RAND,
J.:—The
appellant
company
deals
in
large
scale
manufacture
of
wearng
apparel
in
the
course
of
which
quantities
of
cloth
are
purchased
in
lots
from
Great
Britain.
Its
ordinary
practice,
prior
to
January
1948,
was
to
pay
for
each
lot
according
to
the
terms
of
the
invoice
by
an
individual
purchase
of
sterling
at
the
rate
of
exchange
then
prevailing.
In
that
month
the
officers
of
the
company,
foreseeing
the
likelihood
of
a
devaluation
of
sterling,
made
preparations
to
avail
themselves
of
the
benefit
of
that
happening
should
it
eventuate.
The
company
thereupon
arranged
with
a
Canadian
bank
having
a
branch
office
in
London
for
a
line
of
credit
at
that
office
to
a
maximum
of
£250,000
which
could
be
called
in
by
the
bank
at
the
end
of
each
year.
Although
this
credit
may
have
been
available
for
any
purposes
of
the
company,
that
it
would
be
resorted
to
for
some
or
all
of
its
purchases
of
material
for
its
business
is
quite
evident,
and
no
other
purpose
is
suggested.
The
debit
account
accumulated
until
September
1949;
interim
payments
during
that
period
were
from
time
to
time
made
on
the
loan
generally
for
the
purpose
of
keeping
it
within
what
were
considered
to
be
desirable
limits.
In
that
month
the
pound
was
devalued
and
the
amount
then
reached,
approximately
$588,000,
was,
in
the
course
of
weeks,
liquidated
by
purchases
of
sterling
at
the
lower
rate.
During
this
period
of
approximately
twenty
months
the
purchases
of
goods
were
settled
in
the
following
manner:
when
the
goods
had
been
received
in
Canada,
and
within
the
terms
of
the
invoice,
a
direction
would
be
forwarded
to
the
bank
in
London
to
make
payment
to
the
seller;
at
the
same
time
the
price
would
be
entered
in
the
books
of
the
company
in
Canadian
dollars
at
the
then
officially
fixed
rate
of
exchange;
and
when
payment
was
made
the
purchase
became
a
closed
transaction.
The
total
outstanding
advances
in
September
1949,
cleared
at
the
lower
rate,
consisted
solely
of
accumulated
sums
paid
in
this
manner
to
sellers
of
cloth,
i.e.
goods
bought
by
the
company
in
the
course
of
its
trade.
Up
to
devaluation
the
rate
was
$4.04
to
the
pound
but
the
bank
overdraft
was
paid
on
an
exchange
rate
of
$3.0875.
The
net
profit
was
approximately
$160,000
and
the
question
is
whether
that
profit
is
taxable
as
income.
The
company’s
contention
is
that
the
profit
was
on
a
collateral
borrowing
of
capital,
a
single
and
discrete
transaction,
not
in
the
course
of
any
business
carried
on
by
it,
in
effect,
a
temporary
investment
in
foreign
currency.
As
a
profit
on
such
an
investment
it
is
not
within
the
scope
of
the
taxing
statute.
The
Crown’s
answer
is
that
this
mode
of
financing
was,
as
created,
an
inseparable
part
of
and
merged
in
the
business
in
which
the
company
was
engaged;
or
if
not,
that
it
was
a
venture
within
Section
127(e)
which
defines
"‘business''
as
including
"‘an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
a
trade’’.
A
number
of
authorities
were
examined
by
both
counsel
which
bear
more
or
less
directly
upon
dealings
involving
foreign
exchange.
Those
relied
on
by
the
Crown
were
cases
in
which
the
exchange
was
encountered
as
part
of
the
transaction
of
purchase
and
sale
as
between
the
buyer
and
seller
themselves:
the
exchange
benefit
or
detriment
was
immediately
involved
in
the
actual
payment
to
the
seller
of
the
price
of
goods
purchased.
Admittedly
in
such
a
mode
of
dealing
the
rate
of
exchange
at
the
time
of
payment
and
not
at
any
other
time
controls:
the
actual
outlay
by
the
purchaser
to
the
seller
for
the
goods
received,
in
terms
of
the
domestic
currency,
is
the
amount
which
must
be
taken
into
the
account.
Between
that
and
the
practice
here
there
is,
no
doubt,
a
difference
in
fact.
When
the
goods
were
paid
for
with
the
borrowed
sterling,
the
relation
between
buyer
and
seller,
for
those
goods,
was
ended.
Entry
had
to
be
made
in
various
records,
in
London
between
the
bank
and
the
purchaser,
in
Canada
between
the
purchaser
and
seller.
What
remained
outstanding
was
the
debt
to
the
bank
owing
by
the
purchaser,
and
with
this
transaction
the
seller
had
nothing
to
do.
The
proposition
that
the
risk
of
a
change
in
value
of
capital
securities
or
investments
is
that
of
capital
can
be
accepted.
The
capital
machinery
within
and
by
means
of
which
the
business
earning
the
income
is
carried
on
is
distinct
from
that
business
itself;
and
the
fluctuations
in
its
value
have
no
bearing
on
profits
or
losses
from
the
business.
That
distinction
was
stated
with
clarity
by
Lord
Macmillan
in
Montreal
Coke
and
Manufacturing
Company
v.
M.N.R.,
[1944]
A.C.
126.
At
p.
134;
[1944]
C.T.C.
94
at
p.
100,
he
puts
it
thus:
"‘It
is
not
the
business
of
either
of
the
appellants
to
engage
in
financial
operations.
The
nature
of
their
businesses
is
sufficiently
indicated
by
their
titles.
It
is
to
those
businesses
that
they
look
for
their
earnings.
Of
course,
like
other
business
people,
they
must
have
capital
to
enable
them
to
conduct
their
enterprises,
but
their
financial
arrangements
are
quite
distinct
from
the
activities
by
which
they
earn
their
income.
No
doubt,
the
way
in
which
they
finance
their
businesses
will,
or
may,
reflect
itself
favourably
or
unfavourably
in
their
annual
accounts,
but
expenditure,
incurred
in
relation
to
the
financing
of
their
businesses
is
not,
in
their
Lordships’
opinion,
expenditures
incurred
in
the
earning
of
their
income
within
the
statutory
meaning.
The
statute,
in
s.
5(b),
significantly
employs
the
expression
‘capital
used
in
the
business
to
earn
the
income.’
differentiating
between
the
provision
of
capital
and
the
process
of
earning
profits.”
The
principle
was
applied
by
this
Court
in
Bennett
&
White
v.
M.N.R.,
[1949]
S.C.R.
287;
[1949]
C.T.C.
1,
in
which
certain
payments,
made
as
the
price
of
obtaining
guarantees
required
for
bank
advances
to
the
company,
were
held
to
be
of
a
capital
nature
and
not
deductible.
An
analogous
application
was
made
in
McKinlay
v.
Jenkins,
10
T.C.
372.
A
contractor,
undertaking
work
which
called
for
the
use
of
Italian
granite,
purchased
lira
in
advance
of
his
requirements.
The
exchange
value
of
the
lira
went
up,
the
contractor
sold
at
a
profit
and
later
repurchased
when
the
value
had
fallen
off.
The
gain
was
held
to
result
from
an
isolated
transaction
in
a
capital
dealing
and
was
not
income.
In
the
language
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
the
profit
was
not
"‘connected
with
the
contract
to
construct’’;
it
was
an
appreciation
of
a
temporary
investment,
a
dealing
not
merged
in
the
business.
So,
too,
in
Davies
v.
Shell
Company
of
China
Limited,
32
T.C.
133.
There
the
company
sold
petroleum
products
in
China
to
agents
who
paid
as
the
products
were
sold.
To
secure
the
seller’s
position
the
agents
were
required
to
deposit
sums
in
Chinese
dollars
with
the
seller.
The
latter
transferred
the
deposits
to
London
and
converted
them
into
sterling.
Three
years
later
when
the
business
in
China
was
brought
to
a
close
the
amounts
due
the
agents
in
Chinese
currency
were
repaid
them.
The
value
of
that
currency
had
declined
and
the
company
realized
a
substantial
benefit
in
pound
sterling,
which
was
held
not
to
be
taxable
income.
The
dealings
before
us
are
not,
in
my
opinion,
within
that
differentiating
conception.
The
loan
produced
working
capital
used
in
the
course
of
the
company’s
business;
the
loan
was
effected
as
each
payment
was
made
to
a
seller
;
but
in
substance
the
creation
of
debt
in
the
bank
was
merely
a
substitution
of
creditor
for
the
actual
transactions:
no
advance
was
ever
made
or,
so
far
as
the
case
goes,
was
ever
agreed
to
be
made
to
the
company
itself.
Mr.
Phillips,
in
his
plausible
argument,
stressed
the
arrangement
as
a
temporary
investment
in
foreign
currency.
But
what,
in
the
sense
of
McKinlay,
is
an
investment
?
Surely
it
involves
the
putting
at
risk
of
an
asset
or
interest
of
value
by
the
investor
from
which
an
increment
of
additional
return
of
value
is
ordinarily
hoped
for.
Here
there
was
simply
an
accumulation
of
debt
as
the
transactions
of
the
business
proceeded.
No
asset
was
put
at
risk
by
the
company:
the
obligation
of
the
bank
was
to
pay
the
sellers
of
the
goods
and
them
only.
Even
the
elements
here
of
a
short
sale
of
sterling
do
not,
as
a
collateral
investment,
bring
it
within
the
meaning
of
McKinlay.
What
was
intended
and
done
was
the
creation
of
indebtedness
to
the
bank
arising
directly
out
of
the
business
and
we
cannot
distort
that
into
a
purchase
from
the
bank
and
a
payment,
as
a
matter
of
choice,
by
the
company
to
the
supplier
:
actual
sterling
as
a
commodity
never
existed
in
the
ownership
of
the
company.
The
only
difference
between
that
course
of
dealing
and
the
ordinary
monthly
arrangements
with
a
bank
lies
in
the
possibly
greater
time
allowed
the
outgoings
to
accumulate.
It
was
a
large
scale
process
of
overdraft
through
a
substantial
period
of
time
which
I
am
quite
unable
to
view
as
an
investment.
From
South
Africa,
Income
Tax
Case
No.
308
(1934),
8
S.A.T.C.
99
was
cited
as
a
direct
authority
for
the
company.
There
the
taxpayer,
carrying
on
business
in
South
Africa,
had
for
many
years
financed
its
many
operations
by
an
overdraft
with
a
bank
in
London.
When
the
United
Kingdom
left
the
gold
standard
the
company
discharged
the
overdraft
at
a
favourable
rate
of
exchange,
and
the
question,
as
here,
was
whether
that
gain
was
of
an
income
or
capital
nature.
In
the
circumstances
it
was
held
to
be
of
the
latter,
but
in
the
reasons
the
following
language
clearly
differentiates
the
case
from
that
before
us:
"
"
Now,
it
seems
to
us,
having
regard
to
ordinary
business
and
banking
experience,
that
it
would
be
absolutely
impossible
to
dissect
the
various
items
in
an
overdraft
account.
Mr.
Aiken
has
frankly
admitted
that
his
client,
the
appellant
company,
could
not
possibly
trace
each
item
in
the
overdraft
and
show
whether
it
was
applied
or
not
to
the
discharge
of
trading
liabilities.
The
appellant
company
has
been
carrying
on
a
system
of
overdraft
transactions
with
the
bank
for
many
years
past,
and
it
may
very
well
be
that
certain
items
went
to
the
discharge
of
trading
liabilities,
while
other
items
may
not
have
been
applied
to
such
liabilities.
All
we
know
is
that
this
money
went
to
the
discharge
of
this
overdraft.
It
would
be
quite
impossible,
as
I
have
said,
to
dissect
these
various
payments
more
especially
as
an
overdraft
goes
up
and
down,
and
is
decreased
by
other
payments
made
from
time
to
time,
while
it
is
swollen
by
further
borrowings
which
are
made
by
the
client
of
the
bank;
but
for
all
ordinary
purposes
an
overdraft
is
a
borrowing
of
money.”
What
was
impossible
there
is
admitted
here:
the
accumulated
debt
was
exclusively
that
of
payments
made
in
the
course
of
the
trade;
and
that
circumstance
is
itself
sufficient
to
distinguish
the
cases
and
to
justify
the
difference
in
their
ultimate
determination.
The
dealings
here
are,
I
think,
governed
by
a
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
England,
Imperial
Tobacco
Company
v.
Kelly,
25
T.C.
292.
The
Tobacco
Company,
an
English
incorporation,
was
a
buyer
of
large
quantities»of
tobacco
leaf
in
the
United
States.
During
the
first
months
of
1939
in
preparation
for
that
year’s
purchasing
in
the
late
summer
and
early
autumn,
the
company
bought
$45,000,000
at
rates
of
exchange
varying
between
$4.63
and
$4.68
and
the
money
was
remitted
to
the
United
States
to
be
used
to
buy
the
ensuing
year’s
stock.
On
September
3
the
war
with
Germany
broke
out
and
on
the
8th
of
that
month
the
British
Treasury
requested
the
company
to
stop
all
further
purchases.
As
a
result
of
compliance,
there
remained
of
the
American
currency
unusable
approximately
$25,755,000.
On
September
30
the
British
Treasury
required
the
company
to
sell
this
surplus
of
dollars
to
it.
Owing
to
the
rise
in
the
dollar
exchange
which
had
occurred,
the
price
received
by
the
company
was
much
larger
than
that
paid
and
the
difference
was
included
in
the
computation
of
taxable
profits.
It
was
held
by
Macnaghten,
J.,
and
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
that
the
gain
was
attributable
to
the
business
carried
on
by
the
company.
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
with
whom
MacKinnon,
L.J.,
and
du
Parcq,
L.J.,
concurred,
took
the
view
that
the
acquisition
of
the
dollars
was
simply
the
first
step
in
carrying
out
the
purchases
of
the
leaf
and
the
payment
of
its
price.
Bought
for
that
purpose,
the
currency
took
on
a
revenue
characteristic
which
was
not
lost
when
the
surplus
was
sold.
The
argument
against
that
seems
to
have
been
directed
mainly
to
the
circumstance
that
the
disposal
was
not
voluntary
but
dictated
by
the
Treasury
and
a
considerable
part
of
the
reasoning
was
to
meet
that
consideration.
Mc-
Kinlay’s
case
(supra)
was
examined
and
distinguished.
The
principle
there
followed,
however
sound
its
application,
and
I
do
not
imply
a
doubt
of
that,
is,
a
fortiori,
appropriate
here.
Every
dollar
of
the
accumulated
debt
represents
the
discharge
of
purchase
price
of
goods
bought.
From
the
standpoint
of
investment,
that
case
is
much
clearer;
the
sterling
was
bought
generally
and
that
allocated
to
the
specific
purchases
was
chargeable
at
the
exchange
existing
at
the
moment
of
purchase.
In
both
cases
the
foreign
currency
was
used
in
the
purchase
of
a
commodity
for
the
company’s
trade,
but
in
that
before
us,
the
sterling
representing
the
debt
had
no
existence
apart
from
that
use.
Mr.
Phillips
urged
the
analogy
of
a
loan
by
way
of
bonds
or
debentures
repayable,
say,
in
1
or
2
years.
If
the
money
was
raised
for
the
purpose
and
used
as
here,
that
is,
for
and
as
working
capital
that
was
immediately
employed
in
the
course
of
the
company’s
business,
there
would
not
seem
to
be
any
difference,
and
profit
realized
upon
the
redemption
of
the
bonds
or
debentures
might
find
itself
gathered
into
income.
It
is
difficult
to
distinguish
a
liability
represented
by
bonds
or
debentures
for
a
short
period
and
mere
indebtedness
however
represented
when
the
character
of
the
money
and
the
purpose
of
its
employment
are
the
same.
Bonds
or
other
securities
representing
permanent
or
fixed
features
of
the
capital
structure
are
entirely
different
in
their
nature
and
incidents.
Mr.
Phillips
also
stressed
the
distinction
between
sterling
as
a
commodity
and
as
a
medium
of
exchange,
but,
as
already
remarked,
here
no
sterling
was
ever
owned
by
the
company
as
a
commodity.
A
contractual
right,
assuming
that
the
arrangement
went
so
far,
to
have
a
bank
pay
bills
on
behalf
of
a
purchaser
as
they
are
presented
by
sellers
of
goods,
does
not
entail
a
purchase
of
a
commodity
for
the
company;
and
it
is
confusing
the
issue
to
speak
of
the
arrangement
as
having
produced
a
temporary
investment:
a
debt
is
neither
an
asset
nor
an
investment
of
the
debtor,
even
though,
as
here,
it
may
be
exposed
to
the
risk
of
variable
value
in
terms
of
a
foreign
currency.
It
follows
that
the
appeal
must
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Locke,
J.
(The
Chief
Justice
concurring
)
:—The
Income
Tax
Act,
1948
does
not
contain
any
further
definition
of
"‘income’’
which
requires
consideration
in
this
case
than
that
to
be
found
in
Sections
3
and
4.
In
this
respect
it
differs
from
its
predecessor,
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
(R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97)
where
the
meaning
to
be
assigned
to
the
term
in
the
Act
was
elaborately
defined.
Section
3
of
the
1948
Act
says
that
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
is
his
income
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing
includes
income
from,
inter
alia,
all
businesses.
Section
4
so
far
as
it
is
relevant
merely
says
that
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
Accordingly
the
only
question
to
be
considered
is
whether
the
profit
which
was
undoubtedly
realized
in
the
present
matter
is
a
profit
from
the
business
carried
on
by
the
appellant.
The
relevant
facts
are
detailed
in
the
judgment
of
Cameron,
J.,
delivered
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
The
purpose
of
the
borrowing
from
the
Canadian
Bank
of
Commerce
branch
in
London
was
stated
during
cross-examination
of
the
witness
Clayton,
the
secretary
and
controller
of
the
appellant
company,
in
these
terms
:
"‘It
was
felt
that
the
pound
sterling
would
be
devalued,
and
after
discussing
the
matter
fully
with
the
President
and
other
top
officials
in
the
company
we
decided
to
deliberately
pursue
this
policy
of
running
a
large
overdraft
in
England
in
the
hope
of
gaining
the
capital
profit
on
devaluation.”
And
again
:
‘‘I
contend
that
that
profit
is
the
result
of
a
premeditated
act
on
my
part
and
other
officials
of
the
company
to
build
up
a
liability
in
Egland
when,
in
fact,
we
could
have
specifically
paid
out
of
funds
that
we
had
in
Canada,
and
it
had
no
relationship
whatsoever
with
the
merchandise,
as
you
are
saying
it
does,
in
that
once
we
paid
a
supplier
the
transaction
was
completed
with
the
supplier
and
we
had
no
more
recourse
to
him.
In
normal
circumstances,
for
as
long
back
as
I
can
trace
the
records,
the
procedure
was
different,
and
it
was
only
during
this
18
months
when
we
tried
to
go
short
of
sterling
and
the
procedure
was
different
and
resulted
in
a
capital
profit,
and
has
no
relationship,
in
my
opinion,
to
the
merchandise.”
While
the
foregoing
is
rather
more
argument
than
a
statement
of
facts
it
makes
clear
the
purpose
of
the
course
that
was
followed.
The
question
as
to
whether
the
gain
made
by
the
company
is
a
capital
profit
is,
of
course,
the
point
in
the
case.
It
is,
in
my
view,
of
importance
to
note
that
while,
as
Clayton’s
evidence
indicated,
the
appellant
intended
to
advance
the
claim
that
any
profit
realized
as
a
result
of
devaluation
of
the
pound
was
a
capital
gain
resulting
from
what
was
to
be
a
speculation
in
foreign
exchange,
the
interest
charges
on
the
bank
loan
were
charged
in
the
years
1948
and
1949
as
expenses
of
the
operation
of
the
business.
In
my
opinion
the
present
matter
is
concluded
against
the
appellant
by
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
Atlantic
Sugar
Refineries
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1949]
S.C.R.
706;
[1949]
C.T.C.
196.
I
am
unable
to
differentiate
the
position
of
the
taxpayer
in
that
case
in
respect
to
the
profit
made
on
the
short
sales
of
sugar
from
the
position
of
the
appellant
in
regard
to
the
profit
that
was
made
due
to
the
fall
in
value
of
the
pound.
At
the
commencement
of
the
year
1948
the
appellant
had
a
very
small
overdraft
with
the
bank
in
London
and
from
then
until
September
1949
used
sterling
borrowed
from
that
bank
to
pay
for
the
goods
used
in
its
manufacturing
operations
in
Canada.
The
purpose
of
incurring
the
overdraft
was
made
clear
by
Clayton.
It
was
the
hope
that
when
it
became
necessary
to
pay
the
overdraft
the
value
of
the
pound
in
relation
to
the
Canadian
dollar
would
have
dropped,
the
practical
result
of
which
would
be
that
the
cost
of
the
goods
which
had
been
used
in
the
operations
or
purchased
during
that
period
would
be
reduced.
In
essence
there
appears
to
be
no
difference
between
the
resulting
profit,
whether
it
be
expressed
as
one
realized
by
the
reduction
in
the
number
of
Canadian
dollars
needed
to
discharge
a
debt
or
as
a
reduction
in
the
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
the
merchandise
which
had
been
used
and
purchased
during
the
period
and
that
which
would
have
resulted
had
the
taxpayer
sold
sterling
short
to
the
requisite
amount.
I
agree
with
the
learned
trial
judge
that
it
was
a
scheme
for
profit-making
in
one
necessary
part
of
the
appellant’s
trading
operations,
namely,
the
purchase
of
sterling
funds
and
part
of
an
integrated
commercial
operation
being
the
purchase
of
the
supplies
and
the
payment
for
them
in
that
currency.
It
was
apparently
treated
as
such
in
the
preparation
of
the
appellant’s
accounts
for
the
years
in
question
since
if
it
was
simply
a
speculation
in
sterling
exchange
divorced
from
the
company’s
trading
operations
the
interest
payable
on
the
bank
loan
would
not
have
been
deductible
as
an
operating
expense.
In
my
opinion
the
decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
in
McKinlay
v.
Jenkins
(1926),
10
T.C.
405,
does
not
assist
the
appellant.
As
the
report
of
that
case
indicates,
Rowlatt,
J.,
treated
the
purchase
of
Italian
currency
which
was
made
as
an
investment
into
which
the
taxpayer
had
put
its
money
temporarily.
The
learned
judge
explained
the
ground
of
his
decision
in
McKinley
s
case
in
the
case
of
Thompson
v.
C.].R.
(1927),
13
T.C.
at
p.
1102
where
he
said
that
he
had
considered
that
it
was
a
ease
where
they
had
some
capital
lying
idle
and
they
embarked
upon
an
exchange
speculation.
This
fact
is
commented
upon
by
Lord
Greene,
MR.
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
Imperial
Tobacco
Company
v.
Kelly,
[1943]
2
All
E.R.
119
at
122
where,
however,
it
is
pointed
out
that
the
case
stated
in
McKrnlay
s
case
does
not
appear
to
contain
any
basis
for
a
finding
that
the
original
purchase
of
the
lire
was
a
speculation.
There
had
been,
however,
no
appeal
from
the
decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.,
and
Lord
Greene
did
not
further
express
his
opinion
as
to
its
accuracy.
Decisions
as
to
what
constitutes
‘‘income’’
under
Schedule
D
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
1918
(Imp.)
appear
to
me
to
be
of
value
in
considering
cases
such
as
the
present
arising
under
the
statute
of
1948.
To
what
extent
they
touch
such
eases
arising’
under
the
income
War
Tax
Act
need
not
here
be
considered.
Under
Schedule
D,
Section
1,
the
tax
is
applied
to
the
annual
profit
or
gains
arising,
inter
alia,
from
any
trade
whether
the
same
be
carried
on
in
the
United
Kingdom
or
elsewhere.
This
does
not
appear
to
differ
from
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Canadian
statute.
In
the
Imperial
Tobacco
case
the
company
carrying
on
business
in
England
had
acquired
a
large
amount
of
American
exchange
for
the
purchase
of
tobacco
in
the
United
States
and
when
the
American
dollars
were
requisitioned
by
the
Treasury
in
England
they
had
appreciated
greatly
in
value
in
terms
of
sterling.
The
question
was
as
to
whether
the
resulting
profit
to
the
company
was
income.
Lord
Greene
said
in
part
after
referring
to
Thompson’s
case:
"In
the
present
case
it
is
truly
said
that
it
was
no
part
of
the
company’s
business
to
buy
and
sell
dollars.
But
in
each
case
the
commodity
(in
the
one
case
the
coal
and
in
the
other
case
the
dollars)
was
required
for
the
purpose
of
transactions
on
revenue
account
and
nothing
else.”
and
held
the
profit
to
be
taxable
income.
In
the
present
matter
the
borrowings
of
sterling
from
the
bank
were
made
for
the
purpose
of
transactions
on
revenue
account
to
the
same
extent.
The
decision
in
Tax
Case
No.
308
(1934),
8
S.A.T.C.
999,
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
assist
the
appellant.
That
matter
was
decided
in
a
special
court
for
hearing
income
tax
appeals,
the
judgment
being
delivered
by
the
learned
President.
The
report
contains
a
very
meagre
statement
of
the
facts
but
it
appears
that
the
taxpayer
which
carried
on
business
in
South
Africa
had
for
many
years
financed
its
obligations
by
an
overdraft
in
London.
When
the
United
Kingdom
left
the
gold
standard,
the
company
took
advantage
of
the
favourable
rate
of
exchange
which
resulted
to
discharge
its
liability
on
the
overdraft
for
an
amount
in
South
African
pounds
substantially
less
than
the
nominal
amount
of
its
debts
expressed
in
sterling.
The
profit
thus
resulting
was
held
to
be
a
capital
gain
on
the
ground
that
the
debt
due
to
the
bank
on
overdraft
was
of
the
nature
of
a
loan
and,
therefore,
a
capital
liability.
The
report
does
not
contain
a
statutory
definition
of
income
in
the
statute
which
affected
the
matter
and
the
evidence
did
not
disclose
the
purpose
for
which
the
moneys
borrowed
had
been
disbursed.
It
was,
apparently,
on
the
ground
that
the
borrowing
of
money
is
prima
facie
a
liability
on
capital
account
that,
in
the
absence
of
other
evidence,
the
learned
President
considered
that
the
profit
was
a
capital
gain.
I
see
no
relation
between
this
set
of
facts
and
the
present,
where
the
exact
purpose
for
which
the
moneys
were
borrowed
from
the
bank
was
as
above
stated,
being
for
the
purpose
of
transactions
on
revenue
account
and
nothing
else,
to
adopt
the
language
of
the
Master
of
the
Rolls
in
the
Imperial
Tobacco
case.
Everything
that
could
be
fairly
urged
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
in
the
present
matter
has
been
said
by
the
learned
counsel
who
appealed
on
its
behalf
but,
in
my
opinion,
this
appeal
should
fail
for
the
above
reasons.
Cartwright,
J.
:—The
relevant
facts
out
of
which
this
appeal
arises
are
undisputed.
The
appellant
has
for
many
years
carried
on
the
business
of
manufacturing
and
selling
clothes
and
in
the
course
of
that
business
makes
large
purchases
of
woolens
in
the
United
Kingdom
the
price
of
which
is
payable
in
sterling.
For
some
years
prior
to
January
1948
its
practice
was
to
purchase
the
necessary
sterling
funds
to
pay
for
each
lot
of
goods
bought
but
at
about
the
date
mentioned
it
arranged
to
borrow
sterling
from
a
bank
in
England.
The
funds
borrowed
were
used
to
pay
the
vendors
of
the
goods
purchased
and
the
cost
of
each
lot
of
goods
was
charged
in
the
appellant’s
books
in
dollars
at
the
current
rate
of
exchange
which
had
for
some
time
been
pegged
at
$4.04
to
the
pound.
Admittedly
this
arrangement
was
made
in
the
expectation
that
the
pound
would
be
devalued
and
that
a
substantial
saving
to
the
appellant
would
result.
On
September
20,
1949,
the
rate
of
exchange
was
altered
to
$3.0875.
At
this
date
the
appellant
owed
the
bank
in
round
figures
£178,000.
In
October
1949
the
appellant
paid
off
this
indebtedness
at
the
new
rate
of
exchange.
The
amount
in
dollars
required
to
make
this
payment
was
less
by
$169,614.96
than
it
would
have
been
at
the
old
rate.
The
respondent
in
assessing
the
appellant
for
the
year
1949
added
this
sum
to
its
declared
income.
The
item
in
the
notice
of
assessment
reads
:
Add
:
Profit
on
Foreign
Exchange
.1
$169,614.96
The
appellant’s
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
allowed
and
the
assessment
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
by
deleting
the
amount
in
question
from
taxable
income.
An
appeal
by
the
respondent
to
the
Exchequer
Court
was
allowed
and
the
assessment
affirmed.
From
that
judgment
this
appeal
is
brought.
The
gist
of
the
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
delivered
by
Mr.
W.
S.
Fisher,
Q.C.,
is
contained
in
the
following
paragraph
in
his
reasons
:
“In
the
case
of
a
debenture
or
bond
issue
floated
by
a
company
and
subsequently
liquidated
or
paid
off
for
a
smaller
amount
than
that
originally
received,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
difference
would
have
been
treated
as
a
capital
profit
without
question,
and
that
this
would
be
so
even
although
the
proceeds
of
the
debenture
or
bond
issue
had
been
used
in
the
business
of
the
company
for
the
purchase
of
raw
materials
utilized
in
the
company’s
manufacturing
and
trading
operations.
In
my
opinion,
the
loan
obtained
from
the
British
bank
was
borrowed
capital,
and
when
that
loan
was
repaid
by
the
appellant,
the
profit
realized
was
a
capital
profit
which
was
not
subject
to
income
tax
under
the
Act.
The
profit
in
question
did
not
arise
out
of
the
trading
operations
of
the
appellant
company.
The
goods
which
it
purchased
in
Great
Britain
were
paid
for
promptly
by
it
within
a
very
short
time
after
the
goods
were
delivered,
and
the
transaction
was
then
closed.
The
fact
that
the
payment
was
made
out
of
monies
borrowed
from
a
bank
does
not,
in
my
view,
bring
the
bank
loan
into
the
category
of
ordinary
day-to-day
transactions
carried
on
by
the
company.
At
all
times,
the
position
of
the
appellant
in
relation
to
the
British
bank
was
that
of
borrower
to
lender,
and
it
was
not
part
of
the
business
of
the
appellant
to
deal
in
foreign
exchange.’’
In
the
Exchequer
Court,
Cameron,
J.,
after
a
careful
review
of
a
number
of
authorities
reached
the
conclusion
‘‘that
the
profit
made
in
the
instant
case
was
one
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
the
respondent’s
business
operations
and
while
engaged
therein
on
a
scheme
for
profit
making”.
After
considering
all
of
the
decisions
referred
to
in
the
reasons
of
Cameron,
J.,
and
those
discussed
by
counsel
in
the
argument
before
us,
it
is
my
opinion
that,
in
the
case
of
a
taxpayer
carrying
on
a
commercial
undertaking
such
as
that
of
the
appellant
whose
business
is
not
that
of
dealing
in
foreign
exchange
or
borrowing
and
lending
money,
a
gain
or
loss
related
to
dealings
between
borrower
and
lender
is
prima
facie
one
of
capital
and
not
of
income.
This
appears
to
me
to
be
a
result
of
the
decision
in
Davies
v.
Shell,
32
T.C.
133,
Montreal
Coke
and
Manufacturing
Co.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1944]
A.C.
126;
[1944]
C.T.C.
94,
and
Bennett
&
White
Construction
Co.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1949]
S.C.R.
287;
[1949]
C.T.C.
1.
In
the
case
at
bar
I
can
find
nothing
sufficient
to
displace
this
prima
facie
presumption
that
a
saving
made
in
discharging
an
obligation
to
a
lender
is
properly
treated
as
an
item
of
capital
and
not
of
revenue.
The
circumstance
that
the
payments
of
interest
to
the
bank
were
charged
as
expenses
of
the
operation
of
the
appellant’s
business
in
the
years
1948
and
1949
does
not
appear
to
me
to
assist
the
respondent.
The
money
borrowed
was
used
as
part
of
the
appellant’s
working
capital
and
the
interest
was
an
amount
paid
in
the
year
.
.
.
pursuant
to
a
legal
obligation
to
pay
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
.
.
.’’
and
was
properly
deductible
from
taxable
income
under
clause
(c)
of
Section
11
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
Statutes
of
Canada,
1948,
ce.
52.
I
think
I
am
right
in
saying
that
in
none
of
the
cases
relied
upon
by
the
respondent
was
a
profit
held
to
be
taxable
which
arose
in
dealings
where
the
relationship
between
the
parties
was
solely
that
of
lender
and
borrower.
For
this
reason
I
do
not
propose
to
deal
with
those
cases
in
detail.
However,
as
the
case
of
Eli
Lilly
and
Co.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
S.C.R.
745;
[1955]
C.T.C.
198,
was
submitted
to
be
indistinguishable
from
the
case
at
bar
I
should
point
out
that
in
that
case
the
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
its
parent
company
was
throughout
that
of
vendor
and
purchaser
and
the
account,
on
the
payment
of
which
the
saving
held
to
be
taxable
was
made,
was
a
merchandise
account
for
goods
sold
and
delivered.
For
the
reasons
given
by
Mr.
Fisher
and
for
those
set
out
above
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
restore
the
decision
of
the
Income
Tax,
Appeal
Board
with
costs
throughout.
Appeal
dismissed.