Ritchie,
J.
(all
concur)
:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
Kearney,
J.
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
directing
that
an
order
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
be
set
aside
and
restoring
the
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
appellant’s
taxation
year
1958,
whereby
income
tax
was
levied
on
a
net
gain
of
$23,384
realized
by
the
appellant
in
a
series
of
real
estate
transactions
which
are
hereinafter
described.
The
appellant
is
and
always
has
been
engaged
in
the
business
of
general
contracting,
and
the
objects
expressed
in
its
Memorandum
of
Association
read,
in
part,
as
follows:
3.
The
objects
for
which
the
Company
is
established
are:
(a)
To
purchase,
take
on
lease
or
in
exchange,
or
otherwise
acquire
any
lands
and
buildings,
and
any
estate
or
interest
in,
and
any
rights
connected
with,
any
such
lands
and
buildings.
(b)
To
develop
and
turn
to
account
any
land
acquired
by
the
Company
or
in
which
the
Company
is
interested,
.
.
.
Nothing
turns
on
the
language
of
this
Memorandum
of
Association
standing
alone
but
it
is
apparent
to
me
from
the
evidence
that
in
conformity
with
these
objects
the
appellant
in
fact
engaged
in
the
business
of
purchasing
land
in
the
Province
of
Alberta
and
elsewhere
primarily
for
the
purpose
of
building
houses
thereon
for
sale,
but
also
with
a
view
to
constructing
apartment
blocks
for
renting.
The
appellant’s
course
of
conduct
indicates
to
me
that
the
lands
alone
were
also
available
for
resale
if
‘‘somebody
came
along’’
who
was
prepared
to
offer
a
sufficiently
high
price.
In
the
course
of
its
business
in
the
year
1953,
the
appellant
purchased
a
number
of
parcels
of
land
in
the
west
end
of
the
City
of
Edmonton
which
it
later
assembled
into
a
block
with
the
approval
of
the
city.
This
land
came
to
be
known
as
the
Parkview
Subdivision’’
and
the
company
there
built
approximately
300
houses
which
were
later
sold.
It
was
one
of
the
conditions
of
the
city’s
approval
of
this
scheme
that
the
appellant
should
provide
the
necessary
land
for
public
services
including
schools,
and
when
the
city
decided
to
construct
a
large
high
school
in
this
subdivision
the
appellant
was
required
to
transfer
to
it
about
100
small
lots
in
exchange
for
which
in
the
month
of
April
1955
the
city
transferred
to
the
appellant
a
number
of
city
lots
which
the
appellant
itself
selected
and
which
included
a
property
of
about
2.85
acres
at
the
corner
of
86th
Avenue
and
83rd
Street,
then
described
as
lot
42
and
sometimes
referred
to
as
the
“Bonnie
Doon’’
property.
A
further
property
of
approximately
9
acres
which
was
transferred
to
the
appellant
was
located
on
the
west
side
of
85th
Street.
There
was
also
included
in
the
exchange
a
lot
of
a
little
more
than
2
acres
which
was
in
another
area
and
which
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
property
‘‘x’’.
The
profit
of
$23,384
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
assessed
as
part
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
1958
arose
as
the
result
of
a
replotting
of
lot
42,
hereinbefore
referred
to.
The
effect
of
this
replotting
was
that
lot
42
was
subdivided
into
lots
43,
44
and
46,
and
the
appellant
transferred
the
new
lot
44
to
the
Imperial
Oil
Company
Limited
in
exchange
for
which
Imperial
Oil
transferred
lot
48
to
the
appellant
and
paid
the
sum
of
$20,000.
The
appellant
then
transferred
the
newly
acquired
lot
48
to
the
Lutheran
Church
for
$18,000.
It
is
agreed
that
this
series
of
transactions
gave
rise
to
the
profit
now
sought
to
be
taxed.
The
contention
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
which
found
favour
with
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
was
that
at
the
time
when
the
city
lots
were
transferred
to
it
in
exchange
for
the
Parkview
School
property
the
appellant
had
already
determined
that,
apart
from
property
‘‘x’’,
all
the
lands
were
to
be
used
for
the
construction
of
apartment
buildings
which
would
be
held
as
capital
assets
so
as
to
provide
a
permanent
source
of
income
for
the
appellant’s
controlling
shareholder
and
his
family.
On
this
assumption,
it
was
argued
that
when
the
properties
were
sold
without
any
apartment
buildings
having
been
built
the
sales
were
sales
of
capital
assets
and
that
any
profit
realized
by
the
appellant
as
a
result
thereof
was
a
capital
gain
and
not
income.
In
the
course
of
delivering
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
learned
Assistant
Chairman
observed
that
apartment
buildings
built
by
the
appellant
had
always
been
retained
by
it
for
the
rental
income
to
be
had
and
he
went
on
to
Say
:
The
plan
was
that
any
apartment
building
put
up
should
be
treated
as
for
investment
purposes
only.
On
this
account,
the
appellant
has
never
disposed
of
or
parted
with
any
apartment
building
erected
by
it.
Having
been
through
a
heavy
housebuilding
programme
over
a
period
of
years
and
achieved
a
position
of
financial
independence,
the
appellant’s
controlling
shareholder,
Mr.
G.
W.
Golden,
became
more
interested
in
creating
and
enlarging
a
permanent
source
of
income
for
himself
and
family
than
in
money-making
through
further
building
operations.
Although
plans
and
a
model
of
an
apartment
building
to
be
erected
on
lots
43,
44
and
46
were
prepared
for
the
appellant,
none
was
ever
constructed
on
any
part
of
the
property
acquired
from
the
city.
This
was
chiefly
due
to
the
fact
that
a
very
large
shopping
centre
was
constructed
on
adjacent
property
which,
it
was
felt,
would
interfere
with
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
lands
as
an
attractive
site
for
the
apartment
building,
and
negotiations
were
conducted
with
the
builder
of
the
proposed
shopping
centre
with
a
view
to
erecting
a
large
screen
to
block
the
view
of
the
back
of
the
shopping
centre
from
the
proposed
apartments
but
nothing
came
of
this
and
the
project
was
abandoned
The
evidence
of
Mr.
G.
W.
Golden,
the
president
and
controlling
shareholder
of
the
appellant,
was
clearly
to
the
effect
that
when
it
acquired
these
lands
from
the
city
its
primary
purpose
and
intention
was
to
use
them
for
the
construction
of
apartment
buildings,
and
steps
were
undoubtedly
taken
to
this
end,
but
when
it
became
apparent
that
the
sites
were
not
as
desirable
for
this
purpose
as
they
had
originally
appeared
to
be,
the
appellant
was
willing
and
ready
to
turn
them
to
account
if
a
sufficiently
profitable
sale
offered
itself.
In
this
latter
regard,
I
am
of
the
opinion,
for
the
reasons
stated
by
Kearney,
J.,
that
the
evidence
which
was
tendered
as
to
the
sale
in
1959
of
the
balance
of
the
property
which
the
appellant
had
acquired
from
the
city
is
admissible.
(See
Osler,
Hammond
&
Nanton
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1963]
S.C.R.
432
at
484;
[1963]
C.T.C.
164
at
166,
per
Judson,
J.)
When
questioned
about
this
sale,
Mr.
Golden
said:
I
couldn’t
afford
to
build
apartments
on
land
that
I
could
get
$20,000.00
an
acre
for.
I
thought
it
was
a
windfall
myself.
So
that
the
sale
was
something
over
$200,000.00.
Q.
Let
us
put
it
this
way,
Mr.
Golden,
you
finally
reach
a
point,
you
may
intend
to
build
an
apartment
or
houses
on
property,
and
that
may
be
your
intention
all
along.
A.
I
didn’t
go
looking
for
it.
It
was
not
for
sale.
Q.
If
you
were
offered
enough
money
or
it
is
a
good
deal
and
you
are
willing
to
sell,
you
are
willing
to
sell?
A.
Well,
it
was
not
economical
for
me
to
build
if
somebody
came
along
like
this.
Q.
In
other
words
with
a
price
like
that
it
didn’t
pay
you
to
keep
it
for
apartments
no
matter
what
your
original
intention
had
been?
A.
No.
I
think
this
evidence
is
relevant
to
show
a
course
of
conduct
on
the
part
of
the
appellant,
and
when
it
is
remembered
that
all
of
the
property
which
the
city
transferred
to
it
in
exchange
for
the
Parkview
School
site,
amounting
in
all
to
about
12
acres,
was
sold
off
within
four
years
after
the
appellant
had
acquired
it,
I
think
it
is
only
reasonable
to
infer
that,
at
least
after
the
abandonment
of
the
apartment
project,
these
lands
were
being
held
for
resale
as
a
part
of
the
appellant’s
inventory.
It
is
of
some
significance
to
note
in
this
connection
that
the
lands
were
entered
in
the
books
of
the
company
in
an
account
under
the
heading
‘‘
Land
for
Resale’’.
Notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
appellant
may
originally
have
intended
to
build
apartments
on
this
land,
I
think
the
evidence
disclosed
that
it
had
the
secondary
intention
of
selling
the
lands
at
a
profit
if
it
were
unable
to
carry
out
its
primary
objective.
In
this
regard,
I
find
it
difficult
to
distinguish
this
case
in
principle
from
the
situation
which
was
considered
by
Judson,
J.
in
Regal
Heights
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
S.C.R.
902
at
907;
[1960]
C.T.C.
384
at
389,
although
that
was
a
case
in
which
the
profit
to
the
promoters
arose
out
of
a
single
transaction
for
the
carrying
out
of
which
Regal
Heights
Ltd.
had
been
expressly
incorporated,
whereas
in
the
present
case
the
taxpayer
is
an
experienced
real
estate
operator
of
long
standing.
An
even
closer
analogy
to
the
situation
here
in
question
is,
in
my
opinion,
to
be
found
in
the
case
of
Fraser
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
S.C.R.
657;
[1964]
C.T.C.
372,
where
the
appellant
and
his
associate
were
found
to
be
experienced
operators
in
the
field
of
real
estate
and
where
Judson,
J.,
giving
the
unanimous
decision
of
this
Court,
reviewed
the
situation
in
the
following
passage
at
pp.
660-1,
375:
Cameron,
J.
accepted
the
evidence
of
the
appellant
that
when
the
two
associates
acquired
the
property,
they
did
intend
to
attempt
to
develop
the
property
for
rental
purposes.
He
calls
this
their
dominant
intention
and
he
says
that
he
is
far
from
satisfied
that
it
was
their
sole
intention
at
any
time.
He
also
finds
that
they
intended
to
sell
at
least
part
of
the
property
if
they
were
unsuccessful
in
developing
it
as
they
planned.
His
conclusion
is
contained
in
the
following
extract
from
his
reasons:
“In
my
view,
the
whole
scheme
was
of
a
speculative
nature
in
which
the
promoters
envisaged
the
possibility
that
if
they
could
not
complete
their
plans
to
build
and
retain
as
investments
a
shopping
centre
and
apartments,
a
profitable
sale
would
be
made
as
soon
as
it
could
be
arranged.”
In
spite
of
the
Judge’s
emphasis
on
primary
and
secondary
intention,
when
applied
to
the
facts
of
this
case
it
amounts
to
no
more
than
this.
He
was
saying
that
two
active
and
skilled
real
estate
promoters
made
a
profit
in
the
ordinary
course
of
their
business,
and
this
they
obviously
did.
They
were
carrying
on
a
business;
they
intended
to
make
a
profit,
and
if
they
could
not
make
it
one
way,
then
they
made
it
another
way.
This
language
appears
to
me
to
have
direct
application
to
the
present
case.
I
regard
the
property
originally
described
as
lot
42
as
having
been
acquired
by
the
appellant
as
part
of
the
inventory
of
its
business
and
as
being
so
held
by
it
when
the
profit
which
is
here
in
question
was
realized.
I
therefore
agree
with
Kearney,
J.
that
the
profit
was
a
profit
from
the
appellant’s
business
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
For
these
reasons,
as
well
as
for
those
contained
in
the
reasons
of
Kearney,
J.,
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.