The
Chairman:—These
are
the
appeals
of
Vaughn
Theodore
Neilson,
Michael
Melton
and
Edwin
R
Benbow
from
income
tax
assessments
in
respect
of
the
1969,
1970
and
1971
taxation
years.
By
agreement
the
appeals
of
these
three
appellants
were
heard
and
decided
on
common
evidence.
The
issue
in
these
appeals
(arising
from
reassessments
dated
October
31,
1973
in
respect
of
Messrs
Melton
and
Benbow
and
dated
January
23,
1974
in
respect
of
Mr
Neilson)
is
common
to
each
of
the
appellants,
and
concerns
gains
made
by
each
of
them
as
a
result
of
the
sale
of
certain
lands.
Counse!
for
the
appellants
claims
that
the
gain
so
realized
was
on
capital
account
whereas
counsel
for
the
respondent
contends
that
the
gains
were
income
from
a
business.
The
facts
which
have
to
be
interpreted
in
order
to
determine
the
issue
can
be
summarized
as
follows:
Mr
Michael
Melton,
one
of
the
appellants
herein,
has
been
involved
in
real
estate
in
Calgary,’
Alberta,
since
1948
and
was,
in
the
pertinent
years,
sales
manager
of
Melton
Real
Estate
Ltd,
a
company
beneficially
owned
by
his
brother.
On
taking
a
short
cut
to
work,
Michael
Melton
noticed
that
a
packing
plant
on
property
owned
by
Swift
Canadian
Co
Ltd
was
being
demolished.
Melton
considered
the
property
to
be
well
located
and
serviced
with
sewer
lines
and
waiter,
and
he
brought
the
property
to
the
attention
of
Melton
Real
Estate
Lid.
That
company
not
being
interested
in
acquiring
the
property,
Michael
Melton
decided
to
acquire
the
property
himself
in
conjunction
with
other
partners.
In
order
to
do
so,
he
had
to
obtain
the
authority
of
his
employer,
Melton
Real
Estate
Ltd,
before
acquiring
the
property
because
of
that
company’s
policy
of
not
permitting
its
employees
to
trade
in
property
on
their
own
account.
Michael
Melton
alleges
that
the
intention
he
had
in
mind
in
attempting
to
acquire
the
land
was
to
develop
it
into
a
revenue-
producing
property
and,
for
that
reason,
he
was
allowed
by
Melton
Real
Estate
Ltd
to
negotiate
for
the
land
on
his
own
account.
Michael
Melton,
in
his
capacity
of
real
estate
salesman,
had
recently
been
instrumental
in
selling
a
hotel
for
Mr
V
T
Neilson,
one
of
the
other
appellants
in
this
matter.
Mr
Neilson
at
the
time
was
not
employed
and,
having
capital
on
hand,
was
approached
by
Michael
Melton
with
regard
to
the
possible
acquisition
of
the
Swift
Canadian
Co
Lid
property
for
development
purposes,
a
project
which
would,
at
the
same
time,
also
provide
Mr
Neilson
with
an
occupation
as
manager
of
the
development.
Mr
Neilson
then
approached
his
brother-in-law,
Mr
Duane
Evans,
who
had
considerable
means
and
who
was
interested
in
participating
strictly
on
an
investment
basis.
Mr
Neilson
went
to
the
head
office
of
Swift
&
Co
in
Chicago
to
make
an
offer
on
this
piece
of
property
in
Calgary,
and
as
a
result
of
this
meeting,
succeeded
in
purchasing
the
property,
by
Memorandum
of
Agreement
dated
March
28,
1969
for
an
amount
of
$100,000
payable
on
the
following
terms:
a
$5,000
deposit
on
signing;
$30,000
in
approximately
one
month;
$32,500
within
2
Z?
years;
and
$32,500
within
5
years.
Neilson
also
assumed
the
obligation
of
demolishing
the
packing
plant
to
the
City
of
Calgary’s
satisfaction,
which
apparently
was
an
important
consideration
in
so
far
as
Swift
Canadian
Co
Ltd
was
concerned
(Exhibits
A-1;
A-2;
A-3;
A-4).
It
was
explained
by
Mr
Neilson
and
by
Mr
Melton
that
a
5-year
term
was
sought
by
them
because
the
trailer
park
which
was
then
contemplated
as
a
development
for
the
property
could
not
be
financed
through
the
usual
lending
institutions
and
the
available
cash
they
had
could,
in
their
opinion,
be
better
used
for
developing
the
trailer
park
than
for
paying
off
the
balance
of
the
purchase
price.
The
Swift
property
consisted
of
two
parts,
Parcel
“A”
and
Parcel
“B”,
(see
Ex
A-1),
totalling
some
47
acres,
and
Swift
would
only
consider
the
sale
of
the
property
as
a
whole.
The
land
on
which
the
packing
plant
had
been
constructed
(Parcel
“A”)
was
separated
from
the
main
parcel
of
land
by
Nose
Creek
and,
as
I
understand
it,
was
some
30
to
40
feet
lower
than
the
rest
of
the
property
(Parcel
“B”)
on
the
other
side
of
the
Creek
(Ex
A-1).
The
land
on
which
the
packing
plant
had
been
erected
had
been
found
to
consist
of
unstable
soil,
and
Swift
Canadian
Co
Ltd
had
had
to
find
a
way
to
curcumvent
that
difficulty
before
constructing
the
packing
plant.
This
portion
of
the
land
was
therefore
useless
for
purposes
of
developing
a
trailer
park
and
was
considered
of
no
value
to
the
purchasers,
who
had
no
plans
for
it
but
had
been
forced
to
acquire
it
as
part
of
the
package
deal
for
the
whole
of
the
Swift
property.
Mr
William
Gallelli,
a
client
of
Melton
Real
Estate
Ltd,
was
seeking
a
property
zoned
for
heavy
industry
on
which
to
build
an
asphalt
plant,
and
Mr
Michael
Melton
suggested
that
he
purchase
the
old
Swift
packaging
plant
site,
which
was
zoned
M-3
for
heavy
industry.
Mr
Gallelli,
on
April
25,
1969
purchased
that
part
of
the
property
from
Mr
Neilson
for
$88,000
(Ex
A-6).
The
asphalt
plant,
however,
was
not
proceeded
with
on
that
site,
as
the
City
of
Calgary
refused
to
allow
the
construction
of
an
asphalt-batching
plant
in
the
area
and
eventually
the
City
of
Calgary
purchased
the
site
from
Mr
Gallelli.
At
the
time
of
purchase
of
the
subject
land,
Mr
Neilson,
Mr
Melton
and
others
had
heard
that
studies
were
being
made
by
the
City
of
Calgary
with
regard
to
selecting
a
route
for
the
possible
construction
of
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway,
which,
according
to
the
City’s
thinking
at
that
time,
was
to
pass
on
the
westerly
side
of
Nose
Creek
Valley.
Mr
Melton
testified
that,
the
subject
property
being
on
the
East
side
of
the
valley
and
some
1,000
feet
away,
it
would
not
be
affected
by
the
proposed
freeway
because,
although
it
would
have
had
a
good
exposure
to
the
freeway,
it
could
have
no
access
to
it.
As
I
understand
it,
the
persons
who
held
interests
in
the
land
at
that
time
were:
Mr
Duane
Evans,
14;
Mr
Michael
Melton,
14
and
Mr
Theodore
Neilson,
14.
However,
Mr
Melton’s
13
interest
was
again
divided
into
three
equal
parts:
one
held
by
Mr
Melton;
one
by
Michael
Management
Ltd,
a
company
originally
owned
by
Melton
but
transferred
to
a
Mr
McKinnon
in
settlement
of
an
account
in
1966;
and
one
by
Mr
Edwin
R
Benbow,
who
was
an
old
business
friend
of
Melton's
and
who,
although
he
was
never
called
upon
to
put
up
any
money,
had
agreed
to
back
Melton
financially
for
Melton’s
share
of
the
purchase
of
the
land
and
its
subsequent
development.
For
purposes
of
developing
the
land,
a
company
named
DMT
Holdings
Ltd
was
incorporated
in
the
spring
of
1969,
in
which
Duane
Evans,
Michael
Melton
and
Theodore
Neilson
were
allegedly
the
trustees.
The
original
plan
of
building
a
trailer
park
on
the
subject
property
never
got
off
the
ground.
Mr
Melton
testified
that
the
City
of
Calgary
seemed
to
want
to
upgrade
the
zoning
of
the
subject
land
and
that
was
why
the
municipal
authorities
did
not
allow
the
construction
of
an
asphalt-batching
plant
on
the
site.
It
was
then
considered
that
the
construction
of
town
houses
might
be
more
appropriate,
and
plans
and
working
papers
for
a
town-house
development
were
prepared
for
the
site
by
Mr
Milne,
an
architect
(Ex
A-7,
8
and
9).
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation
was
consulted,
and
a
firm
price
for
the
construction
of
675
town
houses
was
asked
of
Engineered
Buildings
Ltd,
a
firm
which,
for
purposes
of
economy
in
prefab
construction,
redesigned
the
floor
plans
of
the
units
and
quoted
a
price
(Ex
A-9
and
10).
The
financing
of
the
project
was
allegedly
discussed
with
the
North
American
Life
Assurance
Company
and
with
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation.
An
application
for
a
permit
to
construct
the
town
houses
was
made
by
Engineered
Buildings
Ltd
to
the
City
of
Calgary
on
the
basis
of
working
drawings,
the
design
stage
not
yet
having
been
reached,
and
the
City
advised
the
contractors
that
it
would
object
to
the
development
of
the
town
house
project
because
the
site
was
on
the
Calgary
Airport
flight
path
and
the
attendant
noise
would
prohibit
the
development
of
a
residential
community
in
that
area.
The
City
also
felt
that
the
existing
school-busing
system
in
the
immediate
area
would
be
totally
inadequate
to
handle
all
the
additional
children
from
the
town
house
development.
The
Neilson
group
then
decided
to
return
to
their
original
pian
and
develop
the
land
as
a
Mobile
Home
Park,
and
advances
were
made
to
Engineered
Buildings
Ltd,
who
also
constructed
mobile
homes,
and
subsequently,
to
United
Trailers,
who
made
the
necessary
studies,
and
an
application
was
presented
to
the
City
of
Calgary
for
approval
(Ex
A-11,
A-12
and
A-13).
A
Certificate
of
Compliance
was
issued
by
the
City
on
two
conditions:
first,
that
the
developers
pay
$100
per
year
per
child
to
help
defray
the
costs
of
busing
the
children
to
school;
and,
secondly,
that
the
land
would
be
rezoned
as
a
Direct
Control
District
(Ex
A-14).
The
City
upgraded
its
trailer
park
regulations
by
increasing
the
requirements
with
regard
to
power,
sewers,
septic
tanks
and
water
supply,
and
by
requiring
the
installation
of
larger
stalls
(Ex
A-15,
A-16,
A-17,
A-18,
A-19,
A-20,
A-21
and
A-22).
Consequently,
the
trailer
park
project
was
not
proceeded
with.
In
the
meanwhile,
some
interest
was
shown
by
a
contractor
in
the
construction
of
a
warehouse
on
the
southern
part
of
the
land,
adjacent
to
the
area
zoned
as
industrial.
An
application
for
subdividing
the
land
was
made
to
the
City
of
Calgary
and,
if
my
understanding
is
correct,
some
preliminary
grading
for
an
access
road
was
done
by
the
developers
in
connection
with
the
proposed
warehouse
(Exs
A-27
to
A-35).
The
Planning
Commission
of
Calgary,
in
spite
of
very
long
delays,
did
not
approve
or
disapprove
the
request
to
subdivide
the
land
on
which
the
warehouse
was
to
be
built,
and
the
warehousing
project
was
in
fact
never
proceeded
with.
By
letter
of
August
13,
1970
Melton
wrote
to
the
City
of
Calgary
Offering
the
land
for
sale
(Ex
A-34).
By
letter
of
September
9,
1970
Melton
requested
that
the
City
either
approve
the
plan
of
subdivision
presented
to
it
or
buy
the
land
from
the
owners
(Ex
A-38).
The
whole
matter
was
again
studied
by
the
Planning
Commission
(Exs
A-39
io
A-45),
and
the
City
finally
decided
to
purchase
the
subject
land.
The
taxability
of
the
profit
realized
by
each
of
the
appellants
from
the
disposition
of
the
subject
land
is
the
issue
in
dispute
in
these
appeals.
I
have
set
down
the
facts
in
considerable
detail
because
we
are
faced
here
with
a
trading
case,
and
there
is
no
doubt
that,
though
Mr
Neilson
and
Mr
Benbow
may
not
have
a
previous
history
of
real
estate
transactions,
Mr
Melton,
who
initiated
the
purchase
of
the
subject
land
from
Swift
Canadian
Co
Ltd
and
was
the
principal
agent
in
sub-
sequent
transactions,
was
very
active
in
real
estate,
both
as
sales
manager
for
Melton
Realties
Ltd
and
through
companies
which
he
had
himself
incorporated
for
the
purpose.
However,
in
my
opinion,
the
fact
that
a
taxpayer
is
very
knowledgeable
and
active
in
the
real
estate
field
does
not
preclude
him
automatically
from
holding
property
on
a
long-term
investment
basis.
In
such
cases,
the
transaction
must
be
scrutinized
closely,
and
the
facts
adduced
are
of
the
utmost
importance
in
determining
whether
the
transaction
was
entered
into
as
part
of
the
business
of
trading
in
land
or
whether
it
was
meant
to
be
a
long-term
investment
with
a
view
to
realizing
revenue
from
the
property.
There
are,
in
determining
the
nature
of
the
transaction
and
the
consequent
profit
realized,
two
important
considerations
in
these
appeals.
The
first
is
whether
Mr
Melton
and/or
the
other
appellants
knew
at
the
time
of
the
purchase
of
the
subject
property
that
the
City
was
proposing
to
build
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway
on
that
property
and
would
therefore
have
to
purchase
it
from
the
appellants.
The
property
was
purchased
from
Swift
Canadian
Co
Ltd
on
March
28,
1969.
From
the
evidence,
it
seems
very
likely
that
Mr
Melton
knew,
as
early
as
1968,
that
the
City
was
contemplating
the
construction
of
a
freeway
in
the
general
area
of
the
subject
property
(Ex
R-1).
However,
at
that
time
the
City
had
not
decided
exactly
where
the
freeway
would
be
built
(Ex
R-3).
The
DeLeuw,
Cather
Interim
Report
on
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway
prepared
at
the
request
of
the
City
of
Calgary
is
dated
April
1969
(Ex
A-47).
This
report
made
a
study
of
four
alternative
routes
for
the
freeway.
The
alignment
of
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway
between
Memorial
Drive
and
the
Alyth
Yards
proposed
in
the
DeLeuw,
Cather
Report
was
rejected
on
September
15,
1970,
and
alternatives
were
to
be
recommended
and
studied
by
the
City’s
Commissioners
(Ex
A-48).
The
sequence
of
these
events
and
the
correspondence
between
Melton
and
the
City
of
Calgary
already
referred
to,
(particularly
Ex
A-36
dated
September
3,
1970),
indicates
to
me
that
the
appellants
did
not
know,
and
could
not
know,
at
the
time
they
purchased
the
land
that
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway
would
eventually
be
built
on
their
property.
I
am
satisfied
from
the
evidence
that
the
land
was
not
purchased
for
resale
to
the
City.
The
second
important
consideration
is
whether
the
facts
substantiate
the
appellants’
contention
that
the
reason
for
purchasing
the
land
was
for
development
purposes.
In
my
opinion,
based
on
the
evidence,
participation
in
a
revenue-producing
investment
by
Mr
Neilson
and
Mr
Evans,
who
had
some
capital
and
who
were
getting
on
in
years,
is
credible.
Mr
Benbow’s
participation
in
the
investment,
which
was
limited
to
a
moral
financial
backing
of
Mr
Melton,
is
also
credible.
Because
of
his
activity
in
real
estate,
Mr
Melton’s
participation
in
the
transaction
as
an
investment
can
be
questioned.
However,
the
preponderance
of
the
evidence,
including
the
original
plans
for
the
construction
of
a
trailer
park,
the
reasons
for
which
the
plan
was
changed
from
a
trailer
park
to
a
town
house
development,
the
estimate
of
costs,
the
designs
of
the
development,
the
application
to
the
City
for
permits,
the
City’s
refusal
to
allow
town
houses
to
be
built
in
the
area,
the
appellants’
enforced
return
to
their
original
plan
of
developing
the
land
for
mobile
homes,
the
estimates
and
designs
for
the
mobile
homes,
the
eventual
project
for
the
construction
of
a
warehouse,
the
appellants’
letter
to
the
City
asking
that
their
development
plans
be
approved
and
permission
granted
to
proceed
with
the
project
or,
alternatively,
that
the
City
buy
the
land,
and
the
expenditure
of
some
$28,000
by
the
appellants
in
an
effort
to
develop
the
land,
are
all
facts
which
have
not
been
contradicted
and
which,
in
my
opinion,
are
sufficient
to
establish
that
the
intention
of
the
appellants
was
to
develop
the
land
in
one
way
or
another
as
a
long-term
investment.
In
my
opinion
the
appellants
failed
to
develop
the
land
only
because
of
the
City’s
procrastination
and
its
long-delayed
decision
to
acquire
the
appellants’
land
as
part
of
the
route
of
the
Blackfoot
Trail
Freeway.
In
the
result,
I
hold
that
the
profits
realized
on
the
sale
of
the
subject
land
are
on
capital
account
and
the
appeals
are
therefore
allowed.
Appeals
allowed.