Walsh,
J:—This
action
concerns
plaintiff’s
claim
for.maximum
capital
cost
allowance
under
Class
2
in
its
1971-72-73
and
1974
taxation
years
of
additional
amounts
of
$4,073,751,
$5,163,174,
$5,958,696
and
$6,907,912
for
each
of
the
said
years
respectively.
At
the
opening
of
the
hearing
it
was
agreed
that
as
a
result
of
further
auditing
and
verification
these
figures
should
now
read
$3,923,093.83,
$4,900,149.89,
$5,749,511.45,
and
$6,629,456.19
for
each
of
the
four
years
in
question
and
the
conclusion
of
the
amended
statement
of
claim
should
be
amended
accordingly.
These
figures
appear
from
the
partial
agreed
statement
of
facts
produced
at
the
opening
of
the
hearing
which
also
sets
out
that
the
agreed
additional
capital
cost
allowance
which
could
be
claimed
for
the
years
in
question
should
the
judgment
be
rendered
wholly
in
favour
of
plaintiff
would
amount
to
$235,385.63,
$294,008.99,
$344,970.69,
and
$397,767.37
respectively
for
each
of
the
said
years.
A
table
forming
part
of
the
partial
agreed
statement
of
facts
shows
that
total
reimbursement
for
the
alteration,
modification
or
replacement
of
its
Class
2
depreciable
properties
for
which
plaintiff
was
reimbursed
by
other
parties
for
the
years
in
question
amounted
to
$731,032.33
for
1971
of
which
$456,169.29
was
reimbursed
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
and
$274,863.04
from
other
sources,
$1,212,441.69
for
1972
of
which
$1,121,261.43
was
reimbursed
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
and
$91,180.26
from
other
sources,
$1,143,370.55
for
1973
of
which
$1,051,896.75
was
reimbursed
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
and
$91,473.80
from
other
sources,
and
$1,224,915.43
in
1974
of
which
$1,054,280.60
was
reimbursed
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
and
$170,634.83
from
other
sources.
The
plaintiff
is
a
public
company
primarily
engaged
in
processing
and
distributing
natural
gas
to
residential,
commercial
and
industrial
users
in
Ontario,
operating
in
various
operating
districts.
The
reason
for
the
breakdown
of
figures
into
those
received
from
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authorities
and
those
received
from
other
sources
results
from
paragraph
13(7)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
for
the
years
in
question
read
as
follows,
being
paragraph
20(6)(h)
in
the
former
Act
applicable
for
the
1971
year.
13
(7)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section
and
any
regulations
made
under
paragraph
20(1
)(a)
the
following
rules
apply:
(e)
where
a
taxpayer
has
received
or
is
entitled
to
receive
from
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority,
in
respect
of
or
for
the
acquisition
of
property,
a
grant,
subsidy
or
other
assistance
other
than
an
amount
authorized
to
be
paid
under
an
Appropriation
Act
and
on
terms
and
conditions
approved
by
the
Treasury
Board
for
the
purpose
of
advancing
or
sustaining
the
technological
capability
of
Canadian
manufacturing
or
other
industry,
the
capital
cost
of
the
property
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
the
taxpayer
minus
the
amount
of
the
grant,
subsidy
or
other
assistance.
It
is
further
admitted
that
none
of
the
amounts
shown
as
total
reimbursement
for
four
years
in
question
were
included
in
plaintiff's
undepreciated
capital
cost
for
taxation
years
prior
to
1971
and
that
no
capital
cost
allowance
was
Claimed
in
respect
of
those
amounts
prior
to
1971.
The
reimbursements
were
received
pursuant
to
certain
contracts
between
plaintiff
and
other
parties,
resulting
from
198
contracts
in
1971,
209
in
1972,
252
in
1973
and
245
in
1974
or
an
average
of
226
contracts
per
year.
Finally
it
is
agreed
that
if
the
Court
should
find
wholly
in
favour
of
plaintiff
that
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
include
the
amounts
referred
to
as
total
reimbursements
received
in
its
Class
2
capital
cost
and
if
those
amounts
do
not
result
in
any
other
offsetting
effect
on
taxable
income
then,
as
compared
with
the
reassessments,
plaintiff’s
undepreciated
capital
cost
at
the
end
of
each
taxation
year
prior
to
any
capital
cost
allowance
being
taken
should
be
increased
by
the
amounts
set
out
above
and
plaintiff’s
capital
cost
allowance
foreach
year
should
similarly
be
increased
by
the
amounts
indicated.
Plaintiff’s
statement
of
claim
sets
out
that
the
assessment
practice
of
the
defendant
was
not
to
permit
the
depreciation
for
tax
purposes
of
the
amounts
of
such
contributions
but
to
require
the
reduction
of
the
plaintiff’s
capital
cost
of
Class
2
depreciable
properties
by
the
amount
of
donations,
grants
and
other
contributions
received
by
plaintiff
pursuant
to
contractual
obligations
of
third
parties
to
reimburse
the
plaintiff
for
its
expenditures
in
making
certain
replacements,
alterations
or
modifications
to
its
Class
2
depreciable
properties
at
the
request
of
such
third
parties.
Plaintiff
filed
formal
notice
of
objection
to
assessments
received
in
1977
for
its
1971,
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
and
filed
an
amended
tax
return
for
the
1974
taxation
year
on
the
basis
that
the
donations,
grants,
and
other
contributions
did
not
reduce
its
capital
cost
of
Class
2
depreciable
properties,
placing
reliance
upon
the
judgment
in
the
case
of
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
v
Canadian
Pacific
Ltd
No
1,
[1976]
2
FC
563;
[1976]
CTC
221;
77
DTC
5383.
Defendant
contends
that
both
the
amounts
paid
and
reimbursement
received
by
plaintiff
pursuant
to
its
agreement
with
third
parties
were
on
income
account,
but
if
the
disbursements
were
on
capital
amount
which
it
denies,
either
the
capital
cost
to
plaintiff
of
each
of
its
said
relocated
pipelines
built
pursuant
to
said
agreements
is
the
amount
disbursed
by
it
less
the
reimbursement
received
from
the
third
party,
or
alternatively
in
each
case
a
pipeline
is
disposed
of
for
proceeds
of
disposition
equal
to
the
amount
the
plaintiff
was
reimbursed
under
its
respective
agreement
with
the
third
party.
In
the
latter
alternative
although
the
amount
disbursed
by
plaintiff
pursuant
to
the
agreement
could
properly
be
added
to
its
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
pipelines,
that
undepreciated
capital
cost
would
be
reduced
by
the
proceeds
of
disposition.
Agreed
books
of
documents
were
filed
and
plaintiff
called
only
one
witness,
Ronald
Carter,
who
has
been
an
accountant
with
plaintiff
since
1968.
While
not
testifying
as
an
expert
witness
he
has
undoubtedly
had
a
very
wide
experience,
being
director
of
financial
accounting
and
statistics
for
the
company
in
charge
of
preparing
exhibits
for
hearings
before
the
Ontario
Energy
Board
before
which
he
also
testifies
as
an
expert
witness.
Previously
he
served
as
taxation
supervisor
for
plaintiff.
He
gave
background
information
about
plaintiff’s
extensive
business
of
natural
gas
production
and
distribution.
It
serves
some
five
million
people
and
has
approximately
17,000
kilometres
of
mains,
and
$1.1
billion
of
property,
plant,
and
equipment
in
its
distribution
system.
Its
rates
and
accounting
methods
and
practices
are
subject
to
approval
of
the
Ontario
Energy
Board,
the
rates
being
based
on
a
fair
return
on
its
rate
base.
He
testified
that
the
Ontario
Energy
Board
accepts
two
methods
of
accounting,
the
first
being
to
credit
contributions
against
the
cost
of
construction,
with
the
net
amount
appearing
on
the
balance
sheet,
and
in
the
second
method
the
cost
of
construction
is
carried
on
the
balance
sheet
and
contributions
against
it
are
credited
as
a
liability
or
a
long
term
debt
with
deferred
income
tax.
The
company
uses
the
first
method
for
accounting
purposes
but
the
end
result
of
either
method
would
be
that
the
amounts
are
netted
for
rate
making
purposes.
Originally
the
method
adopted
for
rate
making
purposes
was
also
used
for
tax
purposes
but
this
was
changed
after
the
finding
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
which
will
be
examined
later
in
detail.
By
far
the
greater
part
of
the
contributions
result
from
the
provisions
of
the
Public
Service
Works
and
Highways
Act,
RSO
c
420
(RSO
1970
c
388
for
the
years
in
question).
This
statute
requires
companies
such
as
plaintiff
to
agree
to
road
changes
in
return
for
a
subsidy
from
the
public
authority
requiring
the
change
of
50%
of
the
labour
costs
as
defined
in
the
Act,
which
do
not
include
such
items
as
supervision,
or
overhead
nor
is
material
included,
so
that
in
practice
the
actual
subsidy
received
is
somewhat
less
than
50%
of
the
total
cost.
In
the
event
that
the
Act
does
not
apply
then
a
municipality
or
other
party
requiring
the
building
or
construction
of
the
pipeline
will
have
to
pay
100%
of
the
costs.
The
witness
directed
attention
to
exhibits
showing
how
this
is
worked
out
with
respect
to
various
types
of
of
contracts
with
Toronto
Hydro,
the
Ontario
Ministry
of
Transport
and
Communications,
the
St
Lawrence
Seaway
Authority
(a
100%
contribution
resulting
from
pipeline
relocation
in
connection
with
the
Welland
Canal),
Markborough
Properties,
a
developer
(100%
contribution)
and
Bell
Canada
(also
100%
contribution).
Another
example
of
a
private
100%
contribution
was
Ford
Motors
of
Canada
which
required
a
relocation
of
the
entry
main
to
its
plant
as
a
result
of
building
expansion
alterations.
The
witness
explained
that
the
abandoned
mains
are
left
in
the
ground
as
it
is
not
worthwhile
to
recover
them
and
that
the
new
main
is
of
no
greater
use
to
the
plaintiff
than
the
abandoned
main.
The
changes
in
question
here
do
not
result
from
any
expansion
of
the
company’s
distribution
system
for
its
own
purposes
since
the
old
mains
can
remain
in
service
for
at
least
80
years,
nor
is
there
any
revenue
gain
for
plaintiff
resulting
from
the
changes
which
are
done
to
accommodate
customers.
The
remaining
undepreciated
value
of
the
abandoned
pipeline
remains
in
the
company’s
capital
account
and
the
capital
cost
allowance
continues
to
be
claimed
on
it
together
with
the
new
pipeline.
The
company
depreciates
its
pipelines
over
a
70-year
period.
As
a
result
of
crediting
the
contributions
against
the
cost
of
the
new
pipeline,
in
the
company’s
books
as
the
Ontario
Energy
Board
requires
for
rate
making
purposes
the
books
always
show
a
value
for
the
pipeline
of
less
than
its
true
value.
David
Bonham,
FCA
a
chartered
accountant
and
lawyer
testified
as
an
expert
witness
for
defendant.
He
has
high
qualifications
both
as
an
accountant,
writer
of
accounting
text
books
and
university
teacher
and
served
as
vice-president
of
finance
for
Queens
University
from
1971
to
1977.
His
expert
report,
taken
as
read,
assumes
that
as
an
ongoing
part
of
its
business
plaintiff
frequently
has
to
locate
its
pipelines
pursuant
to
contracts
made
at
the
request
of
other
parties
which
takes
place
some
200
times
a
year,
normally
resulting
from
planned
construction
by
the
other
party
which
would
create
a
physical
conflict
with
plaintiff’s
pipeline
or
other
facility,
that
in
a
vast
majority
of
cases
such
work
does
not
increase
the
capacity
of
the
pipeline
or
other
facility
on
which
plaintiff
retains
ownership,
that
any
salvage
is
incidental,
that
plaintiff
makes
full
recovery
of
its
costs
except
where
prevented
by
statute,
and
that
this
work
is
a
normal
and
necessary
part
of
carrying
on
plaintiff’s
business.
On
the
basis
of
these
assumed
facts
he
gives
his
opinion,
which
is
to
the
effect
that
the
total
cost
of
the
work
should
be
recorded
as
a
Capital
asset
with
the
reimbursement
as
a
reduction
to
the
cost
of
acquiring
it,
and
that
the
annual
charge
for
depreciation
should
be
on
the
resultant
balance
in
the
fixed
asset
account
after
each
such
transaction
has
been
so
recorded.
He
considers
this
to
be
appropriate
as
the
relocation
of
facilities
and
related
work
cannot
reasonably
be
avoided,
so
the
resultant
net
cost
can
properly
be
considered
as
an
inherent
part
of
the
cost
of
acquiring
the
fixed
assets
of
the
corporation.
He
concludes
that
although
alternative
methods
of
disclosing
such
transactions
may
exist,
it
is
his
opinion
that
regardless
of
the
alternative
selected
all
such
transactions
must
be
reflected
in
the
income
statement
and
then
through
reinvested
earnings
as
a
regular
ongoing
commercial
activity
of
the
corporation,
and
that
it
would
be
unacceptable
to
record
any
part
of
these
transactions
as
contributed
surplus
or
in
any
manner
other
than
through
the
income
statement
to
reinvested
earnings.
In
testifying
he
outlined
different
types
of
surplus,
distinguishing
contributed
surplus
from
earned
surplus,
contributed
surplus
being
in
the
nature
of
windfalls,
shareholders’
investments,
and
so
forth
and
he
does
not
believe
that
the
contributions
to
relocation
fall
into
any
such
categories.
He
discussed
the
second
accounting
method
allowed
by
the
Ontario
Energy
Board
which
results
in
the
deferred
credit
gradually
being
brought
into
income,
and
provided
it
is
brought
in
each
year
in
the
same
amount
as
that
claimed
for
capital
cost
allowance
the
end
result
would
be
the
same.
He
would
preferably
have
adopted
the
other
method,
which
was
actually
adopted
by
plaintiff
for
accounting
purposes,
and
merely
include
the
net
cost
in
the
capital
account
as
a
Class
2
asset
on
which
capital
cost
allowance
could
be
claimed.
In
argument
extensive
reference
was
made
by
plaintiff
to
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
(supra).
This
dealt
with
various
aspects
of
taxation
of
Canadian
Pacific
Limited
for
its
1965,
1966
and
1967
taxation
years,
inter
alia
how
it
would
deal
with,
for
capital
cost
allowance
purposes,
donations
and
grants
received
for
construction
or
modifications
on
its
own
property
of
rail
lines,
made
at
the
request
of
another
party
to
enable
that
party
to
carry
out
a
project
of
its
own,
similar
requests
made
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
allegedly
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
20(6)(h)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
years
in
question
(supra),
and
other
questions
relating
to
private
sidings
and
improvements
on
properties
leased
by
plaintiff
which
do
not
concern
us
in
the
present
case.
The
costs
were
recorded
in
the
company’s
accounting
records
in
accordance
with
the
uniform
classification
of
accounts
as
required
by
section
328
of
the
Railway
Act
and
the
Regulations
of
the
Canadian
Transport
Commission,
but
as
was
pointed
out
at
251
of
the
trial
judgment
(CTC
report)
this
does
not
bind
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
with
respect
to
the
tax
treatment
of
same.
The
same
applies
in
the
present
case.
After
careful
study
of
the
principal
jurisprudence,
both
Canadian,
British
and
American,
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
rejected
for
tax
purposes
the
accounting
method
of
carrying
the
net
cost
only
to
capital
account
for
purposes
of
capital
cost
allowance.
Reference
was
made
at
255
to
the
British
case
of
Corporation
of
Birmingham
v
Barnes
(1935),
19
TC
195,
in
which
the
appellant
corporation
had
entered
into
an
agreement
with
the
company
to
lay
a
tramway
track
to
the
company’s
works
in
return
for
which
they
received
a
specific
sum
and
also
received
a
grant
under
the
Unemployment
Grants
Committee
for
sums
it
had
expended
under
renewal
of
its
tramway
tracks.
It
was
held
that
the
payment
by
the
company
and
the
grant
from
the
Unemployment
Grants
Committee
could
not
be
taken
into
account
in
ascertaining
the
actual
cost
to
the
corporation
of
the
tramway
tracks
in
question
for
the
purposes
of
computing
the
allowance
due
for
wear
and
tear
of
such
tracks,
ie
depreciation.
At
217
of
his
judgment
Lord
Atkins
States:
What
a
man
pays
for
construction
or
for
the
purchase
of
a
work
seems
to
me
to
be
the
cost
to
him;
and
that
whether
someone
has
given
him
the
money
to
construct
or
purchase
for
himself,
or
before
the
event
has
promised
to
give
him
the
money
after
he
has
paid
for
the
work,
or
after
the
event
has
promised
or
given
the
money
which
recoups
him
what
he
has
spent.
This
case
was
also
referred
to
by
Jackett,
P,
as
he
then
was,
in
the
case
of
Ottawa
Valley
Power
Company
v
MNR,
[1969]
CTC
242;
69
DTC
5166
in
which
at
254
[5174]
he
stated:
The
next
question
is
whether,
assuming
that
I
am
right
in
concluding
that
the
appellant
would
have
been
entitled
to
capital
cost
allowance
if
it
had
received
the
cash
from
Hydro
and
expended
it
on
the
capital
additions
and
improvements
itself,
it
is
in
any
different
position
because
the
bargain
took
the
form
of
Hydro
undertaking
to
make
the
expenditures
in
such
a
way
that
the
additions
and
improvements
would
be
made
to
the
appellant’s
assets
and
belong
to
the
appellant.
He
eventually
found
against
the
appellant
since
it
itself
had
not
incurred
the
expenditure
on
capital
account,
the
work
being
done
for
it
by
Hydro,
but
referred
to
the
Corporation
of
Birmingham
v
Barnes
case
(supra)
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
had
the
company
made
the
expenditures
itself
it
could
have
carried
the
total
amount
to
capital
account
for
depreciation
purposes.
This
decision
of
Chief
Justice
Jackett,
as
he
later
became,
distinguished
in
a
footnote
the
American
case
of
Detroit
Edison
Co
v
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue
1942
319
US
93
stating
that
the
decision
seems
to
have
been
based
on
the
fact
that
the
payments
received
were
not
taken
into
revenue,
and
concluding
that
if
the
payments
had
been
taken
into
revenue,
it
would
seem
that
the
Court
might
have
reached
the
opposite
result.
In
the
Detroit
Edison
case
it
was
stated
under
Paragraph
No
102:
But
we
think
the
statutory
provision
that
the
“basis
of
property
shall
be
the
cost
of
such
property”
normally
means,
and
that
in
this
case
the
Commissioner
was
justified
in
applying
it
to
mean,
cost
to
the
taxpayer.
and
again
under
No
103:
But
it
does
not
follow
that
the
Company
must
be
permitted
to
recoup
through
untaxed
depreciation
accruals
an
investment
it
has
refused
to
make.
The
Commissioner
was
warranted
in
adjusting
the
depreciation
base
to
represent
the
taxpayer’s
net
investment.
The
Detroit
Edison
case
was
itself
distinguished
in
the
United
States
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
case
of
Brown
Shoe
Co
v
Commissioner,
339
US
583,
which
held
that
the
petitioner
was
entitled
to
deductions
on
account
of
depreciation
on
property
acquired
from
community
groups
or
acquired
with
cash
received
from
such
groups,
and
might
also
include
the
value
of
such
contributions
from
community
groups
in
equity
invested
capital.
The
Detroit
Edison
case
had
denied
inclusion
in
its
base
for
depreciation
of
electric
power
lines
of
the
amount
of
payments
received
by
the
electric
company
for
construction
of
the
line
extensions
to
the
premises
of
applicants
for
service.
It
was
held
that
to
the
extent
of
such
payments
the
electric
lines
did
not
have
cost
to
the
taxpayer
and
that
such
payments
were
neither
gifts
nor
contributions
to
the
taxpayer’s
capital.
In
the
Brown
Shoe
case
the
Court
stated
at
591:
.
.
.
We
do
not
consider
that
case
controlling
on
the
issue
whether
contributions
to
Capital
are
involved
here.
Because
in
the
Detroit
Edison
“The
payments
were
to
the
customer
the
price
of
the
service,”
the
Court
concluded
that
“it
overtaxes
imagination
to
regard
the
farmers
and
other
customers
who
furnished
these
funds
as
makers
either
of
donations
or
contributions
to
the
company.”
Since
in
this
case
there
are
neither
customers
nor
payments
for
service,
we
may
infer
a
different
purpose
in
the
transactions
between
petitioner
and
the
community
groups.
The
contributions
to
petitioner
were
provided
by
citizens
of
the
respective
communities
who
neither
sought
nor
could
have
anticipated
any
direct
service
or
recompense
whatever,
their
only
expectation
being
that
such
contributions
might
prove
advantageous
to
the
community
at
large.
Under
these
circumstances
the
transfers
manifested
a
definite
purpose
to
enlarge
the
working
capital
of
the
company.
We
are
not
in
the
present
case
of
course
dealing
with
contributions
from
community
groups.
In
1954
the
Internal
Revenue
Code
of
the
United
States
was
amended,
(Section
362)
being
somewhat
similar
to
paragraph
20(6)(h)
of
the
Canadian
Statute
(supra)
but
broader
so
as
to
cover
all
contributions
and
not
merely
those
from
public
authorities.
It
was
necessary
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
to
consider
the
applicability
of
paragraph
20(6)(h),
the
question
being
whether
Canadian
Pacific
received
or
was
entitled
to
receive
“from
a
government,
municipality,
or
other
public
authority,
in
respect
of
or
for
the
acquisition
of
property,
a
grant,
subsidy
or
other
assistance
.
.
.
for
the
purposes
of
advancing
or
sustaining
the
technological
capability
of
Canadian
manufacturing
or
other
industry”.
At
253
the
trial
judge
stated:
.
..
Although
the
argument
was
not
raised
before
me
I
would
seriously
doubt
whether
the
sums
which
Canadian
Pacific
received
from
public
authorities
for
the
relocation
of
railway
tracks
or
telecommunication
lines
were
“for
the
purpose
of
advancing
or
sustaining
its
technological
capability”
since
in
each
case
the
evidence
indicated
tht
it
was
satisfied
with
the
lines
as
they
were
and
merely
moved
them
to
accommodate
the
public
authority
in
question.
In
any
event,
I
do
not
find
that
these
payments
can
be
considered
as
“a
grant,
subsidy
or
other
assistance”.
Reference
was
made
to
the
case
of
G
T
E
Sylvania
Canada
Limited
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1974]
CTC
408;
74
DTC
6315,
in
which
Justice
Cattan-
ach
considered
the
question
and
stated
at
415
(CTC
report):
As
I
have
said
before,
the
constant
and
dominating
feature
in
the
words
“grant”
and
“subsidy”
is
that
each
contemplates
the
gift
of
money
from
a
fund
by
government
to
a
person
for
the
public
weal.
Something
concrete
and
tangible
is
to
be
bestowed.
For
the
reasons
I
have
expressed
the
general
words
“or
other
assistance”
must
be
coloured
by
the
meaning
of
those
words.
Reference
was
also
made
to
the
Ottawa
Valley
Power
Company
case
(supra)
where
Jackett,
P
stated
at
249-50:
I
do
not
think
that
the
words
in
paragraph
(h)
—
“grant,
subsidy
or
other
assistance
from
a
..
.
public
authority”
—
have
any
application
to
an
ordinary
business
contract
negotiated
by
both
parties
to
the
contract
for
business
reasons.
If
Ontario
Hydro
were
used
by
the
legislature
to
carry
out
some
legislative
scheme
of
distributing
grants
to
encourage
those
engaged
in
business
to
embark
on
certain
classes
of
enterprise,
then
I
would
have
no
difficulty
in
applying
the
words
of
paragraph
(h)
to
grants
so
made.
That
was
not
the
situation
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
nor
is
it
the
situation
in
the
present
case.
In
the
case
of
St
John
Dry
Dock
and
Shipbuilding
co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1944]
CTC
106;
2
DTC
663,
Thorson,
J,
as
he
then
was,
stated
at
114:
The
fact
that
an
amount
is
described
as
a
Government
subsidy
does
not
of
itself
determine
its
character
in
the
hands
of
the
recipient
for
taxation
purposes.
In
each
case
the
true
character
of
the
subsidy
must
be
ascertained
and
in
so
doing
the
purpose
for
which
it
was
granted
may
properly
be
considered.
The
judgment
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
was
sustained
in
appeal,
[1978]
2
FC
439;
[1977]
CTC
606;
78
DTC
5388,
save
for
two
of
the
eight
items
for
which
capital
cost
allowance
had
been
claimed.
The
first
was
a
deviation
of
a
track
carried
out
by
contract
with
the
St
Lawrence
Seaway
Authority
for
which
Canadian
Pacific
was
reimbursed
for
a
relatively
minor
part
of
the
work
done
by
it.
This
sum
was
not
spent
in
order
to
acquire
property
but
rather
for
purposes
of
doing
some
work
for
the
Seaway
Authority
on
the
railway
line
then
owned
by
the
Authority,
although
this
line
was
later
turned
over
by
the
Authority
to
the
company
in
exchange
for
the
old
one.
It
was
held
that
the
capital
cost
to
the
respondent
of
the
new
line
was
the
value
of
the
old
line,
not
the
sums
expended
by
the
respondent
to
perform
for
the
benefit
of
the
Authority
some
work
related
to
the
construction
of
the
new
line.
The
other
issue
on
which
the
judgment
was
not
sustained
was
with
respect
to
private
sidings
built
by
Canadian
Pacific
by
agreement
to
build
a
private
siding
for
a
customer
to
the
customer’s
property
at
the
customer’s
expense
save
for
the
track
material
which
it
provided
and
of
which
it
retained
ownership.
Here
again
it
was
held
that
the
sum
expended
by
Canadian
Pacific
was
not
a
capital
expenditure
but
merely
a
cost
of
carrying
out
a
building
contract
for
the
benefit
of
a
customer.
On
the
principal
issue
with
which
we
are
concerned
however
the
judgment
was
fully
upheld.
In
so
doing
the
Court
of
Appeal
placed
reliance
on
the
House
of
Lords’
decision
in
Corporation
of
Birmingham
v
Barnes
(supra).
Defendant
cannot
seriously
maintain
its
first
contention
that
both
the
amounts
paid
and
reimbursements
received
by
plaintiff
should
be
considered
as
on
income
account.
Even
defendant’s
own
expert
witness
disagrees
with
this
and
it
is
evident
that
the
expenses
of
relocation
were
not
expenses
laid
out
on
account
of
income
but
were
merely
for
the
relocation
of
certain
of
plaintiff’s
pipeline
which
were
in
themselves
capitalized
assets.
Moreover
the
reimbursement
represented
in
the
great
majority
of
cases
less
than
40%
of
total
cost
and
it
would
be
difficult
to
conceive
of
plaintiff
disbursing
the
difference
as
income
producing
expense
when
no
change
of
income
is
involved.
Actually
such
a
treatment
would
be
more
advantageous
for
plaintiff
in
any
given
taxation
year
as
the
amount
thereby
deductible
would
be
greater
than
what
could
be
claimed
as
capital
cost
allowance,
although
in
the
long
run
the
method
of
tax
accounting
which
plaintiff
seeks
would
be
more
advantageous
in
that
the
entire
cost
of
relocation
could
eventually
be
claimed
by
annual
capital
cost
allowance
deduction
without
any
corresponding
tax
liability
being
incurred
as
a
result
of
the
contribution.
This
argument
must
therefore
be
rejected
and
the
present
case
must
depend
on
one
of
the
alternative
arguments.
Further
relying
on
the
decision
of
the
Canadian
Pacific
case,
plaintiff
contends
that
if
contributions
for
performing
such
work
were
to
be
netted
in
plaintiff’s
capital
account,
which
is
defendant’s
alternate
argument
supported
by
the
expert
witness,
there
would
have
been
no
need
for
paragraph
20(6)(h)
in
the
Act
(now
13(7)(e))
with
reference
to
grants,
subsidies
or
other
assistance
provided
by
a
government,
municipality
or
other
authority,
as
all
such
contributions
would
be
netted
whatever
their
origin.
It
might
even
be
contended
that
by
virtue
of
the
inclusio
unius
fit
exclusio
alterius
principle
existence
of
this
section
might
imply
that
contributions
other
than
those
from
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
would
not
normally
be
netted.
With
respect
to
defendant’s
second
alternative
argument
that
in
each
relocation
the
original
pipeline
must
be
deemed
to
have
been
disposed
of
for
proceeds
of
disposition
equal
to
the
amount
plaintiff
was
reimbursed
for
the
construction
of
the
new
line,
plaintiff
referred
to
several
cases
as
to
the
proper
meaning
to
be
given
to
the
word
“disposition”.
This
was
examined
in
the
Saskatchewan
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
case
of
Harman
v
Gray-Campbell
Ltd,
[1925]
2
DLR
904
at
908-909
where
Lamont,
J
states:
I
am
therefore
of
opinion
that
the
words
“dispose
of
.
.
.
her
landed
property”
in
the
note
before
us,
mean,
to
make
the
property
over
to
another
so
that
no
interest
therein
remains
in
the
plaintiff.
To
dispose
of
it
required
not
only
a
willingness
on
the
part
of
the
plaintiff
to
part
with
her
interest,
but
a
willingness
on
the
part
of
someone
else
to
take
that
interest
of
.
..
That
the
plaintiff
abandoned
the
property
is,
I
think,
clear;
but
the
contract
does
not
give
a
right
of
repossession
upon
the
abandonment
by
the
plaintiff
of
her
interest.
An
abandonment
of
her
interest
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
constitute
a
disposal
of
it,
unless
the
abandonment
of
it
is
accepted
by
her
vendor
and
her
interest
taken
over
by
him.
In
the
Supreme
Court
case
of
The
Queen
v
Malloney’s
Studio
Limited,
[1979]
CTC
206;
79
DTC
5124,
Estey,
J
in
dealing
with
disposition
of
depreciable
property
states
at
210
[5127]:
.
..
Thus
it
seems
abundantly
clear
that
for
the
purposes
of
this
invocation
of
rule
(g),
the
disposition
in
question
must
be
bilateral
and
include
both
a
disposer
and
“the
person
to
whom
the
depreciable
property
was
disposed
of”,
whether
or
not
such
person
may
thereupon
become
entitled
to
any
capital
cost
allowance
under
the
Act.
Here
the
demolition
involved
no
recipient.
In
the
present
case
there
was
certainly
no
disposition
by
plaintiff
of
the
abandoned
pipeline;
in
fact
the
evidence
indicated
that
it
retained
ownership
of
same.
Moreover
it
follows
that
the
remaining
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
abandoned
pipeline
remained
in
plaintiff’s
capital
account.
It
would
appear
that
the
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
with
respect
to
the
St
Lawrence
Seaway
Authority
deviation
(supra)
does
not
apply
since
in
that
case
a
new
line
of
railway
was
conveyed
to
it
by
the
Seaway
Authority
which
had
built
it,
in
exchange
for
the
old
one,
while
in
the
present
case
plaintiff
never
disposed
of
the
old
pipelines
nor
obtained
the
new
ones
by
way
of
conveyance
from
third
parties
but
built
them
itself
aided
by
contributions
from
such
third
parties.
In
the
present
case
the
contributions
went
into
plaintiff’s
books
as
contributions
to
capital
for
income
tax
purposes.
Plaintiff
points
out
that
by
definition
in
subsection
248(1
)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(139(1)(e)
of
the
former
Act)
is
defined
as
including
a
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade.
Paragraph
12(1
)(g),
((6)(1)(j)
of
the
old
Act)
includes
in
“income”
“any
amount
received
by
a
taxpayer
in
the
year
that
was
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property
.
..”
Certainly
the
relocation
of
the
pipelines
which
plaintiff
made
were
not
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade
calculated
to
result
in
profit.
It
was
obliged
to
make
the
relocations
by
law
in
the
greater
number
of
cases
and
even
for
those
which
it
had
made
voluntarily
by
contract
with
a
private
company
these
were
not
done
in
order
to
sell
more
gas
nor
acquire
a
new
customer.
At
best
they
might
be
said
to
be
done
as
a
matter
of
goodwill
and
good
business
relations.
Neither
were
the
amounts
received
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
plaintiff’s
property.
While
defendant
argues
strongly
that
the
frequency
of
the
relocations
indicates
that
they
were
current
business
transactions
this
does
not
necessarily
make
the
contributions
subject
to
entry
in
the
revenue
account
nor
is
it
a
more
important
factor
than
the
absence
of
any
element
of
profit.
In
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
at
611,
Pratte,
J
in
rendering
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
points
out:
As
the
respondent
had
entered
into
many
transactions
giving
rise
to
that
kind
of
a
problem,
the
parties
agreed
before
trial
to
adduce
evidence
in
respect
of
only
certain
of
those
transactions,
it
being
understood
tht
the
decision
of
the
Court
concerning
them
would
be
applied
by
the
parties
to
the
solution
of
the
difficulties
raised
by
the
others.
Evidence
was
thus
adduced
in
respect
of
nine
typical
transactions.
This
is
the
situation
in
the
present
case
and
indicates
that
the
relocation
of
tracks
by
Canadian
Pacific
was
also
a
common
occurrence
in
the
carrying
out
of
its
business,
so
the
element
of
frequency
in
the
present
case
does
not
in
itself
make
that
judgment
inapplicable.
Defendant
contends
that
plaintiff’s
tax
position
is
not
in
accordance
with
either
accounting
or
economic
reality,
and
now
contends
that
preferably
the
entire
cost
of
relocation
should
be
included
in
the
capital
account
for
capital
cost
allowance
purposes,
and
does
not
suggest
that
the
while
contribution
should
be
brought
into
income
in
the
year
when
it
was
received,
provided
that
it
be
brought
in
in
such
a
way
that
it
will
be
amortized
in
the
current
year
and
future
years
at
a
rate
equal
to
the
amount
claimed
by
plaintiff
as
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
costs
of
the
relocation.
The
end
result
will
be
the
same.
It
was
contended
that
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
does
not
apply
since
in
it
the
Crown
never
argued
that
the
contributions
received
were
income,
the
whole
argument
relating
to
the
amounts
to
be
taken
into
capital
cost.
In
it
reference
was
made
at
255
to
the
comments
of
Chief
Justice
Jackett
in
the
Ottawa
Valley
Power
case
(supra)
respecting
the
Detroit
Edison
case
(supra)
in
which
he
suggested,
as
I
have
already
indicated
that
the
ratio
decidendi
in
the
Detroit
Edison
case
was
that
the
receipts
were
not
taken
into
revenue
from
which
he
concludes
that
“if
the
payments
had
been
taken
into
revenue
it
would
seem
that
the
Court
might
have
reached
the
opposite
result”.
Counsel
also
distinguishes
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
on
the
ground
that
it
was
largely
decided
on
the
basis
of
subsection
84A(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
relating
to
railroads
which
is
not
pertinent
to
the
present
case.
These
distinctions
have
little
weight
however
since
in
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
contributions
received
were
not
taken
into
revenue
but
were
capitalized,
and
paragraph
20(6)(h)
of
th
Act
was
examined
fully
in
reaching
a
conclusion
that
it
was
not
applicable,
any
more
than
it
is
in
the
present
case.
Defendant
contends
that
it
is
not
possible
to
consider
the
contributions
as
contributions
to
surplus.
Jurisprudence
does
not
so
hold
however,
each
case
depending
on
its
own
facts.
In
the
Ottawa
Valley
Power
case
for
example
(supra)
Jackett,
P
in
a
somewhat
obiter
portion
of
his
judgment
states
that
in
the
event
that
the
Ottawa
Valley
Power
itself
had
paid
for
the
alterations
instead
of
Hydro
paying
for
them
on
behalf
of
Ottawa
Valley
Power
then
“In
my
view,
if
that
had
happened,
there
would
be
two
aspects
of
the
matter,
viz,
(a)
the
appellant
would
have
incurred
capital
costs
for
which
it
should
have
capital
cost
allowance,
and
(b)
the
appellant
would
have
received
a
payment
from
the
purchaser
of
its
power
which
should
be
taken
into
its
revenues
if
it
is
part
of
the
payment
for
what
it
has
sold
in
the
course
of
its
business
or
should
be
regarded
as
a
capital
receipt
if,
in
the
circumstances,
it
should
so
characterized."
(italics
mine)
That
case
was
complicated
by
the
fact
that
by
the
terms
of
the
agreement
appellant
agreed
to
continue
to
accept
a
lower
price
for
more
expensive
power
in
consideration
for
being
provided
with
the
capital
additions
and
improvements.
The
case
of
C/R
v
Fleming
&
Co
(Machinery)
Ltd,
33
TC
57,
referred
to
by
defendant
dealt
with
the
treatment
of
a
payment
received
by
a
long
term
manufacturer’s
agency
for
termination
of
a
contract.
At
63
Lord
Russell
states:
On
the
other
hand
when
the
benefit
surrendered
on
cancellation
does
not
represent
the
loss
of
an
enduring
asset
in
circumstances
such
as
those
above
mentioned
—.
where
for
example
the
structure
of
the
recipient’s
business
is
so
fashioned
as
to
absorb
the
shock
as
one
of
the
normal
incidents
to
be
looked
for
and
where
it
appears
that
the
compensation
received
is
no
more
than
a
surrogatum
for
the
future
profits
surrendered
—
the
compensation
received
is
in
use
to
be
treated
as
a
revenue
receipt
and
not
a
capital
receipt.
This
can
clearly
be
distinguished
from
the
facts
in
the
present
case
where
plaintiff
surrendered
no
future
profits
for
the
contributions
paid,
the
relocation
of
the
pipelines
not
affecting
the
profits
one
way
or
the
other.
The
case
of
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v
MNR,
[1955]
CTC
39;
55
DTC
1176;
70
DTC
1417
can
similarly
be
distinguished.
It
dealt
with
a
subsidy
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
for
drilling
and
exploration
costs
for
an
oil
well.
The
late
Cameron,
J
after
pointing
out
that
the
section
in
question
dealt
with
legislation
designed
to
encourage
the
production
of
oil
and
oil
products
stated
at
44-45:
.
.
.
I
find
it
impossible
to
put
upon
the
subsection
such
a
construction
as
would
enable
a
corporation
which
is
out-of-pocket
on
its
operation,
but
on
the
contrary
had
had
all
its
expenses
paid
for
by
another
party
—
in
this
case
a
Crown
corporation
—
to
be
repaid
for
such
expenses
out
of
taxes
which
would
otherwise
accrue
to
the
Crown.
To
do
so
would
mean
that
the
legislation
was
intended
to
confer
not
only
indemnity
for
such
losses,
but
also
an
additional
bonus
of
a
like
amount,
an
interpretation
which
I
think
Parliament
did
not
contemplate.
The
present
case
clearly
does
not
deal
with
incentive
subsidies.
It
is
possible
to
similarly
distinguish
the
case
of
Radio
Engineering
Products
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1970]
Tax
ABC
650;
70
DTC
1417
and
in
appeal
[1973]
CTC
29;
73
DTC
5071,
in
which
a
$450,000
subsidy
was
paid
to
the
appellant
for
outlays
in
connection
with
the
development
of
a
certain
telephone
system
and
it
was
held
that
the
appellant
was
obliged
to
apply
the
subsidy
for
the
purpose
for
which
the
loan
was
granted
and
it
must
therefore
be
deducted
from
the
appellant’s
expenditures.
At
663
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
judgment
it
is
stated:
.
.
.
It
is
common
ground
that
grants
from
the
Crown
must
be
deducted
from
expenditures.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
subsidy
was
granted
to
carry
out,
under
the
scheme,
work
totally
of
a
revenue
character.
In
the
present
case
there
is
no
revenue
advantage
for
plaintiff.
In
another
case
referred
to
by
defendant,
that
of
Nuclear
Enterprises
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
449;
71
DTC
5243,
Kerr,
J
in
dealing
with
the
taxability
of
grants
from
the
National
Research
Council
and
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
for
financial
assistance
in
research
and
manufacturing
stated
at
466:
In
the
present
case,
I
am
unable
to
give
the
applicable
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
a
construction
that
the
appellant
should
not
only
not
be
required
to
include
the
grants
as
income
but
should
also
be
allowed
to
deduct
from
its
other
income
the
expenditures
that
in
reality
were
paid
for,
not
by
the
appellant,
but
by
NRC
and
Department
of
Defence
Production.
Here
again
that
case
dealt
with
grants
to
promote
research
which
might
eventually
enure
to
the
benefit
of
the
taxpayer
among
others.
It
has
already
been
concluded
that
paragraph
20(6)(h)
of
the
Act
dealing
with
grants,
sub-
sidies,
or
other
such
assistance
from
a
government,
municipality
or
other
public
authority
does
not
apply
in
the
present
case.
Relying
on
the
evidence
of
Mr
Bonham
in
support
of
its
principal
argument
that
the
subsidy
should
have
been
deducted
from
the
cost
of
the
relocations
and
only
the
resulting
difference
capitalized,
defendant
refers
inter
alia
to
the
case
of
J
L
Guay
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
686;
71
DTC
5423,
in
which
Associate
Chief
Justice
Noel,
as
he
then
was,
stated
at
691:
.
.
.
In
determining
the
taxable
profits
of
a
taxpayer
we
can
take
as
a
starting
point
the
profit
and
loss
statement
prepared
according
to
the
rules
of
accounting
practice.
However,
the
profit
shown
on
this
statement
has
always
to
be
adjusted
according
to
the
statutory
rules
used
in
determining
taxable
profits.
This
is
because
a
number
of
facts
taken
into
consideration
by
accountants
are
excluded
by
certain
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
determining
of
taxpayers’
profits.
It
was
contended
that
there
is
no
statutory
provision
permitting
the
contributions
in
the
present
case
to
be
treated
differently
for
tax
purposes
from
the
manner
in
which
they
were
treated
for
accounting
purposes
establishing
the
proper
rate
base
for
the
company.
While
there
may
be
no
statutory
requirement
necessitating
a
different
treatment,
the
weight
of
jurisprudence
and
more
specifically
the
Canadian
Pacific
case
suggests
the
contrary.
Further
support
for
plaintiff’s
position
can
be
found
in
a
relatively
recent
British
case
of
Murray
(Inspector
of
Taxes)
v
Goodhews,
[1978]
1
W.L.R.
499,
in
which
a
voluntary
payment
was
made
as
a
goodwill
gesture
for
the
termination
of
certain
tenancies
of
public
houses
held
by
the
taxpayer.
The
taxpayer
was
assessed
corporation
tax
on
the
voluntary
payment
on
the
basis
that
it
represented
compensation
for
loss
of
profits
from
the
loss
of
the
tenancies
and
were
thus
profits
or
gains
of
the
trade.
This
was
reversed,
the
judgment
holding
that
the
payments
were
capital
receipts.
The
headnote
reads:
.
..
every
case
of
a
voluntary
payment
must
be
considered
on
its
own
facts
to
ascertain
the
nature
of
the
receipt
in
the
hands
of
the
recipient
and
as
the
payments
to
the
taxpayer
company
were
not
linked
with
future
trading
relations
between
the
parties
and
were
not
payments
made
to
compensate
for
loss
of
profits
and
were
unrelated
to
any
specific
trading
transaction,
they
were
not
receipts
arising
from
the
taxpayer
company’s
trade.
I
have
concluded
that
plaintiff
in
the
present
case
was
justified
in
considering
that
contributions
received
towards
the
relocation
of
its
pipelines
done,
not
for
its
benefit,
but
for
the
benefit
of
the
parties
making
the
contributions,
can
be
carried
to
a
contributed
capital
account
without
passing
through
income.
While
this
undoubtedly
has
the
result,
as
plaintiff
readily
concedes
of
conferring
an
advantage
on
its
shareholders
which
the
parties
making
the
contributions
had
no
intention
of
doing,
nevertheless
this
appears
to
be
the
correct
manner
of
dealing
with
these
contributions
in
the
light
of
current
jurisprudence.
As
plaintiff’s
counsel
argues
if
this
results
in
unintended
tax
advantages
for
plaintiff
the
remedy
is
in
the
hands
of
defendant
by
way
of
amending
legislation.
Plaintiff's
appeal
therefore
must
be
maintained,
and
its
tax
assessments
for
its
1971,
1972,
1973
and
1974
taxation
years
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
this
judgment,
with
costs.