Bowman,
T.C.C.J.:—These
appeals
were
heard
together
on
common
evidence
under
the
general
procedure
of
this
Court.
The
issue
is
whether
gains
realized
by
the
appellants
on
the
disposition
of
five
properties
in
1988
were
gains
on
revenue
or
capital
account.
Both
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Guermoudi
gave
evidence,
although
Mrs.
Guermoudi's
evidence
was
brief
and
confirmed
that
of
her
husband
whom
I
consider
to
be
the
prime
mover
in
respect
of
the
transactions.
All
the
properties
in
question
were
held
jointly
by
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Guermoudi.
Mr.
Guermoudi
and
his
wife
immigrated
to
Canada
in
1981
from
Sweden.
He
worked
until
1985
for
Hertz
Rent-a-Car
when
he
lost
his
job.
He
and
his
wife
decided
to
start
a
private
school
in
which
they
would
tutor
in
French
and
mathematics.
They
sold
their
house
in
Brampton
and
in
1986
they
commenced
a
series
of
purchases
which
culminated
in
the
sales
in
1988
giving
rise
to
the
assessments
in
question.
The
first
purchase
was
in
December
1986
at
217
Owen
Sound
Street,
Shelburne,
Ontario.
This
property
consisted
of
three
apartments
and
had
nonconforming
use
status.
Mr.
Guermoudi
testified
that
they
and
their
four
children
intended
to
live
in
two
of
the
apartments
and
use
the
third
as
a
school.
They
moved
into
the
two
apartments
and
applied
to
the
municipality
for
a
change
in
zoning
to
permit
the
establishment
of
a
school.
Matters
did
not
proceed
with
the
despatch
that
Mr.
Guermoudi
had
hoped
for
and
in
April
he
and
his
family
moved
to
111
Toronto
Street,
Markdale,
Ontario,
about
55
kilometres
from
Owen
Sound.
They
continued
to
rent
the
Shelburne
property
until
July
8,
1988
at
which
time
he
sold
it,
having
listed
it
on
January
25,
1968.
The
property
at
Shelburne
had
been
purchased
for
$92,500
and
sold
for
$180,800.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
on
assessing,
included
as
income
from
a
business
or
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
the
sum
of
$22,423.41,
on
the
basis
that
A
of
the
property
was
the
appellants’
principal
residence
up
to
the
point
at
which
the
two
apartments
which
they
occupied
were
converted
to
rental
use.
The
appellants
installed
a
new
furnace
at
111
Toronto
Street,
Markdale,
repaired
the
roof
and
put
in
insulation,
for
a
total
cost
of
between
$10,000
and
$15,000.
They
lived
in
that
property
until
September
1987
at
which
time
they
moved
to
Owen
Sound
and
upon
vacating
111
Toronto
Street,
Markdale,
they
converted
it
to
two
rental
units
at
a
cost
of
about
$5,000.
This
property
was
sold
on
May
26,
1989
for
$84,000.
There
is
no
evidence
as
to
the
manner
in
which
the
gain
was
treated
by
the
Minister
and
I
make
no
finding
on
this
point
as
it
took
place
in
subsequent
taxation
years
that
is
not
before
the
Court.
The
next
purchase
was
of
a
cottage
property
at
575
Mary
Street
in
Wiarton
on
November
27,1987
for
$32,000.
The
appellant
testified
that
he
and
his
wife
intended
to
use
the
property
as
a
cottage
and
that
he
subsequently
decided
to
rent
it
out
during
the
winter.
They
sold
the
property
on
September
30,
1988
for
$62,000.
The
appellant
testified
that
he
sold
this
property
in
order
to
buy
a
more
desirable
cottage
property
at
535
George
Street,
Wiarton,
which
the
appellants
still
own.
The
next
purchase
was
at
361
Waterloo
Street,
Mount
Forest
on
May
29,
1987,
for
$25,500.
The
agreement
of
purchase
and
sale
was
signed
in
February
1987
where
the
appellants
were
living
in
Shelburne
and
the
transaction
closed
on
May
29,
1987,
when
they
had
moved
to
Markdale.
The
property
was
listed
for
sale
on
August
17,1987
and
was
sold
on
May
9,
1988
for
$45,000.
The
property
was
rented
during
the
period
in
which
it
was
held.
Mr.
Guermoudi
testified
that
by
the
time
the
transaction
closed
they
had
moved
to
Markdale
and
the
property
was
too
distant
to
enable
them
to
manage
it
easily.
On
July
31,
1987
the
appellants
bought
570-4th
Avenue
East,
Owen
Sound,
for
$65,000.
On
September
14,1987
the
property
was
listed
for
sale
and
was
sold
for
$85,000
on
April
4,
1988.
Mr.
Guermoudi
testified
that
this
property
was
a
three
family
dwelling
and
that
he
and
his
family
intended
to
use
two
apartments
and
to
rent
out
the
third
apartment.
He
stated
that
it
was
sold
because
a
more
desirable
property
at
393-15th
Street
in
Owen
Sound
was
located
and
purchased.
The
property
at
393-15th
Street,
Owen
Sound
was
in
fact
also
sold
in
1989.
On
September
30,
1987
the
appellants
purchased
137
Mark
Street,
Markdale
for
$33,000.
On
June
30,
1988
it
was
sold
for
$58,000.
Mr.
Guermoudi
was
unable
to
say
why
this
property
was
sold.
In
February
1988
the
appellants
acquired
401-5th
Street
East,
Owen
Sound
for
$66,000
and
sold
it
in
June
1989
for
$104,900.
Also,
in
October
1989
the
appellants
acquired
property
at
1787-5th
Avenue
West,
Owen
Sound
for
$41,000
and
sold
it
on
February
15,
1989
for
$60,900.
These
two
properties
were
sold
in
1989
and
the
treatment
of
the
gain
is
not
before
the
court.
They
do,
however,
indicate
the
degree
of
activity
of
Mr.
Guermoudi
and
his
wife
in
real
estate
in
those
years.
At
the
present
time
Mr.
Guermoudi,
who
is
a
licensed
real
estate
broker,
and
his
wife
own
a
substantial
portfolio
of
rental
properties.
Mr.
Guermoudi
argued
that
the
gains
realized
by
him
and
his
wife
(they
never
sustained
a
loss)
were
simply
a
case
of
disposing
of
one
rental
property
in
order
to
purchase
another
one.
I
daresay
this
is
substantially
true.
I
do
not
however
think
that
this
is
determinative
of
the
matter.
The
appellants
have
acquired
their
substantial
portfolio
of
rental
properties
as
the
result
of
astutely
recognizing
and
taking
advantage
of
the
rising,
indeed
overheated,
real
estate
market
that
prevailed
in
1987,
1988
and
1989.
It
is
true
that
the
nature
of
the
properties
is
consistent
with
their
being
capital
investments
in
the
appellants’
hands
but
the
manner
in
which
they
were
treated,
the
relatively
short
time
during
which
they
were
held
and
the
frequency
of
the
transactions
lead
me,
with
one
exception,
to
conclude
that
the
appellants
were
engaged
in
a
business
which
involved
both
holding
rental
properties
and
selling
them
when
an
appropriate
opportunity
arose.
In
some
cases
the
appellants
improved
the
properties
and
in
some
cases
they
did
not.
In
no
case
were
the
appellants
under
any
particular
compulsion
to
dispose
of
the
properties,
other
then
a
desire
to
take
advantage
of
the
rising
market
in
order
to
trade
up.
I
cannot
accept
the
appellants’
definition
of
a
capital
gain
as
a
gain
realized
on
the
disposition
of
a
property
in
a
rising
market
where
the
taxpayer
has
done
nothing
to
increase
the
value
of
the
property
or
to
create
the
market.
That
definition
may
have
some
application
in
the
case
of
an
isolated
purchase
and
sale
but
I
do
not
think
it
can
apply
where
there
is
a
series
of
rapid
purchases
and
sales
as
part
of
what
appears
to
me
to
be
a
concerted
money-making
operation.
I
need
not
repeat
the
tests
enunciated
in
such
cases
as
Happy
Valley
Farms
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
259,
86
D.T.C.
6421
(F.C.T.D.)
and
First
Investors
Corp.
v.
The
Queen,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
285,
87
D.T.C.
5176
(F.C.A.).
I
think
the
application
of
these
tests
indicate
that
the
appellants
were
engaged
in
"an
operation
of
business
in
carrying
out
a
scheme
for
profit-making”,
and
were
not
making
a
gain
by
a“
"mere
enhancement
of
value
by
realizing
a
security"
(Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159
at
page
165).
I
have
no
difficulty
in
accepting
Mr.
Guermoudi's
evidence
as
far
as
it
goes.
He
was
a
perfectly
credible
witness.
I
do
not,
however,
on
all
of
the
evidence,
think
that
it
has
been
established
that
in
selling
the
properties
the
appellants
were
merely
disposing
of
capital
investments.
The
one
exception
to
this
conclusion
is
the
property
at
217
Owen
Sound
Street,
Shelburne.
It
was
the
first
property
purchased
and
it
was
held
for
16
months
before
being
listed.
It
was
rented
during
the
entire
period
that
it
was
not
occupied
by
the
appellants
and
their
family.
I
think
that
this
property
was
at
all
times
a
capital
asset
in
the
appellants’
hands,
and
that
the
Minister
erred
in
concluding
that
it
was
converted
to
inventory
when
the
appellants
moved
out
of
the
two
apartments.
At
no
time
was
any
portion
of
this
property
a
trading
asset
in
the
appellants’
hands.
A
number
of
factors
appear
to
me
to
justify
this
conclusion.
The
sale
of
this
property
took
place
after
the
appellants
had
moved
to
Owen
Sound
and
the
property
was
geographically
distant
and
difficult
to
manage.
The
appellants'
desire
to
start
a
school
and
to
live
at
the
property
was
frustrated
by
the
failure
to
obtain
a
zoning
change.
Moreover
Mrs.
Guermoudi
testified
that
the
family
wished
to
move
from
Shelburne
to
Owen
Sound
because
there
was
no
French
immersion
course
for
their
children
in
Shelburne.
This
is
understandable
given
that
Mr.
Guermoudi's
first
language
is
French.
In
the
circumstances
I
think
the
appellants
have
met
the
onus
of
establishing,
on
a
balance
of
probabilities,
that
the
portion
of
the
gain
on
217
Owen
Sound
Street,
Shelburne
that
was
not
attributable
to
the
sale
of
the
appellants’
principal
residence
was
not
a
trading
gain.
The
appeals
are
therefore
allowed
and
the
reassessment
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
in
accordance
with
these
reasons.
In
the
circumstances
I
make
no
order
as
to
costs.
Appeal
allowed.