A
J
Frost:—This
is
an
appeal
from
three
income
tax
assessments
each
dated
October
30,
1969
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
taxation
years
1966,
1967
and
1968,
wherein
tax
in
the
amounts
of
$80,
$253
and
$2,512.88
was
levied.
Upon
Notices
of
Objection
duly
signed
and
filed,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
confirmed
the
assessments
on
January
25,
1971.
The
appeal
was
heard
at
Penticton,
BC,
on
September
16,
1971
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
as
it
was
then
constituted.
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
on
November
16,
1962,
with
the
sole
object
of
acquiring
and
operating
a
logging
and
sawmill
business.
Prior
to
June
1965
the
appellant
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
logging
and
pole
producing.
After
June
1965
the
appellant
carried
on
a
pole
business,
having
disposed
of
all
its
logging
equipment
and
all
of
its
timber
except
for
timber
in
the
Scotch
Creek
and
Celista
Creek
areas.
The
change
in
operations
came
about
when
Bell
Pole
Company
Ltd
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Bell”)
purchased
all
the
outstanding
shares
of
the
appellant.
According
to
the
evidence
Timber
Sale
Contract
No
TSX
93564,
owned
by
the
company,
was
situated
on
the
east
fork
of
Scotch
Creek.
The
company
did
not
wish
to
operate
in
this
area
as
it
was
a
considerable
distance
from
its
other
operations
which
were
at
Celista
Creek.
It
therefore
sold
the
timber
sale
contract
to
Tappen
Valley
Timber
Ltd
for
$5,000
on
May
31,
1966.
On
reassessment
the
proceeds
of
sale
amounting
to
$5,000
were
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
1966.
The
basic
question
in
issue
is
the
characterization
of
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
cutting
rights
under
the
Tappen
Valley
Timber
Sale
Contract
TSX
93564.
The
history
of
the
appellant
indicated
that
prior
to
1965
it
was
interested
in
acquiring
timber
sales
contracts
as
a
source
of
supply
of
saw
logs
and
poles,
and
endeavoured
to
purchase
a
number
of
timber
sales
contracts
in
the
Tappen
Valley
area
but
was
unsuccessful.
After
Bell
purchased
the
outstanding
shares
of
the
appellant,
the
two
companies
integrated
their
operations
and
concentrated
on
the
production
of
poles
only.
The
new
owner
was
only
interested
in
poles.
Timber
Sale
Contract
TSX
93564
was
of
no
further
use
to
the
appellant
company,
as
the
number
of
trees
in
the
area
suitable
for
the
production
of
poles
was
not
sufficient
to
make
the
area
profitable.
The
area
could
have
produced
saw
logs
in
sufficient
quantity
but
not
poles.
A
pole
is
different
from
a
log
and
has
a
different
market.
A
tree
suitable
for
the
production
of
a
saw
log
may
not
be
suitable
for
pole
production.
When
it
became
uneconomical
for
the
company
to
operate
in
the
area,
the
appellant
either
had
to
operate
TSX
93564
at
a
loss
or
lose
its
deposit
for
non-performance.
In
order
to
resolve
this
dilemma,
the
appellant
sold
its
cutting
rights
but
retained
its
identity
as
licensee
under
the
contract.
To
determine
whether
or
not
the
net
gain
from
the
proceeds
of
assignment
of
the
contract
in
question
is
a
capital
gain
or
income
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
it
is
necessary
to
apply
three
tests:
1.
Why
did
the
appellant
buy
the
asset
in
question?
2.
Why
did
the
appellant
sell
the
asset?
3.
What
is
the
pattern
of
dealing
with
this
type
of
asset?
These
three
areas
all
involve
questions
of
fact.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
the
appellant
acquired
the
timber
contract
as
a
capital
asset,
spent
money
building
a
road,
endeavoured
to
acquire
further
rights
to
cut
timber,
and
logged
the
area
for
poles
and
saw
logs.
It
sold
the
contract
when
it
was
no
longer
useful
or
profitable
to
operate.
It
is
also
clear
that
the
appellant
was
not
engaged
in
the
selling
of
timber
cutting
rights
as
part
of
its
regular
business.
It
had
sold
another
contract
for
quota
purposes,
but
this
sale,
in
my
opinion,
did
not
stamp
the
appellant
as
a
trader.
In
my
view,
the
appellant
clears
these
three
hurdles.
One
question
remains:
Why
did
the
appellant
retain
its
identity
as
a
licensee
under
the
contract?
The
point
is
reflected
in
two
of
the
Minister’s
assumptions,
which
read
as
follows:
By
virtue
of
the
acquisition
of
Timber
Sale
Contract
X
93564
aforementioned,
the
Appellant
acquired
the
right
to
cut
and
remove
timber
in
an
area
therein
designated
in
a
manner
therein
prescribed,
together
with
the
right
to
acquire
replacement
timber
upon
having
removed
or
disposed
of
the
timber
designated
in
the
contract,
and
to
acquire
thenceforth
rights
successively
to
further
replacement
timber
so
that
the
Appellant
as
long
as
it
continued
to
be
a
timber
contract
holder
would
be
possessed
in
perpetuity
with
a
supply
of
timber
about
equal
to
that
provided
for
in
Timber
Sale
Contract
X
93564.
By
virtue
of
an
Agreement
dated
31st
May,
1966,
which
speaks
for
itself,
the
Appellant
sold
for
$5,000.00
the
rights
only
to
cut
timber
on
Timber
Sale
Contract
X
93564,
thereby
retaining
its
right
to
replacement
timber
and
its
identity
as
licensee
under
the
contract.
The
evidence
indicated
that
no
quota
was
attached
in
1966
to
the
Tappen
Valley
contract
and
for
this
reason
the
sale
covered
virtually
everything
of
value.
Changes
in
Forest
Service
policy
subsequent
to
the
assignment
of
the
Tappen
Valley
contract
did
confer
some
benefit
on
the
licensee
but
this
did
not
occur
until
1969.
This
benefit,
according
to
the
evidence
adduced,
was
fortuitous
and
not
foreseen.
For
these
reasons,
counsel
in
his
argument
contended
that
the
Minister’s
assumptions
were
based
on
a
misunderstanding.
He
stated:
I
submit,
again,
that
is
a
misunderstanding,
because
there
were
no
rights
to
replace
the
timber
at
the
time
of
May
thirty-first
1966,
and
it
was
not
contemplated,
and
it’s
only
through
hindsight
that
these
statements
have
any
relevancy,
and
I
submit
that
the
hindsight
effect
should
not
affect
the
intentions
of
the
parties
at
the
time
they
made
it.
I
base
my
decision
primarily
on
the
fact
that
the
appellant
did
not
assign
the
Tappen
Valley
contract
until
after
Bell
had
acquired
it
at
which
time
the
integrated
operations
of
the
two
companies
forced
the
appellant
company
to
change
direction
and
abandon
its
saw
log
business
thus
creating
an
asset
which
it
was
no
longer
profitable
to
retain.
The
fact
that
the
appellant
retained
its
identity
as
licensee
is
not,
in
my
opinion,
of
great
significance.
The
appellant
kept
a
residual
string
on
the
contract
as
a
matter
of
sound
business.
Forest
Service
policy
could
change
and
did
change,
but
this
circumstance
per
se
is
not
sufficient
ground
for
concluding
that
the
proceeds
of
sale
of
an
unwanted
capital
asset
are
in
the
nature
of
a
revenue
receipt
under
any
of
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Appeal
allowed.