Jerome,
ACJ
[ORALLY]—This
case
is
an
action
by
way
of
appeal
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
from
a
reassessment
by
the
Minister
or
really
from
assessment,
to
be
more
technically
correct,
of
the
plaintiff’s
1977
income
tax
year
and
in
more
specific
terms
is
related
to
a
single
issue,
the
sum
of
$15,500
received
in
1977
from
Butress
Investments
Limited
of
which
the
plaintiff
was
in
that
year
a
major
shareholder
and
director.
The
onus,
of
course,
of
establishing
the
contention
that
the
$15,500
was
correctly
classified
as
a
retirement
allowance
or
a
retiring
allowance
within
the
terms
of
the
statute
falls
upon
the
taxpayer
and
in
turn
in
this
action
falls
upon
the
plaintiff
so
that
in
both
respects
the
plaintiff
must
satisfy
me
that
the
sum
of
money
in
question,
$15,500,
comes
within
the
terms
of
the
statute
specifically
as
retiring
allowance
as
defined
in
subsection
248(1).
The
language
of
that
section
is
as
follows:
“retiring
allowance”
means
an
amount
received
upon
or
after
retirement
from
an
office
or
employment
in
recognition
of
long
service
or
in
respect
of
loss
of
office
or
employment.
There
are
other
words,
but
they
are
not
of
any
significance
in
respect
to
this
dispute.
The
facts
here
disclose
without
any
question
that
the
business
of
Butress
Investments
Limited
was
the
management
of
real
estate.
All
of
the
inventory
of
that
company
passed,
upon
its
winding
up,
on
to
another
corporation
of
which
the
plaintiff
was
a
majority
shareholder
or
major
shareholder
or
director.
I
am
not
clear
on
the
term
“majority”,
but
a
major
shareholder
and
director
in
virtually
the
same
manner
and
relationship
that
he
enjoyed
with
Butress
Investments.
The
management
of
the
property
went
on
to
dispose
of
the
real
estate.
All
of
the
evidence
indicates
that
that
responsibility
rested
in
the
hands
of
the
plaintiff
in
the
same
way
as
it
had
with
Butress
Investments
Limited.
His
own
answer
to
cross-examination
when
the
question
of
the
voluntariness
of
his
retirement
was
put
to
him,
his
answer
was
he
was
not
certain
about
the
voluntary
nature
of
it,
but
that
it
was
purely
due
to
circumstances
related
to
corporate
reorganization.
I
asked
him
to
clarify
that
answer
and
before
leaving
the
witness
stand
he
did.
He
expanded
upon
it
to
indicate
the
reasons
why
Butress
Investments,
some
of
the
reasons
why
Butress
Investments
Limited
was
in
fact
wound
up,
but
the
reasons
are
not
important
here.
The
fact
is
that
the
business
of
Butress
Investments
came
to
an
end.
It
was
not
the
employment
of
this
plaintiff,
but
the
business
of
Butress
Investments
came
to
an
end
and
what
was
left
of
it
was
transferred
to
another
company
in
which
at
least
there
was
sufficient
control
in
the
hands
of
this
plaintiff
that
the
accountant,
Mr
Peter
Petryna,
confirmed
in
his
testimony
that
he
received
his
instructions
in
the
affairs
of
the
other
companies
that
had
anything
to
do
with
this
real
estate
in
the
same
way
from
Mr
Doyle
that
he
received
them
when
the
properties
were
managed
by
Butress
Investments
Limited.
All
of
these
decisions
about
the
winding
up
of
Butress
Investments,
the
transfer
of
the
properties
to
the
other
corporation,
Weram
I
believe
is
the
name,
as
well
as
the
decision
about
the
allowance
paid
to
the
plaintiff
were
in
fact,
it
appears
to
me,
at
all
times
under
the
control
of
the
plaintiff.
What
I
must,
therefore,
conclude
is
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
evidence
to
indicate
to
me
that
there
has
been
in
the
true
sense
of
the
word
any
retirement
of
the
plaintiff
at
all.
What
has
happened
is
that
the
company
in
which
the
plaintiff
occupied
a
certain
office
was,
upon
the
decision
of
the
plaintiff,
wound
up.
The
real
estate
which
occupied
some
of
his
attention
in
the
Butress
company
occupied
his
attention
in
a
similar
manner
in
the
other
company
until
it
was
disposed
of.
The
jurisprudence
cited
by
the
plaintiff
in
his
argument
refers
in
particular
to
the
Speck
decision
of
my
brother
Mr
Justice
Collier
and
to
a
number
of
other
decisions
from
which
immediately
emerge
the
basic
minimum
that
the
court
concerns
itself
with
here:
whether
or
not
there
is
genuine
retirement
from
an
office.
Several,
of
the
cases
concern
themselves
with
difficult
questions
about
employees
continuing
to
work
in
a
different
capacity
for
different
employers
or
earn
different
kind
of
incomes
as
consultants,
but
in
every
case
in
which
there
has
been
simply
a
continuation
in
the
same
capacity,
the
same
responsibilities,
but
under
a
different
company
and
especially
where
there
is
some
relationship
in
the
shareholdings
of
the
companies
the
decisions
uniformly
and
consistently
reject
the
notion
that
there
has
been
retirement
and
that,
therefore,
any
sum
paid
falls
within
the
terms
of
subsection
248(1).
So,
to
summarize
the
onus
is
on
the
plaintiff
and
taxpayer
to
satisfy
me
that
the
allowance
is
paid
or
was
paid
as
a
retiring
allowance.
The
evidence,
the
facts
do
not
indicate
that.
They
indicate,
rather,
that
this
plaintiff
continued
to
do
the
same
things
for
a
corporation
under
another
name,
but
with
substantially
the
same
shareholdings
in
which
he
served
also
a
director
and
it
would,
in
my
opinion,
be
directly
contrary
to
the
spirit
of
all
of
the
jurisprudence
which
the
plaintiff
cited
to
me
if
I
were
to
hold
that
that
came
within
that
situation,
if
I
were
to
hold
that
situation
comes
within
either
the
spirit
or
the
letter
of
the
law
as
retiring
allowance
as
defined
in
subsection
248(1).
Therefore,
I
am
not
satisfied
that
the
facts
fall
within
that
section
and
I
am
clearly
convinced
that
the
existing
jurisprudence
runs
against
the
plaintiff
in
this
matter.
Therefore,
both
on
matters
of
fact
and
on
matters
of
law
nothing
convinces
me
that
this
allowance
has
anything
to
do
with
a
retiring
allowance
as
that
language
is
used
in
subsection
248(1)
and
the
action
is,
therefore,
dismissed
with
costs
as
demanded.