MacGuigan,
J.:—This
case
raises
a
classic
issue
of
income
tax
law.
In
the
words
of
the
Lord
Justice
Clerk
(Macdonald)
in
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
Limited
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159
at
165,
“‘Is
the
sum
of
gain
that
has
been
made
a
mere
enhancement
of
value
by
realising
a
security,
or
is
it
a
gain
made
in
an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profitmaking?’’
In
this
case
the
issue
was
resolved
by
the
trial
judge
as
follows,
Appeal
Book,
p.
290;
[1979]
C.T.C.
296
at
303:
Although
Defendant
has
an
acceptable
explanation
as
to
why
he
took
nominal
sums
which
he
required
for
living
expenses
out
of
the
company
as
repayment
of
loans
rather
than
as
salary
—
Namely
that
the
company’s
affairs
were
so
precarious
when
he
again
took
over
that
the
bank
might
well
call
its
loans,
putting
the
company
into
bankruptcy
unless
it
could
begin
to
show
a
profit,
and
I
am
satisfied
that
the
tax
considerations
did
not
enter
into
his
mind,
nevertheless
I
am
forced
to
the
conclusion
that
although,
at
the
time
of
the
acquisition,
assignment
of
the
loans
to
him
was
of
little
interest
to
him
and
not
a
primary
consideration
for
his
reacquisition
of
the
business,
the
acquisition
of
these
loans
by
such
assignment
cannot
be
considered
as
a
capital
investment
by
him
(even
if
he
had
paid
some
nominal
sum
for
them)
but
must
be
considered
as
part
and
parcel
of
the
acquisition
of
the
business.
Therefore
even
though
it
was
an
isolated
transaction
and
he
is
certainly
not
in
the
business
of
acquiring
loans
or
book
debts,
the
acquisition
of
them
cannot
be
considered
as
a
capital
investment
by
him.
Although
the
reasoning
in
the
Australian
case
of
Wills
is
persuasive,
the
weight
of
Canadian
jurisprudence
and
in
particular
the
Supreme
Court
case
of
Sissons
(although
the
facts
in
it
were
somewhat
dissimilar
in
that
the
taxpayer
had
deliberately
purchased
two
loss
companies
and
transferred
a
profitable
business
to
one
of
them
which
was
able
to
write
off
its
losses
against
these
profits
and
thus
repay
a
loan
to
the
other
company
enabling
it
to
redeem
debentures
held
by
the
taxpayer
—
in
short
a
well
thought
out
scheme)
lead
me
to
conclude
that
the
enhancement
in
value
of
the
loans
to
the
company
which
he
acquired
from
nil
to
a
sufficient
value
to
enable
repayment
of
them
to
him
to
be
commenced
was
not
a
capital
profit
resulting
from
circumstances
which
he
did
not
control
but
that
it
was
a
result
of
Defendant’s
personal
efforts
and
hence
part
of
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
We
are
all
agreed
that
the
learned
trial
judge
has
misinterpreted
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
M.N.R.
v.
Sissons,
[1969]
C.T.C.
184;
69
D.T.C.
5152.
We
do
not
agree
that
the
Sissons
case
stands
for
the
proposition
that
gain
arising
from
an
entrepreneur's
personal
efforts
has,
by
reason
of
that
fact
alone,
the
quality
of
income
rather
than
of
capital
gain.
In
fact,
the
passage
of
Pigeon,
J.
at
187
(D.T.C.
5154)
on
which
such
an
interpretation
might
be
based
was
merely
part
of
the
Court’s
rejection
of
all
five
of
the
reasons
upon
which
the
trial
judge
there
had
based
his
conclusion.
A
more
decisive
consideration
seems
rather
to
have
been
that
in
the
paragraph
which
immediately
follows
at
187
D.T.C.:
(e)
Finally,
respondent's
gain
cannot
properly
be
considered
as
having
arisen
fortuitously.
On
the
contrary,
uncontradicted
evidence
shows
that
it
is
the
result
of
a
carefully
considered
plan
executed
as
conceived.
Pigeon,
J.
further
adds,
at
188
(D.T.C.):
Here
the
clear
indication
of
“trade"
is
found
in
the
fact
that
the
acquisition
of
the
securities
was
a
part
of
a
profit-making
scheme.
The
purpose
of
the
operation
was
not
to
earn
income
from
the
securities
but
to
make
a
profit
on
prompt
realization.
The
operation
has
therefore
none
of
the
essential
characteristics
of
an
investment,
it
is
essentially
a
speculation.
In
the
instant
case
the
evidence
negates
any
such
carefully
considered
plan
for
the
realization
of
speculative
profits.
In
that
respect
it
also
differs
from
the
scheme
considered
by
this
Court
in
Steeves
v.
The
Queen,
[1977]
C.T.C.
325
at
327;
77
D.T.C.
5230
where
Urie,
J.
emphasized
that
“the
transaction
was
structured
in
the
fashion
in
which
it
was
to
achieve
a
desired
purpose.”
Here,
as
the
above
passage
from
his
reasons
shows,
the
trial
judge
found
that
(1)
"the
tax
considerations
did
not
enter
into
his
[appellant’s]
mind”
and
(2)
"at
the
time
of
the
acquisition,
assignment
of
the
loans
to
him
was
of
little
interest
to
him
and
not
a
primary
consideration
for
his
reacquisition
of
the
business.”
The
fact
that
the
assignment
of
the
loans
was
"part
and
parcel"
of
the
appellant's
reacquisition
of
a
business
which
he
himself
founded
years
earlier
and
which
he
wished
to
rescue
from
its
financially
perilous
position
must
lead
to
the
same
conclusion
with
respect
to
the
loans
as
would
be
drawn
for
the
business
itself,
viz.,
that,
although
in
aspiration
a
profitmaking
venture,
it
was
unquestionably
a
capital
investment.
For
that
reason
we
are
all
agreed
that
the
partial
repayments
on
the
loans
made
by
the
business
to
the
appellant
in
the
1971
and
1972
taxation
years
were
not
income
arising
from
the
appellant’s
business
in
those
years.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
allowed,
with
costs
both
here
and
in
the
Trial
Division,
the
judgment
of
the
trial
judge
set
aside,
and
appellant's
income
tax
assessments
for
the
1971
and
1972
years
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
in
accordance
with
these
reasons.
Appeal
allowed.