Taylor,
TC
J:—These
are
appeals
heard
on
common
evidence
in
Vancouver,
British
Columbia,
on
November
16,
17
and
18,
1983.
The
income
tax
assessments
against
which
Mr
Wolfin
(“Wolfm”)
appealed
were
for
the
years
1973,
1974,
1975,
1976,
1977
and
1978,
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
considered
certain
gains
as
on
income,
not
on
capital
account.
For
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd,
(“Frobisher”)
the
taxation
years
were
1975,
1976
and
1977,
and
the
appeal
was
for
the
same
reasons.
Certain
penalties
had
been
imposed
in
the
assessments
of
Wolfin,
but
at
the
start
of
the
hearing
the
Minister
agreed
to
have
these
deleted
from
the
assessments.
The
essence
of
the
issue
can
be
gleaned
from
the
documents
filed
with
the
Court:
—
In
1971
the
appellant
purchased
shares
in
Lure
Camera
Ltd.
The
appellant
sold
its
shares
in
Lure
Camera
Ltd
in
1975.
—
The
appellant
sold
its
shares
in
Lure
Camera
Ltd
since
it
had
a
major
difference
of
opinion
with
the
management
of
Lure
and
decided
that
the
future
success
of
the
company
was
doubtful.
—
The
appellant
was
at
all
material
times
a
broker-dealer
involved
in
the
promotion
of
mining
and
other
stocks
through
the
Vancouver
Stock
Exchange
and
the
Vancouver
Curb
Exchange.
—
The
principal
shareholder
of
the
appellant
is
Louis
Wolfin.
—
Lure
Camera
Ltd
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
Lure)
was
incorporated
on
December
9,
1971
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
province
of
British
Columbia.
—
Pursuant
to
an
agreement
dated
May
24,
1972
between
Lure,
Thomas
J
Woods
and
Joe
D
Cox,
Lure
was
granted
an
exclusive
worldwide
right
and
license
to
make
and
use
and
sell
disposable
cameras
having
a
certain
patented
mechanism.
—
Pursuant
to
the
aforesaid
agreement,
Lure
issued
750,000
shares
of
which
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd
obtained
140,000
shares.
The
said
shares
were
placed
in
escrow.
—
In
1972,
a
further
950,000
shares
were
issued
by
Lure
for
cash
at
10¢
per
share
of
which
62,001
shares
were
issued
in
the
name
of
Louis
Wolfin.
—
By
way
of
a
prospectus
dated
December
13,
1972,
Lure
offered
the
public
200,000
and
a
secondary
sale
of
50,000
shares
owned
by
Louis
Wolfin.
The
aforesaid
prospectus
was
withdrawn
by
Lure’s
directors.
—
On
April
30,
1974,
Louis
Wolfin
and
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd
entered
into
an
agreement
to
sell
62,001
shares
of
Wolfin
and
120,000
escrow
shares
of
the
appellant
to
William
Meiklejohn
for
the
consideration
of
$125,000
upon
receipt
of
consent
to
transfer
and
a
further
$15,000
on
or
before
May
15,
1975.
—
The
second
installment
was
not
paid
with
the
consequence
that
the
appellant
and
Louis
Wolfin
sold
their
interest
in
the
Meiklejohn
agreement
to
Meteor
Developments
Ltd
for
$18,200.
—
An
operating
motive
for
the
acquisition
by
the
appellant
of
the
Lure
shares
was
for
resale
at
a
profit.
—
At
all
material
times,
the
appellant
was
a
promoter
and
trader
in
securities.
—
At
all
material
times,
the
principal
shareholder
of
the
appellant,
Louis
Wolfin,
was
a
trader
in
securities.
—
The
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
upon
sections
9,
38
and
39
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63
as
amended.
For
Wolfin
The
activities
of
the
various
businesses
were
described
in
detail
in
both
the
notice
of
appeal
and
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
which
together
comprised
some
20
typed
pages.
A
brief
summary
of
the
financial
information
which
for
the
basis
of
this
appeal
is
taken
from
the
notice
of
appeal:
—
According
to
calculations
prepared
by
officials
of
Revenue
Canada
the
appellant
realized
the
following
gains:
—
Avino
Mines
&
Resources
Ltd.
1973
$
2,445.16)
1974
$
5,344.17)
1975
$
569.50)
1977
($13,706.36)
—
Gallahad
Petroleums
Ltd.
(Formerly
Boru
Mining
Ltd.)
1973
$12,500.00
1975
$10,000.00
1977
$
3,037.00
—
Kerry
Mines
Ltd.
1973
$15,000.00
—
Lure
Camera
Ltd.
1974
$42,800.00
—
Berkeley
Resources
Inc.
(Formerly
Trevlac
Resources
Ind.)
1974
$61,667.50
—
Holofile
Industries
Ltd.
1975
$
7,846.99
1976
$139,502.89
1977
$
3,222.14
—
New
Congress
Resources
Ltd.
1977
$4,149.18
—
Osec
Properties
Corp.
1978
$1,731.45
—
Manufacturing
Process
owned
by
Lincoln
Industries
Ltd.
1974
$50,000.00
—
Oniva
1974
$15,250.00
1975
$28,360.00
1976
$20,237.00
The
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
upon
sections
3,
9,
subsections
248(1),
163(2),
39(4),
39(5)
and
85(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c.
63,
as
amended,
and
contended:
—
an
operating
motive
for
the
acquisition
by
the
appellant
of
the
shares
(in
the
above
corporations)
and
the
manufacturing
process
acquired
was
for
resale
of
same
at
a
profit;
—
at
all
material
times
the
appellant
was
in
the
business
of
stock
speculation
and
stock
promotion;
—
the
gains
realized
by
the
appellant
in
each
of
the
years
under
appeal
were
the
combination
of
a
scheme
of
profit-making
engaged
in
by
the
appellant;
—
at
all
material
times
the
appellant
was
a
trader
in
securities;
—
the
cost
to
the
appellant
of
the
following
shares
transferred
by
him
to
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd.
in
1977
was
as
follows:
|
(i)
Avino
Mines
&
Resources
Ltd
|
$60,431.38
|
|
(ii)
Gallahad
Petroleums
Ltd
|
NIL
|
|
(iii)
New
Congress
Resources
Ltd
|
15,850.82
|
|
(iv)
Holofile
Technology
Inc
|
$14,374.86
|
|
(v)
Onaca
Exploration
Ltd
|
$1.00
|
|
(vi)
Kerry
Mines
Ltd
|
NIL
|
—
.
.
.
The
appellant’s
gain
or
loss
on
the
transfer
by
him
of
various
securities
to
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd
(has
been
correctly
calculated
by
the
Minister)
in
1977
in
that
pursuant
to
the
elections
filed
under
subsection
85(1)
by
the
appellant,
the
agreed
values
were
less
than
the
fair
market
value
and
cost
of
the
said
securities
with
the
consequence
that
the
deemed
proceeds
were
equal
to
the
lower
of
the
aforesaid.
Mr
Wolfin
provided
detailed
testimony
regarding
his
assertions
with
respect
to
the
gains,
in
particular
that
his
efforts
to
bring
the
various
endeavours
to
fruition
had
met
with
only
limited
success,
and
in
some
cases
considerable
frustration.
Two
other
gentlemen
also
testified
on
behalf
of
the
appellants,
explaining
their
own
association
with
Mr
Wolfin,
and
their
particular
interests
in
the
transactions
under
review.
The
able
arguments
from
counsel
clearly
set
out
the
different
perspectives
of
the
parties,
and
certain
quotations
from
those
arguments
will
serve
to
highlight
the
major
portion
of
the
testimony
and
evidence:
For
the
appellants:
..
we
have
heard
evidence
from
Mr
Wolfin
concerning
various
investments
that
he
made
in
three
manufacturing
type
companies,
ie
Lure
Camera,
Holofile
Industries,
and
Lincoln
Industries,
plus
investments
in
six
resource
companies.
Exhibit
A-8
is
the
camera
that
was
to
be
manufactured,
produced
and
distributed.
After
spending
considerable
time
checking
this
camera
out
and
determining
that
it
could
be
produced
and
marketed,
Mr
Wolfin
incorporated
a
company
that
helped
with
the
raising
of
the
money
to
begin
production.
Now,
we’re
not
talking
about
simply
a
vague
idea
that
never
got
off
the
drawing
board
stage.
We’re
talking
about
a
situation
where
thousands
of
cameras
were
produced.
Exhibit
A-10
is
the
prospectus
that
was
prepared
for
the
purpose
of
raising
the
initial
money.
It
is
understandable
that
Mr
Wolfin
accepted
the
offer
from
the
other
shareholders
to
purchase
his
shares,
and
these
factors
that
I’ve
just
summarized
make
it
clearly
apparent
that
this
transaction
does
not
have
the
badges
of
trade.
This
was
a
clear,
unmistakable
investment
opportunity
made
by
an
entrepreneur
such
as
Mr
Wolfin
is,
to
become
involved
in
a
manufacturing
process,
and
his
attempt
to
produce
a
product
such
as
this
camara,
he
made
every
attempt
that
a
reasonable
man
would
do.
.
.
.
Holofile
has
many
similarities
to
Lure.
In
order
to
raise
the
money
from
the
public
to
pay
for
the
prototype
and
for
other
costs
which
approached
$500,000,
Holofile
merged
with
Jersey
consolidated
and
became
a
public
company
whose
shares
traded
on
the
Vancouver
Stock
Exchange.
Once
again,
as
a
result
of
a
need
for
funds
to
pay
personal
taxes,
and
significantly
because
of
the
change
in
the
direction
of
the
company,
Mr
Wolfin
agreed
to
sell
some
of
his
shares.
I
suggest
that
the
nature
of
the
investment,
the
holding
period,
the
reason
for
sale,
and
the
type
of
activity
particularly
all
point
to
a
capital
gain.
A
third
manufacturing
company
which
I
want
to
summarize
is
the
case
of
Lincoln
Industries
.
.
.
They
incorporated
a
company
to
produce
and
market
the
device,
but
before
they
got
much
beyond
the
initial
stages
Mr
Frankel
decided
that
as
opposed
to
going
through
a
public
issue
and
becoming
involved
in
significant
shareholders,
it
made
more
sense,
in
Mr
Frankel’s
view,
to
bring
in
substantial
private
investors.
Mr
Frankel
wanted
to
keep
the
companies
private,
and
use
private
funding.
Mr
Wolfin
wished
to
use
public
funding.
As
a
result
of
this
disagreement,
Mr
Wolfin
agreed
to
accept
Mr
Frankel’s
proposal
to
sell
his
interest,
entire
interest
in
the
Lincoln
process
to
the
company,
and
Exhibit
A-27,
a
document
dated
July
29th,
1974,
had
the
effect
of
Mr
Wolfin
selling
his
interest,
according
to
that
document,
to
the
company
but,
in
effect,
Mr
Frankel
was
at
that
time
running
the
situation
entirely.
.
.
.
I’ve
decided
to
summarize
the
three
manufacturing
processes
because
they
are
almost
identical
in
many
respects.
There
are
some
differences,
but
all
three
have
a
situation
where
there
was
a
very
significant
potential
for
a
breakthrough
in
a
new,
exciting,
entrepreneurial
business
venture.
.
.
.
we
have
three
manufacturing
processes,
all
of
which
were
developed
in
the
way
a
normal
intelligent
entrepreneur
would
do,
and
there
were
not
processes
which
would
be
developed
in
the
way
a
trader
or
a
promoter,
or
simply
a
speculator
would
perform.
When
we
examine
the
investments
in
resource
companies,
it
is
important
to
note
the
following
factors.
First
of
all,
Mr
Wolfin
is
not
a
market
trader.
He
is
not
a
promoter.
He
is
an
entrepreneur
who
has
developed
Avino
Mines
and
Resources
Ltd,
one
of
the
more
successful
silver
mines
in
Mexico.
The
second
resource
company
I
wish
to
mention
is
Gallahad
Petroleum.
This
company
was
originally
formed
to
develop
a
mine.
This
was
unsuccessful
and
the
company
became
involved
in
oil
and
gas
activities
.
.
.
It’s
a
situation
where
the
company
has
operated
for
some
15
years,
and
Mr
Wolfin
indicated
that
while
he
sold
some
of
the
shares,
he
retains
the
balance
of
his
stock,
and
has
only
sold
a
few
shares,
something
like
5,000,
or
not
many
more,
since
the
years
under
appeal.
The
third
resource
company
is
Kerry,
K-E-R-R-Y
Mines
Ltd.
Kerry
is
somewhat
similar.
Shares
were
raised
by
sale
to
the
public,
and
exploration
was
carried
out.
There
was
only
one
transaction
involving
shares,
and
Mr
Wolfin
stated
that
he
still
has
most
of
his
free
stock,
and
all
of
his
escrow
stock
.
.
.
The
fourth
resource
company
is
Berkely
Resources
Ltd,
formerly
Trevlac,
T-R-E-V-
L-A-C.
This
company
.
.
.
incorporated
in
1966,
and
there
was
only
one
transaction
under
appeal,
and
that
was
in
1977,
when
he
attempted
by
advice
of
his
accountants,
to
obtain
a
tax-free
rollover,
that’s
a
holding
period
of
11
years,
only
one
transaction.
.
.
.
I
want
to
comment
by
saying
that
if
we
take
the
hard
and
fast
approach
that
anyone
who
buys
shares
and
sells
them
as
soon
as
they
increase
in
value,
then
anyone,
any
taxpayer
participating
in
the
stock
market
is
taxable
either
on
an
income
business
or
as
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
That
is
not
the
law,
that
is
not
the
Department’s
assessing
policy,
and
that
is
the
situation
before
you
today.
We
have,
in
the
case
of
Lincoln,
Lure
and
Holofile,
three
clear
indications
of
a
situation
where
a
company
was
attempted
to
be
developed
by
Mr
Wolfin.
Corporate
shares
are
to
be
distinguished
from
say
raw
land.
Raw
land
can
only
be
realized
on
one
basis,
by
sale.
If
it’s
raw,
undeveloped
land
with
no
hope
for
development
as
an
apartment
complex,
or
what
have
you,
the
only
way
you
can
realize
on
raw
land
is
by
selling
it.
In
conclusion,
I
would
like
to
simply
state
that
Revenue
Canada
takes
the
position
that
Mr
Wolfin
is
taxable
on
everything
.
.
.
That,
I
suggest,
goes
far
beyond
any
court
decision
of
this
Court,
of
the
Federal
Court,
or
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
and
I
suggest
that
on
the
authority
cited,
on
the
facts
before
you
for
the
past
two
days,
on
the
clear
evidence
that
Mr
Wolfin,
an
admitted,
no
doubt
about
it,
an
admitted
intelligent
entrepreneur,
but
on
those
facts,
Mr
Wolfin
was
doing
everything
in
his
power
to
develop
viable
business
enterprises,
and
his
investment
was
nothing
more
than
an
attempt
to
obtain
through
corporate
shares,
through
the
ownership
of
corporate
shares,
income
from
dividends,
income
from
the
development
of
a
new
innovative
camera,
income
from
the
development
of
high
technology
through
Holofile,
income
through
the
door
lock
process,
income
through
developing
resource
properties,
as
he
has
done
very
successfully
in
Avino
Mines,
we
are
not
talking
about
a
dreamer,
we
are
talking,
income
from
dividends,
income
from
the
development
of
a
new
innovative
camera,
income
from
the
development
of
high
technology
through
Holofile,
income
through
the
door
lock
process,
income
through
developing
resource
properties,
as
he
has
done
very
successfully
in
Avino
Mines,
we
are
not
talking
about
a
dreamer,
we
are
talking
about
a
practical
businessman
who,
through
his
creative
activities,
has
created
viable
business
operations.
For
the
respondent:
...
the
Minister’s
position
is
that
the
evidence
before
you
would
indicate
that
the
Appellant
is
in
the
business
of
promoting
and
marketing
speculative
securities.
As
a
consequence,
we
say
that
the
gains
realized
by
him,
and
that
are
under
appeal
before
you,
formed,
and
are
an
integral
part
of
that
particular
business,
with
the
result
that
they
should
be
taxed
on
income
account.
Firstly,
the
Appellant
himself.
Clearly,
he
is
an
experienced
promoter
and
trader.
His
own
evidence
is
that
people
have
come
to
him
to
promote
the
particular
securities
in
question.
If
you
look
at
his
company,
Frobisher
Securities,
which
I
believe
he
indicated
in
his
evidence,
he
felt
and
looked
upon
as
almost
indistinguishable
from
himself,
it
had
traded
in
literally
millions
of
shares.
There
is
a
brokerage
license
involved,
which
he
had.
Clearly
we
have
an
individual
who
has
an
intimate
detailed
knowledge
of
the
market
.
.
.
at
least,
and
one
need
only
look
at
the
complexity
of
the
transaction
involved
in
the
Holifile
transaction
to
determine
that
this
is
surely
a
very
intelligent
man.
Finally,
it
is
clear
that
at
all
times
Mr
Wolfin
was
an
insider
of
the
various
companies
involved.
The
other
factor,
another
factor
I
had
asked
you
to
consider,
is
the
Appellant’s
active
participation
in
promoting
all
of
the
particular
securities
involved
in
the
case
before
you.
We
do
not
have
a
situation
where
there
is
a
passive
investor
purchasing
a
security
sitting
back
and
selling
the
same.
This
is
an
individual
who
has
actively
taken
part
from
the
first
step
in
obtaining
the
particular
process,
in
terms
of
the
three
companies,
Lure,
Lincoln
and
Holofile,
or
obtaining
the
mineral
properties
and
incorporating
the
companies
in
terms
of
the
resource
companies.
.
.
.
there
is
a
pattern,
a
clear
pattern
of
activity
which
shows
a
consistent
scheme
of
profit
making.
Firstly,
we
say
the
first
step
in
all
of
these
proceedings
is
that
there
is
obtained
by
Mr
Wolfin
an
asset,
either
a
mineral
claim
for
the
resource
companies,
or
an
option
to
acquire
a
particular
right
or
a
licence,
the
initial
cost
of
which
asset
is
close
to,
for
the
mineral
claims
I
believe
it
was
minimal,
for
the
options
it
was
very
small.
I
think
the
Holofile
was
15,000,
Lincoln
25,000
and
Lure
31,000.
In
return
for
obtaining
these
particular
assets
and
transferring
these
assets
to
the
companies
he
obtained
enormously
large
stock
positions,
be
they
in
escrow,
or
alternatively,
for
want
of
a
better
phrase,
the
cheap
stock,
the
ten
cent
stock.
The
next
step
in
this
particular
process
was
to
arrange
to
have
this
stock
traded
on
the
market
in
some
particular
way.
This
is
either
done
directly,
in
other
words,
through
the
resource
companies,
or
indirectly
by
way
of
an
exchange
of
stock.
.
.
.
these
large
accumulations
of
stock
which
are
obtained
at
a
very
cheap
price,
are
finally
sold
on
the
market
by
Mr
Wolfin
at
the
same
time
that
he
acts
as
underwriter
to
raise
funds
for
the
company
itself.
.
.
.
Mr
Wolfin
not
only
acted
as
underwriter,
by
way
of
Frobisher
Securities,
really
his
own
company,
or
on
a
number
of
occasions
by
Davidson
once
he
had
acquired
an
interest
in
it.
But
he
was
also
officer,
director
and
promoter
of
the
issuer,
ie
the
company
he
was
in
fact
underwriting.
.
.
.
at
one
stage
he
is
an
integral
part
of
all
aspects
of
bringing
this
particular
stock
to
the
market.
He
is
the
officer
of
Frobisher,
the
underwriter,
and
indeed,
he
also
acts
in
his
personal
capacity.
What
we
are
saying
is
that
really,
in
that
kind
of
situation,
you
cannot
separate
him
from
Frobisher.
He
is
one
and
the
same
and
they
act
together.
It
is
clear,
we
submit
to
you,
on
the
evidence
that
they
were
all
speculative
stocks.
There
were
no
dividends
on
any
of
them
(that)
had
been
paid
or
could
be
anticipated
to
be
paid
for
a
substantial
period
of
time.
It
was,
in
effect,
the
promotion
of
an
idea
rather
than
a
company
which
had
industrial,
firm
industrial
type
base.
And
we
say,
based
on
those
authorities,
and
based
on
the
evidence
before
you,
that
this
particular
taxpayer
is
part
and
parcel
of
his
activities
in
Frobisher
Securities
Ltd,
and
as
a
consequence,
his
stocks
are
to
be
treated
as
inventory
which
arises
from
the
business
of
trading
in
securities.
Considerable
jurisprudence
was
provided
to
the
Court
by
both
counsel,
and
while
certain
portions
of
each
case
can
be
seen
to
bear
some
similarity
to
this
matter,
the
facts
in
each
one
can
also
be
distinguished.
This
issue,
as
is
usually
the
case
in
such
determinations,
must
be
viewed
on
the
basis
of
its
own
facts.
Both
parties
agreed
that
the
appeal
of
Frobisher
for
the
year
1976
technically
was
not
before
the
Court
in
this
matter,
but
that
nothing
hinged
on
that
situation,
and
the
appeal
should
be
heard
on
the
basis
that
it
need
only
arise,
if
necessary,
at
the
stage
of
determination
of
the
specific
issue.
That
specific
issue
was
clearly
whether
the
gains
realized
should
be
taxed
on
income
or
on
capital
account.
In
argument
counsel
for
the
appellants
did
note
that
the
possibility
existed
for
the
Court
to
make
some
intermediate
determination
—
partly
income
and
partly
capital,
but
I
find
that
prospect
not
only
unattractive,
but
virtually
impossible
due
to
the
interrelationship
of
many
or
all
of
the
facets
of
this
matter;
the
complete
direction
of
Frobisher
by
Wolfin;
and
the
overlapping
time
frames
within
which
many
of
the
relevant
events
transpired.
It
is
that
very
complexity
which
forms
the
main
thrust
of
this
judgment,
and
which
in
my
view
permits
of
only
one
result
—
that
the
appellants
cannot
succeed.
I
accept
that
some
of
the
evidence
might
permit
the
perception
of
one
or
another
of
the
items
of
income,
or
the
transactions,
as
on
capital
rather
than
on
income
account,
if
it
were
the
sole
transaction
and
could
be
so
clearly
isolated
from
all
other
relevant
factors
which
impinged
on
it.
But,
as
I
see
it,
the
matter
must
be
decided
from
the
vantage
point
of
a
global
look
at
all
the
facts
and
evidence.
That
viewpoint
is
particularly
reinforced
when
the
thrust
of
the
argument
for
the
appellant
is
that
he
was
trying
to
make
all
the
smaller
resource
companies
into
at
least
an
equivalent
of
“Lure
Camera”,
or
perhaps
“Avino
Mines”,
and
that
at
least
these
two
are
prime
examples
of
the
success
attained
by
Wolfin
in
his
alleged
efforts
to
establish
revenue-producing
businesses
as
contrasted
with
speculative
activity
in
corporate
capital
stock.
I
do
not
agree.
Certainly
the
trail
of
Mr
Wolfin’s
activity
and
enterprise
in
Lure,
and
even
more
so
in
Avino,
can
be
cast
in
a
better
light,
and
his
tendency
toward
stock
speculation
and
taking
advantage
of
the
vicissitudes
of
the
market
is
somewhat
more
difficult
to
perceive
than
in
certain
of
his
other
activities.
Nevertheless,
that
tendency
remains
a
constant.
It
is
the
all-pervasive
background
for
all
the
activities
described
to
the
Court.
His
activity
in
the
resource
companies
needs
no
great
analysis
—
on
its
own
such
activity
could
not
withstand
the
scrutiny
necessary
to
attain
his
income
tax
objective,
and
the
diffusion
which
arises
from
slightly
less
obvious,
but
concurrent
activity
in
Avino,
Lure,
Holofile
and
Lincoln,
does
not
change
that
at
all.
The
proposition
of
the
appellants
can
be
summarized
as
—
the
gains
realized
by
virtue
of
the
trading
in
shares
resulted
from
transactions
and
events
completely
unrelated
to
and
incidental
to
the
alleged
main
purpose
of
the
corporations
—
“to
gain
revenue
from
the
business
operation
of
these
various
companies”.
The
Minister’s
position
is
that
the
main,
virtually
the
sole,
purpose
of
the
corporations
and
the
activities
of
Mr
Wolfin,
was
to
provide
the
environment
within
which,
and
the
mehanism
through
which
he
could
trade
in
the
shares
of
the
companies
to
his
advantage,
and
that
the
prospect
of
gains
arising
out
of
the
business
operations
of
the
various
companies
was
secondary,
if
it
existed
at
all.
Since
I
see
this
matter
as
requiring
the
acceptance
of
one
or
the
other
proposition,
and
since
there
is
no
doubt
at
all
in
my
mind
with
regard
to
the
resource
companies,
the
decision
becomes
obvious.
Mr
Wolfin
was
and
remains
an
intelligent
and
resourceful
entrepreneur,
and
he
directed
his
energies
and
efforts
in
a
manner
designed
to
utilize
to
the
maximum
his
peculiar
and
particular
“insider”
situation
in
all
the
matters
which
have
come
to
the
Court’s
attention.
That
degree
of
dedication
to
his
overall
affairs
one
can
only
salute,
but
he
clearly
fashioned
a
business
which
at
least
for
a
time
was
very
profitable.
It
was
a
business
in
which
he,
more
than
anyone
else,
was
fully
aware
that
the
prospect
of
business
returns
in
the
form
of
dividends
was
almost
negligible,
but
that
the
prospect
of
turining
over
the
stock,
as
the
demand
for
it
rose
or
was
encouraged,
was
a
viable,
immediate
and
attractive
opportunity.
Whether
or
not
the
purchasers
of
the
stock
in
the
various
companies,
including
those
other
investors
who
bought
out
Wolfin’s
interests
(Lure,
Holofile,
etc)
believed
they
were
acquiring
long-term
business
investments
with
great
prospects
for
dividends,
or
whether
they
too
looked
at
the
acquisitions
as
“inventory”
for
immediate
or
later
sale,
is
irrelevant
to
a
determination
of
this
issue
before
the
Court.
Before
concluding,
I
should
like
to
note
that
no
appropriate
basis
was
provided
to
the
Court
from
the
appellant
(Wolfin)
upon
which
a
distinction
between
a
“market
trader,
or
promoter’’,
and
an
“entrepreneur”
could
be
made,
and
in
my
view
none
of
these
terms
necessary
carries
with
it
the
reduction
in
the
impact
of
income
taxes
sought
by
Mr
Wolfin.
Secondly,
while
some
physical
differences
might
be
noted
between
“corporate
shares”
and
“raw
land”
(see
comments
of
counsel
for
the
appellants
above),
I
am
unaware
of
jurisprudence
which
would
identify
and
consecrate
one
or
the
other
as
outside
the
parameters
of
“inventory”
for
purposes
of
trading.
In
the
end
analysis
the
evidence
supports
the
assessments
of
the
Minister,
and
most
certainly
the
very
critical
one,
to
disallow
the
“‘roll
over”
under
section
85
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appeals
are
allowed
in
order
to
delete
the
penalties
imposed,
but
in
all
other
respects
the
appeals
are
dismissed.
Appeals
allowed
in
part.