JUDSON,
J.
(all
concur)
:—The
sole
question
in
this
appeal
is
whether
a
profit
of
$263,864.03
was
properly
assessed
in
the
taxation
year
1955.
The
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
holds
that
this
profit
must
be
excluded
in
assessing
the
profits
for
the
taxation
year
1955
on
the
ground
that
it
should
have
been
assessed
in
the
taxation
year
1954.
The
facts
are
simple.
On
January
7,
1954,
the
Crown
in
right
of
Canada
expropriated
two
parcels
of
land
belonging
to
the
respondent
company,
Benaby
Realties
Limited,
on
the
Island
of
Montreal.
The
company’s
1954
fiscal
year
ended
on
April
30,
1954.
On
November
9,
1954,
as
a
result
of
an
agreement
fixing
the
amount
of
compensation,
the
Crown
paid
the
sum
of
$371,260.
This
happened
during
the
company’s
1955
fiscal
year,
which
ended
on
April
30,
1955.
The
profit
of
$263,864.03
is
the
difference
between
the
cost
of
the
land
and
the
amount
of
compensation.
It
was
argued
in
the
Exchequer
Court
that
the
profit
was
not
taxable
but
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
was
against
this
and
the
appeal
in
this
Court
was
argued
on
the
assumption
that
this
was
a
taxable
profit.
The
only
issue
was
the
appropriate
year
of
assessment.
The
taxpayer’s
argument
in
this
Court
is
that
from
the
moment
of
expropriation,
the
taxpayer
no
longer
had
its
land
but
had
instead
the
right
to
receive
compensation.
This
is
set
out
in
Section
23
of
the
Expropriation
Act,
which
reads:
The
compensation
money
agreed
upon
or
adjudged
for
any
land
or
property
acquired
or
taken
for
or
injuriously
affected
by
the
construction
of
any
public
work
shall
stand
in
the
stead
of
such
land
or
property;
and
any
claim
to
or
encumbrance
upon
such
land
or
property
shall,
as
respects
Her
Majesty,
be
converted
into
a
claim
to
such
compensation
money
or
to
a
proportionate
amount
thereof,
and
shall
be
void
as
respects
any-
land
or
property
so
acquired
or
taken,
which
shall,
by
the
fact
of
the
taking
possession
thereof,
or
the
filing
of
the
plan
and
description,
as
the
case
may
be,
become
and
be
absolutely
vested
in
Her
Majesty.
The
taxpayer
conducted
its
business
on
the
accrual
basis
under
Section
85B(l)(b),
which
reads:
85B.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
(b)
every
amount
receivable
in
respect
of
property
sold
or
services
rendered
in
the
course
of
the
business
in
the
year
shall
be
included
notwithstanding
that
the
amount
is
not
receivable
until
a
subsequent
year
unless
the
method
adopted
by
the
taxpayer
for
computing
income
from
the
business
and
accepted
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
does
not
require
him
to
include
any
amount
receivable
in
computing
his
income
for
a
taxation
year
unless
it
has
been
received
in
the
year.
The
Crown’s
argument
is
that
the
general
rule
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
that
taxes
are
payable
on
income
actually
received
by
the
taxpayer
during
the
taxation
period;
that
there
is
an
exception
in
the
ease
of
trade
receipts
under
Section
85B(1)
(b),
which
include
not
only
actual
receipts
but
amounts
which
have
become
receivable
in
the
year;
that
the
taxpayer’s
profit
from
this
expropriation
did
not
form
part
of
its
income
for
the
year
1954
because
it
was
not
received
in
that
year
and
because
it
did
not
become
an
amount
receivable
in
that
year.
In
my
opinion,
the
Minister’s
submission
is
sound.
It
is
true
that
at
the
moment
of
expropriation
the
taxpayer
acquired
a
right
to
receive
compensation
in
place
of
the
land
but
in
the
absence
of
a
binding
agreement
between
the
parties
or
of
a
judgment
fixing
the
compensation,
the
owner
had
no
more
than
a
right
to
claim
compensation
and
there
is
nothing
which
can
be
taken
into
account
as
an
amount
receivable
due
to
the
expropriation.
The
Exchequer
Court
founded
its
judgment
on
Newcastle
Breweries
v.
C.I.R.
(1927),
12
T.C.
927,
which
was
a
case
involving
the
government’s
requisitioning
of
a
supply
of
rum
in
1918.
The
company
accepted
the
government’s
price
without
prejudice
to
its
right
to
claim
a
larger
amount.
This
was
subsequently
granted
under
legislation
enacted
in
1920.
This
additional
sum
was
received
in
1922.
The
Inland
Revenue
then
reopened
the
company’s
1918
trading
account
to
include
this
additional
sum
and
the
Courts
held
throughout
that
this
could
be
done.
What
happened
was
that
in
1918
there
was
a
compulsory
sale
at
a
fixed
price
with
an
award
of
additional
compensation
under
statutory
authority
three
or
four
years
later.
The
application
of
this
decision
to
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act
is
questionable.
This
decision
implies
that
accounts
can
be
left
open
until
the
profits
resulting
from
a
certain
transaction
have
been
ascertained
and
that
accounts
for
a
period
during
which
a
transaction
took
place
can
be
reopened
once
the
profits
have
been
ascertained.
There
can
be
no
objection
to
this
on
the
properly
framed
legislation,
but
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act
makes
no
provision
for
doing
this.
For
income
tax
purposes,
accounts
cannot
be
left
open
until
the
profits
have
been
finally
determined.
Taxpayers
are
required
to
file
a
return
of
income
for
each
taxation
year
(Section
44(1))
and
the
Minister
must
‘‘with
all
due
despatch’’
examine
each
return
of
income
and
assess
the
tax
for
the
taxation
year.
However,
in
many
cases,
compensation
payable
under
the
Expropriation
Act
is
not
determined
until
more
than
four
years
after
the
expropriation
has
taken
place
and,
in
many
of
these
cases,
the
Minister
would
be
precluded
from
amending
the
original
assessment
because
of
the
four-year
limitation
for
the
assessment
(Section
46(4)
).
My
opinion
is
that
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act
requires
that
profits
be
taken
into
account
or
assessed
in
the
year
in
which
the
amount
is
ascertained.
Try
v.
Johnson,
[1948]
1
All
E.R.
532,
is
much
closer
to
the
point
in
issue
here.
The
claim
was
for
compensation
under
legislation
which
imposed
restrictions
on
‘‘Ribbon
Development”.
When
the
case
reached
the
Court
of
Appeal,
the
amount
of
compensation
was
admitted
to
be
a
trade
receipt.
The
argument
in
that
Court
was
directed
to
the
appropriate
year
of
assessment.
The
judgment
was
that
the
right
of
the
frontager
to
compensation
under
the
Ribbon
Development
Act
contained
so
many
elements
of
uncertainty
both
as
to
the
right
itself
and
the
quantum
that
it
could
not
be
regarded
as
a
trade
receipt
for
the
purpose
of
ascertaining
the
appropriate
year
of
assessment
until
the
amount
was
fixed
either
by
an
arbitration
award
or
by
agreement.
Under
the
Canadian
Expropriation
Act,
there
is
no
doubt
or
uncertainty
as
to
the
right
to
compensation,
but
I
do
adopt
the
principle
that
there
could
be
no
amount
receivable
under
Section
85B(l)(b)
until
the
amount
was
fixed
either
by
arbitration
or
agreement.
The
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Lechter,
[1966]
S.C.R.
655;
[1966]
C.T.C.
434,
does
not
support
the
taxpayer’s
submission.
In
that
case,
the
expropriation
was
in
the
1954
fiscal
year;
the
settlement
was
in
the
1955
fiscal
year
and,
according
to
its
terms,
payment
should
have
been
made
within
60
days.
For
some
reason
the
Treasury
Board
authorization
was
7
months
later
and
the
actual
payment
10
months
later,
both
events
following
within
the
1956
fiscal
year.
The
judgment
says
no
more
than
this,
that
the
respondent,
operating
on
an
accrual
basis,
was
bound
to
treat
the
profit
of
$234,506.91
on
the
disposition
of
part
of
lot
507,
as
having
been
earned
prior
to
January
31,
1955,
and
that
it
was
not
taxable
income
in
his
taxation
year
ending
January
31,
1956.
The
governing
factor
was
the
settlement
made
in
the
1955
taxation
year.
I
would
therefore
allow
the
appeal,
set
aside
the
Judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
and
restore
the
assessment
of
the
Minister,
with
costs
in
this
Court
and
in
the
Exchequer
Court.