Strayer,
J.:—
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
with
respect
to
the
reassessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
of
the
plaintiff's
1978
income.
At
the
beginning
of
the
hearing
of
the
appeal,
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
advised
the
Court
that
he
was
proceeding
on
only
two
of
the
three
matters
referred
to
in
the
statement
of
claim
commencing
this
appeal.
Both
these
matters
related
to
the
plaintiff's
farm
income
for
1978:
the
amount
received
by
the
plaintiff
as
crop
insurance
and
the
amount
received
by
him
from
the
sale
of
cattle.
In
both
cases,
the
taxpayer's
problem
arose
from
the
manner
in
which
his
1978
income
tax
return
had
been
prepared.
It
emerged
from
the
evidence
that
this
return
was
prepared
by
a
female
employee
in
the
office
of
the
taxpayer's
counsel,
Mr.
Hawrish.
In
both
cases,
according
to
the
taxpayer,
his
income
had
been
overstated
by
the
person
preparing
his
return.
His
subsequent
attempts
to
amend
the
return
had
been
rejected
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
in
whole
or
in
part.
The
defendant
takes
no
objection
to
the
plaintiff's
right
to
amend
his
return
or
the
procedure
by
which
this
was
attempted.
The
sole
dispute
is
as
to
the
amounts
actually
received
by
the
plaintiff
from
these
two
sources
in
1978.
With
respect
to
the
proceeds
from
crop
insurance,
the
taxpayer
in
his
original
return
for
1978
showed
total
receipts
of
$8,337.25.
In
his
appeal,
as
amended
at
the
hearing
he
asserted
that
the
actual
amount
received
was
only
$4,520.19.
During
the
course
of
the
hearing
before
me,
this
matter
was
settled
by
agreement
of
both
counsel
with
the
result
that
the
correct
amount
of
income
received
from
crop
insurance
in
1978
was
fixed
at
$4,956.35.
The
Minister
will
be
directed
to
reassess
accordingly.
With
respect
to
income
from
livestock
sold
in
1978,
the
taxpayer
in
his
original
return
reported
total
receipts
from
cattle
sold
as
$20,163.38.
Subsequently
he
has
contended
that
the
correct
amount
was
$16,783.80.
The
Minister
has
insisted
on
maintaining
the
assessed
income
at
the
total
originally
stated
in
the
1978
return.
This
amount
was
reduced
by
$554.17
in
the
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
learned
judge
of
the
Tax
Court
on
the
basis
of
weigh
scale
ticket
56174
(Exhibit
A-4
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
part
of
Exhibit
P-1
in
this
Court)
apparently
concluded
that
the
total
amount
shown
on
it,
$554.17,
had
been
added
in
error
to
the
taxpayer's
receipts
from
livestock
sales
when
his
return
was
prepared.
He
therefore
reduced
the
total
receipts
from
cattle
sales
by
this
amount.
According
to
the
evidence
before
me,
upon
delivery
of
cattle
at
the
stockyard
of
the
Saskatchewan
Wheat
Pool
Livestock
Division,
they
would
be
unloaded,
weighed,
and
then
put
in
the
sale
ring.
When
the
cattle
were
sold,
a
yellow
weigh
ticket
would
be
completed
showing,
inter
alia,
the
weight
and
price
per
hundredweight
paid
for
the
cattle.
Such
tickets
would
be
sent
immediately
to
the
office
where
a
white
sales
record
slip
would
be
prepared
showing
the
gross
amount
received,
the
charges
imposed
by
the
Saskatchewan
Wheat
Pool
Livestock
Division
as
deducted
therefrom,
and
the
net
amount
owing
to
the
vendor.
A
cheque
for
this
amount
would
be
issued,
to
which
would
be
attached
a
copy
of
this
white
sales
record
and
of
the
relevant
yellow
weigh
scale
tickets.
According
to
the
taxpayer,
he
would
take
these
documents
home
and
throw
them
in
a
box.
When
preparing
his
materials
each
year
to
take
to
Mr.
Hawrish's
office
for
preparation
of
his
income
tax
return,
he
would
sort
through
the
documents
in
the
box
and
would
normally
remove
the
yellow
tickets
since
they
would
be
duplicative
of
the
white
sales
records.
According
to
him
some
seven
such
yellow
tickets
must
have
been
left
with
the
material
which
was
given
to
Mr.
Hawrish's
office
for
the
preparation
of
the
1978
return.
His
only
explanation
for
these
tickets
being
among
such
material
is
that
his
parents
must
have
put
the
tickets
back
with
the
other
documents
after
he
had
sorted
them
out.
Of
these
seven
tickets,
one,
number
56174
(Exhibit
A-4
in
the
Tax
Court,
part
of
Exhibit
P-1
in
this
Court)
has
already
been
taken
into
account
by
the
Tax
Court
and
the
total
receipts
for
cattle
have
been
reduced
by
the
amount
of
that
ticket,
as
noted
above.
The
other
six
tickets
were
apparently
not
put
before
the
Tax
Court.
The
remaining
amount
in
dispute
is
$2,825.41,
being
the
difference
between
the
revenue
from
cattle
sales
as
reduced
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
$19,609.21,
and
the
total
sales
as
claimed
now
by
the
taxpayer,
namely
$16,783.80.
I
have
concluded
on
the
balance
of
probabilities
that
the
taxpayer
is
right
in
his
assertion
that
his
income
was
overstated
by
this
amount
in
his
1978
return
as
prepared
in
his
lawyer's
office
and
as
signed
by
him.
While
the
defendant,
of
course,
need
not
prove
its
case,
it
has
produced
no
evidence
to
refute
the
evidence
of
the
plaintiff.
That
evidence
is
in
my
view
substantiated
to
an
important
extent
by
the
documents
in
evidence
consisting
of
the
white
sales
records
(part
of
Exhibit
P-1)
and
the
six
yellow
weigh
tickets
(Exhibit
P-6).
The
net
amounts
paid
to
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
cattle
sales
covered
by
the
white
sales
records
total
$16,783.80,
the
amount
which
he
claims
he
actually
received
by
the
sale
of
cattle
in
1978.
The
six
yellow
weigh
scale
tickets,
when
examined
in
relation
to
those
sales
records,
appear
to
relate
to
certain
of
the
sales
already
included
in
them.
While
the
amounts
shown
on
the
yellow
tickets
for
any
of
the
relevant
dates
do
not
correspond
with
the
total
of
sales
recorded
on
the
white
slips
for
those
dates,
this
is
not
surprising
since
there
would
usually
be
two
or
more
yellow
tickets
in
respect
of
each
day's
sales
—
the
tickets
being
issued
in
respect
of
each
lot
of
cattle
as
auctioned,
with
any
given
vendor's
cattle
being
sold
in
possibly
several
lots.
The
totals
on
the
yellow
tickets
and
on
the
sales
records
are
quite
consistent
with
this:
for
each
of
the
yellow
tickets
put
in
as
evidence
there
is
a
corresponding
sales
record
of
the
same
date
and
the
total
sales
shown
on
the
sales
records
are
in
excess
of
the
amounts
shown
on
the
yellow
ticket
or
tickets
for
that
day.
That
is,
the
yellow
tickets
could
well
be
only
one
or
two
of
several
tickets
issued
on
those
particular
days.
Further,
when
the
six
yellow
tickets
are
added
up,
they
total
$2,825.29
which
is
within
12
cents
of
equalling
the
excess
amount
by
which
the
taxpayer
claims
his
revenues
were
reported
in
his
1978
return.
It
is
improbable
that
there
could
be
such
a
coincidence
and
in
my
view
the
most
reasonable
explanation
is
that
the
person
in
Mr.
Hawrish's
office
who
completed
the
taxpayer's
return
erroneously
added
in
the
amounts
shown
on
these
six
yellow
tickets
not
realizing
that
the
amounts
covered
by
them
were
also
already
included
in
the
white
sales
records.
This
is
also
consistent
with
the
finding
of
the
Tax
Court
with
respect
to
the
seventh
yellow
ticket:
the
learned
judge
of
the
Tax
Court
reduced
the
taxpayer's
income
by
the
amount
shown
on
that
ticket
but
apparently
did
not
have
the
other
six
tickets
before
him.
While
this
situation
shows
negligence
on
the
part
of
the
person
who
prepared
the
tax
return,
and
on
the
part
of
the
plaintiff
himself
in
signing
the
return
without
questioning
the
fact
that
his
livestock
sales
had
been
inflated
by
about
25
per
cent,
nevertheless
I
am
satisfied
that
such
an
error
did
occur
and
that
therefore
the
taxpayer's
1978
income
should
be
reassessed
on
the
basis
that
his
cattle
sales
did
not
exceed
$16,783.80.
He
is
entitled
to
costs.
Since
preparing
these
reasons
I
have
received
from
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
further
argument
in
writing.
No
leave
was
given
for
the
filing
of
such
argument
and
under
the
circumstances
I
have
ignored
it.
Appeal
allowed