Martin,
J.:—The
plaintiff,
London
Life
Insurance
Company,
appeals
the
defendant's
reassessment
of
July
28,
1980
in
respect
of
its
1976
taxation
year
under
which
the
defendant
assessed
the
plaintiff
for
additional
tax
on
the
basis
that
the
plaintiff
was
not
carrying
on
an
insurance
business
outside
of
Canada,
and
reduced
expenses
deductible
in
computing
the
amount
on
which
tax
payable
under
Part
XII
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
applicable
by
treating
revenue
received
from
the
plaintiff's
subsidiary,
Lonlife
Data
Services
Limited
("L.D.S."),
as
a
reduction
of
expenses
rather
than
as
income
received.
At
issue
in
respect
of
the
first
part
of
the
plaintiff's
appeal
is
whether,
during
1976,
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
the
life
insurance
business
in
Bermuda.
The
issues
in
respect
of
the
second
part
of
the
plaintiff's
appeal
are,
unfortunately,
not
as
clear
and
have
given
rise
to
the
delay
in
filing
my
decision.
I
will
deal
with
the
Bermuda
issue
first
and
the
L.D.S.
issue
in
the
latter
portion
of
these
reasons
for
my
decision.
The
plaintiff
is
a
major
Canadian
life
insurance
company
which,
until
1976,
had
carried
on
the
life
insurance
business
exclusively
in
Canada.
Although
it
had
given
consideration
to
extending
its
business
outside
of
Canada
as
early
as
1973
it
took
no
steps
to
do
so
until
1976.
What
prompted
the
company
to
extend
its
business
at
that
time
was
what
counsel
for
both
parties
have
referred
to
as
a
tax
loophole
which
allowed
more
favourable
tax
treatment
to
a
life
insurance
company
which
carried
on
its
business
outside
of
Canada
than
to
a
company
which
carried
on
its
life
insurance
business
exclusively
within
Canada.
In
order
to
ensure
that
it
would
be
treated
as
favourably
as
its
competitors,
which
carried
on
their
life
insurance
business
both
within
and
outside
of
Canada,
the
plaintiff
decided
to
extend
its
operations
to
Bermuda.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
decision
to
do
so
was
tax
motivated
but
for
the
purposes
of
the
issue
in
this
matter
the
motivation
is
irrelevant.
Even
if
it
were
relevant
to
the
initial
decision
that
motivation
was
removed,
at
least
in
the
opinion
of
the
president
and
other
senior
officers
of
the
company,
when,
on
May
26,
1976,
which
was
prior
to
the
time
the
plaintiff
completed
its
arrangements
for
its
Bermuda
operations,
the
Canadian
government
publicly
gave
notice
of
its
intention
to
amend
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
remove
the
tax
benefits
which
prompted
the
plaintiff
to
extend
its
operations
outside
of
Canada.
Had
the
plaintiff
been
solely
tax
driven
I
am
satisfied
that
it
would
have
discontinued
its
plans
to
establish
itself
in
Bermuda
when
it
satisfied
itself
that
there
would
be
no,
or
minimal,
tax
benefits
to
be
derived
from
doing
so.
It
did
not,
however,
abandon
its
plans
for
once
it
had
decided
to
enter
the
Bermuda
market,
for
whatever
reason,
it
implemented
that
plan
in
a
thoroughly
businesslike
and
well
considered
manner.
It
is
not
necessary
to
detail
step
by
step
every
activity
which
the
plaintiff
took
to
establish
its
Bermuda
operation.
Instead,
I
think
a
short
list
of
its
activities
should
be
sufficient.
In
this
respect
during
1976
the
plaintiff
caused
the
following
steps
to
be
taken:
(a)
It
obtained
several
opinions
from
its
solicitors
with
respect
to
all
aspects
of
Bermuda
law
which
would
be
relevant
to
its
proposed
operations.
(b)
It
sent
one
of
its
senior
personnel
to
Bermuda
to
study
the
potential
of
Bermuda
as
a
market
for
life
insurance
and
to
identify
a
suitable
firm
to
represent
it.
(c)
On
May
11,
1976,
after
Mr.
Alex
Jeffery,
the
then
president
of
the
plaintiff,
personally
assured
Harnett
&
Richardson
Limited
of
Bermuda
that
the
plaintiff
had
a
long-term
interest
in
Bermuda
it
appointed
that
firm
as
its
Bermuda
agent
and
authorized
it
to
apply
for
a
Bermuda
licence
to
allow
the
plaintiff
to
carry
on
the
life
insurance
business
in
that
country
which
licence
was
obtained
on
June
24,1976.
(d)
In
early
June
of
1976
it
sent
its
solicitor
to
Bermuda
for
meetings
with
bankers,
lawyers
and
the
plaintiff's
agent
for
the
purpose
of
further
assessing
the
particular
requirements
of
doing
business
in
Bermuda.
(e)
It
had
the
heads
of
its
various
departments
prepare
written
submissions
on
any
changes
in
the
plaintiff's
procedures
which
would
be
necessary
as
a
result
of
its
entry
into
the
Bermuda
market
and
held
many
meetings
of
its
senior
executive
personnel
to
plan
and
execute
the
proposed
venture.
(f)
It
prepared
special
insurance
policy
and
application
forms
for
the
several
types
of
insurance
intended
for
the
Bermuda
market
which,
among
other
things,
provided
that
Bermuda
law
would
apply
and
that
payment
would
be
made
in
Bermuda
currency.
(g)
It
brought
Mr.
Simon
Evrett,
the
Director
of
Harnett
&
Richardson
Limited's
insurance
operation,
to
London,
Ontario,
for
a
week
of
meetings
and
indoctrination.
(h)
It
set
up
a
system
of
contracts
for
premium
billings
and
collections
for
the
Bermuda
market.
(i)
Through
Harnett
&
Richardson
Limited
it
solicited
many
Bermuda
residents
to
take
policies
with
it
and
provided
rate
quotations
to
potential
policy
holders.
(j)
It
opened
bank
accounts
in
Bermuda
into
which
it
deposited
$100,000.
(k)
In
late
December
1976
Mr.
John
Fowler,
a
marketing
executive
with
the
plaintiff,
was
sent
to
Bermuda
to
conclude
the
formal
agency
agreement
with
Harnett
&
Richardson
Limited
atwhich
time
the
first
two
policies
which
had
been
issued
for
Bermuda
residents
were
given
to
the
agent
for
delivery
to
the
policy
holders.
Both
in
Her
pleadings
and
in
Her
counsel's
argument
the
defendant
submits
that
Harnett
&
Richardson
Limited's
authority
to
act
on
behalf
of
the
plaintiff
was
so
limited
that
the
plaintiff
cannot
be
considered
to
be
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda
through
its
agent.
Specifically
the
defendant
says
that
the
agent
was
only
authorized,
under
the
agency
agreement
of
December
30,
1976,
to
solicit
applications
for
insurance
policies
to
be
issued
by
the
plaintiff,
to
receive
premiums
therefore,
and
to
draw
cheques
on
the
plaintiff's
current
bank
account
to
make
payments
for
Commissions,
Stamp
Tax
and
such
other
liabilities
as
the
plaintiff
would
from
time
to
time
designate.
The
defendant,
in
paragraph
3
of
the
statement
of
defence,
refers
to
the
several
limitations
placed
upon
the
agent's
authority
by
the
agency
agreement
as
follows:
(1)
could
not
bind
the
Plaintiff
in
any
way,
(2)
could
not
interpret
a
contract
of
insurance
so
as
to
bind
the
Plaintiff,
(3)
could
not
make,
alter
or
discharge
a
contract,
(4)
could
not
extend
the
time
for
payment
of
any
premium;
(5)
could
not
waive
any
forfeiture
or
grant
any
permit;
(6)
could
not
incur
any
liability
on
behalf
of
the
Plaintiff;
(7)
could
not
make
or
allow
the
delivery
of
any
policy
not
issued
under
a
binding
receipt,
unless
the
applicant
was
at
the
time
in
good
health
and
the
first
premium
had
been
paid;
(8)
could
not
collect
a
premium
on
any
policy
or
a
payment
on
any
policy
loan
except
as
he
might
be
authorized
under
this
Agreement;
(9)
could
not
give
a
receipt
for
any
premium
or
payment
except
upon
the
printed
form
of
receipt
furnished
by
the
Plaintiff
for
that
purpose;
(10)
could
not
vary
any
of
the
conditions
contained
in
any
printed
form
or
receipt;
(11)
could
not
institute
or
defend
legal
proceedings
for
any
cause
in
connection
with
the
transaction
of
the
Plaintiff's
business;
(12)
could
not
publish
any
advertisement
relating
in
any
way
to
the
business
of
the
Plaintiff
until
a
copy
of
same
had
been
submitted
to
and
approved
by
the
Plaintiff.
In
paragraph
6
of
the
statement
of
defence
the
defendant
says
that
any
business
which
the
plaintiff
may
have
carried
on
by
insuring
lives
in
Bermuda
was
carried
on
in
Canada
in
that:
(a)
any
and
all
applications
for
the
insurance
of
lives
in
Bermuda
were
required
to
be
submitted,
and
they
were
in
fact
submitted,
to
the
Plaintiff
in
Canada,
(b)
all
decisions
required
to
be
made
by
the
Plaintiff
regarding
the
acceptance
or
rejection
of
applications
for
the
insurance
of
lives
in
Bermuda
were
required
to
be
made,
and
they
were
in
fact
made,
by
the
Plaintiff
in
Canada,
(c)
any
and
all
contracts
of
insuring
lives
in
Bermuda
were
in
fact
and
law
required
to
be
made,
and
they
were
in
fact
made,
in
Canada,
(d)
any
and
all
insurance
policies
which
the
Plaintiff
issued
on
lives
in
Bermuda
were
prepared
and
issued
by
the
Plaintiff
in
Canada,
(e)
any
and
all
claims
against
or
arising
out
of
any
life
insurance
policies
on
lives
in
Bermuda
were
required
to
be
processed,
and
they
were
in
fact
processed,
by
the
Plaintiff
in
Canada,
and
(f)
any
and
all
business
decisions
or
transactions
collateral
to
the
entering
into
contracts
of
insurance
on
lives
in
Bermuda
were
required
to
be
made
or
directed,
and
they
were
in
fact
made
or
directed
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
Plaintiff
in
Canada.
Furthermore
the
defendant
claims,
in
paragraph
7
of
the
statement
of
defence,
that
in
the
1976
taxation
year
the
plaintiff's
agent
solicited
no
applications
for
insurance
policies
to
be
issued
by
the
plaintiff
on
lives
in
Bermuda
and
that
the
two
policies
which
were
issued
on
residents
of
Bermuda
resulted
from
their
applications
which
they
submitted
to
the
plaintiff
in
Canada
and
which
the
plaintiff
accepted
in
Canada.
In
his
argument
counsel
for
the
defendant
submitted
that
the
only
test
to
determine
where
a
business
is
being
carried
on
is
the
one
stated
in
F.L.
Smidth
and
Company
v.
F.
Greenwood,
[1921]
3
K.B.
583.
The
test
set
out
in
that
case
is
that
the
place
where
a
business
is
carried
on
is
wherever
the
operations
take
place
from
which
the
profits
in
substance
arise.
Counsel
went
on
to
identify
the
activities
which
in
his
view
were
in
substance
responsible
for
the
profits
from
the
Bermudian
policies
as
being:
(a)
the
underwriting
activities
which
took
place
exclusively
in
Canada,
i.e.
the
activity
of
the
plaintiff
leading
up
to
a
decision
whether
or
not
to
underwrite
the
risk
that
has
been
offered;
(b)
of
lesser
importance,
but
nevertheless
highly
relevant,
the
financial
control
activities,
such
as
the
preparation
of
premium
notices,
the
determination
of
premiums
payable,
and
the
authorization
of
the
payment
of
claims
which
all
took
place
entirely
in
Canada.
Counsel
also
argued,
on
the
authority
of
Grainger
&
Son
v.
William
Lane
Gough,
[1896]
A.C.
325,
3
T.C.
462
(H.L.)
that
the
mere
solicitation
of
insurance
applications
by
the
plaintiff's
agent
in
Bermuda
is
not
sufficient
to
permit
the
conclusion
that
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
business
there.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
argued
that,
notwithstanding
the
written
agreement
between
the
plaintiff
and
its
agent,
the
agent
could
and
did
bind
the
plaintiff
to
the
terms
of
interim
insurance
coverage,
that
the
agent
could
and
did
complete
the
contracts
of
insurance
by
delivering
the
policies
to
the
applicants,
and
that
thereby
the
contracts
were
made,
he
argues,
is
an
important
if
not
a
determining
factor
in
resolving
the
question
of
whether
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
its
business
in
Bermuda
(Firestone
Tyre
and
Rubber
Co.,
Ltd.
v.
Lewellin,
[1957]
1
All
E.R.
561;
37
T.C.
111
(H.L.)).
In
this
respect
there
was
some
confusing
evidence
about
the
interim
insurance
coverage,
i.e.
the
coverage
which
the
policy
holder
has
between
the
time
he
makes
his
application
for
coverage
and
the
time
the
contract
of
insurance
is
completed
by
delivery
to
him
of
the
policy
by
the
agent,
providing
that
the
applicant
has
tendered
with
the
application
the
amount
of
the
first
premium.
On
the
authority
of
Zurich
Life
Insurance
Company
of
Canada
v.
Barbara
Wallace
Davies,
[1981]
2
S.C.R.
670,
and
Matchett
et
al.
v.
London
Life
Insurance
Co.
(1986),
14
C.C.L.I.
89
(Sask.
C.A.),
I
am
satisfied
that
it
was
within
the
authority
of
the
plaintiff's
agents
to
bind
the
plaintiff
to
this
coverage
and
that
that
contract,
like
the
contract
represented
by
the
policy
itself,
was
completed
in
Bermuda.
However
I
share
the
view
of
counsel
for
the
defendant
that
the
bare
completion
of
those
contracts
by
the
formality
of
accepting
an
application
in
the
one
case
and
the
delivery
of
a
policy
in
the
other
case
is
by
itself
of
little
assistance
in
determining
whether
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
also
advances
the
argument
that
I
should
have
regard
to
section
253
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
subsection
2(1)
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
31
in
deter
mining
whether
the
activities
of
the
plaintiff
through
its
agent
in
Bermuda
constituted
the
carrying
on
of
its
business
there.
Section
253
is
a
deeming
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
provides
that
a
non-resident
of
Canada
who
solicits
orders
or
offers
anything
for
sale
in
Canada
will
be
deemed
to
have
been
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
Counsel
submits
if
that
is
the
test
which
Canada
applies
to
determine
whether
a
non-resident
is
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
it
would
be
an
appropriate
test
for
me
to
apply
in
order
to
determine
whether
a
Canadian
resident
is
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda.
Presumably
by
way
of
buttressing
this
argument,
as
well
as
his
argument
with
respect
to
the
completion
of
the
insurance
contracts
in
Bermuda,
the
plaintiff
tendered
the
expert
evidence
of
Smedly,
Q.C.
[sic]
of
Bermuda
who
said
that
for
the
purposes
of
Bermuda
statutory
law
the
activities
of
the
plaintiff
through
its
agent
would
be
considered
to
be
carrying
on
the
insurance
business
in
Bermuda.
He
also
cites
subsection
2(1)
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
31
which
defines
the
business
of
insurance
as,
among
other
acts,
any
act
of
inducement
to
enter
a
contract
of
insurance
and
submits
that
this
definition
should
be
applied
to
the
concept
of
carrying
on
an
insurance
business
in
a
country
other
than
Canada
as
provided
for
in
subsection
138(9)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
If
one
were
to
apply
these
statutory
provisions
to
the
plaintiff's
activities
in
Bermuda
in
1976
it
would
be
clear,
because
the
agent
solicited
insurance
applications
and
induced
persons
to
enter
into
contracts
of
insurance
in
Bermuda,
that
the
plaintiff
did,
within
the
meaning
of
those
statutory
provisions
as
well
as
within
the
meaning
of
the
relevant
provisions
of
Bermuda's
legislation,
carry
on
the
insurance
business
in
Bermuda.
Once
again
I
find
these
statutory
provisions,
by
themselves,
of
little
assistance
in
determining
the
issue
in
this
matter.
I
note
that
section
253
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
a
deeming
provision
and
commences
with
the
phrase:
"Extended
meaning
of
carrying
on
business”.
That
indicates
to
me
that
it
extends
beyond
the
normal
or
generally
accepted
meaning
of
the
expression.
I
note
also
that
the
definition
in
the
Bermudian
legislation
would
characterize
as
carrying
on
the
insurance
business
in
Bermuda,
a
non-resident
who
merely
advertised
in
Bermuda
insurance
for
sale
in
Canada
which,
in
my
view,
clearly
extends
beyond
any
generally
accepted
meaning
of
the
term.
The
Canadian
statutory
provisions
define
what
will
constitute
the
carrying
on
of
business
and
the
carrying
on
of
an
insurance
business
in
Canada
for
the
purpose
of
that
particular
Canadian
legislation.
The
provisions
do
not
purport
to
define
what
will
constitute
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
or
an
insurance
business
outside
of
Canada
by
a
Canadian
resident.
Nor
does
the
Bermudian
legislation
purport
to
determine,
for
the
purposes
of
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act,
what
will
constitute
the
prosecution
of
the
insurance
business
in
Bermuda.
Dubé,
J.
put
in
perspective
the
matter
of
the
place
where
the
contracts
are
made
and
the
place
where
the
operations
take
place
from
which
the
profits
arise
in
Cutlers
Guild
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1981]
C.T.C.
115
at
117;
81
D.T.C.
5093
at
5095
where
he
observed:
Whether
or
not
a
taxpayer
is
carrying
on
a
business
in
another
country
is
a
question
of
fact
to
be
determined
in
each
case.
Courts
have
ruled
that
the
place
where
sales,
or
contracts
of
sale,
are
effected
is
of
substantial
importance.
However,
the
place
of
sale
may
not
be
the
determining
factor
if
there
are
other
circumstances
present
that
outweigh
its
importance.
Firestone
Tyre
and
Rubber
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Lewellin
(1957),
37
T.C.
111.
Another
test
emanating
from
the
jurisprudence
is
"Where
do
the
operations
take
place
from
which
the
profits
arise?”
Soliciting
orders
in
one
country
may
only
be
ancillary
to
the
exercise
of
a
trade
in
another
country.
F.
L.
Smidth
&
Co.
v.
F.
Greenwood
(1922),
8
T.C.
193.
Certain
authorities
establish
that
activities
and
operations
other
than
contracts
for
sale
constitute
the
carrying
on
of
a
business,
especially
where
these
respective
activities
and
operations
produce
or
earn
income.
While
income
may
be
realized
through
sales,
it
may
not
arise
entirely
from
that
one
activity
or
operation.
Estey,
J.
in
Wm.
Wrigley
Company
Limited
v.
Provincial
Treasurer
of
Manitoba,
[1947]
C.T.C.
304;
confirmed
by
the
Privy
Council,
[1949]
C.T.C.
377.
Purchasing
of
merchandise
in
one
country
(i.e.
Japan)
with
the
view
of
trading
in
it
elsewhere
(Canada)
does
not,
of
course,
constitute
an
exercise
of
the
trade
in
the
former
country.
Grainger
&
Son
v.
William
Lane
Gough,
[1896]
A.C.
325
(House
of
Lords).
Counsel
for
the
defendant
relied
heavily
on
F.L.Smidth
and
Company
v.
F.
Greenwood,
[1921]
3
K.B.
583,
referring
to
it
as
"perhaps
the
most
important
case".
He
emphasized
the
following
passage
from
the
decision
of
Atkin,
L.J.
at
page
593:
The
contracts
in
this
case
were
made
abroad.
But
I
am
not
prepared
to
hold
that
this
test
is
decisive.
I
can
imagine
cases
where
the
contract
of
resale
is
made
abroad,
and
yet
the
manufacture
of
the
goods,
some
negotiation
of
the
terms,
and
complete
execution
of
the
contract
take
place
here
under
such
circumstances
that
the
trade
was
in
truth
exercised
here.
I
think
that
the
question
is,
Where
do
the
operations
take
place
from
which
the
profits
in
substance
arise?
In
that
case,
as
well
as
in
Grainger
&
Son
v.
William
Lane
Gough,
[1896]
A.C.
325
(H.L.),
the
court
was
required
to
determine
the
meaning
of
an
expression
used
in
the
taxing
legislation
of
the
United
Kingdom
which
expression
is
not
the
same
as
that
used
in
subsection
138(9)
of
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act.
The
test
or
question
stated
by
Atkin,
L.J.
is
thus
applicable
to
the
interpretation
of
the
relevant
tax
legislation
of
the
United
Kingdom
which
is
quite
different
from
the
Canadian
legislation.
Atkin,
L.J.
was
not
addressing
the
issue
of
whether
the
taxpayer
was
carrying
on
business
in
a
country
(which
is
the
expression
in
subsection
138(9)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act)
but
the
narrower
question
of
whether
the
profits
sought
to
be
taxed
arose
out
of
the
trade
which
was
exercised
in
the
country,
and
it
was
for
that
reason
that
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
or
the
exercise
of
a
trade
was
necessarily
related
to
the
place
where
the
profits
arise.
This
seems
clear
from
his
observations
at
page
593
immediately
before
the
passage
cited
by
counsel
for
the
defendant.
The
question
is
whether
the
profits
brought
into
charge
are
“profits
arising
or
accruing”
to
the
respondents
"from
any
trade
.
.
.
exercised
within
the
United
Kingdom"
within
the
meaning
of
Sch.
D.
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
1853.
The
question
is
not
whether
the
respondents
carry
on
business
in
this
country.
It
is
whether
they
exercise
a
trade
in
this
country
so
that
profits
accrue
to
them
from
the
trade
so
exercised.
From
that
I
conclude
that
the
"profits"
test
relied
upon
by
counsel
for
the
defendant
is
not
as
determinative
of
the
issue
in
this
matter
as
he
would
urge
it
to
be,
and
that
the
concept
of
a
person
carrying
on
a
business
in
a
country
is
somewhat
broader
than
the
more
restrictive
interpretation
of
the
United
Kingdom
legislation
contained
in
the
two
cases
to
which
I
have
referred.
Although
I
have
indicated
that
the
place
where
the
contracts
are
made,
the
place
where
the
profits
arise,
and
the
legislative
definitions
are
of
little
assistance
or
are
not
determinative
of
the
issue
before
me,
I
do
not
discount
them
entirely.
I
simply
mean
to
say
that
no
single
one
of
those
arguments
in
itself
persuades
me
I
should
thereby
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda
in
1976.
Because,
however,
I
have
concluded
that
the
operations
which
the
plaintiff
conducts
through
its
agent
in
Bermuda
fall
within
the
parameters
of
all
three
methods
suggested
to
me
for
determining
the
question
in
issue,
and
because
of
the
nature
of
the
insurance
business
I
have
concluded
that
the
plaintiff
did
carry
on
its
business
in
Bermuda
in
its
1976
taxation
year.
In
so
far
as
the
place
where
the
contracts
are
made
dictates
that
as
the
place
where
the
business
is
carried
on,
the
plaintiff
makes
its
contracts
of
insurance
on
lives
of
Bermudian
policy
holders
in
Bermuda.
I
am
satisfied
that
the
interim
insurance
coverage
is
effected
in
Bermuda
by
the
completion
in
Bermuda
of
the
requisite
formalities.
Similarly
I
am
satisfied
that
the
contract
of
insurance
represented
by
the
written
policy
is
completed
in
Bermuda
by
the
delivery
in
Bermuda
to
the
applicant
of
the
policy
itself.
Although
counsel
for
the
defendant
brushed
this
aside
as
a
mere
formality,
and
I
tend
to
agree
with
him,
I
cannot
agree
with
his
suggestion
that
the
agent's
duty
to
assure
himself
that
there
had
been
no
perceivable
change
in
the
applicant's
insurable
status
before
he
concluded
the
contract
by
delivering
the
policy
is
a
mere
formality
without
substance.
The
policies
themselves
provide
that
the
contract
will
not
come
into
effect
until
they
are
delivered
to
the
insured.
The
delivery
and
final,
even
though
cursory,
assessment
of
the
continued
insurability
of
the
proposed
policy
holder
is
an
important
condition
precedent
to
the
completion
of
the
contract.
It
is
also
a
procedure
or
action
which
is
vital
to
the
protection
of
the
business
interest
of
the
plaintiff
and
one
which
is
perfomred
by
the
plaintiff's
agent
in
Bermuda.
I
have
already
suggested
that
the
"profits"
test
may
have
its
limitations
because
of
the
requirement
under
the
United
Kingdom
legislation
that
there
be
profits
in
the
United
Kingdom
from
the
exercise
of
the
trade.
It
is
not
unusual
that
a
new
business
will
have
no
profits
for
a
substantial
period
of
time
but
it
will
nevertheless
be
carrying
on
business.
However
it
is
not
necessary,
or
even
possible,
for
me
to
determine
whether
the
plaintiff
derived
a
profit
from
its
1976
operations
in
Bermuda.
By
any
standard
the
direct
and
allocable
costs
attributable
to
the
Bermuda
operation
for
1976
would
have
resulted
in
a
loss.
The
question,
if
I
were
to
apply
the
"profits"
test,
would
be
whether
those
operations
which
the
plaintiff
carried
on
through
its
agent
in
Bermuda
during
1976
were
the
beginning
of
a
proposed
or
systematic
type
of
operation
out
of
which
the
plaintiff
could
reasonably
expect
to
derive
a
profit.
In
my
view
they
were.
An
insurance
company
carries
on
its
business
by
underwriting
risks,
collecting
premiums,
investing
the
funds
represented
by
the
premiums,
paying
losses,
fixing
rates,
advertising
and
in
a
host
of
other
ways
but,
as
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
says,
without
the
huge
force
of
insurance
agents
there
would
be
no
business
and
no
profits.
The
insurance
salesman,
agent,
underwriter
or
broker
and
the
activities
which
he
carries
on
are
not,
like
the
wine
makers'
and
manufacturers’
representatives,
merely
to
accept
or
even
solicit
orders,
which
has
been
found
to
be
ancillary
to
the
main
business
of
buying,
storing,
selling
or
manufacturing
the
product.
The
insurance
agent
represents
the
insurance
company
and
on
its
behalf
carries
on
a
major
and
essential
portion
of
the
insurance
company's
business
operations.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
characterizes
the
insurance
agent
as
a
person
who
simply
takes
orders
for
a
policy
and
submits
the
premium
to
the
company.
If
that
were
the
case
there
would
have
been
little
need
for
the
elaborate
preparations
which
the
plaintiff
made
prior
to
embarking
upon
its
Bermuda
venture.
The
insurance
company's
sales
force
not
only
solicits
insurance
and
collects
the
premiums,
but
the
agents
promote
the
various
policies
available,
make
various
proposals
to
prospective
policy
holders,
complete
the
applications,
arrange
for
the
medical
examinations,
bind
the
company
to
interim
insurance
coverage,
complete
the
contract
of
insurance
by
delivering
the
policy
and
deliver
the
cheque
in
payment
of
a
claim.
The
agent
also
has,
in
Bermuda,
the
responsibility
of
assessing
the
"persistency
rating"
of
a
policy
holder
i.e.
the
likelihood
of
the
applicant
continuing
with
the
payment
of
the
premiums.
The
profits
of
the
plaintiff
and
the
renewal
commissions
of
the
agent
are
dependent
on
the
accuracy
of
the
agent's
assessment
in
this
respect.
The
agent
also
has
the
responsibility,
already
referred
to,
prior
to
completing
the
contract
of
insurance
by
delivery
of
the
policy,
to
assure
himself
that
there
has
been
no
material
change
in
the
risk
during
the
interval
between
taking
the
application
and
the
delivery
of
the
policy.
A
further
and
important
part
of
the
agent's
activities
on
behalf
of
the
company
is
to
service
the
policy
and
deal
directly
with
the
policy
holder
on
any
problems
which
arise.
It
was
by
these
activities
or
operations
which
the
plaintiff
carried
on
through
its
agent
in
Bermuda
that
the
plaintiff
expected
to
derive
a
profit,
not
in
1976,
but
as
the
business
which
it
started
in
1976
grew.
By
that
test
the
plaintiff
was,
in
my
view,
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda.
The
fact
that
the
plaintiff
issued
only
two
policies
in
Bermuda
in
1976,
and
then
only
at
the
end
of
December,
is
of
little
consequence.
The
plaintiff
put
in
motion
its
plan
to
operate
in
Bermuda
in
May
and
thereafter
did
all
things
necessary
to
implement
that
plan.
Its
intention
to
carry
on
its
business
in
Bermuda
was
evident
well
before
December
1976.
It
had,
as
early
as
August
of
1976,
embarked
upon
its
business
by
having
its
agent
solicit
insurance
contracts
from
Bermudian
residents
with
the
intention
that
the
venture
would
continue
indefinitely.
The
operations
of
1976
were
but
the
beginning
of
a
systematic
or
habitual
series
of
activities
which
were
intended
to
and
did
continue
with
a
view
to
producing
a
profit.
While
I
have
previously
noted
that
I
do
not
accept
the
argument
of
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
that
the
meaning
assigned
to
the
business
of
insurance
in
the
several
pieces
of
legislation
to
which
he
referred
me
should
be
applied
to
determine
whether
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda,
I
do
note
that
throughout
the
various
definitions
there
is
the
common
thread
that
the
inducement
of
persons
to
enter
into
contracts
of
insurance
is
considered
to
be
the
business
of
insurance.
Whatever
reservations
I
may
have
with
respect
to
applying
legislative
definitions
to
an
activity
which
must
be
determined
on
the
facts,
it
appears
to
me
that
the
inducement
of
persons
to
enter
into
contracts
of
insurance
fairly
describes
the
business
of
an
insurance
company,
or
at
least
a
vital
portion
of
that
business.
In
my
view
it
can
be
fairly
said
that
the
business
of
an
insurance
company
is
selling
insurance.
It
is,
of
course,
other
things
as
well,
but
it
is
certainly
that,
and
it
carries
on
that
portion
of
its
business
through
its
sales
agents.
In
this
matter
the
plaintiff,
through
its
agent
in
Bermuda,
induces
residents
of
Bermuda
to
enter
into
contracts
of
insurance
in
Bermuda.
Accordingly
if
I
were
to
apply
the
“legislative”
test
suggested
by
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
I
would
also
find
that
the
plaintiff
was
carrying
on
business
in
Bermuda.
Thus,
although
no
one
of
the
several
tests
to
which
counsel
have
referred
me
is
determinative,
the
cumulative
effect
of
applying
them
all
has
been.
The
contracts
of
insurance
issued
in
1976
were
made
in
Bermuda,
a
vital
part
of
the
company's
business,
its
sales
operations,
was
conducted
in
Bermuda
through
its
agent,
and
the
inducements
to
have
residents
of
Bermuda
enter
into
life
insurance
contracts
clearly
fell
within
the
common,
and
also
legislatively
defined,
meaning
of
carrying
on
the
insurance
business.
Those
circumstances,
combined
with
the
other
activities
carried
on
by
the
plaintiff's
agent
in
Bermuda,
to
which
I
have
already
made
reference,
have
satisfied
me
that
in
1976
the
plaintiff
did
carry
on
its
business
in
Bermuda.
Accordingly
I
direct
that
the
1976
reassessment
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
of
tax
under
Part
I
in
accordance
with
the
method
contemplated
by
subsection
138(9)
of
the
Act
and
Part
XXIV
of
the
Regulations
as
they
read
in
respect
of
the
1976
taxation
year.
The
second
part
of
the
plaintiff's
appeal
is
in
respect
of
both
its
1975
and
1976
taxation
years
and
relates
to
the
reductions
in
expenses
claimed
by
the
plaintiff
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
the
Minister
treated
or
characterized
certain
amounts
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
its
subsidiary,
Lonlife
Data
Services
Limited
("L.D.S."),
as
a
reduction
of
expenses
rather
than
as
income
received.
It
is
this
portion
of
the
plaintiff's
appeal
which,
as
I
have
already
noted,
has
given
rise
to
the
delay
in
filing
my
decision.
Even
though
counsel
took
the
most
elaborate
and
detailed
efforts
to
guide
me
through
the
evidence
I
was
not
able,
by
the
end
of
the
trial,
to
crystallize
in
my
own
mind
any
succinct
exposition
of
the
issues
to
be
addressed.
I
am
not
sure
that
my
painstaking
and
lengthy
efforts
to
resolve
this
difficulty
since
the
trial
have
been
successful.
The
plaintiff
uses
computer
equipment
in
carrying
on
its
insurance
business.
Because
the
equipment
must
have
the
capacity
to
handle
the
peak
demand
loads
of
the
plaintiff's
business
there
exists
extra
capacity
when
the
plaintiff’s
requirements
are
at
less
than
peak
or
maximum.
Realizing
this,
the
plaintiff
wanted
to
turn
that
excess
capacity
to
account.
The
natural
method
of
doing
this
would
be
to
sell
or
lease
the
excess
capacity
to
others
for
a
fee.
However
the
plaintiff's
business
is
subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
31
which
counsel
for
the
parties
to
this
action
inform
me
prohibits
the
plaintiff
from
selling
that
capacity
to
the
public
at
large.
The
plaintiff,
however,
is
not
prohibited
from
providing
that
excess
capacity
to
a
subsidiary
which
in
turn
may
sell
it
to
the
public.
Accordingly,
with
the
apparent
approval
of
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance,
the
plaintiff
incorporated
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary,
L.D.C.,
which
acquired
that
excess
capacity,
or
portion
of
it,
and
with
it
provided
computer
services
to
the
public.
L.D.S.
paid
the
plaintiff
for
this
capacity
an
annual
amount
calculated
as
a
percentage
of
certain
actual
and
fictional
expenses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
in
the
operation
of
the
computer.
By
the
direction
of
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
the
plaintiff,
in
this
arrangement
with
L.D.S.,
was
not
permitted
to
make
a
profit
or
suffer
a
loss
as
determined
by
the
methods
of
accounting
prescribed
for
life
insurance
companies.
I
should
note
here
that
because
the
accounting
methods
prescribed
by
the
plaintiff
as
an
insurance
company
are
not
precisely
the
same
as
those
which
determine
the
plaintiff's
liability
for
income
tax,
it
does
not
follow
from
the
Superintendent's
directives
that
there
could
not
be
a
taxable
income
or
a
loss
resulting
from
the
arrangement
into
which
the
plaintiff
entered
with
L.D.S.
Nor,
as
I
understand
the
evidence,
does
it
follow
that
the
plaintiff's
unconsolidated
corporate
financial
statements
would
necessarily
show
a
"no
profit/no
loss"
arrangement.
For
its
1975
and
1976
taxation
years,
the
plaintiff
carried
on
this
arrangement
with
its
subsidiary
and,
for
the
purposes
of
its
insurance
accounting
requirements,
made
neither
a
profit
nor
sustained
a
loss.
In
its
annual
statements
for
those
years,
which
it
was
required
to
submit
to
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance,
the
revenues
and
expenses
associated
with
the
intercompany
computer
business
were
shown
as
net
amounts
which
sometimes
offset
one
another
in
individual
categories
of
each
and
the
net
totals
of
each
category
of
which
offset
each
other
completely.
This
was
as
required
and
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance.
In
filing
its
income
tax
returns
for
the
same
years,
however,
the
plaintiff
did
not
report
the
revenues
and
expenses
in
the
same
manner
as
it
did
for
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance.
Indeed
it
reported
all
of
the
funds
received
from
L.D.S.
as
income
and
all
of
the
expenses,
which
it
considered
as
deductible
expenses,
as
expenses.
This
had
the
result
of
increasing
the
plaintiff's
income
as
well
as
its
expenses.
It
also
gave
rise
to
the
result
which
formed
the
basis
for
the
defendant
reassessing
the
plaintiff
for
those
two
years.
The
reassessment
was
for
additional
tax
in
each
year
under
Part
XII
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
by
reason
of
the
defendant
reducing
the
expenses
deductible
in
computing
the
amounts
on
which
the
Part
XII
tax
was
applicable.
Part
XII
of
the
Act,
now
repealed,
contained
special
provisions
for
the
taxation
of
investment
income
of
a
life
insurer
arising
in
the
course
of
its
Canadian
life
insurance
business.
Subsection
209(2)
also
provided
for
the
deduction
of
expenses
incurred
in
carrying
on
its
life
insurance
business.
Fifty
per
cent
of
any
expense
so
incurred
was
allowed
as
a
deduction
and
the
resultant
taxable
income
was
taxed
at
the
rate
of
15
per
cent.
By
adding
50
per
cent
of
the
gross
expenses
associated
with
its
income
from
L.D.S.
to
50%
of
each
of
the
other
expenses
incurred
in
carrying
on
its
life
insurance
business,
the
plaintiff
reduced
its
taxable
income
from
its
life
insurance
business
by
an
equivalent
amount
and
its
tax
by
15
per
cent
of
that
amount.
The
defendant
disallowed
the
deductions
associated
with
the
income
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
on
the
grounds
that:
(a)
the
amounts
shown
as
income
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
were
not
income
of
the
plaintiff
but
were
operating
expenses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
on
behalf
of
L.D.S.
for
which
the
plaintiff
was
reimbursed;
and
(b)
even
if
the
amounts
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
were
income
from
the
sale
of
excess
computer
capacity
the
amounts
were
income
of
the
plaintiff
from
a
business
other
than
the
plaintiff's
life
insurance
business
and
the
amounts
shown
as
expenses,
50
per
cent
of
the
total
of
which
are
claimed
as
deductions,
are
not
deductible
under
the
provisions
of
subsection
209(2)
because
they
were
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
the
sale
of
excess
computer
capacity
and
not
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
the
life
insurance
business.
As
counsel
for
the
defendant
put
the
issue
to
me
in
argument:
.
.
.
these
expenses
in
question
(1)
were
not
expenses
of
the
plaintiff
but,
in
fact
and
law,
expenses
of
Lonlife
Data
Services
Limited;
(2)
even
if
these
expenses
were
expenses
of
the
plaintiff
rather
than
Lonlife
Data
Services
Limited,
they
were
nevertheless
not
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
a
life
insurance
business
but
were,
rather,
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
providing
computer
services.
To
resolve
those
issues
I
must,
as
I
understand
them,
answer
the
following
questions.
1.
Was
the
amount
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
as
payment
for
the
plaintiff's
excess
computer
capacity
properly
characterized
as
income
of
the
plaintiff?
2.
If
the
amount
was
income
earned
by
the
plaintiff
and
for
which
it
incurred
expenses,
were
the
expenses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
on
its
own
behalf
or
by
the
plaintiff
on
behalf
of
L.D.S.
and
for
which
the
plaintiff
was
reimbursed?
3.
If
the
expenses
were
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
on
its
own
behalf,
were
they
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
the
life
insurance
business
and
therefore
deductible
under
subsection
209(2)
of
the
Act?
The
defendant
submits
that
the
amounts
characterized
by
the
plaintiff
as
income
from
L.D.S.
cannot
be
characterized
as
such
because
the
arrangement
was
made
on
a
no
profit/no
loss
basis.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
cites
Dickson,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
in
William
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
[1978]
1
S.C.R.
480
at
485;
[1977]
C.T.C.
310
at
313
for
the
proposition
that
there
can
be
no
income
without
a
profit
or
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
Counsel
then
submits
that
because
of
the
no
profit/no
loss
arrangement
between
the
plaintiff
and
L.D.S.
there
could
be
no
profit
or
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
and
thus
no
income
in
the
hands
of
the
plaintiff
resulting
from
that
arrangement.
The
error
in
this
submission
is
that
the
no
profit/no
loss
arrangement
between
the
plaintiff
and
L.D.S.
was
with
reference
to
the
manner
in
which
the
plaintiff
was
obliged
to
keep
its
accounts
for
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
under
the
provisions
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act.
It
was
within
the
confines
of
those
provisions
that
the
plaintiff
could
not
show
a
profit
or
a
loss.
Under
those
provisions,
for
example,
the
plaintiff
properly
allocated
to
the
defendant
as
an
expense
a
portion
of
the
rent
which
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
required
the
plaintiff
to
charge
itself
for
premises
which
were
in
fact
owned
by
the
plaintiff.
As
this
was
not
an
expense
of
the
plaintiff
in
providing
the
computer
services
to
L.D.S.
it
represented
at
least
the
possibility
or
reasonable
expectation
of
a
profit
to
the
plaintiff
to
that
extent.
In
the
same
way
portions
of
other
expenses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
in
providing
services
to
L.D.S.
which
would
have
been
incurred
in
any
event,
such
as
equipment
rentals
and
salaries,
were
reduced
by
allocating
a
portion
of
them
to
L.D.S.
The
reduction
of
the
plaintiff's
overall
costs
thus
also
represented
additional
income
or
profit
in
the
hands
of
the
plaintiff
in
a
business
sense
if
not
in
the
accounting
methods
prescribed
by
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance.
In
my
view
the
plaintiff,
in
a
business
sense,
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
making
a
profit
from
the
arrangement
and,
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
properly
characterized
the
revenue
from
L.D.S.
as
income
from
a
business.
The
defendant
also
submits
that
even
if
the
amount
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
is
income
in
respect
of
which
it
incurred
expenses,
the
expenses
were
incurred,
not
by
the
plaintiff
on
its
own
behalf,
but
by
the
plaintiff
on
behalf
of
L.D.S.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
likens
this
arrangement
to
an
agency
relationship
where
the
plaintiff
is
the
agent
and
L.D.S.
is
the
principal
which
had
simply
reimbursed
the
plaintiff
for
expenses
or
outlays
which
the
plaintiff
made
on
its
behalf.
Once
again
I
do
not
agree.
The
fact
is
that
practically
all
of
the
expenses
which
went
to
make
up
the
annual
charge
to
L.D.S.
would
have
been
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
without
the
existence
of
its
arrangement
with
L.D.S.
They
were
therefore,
in
my
view,
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
own
right
and
not
on
behalf
of
L.D.S.
There
is
no
suggestion
in
the
evidence
that
the
salaries
of
the
plaintiff's
staff
would
have
been
reduced
or
that
the
number
of
employees
of
the
plaintiff
would
have
been
reduced
if
the
plaintiff
had
not
entered
into
the
arrangement
with
L.D.S.
Similarly
the
computer
equipment
would
have
required
the
same
amount
to
maintain
and
repair
it
and
would
have
depreciated
to
the
same
extent.
What
was
charged
by
the
plaintiff
to
L.D.S.
for
the
provision
of
the
excess
computer
capacity
was
an
annual
fee
calculated
in
accordance
with
the
guidelines
of
the
Superintendent
of
Insurance
and
by
reference
to
percentages
of
certain
costs
of
the
plaintiff
allowed
as
costs
under
the
provisions
of
the
Canadian
and
British
Insurance
Companies
Act.
The
expenses
were
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
in
its
own
right
and
not
on
behalf
of
L.D.S.
Indeed
the
rent
and
depreciation
amounts
which
were
allocated
and
made
up
some
$60,000
of
the
1976
charge
to
L.D.S.
were
not
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
at
all
and
therefore
could
not
possibly
be
considered
as
reimbursed
expenses
because
there
was
no
outlay
by
the
plaintiff
and
therefore
nothing
to
be
reimbursed.
I
come
now
to
the
third
and,
to
me,
the
most
troublesome
question
which
is,
assuming
the
income
is
income
of
the
plaintiff
and
the
expenses
are
expenses
of
the
plaintiff
properly
incurred
in
rendering
the
computer
service
to
L.D.S.,
were
the
expenses
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
the
plaintiff’s
life
insurance
business
and
therefore
deductible
under
subsection
209(2)
of
the
Act?
Counsel
for
the
defendant
submits
that
in
order
for
the
expenses
relating
to
the
L.D.S.
arrangement
to
be
deductible
under
Part
XII
of
the
Act
they
must
have
been
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
its
life
insurance
business.
Because
these
expenses
were
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
providing
a
computer
service
to
L.D.S.
and
not
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
on
the
plaintiff's
life
insurance
business,
according
to
counsel
for
the
defendant,
they
are
not
deductible
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
209(2)
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
argues
that
the
expenses
were
incurred
to
carry
on
the
plaintiff's
life
insurance
business.
The
expenses
are
associated
with
the
operation
of
the
plaintiff's
computer,
the
operation
of
which
is
a
part
of
the
operation
of
its
life
insurance
business.
He
argues,
and
I
agree,
that
the
plaintiff
had
to
have
the
extra
capacity
to
service
its
peak
demands
and
that
the
expenses
claimed
would
have
been
incurred
whether
or
not
there
had
been
any
arrangements
with
L.D.S.
Counsel
referred
me
to
Joyal,
J.'s
decision
in
The
Excelsior
Life
Insurance
Company
v.
The
Queen,
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
213;
85
D.T.C.
5164
which
he
sug-
gested
clearly
established
that
the
expenses
may
be
taken
into
account.
If
I
understand
the
effect
of
that
decision
counsel
is
correct
in
his
assertion
that
the
disputed
expenses
should
be
allowed.
In
that
case
an
expense
was
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
a
portion
of
which
was
attributable
to
its
life
insurance
business
and
a
portion
of
which
was
not.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
latter
portion.
Joyal,
J.
allowed
the
taxpayer's
appeal
against
that
decision
saying,
in
effect,
that
expenses
allowed
under
Part
I
of
the
Act
are
also
allowed
under
Part
XII
whether
or
not
they
are
attributable
to
the
taxpayer's
life
insurance
business.
In
this
case
the
evidence
is
that
the
plaintiff
completed
its
Part
I
tax
return
using
gross
income
and
gross
expenses.
Mr.
James
Macdonald,
the
plaintiff's
comptroller
in
1975
and
1976
and
now
its
Director
of
Taxation
and
Cash
Management,
described
how
this
was
done.
I
think
what
you've
outlined
follows
essentially
how
we
had
filed
our
tax
return
for
Part
I;
in
other
words,
we
had
grossed
up
the
Lonlife
expenses
and
we
had
grossed
up
depreciation
and
grossed
up
the
rent,
as
has
been
done
there.
So,
for
Part
1,
we
felt
that
it
was
the
correct
way
to
handle
it
—
the
expenses
should
be
grossed
up
and
the
other
items
shown
as
miscellaneous
income
so
they
came
into
the
tax
calculation.
To
the
best
of
my
knowledge,
there
was
no
adjustment
made
as
to
how
we
did
the
Part
I
calculation.
It
was
when
we
came
to
doing
the
Part
XII
in
determining
the
50%
administrative
expenses
that
they
indicated
that
we
could
not
treat
the
Lonlife
payment
to
us,
the
charge
to
Lonlife,
as
miscellaneous
income;
we
had
to
use
it
as
a
net
of
expense.
We
understand
there's
an
inconsistency
there
between
how
we're
treated
under
Part
XII
and
how
we're
treated
under
Part
I.
To
do
Part
I
properly,
you
have
to
gross
it
up
and
take
off
the
gross
depreciation
and
take
out
the
gross
rental
in
order
to
come
up
with
the
proper
figures.
Thus
the
expenses,
the
subject
of
this
action,
were
allowed
under
Part
I
but,
by
requiring
the
plaintiff
to
file
net
figures
for
income
and
expenses
under
Part
XII,
they
were
effectively
disallowed.
Assuming
that
I
have
interpreted
Joyal,
J.'s
decision
properly,
this
the
defendant
is
not
entitled
to
do
and
this
is
the
conclusion
that
I
have
reached.
Accordingly,
the
plaintiff's
appeal
on
this
issue
will
be
allowed
and
the
assessments
of
tax
for
the
plaintiff's
1975
and
1976
taxation
years,
for
the
purposes
of
Part
XII
of
the
Act,
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
amounts
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
L.D.S.
did
not
reduce
expenses
incurred
by
the
plaintiff
deductible
under
Part
XII
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
is
asked
to
submit
a
draft
judgment
for
signature,
in
accordance
with
these
reasons,
pursuant
to
paragraph
2(b)
of
rule
337
of
the
Federal
Court
Rules
and
approved
as
to
form
by
counsel
for
the
defendant.
The
plaintiff
shall
have
its
costs.
Appeal
allowed.