CARTWRIGHT,
J.
(dissenting)
:—The
facts
out
of
which
this
appeal
arises
are
stated
in
the
reasons
of
my
brother
Abbott.
The
question
for
decision
is
whether
the
rebates
totalling
$483,185.91
given
by
Nuffield
to
the
appellant
in
the
course
of
the
latter’s
taxation
year
ending
September
30,
1952,
should
be
regarded
as
receipts
from
its
trade
or
business
during
the
year.
The
difficulties
of
the
problem
are
of
fact
rather
than
of
law.
The
underlying
rules
are
not
in
dispute;
they
are
stated
in
the
judgment
of
Kerwin,
C.J.,
in
M.N.R.
v.
Anaconda
American
Brass
Ltd.,
[1954]
S.C.R.
737
at
pp.
738,
739;
[1954]
C.T.C.
339
at
338,
as
follows:
“The
statement
of
Lord
Clyde
in
Whimster
&
Co.
v.
The
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1925),
12
Tax
Cas.
813
as
to
the
two
fundamental
matters
to
be
kept
in
mind
in
computing
annual
profits
is
accepted
in
England
and
is
applicable
here.
It
appears
at
p.
823
of
the
report
:—
‘In
the
first
place,
the
profits
of
any
particular
year
or
accounting
period
must
be
taken
to
consist
of
the
difference
between
the
receipts
from
the
trade
or
business
during
such
year
or
accounting
period
and
the
expenditure
laid
out
to
earn
those
receipts.
In
the
second
place,
the
account
of
profit
and
loss
to
be
made
for
the
purpose
of
ascertaining
that
difference
must
be
framed
consistently
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
accounting,
so
far
as
applicable,
and
in
conformity
with
the
rules
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
or
of
that
Act
as
modified
by
the
provisions
and
schedules
of
the
Acts
regulating
Excess
Profits
Duty,
as
the
case
may
be.’
”
If
during
the
taxation
year
in
question
the
appellant
had
received,
or
acquired
any
right
to
receive,
payment
of
the
$483,185.91
or
any
part
thereof,
as
a
trading
receipt,
the
amount
so
received
should
be
taken
into
account
in
determining
the
amount
of
its
profit
and
this
result
would
not
be
altered
by
the
circumstance
that
the
appellant
elected,
or
was
bound
by
some
agreement,
to
apply
the
sum
so
received
in
reduction
of
a
past
due
indebtedness.
On
a
consideration
of
the
whole
record
in
the
light
of
the
full
and
helpful
arguments
of
counsel,
the
conclusion
appears
to
me
to
be
inescapable
that
the
substance
of
the
transaction
was
the
forgiveness
by
Nuffield
of
a
past
due
debt
incurred
in
a
previous
taxation
year.
The
evidence
does
not
support
the
view
that
the
rebates
were
the
equivalent
of
payments
in
the
nature
of
subsidies.
The
case
of
Lincoln
Sugar
Limited
v.
Smart,
[1937]
A.C.
697,
is
distinguishable
on
the
facts.
The
character
of
the
transaction
is
not
affected
by
the
circumstance
that
Nuffield’s
decision
to
forgive
the
indebtedness
was
prompted
not
by
solely
philanthropic
motives
but
rather
by
the
desire
to
enable
the
appellant,
a
purchaser
of
large
numbers
of
its
cars,
to
remain
in
business.
It
was
not
suggested
that
there
should
be
a
re-opening
of
the
accounts
of
the
previous
taxation
year.
The
evidence
appears
to
me
to
bring
the
case
within
the
principle
of
the
decision
in
The
British
Mexican
Petroleum
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Jackson
(1932),
16
T.
C.
570,
and
particularly
the
following
passages.
At
p.
585,
Rowlatt,
J.,
after
stating
that
the
trading
profit
for
a
year
is
to
be
arrived
at
by
comparing
the
amounts
received
from
selling
goods
with
the
amount
paid
out
to
put
the
trader
in
the
position
to
do
so
by
buying
goods,
with
the
necessary
adjustments
in
the
account
to
allow
for
the
stock
which
is
carried
from
year
to
year,
and
that
the
profit
is
the
difference
between
what
is
received
and
what
is
paid
out
in
the
year’s
trading,
continues:
“How
on
earth
the
forgiveness
in
that
year
of
a
past
indebtedness
can
add
to
those
profits
I
cannot
understand.
It
is
not
a
matter
depending
upon
the
form
in
which
the
accounts
are
kept.
It
is
a
matter
of
substance,
looking
at
the
thing
as
it
happened,
as
a
man
who
knows
nothing
of
scientific
accountancy
might
look
at
it—it
is
the
receipts
against
payments
in
trading.
’
’
At
p.
0992,
Lord
Thankerton
says:
“I
am
unable
to
see
how
the
release
from
a
liability,
which
liability
has
been
finally
dealt
with
in
the
preceding
account,
can
form
a
trading
receipt
in
the
account
for
the
year
in
which
it
is
granted.”
And
at
p.
593,
Lord
Macmillan
says:
“If,
then,
the
accounts
for
the
year
to
30th
June,
1921,
cannot
now
be
gone
back
upon,
still
less
in
my
opinion
can
the
Appellant
Company
be
required
to
enter
as
a
credit
item
in
its
accounts
for
the
eighteen
months
to
31st
December,
1922,
the
sum
of
£945,232,
being
the
extent
to
which
the
Huasteca
Company
agreed
to
release
the
Appellant
Company’s
debt
to
it.
I
say
so
for
the
short
and
simple
reason
that
the
Appellant
Company
did
not,
in
those
eighteen
months,
either
receive
payment
of
that
sum
or
acquire
any
right
to
receive
payment
of
it.
I
cannot
see
how
the
extent
to
which
a
debt
is
forgiven
can
become
a
credit
item
in
the
trading
account
for
the
period
within
which
the
concession
is
made.”
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
substance
of
the
transaction
tends
to
be
obscured,
but
is
not
altered,
by
the
circumstance
that
the
forgiveness
was
made
piecemeal
and
that
the
individual
items
composing
the
total
of
$483,185.91
were
related
in
time
some
to
the
sales
of
cars
and
some
to
the
payment
of
drafts;
each
item
was
in
substance
nothing
other
than
the
voluntary
forgiveness
of
a
past
indebtedness
incurred
in
a
previous
taxation
year.
In
my
opinion
no
part
of
the
said
sum
of
$483,185.91
should
have
been
treated
as
a
receipt
from
the
appellant’s
business
in
calculating
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
taxation
year
in
question.
I
would
allow
the
appeal,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
and
direct
that
the
assessment
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
to
be
dealt
with
in
accordance
with
these
reasons.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
its
costs
in
the
Exchequer
Court
and
in
this
Court.
ABBOTT,
J.
(Locke,
Fauteux
and
Martland,
JJ.,
concur)
:—
Since
1936
appellant
has
been
a
distributor
and
retailer
of
Morris
motor
cars
in
British
Columbia
and
in
the
adjoining
States
of
Washington
and
Oregon,
purchasing
its
cars
from
Nuffield
Exports
Limited
of
Oxford,
England.
In
the
summer
of
1951
appellant
had
a
large
inventory
of
ears
on
hand,
for
which
it
had
not
paid
Nuffield,
and
by
reason
of
the
imposition
of
severe
Consumers
Credit
Restrictions
in
March
of
that
year
was
experiencing
great
difficulty
in
disposing
of
its
inventory.
Following
discussions
which
took
place
between
officers
of
the
Nuffield
company
and
its
Canadian
dealers
during
the
summer
of
1951,
Nuffield
offered
to
all
its
Canadian
dealers
a
special
arrangement
in
virtue
of
which
it
agreed
to
give
a
rebate
of
$250
on
each
car
in
stock
in
Canada
on
September
1,
1951,
and
subsequently
sold
in
Canada,
such
rebate
to
be
available
upon
payment
being
made
to
Nuffield
of
an
amount
equal
to
the
c.1.f.
value
of
the
cars
on
which
rebate
was
claimed.
The
amount
of
all
rebates
was
to
be
applied
on
the
dealer’s
outstanding
indebtedness
to
Nuffield.
In
February
1952,
this
arrangement
appears
to
have
been
modified;
the
grant
of
the
rebate
was
dissociated
from
actual
sales
but
it
continued
to
be
applicable
only
with
respect
to
the
cars
on
hand
in
Canada
at
September
1,
1951,
and
to
cars
sold
in
Canada
and
not
in
the
United
States.
In
essence
this
allowance
does
not
seem
to
differ
from
the
discount
on
prompt
payment
commonly
allowed
by
wholesalers
of
a
great
variety
of
merchandise
to
retailers
all
over
Canada.
The
arrangement
here
was
in
reality,
simply
the
granting
of
a
discount
of
$250.00
upon
the
sale
price
of
cars
sold
or
upon
their
purchase
price
if
paid
between
the
dates
stipulated
by
Nuffield.
In
fact
most
of
the
cars
on
hand
at
September
1,
1951,
were
sold
prior
to
September
30,
1952,
which
was
the
end
of
appellant’s
taxation
year,
and
during
that
twelve
month
period
the
appellant
obtained
rebate
credits
from
Nuffield
in
the
amount
of
$483,185.91.
In
its
books
these
credits
were
reflected
in
its
profit
and
loss
account
for
the
year
under
various
income
and
expense
items.
It
filed
its
income
tax
return
for
the
1952
taxation
year,
reporting
taxable
income
as
being
$10,469.42
and
was
assessed
tax
in
the
amount
of
$5,275.67.
It
should
perhaps
be
mentioned
that
during
the
period
from
October
1,
1951,
to
September
30,
1952,
appellant
carried
on
its
business
in
partnership
with
a
related
company
under
the
firm
name
of
“British
Motor
Centre’’
but
the
existence
of
that
partnership
is
of
no
significance
to
this
appeal.
Appellant
appealed
from
the
assessment
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
and
upon
that
appeal
took
the
position
that
the
application
of
the
rebates
in
its
books
had
been
made
in
error;
that
the
total
amount
of
these
rebates,
was
in
law
the
forgiveness
of
a
debt,
and
as
such
should
have
been
credited
as
a
capital
accretion
to
its
surplus
account.
That
appeal
was
dismissed
with
costs
and
the
present
appeal
is
from
that
judgment.
The
relevant
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
Section
4
which
reads
as
follows:
4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
’
’
The
issue
here
is
whether
the
admitted
profit,
realized
by
appellant
in
its
financial
year
ending
September
30,
1952,
as
a
result
of
the
special
rebate
arrangement
with
Nuffield,
was
a
profit
earned
in
the
course
of
its
trading
operations
as
contended
by
the
Crown,
or
a
capital
gain
as
contended
by
appellant.
The
principal
business
of
appellant
is
the
buying
and
selling
of
new
and
used
motor
cars.
The
circumstance
which
gave
rise
to
the
special
rebate
arrangement
with
Nuffield
was
the
imposition
by
the
Federal
Government
of
consumer
credit
restrictions.
It
was
not
suggested
that
the
imposition
of
these
restrictions
(which
were
cancelled
in
May
1952)
had
the
effect
of
decreasing
the
value
of
the
cars
held
by
appellant
nor
was
it
suggested
that
they
were
ultimately
sold
at
reduced
prices.
What
the
restrictions
did
do
was
to
make
sales
on
credit
more
difficult.
In
other
words,
in
the
language
of
trade,
the
appellant
had
a
slow
moving
inventory.
It
was
to
meet
this
situation
that
Nuffield
offered
to
all
its
Canadian
dealers
the
special
rebate
arrangement
of
$250
with
respect
to
each
Morris
car
on
hand
on
September
1,
1951,
and
subsequently
sold
in
Canada.
Nuffield
was,
of
course,
faced
with
a
situation,
where
not
only
appellant
but
its
other
Canadian
distributors,
held
large
inventories
of
cars
not
readily
saleable
and
for
which
they
were
unable
to
pay,
and
being
unwilling
to
go
into
the
selling
business
in
Canada
itself,
the
rebate
scheme
was
no
doubt
instituted
in
order
to
assist
these
dealers
to
continue
in
business,
dispose
of
their
cars,
and
discharge
their
obligations
to
Nuffield.
One
effect
of
the
rebate
arrangement
was
to
enable
appellant
to
extend
more
generous
terms
to
its
customers,
by
increasing
its
trade-in
allowances
for
used
cars.
That
appellant
took
advantage
of
this,
is
indicated
by
the
fact
that
the
sum
of
$51,856.10
appears
as
an
item
of
expense
in
the
1952
accounts
under
the
head
“Over
allowances—Used
Cars’’.
No
similar
item
appeared
in
the
accounts
for
the
previous
year.
The
result
of
the
offer
made
by
Nuffield
was
that
appellant’s
inventory
of
cars,
if
sold
in
Canada,
would
yield
to
it
an
additional
gross
profit
of
$250
per
car.
Put
alternatively,
the
cost
of
every
car
sold
in
Canada
was
reduced
by
$250.00.
The
fact
that
the
rebates
took
the
form
of
credits
against
appellant’s
indebtedness
to
Nuffield,
did
not
alter
their
true
character,
or
make
them
merely
the
‘‘forgiveness’’
of
a
past
due
debt
incurred
in
a
preceding
year,
as
that
term
was
used
in
the
British-Mexican
Petroleum
case
to
which
I
shall
refer
presently.
These
rebates
were
intimately
related
to
the
appellant’s
trading
operation,
and
in
my
opinion
the
profit
realized
from
them
was
clearly
a
trading
profit
from
the
business.
Viewed
in
another
aspect,
it
could
be
said
that
Nuffield
agreed
to
pay
to
its
Canadian
dealers
a
subsidy
of
$250
on
each
car
sold
in
Canada
and
such
a
subsidy
has
been
held
to
be
part
of
revenue
for
the
purpose
of
computing
profit:
Lincoln
Sugar
Limited
v.
Smart,
[1937]
A.C.
697.
In
that
case
at
p.
704,
Lord
Macmillan
referred
to
the
payments
made,
as
‘‘intended
artificially
to
supplement
their
(the
taxpayer’s)
trading
receipts
so
as
to
enable
them
to
maintain
their
trading
solvency’’.
The
same
statement
might
appropriately
be
made
with
respect
to
the
rebates
in
issue
here.
It
would
be
immaterial
in
such
a
case,
whether
the
subsidy
were
received
in
cash
or
in
the
form
of
credit
notes
against
outstanding
indebtedness.
In
his
able
argument
Mr.
Hossie
put
his
case
squarely
upon
the
basis
that
the
benefit
derived
by
appellant,
was
in
law,
a
forgiveness
of
debt,
and
as
such
was
to
be
treated
as
a
capital
accretion,
and
he
relied
upon
the
decision
of
the
House
of
Lords
in
British
Mexican
Petroleum
Limited
v.
Jackson
(1932),
16
T.C.
570,
but
in
my
view,
that
decision
has
no
application
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
In
the
British
Mexican
case
the
facts
were
as
follows.
The
British
Mexican
company,
in
addition
to
certain
other
liabilities,
actual
and
contingent,
owed
very
large
sums
to
two
creditors
who
were
also
the
principal
shareholders
in
the
Company.
This
indebtedness
represented
oil
purchased,
and
freight
charges
incurred,
during
a
preceding
accounting
period.
As
the
result
of
a
sharp
decline
in
prices,
the
value
of
the
Company’s
assets
had
decreased,
its
working
capital
was
seriously
impaired
and
it
was
in
fact
insolvent.
In
these
circumstances
the
two
shareholder
creditors
and
a
third
creditor,
with
whom
the
debtor
Company
had
entered
into
a
contract
for
the
construction
of
ten
tank
steamers
on
which
there
was
a
large
sum
owing,
entered
into
a
written
agreement
for
the
partial
remission
by
the
three
creditors
concerned,
of
their
claims
against
the
debtor
Company.
It
was
an
express
term
of
this
agreement
that
the
sum
remitted
should
be
applied
by
the
debtor
to
reduce
the
amount
shown
in
its
books
in
respect
of
its
assets
‘‘to
a
figure
more
nearly
representing
the
present
value
thereof’’.
What
really
happened
was
that
the
three
interested
creditors
assisted
in
restoring
the
capital
position
of
the
Company
by
writing
off
claims
which
could
no
longer
be
paid
out
of
the
proceeds
of
available
assets.
The
main
argument
for
the
Crown
was
that
the
indebtedness
remitted
had
been
treated
in
the
previous
accounting
period
as
an
expense
of
trade
deductible
from
gross
receipts
in
that
period
but
that,
to
the
extent
that
it
was
subsequently
released,
it
was
never
in
fact
expended;
and
that
in
consequence
the
accounts
for
the
previous
period
should
be
opened
up
and
the
deduction
brought
into
conformity
with
the
amount
actually
paid.
Alternatively
it
was
urged
that
the
amount
of
the
sum
released
ought
to
be
brought
into
profit
and
loss
account
as
a
credit
item
in
the
period
in
which
the
release
was
granted.
Both
contentions
failed
in
all
courts.
As
to
the
alternative
submission
(which
Lord
Thankerton
stated
was
not
seriously
pressed),
it
seems
clear
that
the
amount
remitted
was
properly
considered
as
a
capital
item.
As
Lord
Hanworth,
M.R.,
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
stated
at
p.
588,
the
release
was
given
‘not
by
way
of
return
of
something
which
had
been
taken
out
from
the
Company
in
a
previous
accounting
period,
but
which
was,
by
a
new
bargain
made,
to
afford
new
capital
and
was
under
the
terms
of
that
bargain
to
be
placed
to
the
relief
of
the
depreciation
account
and
not
otherwise.
It
cannot
be
brought
into
the
profit
and
loss
account
of
either
1921
or
1922”.
The
British
Mexican
case
did
not
decide,
that
under
no
circumstances
can
the
forgiveness
of
a
trade
debt
be
taken
into
account,
in
determining
the
taxable
profit
arising
from
the
carrying
on
of
a
business,
and
I
have
found
no
subsequent
case
in
which
it
has
been
so
held.
No
one
has
ever
been
able
to
define
income
in
terms
sufficiently
concrete
to
be
of
value
for
taxation
purposes.
In
deciding
upon
the
meaning
of
income,
the
Courts
are
faced
with
practical
considerations
which
do
not
concern
the
pure
theorist
seeking
to
arrive
at
some
definition
of
that
term,
and
where
it
has
to
be
ascertained
for
taxation
purposes,
whether
a
gain
is
to
be
classified
as
an
income
gain
or
a
capital
gain,
the
determination
of
that
question
must
depend
in
large
measure
upon
the
particular
facts
of
the
particular
case.
For
the
reasons
which
I
have
given,
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.