Judge
K
A
Flanigan
(orally:
September
26,
1974):—This
is
an
appeal
by
Alfred
C
Huxtable
against
a
reassessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
1969
taxation
year.
The
appeal
arises
out
of
an
expense
disallowed
to
a
personal
corporation,
Bedford
Investments
Limited,
the
shares
of
which
were
owned
by
the
appellant
in
the
year
1969.
The
deduction
was
claimed
in
connection
with
a
reserve
for
a
quadrennial
survey
originally
set
up
in
1967
by
Mr
Huxtable
as
the
beneficial
shareholder
of
Bedford
Investments
Limited
when
it
was
known
as
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited.
The
facts
of
the
case
deal
mainly
with
corporate
entities
but
find
their
way
back
to
Mr
Huxtable
in
this
reassessment
by
virtue
of
the
fact
of
the
personal
corporation.
I
am,
quite
frankly,
amazed
at
the
dearth
of
authorities
and
cases
dealing
with
quadrennial
surveys.
None
have
been
cited
to
me
in
the
course
of
argument,
which
has
been
detailed
and
well
prepared
by
both
parties,
and
I
can
only
assume
that
there
are
no
cases
directly
on
this
point.
Editorial
comments
on
the
sections
of
the
Act
(namely,
paragraph
11(1)(ea),
which
permits
the
reserve,
and
paragraph
6(1)(eb),
which
provides
for
the
usual
treatment
of
reserves
being
brought
back
into
income
in
the
following
year),
in
the
respective
annotated
copies
of
the
Act
and
in
the
commentaries
that
I
have
looked
at,
contain
no
reference
to
any
case
law.
The
facts
briefly
are
that,
in
or
about
1964,
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited
was
an
operating
company
that
was
purchased
by
F
C
Warren
Limited
through
ACH
Limited,
a
personal
corporation,
the
shares
in
both
the
last-named
companies
being
owned
by
the
appellant,
and
the
appellant
thereby
became
the
beneficial
owner
of
all
the
shares
in
what
has
been
referred
to
as
the
old
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited
company.
Included
in
the
assets
of
that
company
when
purchased
by
Mr
Huxtable
in
the
manner
aforesaid
was
a
ship
or
vessel
known
as
“the
Bedford
Il’.
In
or
about
the
year
1968,
Mr
Huxtable
decided,
for
two
major
reasons,
that
it
would
be
better
to
create
a
shell
company
and
an
operating
company
rather
than
have
all
his
assets
tied
up
in
the
old
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited
company
because,
as
he
said,
some
of
his
competitors
were
experiencing
litigation
prob-
lems
and
he
was
concerned
about
some
$200,000
worth
of
assets
that
the
old
company
owned.
He
thought
that
if
he
could
create
a
shell
company
he
would
be
able,
perhaps,
to
sell
the
new
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited
company.
Therefore,
as
of
the
end
of
December
1968
the
old
company
changed
its
name
to
Bedford
Investments
Limited
and
another
company
was
incorporated
under
the
name
of
Newfoundland
Canada
Steamships
Limited,
which
I
will
refer
to
as
“the
new
company”.
It
is
admitted
that
Bedford
Investments
Limited,
from
and
after
January
1,
1969,
carried
on
no
active
business
and,
for
the
year
in
question,
was
a
personal
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
At
the
time
of
the
creation
of
the
new
company,
the
assets
of
the
old
company,
which
was
now
Bedford
Investments
Limited,
were
sold
to
the
new
company
in
a
non-arm’s
length
transaction
for
the
sum
of
about
$260,000,
as
evidenced
by
the
balance
sheet
filed
as
appellant’s
Exhibit
6.
The
old
company,
pursuant
to
paragraph
11(1)(ea),
had
completed
a
quadrennial
survey
some
years
before
at
a
cost
of
$60,000,
and,
through
agreement
with
the
local
taxation
office,
had
been
using
this
as
the
basis
for
setting
up
the
sum
of
$15,000
per
year
as
its
quadrennial
survey
reserve.
The
Act
provides
that,
in
the
third
year
prior
to
the
year
of
the
next
survey,
one-quarter
of
the
estimated
cost
may
be
deducted.
in
the
following
year,
carrying
out
the
scheme
of
the
Act
in
dealing
with
reserves,
that
sum
is
brought
back
into
income
and
one-half
of
the
cost
of
the
survey
is
allowed
in
the
second
year.
Then
in
the
first
year
prior
to
the
new
survey
the
one-half
estimate
is
brought
back
in
and
three-quarters
of
the
estimated
cost
is
allowed
as
a
reserve.
Basing
their
reserve
on
the
sum
of
$60,000
or
$15,000
a
year,
and
taking
the
fiscal
year
end
in
both
the
old
and
the
new
company
at
September
30,
as
at
the
end
of
December
1968
the
reserve
for
quadrennial
survey
in
the
old
company
stood
at
$48,750.
The
vessel
in
question
was
classified
or
used
as
a
cargo
Carrier
between
Halifax
and
Newfoundland.
It
was
a
conventional
general
cargo
vessel
with
three
holds,
built
in
1943,
and
was
an
ageing
vessel
when
it
came
into
the
possession
of
this
appellant.
As
he
said
in
his
evidence,
“the
older
the
ship,
the
more
likely
you
are
to
incur
extensive
replacements
and
repairs
following
each
quadrennial
survey”.
The
$60,000,
it
should
be
noted,
is
not
for
the
estimated
cost
of
the
result
of
the
survey,
that
is,
the
cost
of
taking
the
ship
into
dry
dock
and
repairing
or
renewing
her
as
ordered
by
the
survey.
This
is
a
survey
that
Is
required
by
the
Canada
Shipping
Act.
It
is
also
required
by
various
societies
or
associations
dealing
with
the
owners
of
vessels
and
is
in
no
small
way
directly
connected
with
the
availability
of
insurance
to
the
owners
of
the
vessel.
At
the
beginning
of
1969,
when
the
assets
were
transferred
from
the
old
company
to
the
new
company,
the
old
company,
by
then
known
as
Bedford
Investments
Limited,
took
into
income
the
sum
of
$48,750,
as
stated
in
evidence
by
Mr
Kuipers,
the
accountant
for
the
company.
It
also
showed
as
an
expense
the
sum
of
$48,750
which
was,
in
effect,
the
adjustment
allowed
to
the
new
company
on
the
purchase
price
of
the
assets
of
the
old
company.
Call
it
what
you
may,
in
substance
that
was,
in
effect,
one
way
of
reducing
the
amount
owing
by
the
new
company
to
Bedford.
In
other
words,
Bedford
assumed
an
expense
that
had
been
built
up
as
a
result
of
the
operation
of
this
vessel
for
a
period
of
three
years
and
three
months.
It
seems
to
me
that
the
accountant
could
have
avoided
a
great
deal
of
misunderstanding
if
he
had
eliminated
the
“reserve”
by
crediting
the
book
value
of
the
vessel
with
the
amount
of
the
reserve.
After
all,
the
reserve
was
in
fact
a
valuation
adjustment
which
should
be
brought
out
at
the
time
of
the
transfer.
Crediting
income
from
operations
with
the
amount
of
the
reserve
at
the
beginning
of
the
year
was
illogical
as
there
were
no
operations
by
Bedford
any
more.
The
fact
that
this
entry
would
have
turned
the
asset
account
into
a
credit
position
should
not
have
prevented
such
journal
entry.
The
asset
account
was
never
meant
to
express
the
current
fair
market
value
of
the
asset.
Although
this
is
of
no
consequence
to
the
outcome
of
this
appeal,
it
may
be
noted
that
in
May
of
1969,
I
believe
it
was,
the
new
company
sold
“the
Bedford
ll”
in
an
arm’s
length
transaction
to
some
purchasers
from
the
United
States
for
the
sum
of
$74,000
US.
Included
in
that
sale,
according
to
the
evidence
of
Mr
Huxtable,
was
a
negotiated
adjustment
of
$34,000
with
respect
to
the
cost
of
an
American
survey
similar
to,
if
not
the
same
as,
the
quadrennial
survey
referred
to
in
the
Canada
Shipping
Act
and
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act.
It
may
well
be,
as
Mr
Huxtable
said,
that
in
various
locations
around
the
world
the
cost
of
surveys
and
regulations
with
regard
to
other
shipping
requirements
may
not
be
as
exacting
as
in
this
country,
but
in
all
countries
a
similar
type
of
survey
is
required.
So,
instead
of
receiving
$74,000
US,
the
new
company
received
approximately
$40,000
US
for
the
ship.
It
should
be
noted
that
by
this
time
the
ship
had,
of
course,
been
written
down
to
a
very
low
figure.
Capital
cost
allowance
recapture
resulted.
There
was
still
a
capital
gain,
and
the
difference
between
the
$34,000
negotiated
adjustment
and
the
$48,750
survey
reserve,
which
difference
amounted
to
approximately
$12,000
Canadian
after
adjusting
for
foreign
exchange
rates
at
the
material
time,
was
taken
into
income.
The
question
now
before
me
is
whether
or
not,
putting
aside
the
subtleties
of
argument,
the
cost,
or
the
estimated
cost,
of
the
quadrennial
survey
can
be
transferred
from
one
owner
to
another
and
written
off
as
an
expense
to
successive
owners,
using
the
formula
set
out
in
the
Canadian
Income
Tax
Act
prior
to
1972—though
I
do
not
believe
there
is
any
change
in
the
new
Act.
The
respondent
argues
that
there
was,
first
of
all,
no
expense
incurred
by
either
the
new
company
or
by
the
old
company
in
the
transfer
of
“the
Bedford
II”
from
Bedford
Investments
Limited
to
the
new
Newfoundland
Steamships
Limited
company,
and
no
expense
was
incurred
in
the
transfer
in
the
arm’s
length
transaction
to
the
Americans.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
also
contends
that,
if
it
is
anything,
the
quadrennial
survey
reserve
is
a
contingent
liability
that
never
came
to
pass,
and
therefore
is
excluded
as
a
deduction
by
paragraph
12(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Thirdly,
although
not
as
specifically
mentioned,
but
evident
from
assessing
his
argument
and
from
reading
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
it
is
submitted
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
that
this
was
not
an
expense
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
in
the
operations
of
a
business.
Under
subsection
12(2)
of
the
old
Act
the
question
as
to
whether
or
not
the
outlay
was
reasonable
is
not
in
issue
here
because
clearly
the
sum
was
reasonable
in
relation
to
the
actual
experience
of
the
quadrennial
survey
of
“the
Bedford
II”
in
1966
or
1967.
The
reserve
as
at
December
31,
1968
represented
the
accumulated
charges
against
operational
income
on
account
of
the
anticipated
costs
resulting
from
the
foreseeable
quadrennial
survey.
The
charges
had
been
real
expenses
and
their
accumulated
amount
was
in
fact
the
adjustment
one
should
take
into
account
when
considering
the
book
value
of
the
vessel.
It
was
a
very
real
encumbrance
if
the
vessel
was
to
remain
in
operation
or
even
be
saleable
as
an
operating
vessel.
It
is
clear
that
it
requires
a
special
licence,
as
declared
in
evidence
by
Mr
Huxtable,
to
operate
a
ship
up
to
a
maximum
of
one
year
beyond
the
time
of
her
quadrennial
survey
date,
and
such
extensions
are
frowned
upon,
to
say
the
least,
by
the
insurers.
Indeed,
it
is
questionable
whether
or
not
insurance
on
a
vessel
such
as
this
could
have
been
maintained
without
the
quadrennial
surveys
and
the
repairs
and
renewals
required
thereby.
I
think
that
the
annual
charge
of
a
proportionate
part
of
the
estimated
anticipated
cost
of
the
quadrennial
survey
is
a
very
real
expense
incurred
in
earning
income.
There
is
evidence
that,
after
it
was
taken
over
by
Mr
Huxtable
through
his
various
corporate
vehicles,
the
old
company
made
a
reasonably
good
profit.
The
evidence,
although
sketchy,
is
that
in
1969,
1970
and
1971
the
business
was
still
successful.
It
fell
off
after
1971
because
of
a
reduction
in
subsidies,
a
change
in
the
method
of
operation,
and
many
other
factors
that,
in
my
view,
do
not
affect
the
outcome
of
this
appeal.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
cross-examined
at
great
length
on
the
question
of
subsidies,
presumably
expecting
or
hoping
that
the
Board
would
infer
from
that
that
the
transaction
between
the
old
company
and
the
new
was
really
a
sham
to
rid
itself
of
its
liabilities
because
of
the
prospective
loss
of
subsidies.
The
accountant,
Mr
Kuipers,
has
said
in
evidence
that
each
year
these
subsidies
had
to
be
negotiated
and
that
“you
could
not
count
on
them
from
year
to
year”.
There
was
a
subsidy
negotiated
and
granted
for
the
year
1969
after
the
transfer
of
assets
that
I
have
previously
described.
The
appellant
says
that,
by
taking
the
$48,750
into
income
in
Bedford
and
allowing
or
charging
the
same
amount
as
an
expense,
the
net
tax
result
is
zero
because
the
liability
to
Bedford,
though
it
had
ceased
at
that
time,
had
been
in
effect
met
at
the
time
of
the
transfer
by
crediting
the
sum
of
$48,750
to
the
new
company
and
by
the
new
company
thereupon
setting
the
said
amount
up
in
its
opening
balance
sheet
as
a
liability.
It
is
a
roundabout
way
of
reaching
the
same
result
as
could
have
been
realized
in
a
more
simple
manner,
as
I
have
indicated
hereinbefore.
Appellant’s
counsel
contends
that
there
is
no
prohibition
in
the
Act
against
a
transfer
of
such
a
liability
(reserve),
whereas
counsel
for
the
Minister
says
that
it
is
not
permitted
by
the
terms
of
either
section
11,
section
6,
or
the
regulations
pertaining
thereto.
As
I
look
at
the
terms
of
paragraph
11
(1)(ea)
with
regard
to
the
reserve
for
quadrennial
survey
provisions,
I
see
no
reason
why
what
has
been
stated
to
be
an
accumulated
decrease
in
value
or
rather
increase
in
encumbrances
of
the
vessel
could
not
be
transferred
to
a
new
owner,
especially
in
a
non-arm’s
length
transaction.
Clearly,
the
transfer
of
this
vessel
in
the
arm’s
length
transaction
to
Thomas
Cuni
and
Jack
Trainer
of
Miami
by
contract
dated
May
13,
1969
lends
credence,
I
think,
to
the
ultimate
result
which
the
accountant
achieved
through
his
complicated
way
of
recording
the
transaction
of
January
1,
1969.
Clearly
it
was
the
recognized
existence
of
an
expense
incurred
by
virtue
of
the
need
for
a
quadrennial
survey
that
reduced
the
purchase
price
from
$74,000
to
$40,000
in
the
arm’s
length
transaction
of
May
13,1969.
Though
I
would
have
preferred
another
accounting
procedure,
it
is
obvious
that
the
final
result
would
have
been
the
same.
The
net
income
of
Bedford
Investments
Limited
for
1969
was,
in
so
far
as
it
concerned
the
quadrennial
survey
and
related
charges,
in
my
opinion
correctly
reported
and
the
Minister
failed
to
show
that
the
company’s
income,
due
to
an
allegedly
incorrect
charge
of
$48,750,
was
understated
by
that
amount.
I
therefore
allow
the
appeal.
Appeal
allowed.