D
E
Taylor:—This
is
an
appeal
heard
in
Calgary,
Alberta,
on
May
25
and
26,
1982,
with
regard
to
an
income
tax
assessment
for
the
year
1975
in
which
the
Minsiter
of
National
Revenue
disagreed
with
the
V-day
value
ascribed
by
the
appellant
to
a
certain
57.98-acre
parcel
of
property.
The
appellant
conducts
his
profession
as
a
chartered
accountant
in
the
Town
of
Brooks,
Alberta.
Prior
to
January
1,
1972,
he
acquired
the
subject
property
for
approximately
$4,500,
and
in;
1975
he
sold
it
for
$391,635.
For
the
year
1975
the
appellant
claimed
a
capital
gain
based
on
the
following
calculations,
which
show
a
V-day
value
of
approximately
$14,350
per
acre:
Proceeds
of
Disposition
57.98
acres
@
$6,714.18/acre
|
|
$391,365
|
Adjusted
Cost
Base
|
$252,213
|
|
Outlays
and
Expenses
|
2,077
|
254,290
|
Capital
Gain
|
|
$137,075
|
In
assessing,
the
respondent
attributed
to
the
property
a
value
of
not
more
than
$58,000,
or
approximately
$1,000
per
acre.
The
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
upon
sections
3,
38,
39
and
40
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended
and
section
26
of
the
Income
Tax
Application
Rules,
1971,
as
amended.
Evidence
The
appellant
gave
testimony
regarding
the
transactions
and
indicated
his
own
view
as
a
local
businessman
with
considerable
knowledge
through
his
clients
in
the
real
estate
field,
that
his
$4,350
valuation
was
sound.
He
simply
rcognized
the
worth
of
the
property,
its
unique
characteristics
and
location
(in
his
view),
and
stated
that
he
would
not
have
sold
it
in
1971
for
less
than
that
amount
per
acre.
The
appellant
provided
a
copy
of
an
appraisal
report
dated
September
11,
1975
by
“Pro
Agencies
Ltd.”
(“Pro”)
of
Brooks,
Alberta,
which
supported
that
opinion.
No
one
representing
Pro
testified
at
the
hearing.
À
Mr
J
L
Zezulka,
of
Klassen,
Eagleson
Associates
Ltd,
presented
his
own
report
dated
March
14,
1979,
which
gave
an
estimate
of
the
value
of
the
subject
property
at
a
total
of
$190,000
(or
some
$3,277
per
acre),
and
gave
testimony
on
behalf
of
the
appellant.
For
the
Minister,
there
were
two
appraisal
reports,
each
one
presented
and
supported
by
its
author
—
one
by
Mr
L
W
Bechthold,
an
officer
with
Revenue
Canada,
which
resulted
in
an
estimate
of
$850
per
acre
(some
$50,000
In
total);
and
one
from
Mr
Allen
Braa
of
Allen
Braa
Appraisals
Ltd,
giving
an
estimate
of
$800
per
acre,
about
$46,500.
In
addition
to
the
appraisal
reports
noted
above,
there
was
filed
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
(with
agreement
of
counsel
for
the
respondent),
an
extremely
helpful
complete
Plan
of
the
Town
of
Brooks
dated
in
October
1968
(revised
to
June
1970),
upon
which
the
subject
property,
and
the
various
parcels
of
property
referenced
in
the
above
appraisal
reports
were
indexed
and
noted.
These
were
“colour”
referenced
on
the
plan
but
I
have
given
each
appraiser
a
number:
(Blue
for
Zezulka
,
Red
for
Bechthold
,
Green
for
Pro
,
and
Black
for
Braa
.
The
following
listing
of
them
may
not
do
justice
to
the
excellent
presentation
but
it
will
serve
this
purpose.
I
have
identified
each
property
with
a
letter,
given
a
brief
description
of
it
and
its
general
relative
position
with
regard
to
the
subject
property,
together
with
the
numerical
identification
indicating
which
appraiser(s)
used
it:
|
1971
|
|
|
Inside
|
Date
|
Date
|
Price
|
Relative
|
|
Identi
|
Town
|
Acreage
|
of
|
per
|
to
|
Appraiser
|
|
Used
by
|
fication
|
Limits
|
Size
|
Sale
|
Acre
|
Subject
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
Appraisers
|
A
|
X
|
10
|
4/73
|
$
600
|
NW
%
mile
|
X
|
|
|
37
|
|
B
|
X
|
160
|
|
NW
1
mile
|
X
|
|
|
9/76
|
3500
|
|
C
|
x
|
18
|
3/73
|
1915
|
NW
%
mile
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
D
|
X
|
5
|
9/73
|
5000
|
W
/2
mile*
|
XX
|
|
3
|
E
|
X
|
2
|
9/73
|
2190
|
W
/
mile
|
X
|
|
F
|
X
|
5
|
11/73
|
6000
|
W
’/
mile
|
XX
|
|
3
|
G
|
|
219
|
4/72
|
426
|
SE
adjacent
|
|
X
|
X
|
2/4
|
H
|
X
|
70
|
11/69
|
571
|
NW
%
mile
|
|
X
|
|
I
|
|
70
|
7/72
|
457
|
E.
adjacent
|
|
X
|
X
|
2/4
|
J
|
X
|
20
|
10/70
|
850
|
NW
%
mile
|
|
X
|
|
K
|
X
|
28
|
11/73
|
750
|
NW
’/
mile
|
|
X
|
|
L
|
X
|
9
|
3/73
|
1235
|
NW
%
mile
|
|
X
|
|
M
|
X
|
29
|
11/72
|
637
|
NW
/2
mile
|
|
X
|
4
|
—
In
or
adjacent
to
built
up
areas
of
Brooks.
Argument
To
avoid
providing
unnecessary
detail
in
this
decision,
the
following
thrust
of
counsel’s
arguments
dealing
with
the
appraisal
reports
and
testimony
brings
out
their
essential
characteristics,
as
they
appear
to
me
to
be
relevant
to
this
issue.
For
the
appellant:
There
was
a
big
demand
for
housing
at
that
particular
time.
I
won’t
go
through
the
evidence
again
but
the
(newspaper)
articles
clearly
indicate
that
the
demand
was
there.
That
is
demonstrated
as
well
by
the
appraisal
of
Pro-Agencies,
as
well
as
the
evidence
of
Mr.
Zezulka,
both
in
chief
and
in
cross-examination.
Indeed
even
Mr
Braa
has
admited
in
cross-examination,
and
indeed
in
examination
in
chief,
that
there
was,
in
his
estimate,
only
a
one-year
supply
of
lots
at
December
31,
1971.
So,
at
most
—
sorry
—
at
best,
we
are
dealing
with
an
immediate
need,
no
lots
available,
and
of
course
there
was
a
one-year
supply
of
lots,
if
we
believe
Mr
Braa’s
testimony.
With
respect
to
the
appraisals
prepared
by
the
witnesses
called
by
my
learned
friend,
and
not
to
be
disparaging,
Mr
Chairman,
but
I
suggest
to
you
that
both
Mr
Bechthold
and
Mr
Braa
admitted
that
the
appraisals
of
the
subject
property
were
very,
very
difficult.
Both
indicated
that
they
would
have
preferred
to
have
other
parcels
to
look
at.
Mr
Braa
indicated
that
he
was
forced
to
go
out
of
town*
to
supplement
the
universe
from
which
he
was
selecting,
on
the
basis
that
there
wasn't
sufficient
evidence
or
sufficient
details
in
the
city.
It
is
submitted
that
in
light
of
that
comment
by
both
of
these
gentlemen,
their
reports
were
very,
very
short.
I
find
that
remarkable,
especially
when
we
are
dealing
with
a
residential
subdivision.
And,
the
highest
and
best
use
of
which
was
alluded
to
by
both
Mr
Zezulka
and
Mr
Braa.
while
both
the
Bechthold
and
the
Braa
appraisals
looked
at
size
and
location,
I
think
it
is
remarkable
that
neither
of
the
two
reports
spent
any
or
little
time
referring
to
matters
such
as
contour,
(or)
the
lay
of
the
land.
Little
time,
if
any,
was
spent
on
what
the
water
table
was
like;
how
high
was
the
water?
Could
a
basement
be
put
into
a
particular
parcel
of
land?
Little
time,
if
any,
was
spent
on
soil
conditions.
Was
it
alkali?
Was
there
a
slough?
Was
a
gray
lake
located
on
a
particular
parcel
of
property?
Almost
without
exception,
there
was
no
reference
in
either
of
the
two
reports
to
the
presence
of
services.
For
some
strange
reason
that
was
not
considered
to
be
relevant
in
the
determination
of
a
comparable
of
a
particular
parcel.
Only
Mr
Zezulka’s
appraisal
dealt
directly
with
that.
Mr
Zezulka
admits
in
his
report
as
well
as
in
his
examination-in-chief
that
the
appraisal
was
difficult
to
do.
Having
regard
to
that,
Mr
Zezulka
employed
certain
techniques
with
which
issue
has
been
taken
here.
He
increased
the
scope
of
generally
accepted
appraisal
techniques
to
include
not
only
looking
at
comparables,
but
also
the
analyis
of
comparables
of
different
communities,
as
well
as
certain
generally
accepted
techniques
relating
to
residential
development
and
linear
regression
approaches,
all
of
which
I’m
unfamiliar
with.
I
believe,
Mr
Chairman,
that
Mr
Braa
at
least
admitted
on
cross-examination
that
the
number
of
comparables
approached
some
very
small
amount
or
zero,
if
that
was
the
case,
if
there
was
nothing
to
look
at,
he
admitted
that
he
would
go
to
other
communities.
He
took
exception
to
Lethbridge,*
as
illustrated,
but
he
indicated
that
perhaps
some
other
centres,
perhaps
smaller
than
Lethbridge,
would
be
appropriate.
He
acknowledged
that
he
would
look
at
other
factors
as
well,
if
circumstances
presented
it
to
him.
Apparently
he
felt
the
circumstances
were
not
present,
notwithstanding
that
he
had
relied
upon,
as
it
turns
out,
some
non-arm’s
length
transactions
with
which
I
will
deal
in
a
few
moments.
Some
issue
has
been
taken
—
my
learned
friend
has
taken
exception
to
Mr
Zezulka’s
report
on
the
basis
that,
to
some
extent,
it
dealt
with
some
hindsight.
Mr
Chairman,
it
is
respectfully
submitted
that
the
use
of
hindsight
to
corroborate
other
independent
evidence
is
perfectly
acceptable
and
admissible
evidence
before
this
Board.
It
is
respectfully
submitted
that
both
appraisals
(Bechthold
&
Braa)
ought
to
be
materially
discounted
and
no
reliance
or
very
little
reliance
ought
to
be
placed
upon
them
by
this
Board,
and
indeed
the
Minister
appears
not
to
have
relied
upon
them
in
making
his
assessment.
With
respect
to
the
issue
of
—
was
the
subject
ripe
for
subdivision
at
December
31,
1971,
I
believe
the
evidence
has
shown
(both
by
Mr
Zezulka
and
Mr
Bevan,
and
indeed
that
of
Mr
Braa)
that,
at
December
31,
1971,
there
was
a
small
suppy
of
developed
lots
available
in
the
town
of
Brooks.
Mr
Zezulka
said
there
was
an
immediate
need,
as
did
Mr
Bevan.
Mr
Braa
indicates
that,
at
most,
there
was
a
one-
year
supply
of
lots
as
at
December
31,
1971.
Only
Mr
Bechthold
is
alone
in
estimating
that
there
was
a
20-year
supply
of
lots.
.
.
.
it
is
respectfully
submitted
that
the
reason
why
the
town
was
involved
in
the
residential
subdivision
at
this
time
was
because
nobody
else
was
at
that
particular
time;
nobody
had
demonstrated
the
wherewithal!.
Local
builders
were
building,
as
Mr
Bevan
has
indicated,
one
or
two
houses
a
year,
and
that
was
all
they
were
capable
of
doing.
And
the
town
had
to
come
to
the
rescue,
the
Municipality
had
to
come
to
the
rescue
of
the
town
and
assist
in
what
was
obviously
a
boom
period
of
time.
And
it
was
forced,
Mr
Chairman,
into
that
position.
I
submit,
Mr
Chairman,
that
towns,
with
their
notoriously
small
shoestring
budgets,
had
better
things
to
do
than
go
into
the
real
estate
development
game.
That
indeed,
if
other
parties
had
the
wherewithal!
and
the
enthusiasm,
that
typically
and
generally
such
development
is
left
to
people
with
more
competence
in
that
regard
and
that
it
was
the
explanation
for
the
rightness
of
this
particular
par-
*(A
comparison
between
Brooks
and
Lethbridge
provided
in
the
report
of
Mr
Zezulka.)
cel
and
the
fact
that
the
town
got
involved
was
simply
as
a
last
resort
as
the
wherewithal!
of
local
builders
simply
wasn’t
there.
It
was
clearly
ripe
for
development
in
1974
when
Mr
Bevan
elected
to
sell
the
particular
parcel
or
negotiated
for
its
sale.
What
we
are
dealing
with
then
is
that
most
of
the
three-year
holding
period
in
respect
of
this
property,
and
if
we
accept
that
the
sales
price
of
some
$6,750
which
was
the
ultimate
sales
price
per
acre,
was
fair
market
value
determination,
at
most
we
are
looking
at
a
discount
of
some
amount
—
I’m
not
sure
if
it
is
15%
or
some
other
amount
—
from
that
number,
back
to
December
31,
1971,
which
was
the
technique
used
by
Mr
Bonner*
in
his
examination,
at
most
we
are
looking
at
a
discount
of
some
percentage
points
from
$6,750
down
to
the
December
31
(1971)
value.
.
.
.
it
is
respectfully
submitted
that
the
appeal
in
this
particular
matter
be
allowed
in
full;
that
the
true
fair
market
value
at
V-Day
was
at
least
the
amount
reported
by
Mr
Bevan
in
his
income
tax
returns
of
$4,350
(per
acre).
For
the
respondent:
.
.
.
the
property
was
worth
no
more
than
that
amount
($1,000
per
acre)
as
of
December
31,
1971.
This
document
(Pro
Agencies)
introduced
and
filed,
the
person
who
wrote
it
was
not
available
for
cross-examination;
there
was
no
presentation
or
any
support
for
any
qualifications
of
the
person
who
wrote
it.
There
was
no
substantive
evidence
to
show
why
this
man
was
properly
qualified
or
even
capable
of
being
present
here
for
cross-examination
on
his
qualifications,
and
to
determine
whether
or
not
he
was
a
person
qualified
to
give
expert,
or
at
the
worst,
opinion
evidence,
even
if
his
qualifications
weren’t
even
too
marvelous,
to
consider
even
what
weight
to
give
to
that
opinion.
And
I
submit
to
you,
with
great
sincerity,
that
no
weight
whatsoever
should
be
given
to
the
Pro
Agencies’
valuation.
It
is
of
no
assistance
to
you,
in
our
submission,
in
this
hearing,
and
you
must
disregard
it.
Similarly,
Mr
Bevan
has
indicated
some
familiarity
with
the
land
in
Brooks
because
he
lived
there
for
30
years.
But
he
is
not
qualified
as
an
expert
to
value
land,
and
all
he
said
was
that
he
felt
his
land
was
worth
$4,500
at
valuation
day.
I
take
issue
with
the
vague
and
critical
demand
for
housing
and
ask
you
to
consider
carefully
the
evidence
given
by
Mr
Bechthold
and
Mr
Braa,
both
of
whom
had
personal
knowledge
of
the
area
at
the
time.
Mr
Bechthold
was
staying
there
during
the
period
in
question
and
also
Mr
Braa
made
several
visits
to
the
area
in
making
appraisals
at
the
time.
They
both
indicate
that
there
was
not
a
severe
or
critical
lack
of
housing.
They
acknowledge
that
there
may
be
a
need,
but
Mr
Braa
said
a
year’s
available
supply
of
lots
and
Mr
Bechthold
in
his
evidence
carried
with
him
and
presented
to
you
the
1972
zoning
book
and
which
he
had
made
reference
to
in
order
to
determine
whether
or
not
there
was
land
available
for
subdivision
in
the
town
at
the
time.
That,
compared
to
the
1974
report
that
Mr
Zezulka
used,
referring
to
land
being
available
for
residential
development,
but
he
wasn't
sure
that
it
applied
to
the
Town
of
Brooks.
The
1972
zoning
book
referred
to
is
a
much
more
reliable
source
than
a
report
done
three
or
four
years
later.
The
further
demand
for
lots
of
course
would
have
been
depressed
by
the
availability
of
lots
for
sale
in
that
East
Brooks
subdivision!
which
is
almost
adjacent
to
the
subject
property.
In
other
words,
proximity
to
the
subject
property
must
have
some
bearing
on
the
desirability
of
lots
that
would
relate
to
the
subject
property.
.
..
Mr
Braa
made
no
reference
to
contours,
water
tables,
soil
conditions
and
presence
of
services.
It
was
brought
out
more
than
once
that
these
were
factors
considered
in
the
use
of
the
development
approach
to
the
appraisal
of
a
piece
of
property,
which
Mr
Braa
stated
more
than
once
he
did
not
feel
was
an
appropriate
method
to
appraise
this
particular
piece
of
property.
He
was
looking
at
a
piece
of
vacant
land
that
was
still
zoned
agricultural,
and
so
he
admitted
that
the
agricultural
zoning
may
or
may
not
have
been
a
hindrance
at
the
time.
He
also
stated
that
the
market
place
actually
takes
care
of
a
lot
of
these
problems
in
that
when
you
see
what
the
developers
will
pay
for
a
piece
of
property,
they
have
taken
in
the
soil,
the
topography
and
construction
problems,
and
that
those
factors
have
been
taken
into
the
market
price
and
reflected
in
that
market
price.
.
.
.
I
ask
you
to
accept
the
approach
of
Mr
Braa,
as
supported
by
Mr
Bechthold,
Mr
Braa
not
being
employed
by
the
Department
of
Revenue
as
a
standard
employee,
but
as
an
independent
appraiser.
He
comes
in
lower
than
the
Departmental
appraiser.
His
approach
is
very
rational,
very
reasonable.
he
had
no
bones
to
pick
when
he
was
out
there
looking
at
the
property,
he
was
familiar
with
the
area,
which
I
believe
is
essential,
and
the
fact
of
his
excellent
qualifications
and
the
straightforward
and
frank
way
that
he
gave
his
evidence,
I
say
give
him
a
very
credible
approach
that
I
ask
you
to
consider
very
strongly.
The
major
diversion,
without
at
this
point
being
too
critical
of
the
appellant’s
one
reasonable
appraisal
(Zezulka’s),
seems
to
be
the
issue
of
the
time
of
developing,
which
would
make
it
so
critical.
I
submit
to
you
that
there
is
not
enough
evidence,
if
any
at
all,
that
would
convince
you
to
find
that
there
was
such
a
great
boom
in
the
economy
that
there
was
an
escalation
of
real
estate
values.
There
is
nothing
there
that
would
indicate
that,
and
particularly
when
there
are
other
properties
for
sale
that
have
been
developed.
There
is
not
the
lack,
the
critical
lack.
The
lack
was
more
in
the
hotels
for
transients
than
it
was
for
permanent
residents.
Findings
It
may
be
over-simplistic
to
indicate
as
I
have
done
that
Mr
Zezulka
did
not
utilize
any
of
the
comparables
in
arriving
at
his
estimate
but,
as
I
read
the
report,
his
estimate
was
based
upon
the
median
of
(1)
a
comparison
with
sales
in
Lethbridge,
Alberta;
(2)
a
mathematical
subdivision
development
appraoch
utilizing
cost
factors
to
be
taken
into
account
in
bringing
raw
land
to
the
sale
level,
and
(3)
a
variation
on
(2)
above,
the
latter
two
related
to
experience
in
other
municipalities.
In
effect,
Zezulka
is
asking
the
Board
to
agree
to
the
calculated
result
arrived
at,
as
opposed
to
the
use
of
standard
a
comparable
sale
approach.
I
commend
the
author
of
the
report
on
its
ingenuity
and
completeness
but
while
any
or
all
of
his
above
(1),
(2)
or
(3)
approaches
could
serve
to
support
or
coordinate
a
comparable
sale
approach,
I
am
not
prepared
to
accept
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case
that
they
can
be
substituted
for
it.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
cited
Robulak
et
al
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2991;
79
DTC
809,
which
appeal
was
allowed
and
in
which
Mr
Zezulka
was
also
an
expert
witness
for
the
appellant.
Counsel
quoted
from
2995
and
812
respectively:
If
the
twenty
per
cent
per
annum
appreciation
rate
referred
to
by
Mr
Zezulka
were
applied
to
the
eighteen
month
period
between
V-Day
and
the
date
of
sale,
a
V-Day
value
of
$4,104
is
indicated.
It
is,
I
think,
permissible
to
test
Mr
Zezulka’s
evidence
in
this
way.
In
C
Ralpy
Lipper
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
79
DTC
5246,
Addy,
J,
stated
at
page
5252:
It
is
obvious
that
the
market
value
of
the
films
in
December
1971
and
the
likelihood
and
extent
of
any
future
success
from
a
financial
standpoint
must
be
judged
on
the
evidence
available
to
prospective
investors
at
that
time
and
not
determined
ex
post
facto
in
the
light
of
subsequent
events.
However,
where,
as
in
the
case
at
Bar,
large
and
totally
irreconcilable
differences
occur
in
the
opinion
evidence
of
various
experts,
subsequent
events
can
be
used
to
test
the
accuracy
and,
at
times
also,
the
bona
fides
of
the
opinions
expressed.
It
is
not
my
reading
of
Robulak
(supra)
that
the
Board
takes
the
position
that
“hindsight”
or
any
related
calculated
method
such
as
that
proposed
by
Mr
Zezulka
is
universally
acceptable,
when
the
use
of
such
“hindsight
assumes
as
a
given,
the
very
critical
issue
in
the
appeal
—
that
there
was
indeed
such
a
pressing
demand
in
Brooks
in
1971
for
serviced
or
readily
serviceable
land,
and
that
a
developer
would
have
knowingly
paid
about
$3,277
per
acre
for
the
subject
property
when
very
similar
land
was
readily
available
at
prices
very
much
lower
than
that
figure.
Accordingly,
as
I
see
it,
the
very
basis
of
the
Zezulka
report
must
be
rejected.
Turning
to
the
only
other
evidence
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
which
is
before
the
Board
(the
Pro
report,
as
presented
and
supported
by
Mr
Bevan),
I
do
not
adopt
the
position
of
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
the
testimony
of
Mr
Bevan
and
his
belief
in
the
Pro
report
should
be
rejected
out
of
hand
simply
because
Mr
Bevan
is
not
a
qualified
appraiser
(See
Fambau
Limited
—
[1982]
CTC
2228;
82
DTC
1027),
but
I
do
accept
that
on
its
own
merits,
the
Pro
report
must
be
rejected.
Its
reliance
on
two,
and
only
two,
very
small
urban
properties
as
compared
to
a
large
rural
property
discredits
it.
Properties
“D”
and
“E”
were
not
considered
sufficiently
reliable
by
Mr
Zezulka
for
him
to
reach
any
definite
conclusion
based
on
them
alone,
and
he
was
right,
and
they
were
not
even
listed
by
Mr
Bechthold
or
Mr
Braa
—
and
again
correctly
(see
above
chart).
It
should
be
noted
that
both
Mr
Bevan
(on
account
of
Pro
Agencies)
and
Mr
Zezulka
gave
certain
reasons
for
not
listing
as
comparables
properties
“G”
and
“I”
on
the
chart
above,
but
in
my
view
these
reasons
come
down
to
only
one
point
—
that
the
two
properties
were,
in
1971,
outside
the
municipal
boundaries
of
Brooks.
In
my
view,
that
is
a
minor
consideration
when
contrasted
with
the
fact
that
they
were
of
similar
size
(or
larger),
zoned
and
used
for
the
same
general
purpose,
immediately
adjacent
to
the
subject
property,
and
save
for
physical
differences
which
would
be
relatively
unimportant
to
a
serious
developer,
the
properties
were
of
the
same
topography
and
nature.
Certain
municipal
services
extended
at
least
part
way
along
Parcel
“G”
on
the
boundary
common
with
the
subject
property,
and
it
would
appear
to
me
to
have
reached
at
least
to
one
corner
of
Parcel
“I”.
Leaving
these
comparables
(“G”
and
“I”)
out
of
the
reports
of
Pro
and
Zezulka
indicates
that
in
the
authors’
minds,
no
importance
whatsoever
should
be
attached
to
the
selling
price
of
the
properties
—
$426
and
$457
per
acre
by
them,
at
a
time
only
months
removed
from
V-Day
—
a
view
which
I
do
not
espouse.
They
are
by
any
reasonable
standard
the
most
attractive
two
comparables
listed
on
the
above
chart.
Turning
to
the
proposition
of
counsel
for
the
appellant'—
that
“the
true
market
value
at
V-Day
was
at
least
the
amount
reported
by
Mr
Bevan
in
his
tax
return
of
$4,350
(per
acre)”
—
I
make
reference
to
a
recent
decision
of
the
Board,
Nan
M
Goodwin
v
MNR,
[1982]
CTC
2675;
82
DTC
1679,
in
which
the
following
comments
can
be
found
at
2677
and
1680
respectively:
Obviously
one
notes
with
interest
the
wide
discrepancy
between
the
Minister’s
valuation,
at
least
for
the
assessment
purposes,
of
$600
per
acre
and
the
$6,000
per
acre
originally
ascribed
to
the
property
by
the
appellant
and
maintained
throughout
the
proceedings,
including
today.
However,
as
the
Board
noted
for
counsel,
I
have
not
been
asked
to
act
as
“arbitrator”
in
the
dispute,
and
arrive
in
some
manner
at
a
“fairer”
valuation.
The
Board’s
primary
role,
as
I
see
it,
ina
valuation
case,
is
to
decide
whether
the
evidence
presented
by
the
appellant
supports
a
different
valuation
than
that
used
by
the
Minister
in
assessing.
The
mechanism
chose
by
the
appellant
in
this
appeal,
and
in
most
such
appeals,
is
to
present
evidence
in
support
of
a
different
valuation
—
in
this
case
$6,000
per
acre.
Unless
there
is
good
"prima
facie"
evidence
to
support
that
alternative
valuation,
I
am
not
of
the
opinion
that
the
Board
is
required
to
consider
at
all
whether
the
valuation
used
by
the
Minister
is
correct
or
incorrect.
Again
it
is
noted
that
the
only
support
that
has
been
presented
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
for
the
$6,000
figure
contended
in
this
appeal
is
the
sale
of
adjacent
property
previously
noted,
made
in
1971.
While
it
might
have
some
possible
relevance
to
the
valuation
of
the
subject
property,
it
does
not
and
cannot
establish
the
value
for
that
subject
property
on
its
own,
even
though
it
is
adjacent
to
the
subject
property
and
owned
by
the
same
owner.
That
is
the
only
evidence
upon
which
the
Board
is
asked
to
reach
a
conclusion.
While
the
factual
situation
in
the
Goodwin
appeal
was
directly
opposite
to
the
instant
case
(the
appellant
therein
proposed
that
the
values
adopted
by
the
Board
should
be
related,
and
only
related,
to
the
sale
of
adjacent
property),
the
principle
involved
regarding
the
Board’s
role
remains
the
same,
as
I
see
it.
I
doubt
that
the
Board
needs
to
go
beyond
this
point
in
order
to
dismiss
the
instant
appeal
—
there
is
no
acceptable
independent
evidence
at
all
that
the
value
of
the
subject
property
should
be
$4,350
per
acre,
and
the
only
appraisal
report
presented
(even
by
utilizing
an
unacceptable
method
of
calculation)
arrives
at
a
figure
of
$3,277
per
acre.
As
I
see
it,
that
should
have
been
the
highest
level
to
which
this
appellant
could
have
hoped
to
aspire
at
a
hearing
of
this
nature.
The
proposition
put
forward
by
the
appellant
—
that
inherent
in
the
fact
that
the
subject
property
was
inside
the
municipal
boundaries
in
1971
made
it
much
more
valuable
(something
in
the
order
of
8
to
10
times
more
valuable)
than
immediately
adjacent
properties
(“G”
and
“I”
on
the
chart)
—
is
not
one
in
which
I
find
any
merit.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
and
testimony
that
the
Town
of
Brooks
was
the
major
player,
in
fact
the
only
player,
in
land
development
or
proposed
land
development
in
the
area.
There
was
no
indication
in
that
same
evidence
of
great
difficulty
encountered
by
the
municipality
in
its
eventual
purchase
in
1972,
and
I
would
presume
subsequent
inclusion
in
the
municipal
boundaries,
of
parcel
“G”
on
the
chart
earlier
provided.
I
am
quite
prepared
to
assume
that
discussions
and
negotiations
relevant
to
that
property
acquisition
(“G”)
had
at
least
commenced
before
V-Day
and,
contiguous
as
it
was
to
already
developed
municipal
property,
it
had
the
potential
to
fill
the
apparent
needs
of
the
Town
for
several
years
—
which
in
fact
it
did.
There
is
no
evidence
that
the
municipal
acquisition
of
parcel
“G”,
or
negotiations
leading
up
to
that
acquisition,
had
the
effect
of
markedly
increasing
the
real
value
of
the
subject
property,
although
such
acquisition
may
well
have
made
even
more
firm
in
the
appellant’s
mind
that
he
should
hold
the
property
until
he
was
able
to
obtain
the
price
desired
—
which
he
in
fact
did.
Just
on
another
point
—
the
fact
that
the
subject
property
was
separated
in
1971
from
any
subdivided
or
developed
municipal
land
by
a
40-acre
poultry
farm
seems
to
have
been
virtually
ignored
at
the
hearing.
That
fact
may
well
have
been
a
serious
impediment
to
the
early
utilization
of
the
subject
property
for
development
purposes,
even
if
the
“critical
demand”
for
housing
asserted
by
the
appellant
had
existed
in
1971
—
an
assumption
for
which
the
Board
has
not
found
support.
To
comment
on
the
two
appraisals
presented
by
the
Minister,
with
regard
to
qualifications
of
the
individual
I
would
again
refer
to
Fambau
(supra)
and
summarize
by
saying
that
the
testimony
and
documentation
before
the
Board
would
confirm
the
capacity
of
both
Bechthold
and
Braa
to
present
expert
evidence
which
should
be
given
considerable,
not
minimal,
weight
by
the
Board.
Nothing
has
been
presented
which
would
lend
credence
to
the
appellant’s
claim
that
the
subject
property
at
V-Day
had
a
value
of
$4,350
on
the
open
market.
I
fully
accept
that
Mr
Bevan
may
believe
he
would
not
have
accepted
less
than
that
for
it,
and
events
proved
him
wise
to
hold
it
—
But
that
is
no
substitute
for
arriving
at
a
proper
value
to
be
assumed
between
a
willing
buyer
and
a
willing
seller.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.