Jerome,
       
        ACJ:—There
      
      are
      two
      issues
      in
      this
      action,
      which
      is
      brought
      by
      
      
      way
      of
      an
      appeal
      under
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act,
      
      in
      which
      the
      taxpayer,
      Chis-
      
      
      topher
      Haber,
      appeals
      a
      determination
      from
      the
      minister.
      
      
      
      
    
      Firstly,
      that
      the
      taxpayer,
      for
      his
      1974
      taxation
      year,
      was
      not
      entitled
      to
      
      
      treat
      his
      residential
      property
      at
      2277
      Lakeshore
      Road
      in
      Burlington
      as
      his
      
      
      principal
      residence
      and
      was,
      therefore,
      subject
      to
      taxation
      as
      a
      capital
      gain
      
      
      on
      profit
      realized
      from
      a
      sale,
      in
      the
      year
      of
      its
      purchase,
      at
      that
      time.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      second
      issue
      has
      to
      do
      with
      the
      profit
      also
      realized,
      at
      that
      time,
      by
      
      
      the
      taxpayer
      through
      the
      acquisition
      and
      resale
      of
      a
      piece
      of
      property
      at
      
      
      King
      Road
      which
      the
      taxpayer
      maintained
      was
      done
      in
      the
      nature
      of
      an
      
      
      investment,
      and
      which
      the
      minister
      maintained
      was
      a
      transaction
      to
      be
      
      
      treated
      as
      income
      from
      business
      as
      that
      phrase
      is
      used
      in
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
      
        Act.
      
      I
      will
      deal
      with
      the
      principal
      residence
      question
      first
      because
      it
      is
      easily
      
      
      resolved,
      there
      does
      not
      seem
      to
      be
      much
      room
      for
      difficulty.
      The
      plaintiff
      is
      
      
      technically
      caught
      by
      the
      language
      of
      section
      54(g)
      in
      which
      “principal
      residence”
      
      
      is
      defined;
      and
      essentially
      reduces
      itself
      to
      either
      the
      property
      in
      
      
      which
      the
      plaintiff
      was
      ordinarily
      resident
      which
      was
      not
      the
      situation
      here,
      
      
      or
      one
      which
      if
      the
      plaintiff
      was
      not
      ordinarily
      resident
      he
      had
      designated
      in
      
      
      the
      usual
      manner,
      or
      the
      manner
      prescribed
      by
      the
      section,
      as
      his
      principal
      
      
      residence.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      facts
      are
      that
      the
      plaintiff
      never
      did
      inhabit
      2277
      Lakeshore;
      and
      maintained
      
      
      that
      when
      he
      realized
      a
      gain
      on
      the
      sale
      of
      the
      property,
      within
      a
      year
      
      
      of
      its
      acquisition,
      he
      did
      not
      report
      that
      gain
      as
      he
      considered
      the
      property
      
      
      to
      be
      his
      principal
      residence
      having
      acquired
      it
      with
      that
      intention.
      
      
      
      
    
      However,
      during
      that
      year,
      the
      plaintiff
      also
      resided
      on
      lan
      Road,
      which
      he
      
      
      also
      purchased
      and
      resold
      during
      the
      year,
      from
      which
      he
      also
      realized
      a
      
      
      gain,
      and
      the
      plaintiff
      did
      not
      report
      that
      gain
      because
      he
      considered
      that
      
      
      property
      to
      be
      his
      principal
      reidence.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      plaintiff
      did
      not
      file
      a
      designation
      as
      contemplated
      by
      the
      section
      
      
      45(2).
      In
      any
      event,
      I
      had
      difficulty
      in
      comprehending
      how
      such
      a
      choice
      
      
      would
      be
      open
      to
      the
      plaintiff
      since
      the
      language
      of
      section
      54(g)(iii)
      would
      
      
      permit
      only
      one
      such
      designation
      as
      an
      official
      residence
      by
      any
      taxpayer
      
      
      during
      the
      year.
      In
      his
      return,
      where
      the
      taxpayer
      is
      asked
      to
      designate
      his
      
      
      official
      residence,
      the
      taxpayer
      had
      already
      designated
      the
      other
      property.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      any
      case,
      the
      only
      effect
      of
      the
      election
      is
      to
      alter
      the
      interpretation
      of
      
      
      when
      a
      taxpayer
      may
      occupy
      an
      official
      residence.
      So
      that
      there
      does
      not
      
      
      appear
      to
      be,
      in
      the
      language
      of
      the
      statute
      or
      in
      any
      of
      the
      facts,
      any
      support
      
      
      for
      an
      interpretation
      in
      any
      way
      in
      disagreement
      with
      that
      taken
      by
      the
      
      
      minister.
      In
      my
      opinion,
      the
      minister
      had
      no
      choice
      since
      the
      taxpayer
      had
      
      
      not
      sought
      designation
      of
      2277
      Lakeshore
      as
      his
      principal
      residence
      but,
      in
      
      
      fact,
      had
      occupied
      and,
      for
      taxation
      purposes,
      treated
      some
      other
      property
      
      
      as
      his
      principal
      residence
      during
      that
      same
      taxation
      year.
      
      
      
      
    
      Accordingly,
      the
      appeal
      with
      respect
      to
      the
      taxation
      of
      the
      plaintiff’s
      residential
      
      
      property
      at
      2277
      Lakeshore
      Road,
      that
      is
      to
      say
      the
      taxation
      of
      the
      
      
      gain
      realized
      by
      the
      plaintiff
      on
      the
      sale
      of
      that
      residential
      property,
      is
      dismissed.
      
      
      
    
      In
      respect
      to
      the
      property
      at
      King
      Road,
      the
      issue
      is
      whether
      the
      plaintiff
      
      
      acquired
      the
      property
      as
      an
      investment
      as
      the
      plaintiff
      contends,
      or
      whether
      
      
      the
      facts
      that
      lead
      to
      the
      inference
      that
      the
      property
      was
      acquired
      and
      resold
      
      
      in
      the
      manner
      of
      dealing
      in
      real
      estate
      so
      as
      to
      lead
      to
      the
      conclusion
      that
      it
      
      
      was,
      in
      fact,
      an
      adventure
      in
      the
      nature
      of
      real
      estate
      trade
      and,
      therefore,
      
      
      taxable
      as
      income
      from
      a
      business
      as
      defined
      in
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act.
      
      The
      plaintiff
      adduced
      evidence
      to
      show
      that
      as
      a
      graduate
      from
      law
      school
      
      
      in
      1973,
      he
      was
      initially
      inhabiting
      rental
      property
      together
      with
      his
      wife,
      and
      
      
      when
      he
      joined
      a
      law
      firm
      in
      Burlington,
      his
      original
      home,
      examined
      the
      
      
      possibility
      of
      acquiring
      residential
      property
      there,
      and
      in
      fact
      went
      on
      to
      
      
      acquire
      2277
      Lakeshore
      Road
      which
      he
      purchased
      on
      May
      24,
      1973
      and
      sold
      
      
      on
      May
      23,
      1974.
      The
      plaintiff
      indicated
      in
      his
      testimony
      that
      he
      and
      his
      wife
      
      
      changed
      their
      mind
      about
      occupying
      that
      residence
      and
      instead
      purchased
      
      
      a
      residence
      at
      1377
      lan
      Road
      where
      they
      lived
      from
      February
      1974
      to
      July
      
      
      1974
      when
      that
      property
      was
      sold.
      
      
      
      
    
      On
      the
      sale
      of
      the
      2277
      Lakeshore
      Road
      property,
      the
      plaintiff
      realized
      a
      
      
      gain
      of
      $14,148.94
      which
      was
      the
      subject
      matter
      of
      discussion
      with
      the
      minister,
      
      
      which
      I
      have
      resolved
      above.
      
      
      
      
    
      I
      think
      his
      testimony
      described
      his
      interest
      in
      the
      property
      at
      King
      Road
      
      
      which,
      he
      said,
      had
      potential
      for
      development
      since
      it
      contained
      a
      building
      
      
      with
      some
      four
      or
      five
      apartments,
      a
      greenhouse
      and
      a
      barn,
      it
      was
      his
      hope
      
      
      that,
      without
      too
      much
      expense,
      he
      could
      refurbish
      the
      buildings
      by
      cleaning
      
      
      and
      painting,
      and
      they
      would
      not
      need
      structural
      improvements
      to
      make
      
      
      them
      commercially
      viable.
      He
      also
      hoped
      to
      rent
      the
      greenhouse
      and
      the
      
      
      barn
      to
      a
      florist.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      plaintiff's
      evidence
      is
      that
      he
      had
      every
      reason
      to
      believe
      that
      his
      
      
      family
      would
      support
      him
      in
      the
      venture
      and
      to
      lend
      him
      the
      necessary
      
      
      funds
      for
      the
      down
      payment.
      So,
      on
      January
      8,
      1974,
      he
      signed
      an
      offer
      to
      
      
      purchase
      the
      property
      for
      the
      sum
      of
      $192,000
      with
      a
      deposit
      of
      $500
      as
      the
      
      
      offer
      was
      originally
      prepared,
      but
      with
      a
      subsequent
      change
      to
      $2,500.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      offer
      to
      purchase
      is
      Exhibit
      A-4
      and
      the
      bottom
      of
      page
      2
      has
      not
      one
      
      
      but
      three
      signatures
      of
      the
      plaintiff
      Christopher
      J
      Haber.
      The
      first
      is
      the
      
      
      signature
      of
      C
      J
      Haber
      dated
      January
      8,
      1974.
      The
      second,
      the
      same
      signature
      
      
      dated
      February
      5,
      1974.
      The
      third,
      the
      same
      signature
      date
      February
      8,
      
      
      1974.
      The
      plaintiff’s
      explanation
      for
      the
      three
      signatures
      is
      that
      the
      offer
      had
      
      
      been
      returned
      to
      him
      twice
      with
      some
      changes
      put
      in
      by
      the
      vendor.
      
      
      
      
    
      Exhibit
      A-5
      is
      an
      offer
      to
      purchase
      the
      property
      from
      the
      plaintiff,
      in
      the
      
      
      name
      of
      Night
      Construction
      as
      purchaser,
      in
      the
      sum
      of
      $255,000.
      It
      is
      significant
      
      
      that
      this
      offer
      was
      signed
      by
      the
      purchaser
      on
      February
      8,
      also
      accepted
      
      
      by
      the
      plaintiff
      as
      vendor
      on
      February
      8.
      The
      plaintiff
      thereby
      effected
      
      
      a
      resale
      of
      this
      property,
      for
      all
      intents
      and
      purposes,
      simultaneously
      
      
      with
      his
      acquisition
      of
      it
      and
      not,
      I
      should
      stress,
      simultaneously
      with
      his
      
      
      acquisition
      of
      title,
      but
      with
      his
      execution
      of
      the
      agreement
      to
      purchase.
      It
      
      
      follows,
      of
      course,
      that
      the
      plaintiff
      did
      not
      hold
      the
      property
      for
      investment
      
      
      and
      development
      and
      did
      not
      have
      any
      occasion
      to
      expend
      any
      energy
      in
      
      
      the
      direction
      of
      improvement
      of
      the
      property
      or
      its
      rezoning
      which,
      he
      has
      
      
      indicated,
      were
      his
      initial
      intentions
      in
      holding
      this
      as
      an
      investment.
      
      
      
      
    
      At
      the
      conclusion
      of
      the
      plaintiff’s
      testimony
      in
      chief
      and-eross-examina-
      
      
      tion
      by
      counsel
      for
      the
      crown,
      I
      questioned
      the
      plaintiff
      about
      the
      coincidence
      
      
      of
      the
      dates
      on
      the
      two
      offers
      to
      purchase
      in
      light
      of
      his
      evidence
      that
      
      
      he
      had
      initially
      offered
      to
      purchase
      the
      property
      and
      then
      some
      two
      or
      three
      
      
      weeks
      later,
      entirely
      without
      solicitation
      on
      his
      part,
      was
      approached
      by
      a
      
      
      realtor
      on
      behalf
      of
      the
      ultimate
      purchaser
      Night
      Construction.
      The
      plaintiff’s
      
      
      answers
      were,
      at
      best,
      uncertain
      about
      the
      coincidence
      of
      the
      two
      
      
      dates,
      and
      about
      whether
      in
      fact
      on
      the
      occasion
      of
      the
      second
      signing
      
      
      which
      was
      on
      February
      5,
      1974,
      if
      not
      on
      the
      first
      signing
      which
      was
      January
      
      
      8,
      1974,
      he
      had
      knowledge
      of
      the
      forthcoming
      offer
      by
      Night
      Construction.
      
      
      His
      answer
      was
      that
      he
      was
      unceratin
      about
      the
      details
      with
      respect
      to
      the
      
      
      exact
      timing,
      especially
      in
      reference
      to
      the
      second
      signing
      February
      5
      and
      
      
      the
      first
      approach
      by
      the
      agent
      on
      behalf
      of
      Night
      Construction.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      witness
      naturally
      claimed
      that
      since
      these
      events
      occurred
      some
      eight
      
      
      years
      ago,
      some
      of
      the
      details
      would
      naturally
      be
      unclear
      in
      his
      mind.
      But
      
      
      there
      seemed
      to
      be,
      in
      my
      opinion,
      a
      difference
      in
      his
      ability
      to
      recall
      with
      
      
      detail
      the
      other
      events
      surrounding
      his
      property
      acquisitions
      and
      the
      acquisition
      
      
      of
      this
      piece
      of
      property.
      However,
      in
      any
      case,
      a
      direct
      finding
      of
      
      
      credibility
      is
      not
      necessary.
      
      
      
      
    
      There
      is,
      from
      the
      coincidence
      of
      the
      two
      offers
      to
      purchase,
      a
      strong
      
      
      inference
      that
      the
      plaintiff
      had
      at
      least
      some
      indication
      at
      the
      time
      that
      he
      
      
      launched
      into
      the
      acquisition
      of
      this
      property,
      and
      had
      his
      opportunity
      to
      
      
      resell
      it
      quickly
      at
      a
      profit.
      But
      as
      a
      minimum,
      taken
      together
      with
      other
      
      
      facts,
      it
      leaves
      me
      in
      no
      doubt
      that
      the
      balance
      of
      probabilities
      favour
      and
      
      
      the
      conclusion
      that
      this
      plaintiff’s
      original
      intention
      was
      to
      purchase
      this
      
      
      property
      as
      a
      speculative
      venture
      for
      resale
      rather
      than
      for
      management
      as
      
      
      an
      income
      producing
      property.
      
      
      
      
    
      These
      other
      facts
      are
      that
      the
      likelihood
      of
      credit
      arrangements,
      which
      
      
      would
      be
      sufficient
      to
      sustain
      this
      property,
      are
      very
      remote.
      There
      was
      no
      
      
      indication
      of
      more
      than
      the
      most
      minimal
      revenue
      from
      the
      buildings
      since
      
      
      they
      were
      only
      partially
      occupied
      at
      the
      time
      of
      the
      purchase.
      There
      was
      no
      
      
      indication
      of
      any
      real
      likelihood
      that
      the
      plaintiff
      had
      begun
      to
      assemble
      or
      
      
      could
      have
      assembled
      the
      necessary
      funds
      to
      go
      through
      with
      the
      transaction.
      
      
      That
      is
      not
      to
      say,
      it
      would
      not
      have
      been
      possible
      for
      the
      plaintiff
      to
      do
      
      
      so,
      but
      only
      that
      there
      was
      no
      evidence
      to
      indicate
      that
      he
      had
      made
      a
      
      
      serious
      effort
      that
      would
      be
      necessary
      to
      justify
      placing
      his
      signature
      on
      the
      
      
      committment
      for
      $192,000.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      addition,
      the
      offer
      to
      purchase
      Exhibit
      A-4
      contained
      conditions
      clearly
      
      
      designated
      to
      be
      for
      the
      benefit
      of
      the
      purchaser,
      allowing
      him
      an
      extension
      
      
      period
      of
      some
      nine
      months
      in
      which
      he
      would
      have
      the
      opportunity
      to
      be
      
      
      released
      from
      his
      obligation
      to
      purchase
      if
      he
      was
      not
      able
      to
      achieve
      some
      
      
      rezoning
      and
      if
      he
      was
      not
      able
      to
      achieve
      “financial
      arrangement
      satisfactory
      
      
      to
      himself”
      which
      constitutes
      a
      virtual
      option
      to
      release
      himself
      from
      the
      
      
      obligation
      to
      close
      the
      deal.
      At
      page
      2
      of
      the
      plaintiff's
      offer
      to
      purchase,
      
      
      paragraph
      No
      5,
      the
      vendor
      agreed
      to
      grant
      partial
      discharges
      of
      mortgages,
      
      
      which
      I
      would
      consider
      to
      be
      more
      consistent
      with
      the
      intention
      to
      sever
      and
      
      
      therefore
      to
      sell
      a
      portion
      of
      the
      property
      than
      with
      an
      interest
      in
      long-term
      
      
      acquisition
      for
      operation
      and
      investment.
      
      
      
      
    
      That
      finding
      does
      not
      finalize
      the
      matter
      because
      even
      if
      the
      plaintiff
      acquired
      
      
      the
      property
      with
      the
      intention
      to
      resell,
      it
      is
      still,
      in
      proper
      circumstances,
      
      
      open
      to
      the
      court
      to
      find
      that
      the
      transaction
      was
      a
      singular
      one
      in
      
      
      respect
      to
      the
      parties
      involved
      and
      especially
      where
      it
      is
      a
      once-in-a-lifetime
      
      
      venture
      may
      conclude
      that
      it
      is
      in
      the
      nature
      of
      an
      investment
      rather
      than
      a
      
      
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      It
      is
      obvious,
      however,
      that
      where
      a
      party
      involved
      has
      both
      some
      background
      
      
      or
      experience
      in
      real
      estate
      and
      particularly
      with
      an
      experience
      of
      a
      
      
      gain
      and,
      in
      addition,
      deals
      with
      a
      property
      in
      the
      manner
      of
      those
      who
      are
      
      
      in
      the
      operation
      of
      a
      real
      estate
      business
      rather
      than
      in
      the
      manner
      of
      those
      
      
      who,
      from
      outside
      the
      real
      estate
      business,
      do
      so
      as
      an
      investment,
      that
      
      
      combination
      is
      as
      such
      to
      lead
      only
      to
      the
      interpretation
      that
      gain
      from
      such
      
      
      a
      transaction
      is
      in
      the
      nature
      of
      income
      from
      a
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      I
      refer
      to
      three
      decisions.
      The
      decision
      of
      Mr
      Justice
      Mahoney
      in
      
        1A
      
        Blackstone
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1973]
      CTC
      842;
      74
      DTC
      6020,
      in
      which
      the
      taxpayer
      
      
      was
      a
      lawyer
      with
      no
      record
      of
      real
      estate
      trading.
      He
      acquired
      a
      
      
      partial
      interest
      in
      a
      parcel
      of
      farmland
      in
      Calgary
      and
      even
      though
      he
      and
      
      
      his
      partners
      held
      it
      for
      some
      seven
      years,
      the
      court
      upheld
      the
      minister’s
      
      
      interpretation
      that
      the
      profit
      realized
      by
      the
      plaintiff
      was
      taxable
      upon
      disposition
      
      
      as
      income
      because
      the
      land
      was
      never
      purchased
      for
      use
      for
      development
      
      
      and
      was
      acquired
      and
      held
      as
      an
      article
      of
      commerce
      for
      speculative
      
      
      reasons.
      I
      note
      that
      that
      was
      notwithstanding
      the
      absence
      entirely
      of
      previous
      
      
      experience
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      and
      furthermore
      long-term
      ownership
      of
      
      
      the
      property.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      decision
      of
      the
      Federal
      Court
      of
      Appeal
      delivered
      orally
      by
      Mr
      Justice
      
      
      Urie
      in
      
        David
       
        C
       
        McDonald
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen
      
      on
      November
      20,
      1974,
      [1974]
      CTC
      
      
      836;
      74
      DTC
      6644.
      The
      court
      addressed
      a
      similar
      situation
      in
      which
      the
      taxpayer
      
      
      had
      shared
      in
      the
      acquisition
      of
      real
      estate
      and
      where
      there
      was
      some
      
      
      annual
      income
      from
      the
      land,
      although
      very
      slight.
      I
      quote
      from
      that
      judgment
      
      
      at
      837
      [6645]:
      
      
      
      
    
        Having
        so
        found,
        the
        contention
        of
        the
        Appellant
        that
        his
        interest
        in
        the
        vacant
        
        
        land
        purchased
        was
        an
        investment
        and
        being
        an
        isolated
        transaction
        outside
        the
        
        
        ordinary
        scope
        of
        his
        profession,
        the
        profit
        earned
        on
        its
        resale
        was
        not
        taxable,
        is
        
        
        in
        our
        view,
        untenable.
        Even
        if
        the
        fact
        is
        accepted
        that
        the
        sale
        was
        made
        due
        to
        a
        
        
        threat
        of
        expropriation,
        it
        was
        nonetheless
        a
        premature
        occurrence
        of
        the
        Appellant’s
        
        
        ultimate
        intention,
        namely
        to
        sell
        his
        interest
        in
        the
        land
        at
        a
        profit.
        Although
        
        
        he
        was
        not
        dealing
        in
        what
        is
        normally
        considered
        to
        be
        a
        subject
        of
        commerce
        
        
        such
        as
        commodities,
        the
        transaction
        from
        its
        very
        inception
        was
        purely
        speculative
        
        
        in
        character
        and
        was,
        in
        our
        opinion,
        as
        a
        matter
        of
        law,
        a
        venture
        in
        the
        nature
        
        
        of
        trade.
        
        
        
        
      
      Finally,
      the
      case
      of
      
        Kenneth
       
        Marshall
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1980]
      CTC
      475;
      80
      
      
      DTC
      6357,
      delivered
      by
      Deputy
      Judge
      Grant
      on
      October
      7,
      1980.
      The
      factual
      
      
      circumstances
      are
      similar
      to
      the
      other
      two
      cases.
      I
      note
      particularly
      at
      
      
      479
      [6360]
      that
      Mr
      Justice
      Grant
      quotes
      for
      approval
      an
      excerpt
      from
      
        Wil-
      
        lumsen
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1967]
      CTC
      13;
      67
      DTC
      5022,
      portion
      of
      the
      judgment
      of
      
      
      Cattanach,
      J:
      
      
      
      
    
        As
        I
        conceive
        it
        the
        correct
        approach
        to
        the
        solution
        of
        a
        problem
        of
        this
        kind
        of
        
        
        case
        in
        any
        given
        set
        of
        circumstances
        is
        first
        to
        examine
        the
        taxpayer’s
        acts
        and
        
        
        operations
        objectively,
        bearing
        in
        mind
        that
        the
        question
        is
        one
        of
        fact
        in
        each
        
        
        particular
        case
        and
        that
        the
        Appellant’s
        statement
        at
        the
        trial
        is
        only
        part
        of
        the
        
        
        evidence
        and
        must
        be
        considered
        along
        with
        all
        the
        objective
        facts.
        If,
        after
        consideration
        
        
        of
        these
        facts,
        it
        should
        be
        concluded
        that
        the
        inference
        to
        be
        drawn
        is
        one
        
        
        of
        “trading”,
        then
        the
        matter
        must
        be
        considered
        to
        ascertain
        if
        there
        is
        some
        satisfactory
        
        
        explanation,
        consistent
        with
        the
        facts
        as
        found,
        which
        would
        negative
        that
        
        
        prima
        facie
        inference.
        If
        from
        the
        facts
        that
        are
        proved
        it
        appears
        to
        the
        satisfaction
        
        
        of
        the
        Court
        that,
        at
        the
        time
        of
        acquisition,
        the
        purpose
        of
        the
        operation
        was
        
        
        exclusively
        to
        provide
        the
        taxpayer
        with
        a
        satisfactory
        investment
        and
        that
        there
        
        
        was
        not
        in
        contemplation,
        at
        that
        time,
        the
        possibility
        of
        sale,
        then
        the
        inference
        of
        
        
        trading
        would
        be
        rebutted.
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        onus
        of
        disapproving
        the
        Minister’s
        assumption,
        in
        assessing
        the
        appellant
        
        
        as
        he
        did
        falls
        on
        the
        appellant.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      this
      case,
      this
      plaintiff
      made
      an
      offer
      to
      purchase
      a
      property
      valued
      at
      
      
      $192,000
      at
      the
      time
      when
      his
      reported
      gross
      earnings
      for
      the
      year
      were
      
      
      some
      $4,000
      for
      his
      law
      practice
      and
      a
      further
      $10,000
      for
      some
      agency
      or
      
      
      commission
      work
      in
      his
      father’s
      business.
      No
      evidence
      was
      adduced
      to
      indicate
      
      
      how
      the
      plaintiff
      proposed
      to
      carry
      the
      financial
      burden
      on
      the
      acquisition
      
      
      of
      the
      property
      or
      that
      the
      property
      was,
      in
      any
      way,
      viable
      to
      carry
      it
      on
      
      
      as
      an
      ongoing
      rental
      venture.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      addition,
      the
      plaintiff
      acknowledges
      and
      these
      documents
      disclose
      that
      
      
      certainly
      on
      the
      occasion
      of
      the
      third
      signing
      of
      his
      offer
      to
      purchase
      the
      
      
      property
      on
      February
      8,
      1974,
      and
      almost
      certainly
      on
      the
      occasion
      of
      his
      
      
      second
      signing
      of
      that
      offer
      on
      February
      5,
      1974,
      he
      was
      aware
      of
      the
      interest
      
      
      of
      Night
      Construction
      in
      the
      acquisition
      of
      the
      property.
      In
      fact,
      there
      
      
      can
      be
      no
      doubt
      that
      his
      execution
      on
      February
      8,
      1974,
      his
      third
      signing
      of
      
      
      the
      offer
      to
      purchase
      the
      property,
      was
      simultaneous
      with
      his
      acceptance
      of
      
      
      the
      offer
      to
      purchase
      the
      same
      property
      by
      Night
      Construction.
      Both
      offers
      
      
      contain
      the
      same
      closing
      date,
      some
      nine
      months
      later.
      In
      fact,
      when
      the
      
      
      transaction
      was
      closed,
      title
      never
      passed
      to
      the
      plaintiff
      but
      passed
      directly
      
      
      from
      the
      vendor
      to
      the
      plaintiff
      to
      Night
      Construction
      as
      purchaser.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      circumstances,
      as
      I
      have
      indicated,
      there
      is
      a
      strong
      likelihood
      that
      
      
      the
      plaintiff
      knew
      of
      this
      opportunity
      to
      resell
      at
      a
      profit
      when
      he
      agreed
      to
      
      
      purchase
      it.
      But
      as
      a
      very
      minimum,
      the
      balance
      of
      probabilities
      clearly
      favour
      
      
      the
      factual
      conclusion
      that
      this
      property
      was
      acquired
      by
      this
      plaintiff
      
      
      not
      with
      the
      intention
      to
      hold
      it
      and
      operate
      it
      as
      a
      long-term
      investment,
      but
      
      
      to
      resell
      it.
      That
      does
      not,
      in
      itself,
      exclude
      any
      other
      conclusions
      except
      
      
      that
      it
      is
      a
      business
      transaction,
      but
      it
      strongly
      supports
      the
      minister’s
      assessment.
      
      
      Since
      this
      plaintiff
      dealt
      with
      this
      property
      in
      the
      manner
      in
      which
      
      
      an
      entrepreneur
      in
      the
      real
      estate
      business
      would
      do
      rather
      than
      as
      an
      investor
      
      
      would
      do,
      it
      should
      be
      considered
      as
      a
      venture
      in
      the
      real
      estate
      business.
      
      
      
    
      Finally,
      I
      have
      to
      add
      that
      where
      such
      a
      transaction
      takes
      place,
      it
      may
      
      
      possibly
      be
      open
      to
      the
      taxpayer
      to
      persuade
      the
      minister
      and
      try
      to
      persuade
      
      
      the
      court
      that
      it
      is
      such
      a
      singular
      transaction
      for
      the
      taxpayer
      that
      his
      
      
      Status
      as
      an
      investor
      might
      be
      preserved.
      The
      plaintiff,
      in
      his
      argument,
      described
      
      
      that
      as
      his
      right,
      to
      have
      one
      ticket
      ahead
      before
      falling
      out
      of
      the
      
      
      classification
      of
      investor
      and
      into
      the
      classification
      of
      an
      operator
      of
      a
      real
      
      
      estate
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      Of
      course
      I
      must
      turn
      to
      the
      evidence
      that
      in
      the
      two
      years
      surrounding
      
      
      the
      transaction
      in
      question
      the
      evidence
      related
      to
      the
      first
      aspect
      of
      this
      
      
      appeal,
      establishes
      that
      in
      fact,
      even
      though
      it
      was
      a
      very
      brief
      experience,
      
      
      the
      plaintiff
      during
      1973
      and
      1974
      purchased
      one
      more
      residence
      than
      he
      
      
      needed,
      profiting
      some
      $14,000
      on
      the
      Lakeshore
      residence,
      and
      some,
      as
      
      
      yet
      unidentified,
      amount
      on
      the
      lan
      Road
      residence.
      This,
      however
      brief
      experience,
      
      
      seems
      to
      me
      deprives
      the
      plaintiff
      of
      a
      claim
      to
      the
      position
      of
      
      
      engaging
      in
      this
      transaction
      on
      King
      Road
      as
      a
      first-time
      investor
      in
      real
      
      
      estate.
      
      
      
      
    
      Accordingly,
      since
      the
      facts,
      to
      which
      I
      have
      referred,
      lead
      without
      question
      
      
      on
      the
      balance
      of
      probabilities
      to
      the
      conclusion
      that
      the
      plaintiff's
      initial
      
      
      intention
      was
      to
      acquire
      this
      property
      not
      as
      an
      investment
      but
      as
      a
      
      
      speculative
      resale
      venture.
      Since
      he
      had
      during
      that
      two
      years,
      in
      which
      he
      
      
      acquired
      and
      resold
      this
      property,
      also
      had
      done
      the
      same
      with
      at
      least
      one
      
      
      other
      residential
      property
      to
      his
      gain,
      then
      I
      must
      conclude
      that
      the
      minister’s
      
      
      assessment
      of
      the
      gain
      from
      the
      property
      at
      King
      Road
      in
      Burlington,
      
      
      which
      is
      the
      subject
      matter
      of
      the
      second
      aspect
      of
      this
      appeal,
      is
      properly
      
      
      classified
      as
      income
      from
      a
      business
      as
      that
      term
      is
      used
      in
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
      
        Act.
      
      Accordingly,
      the
      second
      branch
      of
      this
      appeal
      must
      also
      be
      dismissed
      
      
      with
      costs.