CAMERON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
January
13,
1953
(reported
as
No.
78
v.
M.N.R.,
7
Tax
A.B.C.
408)
dismissing
by
a
majority
an
appeal
by
the
taxpayer
from
an
assessment
made
upon
it
for
its
taxation
year
1949.
To
the
appellant’s
declared
income
the
respondent
had
added
the
sum
of
$450,000.00,
the
ground
for
doing
so
being
stated
in
the
Notification
by
the
Minister
as
follows:
“The
amount
of
$450,000.00
received
by
the
taxpayer
from
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
has
been
properly
taken
into
account
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act.
’
’
The
facts
in
the
case
are
not
in
dispute.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
as
a
private
company
in
1941
under
the
Dominion
Companies
Act
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
generally
the
business
of
a
dry
dock
company
and
the
business
of
building
and
repairing
ships
and
other
vessels.
In
December,
1946,
it
entered
into
a
contract
with
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Co.
Ltd.
(hereinafter
to
be
called
the
Chinese
Company)
whereby
it
undertook
to
build
and
deliver
four
small
Yangtze
River
Freight
and
Passenger
Vessels
at
a
fixed
price
per
vessel,
which
price
was
later
increased
to
a
larger
sum.
In
March,
1947,
this
contract
was
amended
in
order
to
provide
that
the
appellant
should
deliver
only
two
of
such
small
vessels.
At
the
same
time
the
appellant
entered
into
a
further
agreement
to
build
and
deliver
three
larger
vessels
for
the
Chinese
Company
at
a
fixed
price.
The
two
smaller
vessels
were
delivered
prior
to
September,
1948,
and
the
last
of
the
three
larger
vessels
in
July,
1949.
For
the
purpose
of
financing
the
construction
of
the
said
vessels,
the
Chinese
Company
had
obtained
loans
from
Canadian
banks,
the
repayment
of
such
loans
being
guaranteed
by
the
Government
of
China.
In
March,
1947,
under
the
authority
of
Part
II
of
the
Export
Credits
Insurance
Act
(1944-45,
8-9
George
VI,
c.
39
and
amendments,
more
particularly
those
resulting
from
10
George
VI,
ce.
49),
the
Government
of
Canada
had
guaranteed
the
undertaking
of
the
Government
of
China
in
this
respect.
By
August,
1948,
the
appellant
was
in
such
financial
difficulties
due
to
increased
costs
and
to
certain
technical
difficulties
that
it
could
not
fulfil
its
obligations
or
complete
and
deliver
the
vessels
in
accordance
with
its
contracts.
On
September
21,
1948,
it
entered
into
a
Deed
of
Loan
and
Mortgage
(Ex.
A)
with
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
(hereinafter
to
be
referred
to
as
C.C.C.),
established
under
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
Act
(1946,
10
George
VI,
c.
40).
Prior
to
that
date
the
C.C.C.
had
loaned
the
appellant
sums
aggregating
$450,000.00.
In
that
Deed
the
appellant
was
referred
to
as
the
Borrower
and
the
C.C.C.
as
the
Lender,
and
the
agreement
contained
the
following
clause
:
41
To
secure
the,
reimbursement
of
the
said
capital
sum
of
$450,000.00,
and
in
order
to
guarantee
further
advances
to
the
extent
of
an
additional
amount
of
one
million
dollars
which
the
Lender
may
from
time
to
time
advance
but
does
not
hereby
undertake
to
advance,
the
Borrower
specifically
charges
and
hypothecates
in
favour
of
the
Lender
”...
the
immoveable
properties
therein
described
which
were
in
fact
all
the
immoveable
properties
then
owned
by
the
appellant.
By
the
Appropriation
Act,
No.
2,
1949
(13
Geo.
VI,
Vol.
I,
c.
15)
assented
to
on
April
7,
1949,
a
sum
of
$850,000.00
was
appropriated
by
Parliament
for
the
financial
year
ending
March
31,
1949,
and
the
purposes
for
which
the
said
sum
was
granted
to
His
Majesty
were
stated
to
be
as
follows:
44
Vote
No.
638.
To
reimburse
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
for
amounts
advanced
by
it
as
working
capital
under
mortgage
security
to
George
T.
Davie
&
Sons,
Ltd.
(losses
on
which
advances
cannot
yet
be
estimated)
for
the
purpose
of
enabling
that
company
to
complete
and
to
deliver
ships
to
the
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Company,
Ltd.,
which
purchased
such
ships
with
funds
derived
mainly
from
a
loan
for
this
purpose
guaranteed
by
Canada
under
Part
II
of
the
Export
Credits
Insurance
Act
$850,000.00”
Pursuant
to
the
said
appropriation,
the
sum
of
$850,000.00
was
transferred
by
the
Comptroller
of
the
Treasury
to
C.C.C.
upon
requisition
of
the
Minister
of
Trade
and
Commerce.
On
July
31,
1949,
upon
completion
of
the
shipbuilding
agreements,
the
appellant’s
total
indebtedness
to
C.C.C.
under
the
aforesaid
Deed
of
Loan
and
Mortgage
amounted
to
$914,000.00.
By
the
fall
of
that
year
the
losses
on
the
Chinese
contracts
were
ascertained
to
be
$1,150,164.05
in
all,
as
admitted
by
the
respondent.
The
appellant
was
then
in
a
precarious
financial
position
and
quite
unable
to
meet
its
obligations
to
C.C.C.
In
the
meantime
the
Chinese
Company
had
paid
direct
to
C.C.C.
the
sum
of
$284,813.83,
‘‘as
the
final
increase
of
contract
price
in
respect
of
the
three
larger
vessels’’,
thereby
reducing
the
appellant’s
net
overall
losses
on
both
types
of
vessels
to
$865,350.22.
The
appellant,
having
assented
to
the
Deputy
Minister’s
proposal
to
that
effect,
that
sum
of
$284,813.83
was
applied
in
reduction
of
the
appellant’s
indebtedness
to
C.C.C.,
thus
reducing
its
liability
to
$629,186.17.
That
payment
of
$284,813.83
was
taken
by
the
appellant
into
its
trading
receipts
as
being
an
additional
payment
on
account
of
the
contract
price
of
the
three
large
vessels.
On
November
2,
1949,
the
Deputy
Minister
of
Trade
and
Commerce
wrote
the
appellant,
part
of
that
letter
(Ex.
Rl)
being
as
follows
:
‘
‘
This
will
confirm
that,
as
a
result
of
recent
re-negotiations
between
officials
of
your
company
and
officers
of
this
Department,
agreement
has
been
reached
whereby
the
Minister
is
prepared
to
recommend
to
the
Governor
in
Council
that
the
amount
of
the
advances
due
the
Canadian
Government
by
your
Company
at
July
31,
1949,
be
abated
by
an
amount
of
$450,000
in
respect
of
losses
sustained
in
the
construction
of
the
three
270
ft.
Yangtze
vessels
for
the
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Company
Limited.
It
is
proposed
that
the
foregoing
abatement
be
effected
by
a
reduction
of
$450,000
in
the
amount
of
the
advances
outstanding
at
July
31,
1949,
which
are
to
be
further
reduced
by
an
amount
of
$284,813.83
received
by
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
from
the
Ming
Sung
Company
as
the
final
increase
of
contract
price
in
respect
of
the
three
larger
vessels.
The
net
result
of
these
credits
will
be
the
reduction
of
your
Government
advance
account
from
$914,000
to
the
amount
of
$179,186.17.
This
indebtedness
of
$179,186.17
will
be
secured
by
First
Mortgage
held
by
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
on
the
assets
of
the
Geo.
T.
Davie
&
Sons
Limited.
Security
now
held
by
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
on
the
Company’s
assets
may
be
altered
accordingly,
if
required
by
either
party.”
The
net
result
of
the
foregoing
proposals,
accepted
by
the
appellant,
was
to
reduce
the
appellant’s
indebtedness
under
the
Deed
of
Loan
and
Mortgage
to
the
sum
of
$179,186.17.
Later
an
understanding
was
reached
regarding
the
terms
of
repayment
and
security
to
be
given
in
respect
of
that
balance,
and
an
agreement
embodying
the
same
and
effective
on
November
2,
1949
(but
actually
executed
on
June
29,
1950)
was
entered
into.
In
that
agreement
(Ex.
A4),
the
appellant
was
the
party
of
the
first
part,
and
His
Majesty
the
King
in
Right
of
Canada
(represented
by
the
Minister
of
Trade
and
Commerce)
was
the
party
of
the
second
part.
In
draft
form
it
was
attached
to
Order-in-Council
P.C.
145/1111,
dated
March
4,
1950,
which
was
as
follows:
“TRADE
AND
COMMERCE
The
Board
had
under
consideration
a
memorandum
from
the
Right
Honourable
the
Minister
of
Trade
and
Commerce
reporting
:
‘THAT,
in
March,
1947,
under
authority
of
Part
II
of
the
Exports
Credits
Insurance
Act,
the
Government
of
Canada
guaranteed
the
undertaking
of
the
Government
of
China,
which
latter
Government
had
guaranteed
the
repayment
of
loans
by
Canadian
banks
to
the
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Company
Limited
for
the
purpose
of
financing
construction
of
Yangtze
River
Freight
and
Passenger
Vessels
by
Canadian
shipyards;
THAT
due
to
increased
costs
of
labour
and
materials
and
to
certain
technical
difficulties,
it
became
apparent
during
August,
1948,
that
George
T.
Davie
&
Sons
Limited
would
be
unable
to
complete
and
deliver
vessels
in
accordance
with
its
contracts
with
the
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Company
Limited
;
THAT
in
order
to
carry
out
the
purposes
for
which
the
Canadian
Government
had
originally
entered
into
the
transaction
and
to
minimize
the
possible
loss
under
its
guarantee,
the
Government
of
Canada
acting
through
the
Canadian
Commercial
Corporation
advanced
funds
under
mortgage
security
to
George
T.
Davie
&
Sons
Limited
for
working
capital
to
enable
the
Company
to
complete
and
deliver
the
ships,
funds
for
such
purpose
being
provided
by
Vote
638
of
the
Further
Supplementary
Estimates
of
1948-49
in
the
amount
of
$850,000
pending
completion
of
the
contracts
and
determination
of
the
actual
losses
thereon
;
THAT
the
vessels
have
now
been
constructed,
delivered
to,
and
accepted
by
the
Ming
Sung
Industrial
Company
Limited,
and
the
amount
of
the
losses
thereon
determined
;
THAT
it
is
proposed
to
effect
final
settlement
of
advances
made
in
respect
of
such
transactions
with
George
T.
Davie
&
Sons
Limited
substantially
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
Agreement
annexed
hereto
as
Schedule
‘‘A’’,
which
provides,
inter
alia,
that
the
Government
of
Canada
will
assume
losses
to
the
extent
of
$450,000
on
the
Ming
Sung
contracts
;
THAT
the
matter
has
been
carefully
reviewed
by
officials
of
this
Department
and,
having
regard
to
all
the
circumstances,
it
is
considered
that
the
proposed
settlement
is
fair
and
reasonable
and
in
the
public
interest.
The
undersigned,
therefore,
has
the
honour
to
recommend
that
authority
be
given
for
the
execution
and
delivery
of
such
Agreement
and
other
documents
as
may
be
necessary
to
give
effect
thereto.
’
The
Board
concur
in
the
above
report
and
recommendations.
and
submit
the
same
for
favourable
consideration.”
One
of
the
recitals
in
the
said
agreement
is
as
follows:
4
‘WHEREAS,
having
regard
to
the
guarantee
of
the
Canadian
Government,
and
all
other
circumstances,
it
is
considered
fair
and
equitable
that
the
remainder
of
the
loss
incurred
under
the
ship
building
agreement,
amounting
to
$450,000
be
assumed
by
the
Canadian
Government,
and
that
the
amount
of
the
outstanding
advances
be
abated
accordingly.”
Then
Clause
1
of
the
operative
part
is
as
follows:
“1.
The
total
advance
of
Nine
Hundred
and
Fourteen
Thousand
Dollars
($914,000)
made
by
the
Canadian
Government
to
the
Shipbuilder
shall
be
and
the
same
is
hereby
abated
by
the
sum
of
Seven
Hundred
and
Thirty-Four
Thousand,
Eight
Hundred
and
Thirteen
Dollars
and
Eighty-Three
Cents
($734,813.83),
made
up
of
the
following
sums,
namely:
(a)
the
sum
of
$284,813.83,
being
the
amount
of
a
payment
received
by
the
Corporation
from
Ming
Sung
representing
the
increase
in
the
price
of
the
said
three
(3)
vessels;
and
(b)
the
sum
of
$450,000.00
being
a
portion
of
the
said
advances
made
by
the
Corporation
to
the
Shipbuilder
under
mortgage
security,
and
representing
the
portion
of
loss
assumed
by
the
Canadian
Government
under
the
shipbuilding
agreement;
and
the
repayable
portion
of
the
total
advance
made
by
the
Canadian
Government
to
the
Shipbuilder
is
hereby
fixed
at
the
sum
of
One
Hundred
and
Seventy-Nine
Thousand,
One
Hundred
and
Eighty-Six
Dollars
and
Seventeen
Cents
($179,186.17).’’
Then
followed
certain
other
provisions
not
here
of
importance.
Clause
4
fixes
the
time
of
payment
of
the
balance
of
the
said
indebtedness
and
by
Clause
5
the
appellant,
upon
full
payment
of
principal
and
interest
thereof,
is
to
be
discharged
from
all
liability.
By
Clause
6
the
appellant
agreed
to
execute
a
first
mortgage
to
the
Canadian
Government
as
collateral
security
for
the
said
indebtedness,
on
all
its
real
property,
and
upon
delivery
thereof
the
mortgage
given
to
the
C.C.C.
on
September
21,
1948,
was
to
be
discharged.
In
the
meantime,
C.C.C.
had
paid
back
to
the
Comptroller
of
the
Treasury
the
sum
of
$400,000.00
in
respect
of
the
original
sum
of
$850,000.00
advanced
to
it
under
Vote
638,
and
the
balance
of
$450,000.00
was
accounted
for
by
the
aforesaid
abatement
of
$450,000.00
and
the
agreement
of
November
2,
1949,
above
mentioned.
The
provisions
of
the
said
agreement
relating
to
the
giving
of
the
new
mortgage
for
the
sum
of
$179,186.17
and
the
discharge
of
the
former
mortgage
to
C.C.C.
were
duly
carried
out.
As
I
have
indicated
above,
the
respondent
added
to
the
appellant’s
declared
income
for
the
year
1949
the
said
sum
of
$450,000.00,
i.e.,
the
amount
by
which
the
indebtedness
of
the
appellant
had
been
abated.
The
appellant
says
that
at
all
relevant
times
the
relationship
between
it
and
C.C.C.,
or
the
Canadian
Government,
was
that
of
debtor
and
creditor
or
capital
account
and
that
the
abatement
or
cancellation
of
a
debt
of
a
capital
nature
cannot
give
rise
to
anything
but
a
capital
gain.
In
his
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
the
Minister
alleges
that
under
the
agreement
of
November
2,
1949,
of
Order-in-Council
P.C.
145/1111,
His
Majesty
made
a
grant
or
subsidy
to
the
appellant
in
respect
of
losses
sustained
by
the
appellant
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
its
business,
which
amount
was
applied
in
reducing
the
amount
owed
by
the
appellant
to
the
C.C.C.;
and
that
in
adding
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
1949
the
sum
of
$450,000.00
it
did
so
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
Section
3
and
Section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
are
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,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(ce)
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.
’
’
One
of
the
submissions
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
may
be
disposed
of
at
once.
By
the
agreement
effective
November
2,
1949,
the
indebtedness
of
the
appellant
to
C.C.C.
was
abated
in
respect
of
two
amounts.
The
first
was
that
of
$284,813.23,
“being
the
amount
of
a
payment
received
by
the
Corporation
(i.e.,
the
C.C.C.)
from
Ming
Sung,
representing
the
increase
in
the
price
of
the
said
three
vessels’’.
The
second
abatement
was
the
sum
of
$450,000.00,
‘‘being
a
portion
of
the
said
advances
made
by
the
corporation
to
the
shipbuilder
under
mortgage
security,
and
representing
the
portion
of
the
loss
assumed
by
the
Canadian
Government
under
the
shipbuilding
agreement.’’
The
amount
of
the
first
abatement
was
taken
into
the
accounts
of
the
appellant
for
the
year
1949
as
a
trading
receipt
and
I
think
properly
so.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submits,
however,
that
there
is
no
essential
difference
between
these
two
items
and
that
if
the
first
abatement
is
properly
a
trading
receipt,
so
also
is
the
second.
He
suggests
that
owing
to
the
financial
difficulties
in
which
the
appellant
found
itself,
the
losses
which
it
had
sustained
in
respect
of
the
three
vessels
were
made
up
in
part
of
Ming
Sung,
and
as
to
another
part,
by
the
Crown.
In
my
view,
however,
that
submission
cannot
be
supported.
There
is
no
evidence
whatever
that
in
paying
the
additional
sum
of
$248,813.83,
Ming
Sung
was
contributing
to
the
losses
of
the
appellant.
The
letter
of
the
Deputy
Minister
dated
November
2,
1949,
states
that
the
sum
“was
received
by
the
C.C.C.
from
Ming
Sung
as
the
final
increase
of
contract
price
in
respect
of
the
three
large
vessels’’.
A
statement
in
paragraph
28
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
—
and
admitted
in
the
respondent’s
Reply
—
was
that
that
sum
was
taken
into
the
appellant’s
trading
receipts
as
being
an
additional
payment
on
account
of
the
contract
price
of
the
three
large
vessels.
It
was
therefore,
in
my
opinion,
not
a
contribution
to
the
appellant’s
losses
but
rather
a
true
trading
receipt.
The
mere
fact
that
the
two
items
of
abatement
were
dealt
with
in
the
one
agreement
does
not
lead
to
the
inference
that
they
were
of
the
same
character.
In
my
view
they
were
of
a
totally
different
character.
The
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
Mine
Sung
was
that
of
vendor
and
purchaser
;
whereas
the
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
the
Crown
(or
its
agent
the
C.C.C.)
was
that
of
debtor
and
creditor.
In
its
return
for
1949
the
appellant
did
not
show
the
sum
of
$450,000.00
as
a
trading
receipt
but
as
an
increase
in
its
capital
surplus.
It
is
well
settled,
however,
that
the
mere
way
in
which
a
company
keeps
its
accounts
is
not
conclusive
in
the
matter.
It
is
quite
clear
that
the
advances
by
C.C.C.
to
the
appellant
were
advances
on
capital
account.
They
are
described
as
“capital”
in
the
mortgage
(Ex.
A)
and
as
working
capital
in
Vote
No.
638
(supra).
Indeed,
counsel
for
the
respondent
agreed
that
they
were
advances
of
capital
and
on
the
facts
they
could
not
be
otherwise.
They
were
not
taken
into
the
appellant’s
accounts
as
trading
receipts.
It
follows
that
whatever
may
have
been
the
reason
for
the
abatement,
it
was,
in
fact,
an
abatement
of
the
capital
indebtedness.
The
substantial
question
for
consideration,
therefore,
is
whether
such
an
abatement
can
give
rise
to
taxable
income.
Is
it
‘‘income’’
within
the
meaning
of
that
term
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
—
a
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business
in
1949?
The
respondent
endeavours
to
bring
this
amount
within
the
purview
of
the
appellant’s
trading
operations
by
reference
to
the
fact
that
the
abatement
arose
because
or
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
losses
in
the
Ming
Sung
contract.
It
cannot
be
disputed
that
such
is
the
case,
as
counsel
for
the
appellant
readily
admits.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
goes
further
and
submits
that
the
letter
of
the
Deputy
Minister
of
November
2,
1949,
and
the
contract
effective
as
of
that
date,
are
clear
indications
that
the
Crown
was
assuming
a
portion
of
losses
sustained
by
the
appellant
in
the
Ming
Sung
contract,
that
the
abatement
in
the
indebtedness
was
merely
a
mode
of
artificially
supplementing
the
income
of
the
appellant
in
respect
of
that
contract
—
a
contract
which
undoubtedly
was
within
the
ambit
of
the
appellant’s
normal
trading
operation.
He
submitted,
therefore,
that
it
was
in
the
nature
of
an
income
subsidy
and
so
subject
to
tax.
He
says
that
what
happened
was
this.
The
Crown
in
order
to
stimulate
the
production
of
goods
for
export
had
guaranteed
to
the
Canadian
banks
the
repayment
of
loans
made
by
them
to
Ming
Sung;
that
when
the
appellant
got
into
financial
difficulties
in
carrying
out
its
contract,
advances
were
made
to
it
by
the
Crown’s
agent
—
the
C.C.C.
;
that
when
the
losses
were
finally
established,
the
Crown,
having
perhaps
a
moral
obligation
to
assist
the
appellant
by
bearing
part
of
its
losses,
agreed
to
abate
the
appellant’s
liability
to
C.C.C.;
and
that
the
agreement
to
reduce
the
mortgage
held
by
C.C.C.
by
$450,000.00
had
the
same
result
as
if
the
Crown
had
paid
that
sum
to
the
appellant
and
the
appellant
had
then
in
turn
paid
it
to
C.C.C.
As
pointed
out
by
the
President
of
this
Court
in
the
St.
John
Drydock
case,
[1944]
Ex.
C.R.
186;
[1944]
C.T.C.
106,
statutory
subsidies
may
be
of
a
capital
nature
or
of
a
revenue
nature.
In
that
case
it
was
held
that
the
payment
to
the
taxpayer
was
a
construction
subsidy
payable
in
respect
of
the
capital
expenditure
and
that
the
taxpayer
did
not
receive
it
in
the
course
of
its
trading
or
business
operations
or
because
of
them
and
so
was
not
“income”
in
the
hands
of
the
taxpayer.
The
case
of
Smart
(Inspector
of
Taxes)
v.
The
Inncolnshire
Sugar
Co.
Ltd.,
20
T.C.
643,
is
an
illustration
of
the
statutory
subsidy
resulting
in
taxable
income.
There
the
subsidy
was
paid
on
sugar
manufactured
in
Great
Britain
from
beet
grown
there.
It
was
held
that
in
view
of
the
business
nature
of
the
sums
paid,
that
they
were
trading
receipts
and
proper
to
be
taken
into
account
for
income
tax
purposes
in
the
year
in
which
they
were
received.
Another
similar
case
is
that
of
Charles
Brown
&
Company
v.
C.I.R.,
12
T.C.
1256.
The
submissions
so
made
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
are
substantial,
but
in
view
of
the
facts
as
I
consider
them
to
be
I
cannot
give
effect
to
his
argument.
In
the
first
place
I
do
not
think
that
the
benefit
received
by
the
appellant
by
reason
of
the
abatement
can
be
considered
as
a
subsidy.
I
was
not
referred
to
any
statute
which
would
authorize
the
payment
of
any
subsidy
to
the
appellant,
and
in
the
correspondence
and
documents
filed
it
is
referred
to
as
an
abatement
and
not
as
a
subsidy.
Secondly,
I
think
the
argument
entirely
overlooks
the
fact
that
the
indebtedness
of
the
appellant
to
0.0.0.
—
and
which
was
secured
by
a
mortgage
of
all
the
immoveable
properties
of
the
appellant
—
was
an
indebtedness
on
capital
account.
I
think
this
is
the
most
important
fact
in
the
entire
case
and
counsel
for
the
respondent
admitted
that
it
was
a
formidable
barrier
in
his
way.
I
think
it
is
of
importance
also
to
note
that
while
advances
made
by
C.C.C.
were
doubtless
used
by
the
appellant
in
building
the
ships
under
the
Ming
Sung
contract,
the
C.C.C.
itself
was
in
exactly
the
same
position
as
a
banker
advancing
working
capital
or
as
a
lender
who
had
advanced
working
capital
and
had
taken
security
by
way
of
mortgage.
It
was
not
a
party
to
the
Ming
Sung
contract
and
neither
it
nor
its
principal,
the
Crown,
was
under
any
legal
obligation
to
assume
or
bear
any
part
of
the
appellant’s
loss.
*
Now,
as
I
view
the
matter,
this
is
what
happened.
The
appellant
owed
the
C.C.C.—the
agent
of
the
Crown—very
substantial
amounts
on
capital
account.
Due
to
its
losses
under
the
contract,
the
appellant
could
not
pay
the
debt
and
was
facing
bankruptcy.
The
C.C.C.
could
have
foreclosed
the
mortgage
and
might
thereby
have
realized
a
part
of
its
claim.
But
the
Crown
for
good
and
valid
reasons
preferred
not
to
deal
with
the
matter
in
that
way.
It
may
have
felt
a
moral
obligation
to
bear
some
part
of
the
losses
due
to
the
manner
in
which
it
had
encouraged
the
appellant
to
enter
into
the
contract
—
as
suggested
by
counsel
for
the
respondent.
As
a
matter
of
policy
it
may
have
decided
not
to
put
the
appellant
into
bankruptcy
and
thereby
throw
a
substantial
number
of
men
out
of
employment.
.It
is
clear
from
the
terms
of
Vote
628
(supra)
that
losses
on
the
advances
made
by
C.C.C.
to
the
appellant
were
anticipated
at
that
time,
the
amount
of
which
was
not
fully
determined.
What
the
Crown
actually
did
was
to
enter
into
a
compromise
of
the
capital
debt
by
abating
it
to
the
extent
stated.
I
think,
therefore,
that
the
case
falls
to
be
decided
on
the
law
applicable
to
abatements
rather
than
to
that
applicable
to
subsidies.
The
leading
case
which
has
to
do
with
the
position
of
a
taxpayer
whose
trade
liabilities
have
been
lessened
is
that
of
the
British
Mexican
Petroleum
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Jackson
(Inspector
of
Taxes),
16
T.C.
570.
The
facts
in
that
case
are
briefly
as
follows:
In
1919
the
appellant
had
entered
into
a
contract
with
an
oil
producing
company
(which
held
a
large
interest
in
the
shares
of
the
appellant
company)
for
the
purchase
of
petroleum.
By
reason
of
a
slump
in
the
petroleum
business
in
1921,
the
appellant
was
unable
to
meet
its
obligations
under
its
contract.
Accounts
of
the
appellant
company’s
business
were
made
up
for
the
year
ended
the
30th
June,
1921,
and
for
the
eighteen
months
ended
the
31st
December,
1922.
At
the
30th
June,
1921,
the
agreed
amount
owing
to
the
oil-producing
company
under
the
contract
was
£1,073,281
;
at
the
30th
September,
1921,
the
amount
was
£1,270,232.
Under
the
terms
of
an
agreement
dated
the
25th
November,
1921,
the
appellant
company
paid
to
the
producing
company
the
sum
of
£325,000
and
was
released
by
the
producing
company
from
its
liability
to
pay
the
balance
remaining
due,
namely,
£945,232.
The
amount
so
released
was
carried
direct
to
the
appellant
company’s
balance
sheet
and
was
shown
as
a
separate
item
under
the
head
‘‘
Reserve”?
at
the
81st
December,
1922.
The
Crown
contended
that
the
amount
released
should
be
brought
into
account
in
computing
the
appellant
company’s
profits
for
purposes
of
income
tax
and
corporation
profits
tax,
either
in
the
account
for
the
eighteen
months
to
the
31st
December,
1922,
or,
alternatively,
in
the
account
for
the
year
to
the
30th
June,
1921,
that
account
being
re-opened
for
the
purpose.
The
Special
Commissioners
held
that
the
amount
released
should
be
brought
into
the
profit
and
loss
account
of
the
company
for
the
eighteen
months
to
the
31st
December,
1922.
Rowlatt,
J.,
reversed
the
finding
of
the
Special
Commissioners,
and
appeals
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
and
to
the
House
of
Lords
were
both
dismissed.
It
was
held
that
the
amount
remitted
should
not
be
included
as
a
receipt
in
the
account
for
the
eighteen
months
to
the
31st
of
December,
1922,
and
that
the
account
for
the
year
to
the
30th
June,
1921,
should
not
be
re-opened
and
adjusted
by
reference
to
the
remission.
At
p.
584
Rowlatt,
J.,
said
:
“All
these
companies
are
very
closely
connected
—
at
any
rate,
two
of
them
are,
the
oil
company
and
the
ship-owning
company
;
the
oil
company
and
the
ship-owning
company
are
very
closely
connected
with
this
Company
in
that
they
own
all
the
shares,
or
something
of
that
sort.
What
they
said
was:
‘We
will
release
this
debt
or
a
very
large
part
of
it
—
we
will
absolutely
release
it
and
write
it
off
and
you
can
go
on
trading
on
that
footing.’
They
could
have
wound
up
the
Company
and
reconstructed
it
;
but
they
did
not
do
that.
They
simply
carried
on
releasing
the
debt.
That
is
what
they
have
done.
Under
those
circumstances
the
Commissioners
have
held
what
Mr.
Hills
himself
finds
it
difficult
to
support
—
on
broad
business
lines
it
cannot
be
supported
;
I
do
not
understand
it
myself
in
the
least
—
that
in
the
year
of
release,
when
the
business
entered
into
a
new
lease
of
life
and
a
new
bargain
was
struck,
the
amount
released
must
be
brought
into
the
revenue
account
.
.
.
They
resisted
it
in
the
other
case,
and
I
have
to
decide
whether
or
not
that
is
right.
I
literally
cannot
understand
why
they
should
be
entitled
to
do
that.
What
is
chargeable
to
income
tax
under
either
the
First
or
Second
Case
of
Schedule
D,
I
forget
which
it
is
—
the
trading
case
—
is
the
profit
which
is
made
by
comparing
the
amount
which
you
receive
from
selling
goods
or
rendering
services,
or
whatever
it
is,
with
the
amount
which
you
pay
out
in
putting
yourself
in
a
position
to
do
that
by
buying
goods
and
equipping
yourself,
finding
the
expenses
for
rendering
the
services
or
whatever
it
is
—
with
the
necessary
adjustments
in
the
account
to
allow
for
the
stock
which
is
carried
over
from
year
to
year
in
the
way
Mr.
Hills
drew
my
attention
to
—
that
is
what
it
is,
the
difference
which
you
enjoy
between
what
you
receive
and
what
you
have
to
pay
out
in
the
year’s
trading.
How
on
earth
the
forgiveness
in
that
year
of
a
past
indebtedness
can
add
to
those
profits
I
cannot
understand.
It
is
not
a
matter
depending
upon
the
form
in
which
the
accounts
are
kept.
It
is
a
matter
of
substance,
looking
at
the
thing
as
it
happened,
as
a
man
who
knows
nothing
of
scientific
accountancy
might
look
at
it
—
it
is
the
receipts
against
payments
in
trading.”
In
the
Court
of
Appeal,
Lord
Hanworth,
M.R.,
speaking
for
the
full
Court,
placed
considerable
stress
on
the
fact
that
in
the
agreement
by
which
the
debt
was
reduced
the
parties
had
agreed
that
the
abatement
was
to
be
placed
to
the
credit
of
the
depreciation
account
and
not
otherwise.
It
is
significant
to
note,
however,
that
in
the
House
of
Lords,
no
reference
whatever
was
made
to
that
clause
of
the
agreement,
nor
was
it
mentioned
in
the
opinion
of
Rowlatt,
J.
Lord
Thankerton,
whose
judgment
was
concurred
in
by
all
the
judges
in
the
House
of
Lords,
stated,
in
part,
as
follows
:
‘“My
Lords,
I
am
of
opinion
in
the
present
case,
that
the
account
to
30th
June,
1921,
cannot
be
re-opened,
as
the
amount
of
the
liability
there
stated
was
correctly
stated
as
the
finally
agreed
amount
of
the
liability
and
the
subsequent
release
of
the
respondent’s
proceeds
on
the
footing
of
the
correctness
of
that
statement.
The
appellant’s
alternative
contention,
which
was
not
seriously
pressed
by
the
Attorney-General,
is
equally
unsound,
in
my
opinion.
I
am
unable
to
see
how
the
release
from
a
liability,
which
liability
has
been
finally
dealt
with
in
the
preceding
account,
can
form
a
trading
receipt
in
the
account
for
the
year
in
which
it
is
granted.
Accordingly,
I
agree
with
the
unanimous
decision
of
the
Courts
below,
who
disagreed
with
the
decision
of
the
Special
Commissioners,
and
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed.’’
Lord
Macmillan,
with
whom
Lord
Warrington
of
Clyffe
concurred,
gave
additional
reasons
for
dismissing
the
appeal,
stating
at
p.
993
as
follows:
‘‘If,
then,
the
accounts
for
the
year
to
30th
June,
1921,
cannot
now
be
gone
back
upon,
still
less
in
my
opinion
can
the
appellant
Company
be
required
to
enter
as
a
credit
item
in
its
accounts
for
the
eighteen
months
to
31st
December,
1922,
the
sum
of
£945,232,
being
the
extent
to
which
the
Huasteca
Com-
pany
agreed
to
release
the
appellant
Company’s
debt
to
it.
I
say
so
for
the
short
and
simple
reason
that
the
appellant
Company
did
not,
in
those
eighteen
months,
either
receive
payment
of
that
sum
or
acquire
any
right
to
receive
payment
of
it.
I
cannot
see
how
the
extent
to
which
a
debt
is
forgiven
can
become
a
credit
item
in
the
trading
account
for
the
period
within
which
the
concession
is
made.
I
observe
that
of
the
appellant
Company’s
total
indebtedness
to
the
Huasteca
Company,
£196,951
was
incurred
during
the
eighteen
months
covered
by
the
accounts
to
31st
December,
1922,
and
that
the
date
on
which
the
Huasteca
Company
agreed
to
forgo
£945,232
of
the
appellant
Company’s
total
indebtedness
was
25th
November,
1921,
also
within
that
period
of
eighteen
months.
Now
it
may
be
that
where
during
the
currency
of
an
accounting
period
a
trading
debt
is
incurred,
and
the
creditor
agrees
during
the
currency
of
the
same
period
to
accept
less
than
the
full
amount
of
the
debt
due
to
him,
it
is
only
the
balance
of
the
debt
as
exacted,
or
agreed
to
be
exacted,
which
ought
to
enter,
as
a
debit,
the
debtor’s
accounts
for
the
period.
As
to
this
I
say
nothing,
for
the
present
case
has
been
argued
by
the
Crown
on
the
footing
that
the
whole
sum
of
£945,232
ought
either
to
be
dealt
with
in
a
re-opened
account
for
the
year
to
30th
June,
1921,
or
credited
in
the
eighteen
months’
account
to
31st
December,
1922,
and
as,
in
my
opinion,
neither
of
these
contentions
is
admissible,
I
concur
in
the
motion
that
the
appeal
be
dismissed.’’
It
will
be
noted
that
in
the
second
paragraph
of
Lord
Macmillan’s
opinion,
he
was
careful
to
reserve
the
question
as
to
the
effect
of
releasing
a
trade
debt
in
the
year
in
which
it
was
incurred.
In
the
instant
case
it
is
clear
that
much
if
not
all
of
the
indebtedness
was
incurred
in
the
previous
year,
and
that
it
has
been
argued
by
the
Crown
on
the
footing
that
the
whole
of
the
amount
abated
should
be
treated
as
income
in
the
year
1949.
That
case
was
followed
in
Income
Tax
Case
No.
455,
11
S.A.
17.0.
168.
The
facts
there
were
as
follows:
“Appellants
were
three
subsidiaries
of
a
company
to
which
they
were
indebted
in
certain
large
amounts,
incurred
in
the
course
of
trading.
The
parent
company
owned
or
controlled
all
the
shares
in
the
appellant
companies,
whose
business
consisted
of
the
sale
of
goods
purchased
by
the
parent
company.
The
parent
company
also
sold
goods
produced
by
the
appellant
companies.
The
parent
company,
during
the
year
of
assessment
under
review,
passed
resolutions
recording
its
decision
to
forego
a
substantial
portion
of
the
amounts
owing
to
it
by
the
appellant
companies.
The
amounts
of
the
debts
so
forgiven
by
the
parent
company,
which
were
reflected
in
the
accounts
submitted
by
the
appellant
companies
in
support
of
their
returns
of
income,
were
included
by
the
Commissioner
for
Inland
Revenue
in
the
respective
incomes
of
the
appellant
companies
subject
to
normal
tax
and
assessed
accordingly.”
Dr.
M.
Nathan,
K.C.,
President
of
the
Court,
summarized
the
possibilities
of
the
parties
as
follows:
1
‘It
was
contended
on
behalf
of
the
appellants
that
these
were
gratuitous
releases,
and
that
they
constituted
donations.
They
were
not,
therefore,
subject
to
tax,
being
in
their
nature
capital
receipts.
On
behalf
of
the
Commissioner
it
was
said
that
these
releases
of
indebtedness
were
made
in
the
course
of
trading
and,
therefore,
the
receipts
were
trading
receipts,
and
not
capital
receipts.
Counsel
for
the
Commissioner
relied
upon
the
fact
that
the
indebtedness
of
the
appellants
to
the
parent
company
arose
out
of
trading;
the
remissions
by
the
parent
company
of
the
indebtedness
increased
the
prospects
of
future
trading
between
the
companies;
and
it
was
suggested
that
the
remissions
were
rebates
or
discounts
or
allowances
in
reduction
of
the
price
paid
for
goods
sold
to
the
appellants,
or
the
remissions
were
in
the
nature
of
remuneratory
donations
for
services
rendered
to
the
parent
company.’’
At
p.
169
he
said:
“In
our
view,
the
remissions
made
by
the
parent
company
were
not
rebates
or
discounts
or
allowances
in
reduction
of
the
prices
paid
for
goods
sold
to
the
appellants.
They
cannot
be
regarded
as
part
of
the
ordinary
trading
of
the
appellant
companies,
nor
were
they
in
the
nature
of
remuneratory
donations
for
services
rendered
to
the
parent
company.
It
appears
to
us
that
this
case
is
governed
by
the
decision
of
the
English
Courts
in
British
Mexican
Pert
oleum
Company
Limited
v.
Jackson.”
Then,
after
adopting
what
was
said
by
Rowlatt,
J.,
and
Lord
Hanworth,
M.R.,
and
Lord
Macmillan
in
the
British
Mexican
Petroleum
case,
the
President
said
:
‘
‘
It
appears
to
us
that
this
is
an
identical
case.
The
amounts
remitted
were
not
receipts
in
the
course
of
trading.
The
result
is
that
the
appeals
are
allowed,
and
the
assessments
must
be
amended
accordingly.”
The
fact
in
the
British
Mexican
Petroleum
case
are,
of
course,
somewhat
different
from
those
in
the
instant
case.
There
the
debt
which
was
abated
was
incurred
in
the
ordinary
course
of
trading
and
it
was
held
that
the
accounts
for
the
earlier
period
in
which
most
of
the
debt
had
been
incurred
could
not
be
re-opened
and
those
accounts
readjusted
because
of
the
abatement;
and
also
that
the
amount
of
the
abatement
could
not
be
brought
into
account
in
the
later
period
in
which
some
part
of
the
debt
had
been
incurred
and
the
abatement
made.
As
I
read
the
judgment
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
he
considered
the
benefit
received
by
the
taxpayer
as
something
quite
outside
the
scope
of
its
trading
activities;
something
which
was
conferred
on
it
‘‘as
an
act
of
grace
although
business
methods
were.
behind
it’’.
Lord
Macmillan,
in
disposing
of
the
suggestion
that
the
amount
of
the
abatement
should
be
treated
as
a
revenue
item
in
the
taxation
period
in
which
the
abatement
was
made,
stated
his
reasons
in
these
few
sentences
:
1
‘
I
say
so
for
the
short
and
simple
reason
that
the
appellant
Company
did
not,
in
those
eighteen
months,
either
receive
payment
of
that
sum
or
acquire
any
right
to
receive
payment
of
it.
I
cannot
see
how
the
extent
to
which
a
debt
is
forgiven
can
become
a
credit
item
in
the
trading
account
for
the
period
within
which
the
concession
is
made.”
In
my
view,
that
case
is
authority
for
the
proposition
that
the
mere
cancellation
or
abatement
of
an
undisputed
trade
debt
does
not
give
rise
to
taxable
income
in
the
hands
of
a
taxpayer
whose
trade
debt
has
been
cancelled
or
abated,
subject
perhaps
to
the
question
reserved
by
Lord
Macmillan
and
which
I
have
referred
to
above.
That
being
so,
it
cannot
be
found
that
the
abatement
of
a
capital
indebtedness
—
as
in
the
instant
case
—
can
give
rise
to
taxable
income.
In
my
opinion,
also,
the
benefit
conferred
on
the
appellant
by
the
abatement
of
its
capital
liability
was
not
something
received
in
the
course
of
its
normal
trading
operations.
It
was
outside
those
operations
entirely.
Moreover,
to
adopt
the
language
of
Lord
Macmillan,
it
did
not
in
1949
receive
payment
of
the
sum
of
$450,000.00
or
acquire
any
right
to
receive
it.
The
liability
was
diminished
purely
as
an
act
of
grace,
coupled
possibly
to
some
extent
with
matters
of
public
policy
and
business
motives.
The
benefit
received
by
the
appellant
was
not
a
profit
from
its
business.
It
is
of
some
interest,
also,
to
refer
to
Income
Tax
Law
and
Practice
by
Newport
and
Shaw,
25
Ed.,
where
under
the
heading
“Compositions”
at
p.
120,
the
following
comment
appears:
“Where
the
taxpayer
himself
makes
a
composition
with
his
creditors,
the
Revenue
do
not
normally
seek
to
bring
in
the
‘benefit’
as
an
addition
to
his
profits,
or
as
a
deduction
from
the
amount
of
a
corresponding
loss.”
And
reference
is
made
to
the
British
Mexican
Petroleum
case
as
authority
for
that
statement.
For
these
reasons,
I
think
the
appeal
must
be
allowed.
The
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
will
be
set
aside
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
the
purpose
of
re-assess-
ing
the
appellant
in
accordance
with
these
findings.
The
appellant
is
also
entitled
to
be
paid
his
costs
after
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.