Taylor,
T.C.J.:—These
are
appeals
heard
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba,
on
September
11,
1990,
against
income
tax
assessments
for
the
years
1982,1983
and
1984
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
reassessed
as
follows:
—
by
Notice
of
Reassessment
dated
December
1,
1986
the
Respondent
reassessed
the
Appellant's
1984
taxation
year
and
increased
its
active
business
income
by
$238,212.00
as
follows:
Disallowed
portion
of
3%
Inventory
Allowance
|
$58,424.00
|
Disallowed
deduction
of
|
|
Finance
Reserve
|
$179,788.00
|
Finance
Reserve
|
|
Total
|
$238,212.00
|
—
by
further
Notice
of
Reassessment
dated
July
17,
1987,
the
Respondent
reassessed
the
Appellant's
1984
taxation
year
and
decreased
its
active
business
income
by
$181,287.00;
—
the
Respondent
assessed
the
Appellant's
liability
for
tax
for
the
1984
taxation
year
on
a
taxable
income
of
$199,721.00;
—
by
Notices
of
Reassessment
also
dated
July
17,
1987,
the
Respondent
reassessed
the
Appellant's
tax
for
the
1983
taxation
year
to
disallow
a
deduction
in
respect
of
the
Finance
Reserve
in
the
amount
of
$181,287.00
and
for
the
1982
taxation
year
to
reduce
the
Appellant's
loss
carry
back
front
1983
to
nil.
At
the
start
of
the
trial,
counsel
for
the
appellant
stated
that
the
amount
of
$58,424
for
the
1982
inventory
allowance,
supra,
was
no
longer
in
dispute;
and
counsel
for
the
respondent
noted
that
in
the
event
the
assessment
by
the
Minister
for
the
year
1984
was
upheld
by
the
Court
the
amount
of
$179,788,
supra,
should
be
reduced
by
an
amount
of
$68,374
and
reassessments
where
required
struck
by
the
Minister.
The
position
of
the
appellant
was
outlined
in
the
notice
of
appeal
(using
the
year
1984
as
typical):
—
At
all
relevant
times,
the
Appellant
was
an
authorized
dealer
of
agricultural
equipment
and
machines
for
John
Deere
Ltd.
(“John
Deere")
under
an
"Authorized
Agricultural
Dealer
Agreement"
(the"Dealer
Agreement").
—
Pursuant
to
the
Dealer
Agreement,
the
Appellant
purchased
and
acquired
from
John
Deere
agricultural
equipment
and
machinery
and
John
Deere
sold
to
the
Appellant
agricultural
equipment
and
machinery.
—
Pursuant
to
the
John
Deere
DRV
Lease
Agreement
(the"
John
Deere
Finance
Plan")—.
.
.—executed
pursuant
to
the
Dealer
Agreement,
the
Appellant
sold
farm
equipment
to
its
customers
under
the
John
Deere
Finance
Plan.
The
relevant
portion
of
the
John
Deere
Finance
Plan
is
contained
in
section
4
thereof
as
follows:
4.
Dealer’s
Reserve
Account
4.1
As
provided
in
subsection
(a)
of
Sections
1.3
and
2.4
hereof
respectively,
when
any
lease
or
contract
is
accepted
by
the
Company,
one
per
cent
(1%)
of
the
aggregate
lease
payment
of
the
lease
or
one
per
cent
(1%)
of
the
time
balance
of
the
contract
will
be
credited
to
the
Dealer's
reserve
account.
The
reserve
account
will
also
be
credited
with
interest
earned
at
the
rate
of
eight
per
cent
(8%)
per
annum
on
the
average
of
the
month-end
balances
for
each
twelve
(12)
month
period
ending
31
December.
4.2
If
at
any
31
December,
the
Dealer's
reserve
account,
including
interest
earned
thereon,
exceeds
three
per
cent
(3%)
of
the
balance
then
outstanding
on
all
leases
and
contracts
accepted
from
the
Dealer,
the
reserve
account
will
be
adjusted
to
three
per
cent
(3%)
of
such
balance
and
the
excess
will
be
applied
to
the
Dealer's
currently
due
indebtedness
to
the
Company
or
to
any
other
company
affiliated
with
the
Company.
Any
part
of
such
excess
which
remains
after
all
of
the
Dealer's
currently
due
indebtedness
has
been
satisfied
will
be
paid
to
the
Dealer
in
cash
or
as
the
Dealer
may
direct.
No
adjustment
will
be
made
which
reduces
the
reserve
account
below
one
thousand
dollars
($1,000).
—
.
.
.,
the
Appellant
says,
as
the
fact
is
that
the
finance
reserve
of
$181,287
is
not
a
receivable
from
John
Deere.
The
Appellant
alleges
that
such
amount
is
not
a
receivable
either
from
an
accounting
point
of
view
nor
as
a
matter
of
law.
The
Appellant
submits
that
in
order
for
an
amount
to
be
a
receivable
there
must
be
no
legal
impediment
or
condition
precedent
lying
in
the
way
of
it
being
an
amount
owing.
Under
the
John
Deere
DRV
Lease
Agreement
between
John
Deere
and
the
Appellant,
the
amount
is
neither
owing
nor
can
the
Appellant
enforce
payment
against
John
Deere.
—
The
Appellant
asserts
that
the
deduction
of
the
“finance
reserve"
is
not
a
deduction
prohibited
by
the
provisions
of
paragraph
18(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Canada)
but
rather
is
a
consistent
method
of
accounting
taken
by
the
Appellant
inaccordance
with
generally
accepted
accounting
principles
applied
consistently
and
furthermore
annually
accepted
and
approved
by
the
Respondent
since
at
least
as
early
as
1974.
—
The
Appellant
has
reported
its
income
from
the
"finance
reserve"
as
calculated
by
John
Deere
on
a
cash
basis
(as
per
Schedule
B
hereto)
and
has
done
so
consistently
without
objection
of
any
kind
by
the
Respondent
for
some
years
or
alternatively,
since
at
least
as
early
as
1974.
The
Appellant
alleges
that
this
practise
[sic]
has
prevailed
throughout
the
farm
implement
industry
and
has
been
accepted
by
the
Respondent
as
being
a
proper
basis
for
calculating
profit
from
a
farm
implement
business.
—
The
Appellant
further
asserts
that
the
sum
of
$170,814
as
at
December
31,
1981
being
a
portion
of
the
“finance
reserve"
was
created
in
years
from
which
the
Respondent
is
statute
barred
from
reassessing,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
152(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Canada).
For
the
respondent
the
situation
was:
—
the
Appellant
sells
and
leases
agricultural
equipment
and
machines
of
John
Deere
Ltd.;
—
pursuant
to
the
John
Deere
DRV
Lease/Finance
Agreement,
John
Deere
Ltd.
provides
financing
to
the
purchasers
and
lessees
of
equipment
sold
or
leased
by
the
Appellant;
—
when
John
Deere
Ltd.
agrees
to
finance
a
contract
obtained
by
the
Appellant
the
proceeds
thereof
(less
financing
charges)
became
payable
by
John
Deere
Ltd.
and
receivable
by
and
due
to
the
Appellant;
—
John
Deere
Ltd.
pays
the
proceeds
to
the
Appellant
less
a
one
percent
holdback
which
is
credited
to
the
Appellant's
reserve
account;
—
thereafter
all
payments
under
the
contracts
are
made
by
the
customer
directly
to
John
Deere
Ltd.;
—
the
Appellant's
reserve
account
is
credited
with
interest
at
the
rate
of
8%
per
annum
on
the
average
of
the
monthly
end
balances
for
the
12
month
period
ending
December
31;
—
at
any
December
31,
the
Appellant
becomes
entitled
to
amounts
credited
to
its
reserve
account
in
excess
of
3%
of
the
outstanding
leases
and
contracts;
—
when,
and
if,
all
leases
and
contracts
accepted
from
John
Deere
Ltd.
have
been
liquidated
in
full
the
Appellant
becomes
entitled
to
receive
any
credit
balance
remaining
in
its
reserve
account;
—
the
reserve
is
established
by
John
Deere
Ltd.
to
protect
it
against
possible
defaults
on
the
leases
and
contracts
and
against
possible
losses
on
repossessions
which
rarely
occur
in
practice
and
for
which
the
Appellant
is
fully
responsible;
—
in
preparing
financial
statements
for
its
1984
fiscal
period,
the
Appellant
included
in
its
income
the
full
amount
of
the
proceeds
of
its
sale
and
lease
contracts
and
deducted
from
income
the
amount
credited
to
its
reserve
account;
—
the
Appellant
also
included
in
its
income
for
the
1984
taxation
year
the
amount
of
$181,287
deducted
as
a
reserve
in
its
1983
taxation
year;
—
the
amounts
credited
to
the
Appellant's
reserve
account
are
neither
bad
nor
doubtful
but
constitute
a
reserve
for
contingencies;
—
the
Respondent
relies,
inter
alia,
on
sections
3
and
9,
subsection
12(2)
and
paragraphs
12(1)(b),
12(1)(e),
20(1)(n)
and
20(1)(gg)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
as
amended
by
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63,
s.
1
for
the
1984
taxation
year;
—
.
.
.
the
Appellant
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
a
reserve
pursuant
to
paragraph
20(1)(n)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
the
amounts
credited
to
its
reserve
account
as
the
said
amounts
were
due
to
the
Appellant
in
its
1984
taxation
year.
Evidence
was
provided
through
Mr.
William
Green,
a
chartered
accountant,
witness
for
the
appellant.
He
confirmed
the
accounting
procedures
used
by
Enns
Brothers
Ltd.
(Enns"),
which
are
described
above
in
the
respondent's
reply
to
notice
of
appeal,
but
stated
that
one
phrase
therefrom
should
be
clarified:
”.
.
.and
deducted
from
income
the
amount
credited
to
its
reserve
account".
According
to
Mr.
Green,
the
term
”
reserve
account"
used
therein
by
the
respondent
must
be
recognized
as
referring
to
the
reserve
account”
set
up
in
the
record
of
John
Deere,
as
per
the
agreement,
supra.
There
was
no
"reserve
account"
set
up
in
the
records
of
Enns,
but
the
amounts
which
were
not
immediately
received
from
John
Deere
(the
one
per
cent
holdback
to
use
a
simple
term)
were
added
to
"cost
of
sales”
in
the
records
of
Enns
when
the
contract
was
turned
over
to
John
Deere.
At
the
year-end,
Mr.
Green
agreed
that
he
did
record
in
the
financial
statements
of
Enns
an
amount
equal
to
that
which
John
Deere
informed
him
was
to
the
credit
of
Enns,
in
the
John
Deere
record.
For
example,
at
December
31,
1984,
the
Enns
financial
statements
showed
the
following
items:
Mr.
Green
could
see
how
the
Minister's
assessors
could
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
indeed
“
reserves”
were
being
set
up
in
the
records
of
Enns—
but
he
assured
the
Court
that
had
not
been
done,
and
that
what
appeared
above
had
only
been
to
make
a
year-end
reference
note
to
that
amount
which
Enns
hoped
(and
expected)
it
would
receive
some
day.
The
Note
1
above
for
the
1984
financial
statements
read:
|
1984
|
1985
|
under
"Other
Assets”
|
|
Finance
reserve
receivable
(Note
1)
|
179,788
|
181,287
|
and
under
"Other
Liabilities"
|
|
Finance
reserve
(Note
1)
|
179,788
|
181,287
|
Finance
Reserve
John
Deere
Limited
computes
the
finance
reserve
at
December
31st.
The
company's
policy
is
to
include
finance
reserve
income
in
the
year
of
receipt.
In
January
1985,
$25,152
was
received.
The
effect
of
the
accounting
procedures
followed
by
Mr.
Green
was
to
eliminate
from
actual
net
income
of
the
appellant
the"
holdback"
amounts
resulting
from
the
one
per
cent
retained
by
John
Deere—even
though
the
total
sales
income
included
these
amounts.
The
reduction
of
the
net
income
by
these
amounts
resulted
from
including
them
as
part
of
"cost
of
sales”
thereby
producing
a"
wash”
of
the
two
offsetting
amounts—leaving
the
way
clear
in
Mr.
Green's
view
to
account
for
the
amounts
when
and
if
received
as
"miscellaneous
income”
which
he
did
religiously.
Argument
The
main
point
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
was
that
there
were
two
reasons
the
“holdback”
amounts
from
John
Deere
should
not
be
taken
directly
into
income
as
some
form
of
accounts
receivable.
First,
that
because
there
was
a
pre-existing
condition—the
purchaser
of
the
equipment
from
Enns
must
pay
the
balance
of
the
finance
contract
(usually
spread
all
over
a
few
years)
before
the
appellant
could
legally
have
any
claim
to
the
“
holdback”
from
John
Deere,
(and
even
then
only
after
a
credit
in
the
John
Deere"
reserve
account”
of
more
than
three
per
cent
of
all
outstanding
contracts
had
been
accumulated);
and
second,
that
because
there
was
no
way
of
knowing
if
all
of
the
contracts
would
be
paid,
no
easy
way
of
calculating
the
exact
amount
at
any
time
was
available.
Therefore—conditions
to
be
fulfilled
and
no
exact
amount,
left
these
amounts
outside
of
any
of
the
terms
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
which
called
for
these
being
treated
as
net
income.
For
counsel
for
the
respondent,
the
situation
is
quite
different.
It
was
clear
from
the
evidence
of
Mr.
Green
that
the
total
amount
of
the
sales
contracts
to
its
customers
had
been
taken
into
sales—and
that
was
proper,
since
whatever
was
received
by
Enns
from
a
sale—a
trade,
some
downpayment,
or
a
contract
for
later
payments—constituted
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
equipment
sold.
The
"sale"
of
the
finance
contract
by
Enns
to
John
Deere
was
a
subsequent
event—having
no
effect
on
the
requirement
of
Enns
under
the
Act
to
bring
into
income
all
such
proceeds—subject
only
to
the
possibility
of
some
stipulated
reserves
under
a
quite
different
section
of
the
Act—perhaps
section
20(1)(n),
but
apparently
that
was
not
in
issue
at
this
hearing,
counsel
for
the
appellant
having
made
the
point
that
no
"reserve"
had
been
taken.
However,
counsel
for
the
respondent
did
contend
that
in
reviewing
whether
any
reserve"
could
be
considered,
that
question
must
be
posed
in
relation
to
the
amount
of
the
"holdback"
due
from
John
Deere
in
connection
with
the
sale
of
the
negotiable
paper—the
financing
contract—from
Enns
to
John
Deere,
and
that
the
question
could
have
no
relation
to
the
original
sale
of
the
equipment
from
Enns
to
the
customer,
which
sale
created
the
financing
contract.
Analysis
The
thrust
of
the
appellant's
evidence
and
argument
was
directed
towards
establishing
a
connection
between
the
sale
of
the
equipment
by
Enns,
and
the
one
per
cent
"holdback"
from
John
Deere
at
issue,
thereby
justifying
the
practice
of
increasing
the
"cost
of
sale”
by
the
one
per
cent
holdback
which
had
already
been
credited
to
sales.
In
my
view
they
are
not
connected
for
that
purpose
although
they
are
related.
The
one
per
cent
holdback
has
nothing
whatever
to
do
with
"cost
of
sales”
however
else
it
might
be
treated.
I
do
agree
that
the
transaction
to
be
considered
is
that
between
Enns
and
John
Deere,
which
produces
the
one
per
cent
holdback,
not
the
transaction
between
Enns
and
the
customer
which
produces
the
original
amounts.
The
total
amount
of
the
sale
of
a
piece
of
equipment
must
be
shown
as
part
of
the
gross
sales
of
the
appellant,
and
this
has
been
done.
Obviously,
if
that
sale
(any
particular
one)
resulted
in
payment
all
in
cash,
there
would
be
no
problem
area
in
the
nature
of
this
appeal.
It
is
only
where
part
of
that
sale
is
not
received,
at
the
time
of
the
sale,
from
the
customer,
that
the
financing
arrangement
with
John
Deere
kicks
in.
In
effect,
John
Deere,
by
virtue
of
its
dealer
agreement
with
Enns,
takes
over
the
customers’
account
receivable
now
owing
to
Enns
and
deducts
therefrom
when
remitting
the
cash
to
Enns
the
one
per
cent
holdback.
This
is
not
a
"commission"
to
John
Deere,
a
“discount”,
or
some
other
form
of
expense—which
might
then
warrant
showing
it
as
part
of
"cost
of
sales",
as
the
accounting
practice
in
effect
now
records
it.
The
effect
of
including
the
one
per
cent
holdback
in
"sales
income",
and
then
concurrently
including
the
same
amount
as
part
of"
cost
of
sales"
resulted
in
a"
wash”
of
the
amount
as
far
as
any
effect
it
could
have
on
the”
net
income"
of
the
particular
year.
That
is
no
income
tax
was
paid
on
the
holdback
in
that
year.
When
the
amount
was
finally
received
(or
at
least
an
amount
with
reference
to
the
holdback,
taking
into
account
the
terms
of
the
agreement
between
John
Deere
and
Enns)
it
was
then
re-recorded
under
“
miscellaneous
income”,
and
certainly
tax
would
be
paid
(if
there
was
a
net
income)
on
the
amount
in
that
year
of
receipt—which
of
course
could
be
two,
three,
or
several
years
after
the
sale
of
the
equipment
which
had
been
the
original
transaction
triggering
the
relevant
events.
That
means
simply
that
the
amount
of
holdbacks—which
are
eventually
received
from
John
Deere,
are
in
fact
reported
as
gross
income
(not
net
income)
twice,
probably
in
different
years—
once
when
the
original
amount
is
credited
to
"sales"
(above)
and
once
when
that
amount
is
actually
received—to
“miscellaneous
income".
This
matter
before
the
Court,
of
course,
is
not
to
be
decided
upon
the
manner
in
which
the
appellant
maintained
its
accounting
records
above,
although
it
can
be
a
factor.
But
at
the
minimum
the
procedure
I
have
just
described
is
“double
entry
bookkeeping”
of
an
unusual
nature.
It
certainly
does
serve
to
cloud
the
examination
of
the
transactions
somewhat,
and
accordingly
makes
a
little
more
difficult
the
required
determination
for
income
tax
purposes.
The
very
fact
that
the
appellant
followed
the
practice
of
crediting
to
"sales
income”
in
the
years
of
the
sale
the
amount
of
the
holdback
(thereby
increasing
sales)
somewhat
defeats
the
underlying
foundation
for
this
appeal.
It
might
be
argued
that
since
the
appellant
at
least
in
this
appeal
did
not
regard
the
amount
of
the
holdback
as
producing
"net"
or
"taxable"
income
for
that
year,
it
should
have
been
left
out
of
the
sales—but
that
would
have
understated
the
total
sales
amount
for
that
year.
So
I
can
see
the
rationale
for
treating
it
in
the
manner
it
was
shown
originally
as
part
of
"sales".
But
when
it
comes
to
treating
the
same
amount
as
an
increase
in
the
cost
of
sales
in
the
same
year,
I
fail
to
follow
the
rationale.
The
amount
at
issue—an
increase
in
the“
cost
of
sales”,
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
cost
of
sales.
It
represents
only
one
thing—an
amount
which
Enns
expected
to
receive
at
some
time
in
the
future,
but
to
which
the
appellant
company
was
not
entitled
until
certain
conditions
were
fulfilled—in
this
case
effectively
until
John
Deere
had
collected
the
amount
in
the
first
place.
That
is
a
definition
of
some
form
of
receivable,
as
I
see
it—granted
that
there
are
conditions
attached
to
its
eventual
receipt.
So
therefore,
logically,
as
I
see
it,
instead
of
the
amount
of
the
holdback
increasing
cost
of
sales
an
immediately
deductible
item,
it
should
have
been
treated
in
some
other
way
albeit
with
the
attendant
restrictions
regarding
receipt
indicated,
which
would
not
have
re-
suited
in
an
immediate
reduction
of
"net"
or"taxable"
income.
Certainly
that
would
have
also
avoided
the
"double
entry”
of
the
amount,
when
it
was
received,
which
I
have
noted
above.
This
judgment
is
based
on
the
Court's
acceptance
of
the
assertion
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
at
the
hearing,
that
the
transaction
to
be
considered
by
the
Court
is
that
of
the
agreement
between
Enns
and
John
Deere,
not
Enns
and
a
customer.
I
am
not
called
on
to
determine
how
the
amount
should
be
represented
in
the
records,
but
some
form
of
receivable
appears
proper.
Nor
am
I
called
on
to
review
whether
this
final
one
per
cent
could
be
qualified
for
consideration
as
part
of
the
reserve"
under
section
20(1)(n)
of
the
Act—some
form
of
"amount
receivable”
from
John
Deere
"in
respect
of
property
sold"—the
property
being
the
finance
contract
“sold”
from
Enns
to
John
Deere
(since
this
aspect
of
the
matter
was
not
raised
by
the
appellant).
But
when
the
account
is
factored
to
John
Deere—it
could
be
argued
it
ceases
to
be
a
trade
account
receivable
since
the
entire
account
is
now
the
property
of
John
Deere,
subject
to
the
conditions
imposed
on
it
regarding
eventual
payment
to
Enns.
The
one
per
cent
which
is
now
a
holdback
in
anticipation
or
eventual
receipt
from
John
Deere,
is
not
the
same
one
per
cent
which
the
appellant
has
already
included
in
gross
sales—and
which
itself
might
have
been
subject
to
consideration
for
a”
reserve”.
In
the
end
analysis,
as
I
understand
the
evidence
presented,
the
existing
method
of
accounting
for
the
“
holdback
amounts”
(by
increasing
cost
of
sales
by
the
amounts
each
year)
is
not
acceptable
and
the
respondent
is
entitled
to
reject
it,
and
review
the
amounts
so
recorded.
In
the
same
way,
it
has
not
been
shown
that
even
if
the
above
method
of
dealing
with
these
amounts
could
be
considered
as
setting
up
some
kind
of
a
reserve
(a
position
not
taken
by
the
appellant,
but
raised
by
the
respondent)
that
such
a
reserve
has
a
viable
basis
in
the
Act.
From
either
possible
perspective
the
appellant's
case
has
not
been
supported.
I
would
also
note
that
counsel
for
the
appellant
raised
the
argument
that
if
the
Court
held
the
amounts
at
issue
to
be
income
as
claimed
by
the
respondent
(which
has
been
decided
above),
then
somewhat
different
amounts,
respecting
only
the
exact
amounts
of
the
holdbacks
generated
each
individual
year
should
be
so
included,
as
opposed
to
the
basis
of
the
respondent's
calculations—the
differences
represented
by
the
build-up
of
the
total
account
at
John
Deere.
I
do
not
agree.
I
do
understand
that
the
respondent
was
required
to
start
somewhere
to
get
the
reporting
procedure
in
order—and
started
for
the
year
1982.
The
system
as
described
by
Mr.
Green
apparently
had
been
in
effect
since
1974,
and
there
well
may
be
(as
a
result
of
the
first
reassessment,
1982)
a
dislocation
of
total
tax
payable—I
really
do
not
know,
because
I
have
made
no
attempt
to
reconcile
it.
But
the
system
of
reporting
the
holdbacks
has
been
improper
since
1974,
and
as
I
see
it
the
respondent
is
entitled
to
make
it
right,
at
the
earliest
opportunity
he
chooses—and
he
chose
1982.
According
to
the
agreement
between
the
parties
noted
at
the
outset
of
these
reasons,
the
amount
of
$179,788
shown
for
the
year
1984
should
be
reduced
by
an
amount
of
$68,374.
My
brief
review
of
the
circumstances
of
the
reassessments
and
the
details
surrounding
these
two
amounts
leaves
me
less
than
completely
satisfied
that
such
an
adjustment
is
warranted
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer,
but
that
is
the
prerogative
of
the
parties
and
the
judgment
will
go
accordingly.
The
appeal
for
1984
is
allowed
to
the
extent
that
the
amount
of
$179,788
in
the
reassessment
should
be
reduced
by
an
amount
of
$68,374
as
agreed
by
the
parties.
The
appeals
for
the
years
1982
and
1983
are
dismissed.
No
costs
are
to
be
awarded.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.