Source: http://taxauditsolutions.ca/anatomy-of-a-tax-court-case/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 02:00:19+00:00

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Anatomy of a tax court case, won by Tax Audit Solutions Review of the John Wiens Court case. This was written for information purposes and to assist taxpayers in understanding of what to expect in tax court.
Review of the John Wiens Court case.
This was written for information purposes and to assist taxpayers in understanding of what to expect in tax court.
The following article is written both for professional tax representatives and for those who would consider defending themselves in tax court. This article brings out the seriousness of the things you don’t know that you don’t know about that will kill you.
For the point of understanding our company’s role in this exercise: There is a role for us in Tax Court in that we can represent our clients in informal tax court but not General Procedures. In General Procedures we still do the audit/court ready accounting, but we do it on behalf of the client who self represents or who has retained a lawyer. Our services dramatically reduce the cost of the overall exercise.
Usually hiring a lawyer for informal tax court is not cost justified, that is the primary reason we act as an agent for our clients in informal court.
When you need a lawyer, make sure you go by reference because there is a huge difference between a good tax lawyer and a dabbler in the profession.
The following case was in Informal Tax Court case that could have gone to General Procedures but was heard in Informal Tax Court as per the wishes of the client.
The bottom line financial results of this court case is that the Appellant (The Taxpayer) succeeds in his appeal and gets a reduction in his taxable income, subject to the limitations of informal procedure and is awarded costs.
It is significant that costs were awarded, because it shows how the judge saw the case in terms of how CRA handled the case.
The text in bold italics is what I have inserted with what Justice Webb wrote in his judgement.
John Wiens and Her Majesty the Queen.
Counsel for the Respondent: Samantha Hurst.
The Appellant, Mr. John Wiens, has his appeals allowed with Costs. The matter is referred back to the Minister for reconsideration and reassessment based on Justice Webb’s judgment on the matter.
The following is an explanation of how I interpret the judgment and what I think is noteworthy as a reference to tax knowledge. I think this is very useful information for anyone thinking of handling their own tax case, or who wants to know what is going on in court.
The judgment is a 47 page document by Justice Webb. One can only respect the judge for the care and attention he took to his decision and how useful his explanations were. He is a credit to his profession.
The issues revolved around a series of real estate transactions by the Wiens family. Was this the business of buying and selling real estate? An adventure in the nature of trade, or was it capital gains?
There was the question of who earned the money from the exercises.
There was an issue as to was one year statute barred due to CRA opening up the year based on a signed waiver by the taxpayer… The taxpayer was gravely ill at the time and does not remember signing the waiver.
There was an issue around a retail store that was closed down after various disasters including multiple robberies. Was the insurance payout income or not?
THE CASE WAS TRIED IN (IT) INFORMAL TAX COURT.
as the case may be, the Court shall order that sections 17.1 to 17.8 apply in respect of the appeal unless the appellant elects to limit the appeal to $12,000 or $24,000, as the case may be.
2.1 For the purposes of this Act, “the aggregate of all amounts” means the total of all amounts assessed or determined by the Minister of National Revenue under the Income Tax Act, but does not include any amount of interest or any amount of loss determined by that Minister.
 Since no penalties were assessed under the Income Tax Act (the “Act”) against the Appellant, for the purposes of the Tax Court of Canada Act “the aggregate of all amounts” in this case would mean the taxes assessed under the Act. In Maier v. The Queen,  T.C.J. No. 1260, Justice Garon (as he then was) held that the aggregate of all amounts in dispute means the aggregate amounts in dispute under a particular assessment (or reassessment) and not under a Notice of Appeal. When a Notice of Appeal relates to more than one assessment (or reassessment) the issue is not whether the total amounts in dispute under the Notice of Appeal exceed $12,000 but whether the total amounts in issue in relation to any particular assessment or reassessment exceeds $12,000. Therefore, if a person elects to limit an appeal to $12,000, the limitation will apply to each assessment (or reassessment) that is the subject of the appeal. In this case, the $12,000 limit will apply to the appeal from the reassessment of the Appellant’s liability for his 2002 taxation year and a separate $12,000 limit will apply to the appeal from the reassessment of the Appellant’s liability for his 2003 taxation year.
INTERPRETATIONS & COMMENTS BY DAN (in bold italics) In our case, the taxpayers had reasons to want to keep the matter in informal proceedings. One big factor was the cost of formal procedures of General Procedures. Their decision limited the amount of federal tax in dispute to a $12,000 limit. Being that no penalties had been assessed by CRA, that meant the aggregate of all amounts would be exclusive of penalties or interest on those penalties. Because there were two years under appeal it meant that winning the case would result in a $24,000 reduction in tax owing on the years in question as well as all the related interest that would have accumulated after the assessment was issued by CRA.
The $24,000 loss limit allowed in informal court, was not relevant in this case, so I will not get into that here.
It is important to note that the amount in dispute is not what is in the Notice of Appeal, but rather what is in the assessment or reassessment issued to the taxpayer by CRA. The aggregate amount of $12,000 is exclusive of interest. The way it works, is the taxpayers income would be reduced by $12,000 for each year in question and then the interest would be calculated based on the reassessed lower income, from that point in time on until the present.
It is also important to note that the reduced income would also lower the provincial tax owing portion which is not included in the $12,000 limit. Therefore the total tax owing would be reduced by more than the 12k per year.
Naturally one has to reduce their taxable income by at least 12k per year otherwise it would be a lesser amount based on what the taxpayer won on.
Without agreeing to the limit the case would have had to be heard in General Court proceedings. Justice Webb was very clear in the seriousness of the limiting decision.
It is a bitter sweet victory when you get 100% of the amount you went after, but see that you possibly would have received much more in General Proceedings. Making the call to limit your win versus a dramatic increase in the cost of the case in General Proceedings is a tough call and there are no guarantees in court. For 2002 General proceedings would have been further reduction of income of around $7,400 more and for 2003 it would have been about $54,200. But that was a decision that was made and we accept that because we made the decision fully informed.
Getting costs awarded is a nice bonus and means to me that we did a good job of representing the case.
Reducing the amounts in dispute also means that there is less attention paid to certain details required. One limits their scope to going after what they are sure they can win. The issue of my pointing my attention away from certain areas was noted by Justice Webb in relation to the Agent not putting his mind to questioning and certain proofs of evidence as in the issue of the three real estate properties.
Having said that, it still leaves me with the notion that it would have been better to go for all the points as we would have if it was General Procedures. The more considerations the more work is required and the higher the related costs will be. As you get into a complicated case, you really see the benefit an experienced tax lawyer brings to the game, due to the complexity of tax law. We are not lawyers so we need to do extensive research and subscribe to the same expensive resources. With each case we get better and better, but it is a hard road.
In our company’s world, we bring professional services to an area where it is hard to justify a lawyer’s fees. That specially is that Tax Audit Solutions addresses that niche market of informal tax court. Our first objective is to prove what was or what should have been done in the accounting.
Where the amounts are above the threshold of informal court, we then support lawyers by doing the audit and tax court ready accounting.
One has to be really aware of court proceedings, I am of the strong opinion, that one only gets good in court as a result of experience. There is no school that provides the learning platform as a day in court. Tax Court is not a place for a taxpayer to defend themselves. The deck of cards is too stacked in favor of those who know the game. I would compare a day in self-represented tax court to a day in a chess tournament by a novice against a Chess Master.
In our business we see all to much of what happens when taxpayers self-represent. Earning your stripes in court is the only way to get good at it. Self-representation is a recipe for a big loss.
How we see it, is for every case we have in court, win or lose, it makes us stronger. It also makes us much more aware of how badly a really good tax lawyer who is skilled at litigation, is needed if you want to win your case in General Procedures.
Justice Webb in point #7 states the following.
 It is clear that the Appellant and his agent have received adequate notification of the limitations related to appeals under the informal procedure and that the Appellant has elected to limit the amount of taxes in dispute for each year to $12,000. As a result, the hearing continued under the Informal Procedure.
The decision to represent in informal tax court is a serious decision and Justice Webb was nailing things down so it was very clear that the agent and the taxpayer knew full well the consequences.
Re-examination is another term for re-direct. That is where the Appellant gets to re-examine the witness after the defendant is done cross examining them.
MS. HURST: In my submission, reply is directed at issues that were raised in cross that the Appellant could not have known in chief.
Ms. Hurst was attempting to prevent me from introducing new information to dispute what the defendant agent had brought up in cross examination. It would be appropriate to introduce questions around that new information, but not for me to include new additional information.
I think it was a bit gray as to was the information new or just a clarification on the matter brought up by the Appellant’s agent.
It is interesting to consider, that if allowing me to introduce new information, the judge could have also have allowed the defendants agent to get a shot at another cross examination of the plaintiff’s witness.
It is usually a one two three and you are done scenario. One “Direct Questions, by the appellant.”, Two is “Cross Examination by the defendant’s agent,” and Three is “Re-direct by the appellant’s agent.
 This was an informal procedure hearing and I allowed the agent to ask questions on re-examination of a witness in relation to matters that were raised during the cross-examination of that witness but which had not been addressed during the direct examination of that witness.
Informal Tax Court allows a judge greater scope in allowing the presentation of information that helps in making his decisions.
Justice Webb outlined the following case to support his decision. The case gives an excellent example of what needs to be considered in re-direct of questions to a witness by the appellant’s agent.
Should the Question Have Been Permitted on Re-examination?
37 Even though it has been determined that the evidence was admissible, (in the direct examination) it remains to be seen whether the question should have been permitted on re-examination.
This is an important point to understand. So let’s explain it in other words.
1. The agent for the Plaintiff, gets do “Direct” questions to his witness to create the story they want to tell the judge. The agent brings out all the information and evidence to build the case.
2. The agent for the defendant gets to “cross-examine” the witness to tear the story apart. The agent tries to break the story down and introduces new information to damage the appellant’s case.
3. The agent for the plaintiff gets to re-direct the questions to rebuild any tearing apart that was done and reinstate the appellant’s credibility. The agent must only deal with information provided in the direct or to ask questions about any new information provided by the agent for the defendant in her cross examination.
Generally speaking, the right to re-examine must be confined to matters arising from the cross-examination. As a general rule new facts cannot be introduced in re-examination. See R. v. Moore (1984), 15 C.C.C. (3d) 541 (Ont. C.A.), per Martin J.A. In this case, the cross-examination of Linda Sample referred to her statements to police about the appellant. The police interview of December 30 was specifically alluded to during the cross-examination and had not been dealt with in’ chief. It was in response to this cross examination that Linda Sample stated that, from the time of that meeting, she suspected the appellant of committing the crime. // would seem that the Crown had the right to re-examine Linda Sample as to precisely what she told the police at that time with regard to the appellant. It was a subject that had not been raised in the examination in chief but arose from the cross-examination. The trial judge erred in failing to allow re-examination on this point.
I think the judge was correct in allowing me to bring up information related to the new information provided by the agent for the defendant.
 It seems to me that when the witness was being examined in chief the Crown would have known (or could have known if the Crown would have asked the police) about the police interview with the witness. Not having referred the witness during the examination-in-chief to her statements that she had made to the police should not have prevented the Crown from asking that witness questions about her statements during the re-examination of that witness because the matter was raised during the cross-examination of the witness. Therefore, even though a matter was not raised during examination-in-chief of a witness, if that matter is raised during cross-examination of that witness, the witness can be re-examined in relation to that matter following cross-examination, even though the agent or counsel who called the witness would have (or could have) known about the matter prior to the cross-examination of that witness.
This is another interesting technicality… if the agent for the plaintiff knew about the information, but did not bring it up in the direct examination, then they should not be allowed to address that in re-direct. In the case at hand, the agent did not have prior knowledge about the information brought up by the agent for the defendant.
Based on the above, it indicates I was correct in my assumptions.
 Therefore even if a matter has not been addressed during the examination-in-chief or during the cross-examination of a witness, it is still possible to permit the matter to be addressed during re-examination, with the opposing party having the right to a further cross-examination of the witness.
I see this as a very valuable tid bit…. because if the agent for the appellant finds that the agent for the defendant has opened up a can of worms, it may be worth asking the judge if you can introduce new information. Having said that it obviously is better to be well prepared in the first place.
 The Appellant’s tax liability for 2002 was originally assessed on October 14, 2003 and the Appellant’s tax liability for 2003 was originally assessed on May 25, 2004. The Appellant was reassessed to include the additional income referred to above by notices of reassessment dated August 30, 2007.
In this case, the appellant had signed a waiver that we were challenging as being binding.
 A waiver in respect of “Business Income & Expenses & Real Estate Transactions” for the 2002 taxation year of the Appellant was dated October 10, 2006. The Appellant acknowledged that the signature on the form appeared to be his signature but he stated that he has no recollection of signing the waiver. No waiver was submitted in respect of the 2003 taxation year.
The following is what was covered in the direct questioning by the agent for the appellant.
Q. Mr. Wiens, I was asking you: Do you recall where you were and what you were doing on October 10,2006?
A. I was either in the hospital or out for a few days or on day passes or so on. I was awaiting surgery.
Q. Can you describe what type of surgery you were waiting to do?
A. I was going to take out my spleen. They said it was in danger of a spontaneous rupture. They wanted to diagnose it or something. I don’t understand what the doctors do.
Q. Were you physically ill as a result of this?
Q. Were you on medication?
Q. Do you recall what that medication was?
A. Some of them were narcotics, but I know you have to get a special prescription. If I was in the hospital I would get a whole bunch of pills. My wife knew more of what I was taking at home. It would be a shot glass of a whole bunch of different stuff. I don’t know exactly what everything was.
Q. Would you say that you were your normal self and functioning mentally properly at that time?
A. I couldn’t drive. They told me that with the drugs I was on I couldn’t operate a motor vehicle.
Q. Were you dealing with your tax matters at that time? A. No.
Q. In regard to taxes, to your mental and physical state, your ability to make decisions; all that stuff.
A. My wife described me as a vegetable. I remember getting a call when I was in the hospital -1 think it was in July – or it was a message from a nurse to call the auditor. I asked my wife if she could get the accountant at that time or a bookkeeper to take care of it. As days went on, I got worse and worse. I was on more and more drugs, so I didn’t know what I was doing. I couldn’t operate a car. I couldn’t even walk.
A. My mental condition, I was probably close to how my wife described me. I didn’t know what I was doing. I didn’t know anything.
Q. How far back do we go before you had your normal clarity of thought? If we took October 10 as a benchmark, when did you start having your memory and thinking capacity affected by your illness? That is what I’m trying to establish.
A. I know I was admitted to the hospital in late July, I think it was, of 2006, and I stayed there for a long time. While I was there I was in pretty bad shape. Previous to that when we were having all the problems with the store, I think I probably had some kind of nervous problem because I was not very well there. You can imagine the effect if someone’s house is broken into once or so or twice, three times, five times, I don’t even know how many times it was. It was a big stress. I was paranoid, I guess. I didn’t know what was going on.
Q. What would you say your capacity was to look after your own affairs – especially around the audit – during that period of time?
Q. Who was looking after your affairs?
A. An accountant named Kathy Currie. I’m not sure if she is an accountant or a bookkeeper.
32 The Appellant therefore accepted a settlement which he surely believed was in his favour at the time, and assessments were done based on that settlement, that is, with no penalty. He waived his right to object and appeal in respect of the expenses the deduction of which was disallowed for the years 1997, 1998 and 1999. He did not offer any compelling evidence showing that he was unable, for reasons related to his origin or language, to understand the consequences of his waiver or that tax officials tried to mislead him, threaten him or apply undue pressure in connection with the waiver. Subsections 165(1.2) and 169(2.2) of the Act sanction such waivers.
33 It is clear to me that a waiver of the right to object and appeal signed by a taxpayer cannot be set aside except on a preponderance of evidence that the taxpayer did not freely consent to the waiver or was unduly pressured. I do not believe such evidence was put forward in this instance.
Contractual incapacity. The incapacity of one or more of the contracting parties may defeat an otherwise valid contract. Prima facie, (Prima Facie is (Latin) A legal presumption which means on the face of it or at first sight. )however, the law presumes that everyone has a capacity to contract; so that, where exemption from liability to fulfill an obligation is claimed by reason of want of capacity, this feat must be strictly established on the part of the person who claims the exemption.
One needs to make sure that they have good evidence to prove the incapacity of the party to consent to the waiver.
In this case there was no suggestion that the Appellant was unduly pressured. The reference to “strictly established” does not impose a standard of proof that is different from a balance of probabilities or impose a requirement on the trial Judge to scrutinize evidence more carefully than such trial Judge would in other civil matters. Based on the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in F.H. v. McDougall, referred to below, since the Appellant is claiming that he is not bound by the waiver, the Appellant will need to establish on a balance of probabilities that he did not have the requisite capacity to execute the waiver on October 10, 2006.
 However, in this case it is not at all clear whether the Appellant was in the hospital on October 10, 2006. No records from the hospital were introduced to show the date that he was admitted to the hospital or discharged from the hospital. His recollection was that he was admitted in late July 2006 and that he “stayed there for a long time”. A long time is very subjective and of little assistance in determining whether he was still in the hospital on October 10, 2006. For some people a couple of weeks in a hospital may be a long time.
I see this issue as a stark reminder of how important it is for an agent to verify all facts and not to make assumptions. We were told the appellant was in the hospital and have no reason to think it was not so, however by the agent not verifying that the appellant was actually there on that date, there was no hard evidence to introduce to the court.
 It is also not clear what medication he was actually taking on October 10, 2006 or what his capacity was on that date to understand the nature of the document that he was signing. Simply not remembering that he had signed the document is not sufficient. It seems to me that testimony from medical experts would have been important in relation to the capacity of the Appellant on October 10, 2006 if the Appellant wanted to establish that he lacked the capacity to understand the nature of the document that he was signing on that particular day.
This is where we should have had the proof of the appellant being in the hospital at the time of signing the wavier of his rights.
Certainly it would have been good to have the testimony or at least a sworn affidavit of a medical expert to prove the point.
40 Like the House of Lords, I think it is time to say, once and for all in Canada, that there is only one civil standard of proof at common law and that is proof on a balance of probabilities. Of course, context is all important and a judge should not be unmindful, where appropriate, of inherent probabilities or improbabilities or the seriousness of the allegations or consequences. However, these considerations do not change the standard of proof….
We often hear judges speak of “Balance of Probabilities” and the following information needs to be looked at closely to understand how this is handled in court.
If a legal rule requires a feet to be proved (a “fact in issue”), a judge or jury must decide whether or not it happened. There is no room for a finding that it might have happened. (key issue to keep in mind when providing information in court, there can be no assumptions) The law operates a binary system in which the only values are zero and one. The fact either happened or it did not If the tribunal is left in doubt, the doubt is resolved by a rule that one party or the other carries the burden of proof. If the party who bears the burden of proof fails to discharge it, a value of zero is returned and the fact is treated as not having happened. If he does discharge it, a value of one is returned and the fact is treated as having happened.
A binary system of zero and one is a good way to visualize the determination of the balance of probabilities.
I like this, it is a simple way to look at information. First determine who has the onus to prove the information and secondly ask yourself what proof is there? This underscores the importance of understanding who has the onus of proof.
In my view, the only practical way in which to reach a factual conclusion in a civil case is to decide whether it is more likely than not that the event occurred.
45 To suggest that depending upon the seriousness, the evidence in the civil case must be scrutinized with greater care implies that in less serious cases the evidence need not be scrutinized with such care. I think it is inappropriate to say that there are legally recognized different levels of scrutiny of the evidence depending upon the seriousness of the case. There is only one legal rule and that is met in all cases, evidence must be scrutinized with care by the trial judge.
Key note here is that if the judge is going to scrutinize your evidence then the evidenced needs to be scrutinized before giving it to a judge.
46 Similarly, evidence must always be sufficiently clear, convincing and cogent (persuasive) to satisfy the balance of probabilities test. But again, there is no objective standard to measure sufficiency,in serious cases, like the present, judges may be faced with evidence of events that are alleged to have occurred many years before, where there is little other evidence than that of the plaintiff and defendant. As difficult as the task may be, the judge must make a decision. If a responsible judge finds for the plaintiff, it must be accepted that the evidence was sufficiently clear, convincing and cogent to that judge that the plaintiff satisfied the balance of probabilities test.
In our case we were trying to prove that the appellant was in the hospital, the onus of proof was on us, but we did not have any visual evidence. Had the onus been on the defendant, they would have to prove that the appellant was not in the hospital and or the date of signing was not close to the date of the time in question… at the time of the signing.
Consider the famous example of the animal seen in Regent’s Park. If it is seen outside the zoo on a stretch of greensward regularly used for walking dogs, then of course it is more likely to be a dog than a lion. If it is seen in the zoo next to the lions’ enclosure when the door is open, men it may well be more likely to be a lion than a dog.
In this case, had the appellant signed the document near the date of the stay in the hospital, on the balance of probabilities, he would not have been in a mental state to know what he was signing.
Common sense, not law, requires (that in deciding this question, regard should be had, to whatever extent appropriate, to inherent probabilities.
It will be for the trial judge to decide to what extent, if any, the circumstances suggest that an allegation is inherently improbable and where appropriate, that may be taken into account in the assessment of whether the evidence establishes that it is more likely than not that the event occurred. However, there can be no rule of law imposing such a formula.
 While the Appellant might have lacked the capacity to execute a valid waiver on October 10, 2006, this is not sufficient. The Appellant must establish that it was more likely than not that the Appellant lacked the requisite capacity on October 10, 2006 to consent to the waiver. The Appellant has failed to establish that it was more likely than not that on October 10, 2006 the Appellant lacked the requisite capacity to execute a valid waiver and therefore I find that the waiver is valid and the Respondent had the right to reassess the Appellant for 2002.
While there was no doubt the waiver was signed, there was no proof of when the appellant was in the hospital, and being that there was more time out of the hospital than in, one could take the position, that it is more likely that the appellant was not in the hospital at the time of signing.
We now go into an area where one needs to fully see the power of good evidence to demolish an argument and shift the onus to the other party.
92 … The Minister, in making assessments, proceeds on assumptions (Bayridge Estates Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue (1959), 59 D.T.C. 1098 (Can. Ex. Ct.), at p. 1101) and the initial onus is on the taxpayer to “demolish” the Minister’s assumptions in the assessment (Johnston v. Minister of National Revenue,  S.C.R. 486 (S.C.C.); Kennedy v. Minister of National Revenue (1973), 73 D.T.C. 5359 (Fed. C.A.), at p. 5361). The initial burden is only to “demolish” the exact assumptions made by the Minister but no more: First Fund Genesis Corp. v. R. (1990), 90 D.T.C. 6337 (Fed. T.D.), at p. 6340.
93 This initial onus of “demolishing” the Minister’s exact assumptions is met where the Appellant makes out at least a prima facie case: (Prima Facie is (Latin) A legal presumption which means on the face of it or at first sight.) Kamin v. Minister of National Revenue (1992), 93 D.T.C. 62 (T.C.C.); Goodwin v. Minister of National Revenue (1982), 82 D.T.C. 1679 (T.R.B.).
In the case at bar, the Appellant adduced evidence which met not only a prima facie standard, but also, in my view, even a higher one. In my view, the Appellant “demolished” the following assumptions as follows: (a) the assumption of “two businesses”, by adducing clear evidence of only one business; (b) the assumption of “no income”, by adducing clear evidence of income. The law is settled that unchallenged and uncontradicted evidence “demolishes” the Minister’s assumptions: see for example Maclsaac v. Minister of National Revenue (1974), 74 D.T.C. 6380 (Fed. C.A.), at p. 6381; Zink v. Minister of National Revenue (1987), 87 D.T.C. 652 (T.C.C.). As stated above, all of the Appellant’s evidence in the case at bar remained unchallenged and uncontradicted. Accordingly, in my view, the assumptions of “two businesses” and “no income” have been “demolished” by the Appellant.
94 Where the Minister’s assumptions have been “demolished” by the Appellant, “the onus shifts to the Minister to rebut the prima facie case” made out by the Appellant and to prove the assumptions: Magilb Development Corp. v. Minister of National Revenue (1986), 87 D.T.C. 5012 (Fed. T.D.), at p. 5018. Hence, in the case at bar, the onus has shifted to the Minister to prove its assumptions that there are “two businesses” and “no income”.
95 Where the burden has shifted to the Minister, and the Minister adduces no evidence whatsoever, the taxpayer is entitled to succeed: see for example Maclsaac, supra, where the Federal Court of Appeal set aside the judgment of the Trial Division, on the grounds that (at pp. 6381-2) the “evidence was not challenged or contradicted and no objection of any kind was taken thereto”. See also Waxstein v. Minister of National Revenue (1980), 80 D.T.C. 1348 (T.R.B.); Roselam Investments Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue (1980), 80 D.T.C. 1271 (T.R.B.). Refer also to Zink v. Minister of National Revenue, supra, at p. 653, where, even if the evidence contained “gaps in logic, chronology and substance”, the taxpayer’s appeal was allowed as the Minster failed to present any evidence as to the source of income. I note that, in the case at bar, the evidence contains no such “gaps”. Therefore, in the case at bar, since the Minister adduced no evidence whatsoever, and no question of credibility was ever raised by anyone, the Appellant is entitled to succeed.
It has been my experience that establishing credibility of both the appellant and the agent is critical. Our position is to defend what we can prove was done and not defending what was done that we cannot prove, allows us to build credibility in front of the judges.
96 In the present case, without any evidence, both the Trial Division and the Court of Appeal purported to transform the Minister’s unsubstantiated and unproven assumptions into “factual findings”, thus making errors of law on the onus of proof.
the Minister should be able to rebut such [prima facie] evidence and bring forth some foundation for his assumptions.
So as we come back to the word “Demolish” we are reminded that demolish does not require a higher standard to prove the point. So how I would define the word would be as follows; To demolish an argument means that; on the balance of probabilities, you have to remove any doubt the argument made was wrong.
… The act of “demolishing” a ministerial assumption entails proving on the balance of probabilities the material facts that are within the taxpayer’s knowledge if those facts do not support the assumption.
 This initial onus of “demolishing” the Minister’s exact assumptions is met where the appellant makes out at least a prima facie case: Kamin v. M.N.R., 93 D.T.C. 62 (T.C.C.); Goodwin v. M.N.R., 82 D.T.C. 1679 (T.R.B.). In the case at bar, the appellant adduced evidence which met not only a prima facie standard, but also, in my view, even a higher one. In my view, die appellant “demolished” the following assumptions as follows: (a) the assumption of “two businesses”, by adducing clear evidence of only one business; (b) the assumption of “no income”, by adducing clear evidence of income. The law is settled that unchallenged and uncontradicted evidence “demolishes” the Minister’s assumptions: see for example Maclsaac v. M.N.R., 74 D.T.C. 6380 (F.C.A.), at p. 6381; Zink v. M.N.R., 87 D.T.C. 652 (T.C.C.). As stated above, all of the appellant’s evidence in the case at bar remained unchallenged and uncontradicted. Accordingly, in my view, the assumptions of “two businesses” and “no income” have been “demolished” by the appellant.
 Where the Minister’s assumptions have been “demolished” by the appellant, “the onus … shifts to the Minister to rebut the prima facie case” made out by the appellant and to prove the assumptions: Magilb Development Corp. v. The Queen, 87 D.T.C. 5012 (F.C.T.D.), at p. 5018. Hence, in the case at bar, the onus has shifted to the Minister to prove its assumptions that there are “two businesses” and “no income”.
29 Before us, counsel for the Crown made persuasive submissions on the issue of the so-called “prima facie” standard: L’Heureux-Dubé J.’s use of “prima facie” was made in the context of a case in which the Crown had not called any evidence whatsoever; it was relying solely on its assumptions. It is certainly possible in such circumstances that a prima facie case, or even one with “gaps”, would be sufficient to displace the Crown’s assumptions, but the prima faciestandard described by Justice L’Heureux-Dubé should not be interpreted as having altered the usual standard of proof in tax cases: see the comments in Sekhon v. Canada,  T.C.J. No. 1145 at para. 37; and Hallat v. The Queen (2000),  1 C.T.C. 2626 (F.C.A.).
31 This statement is consonant with the taxpayer’s initial legal burden: The taxpayer’s only task is to rebut the Minister’s assumptions so that the Minister does not have the benefit of the assumption. If the Minister adduces alternate evidence to support the assessment then there is a tactical burden on the taxpayer to challenge it, but, in theory, the taxpayer need do “no more” than bring evidence to unseat the assumptions.
This is very interesting to ponder over. How I see this; is … being that during a tax audit, the Minister has the right to make assumptions in the absence of facts… when a taxpayer comes to court, the taxpayer has to bring evidence to unseat the assumption. This is different that simply proving the Minister’s assumptions wrong.
A good example of this is if the Minister assumes no income, but the taxpayer shows that the taxpayer reported income on his tax return, it does not prove there was income. It only shows that the taxpayer claimed income which would unseat the Minister’s assumption. Certainly the tax return did not prove the income as would bank deposits, but it does unseat the assumption of no income.
(c) contend that, even if the assumptions were justified, they do not of themselves support the assessment.
These points are subtle but powerful.
33 In response to the taxpayer’s submissions, the Crown may adduce its own evidence to prove either that the assumptions are correct or to show that, even without relying on the assumptions, the assessment is nevertheless valid: Pillsbury at 5188; Pollock at 6053. The Crown may also challenge the taxpayer’s evidence, either on cross-examination, or by raising serious issues of credibility. A court may draw a negative inference “from the taxpayer’s failure to adduce material evidence in the taxpayer’s possession or control” and conclude the taxpayer has not met its initial burden of disproving one or more of the assumptions: Trac at para. 31. Once all the evidence is in, the judge must weigh it and first determine whether the taxpayer has met the initial legal burden with respect to the assumptions. If the taxpayer has failed to meet its burden, then the Crown need not go on to discharge its conditional legal burden because the precondition has not been met.
How I see this, is that the taxpayer ought to provide as much proof as possible at all times.
34 If the taxpayer has successfully discharged its legal burden with regard to an assumption, the Crown may not rely on that assumption in attempting to prove the validity of the assessment. If unproven assumptions are necessary to the assessment, the taxpayer will succeed. Assumptions not disproven are deemed facts which, if sufficient to establish the Minister’s case, will cause the appeal to fail.
So we get that one must be very cognizant of all the assumptions made by the Minister and disprove all of them.
i. What are the assumptions?
Now I will still start with the issues, then in addition, I will outline what assumptions the Minister made and indicate my plan to disprove those assumptions. This may not sound too noteworthy, but based on what Justice Webb has written, I now have my eyes wide open about this. Previously in court I did talk about onus, but this approach is much clearer, of better process and gives the judge something to help him make decisions on.
I am including extra data from the Holm case… as I think it is relevant. SEE *** at the end of my insertion.
 Nonetheless, I do not propose to apply any of the sanctions or remedies that might be available in other circumstances. Counsel allege that sub paragraph 5d) is an abuse of the process of this court. In some circumstances I would agree that pleading as an assumption a fact that was not made (or could not possibly have been made as in Anchor Pointe Energy Limited v. The Queen, 2002 DTC 2071) calls for a severe sanction. However I am dismissing the motion for several reasons.
Upon receipt of a notice of objection it is the duty of the Minister with all due dispatch to reconsider the amount. This has been referred to by counsel for the respondent as an “in-house” appeal.
In my opinion it is not an appeal. It continues to be part and parcel of the assessment process.
1] These motions were brought by the appellants for an order allowing the appellants’ appeals or, in the alternative, for an order striking out the replies to the notices of appeal in their entirety coupled with an order that the respondent not be permitted to file fresh or amended replies. In the further alternative they request an order that paragraph 5 of the replies (paragraph 7 in the appeal of Reverend Powell) be struck out. The basis of the motions is that the respondent pleaded as an “assumption” a fact that the appellants say was not assumed at the time the assessments were made.
So what we get out of this, if the Minister assesses and a taxpayer files a notice of objection (also noted as an in house appeal) which and the Minister confirms the assessment. The Minister can not assume any facts after that point in time.
If the taxpayer files an appeal to the confirmed assessment, the Minister may not introduce new assumptions in their reply to the appeal.
 This is not a case “where the pleaded assumptions of facts are exclusively or peculiarly within the Minister’s knowledge and that the rule as to the onus of proof may work so unfairly as to require a corrective measure”. Therefore the Appellant in this case has the initial onus of proving that any assumptions, that were made in reassessing the Appellant for 2002 with which the Appellant does not agree, are not correct. There are two items in dispute in relation to the reassessment of the Appellant’s 2002 tax liability. One is related to the real property transactions and the other is related to the amounts paid by the insurance company in relation to claims filed by the Appellant.
 The first property was held for approximately six months and the second for approximately three months. It is the position of the Appellant that any gain realized on the sale of these properties is income of his daughter. If any gain is income of his daughter, then it will not matter whether the gain is a capital gain or an income gain as only the reassessment of the Appellant is in issue in this case. How his daughter should have reported such gain (if such gain should have been reported by her) is not in issue in this case.
It was the taxpayer’s position that the houses were bought and sold for the sole benefit of his daughter.
 It is the position of the Respondent that the gains realized on the sales of these two properties in 2002 were income gains of the Appellant.
 The Appellant and his spouse have three children. Their daughter, Jessalyn, would have been 20 years old in 2002. Their other two children would have been 17 and 13 in 2002. Jessalyn Wiens graduated from high school in 2001 and worked part time at Smitty’s restaurant and the retail store operated by the Appellant. It was assumed in the Reply that Jessalyn Wiens was paid $4,000 for working at the store in 2002 and the Appellant has not established that this assumption was not correct. She was living with the Appellant in 2002 prior to the purchase of the Pembroke Road property.
 It is the position of the Appellant that the money required to purchase the property located at 22 Pembroke Road was advanced to Jessalyn Wiens from a line of credit that the Appellant and his spouse had with CIBC. It is not clear whether the amount advanced from the line of credit was the full purchase price of $90,520 (including repairs and improvements) or a down payment amount (with the balance being financed from another loan). Jessalyn Wiens graduated from high school in 2001. The property at 22 Pembroke Road was acquired on February 15, 2002 which was before she started working at the retail store operated by the Appellant. The Appellant did not start operating the retail store until July 2002. Therefore it appears that the only income that Jessalyn Wiens had from the end of June 2001 (when she graduated from high school) to mid February 2002, would have been whatever income she earned from her job at Smitty’s restaurant. It is more likely than not that Jessalyn Wiens did not have any money to apply towards the purchase of the property located at 22 Pembroke Road.
Q. Mr. Wiens, if you could take a look at the last page I was about to ask you something on where it is entitled across the top “Jessalyn Wiens Real Estate Transactions 2002, 2003″. It’s the third page of the last exhibit. The bottom number on the right hand corner is 245. We had some discussion earlier, and I think we came to the agreement that this was prepared by your previous accountant. My first question to you is: Have you seen this before?
Q. Can you read what “Explanations” says, and what that means to you, just to get familiar? For instance, the first line under “Explanations”, the “Borrowed from dad for down payment on first house,” what would that mean to you?
A. There, there is $10,000 so that must have been a loan to her.
Q. Do you see on the far right “Balance owed to dad, $10,000″? Would that seem to be about how loaning your money to your daughter was handled?
A. Yes. I have never seen this before, but it seems to be something dealing with loans for houses.
Q. As you read down, you see that money was paid out to various parties. As it is paid out down the right side of the page, it appears that the balance owing to dad keeps increasing. Do you see that?
Q. If we get right down to the bottom and we look underneath the trust account and it says the trust account balance is zero, it says the total paid back is $105,907.35 and then “Final balance to dad” was $97,013.80. That is what it says there. If you look at that and then you look at the bottom, immediately below that it says “Total borrowed $148,000 and some. Total paid back, $245,000 and some”. That would appear to take us to the last statement, “September 30, 2003, Dad holding $97,000 to purchase house in Lorette”. Did that money go to your daughter to buy the house in Lorette?
A. I think the house in Lorette was $75,000 but there were some improvements also done there, and they didn’t have money. I think they had a new baby then when they moved in. It’s foggy. They didn’t have a lot of money. Between me and my daughter, we didn’t keep this type of accounting. It looks like somebody put a lot of work into this. They are probably missing something. Between a father and a daughter, everyone knows you are not going to strictly make her pay back everything she owes or not give her money when she needs it. It is very loose accounting between me and her; between me and my wife and her. Someone spent a lot of time going into specifics. I agree and I’m sure Jessie would agree too that we were even after that house.
This testimony hurt the appellant because it indicated that there was no recourse to the loan and makes it look like the daughter was less involved and really the mind and management of the buying and selling of these houses was the appellant and not the daughter.
 Since the first time that the Appellant saw this schedule was during the hearing this schedule was obviously not prepared by the Appellant or reviewed by the Appellant during 2002 or at any other time prior to the hearing. As well since the Appellant stated that he and his daughter did not “keep this type of accounting” it raises questions about whether it really was the intention of the Appellant that he intended to create a debtor / creditor relationship with Jessalyn Wiens. His statement that “everyone knows you are not going to strictly make her pay back everything she owes” confirms that he did not intend to create an enforceable obligation on the part of Jessalyn Wiens to repay amounts used to purchase properties that were put in her name. If they would have intended to create an enforceable obligation, then presumably they would have maintained a schedule similar to the one submitted at the hearing.
This is an important lesson for parents who are looking to help their children in obtaining home ownership. If the agreement is too lose, the income would attribute to the parent and the equity earned would be a gift from the parent to the child.
 I find that there was no intention to create an enforceable obligation for Jessalyn Wiens to repay amounts used to purchase the properties that were in her name.
Q. You are saying to us today that it is Jessalyn who owns these properties. Do you agree with me so far?
A. I’m saying it was Jessalyn?
A. The land title said it was Jessalyn’s.
Q. Your evidence today is that it was Jessalyn. Would you agree with that?
A. As far as I know, yes.
 The registration of the title at the applicable registry office would simply relate to the legal title to the property. For the purposes of this appeal the issue is whether Jessalyn Wiens was the beneficial owner of the property, not whether she was the legal owner of the property.
This is a very important factor to consider as beneficial is to taxation what legal has to do with control. The appellant realized the gain, because the gains would go back to his bank account, but the daughter had legal control over the property.
 Jessalyn Wiens had no money to contribute towards the purchase of the property located at 22 Pembroke Road, which was the first property that was acquired in 2002. The only evidence at the hearing was that the line of credit was used to finance the purchase of the houses in 2002. The line of credit was a personal line of credit of the Appellant and his spouse. The fact that the spouse was a joint owner of the bank account, that brings her into the beneficial owner picture. A copy of the statement for the line of credit dated July 10, 2002 was introduced at the hearing. This statement shows that as of June 8, 2002 the amount outstanding under this line of credit was $91,307 which was slightly more than the total cost of the property located at 22 Pembroke Road. This was also approximately one month before the retail store opened and approximately four months after the Pembroke property had been acquired.
To make things real, the daughter should have had the proceeds of each house sold go to her bank account and not to the account of her parents.
 The Appellant also stated that the proceeds realized from the sale of the properties were deposited in the same account (which, since the only statement introduced in relation to the line of credit shows that there was a balance outstanding under the line of credit, would mean that the sale proceeds would be applied against the amount outstanding under the line of credit). Jessalyn Wiens was not liable under the line of credit with CIBC. The Appellant and his spouse were liable under this line of credit. When the amounts received from the sale of the properties were applied against the amounts outstanding under the line of credit, the Appellant and his spouse received the benefit from the sale proceeds since such proceeds reduced their indebtedness to CIBC.
 I find that Jessalyn Wiens did not acquire any beneficial interest in the property located at 22 Pembroke Road or 428 Redonda Street in 2002.
One has to agree, because the question has to be asked… “What benefit did Jessalyn receive?” The answer being that the money went to her parent’s bank account, there does not appear to be any benefit to Jessalyn upon the sale of each of the properties.
 The next question is whether the Appellant was the beneficial owner or whether the Appellant and his spouse were the beneficial owners of these properties. The only source of funds that was identified in relation to the purchase of the properties in 2002 was the amount that was borrowed under the line of credit. When the amount was borrowed to purchase the property located at 22 Pembroke Road, both the Appellant and his spouse were liable to repay the amount borrowed from CIBC since both individuals are identified in the statement for the line of credit. There is no indication that the Appellant used any of his own funds. (This is a fine detail to consider in that borrowed money is not his money, it is the banks money. Had he taken his own money to loan his daughter, then there would be no financial benefit to the appellant in having a loan paid back without interest. ) in relation to the purchase of either one of the two properties in 2002. It appears that the proceeds from the sale of the property located at 22 Pembroke Road were applied against the amount outstanding under the line of credit (which benefitted both the Appellant and his spouse now this begins to implicate his spouse, although it would be very hard for CRA to make this attack back on statute barred years.) and that the line of credit was again used to finance the purchase of the property located at 428 Redonda Street. Again the proceeds from the sale of this house were applied against the amount outstanding under the line of credit (which again benefitted both the Appellant and his spouse).
 As a result it does not seem to me that the Appellant acquired all of the beneficial interest in the properties in 2002 but rather that he acquired one-half of the beneficial interests in these properties. (Because his wife was also on the personal line of credit that was used to finance the purchase of the various houses.) Therefore, in my opinion, the Appellant should only be required to report one-half of the gain realized on the sales of these properties. It is not necessary to find that there was any partnership between the Appellant and his spouse, it is only necessary to find that he was only the beneficial owner of a one-half interest in the properties.
Is the sum of gain that has been made a mere enhancement of value by realising a security, or is it a gain made in the operation of business in carrying out a scheme for profit-making?
Now we get into what is a business and what is an adventure in trade. In this case the appellant does not meet the test of being a business, so we have to look does it qualify as an adventure in trade… an activity with an expectation of profit.
(i) The taxpayer’s intention with respect to the real estate at the time of purchase and the feasibility of that intention and the extent to which it was carried out. An intention to sell the property for a profit will make it more likely to be characterized as an adventure in the nature of trade.
This is a very important point, which demonstrates the importance of written plans, which could also be referred to as a journal. I believe that a journal is an important way to document Reasons and Rationals of decision making. This becomes a record to fall back on for a variety of reasons.
(ii) The nature of the business, profession, calling or trade of the taxpayer and associates. The more closely a taxpayer’s business or occupation is related to real estate transactions, the more likely it is that the income will be considered business income rather than capital gain.
This is another point in the case at hand. The Appellant had a history in buying and selling of homes. This took the spotlight on his experience and probabilities that this was an endeavour fr the purpose of making money. Had he not taken all the proceeds into his account before giving the money earned to his daughter, things could have looked quite differently in the eyes of the judge.
(iii) The nature of the property and the use made of it by the taxpayer.
In this case there were times when the house was not occupied by the daughter.
(iv) The extent to which borrowed money was used to finance the transaction and the length of time that the real estate was held by the taxpayer. Transactions involving borrowed money and rapid resale are more likely to be adventures in the nature of trade.
In this case, the homes were financed by the line of credit over short periods of time where the houses where not held for long term uses. There were quite plausible explanations of why the turn overs were rapid, but none the less the facts are that the turn arounds were quite frequent.
61 A number of principles emerge from these decisions which I believe can be summarized as follows. First, the boundary between income and capital gains cannot easily be drawn and, as a consequence, consideration of various factors, including the taxpayer’s intent at the time of acquiring the property at issue, becomes necessary for a proper determination. *(This is why we stress so much around indicating intent by way of business planning. ) Second, for the transaction to constitute an adventure in the nature of trade, the possibility of resale, as an operating motivation for the purchase, must have been in the mind of the taxpayer.(By nailing down intent in a business plan it demonstrates intent at time of queston.) In order to make that determination, inferences will have to be drawn from all of the circumstances. In other words, the taxpayer’s whole course of conduct has to be assessed. Third, with respect to “secondary intention”, it also must also have existed at the time of acquisition of the property (Note that if you intend to keep and not resell at the time in question, that is in your favour. ) and it must have been an operating motivation in the acquisition of the property. Fourth, the fact that the taxpayer contemplated the possibility of resale of his or her property is not, in itself, sufficient to conclude in the existence of an adventure in the nature of trade. In Principles of Canadian Income Tax Law, supra, the learned authors, in discussing the applicable test in relation to the existence of a “secondary intention”, opine that “the secondary intention doctrine will not be satisfied unless the prospect of resale at a profit was an important consideration in the decision to acquire the property” (see page 337). I agree entirely with that proposition. Fifth, the viva voce evidence of the taxpayer with respect to his or her intention is not conclusive and has to be tested in the light of all the surrounding circumstances.
 The Appellant’s stated intention in acquiring the Pembroke Road property was to provide his daughter with a place to live. He stated that she did live there for a few months. As noted, the statement of the Appellant’s intentions is not conclusive and must “be tested in the light of all the surrounding circumstances”. In this case it appears that the full amount of the purchase price of 22 Pembroke Road was financed by amounts borrowed from the line of credit of the Appellant and his spouse. It seems to me that a line of credit would be a short term form of financing and not, in general, a long term form of financing. The use of short term financing to purchase the property would support a conclusion that the sale of the property was an adventure in the nature of trade.
This brings us back to the point of seeing that this real estate endeavour because it had short term financing, makes it look like a short term money making exercise… e.g. if this was to be a long term loan… there should have been a mortgage put on the property.
 The Pembroke Road property did not produce any income (except the income arising as a result of the sale of the property). This property was acquired on February 15, 2002 which was approximately 4.5 to 5 months before the Appellant started to operate the retail store in July 2002. The only evidence in relation to the income of the Appellant’s spouse in 2002 is that she was not paid while she was working at the retail store. The Appellant introduced into evidence an excerpt from his tax return for 2003. The excerpt included the first page of this return but the net income amount for his spouse was redacted. Therefore the only sources of funds that were identified at the hearing that could be used to repay the amount borrowed from the line of credit to purchase this property, other than any amount realized from the sale of this property, were the employment income and dividend income of the Appellant as stated above. Since the amount owing on the line of credit was increasing during a period of time when no properties were being acquired, it appears that his income was being used for other expenditures. The Appellant would presumably have to use his income for the living expenses for himself and his spouse and his two other children who were living at home after February 15, 2002. If reselling the property was not an important consideration when the property was acquired in February 2002, how would the amount borrowed against the line of credit be repaid?
 The property located at 428 Redonda Street was acquired approximately one month after the property located at 22 Pembroke Road was sold. It was acquired for $81,486. There was no indication of the balance of the line of credit on September 11, 2002 but since this was after the retail store was operating and since the Appellant indicated that he was losing money in operating this store, it seems more likely than not that there was an outstanding balance owing under the line of credit when the Redonda Street property was acquired. It would again seem that the only feasible way that the amount borrowed against the line of credit to purchase this property could be repaid would be if this property was sold.
 The very short holding periods (approximately six months for the Pembroke Road property and three months for the Redonda Street property) support a finding that the purchase and sale of these properties was an adventure in the nature of trade. The use of the line of credit to finance the purchase of these properties (which would be a form of short term financing) would also support a finding that the purchase and sale of these properties was an adventure in the nature of trade.
 As a result I find that the gain on the properties sold in 2002 was an income gain and not a capital gain. I also find that one-half of this gain should have been included in determining the income of the Appellant for 2002 as he held one-half of the beneficial interest in these properties.
For the first claim of November 14, 2002; the client had claimed a loss of $4,238.99 consisting of lost property – namely 55 cartons of Cigarettes, Cash ($500.) and a Cash Register. We paid the client $3,738.99 which was the loss amount less the $500 policy deductible. The rest of the payments were to contractors for repair of the glass, door and lock. These repairs were done in December, after the time of all 3 losses. Hence, no repair expenses claimed in the next 2 losses. Part of the expense payment was an emergency call to “board-up” the broken glass until permanent repairs could be made. This was done immediately after the first loss.
For the Second Claim of November 17, 2002; the client claimed a loss of $4,133.00 which again consisted of Cigarettes, Cash ($50. – $60.) and a Cash Register. We paid the client $3,633.00 which was the loss less the $500 policy deductible.
Common sense, not law, requires that in deciding this question, regard should be had, to whatever extent appropriate, to inherent probabilities.
When it comes to dealing with improbabilities, it is clear that a judge needs to really ponder a case before ruling on it. This is not something that can really be properly done during the trial.
 In this particular case the event in question is whether the Appellant would have deducted the amount paid by the insurance company to the contractors for the repairs in determining his income from the sole proprietorship. Since the Appellant did not pay the contractors, it seems to me that it was inherently improbable that this occurred. (This was an issue during the trial, as I was put in the awkward spot of proving something did not happen, when I did not have all the backup data to prove no income or expense was claimed because it was a wash.) I requested. )As a result it seems to me that it is more likely than not that the Appellant would not have claimed a deduction for the amount paid to the contractors for repairs and therefore no amount should have been added to the Appellant’s income for this amount. If this amount were to be added to the Appellant’s income, then he would be entitled to claim a deduction for repairs in the same amount and therefore no net amount would be added to his income. As a result, the Appellant’s income is reduced by the amount of $3,542 (which is the amount paid by the insurance company to the contractors).
So in this case the law of improbabilities saved the day.
For the purposes of Part I of the Income Tax Act, the answer to that question requires the application of a judge-made rule sometimes called the “surrogatum principle”, by which the tax treatment of a payment of damages or a settlement payment is considered to be the same as the tax treatment of whatever the payment is intended to replace.
I have added a lot of information here, because I see this as an important principle to understand.
For taxation in Canada purposes, damages or compensation received, either pursuant to a court judgment or an out-of-court settlement, may be considered as on account of income, capital, or windfall to the recipient. The nature of the injury or harm for which compensation is made generally determines the tax consequences of damages. Under the surrogatum principle, the tax consequences of a damage or settlement payment depend on the tax treatment of the item for which the payment is intended to substitute.
As a judge-made tax principle, the surrogatum principle must relate to tax treatment, not just to the nature of the payment, though in most cases the two will go hand-in-hand. The surrogatum principle should apply to assist in reaching a tax result in accordance with the tax legislation, not to encourage a result of either windfall at one end of the spectrum, or double taxation at the other end. The surrogatum principle should apply to maintain tax neutrality of damages.
If a taxpayer in the course of carrying on a business or earning income from a property receives damages or similar compensation, such as that received as a result of another party’s breach of contract or tortuous act, the receipt will be either income or capital for income tax purposes. As a general rule, the courts have held that the character of such a receipt will depend on the character of the item or subject matter that the receipt is intended to replace. This judge-made rule is often described as the “surrogatum principle”.
The general principle is that damages in lieu of receipts that would otherwise have been taxable to the taxpayer are taxable as income.
Thus, one must determine whether the receipts, in lieu of which the damages compensate, would have been taxable. Note, however, the characterization of damages as taxable income or non-taxable capital receipts depends upon the nature of the legal right settled and not upon the method used to calculate the award.
In contrast, if a contract constitutes a significant part of the company’s business structure, compensation paid on the termination of the contract may be on capital account. In Van den Berghs, Ltd. v. Clark,  A.C. 431, the taxpayer was an English company that entered into an agreement with a competing Dutch company which provided that the two companies (which were manufacturers and dealers in margarine) would conduct their businesses in cooperation with one another along certain prescribed lines and that they would share profits or losses. The agreement was to run for thirty years, but differences subsequently arose over the proper distribution of the profits. A settlement was reached under which a lump-sum amount was paid by the Dutch company to the taxpayer and the agreement was terminated. The House of Lords held that the rights of the taxpayer under the agreement constituted a capital asset and the sum paid for their cancellation was a capital receipt.
The case of Parsons-Steiner Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, 62 DTC 1148 (Ex. Ct.) was one of the first in Canada to consider the nature of damages received upon the termination of a business contract. The taxpayer received a lump-sum payment upon the cancellation of a sales agency contract under which it sold “Doulton” figurines and china products. This agency, when combined with another with the same company, accounted for 80% of the taxpayer’s business and in the last two or three years of the agency one of the products accounted for 55% of the taxpayer’s business. The agency relationship had lasted twenty years prior to its termination. Given the length of the agency relationship, its importance to the taxpayer’s business operations, and the fact that the taxpayer suffered decreased sales by reason of its inability to replace the agency with an equivalent arrangement, the Exchequer Court found the damages to be capital. The Court held that the damages related to the loss of the taxpayer’s interest in the goodwill and business in Doulton products in Canada, which the Court viewed as “a capital asset of an enduring nature”.
In H. A. Roberts Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, 69 DTC 5249, the taxpayer carried on a mortgage business in one of its five departments, having obtained two mortgage agencies (as well as a third less significant agency). The mortgage department was operated as a separate division from the taxpayer’s other businesses. The net income of the mortgage department ranged from 27% to 51% of the taxpayer’s total net income. The two agencies were cancelled and pursuant to the agency agreements the taxpayer received compensation payments. The cancellation of the agencies terminated the taxpayer’s mortgage business; the department was closed and the staff was disbanded. In holding that the payments were capital, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the loss of the two agencies represented “the loss of capital assets of an enduring nature the value of which had been built up over the years and that therefore the payments received by this appellant represented capital receipts”.
In The Queen v. Manley, 85 DTC 5150, the taxpayer was hired to find a purchaser for the shares of a family-owned company in exchange for a finder’s fee. When he found such a purchaser but was not paid, he sued the former controlling shareholder of the company, who on behalf of the other family shareholders had agreed to pay the finder’s fee. The taxpayer was successful in the lawsuit and was awarded damages for the shareholder’s breach of warranty of authority. In holding that the damages were income from a business, the Federal Court of Appeal held that they were compensation for the failure to receive the finder’s fee, which would have been income from a business because the taxpayer had engaged in an adventure in the nature of trade.
In Canadian National Railway Company v. The Queen, 88 DTC 6340, the taxpayer received an amount upon the termination of a contract for the transportation by road and rail of certain supplies and building materials. Justice Strayer of the Federal Court-Trial Division held that the operations under the contract did not constitute a separate business and that they were not that significant that the termination of the contract destroyed the taxpayer’s “profit-making apparatus” or seriously dislocated its “normal commercial organization”. He went on to hold that the purpose of the compensation provision in the contract was to enable the taxpayer to “absorb the shock as one of the normal incidents to be looked for” and that the compensation received was “no more than a surrogatum for the future profits surrendered”. As a result, the payment was income. In contrast, in Pe Ben Industries Company Limited v. The Queen, (88 DTC 6347), heard concurrently with Canadian National Railway, a similar payment was held to be capital. In that case, Justice Strayer concluded that the payment was compensation for the destruction of a distinct part of the taxpayer’s business. It had been the first “intermodal” undertaking of the taxpayer, which required it to establish a base of operations at a rail yard solely for that purpose. Justice Strayer held that the termination of the contract put an end to the intermodal operations of the taxpayer, such that the payment was capital. He went on to hold that the taxpayer’s rights under the contract constituted “property” and that the termination payment constituted “compensation for property destroyed” and therefore proceeds of disposition received in respect of the property. Since the taxpayer had a nil adjusted cost basis in the contract, the amount of the termination payment was a capital gain.
In T. Eaton Company Limited v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5178, the taxpayer was a tenant under a long-term lease for retail space in a shopping centre. The terms of the lease included a “participation clause” entitling the taxpayer to 20% of the annual net profits of the shopping centre over the duration of the lease. For several years, the taxpayer reported the amounts received under the participation clause as income. In 1989, the landlord offered to buy out the participation clause for $9.25 million. The offer was accepted and the taxpayer reported the $9.25 million amount as proceeds of the disposition of a capital property that had an acquisition cost of nil. Accordingly, the taxpayer reported a capital gain of $9.25 million. The Minister reassessed the taxpayer on the ground that the entire amount constituted income from a business. The Tax Court of Canada agreed with the Minister and characterized the participation clause as part of an ordinary business contract not forming part of the taxpayer’s capital structure. However, the Tax Court decision was overturned on appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal. The Federal Court rejected the Minister’s position that the participation clause was analogous to an ordinary trade contract. The Federal Court instead characterized the participation clause as an integral part of the lease, which was a capital asset of the taxpayer. The Court held that buy-out of the participation clause had the effect of diminishing the value of this capital asset by $9.25 million. Accordingly, the buy-out amount was on capital account.
Historically, the surrogatum principle has been applied by the courts only in the determination of profit from a business or property under general principles. However, in the case of Tsiaprailis v. The Queen, 2005 DTC 5119, the Supreme Court of Canada applied the principle in its consideration of a more specific statutory provision dealing with amounts received pursuant to a disability insurance plan, namely paragraph 6(1)(f). The case dealt with a lump-sum settlement payment received in respect of a disputed claim under a disability insurance plan. The payment ostensibly represented both past disability benefits accruing to the time of the settlement and the taxpayer’s foregone future benefits under the plan. The Court held that the portion of the lump-sum payment reflecting the taxpayer’s future benefits was not made pursuant to the insurance plan because there was no obligation to make such a lump-sum payment under the terms of the plan. Therefore, such amount was not taxable under paragraph 6(1)(f). However, turning to the portion of the payment that represented the past benefits under the plan, the Court applied the surrogatum principle in concluding that the portion was taxable under paragraph 6(1)(f) because it was meant to replace amounts that were payable pursuant to the plan.
“The surrogatum principle need not be considered in this case because the words “in lieu of” in paragraph 212(1)(d) of the Income Tax Act express a similar idea. The fact finding process that precedes the application of the surrogatum principle is similar to the fact finding process that must be undertaken to determine whether a payment has been made “in lieu of” a specified thing. Here, the fact finding exercise was completed when the Judge determined that the US$40 million payment was made as compensation for lost future rent.
 It seems to me that this principle will apply to the payments made to the Appellant for the lost cigarettes (which would be lost inventory) and for the lost cash. The amount received for the cigarettes that were stolen is a payment for this lost inventory. If the Appellant would have sold these cigarettes, any amount received would have been revenue. The payment made by the insurance company is a payment to replace revenue that the Appellant would have received if the cigarettes would have been sold, even though the amount received may be less than the amount that the Appellant may have received on a retail sale of the cigarettes. There was no indication that the cash that was stolen (and for which the Appellant received payment from the insurance company) was cash that was on hand otherwise than from sales. Therefore it seems to me that the cash that was stolen would have been cash from the sale of items and therefore would have been revenue. The payment of the amount for the lost cash is a payment made to replace the lost revenue. Therefore the payment in relation to the loss of inventory and cash would be income to the Appellant.
 However if any portion of the payment was for the lost cash register, it would be treated as proceeds of disposition of depreciable property of the same class of property as the cash register. Paragraph (c) of the definition of “proceeds of disposition” in subsection 13(21) of the Act provides that proceeds of disposition, for the purposes of determining the undepreciated capital cost of depreciable property, includes “any amount payable under a policy of insurance in respect of loss or destruction of property”.
That was how the CRA handled the money from the insurance claim. It would indicate by what I’m reading that they increased your income by the amount of the insurance payout.
A. I believe I remember I may be wrong I didn’t add that to income. I took it off of expenses when I was doing my income tax.
Q. Can you explain why you wouldn’t add it to your income?
A. It was just replacing smashed or stolen stuff.
Q. Was that amount of money more than your loss?
A. The amount the insurance paid?
A. That would be far less.
Q. So you were in a net loss position. Is that correct?
A. Yes; because of the deductible and the insurance company is pretty stingy.
Q. You didn’t see the money the insurance company paid you as a financial gain to be reported?
A. No, I didn’t. I don’t exactly recall.
A. To the best of my recollection, I deducted the insurance from expenses. I had a lot of bills and so on go missing, but I can’t really remember what happened. I know I grossly understated my losses.
Q. Mr. Wiens, how would you define your ability to remember things today?
A. I think I can remember some things. I did have chemotherapy, and I have a foggy condition.
Q. … What would you say that your mental faculty is now, and did it start getting better? If so, when?
A. It did. I have good days sometimes, but I have blank spots in my memory. I can’t remember a lot of things like I used to be able to. Some days I can’t think of I don’t know anything. There have been times when I don’t know even know who I am. All of a sudden I have this thing in my head. I don’t know what I’m doing, who I am or what is going on, but that’s rare. I’m smart enough to know I’m not as smart enough as most people.
In the following, one can clearly see how not being able to get all the documentation for the years in question continues to be problematic for the case.
 The only evidence presented by the Appellant in relation to whether the amounts received from the insurance company were included in the Appellant’s income or deducted from expenses was the testimony of the Appellant. No financial statements of the Appellant were introduced. This evidence is not sufficient to support a finding that the Appellant had reduced expenses by the amount of the insurance. If the Appellant had taken the insurance into account in determining his income (either by including the amount in income as revenue or reducing his expenses by the same amount) then no adjustment would be made to his income for the insurance as it is the amount of his liability for taxes that is in dispute. If the Appellant had reduced expenses by the amount of the insurance received and if the insurance amount is added to his income, then the Appellant would be entitled to claim the additional expenses (that he had not previously claimed) and his net income would remain the same. However, the Appellant has failed to establish that it is more likely than not that he reduced his expenses by an amount that was equal to or more than the amount that he received from the insurance company. While he might have reduced his expenses by such an amount, this is not sufficient.
 The Appellant has also failed to establish what part, if any, of the amount received from the insurance company was paid in relation to the loss of the cash register. If the claim for the cash register was less than $500, then because the deductible amount was $500, the full amount received could have been for the lost cigarettes and cash.
 As a result, no adjustment will be made with respect to the amount included in the Appellant’s income for 2002 in relation to the balance of the amount paid in relation to the first claim ($3,739) and the amount paid in relation to the second claim ($3,633).
 With respect to the reassessment of the Appellant’s tax liability for the 2003 taxation year, the reassessment of this taxation year was issued after the normal reassessment period and the Appellant did not sign a waiver in relation to the reassessment of this taxation year.
(a) that the misrepresentation was attributable to neglect, carelessness, wilful default or fraud.
I think this is the correct interpretation. If the onus that was imposed on the taxpayer under former paragraph 152(5)(b) survived the amendment to subsection 152(5) and the enactment of subsection 152(4.01), subsection (4.01) would have no purpose.
 Therefore the onus was on the Respondent (CRA) to not only establish that there was a misrepresentation with respect to the statements made by the Appellant in his tax return for 2003, but also that the “misrepresentation was attributable to neglect, carelessness, wilful default or fraud”.
 In this case the alleged misrepresentations for 2003 are in relation to the amounts realized on the sale of houses in 2003 and the amount received in relation to insurance claims in 2003.
 There were four properties that were sold in 2003. Each of these properties was also acquired in 2003. The longest period of time that any of thee properties was held was approximately 7 months (453 Phelan Road was purchased in March and sold in October).
 The property located at 1581 Rothesay Street was acquired in the name of the Appellant’s spouse. The Appellant stated that this property was acquired as a home for his second daughter. However she did not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of this property nor could she have occupied it for any significant period of time as it was sold a little more than three months after it was purchased.
 There were two sources of funds identified in 2003. One was the personal line of credit with CIBC and the other was Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. As stated below, I find that the amount of approximately $40,000 that was borrowed from Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. was used to finance the purchase of the Springfield property. As a result, I find that the purchase of the Rothesay Street property was financed by the line of credit with CIBC. Both the Appellant and his spouse were liable to repay amounts borrowed under the line of credit. It also appears more likely than not that the proceeds from the sale of the house were also applied against the amount outstanding under the line of credit. Therefore both the Appellant and his spouse benefitted from the sale of this house as they each had their liability under the line of credit reduced by the proceeds of sale that were applied against the amount outstanding under the line of credit.
 No statements from the line of credit for 2003 were introduced at the hearing but since the statement for July 10, 2002 indicates that, at that time, the Appellant and his spouse owed CIBC $108,761 under the line of credit and since the Appellant indicated that he incurred significant losses in operating the retail store that he opened around that time, it seems more likely than not that the Appellant and his spouse continued to owe amounts under the line of credit throughout 2003. As a result, I find that when the Rothesay Street property was sold, the proceeds would have reduced the liability of not only the Appellant’s spouse but also the Appellant under the line of credit. Although the Appellant had stated that only his spouse had received the money from the sale of this property, I find that both the Appellant and his spouse received the proceeds since the proceeds reduced their joint liability to CIBC. I find that the Appellant should have included one-half of the gain realized on the sale of the Rothesay Street property in determining his income for 2003.
 With only these sources of income (one of which arises from the sale of the real properties in 2003), how could the Appellant expect to repay the amount borrowed from CIBC to acquire the property unless the property was sold? It seems to me that “the possibility of resale, as an operating motivation for the purchase, must have been in the mind of the” Appellant when the property was acquired. The short holding period (approximately three months) confirms this intention. As well the number of similar transactions (six in 2002 and 2003) is also relevant in determining the Appellant’s intention. The use of the line of credit to fund the purchase price is also relevant, as discussed above. As a result the Appellant’s gain on the sale of the property was an income gain.
 The Appellant did not report any part of the gain realized on the sale of the property located at 1581 Rothesay Street in his tax return for 2003. The failure to report his share of the gain (which would be one-half of the gain) was a misrepresentation.
 The Springfield property was purchased on June 13, 2003. The property was purchased in the name of the Appellant’s daughter (Jessalyn Wiens). It is not entirely clear whether the purchase of this property was financed with a loan that the Appellant had received from Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. or from amounts borrowed under the line of credit with CIBC. Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. is a private company in which the shares were held by the Appellant and other members of his family. The Appellant confirmed that he had borrowed approximately $40,000 from this company but he was not sure when he had borrowed this amount or how the funds were used. When counsel for the Respondent had suggested that the funds were used to finance the purchase of theSpringfield property, the Appellant indicated that he thought that it was for the Rothesay Street property but he was not certain. It is clear that the loan was repaid on October 17, 2003 as a cheque for $41,500 payable to Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. and drawn on the line of credit was introduced as an exhibit.
 Therefore the result of these transactions would have been a reduction in the amount owing under the line of credit of $90,672. Therefore it seems more likely than not that the line of credit would have been used to finance the purchase of the Rothesay Street property. When the Springfield property was acquired on June 13, 2003, both the properties located on Rothesay Street and Phelan Road had been purchased and neither one of these had been sold. As well the retail store would have still been operating and presumably continuing to incur losses. As a result, in June 2003 there would not have been as much credit available under the line of credit as there would have been in March or April and therefore June 2003 would have been the time when the Appellant would have needed an additional source of funds. As well, the Springfield property was sold on September 30, 2003 and the cheque to Tedhil Enterprises was dated October 17, 2003. As a result it seems to me that it was more likely than not that the funds were borrowed from Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. to finance the purchase of the Springfield property.
Q. Would you borrow money from Tedhil to benefit your daughter?
A. If I borrowed money from the company I had to take responsibility to make sure it was repaid. I don’t remember borrowing money on her behalf, and I would never do that. I would have to make sure that money was repaid. The way I understand it, you are not allowed loans from a company to go over a tax year. Then you would get T 4′d for them. I have to make sure that I’m reliable enough to it is my responsibility from the company to make sure that everything was repaid properly and the books all balanced.
 It seems to me that it was the Appellant who borrowed the money to finance the purchase of the Springfield property. It was his money that was used to purchase this property, not Jessalyn Wiens’ money. The proceeds from the sale of the property were, more likely than not, used to repay the indebtedness of the Appellant to Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. As a result I find that the Appellant was the sole beneficial owner of the Springfield property.
You can easily see here how liability is a strong indicator of who gets both the liability and the financial gain.
 The Appellant clearly understood that if he borrowed money from Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. that he had a limited amount of time within which to repay the debt to avoid being taxed on the amount borrowed. His understanding of the time period results in a shorter time than is actually permitted by subsection 15(2.6) of the Income Tax Act . However for the purposes of this appeal, the Appellant’s understanding of the requirement to repay loans from a company in which he is a shareholder indicates that the Appellant must have had the intention to sell the property at the time he acquired it. The only means available to the Appellant to repay the debt to Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. was from the proceeds that would be realized on a sale of the property. The short holding period (approximately 3.5 months) also confirms that the possibility of reselling the property must have been in his mind when the property was acquired and must have been an operating motivation for the purchase. As a result I find that the gain realized on the sale of the Springfield property should have been included in the income of the Appellant and that this gain was an income gain. The failure of the Appellant to include this gain in his tax return was a misrepresentation.
 The properties located on Phelan Road and Crestwood Crescent were both acquired in the name of the Appellant. In filing his tax return for 2003 the Appellant only reported the gain realized on the sale of the Crestwood Crescent property and this gain was reported as a taxable capital gain. No explanation was provided for the failure of the Appellant to report any gain realized on the sale of the property located on Phelan Road in his 2003 income tax return. In the Reply it is noted that in reassessing the Appellant his income was reduced by $36,952 for taxable capital gains. Since he only reported a taxable capital gain of $7,500 in his 2003 tax return, the Appellant must have subsequently reported or been assessed (or reassessed) for a taxable capital gain of $29,452 presumably in relation to the sale of the Phelan Road property.
 The purchase of these properties was financed by the line of credit. Since both the Appellant and his spouse were jointly liable to repay amounts borrowed from the line of credit, it seems reasonable to conclude that the Appellant and his spouse each beneficially acquired a one-half interest in these properties. Therefore each of the Appellant and his spouse should have reported one-half of the gain realized on the sale of these properties. As well, since there was no means to repay the amount borrowed under the line of credit to purchase these properties, other than from the proceeds that would be realized on a sale of these properties, they must have had an intention to sell the properties at the time that the properties were acquired. The short holding periods (approximately seven months and one month) confirm this intention as does the use of short term financing (the line of credit).
 As a result the gain realized on the sale of these properties (Phelan Road andCrestwood Crescent) was an income gain. The failure of the Appellant to report any amount in his tax return for 2003 in relation to the gain realized on the sale of the Phelan Road property was a misrepresentation.
 With respect to the disposition of the Crestwood Crescent property, the Appellant did report a taxable capital gain in relation to the disposition of this property (which would be one-half of the capital gain) in his tax return for 2003. The amount that he reported as a taxable capital gain was $7,500. As noted above, I find that he should have reported one-half of the gain realized on the sale of this property as an income gain. The agent for the Appellant at the commencement of the hearing indicated that the Appellant was not disputing any of the amounts as set out in the Reply and therefore the gain realized on the sale of this property was $16,346. The Appellant therefore should have reported the amount of $8,173 as an income gain. Since both taxable capital gains and income gains are included in determining the income of the Appellant for the purposes of the Act the net effect on his income for the purposes of the Act would be that his income should be increased by $673.
 The question is whether the incorrect statement made by the Appellant in his 2003 tax return in relation to the amount reported as a result of the disposition of the Crestwood Crescent property is material. The discrepancy in reported income ($673) in my opinion is not material. In many situations it would be material whether a particular amount is reported as a taxable capital gain or as an income gain since only one-half of capital gains are included in income. In this case because I have found that the Appellant only owned a one-half interest in the property, the quantum of the amount added to income is approximately the same whether, as he had filed his return, he was the sole owner of the property and realized a capital gain (and therefore would include one-half of the capital gain in his income as a taxable capital gain) or whether he owned a one-half interest and realized an income gain. However if the Appellant would have claimed allowable capital losses (which may be claimed against taxable capital gains but not income gains) or if the property would have been eligible and the Appellant would have claimed a capital gains deduction under section 110.6 of the Act or a reduction in the capital gain based on the property being his principal residence (as provided in subsection 40(2) of the Act), then it would have been material whether the amount was reported as a capital gain or an income gain. However there was no evidence that the Appellant had claimed any allowable capital losses or any deduction in relation to any capital gain that he claimed.
The above is an example of why it is so important to keep good records and get professional help when one does their taxes. Tax law is too complex for any normal person to understand.
 As a result, in my opinion the Appellant did not make an incorrect statement that was material for the purposes of his 2003 income tax return in relation to the gain realized on the sale of the Crestwood Crescent property. Since the reassessment of his 2003 taxation year was issued after the normal reassessment period, the Respondent could not have reassessed the Appellant in relation to the gain realized on the sale of the Crestwood Crescent property.
 It appears that the Respondent, (CRA) in reassessing the Appellant, also reduced his income by the amount of the taxable capital gain that he had claimed in his tax return in relation to the disposition of the Crestwood Crescent property ($7,500). The Minister cannot appeal his own assessment (Valdis v. The Queen,  1 C.T.C. 2827). However, in this case, it does not seem to me that if the amount claimed as a taxable capital gain were to be restored that this would be a situation where the Minister is appealing his own assessment. It is simply recognition that the Minister did not have the right to reassess the Appellant in relation to the gain realized on the sale of the Crestwood Crescent property and that the income of the Appellant should therefore be restored to what it was before the reassessment. As a result, the Appellant’s income is reduced by the amount added by the reassessment ($16,346 as income from an adventure in the nature of trade) and the taxable capital gain claimed by the Appellant ($7,500) is reinstated.
 The next question is whether the misrepresentations arising as a result of the failure of the Appellant to report his share of the gains arising on the sale of the Rothesay Street property, the Springfield property, and the Phelan Road property (or any one or more of them) were attributable to neglect, carelessness, wilful default or fraud”.
Subsection 152(4) protects such conduct, and perhaps only such conduct, where the taxpayer thoughtfully, deliberately and carefully assesses the situation as being one in which the law does not exact the reporting of that which the taxpayer bona fide believes does not exist.
Simple translation here is that if the taxpayer believed he was doing his taxes correctly, then there is no intended misrepresentation.
 The purchases of the Rothesay Street property and the Phelan Road property were each funded by amounts borrowed under the line of credit, which would be short term and not long term financing. The Appellant was jointly liable with his spouse to repay amounts borrowed under this line of credit. The properties did not produce any income (other than income arising as a result of the sale of the properties) and, based on the income of the Appellant, the Appellant would only be able to repay his share of the amount borrowed to purchase these properties if these properties were sold. These properties were only held for approximately three months and seven months, respectively. When the Appellant filed his tax return for 2003 he would have known that each of these properties had been bought and sold in 2003 and also that the Crestwood Crescent property would have been bought and sold in 2003. He would also have known that two properties had been bought and sold in 2002.
 As well, no amount was reported in the Appellant’s income tax return for 2003 in relation to the gain realized on the sale of the Phelan Road property. This was a property that was registered in the Appellant’s name and a significant gain ($80,114) was realized on the sale of this property.
 As a result, I find that in this case the failure of the Appellant to include his share of the gain realized on the sale of these properties (the Rothesay Street property and the Phelan Road property) in his income as an income gain was not what a wise and prudent person would have done and that the Appellant could not have truly believed that this was correct. As a result the reassessment of the Appellant in relation to the inclusion in his income of one-half of the gain realized on the sale of these properties as an income gain is valid. The Appellant’s income as reassessed is reduced by one-half of the gain realized on the sale of these properties.
 The Appellant alone borrowed the money from Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. to fund the purchase of the Springfield property. He knew that when he borrowed this money he had a limited period of time within which to repay the debt to Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. to avoid having the amount of the debt included in his income. This property did not produce any income (except as a result of the sale of this property) and the only source of funds that would have been available to repay the debt to Tedhil Enterprises Ltd. would have been the proceeds from a sale of this property. As a result, I find that in this case the failure of the Appellant to include the gain realized on the sale of this property in his income as an income gain was not what a wise and prudent person would have done and that the Appellant could not have truly believed that this was correct. As he was the sole beneficial owner of this property all of the gain from this property was his income. Therefore no adjustment to the income of the Appellant will be made in relation to the sale of this property.
Borrowing the money from Tedhil was very problematic for the appellant in this case. All the income was attributed to him, as his spouse was not a co borrower on this property.
 The other item for 2003 is the amount included in the Appellant’s income for 2003 in relation to the amounts received as a result of the insurance claim filed by the Appellant. The amount added to his income for 2003 was $2,200.
 As noted above, the Respondent has the onus of proof to establish that the Appellant made a misrepresentation and that the misrepresentation was attributable to neglect, carelessness or wilful default. The Appellant’s position is that he had greater losses from the operation of the retail store than he reported. In this case the amount of additional income that the Respondent has added to the Appellant’s income is $2,200. The additional unclaimed expenses might have been less than this amount, equal to this amount or greater than this amount.
The Fourth claim of June 23, 2003; we paid $2,200. Unfortunately, I do not have further details on the conditions regarding this loss at this time.
 In the memo from the insurance company dated September 1, 2003, the amount is stated to be $2,000 for this claim. No explanation was provided for this discrepancy. Therefore it is not clear whether the amount should be $2,000 or $2,200 or whether any of this amount was paid to contractors (as was a portion of the claims for 2002) or was for the loss of inventory or cash or for property damage. While the amount might have been for loss of inventory or loss of cash and, if included in the Appellant’s income, might have been material in determining his income for 2003, this is not sufficient to discharge the onus of proof. The Respondent (CRA) failed to establish that the Appellant made an incorrect statement in his tax return that would have been material to the amount of his income for 2003 from the retail store in relation to the amount paid by the insurance company in 2003. Therefore the Respondent could not reassess the Appellant to include this amount of $2,200 in his income for 2003 and his income for 2003 is reduced by this amount.
This time the onus was on the Minister, who failed to prove his assumptions, so the benefit of the doubt goes to the taxpayer.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 15th day of March, 2011.
 In this case there was no suggestion that the Appellant was unduly pressured.
This point is to be remembered where a taxpayer signs a waiver because of pressure exerted by CRA, the waiver may be invalidated.
 In the Reply, the net proceeds are stated to be $83,724.72 (based on a selling price of $88,500 and costs of $4,190.68). However the difference between $88,500 and $4,190.68 is $84,309.32, not $83,724.72. The net cost is stated to be $81,486.09 and the net gain is stated to be $2,256.63. However, the difference between $83,724.72 and $81,486.09 is $2,238.63 and the difference between $84,309.32 and $81,486.09 is $2,823.23. Since no evidence was presented at the hearing with respect to the cost or proceeds, it is impossible to determine which amount is correct for the gain realized on the sale of the property. I assume that the amount stated to be the profit (which would be the amount that would have been added to the Appellant’s income) is correct.
Since there are 6 properties included in the definition of “The Properties”, this would mean that there was a total of 23 properties bought and sold over the 28 years from 1988 to 2005 (counting each of 1988 and 2005 as a full year). However, there is no indication (nor was there any evidence) of how many of these transactions occurred during the period from 1988 to 2002 and how many occurred during the period from 2003 to 2005. The year in question is 2002, not 2005. It does not seem to me that events that take place after the end of a taxation year (and in particular 2 or 3 years after the end of a year) should be taken into account in determining whether a particular gain realized during that taxation year is an income gain or a capital gain. Therefore this assumption is of little assistance in determining this matter.
 The Application for Leave to appeal this decision to the Supreme Court of Canada was dismissed ( S.C.C.A. No. 235).
 Since the Respondent has the onus of proof in relation to whether the Appellant made a misrepresentation, the Respondent cannot rely on assumptions made in the Reply but must establish facts at the hearing. The facts referred to in paragraph 24. yy) of the Reply were not established during the hearing.
(2.6) Subsection (2) does not apply to a loan or an indebtedness repaid within one year after the end of the taxation year of the lender or creditor in which the loan was made or the indebtedness arose, where it is established, by subsequent events or otherwise, that the repayment was not part of a series of loans or other transactions and repayments.
 The total gain realized on the sale of the Phelan Road property was $80,114. One-half of this amount would be $40,057, not $29,452. The agent for the Appellant indicated at the commencement of the hearing that the Appellant was not disputing any of the amounts as set out in the Reply and therefore the Appellant was accepting that the total gain realized in the sale of the Phelan Road property was $80,114. No explanation was provided to explain why only an additional taxable gain of $29,452 and not $40,057 was included in the income of the Appellant.

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