Stone,
J.A.
(Pratte
and
Desjardins,
JJ.A.,
concurring):
—This
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
raises
an
issue
as
to
whether
the
receipt
by
the
appellant
of
a
$229,000
interest-free
loan
required
him,
in
computing
his
income
for
the
1981
and
1982
taxation
years,
to
include
an
amount
pursuant
to
either
paragraphs
3(a)
or
245(2)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
as
amended
("the
Act"),
or
both
as
the
trial
judge
held.
In
preparing
his
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant
did
not
include
any
amount
in
respect
of
the
interest-free
loan.
His
taxable
income
for
the
1981
and
1982
taxation
years
was
revised
by
way
of
reassessments
as
a
result
of
which
there
were
added
as
“management
fees"
the
amounts
of
$34,457.94
and
$37,279.17
respectively.
This
impacted
upon
the
availability
of
his
revised
non-capital
loss,
so
much
so
that
if
the
first
amount
had
not
been
included
in
1981
taxation
income,
the
loss
available
for
deduction
in
1982
would
have
been
greater
by
a
sum
equivalent
thereto.
In
his
appeal
from
the
reassessments,
the
appellant
asked
that
the
Trial
Division
refer
the
reassessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
amounts
in
question
be
excluded
from
his
1981
and
1982
taxable
income
and
that
there
be
allowed
in
1982,
as
an
additional
non-capital
loss
deduction,
the
sum
of
$34,357.94.
The
parties
agreed
at
trial,
and
the
trial
judge
so
found,
that
these
amounts
were
overstated
in
the
reassessments,
the
correct
figures
being
$34,206.88
in
1981
and
$37,116.88
in
1982.
As
the
trial
judge
has
set
out
the
facts
which
gave
rise
to
the
present
dispute,
I
am
relieved
of
the
need
to
do
more
than
briefly
summarize
them.
The
appellant,
a
Vancouver
lawyer,
was
a
party
to
a
tri-partite
agreement
made
August
29,
1979.
Though
it
carried
no
particular
label,
the
agreement
was
referred
to
in
the
pleadings
and
evidence
and
by
the
trial
judge
as
a
"joint
venture
agreement”.
The
other
parties
to
the
agreement
were
a
four-
member
firm
of
chartered
accountants
and
the
regional
council
of
a
trade
union,
and
all
of
the
parties
were
cumulatively
described
as
"the
Developers".
The
agreement
had
as
its
purpose
the
development
of
a
commercial
office
building
in
Vancouver
to
be
known
as
the
"Evergreen
Building”.
Title
to
the
lands
was
to
be
acquired
by
Evergreen
Building
Limited
acting
as
a
bare
trustee
for
facilitating
the
acquisition,
construction
and
operation
of
the
building.
The
parties
each
agreed
to
acquire,
through
the
instrumentality
of
the
company,
an
undivided
interest
in
the
lands
and
premises
"as
co-owners
and
as
tenants-in-common"
(Article
2.1),
and
also
agreed
that
each
"shall
be
a
co-owner
upon
the
terms
and
conditions
set
forth
in
this
Agreement"
(Article
15.4).
Any
right
to
ownership
of
the
property
and
assets
was
agreed
to
be
"a
sole
individual
right,
not
a
joint,
collective
or
partnership
right"
(Article
15.9).
They
agreed
as
well
that
the
appellant's
proportionate
interest
in
the
lands
and
premises
would
be
36.66
per
cent
and
that
of
the
others
31.67
per
cent
each
(Article
3.1).
All
questions
affecting
the
lands
and
premises
and
their
development
were
to
be
determined
by
a
vote
of
developers
holding
more
than
60
per
cent
interest
in
total
in
the
lands
and
premises
on
the
basis
of
one
vote
for
each
one
per
cent
of
lands
and
premises
owned
(Article
16.1).
The
parties
expressly
agreed
that
the
agreement
was
"not
intended
to
create
nor
shall
it
be
construed
to
have
created
any
partnership
or
agency
whatsoever"
or
that
the
lands
and
premises
were
to
be
considered
as
"partnership
property"
notwithstanding
the
division
of
profits
and
losses
according
to
proportionate
shares
(Article
15.1),
and
that
none
of
them
“shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
partner,
agent
or
legal
representative
of
the
others"
(Article
15.2).
Each
of
the
parties
was
bound
to
be
"proportionately
responsible
for
all
bank
loans
and
mortgage
loans
to
be
obtained
by
and
for
the
purpose
of
the
said
lands
and
premises
and
the
development
thereof"
and
to
“be
responsible
and
liable
for
payments
of
his
Proportionate
Share
of
all
monies
owing
or
that
may
be
owing
on
such
bank
or
mortgage
loans”
(Article
15.6).
The
liability
of
each
party
for
such
payments
was
to
be
adjusted
in
the
case
of
any
variance
in
a
proportionate
interest
so
as
to
reflect
the
revised
interest
(Article
15.7).
In
point
of
fact,
during
1982
the
appellant's
proportionate
interest
increased
from
36.66
per
cent
to
45
per
cent
and
then
to
50
per
cent
of
total
ownership.
At
the
very
heart
of
the
dispute
are
certain
provisions
found
in
Articles
3,
7
and
8
of
the
agreement,
which
should
be
recited
in
their
entirety.
After
first
defining
the
proportionate
interest
of
each
of
the
parties,
Article
3.1
went
on
to
provide:
The
Developers
further
agree
that
should
the
said
lands
and
premises
be
sold,
the
profit,
if
any,
shall
be
allocated
as
to
John
Laxton,
the
first
$450,000,
and
the
balance,
if
any,
to
the
Developers
in
accordance
with
their
respective
Proportions.
The
$450,000
paid
to
John
Laxton
or
such
part
thereof
as
is
necessary
shall
be
used
first
to
repay
any
loans
made
by
the
Developers
to
John
Laxton.
Article
7.1,
7.2,
8.1
and
8.2
of
the
agreement
read:
7.1
It
is
agreed
that
John
Laxton
shall
be
responsible
for
management
of
development
up
to
and
until
the
completion
of
construction
and
for
that
purpose
be
shall
devote
such
time
and
skill
to
the
development
as
is
necessary
to
have
the
construction
completed
expeditiously.
7.2
It
is
further
agreed
that
John
Laxton
will
be
advanced
as
an
interest
free
loan,
the
following
amounts
on
the
following
terms:
(a)
advances
will
be
made
in
monthly
instalments
of
$10,000.00
each,
commencing
April
1,1979
and
on
the
first
day
of
each
month
thereafter
up
to
and
including
June,
1980;
(b)
the
said
advances
are
to
be
derived
solely
from
mortgage
funds
and
the
provisions
of
Article
9.3
herein
may
not
be
used
to
generate
sufficient
monies
to
make
such
advances;
(c)
In
the
event
of
a
cash
shortfall,
one-half
of
the
amounts
advanced
pursuant
to
subclause
(a)
hereof
shall
be
repaid
by
John
Laxton.
8.1
Following
completion
of
construction
the
Developers
will
contract
for
the
long-term
management
of
the
lands
and
premises.
8.2
Commencing
April
30,
1981,
John
Laxton
shall
oversee
the
general
management
of
the
lands
and
premises
on
behalf
of
the
Developers
for
which
John
Laxton
shall
be
paid
a
monthly
fee
computed
on
an
annual
basis
as
follows:
(a)
$450,000.00
minus
such
interest
free
loans
made
to
John
Laxton
pursuant
to
Article
7.2
hereof,
together
with
any
other
interest
free
loans
made
to
John
Laxton,
multiplied
by
an
amount
equivalent
to
the
prime
rate
charged
by
the
Bank
of
Montreal,
Main
Branch,
Vancouver,
British
Columbia,
to
its
most
favoured
commercial
customers.
(b)
If
at
any
time
the
Developers
have
insufficient
monies
to
make
the
payment
pursuant
to
paragraph
(a)
hereof,
John
Laxton
may
lend
to
the
Developers
sufficient
monies
to
make
such
payment,
which
loan
shall
bear
interest
equivalent
to
the
prime
rate
charged
by
the
Bank
of
Montreal,
Main
Branch,
Vancouver,
British
Columbia,
to
its
most
favoured
customers
and
shall
be
compounded
semi-annually.
In
rejecting
the
appeal
against
the
reassessments,
the
trial
judge
considered
that
the
benefit
of
the
interest-free
loan
was
taxable
income
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
either
as
being
an
"amount"
under
paragraph
3(a)
and
the
definition
of
that
word
in
subsection
248(1)
,
or
a
"benefit"
within
paragraph
245(2)(a)
of
the
Act.
After
analyzing
and
rejecting
several
arguments
of
the
appellant
at
trial
(and
renewed
before
this
Court),
she
summed
up
her
reasons
for
dismissing
the
appeal
at
page
9
of
her
reasons
for
judgment:
Where
an
agreement
explicitly
provides
that
a
taxpayer's
remuneration
for
services
is
to
take
the
form
of
an
interest
free
loan,
the
taxpayer
should
be
required
to
recognize
that
remuneration
in
some
form
in
his
taxable
income.
This
is
particularly
so
where
there
are
acknowledged
borrowing
costs
being
paid
by
another
in
order
to
obtain
the
funds
being
loaned
to
the
taxpayer.
It
is
difficult
to
understand
why
the
value
of
the
benefit
received
by
the
taxpayer
should
not
be
equated
to
the
amount
of
the
borrowing
costs,
or
in
this
case,
by
reference
to
the
calculation
as
provided
for
in
article
8
of
the
joint
venture
agreement.
She
also
rejected
the
appellant's
contention
that
the
amounts
or
benefits
in
question
were
not
taxable
in
1981
or
1982
in
any
event
because
the
instalments
of
interest-free
loan
had
been
advanced
in
1979
and
1980,
when
she
wrote
at
page
11
of
her
reasons
for
judgment:
But
I
do
not
think
that
applies
in
a
case
such
as
the
present
where
the
benefit
conferred
by
the
interest
free
loan
is
seen
as
component
of
the
compensation
being
paid
for
management
services
which
is
calculated
and
invoiced
on
a
monthly
basis
over
several
years.
The
benefit
occurs
on
a
continuing
basis,
as
long
as
the
loan
remains
outstanding.
I
accept,
as
the
appellant
contends,
that
the
Act
contains
no
specific
provision
creating
tax
liability
in
respect
of
the
"benefits"
the
appellant
is
alleged
to
have
received
in
1981
and
1982.
He
argues
from
this
that
neither
paragraph
3(a)
nor
245(2)(a)
should
be
construed
as
reaching
the
reassessed
amounts.
In
any
event
he
says
that
the
portion
of
these
amounts
attributable
to
his
own
proportionate
interest
in
the
joint
venture
should
be
excluded.
The
appellant
begins
with
the
general
submission
that
his
economic
position
was
not
enhanced
over
and
above
that
which
would
have
been
the
(a)
determine
the
aggregate
of
amounts
each
of
which
is
the
taxpayer's
income
for
the
year
(other
than
a
taxable
capital
gain
from
the
disposition
of
a
property)
from
a
source
inside
or
outside
Canada,
including,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
his
income
for
the
year
from
each
office,
employment,
business
and
property;
248.
(1)
In
this
Act,
"amount"
means
money,
rights
or
things
expressed
in
terms
of
the
amount
of
money
or
the
value
in
terms
of
money
of
the
right
or
thing
.
.
.
case
had
he
been
charged
interest
on
the
loan
at
prevailing
commercial
rates
and
been
paid
a
larger
management
fee.
The
economic
reality
of
the
transaction,
he
says,
was
that
the
right
to
a
management
fee
and
the
use
of
the
interest-free
loan
were
merely
a
set-off
of
one
against
the
other
that
resulted
in
no
additional
income
to
him,
and
therefore
gave
rise
to
no
"amount"
or
"benefit"
within
either
paragraph
3(a)
or
245(2)(a).
The
trial
judge
rejected
this
argument.
She
expressed
the
view
at
page
8
of
her
reasons
for
judgment
that
the
appellant
had
“received
economic
advantage
in
the
form
of
cash
compensation
plus
an
interest
free
loan”.
She
also
considered
(at
page
3)
that
Articles
7
and
8
in
effect
provided
for
a
management
fee
"to
be
calculated
by
reference
to
the
interest
payable
on
$450,000
as
that
might
fluctuate
from
time
to
time”,
the
cash
component
of
which
"was
to
vary
depending
upon
whether
or
not
the
plaintiff
had
been
advanced
a
total
amount
of
$450,000
as
an
interest
free
loan,
or
some
lesser
amount".
The
appellant
contends
that
while
it
is
proper
to
read
Articles
7.1
and
7.2
together,
they
should
not
be
read
in
conjunction
with
Article
8.2
which
is
entirely
independent
of
the
first
two.
This
latter
Article,
he
claims,
specifies
exactly
the
form
the
management
fee
would
take
and
its
method
of
calculation.
It
was
a
payment
of
interest
that
had
nothing
whatever
to
do
with
Article
7.
I
am
unable
to
accept
this
submission.
The
payment
to
be
made
pursuant
to
Article
8.2
was
as
a
fee
to
"oversee
the
general
management
of
the
lands
and
premises".
Although
it
was
to
be
calculated
by
reference
to
the
difference
between
the
amount
of
interest-free
loan
advanced
($229,000)
and
the
lull
sum
of
$450,000
as
multiplied
by
a
factor
based
upon
the
prevailing
bank
prime
lending
rate,
the
resulting
payment
was
a
cash
percentage
of
that
difference
and
not
merely
interest
thereon.
I
think
the
judge
was
correct
in
treating
it
as
such
and
that,
in
the
total
context
of
Articles
7
and
8,
it
represented
remuneration
or
consideration
for
services
performed
by
the
appellant.
That
this
seems
also
to
have
been
the
understanding
of
the
appellant
himself
is
apparent
from
his
testimony
given
at
trial.
When
asked
upon
examination-in-chief
why
in
pursuance
of
Article
8.2
the
figure
of
$450,000
"was
to
be
reduced
.
.
.
if
there
had
been
interest
free
loans
made
to
you?",
he
gave
the
following
as
the
intent
of
the
agreement:
”.
.
.
I
should
not
get
any
more
than
the
$450,000
so
that
if
I
had
received
part
of
it
by
way
of
an
interest
free
loan
then
that
.
.
.
amount
should
be
considered
for
the
payment
of
the
management
fee".
As
the
trial
judge
found,
the
interest
-free
loan
advanced
pursuant
to
Article
7.2
was
linked
to
and
was
in
reality
part
of
the
overall
management
fee
arrangement
in
favour
of
the
appellant.
Article
8.2
recognized
that
as
the
appellant
had
already
the
use
of
a
$229,000
loan
free
of
interest,
the
$450,000
figure
should
be
reduced
accordingly,
resulting
in
a
smaller
fee
payable
pursuant
to
that
Article.
If
this
be
the
correct
view,
then
the
case
does
not
raise
the
wider
question
of
whether
interest
forgone
by
a
lender
is
liable
to
taxation
as
an
"amount"
or
as
a
"benefit"
under
paragraphs
3(a)
or
245(2)(a)
of
the
Act.
It
is
concerned
only
with
whether
the
arrangement
in
issue
attracted
tax
under
either
of
those
paragraphs
because
it
involved
the
receipt
by
the
appellant
of
an
interest-free
loan
as
consideration
or
remuneration
for
services
rendered.
Turning
then
to
the
taxing
provisions
relied
upon,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
learned
trial
judge
was
correct
in
holding
that
there
were
here
"amounts"
that
were
taxable
in
1981
and
1982
under
paragraph
3(a)
of
the
Act.
The
fact
that
the
appellant
received
the
interest-free
loan
as
compensation
for
the
services
he
rendered
means
that
the
amounts
constituted
the
"taxpayer's
income
.
.
.
from
a
source
inside
.
.
.
Canada”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
3(a)
of
the
Act.
That
being
so,
I
need
not
consider
the
possible
application
of
paragraph
245(2)(a).
I
do
not
accept
the
appellant's
submission
that,
because
by
the
terms
of
the
agreement
the
full
sum
of
$450,000
would
become
repayable
in
certain
circumstances
upon
resale
of
the
Evergreen
Building,
this
conclusion
is
not
open
to
the
Court.
While
Article
3.1
plainly
provides
for
the
conditional
repayment
of
loans
made
by
the
developers
to
the
appellant,
the
latter
continued
to
receive
this
form
of
reward
for
services
while
the
loan
remained
outstanding,
and
particularly
throughout
1981
and
1982.
Two
questions
remain
to
be
considered.
The
first
is
whether
the
appellant
is
right
in
contending
that
the
amounts,
if
taxable
at
all,
are
not
taxable
in
1981
and
1982
but
only
in
1979
and
1980
during
which
years
the
interest-free
loan
instalments
were
advanced.
As
I
agree
with
the
trial
judge's
reasoning
on
the
point
(already
recited),
I
simply
wish
to
adopt
it
as
my
own.
Though
the
advances
were
undoubtedly
made
in
1979
and
1980,
the
fact
remains
that
the
benefit
thereby
enjoyed
was
a
continuing
one
which
most
certainly
ran
throughout
the
years
1981
and
1982
as
well.
The
final
question
is
said
to
emerge
out
of
the
nature
of
the
relationship
that
existed
between
the
appellant
and
his
fellow
developers
at
the
time
of
the
loan
instalments.
The
parties
to
the
agreement
spoke
of
"the
continuance
of
the
“joint
venture"
(Article
15.12),
the
"best
interests
of
the
joint
venture"
and
of
the
"entire
joint
venture"
(Article
16.3).
The
relationship,
described
in
the
evidence
and
pleadings
and
accepted
by
the
trial
judge
as
one
of
joint
venture",
was
declared
by
the
agreement
not
to
be
one
of
"partnership".
Thus
in
Articles
15.1
and
15.2
we
find
the
following:
15.1
This
Agreement
is
not
intended
to
create
nor
shall
it
be
construed
to
have
created
any
partnership
or
agency
whatsoever.
Nothing
herein
shall
deem
the
said
lands
and
premises
to
be
considered
partnership
property
notwithstanding
that
the
profits
and
losses
to
be
derived
therefrom
or
incurred
therein
may
be
divisible
among
the
developers
in
accordance
with
their
proportionate
interest.
15.2
None
of
the
Developers
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
partner,
agent
or
legal
representative
of
the
others
of
them
whether
for
the
purposes
of
this
Agreement
or
otherwise.
No
Developer
shall
have
any
authority
or
power
to
act
for
or
to
undertake
any
obligation
of
responsibility
on
behalf
of
any
of
the
other
Developers
except
as
herein
may
be
expressly
provided.
The
parties
also
agreed
(Article
2.1)
that
they
were
"co-owners
and
.
.
.
tenants-in-common"
and
also
that
they
would
“develop,
own
and
manage
same
on
terms
and
subject
to
the
conditions
of
this
Agreement".
It
is
on
the
basis
of
this
declaration
and
of
these
provisions
that
the
appellant
submits
that
any
benefit
enjoyed
by
him
by
reason
of
the
interest-free
loan
must
be
reduced
by
the
extent
of
his
own
proportionate
interest
including
his
responsibility
under
Article
15.6
to
repay
only
his
own
share
of
mortgage
funds
out
of
whose
surplus
the
interest-free
loan
was
taken.
There
could
thus
be
no
benefit
to
him
in
respect
of
that
interest,
but
only
such
as
was
conferred
on
him
by
his
fellow
joint
venturers
in
paying
management
fees
to
the
extent
of
their
combined
interests.
This
argument
was
rejected
by
the
trial
judge.
The
appellant
says
that
the
trial
judge
arrived
at
the
wrong
conclusion
because
she
treated
the
joint
venture
as
having
legal
existence
separate
from
that
of
its
members,
which
it
does
not.
He
points
to
page
4
of
her
reasons
where
she
spoke
in
terms
of
the
mortgage
funds
having
been
"provided
to
the
venture
group"
and
of
the
"venture"
having
paid
bank
interest
on
that
financing,
and
to
page
6
where
she
said
that
the
mortgage
loan
had
been
made
"by
the
joint
venture".
She
also
found
significant
that
the
cost
of
the
borrowed
mortgage
funds
were
carried
into
the
unaudited
financial
statement
of
the
joint
venture
and,
thus,
into
the
appellant’s
own
personal
income
tax
returns
to
the
extent
of
his
proportionate
share
of
that
cost.
Her
conclusion,
as
expressed
at
pages
9-10,
was
that
the
whole
of
the
benefit
derived
from
the
interest-free
loan
was
paid
to
the
appellant
by
the
joint
venture.
She
said:
With
respect
to
the
plaintiff's
third
argument,
I
accept
counsel
for
the
defendant's
position
that
this
is
not
a
case
of
"self-dealing"
where
the
taxpayer
“borrower”
and
the
taxpayer
“income
recipient”
are
one.
The
joint
venture,
through
the
vehicle
of
Evergreen
Building
Limited
(as
bare
trustee),
is
interposed.
Even
though
the
taxpayer
may,
as
a
practical
matter,
be
ultimately
liable
(along
with
the
other
joint
venturers)
for
the
total
amount
of
the
joint
venture's
debt,
this
does
not
mean
that
he
has
paid
the
cost
of
borrowing.
The
cost
of
borrowing
was
borne
by
the
joint
venture.
The
fact
that
the
plaintiff
pays
one-third
of
that
(subsequently
increased
to
45-50%)
does
not
mean
that
he
can
ignore
for
the
purposes
of
his
income
calculation,
remuneration
paid
to
him
by
the
joint
venture
in
the
form
of
an
interest
free
loan.
.
.
The
fact
that
the
taxpayer
may
himself
be
liable
(as
a
member
of
the
joint
venture)
for
part
of
the
borrowing
costs
is
an
independent
matter
and
indeed,
in
this
case,
his
tax
returns
were
prepared
on
that
basis.
The
cost
of
borrowing
by
the
joint
venture
was
accounted
for
as
an
expense
of
the
joint
venture
and
the
plaintiff's
proportion
of
that
expense
was
carried
into
his
income
tax
return
under
the
joint
venture
account.
It
seems
to
me
that
to
allow
a
one-third
reduction
of
the
income
attributable
to
this
interest
free
loan
would
be
to
allow
that
deduction
twice
over.
It
seems
to
me
that
this
conclusion
is
available
if,
as
a
matter
of
law,
the
joint
venture
had
separate
legal
existence
or,
at
very
least,
is
to
be
so
regarded
for
income
tax
purposes.
Now,
that
it
had
no
such
existence
is
manifest.
The
group
composing
the
joint
venture
came
together
on
a
purely
voluntary
basis.
The
property
belonged
to
them
in
undivided
shares
and
they
shared
profits
and
losses
in
the
manner
provided
in
their
agreement.
The
business
venture
they
formed
could
of
itself
neither
hold
any
property
nor
incur
any
costs.
This
is
not
to
say
that
the
results
of
group
operations
or
activities
could
never
be
ascertained
for
tax
purposes
at
the
joint
venture
level.
That
clearly
would
be
the
case
if
the
joint
venture
were
to
be
regarded
as
a
"partnership"
to
which
the
provisions
of
section
96
of
the
Act
applied.
Here,
though
the
respondent
conceded
that
a
"joint
venture"
had
been
formed,
it
is
nowhere
suggested
in
the
pleadings
that
the
joint
venture
constituted
a
"partnership"
within
the
meaning
of
that
section
or,
if
it
did,
that
the
result
would
be
different.
Under
that
section
the
results
of
each
year's
operation
of
a
partnership
must
to
be
determined
at
the
"partnership"
level
as
if
it
"were
a
separate
person
resident
in
Canada"
and
having
its
own
fiscal
period.
The
trial
judge
did
not
treat
the
joint
venture
for
tax
purposes
as
falling
under
section
96
and,
indeed,
made
no
express
mention
of
that
section.
She
noted
that
the
mortgage
funds
had
been
borrowed
by
the
joint
venture,
that
the
joint
venture
had
expensed
the
cost
of
the
borrowing
in
its
own
accounts
and
had
made
the
interest-free
loan
to
the
appellant.
So
viewed,
the
case
was
not,
in
her
opinion,
one
of
"self-dealing"
by
a
taxpayer
using
borrowed
money
for
his
own
purposes.
I
accept
that
the
factors
singled
out
by
the
trial
judge
may
well
argue
against
the
sought
after
reduction
in
the
amounts
added
by
the
reassessments,
but
these
factors
must
surely
be
weighed
in
overall
context
with
others
that
are
also
present.
As
already
noted,
it
was
conceded
and
the
trial
judge
so
found
that
the
grouping
of
interests
here
involved
was
that
of
“joint
venture".
That
a
“joint
venture"
per
se
may
differ
from
a
“partnership”
has
been
recognised
by
Canadian
Courts,
and
that
neither
is
a
legal
entity
is
(d)
each
income
or
loss
of
the
partnership
for
a
taxation
year
were
computed
as
if
this
Act
were
read
without
reference
to
subsections
59(1.1)
and
(1.2)
and
66(12.1)
and
paragraphs
59(3.1)(a)
and
66(12.2)(a),
(12.3)(a)
and
12.5(a)
and
as
if
no
deduction
were
permitted
by
subsection
65(1),
section
66,
66.1,
66.2
or
66.4
or
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules,
1971
in
respect
of
this
paragraph;
(e)
each
gain
of
the
partnership
from
the
disposition
of
land
used
in
a
farming
business
of
the
partnership
were
computed
as
if
this
Act
were
read
without
reference
to
paragraph
53(1)(i);
(f)
the
amount
of
the
income
of
the
partnership
for
a
taxation
year
from
any
source
or
from
sources
in
a
particular
place
were
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
from
that
source
or
from
sources
in
that
particular
place,
as
the
case
may
be,
for
the
taxation
year
of
the
taxpayer
in
which
the
partnership's
taxation
year
ends,
to
the
extent
of
the
taxpayer's
share
thereof;
and
(g)
the
amount
of
the
loss
of
the
partnership
for
a
taxation
year
from
any
source
or
from
sources
in
a
particular
place
were
the
loss
of
the
taxpayer
from
that
source
or
from
sources
in
that
particular
place,
as
the
case
may
be,
for
the
taxation
year
of
the
taxpayer
in
which
the
partnership's
taxation
year
ends,
to
the
extent
of
the
taxpayer's
share
thereof.
also
plain.
A
joint
venture
cannot
contract
in
its
own
right;
only
its
members
may
do
so.
Obligations
cannot
be
incurred
by
it,
but
only
by
its
members.
It
may
neither
sue
nor
be
sued
in
a
separate
capacity.
A
lender
must
look
for
redress
not
to
the
joint
venture
but
to
its
members.
The
existence
of
unaudited
accounts
drawn
up
to
reflect
the
group
operations
does
not
of
itself
clothe
the
joint
venture
with
separate
legal
existence,
and
the
correctness
for
tax
purposes
of
the
appellant
filing
personal
tax
returns
on
the
basis
of
the
net
results
to
him
of
operations
at
a
given
point
in
time
is
not
a
question
we
are
required
to
pass
upon
in
these
proceedings.
I
must
respectfully
differ
with
the
trial
judge
on
this
final
aspect
of
the
appeal
only.
Given
that
the
joint
venture
was
a
voluntary
grouping
having
no
separate
legal
existence
apart
from
its
members,
the
mortgage
funds
were
borrowed
by
such
members
in
proportion
to
their
respective
interests
and,
subject
to
the
terms
of
the
loan
agreement
and
of
any
loan
guarantees,
each
of
them
were
liable
to
make
repayment
accordingly.
It
follows
too
that
moneys
advanced
to
the
appellant
from
surplus
mortgage
funds
were
in
fact
advanced
according
to
the
proportionate
interests
that
each
venturer
held
in
those
funds.
The
results
are
that
the
appellant
did
in
law
incur
the
cost
of
borrowing
mortgage
funds
in
proportion
to
his
interest,
and
did
in
law
use
some
of
the
funds
for
his
own
purposes.
Obviously,
he
could
not
lend
to
himself
,
but
his
fellow
participants
in
the
venture
could
lend
to
him
and
so
they
did
to
the
extent
of
their
combined
interests.
I
have
already
concluded
that
the
benefits
conferred
by
them
in
advancing
their
proportionate
shares
of
the
interest-free
loan
are
subject
to
taxation
in
his
hands
pursuant
to
paragraph
3(a)
of
the
Act.
In
the
result,
I
would
allow
the
appeal,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
and
refer
back
the
assessments
of
the
appellant's
income
tax
for
the
years
1981
and
1982
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
taxable
benefits
received
by
the
appellant
as
a
result
of
having
had,
during
those
years,
the
enjoyment
of
an
interest-free
loan
of
$229,000
are,
for
the
1981
taxation
year,
an
amount
of
$34,206.88
less
the
appellant’s
share
of
the
costs
of
the
loan
for
that
year
and,
for
the
1982
taxation
year,
an
amount
of
$37,116.88
less
the
appellant's
share
of
the
costs
of
the
loan
for
that
year.
I
would
grant
the
appellant
his
costs
both
here
and
below.
Appeal
allowed.