CAMERON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
November
25,
1955
(14
Tax
A.B.C.
110)
allowing
the
respondent’s
appeals
from
reassessments
made
upon
him
for
the
years
1947
to
1952,
both
inclusive,
and
allowing
his
appeal
in
part
for
the
year
1953.
There
is
also
a
cross-appeal
by
the
respondent
in
respect
of
his
appeal
from
that
portion
of
the
reassessment
for
the
‘year
1953
which
was
disallowed
by
the
Board.
Certain
profits
were
received
by
the
respondent
in
each
of
these
years
upon
the
sales
of
real
estate
and
the
question
for
determination
is
the
familiar—but
frequently
difficult—one
of
determining
whether
such
profits
are
of
a
capital
nature
as
contended
for
by
the
respondent,
or
constitute
taxable
income
as
submitted
by
the
appellant.
In
this
type
of
case
it
is
necessary
to
consider
the
whole
course
of
conduct
of
the
taxpayer
viewed
in
the
light
of
all
the
surrounding
circumstances.
It
is
desirable,
therefore,
to
record
at
once
certain
facts
which
are
neither
admitted
in
the
pleadings
or
are
fully
established
by
the
evidence.
At
all
material
times
the
respondent
has
resided
at
Simcoe,
Ontario,
where
he
has
carried
on
the
business
of
a
coal
dealer.
In
August,
1939,
he
purchased
for
$4,500
the
orchard
portion
of
a
farm
comprising
about
29
acres
and
situated
on
the
eastern
boundary
of
the
town
of
Simcoe.
Prior
to
the
completion
of
the
purchase,
the
respondent
had
made
arrangements
with
a
friend—the
witness
M.
T.
Gray,
who
was
a
land
surveyor—to
complete
a
survey
and
lay
out
a
plan
of
the
property.
Exhibit
1,
introduced
by
the
respondent,
is
a
copy
of
the
"‘Plan
of
Simcoe
Heights
(the
name
given
the
property
by
the
respondent),
being
a
subdivision
of
part
of
Lot
No.
1
.
_.
.”
It
was
registered
in
the
County
Registry
Office
on
November
17,
1939.
Undoubtedly,
the
survey
and
the
preparation
of
the
plan
were
undertaken
at
or
immediately
after
the
purchase
was
completed.
Exhibit
1
shows
that
the
property
was
subdivided
into
some
121
lots,
that
streets
were
laid
out,
that
wooden
stakes
were
placed
to
mark
the
corners
of
each
lot
and
that
more
substantial
iron
bars
of
the
type
used
by
surveyors
were
placed
at
street
intersections
and
other
necessary
places.
It
also
shows
that
prior
to
registration
the
respondent
had
secured
the
assent
of
all
necessary
parties,
namely,
the
Municipal
Council
of
the
town
of
Simcoe,
the
Highway
Department
of
Ontario,
the
Municipal
Council
of
the
township
of
Woodhouse
(in
which
township
the
property
was
then
located),
and
the
Ontario
Municipal
Board.
Then
there
are
the
usual
certificates
by
the
surveyor
and
the
owner,
in
the
latter
of
which
the
respondent
stated
that
all
the
streets
within
the
survey
"‘are
hereby
dedicated
as
public
highways”.
The
total
cost
to
the
respondent
of
the
survey,
plan,
legal
expenses,
securing
the
necessary
consents
and
similar
disbursements
leading
up
to
the
registration
of
the
plan,
was
approximately
$3,600,
of
which
amount
$800
was
paid
to
the
surveyor
Gray.
Shortly
after
the
end
of
the
second
World
War,
there
was
an
increased
demand
for
building
lots
and
in
each
of
the
years
1945
and
1946
the
respondent
sold
4
of
the
lots
on
Simcoe
Heights.
As
the
present
appeals
do
not
relate
to
those
years,
I
merely
record
the
sales
as
part
of
the
respondent’s
activities
in
regard
to
Simcoe
Heights.
In
1947
several
matters
of
importance
to
the
respondent
occurred.
Due
to
the
increase
in
population
of
Simcoe,
there
was
a
great
demand
for
building
lots
and
residences.
As
of
January
1,
1947,
the
whole
of
Simcoe
Heights
(except
one
lot)
was
incorporated
into
the
town
of
Simcoe;
the
respondent
states
that
he
took
no
part
in
the
annexation
proceedings.
In
the
same
year
the
respondent
entered
into
an
agreement
with
the
town
of
Simcoe
by
which
Lots
1
to
12
inclusive
on
Simcoe
Heights,
Subdivision
191
and
adjacent
property
of
the
town
of
Simcoe,
were
re-subdivided.
Exhibit
3
is
substantially
the
plan
of
such
resubdivision,
registered
on
April
28,
1947,
as
Plan
267.
It
may
be
noted
that
Exhibit
3
is
dated
the
17th
of
September,
1946.
In
the
same
year
the
respondent
exchanged
6
or
7
of
the
lots
in
Simcoe
Heights
for
other
lots
owned
by
the
town.
The
matter
is
not
quite
clear,
but
I
infer
from
the
respondent’s
evidence
and
the
particulars
listed
on
Exhibit
6
that
after
the
exchange
he
was
the
owner
of
all
of
the
lots
on
Plan
267,
except
small
portions
previously
sold
by
him.
In
that
year,
also,
the
respondent
decided
to
interest
himself
in
the
construction
and
sale
of
houses
on
his
property.
Accordingly,
he
entered
into
an
arrangement
with
a
building
contractor,
one
Ryerse.
No
written.
agreement
was
produced
but
I
infer
from
the
evidence
that
Ryerse
was
to
supervise
the
construction
and
the
respondent
was
to
arrange
for
all
financial
matters
and
purchase
all
material.
Ryerse
was
to
receive
his
wages
and
also
25
per
cent
of
the
"patronage
dividends’’
and
the
same
proportion
of
the
net
profits
arising
from
the
sale
of
the
buildings;
the
balance
was
to
be
retained
by
the
respondent
as
his
profits.
The
profits,
however,
were
confined
to
the
profits
on
buildings
only,
the
respondent
considering
the
land
to
be
his
own
separate
asset.
In
pursuance
of
this
plan,
the
respondent
and
Ryerse
built
and
sold
a
substantial
number
of
houses
on
Plan
267
in
1947
and
1948.
Exhibit
6,
which
is
the
list
of
sales
made
from
that
plan
in
the
years
1946
to
1948
inclusive,
lists
10
sales
in
1947
and
3
in
1948.
The
respondent’s
evidence
is
that
of
the
13
lots
owned
by
him
at
the
time
Plan
267
was
registered,
11
were
sold
with
houses
erected
by
him
and
his
associate;
one
was
sold
as
a
lot
and
at
the
date
of
the
hearing
he
had
one
lot
still
unsold.
Precisely
the
same
operations
were
carried
out
in
regard
to
the
orchard
property
shown
on
Exhibit
1.
Buildings
were
erected
and
sold.
Exhibit
5
is
a
list
of
such
sales
for
1945
to
1953
inclusive.
Excluding
those
made
in
1945
and
1946,
the
annual
sales
from
Plan
191
were
as
follows
:
1947
—
14
|
1951
—
2
|
1948—
8
|
1952
—
3
|
1949—
3
|
1953
—
4
|
1950—
8
|
|
À
small
number
of
sales
were
also
made
in
1954,
1955
and
1956.
The
evidence
is
not
clear
as
to
how
many
of
these
sales
were
of
lots
only,
but
I
infer
from
the
evidence
as
a
whole
that
a
very
substantial
number,
if
not
all,
were
sales
of
lots
on
which
the
respondent
and
his
associate
had
built
and
sold
houses.
It
may
be
noted
here
that
following
the
annexation
of
Simcoe
Heights
in
1947,
the
respondent
in
that
and
the
next
year
expended
about
$2,500
in
grading
the
roads
and
clearing
the
property.
From
1947
to
1951
the
municipality
installed
sewers
and
water
supplies.
The
respondent
stated
that
in
1947
he
first
acquired
income
from
the
contracting
business.
It
is
apparent
that
he
considered
the
profits
which
he
realized
from
the
construction
and
sale
of
houses
to
be
taxable
profits
as
in
all
of
the
years
in
question
he
included
in
his
declared
income
his
share
of
the
profits
from
such
sales,
excluding
therefrom,
however,
any
profit
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
lots
which
are
on
Plan
191
or
Plan
267.
There
is
some
suggestion
in
his
evidence
that
he
may
have
included
such
profit
in
and
after
1951.
In
any
event,
the
pleadings’
in
this
Court
make
it
clear
that
in
reassessing
the
respondent
for
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant
added
certain
amounts
to
the
declared
income
of
the
respondent
the
amounts
stated
for
each
of
the
years
‘‘for
the
sale
of
seventy-two
and
one-half
lots
of
land
known
as
Simcoe
Heights’’.
That
is
admitted
in
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
;
and
at
the
hearing
counsel
agreed
that
there
was
now
no
dispute
as
to
the
various
amounts
added
(a
total
of
$29,690.50)
should
it
be
found
that
they
constituted
taxable
income.
The
respondent’
s
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
respect
of
the
addition
of
these
amounts
to
the
respondent’
s
declared
income
was.
allowed
and
from
that
decision
the
Minister
has
appealed
to
this
Court.
Before
considering
this
appeal,
I
think
it
advisable
to
‘now
record
another
transaction
of
the
respondent
relating
to
his
cross-appeal.
The
respondent
stated
that
in
1952
there
was
a
heavy
demand
in
Simcoe
for
building
lots
and
residences.
In
July
of
that
year
he
bought
for
$35,000
the
Booth
farm,
consisting
of
about
88
acres,
situated
immediately
adjacent
to
the
west
boundary
of
the
town
of
Simcoe.
His
purpose
in
buying
the
property
was
admittedly
to
put
on
a
plan
of
subdivision
and
to
realize
a
profit
on
the
sale
of
lots
or
of
houses
which
he
later
constructed
in
cooperation
with
his
building
contractor,
in
the
same
manner
as
had
been
done
on
the
Simeoe
Heights
property.
Part
of
the
Booth
farm
was
on
high
ground
and
suitable
for
residences.
On
this
portion
he
laid
out
and
registered
three
plans,
the
whole
comprising
about
185
lots.
On
sales
made
in
1952
and
1953
he
says
he
reported
his
entire
profits
thereon
as
income
and
was
taxed
accordingly.
The
remaining
portion
of
about
46
acres
was
low-lying
and
swampy
and
unsuitable
for
building
purposes.
At
one
time
he
considered
it
valueless
and
offered
it
to
the
municipality
as
a
gift
for
use
as
a
park,
but
his
offer
was
not
accepted.
Later,
a
quantity
of
valuable
black
muck
was
found
thereon;
he
proposed
to
drain
this
portion
so
that
the
muck
could
be
removed
and
sold,
but
as
this
operation
would
have
interfered
with
the
town
waterworks
system
he
was
not
allowed
to
do
so.
In
Decem-
ber,
1952,
he
sold
the
low-lying
part
to
the
town
of
Simeoe
for
$20,000,
receiving
payment
therefor
in
January,
1953.
As
he
considered
it
a
capital
gain,
he
did
not
include
any
portion
of
this
amount
as
income
for
the
year.
The
respondent,
however,
considered
that
it
was
taxable
income
and
took
it
into
consideration
when
reassessing
him
for
that
year,
adding
an
additional
sum
(the
amount
of
which
is
not
now
in
dispute)
to
his
taxable
income.
The
respondent
appealed
also
from
that
portion
of
the
reassessment
but
his
appeal
was
disallowed
by
the
Board.
He
now
cross-appeals
to
this
Court
in
regard
to
that
item.
I
shall
first
consider
the
cross-appeal
relating
to
the
$20,000
received
in
1953
upon
the
sale
of
the
unsubdivided
portion
of
the
Booth
farm.
The
Minister
asserting
that
it
was
income
from
a
business,
relies
on
certain
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
in
1953
were
as
follows
:
‘*3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing
sg,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(e)
‘business’
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment
;
”
Now
the
respondent
stated
quite
clearly
in
evidence
that
he
purchased
the
Booth
farm
for
the
purpose
of
putting
on
a
plan
and
disposing
of
it
at
a
profit.
He
says,
also,
that
he
considered
the
lower
part
quite
valueless.
In
his
Notice
by
Way
of
CrossAppeal,
he
alleged
that
the
vendor
would
not
separate
the
land
and
that
he
was
obliged
to
buy
the
entire
farm
or
none
at
all.
In
evidence,
however,
he
said
that
he
could
have
purchased
only
the
high
land
but
that
as
the
price
would
have
been
the
same
as
for
the
entire
farm,
he
purchased
the
whole.
In
connection
with
the
sale
of
the
lots
and
buildings
on
the
Booth
subdivision,
he
says
he
“pushed”
the
sales
in
the
usual
way
by
advertising,
interviews
and
the
like.
Admittedly,
as
to
the
purchase
and
sale
of
the
high
ground,
the
respondent
was
in
business
and
his
profits
on
that
part
of
the
operation
were
properly
considered
by
him
as
taxable
profits.
I
can
perceive
no
distinction
between
this
operation
and
that
relating
to
the
other
portion
of
the
Booth
farm.
There
is
nothing
to
indicate
that
the
low
ground:
was
in
any
proper
sense
to
be
held
as
an
investment.
Only
a
few
months
elapsed
between
its
purchase
and
sale
and
in
the
meantime
the
respondent
had
been
endeavouring
to
dispose
of
it
or
to
turn
it
to
account
in
some
way.
I
am
quite
satisfied
that
even
at
the
time
of
purchase,
it
was
in
the
respondent’s
mind
that
he
would
not
retain
any
part
of
the
Booth
property
but
would
dispose
of
it
in
some
convenient
way,
and,
if
possible,
at
a
profit.
The
whole
property
constituted
his
inventory.
It
is
not
unusual
for
a
purchaser
of
land
to
find
that
not
all
of
his
property
is
adapted
to
subdivision
and
that
he
must
find
other
ways
of
disposing
of
the
surplus.
That
was
the
case
here
and
the
fact
that
the
low-lying
land
was
sold
en
bloc
does
not
affect
the
matter
in
any
way.
I
am
quite
satisfied
that
the
profits
arising
from
the
purchase
of
the
Booth
farm
and
the
sale
of
the
large
portion
of
the
subdivided
part
and
of
the
low-lying
part,
constituted
‘income
from
a
business”
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
in
Sections
3
and
4
as
further
defined
in
Section
139(1)
(e).
Accordingly
the
cross-appeal
will
be
dismissed.
The
main
appeal
remains
to
be
considered.
As
with
the
crossappeal,
the
onus
of
proving
the
reassessment
to
be
erroneous
is
on
the
respondent
(M.N.R.
v.
Simpson
s
Limited,
[1953]
Ex.
C.R.
93;
[1953]
C.T.C.
203).
The
appeals
relate
to
the
years
1947
to
1953.
For
the
respondent
it
is
submitted
that
the
profits
realized
were
not
income,
but
merely
the
proceeds
of
the
realization
of
a
capital
asset,
namely,
the
Simcoe
Heights
property.
The
appellant
says
that
the
profits
in
question
were
profits
from
a
business.
For
the
years
1947
and
1948
the
matter
is
to
be
determined
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Taz
Act,
which
was
as
follows
:
"
"
3.
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
‘
income
‘
means
the
annual
net
profit
or
gain
or
gratuity
whether
ascertained
and
capable
of
computation
as
being
wages,
salary,
or
other
fixed
amount
or
unascertained
as
being
fees
or
emoluments,
or
as
being
profits
from
a
trade
or
commercial
or
financial
or
other
business
or
calling
directly
or
indirectly
received
by
a
person
.
.
.
or
from
any
trade,
manufacture
or
business
.
.
.;
and
shall
include
.
.
.
and
also
the
annual
profit
or
gain
from
any
other
source
including”?
For
the
years
1949
to
1953
the
Income
Tax
Act
applied.
I
have
set
out
above
the
provisions
of
Sections
3
and
4
thereof
which
were
the
same
throughout
the
entire
period.
Section
139(1)
(e)
,
also
set
out
above,
appeared
as
Section
127(1)
(e)
in
the
years
1949
to
1952.
The
respondent
states
that
for
some
time
prior
to
1939,
he
had
been
considering
the
purchase
of
a
lot
on
which
to
erect
a
residence
for
himself;
for
that
purpose
he
required
only
about
one-half
acre.
The
owner
of
the
farm
on
which
the
orchard
was
located
would
not
agree
to
selling
such
a
small
portion
but
was
willing
to
sell
the
farm
as
a
whole,
or
the
orchard.
As
the
respondent’s
wife
approved
of
that
particular
location,
the
respondent:
bought
the
orchard.
He
says
he
acquired
the
property
with
the
intention
of
erecting
a
residence
for
his
own
use
on
a
portion
thereof
and
of
retaining
the
rest
as
an
investment
;
the
trees
in
the
orchard
had
been
badly
neglected
and
he
planned
to
bring
them
back
into
production
and
thereby
increase
his
income.
At
the
hearing-he
stated
that
he
could
not
say
that
in
1939
there
was
no
market
for
lots
but
added
that
there
was
little
likelihood
of
disposing
of
them
then
as
only
a
small
portion
thereof
was
accessible
to
a
public
highway
and
there
were
no
sewers
or
water
mains.
In
furtherance
of
his
plan,
he
entered
into
an
agrément
with
a
nurseryman—the
witness
Piggott—to
care
for
the
trees;
the
development,
he
says,
was
to
continue
for
five
years,
but
the
evidence.
indicates
that
very
little
was
done
and
that
no
income
was
derived
from
the
trees
at
any
time.
For
some
two
years
Piggott
did
a
small
amount
of
pruning
and
spraying
but
only
one
account
of
some
$15
for
such
work
was
produced,
although
there
may
have
been
other
small
accounts.
Nothing
further
was
done
in
developing
the
orchard
due,
it
is
said,
to
the
shortage
of
labour
1
in
wartime.
The
respondent
also
states
that
while
he
actively
promoted
the
sale
of
lots
and
buildings
on
the
Booth
property
by
advertising
and
the
like,
he
did
nothing
to
push
the
sales
in
Simcoe
Heights;
in
all
cases
he
says
the
purchasers
came
to
him.
He
could
not
say,
however,
what
efforts
his
associate
Ryerse
had
made
to
further
the
sales.
He
added,
also,
that
one
of
his
reasons
for
selling
the
Simcoe
Heights
lots
was
that
taxes
had
increased
following
the
annexation
to
the
town
of
Simcoe.
When
considering
the
important
question
as
to
the
intention
of
the
respondent
at
the
time
of
the
purchase,
it
is
important
to
bear
in
mind
that
what
he
was
seeking
originally
was
a
small
lot
on
which
to
construct
his
own
home.
He
acquired
the
29
acres
merely
because
the
former
owner
would
not
sell
one
building
lot.
There
is
no
evidence
that
the
respondent
had
any
knowledge
of
farming
or
fruit-raising.
The
most
significant
evidence,
however,
is
that
relating
to
the
survey
of
the
property
and
the
preparation
and
registration
of
the
plan,
some
of
the
details
of
which
I
have
set
out
above.
I
reject
entirely
the
respondent’s
suggestion
that
he
was
"‘pressured''
by
his
friend,
the
witness
Gray,
to
lay
out
the
whole
property
in
lots
and
register
a
plan
and
that
he
finally
agreed
to
do
so
because
of
the
financial
needs
of
Gray.
That
evidence
is
not
supported
by
that
of
Gray
himself.
The
respondent
says
that
all
he
really
needed
was
an
outline
sketch
of
the
small
lot
on
which
his
home
was
to
be
built
and
as
required
by
the
proposed
mortgagee
thereof.
Had
that
been
so,
such
a
plan
could
have
been
prepared
at.
very
little
expense
and
there
i
is
no
evidence
to
show
that
for
such
a
limited
purpose
it
was
necessary
to
secure
the
various
consents
and
certificates
shown.
on
Exhibit
1
or
to
register
any
plan.
The
fact
is
that
h(
expended
about
$3,600
in
all
in
that
connection
(only
$800
of
which
went
to
Gray)
and
in
addition
he
laid
out
a
further
sum
of
about
$2,500
in
the
succeeding
years
in
grading
the
roads,
clearing
the
land
and
the
like.
The
only
reasonable
inference
from
the
established
facts
is
that
even
prior
to
the
time
of
purchase
he
had
in
mind
selling
lots
as
the
opportunity
arose.
The
plan
as
registered
was
necessary
for
one
purpose
only,
namely,
the
facilitate
sales
of
lots.
His
residence
was
built
on
a
lot
facing
on
the
public
highway
and
there
was
therefore
no
need
of
laying
out
roads
or
dedicating
them
as
public
highways
if
his
intention
was
merely
to
hold
and
operate
the
orchard
for
his
own
use.
Such
dedication
would
have
been
most
disadvantageous
to
the
working
of
the
orchard.
There
is
no
difficulty,
therefore,
in
reaching
the
conclusion
that
the
respondent
fully
intended
at
the
time
he
purchased
Simcoe
Heights
to
dispose
of
the
lots
as
soon
as
conditions
were
favourable
for
him
to
do
so.
No
doubt
his
plans
were
held
up
due
to
war
conditions,
building
restrictions
and
the
like.
His
first
sales
were
made
in
1945
and
1946
and
apparently
were
of
vacant
lots.
The
evidence
is
not
very
clear
as
to
whether
all
the
7214
lots
referred
to
in
the
pleadings
had
been
improved
by
the
addition
of
buildings
prior
to
sale,
or
whether
some
were
sold
as
lots.
It
is
probably
the
case
that
some
lots
and
some
lots
with
buildings
were
sold,
but
I
was
not
asked
to
find
that
there
was
any
distinction
between
such
sales
so
far
as
income
tax
is
concerned.
Further,
the
evidence
is
not
clear
as
to
whether
all
the
721
lots
referred
to
were
originally
part
of
the
orchard
(Exhibit
1)
or
whether
some
were
lots
received
by
the
respondent
at
the
time
of
his
exchange
of
properties
with
the
town
of
Simcoe
in
1947.
I
infer
from
the
evidence
as
a
whole
that
the
lots
now
in
question
included
those
received
at
the
time
of
the
exchange
and
that
all
of
the
property
shown
in
Exhibits
1
and
3
were
known
as
“Simcoe
Heights’’.
It
is
admitted
by
the
respondent
that
none
of
the
profits
received
from
the
sales
of
these
lands
were
included
in
his
income
tax
returns.
He
considered
the
sales
of
lands
to
be
merely
the
realization
of
a
capital
asset.
Now
the
respondent’s
own
evidence
is
that
for
all
the
years
in
question
he
considered
himself
to
have
been
carrying
on
a
business
separate
and
apart
from
that
of
his
coal
business.
He
stated
that
he
first
acquired
income
from
the
contracting
business
in
1947
and
that
business
continued
throughout.
As
for
the
lots
acquired
by
exchange
from
the
town
of
Simcoe
in
1947,
he
says
they
were
suitable
for
building
purposes,
that
he
bought
and
used
them
for
that
purpose
only
and
sold
them
as
soon
as
buildings
were
constructed.
As
to
these
lots,
it
is
clear
that
they
were
not
acquired
as
an
investment
but
for
the
purpose
of
sale
at
a
profit
at
the
earliest
possible
moment.
In
my
view,
no
distinction
can
be
drawn
between
the
profits
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
buildings
thereon
(and
which
he
did
report
as
taxable
income)
and
that
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
lands
on
which
the
buildings
were
erected.
Both
were
profits
from
carrying
on
the
business
of
a
building
contractor.
They
are
therefore
profits
from
a
business
both
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
the
Income
Tax
Act.
There
remains
only
the
question
regarding
the
profits
from
the
sales
of
the
land
which
originally
formed
part
of
the
orchard.
In
support
of
his
submission
that
the
respondent
was
merely
realizing
a
capital
asset
and
that
the
profits
so
realized
were
not
profits
from
a
business,
counsel
for
the
respondent
referred
me
to
the
decision
of
Hyndman,
D.J.,
in
McGuire
v.
M.N.R.,
[1956]
Ex.
C.R.
264;
[1956]
C.T.C.
98.
That
case,
however,
is
clearly
distinguishable
on
the
facts.
There
the
taxpayer
in
1940
purchased
a
farm
as
a
residence
and
with
the
intention
of
operating
it
as
a
farm.
After
operating
it
as
such
for
some
years,
he
found
that
it
was
not
a
paying
proposition
;
then
he
had
an
opportunity
of
selling
a
small
lot
but
found
that
under
The
Planning
Act
he
could
not
convey
the
title
until
he
had
prepared
and
registered
a
plan
of
subdivision.
In
compliance
with
that
requirement
he
laid
out
and
registered
a
plan
of
some
52
lots.
In
the
years
1949
to
1952
he
sold
20
lots.
Hyndman,
D.J.,
allowed
the
taxpayer’s
appeal
from
assessment
to
tax
on
the
profits
so
realized.
He
was
of
the
opinion
that
at
the
time
of
purchase,
McGuire
had
no
intention
of
reselling
any
of
the
land,
but
intended
merely
to
operate
it
as
a
farm
;
that
the
registering
of
a
plan
some
seven
or
eight
years
after
the
purchase
was
done
solely
because
of
the
requirements
of
The
Planning
Act,
and
that
in
so
selling
his
own
property
McGuire
was
not
engaged
in
a
business
but
was
merely
realizing
unused
portions
of
his
own
property.
In
the
present
case,
however,
the
respondent
arranged
for
the
preparation
of
the
subdivision
plan
prior
to
completing
his
purchase
and
had
it
completed
and
registered
at
a
very
considerable
cost
immediately
after
the
purchase
was
made,
indicating
very
clearly,
as
I
have
stated
above,
his
intention
of
disposing
of
the
lots
as
soon
as
there
was
a
demand
for
them.
Moreover,
as
I
have
pointed
out
above,
the
respondent
was
admittedly
carrying
on
the
business
of
a
building
contractor
in
each
of
the
years
in
question.
In
1947
he
acquired
by
exchange
further
land
suitable
for
building.
In
all
the
years
he
and
his
associate
built
houses
for
sale
and
entered
into
building
contracts
with
purchasers,
purchased
materials,
employed
labour,
placed
mortgages,
and
did
everything
one
would
expect
building
contractors
to
do.
Such
operations
fall
clearly
within
the
term
"‘business”,
both
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
my
opinion,
the
sales
of
the
7212
lots
now
in
question
cannot
be
segregated
from
the
sale
of
the
buildings.
They
formed
a
necessary
part
of
the
building
operation
as
a
whole
and
were
part
of
the
respondent’s
inventory
used
in
carrying
on
that
business.
Reference
may
be
made
to
the
well-known
case
of
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
v.
Stevens
(1909),
5
T.C.
424,
in
which
the
Court
had
to
determine
whether
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
carried
on
a
trade
in
buying
and
selling
land
by
which
they
made
a
profit.
Farwell,
L.J.,
at
p.
437,
pointed
out
the
distinction
between
dealing
with
one’s
property
as
owner
and
dealing
with
it
as
a
trader,
in
these
words
:
“It
is
clear,
therefore,
that
a
man
who
sells
his
land,
or
pictures,
or
jewels,
is
not
chargeable
with
income
tax
on
the
purchase-money
or
on
the
difference
between
the
amount
that
he
gave
and
the
amount
that
he
received
for
them.
But
if
instead
of
dealing
with
his
property
as
owner
he
embarks
on
a
trade
in
which
he
uses
that
property
for
the
purposes
of
his
trade,
then
he
becomes
liable
to
pay,
not
on
the
excess
of
sale
prices
over
purchase
prices,
but
on
the
annual
profits
or
gains
arising
from
such
trade,
in
ascertaining
which
those
prices
will
no
doubt
come
into
consideration.”
In
the
present
case,
the
respondent
in
the
sales
in
question
was
using
his
property
for
the
purposes
of
his
trade
or
business
and
in
my
opinion
the
profits
therefrom
are
properly
to
be
taken
into
account
in
computing
his
taxable
income.
In
both
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
in
the
crossappeal,
the
respondent
challenged
the
method
used
by
the
Minister
in
computing
the
profits
for
each
year.
At
the
hearing,
however,
these
claims
were
abandoned
and
it
was
agreed
that
the
profits
as
such
were
properly
determined.
Accordingly,
for
the
reasons
which
I
have
given
the
Minister’s
appeal
will
be
allowed,
the
cross-appeal
of
the
respondent
will
be
dismissed
and
all
the
assessments
in
appeal
will
be
affirmed.
The
respondent
will
pay
the
costs
of
the
appeal
and
of
the
crossappeal
after
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.