Roland
St-Onge
(orally:
February
28,
1977):—The
appeal
of
Morris
Feinstein
came
before
me
on
February
25,
1977
at
the
City
of
Montreal,
Québec,
and
it
is
with
respect
to
a
reassessment
wherein
non-resident
tax,
interest
and
penalties
were
levied
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1970
and
1971
taxation
years.
The
appellant,
a
resident
of
Canada,
owned
a
complex
of
nine
rental
buildings
of
28
apartments
each,
known
as
Fleury
Gardens,
located
at
Place
Meilleur
in
Montréal.
In
1970
the
appellant
entered
into
negotiations
with
Mr
Herman
Lipsitz,
a
resident
of
the
United
States,
and
received
$100,000.
At
the
hearing
Mr
Morris
Feinstein
explained
the
following:
Since
1952
the
appellant
has
been
buying
and
selling
buildings,
raw
land,
either
personally
or
through
companies.
He
kept
some
buildings
for
himself
and
he
was
always
in
need
of
money
that
he
was
getting
from
the
banks,
mortgage
companies,
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation,
private
parties,
and
consequently
he
was
in
the
habit
of
giving
his
buildings
as
securities
and
of
borrowing
money
at
a
rate
of
some
14%
interest.
In
the
month
of
October
1970
Mr
Lipsitz,
a
lawyer
from
the
United
States,
came
with
his
wife
to
Montreal
for
a
weekend.
On
this
occasion
the
appellant
tried
to
sell
him
some
land
but
the
latter
was
not
interested.
As
already
mentioned,
the
appellant
was
in
need
of
$100,000.
Mr
Lipsitz
agreed
to
lend
the
money
and
was
even
ready
to
accept
the
appellant’s
personal
guarantee
and
a
mortgage
on
the
said
buildings
which
he
owned
personally.
The
next
day
Mr
Lipsitz
with
his
wife,
who
is
also
well
off,
went
to
see
a
lawyer
and
were
advised
not
to
accept
a
mortgage,
but
instead
to
get
titles
to
the
buildings.
The
explanation
was
that
the
appellant
had
already
granted
two
mortgages
on
the
said
buildings
and
his
equity
therein
was
only
some
$500,000.
On
October
14,
1970
the
appellant
transferred
his
titles
on
five
of
the
nine
buildings
to
Mr
Lipsitz
and
received
$100,000
therefor.
On
November
3,
1971
the
appellant
exercised
his
option
and
purchased
back
the
five
buildings
from
the
non-resident;
later,
he
sold
the
nine
buildings
to
a
Mr
Roy
for
$1,650,000,
who
in
turn
sold
them
for
$3,200,000.
Mr
Feinstein
testified
that
he
never
sold
the
five
buildings
but
obtained
from
Mr
Lipsitz
a
loan
of
$100,000
at
9%
interest;
that
he
never
paid
or
credited
to
him
the
sums
of
$32,499.75
in
1970,
and
$123,729.25
in
1971,
as
alleged
by
the
respondent,
but
only
$9,000
in
each
year;
that
before
selling
the
nine
buildings
to
Mr
Roy,
he
offered
them
to
Mr
Lipsitz
for
$1,650,000,
which
was
$20,000
less
than
the
transfer
for
each
building
but
Mr
Lipsitz
was
not
interested.
He
went
on
to
say
that
he
transferred
$455,000
to
one
Mr
Hurwitz,
a
friend
of
Mr
Lipsitz,
in
order
to
protect
his
own
equity
in
the
buildings.
At
this
juncture
the
Board
has
to
refer
to
the
documentary
evidence.
On
October
14,
1970
Messrs
Morris
Feinstein
and
Herman
Lipsitz
were
parties
to
three
separate
documents,
a
deed
of
sale,
a
lease
and
an
option
to
purchase
the
said
properties.
According
to
the
deed
of
sale,
the
appellant
sold
five
buildings.
for
$1,100,000
and
received
$100,000.
The
purchaser
undertook
to
pay
the
balance
of
$1,000,000
to
the
Crown
Life
Insurance
Company
and
some
$455,000
to
the
vendor
on
October
14,
1973
at
an
interest
rate
of
5%
per
annum.
It
is
further
stipulated,
and
I
read
from
Exhibit
A-1,
tab
1,
at
pages
19
and
7:
p
19:
The
Purchaser
shall
have
the
right
to
prepay
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
said
sum
at
any
time
remaining
unpaid
without
notice,
bonus
or
indemnity.
Notwithstanding
any
other
term,
clause,
condition
or
stipulation
herein
contained,
the
Vendor
renounces
by
these
presents
to
any
right,
recourse
or
action
existing
in
his
favour
to
hold
the
Purchaser
personally
responsible
or
sue
the
Purchaser
personally
for
the
said
sum
of
FOUR
HUNDRED
AND
FIFTY-FIVE
THOUSAND
SIX
HUNDRED
AND
TWENTY-EIGHT
DOLLARS
AND
SIX
CENTS
($455,628.06)
and
interest
thereon,
it
being
acknowledged
between
the
Parties
hereto
that
payment
of
the
said
sum
of
FOUR
HUNDRED
AND
FIFTY-FIVE
THOUSAND
SIX
HUNDRED
AND
TWENTYEIGHT
DOLLARS
AND
SIX
CENTS
($455,628.06)
shall
only
be
guaranteed
by
a
Privilege
and
a
Hypothec
and
the
rights
under
the
Resolutory
Clause
created
in
favour
of
the
Vendor
in
virtue
of
these
presents.
P
7:
The
Vendor
hereby
warrants
that
he
will
pay
the
required
stipulated
payments
of
interest
and
furthermore
warrants
that
he
will
pay
and
discharge
the
capital
sums
due
to
the
said
Creditors
at
maturity
or
earlier,
should
the
said
Creditors
have
the
right
to
demand
earlier
payment,
together
with
any
penalty
assessed
thereon
and
the
Purchaser
will
not
be
called
upon
to
pay
the
said
sums.
The
Purchaser
agrees
to
tolerate
the
said
Hypothec
but
does
not
assume
the
same.
According
to
this
document,
the
appellant
had
no
right
to
obtain
the
sum
of
$455,000
before
the
end
of
three
years.
The
appellant
testified
that
he
never
received
this
sum
and
that
the
5%
interest
was
never
paid.
As
already
mentioned,
a
deed
of
lease
was
executed
the
same
day
by
the
same
parties
for
the
same
buildings
and
for
a
term
of
three
years
which
corresponded
to
the
clause
in
the
deed
of
sale
by
which
the
appellant
renounced
to
sue
Mr
Lipsitz
for
the
sum
of
$455,000,
which
sum
was
payable
only
on
October
14,
1973.
The
lease
was
made
for
an
annual
rental
of
$9,000
payable
by
way
of
12
monthly
instalments
of
$750
each.
It
was
further
provided
that
the
appellant
would
be
in
exclusive
control
and
possession
of
the
premises
and
that
Mr
Lipsitz
would
not,
in
any
event
whatsoever,
be
liable
for
any
injury
or
damages
to
any
property
or
to
any
person
happening
in,
upon
or
about
the
leased
premises.
On
the
same
day
again
Mr
Lipsitz
granted
to
the
appellant
an
option
to
purchase
the
same
buildings
by
paying
the
$100,000
and
assuming
the
balance
then
remaining
payable
in
capital
to
the
Crown
Life
Insurance
Company
and
also
by
assuming
the
payment
of
$455,628.06
due
to
himself.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
the
following
three
points:
(1)
the
substance
and
not
the
form
of
the
transaction
must
prevail
in
civil
law
and
income
tax
matters;
(2)
should
the
form
prevail,
the
deed
of
sale
and
the
option
to
buy
back
constitutes
a
sale
with
right
of
redemption
rather
than
a
sale
with
an
ordinary
option;
(3)
de
facto
there
is
no
amount
of
money
credited
as
rental
except
the
$9,000
a
year
on
account
of
the
non-resident,
all
the
expenses
relative
to
the
five
buildings
were
paid
by
the
appellant.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
referred
the
Board
to
a
voluminous
jurisprudence
on
form
and
substance,
on
sale
with
contre-lettre,
on
sale
with
right
of
redemption
and
on
ordinary
options.
He
has
also
Summarized
the
facts
and
examined
every
pertinent
clause
of
the
three
documents
to
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
true
nature
of
the
three
documents
passed
on
the
same
date
was
a
loan
of
$100,000
at
9%
interest
and.
that
effectively.
the
appellant
paid
the
said
sum
of
$9.000
in
each
taxation
year,
1970
and
1971.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
argued
that
in
1970
the
appellant
wanted
to
borrow
money
but
effectively
he
sold
his
buildings
because
the
first
document
is
a
registered
deed
of
sale
and
the
two
other
documents
are
not;
that
the
said
documents
cannot
be
contradicted
by
verbal
evidence
and
that
they
are
not
ambiguous,
that
nowhere
in
the
documents
mention
is
made
of
a
loan
and
that
this
transaction
cannot
be
regarded
as
a
sale
with
a
right
of
redemption.
According
to
the
terms
of
the
three
documents,
the
deed
of
sale,
the
lease
and
the
option
to
purchase,
which
were
entered
into
on
the
same
day
by
the
same
parties
and
with
the
same
goal
in
sight,
which
had
to
be
executed
at
the
end
of
three
years,
it
appears
that
the
substance
of
the
transaction
was
the
loan
of
$100.000
at
9%
interest,
that
the
appellant
was
still
acting
as
the
owner
of
the
buildings
and
the
non-resident
was
only
a
lender
of
money
with
the
best
security
for
his
loan
of
$100.000.
This
situation
can
be
well
understood
by
the
way
the
appellant
used
to
do
business.
Furthermore,
the
uncontradicted
evidence
of
the
appellant
has
to
be
taken
into
consideration
in
fact
and
in
law
because
the
deeming
and
the
uncommon
clauses
of
the
three
documents
allowed
the
Board
to.
disturb
the
form
of
the
document
in
order
to
find
the
true
nature
of
the
transaction.
Furthermore,
the
respondent
was
very
vague
in
trying
to
establish
under
which
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
appellant
was
reassessed
and
how
the
Minister
arrived
at
this
substantial
rental
income
of
some
$32,000
in
1970
and
some
$123.000
for
1971.
The
Board
cannot
understand
that
a
taxpayer
would
consent
to
an
irrevocable
sale
of
his
buildings
under
such
conditions,
nor
does
it
understand
that
a
taxpayer
would
manage
five
buildings
of
28
apartments
each
and
pay
in
a
span
of
one
year
and
three’-weeks
some
$156.000
in
rental
in
addition
to
$18,000.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
respondent
is
going
much
too
far
by
asking
the
appellant
to
decide
what
was
the
income
of
a
non-resident
when
the
respondent
himself
was
unable
to
establish
his
figures
and
also
that
the
Board
was
put
in
a
position
to
decide
whether
the
transaction
was
an
ordinary
sale,
a
loan.
a
lease,
a
sale
with
a
right
of
redemption
or
what
was
the
effect
of
a
resolutory
clause.
The
Board
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
respondent
would
have
been
more
reasonable
to
accept
as
income
to
a
non-resident
the
amount
of
some
$18,000
that
the
appellant
actually
paid
to
him.
After
all,
the
appellant
is
asked
to
pay
tax.
penalties
and
interest
on
income
of
a
non-resident;
in
such
a
situation,
the
respondent
has
the
onus
to
establish
his
case
with
much
more
precision
and
should
not
rest
on
mere
suspicions.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
accordingly.
Appeal
allowed.