THURLOW,
J.:—These
are
appeals
from
a
judgment
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board,
allowing
in
part
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
and
penalties
in
respect
of
the
taxation
years
1950,
1951,
and
1952.
The
matters
in
issue
are,
first,
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
certain
deductions
in
computing
his
income
and,
second,
whether
he
has
incurred
any
of
the
penalties
so
assessed.
The
appellant
is
a
farmer
and
lives
at
Struan,
Saskatchewan,
where,
in
partnership
with
his
father,
Nick
Pashovitz,
he
operates
a
farm
consisting
of
nine
quarter
sections.
On
this
farm
he
grows
grain
and
raises
cattle.
He
is
now
38
years
of
age.
He
has
a
Grade
VII
education,
and
he
speaks
English
plainly
enough,
but
his
vocabulary
is
limited,
and
he
is
slow
in
understanding
anything
but
plain
and
simple
words.
On
the
other
hand,
once
he
thinks
he
understands
a
question,
he
does
not
seem
to
be
lacking
in
either
mental
agility
or
candour.
He
knows
little,
if
anything,
of
income
tax
law
or
accounting
and
knew
even
less
of
those
subjects
before
the
assessments
in
question
were
made.
His
father
is
77
years
of
age
and
appears
to
have
taken
no
very
great
part
in
the
activities
of
the
partnership
even
as
far
back
as
1950
to
1952.
He
was
not
called
as
a
witness.
The
appellant
filed
an
income
tax
return
for
1947
but
filed
none
thereafter
until
1953,
when
he
filed
a
return
for
the
year
1952.
He
did
not
consider
that
he
had
any
taxable
income
in
the
intervening
years.
Subsequently,
in
August,
1953,
at
the
Minister’s
request
he
filed
returns
for
the
years
1950
and
1951.
All
three
returns
showed
no
taxable
income.
Some
time
later
the
appellant
was
requested
to
send
in
his
records
and
vouchers,
which
he
did,
and
ultimately,
on
January
6,
1956,
the
assessments
giving
rise
to
these
appeals
were
made.
He
thereupon
filed
notices
of
objection,
raising
a
number
of
contentions
respecting
the
computations
of
his
income
for
the
years
in
question
and
challenging
the
assessments
of
the
penalties.
He
subsequently
found
some
further
vouchers
and
records
of
expenditures
which
he
transmitted
to
the
Department,
and
he
arranged
to
have
Mr.
John
Antonenko,
a
merchant
who
had
supplied
merchandise
and
repair
services,
prepare
a
summary
(Ex.
1)
of
such
purchases
and
services
for
the
years
in
question.
Some
time
later,
at
the
request
of
the
Department,
Mr.
Antonenko
delivered
to
an
officer
of
the
Department
his
copies
of
the
bills
for
such
merchandise
supplied
and
services
rendered.
None
of
these
vouchers
or
records
have
been
in
the
appellant’s
possession
since
they
were
delivered
to
the
Department
in
1956.
In
January,
1958,
the
Minister
by
notification
undertook
to
allow
some
further
capital
cost
allowance
in
respect
of
each
of
the
three
years
but
otherwise
confirmed
the
assessments,
whereupon
the
appellant
appealed
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board.
The
matter
came
before
the
Board
on
two
occasions,
the
first
in
November,
1958,
when,
after
a
number
of
witnesses
had
been
heard,
it
was
adjourned
without
day,
and
the
second
in
May,
1959.
Following
the
latter
hearing,
the
judgment
now
appealed
from
was
rendered.
By
it,
the
appellant’s
appeals
were
allowed
in
part
to
reflect
a
revision
of
the
net
income
of
the
partnership
as
follows:
|
Net
Income
Assessed
|
Revised
Net
Income
|
1950
|
$
8,165.00
|
$
8,810.94
|
1951
|
6,313.80
|
5,464.39
|
1952
|
15,048.41
|
14,266.12
|
The
appellant
thereupon
appealed
to
this
Court,
and
the
Minister
cross-appealed,
though
the
cross-appeal
was
abandoned
at
the
opening
of
the
trial.
As
the
appellant’s
return
for
the
year
1952
was
the
first
of
the
returns
for
the
three
years
in
question
to
be
filed
and
the
question
of
liability
for
penalty
under
Section
51A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1948,
c.
52,
as
amended
by
S.C.
1950,
c.
40,
s.
19,
arises
first
in
connection
with
that
year,
it
will
be
convenient
to
deal
with
it
first.
In
his
return
for
1952,
the
appellant
reported
the
revenue
of
the
partnership
for
the
year
as
follows:
Crops
and
seeds—wheat
|
$5,405.37
|
Participation
certificates
|
3,405.40
|
Livestock
sales
cattle
|
1,035.41
|
|
$9,846.18
|
From
this,
there
was
deducted
a
total
of
$7,575.42
for
expenses,
including
capital
cost
allowance
of
$2,494.24,
to
leave
a
net
profit
from
the
operation
for
the
year
of
$2,270.26,
of
which
the
appellant’s
share
was
one
half.
In
making
the
assessment,
the
Minister
added
to
the
computation
of
the
partnership
income
for
the
year
the
following:
and
he
assessed
tax
accordingly,
together
with
a
penalty
of
$58.23
pursuant
to
Section
51(1)
of
the
Act
for
late
filing
of
the
return
and
a
further
penalty
of
$358.45
pursuant
to
Section
51A
of
the
Act.
So
far
as
liability
for
tax
is
concerned,
no
issue
is
raised
in
this
appeal
with
respect
to
the
inclusion
of
items
1,
2
and
3
in
computing
the
income
of
the
partnership,
though
they
enter
into
the
question
of
liability
for
the
penalty
under
Section
51
A.
With
respect
to
item
5,
the
Minister
in
his
notification
undertook
to
allow
an
additional
amount
of
$212.03
as
a
deduction
in
respect
of
capital
cost
allowance
and,
by
an
amendment
to
his
reply
made
at
the
opening
of
the
trial,
conceded
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
deduct
in
respect
of
capital
cost
allowance
the
whole
sum
claimed
in
his
return.
No
issue,
therefore,
arises
on
this
item
as
well,
but
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
have
the
assessment
varied
so
as
to
reflect
this
concession.
The
real
issue
as
to
the
tax
assessed
for
1952
revolves
around
item
4.
No
particulars
were
given
in
the
reply,
nor
do
they
appear
to
have
been
demanded,
as
to
what
among
the
whole
mass
of
items
of
expenses
making
up
a
total
of
over
$4,000
the
Minister
had
singled
out
for
disallowance,
the
plea
being
simply
that,
in
making
the
assessment,
he
assumed
that
in
the
“Statement
of
Income
and
Expenses’’
contained
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return
there
were
included
as
operating
expenses
of
the
partnership
amounts
aggregating
in
the
sum
of
$127.10,
which
were
not
outlays
or
expenses
made
or
incurred
by
the
partnership
for
the
purposes
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
On
examination
for
discovery,
however,
an
officer
designated
to
answer
for
the
Minister
stated
that
what
was
disallowed
was
$190.55
out
of
a
total
sum
of
$880.27
which
had
been
charged
in
the
appellant’s
return
as
Repairs
and
Maintenance
and
Auto
and
Truck
Expenses.
The
disallowance
had,
however,
been
reduced
by
$63.47
because
operating
expenses
of
farm
machinery
(except
repairs),
which
had
been
stated
at
$845.92,
had
been
allowed
at
an
amount
higher
to
that
extent,
thus
reducing
the
disallowance
to
$127.18.
He
further
stated,
however,
that
the
Minister
had
since
found
vouchers
for
$879.57
for
repairs,
as
well
as
vouchers
for
$933.15
for
operating
expenses
for
which
only
$845.92
had
been
claimed
under
the
heading
“Farm
Machinery
Expenses’’
(gas,
oil,
etc.—except
repairs)
and
vouchers
for
$357.75
for
fertilizer
and
spray,
of
which
only
$131.25
had
been
claimed.
It
is,
therefore,
obvious
that
the
disallowance
of
$129.10
of
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
his
return
cannot
stand.
1.
Omitted
grain
sales
|
$10,073.89
|
2.
Omitted
Wheat
Board
payments
|
1,381.06
|
3.
Rent
expense
claimed
and
not
included
|
|
in
income
|
521.54
|
4.
Overstatement
of
expenses
|
127.10
|
5.
Capital
cost
allowance
adjustment
|
424.06
|
The
matter,
however,
does
not
end
there,
for
the
appellant
by
his
notice
of
appeal
claims
the
right
to
further
deductions
of
$2,516.76
for
what
are
referred
to
therein
as
additional
operating
expenses
and
$750
for
livestock
purchased
in
the
year.
Here
again
the
record
contains
no
particulars
of
the
sum
of
$2,516.76,
though
the
right
of
such
deductions
was
not
admitted.
On
the
evidence,
including
the
admissions
by
the
officer
examined
for
discovery,
I
find
that
expenditures
were
made
in
respect
of
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
deductions
as
follows
:
Repairs
and
maintenance,
including
repairs
to
buildings
and
machinery
and
auto
and
|
|
truck
expense
|
$2,023.00
|
Farm
machinery
operating
expense
|
933.15
|
Fertilizer
and
spray
|
431.20
|
Livestock
purchased
|
1,785.41
|
in
place
of
the
amounts
claimed
in
respect
of
these
items
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return.
The
evidence
leaves
me
unsatisfied
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
further
deductions
in
respect
of
any
other
items
and
deductions
in
respect
of
the
remaining
items
other
than
capital
cost
allowance
will
stand
as
dealt
with
by
the
Minister
in
making
the
assessment.
The
appellant’s
income
for
1952
will
be
computed
accordingly
and
the
assessment
of
tax
for
the
year
varied
as
indicated.
I
turn
now
to
the
question
of
the
penalty
of
$358.45
assessed
by
the
Minister
under
Section
51A
of
the
Act.
That
section
read
as
follows:
“51
A.
Every
person
who
has
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
or
any
part
thereof
is
liable
to
a
penalty,
to
be
fixed
by
the
Minister,
of
not
less
than
25%
and
not
more
than
50%
of
the
amount
of
the
tax
evaded
or
sought
to
be
evaded.”
No
particulars
of
what
the
appellant
did
to
incur
this
penalty
or
of
how
it
was
calculated
were
given
in
the
notice
of
assessment
or
in
the
Minister’s
reply.
On
the
examination
for
discovery,
however,
it
was
stated
that
the
Minister
had
‘‘no
factors
other
than
the
understatement
of
income
and
the
overstatement
of
expenses’’,
and
at
the
trial
it
was
not
argued
that
the
penalty
had
been
incurred
in
any
other
manner.
The
Minister’s
authority
to
assess
such
a
penalty
arose
under
Section
42,
now
Section
46
of
the
Act,
by
subsection
(1)
of
which
he
was
required,
with
all
due
dispatch,
to
“examine
each
return
of
income
and
assess
the
tax
for
the
taxation
year
and
the
interest
and
penalties,
if
any,
payable’’.
By
subsection
(4)
of
the
same
section,
as
it
then
read,
he
was
also
authorized
to
assess
tax,
interest
or
penalties
at
any
time
and
within
the
times
limited
by
clauses
(a)
and
(b)
to
re-assess
or
make
additional
assessments.
Section
53
(now
Section
58)
provided
that
a
taxpayer
who
objected
to
an
assessment
under
Part
I
might
serve
a
notice
of
objection
on
the
Minister,
who
was
thereupon
required
to
reconsider
the
assessment
and
vacate,
confirm,
or
modify
it
or
re-assess
and
to
notify
the
taxpayer.
By
Section
54
(now
Section
59)
a
right
was
given
to
the
taxpayer
who
had
served
a
notice
of
objection
to
an
assessment
to
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
to
have
the
assessment
vacated
or
varied,
and
by
Section
55
(now
Section
60)
both
the
taxpayer
and
the
Minister
were
given
rights
to
appeal
to
this
Court.
By
Section
91
(now
Section
100),
after
prescribing
the
material
the
be
filed
in
this
Court,
it
was
provided
in
subsection
(3)
that,
upon
the
filing
of
such
material,
the
matter
shall
be
deemed
an
action
in
the
court
and,
unless
the
court
otherwise
orders,
ready
for
hearing’’.
When
assessments
of
tax
are
made,
they
are
made
pursuant
to
Section
42
(now
Section
46),
and
it
has
been
held
under
similar
provisions
contained
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
that,
on
an
appeal
to
this
Court
from
such
an
assessment,
the
onus
of
proof
that
there
is
error
in
it
falls
on
the
taxpayer.
In
Johnston
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486;
[1948]
C.T.C.
195,
Rand,
J.,
speaking
for
the
majority
of
the
Supreme
Court,
said
at
page
489
[[1948]
C.T.C.
at
pages
202
and
203]
:
“Notwithstanding
that
it
is
spoken
of
in
Section
63(2)
as
an
action
ready
for
trial
or
hearing,
the
proceeding
is
an
appeal
from
the
taxation;
and
since
the
taxation
is
on
the
basis
of
certain
facts
and
certain
provisions
of
law
either
those
facts
or
the
application
of
the
law
is
challenged.
Every
such
fact
found
or
assumed
by
the
assessor
or
the
Minister
must
then
be
accepted
as
it
was
dealt
with
by
these
persons
unless
questioned
by
the
appellant.
If
the
taxpayer
here
intended
to
contest
the
fact
that
he
supported
his
wife
within
the
meaning
of
the
Rules
mentioned
he
should
have
raised
that
issue
in
his
pleading,
and
the
burden
would
have
rested
on
him
as
on
any
appellant
to
show
that
the
conclusion
below
was
not
warranted.
For
that
purpose
he
might
bring
evidence
before
the
Court
notwithstanding
that
it
had
not
been
placed
before
the
assessor
or
the
Minister,
but
the
onus
was
his
to
demolish
the
basic
fact
on
which
the
taxation
rested.
♦
*
#
The
allegations
necessary
to
the
appeal
depend
upon
the
construction
of
the
statute
and
its
application
to
the
facts
and
the
pleadings
are
to
facilitate
the
determination
of
the
issues.
It
must,
of
course,
be
assumed
that
the
Crown,
as
is
its
duty,
has
fully
disclosed
to
the
taxpayer
the
precise
findings
of
fact
and
rulings
of
law
which
have
given
rise
to
the
controversy.
But
unless
the
Crown
is
to
be
placed
in
the
position
of
a
plaintiff
or
appellant,
I
cannot
see
how
pleadings
shift
the
burden
from
what
it
would
be
without
them.
Since
the
taxpayer
in
this
case
must
establish
something,
it
seems
to
me
that
that
something
is
the
existence
of
facts
or
law
showing
an
error
in
relation
to
the
taxation
imposed
on
him.”
Kellock,
J.,
said
at
page
492
[[1948]
C.T.C.
205]
:
‘As
I
read
the
provisions
of
the
statute
commencing
with
Section
58,
a
person
who
objects
to
an
assessment
is
obliged
to
place
before
the
Minister
on
his
appeal
the
evidence
and
the
reasons
which
support
his
objection.
It
is
for
him
to
substantiate
the
objection.
If
he
does
not
do
so
he
would,
in
my
opinion,
fail
in
his
appeal.
That
is
not
to
say,
of
course,
that
if
he
places
before
the
Minister
facts
which
entitle
him
to
Succeed,
the
Minister
may
arbitrarily
dismiss
the
appeal.
No
question
of
that
sort
arises
here,
and
I
am
deciding
nothing
with
respect
to
it.
I
further
think
that
that
situation
persists
right
down
to
the
time
when
the
matter
is
in
the
Exchequer
Court
under
the
provisions
of
Section
63.
I
regard
the
pleadings,
which
may
be
directed
to
be
filed
under
subsection
(2)
of
that
section,
as
merely
defining
the
issues
which
arise
on
the
documents
required
to
be
filed
in
the
court
without
changing
the
onus
existing
before
any
such
order
is
made.
In
my
opinion
therefore
the
learned
judge
below
was
right
in
his
view
that
the
onus
lay
upon
the
appellant.”
It
was
submitted
that
the
rule
was
otherwise
where
a
penalty
has
been
assessed
and
that,
in
this
instance,
the
onus
of
proving
liability
for
the
penalty
rests
on
the
Minister.
In
my
opinion,
a
taxpayer
upon
whom
an
assessment
of
penalty
is
made
is
entitled
as
a
matter
of
course
to
particulars
of
what
the
Minister
has
assumed
as
facts
giving
rise
to
the
taxpayer’s
liability
for
the
penalty
assessed,
but
I
can
see
no
sufficient
reason
for
making
any
distinction
as
to
the
onus
of
proof,
and
the
reasoning
of
Rand
and
Kellock,
JJ.,
in
the
passages
quoted
appears
to
me
to
apply
in
the
case
of
an
assessment
of
a
penalty
just
as
forcibly
as
in
the
case
of
an
assessment
of
tax.
I
am,
therefore,
of
the
opinion
that
it
falls
on
the
taxpayer
appealing
such
an
assessment
to
‘‘demolish
the
basic
fact’’
on
which
his
liability
for
the
penalty
rests.
The
proceedings
are,
however,
of
a
civil
nature,
and
a
preponderance
of
evidence
is
sufficient.
Moreover,
the
essential
facts
giving
rise
to
liability
for
penalty
under
Section
51A
are
not
the
same
as
those
which
give
rise
to
liability
for
tax.
For
example,
errors
in
the
taxpayer’s
returns,
whether
made
intentionally
or
otherwise,
have
no
effect
on
his
liability
for
tax.
Under
Section
51A,
however,
the
intention
to
evade
taxation
is
of
the
first
importance,
and
a
taxpayer’s
ignorance
of
what
is
required
of
him,
rather
than
an
intention
to
evade,
may
account
for
the
errors
and
absolve
him
from
liability.
To
take
another
example,
for
purposes
of
liability
for
tax
a
taxpayer,
failing
to
keep
adequate
records,
may
find
himself
in
the
unfortunate
position
of
being
unable
to
disprove
the
correctness
of
an
assessment.
But
the
failure
to
keep
records
is
not
necessarily
accompanied
by
an
intention
to
avoid
payment
of
tax
and
by
itself
leads
to
no
conclusion
on
the
question
of
liability
for
penalty
under
Section
51A.
It
is
also
to
be
observed
that
liability
for
the
penalty
provided
by
Section
51A
arises
only
from
conduct
by
which
a
person
‘wilfully
evades
or
attempts
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him
for
a
taxation
year
or
any
part
thereof’’,
and
the
penalty
is
fixed
at
a
percentage
of
the
tax
so
evaded
or
sought
to
be
evaded.
This,
in
my
opinion,
directs
the
enquiry
to
particular
years
and
particular
tax,
rather
than
to
the
picture
that
may
be
presented
by
viewing
a
taxpayer’s
conduct
in
respect
of
several
years
together,
though
the
latter
may
be
of
assistance
in
determining
the
material
questions.
Turning
now
to
the
allegation
that
the
appellant
understated
his
income
for
the
year
1952,
there
is
the
fact
that
in
the
year
1952
to
his
knowledge
the
partners
sold
grain
to
the
extent
of
$10,073.89
which
was
not
included
in
the
computation
of
the
partnership
income
for
the
year.
There
is
also,
for
what
it
is
worth,
the
fact
that
the
addition
of
this
sum,
as
well
as
of
$1,381.06
of
Wheat
Board
payments,
in
the
computation
by
the
Minister
is
not
now
contested.
The
grain
so
sold,
however,
was
undoubtedly
part
of
a
considerable
stock
of
grain
grown
in
earlier
years
which
was
on
hand
at
the
beginning
of
1952.
Moreover,
the
appellant
had
not
filed
returns
for
the
years
1948
to
1951
and
had
established
no
method
of
computing
income
for
income
tax
purposes
from
the
partnership
operations
for
those
years,
nor
was
he
under
any
necessity
to
adopt
a
cash
received
method
for
computing
the
partnership
income
for
1952.
He
was
obliged
to
compute
the
income
by
a
method
which
would
accurately
reflect
the
profit
from
the
operation
for
the
year,
but
it
was
only
that
year
that
was
being
dealt
with
at
that
time,
and
to
include
in
the
computation
the
receipts
from
the
sale
during
the
year
of
grain
held
at
the
beginning
of
the
year
without
deducting
its
value
at
the
beginning
of
the
year
would
have
given
a
distorted
result
unless
by
chance
the
quantity
of
grain
remaining
on
hand
at
the
end
of
the
year
were
the
same
as
at
its
beginning,
At
the
trial,
the
appellant
stated
that
when,
some
years
earlier,
he
filed
an
income
tax
return
for
1947,
he
did
so
according
to
his
understanding
of
the
answer
to
a
question
set
out
in
a
Department
of
National
Revenue
publication
entitled
Prairie
Farmers
Income
Tax
Guide
and
that
he
followed
the
same
principle
in
computing
the
partnership
income
for
1952,
the
principle
being
that
only
the
crop
grown
in
the
year
is
regarded
as
income
for
the
year.
He
figured
out
the
acreage
under
cultivation
for
the
year
and
the
yield
per
acre
and
reported
as
receipts
from
grain
only
what
he
realized
from
the
sale
of
that
quantity
of
grain.
There
are
no
details
in
the
record
as
to
the
year
when
the
grain
represented
by
the
Wheat
Board
payments
totalling
$1,381.06
was
grown,
but
the
appellant
said
he
followed
approximately
the
same
method
in
reporting
Wheat
Board
payments.
In
this,
he
is
borne
out
to
some
extent
by
the
fact
that,
in
his
return
for
1950,
filed
some
months
later,
he
included
Wheat
Board
payments
received
in
1951
for
1950
crops,
and
it
may
be
noted
that
this,
while
not
consistent
with
a
cash
received
method
of
accounting,
was
not
challenged
by
the
Minister
in
making
the
assessment
for
the
year.
In
the
circumstances,
I
would
infer
that
the
Wheat
Board
payments
added
by
the
Minister
to
the
1952
income
were
for
wheat
grown
in
an
earlier
year
or
years
and
received
in
1952.
The
appellant
was
subjected
to
a
searching
cross-examination,
extending
over
more
than
a
full
day
of
the
trial,
but,
while
conceding
that
there
are
errors
in
his
returns,
he
stoutly
maintained
that
he
had
not
intentionally
misrepresented
anything,
and
in
my
judgment
his
evidence
on
this
question
remained
unshaken.
It
is
not
surprising
that
his
memory
should
be
poor
on
matters
of
detail
after
a
period
of
eight
years,
and
particularly
so
in
view
of
the
fact
that
he
has
not
had
possession
of
his
documents
or
records
for
most
of
that
time.
Nor
did
he
or
his
counsel
have
them
for
the
purpose
of
preparing
and
organizing
the
presentation
of
his
case.
On
the
whole,
though
I
think
his
evidence
is
subject
to
some
discount
on
matters
of
detail,
I
regard
it
as
generally
credible,
and
I
find
that
he
did
not
wilfully
evade
or
attempt
to
evade
the
payment
of
tax
by
not
including
the
sums
in
question
in
the
partnership
income
reported
in
his
income
tax
return
for
1952.
It
is
also
apparent
from
what
has
been
said
that,
instead
of
overstating
the
partnership
expenses,
the
appellant
considerably
understated
them
in
the
return,
a
result
which,
in
my
opinion,
flowed
from
his
unorganized
method
of
keeping
account
of
the
expenditures,
rather
than
from
an
intention
to
mislead.
No
explanation
was
given
as
to
how
the
$521.54
charged
for
rent
expense,
the
disallowance
of
which
by
the
Minister
is
not
now
in
issue,
came
to
be
included
in
the
expenditures,
but,
having
regard
to
the
appellant’s
evidence
that
he
made
up
the
return
to
the
best
of
his
ability
and
did
not
intentionally
misrepresent
anything,
I
regard
this
as
having
been
done
through
ignorance,
and
I
find
that
he
did
not
wilfully
seek
to
evade
payment
of
tax
for
the
year
by
including
the
$521.54
in
the
deductible
expenses
of
the
partnership.
The
assessment
of
penalty
under
Section
51A
will
accordingly
be
vacated.
I
turn
next
to
the
penalty
of
$58.23
for
late
filing
of
the
return.
The
provision
by
which
such
a
penalty
was
imposed
was
Section
51(1),
which
read
as
follows:
“51.
(1)
Every
person
who
has
failed
to
make
a
return
as
and
when
required
by
subsection
(1)
of
section
40
is
liable
to
a
penalty
of
(a)
an
amount
equal
to
5%
of
the
tax
that
was
unpaid
when
the
return
was
required
to
be
filed,
if
the
tax
payable
under
this
Part
that
was
unpaid
at
that
time
was
less
than
$10,000,
and
(b)
$500,
if
at
the
time
the
return
was
required
to
be
filed
taxable
payable
under
this
Part
equal
to
$10,000
or
more
was
unpaid.”
In
the
case
of
this
section,
as
well,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
onus
of
demolishing
the
basic
fact
on
which
the
assessment
rests
is
on
the
appellant.
The
appellant
on
or
about
April
8,
1953
employed
a
Mr.
Henderson,
an
insurance
agent
and
income
tax
consultant,
to
make
np
the
return,
which
Mr.
Henderson
did
on
the
same
day.
At
the
appellant’s
request,
he
also
made
up
a
return
for
Nick
Pashovitz,
and
the
appellant
took
it
to
his
father
for
signature,
after
which
he
returned
it
to
Mr.
Henderson.
There
is,
however,
no
evidence
that
the
returns
were
sent
to
or
filed
at
the
District
Taxation
Office
on
or
before
April
30,
1953,
as
was
required
by
Section
40(1).
The
onus
is,
accordingly,
not
discharged,
and
the
appellant
is
liable
for
a
penalty
under
Section
51(1),
but
in
view
of
the
findings
which
I
have
made
as
to
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
year
the
amount
of
the
penalty
must
be
varied
so
as
not
to
exceed
what
Section
51(1)
provided.
The
appellant’s
returns
for
the
years
1950
and
1951
were
both
dated
August
25,
1953.
In
them
he
reported
the
income
of
the
partnership
as
follows:
|
1950
|
1951
|
Crops
and
seeds—wheat
|
$5,383.03
|
$3,262.82
|
Participation
certificates
|
2,884.45
|
1,333.11
|
Livestock
and
livestock
products
|
|
5
head
cattle
|
|
1,100.00
|
|
$8,267.48
|
$5,695.93
|
Less
total
expenses
|
4,968.52
|
5,891.47
|
|
deficit
|
|
$3,298.96
$
195.54
|
In
the
assessments
for
these
years,
th
e
Minister
added
to
this
income
the
following
:
|
1950
|
1951
|
1.
Omitted
grain
sales
|
$1,508.07
|
$4,116.08
|
2.
Omitted
cattle
sales
|
1,722.68
|
1,011.04
|
3.
Rent
expense
claimed
not
paid
|
300.00
|
|
4.
Overstatement
of
operating
|
|
expenses
|
800.79
|
812.2?
|
5.
Capital
cost
allowance
not
|
|
allowed
|
239.00
|
270.00
|
and
he
assessed
tax
accordingly,
together
with
penalties
of
$16.78
and
$8.31
respectively,
under
Section
51(1)
for
late
filing
of
the
returns
and
$76.96
and
$26.82
respectively
pursuant
to
Section
51A
of
the
Act.
So
far
as
liability
for
tax
is
concerned,
no
issue
is
now
raised
as
to
the
inclusion
of
items
1
and
2
in
the
computation
of
income
though,
as
in
the
case
of
the
1952
assessment,
these
items
are
involved
in
the
question
of
liability
for
penalties
under
Section
51A.
With
respect
to
item
5,
the
Minister
by
his
notification
undertook
to
allow
a
portion
of
the
disallowed
capital
cost
allowance
and
now
concedes
the
appellant’s
right
to
deduct
the
full
amount
claimed
in
the
returns.
The
assessments
must,
accordingly,
be
varied
so
as
to
reflect
these
concessions.
Issue
does
arise,
however,
over
items
3
and
4.
With
respect
to
item
3,
I
am
not
satisfied
that
the
partnership
paid
rent
otherwise
than
by
delivery
of
grain
for
which
payment
was
made
by
the
purchaser
directly
to
the
landlord
or
that
the
amount
of
the
rent
paid
was
included
in
what
was
accounted
for
as
receipts.
The
disallowance
of
the
deduction
claimed
will,
accordingly,
stand.
With
respect
to
item
4,
it
will
be
convenient
to
deal
separately
with
each
year.
The
officer
examined
for
discovery
stated
that
the
expenses
disallowed
were
as
follows
for
1950.
|
Claimed
|
Disallowed
|
Insurance
|
..-
|
|
$
30.00
|
$
30.00
|
Repairs
&
Maintenance
|
$159.91"
|
|
Auto
|
$126.00
|
|
650.91
|
486.89
|
Truck
|
265.00
391.00
|
|
Operating
expenses
of
farm
|
|
machinery
(except
repairs)
|
1,011.11
|
283.90
|
|
$800.79
|
The
officer
admitted,
however,
that
he
had
vouchers
which
the
Minister
would
allow
under
the
item
headed
‘‘Operating
Expenses”
amounting
to
$1,209.79
and
$28.15
in
excess
of
what
had
been
claimed
in
respect
of
small
tools.
The
disallowance
of
$283.90
of
the
sum
claimed
as
operating
expenses
of
farm
machinery
is,
therefore,
not
justified,
and
from
these
admissions
alone
it
would
appear
that
the
total
amount
disallowed
should
be
reduced
by
$510.78.
The
appellant,
on
the
other
hand,
not
only
disputes
the
whole
of
the
allowance
of
$486.89
under
the
item
‘‘
Repairs,
etc.”
but
claims
the
right
to
further
deductions
of
$1,284.74
for
what
are
referred
to
in
his
notice
of
appeal
simply
as
additional
expenses.
The
right
to
make
such
deductions
was
not
admitted.
On
the
evidence,
including
the
admissions
made
by
the
officer
examined
for
discovery,
I
find
that
expenditures
were
made
in
respect
of
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
deductions
as
follows:
Repairs
and
Maintenance
(including
repairs
|
|
to
buildings),
Auto
and
Truck
expense
|
$1,048.65
|
Operating
expenses
of
farm
machinery
|
|
(except
repairs)
|
1,209.79
|
Fertilizer
and
Spray
|
211.15
|
Small
tools
|
58.15
|
in
place
of
the
amounts
claimed
in
respect
of
these
items
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return.
The
evidence
leaves
me
unsatisfied
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
further
deductions
in
respect
of
any
other
items,
and
deductions
in
respect
of
the
remaining
items
other
than
capital
cost
allowance
will
stand
as
dealt
with
by
the
Minister
in
making
the
assessment.
The
appellant’s
income
for
1950
will
be
re-computed
accordingly
and
the
assessment
of
tax
for
the
year
varied
to
the
extent
indicated.
With
respect
to
the
year
1951,
the
officer
examined
for
discovery
stated
that
the
expenses
disallowed
were
as
follows
:
|
Claimed
|
Disallowed
|
Taxes
|
|
$495.25
|
$
70.00
|
Insurance
|
|
30.00
|
30.00
|
Repairs
and
Maintenance-
|
$295.11
|
|
Auto
|
$123.20
|
676.31
|
326.93
|
Truck
|
298.00
|
381.20
|
|
Operating
expenses
of
farm
machinery
|
|
(except
repairs)
|
|
950.76
|
293.29
|
Containers
and
twine
|
128.00
|
32.00
|
Fertilizer
and
spray
|
60.00
|
60.00
|
|
$812.22
|
He
also
admitted,
however,
that
the
Minister
had
found
that
the
expenses
of
maintenance
and
repairs
had
amounted
to
$386.35
and
the
auto
and
truck
expenses
to
$476.24,
the
latter
two
totalling
$862.59,
and
the
fertilizer
and
spray
expenses
to
$524.48.
The
disallowance
of
$326.93
of
the
amounts
claimed
under
the
items
for
repairs
and
maintenance
and
auto
and
truck
expenses
and
$60
as
claimed
for
fertilizer
and
spray
is,
therefore,
not
justified,
and
from
these
admissions
alone
it
appears
to
me
that
not
only
should
nothing
have
been
disallowed
under
these
items
but
that
the
deductions
claimed
by
the
appellant
under
them
should
have
been
increased.
Again,
however,
the
matter
does
not
end
there,
for
the
appellant
not
only
disputes
the
disallowances
but
claims
the
right
to
further
deductions
of
$2,074.81
for
what
are
referred
to
in
his
notice
of
appeal
simply
as
additional
expenses
and
$460
for
livestock
purchased.
The
right
to
make
such
deductions
was
not
admitted.
On
the
evidence,
including
the
admissions
made
by
the
officer
examined
for
discovery,
I
find
that
expenditures
were
made
in
respect
of
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
deductions
as
follows
in
place
of
the
amounts
claimed
in
respect
of
these
items
in
the
appellant’s
income
tax
return.
Repairs
and
maintenance
(including
repairs
|
|
to
buildings),
auto
and
truck
expenses
|
$1,677.00
|
Operating
expenses
of
farm
machinery
|
|
(except
repairs)
|
942.34
|
Livestock
purchased
|
481.25
|
Fertilizer
and
spray
|
524.48
|
The
evidence
leaves
me
unsatisfied
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
additional
deductions
in
respect
of
any
other
items
and
deductions
in
respect
of
the
remaining
items
other
than
capital
cost
allowance
will
stand
as
dealt
with
by
the
Minister
in
making
the
assessment.
The
appellant’s
income
for
1951
will
be
re-computed
accordingly
and
the
assessment
of
tax
for
the
year
varied
to
the
extent
indicated.
I
come
now
to
the
question
whether
the
appellant
incurred
penalties
under
Section
51A
by
understating
his
income
or
overstating
his
expenses
in
his
returns
for
1950
and
1951.
It
is
obvious
from
what
I
have
found
that,
speaking
generally,
the
operating
expenses
of
the
partnership
for
these
years
were
understated
rather
than
overstated,
and
while
I
am
not
satisfied
on
the
evidence
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
a
deduction
in
respect
of
the
$300
rent
expense
claimed
in
1950,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
appellant
believed
when
making
the
return
and
still
believes
that
it
is
a
deduction
to
which
he
is
entitled.
Nor
am
I
satisfied
that
the
other
expenses
claimed
which
have
not
been
allowed
were
not
in
fact
incurred,
even
though
the
appellant
has
not
succeeded
in
establishing
them.
It
is
a
long
step
from
this
position
to
say
that,
by
including
them,
he
wilfully
sought
to
evade
tax
and,
while
he
sets
out
with
a
presumption
to
that
effect
against
him
and
with
the
onus
upon
him
of
disproving
it,
his
evidence
satisfies
me
that
he
did
not
wilfully
evade
or
attempt
to
evade
the
taxpayable
by
including
them.
I
am
also
satisfied
that
he
knew
nothing
about
the
basis
for
computing
capital
cost
allowances
and
that
such
errors
as
were
shown
to
exist
in
the
computation
contained
in
his
returns
were
not
made
for
the
purpose
of
evading
tax.
In
respect
to
capital
cost
allowance
claims,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
he
relied
on
Mr.
Henderson,
whose
integrity
is
unquestioned,
and
I
do
not
think
that
he
understood
the
computations
which
Mr.
Henderson
made
or
that
he
knew
what
information
they
were
or
ought
to
be
based
upon.
The
most
troublesome
questions
with
respect
to
the
penalties
relate
to
the
income
from
grain
and
cattle
which
the
Minister
added
in
making
the
assessments
for
1950
and
1951.
The
grain
sales
so
added
were
$1,508.07
in
1950
and
$4,116.08
in
1951.
That
the
partners
made
these
sales
is
not
in
doubt,
and
the
appellant
had
no
hesitation
in
admitting
that
there
were
errors
in
his
returns.
His
explanation
of
how
these
errors
occurred
was
that,
before
making
up
the
returns,
he
went
to
a
Mr.
Tetarenko,
an
elevator
agent
who
had
purchased
grain
from
time
to
time
for
his
employer
from
the
appellant
and
his
father,
and
had
Tetarenko
calculate
the
amount
of
his
grain
sales
for
each
of
these
years.
Tetarenko
made
the
calculations
and
marked
the
result
in
the
Wheat
Board
permit
books
of
the
appellant
and
his
father,
and
the
appellant
copied
these
figures
on
a
piece
of
paper
and
used
them
in
compiling
the
information
for
his
returns.
From
his
knowledge
of
the
number
of
acres
under
cultivation
in
the
year
and
the
yield
per
acre,
it
seemed
to
him
to
work
out
to
the
amount
of
the
crop
for
the
year.
The
permit
books
were
always
kept
at
the
elevator,
rather
than
at
the
appellant’s
home,
and
the
entries
therein
were
made
by
the
elevator
agent
who
purchased
the
grain.
And
though
it
was
the
producer’s
responsibility,
as
well
as
that
of
the
agent,
to
see
that
all
sales
were
entered,
in
practice
this
was
left
to
the
agent.
In
truth,
all
the
sales
of
grain
were
not
entered
in
the
permit
books,
and
it
is
the
omitted
sales
which
the
Minister
had
added
in
making
the
assessments.
After
a
lengthy
consideration
of
the
evidence
and
bearing
in
mind
that
the
appellant
was
a
novice
in
these
matters
at
the
time,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
his
explanation
is
sufficiently
plausible
to
support
his
evidence
that
he
did
not
intentionally
misrepresent
his
income
by
not
accounting
for
the
sales
which
the
Minister
has
added.
I
find
it
more
difficult,
however,
to
take
this
view
of
his
omission
to
report
for
1950
cattle
sales
amounting
to
$1,722.68.
He
said
that,
in
reporting
cattle
sales,
he
reported
only
the
excess
of
selling
price
over
what
they
had
cost
him,
but
this
affords
at
best
only
a
partial
explanation,
since
in
1950
he
reported
no
proceeds
at
all
from
cattle
sales.
Moreover,
the
size
of
the
amount
is
such
that
I
find
it
difficult
to
believe
he
would
entirely
forget
about
it.
If
a
satisfactory
explanation
of
his
failure
to
report
this
sum,
or
at
least
some
portion
of
it,
existed,
it
was
not
given
in
evidence,
and
in
this
instance
his
evidence
has
not
tipped
the
scale
in
his
favour
or
persuaded
me
that
his
returns
from
sales
of
livestock
were
not
intentionally
omitted.
On
the
other
hand,
for
1951
he
reported
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
cattle,
and
while
his
method
of
computing
the
amount
was
inadequate,
I
am
satisfied
by
his
evidence
that
he
did
not
wilfully
omit
what
the
Minister
added
for
the
purpose
of
evading
tax.
The
assessment
of
penalty
under
Section
51A
for
the
year
1950
must,
accordingly,
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
re-assessment,
having
regard
to
the
tax
payable
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
$1,722.68
so
omitted.
The
assessment
of
penalty
under
Section
51A
for
the
year
1951
will
be
vacated.
On
the
evidence,
the
appellant’s
returns
for
1950
and
1951
were
clearly
late,
and
penalties
under
Section
51(1)
were,
accordingly
incurred.
The
assessments
of
such
penalties
will,
however,
be
varied
so
as
not
to
exceed
five
per
cent
of
the
tax
payable
in
respect
of
those
years,
based
on
the
appellant’s
income
computed
in
accordance
with
this
judgment.
The
appeals
will
be
allowed
to
the
extent
indicated
in
these
reasons,
and
the
assessments
varied,
referred
back
or
vacated,
is
stated
therein.
The
appellant
will
have
the
costs
of
the
appeals.
Judgment
accordingly.