The
Associate
Chief
Justice:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
which
allowed
an
appeal
by
the
defendant
from
a
reassessment
of
income
tax
for
the
year
1969.
In
that
year
Bedford
Investments
Limited
(formerly
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited)
became
a
personal
corporation,
as
defined
in
section
68
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
under
section
67
of
the
Act
the
defendant,
as
owner
of
the
company,
was
liable
for
tax
in
respect
of
a
dividend
deemed
to
have
been
distributed
to
him
equal
to
the
income
of
the
company
for
the
year.
The
issue
in
the
appeal
is
whether
the
company
in
computing
its
income
was
entitled
to
deduct
an
amount
of
$48,750
which
it
allowed
or
credited
to
a
newly
incorporated
company,
named
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited,
in
the
transaction
which
is
described
in
what
follows.
The
Tax
Review
Board,
after
hearing
evidence,
concluaed
that
Bedford
was
entitled
to
the
deduction
and
accordingly
allowed
the
appeal.
In
this
Court,
however,
the
case
was
presented
on
an
agreed
statement
of
facts
which,
with
the
documents
therein
mentioned,
including
the
pleadings,
constitutes
the
material
on
which
the
matter
must
be
determined.
In
summary,
what
they
disclose
is
that
Bedford,
after
operating
a
ship
known
as
the
Bedford
II
for
some
years,
on
January
1,
1969,
in
a
transaction
not
at
arm’s
length,
sold
the
ship,
the
company’s
goodwill
and
its
entitlement
to
a
tax
refund
to
the
new
company
(hereafter
New
Newfoundland),
and
that
that
company
assumed
certain
items
shown
on
its
opening
balance
sheet
as
liabilities.
Included
under
the
latter
was
an
item
referred
to
as
“reserves”,
Quadrennial
Survey,
$48,750.
Such
an
amount
was
included
by
Bedford
in
computing
its
income
for
the
year
ending
December
31,
1968
as
a
reserve
for
quadrennial
survey
under
paragraph
11(1)(ea)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act*
and,
in
consequence
and
since
the
quadrennial
survey
was
not
done
in
1968,
it
became
necessary
for
Bedford,
under
paragraph
6(1)(eb),t
to
include
that
amount
in
computing
its
income
for
1969.
Of
that
there
is
no
longer
any
dispute.
It
is
claimed,
however,
that
Bedford
is
entitled
to
deduct
a
like
amount
of
$48,750
as
a
revenue
expense
incurred
in
the
course
of
the
transaction
of
January
1,
1969.
In
this
connection,
the
plaintiff’s
statement
of
claim
contains,
among
others,
the
following
three
paragraphs
which
were
admitted
by
the
defendant:
8.
As
the
vessel,
Bedford
II,
was
subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
Canada
Shipping
Act
for
quadrennial
surveys,
Old
Newfoundland,
Bedford,
had
set
up
a
reserve
in
its
accounts
of
$48,750
as
of
December
31,
1968,
in
respect
of
the
survey
which
was
to
be
required
to
be
performed
during
1969;
9.
Bedford
transferred
the
vessel
on
January
1,
1969,
to
New
Newfoundland
at
its
undepreciated
capital
cost
in
the
hands
of
Bedford;
10.
Bedford
also
agreed
to
give
New
Newfoundland
an
amount
of
$48,750,
the
amount
appearing
on
the
books
of
Bedford
as
a
reserve
for
quadrennial
surveys,
in
respect
of
the
estimated
cost
of
the
quadrennial
survey;
In
view
of
this
and
the
other
facts
appearing
from
the
agreed
statement,
it
appears
to
me
that:
(1)
in
the
transaction,
the
amount
of
$48,750
was
in
fact
allowed
or
credited
by
Bedford
to
New
Newfoundland,
against
what
otherwise
would
have
been
the
balance
of
the
consideration
to
be
paid
or
given
by
New
Newfoundland;
(2)
in
that
sense,
the
amount
was
paid
by
Bedford
to
New
Newfoundland
on
January
1,
1969,
in
respect
of
the
estimated
cost
of
the
quadrennial
survey;
and,
(3)
as
other
assets
of
Bedford
were
transferred
in
the
same
transaction,
the
$48,750
should
not
be
regarded
simply
as
a
reduction
of
the
price
to
be
paid
for
the
ship.
It
should
be
noted,
however,
that
while
the
owner
is
required
by
the
Canada
Shipping
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
S-9,
to
have
the
quadrennial
survey
done,
and
cannot
get
a
certificate
to
permit
further
operation
of
the
ship
until
the
survey
has
been
done,
it
is
no
more
than
a
condition
for
further
operation
since
the
owner
has
at
all
times
the
alternatives
of
disposing
of
the
ship
to
a
buyer
or
of
having
her
broken
up
for
scrap
in
either
of
which
instance
there
would
be
no
further
obligation
on
him
to
have
a
survey
made.
Or
he
might
let
her
lie
idle.
It
is
only
if
he
proposes
to
continue
operating
the
ship
that
he
must
have
the
survey
made.
The
question
then
is
whether
Bedford
is
entitled
to
a
deduction
in
respect
of
the
$48,750
which
it
allowed
or
paid
to
New
Newfoundland.
The
principal
points
of
Mr
Ainslie’s
argument,
as
I
understand
it,
were
that
there
was
never
any
actual
liability
on
Bedford
to
have
the
quadrennial
survey
carried
out;
that
at
most
there
was
a
potential
liability
which
would
mature
only
if
Bedford
continued
to
operate
the
ship;
that
this
potential
liability
and
the
state
of
the
ship
were
no
doubt
taken
into
account
in
arriving
at
the
value
of
the
assets
to
be
transferred
to
New
Newfoundland
but
that
this
does
not
give
rise
to
a
deductible
expense;
that
even
if
Bedford
had
agreed
to
have
the
survey
and
repairs
carried
out,
on
the
authority
of
Montship
Lines
Limited
v
MNR,
[1954]
Ex
CR
376;
[1954]
CTC
295;
54
DTC
1151,
the
amount
would
not
be
deductible;
and
that
if
the
$48,750
is
an
amount
allowed
in
respect
of
dilapidations,
since
no
repairs
were
carried
out,
the
amount
is
a
mere
estimate
and
its
deduction
is
prohibited
by
paragraph
12(1)(e).
On
the
latter
point,
counsel
relied
on
Edward
Collins
&
Sons,
Ltd
v
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1924),
12
TC
773;
The
Naval
Colliery
Co,
Ltd
v
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1928),
12
TC
1017;
and
Peter
Merchant,
Ltd
v
Stedeford
(HM
Inspector
of
Taxes)
(1948),
30
TC
496.
He
also
read
from
Southern
Railway
of
Peru
Ltd
v
Owen,
[1957]
AC
334;
James
Spencer
&
Co
v
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1950),
32
TC
111;
and
Federal
Commissioner
of
Taxation
v
James
Flood
Proprietary
Limited
(1953),
88
CLR
492.
While
these
cases
illustrate
principles
applied
in
other
jurisdictions,
I
do
not
find
them
of
much
assistance
in
resolving
the
present
problem.
It
must,
I
think,
be
remembered
that
they
are
decisions
on
provisions
of
the
statutes
applicable
to
the
situations
with
which
they
deal
and
that
such
provisions
are
not
necessarily
the
same
as
those
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
difference
between
the
English
statute
and
the
Australian
statute
is
brought
out
in
the
following
passage
from
the
judgment
in
the
Flood
case
at
page
505;
it
is
also
apparent
from
the
passage
that
both
statutes
are
different
from
the
Income
Tax
Act:
In
considering
such
questions
the
difference
should
never
be
overlooked
between
the
English
income
tax
law
and
the
Commonwealth
statute.
The
Report
of
1936
of
the
Income
Tax
Codification
Committee,
par
76,
contains
the
following
description
of
the
English
system:
“It
has
often
been
the
subject
of
judicial
comment
that
the
existing
Acts
contain
no
general
direction
as
to
the
ascertainment
of
business
profits.
Such
guidance
as
they
give
is
confined
to
a
statement
that
the
amount
to
be
assessed
is
‘the
balance
of
the
profits
or
gains’
of
the
business,
Subject
to
a
series
of
provisions
prohibiting
certain
specific
deductions—
some
of
which,
being
in
the
form
of
limitations,
are
taken
as
authorisations
of
deductions
within
the
limits.
It
has
been
left
to
the
Courts
to
lay
down
that
‘the
balance
of
the
profits
or
gains’
must,
in
the
absence
of
express
provision
to
the
contrary,
be
arrived
at
in
accordance
with
ordinary
commercial
principles,
and
to
formulate
the
principle
that
a
proper
debit
item
in
a
trading
or
in
a
profit
and
loss
account
is,
in
general,
a
proper
debit
item
in
an
income
tax
computation.’’
The
principle
of
the
Commonwealth
Act,
on
the
other
hand,
is
to
calculate
the
taxable
income
as
the
amount
remaining
after
deducting
from
the
assessable
income
all
allowable
deductions
and
to
restrict
allowable
deductions
to
deductions
allowable
under
the
Act.
What
losses
and
outgoings
arising
in
the
course
of
business
are
to
be
deducted
is
a
matter
which
must
be
governed
by
s
51(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Assessment
Act.
Under
its
provisions
all
losses
and
outgoings
may
be
deducted
to
the
extent
to
which
they
are
incurred
in
gaining
or
producing
the
assessable
income,
or
are
necessarily
incurred
in
carrying
on
a
business
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
such
income,
provided,
of
course,
they
are
not
of
a
capital
nature
or
otherwise
excluded.
The
word
“outgoing”
might
suggest
that
there
must
be
an
actual
disbursement.
But
partly
because
such
an
interpretation
would
produce
very
strange
and
anomalous
results,
and
partly
because
of
the
use
of
the
word
“incurred”,
the
provision
has
been
interpreted
to
cover
outgoings
to
which
the
taxpayer
is
definitively
committed
in
the
year
of
income
although
there
has
been
no
actual
disbursement.
The
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
so
far
as
it
is
applicable
to
the
present
situation,
is
found
in
sections
3,
4,
and
12.
By
section
3,
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
(which,
under
paragraph
139(1)(av),
includes
any
person)
for
a
taxation
year
includes
inter
alia
income
from
all
businesses.
By
section
4
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I
of
the
Act,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
Is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
It
is
well
established
that
the
profit
from
a
business
is
the
profit
as
ascertained
by
the
application
of
ordinary
commercial
principles,
but
for
income
tax
purposes
the
profit
so
established
is
subject
to
such
limitations
or
alterations
as
are
required
to
give
effect
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I
of
the
Act.
Among
these
is
section
12
which
provides
inter
alia
that:
12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(e)
an
amount
transferred
or
credited
to
a
reserve,
contingent
account
or
sinking
fund
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part,
Under
these
provisions,
in
order
to
qualify
for
deduction
an
outlay
or
expense
that
is
deductible
in
computing
profit
on
ordinary
commercial
principles
must
also
fall
within
the
exception
to
paragraph
12(1
)(a).
If,
on
the
other
hand,
the
item
to
be
claimed
is
not
an
actual
outlay
or
expense
but
an
amount
set
aside
or
taken
into
account
to
provide
for
some
anticipated
outlay
or
expense
for
which
liability
has
not
yet
arisen,
it
will
be,
in
substance
and
in
fact,
a
reserve
and
will
fall
under
the
prohibition
of
paragraph
12(1)(e).
On
the
facts
of
the
case,
it
appears
to
me
to
be
impossible
to
regard
the
allowance
or
payment
of
$48,750
made
by
Bedford
to
New
Newfoundland
in
the
transaction
of
January
1,
1969
as
in
any
relevant
sense
a
reserve
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
12(1)(e).
The
amount
of
$48,750
set
up
by
Bedford
in
its
accounts
for
the
period
ending
December
31,
1968
was
a
reserve,
and
was
deductible
as
such,
in
computing
income
for
1968,
under
paragraph
11
(1
)(ea)
and
the
regulations,
notwithstanding
paragraph
12(1)(e).
But
what
was
allowed
or
paid
to
New
Newfoundland
on
January
1,
1969
was
not
a
reserve.
It
was,
if
it
was
anything
at
all,
an
item
of
disbursement
and
the
fact
that
its
amount
was
calculated
or
arrived
at
as
an
estimate
of
the
cost
of
the
survey
does
not
make
it
in
any
sense
a
reserve.
Paragraph
12(1
)(e)
accordingly
has
no
application
to
prohibit
its
deduction.
On
the
other
hand,
adverting
to
paragraph
12(1)(a),
while
I
think
the
disbursement
must
be
taken
to
have
been
“made”
or
“incurred”
within
the
meaning
of
those
terms
in
the
paragraph,
I
am
not
satisfied
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
“for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from”
the
business
of
Bedford,
within
the
meaning
of
that
paragraph.
The
business
had
been
that
of
operating
the
Bedford
II.
But
the
amount
was
not
allowed
or
paid
to
enable
Bedford
to
continue
to
operate
the
ship,
and
the
transaction
in
which
the
amount
was
allowed
or
paid
was
not
a
transaction
in
the
course
of
the
business.
It
was
a
transaction
that
disposed
of
the
assets
employed
in
the
business
and
put
an
end
to
it.
Such
a
transaction
is
not
one
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
business.
Nor
is
the
amount
which
Bedford,
in
the
transaction,
agreed
to
pay
or
allow
an
outlay
or
expense
incurred
“for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from”
the
business.
The
exception
to
paragraph
12(1
)(a)
is
not
a
narrow
one.
Speaking
generally,
it
includes
any
expense
that
is
an
incident
or
part
of
the
profit-earning
operation.
But,
even
if
it
is
broad
enough
to
include,
in
some
instances,
an
expenditure
incurred
in
a
transaction
by
which
the
business
is
terminated,
of
which
there
may
be
some
question
and
which
it
is
not
necessary
now
to
decide,
it
does
not
appear
to
me
to
embrace
an
expenditure
of
the
kind
here
in
question,
that
is
to
say,
an
expenditure
not
for
a
survey
of
the
ship
but
simply
to
give
the
purchaser
of
the
capital
assets
of
the
business,
including
the
ship,
an
allowance
in
respect
of
the
anticipated
cost
of
a
survey
which
he
might
thereafter
use
or
not
use
for
that
purpose,
as
he
might
see
fit.
Plainly
it
was
not
an
outlay
for
a
survey
because
no
survey
was
made.
The
defendant’s
position
was
that
the
expense
of
a
quadrennial
survey
is
really
incurred
while
the
ship
is
being
operated
but,
as
there
is
no
annual
outlay
made
or
expenses
incurred
for
it,
nothing
could
be
deducted
in
respect
of
it
in
any
of
the
first
three
years
because
of
paragraph
12(1)(e);
that
Parliament
recognized
this
as
being
unfair
and
has
provided
for
it
by
paragraph
11(1)(ea);
that
if
and
when
a
taxpayer
pays
anyone
else
to
do
with
respect
to
a
quadrennial
survey
what
otherwise
the
taxpayer
would
ultimately
have
to
do
and
then
becomes
entitled
to
deduct
the
cost,
what
the
taxpayer
pays
equally
relates
to
the
operation
of
the
vessel
in
the
preceding
years
and
the
payment
takes
its
character
from
that
of
the
expense
for
which
it
was
submitted.
He
cited
as
an
instance
of
this
the
common
practice
of
apportioning
current
taxes
between
vendor
and
purchaser
in
closing
real
estate
transactions.
It
is
a
tempting
argument,
but
I
do
not
think
it
can
prevail.
With
respect
to
the
submission
that
the
expense
of
a
quadrennial
survey
is
incurred
while
the
ship
is
being
operated,
it
is
to
be
observed
that
the
material
before
me
provides
no
guide
as
to
how
the
matter
is
regarded
or
dealt
with
in
ordinary
commercial
practice.
It
was
said,
however,
that
for
income
tax
purposes
the
amount
of
the
reserve
deducted
under
paragraph
11(1)(ea)
in
1968
was
equal
to
three-
quarters
of
an
estimate
of
what
the
survey
would
cost,
based
on
the
experience
of
the
actual
cost
of
the
previous
quadrennial
survey.
Throughout
that
stage,
however,
there
was
no
outlay
made
or
expense
incurred
for
the
survey.
There
was
only
a
reserve
which,
so
far
as
income
tax
purposes
are
concerned,
fell
under
the
prohibition
of
paragraph
12(1)(e)
except
to
the
extent
permitted
by
paragraph
11(1)(ea).
It
appears
to
me
to
follow
that
in
the
statutory
scheme
the
incurring
of
the
need
for
a
survey
is
not
equivalent
to
the
making
of
an
outlay
or
the
incurring
of
expense
for
a
survey
and
cannot
be
considered
or
treated
as,
in
itself,
an
expense.
There
was,
thus,
in
fact
and
in
law
no
expense
incurred
by
Bedford
to
which,
in
computing
income
for
income
tax
purposes,
the
allowance
or
payment
made
by
Bedford
to
New
Newfoundland
could
relate
or
from
which
it
could
acquire
or
take
the
character
of
an
expense
for
a
quadrennial
survey.
With
respect
to
the
practice
in
real
estate
transactions,
the
analogy
appears
to
me
to
break
down
because
in
such
situations
there
is,
in
fact,
a
liability
for
taxes
which
is
an
expense
incurred
by
one
party
or
the
other
in
respect
of
the
year
in
which
the
sale
occurs.
Here
there
was
no
quadrennial
survey
and
no
cost
was
incurred
by
vendor
or
purchaser
for
one.
In
the
course
of
argument,
counsel
for
the
defendant
suggested
that,
if
I
should
conclude
that
the
$48,750
was
simply
a
reduction
in
the
price
of
the
ship,
the
matter
should
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
with
a
direction
to
deduct
a
terminal
capital
cost
allowance.
The
point,
however,
was
not
raised
in
the
defence
and,
in
any
case,
I
have
not
concluded
that
the
$48,750
was
a
reduction
in
the
price
of
the
ship.
The
appeal
accordingly
succeeds
and
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
reassessment
will
be
restored.