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A-406-79
Samuel Eidinger (Appellant)
v.
The Queen (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: EIDINGER V. CANADA
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Hugessen and Mac- Guigan JJ.—Montréal, November 19, 1986.
Income tax — Income calculation — Income or capital gain
— Whether partial repayments of loans assigned to appellant as part of reacquisition of financially troubled corporation income or capital gain — Appeal from Trial Division judg ment holding enhancement in value of loans to company not capital profit resulting from circumstances not controlled by appellant but income as gain resulting from appellant's per sonal efforts and hence part of adventure in nature of trade — Trial Judge misinterpreting Supreme Court of Canada deci sion in Sissons case — Said case not standing for proposition gain arising from entrepreneur's personal efforts necessarily income rather than capital gain — Evidence herein negates any carefully considered plan for realization of speculative profits
— Although, in aspiration, assignment of loans as part of reacquisition profit-making venture, here unquestionably capital investment — Therefore, partial repayments on loans not income from business but capital gain — Appeal allowed.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Californian Copper Syndicate v. Harris (1904), 5 T.C. 159 (Scot. Exch. Ct.).
EXPLAINED:
Minister of National Revenue v. Sissons, [1969] S.C.R. 507; [1969] C.T.C. 184.
DISTINGUISHED:
Steeves (SS) v. The Queen, [1977] CTC 325 (F.C.A.). COUNSEL:
Michael D. Vineberg for appellant. Daniel Verdon for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Phillips & Vineberg, Montréal, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment of the Court delivered orally in English by
MACGUIGAN J.: This case raises a classic issue of income tax law. In the words of the Lord Justice Clerk (Macdonald) in Californian Copper Syndi cate v. Harris (1904), 5 T.C. 159 (Scot. Exch. Ct.), at page 166, "Is the sum of gain that has been made a mere enhancement of value by realis ing a security, or is it a gain made in an operation of business in carrying out a scheme for profit-making?"
In this case the issue was resolved by the Trial Judge as follows [ [1979] CTC 296, at page 303; 79 DTC 5218, at pages 5223, 5224]:
Although Defendant has an acceptable explanation as to why he took nominal sums which he required for living expenses out of the company as repayment of loans rather than as salary— namely that the company's affairs were so precarious when he again took over that the bank might well call its loans, putting the company into bankruptcy unless it could begin to show a profit, and I am satisfied that the tax considerations did not enter into his mind, nevertheless I am forced to the conclusion that although, at the time of the acquisition, assignment of the loans to him was of little interest to him and not a primary consideration for his reacquisition of the business, the acquisi tion of these loans by such assignment cannot be considered as a capital investment by him (even if he had paid some nominal sum for them) but must be considered as part and parcel of the acquisition of the business. Therefore even though it was an isolated transaction and he is certainly not in the business of acquiring loans or book debts, the acquisition of them cannot be considered as a 'capital investment by him. Although the reasoning in the Australian case of Wills is persuasive, the weight of Canadian jurisprudence and in particular the Supreme Court case of Sissons (although the facts in it were somewhat dissimilar in that the taxpayer had deliberately purchased two loss companies and transferred a profitable business to one of them which was able to write off its losses against these profits and thus repay a loan to the other com pany enabling it to redeem debentures held by the taxpayer—in short a well thought out scheme) lead me to conclude that the enhancement in value of the loans to the company which he acquired from nil to a sufficient value to enable repayment of them to him to be commenced was not a capital profit resulting from circumstances which he did not control but that it was a result of Defendant's personal efforts and hence part of an adventure in the nature of trade.
We are all agreed that the learned Trial Judge has misinterpreted the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Minister of National Revenue v. Sissons, [1969] S.C.R. 507; [1969] C.T.C. 184. We do not agree that the Sissons case stands for the proposition that gain arising from an entre preneur's personal efforts has, by reason of that fact alone, the quality of income rather than of capital gain. In fact, the passage of Pigeon J. at pages 511 S.C.R.; 187 CTC on which such an interpretation might be based was merely part of the Court's rejection of all five of the reasons upon which the Trial Judge there had based his conclu sion. A more decisive consideration seems rather to have been that in the paragraph which immediate ly follows at pages 511-512 S.C.R.; 187 CTC:
(e) Finally, respondent's gain cannot properly be considered as having arisen fortuitously. On the contrary, uncontradicted evidence shows that it is the result of a carefully con sidered plan executed as conceived.
Pigeon J. further adds, at pages 512 S.C.R.; 188 CTC:
Here the clear indication of "trade" is found in the fact that the acquisition of the securities was a part of a profit-making scheme. The purpose of the operation was not to earn income from the securities but to make a profit on prompt realization. The operation has therefore none of the essential characteristics of an investment, it is essentially a speculation.
In the instant case the evidence negates any such carefully considered plan for the realization of speculative profits. In that respect it also differs from the scheme considered by this Court in Steeves (SS) v. The Queen, [1977] CTC 325, at page 327 where Urie J. emphasized that "the transaction was structured in the fashion in which it was to achieve a desired purpose."
Here, as the above passage from his reasons shows, the Trial Judge found that (1) "the tax considerations did not enter into his [appellant's] mind" and (2) "at the time of the acquisition, assignment of the loans to him was of little interest to him and not a primary consideration for his reacquisition of the business".
The fact that the assignment of the loans was "part and parcel" of the appellant's reacquisition
of a business which he himself founded years earlier and which he wished to rescue from its financially perilous position must lead to the same conclusion with respect to the loans as would be drawn for the business itself, viz., that, although in aspiration a profit-making venture, it was unques tionably a capital investment. For that reason we are all agreed that the partial repayments on the loans made by the business to the appellant in the 1971 and 1972 taxation years were not income arising from the appellant's business in those years.
The appeal will therefore be allowed, with costs both here and in the Trial Division, the judgment of the Trial Judge set aside, and appellant's income tax assessments for the 1971 and 1972 years referred back to the Minister of National Revenue for reconsideration and reassessment in accordance with these reasons.
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