Abbott,
J.
(all
concur)
:—The
appellant,
a
solicitor
who
has
practised
law
in
the
City
of
Toronto
since
1928,
was
at
all
material
times
a
member
of
the
firm
Mackenzie,
Wood
&
Goodchild.
That
firm
had
a
general
practice
which
included
a
‘‘fairly
substantial
mortgage
practice’’.
The
firm,
on
behalf
of
clients,
managed
or
supervised
the
collection
of
moneys
lent
on
the
security
of
mortgages
and,
between
1956
and
1963,
the
appellant
had
acquired
personally
an
interest
in
thirteen
mortgages.
Eleven
of
these
mortgages
were
acquired
at
a
bonus
or
discount.
In
July
1957,
appellant,
in
association
with
a
client,
bought
a
first
mortgage
on
which
the
amount
then
owing
was
$8,500
for
principal,
with
interest
at
the
rate
of
61%
per
cent
per
annum.
The
term
of
the
mortgage
was
five
years.
Appellant
and
his
client
paid
the
sum
of
$7,100,
each
of
them
putting
up
one-half
of
the
purchase
price.
The
mortgage
was
paid
off
in
full
at
maturity
in
July
1962.
Appellant
was
assessed
for
income
tax
in
1962
on
$700
being
his
share
of
the
discount
on
the
said
mortgage
that
he
had
collected
in
that
year.
Before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
assessment
was
upheld
on
the
finding,
not
that
it
was
a
profit
from
a
business
but
that
‘it
was
a
quasi-ionus”,
and
therefore
‘‘interest
per
se’’.
In
the
Exchequer
Court,
Gibson,
J.
did
not
wish
to
pass
on
the
soundness
of
that
conclusion
and
did
not
choose
(those
are
his
words)
to
make
a
finding
that
this
was
a
profit
from
a
business.
He
expressly
founded
his
decision
on
the
basis
that
this
“was
income
from
a
‘source’
within
the
meaning
of
the
opening
words
of
Section
3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act’’
adding:
as
far
as
I
know
there
is
no
decision
of
this
Court
or
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
which
a
question
of
this
kind
has
been
resolved
by
deciding
that
such
a
discount
was
income
from
a
“source”
within
the
meaning
of
the
opening
words
of
Section
3
of
the
Act,
without
deciding
whether
it
was
income
from
any
of
the
particular
sources
detailed
in
Section
3
or
elsewhere
in
the
Act.
From
this
judgment,
appellant
gave
notice
of
appeal
to
this
Court
as
of
right,
without
apparently
realizing
that,
due
to
the
rate
of
tax
payable,
the
actual
amount
in
controversy
was
less
than
$500.
Respondent
also
appears
to
have
overlooked
this
point
and
did
not
move
to
quash
but,
on
the
contrary,
signed
an
agreement
as
to
the
contents
of
the
case
and
did
not
object
to
the
appeal
being
inscribed
for
hearing.
Before
it
came
on
for
hearing,
however,
appellant
applied
for
special
leave
to
appeal
and,
in
view
of
the
importance
of
the
question
of
law
involved
in
the
decision
sought
to
be
appealed
from,
leave
to
appeal
was
granted
by
my
brother
Pigeon
([1968]
C.T.C.
446).
At
the
hearing
before
this
Court,
counsel
for
the
Crown
abandoned
the
contention
that
the
payment
of
$700
received
by
appellant
in
1962
was
interest
and
conceded
that
the
issue
of
the
appeal
turns
upon
a
finding
as
to
whether
or
not
the
said
sum
was
profit
from
a
business
or
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
by
virtue
of
paragraph
(e)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
139
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Although
certain
specified
receipts
are
declared
to
be
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act,
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
not
purport
to
define
income,
it
simply
describes
it.
Section
3
mentions
the
three
main
sources
of
income,
(1)
business,
(2)
property,
and
(3)
offices
and
employment,
but
without
restricting
the
general
meaning
of
income
as
being
income
from
all
sources.
The
task
of
determining
the
meaning
of
income
for
income
tax
purposes
has
been
left
to
the
courts.
The
English
courts,
whose
decisions
on
this
point
the
Canadian
courts
tend
to
follow,
have
determined
the
meaning
of
income
for
tax
purposes
without
reliance
upon
economic
theory.
Income
is
to
be
understood
in
its
plain
ordinary
sense
and
given
its
natural
meaning.
Since
income
tax
is
levied
on
an
annual
basis
and
capital
gains
are
not
included
in
income
for
tax
purposes,
it
is
necessary
to
determine
whether
a
particular
receipt,
in
a
particular
taxation
year,
18
an
income
receipt
or
a
capital
receipt.
In
the
case
of
a
mortgage
discount,
such
as
the
one
in
issue
in
this
appeal,
it
is
now
well
settled
that
the
answer
to
that
question
depends
upon
whether
the
amount
received
should
be
classified
as
income
from
a
business
or
as
an
accretion
to
capital.
In
Scott
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
S.C.R.
223
at
225;
[1963]
C.T.C.
176
at
177,
Judson,
J.,
after
reviewing
a
line
of
cases
in
the
Exchequer
Court
dealing
with
this
problem,
in
some
of
which
it
was
held
that
the
taxpayer
was
engaged
in
investment,
and
in
others
in
a
scheme
for
profit-making,
said:
This
diversity
of
opinion
is
understandable
when
the
decision
must
depend
upon
a
full
review
of
the
facts
in
each
case
for
the
purpose
of
determining
whether
the
discounts
can
be
classified
as
income
from
a
business.
Even
on
the
same
facts,
there
is
room
for
disagreement
among
judges
on
the
conclusions
that
should
be
drawn
from
these
activities
of
a
taxpayer,
for
the
Act
nowhere
specifically
deals
with
these
discounts,
as
it
does,
for
example,
in
Section
105A
with
shares
redeemed
or
acquired
by
a
corporation
at
a
premium.
It
is
possible
to
deal
expressly
with
the
problem
and
the
Act
has
not
done
so.
The
appellant’s
investments,
including
investments
in
mortgages,
were
made
entirely
from
savings
not
from
borrowings,
and
his
income
from
this
source,
including
income
from
stocks
and
bonds,
was
a
relatively
modest
part
of
his
gross
income.
During
the
period
from
1956
to
1963
inclusive,
the
appellant
acquired
eight
first
mortgages
and
five
second
mortgages
all
but
two
of
them
at
a
discount
or
bonus.
This
represents
an
average
of
one
and
one-half
mortgages
per
year.
The
particulars
of
these
mortgages
are
as
follows:
As
stated,
appellant
acquired
his
one-half
interest
in
the
mortgage
in
issue
here
in
1957,
and
it
was
the
only
acquisition
in
that
year.
Appellant’s
purchases
were
not
speculative
and,
according
to
his
evidence,
they
were
made
after
he
had
inspected
each
property
and
reached
a
decision
that
each
mortgage
was
a
safe
investment
for
him.
1956—
1
mortgage
|
—$
7,000
|
1957—
1
mortgage
|
—$
7,100
(%
interest)
|
1958—No
mortgages
|
|
1959—
1
mortgage
|
—$
2,500
|
1960—
2
mortgages
|
—$
6,600
|
1961—
4
mortgages
|
—$22,412.20
|
1962—
1
mortgage
|
—$
4,000.00
(no
bouns
or
discount)
|
1963—
3
mortgages
|
—$17,000.00
(no
bonus
or
discount)
|
In
my
opinion,
this
pattern
of
appellant’s
activities
was
consistent
with
the
making
of
personal
investments
out
of
his
savings
and
not
with
the
carrying
on
of
a
business.
It
follows
that
the
amount
of
$700,
received
in
1962,
represented
a
capital
gain
and
not
taxable
income.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
direct
that
the
assessment
be
referred
back
for
reconsideration
in
accordance
with
these
reasons.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
his
costs
throughout.