HYNDMAN,
D.J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
(12
Tax
A.B.C.
183)
in
respect
to
the
income
of
the
said
respondent
for
the
1952
taxation
year,
involving
Sections
8
and
4
and
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
read
as
follows:
4
3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(e)
‘business’
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment
;
’
’
The
material
facts
may
be
stated
as
follows:
Respondent,
who
lives
in
Sarnia,
Ontario,
had
been
engaged
in
the
business
of
grocer
and
meat
merchant.
In
1948
he
sold
his
business
and
was
without
occupation.
Shortly
after
one
Clinton
Laidlaw,
a
friend
and
related
to
respondent,
who
was
interested
in
building
for
the
purpose
of
sale,
suggested
to
respondent
that
they
purchase
a
vacant
property
known
as
Grandview
Park
Subdivision
which
adjoined
the
City
of
Sarnia,
and
for
sale
under
the
Veterans
Land
Act.
The
scheme
was
that
the
said
property
might
be
purchased
and
a
number
of
houses
erected
thereon,
a
condition
of
the
sale
being
that
houses
should
be
built
on
said
land.
The
proposal
was
that
they
should
each
acquire
a
90-50
interest.
Of
the
two
men
only
Laidlaw
had
had
any
experience
in
house
building.
Respondent
hesitated
about
entering
into
the
venture,
but
on
repeated
urging
by
Laidlaw,
finally
decided
that
he
would
purchase
one-third
of
the
lots,
namely
55
out
of
the
165
lots,
into
which
the
property
had
been
subdivided,
respondent
to
pay
Laidlaw
$2,500
and
to
receive
a
deed
on
paying
the
further
sum
of
$1,872
on
or
before
May
1,
1948.
They
were
to
be
associated
in
the
building
scheme,
but
later
on
differences
arose
between
them
and
Laidlaw
offered
to
repay
the
respondent
the
$2,500
and
to
end
their
association
in
all
respects.
This
offer
was
unacceptable
to
respondent
who
insisted
on
acquiring
the
lots.
Laidlaw
having
refused
to
carry
out
the
sale
to
McIntosh,
the
latter
brought
an
action
for
specific
performance
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
which
was
ultimately
settled
out
of
Court.
Respondent
then
paid
the
balance
due
Laidlaw,
and
the
lots
were
conveyed
to
him.
This
ended
all
dealings
between
the
two
men.
Respondent
having
no
experience
in
building,
as
was
the
original
intention,
decided
to
sell
the
vacant
lots.
The
cost
to
the
respondent
per
lot
for
the
55
lots
was
about
$112.
In
1952
(which
is
the
year
in
question)
respondent
sold
20
of
the
said
lots
to
one
Alfred
Sauvé
for
the
sum
of
$14,545.40,
being
at
the
rate
of
$727
per
lot
or
a
profit
of
about
$615
per
lot,
a
total
of
$12,287.60,
later
adjusted
to
$12,087.60.
The
question
for
decision
is,
therefore,
whether
said
profit
was
capital
accretion,
or,
income
subject
to
tax.
It
can
be
said
at
once
that
this
was
an
isolated
transaction,
not
in
any
way
related
to
the
respondent’s
usual
or
ordinary
business.
It
is
equally
true
that
when
he
entered
into
the
arrangement
with
Laidlaw
his
intention
was
to
make
gain
or
profit.
Also,
after
acquiring
the
55
lots
from
Laidlaw,
he
had
no
intention
of
using
them
himself
or
developing
them
for
revenue
purposes.
From
his
notice
of
appeal
to
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board,
dated
September
27,
1954,
I
quote
the
following:
“The
appellant’s
venture
in
purchasing
the
said
lots
was
a
speculation.
’’
It
was
very
strongly
argued
by
Mr.
Laird,
Q.C.,
counsel
for
respondent,
that
the
arrangement
with
Laidlaw
having
fallen
through,
an
entirely
new
situation
arose
affecting
or
displacing
his
original
intention.
I
have
given
this
argument
my
best
consideration,
but
I
cannot
escape
the
conclusion
that
the
original
idea,
namely,
to
make
gain
or
profit,
continued.
It
was,
as
above
stated,
still
a
venture
or
speculation,
and
not
an
investment
in
the
ordinary
sense.
Having
acquired
the
said
property
there
was
no
intention
in
his
mind
to
retain
it
as
an
investment,
but
to
dispose
of
the
lots,
if
and
when
suitable
prices
could
be
obtained.
It
was
said
that
the
price
received
by
him
was
one
or
two
hundred
dollars
less
than
the
real
value,
and
that
this
fact
in
some
way
negatived
an
intention
of
entering
into
a
scheme
to
make
a
profit
on
the
venture.
I
am
unable
to
see
any
force
in
this
argument.
In
view
of
all
the
circumstances,
his
insistence
on
obtaining
the
property
could
unquestionably
only
have
been
with
the
object
of
making
a
gain
or
profit.
In
a
recent
judgment
in
this
Court,
Chutter
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
377,
on
December
9,
1955,
Ritchie,
J.,
exhaustively
reviewed
and
cited
the
numerous
decisions
applying
to
cireum-
stances,
in
essence,
similar
or
analogous
to
the
salient
facts
in
the
case
at
bar.
The
contention
in
most
of
these
cases
was
that
the
undertaking
or
venture
was
an
isolated
one,
not
in
the
course
of
the
regular
or
ordinary
business
of
the
taxpayer,
and
consequently
a
capital
gain,
and
not
income
subject
to
tax.
This
was
the
defence
set
up
in
Chutter
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
377,
and
was
rejected
by
Ritchie,
J.,
in
view
of
the
authorities
referred
to
by
him,
and
held
that
it
was
a
venture
in
the
nature
of
a
trade
or
business,
and
that
the
profit
was
a
gain
made
through
an
operation
of
business
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
a
scheme
for
profit
making.
I
find
it
unnecessary
to
review
again
all
the
decisions
as
set
out
in
said
judgment.
Of
the
decisions
mentioned
in
the
judgment
of
Ritchie,
J.,
I
think
I
need
only
to
refer
to
that
of
the
President
in
Atlantic
Sugar
Refineries
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
Ex.
C.R.
622;
[1948]
C.T.C.
326;
[1949]
S.C.R.
706;
[1949]
C.T.C.
196,
which
was
affirmed
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
At
page
630
[[1948]
C.T.C.
333]
the
President
said:
“There
remains
the
contention
that
the
appellant’s
gain
was
not
taxable
income
because
it
was
not
income
from
any
trade
and
because
its
venture
was
an
isolated
transaction
outside
its
normal
business
operations
and
unconnected
therewith.
The
appellant
cannot
escape
liability
merely
by
showing
that
its
entry
into
the
raw
sugar
futures
market
was
an
isolated
transaction.
While
it
is
recognized
that
as
a
general
rule
an
isolated
transaction
of
purchase
and
sale
outside
the
course
of
the
taxpayer’s
ordinary
business
does
not
constitute
the
carrying
on
of
a
trade
or
business
so
as
to
render
the
profit
therefrom
liable
to
income
tax—vide
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
v.
Livingston
et
al.
(1926),
11
T.C.
538
at
543,
per
Lord
Sands;
Leeming
v.
Jones,
[1930]
1
K.B.
279;
[1930]
A.C.
415;
it
is
also
established
that
the
fact
that
a
transaction
is
an
isolated
one
does
not
exclude
it
from
the
category
of
trading
or
business
transactions
of
such
a
nature
as
to
attract
income
tax
to
the
profit
therefrom.
There
are
numerous
expressions
of
opinion
to
that
effect—vide
Californian
Copper
Syndicate
v.
Harris
(1904),
5
T.C.
159
;
T.
Beynon
and
Co.,
Limited
v.
Ogg
(1918),
7
T.C.
125
at
133
;
McKinley
v.
H.
T.
Jenkins
and
Son,
Limited
(1926),
10
T.C.
372
at
404;
Martin
v.
Lowry
(1925),
11
T.C.
297
at
308;
[1926]
1
K.B.
550
at
554;
[1927]
A.C.
312;
The
Cape
Brandy
Syndicate
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1920),
12
T.C.
358;
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
v.
Livingston
(1926),
11
T.C.
538;
Balgownie
Land
Trust,
Ltd.
v.
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(1929),
14
T.C.
684
at
691;
and
Anderson
Logging
Co.
v.
The
King,
[1925]
S.C.R.
45
at
96.
Whether
the
gain
or
profit
from
a
particular
transaction
is
an
item
of
taxable
income
cannot,
therefore,
be
determined
solely
by
whether
the
transaction
was
an
isolated
one
or
not.’’
And
at
page
633:
While
it
may
not
be
possible
to
define
the
line
between
the
class
of
cases
of
isolated
transactions
the
profits
from
which
are
not
assessable
to
income
tax
and
that
of
those
from
which
the
profits
are
so
assessable
more
precisely
than
in
the
tests
referred
to,
it
is
clear
that
the
decision
cannot
be
made
apart
from
the
facts.
The
character
or
nature
of
the
transaction
must
be
viewed
in
the
light
of
the
circumstances
under
which
it
was
embarked
upon
and
the
decision
as
to
the
side
of
the
line
on
which
it
falls
made
after
careful
consideration
of
its
surrounding
facts.”
I
might
also
refer
to
the
case
of
Edwards
v.
Bair
stow,
[1955]
3
All
E.R.
48,
in
which
Lord
Radcliffe
said
:
“There
remains
the
fact
which
was
avowedly
the
original
ground
of
the
commissioner’s
decision—‘this
was
an
isolated
case’.
But,
as
we
know,
that
circumstance
does
not
prevent
a
transaction
which
bears
the
badges
of
trade
from
being
in
truth
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
The
true
question
in
such
eases
is
whether
the
operations
constitute
an
adventure
of
that
kind,
not
whether
they
by
themselves,
or
they
in
conjunction
with
other
operations,
constitute
the
operator
a
person
who
carries
on
a
trade.
Dealing
is,
I
think,
essentially
a
trading
adventure,
and
the
respondent’s
operations
were
nothing
but
a
deal
or
deals
in
plant
and
machinery.”
I
can
quite
understand
an
inclination
in
such
instances
to
regard
the
profit
as
an
accretion
to
capital,
and
therefore
not
taxable.
However,
in
view
of
the
authorities,
with
much
deference
to
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
I
feel
impelled
to
the
conclusion
that
respondent
was
properly
taxed,
and
that
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
must
be
reversed
and
appeal
allowed.
It
was
admitted
by
counsel
for
respondent
that
if
the
appeal
is
allowed
the
amount
claimed
by
the
Minister
is
correct.
The
appeal
of
the
Minister
herein
will
therefore
be
allowed,
the
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
set
aside,
and
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
allowed.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
costs
taxed.
Judgment
accordingly.