Guy
Tremblay:—This
case
was
heard
on
July
15,
1982,
at
the
City
of
St
John’s,
Newfoundland.
1.
The
Point
at
Issue
The
point
at
issue
is
whether
the
appellant
company
is
correct
in
deducting
the
amounts
of
$34,647
and
$72,417
in
the
computation
of
its
income
for
the
1977
and
1978
taxation
years
respectively.
The
expenses
were
disbursed
for
electric
scoreboards
and
illuminated
signs.
The
appellant
considers
these
expenses
as
revenue
expenditures
of
an
income
nature.
The
respondent
contends
that
electric
scoreboards
and
illuminated
signs
are
tangible
capital
assets
subject
to
capital
cost
allowance
as
described
in
Class
8
of
Regulation
1100(1
)(k)(i)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
2.
The
Burden
of
Proof
2.01
The
burden
of
proof
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent’s
assessments
are
incorrect.
This
burden
of
proof
results
particularly
from
several
judicial
decisions,
including
the
judgment
delivered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
2.02
In
the
same
judgment,
the
Court
decided
that
the
assumed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
based
his
assessments
or
reassessments
are
also
deemed
to
be
correct.
In
the
present
case,
the
assumed
facts
are
described
in
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
as
follows:
4.
In
so
reassessing
the
Appellant’s
income
tax
liability
for
its
1977
and
1978
taxation
years,
the
Respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
The
Appellant
is
a
Canadian
resident
corporation
controlled
by
residents
of
Canada;
(b)
The
Appellant
is
a
franchised
manufacturer
and
distributor
of
soft
drinks
in
Newfoundland;
(c)
In
1977
and
1978
the
Appellant
installed
(in
public
sports
areas)
electric
scoreboards
which
promoted
its
product
pursuant
to
10
year
written
agreements
whereby
the
ownership
of
the
electric
scoreboards
remained
with
the
appellant
and
that
the
Appellant
was
given
an
option
to
renew;
(d)
In
1977
and
1978
the
Appellant
installed
on
the
premises
of
various
soft
drink
retailers
illuminated
signs
which
promoted
its
product
pursuant
to
oral
agreements
whereby
the
ownership
of
the
illuminated
signs
remained
with
the
Appellant;
(e)
The
electric
scoreboards
and
illuminated
signs
which
were
installed
by
the
Appellant
in
1977
and
1978
and
which
remain
the
Appellant’s
property
are
separate
and
distinct
assets
and
provide
a
benefit
to
the
Appellant
in
more
than
one
taxation
year;
(f)
Electric
scoreboards
and
illuminated
signs
are
depreciable
property
as
described
in
Class
8(i).
2.03
Admission
At
the
beginning
of
the
trial,
the
counsel
for
the
appellant
informed
the
Board
that
the
assumptions
of
fact
described
above
are
all
admitted
except,
in
fact,
the
one
described
in
subparagraph
(f),
which
is
an
assumption
of
opinion.
3.
The
Facts
3.01
In
his
testimony
Mr
Blair
Patrick,
Assistant
Branch
Manager
for
the
appellant,
St
John’s
Division,
Newfoundland,
testified
that:
(a)
he
has
been
working
for
the
appellant
for
seven
years:
4
years
as
market
manager,
1
/2
years
as
financial
officer
and
internal
auditor
and
1
/2
years
as
Assistant
Manager
(SN
p
6-7);
(b)
the
appellant
has
three
branches
in
Canada;
(c)
as
Assistant
Manager,
he
has
direct
control
over
production,
sales
and
the
accounting
of
the
Newfoundland
Branch
(SN
p
6);
(d)
there
are
about
330,000
people
in
the
area
(SN
p
6);
(e)
the
appellant
sells
the
following
commercial
brands
of
soft
drinks:
Pepsi-Cola,
Orange
Crush,
7-Up,
Canada
Dry,
Countrytime
Lemonade
(SN
p
6);
(f)
the
appellant
is
the
major
soft
drink
company
within
Newfoundland,
however,
it
is
very
competitive.
Advertising
is
an
important
factor
in
the
current
operations
of
the
appellant.
It
is
directly
related
to
the
growth
of
its
sales.
It
spent
in
the
vicinity
of
7
to
8%
of
the
gross
income
on
advertising
(SN
p
8);
(g)
the
national
franchise
companies
also
contribute
to
the
advertising
expenses:
TV,
radio,
menu
boards,
scoreboards,
illuminated
signs,
etc;
(h)
the
scoreboards
are
put
up
in
arenas,
in
stadiums
and
in
schools;
(i)
the
appellant
has
an
arrangement
so
that
its
products
will
be
the
only
ones
to
be
sold
within
the
schools
and
stadiums
for
ten
years;
(j)
the
main
competitor
is
Wometco
Enterprises
Limited,
which
bottles
Coca-Cola,
Sprite,
Schweppes
Ginger
Ale
and
Fanta
flavours.
Pepsi
has
about
70%
of
the
cola
market;
(k)
the
appellant
has
the
major
share
of
illuminated
signs
in
Newfoundland.
This
came
from
its
leading
position
within
the
communities
as
the
illuminated
signs
are
based
on
request
from
the
storekeepers;
(l)
the
appellant
(as
well
as
the
other
agents)
retains
the
ownership
of
the
illuminated
signs.
It
prevents
the
storekeeper
from
taking
them
down.
3.02
In
cross-examination,
Mr
Patrick
testified
that:
(a)
he
recognized
signs
of
Pepsi-Cola
(one
reading
Cornwall
Superette,
one
reading
Tucker’s
Superette
and
one
reading
Capitol
Drugs
Limited)
on
three
photographs
filed
as
Exhibit
R-1.
They
are
the
kind
of
signs
for
which
the
expenses
under
appeal
are
claimed;
(b)
the
appellant
considered
that
kind
of
advertising
as
being
the
same
as
television
advertising.
The
latter,
in
enduring
more
than
30
or
60
seconds,
remains
in
the
mind.
However,
it
is
not
physically
tangible;
(c)
he
recognized
a
document,
filed
as
Exhibit
R-2,
as
an
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
the
Town
Council
of
Port
aux
Basques.
It
is
dated
April
15,
1978
(SN
p
21).
It
is
the
scoreboard
agreement
for
a
onesided
score
clock
for
the
arena.
It
is
the
normal
type
of
agreement
that
the
appellant
entered
into
with
various
arenas,
stadiums
and
schools;
(d)
paragraph
6
of
the
said
agreement
is
the
exclusivity
clause.
Paragraph
8
provides
that
the
agreement
will
remain
in
force
for
the
period
of
10
years,
at
the
end
of
which
time,
option
for
another
10
years
is
also
provided;
(e)
the
signs
in
the
photographs
(Exhibit
R-1)
provide
advertising
value
for
more
than
one
year;
(f)
there
is
no
exclusivity
with
an
illuminated
sign.
Cornwall
Superette
for
instance
sells
Coca-Cola.
3.03
In
his
examination-in-chief,
Mr
James
Winsor,
Registered
Industrial
Accountant
(RIA)
testified
that:
(a)
he
was
a
member
of
the
accounting
firm
Touche
Ross
&
Co,
Chartered
Accountants
(CA);
(b)
Touche
Ross
&
Co
have
been
external
auditors
for
the
appellant
for
7
years;
(c)
the
scoreboard
or
clock-board
is
a
form
of
advertising
which
is
used
in
a
number
of
arenas
throughout
Canada;
(d)
the
bottlers
consider
all
advertising
expenditures
as
an
expense
in
the
year
in
which
they
occur.
3.04
In
cross-examination,
Mr
Winsor
said
although
he
had
not
seen
the
records
of
any
bottlers,
other
than
the
appellant,
he
had,
however,
heard
from
people
who
attended
the
meetings
of
the
national
organization
of
all
independent
bottlers,
that
the
consistent
approach
is
that
all
these
advertising
expenditures
are
considered
as
expenses
of
the
year.
3.05
In
examination-in-chief,
Mr
Connors,
Chartered
Accountant,
testified
that:
(a)
he
is
a
tax
partner
in
the
accounting
firm
of
Touche
Ross
&
Co;
(b)
he
agreed
with
the
evidence
given
by
Mr
Patrick
and
Mr
Winsor
that
the
expenses
must
be
treated
as
revenue
expenditures:
I
think
Mr
Chairman
that
the
whole
question
of
capital
versus
income
expenditures,
Mr
O’Dea
quantifies
it,
is
rather
a
difficult
one,
in
any
circumstances,
and
I
think
as
a
tax
partner;
and
looking
at
whether
or
not
it
was
a
deductible
item,
rather
than
simply
look
at
the
nature
of
the
asset
as
to
whether
it
is
tangible
or
intangible.
I
intend,
in
those
circumstances,
to
look
at
the
purpose
of
the
expenditure.
.
.for
what
purpose
was
the
expenditure
made,
and
I
think
in
analyzing
this
situation,
I
would
first
of
all
have
said
to
myself..
.is
that
a
productive
asset?
Does
it
produce
any
soft
drinks
which
the
Company
sells
and
obviously
the
question
[sic]
is
no.
And
then
I
would
say,
does
it
deliver
any
of
the
product
to
the
customers?
And
obviously
the
ques..
.the
answer
to
that
question
is
no.
And
then
I
would
say
to
myself,
what
does
this
particular
piece,
score..
.whatever,
signs
whatever..
.what
does
it
do?
And
to
my
mind
it
advertises,
and
it
promotes
the
product
to
the
public.
Does
it
have
enduring
benefits?
I
would
look
at
that
situation,
and
I
would
say
no,
because
tomorrow
Pepsi-Cola
may
suddenly
be
determined
to
be
a
cancer
Causing
agent,
and
no
one
would
buy
the
product
any
more.
So,
the
enduring
benefit..
.it
it
exists
at
all,
can
only,
in
my
mind,
exist
as
a
promotional
device,
keep
the
product
before
the
people,
increase
the
sales,
and
unless
those
sales
are
generated
on
an
ongoing
basis,
they
these
assets,
that
are
so
called
have
no
value
whatsoever.
That
would
be
my
reason
for
deducting
it
in
the
year
in
which
the
expenditure
was
made..
.it
produces
income
and
I
would
use
that
as
justification
for
the
deduction.
(SN
p
37-38)
(c)
he
has
no
knowledge
of
how
such
items
would
be
treated
in
other
districts.
3.06
In
cross-examination,
Mr
Connors
said
that:
(a)
he
disagreed
that
a
sign
in
an
arena
with
the
exclusivity
clause
in
the
agreement
formed
some
kind
of
asset
to
the
benefit
of
the
appellant
.
.the
whole
purpose
of
the
sign
is
advertising,
and
the
purpose
of
advertising
is
to
increase
sales.
And
if
sales
have
increased
because
of
advertising
then
the
advertising
is
a
deduction”
(SN
p
40);
(b)
it
is
virtually
impossible
to
match
depreciation
of
the
advertising
signs,
over
the
period
of
ownership,
to
the
income
in
the
particular
year
“unless
you
can
guarantee
me
what
the
revenue
for
the
next
year
for
Pepsi-Cola
is
going
to
be”
(SN
p
41);
(c)
whatever
process
is
used:
TV,
radio,
scoreboard,
clock
board,
illuminated
signs,
etc,
the
expense
becomes
deductible
in
the
year
it
is
done
as
an
advertising
expense;
(d)
.
no
one
has
ever
suggested
to
me
that
advertising
is
not
a
deductible
item
in
the
year
in
which
the
disbursement
is
made,
and
having
that
rule,
or
whatever,
available
to
me,
then
I
would
suggest
that
all
advertising
is
deductible
in
the
year
in
which
it
is
made.”
4.
Law—Cases
at
Law—Analysis
4.01
Law
The
main
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63
as
amended,
involved
in
the
present
case
are
sections
3,
4,
9,
13(21
)(b),
18(1)(a)
and
(b),
20(1)(a)
and
248,
and
Regulation
1100,
Class
8(1)
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations,
CRC
1978,
c
945.
They
shall
be
quoted
in
the
analysis,
if
necessary.
4.02
Cases
at
Law
The
parties
referred
the
Board
to
the
following
cases
at
law:
1.
Algoma
Central
Railway
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
130;
67
DTC
5091:
[1968]
CTC
161;
68
DTC
5096:
2.
BP
Australia,
Ltd
v
Commissioner
of
Taxation,
[1965]
3
All
ER
209;
3.
Canada
Starch
Company
Limited
v
MNR,
[1968]
CTC
466;
68
DTC
5320;
4.
MNR
v
MP
Drilling
Ltd,
[1976]
CTC
58;
76
DTC
6028;
5.
Associated
Investors
of
Canada
Limited
v
MNR,
[1967]
CTC
138;
67
DTC
5096;
6.
The
Queen
v
F
H
Jones
Tobacco
Sales
Co
Ltd,
[1973]
CTC
784;
73
DTC
5577;
7.
Harry
H
Wilson
v
MNR,
[1980]
CTC
2431;
80
DTC
1379.
4.03
Analysis
4.03.1
The
appellant’s
contention
is
based
fundamentally
on
the
decisions
in
Algoma
Central
Railway,
(supra),
and
on
the
cases
to
which
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
and
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
refer
in
giving
the
decisions
in
that
case.
The
facts
in
that
case
are
summarized
as
follows:
The
appellant
company
operated
a
railway
and
steamships
in
an
area
of
Ontario
that
was,
to
a
substantial
extent,
unpopulated.
In
1960
the
company
arranged
with
a
firm
of
mining
geologists
for
a
survey
over
a
five-year
period
of
the
mineral
possibilities
of
the
area
at
an
average
cost
of
$100,000
per
year.
This
arrangement
was
made
with
the
intention
of
making
information
arising
from
the
surveys
available
to
interested
members
arising
from
the
surveys
available
to
interested
members
of
the
public
in
the
hope
and
expectation
that
it
would
lead
to
development
of
the
area
that
would
produce
traffic
for
the
company’s
transportation
system.
The
company
sought
to
deduct
as
current
expenses
the
amounts
paid
in
1960,
1961
and
1962
to
the
firm
of
geologists.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deductions,
ruling
that
the
amounts
paid
were
capital
outlays.
The
company
appealed.
There
was
another
matter
in
dispute,
but
the
parties
agreed
that
it
should
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration.
Mr
Justice
Jackett
of
the
Exchequer
Court
explained
the
“usual
test”
as
follows:
The
“usual
test”
applied
to
determine
whether
such
a
payment
is
one
made
on
account
of
capital
is,
“was
it
made
‘with
a
view
of
bringing
into
existence
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
appellant’s
business’”?
See
BC
Electric
Ry
Co
Ltd
v
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
(1958)
SCR
133,
58
DTC
1022,
per
Abbott
J
at
pages
137-8,
where
he
applied
the
principle
that
was
enunciated
by
Viscount
Cave
in
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables,
Ltd
v
Atherton,
supra,
and
that
had
been
applied
by
Kerwin
J,
as
he
then
was,
in
Montreal
Light,
Heat
&
Power
Consolidated
v
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
(1942)
SCR
89
at
105,
2
DTC
535
at
537.
The
question
is
therefore
whether
what
the
appellant
in
this
mind
had
in
“view”
when
it
made
the
expenditures
in
dispute
was
“an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit”
of
its
business
within
the
meaning
of
the
test
as
it
has
been
developed
by
the
decisions.
After
summarizing
and
studying
six
cases
(1.
British
Columbia
Electric
Railway
Co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1958]
SCR
133;
2.
British
Insulated
and
Helsby
Cables
v
Atherton,
[1926]
AC
205;
3.
Sun
Newspapers
Limited
v
Federal
Commission
of
Taxation,
[1938]
61
CLR
337;
4.
Ounsworth
&
Vickers,
Limited,
[1915]
3
KB
267;
5.
Regent
Oil
Co
Ltd
v
Strick,
[1965]
3
WLR
636;
and
6.
Van
Den
Berghs,
Ltd
v
Clark,
(1935)
AC
431)
in
which
the
test
had
been
applied,
Mr
Justice
Jackett
arrived
at
this
first
conclusion
that
the
advantage
which
was
held
to
be
an
enduring
benefit
to
the
taxpayer’s
business
was
the
thing
contracted
for
or
otherwise
anticipated
by
the
taxpayer
as
a
direct
result
of
the
expenditures.
What
Algoma
contracted
for
and
immediately
received
for
the
expenditures
in
dispute
was
information
produced
by
geological
surveys
that
could
be
placed
in
the
hands
of
interested
members
of
the
public.
That
was
the
direct
result
of
the
expenditure.
As
the
expenditure
was
“part
of
a
programme
for
increasing
the
number
of
person
who
would
offer
traffic
to
the
appellant’s
transportation
systems”,
therefore
it
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income.
According
to
the
Court,
this
kind
of
advertising
is
not
different
from
a
“mammoth”
advertising
campaign
to
create
an
increase
in
the
volume
of
business:
According
to
my
understanding
of
commercial
principles,
however,
advertising
expenses
paid
out
while
a
business
is
operating,
and
directed
to
attracting
customers
to
a
business,
are
current
expenses.
They
are
not,
in
the
sense
of
Viscount
Cave’s
rule,
made
with
a
view
to
“bringing
into
existence”
an
“advantage”
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
business.
If
this
be
true
of
advertising
expenses,
in
my
view,
it
is
equally
true
of
other
expenses,
incurred
while
the
business
is
running
with
a
view
to
increasing
the
volume
of
that
business
—
so
long
as
such
expenses
are
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
in
such
a
way
that
their
deduction
is
not
prohibited
by
section
12(1)(a).
I
can
see
no
difference
in
principle
between
the
two
cases.
This
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
was
confirmed
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
Mr
Justice
Fauteux
said:
Parliament
did
not
define
the
expressions
“outlay..
.of
capital”
or
“payment
on
account
of
capital”.
There
being
no
statutory
criterion,
the
application
or
nonapplication
of
these
expressions
to
any
particular
expenditures
must
depend
upon
the
facts
of
the
particular
case.
We
do
not
think
that
any
single
test
applies
in
making
that
determination
and
agree
with
the
view
expressed,
in
a
recent
decision
of
the
Privy
council,
BP
Australia
Ltd
v
Commissioner
of
Taxation
of
the
Commonwealth
of
Australia,
(1966)
AC
224,
by
Lord
Pearce.
In
referring
to
the
matter
of
determining
whether
an
expenditure
was
of
a
capital
or
an
income
nature,
he
said,
at
p
264:
The
solution
to
the
problem
is
not
to
be
found
by
any
rigid
test
or
description.
It
has
to
be
derived
from
many
aspects
of
the
whole
set
of
circumstances
some
of
which
may
point
in
one
direction,
some
in
the
other.
One
consideration
may
point
so
clearly
that
it
dominates
other
and
vaguer
indications
in
the
contrary
direction.
It
is
a
commonsense
appreciation
of
all
the
guiding
features
which
must
provide
the
ultimate
answer.
In
1968,
the
Exchequer
Court,
in
the
Canada
Starch
Company
Limited,
(supra)
case,
decided
that
an
amount
of
$15,000
paid
out
to
a
competitor
in
order
to
induce
it
to
drop
its
opposition
to
the
registration
of
the
starch
company’s
trademark
was
a
current
expense.
This
decision
was
based
on
the
Algoma
case.
It
is
also
on
the
basis
of
that
same
case,
and
on
the
cases
referred
to
therein,
that
the
Federal
Court
in
1973
decided
in
the
F
H
Jones
Tobacco
Sales
Co
Ltd,
(supra)
case
that
an
amount
of
$115,369
paid
to
a
creditor
of
a
manufacturer-distributor
of
a
certain
cigarette
which
Jones
Tobacco’s
controlling
shareholder
had
endorsed
was
a
business
loss.
The
endorsement
was
made
in
return
for
the
privilege
of
having
Jones
Tobacco
thenceforth
supply
tobacco
to
the
manufacturer,
albeit
“at
the
best
possible
price
having
regard
to
market
conditions”.
In
this
judgment,
Mr
Justice
Noël
said:
For
some
years,
however,
our
courts
have
been
inclined
to
accept
certain
expenses
or
losses
as
deductible
considering
not
so
much
the
legal
aspect
of
the
transaction,
but
rather
the
practical
and
commercial
aspects.
4.03.2
The
board
thinks
that
in
that
field
of
advertising,
a
distinction
must
be
made
between
an
advertising
campaign
(newspaper,
radio,
TV)
which
lasts
a
few
months,
and
physical
signs
which
last
many
years.
Both
expenses
are
made
to
produce
income,
but
it
is
obvious
that
the
direct
and
immediate
result
of
an
advertising
campaign
is
to
increase
the
commercial
sales,
at
least
during
the
period
of
the
said
campaign,
even
though
it
is
hoped
that
it
shall
last
more
than
the
period
of
the
campaign.
For
a
physical
sign,
however,
it
seems
that
the
direct
effect
shall
last
throughout
the
existence
of
the
said
sign.
4.03.3
The
judgment
quoted
above
and
the
other
judgments
which
are
referred
to
above
did
not
make
the
distinction
between
an
advertising
campaign
and
the
physical
signs
because
this
point
was
not
in
dispute.
Even
if
the
fundamental
point
was
the
same,
is
the
expense
a
current
expense,
or
made
with
a
view
of
bringing
into
existence
an
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
appellant’s
business?
As
Lord
Pearce
said
in
the
BP
Australia,
Limited
(Supra)
case
quoted
above
the
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
decision
confirming
the
Exchequer
Court
in
Algoma
Central
Railway
(supra):
“The
solution
to
the
problem
is
not
to
be
found
by
any
rigid
test.
.
..
It
is
a
commonsense
appreciation
of
all
the
guiding
features
which
must
provide
the
ultimate
answer.”
As
advertising
physical
signs
are
commonly
used
in
business,
and
as
the
legislator
provides
in
the
regulations
for
capital
cost
allowance
of
35%
for
electrical
advertising
signs
and
outdoor
advertising
poster
panels
when
used
to
earn
rental
income
(Class
II),
therefore,
since
in
the
instant
case,
the
illuminated
signs
are
made
to
last
many
years
and
the
electric
scoreboards
are
under
a
10-year
contract
with
another
10-year
option,
it
is
my
commonsense
appreciation
to
conclude
that
the
advertising
physical
signs
must
be
considered
as
bringing
into
existence
an
advantage
for
an
enduring
benefit.
This
conclusion
is
correct,
despite
the
fact
that
the
Class
II
does
not
apply
in
the
instant
case,
because
the
appellant’s
signs
are
not
used
to
earn
rental
income.
The
legislator
in
enacting
a
specific
provision
allowing
depreciation
on
physical
signs
confirms
commonly
commercial
fact
that
a
physical
sign
has
an
advantage
of
an
enduring
benefit.
The
class
applied
by
the
respondent
is
Class
8
where
it
is
said
that
20%
of
capital
cost
allowance
must
apply
for
property
not
included
in
classes
2,
7
and
9
where
a
tangible
asset
is
not
included
in
another
class
in
the
schedules
except
in
eleven
exceptions.
The
exceptions
do
not
include
advertising
signs
so
they
fall
in
this
class.
4.03.4
According
to
the
tax
specialist
witness
(para
3.05(b))
the
physical
signs
cannot
be
considered
to
have
enduring
benefit
because
“tomorrow
Pepsi-Cola
may
suddenly
be
determined
to
be
a
cancer
causing
agent,
and
no
one
would
buy
the
product
any
more”.
I
would
say
first
that
it
is
difficult
to
base
a
principle
on
such
hypothesis.
Secondly,
even
if
this
hypothesis
would
occur,
the
appellant
could
claim
the
terminal
loss.
4.03.5
The
reassessments
issued
by
the
respondent
must
be
maintained.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
dismissed
in
accordance
with
the
above
reasons
for
judgment.
Appeal
dismissed.