KEARNEY,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
and
a
cross-appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
(16
T.A.B.C.
252)
rendered
on
January
9,
1957,
in
respect
of
a
re-assessment
of
taxable
income
for
the
taxation
year
1953
made
by
the
appellant-respondent
(hereinafter
called
the
"Minister’’)
against
the
respondent-appellant
(later
referred
to
as
the
"‘taxpayer’’).
The
taxpayer
is
engaged
in
the
furnishing
and
installation
of
plumbing,
heating,
air
conditioning
and
ventilation
equipment.
In
the
computation
of
its
taxable
income
for
its
fiscal
year
ended
March
31,
1953,
which
is
the
only
year
in
issue,
the
taxpayer
excluded
therefrom
all
receipts
and
expenditures
(but
we
are
here
concerned
only
with
gross
receipts)
directly
related
to
three
then
incompleted
contracts.
The
issue
is
not
whether
the
excluded
amounts
are
taxable
but
when
they
are
taxable.
The
amounts
in
question
fall
into
two
categories:
progress
payments
actually
received
and
unreceived
holdbacks.
According
to
the
taxpayer,
the
provisions
of
the
contract
were
such
that
profits
and
losses
in
connection
therewith
could
only
be
determined
if
and
when
each
entire
project
had
been
completed
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
owner,
as
witnessed
by
a
certificate
to
that
effect
signed
by
an
architect
or
engineer
selected
by
the
owner
and
mentioned
in
the
contract.
As
a
result
the
taxpayer,
in
its
income
tax
return
for
the
fiscal
year
in
question,
showed
its
taxable
income
as
$21,150.84;
but
by
notice
of
reassessment
dated
November
24,
1954,
it
was
informed
by
the
Minister
that,
upon
taking
into
account
the
excluded
items,
the
said
sum
of
taxable
income
had
been
increased
by
$146,819.53.
On
January
12,
1955,
the
taxpayer
filed
a
notice
of
objection
to
this
addition
to
its
declared
taxable
income,
but
the
Minister
reaffirmed
it,
and
on
September
23,
1955,
the
taxpayer
was
notified
accordingly.
On
November
3,
1955,
the
taxpayer
appealed
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
which
allowed
the
appeal
with
reference
to
an
unspecified
part
of
the
$146,819.53,
representing
unreceived
holdbacks
which,
the
parties
agree
as
of
March
31,
1953,
amounted
to
$67,728.24.
It
is
in
respect
of
the
amount
thus
allowed
that
the
Minister
now
appeals.
The
Board
dismissed
the
appeal
as
to
the
balance
of
approximately
$80,000
which,
it
is
conceded,
was
made
up
of
amounts
actually
received
by
the
taxpayer
during
the
taxation
year
1953
by
way
of
progress
payments,
or
by
what
has
been
called
in
the
evidence
gratuitous
payments
made
in
advance
of
the
completion
of
the
three
contracts
in
issue.
The
taxpayer
by
way
of
cross-demand
herein
appeals
from
the
decision
of
the
Board
in
respect
of
the
above-mentioned
balance
of
$80,000.
In
respect
of
the
taxability
of
the
progress
payments,
the
Minister
relies
on
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
and
amendments.
As
to
the
holdbacks,
the
Minister
claims
that
they
are
amounts
receivable
within
the
meaning
of
Section
84B
of
the
Act.
The
so-called
gratuitous
payments
arose
because
there
were
instances
in
which
the
taxpayer
was
the
sub-contractor
and
where
the
prime
contractor,
instead
of
insisting
on
its
right
to
retain
holdbacks,
made
partial
payments
on
account
thereof
to
the
taxpayer
notwithstanding
that
the
contract
had
not
yet
been
completed.
The
facts
in
this
case
are
not
in
dispute.
The
taxpayer
carries
out
most
of
its
work
as
a
sub-contractor
but
occasionally
enters
into
a
contract
directly
with
the
owner
as,
for
instance,
when
plumbing
and
heating
apparatus
is
to
be
renewed
or
installed
in
a
building
otherwise
completed,
in
which
case
it
acts
as
a
prime
contractor,
though
not
in
the
ordinary
sense
that
it
undertakes
to
construct
an
entire
building.
We
are
here
concerned
with
the
following
three
contracts
which
are
known
in
the
trade
as
lump
sum
contracts:
contract
dated
February
13,
1951,
for
$999,166
(subsequently
increased
to
$1,084,655.14)
between
the
taxpayer
acting
as
sub-contractor
and
Anglin
Norcross
(Ontario)
Limited
as
contractors
in
connection
with
the
installation
of
‘‘heating,
plumbing,
fire
protection,
kitchen
equipment,
refrigeration,
ventilation,
air
conditioning,
pneumatic
controls
and
insulation’’
in
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
in
Ottawa
(Ex.
A)
;
contract
dated
July
28,
1950,
for
$69,218
(subsequently
increased
by
a
change
order
to
$101,-
711)
between
His
Majesty,
represented
by
the
Minister
of
Trade
and
Commerce,
and
the
taxpayer
as
contractor,
covering
a
steam
distribution
project
in
nine
buildings
located
at
Bouchard,
Que.
(Ex.
B)
;
contract
dated
June
7,
1950,
for
$89,778
(subsequently
increased
on
several
occasions)
between
the
taxpayer
as
subcontractor
and
Héroux
&
Robert
Limited
as
general
contractor,
for
the
supply
of
all
labour
and
materials
for
the
heating
of
the
Basilica
of
St.
Joseph’s
Oratory
in
Montreal
(Ex.
D).
The
taxpayer
follows
the
practice
of
submitting
a
tender
wherein
it
offers
to
complete
a
job
for
a
specified
price.
In
fixing
the
amount
of
its
tender,
it
estimates
the
overall
cost
of
performing
the
work
and
adds
thereto
a
certain
percentage
for
profit
which
varies
between
412
and
612
percent,
depending
on
the
amount
involved
and
the
particular
nature
of
the
undertaking.
The
provisions
of
the
three
contracts
which
have
most
bearing
on
this
case
are
not
identical.
The
following
is
a
relevant
extract
from
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract
(Ex.
A)
:
‘‘As
the
work
progresses
payable
on
or
about
the
twentieth
day
of
each
month
an
amount
equal
to
85
percent
of
the
value
of
the
completed
work
done
during
the
preceding
calendar
month,
provided
that
a
proper
requisition
in
triplicate
therefor
be
delivered
to
Contractor
on
the
last
day
of
the
month
during
which
the
work
covered
thereby
was
done
and
provided
further
that
the
unpaid
balance
of
the
contract
price
shall
at
all
times
be
sufficient
in
the
judgment
of
Architect
to
complete
the
work.
Final
payment
to
be
made
within
30
days
after
satisfactory
completion
of
the
entire
building
and
acceptance
by
the
Architect.
‘
‘
Exhibit
B
is
a
contract
in
which
the
taxpayer
appears
as
prime
contractor.
The
provisions
regarding
the
certification
of
the
work
required
designated
an
engineer
instead
of
an
architect
for
this
purpose,
and
the
holdback
instead
of
being
15
per
cent,
as
in
the
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract,
was
10
per
cent.
Section
1
of
the
said
agreement
contains
a
provision
that
Form
C.C.C.
34A,
entitled
Department
of
Trade
and
Commerce
—
General
Conditions
—
(construction),
shall
form
part
of
the
present
contract.
Copy
of
the
said
General
Conditions
is
annexed
to
Exhibit
B.
Section
41
of
the
General
Conditions
reads
in
part
as
follows:
“The
written
certificate
of
the
Engineer
certifying
to
the
final
completion
of
the
said
work
to
his
satisfaction,
shall
be
a
condition
precedent
to
the
right
of
the
Contractor
to
receive
or
to
be
paid
the
remaining
ten
per
cent,
or
any
part
thereof.
Provided
that
if
the
Contractor
shall
be
required
by
His
Majesty
to
do
work
additional
to
the
work
as
defined
in
the
contract,
the
completion
of
such
additional
work
shall
not,
unless
otherwise
determined
by
the
Minister,
be
a
condition
precedent
to
the
payment
of
the
remaining
10
per
cent
retained
as
above
provided,
but
such
moneys
so
retained
may
be
paid
to
the
Contractor
upon
the
written
certificate
of
the
Engineer
certifying
that
the
work
as
defined
in
the
contract
has
been
completed
to
his
satisfaction.
.
.
.”
By
reason
of
section
1
of
the
agreement
the
Director
of
Works
and
Accommodation
of
the
Department
of
National
Defence
of
Canada
was
appointed
as
the
engineer.
The
same
section
also
provides
that—
‘‘any
act
on
the
part
of
the
Director
of
Works
and
Accommodation,
in
connection
with
and
in
virtue
of
the
present
contract,
and
any
instructions
or
directions
or
certificates
given,
or
decisions
made
by
the
Director
of
Works
and
Accommodation,
or
by
anyone
acting
for
him,
shall
be
subject
to
approval
or
modification
or
cancellation
by
the
Minister
of
National
Defence.’’
In
exhibit
D,
in
which
Héroux
&
Robert
Limited
are
contractors
and
the
taxpayer
is
the
sub-contractor,
the
provisions
regarding
progress
payments
and
holdbacks
are
very
simple
and
are
contained
in
Article
2
which
reads
as
follows:
"The
General
Contractor
agrees
to
pay
to
the
Sub-Contractor
the
sum
of
$89,778.00
Eighty
Nine
Thousand,
Seven
Hundred
and
Seventy
Eight
Dollars
Tax
Included
on
the
Certificate
of
Architect
or
owner
as
the
work
progresses
to
the
value
of
ninety
per
cent
(90%)
of
the
work
done
as
estimated
by
the
Architect
or
owner.
Final
payment
to
be
made
within
thirty
days
after
the
completion
of
the
work
and
acceptance
by
the
Architect
or
owner.”
According
to
an
analysis
(Ex.
E)
of
payments
and
holdbacks
prepared
by
Mr.
C.
H.
Bray,
C.A.,
who
testified
on
behalf
of
the
taxpayer,
of
the
amount
of
additional
income
totalling
in
round
figures
$147,000
which
the
Minister
sought
to
take
into
the
taxpayer’s
fiscal
year
1953,
approximately
$134,000,
$5,000
and
$8,000
were
related,
respectively,
to
the
Statistics
building,
the
Bouchard
contract
and
the
Oratory
contract.
Without
the
Minister’s
knowledge,
the
taxpayer
with
the
approval
of
its
auditor
did
not
take
into
account
for
the
year
in
question
the
above-mentioned
income
on
the
ground
that,
according
to
accepted
accounting
principles
and
good
business
practice,
its
profits,
if
any,
could
not
be
determined
until
after
the
completion
of
each
project
and
a
final
certificate
to
that
effect
had
been
issued
by
the
architect
or
engineer
appointed
for
the
purpose
by
the
owner.
We
are
concerned
with
a
question
of
principle
rather
than
one
of
amount.
If
the
amounts
in
question
were
not
included
in
1953,
they
had
to
be
taken
into
account
in
a
subsequent
year.
The
taxpayer
included
the
sum
of
$134,000
in
his
1954
return
instead
of
1953,
and
the
ensuing
monetary
consequences
to
either
party
were
negligible.
The
issue
in
respect
of
progress
payments
turns
on
whether
the
taxpayer
is
justified
in
ignoring
the
payments
actually
received
during
1953
until
the
architect
or
engineer
has
given
the
certificate
referred
to
in
the
contract.
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provide:
‘
‘
3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
in
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
(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.’’
Judson,
J.,
in
Inter
provincial
Pipe
Line
Co.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
763,
at
page
768;
[1959]
C.T.C.
339,
at
page
344,
observed
:
[4
‘.
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Act
do
not
require
a
separate
computation
of
income
from
each
source
for
the
taxpayer
is
subject
to
tax
on
income
from
all
sources.
The
deduction
against
income
given
by
Section
11(1)(c)
is
attributable
to
all
sources
of
income
and
there
is
no
authority
to
break
it
up
and
relate
various
parts
of
the
deduction
to
various
sources.”’
I
think
the
above
reasoning
is
applicable
mutatis
mutandis
in
the
present
case
and
it
is
my
view
that
progress
payments,
whether
made
on
demand
or
otherwise
during
the
course
of
any
year
in
connection
with
the
contracts
in
question,
must
be
reckoned
with
in
the
year
in
which
they
are
received,
and
may
not
in
effect
be
ignored
by
placing
them
in
a
suspension
account
as
was
done
in
the
present
case.
The
Income
Tax
Act,
in
my
opinion,
contains
no
provision
which
will
allow
a
taxpayer
to
reckon
his
income
according
to
the
duration
of
each
individual
contract,
especially
when
payments
actually
received
thereon
during
any
year
exceed
the
aggregate
of
the
taxpayer’s
direct
costs
applicable
to
them,
and
thus
contain
an
element
of
profit.
This
is
what
occurred
in
respect
of
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract,
as
appears
in
the
analysis
thereof
shown
on
page
2
of
exhibit
EK.
As
of
March
31,
1953,
the
taxpayer
had
received
in
excess
of
direct
costs
an
amount
of
$77,532.48.
According
to
the
evidence,
this
occurred
because,
when
filing
application
for
progress
payments,
it
was
aware
that
four
to
six
weeks
would
elapse
before
payment
would
be
made
;
and,
in
order
to
be
able
to
finance
in
the
interval,
it
would
anticipate
its
expenditures
beyond
the
end
of
the
previous
month.
Subsequently
to
the
hearing
in
the
present
case,
Cameron,
J.,
held
in
Wilson
&
Wilson
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
C.T.C.
1,
that
moneys
paid
before
the
completion
of
any
contract
during
any
year
must
be
regarded
as
income
and
not
as
mere
advances,
and
that
the
completed
contract
method
of
reporting
is
contrary
to
Sections
3,
4
and
85B
of
the
Act,
unless
the
Minister
accepts
such
method
of
reporting.
In
the
Wilson
case
the
contracts
in
question
were
on
a
unit
price
basis
and
not
on
a
lump
sum
basis
as
in
the
instant
case,
but
in
respect
of
progress
payments
I
do
not
think
this
distinction
is
material.
Although
in
the
present
case
it
was
alleged
that
the
completed
contract
method
of
reporting
had
been
accepted
by
the
Minister,
no
proof
was
offered
to
support
this
allegation.
The
second
point
in
issue,
namely,
whether
the
holdbacks
amounting
in
the
aggregate
to
$67,728.24
should
have
been
included
as
taxable
income
by
the
taxpayer
in
1953,
hinges
on
a
narrow
issue
which
is
not
easily
resolved.
It
depends
on
the
interpretation
to
be
given
to
the
word
"‘receivable’’
found
in
Section
75B(l)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
amended,
8.0.
1952-58,
c.
40,
now
Section
85B(1)
(b),
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
which
reads
as
follows:
"85B.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
(b)
every
amount
receivable
in
respect
of
property
sold
or
Services
rendered
in
the
course
of
the
business
in
the
year
shall
be
included
notwithstanding
that
the
amount
is
not
receivable
until
a
subsequent
year
unless
the
method
adopted
by
the
taxpayer
for
computing
income
from
the
business
and
accepted
for
the
purpose
of
this
Part
does
not
require
him
to
include
any
amount
receivable
in
computing
his
income
for
a
taxation
year
unless
it
has
been
received
in
the
year.”
In
the
Wilson
case
(supra)
Cameron,
J.,
came
to
the
conclusion
that
before
Section
85B
became
effective
holdbacks
were
taxable
only
after
the
issuance
of
a
final
certificate
by
the
architect
or
engineer
appointed
by
the
owner,
but
that,
after
the
passage
of
Section
85B(1)(b),
this
was
no
longer
true
because,
in
his
opinion,
as
a
result
of
it
a
holdback
became
“‘receivable’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
said
section.
Although
admittedly
the
section
is
drafted
in
broad
terms,
I
am
disposed
to
add
to
the
above
statement
the
proviso
that
the
facts
in
each
particular
case
are
such
as
to
give
to
the
holdback
the
quality
of
a
receivable.
As
“amount
receivable’’
or
"‘receivable’’
is
not
defined
in
the
Act,
I
think
one
should
endeavour
to
find
its
ordinary
meaning
in
the
field
in
which
it
is
employed.
If
recourse
is
had
to
a
dictionary
meaning,
we
find
in
the
Shorter
Oxford,
Third
Edi-
tion,
the
word
‘‘receivable’’
defined
as
something
'capable
of
being
received.’’
This
definition
is
so
wide
that
it
contributes
little
towards
a
solution.
It
envisages
a
receivable
as
anything
that
can
be
transmitted
to
anyone
capable
of
receiving
it.
It
might
be
said
to
apply
to
a
legacy
bestowed
in
the
will
of
a
living
testator,
but
nobody
would
regard
such
a
legacy
as
an
amount
receivable
in
the
hands
of
a
potential
legatee.
In
the
absence
of
a
statutory
definition
to
the
contrary,
I
think
it
is
not
enough
that
the
so-called
recipient
have
a
precarious
right
to
receive
the
amount
in
question,
but
he
must
have
a
clearly
legal,
though
not
necessarily
immediate,
right
to
receive
it.
A
second
meaning,
as
mentioned
by
Cameron,
J.,
is
‘‘to
be
received,”
and
Eric
L.
Kohler,
in
A
Dictionary
for
Accountants,
1957
edition,
page
408,
defines
it
as
"collectible,
whether
or
not
due.’’
These
two
definitions,
I
think,
connote
entitlement.
This
leads
to
a
consideration
of
whether,
legally
speaking,
each
of
the
holdbacks
in
the
instant
case
possessed
the
quality
required
to
bring
it
within
the
meaning
of
a
receivable.
Speaking
of
the
quality
required
to
constitute
income,
the
learned
president
of
this
Court
stated
in
Robertson
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1944]
Ex.
C.R.
170
at
page
182;
[1944]
C.T.C.
75
at
page
91:
‘
‘.
.
.
Did
such
amounts
have,
at
the
time
of
their
receipt,
or
acquire,
during
the
year
of
their
receipt,
the
quality
of
income,
to
use
the
phrase
of
Mr.
Justice
Brandeis
in
Brown
v.
IIelvering
[(1934)
291
U.S.
198].
In
my
judgment,
the
language
used
by
him,
to
which
I
have
already
referred,
lays
down
an
important
test
as
to
whether
an
amount
received
by
a
taxpayer
has
the
quality
of
income.
Is
his
right
to
it
absolute
and
under
no
restriction,
contractual
or
otherwise,
as
to
its
disposition,
use
or
enjoyment?
To
put
it
in
another
way,
can
an
amount
in
a
taxpayer’s
hands
be
regarded
as
an
item
of
profit
or
gain
from
his
business,
as
long
as
he
holds
it
subject
to
specific
and
unfulfilled
conditions
and
his
right
to
retain
it
and
apply
it
to
his
own
use
has
not
yet
accrued,
and
may
never
accrue?’
’
I
might
here
interpose
that
in
the
present
case
the
amounts
of
the
holdbacks
eventually
were
paid
to
the
taxpayer,
but
to
say
that
they
might
never
have
accrued
to
him
would
be
to
express
something
far
beyond
a
mere
figure
of
speech.
As
illustrative
of
the
risks
of
the
trade,
proof
was
made
that,
in
connection
with
the
installation
of
plumbing
in
the
Queen
Elizabeth
Hotel
in
Montreal,
the
taxpayer
was
required
at
its
own
expense
to
remove
and
replace
immediately
600
bath-tubs
out
of
a
total
of
1,200
installed,
because
three
or
four
months
subsequent
to
the
installation
a
hair-line
flaw
was
discovered
in
them.
Material
and
labour
costs
amounted
to
$263,000.
The
owner
could
not
be
held
responsible
and,
at
the
date
of
hearing,
the
taxpayer
had
been
unable
to
recover
anything
from
the
supplier
of
the
bathtubs.
In
connection
with
the
power
house
attached
to
the
Printing
Bureau
at
Hull,
Que.,
the
engineers
of
the
Department
of
Public
Works
refused
to
accept
the
layout
and
construction
of
the
steam
lines
installed,
and
the
taxpayer
without
recourse
was
obliged
to
remove
and
replace
them
at
a
cost
of
$77,000.
There
is
no
doubt
that,
insofar
as
the
provisions
of
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract
are
concerned,
it
is
the
law
of
Ontario
which
applies,
and
with
regard
to
the
other
two
contracts
it
is
the
law
of
the
Province
of
Quebee
which
governs.
The
jurisprudence
in
respect
of
the
status
of
holdbacks
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
is
similar
to
that
found
in
England
and
is
little
different
from
the
case
law
of
Quebec,
at
least
insofar
as
the
present
case
is
concerned.
In
both
provinces
much
depends
on
the
wording
of
each
individual
contract.
In
this
case
each
contract
must
be
scrutinized
in
order
to
ascertain
whether
in
law
the
clause
dealing
with
the
procurement
of
an
architect’s
or
engineer’s
certificate
either
expressly
or
by
implication
constitutes
a
binding
condition
precedent
on
the
taxpayer
which
prevents
him
from
claiming
a
holdback
until
the
certificate
is
issued.
In
Ontario
it
has
been
held
that
the
contractor
has
no
legal
right
to
the
amount
of
the
holdback
until
the
issuance
of
the
certificate,
and
no
suit
can
be
properly
commenced
by
him
before
certification
unless
it
is
clear
that
the
certificate
has
been
improperly
withheld
by
the
architect.
See
McDonald
v.
Oliver,
3
O.R.
310;
Quaintance
v.
Howard,
18
O.R.
99
(C.A.)
;
Coatsworth
v.
Toronto,
7
U.C.C.P.
490
(C.A.),
see
8
U.C.C.P.
364;
Ferguson
v.
Galt,
23
U.C.C.P.
66
(C.A.).
The
above-mentioned
jurisprudence
deals
with
the
relationship
between
a
contractor
and
the
owner,
but
I
think
it
applies
with
even
greater
force
between
a
sub-contractor
and
a
prime
contractor.
Mr.
W.
E.
Williams
who
has
been
engaged
in
the
construction
business
for
several
years
and
is
a
past
president
of
the
Montreal
Building
Exchange
gave
evidence
as
an
independent
expert
regarding
the
usual
provisions
found
in
construction
contracts
and
how
they
operate.
He
stated
that
a
sub-contractor
is
never
paid
by
the
prime
contractor
until
the
latter
has
secured
the
certificate
of
the
engineer
or
architect
appointed
by
the
owner
and
until
the
whole
construction,
which
may
include
the
work
of
many
sub-contractors,
has
been
completed
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
owner,
and
a
certificate
of
the
architect
or
engineer
chosen
by
him
has
been
issued.
It
will
be
seen
therefore
that,
notwithstanding
that
a
sub-contractor
may
have
carried
out
his
sub-contract
perfectly,
insofar
as
payment
is
concerned,
he
must
wait
until
every
other
sub-contractor
has
done
so
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
prime
contractor
and
the
latter
has
received
a
certificate
to
that
effect
from
the
architect
or
engineer.
The
law
of
England
regarding
the
nature
and
effect
of
an
architect’s
certificate
is
described
together
with
supporting
jurisprudence
in
Law
and
Practice
of
Building
Contracts
by
Donald
Keating,
1955
edition,
pages
62
et
seq.
At
page
68
the
following
is
found:
"‘It
is
a
question
of
construction
in
each
case
to
determine
whether
it
was
intended
that
a
particular
certificate
should
be
conclusive
upon
the
matter
with
which
it
purports
to
deal.
Express
words
are
frequently
used
such
as,
for
example,
that
"the
certificate
of
the
engineer
.
..
shall
be
binding
and
conclusive
on
both
parties.’’
It
seems
that
prima
facie
a
final
certificate
which
is
a
condition
precedent
to
payment
is
conclusive.
Progress
certificates
are
usually
not
conclusive.
.
.
.”’
At
page
69
the
author
states
:
"‘The
architect’s
decision
may
be
conclusive
on
some
matters
but
not
on
others.??
It
is
provided
in
article
3
of
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract
that
the
amount
of
the
holdback
is
to
be
15
per
cent
of
the
progress
payments,
and
the
article
concludes
in
these
words
:
"‘Final
payment
to
be
made
within
30
days
after
satisfactory
completion
of
the
entire
building
and
acceptance
by
the
architect.
’
Although
it
does
not
add
that
such
completion
and
acceptance
by
the
architect
are
conditions
precedent
which
must
be
fulfilled
before
the
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
final
payment
of
the
holdback,
in
my
opinion,
under
the
jurisprudence
such
meaning
is
to
be
implied.
As
a
corollary,
I
consider
that
the
holdback
does
not,
as
far
as
the
taxpayer
is
concerned,
take
on
the
quality
of
a
receivable
until
the
work
has
been
accepted
by
the
architect.
This
does
not,
however,
dispose
of
the
issue
in
regard
to
the
contract
under
consideration.
Ross,
Patterson,
Townsend
and
Fish,
as
appears
by
the
contract,
had
been
named
by
the
owner
as
the
"‘architect;''
and
on
March
9,1953,
the
above-mentioned
firm,
per
J.
IX.
Ross,
certified
that
all
the
work
in
connection
with
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics,
which
totalled
some
$6,000,000,
had
been
completed
by
the
prime
contractor
according
to
plans
and
specifications;
and
that
no
holdback
was
to
be
retained.
The
above-mentioned
certificate,
of
course,
covered
the
work
done
by
several
subcontractors,
including
the
taxpayer.
It
will
thus
be
seen
that
the
condition
precedent
ceased
to
exist
before
the
termination
of
the
taxpayer’s
fiscal
year
1953
and
the
holdbacks
payable
under
it
acquired
the
quality
of
a
receivable
as
of
the
date
of
the
certificate.
It
is
to
be
recalled
that
final
payment
was
to
fall
due
thirty
days
after
the
issuance
of
the
certificate
which
would
bring
it
into
the
taxpayer’s
subsequent
fiscal
year,
and
it
was
in
fact
paid
on
April
11,
1954
(sic
1953).
I
do
not
think
that
the
latter
can
rely
on
the
delay
allowed
for
payment
as
justification
for
bringing
the
amount
of
the
holdback
into
the
fiscal
year
in
which
it
fell
due.
In
my
opinion,
a
term
or
instalment
account
must
be
included
in
the
taxation
year
in
which
it
could
be
said
that
it
had
the
quality
of
a
receivable
since
Section
85B(1)(b)
provides
that
it
shall
be
thus
included
“notwithstanding
that
the
amount
is
not
receivable
until
a
subsequent
year.’’
It
was
alleged
by
counsel
for
the
taxpayer
that,
because
of
article
4
of
the
contract,
the
holdback
in
question
did
not
become
a
receivable
in
the
true
sense
of
the
word
until
April
11,
1954
(sic
1953),
the
date
on
which
the
taxpayer
received
it
from
the
general
contractor,
since
the
taxpayer
was
not
aware
of
the
issuance
of
the
architect’s
certificate
to
the
prime
contractor
until
he
had
received
payment
of
the
holdback.
In
support
of
the
foregoing
submission
reference
was
made
to
Price
v.
Forb
es,
23
D.L.R.
532,
wherein
it
was
held
that—
“An
architect’s
certificate
may
be
made,
by
express
agreement,
final
and
binding
on
both
the
owner
and
contractor,
and
in
that
sense
conclusive
as
between
them.
But,
as
pointed
out
by
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
in
Smallwood
Brothers
v.
Powell,
1
O.W.N.
1025,
that
result
by
no
means
follows
if
the
contract
itself
affords
evidence
that
the
certificate
is
not
finally
to
settle
the
matters
which
it
deals
with,
and
does
not
absolve
the
contractor
from
responsibility
for
work
badly
done
or
omitted.”
I
do
not
think
that
the
reference
to
the
Smallwood
ease
is
particularly
applicable
in
the
present
instance
because
it
dealt
with
progress
payments
and
the
architect
issued
a
certificate
to
the
builder,
knowing
there
was
nothing
due
to
him
by
the
owner.
Article
4
of
the
contract
reads
in
part
as
follows:
“No
payment
made
under
this
contract
shall
be
conclusive
evidence
of
the
performance
of
this
contract,
either
wholly
or
in
part,
and
no
payment
shall
be
construed
to
be
an
acceptance
of
defective
work
or
improper
materials
or
to
relieve
Sub-Contractor
of
responsiblity
for
any
guarantee
or
maintenance
for
which
he
may
be
liable
under
this
contract
or
the
specification
applicable
thereto.’’
In
my
opinion,
article
4
notwithstanding,
the
architect’s
certificate
given
in
the
present
case
on
August
9
(sic
March
9)
is
sufficiently
conclusive
to
give
to
the
holdback
in
question
the
character
of
a
receivable
as
of
that
date.
On
April
11,
the
taxpayer
could
have
ascertained,
as
he
did
later,
that
the
architect’s
certificate
had
been
issued
on
March
9.
It
is
not
the
date
on
which
he
obtains
knowledge
of
the
existence
of
the
certificate
but
the
date
of
its
execution
which
governs.
I
am
accordingly
of
the
opinion
that
the
holdback
of
approximately
$56,000
which
was
paid
on
April
11,
about
thirty
days
after
the
issuance
of
the
architect’s
certificate,
as
contemplated
in
the
contract,
must
be
considered
as
an
amount
receivable
in
the
taxpayer’s
fiscal
year
1953.
I
will
now
pass
on
to
a
consideration
of
the
relevant
law
applicable
to
the
two
Quebec
contracts.
As
to
the
effect
of
the
acceptance
by
the
architect
of
the
work
done
constituting
a
condition
precedent,
the
most
recent
case
which
has
been
brought
to
my
attention
is
that
of
Bertheau
v.
Gagnon,
[1959]
B.R.
473
at
page
476,
in
which
it
was
held
that,
once
the
work
undertaken
has
been
accepted
either
by
the
architect
or
the
proprietor,
this
acceptance
implies
a
recognition
that
the
contract
has
been
fulfilled
and
dispenses
the
contractor
from
otherwise
proving
the
fulfilment
of
his
obligations.
The
judgment
then
deals
with
the
ensuing
consequences
when
the
contractor’s
work
has
been
refused,
but
this
situation
does
not
arise
in
the
present
case.
In
Traité
du
Droit
civil
du
Québec
by
L.
Faribault,
a
notation
in
respect
of
Article
1686
du
Code
Civil
to
the
following
effect
is
found
in
vol.
12,
page
432:
"‘In
the
following
cases
it
has
been
decided
that
when
an
undertaking
must
be
completely
fulfilled
and
delivered,
the
contractor
cannot
make
claim
for
the
amount
of
his
contract
before
the
work
has
been
completely
terminated
and
accepted.’’
A
long
list
of
cases
follows,
among
which
is
Bochon
v.
Favreau,
21
B.R.
61,
wherein
it
was
held
that,
when
a
job
had
to
be
perfected
and
delivered
within
the
meaning
of
Article
1686
du
Code
Civil,
the
contractor
could
not
claim
the
price
of
a
contract
before
the
work
had
been
completed
and
accepted.
Keating
at
page
34
(supra)
observed
that
the
rights
of
contractors
to
be
paid
in
the
face
of
a
condition
precedent
has
greatly
exercised
the
courts
in
England.
That
the
same
is
true
in
respect
of
the
Province
of
Quebec
appears
from
the
fact
that
the
above-
mentioned
judgment
was
affirmed
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
only
because
the
six
presiding
judges
were
equally
divided
on
the
subject.
See
also
Corporation
of
Drummondville
v.
Simoneau,
23
B.R.
392;
Lalonde
v.
Fickles
(1915),
47
C.S.
297.
In
Whiting
v.
Blondin
(1904),
34
S.C.R.
453
at
page
457,
the
Supreme
Court
held,
reversing
the
judgment
appealed
from,
that,
as
the
whole
of
the
works
had
not
been
completed
at
the
time
of
the
institution
of
the
action,
the
condition
precedent
to
payment
had
not
been
fulfilled
by
the
contractor
who
had
no
right
of
action
under
the
contract.
To
the
same
effect
is
the
case
of
Bertrand
v.
Pépin
(1917),
51
C.S.
496.
It
will
be
seen
that
a
number
of
the
cases
referred
to
deal
with
a
situation
wherein
the
contractor
had
not
completely
fulfilled
his
obligations,
but
this
situation
does
not
arise
in
the
present
case,
and
the
applicability
of
the
above-mentioned
jurisprudence
is
accordingly
limited.
I
will
consider
first
the
Quebec
case
which
I
think
offers
the
least
difficulty,
i.e.,
that
concerning
the
Bouchard
contract.
This
contract
leaves
no
doubt
as
to
the
existence
of
a
condition
precedent
with
respect
to
the
taxpayer’s
entitlement
to
payment
of
holdbacks.
Section
1(a)
(ii)
of
the
contract
(Ex.
B)
provides
that
Form
C.C.C.
34A
shall
form
an
integral
part
of
the
contract,
and
section
10
of
the
said
form
reads
in
part
as
follows:
‘I.
.
no
work
under
this
contract
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
performed,
nor
materials
or
things
provided,
so
as
to
entitle
the
Contractor
to
payment
therefor
unless
and
until
the
Engineer
is
satisfied
therewith,
as
evidenced
by
his
certificate
in
writing,
which
certificate
shall
be
a
condition
precedent
to
the
right
of
the
Contractor
to
be
paid
therefor.
.
.
.”
(Emphasis
supplied.)
It
has
been
proved
that
the
engineer’s
final
certificate
(Ex.
H)
was
duly
signed
and
issued
on
January
26,
1954.
It
follows,
in
my
opinion,
that,
insofar
as
that
portion
of
the
sum
added
to
the
taxpayer’s
income
amounting
to
approximately
$3,000,
in
connection
with
the
holdbacks
on
the
original
contract,
or
by
reason
of
additional
work,
the
Minister’s
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
The
Heroux
&
Robert
Limited
Company
contract
(Ex.
D)
provides
that
the
final
payment
is
to
be
made
thirty
days
after
the
completion
of
the
work
and
acceptance
by
either
the
architect
or
the
owner.
I
note
in
passing
that
nowhere
in
this
contract
is
there
an
article
protecting
the
owner
in
the
event
that
defects
should
develop
in
a
building
after
final
payment
has
been
made,
such
as
article
4
in
the
Statistics
building
contract.
This
seeming
omission
may
be
due
to
the
fact
that
the
article
of
the
Civil
Code
cited
hereunder
affords
protection
against
such
eventuality.
"
"
Art.
1688.
If
a
building
perish
in
whole
or
in
part
within
five
years,
from
a
defect
in
construction,
or
even
from
the
unfavorable
nature
of
the
ground,
the
architect
superintending
the
work,
and
the
builder
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
for
the
loss.
‘
‘
Although
the
contract
does
not
specifically
state
that
such
acceptance
shall
constitute
a
condition
precedent
to
payment,
I
think,
by
reason
of
the
foregoing
jurisprudence,
it
should
be
given
the
same
interpretation
as
if
such
words
appeared
in
the
text.
It
is
in
evidence
that
the
owner
accepted
the
work
only
when
final
payment
was
made
in
1957,
amounting
to
some
$5,006
which
falls
under
the
heading
of
holdbacks.
In
view
of
the
foregoing
jurisprudence
and
attributing
what
I
consider
to
be
the
ordinary
meaning
to
the
word
"‘receivable,’
I
think
that
those
portions
of
the
amount
added
by
the
Minister
to
the
taxpayer’s
income
in
connection
with
the
holdbacks
on
the
Bouchard
and
Oratory
contracts
are
unjustified.
For
the
above-mentioned
reasons
I
consider
that
the
crossappeal
of
the
taxpayer
should
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Insofar
as
the
appeal
of
the
Minister
is
concerned,
I
think
it
should
be
maintained
in
respect
of
that
portion
of
the
amount
added
to
the
taxable
income
of
the
taxpayer
in
connection
with
the
holdbacks
in
the
Dominion
Bureau
of
Statistics
contract
but
without
costs.
I
would
accordingly
vary
the
decision
appealed
from
and
refer
the
matter
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment.
In
the
event
that
the
parties
fail
to
agree
on
the
amount
of
holdback
which
is
to
be
attributed
to
each
of
the
three
contracts
in
issue,
this
matter
may
be
spoken
to.
Judgment
accordingly.