Delmer
E
Taylor:—There
are
two
issues
arising
from
income
tax
assessments:
the
first,
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
$4,541.97
and
$4,728.24
of
the
amounts
claimed
as
expenses
during
the
years
1971
and
1972
respectively;
and
the
second
the
further
disallowance
of
a
$40,500
loss
on
the
sale
of
corporate
stock
shares,
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
income
in
the
year
1972.
The
appellant
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
provisions
of
section
3,
paragraph
12(1
)(a)
and
subsection
12(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended,
as
it
read
in
its
application
to
the
appellant’s
1971
taxation
year,
and
on
the
provisions
of
section
3,
subsection
9(2),
paragraph
18(1
)(a)
and
section
67
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended
by
section
1,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
it
read
in
its
application
to
the
appellant’s
1972
taxation
year.
The
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
paragraphs
12(1)(a)
and
12(1)(h)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended,
as
it
applied
to
the
1971
taxation
year
and
on
paragraphs
18(1
)(a),
18(1
)(h),
39(1)(b)
and
40(1
)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63
as
it
applied
to
the
1972
taxation
year
and
on
subsection
26(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules.
Facts
At
all
material
times
the
appellant
was
a
securities
sales
representative
and
a
director
of
the
stock
brokerage
firm
of
Grant
Johnston
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Johnston”
or
“the
Company”),
a
member
of
the
Montreal,
Toronto
and
Canadian
stock
exchanges.
Johnston
was
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Grant
Johnston
Holdings
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Johnston
Holdings’’)
in
which
the
appellant,
in
1969
and
1970,
purchased
3,000
common
shares
at
a
total
cost
of
$40,500.
In
1972
Johnston
found
itself
in
financial.
difficulties
and
Johnston
Holdings
agreed
to
sell
all
of
the
issued
and
outstanding
shares
of
Johnston
to
C
J
Hodgson
&
Co
Inc,
another
brokerage
firm.
At
the
same
time
the
appellant
agreed
to
sell
his
shares
in
the
capital
stock
of
Johnston
Holdings
for
the
nominal
consideration
of
$1.
Contentions
The
position
of
the
appellant
was
that:
—he
was,
in
the
relevant
taxation
years,
a
freelance
securities
sales
representative
and
that
the
amounts
incurred
by
him
for
certain
automobile,
sales
promotion
and
entertainment,
advertising,
general
office
and
travel
expenses
were
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
his
business,
and
that
the
said
expenses
were
reasonable
in
the
circumstances;
—the
shares
were
purchased
by
him
in
the
course
of
his
business
operations
for
the
purpose
of
entitling
him
to
greater
access
to
commercially
useful
information
and
to
earn
income
in
excess
of
that
normally
received
by
securities
sales
representatives.
As
a
result,
the
loss
suffered
by
him
was
properly
included
in
calculating
his
loss
from
a
business
and
in
calculating
his
income
for
his
1972
taxation
year
pursuant
to
section
3
of
the
Act.
The
respondent
contended
that:
—of
the
total
amounts
which
the
appellant
sought
to
deduct
in
respect
of
business
expenses,
the
amounts
of
$4,541.97
in
1971
and
$4,728.24
in
1972,
if
incurred,
were
not
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
appellant’s
business;
—the
shares
of
Johnston
Holdings
at
a
total
cost
of
$40,500
were
not
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
but
were
rather
acquired
with
a
view
to
retaining
the
same
as
an
investment:
—the
appellant’s
loss
from
the
disposal
of
said
shares
was
on
Capital
account.
Evidence
The
appellant,
in
giving
evidence,
stated
that
although
the
expenses
disallowed,
$4,541.97
and
$4,728.24,
(a
portion
only
of
the
total
claimed
for
the
years
in
question)
were
not
supported
by
vouchers,
they
were
reasonable,
and
had
been
the
type
of
expenditure
for
which
it
was
Often
difficult
to
obtain
proper
receipts.
In
dealing
with
the
second
item
(the
$40,500
loss)
his
basic
position
was
that
he
was
an
independent
contractor
servicing
clients
who
had
stayed
with
him
in
several
brokerage
firms
over
many
years,
but
that
he
was
not
a
trader
in
investment
securities
himself.
His
acquisition
of
stock
in
Johnston
Holdings
had
been
to
permit
him
to
be
a
director
providing
commission
rates
on
his
sales
of
40%
or
50%
rather
than
the
regular
sales
commissions
of
33
/3%,
and
to
allow
him
access
to
company
records
and
meetings,
thereby
better
to
serve
his
clients
and
protect
their
interests.
When
Johnston
Holdings
did
encounter
financial
difficulties
he
was
instrumental
in
transferring
his
clients’
business
(amounting
to
some
2
million
dollars
of
securities)
to
a
banking
institution.
He
now
is
associated
with
another
brokerage
firm,
in
which
he
has
some
$10,000
invested
in
subordinated
loans,
and
he
also
receives
regular
financial
and
corporate
information.
His
clientèle
has
remained
with
him
during
this
change
to:
a
different
brokerage
firm.
Argument
Counsel
for
the
appellant
referred
to
an
extract
from
Canadian
Securities
Law
Reports,
Part
X1,
March
1974,
entitled
“Financial
Contribution
of
Partners
and
Directors
of
Member
Firms,
Member
Corporations
and
Affiliated
Companies’’,
and
also
used
as
support
the
cases
of
Brien
A
Hornby
v
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1972]
CTC
2539;
72
DTC
1476,
and
Margaret
Ann
F
rappier
v
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1976]
CTC
85;
76
DTC
6066:
With
regard
to
the
disallowed
expenses
he
argued
that
although
the
action
of
the
Minister
could
be
understood
since
no
vouchers
were
available,
nevertheless
the
appellant
had
met
the
sole
onus
upon
him
to
establish,
at
least
by
his
uncontradicted
evidence,
that
such
expenditures
had
been
made,
and
that
they
were
for
the
purpose
of
earning
his
income.
On
the
second
issue,
counsel
essentially
proposed
that
the
purchase
of
the
company
stock
had
been
in
the
nature
of
a
necessary
extension
of
his
regular
income
earning
activity—as
an
independent
contractor
salesman
of
securities.
The
stock
in
Johnston
Holdings
should
be
viewed
in
the
same
way
as
“the
purchase
of
accounts
receivable”
(any
potential
settlement)
noted
in
Frappier
(supra)
at
[1976]
CTC
89;
76
DTC
6068,
respectively.
The
salient
point
in
Hornby
(supra)
for
counsel,
was
that
the
designation
as
a
trader
in
securities
attributed
to
the
appellant
in
that
case,
was
not
vital
to
the
favourable
decision
given,
but
rather
the
advantages
he
acquired
as
a
result
of
owning
the
capital
stock
were
important.
This
should
support
the
appellant’s
case
in
the
matter
now
before
the
Board.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
make
reference
to
any
particular
case
law,
other
than
to
disagree
with
the
points
raised
from
Hornby
and
Frappier
(supra)
particularly
noting
that
the
deciding
factor
in
favour
of
the
appellant
in
Hornby
(supra)
was
that
he
himself
was
a
trader
in
securities—completely
different
in
the
instant
case.
He
agreed
that
the
acquisition
of
the
company
stock
in
this
appeal
may
not
have
been
an
investment
for
dividends
or
even
long
term
increase
in
value,
but
it
was
an
asset
of
an
enduring
nature
providing
the
appellant
with
certain
advantages
and
benefits,
and
assured
additional
commission
income.
The
issue
of
the
disallowed
expenses,
in
his
view,
left
the
Board
unable
to
allow
the
amounts
since
there
had
been
no
physical
evidence
presented
in
support
of
them.
Findings
First,
on
the
issue
of
the
disallowed
expenses
of
$4,541.97
and
$4,728.24,
the
Board
does
not
consider
the
verbal
evidence
of
the
taxpayer
as
sufficient
to
alter
the
Minister’s
assessment,
even
though
the
appellant’s
general
description
of
his
activities
and
efforts
resulting
in
the
claimed
expenses,
indicated
some
business
relevance.
At
the
same
time
the
Board
notes
that
other
than
arbitrarily,
there
appears
no
basis
for
the
allowance
of
some
portion
of
the
same
type
of
expenses
by
the
Minister,
for
which
receipts
were
not
submitted
either.
This
is
of
particular
note
since
the
taxpayer
had,
on
filing
his
returns,
reduced
his
“Sales
Promotion
and
Entertainment”
expenses
by
30%
for
“personal
use”
to
cover,
according
to
his
own
testimony,
the
meals,
etc
he
personally
consumed
at
business
meetings—an
unusual
and
notable
gesture
indeed.
On
the
major
issue
(the
$40,500
loss)
the
Board
accepts
without
question
that
the
appellant
was
a
“trader”—in
the
sense
described
by
his
counsel—a
commission
salesman
of
investment
securities.
That,
however,
is
not
synonymous
with
being
a
trader
in
securities
in
his
own
right,
and
that
he
was
not,
by
his
own
evidence.
The
effort
of
counsel
by
reference
to
case
law,
to
extrapolate
the
requirements
of
one
form
of
endeavour
into
the
exigencies
of
the
other,
however
commendable,
is
not
persuasive.
I
find
the
Hornby
case
(supra)
dependent.
to
such
a
degree
on
the
acknowledged
securities
trading
of
the
appellant
there,
that
it
has
no
application
here.
In
Frappier
(supra)
I
read
nothing
which
would
lead
me
to
conclude
that
in
holding
that
the
amount
paid
by
the
appellant
to
reimburse
her
client
for
their
losses,
claimed
and
eventually
allowed
as
a
“business
expense”
in
that
case,
would
have
been
regarded
in
the
same
way
had
it
been
a
claim
for
her
own
losses
as
a
result
of
the
bankruptcy
of
the
company.
At
the
same
time
I
have
reservations
that
the
Minister
has
met
very
directly
the
overall
posture
adopted
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
that
the
only
onus
for
the
appellant
was
to
establish
that
the
$40,500
had
not
been
for
a
capital
outlay,
and
this
he
had
done,
in
his
opinion,
by
virtue
of
the
argument
that
the
receipt
of
dividends
was
not
the
motivation
for
the
purchase.
It
appeared
to
me
that
counsel
for
the
appellant,
in
this
proposition,
and
counsel
for
the
respondent
in
his
counter
argument
left
some
rather
nebulous
area
in
between
a
property
acquired
as
inventory
therefore
to
be
used
for
trading
purposes,
and
a
property
acquired
as
an
investment
to
be
held
for
the
return
to
be
gained
from
the
holding
thereof.
Although
there
may
be
a
wide
variety
of
circumstances,
under
which
“property”
is
acquired,
and
on
the
scrutiny
and
interpretation
of
these
circumstances
will
depend
a
determination
of
its
nature,
I
am
unaware
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
the
legislative
record
leaves
open
some
ill-defined
third
option.
In
a
decision
of
this
Board,
Arthur
J
Thomas
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
2227;
77
DTC
171,
a
matter
not
unlike
the
one
at
hand
was
examined
and
decided
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer.
A
review
of
that
decision
may
set
the
framework
for
the
instant
case.
The
point
at
issue
there
was
whether
interest
should
be
a
deductible
expense
when
paid
by
the
taxpayer
on
bank
loans,
the
proceeds
of
which
were
invested
in
a
stock
brokerage
firm—rather
similar
to
this
situation
before
the
Board.
Some
closing
remarks
from
the
Thomas
decision
at
paces
174
and
2231
respectively
would
be
in
order:
The
appellant’s
present
investment
in
McEwen
would
appear
to
be
well
in
excess
of
the
total
of
the
borrowed
funds
and
the
rewards
were
substantial
and
immediate—some
$90.000
in
salary
in
1974
alone.
The
Board
also
accepts
the
appellants
verbal
explanation
regarding
the
company
policy
at
McEwen—to
remunerate
the
security
sales
agents
by
salary
and
commission
rather
than
by
dividends.
Taken
in
conjunction
with
his
statements
that
he
needed
to
be
a
shareholder
to
operate
as
a
stockbroker,
the
investment
must
be
regarded
as
having
been
made
for
a
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
The
point
made
in
the
above
decision
is
that
the
appellant
(Thomas)
made
the
outlay
of
funds
(up
to
$60,000)
for
a
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
It
had
been
the
Minister’s
contention
in
that
case
that
evidence
had
not
been
provided
that
a
property
had
been
acquired,
and
with
that
the
Board
disagreed.
The
same
situation
obtains
in
the
instant
case—property
was
acquired,
not
only
a
minority
interest
in
Company
shares
but
the
rights
to
increased
commission
earnings
attached
thereto.
The
ownership
of
the
stock
conveyed
this
right
on
him
under
Company
policy—and
provided
for
the
appellant
retaining
a
much
larger
share
of
his
earnings
as
commission
on
sales—sales
he
would
be
making
in
any
event.
That
may
well
be
described
as
showing
characteristics
of
an
“enduring
nature”
—certainly
the
very
essence
of
any
capital
acquisition.
The
appellant
in
this
case
also
acquired
a
similar
capital
asset
for
his
investment
of
$40,500.
While
the
interest
charges
related
to
the
acquisition
of
the
capital
asset
in
the
Thomas
case
(supra)
were
held
to
be
deductible,
it
does
not
follow
that
the
cost
of
the
capital
asset
itself
should
be
deductible.
This
is
the
point
at
issue
in
this
appeal,
and
is
quite
a
different
matter.
Decision
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.