FOURNIER,
J.:—In
this
case,
the
appellant
appeals
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
February
7,
1957,
allowing
the
respondent’s
appeal
from
the
reassessment
of
his
income
for
the
taxation
year
1951
under
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act.
In
reassessing
the
respondent,
the
Minister
added
to
his
declared
income
the
sum
of
$9,166.67
on
the
assumption
that
this
amount
represented
the
profit
made
by
the
respondent
on
the
sale
of
a
part
of
his
interest
in
certain
land
acquired
by
him
and
others
for
the
purpose
of
disposition
at
a
profit.
The
onus
is
on
the
taxpayer
to
establish
in
fact
and
in
law
that
the
reassessment
is
based
on
an
incorrect
assumption.
The
respondent
is
a
barrister
who
has
practised
his
profession
since
1928
and
who
has
never
been
engaged
in
any
other
business
or
enterprise.
Some
time
in
February
1951,
he
was
told
by
one
of
his
clients
that
Active
Subdivisions
Limited,
which
had
an
agreement
of
purchase
and
sale
for
a
piece
of
land
in
Scarborough
Township,
thought
of
disposing
of
their
right
to
purchase
the
property.
It
was
suggested
that
a
partnership
or
syndicate
be
formed
to
acquire
the
right,
which
was
done.
The
partners
were
Ruth
Loveless
who
had
a
one-third
interest,
the
respondent
a
one-third
interest
and
Augusto
Boem
and
A.
Andreoli,
each
a
one-sixth
interest.
On
or
about
February
14,
1951,
the
respondent
acquired
from
Active
Subdivisions
Limited
a
right
to
purchase
from
R.
Buchanan
and
Minnie
Buchanan
the
south
half
of
Lot
33
in
Concession
1
in
the
County
of
York,
Province
of
Ontario,
at
a
price
of
$105,000.
When
he
acquired
this
right
he
was
acting
for
the
partners
in
his
capacity
of
solicitor
and
trustee.
The
transaction
of
purchase
and
sale
was
to
be
completed
on
or
before
April
1,
1952,
on
which
date
vacant
possession
of
the
real
property
was
to
be
given
to
the
purchaser.
In
fact,
it
appears
the
transaction
was
completed
on
or
about
February
1,
1952.
At
the
time
the
right
to
purchase
was
acquired
the
partners
intended
to
develop
the
property
for
sale
in
a
housing
development.
The
original
subscription
of
the
partners
to
the
partnership
fund
was
$35,000.
For
his
one-third
interest
in
the
partnership
the
respondent
paid
$11,666.66.
The
other
partners
paid
in
proportion
of
their
interest
in
the
association.
In
August
1951,
Ruth
Loveless
sold
her
one-sixth
interest
in
the
venture
to
Augusto
Boem
and
A.
Andreoli.
On
or
about
November
15,1951,
the
terms
of
the
original
agreement
for
sale
of
the
Buchanan
property
were
altered
to
provide
for
the
payment
of
$20,000
cash
on
December
1,1951
($35,000
had
been
paid
upon
the
acquisition
of
the
right)
and
the
balance
of
$50,000
to
be
secured
by
a
mortgage
on
October
1,
1952.
The
total
of
these
amounts
would
cover
the
sum
of
$105,000,
the
price
of
the
property.
Some
time
in
November
1951,
the
respondent
sold
to
Ruth
Burritt,
for
$15,000,
one-half
of
his
one-third
interest
in
the
partnership.
The
purchaser
of
this
one-sixth
(1/6)
interest
assumed
her
share
of
accounts
payable
by
the
partnership
and
outstanding
at
the
time
of
the
sale.
The
respondent
had
paid
$5,833.33
for
that
one-sixth
interest
he
sold
to
Ruth
Burritt
for
$15,000,
thereby
realizing
a
profit
of
$9,166.67
on
the
transaction.
This
j
is
the
amount
which
was
added
to
the
respondent’s
income
for
the
year
1951.
Some
time
later
in
1951,
Boem
and
Andreoli
sold
parts
of
their
interest
in
the
association
to
George
Lipson,
Jack
Jacobson
and
Eddy
&
Son
Construction
Limited,
the
nominee
of
E.
Green.
So
at
the
end
of
1951
the
partners
and
their
interest
were
as
follows
:
Nathan
Strauss,
one-sixth
interest:
Augusto
Boem
and
A.
Andreoli,
one-third
interest;
Ruth
Burritt,
one-sixth
interest;
George
Lipson,
one-ninth
interest;
Jack
Jacobson,
one-ninth
interest;
E.
Green,
one-ninth
interest.
Filed
as
exhibit
is
a
memorandum
dated
March
24,
1952,
signed
and
executed
by
the
respondent
and
George
Lipson,
Jack
Jacobson
and
A.
Andreoli,
in
which
they
acknowledged
and
declared
that
they
were
in
partnership
for
the
purpose
of
developing
and
selling
the
Buchanan
property
and
that
the
profits
or
losses
of
the
partnership
were
to
be
divided
or
borne
in
proportion
to
the
shares
or
interests
held
by
each
partner
in
the
joint
venture.
In
1952,
the
partnership
commenced
its
selling
operations.
This
must
have
started
after
the
transaction
of
the
purchase
has
been
completed.
The
deed
of
the
property
was
signed
and
delivered
on
February
19,
1952
and
registered
on
February
22,
1952,
as
appears
in
Ex.
5
which
was
filed
as
part
of
the
evidence
before
the
Court.
The
profits
realized
by
the
operating
of
the
partnership
were
divided
between
the
partners
in
proportion
of
their
interest
in
the
venture
and
the
respondent
alleges
having
paid
income
tax
on
same.
The
partnership
which
was
organized
in
1951
to
purchase
land
for
development
and
sale
purposes
is
still
in
existence
and
the
partners
as
of
the
end
of
1951
are
still
the
same.
There
have
been
no
additions
or
subtractions
and
the
matters
of
the
partnership
are
still
incomplete.
Hence
the
adventure
in
the
nature
of
a
trade
of
the
partnership,
to
wit,
that
of
selling
lots
for
housing
purposes,
has
become
a
continuing
business.
The
question
to
be
determined
is
whether
the
sum
of
$9,166.67
received
by
the
respondent
from
the
sale
of
one-half
of
his
one-
third
interest
in
the
partnership
over
and
above
the
amount
he
had
paid
for
same
was
a
capital
gain
or
a
profit
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
sale
by
the
respondent
to
Ruth
Burritt
was
a
sale
of
a
one-sixth
interest
in
the
land
which
had
been
purchased
by
the
partnership
or
syndicate
and
that
the
profit
realized
therefrom
was
taxable
income
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3,
4
and
127
(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(S.C.
1948,
c.
52).
These
sections
provide:
‘3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
4.
Subject
to
the
other
previsions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
127.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(e)
‘business’
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;”
On
the
other
hand,
the
respondent
contends
that
what
he
sold
to
Ruth
Burritt
was
a
portion
of
his
investment
in
the
paid-up
capital
of
a
partnership
which
had
been
formed
to
purchase
and
sell
land
for
building
purposes.
What
he
did
was
to
dispose
of
a
capital
asset
which
had
enhanced
in
value.
The
gain
he
made,
he
says,
was
made
not
as
part
of
a
scheme
of
profit-making
or
trade
but
resulted
from
the
enhanced
value
of
his
investment.
The
above
mentioned
provisions
of
the
Act,
on
which
the
appellant
relies,
are
to
the
effect
that
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
his
income
from
all
sources
and
includes
income
for
the
year
from
business
and
property
and
that
the
income
from
a
business
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
‘‘Business’’
also
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
respondent
has
been
practising
law
for
many
years
in
the
city
of
Toronto,
where
he
is
still
practising
his
profession.
He
testified
at
the
trial
and
filed
documents
to
substantiate
his
oral
testimony.
Finding
no
reason
to
doubt
his
credibility,
I
am
bound
to
consider
seriously
his
uncontradicted
evidence
in
determining
the
issue.
As
the
respondent’s
whole
course
of
conduct
in
this
matter
is
the
best
test
to
be
applied
under
the
circumstances,
I
shall
point
out
certain
facts
which,
in
my
mind,
were
well
proven.
As
solicitor,
he
had
a
wide
experience
in
general
commercial
practice
and
as
such
had
often
acted
for
supply
companies
and
a
number
of
builders
in
construction
work.
He
was
also
well
versed
in
conveyancing
of
properties.
In
1951,
he
joined
three
of
his
clients
in
forming
a
syndicate
or
partnership
which
would
acquire
a
certain
property,
have
it
subdivided
and
sell
the
lots
to
prospective
builders.
He
acted
in
this
matter
as
solicitor
and
trustee.
The
profits
to
be
realized
from
the
sale
of
the
lots
were
to
be
divided
between
the
partners
in
proportion
to
their
share
of
interest
in
the
partnership.
The
respondent
undertook
to
acquire
a
one-third
interest
and
to
assume
a
one-third
of
the
liabilities
of
the
partnership.
It
seems
clear
to
me
that
the
association
formed
by
the
respondent
and
his
three
clients
and
later
extended
to
other
parties
was
a
partnership.
The
Partnerships
Act,
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
270,
Section
2,
defines
the
expression
‘‘partnership’’
thus:
“2.
Partnership
is
the
relation
which
subsists
between
persons
carrying
on
a
business
in
common
with
a
view
of
profit,
but
the
relation
between
the
members
of
any
company
or
association
which
is
incorporated
by
or
under
the
authority
of
any
special
or
general
Act
in
force
in
Ontario
or
elsewhere,
or
registered
as
a
corporation
under
any
such
Act,
is
not
a
partnership
within
the
meaning
of
this
Act.’’
The
rules
determining
whether
a
partnership
does
or
does
not
exist
are
set
out
in
Section
3
of
the
Act.
‘*3.
(1)
Joint
tenancy,
tenancy
in
common,
joint
property,
common
property,
or
part
ownership
does
not
of
itself
create
a
partnership
as
to
anything
so
held
or
owned,
whether
the
tenants
or
owners
do
or
do
not
share
any
profits
made
by
the
use
thereof.
(3)
The
receipt
by
a
person
of
a
share
of
the
profits
of
a
business
is
prima
facie
evidence
that
he
is
a
partner
in
the
business,
but
the
receipt
of
such
a
share
or
payment,
contingent
on
or
varying
with
the
profits
of
a
business,
does
not
of
itself
make
him
a
partner
in
the
business,
.
.
.’’
The
subsections
of
Section
3
then
enumerate
the
cases
where
a
person,
though
receiving
a
share
of
the
profits
of
the
business,
is
not
a
partner.
In
the
present
instance,
at
the
outset
four
persons
made
a
verbal
arrangement
by
which
they
would
join
together
to
purchase
for
the
group
a
certain
property,
subdivide
it
in
lots
and
dispose
of
them
at
a
profit.
So
the
purpose
of
the
arrangement
was
to
carry
on
a
business
in
common
with
a
view
to
profit.
It
was
not
an
agreement
to
purchase
land
for
the
purpose
of
becoming
part
or
co-owner
of
it;
it
was
to
be
sold
at
a
profit
by
the
partnership.
No
part
of
the
property
could
be
sold
without
the
consent
of
all
the
parties
to
the
arrangement.
Each
party
was
to
contribute
to
the
common
fund
in
proportion
to
the
interests
or
shares
each
person
had
in
the
association.
The
evidence
of
the
respondent
is
corroborated
by
the
memorandum
signed
on
March
24,
1952
by
four
of
the
associates
at
the
time.
The
said
parties
hereby
acknowledge
and
declare
that
they
are
in
partnership
for
the
purpose
of
developing
and
selling
the
south
half
of
Lot
33,
Concession
1,
Township
of
Scarborough,
and
that
the
profits
or
losses
of
the
said
partnership
are
to
be
divided
or
borne
in
proportion
to
the
shares
or
interests
as
set
out
below
opposite
the
names
of
the
parties:”
This
acknowledgment
and
declaration
was
signed
following
the
formalities
of
acquiring
the
property
and
having
subdivided
it
in
building
lots.
The
unincorporated
business
association
was
then
in
a
position
to
operate
its
business,
that
of
selling
lots
at
a
profit
if
possible.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
that
from
the
moment
the
interested
persons
formed
a
group
to
carry
on
a
business
in
common
with
a
view
to
earning
profits
their
relationship
was
that
of
partners.
In
the
same
line
of
reasoning,
Duff,
J.,
in
Robert
Porter
&
Sons
Limited
v.
J.
H.
Armstrong,
[1926]
S.C.R.
328,
wrote
(page
329,
in
fine)
:
‘‘Partnership,
it
is
needless
to
say,
does
not
arise
from
ownership
in
common,
or
from
joint
ownership.
Partnership
arises
from
contract,
evidenced
either
by
express
declaration
or
by
conduct
signifying
the
same
thing.
It
is
not
sufficient
there
should
be
community
of
interest;
there
must
be
contract.
The
real
question
is
whether,
from
the
evidence
before
us,
one
ought
to
infer
an
agreement
in
the
juridicial
sense
that
the
property
these
two
persons
intended
dealing
with
was
to
be
held
jointly
as
partnership
property,
and
sold
as
such.
Is
this
what
they
contemplated?
Had
they
in
their
minds
a
binding
agreement
which
would
disable
either
of
them
from
dealing
with
his
share—that
is
to
say,
with
his
share
in
the
land
itself
—as
his
own
separate
property?
A
common
intention
that
each
should
be
at
liberty
to
deal
with
his
undivided
interest
in
the
land
as
his
own
would
obviously
be
incompatible
with
an
intention
that
both
should
be
bound
to
treat
the
corpus
as
the
joint
property,
the
property
of
a
partnership.
.
.
.
The
partner’s
right
is
a
right
to
a
division
of
profits
according
to
the
special
arrangement,
and
as
regards
the
corpus,
to
a
sale
and
division
of
the
proceeds
on
dissolution
after
the
discharge
of
liabilities.
This
right,
a
partner
may
assign,
but
he
cannot
transfer
to
another
an
undivided
interest
in
the
partnership
property
in
specie.”
In
the
preesnt
instance,
four
individuals
made
a
verbal
agreement
by
which
they
would
join
in
the
purchase
and
sale
of
a
certain
property
for
development
purposes.
This
was
not
an
arrangement
to
purchase
land
so
that
each
individual
would
become
co-owner
thereof.
The
purchase
of
the
land
was
made
for
business
purposes
by
the
parties
acting
not
personally
but
as
a
group.
The
association
among
the
persons
concerned
was
an
unincorporated
business
association.
The
property
acquired
was
held
and
applied
by
the
group
exclusively
for
the
purpose
of
the
association,
to
wit,
for
its
sale
and
the
realization
of
profits
to
be
divided
in
accordance
with
the
agreement
and
the
terms
of
the
memorandum.
Believing
as
I
do
that
the
arrangement
between
the
respondent
and
the
other
parties
was
an
agreement
of
partnership,
it
follows
that
legally
the
property,
in
part
or
in
whole,
could
not
have
been
disposed
of
without
the
consent
of
each
and
every
partner.
Each
partner’s
right
was
not
a
right
to
dispose
of
the
land
but
a
right
to
participate
in
the
division
of
the
profits
realized
by
the
business
operations
of
the
partnership.
It
being
a
partnership,
it
was
subject
to
the
rules
provided
for
in
The
Partnerships
Act.
True
the
Act
does
not
give
partnership
a
legal
personality,
but
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
in
different
sections
considers
a
partnership
as
an
entity
for
tax
purposes.
The
charging
provision
of
the
Act
is
Section
6(c)
which
reads
as
follows:
“6.
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(c)
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
partnership
or
syndicate
for
the
year
whether
or
not
he
has
withdrawn
it
during
the
year.
Consequently,
the
income
which
a
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
receive
or
has
received
from
a
partnership
or
syndicate
for
the
year
must
be
included
in
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
year.
This
means
that
profits
realized
from
the
business
or
the
property
of
the
partnership
for
a
year,
whether
or
not
the
partner
has
withdrawn
it
during
the
year,
is
to
be
included
in
his
income.
The
respondent
stated
that
every
amount
to
which
he
was
entitled
from
that
source
had
been
computed
in
his
income
and
that
he
had
paid
the
tax.
Now
the
only
income
under
our
statute
which
is
not
subject
to
tax
is
the
profit
realized
from
an
investment.
The
test
for
deciding
whether
the
profit
is
of
a
capital
nature
or
income
is
always
the
same.
The
rule
laid
down
in
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v.
Harris,
5
T.C.
159,
by
the
Lord
Justice
Clerk
is
well
known
(page
165,
in
fine)
:
It
is
quite
a
well
settled
principle
in
dealing
with
questions
of
assessment
of
Income
Tax,
that
where
the
owner
of
an
ordinary
investment
chooses
to
realise
it,
and
obtains
a
greater
price
for
it
than
he
originally
acquired
it
at,
the
enhanced
price
is
not
profit
in
the
sense
of
.
.
.
the
Income
Tax
Act.
But
it
is
equally
well
established
that
enhanced
values
obtained
from
realisation
and
conversion
of
securities
may
be
so
assessable,
where
what
is
done
is
not
merely
a
realisation
or
change
of
investment,
but
an
act
done
in
what
is
truly
the
carrying
on,
or
carrying
out,
of
a
business.
The
simplest
case
is
that
of
a
person
or
association
of
persons
buying
and
selling
lands
or
securities
speculatively,
in
order
to
make
a
gain,
dealing
in
such
investments
as
a
business,
and
thereby
seeking
to
make
profits.
.
.
.
the
question
to
be
determined
being—lIs
the
sum
of
gain
that
has
been
made
a
mere
enhancement
of
value
by
realising
a
security,
or
is
it
a
gain
made
in
an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profit-making
?
’
’
When
the
respondent
joined
the
partnership
and
made
the
necessary
outlay
to
acquire
a
one-third
interest
in
it,
he
no
doubt
expected
a
return
on
his
investment.
He
must
have
had
in
mind
that
the
partnership
would
make
profits
from
its
business
operations
of
selling
lots
and
that
he
would
share
in
these
profits
in
proportion
to
his
one-third
interest.
As
I
see
it,
the
income
expected
from
his
outlay
was
the
profits
of
the
partnership’s
business
of
selling
building
lots.
The
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
was
that
of
the
partnership
and
not
that
of
the
partners.
The
partners
were
to
receive
their
share
of
the
profits
realized
from
the
business
and
their
responsibility
was,
if
necessary,
to
pay
their
share
of
its
losses.
The
respondent
was
not
acquiring
a
share
in
the
partnership
to
resell
it,
repeat
the
same
with
other
partnerships
and
carry
on
a
trade
in
shares
or
interests
in
partnership,
but
as
an
investment.
After
the
partnership
had
been
organized,
the
negotiations
for
purchasing
the
land
were
well
on
their
way
and
the
property
was
being
subdivided,
it
would
seem
that
its
prospects
of
success
were
such
that
other
parties
were
disposed
to
pay
a
higher
price
for
the
shares
or
interests
in
it
than
that
paid
by
the
original
joiners.
So
in
November
1951,
before
the
partnership
started
its
selling
operations,
the
respondent
sold
one-half
of
his
one-third
share
in
the
partnership
at
a
higher
price
that
he
had
paid
for
it.
The
adventure
in
the
nature
of
a
trade
in
this
instance
was
the
purchase
and
sale
of
land.
What
the
respondent
did
was
not
the
sale
of
land,
which
he
personally
had
not
the
power
to
sell,
but
the
sale
of
his
right
to
the
profits
of
the
sale
of
lots
which
would
eventually
be
made
by
the
partnership.
The
respondent’s
transaction
had
no
effect
whatsoever
on
the
land
which
had
been
acquired
by
the
partnership
to
be
sold.
The
right
he
disposed
of
was
part
of
his
investment
in
the
capital
structure
of
the
partnership.
It
was
not
a
business
operation
or
a
scheme
of
profit
making.
He
sold
part
of
his
capital
asset,
kept
the
other
part
and
later
on
derived
therefrom
taxable
income.
The
Court
was
referred
to
numerous
decisions.
The
basic
test
applied
in
connection
therewith
is
the
same—Is
an
investment
sold
or
is
a
trade
being
carried
on?
When
in
doubt,
one
has
to
scrutinize
the
whole
course
of
the
taxpayer’s
conduct
to
find
out
his
intention
and
draw
what
may
be
considered
as
a
proper
deduction.
This
I
have
done.
What
I
have
stated
is
that
the
sale
of
a
source
of
income
does
not
always
give
rise
to
taxable
income,
though
under
certain
circumstances
it
may
be
considered
as
income
and
assessed
as
such.
In
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Shaw
[1939]
S.C.R.
338;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
346,
Duff,
C.J.C.,
at
page
342
[
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
349]
said:
“The
Legislature,
it
seems
to
me,
is
at
pains
to
emphasize
the
distinction
between
the
income
and
the
source
of
income.
The
income
derived
from
the
capital
source
is
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.
The
source
is
not
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.’’
The
taxpayer
in
this
instance
had
a
potential
source
of
income,
his
right
to
share
in
the
profits
of
a
partnership.
He
disposed
of
part
of
his
source
of
income
which
in
my
opinion
was
a
capital
asset.
I
would
readily
admit
that
when
a
person
makes
a
business
of
acquiring
such
sources
of
income
with
the
intention
of
disposing
of
them
at
a
profit
and
thus
carried
on
a
trade
of
that
nature,
or
has
embarked
on
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
for
the
same
purpose,
the
capital
could
be
considered
as
income.
The
evidence
has
convinced
me
that
the
transaction
between
the
respondent
and
Ruth
Burritt
had
no
business
character.
The
gain
was
not
made
through
an
operation
of
business
in
dealing
in
an
investment
in
partnership’s
shares
or
interests,
nor
made
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
of
profit
making;
it
was
an
enhancement
in
value
of
the
shares
or
interests
of
the
partnership.
There
is
nothine
before
the
Court
which
could
justify
the
conclusion
that
the
respondent
when
he
made
the
outlay
to
acquire
a
right
to
divide
in
the
profits
of
the
partnership
had
any
intention
of
disposing
of
it
at
a
profit.
This
he
did
for
reasons
he
made
clear
in
his
testimony
and
which
I
have
commented
in
these
notes.
In
principle,
to
be
taxable
the
profit
must
arise
from
trading
activities,
not
from
a
sale
of
capital
as
such.
In
my
opinion,
the
right
which
the
respondent
disposed
of
was
an
asset
and
does
not
constitute
trading
or
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
This
rule
was
applied
in
Commissioner
of
Taxes
v.
British-
Australian
Wool
Realization
Association,
Lid.,
[1931]
A.C.
224.
The
sale
herein
provided
a
profit
as
compared
with
the
price
the
respondent
had
paid
for
the
right
to
participate
in
the
profits
of
the
partnership
and
does
not
constitute
income
subject
to
be
taxed.
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
amount
of
$9,166.67
added
to
the
respondent’s
declared
income
did
not
represent
a
profit
from
the
operations
of
the
partnership
and
was
not
subject
to
taxation.
Therefore,
the
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.