DUMOULIN,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
(1958),
20
Tax
A.B.C.
47,
dated
July
28,
1958,
in
respect
of
income
tax
assessments
for
five
successive
years,
namely:
1949
to
1953
inclusive.
It
should
be
noted,
from
the
start,
that
we
have
here
one
of
those
few,
and
usually
unfortunate
instances,
wherein
a
party
appearing
in
his
own
behalf,
in
the
dual
capacity
of
counsel
and
witness,
does
meagre
justice
to
each.
The
appellant
resides
in
the
City
of
Calgary
and
is
not
presently
engaged
in
the
pursuit
of
any
particular
profession,
trade
or
industry.
At
the
material
time,
between
1949
and
1953,
he
had,
according
to
his
evidence,
three
sources
of
income:
(a)
rentals
from
real
estate;
(b)
interest;
(c)
proceeds
from
a
business
known
as:
“A.
A.
Auto
Baggage
Transfer’’.
Out
of
such
revenues,
he
derived
the
wherewithal
for
himself,
his
wife
and
a
family
of
five
children
in
1949,
which
by
1953
had
grown
to
eight.
Section
3
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
also
mentions
‘‘the
systematic
purchase
of
discounted
agreements
for
sale’’.
In
the
very
candid,
but
possibly
not
all-pervading
light
of
a
one-sided
version,
that
of
respondent’s
assessor,
the
trial
revealed
the
following
salient
facts.
An
aggregate
amount
of
$91,273.42
would,
in
respondent’s
view,
represent
Mr.
I.
H.
Graham’s
unreported
income
during
the
relevant
period.
Before
marshalling
the
essential
figures
given
me
by
one
of
the
local
income
tax
assessors,
Mr.
James
W.
Halton,
and
written
down
in
his
very
thorough
balance
sheet
or
comparative
statement
of
Graham’s
liabilities
and
assets
for
the
critical
period,
a
document
filed
as
Exhibit
1,
I
should
make
due
mention
of
another
part
of
his
testimony.
This
witness,
who
impressed
me
as
being
a
most
painstaking,
conscientious
and
patient
official,
expatiated
on
the
appellant’s
uncooperative,
hindering
attitude
throughout.
Appellant’s
books
of
account
were
inadequate;
vouchers
for
rental
returns
either
could
not
be
produced
or,
when
available,
did
not
tally
with
receipts
for
larger
amounts
handed
out
to
the
several
tenants.
Worse
still,
continues
Mr.
Halton,
the
appellant
would
in
his
income
reports
repetitiously
include
property
maintenance
claims
for
alleged
repairs.
painting
for
instance,
which
upon
investigation,
proved
fictitious.
After
repeated
attempts
and
protracted
endeavours
to
obtain
from
Graham
some
elucidation
of
such
irregularities
in
his
yearly
reports,
and
discrepancies
in
his
personal
bookkeeping,
Mr.
Halton,
meeting
with
little
or
no
compliance,
had
no
alternative
other
than
a
recourse
to
the
‘‘net
worth”
statement
method
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
S.C.
1948,
ce.
52,
Section
42(5)
and
the
Income
Tax
Act
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
Section
46(6).
This
system,
as
outlined
to
the
Court
by
Mr.
Robert
Cheyne
Nicholl,
also
a
departmental
assessor,
is,
technically
at
least,
quite
a
simple
one.
Starting
from
a
given
date,
in
the
instant
case,
December
31,
1948,
a
taxpayer’s
financial
situation
or
‘‘net
worth’’,
arrived
at
in
accordance
with
accepted
processes
of
inquiry
and
accountancy,
credit
and
debit,
is
eventually
established
at
a
stated
sum
which,
here,
reads:
$67,485.93
(cf.
Exhibit
1,
sheet
2).
This
operation,
repeated
up
to
the
final
year
within
the
questionable
period,
in
this
instance,
until
December
31,
1953,
resulted
in
Graham’s
assets
reaching
a
summit
of;
$168,571.43
(Exhibit
1,
sheet
1).
Now
the
stretch
between
the
starting
and
terminal
figures,
due
allowances
had
for
proven
capital
accretions
and
statutory
exemptions
or
deductions,
should,
if
not
otherwise
accounted
for,
represent
income.
Moreover
to
anyone
possessed
of
even
a
remote
knowledge
of
accountany,
net
worth
statement
is
a
self-explanatory
expression.
The
balance
sheet
written
out
with
great
care
by
assessor
Halton
(Exhibit
1)
contains
a
list
of
appellant’s
assets,
personal,
real
estate
and
business
chattels,
and
also
a
juxtalinear
tabulation
of
the
income
reported
and
of
revised
income
assessed
by
the
department.
The
difference
is
rather
startling
as
a
glance
at
the
figures
hereunder
will
show.
|
Reported
income
(net)
|
Taxed
income
|
1949
|
$
4,596.88
|
$12,000.00
|
1950
|
2,930.04
|
12,000.00
|
1951
|
3,060.34
|
19,000.00
|
1952
|
3,076.66
|
19,067.21
|
1953
|
3,446.35
|
29,206.21
|
|
$17,110.27
|
$91,273.42
|
Such
a
gap
between
a
reported
net
income,
for
the
five-year
period,
of
$17,110.27
and
a
corrected
one
of
$91,273.42,
was
certainly
not
bridged
by
the
appellant
whose
evidence
might
be
fairly,
albeit
concisely,
summarized
thus:
‘
‘
I
may
have
erred
in
certain
items
of
my
income
tax
reports.
I
may
have
been
neglectful
in
not
obtaining
vouchers
for
jobs
done.
I
may
have
inadvertently
duplicated
claims
for
expenditures,
but
surely
all
these
errors
should
not
add
up
to
more
than
half
the
claims
raised
against
me.’’
To
these
surmises,
Mr.
Graham
coupled
a
denial
of
his
net
worth
value
as
per
December
31,
1948,
a
protest
that
remained
completely
unsubstantiated.
While
in
the
witness
box,
questioned
as
to
the
origin
or
source
of
a
$13,000
cash
instalment
paid
by
him
in
1953
on
the
purchase
price,
$19,800,
of
his
present
home,
he
was
unable
to
make
an
apt
reply.
The
only
useful
contribution
vouchsafed
by
the
appellant
was
a
copy
of
Mr.
Fordham’s
decision
dismissing
the
initial
appeal
before
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board.
This
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A.
By
dint
of
arduous
investigations,
Mr.
Halton
managed
to
piece
together
a
picture,
hereafter
reproduced,
of
rentals
receipted
and
of
claims
filed
for
alleged
maintenance
jobs,
during
this
five-year
period.
|
Rentals
duly
receipted
|
Repairs
claimed
|
1949
|
|
$
4,412.60
|
$
2,055.50
|
1950
|
|
12,433.50
|
6,081.75
|
1951
|
|
15,148.00
|
9,607.00
|
1952
|
|
19,793.35
|
12,306.33
|
1953
|
.
|
27,055.50
|
16,405.01
|
|
$79,842.95
|
$46,455.59
|
Needless
to
say
very
little
doubt
can
be
entertained
on
the
score
of
rentals
acknowledged
by
corresponding
receipts,
but
skepticism,
akin
to
disbelief,
attaches
to
the
would-be
off-setting
total
of
more
than
half
the
gross
rentals.
In
an
ordinary
ease,
such
a
poor
investment
would
be
improbable,
the
‘‘
peculiarities’’
of
this
one
render
it
untenable.
This
list,
of
course,
sets
out
gross
returns
only.
Lacking
the
necessary
details
regarding
civic
taxes,
insurance
and
some
allowance
for
unescapable
maintenance,
I
am
left
to
my
own
conjectures.
Mr.
Graham,
in
Section
3
of
his
Notice
of
Appeal,
attributes
(‘
.
.
the
difference
in
net
worth
between
these
two
years
[presumably
December
31,
1948,
and
December
31,
1953]
.
.
.
mainly
to
capital
gains
on
properties
purchased
by
myself
and
subsequently
sold
at
a
profit,
and
capital
gains
obtained
in
the
purchase
of
discounted
Agreements
for
Sale,
these
transactions
being
a
part
of
a
systematic
plan
to
improve
investments
and
the
amounts
so
made
are
capital
accretions’’.
I
had
the
impression
that
in
a
rapidly
developing
centre
such
as
Calgary,
real
estate
profits
might,
to
some
extent,
justify
the
upsurge
of
Mr.
Graham’s
‘net
worth’’,
until
I
heard
Mr.
Halton’s
evidence
and
perused
the
balance
sheet,
Exhibit
1.
The
only
property
sold,
bearing
civic
number
and
address
2125,
2nd
Avenue,
N.W.,
netted
a
profit
of
$2,895,
in
1952,
which
was
duly
dealt
with
as
a
capital
gain.
Agreements
for
sale
listed
on
the
first
and
second
sheets
of
Exhibit
1,
indicate
for
December
31,
1948,
a
total
of
$14,105.50
;
of
$17,948.60
on
December
31,
1952,
and,
lastly,
of
$17,285.94,
on
the
closing
date,
December
31,
1953.
Even
if
purchased
at
a
fantastic
discount
of
fifty
per
cent
or
more,
as
implicitly
suggested
by
one
Mr.
Cheney
(cf.
Exhibit
A,
p.
8),
these
transactions
add
up
to
a
fraction
only
of
the
over-all
appreciation
in
Mr.
Graham’s
holdings.
The
notes
above
will
show,
I
trust,
the
hopelessness
of
this
appeal,
but
the
matter
extends
further.
By
way
of
cross-appeal,
respondent
contends
that
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board’s
decision
(ef.
Exhibit
A),
allowing
for
a
deduction
of
$24,000
from
the
total
five
yearly
net
income
upon
which
appellant
is
taxed,
should
be
varied
and
the
assessments
appealed
from
restored.
The
learned
member
of
the
Board
largely
based
his
decision
for
such
partial
relief
upon
assessor
Cheney’s
evidence
to
that
effect.
Associated
with
his
colleague,
Halton,
in
the
preparation
of
appellant’s
net
worth
for
the
material
time,
Mr.
Cheney,
now
deceased,
had
testified
at
the
first
hearing
of
the
case.
In
the
Appeal
Board’s
decision,
tendered
as
Exhibit
A,
and
left
unchallenged
by
respondent,
I
read
that:
“At
the
hearing,
Mr.
Cheney,
whose
evidence
particularly
impressed
me,
disclosed
that
he
had
recommended
to
his
superiors
in
the
respondent’s
department
that
a
reduction
of
$22,886.54
be
made
in
the
total
amount
added
to
the
appellant’s
income.
He
gave
the
particulars
thereof
and
these
included,
inter
alia,
a
reduction
of
$10,000
in
respect
of
the
agreements
for
sale
involved
and
a
substantial
lessening
of
the
cost
of
living
estimate,
with
which
I
unhesitatingly
agree.
Mr.
Halton,
too,
thought
that
$1,800.00
per
annum
was
enough.
...”
Some
few
lines
above,
Mr.
Fordham,
Q.C.,
had
written
that:
‘‘
Arbitrary
assessments
are
necessarily
based
largely
on
estimates
.
.
.
and
accordingly
there
is
ample
room
for
error’’;
an
opinion
I
fully
share,
and
so
did
Mr.
Halton,
in
my
presence,
who,
admitting
in
all
frankness
a
possibility
of
error,
nonetheless,
would
have
liked
to
be
told
wherein
he
had
erred.
Since
Exhibit
A
was
allowed
to
remain
unrebutted,
I
feel
justified
to
infer
that
respondent
accepts
as
reasonable
Mr.
Cheney’s
evidence
before
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board,
and
admits
that
had
he
lived
and
testified
anew
he
would
have
asserted
the
selfsame
facts.
In
Dezura
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
Ex.
C.R.
10,
at
p.
19,
wherein
a
hotel
keeper
and
beer
parlour
operator
‘‘unable
to
produce
proper
books
or
accounting
records’?
was
assessed
by
the
Minister
conformably
to
Section
47
of
The
Income
War
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
97,
a
provision
nowise
different
from
those
actually
invoked.
Thorson,
P.,
wrote:
“While
I
am
satisfied
that
the
estimate
of
$32.00
per
keg
is
too
high,
it
is
difficult
in
the
absence
of
reliable
records
to
find
precisely
how
much
too
high
it
is.
But
since
the
Minister’s
estimate
is
reviewable
the
Court
may
substitute
its
finding
even
although
such
finding
may
itself
have
to
be
an
estimate.”
Indeed,
decisions
in
eases
of
this
nature
can
hardly
avoid
being
conjectural.
I
know
full
well
that
a
presumption
of
correctness
operates
in
favour
of
the
respondent
on
the
cross-appeal
as
on
the
appeal
itself.
However,
regarding
the
cross-appeal,
I
feel
inclined
to
hold
that
Mr.
Cheney’s
evidence
overcomes
this
presumption
and
I
would
not
disturb
Mr.
Fordham’s
finding
regarding
a
deduction.
For
those
reasons
given
above,
the
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs
going
against
the
appellant,
Irving
H.
Graham.
Respondent’s
cross-appeal
is
also
dismissed
but
without
any
costs,
since
the
appellant
is
not
a
member
of
the
Bar.
The
record
in
this
case
shall
be
referred
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
consequential
re-assessment
and
interest
adjustments.
Judgment
accordingly.