JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
his
assessment
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1961
taxation
year.
The
sole
question
raised
by
the
appeal
is
the
correctness
of
the
assessment
in
so
far
as
it
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
an
amount
as
‘‘recapture’’
of
capital
cost
allowance
under
Section
20(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows
:
20.
(1)
Where
depreciable
property
of
a
taxpayer
of
a
prescribed
class
has,
in
a
taxation
year,
been
disposed
of
and
the
proceeds
of
disposition
exceed
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
him
of
depreciable
property
of
that
class
immediately
before
the
disposition,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
amount
of
the
excess,
or
(b)
the
amount
that
the
excess
would
be
if
the
property
had
been
disposed
of
for
the
capital
cost
thereof
to
the
taxpayer,
shall
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year.
The
respondent
made
the
assessment,
in
so
far
as
the
question
in
issue
is
concerned,
on
the
basis
of
information
contained
in
the
income
tax
returns
filed
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
by,
or
on
behalf
of,
the
appellant.
Those
assumptions
are
reflected
in
the
table
appearing
in
paragraph
4
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
reading
as
follows
:
|
Furniture
&
|
|
Building
|
Fixtures
|
Capital
Cost
to
the
taxpayer
|
..
$10,767.73
|
$2,196.32
|
Capital
Cost
Allowance
to
Dec.
31/60
|
6,380.08
|
1,071.80
|
Undepreciated
Capital
Cost
to
Dec.
|
|
31/60
|
..
$
4,387.65
|
$1,124.52
|
Selling
Price
August,
1961
|
13,925.00
|
2,075.00
|
Capital
Cost
Allowance
Recovered
|
..
$
6,380.08
|
$
950.48
|
Capital
Gain
|
...
$
3,157.27
|
Nil
|
Subject
to
subsidiary
issues
to
which
I
will
come
later,
if
one
assumes
the
correctness
of
the
information
so
communicated
by
the
appellant
to
the
respondent
when
performing
his
statutory
duty
of
filing
his
income
tax
returns,
there
is
no
question
as
to
the
correctness
of
the
assessment.
What
the
appellant
says,
however,
and
he
said
it
for
the
first
time
when
confronted
in
1964
with
the
possibility
of
a
“recapture”
assessment,
is
that
the
information
communicated
to
the
department
by
him
or
on
his
behalf
for
the
purpose
of
earlier
assessments
was
erroneous.
While
there
is
no
legal
rule
that
prevents
a
taxpayer
coming
forward
long
after
an
event
and
saying
that
what
he
told
the
department
at
the
time
when
information
was
fresh
in
his
mind,
or
in
the
minds
of
those
acting
on
his
behalf,
was
false
or
erroneous,
nevertheless,
it
is
obvious
that
there
is
a
considerable
burden
on
one
who
endeavours
to
persuade
a
court
that
this
was
so.
This
must
be
particularly
so
when
the
attempt
is
based
almost
exclusively
on
self-serving
evidence
uncorroborated
by
any
independent
evidence
and
accompanied
by
no
explanation
as
to
why
inconsistent
statements
were
made
when
the
matters
concerned
were
still
current.
In
so
far
as
relevant,
the
facts
may
be
stated
simply.
The
appellant
owned
a
hotel
in
a
small
Saskatchewan
town
that
had
cost
him
$1,000
and
upon
which
he
had
spent
$5,000
for
improvements.
He
acquired
adjoining
land
and
with
the
aid
of
relatives
erected
and
equipped
a
new
hotel
into
which
he
in-
corporated
all
that
was
reasonably
usable
when
the
old
hotel
was
demolished.
Much
of
the
work
in
the
creation
of
the
new
hotel
came
from
unpaid
family
labour.
Not
only
the
appellant
and
his
sons,
but
brothers-in-law
as
well,
took
part
in
the
operation
which
was
commenced
in
1948
and
completed
in
1949.
The
appellant’s
income
tax
returns
show
that
the
structure
—
as
opposed
to
the
contents
—
cost
a
total
amount
of
$10,767.73.
(It
is
to
be
borne
in
mind
that
it
was
in
his
interest,
and
presumably
in
the
interest
of
whatever
member
of
his
family
actually
prepared
his
returns,
to
show
the
full
cost
because
his
deductions
for
depreciation
or
capital
cost
allowance
were
larger
the
larger
the
capital
cost
and,
therefore,
his
income
tax
was
smaller
the
larger
the
capital
cost.
I
think
it
is
fair
to
assume
that
this
is
a
fact
of
life
that
was
well
known
to
practically
all
business
men
and
property
owners
at
least
by
1949).
In
1961
the
appellant
sold
the
hotel
and
its
contents
for
$16,000.
In
due
course,
the
tax
assessors
sought
further
information
from
the
appellant
with
a
view
to
a
“
recapture
’
’
assessment.
At
that
time,
I
find
on
the
evidence,
although
the
appellant
says
that
he
cannot
recall
it,
that
the
appellant
told
the
assessor
that
his
capital
cost
should
be
taken
to
be
not
less
than
$14,000
by
reason
of
work
done
by
members
of
his
family.
In
his
Notice
of
Objection,
the
appellant
stated
that
the
hotel
cost
him
$14,000
and
not
$10,000
as
he
did
not
take
into
account
the
old
hotel
that
had
cost
him
$6,000.
This
was
also,
apparently,
the
position
taken
by
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
It
is
now
contended
in
this
Court
that
the
capital
cost
of
the
hotel
—
as
opposed
to
the
contents
—
was
over
$16,000.
As
appears
from
the
table
that
I
have
read
from
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
a
finding
that
the
capital
cost
was
greater
than
that
assumed
by
the
Minister
will
not,
by
itself,
alter
the
assessment
unless
the
excess
is
more
than
$3,157.27,
the
amount
characterized
as
a
“capital
gain”.
The
only
evidence
relating
directly
to
the
actual
cost
of
the
hotel
was
that
of
the
appellant
himself
who
swore
that
the
work
done
in
1948
cost
him
eleven
to
twelve
thousand
dollars
and
that
the
work
done
in
1949
cost
him
four
to
five
thousand
dollars.
When
he
was
pressed
by
the
Court
for
some
basis
for
these
amounts,
which
were
given
obviously
as
very
rough
guesses,
and
which
were
unsupported
by
any
papers
or
records
of
any
kind,
he
came
back,
after
an
interval
for
consideration,
and
indicated
that
he
thought
that
he
would
have
spent
in
1948
on
electrical
wiring
|
$
900
|
furnace
|
$1,200
to
$1,500
|
cesspool,
septic
tank,
etc.
|
$
700
to
$
800
|
helper
|
$1,800
|
excavation
and
basement
|
$1,500
|
stucco
|
$
800
|
roof
|
$
700
to
$
800
|
|
$7,600
|
In
addition,
he
said
he
spent,
in
1948
and
1949,
on
a
carpenter
$3,000,
and
$5,000
to
$7,000
on
lumber.
This
makes
a
total
of
minimum
amounts
of
over
$15,000
not
including
any
amount
for
certain
work
done
in
1949,
according
to
his
evidence.
I
did
not
find
the
appellant’s
evidence
persuasive.
He
was
obviously
doing
his
best
to
put
forward
a
view
of
the
facts
that
would
support
his
appeal.
His
evidence
seemed
to
me
to
be
an
example
of
how
a
person
trying
to
recall
events
of
the
past
can
persuade
himself
that
he
actually
remembers
facts
favourable
to
himself
that
did
not
actually
occur.
This
is
not
an
uncommon
phenomenon
in
‘the
courts
and,
when
it
occurs,
the
person
involved
has
frequently
brought
himself
to
the
point
where
he
honestly
believes
what
he
says.
The
strongest
argument
in
favour
of
'the
appeal,
as
I
appraise
it,
is
the
fact
that
it
seems
unlikely
that
any
hotel
could
have
been
constructed
in
1948
and
1949
for
less
than
$11,000.
Such
improbability
is
supported
by
the
evidence
of
the
witness,
Robert
Minshull,
who
gave
an
estimate
of
what
a
contractor
would
have
been
prepared
to
build
the
hotel
for.
However,
I
do
not
think
one
can
overlook
the
fact
that
family
enterprises
frequently
defy
ordinary
economic
principles
and
manage
to
accomplish
apparent
miracles.
In
the
absence
of
any
evidence
to
the
effect
that
there
was
an
actual
mistake
in
the
returns
showing
the
capital
cost
of
the
hotel,
in
the
absence
of
any
evidence
of
a
more
specific
character
than
that
which
the
appellant
was
able
to
give
personally,
and
in
the
absence
of
any
records
or
independent
evidence,
I
must
hold
that
it
has
not
been
established
that
the
balance
of
probability
is
that
the
capital
cost
of
the
hotel
was
more
than
that
which
was
reported
on
the
appellant’s
returns.
This
case
is
to
be
contrasted
with
the
case
of
Olynyk
v.
M.N.R.*
which
I
heard
earlier
this
week
and
decided
without
giving
prepared
reasons.
In
that
case,
there
was
in
issue
a
“recapture”
assessment
based
on
the
information
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
returns,
but
evidence
was
brought
to
show
that
that
information
was
erroneous
by
reason
of
a
misunderstanding,
on
the
part
of
the
person
who
prepared
them,
as
to
what
was
meant
by
capital
cost.
He
thought
that,
for
a
person
on
a
cash
’
’
basis,
this
meant
the
cash
paid
for
the
property
rather
than
its
actual
cost.
Moreover,
in
that
case,
very
persuasive
evidence
was
brought
that
various
substantial
items
had
been
omitted
when
reporting
the
capital
cost
of
Olynyk’s
hotel.
The
evidence
was
sufficient
to
satisfy
me
that,
if
the
true
facts
were
established
as
well
as
might
be,
the
appellant
would
be
entitled
to
some
relief
but
was
not
sufficient
to
enable
me
to
determine
how
much.
I
therefore
referred
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
re-assessment.
In
this
case,
there
is
no
evidence
of
the
character
that
I
have
described
in
the
Olynyk
case.
I
come
now
to
what
I
have
referred
to
as
the
subsidiary
issues.
It
is
common
ground
that
some
part
of
the
sale
price
of
$16,000
should
have
been
allocated
to
land.
I
can
find
no
basis
for
allocating
more
to
land
than
the
purchase
price
of
the
land
on
which
the
new
hotel
was
built,
namely,
$200.
In
my
view,
this
should
be
subtracted
from
the
$13,925
allocated
to
the
building
in
the
table
that
I
have
quoted
from
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
When
that
is
done,
it
does
not
affect
the
amount
of
the
assessment.
The
remaining
issues
do
not
require
to
be
discussed.
One
with
reference
to
goodwill
was
abandoned
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
during
argument,
with
good
reason
because,
not
only
did
the
appellant
not
purport
to
sell
goodwill,
but
as
he
was
not
himself
operating
the
hotel
he
had
no
goodwill
to
sell.
Another
had
to
do
with
the
capital
cost
of
the
old
hotel.
That
issue
was
not
raised
by
the
pleadings
and
the
trial
was
expressly
conducted
by
reference
to
issues
of
fact
that
would
not
have
enabled
it
to
be
argued.
In
any
event,
it
was
abandoned
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
during
argument
when
he
concluded
that,
even
if
it
was
open
to
him,
it
would
not
result
in
any
relief
for
the
appellant.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.