FOURNIER,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
(18
Tax
A.B.C.
421)
dated
February
13,
1958,
allowing
the
respondent’s
appeal
from
an
assessment
made
and
confirmed
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
income
tax
assessment
for
the
respondent’s
taxation
year
1955.
In
its
income
tax
return
for
1955
the
respondent
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
income
an
amount
of
$11,675.95
as
an
expenditure
to
earn
income
from
its
business.
The
amount
is
made
up
of
the
following
items
of
expenses:
Refrigerators
|
_$
8,817.05
|
Blinds
|
1,888.80
|
Stoves
|
970.60
|
Total
|
$11,675.95
|
In
his
re-assessment
the
Minister
disallowed
the
amount
as
a
deduction
and
re-assessed
accordingly.
The
respondent
objected
but
the
re-assessment
was
confirmed
by
the
appellant.
The
respondent
appealed
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
which
allowed
the
appeal.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
above
expenditure
was
made
for
the
replacement
of
capital
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
does
not
constitute
an
expense
made
or
incurred
by
the
respondent
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Act.
On
the
other
hand,
the
respondent
contends
that
the
appellant’s
re-assessment
is
erroneous
in
fact
and
in
law
on
the
ground
that
it
disallows
as
a
deduction
expenses
laid
out
to
earn
income
from
a
property
or
business.
The
only
question
to
be
determined
is
whether
the
amount
of
$11,675.95
claimed
by
the
respondent
as
a
deduction
in
computing
its
income
and
disallowed
by
the
appellant
comes
within
the
ambit
of
Sections
12(1)
(a)
and
12(1)(b):
These
sections
read
as
follows:
“12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(b)
an
outlay,
loss
or
replacement
of
capital,
a
payment
on
account
of
capital
or
an
allowance
in
respect
of
depreciation,
obsolescence
or
depletion
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
Part,”
I
shall
summarize
the
facts
established
before
the
Court
and
which
are
relevant
to
the
issue.
The
respondent
is
a
real-estate
holding
company
which
operates
a
high-class
apartment
building
on
Sherbrooke
Street
West,
in
the
city
of
Montreal.
It
purchased
the
Haddon
Hall
Apartments
in
1948.
The
property
consists
of
ten
buildings
connected
together,
each
one
containing
apartments.
Altogether,
there
are
210
apartment
units
fitted
out
with
first-class
equipment.
According
to
size,
the
rentals
vary
from
$115
to
$350
per
month.
The
leases
of
the
apartments
cover,
amongst
other
things
and
services,
the
use
of
frigidaires,
stoves
and
venetian
blinds
supplied
by
the
owner
in
each
apartment.
The
city
assessment
of
Haddon
Hall
Apartments
is
$2,356,000.
They
are
insured
for
$2,500,000.
The
building
had
been
erected
a
number
of
years
before
its
acquisition
by
the
respondent
and
had
been
occupied
continuously
by
tenants.
The
building
and
its
equipment,
as
all
similar
property,
needed
maintenance,
repairs
and
replacements
to
be
kept
in
condition
for
the
purposes
it
was
used,
otherwise
it
would
have
been
very
difficult
or
impossible
to
attract
tenants
willing
to
pay
rentals
commensurate
to
the
investment,
the
location
of
the
building,
the
high
class
of
the
apartments
and
the
prices
of
rents.
So
gradually
the
respondent
attended
to
the
necessary
maintenance,
repairs
and
replacements.
The
respondent’s
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
1950
to
1954
show
the
amounts
disbursed
in
each
of
these
years
for
refrigerators,
stoves
and
venetian
blinds,
viz.:
|
Refrigerators
|
Stoves
|
Venetian
blinds
|
1950
|
$
1,955.67
|
$3,649.59
|
$1,516.71
|
1951
|
6,885.67
|
6,158.64
|
3,370.29
|
1952
|
1,561.71
|
787.40
|
1,212.79
|
1953
|
1,135.95
|
1,735.69
|
1,398.28
|
1954
|
11,208.75
|
231.00
|
1,727.86
|
These
expenses
were
made
to
keep
the
apartments
in
a
good
state
of
repairs,
to
provide
necessary
replacements
and
to
give
the
services
to
which
the
tenants
were
entitled
according
to
the
terms
of
their
leases.
In
the
present
dispute,
the
amounts
claimed
as
deductions,
totalling
$11,675.15,
were
for
expenditures
incurred
during
the
year
1955
for
the
same
purposes
as
above
mentioned.
The
evidence
is
to
the
effect
that
the
respondent
is
the
owner
of
a
very
large
apartment
building
and
that
its
business
is
the
renting
of
apartments
with
all
necessary
equipment,
comprising
refrigerators,
stoves
and
venetian
blinds
which
it
supplies.
The
amounts
received
from
the
tenants,
less
the
cost
of
the
operations
of
the
business
and
the
expenses
for
the
upkeep
of
the
property
and
its
equipment,
was
the
respondent’s
income.
An
important
part
of
the
respondent’s
business
is
to
find
tenants
for
its
apartments,
keep
them
satisfied
of
their
homes
and
obtain
a
fair
return
on
the
leases.
It
believes
that
modern
services
and
equipment
in
good
order
in
each
apartment
are
not
only
essential
but
tantamount
to
the
success
of
its
business
operations.
It
is
a
high-class
apartment
building,
situated
in
a
fsahionable
district
of
Montreal
and
occupied
by
tenants
of
means.
The
prices
would
indicate
that
the
tenants,
in
return
for
the
rentals
paid,
expect
services
and
first-class
equipment
during
their
period
of
occupancy.
That
is
why
the
respondent
repairs
or
replaces
defective
equipment
in
the
apartments
when
needed.
The
expenses
are
gradual
and
recurrent.
This
is
shown
by
the
figures
of
expenses
made
by
the
respondent,
every
year
since
1950,
to
purchase
refrigerators,
stoves
and
blinds.
Notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
respondent
had
followed
this
policy
since
it
became
the
owner
of
the
apartments,
it
did
not
appeal
from
the
assessments
disallowing
its
claims
for
deduction,
because
prior
to
1955
it
did
not
earn
income,
and
no
appeal
lies
from
nil
assessments.
The
policy
adhered
to
by
the
respondent
has
resulted
in
business
for
it
from
which
income
was
gained
or
produced,
as
is
apparent
in
its
income
tax
returns
since
operating
the
business.
These
established
facts
bring
me
to
the
consideration
of
the
rules
laid
down
in
Section
12(1)(a).
The
general
principle
expressed
in
Section
12(1)
is
that
no
deduction
is
made
in
respect
of
an
outlay
or
expense
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income.
But
Section
12(1)
(a)
makes
an
exception
to
the
general
rule
and
deals
with
the
computation
of
income
from
property
or
the
business
of
a
taxpayer.
It
allows
a
deduction
in
computing
income
when
‘‘an
outlay
or
expense
is
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer’’.
Section
4
of
the
Act
defines
income
from
a
business
or
property
as
‘‘the
profit
therefrom”.
The
principles
for
the
computation
of
income
or
profits
or
gains
are
not
indicated
in
the
Act
but
are
stated
in
many
judicial
decisions.
In
the
case
of
Gresham
Life
Assurance
Society
v.
Styles,
[1892]
A.C.
309
at
316,
Lord
Halsbury,
L.C.,
said:
“Profits
and
gains
must
be
ascertained
on
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading,”
This
rule
was
approved
in
Ushers
Wiltshire
Brewery,
Limited
v.
Bruce,
[1915]
A.C.
433
at
434
by
Earl
Loreburn
when
he
stated
:
profits
and
gains
must
be
estimated
on
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading
by
setting
against
the
income
earned
the
cost
of
earning
it,”
The
President
of
this
Court
dealt
at
length
with
what
he
thought
should
be
the
right
approach
to
the
question
whether
a
disbursement
or
expense
was
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes
under
Section
6(a)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
e.
97,
in
Imperial
Oil
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1947]
Ex.
C.R.
527
;
[1947]
C.T.C.
353;
he
held:
“That
if
a
particular
disbursement
or
expense
is
not
within
the
express
terms
of
the
excluding
provisions
of
section
6(a),
its
deduction
ought
to
be
allowed
if
such
deduction
would
otherwise
be
in
accordance
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
business
and
accounting
practice.’’
In
another
case,
but
this
one
dealing
with
Section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
The
Royal
Trust
Company
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
C.T.C.
32,
he
said:
‘‘that
in
a
case
under
The
Income
Tax
Act
the
first
matter
to
be
determined
in
deciding
whether
an
outlay
or
expense
is
outside
the
prohibition
of
section
12(1)
(a)
of
the
Act
is
whether
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
in
accordance
with
the
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
trading
or
well
accepted
principles
of
business
practice.
If
it
was
not,
that
is
the
end
of
the
matter.
But
if
it
was,
then
the
outlay
or
expense
is
properly
deductible
unless
it
falls
outside
the
expressed
exception
of
section
12(1)
(a)
and,
therefore,
within
its
prohibition.”
The
respondent
submits
that
the
above
test
applies
to
the
facts
of
this
case
and
argues
that
the
expense
it
claims
as
a
deduction
falls
within
the
category
of
expenditures
for
maintenance
and
repairs
of
the
building
which
it
operates
as
a
business,
to
wit,
the
renting
of
apartments.
Before
dealing
with
this
point,
I
shall
consider
the
appellant’s
contention
that
the
outlay
was
of
the
nature
of
a
replacement
of
capital
and
comes
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
of
the
Act.
This
section
provides
that
in
computing
income
no
deduction
should
be
made
in
respect
of
a
replacement
of
capital
and
is
applicable
to
all
taxpayers.
Though
it
is
a
general
provision,
it
contains
the
exception
that
it
will
not
apply
when
a
deduction
is
‘‘expressly
permitted
by
this
Part
of
the
Act”,
namely,
Part
I,
Division
B,
dealing
with
“Computation
of
Income”.
Section
12(1)(a),
which
is
a
provision
of
this
Part
of
the
Act,
provides
that
an
outlay
or
expense
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
of
the
taxpayer
is
deductible.
For
convenience,
I
repeat
its
wording
:
“12.
(1)
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property
or
a
business
of
the
taxpayer,”
This
section
follows
immediately
the
heading
‘‘
Deductions
not
allowed
in
computing
income’’.
It
lays
down
the
sweeping
provision
‘‘No
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
an
outlay
or
expense’’.
This
indicates
that
it
applies
to
all
the
subsections
and
subparagraphs
of
the
section
and
covers
(1)
(a)
and
(1)
(b).
There
are
not
many
general
rules
of
law
that
do
not
call
for
exceptions.
Subparagraphs
(a)
and
(b)
contain
exceptions.
In
(a)
the
exception
applies
not
only
to
outlays
and
expenses
made
but
also
to
those
incurred;
and
it
is
stated
when
and
why
a
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
benefit
of
the
exemption.
The
amount
is
deductible
when
it
is
made
or
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
his
property
or
his
business.
As
to
(b),
deductibility
will
be
allowed
when
it
is
‘‘expressly
permitted
by
this
Part’’.
It
seems
to
me
that
these
words
open
the
door
to
the
exemption
of
(1)
(a).
If
I
am
right
in
so
believing,
then
outlays
that
are
of
the
nature
of
income
producing
expenditures
in
the
operation
of
a
business
and
which
are
not
replacement
of
capital
or
disbursement
on
account
of
capital
are
deductible.
The
parties
seem
to
agree
on
certain
facts.
The
Haddon
Hail
Apartments
were
purchased
by
the
respondent
as
a
business
project.
It
acquired
the
whole
undertaking,
comprising
a
structure,
a
building
and
its
equipment.
The
appellant
did
not
deny
that
the
expenses
incurred
and
claimed
as
deductions
were
expenses
incurred
to
earn
income
but
contended
that
they
were
capital
expense
or
replacement
of
capital.
What
really
took
place
is
that
after
purchasing
the
apartment
building,
basis
of
its
business
operations,
the
respondent,
year
in
and
year
out,
had
to
replace
certain
parts
of
the
equipment
of
the
building
and
the
expenditures
to
do
so
were
made
every
year.
In
this
dispute,
the
replacements
consisted
of
refrigerators,
stoves
and
blinds.
When
the
tenants
complained
that
the
equipment
was
out
of
order,
defective
and
did
not
furnish
the
services
to
Which
they
were
entitled
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
their
lease,
the
respondent
had
the
equipment
repaired
or
replaced.
‘;
Certain
tests
were
suggested
to
the
Court
to
determine
whether
the
expenses
for
these
replacements
were
capital
or
income
outlays
and
references
were
made
to
judicial
decisions
on
the
subject.
In
the
case
of
Lurcott
v.
Wakely
&
Wheeler,
[1911]
1
K.B.
905
at
923,
Buckley,
L.J.,
giving
his
opinion
on
repairs,
said
:
“Repair
always
involves
renewal;
renewal
of
a
part;
of
a
Subordinate
part.
A
skylight
leaks
;
repair
is
effected
by
hacking
out
the
putties,
putting
in
new
ones,
and
renewing
the
paint.
.
.
.
Repair
is
restoration
by
renewal
or
replacement
of
subsidiary
parts
of
a
whole.
’
’
In
the
same
judgment,
at
page
919
Fletcher
Moulton,
L.J.,
stated
:
“For
my
own
part,
when
the
word
‘repair’
is
applied
to
a
complex
matter
like
a
house,
I
have
no
doubt
that
the
repair
includes
the
replacement
of
parts.
.
..
Many,
and
in
fact.
most,
repairs
imply
that
some
portion
of
the
total
fabric
is
renewed,
that
new
is
put
in
place
of
old.
Therefore
you
have
from
time
to
time
as
things
need
repair
to
put
new
for
old.
.
.
.’’
The
test
followed
in
that
case
was
whether
the
act
to
be
done
is
one
which
in
substance
is
the
renewal
or
replacement
of
defective
parts
or
the
renewal
or
replacement
of
substantially
the
whole.
The
Court
was
dealing
with
the
restoration
of
a
portion
of
a
wall
of
24
feet
on
the
front
of
a
building.
The
repairing
of
the
wall
was
made
by
rebuilding
it.
They
evidently
considered
that
a
repair
can
be
a
replacement
and
that
the
portion
of
the
wall
replaced
was
merely
a
subsidiary
portion
of
the
building.
In
the
case
of
Samuel
Jones
&
Co.
(Devondale)
Ltd.
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1951),
32
T.C.
513,
a
chimney
of
a
factory
was
replaced
because
of
its
dangerous
condition.
The
cost
to
do
so
was
claimed
as
a
deduction,
which
was
disallowed.
On
appeal
the
Court
held
‘‘that
the
whole
cost
of
replacing
the
chimney
was
an
admissible
deduction’’.
The
Lord
President
(Cooper)
at
page
518
said:
“It
is
doubtless
an
indispensable
part
of
the
factory,
doubtless
an
integral
part
;
but
none
the
less
a
subsidiary
part,
and
one
of
many
subsidiary
parts,
of
a
single
industrial
profitearning
undertaking.
So
viewing
the
matter
I
am
unable
to
see
why
the
expense
incurred
in
relation
to
this
transaction
should
not
be
treated
as
an
admissible
revenue
expenditure
on
repairs,
..
.’’
Now,
can
the
facts
of
the
present
case
meet
the
above
test?
The
Haddon
Hall
Apartment
was
acquired
as
a
unit.
The
whole
undertaking
was
composed
of
land,
buildings
and
equipment.
The
equipment,
amongst
other
items,
comprised
refrigerators,
stoves
and
venetian
blinds.
It
seems
clear
that
these
items
of
equipment
were
inseparable
portions
of
a
unit,
to
wit,
an
apartment
building.
They
were
materially
and
functionally
component
parts
of
a
whole
undertaking.
Though
they
were
integral
parts,
they
were
only
subsidiary
parts
and
just
a
number
of
many
subsidiary
parts
of
a
single
profit-making
undertaking.
Keeping
in
mind
the
remarks
of
the
judges
in
the
Lurcott
case
(supra)
that
repair
of
a
house
is
restoration
by
renewal
or
replacement
of
parts
of
the
whole
and
that
many,
and
in
fact
most,
repairs
imply
that
some
portion
of
the
total
fabric
is
renewed,
that
new
is
put
in
place
of
old
and
that
from
time
to
time,
as
things
need
repair,
to
put
new
for
old
becomes
necessary”,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
replacement
of
subsidiary
parts
of
equipment
of
the
Haddon
Hall
Apartments
such
as
refrigerators,
stoves
and
blinds
falls
within
the
category
of
repairs
to
the
building
as
a
whole
and
that
the
cost
was
maintenance
expenditures.
I
cannot
agree
with
the
appellant’s
contention
that
pieces
of
equipment
such
as
refrigerators,
stoves
and
blinds
were
not
parts
of
the
apartment
building
but
were
independent
and
individual
units,
e.g.,
capital
assets,
and
that
their
replacement
was
a
replacement
of
capital.
As
stated
above,
they
were
inseparable,
but
subsidiary
parts
of
the
building,
being
materially
and
functionally
portions
of
a
whole
undertaking
of
renting
apartments
fully
equipped
to
service
tenants.
The
respondent
does
not
rent
refrigerators,
stoves
or
blinds—he
leases
apartments.
If
the
reasoning
nf
counsel
were
right,
it
could
apply
to
each
and
every
new
item
used
in
the
repair
of
any
part
of
the
building
or
its
equipment,
however
small
it
may
be.
One
can
foresee
where
this
would
lead
us.
This,
I
am
sure,
is
not
the
meaning
of
the
words
of
Section
12(1)
(b)
that
no
deduction
is
made
for
replacement
of
capital.
To
maintain
a
building
in
good
condition,
replacements,
renewals
and
repairs
of
parts
are
needed,
and
I
consider
that
the
amounts
thus
expended
are
“maintenance
expenditures’’.
The
maintenance
of
the
respondent’s
apartment
building
and
equipment
in
a
good
state
of
repairs
is
vital
to
its
business.
This
is
according
to
well
accepted
principles
of
business.
Without
hesitation,
I
say
that
the
respondent’s
purpose
was
to
increase
its
business
by
maintaining
in
a
good
state
of
repairs
its
high-class
apartment
building
and
to
meet
its
obligations
under
its
leases.
I
would
further
add
that
by
doing
so
it
was
at
times
in
a
position
to
increase
the
price
of
its
rentals.
It
is
clear
that
the
expenditures
were
made
by
the
respondent
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
its
business.
This
was
the
respondent’s
policy.
In
my
opinion
the
amounts
thus
expended
were
properly
deducted
in
its
income
tax
return
for
the
year
in
question
and
the
Department
was
in
error
in
disallowing
the
deduction
and
adding
the
amount
to
the
taxable
income
reported
by
the
respondent.
For
the
above
reasons
I
find
that
the
respondent,
in
computing
its
income
for
1955,
was
entitled
to
deduct
the
sum
of
$11,675.95
and
that
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
was
correct
in
deciding
that
the
expenditure
should
be
considered
to
fall
within
the
exception
contained
in
Section
12(1)
(a)
and
be
held
not
to
come
within
the
provision
of
Section
12(1)
(b).
Appeal
dismissed
with
costs
to
respondent
following
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.