The
Assistant
Chairman:—For
each
of
the
1972,
1973
and
1974
taxation
years,
Paul
White
(the
appellant)
filed
the
requisite
individual
income
tax
return
as
required
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63.
Insofar
as
it
is
relevant
to
this
appeal,
he
did
not
show,
if
called
for,
in
what
province
he
worked;
whether
or
not
he
was
self
employed;
where
the
business
was
located;
or,
except
for
the
1974
income
tax
return,
the
type
of
work
or
occupation
or
the
name
of
present
employer,
if
he
were
employed.
For
the
1974
taxation
year
he
stated
as
to
occupation
that
he
was
a
manager
and
as
to
his
present
employer
the
name
“Palmak
Ltd.”
(hereinafter
called
“Palmak”)
was
shown.
For
each
of
the
said
years,
again
insofar
as
it
is
relevant,
his
only
income
shown
was
his
salary
as
an
employee.
Palmak
also
filed
the
appropriate
income
tax
return
with
all
required
financial
statements
for
each
of
the
said
years.
It
should
be
noted
that
Palmak’s
fiscal
year
coincided
with
the
calendar
year.
As
I
read
each
income
tax
return
and
financial
statement,
I
noticed
that
there
was
no
statement
as
to
what
the
business
activity
of
Palmak
was
and
I
noted
each
was
signed,
apparently
in
the
name
of
P
F
White,
although
the
typewritten
name
was
Paul
White
or
Paul
F
White.
It
would
appear
that
all
six
above-mentioned
income
tax
returns
were
accepted
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
as
filed
until
April
1976,
when
all
six
returns
were
reassessed
by
him.
By
Notices
of
Reassessment
dated
April
12,
1976,
insofar
as
the
appellant
was
concerned,
and
April
15,
1976,
with
respect
to
Palmak,
each
was
reassessed
for
the
said
years.
In
substance
(detail
will
follow)
the
reassessments
had
the
effect
of
saying
that
the
appellant
was
not
an
employee
of
Palmak
and
that
Palmak
did
not
carry
on
a
substantial
business
in
each
of
the
said
years.
The
appellant’s
income
was
substantially
increased
and
Palmak’s
substantially
reduced.
Strangely
both
objected
and,
following
confirmation
by
the
Minister,
both
appealed
to
the
Tax
Review
Board.
I
was
advised
that
both
appeals
were
to
be
heard
on
the
same
evidence.
In
substance,
as
the
appeals
were
presented
to
me,
it
was
submitted
that
if
the
appellant
were
successful
I
was
to
allow
his
appeal
and
order
the
respondent
to
assess
him
as
filed.
This
is
usual
if
an
appeal
pursuant
to
section
171
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
were
allowed.
However,
with
respect
to
Palmak,
the
presentation
to
me
was
that
if
I
were
to
allow
its
appeal,
I
should
tell
the
respondent
to
reassess
it
to
increase,
not
decrease,
its
tax
for
each
year.
It
appears
to
me
that
an
appeal
to
this
Board
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
by
a
person
who,
in
his
or
its
opinion,
has
been
oppressively
assessed
to
tax
and
that
appellant
has
asked
this
Board
for
relief,
not
to
increase
but
to
reduce
the
tax
it
was
assessed.
Were
I
to
allow
the
appeal
of
the
appellant,
counsel
for
Palmak—who
also
acted
for
the
appellant—and
counsel
for
the
Minister
agreed
I
could
give
such
an
order
as
would
be
needed
to
achieve
Palmak’s
goal.
Should
it
be
that
the
appellant
were
successful
in
his
appeal
(in
whole
or
in
part),
both
counsel
agreed
that
Palmak
would
also
be
equally
successful.
As
to
the
problem
raised
by
counsels’
request
re
Palmak,
this
mater
shall
be
resolved
further
in
these
Reasons
for
Judgment
or,
if
a
further
statement
is
required
then
separate
Reasons
for
Judgment
shall
be
given
in
that
appeal.
The
appellant
is
a
qualified
optometrist.
He
was
graduated
from
the
optometric
school
connected
with
the
University
of
Toronto
in
1964.
Following
graduation,
he
served
his
internship
or
apprenticeship
in
Halifax,
Nova
Scotia,
and
was
duly
licensed
to
carry
on
his
profession
in
that
province.
In
the
late
summer
or
early
fall
of
1964
he
was
offered
“employment”
by
“Tuma
Optical”
in
the
City
of
Corner
Brook
in
the
Province
of
Newfoundland.
He
accepted
the
same
and,
after
a
period
of
apprenticeship
in
that
province,
was
duly
licenced
in
or
about
November
1964.
For
information
purposes
only,
the
appellant,
whom
I
presume
was
born
and
raised
in
the
Province
of
Nova
Scotia,
liked
not
only
Corner
Brook
but
also
the
Province
of
Newfoundland
and
decided
to
live
there
and
has
continued
to
do
so.
The
appellant
remained
in
the
employment
which
he
had
accepted
at
Corner
Brook
in
the
fall
of
1964
until
the
spring
of
1965
when
he
left
and,
with
a
Max
Musseau
who
was
an
optician
with
Tuma
Optical,
went
into
a
business
in
partnership,
further
particulars
of
which
will
be
mentioned
later.
It
should
be
understood
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
and
was
practising
his
profession
while
an
employee
and
he
really
was
not
certain,
from
a
legal
point
of
view,
who
his
“employer”
was.
I
conclude
he
was
interviewed
and
hired
by
an
individual
in
the
fall
of
1964
and
he
“thought”
he
was
working
for
“Tuma
Optical”.
He
presumed
he
was
working
for
Elias
Tuma
but
later
learned
that
“Tuma
Optical”
was
the
name
under
which
S
E
Tuma
Ltd
carried
on
business.
His
evidence
was
that
all
bills
(I
presume
to
patients
and
not
to
the
business)
were
in
the
name
of
“Tuma
Optical”.
He
did
not
know
initially
that
the
business
was
owned
by
S
E
Tuma
Ltd.
He
was
employed
at
a
stated
salary
per
year
and,
as
far
as
he
knew,
there
was
never
an
optometric
licence
in
the
name
of
his
“employer”.
So
that
further
evidence
may
be
fully
appreciated
without
in
any
way
determining
what
becomes
the
issue
in
this
appeal,
the
appellant
is
still,
as
of
the
date
of
hearing
of
his
appeal
(July
1978),
practising
his
profession
in
the
Province
of
Newfoundland.
From
1967
until
1975,
he
was
a
member
of
the
Newfoundland
Optometrical
Board
and,
for
three
of
those
years
(1970-72),
was
the
president
of
it.
That
Board
was
created
pursuant
to
what
is
now
the
Optometry
Act,
RSN
1970,
c
281
as
amended.
The
appellant
stated
(and
his
counsel
did
not
refer
to
any
Act)
that
there
was
no
provincial
Act
licencing,
regulating
or
governing
“opticians”
other
than
the
said
Optometry
Act,
if
it
did.
He
stated
that
opticians
were
usually
trained
under
an
optometrist,
and
of
course
optometrists
were
qualified
to
grind
their
own
lenses
(and
I
presume
fill
their
own
prescriptions
completely).
When
the
appellant
and
Musseau
went
into
partnership
it
was
under
the
name
of
W
&
M
Company
and
business
was
carried
on
pursuant
to
a
written
partnership
agreement.
The
business
of
the
partnership
was
to
be
.
.
the
insurance
and
optical
business.”
Musseau
was
an
optician
and,
in
addition,
had
a
small
insurance
business.
It
was
thought
that
the
partnership
would
go
into
real
estate
investment
in
due
course
as
well
as
the
hearing
aid
business.
Palmak
was
incorporated
in
1967
and,
shortly
thereafter,
the
assets
of
the
partnership
as
well
as
the
business
were
sold
to
it.
In
the
opinion
of
the
appellant,
he
was
an
optometrist
in
the
employ
of
Palmak
and
Musseau
was
an
optician
in
the
employ
of
the
company.
The
company
hired
a
person
to
run
the
insurance
business.
The
shares
of
Palmak
were
owned
equally
by
the
appellant
and
his
wife
and
Musseau
and
his
wife.
The
supplies
for
the
optical
business
were
on
hand
at
Palmak
or,
if
the
prescription
were
a
complex
one,
they
would
use
the
services
of
a
laboratory.
Not
too
long
after
the
incorporation
of
Palmak,
Musseau
sold
his
shares
in
it
to
the
appellant
and
Palmak
sold
to
Musseau
the
insurance
business
and
some
laboratory
equipment
so
he
could
set
himself
up
in
business
as
an
optician.
Following
the
purchase
of
Musseau’s
shares,
a
girl
who
was
trained
as
an
optician
was
hired
to
replace
him.
In
the
years
in
question,
Palmak
had
a
bank
acount;
it
was
the
lessee
of
the
business
premises
involved
in
this
appeal,
for
which
it
paid
the
rent;
and
it
had
a
staff
of
three
(including
the
appellant),
all
of
whom
were
paid
salary
by
Palmak.
However
invoices
or
billings
to
patients
“were
sent
out
in
my
name,
Paul
F
White,
Optometrist.”
Payments
were
received
from
clients
(the
payee
was
not
identified)
and
they
were
deposited
to
Palmak’s
bank
account.
In
some
instances,
because
of
patients’
insurance
policies,
after
they
had
paid
their
account
they
were
entitled
to
a
refund.
The
payer
of
the
cheque
for
the
refund
was
Palmak.
The
business’s
main
supplier
in
the
years
in
question
was
Eastern
Optical
Laboratories
Ltd
of
Dartmouth,
Nova
Scotia,
and
all
invoices
with
respect
to
services
rendered
were
in
the
name
of
Paul
F
White.
However
they
were
all
paid
by
Palmak.
A
motor
vehicle
was
used
in
the
business
and
it
was
owned
by
Palmak.
However
accounts
for
services
to
that
vehicle
or
gas
for
it
could
be
in
either
name.
Some
credit
cards
which
the
appellant
carried
were
in
his
own
name
while
others
bore
the
name
of
both
the
appellant
and
Palmak.
Palmak
carried
insurance
(the
type
was
not
mentioned)
and
was
the
lessee
of
a
post
office
box.
All
types
of
mail
went
into
that
box
including
that
addressed
to
the
appellant,
Palmak
and
the
insurance
agency,
and
including
material
addressed
to
Palmak
from
the
Government
of
Canada
as
well
as
the
provincial
government.
As
mentioned,
the
appellant
is
a
licenced
optometrist
and,
at
least
in
two
of
the
years
under
appeal,
the
licence
fee
was
paid
by
a
cheque
drawn
on
Palmak.
The
appellant
explained
that
if
a
person
wished
an
examination,
a
receptionist
would
take
the
patient’s
case
history
and
he
would
then
examine
the
patient
and,
if
needed,
would
write
a
prescription.
That
person
would
take
that
prescription
to
the
optician
of
his
choice
to
have
it
filled.
If
the
filling
of
that
prescription
were
to
be
done
by
Palmak,
then
one
of
the
opticians
would
take
over
and
deal
with
frame
selection,
measurements,
etc.
The
appellant
would
be
involved
in
the
optical
aspect
only
if
the
prescription
were
a
complex
one.
With
respect
to
the
years
when
he
was
a
member
of
the
Optometrical
Board,
not
only
had
there
never
been
a
prosecution
or
a
warning
to
a
corporation
for
carrying
on
the
business
of
an
optometrist,
but
also
there
was
never
any
discussion
concerning
the
propriety
or
impropriety
of
a
corporation
carrying
on
the
business
of
an
optometrist.
The
optometrist
examines
the
eyes
and,
if
needed,
writes
the
appropriate
prescription.
An
optician
is
a
person
who
is
trained
by
an
optometrist
to
supply
the
appropriate
lenses
and
eyeglass
mountings,
which
includes
the
appropriate
measurements.
When
Musseau
was
with
Palmak
he
did
grinding
of
some
lenses.
However
after
he
left,
all
the
grinding
was
done
off
the
premises
by
some
third
party.
The
optician
would,
in
effect,
complete
the
optometrist’s
prescription
by
indicating
on
that
prescription
the
type
of
frames
desired,
the
measurement
for
the
eyes
and
other
physical
information
and
send
thai,
in
the
case
of
the
appellant,
usually
to
Eastern
Optical
Laboratories
Ltd.
In
due
course
the
completed
product
would
be
returned
to
the
appellant
where
it
would
be
checked
and
examined
before
being
given
to
the
patient.
Apparently
in
Newfoundland
an
optician
is
a
person
who
is
trained
by
an
optometrist
to
do
certain
work
and
it
is
the
optometrist
under
whom
he
works
who
decides
whether
or
not
the
optician
performs
his
duties
satisfactorily.
After
Musseau
sold
his
shares
to
the
appellant
and
left
the
employ
of
Palmak,
the
business
was
operated
in
a
slightly
different
manner
than
previously
in
that
it
took
a
little
longer
to
get
the
finished
ophthalmic
product
since
the
service
had
to
be
provided
by
an
independent
laboratory.
There
was
no
sign
around
the
premises
indicating
“Palmak
Ltd”,
while
there
was
a
sign
saying
“Paul
F
White,
Optometrist”.
Likewise
Palmak
was
not
listed
in
the
telephone
book.
For
the
years
in
question
there
were
two
forms
of
billings
to
patients
and
both
were
in
the
name
of
Dr
Paul
F
White,
Optometrist.
The
second
of
the
two
forms
of
billings
had
a
code
to
indicate
the
services
rendered
for
which
a
charge
was
being
made.
The
ledger
card
which
was
used
in
conjunction
with
this
second
form
also
was
in
the
appellant’s
name.
Some
of
those
charges
on
the
form
related
to
what
were
called
“optician
services”.
The
receipt
for
the
payment
of
an
account
was
in
the
name
of
the
appellant
only.
Invoices
received
from
Eastern
Optical
Laboratories
Ltd
as
stated,
as
well
as
from
Dominion
Contact
Lens
Laboratories
Ltd,
Metropolitan
Optical
Ltd
and
Imperial
Optical
Company
Ltd
were
all
addressed
to
the
appellant
with
no
reference
to
Palmak
although
the
appellant
said
it
was
Palmak
who
paid
those
accounts.
To
the
appellant’s
knowledge,
Palmak
was
not
licensed
under
the
Optometry
Act
nor
was
any
company
ever
licenced
under
that
Act.
The
receptionist
answered
the
telephone
in
the
name
of
P
F
White,
Optometrist,
and
made
the
appointments
in
that
name.
As
previously
mentioned,
the
respondent
accepted
the
figures
on
the
profit
and
loss
statement
of
Palmak
as
being
correct,
but
then
applied
them
to
produce
a
profit
and
loss
statement
for
the
appellant
on
the
premise
that
he
carried
on
the
business
allegedly
carried
on
by
Palmak
while
at
the
same
time
he
recognized
that
Palmak
was
providing
a
service
to
the
appellant.
The
value
of
those
services
was,
as
Stated
in
a
letter
to
the
appellant
from
the
respondent
dated
January
7,
1976,
“arbitrarily
set”.
This
amount
was
considered
to
be
the
revenue
of
Palmak.
This
amount
was
reduced
by
the
expenses
attributable
to
Palmak.
As
stated
in
the
same
letter:
“We
have
arbitrarily
allocated
the
expenses
as
being
an
actual
expense
of
the
company
or
a
reimbursement
of
an
amount
paid
on
behalf
of
Dr
White”.
This
produced
a
taxable
income
to
the
company
of
$2,089,
$2,640
and
$3,046,
rather
than
the
reported
amounts
of
$17,259,
$16,232
and
$34,556
for
the
1972,
1973
and
1974
taxation
years
respectively.
The
total
income
of
the
appellant
was
increased
in
each
of
those
years
by
the
amounts
of
$15,320,
$18,142
and
$31,660
respectively
because
of
the
respondent’s
adjustments.
The
appellant’s
submission
was
on
a
three
point
basis:
(a)
the
income
tax
returns
of
the
appellant
and
Palmak
were
correct
as
filed;
(b)
if
they
were
incorrect,
then
the
appellant
should
only
be
assessed
on
the
basis
that
his
income
was
from
the
“optometrist
business”
and
all
other
income
was
that
of
Palmak;
and
(c)
if
neither
position
(a)
nor
(b)
above
were
correct
and,
in
principle,
the
approach
of
the
Minister
was
correct,
then
the
arbitrary
computation
of
Palmak’s
income
is
too
low
and
the
appellant’s
too
high.
The
business
was
carried
on
in
Corner
Brook,
Newfoundland,
by
either
the
appellant
or
Palmak.
When
all
the
evidence
and
the
appropriate
Act
of
the
Province
of
Newfoundland
is
considered,
as
I
view
it,
there
was
only
one
business
carried
on;
namely,
the
combined
business
of
optometrist/opti-
cian.
There
was
no
delineation
between
the
two
as
Palmak
reported
the
income
from
that
business
as
its
own,
and
the
respondent,
on
assessing,
did
not
delineate
and
assessed
all
the
income
to
the
appellant.
The
appellant,
in
taking
the
position
that
Palmak
carried
on
that
business,
made
reference
to
the
decision
in
MNR
v
James
A
Cameron,
[1971]
CTC
97;
[1972]
CTC
380;
71
DTC
5069;
72
DTC
6325,
at
the
Exchequer
Court
and
Supreme
Court
level
respectively.
He
submitted
that,
like
the
corporation
in
that
case,
Palmak
was
a
duly
and
properly
incorporated
company
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
province
in
which
it
carried
on
business,
and
that
really
no
one
other
than
the
persons
immediately
involved
(that
is,
the
shareholders
and
persons—another
company
and
its
shareholders—
with
whom
it
dealt,
together
with
the
lawyers
and
accountants)
knew
of
the
existence
of
the
corporation
and
in
the
Cameron
case
it
was
held
that
that
corporation
and
not
Cameron
and
his
associates
was
carrying
on
the
business.
There
is
no
doubt
that
Palmak
was
a
legally
incorporated
company.
However,
unlike
the
corporation
in
the
Cameron
case,
the
persons
who
dealt
with
the
optometrist
business
had
no
idea
they
were
dealing
with
Palmak,
if
they
were.
As
far
as
the
business
was
concerned,
the
customers
of
the
business—the
patients
of
the
optometrist
business—had
no
knowledge
of
Palmak
or
its
existence:
its
name
appeared
nowhere,
it
was
not
listed
in
the
telephone
book,
and
the
invoice
and
the
receipts
for
payment
for
all
services
were
in
the
name
of
the
appellant.
A
few
individuals
did
receive
a
cheque
of
which
Palmak
was
the
payer,
the
cheque
being
a
refund
because
of
insurance
proceeds.
I
presume
they
knew
the
money
was
coming
to
them
from
their
association
with
the
appellant
and,
since
they
received
the
cheque
through
or
from
him,
they
were
satisfied
the
cheque
was
valid.
There
was
no
indication
to
those
persons
that
the
cheque
was
a
refund
to
them
for
services
rendered
to
them
by
Palmak.
A
truck
was
registered
in
the
name
of
Palmak,
the
lease
was
in
Palmak’s
name,
purchases
at
a
garage
were
sometimes
in
the
appellant’s
name
and
sometimes
in
Palmak’s.
On
at
least
two
occasions
the
appellant’s
annual
fee
to
the
Newfoundland
Optometrical
Board
was
paid
by
cheque
drawn
on
Palmak.
The
licence
was
in
the
appellant’s
name.
It
would
seem
to
me,
as
I
mentioned
with
respect
to
the
cheques
issued
to
patients,
that
the
Board
also
must
have
known
or
have
been
told
that
the
cheque
was
for
the
appellant’s
fee.
As
I
read
the
Optometry
Act,
it
would
appear
that
the
person
referred
to
therein
is
a
natural
person,
not
a
corporation.
I
cannot
envisage
a
corporation
holding
‘‘a
bona
fide
diploma
from
any
generally
recognized
College
of
Optometry”
(section
5)
or
that
a
corporation
(the
applicant)
“is
of
the
full
age
of
twenty-one
years,
is
of
good
moral
character
.
.
In
addition
to
the
above,
not
only
was
there
no
evidence
that
the
patients
of
the
business
knew
they
were
dealing
with
Palmak,
but
also
all
evidence
(invoice
receipts)
indicated
they
were
dealing
with
the
appellant
alone
not
only
for
the
optometrical
services,
but
also
for
the
optical
services.
In
addition,
the
suppliers
billed
the
appellant
for
goods
sold,
not
Palmak.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
referred
to
the
cases
of
Laverne
Clifford
Kin-
dree
v
MNR,
[1965]
1
Ex
CR
305;
[1964]
CTC
386;
64
DTC
5248;
and
Dr
H
Hoyle
Campbell
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1974]
2
FC
658;
[1974]
CTC
783;
74
DTC
6598,
as
supporting
his
position—and
I
agree
that
they
do.
I
am
of
the
opinion,
on
the
facts
of
the
instant
appeal
alone,
that
the
appellant,
and
not
Palmak,
carried
on
the
optometrical
and
optician
business.
This
leaves
unresolved
the
third
branch
of
the
appellant’s
submission;
namely,
that
the
respondent
has
attributed
too
little
revenue
to
Palmak
for
services
it
rendered
to
the
appellant.
It
must
be
borne
in
mind
that
at
no
time
in
the
relevant
period
was
there
a
contract
that
Palmak
would
provide
any
services
to
the
appellant.
Insofar
as
the
appellant
and
Palmak
were
concerned,
Palmak
did
everything—which
view
was
not
accepted
by
the
respondent.
In
summary
fashion,
the
respondent
arbitrarily
set
the
revenue
of
Palmak
for
services
rendered
to
the
appellant
at
$28,000,
$28,000
and
$36,500
in
1972,1973
and
1974
respectively.
Against
those
sums
the
respondent
stated
that
Palmak
had
expenses
of
$25,911,
$25,360
and
$33,454
respectively
for
the
same
years,
yielding
a
net
income
of
about
8%,
10%
and
9%.
Evidence
was
given
by
the
chartered
accountant
for
both
the
appelant
and
Palmak.
He
stated
that
he
was
familiar
with
management
or
service
companies
which
are
set
up
to
provide
services
for
professional
people.
In
his
experience,
those
companies
pay
costs
and
expenses
and
add
15%
of
that
amount
as
its
fee.
Another
approach
would
be
10%
of
the
income
of
the
professional
person
over
and
above
the
expenses.
As
mentioned,
the
respondent
allowed
Palmak
only
8%,
10%
and
9%
in
addition
to
the
expenses
it
incurred
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
not
the
15%
which
the
witness
stated
was
usual.
On
cross-examination
the
witness
admitted
that
he
had
no
experience
with
management
companies
for
opticians,
optometrists
or
ophthalmologists
but
knew
of
a
dentist
who
used
the
10%
approach.
In
argument
on
this
phase,
counsel
referred
to
the
case
of
Jack
K
Holmes
et
al
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1974]
FC
353;
[1974]
CTC
156;
74
DTC
6143,
a
decision
of
Mr
Justice
Catianach
in
which
the
learned
judge
held
that
a
management
fee
of
15%
over
expenses
paid
was
reasonable.
The
management
company
had
shareholders
who
were
the
wives
of
a
group
of
lawyers
who
had,
by
an
agreement,
arranged
to
have
the
management
company
provide
the
law
firm
with
managerial
services
for
expenses
paid
plus
15%.
However,
in
that
case
there
was
an
agreement
as
to
the
arrangement
and
the
company
involved
filed
its
income
tax
return
based
on
a
financial
statement
reflecting
what
the
company
received
and
what
the
company
paid.
The
Minister
did
not
attack
the
percentage
involved,
but
rather,
disallowed
the
management
fee
as
an
expense
to
the
law
firm
and
increased
the
income
of
each
member
of
the
firm
proportionately.
In
the
instant
case
there
was
no
agreement
between
Palmak
and
the
appellant
and
no
amount
was
set
out
as
a
management
fee.
Of
course
the
appellant
and
Palmak
were
of
the
view
that
Palmak
was
carrying
on
the
business
and
so
there
was
no
need
of
any
agreement
between
the
two.
As
I
view
it,
having
found
that
the
appellant
was
carrying
on
the
business
of
an
optometrist/optician,
Palmak
is
a
service
or
management
company.
There
was
evidence
that
15%
of
expenses
was
the
going
rate
for
management
fees,
but
I
find
that
evidence
insufficient
to
disturb
the
onus
which
is
on
the
appellant.
The
chartered
accountant
who
gave
that
evidence
clearly
stated
he
had
no
experience
with
management
companies
with
respect
to
opticians,
optometrists
and
ophthalmologists.
Such
being
the
case,
I
cannot
say
the
respondent
was
incorrect
in
determining
Palmak’s
income
as
he
did.
The
result
is,
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
is
dismissed.
Since
I
am
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal,
there
is
no
problem
with
respect
to
Palmak’s
appeal
and
it
is
also
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.