The
Assistant
Chairman:—In
June
of
1968,
a
Mrs
Mitchell
of
Moncton,
New
Brunswick,
a
widow
of
about
seventy
years
of
age,
let
it
be
known
to
the
mother
of
Russell
Price
(the
appellant)
that
she
wished
to
dispose
of
a
parcel
of
land
on
the
northern
limit
of
the
City
of
Moncton.
Shortly
after
that
the
appellant
bought
the
property
for
$6,500,
payable
$1,000
down
and
the
balance
by
a
mortgage
back,
payable
at
the
rate
of
$1,000
per
year
for
four
years
and
a
final
payment
of
$1,500
at
the
end
of
the
fifth
year,
all
without
interest.
The
appellant,
when
he
acquired
the
property,
boarded
up
the
house
and,
I
believe,
the
barns
which
were
on
the
property
to
keep
out
trespassers,
but
shortly
thereafter
he
was
ordered
by
the
city
to
demolish
those
buildings.
He
did
as
he
was
ordered
by
the
city.
He
did
not
use
the
property
in
any
fashion
while
he
owned
it
although
he
may
have
visited
it
about
every
three
months.
In
December
of
1972,
he
was
approached
by
a
person
named
McGuigan,
who
said
he
was
acting
for
a
government
and
wanted
to
buy
the
property.
McGuigan
believing,
as
did
the
appellant,
that
the
property
contained.
70
acres,
first
offered
$500
an
acre,
or
$35,000.
The
appellant
had
been
told
by
a
Mr
Donahue
that
he
was
getting
$1,600
an
acre
for
his
property
which
was
about
a
quarter
of
a
mile
away.
Another
person
(Bell)
with
property
next
to
the
appellant’s
property
stated
that
he
was
getting
$900
an
acre.
About
mid-January
1973,
McGuigan
returned
and
told
the
appellant
that
if
he
did
not
sell
his
property,
it
would
be
expropriated.
The
appellant
stated
he
would
take
$1,000
an
acre
and,
as
a
result,
by
document
dated
January
12,
1973,
the
appellant,
for
a
consideration
of
$500,
granted
to
McGuigan’s
principal
an
option
on
all
his
property
valid
until
July
12,
1973,
at
a
price
of
$1,000
per
acre.
The
option
was
duly
exercised
and,
since
the
property
only
contained
about
63
acres,
the
appellant
sold
it
for
$63,210.
When
the
appellant
filed
his
income
tax
return
for
the
1973
taxation
year,
he
reported
neither
a
taxable
capital
gain
nor
a
deductible
loss.
The
Minister,
after
learning
of
the
facts,
concluded
that
the
Valuation
Day
value
of
the
property
was
$25,000
or
$395
per
acre
and
concluded
the
appellant,
on
the
disposition
of
the
property,
had
a
gain
‘of
$38,210,
of
which
$19,105
was
taxable.
He
assessed
the
appellant
accordingly
and
in
due
course
the
appellant
appealed
to
this
Board.
He
stated
in
his
Notice
of
Appeal
from
that
assessment
that
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
property
was
equal
to
its
selling
price.
Because
of
the
averaging
provisions
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
1974
assessment
was
also
appealed.
The
question
to
be
resolved
is,
What
was
the
Valuation
Day
value
of
the
property
in
question?
It
is
clear
that
neither
party
places
any
weight
on
the
actual
purchase
price
paid
by
the
appellant
some
three
and
one-half
years
earlier.
His
purchase
price
of
the
63
acres
would
indicate
a
cost
of
about
$100
per
acre,
whereas,
as
at
Valuation
Day
the
Minister
valued
it
at
$395
per
acre,
and
he
himself
valued
it
at
$1,000
an
acre.
Both
the
appellant
and
the
respondent
called
as
a
witness,
a
person
whom
the
other
party
admitted
would
qualify
as
an
expert.
Each
gave
his
opinion
as
to
the
Valuation
Day
value
of
the
property
and
the
reasons
therefor.
I
can
only
say
that
it
seems
strange
that
two
persons
considered
experts
in
their
field
can
be
so
far
apart
in
their
valuation
of
a
particular
piece
of
property.
Per
acre,
the
difference
in
dollars
is
virtually
$600.
This
is
not
a
great
difference
when
one
values
a
parcel
per
acre
at
$50,000
and
another’s
estimate
is
$49,400,
but
when
one
appraiser
puts
it
at
$400
and
the
other
at
$1,000
an
acre,
the
difference
is
remarkable.
One
appraiser
has
valued
it
about
two-fifths
as
high
as
the
other,
or
the
other
has
valued
an
acre
at
two
and
one-half
times
as
much
as
the
other
one.
It
would
seem
to
me
that,
if
the
valuation
reports
of
the
experts
had
been
exchanged
with
each
other
weeks
in
advance
of
the
hearing
and
considered
by
both,
the
experts
might
have
agreed
on
a
valuation
or
narrowed
their
differences
considerably.
Whether
or
not
the
reports
of
the
experts
were
exchanged
I
do
not
know,
but
if
they
were
the
difference
is
more
remarkable.
The
land
in
question
is
in
the
northern
part
of
the
City
of
Moncton
fronting
on
the
east
side
of
Caledonia
Road
somewhat
north
of
the
Trans-Canada
Highway.
There
is
access
to
the
property
from
the
Trans-Canada
Highway
via
Elmwood
Drive
and
Caledonia
Road.
The
northern
limit
of
the
property
in
question
is
the
boundary
of
the
City
of
Moncton.
Rather
than
try
to
fully
describe
the
location
of
the
property,
I
shall
reproduce
and
attach
as
Appendix
I
hereto,
a
sketch
which
was
in
the
report
prepared
by
Mr
de
Stecher,
the
appellant’s
expert.
The
sketch
is
not
a
copy
from
a
survey,
but
is
drawn
to
give
one
a
visual
appreciation
of
the
appellant’s
property
and
also
its
relative
position
to
land
owned
by
Bell,
Donahue,
etc.
Caledonia
Road
runs
in
a
north-northeasterly
south-southwesterly
direction
and
runs
along
part
of
the
western
limits
of
Lots
#6,
5,
14,
7
and
19,
where
it
curves
to
run
in
a
westerly
direction.
Immediately
to
the
west
of
Caledonia
Road
is
the
Canadian
National
Railway
right
of
way
which
crosses
Caledonia
Road
at
the
intersection
of
Lots
#16
and
19.
The
railroad
tracks
continue
in
a
southerly
direction
and
cross
the
TransCanada
Highway.
Access
to
Caledonia
Road
from
the
Trans-Canada
Highway
is
via
Elmwood
Drive
which
is
somewhat
west
of
the
crossover
of
the
tracks
and
the
Trans-Canada
Highway.
The
quality
of
Caledonia
Road
was
never
extremely
good
although
it
did
at
one
time
have
a
hardtop
surface.
The
road
appears
to
become
not
much
more
than
a
trail
north
of
Lot
5.
Immediately
north
of
Lot
7
and
south
of
Lot
15
is
Fillmore
Road.
It
runs
from
the
western
limit
of
the
lot
marked
“M
Melanson”,
westerly
to
the
eastern
limit
of
Caledonia
Road.
The
Bell
property
did
not
front
on
Caledonia
Road.
No
mention
was
made
with
respect
to
the
ownership
of
the
land
(unnamed
and
unnumbered)
immediately
west
of
both
the
Bell
property
and
the
Price
R
v
MNR
2501
property
and
which
fronted
on
Caledonia
Road
and
Fillmore
Road.
The
frontage
of
the
subject
property
on
Caledonia
Road
was
226.85
feet,
its
depth
on
the
south
side
was
4338.81
feet
and
its
width
at
the
rear
was
689.81
feet.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
the
Donahue
property
abutted
the
CNR
right
of
way
and
the
Trans-Canada
Highway
but
it
did
not
have
access
to
it.
Apparently
in
the
late
1960s
and
the
early
1970s
there
was
developing
on
some
of
the
land
on
both
sides
of
Caledonia
Road
west
of
where
it
crosses
the
CNR
right
of
way,
a
private
industrial
park
known
as
the
Caledonia
Park.
It
was
a
private
development
being
developed
by
Kenwood
Realty
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Kenwood”).
At
the
same
time
there
was
in
existence,
as
there
had
been
for
many
years,
a
corporation
known
as
the
Moncton
Industrial
Development
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“MID”).
This
corporation
was
created
as
a
corporation
without
share
capital
by
the
Province
of
New
Brunswick
and
its
officers
were
appointees
of
either
or
both
the
City
of
Moncton
and
the
Province.
MID
and
its
officers
were
interested
in
the
industrial
development
of
the
city.
Their
function,
I
believe,
was
to
have
an
inventory
of
land
in
the
city
to
encourage,
for
the
benefit
of
the
city
at
large,
industrial
development.
In
1971,
MID
had,
I
understand,
many
acres
of
land
available
for
industrial
development.
The
land
which
the
appellant
sold
in
1973
by
the
option
he
gave
to
McGuigan
was
sold
to
MID.
Mr
de
Stecher,
the
valuation
expert
of
the
appellant,
gave
evidence
to
indicate
how
he
arrived
at
the
valuation
of
$1,000
per
acre
at
the
end
of
December
1971.
His
appraisal
report
states
that,
in
his
opinion,
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
land
was:
Having
considered
the
nature
and
location
of
the
property
and
other
factors
affecting
its
use,
the
Highest
and
Best
Use
is
estimated
to
be
for
future
Industrial
Development
together
with
the
adjoining
properties.
In
substance
this
opinion
does
not
appear
to
be
substantially
different
from
the
view
expressed
by
Mr
Hayward,
the
respondent’s
expert:
As
a
result
of
our
investigation
and
analysis,
it
was
concluded
that
the
present
use
of
the
land
(Vacant)
be
continued
until
such
time
as
development
and
zoning
regulations
dictate
another
use.
Mr
de
Stecher,
in
endeavouring
to
reach
his
valuation,
considered,
besides
the
general
terrain
and
other
land
features,
certain
parcels
of
land,
namely,
Lots
1,
4,
15,
16
and
19
as
numbered
on
Appendix
I
hereto,
as
being
the
best
guide
to
the
value
of
the
subject
land
(Lot
14).
Lot
18,
also
so
numbered,
was
rejected
for
special
reasons
which
will
be
mentioned;
and
other
lots
were
not
considered
because
they
were
thought
to
be
too
small.
His
data
with
respect
to
the
sale
of
those
lots,
including
the
subject
parcel,
was
as
follows:
|
Rate
Per
Time
|
#
Date
|
Vendor
|
Price
Area
|
Acre
|
Adjustment
|
1
|
May
1973
|
Donahue
|
47,050
|
37.64
|
1,250
|
1,125
|
4
|
Feb
1973
|
Delahunt
|
30,000
|
24
|
1,250
|
1,125
|
14
|
Oct
1973
|
Price
|
63,210
|
63.21
|
1,000
|
.900
|
15
|
Nov
1973
|
Bell:
|
42,597
|
47.33
|
900
|
810
|
16
|
Dec
1971.
|
Kenwood
|
65,000
|
65.44
|
994
|
,994
|
18
|
Dec
1971
|
Congregation
des
|
|
|
Filles
de
Jesus
|
31,000
|
62
|
500
|
500
|
19
|
1973
|
Burden
|
74,464
|
46.54
|
1,600
|
1,400
|
As
to
Lot
16,
Mr
de
Stecher
has
a
note
stating
that
this
parcel
was
purchased
by
Kenwood
for
$32,
000
($492
per
acre)
by
agreement
four
years
previously.
Mr
de
Stecher’s
written
appraisal
gives
the
following
comments
as
to
all
the
above
numbered
parcels:
Sale
No
1—This
had
no
frontage
to
the
Caledonia
Road
and
was
in
fact
land
locked.
Sale
No
4—This
land
had
no
frontage
to
either
the
Caledonia
Road
nor
to
the
Trans-Canada
Highway.
n.
Sale
No
14—Subject
Property.
Sale
No
15—This
was
similar
in
location
and
size
but
had
access
onto
the
side
road
(Fillmore
Rd)
off
the
Caledonia
Road.
Sale
No
16—This
was
backland
and
had
no
frontage
to
the
Caledonia
Road.
Access
was
by
a
66
foot
Right-of-Way
over
Daigle
Lumber
Co
land.
It
was
wooded
also.
Sale
No
18—This
sale
comprised
the
backland
of
the
Filles
de
Jesus
property
on
Elmwood
Drive
and
extended
east
of
the
CN
Railway.
Examination
of
this
sale
in
the
course
of
valuing
the
main
property
in
1973,
led
to
the
conclusion
at
that
time,
that
the
price
had
been
at
considerably
below
the
1971
market.
for
that.
location.
Some
consideration
would
be
given
to
its
proximity
to
Sale
No
17.
For
these
reasons
it
should
not
be
justified
as
a
basis
for
comparison.
Sale
No
19—Similar
in
location
and
frontage,
to
the
subject
and
all
wooded.
Smaller
area
but
similar
depth.
In
his
oral
testimony,
with
respect
to
sale
#18,
Mr
de
Stecher
investigated
this
sale
and
stated:
We
were
actually
shocked
to
find
that
they
had
sold
it
so
cheaply
because,
to
me,
it
just
doesn’t
make
sense.
I
came
to
the
conclusion
that
they
were
not
advised,
they
were
not
well-informed
as
to
the
value
of
their
land,
and,
in
.
fact,
they.
were
rather
innocent.
because
I
found
another
discrepancy
over
a
piece
of
land
which
they
owned
which,
they-had
been,
told
by
somebody
that
it
contained
something
like
twenty-four
acres,
and
so
when
we
checked
the
drawings
and
made
our
own
calculations,
we
found
that
it
was
something
like
thirty-five
acres
of
land,
which
they
had
contemplated
selling
thinking
it
was
twenty-four.
We
had
to
get
a
survey
done
which
verified
our
suspicion
and,
altogether
they
were
not
very
businesslike
in
their
dealing
with
their
own
property.
When
I
came
to
consider
that
one,
which
was
one
of
the
very
few
sales
outside
the
Moncton
Industrial
Park,
I
had
to
discount
it
because,
in
additiôn
to
that—selling
it
for
$500
an
acre—on
the:same
day
they
gave
the
purchasers
a
mortgage
for
$26,000.
In
other
words
the
purchaser
only
paid
$5,000
cash
which
makes
it
even
more
ridiculous
than
it
would
have
been,
and
that
of
course
I
knew
about
three
or
four
years
ago.
Property
#16
was
the
key
property.
It
had
access
via
a
66-foot
right
of
way.
It
was
a
serviced
lot
and
about
one-half
a
mile
south
of
the
Subject
property.
It
had
immediate
access
to
Elmwood
Drive
and,
to
that
extent,
it
was
a
more
desirable
property.
As
Mr
de
Stecher
stated,
if
one
looked
at
dates
only,
Lot
16
would
appear
to
have
been
sold
to
Kenwood
for
$492
per
acre
and
then
virtually
immediately
sold
to
MID
for
$994
per
acre.
He
explained
that
he
had
spoken
to
the
president
of
Kenwood,
Russell
O’Blenis,
who
informed
him
that
four
or
five
years
before
1971
he
had
an
oral
option
or
agreement
to
buy
this
land
from
the
owner
LeBlanc
for
$27,000.
When
he
came
to
exercise
the
option
in
1971,
it
was
found
that
other
people
had
to
sign
the
deed
and,
to
get
them
to
do
so,
a
.further
$5,000
was
paid.
Lot
16
was
the
first
lot
purchased
in
this
area
east.
of
Caledonia
Road
by.
MID
and,
while
discussions
were
held
with
respect
to
the
purchase
of
other
land,
there
was
a
gap
in
time
until
later
in
1972
to
negotiate
the
purchase
of
the
other
properties
including
the
subject
property.
In
considering
his
other
lots
to
arrive
at
a
value
in
December
1971,
Mr
de
Stecher
made
a
time
adjustment
of
10
per
cent
per
year.
Based
on
this
adjustment,
the
LeBlanc
property
would
have
been
worth
about
$700
an
acre
and
the
subject
property,
based
on
the
appellant’s
purchase
price,
worth
about
$137
per
acre.
Mr
de
Stecher
also
stated
that
he
spoke
to
a
Mr
Black
who
was
the
auditor
of
MID
and
he
(Black)
recalled
a
meeting
of
MID
when
the
officers
of
MID
agreed
to
buy
the
property
for
$1,000
an
acre.
Mr
de
Stecher
stated
he
knew
nothing
about
the
availability
of
funds
to
buy
this
property.
Mr
Hayward
was
the
expert
called
on
behalf
of
the
respondent.
As
stated,
he
valued
the
property
at
$25,000,
or
about
$400
per
acre.
His
comment
was
that
MID
was
selling
increasing
acreage
per
year,
having
sold
to
industry
about
26
acres
in
1972,
and,
considering
the
acreage
they
had
on
hand,
barring
any
unforeseen
developments
the
land
would
not
be
required
for
industrial
or
residential
development
for
a
number
of
years.
He
expressed
the
view
that,
when
considering
size,
shape,
location
and
services
available,
it
could
not
be
considered
as
being
a
very
desirable
property
as
at
the
date
of
appraisal.
In
reaching
his
conclusion
he
considered
Lot
18,
Lot
16
(the
sale
LeBlanc
to
Kenwood),
and
a
sale
west
of
Elmwood
Drive
outside
of
Moncton.
As
to
Lot
18
he
considered
it
slightly
superior
to
the
subject
property—
it
had
rail
and
a
trunk
sewer
and
it
was
zoned
M-Industrial.
He
pointed
out
that
it
did
not
have
access
to
the
Trans-Canada
Highway.
With
respect
to
Lot
16
he
considered
it
much
superior
to
the
subject
property.
It
had
many
services,
eg
railway,
highway,
telephone
and
electricity,
with.
water
and
sewer
a
short
distance
away.
The
third
parcel
he
considered
on
Elmwood
Drive
was
sold
for
$12,000,
or
$240
per
acre.
While
it
had
services
such
as
highway,
telephone
and
electricity,
he
considered
it
inferior
to
the
Price
property.
Where
needed
he
adjusted
the
selling
price
for
time
at
the
rate
of
10
per
cent
per
year.
In
considering
this
property
he
considered
it
as
an
entity
in
itself
and
not
as
part
of
a
whole
as
Mr
de
Stecher
did.
As
to
MID
Mr
Hayward,
like
Mr
de
Stecher,
spoke
to
an.
officer
of
that
company,
a
Mr
MacPherson
who
was
the
general
manager.
He
informed
Mr
Hayward
that
this
general
property
was
a
deal
presented
to
the
Board
of
Directors
by
one
of
its
members
and
it
sounded
pretty
good.
Mr
Hayward
continued
that
Mr
MacPherson
indicated
that
they
did
not
have
any
appraisals
done
of
the
property.
According
to
Mr
Hayward,
a
department
of
the
provincial
government
established
a
commission
to
proceed
with
a
feasibility
study
of
the
land
in
question.
He
understood
there
was
a
budget
set
up
once
the
feasibility
study
was
approved
and
some
money
was
made
available
to
get
options.
With
respect
to
Lot
18,
he
spoke
to
the
individual
who
had
listed
this
property
and
that
person
was
an
accredited
appraiser.
Mr
Hayward
stated
that
that
individual
felt
the
vendor
received
a
good
price
for
the
property.
Mr
Hayward,
when
he
made
his
valuation
of
the
Subject
property,
was
an
employee
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
However,
before
he
was
so
employed
(1972),
he
had
worked
for
the
provincial
Department
of
Municipal
Affairs
as
a
property
evaluator.
In
Mr
Hayward’s
opinion,
MID
had
acquired
properties
in
excess
of
their
market
value.
In
considering
sales,
he
did
not
use
the
sale
by
Kenwood
to
MID
as
he
did
not
feel
the
sale
was
as
good
a
sale
as
#18
or
the
sale
by
LeBlanc
to
Kenwood.
His
comment
on
the
LeBlanc
option
was—was
there
an
option,
what
were
its
terms,
and
what
was
its
duration?
It
is
difficult
to
give
an
oral
option
weight
when
one
does
not
know
what
its
terms
are.
In
cross-examination
it
was
clearly
established
that
Mr
Hayward
did
not
discuss
the
“deal”
between
LeBlanc
and
Kenwood
with
Mr
O’Blenis—the
person
to
whom
Mr
de
Stecher
talked.
As
I
understand
the
evidence,
it
does
not
appear
that
it
was
established
that
Mr
Hayward
knew
of
the
“deal”
to
cause
him
to
talk
to
Mr
O’Blenis.
Considerable
time
was
spent
on
reviewing
what
was
supposed
to
be
Minutes
of
a
director’s
meeting
of
MID
on
November
30,
1971,
pertaining
to
a
65-acre
parcel
of
land
(which
was
not
further
identified).
Those
Minutes
record
the
passing
of
a
motion
to
the
effect
that
MID
was
to
purchase
the
property
at
the
quoted
price
of
$1,000
per
acre
subject
to
council
approving
the
MID
bank
loan
of
the
necessary
funds.
Apparently
there
were
men
at
that
meeting
other
than
those
mentioned
in
the
portion
of
the
Minutes
read
and,
in
summary
fashion,
I
could
say
that
Mr
Hayward
agreed
they.
were
competent
businessmen.
It
was
suggested
in
cross-examination
that
the
agent
who
acted
for
the
vendor
on
sale
#18
was
later
not
used
by
them
on
another
sale—but
Mr
de
Stecher
was—and
that
that
agent
was
not
used
subsequently
as,
in
effect,
he
was
incompetent.
Mr
Hayward
had
no
knowledge
of
this.
As
to
the
sale
west
of
Elmwood
Drive,
he
did
not
know
the
vendor
but
he
spoke
to
a
“Young”
Sumner.
He
did
so
to
verify
the
price
paid,
not
because
he
thought
it
was
too
high
or
too
low.
Mr
de
Stecher
stated
in
rebuttal
that,
about
a
week
before
the
hearing,
he
spoke
to
a
man
whom
he
understood
was
the
general
manager
of
the
purchaser
of
the
property
at
Elmwood
Drive.
He
investigated
that
transaction
because
he
thought
the
sale
price
was
low.
He
was
informed
that
the
vendor
was
old
and
ill
and
initially
he
wanted
$30,000
for
the
property,
which
the
purchaser
rejected.
Later
the
purchaser
returned
and
the
vendor
said
he
wanted
$10,000,
whereupon
the
purchaser
said
he
would
settle
for
$12,000
and,
at
that
price,
purchased
the
property.
Mr
de
Stecher
stated
in
conclusion:
“the
impression
I
had
was
that
it
was
a
forced
sale”.
As
to
the
determination
of
the
issue,
each
counsel
submitted
that
I
should
accept
the
valuation
put
forth
by
the
expert
he
called
and
reject
that
put
forth
by
the
opposing
expert.
For
the
appellant,
his
submission
for
rejecting
the
valuation
of
Mr
Hayward
was
that
it
is
wrong
to
think
that
MID
would
pay
more
than
the
fair
market
value
for
the
land,
and
also
that
each
of
the
three
comparables
used
by
Mr
Hayward
were
all
successfully
attacked
as
being
weak
and
therefore
worthless.
From
the
respondent
it
was
submitted
that,
in
effect,
Mr
de
Stecher’s
valuation
was
no
valuation
at
all—he
used
no
comparables
and
had
only
in
substance
relied
on
sales
to
MID.
In
addition
it
should
be
noted,
counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted,
that
MID
only
proceeded
to
get
options
late
in
1972
or
early
1973.
The
only
sales
which
were
not
to
MID
which
might
be
considered
by
Mr
de
Stecher
were
rejected
by
him
as
he
believed
the
vendor
was
ill-
advised,
it
was
a
forced
sale,
or
there
was
an
option
five
years
before
the
sale.
There
are
three
sales
which
could
serve
as
comparables.
I
was
asked
to
reject
each
and
every
one
of
them,
not
because
the
vendor
or
purchaser
in
each
and
every
one
of
them
gave
evidence
before
me,
but
rather,
because
in
one
case
I
was
advised
that
there
was
an
agreement
five
years
before
the
deed
was
given
and
the
vendor
was
an
honourable
man
and
lived
up
to
his
word.
Where
was
the
vendor,
LeBlanc?
Where
was
the
officer
of
the
purchaser,
O’Blenis?
In
the
other
case
it
was
concluded
that
the
vendors
were
ill-advised
however
there
was
evidence
that
the
agent
for
the
vendor
on
the
sale
of
Lot
18
was
a
qualified
appraiser.
Am
I
to
hold
he
was
incompetent
without
him
being
before
me?
I
was
invited
to
conclude
that
Mr
de
Stecher
was
engaged
by
that
same
vendor
for
a
subsequent
transaction
and
the
previous
agent
was
not
so
engaged
because
of
his
previous
shortcomings.
In
the
third
case
it
was
submitted
that
it
was
a
forced
sale
and
so
should
be
rejected.
Were
no
serious.
attacks
made
on
Mr
Hayward’s
valuation,
I
would
have
nd
hesitation
in
accepting
it.
However,
I
should
look
at
other
features
and
Mr
de
Stecher’s
valuation
as
well.
The
increase
in
value
of
the
property
in
the
period
of
the
appellant’s
ownership
is
tremendous,
especially
since
one
cannot,
over
the
period,
show
an
increase
in
the
value
of
property
in
the
general
area.
This
property
went
from
$6,500
in
1968
to
$63,000
in
1973—a
rate
of
over
$10,000
a
year.
Mr
Hayward
did
say
that,
after
1971,
property
generally
increased
considerably
in
value.
The
property,
except
for
the
con-
tinuing
growth
of
such
trees
as
were
on
it
and
the
tearing
down
of
the
house
and
barns,
was
in
the
same
condition
at
the
time
of
sale
as
it
was
at
the
time
of
purchase.
Not
only
was
it
not
used
during
the
appellant’s
ownership,
but
it
produced
nothing.
Mr
de
Stecher
values
the
property
at
$1,000
per
acre
even
though,
because
of
time,
he
adjusts
it
to
$900.
In
considering
other
properties
he
shows
and
considers
a
time
adjustment
but
in
the
case
of
the
subject
land
he
still
states
he
felt
it
was
worth
the
$1,000.
Lot
16,
which
would
appear
to
be
a
better
lot,
he
shows
at
less
than
$1,000
because
that
was
what
its
selling
price
reflected.
That
lot
also
had
railway
services
and
a
66-foot
right
of
way
to
Caledonia
Road.
In
addition,
Caledonia
Road
would
appear
to
be
in
better
condition
in
that
area
as
opposed
to
its
condition
opposite
the
appellant’s
property.
Also
Lot
16
was
very
close
to
sewers
and
services
whereas
the
subject
property
was
approximately
one-half
a
mile
away
and
unserviced.
As
I
read
his
valuation,
no
adjustment
was
made
by
Mr
de
Stecher
for
this
lack
of
sewers
and
services
or
accessibility
to
the
railway.
After
considering
the
evidence
and
the
submissions
by
counsel,
I
have
concluded
that
it
has
not
been
shown
that
the
1973
assessment
made
by
the
respondent
is
incorrect.
I
am
of
the
view
that
more
than
hearsay
attacks
on
the
comparables
used
by
the
respondent’s
appraiser
is
necessary
to
reject
his
appraisal
in
total.
This
is
especially
so
when
it
appears
that
the
appellant’s
appraisal
is
weak
since
no.
discount
or
adjustment
was
made
to
the
valuation
because
of
time
or
the
lack
of
services,
which
were
available
to
another
lot
which
was
used
as
a
basis
for
that
valuation.
Since
I
have
not
disturbed
the
1973
assessment,
there
will
be
no
change
in
the
1974
assessment.
The
result
is
judgment
will
go
dismissing
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
with
respect
to:
each
of
those
taxation
years.
Appeal
dismissed.