John
B
Goetz:—This
is
an
appeal
against
a
reassessment
relating
to
the
appellant’s
1976
taxation
year.
The
appellant
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Donna
Rae’’)
and
the
respondent
agreed
to
the
facts
as
set
out
in
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal:
A.
Statement
of
Facts
2.
The
respondent
reassessed
the
appellant’s
income
tax
liability
for
its
1976
taxation
year
by
adding
to
its
income
the
amount
of
$60,000
received
as
a
result
of
the
settlement
of
a
claim
against
the
USSR
for
destruction
of
fishing
gear
and
loss
of
income.
3.
In
so
reassessing
the
appellant’s
income
tax
liability,
the
respondent
relied
inter
alia
on
the
following
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
The
appellant
lost
350
deep
sea
lobster
traps
when
a
Soviet
vessel
drove
through
the
string
of
traps
dragging
its
own
nets.
(b)
The
representatives
of
the
appellant
negotiated
with
Soviet
officials
as
a
result
of
the
incident
and
the
Soviets
agreed
to
pay
the
amount
of
$60,000
to
the
appellant.
(c)
The
amount
received
by
the
appellant
was
not
allocated
between
loss
of
equipment
and
loss
of
income.
(d)
The
appellant
received
the
amount
of
$60,000
in
its
1976
taxation
year.
(e)
The
appellant
had
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
income
the
cost
of
the
gear
destroyed.
(f)
The
appellant
also
claimed
as
a
deduction
from
income
the
cost
incurred
in
replacing
the
gear
destroyed.
(g)
The
appellant
reports
its
income
on
the
cash
basis.
The
appellant
received
the
sum
of
$60,000
in
full
settlement
of
damages
suffered
by
reason
of
the
negligence
of
the
Russians
in
destroying
the
lobster
traps.
A
claim
of
$98,255.80
was
advanced
in
a
settlement
of
claim
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada.
This
amount
was
claimed
as
follows:
Cost
of
replacement
gear
|
$33,451.80
|
Labour
for
new
strings
|
3,304.00
|
Loss
of
catch
|
60,000.00
|
Commission
per
pound
|
1,500.00
|
|
$98,255.80
|
The
main
basis
of
the
claim
was
to
replace
damaged
gear
and
for
loss
of
profit.
The
settlement
of
$60,000
was
not
allocated
to
any
specific
portion
or
portions
of
the
claim
for
damages.
The
respondent
contended
that
the
settlement
of
the
claim
was
subject
to
income
tax
within
the
meaning
of
sections
4,
9,
subsections
18(1)
and
248(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended.
On
the
other
hand,
the
taxpayer
appeals
the
assessments
which
considers
that
all
of
the
funds
received
should
have
been
included
in
income.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
cited
the
following
cases:
Federal
Farms
Limited
v
MNR,
[1959]
CTC
98;
59
DTC
1050;
Fleck
Manufacturing
(1959)
Ltd
v
MNR,
30
Tax
ABC
265;
62
DTC
580;
MNR
v
Bonaventure
Investment
Co
Ltd,
[1962]
CTC
160;
62
DTC
1083;
David
Miller
v
MNR,
[1962]
CTC
488;
62
DTC
1303;
MNR
v
Couture,
[1965]
CTC
54;
65
DTC
5031;
A
Janin
&
Cie
Ltée
v
MNR,
[1968]
Tax
ABC
864;
68
DTC
534;
[1971]
CTC
158;
71
DTC
5116;
[1973]
CTC
354;
73
DTC
5267;
Courrier
MH
Inc
v
The
Queen,
[1976]
CTC
567;
76
DTC
6331;
The
Queen
v
Transcontinental
Timber
Co
Ltd,
[1979]
CTC
203;
79
DTC
5147;
Imperial
Oil
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1947]
CTC
353;
(1946-48)
DTC
1090;
Domenic
Cirella
v
The
Queen,
[1978]
CTC
1;
77
DTC
5442.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
cited
the
following
cases:
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
694;
71
DTC
5409;
Abbott
v
Albion
Greyhounds
(Salford)
Ltd,
[1945]
1
All
ER
308;
Domenic
Cirella
v
The
Queen,
[1978]
CTC
1;
77
DTC
5442;
Owners
of
Dredger
Liesbosch
v
Owners
of
Steamship
Edison,
[1933]
AC
449;
Clyde
Navigation
Trustees
v
Bowring
Steamship
Co
(1928),
32
Lloyds
LR
35;
Jones
v
Port
of
London
Authority
(1954),
1
Lloyds
LR
489;
London
and
Thames
Haven
Oil
Wharves
Ltd
v
Attwooll,
[1967]
2
All
ER
124;
Glenboig
Union
Fireclay
Co
Ltd
v
IRC
(1922),
SC
112;
12
TC
427;
28
Digest
412.
Findings
The
appellant
contends
that
the
full
amount
of
the
sum
recovered
from
the
Russians
is
a
capital
receipt
being
compensation
for
the
loss
of
capital
assets.
The
life
of
a
lobster
trap
is
approximately
three
years.
The
lobster
traps,
including
gear
and
strings,
constitute
fixed
capital
assets
of
the
appellant’s
being
of
a
basic
and
enduring
asset
by
means
of
which
the
business
of
Donna
Rae
is
carried
on.
The
lobster
traps
cannot
be
equated
with
circulating
capital
or
stock-in-trade
of
the
business
by
the
turning
of
which
to
account,
the
profit
of
the
business
is
made.
There
has
been
no
clear
and
comprehensive
rule
formulated
and
no
clear
line
of
demarcation
can
be
accurately
drawn,
which
in
every
case
would
determine
whether
the
sum
received
should
be
regarded
as
a
capital
receipt
or
as
a
revenue
receipt
to
be
taken
into
account
in
arriving
at
the
profits
or
gains
of
the
recipient’s
trade
or
business.
Each
case
must
be
considered
on
its
own
facts.
The
lobster
traps
were
capital
property,
being
in
the
nature
of
fixed
capital
rather
than
circulating
capital.
In
Canada
Permanent
Mortgage
Corporation
v
MNR,
(supra)
at
pp
711
and
5419
respectively,
Heald,
J
cites
Plaxton’s
Canadian
Income
Tax
Law,
2nd
Ed
at
44
as
follows:
In
ascertaining
the
profits
of
a
trade
or
business,
the
familiar
distinction,
derived
from
writers
of
political
economy,
between
“fixed
capital”,
meaning
property
acquired
and
intended
for
retention
and
employment
with
a
view
to
profit
and
“circulating
capital”,
meaning
property
acquired
or
produced
with
a
view
to
resale
or
sale
at
a
profit,
comes
into
full
play.
Profits
from
the
realization
of
“fixed
capital”
assets
are
not
receipts
on
revenue
account
but
profits
from
“circulating
capital”
assets
are
receipts
on
revenue
account.
A
fixed
capital
asset
is
an
asset.
It
is
intended
to
be
kept
and
used
in
a
trade
and
a
circulating
asset
is
an
asset
which
is
acquired
or
manufactured
for
the
purpose
of
being
turned
over
or
sold
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
trade.
What
was
the
nature
of
the
award
determined
by
the
law
of
damages
in
the
settlement
in
the
Federal
Court?
The
law
of
damages
makes
a
distinction
between
cases
where
there
has
been
total
destruction
or
permanent
deprivation
of
a
profit-earning
chattel
and
cases
where
there
is
only
a
partial
or
repairable
injury
or
temporary
deprivation
of
a
profit-earning
chattel.
(McGregor
on
Damages,
13th
Ed
(London:
Sweet
&
Maxwell
Limited,
1972)
at
pp
661
and
664).
The
law
of
damages
does
not
recognize
consequential
loss,
ie:
loss
of
profits,
as
a
separate
head
of
damages
where
a
chattel
has
been
totally
destroyed;
whereas,
consequential
loss
is
an
allowable
head
of
damages
where
there
has
been
partial
(repairable)
injury
only.
(McGregor
on
Damages,
(supra).
There
is
a
distinction
in
damages
between
cases
of
total
destruction
and
cases
of
partial
injury.
See
London
and
Thames
Haven
Oil
Wharves
Ltd
v
Attwooll
(supra)
where
Willmer,
JA,
at
129
stated:
.
.
.
there
is
all
the
difference
in
the
world
between
a
total
loss
and
a
partial
injury.
In
the
case
of
a
total
loss
what
can
be
recovered
from
the
assumed
wrongdoer
is
the
value
of
that
which
has
been
lost.
If
the
thing
is
a
ship
or
a
jetty
which
is
ordinarily
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
profits,
the
fact
of
its
profitability
is
an
element
to
be
considered
in
assessing
its
capital
value.
In
such
a
case
the
owner’s
right
is
a
right
to
recover
the
value
of
the
thing
which
has
been
lost,
and
this
can
no
doubt
be
properly
described
as
“whole
and
indivisible”
even
though
it
includes
some
element
of
profitability
of
the
thing
lost;
in
such
circumstances
what
is
recovered
is
properly
treated
as
a
capital
receipt.
Where,
however,
there
is
only
a
partial
injury,
as
there
was
in
the
present
case,
there
are
necessarily
two
elements
to
be
considered
if
the
owner
is
to
be
put
back,
so
far
as
money
can
do
it,
in
the
same
position
he
would
have
been
but
for
the
tortfeasor’s
wrongdoing.
First
he
can
recover
the
whole
cost
of
repair,
which
is
without
a
doubt
a
capital
receipt.
Secondly,
he
can
also
recover
something
in
respect
of
the
loss
of
use
during
the
period
of
repair,
which
the
judge,
in
the
first
of
the
passages
which
I
have
read,
quite
rightly
held
to
be
a
distinct
element.
I
consider
that
the
rule
of
law
applicable
to
this
case
is
that
expressed
by
Diplock,
LJ
at
132
in
London
and
Thames
Oil
Wharves
Ltd
v
Attwool,
(supra):
.
.
.
Even
if
the
compensation
payable
for
the
loss
of
the
capital
asset
has
been
calculated
in
whole
or
in
part
by
taking
into
consideration
what
profits
the
taxpayer
company
would
have
made
had
it
continued
to
carry
on
a
trade
involving
the
use
or
exploitation
of
the
asset,
this
does
not
alter
the
identity
of
what
the
com-
pensation
was
paid
for,
viz,
the
permanent
removal
from
its
business
of
a
capital
asset
which
would
otherwise
have
continued
to
be
exploited
in
the
business.
This
proposition
is
supported
by
the
decisions
in
Domenic
Cirella
v
The
Queen
(supra)
and
in
Glenboig
Union
Fireclay
Co
Ltd
v
IRC
(supra).
The
Minister,
in
looking
at
the
claim
of
the
appellant
before
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
which
included
“loss
of
catch—$60,000’’,
has
concluded
that
the
settlement
figure
in
the
sum
of
$60,000
relates
solely
to
this
item
of
the
statement
of
claim.
For
reasons
stated
above,
I
do
not
reach
the
same
conclusion
but
feel
that
the
settlement
in
the
sum
of
$60,000
was
mainly
a
capital
receipt.
Nevertheless,
I
feel
that
a
portion
of
this
settlement
figure
could
be
construed
as
being
receipt
on
account
of
income
and
I
apportion
30%
of
the
settlement
figure
of
$60,000
as
being
income
to
the
appellant.
In
all
other
respects,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
accordingly.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.