The
       
        Associate
       
        Chief
       
        Justice:—This
      
      is
      an
      appeal
      from
      a
      judgment
      
      
      of
      the
      Tax
      Review
      Board
      which
      allowed
      an
      appeal
      by
      the
      defendant
      
      
      from
      a
      reassessment
      of
      income
      tax
      for
      the
      year
      1969.
      In
      that
      year
      
      
      Bedford
      Investments
      Limited
      (formerly
      Newfoundland
      Canada
      Steamships
      
      
      Limited)
      became
      a
      personal
      corporation,
      as
      defined
      in
      section
      68
      
      
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act,
      
      and
      under
      section
      67
      of
      the
      Act
      the
      defendant,
      
      
      as
      owner
      of
      the
      company,
      was
      liable
      for
      tax
      in
      respect
      of
      a
      dividend
      
      
      deemed
      to
      have
      been
      distributed
      to
      him
      equal
      to
      the
      income
      of
      the
      
      
      company
      for
      the
      year.
      The
      issue
      in
      the
      appeal
      is
      whether
      the
      company
      
      
      in
      computing
      its
      income
      was
      entitled
      to
      deduct
      an
      amount
      of
      
      
      $48,750
      which
      it
      allowed
      or
      credited
      to
      a
      newly
      incorporated
      company,
      
      
      named
      Newfoundland
      Canada
      Steamships
      Limited,
      in
      the
      transaction
      
      
      which
      is
      described
      in
      what
      follows.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      Tax
      Review
      Board,
      after
      hearing
      evidence,
      concluaed
      that
      Bedford
      
      
      was
      entitled
      to
      the
      deduction
      and
      accordingly
      allowed
      the
      appeal.
      
      
      In
      this
      Court,
      however,
      the
      case
      was
      presented
      on
      an
      agreed
      statement
      
      
      of
      facts
      which,
      with
      the
      documents
      therein
      mentioned,
      including
      
      
      the
      pleadings,
      constitutes
      the
      material
      on
      which
      the
      matter
      must
      be
      
      
      determined.
      In
      summary,
      what
      they
      disclose
      is
      that
      Bedford,
      after
      
      
      operating
      a
      ship
      known
      as
      the
      
        Bedford
       
        II
      
      for
      some
      years,
      on
      January
      1,
      
      
      1969,
      in
      a
      transaction
      not
      at
      arm’s
      length,
      sold
      the
      ship,
      the
      company’s
      
      
      goodwill
      and
      its
      entitlement
      to
      a
      tax
      refund
      to
      the
      new
      company
      
      
      (hereafter
      New
      Newfoundland),
      and
      that
      that
      company
      assumed
      certain
      
      
      items
      shown
      on
      its
      opening
      balance
      sheet
      as
      liabilities.
      Included
      
      
      under
      the
      latter
      was
      an
      item
      referred
      to
      as
      “reserves”,
      Quadrennial
      
      
      Survey,
      $48,750.
      Such
      an
      amount
      was
      included
      by
      Bedford
      in
      computing
      
      
      its
      income
      for
      the
      year
      ending
      December
      31,
      1968
      as
      a
      reserve
      
      
      for
      quadrennial
      survey
      under
      paragraph
      11(1)(ea)
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
      
        Act*
      
      and,
      in
      consequence
      and
      since
      the
      quadrennial
      survey
      was
      not
      
      
      done
      in
      1968,
      it
      became
      necessary
      for
      Bedford,
      under
      paragraph
      
      
      6(1)(eb),t
      
      to
      include
      that
      amount
      in
      computing
      its
      income
      for
      1969.
      
      
      Of
      that
      there
      is
      no
      longer
      any
      dispute.
      It
      is
      claimed,
      however,
      that
      
      
      Bedford
      is
      entitled
      to
      deduct
      a
      like
      amount
      of
      $48,750
      as
      a
      revenue
      
      
      expense
      incurred
      in
      the
      course
      of
      the
      transaction
      of
      January
      1,
      1969.
      
      
      In
      this
      connection,
      the
      plaintiff’s
      statement
      of
      claim
      contains,
      among
      
      
      others,
      the
      following
      three
      paragraphs
      which
      were
      admitted
      by
      the
      
      
      defendant:
      
      
      
      
    
        8.
        As
        the
        vessel,
        Bedford
        II,
        was
        subject
        to
        the
        provisions
        of
        the
        
          Canada
        
          Shipping
         
          Act
        
        for
        quadrennial
        surveys,
        Old
        Newfoundland,
        Bedford,
        had
        set
        
        
        up
        a
        reserve
        in
        its
        accounts
        of
        $48,750
        as
        of
        December
        31,
        1968,
        in
        respect
        
        
        of
        the
        survey
        which
        was
        to
        be
        required
        to
        be
        performed
        during
        1969;
        
        
        
        
      
        9.
        Bedford
        transferred
        the
        vessel
        on
        January
        1,
        1969,
        to
        New
        Newfoundland
        
        
        at
        its
        undepreciated
        capital
        cost
        in
        the
        hands
        of
        Bedford;
        
        
        
        
      
        10.
        Bedford
        also
        agreed
        to
        give
        New
        Newfoundland
        an
        amount
        of
        $48,750,
        
        
        the
        amount
        appearing
        on
        the
        books
        of
        Bedford
        as
        a
        reserve
        for
        quadrennial
        
        
        surveys,
        in
        respect
        of
        the
        estimated
        cost
        of
        the
        quadrennial
        survey;
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      view
      of
      this
      and
      the
      other
      facts
      appearing
      from
      the
      agreed
      
      
      statement,
      it
      appears
      to
      me
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
      (1)
      in
      the
      transaction,
      the
      amount
      of
      $48,750
      was
      in
      fact
      allowed
      or
      
      
      credited
      by
      Bedford
      to
      New
      Newfoundland,
      against
      what
      otherwise
      
      
      would
      have
      been
      the
      balance
      of
      the
      consideration
      to
      be
      paid
      or
      
      
      given
      by
      New
      Newfoundland;
      
      
      
      
    
      (2)
      in
      that
      sense,
      the
      amount
      was
      paid
      by
      Bedford
      to
      New
      Newfoundland
      
      
      on
      January
      1,
      1969,
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      estimated
      cost
      of
      
      
      the
      quadrennial
      survey;
      and,
      
      
      
      
    
      (3)
      as
      other
      assets
      of
      Bedford
      were
      transferred
      in
      the
      same
      transaction,
      
      
      the
      $48,750
      should
      not
      be
      regarded
      simply
      as
      a
      reduction
      of
      
      
      the
      price
      to
      be
      paid
      for
      the
      ship.
      
      
      
      
    
      It
      should
      be
      noted,
      however,
      that
      while
      the
      owner
      is
      required
      by
      
      
      the
      
        Canada
       
        Shipping
       
        Act,
      
      RSC
      1970,
      c
      S-9,
      to
      have
      the
      quadrennial
      
      
      survey
      done,
      and
      cannot
      get
      a
      certificate
      to
      permit
      further
      operation
      
      
      of
      the
      ship
      until
      the
      survey
      has
      been
      done,
      it
      is
      no
      more
      than
      a
      
      
      condition
      for
      further
      operation
      since
      the
      owner
      has
      at
      all
      times
      the
      
      
      alternatives
      of
      disposing
      of
      the
      ship
      to
      a
      buyer
      or
      of
      having
      her
      
      
      broken
      up
      for
      scrap
      in
      either
      of
      which
      instance
      there
      would
      be
      no
      
      
      further
      obligation
      on
      him
      to
      have
      a
      survey
      made.
      Or
      he
      might
      let
      her
      
      
      lie
      idle.
      It
      is
      only
      if
      he
      proposes
      to
      continue
      operating
      the
      ship
      that
      
      
      he
      must
      have
      the
      survey
      made.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      question
      then
      is
      whether
      Bedford
      is
      entitled
      to
      a
      deduction
      in
      
      
      respect
      of
      the
      $48,750
      which
      it
      allowed
      or
      paid
      to
      New
      Newfoundland.
      
      
      The
      principal
      points
      of
      Mr
      Ainslie’s
      argument,
      as
      I
      understand
      it,
      were
      
      
      that
      there
      was
      never
      any
      actual
      liability
      on
      Bedford
      to
      have
      the
      quadrennial
      
      
      survey
      carried
      out;
      that
      at
      most
      there
      was
      a
      potential
      liability
      
      
      which
      would
      mature
      only
      if
      Bedford
      continued
      to
      operate
      the
      ship;
      
      
      that
      this
      potential
      liability
      and
      the
      state
      of
      the
      ship
      were
      no
      doubt
      
      
      taken
      into
      account
      in
      arriving
      at
      the
      value
      of
      the
      assets
      to
      be
      transferred
      
      
      to
      New
      Newfoundland
      but
      that
      this
      does
      not
      give
      rise
      to
      a
      
      
      deductible
      expense;
      that
      even
      if
      Bedford
      had
      agreed
      to
      have
      the
      
      
      survey
      and
      repairs
      carried
      out,
      on
      the
      authority
      of
      
        Montship
       
        Lines
      
        Limited
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1954]
      Ex
      CR
      376;
      [1954]
      CTC
      295;
      54
      DTC
      1151,
      the
      
      
      amount
      would
      not
      be
      deductible;
      and
      that
      if
      the
      $48,750
      is
      an
      amount
      
      
      allowed
      in
      respect
      of
      dilapidations,
      since
      no
      repairs
      were
      carried
      out,
      
      
      the
      amount
      is
      a
      mere
      estimate
      and
      its
      deduction
      is
      prohibited
      by
      
      
      paragraph
      12(1)(e).
      On
      the
      latter
      point,
      counsel
      relied
      on
      
        Edward
      
        Collins
       
        &
       
        Sons,
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Commissioners
       
        of
       
        Inland
       
        Revenue
      
      (1924),
      12
      
      
      TC
      773;
      
        The
       
        Naval
       
        Colliery
       
        Co,
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Commissioners
       
        of
       
        Inland
       
        Revenue
      
      
      
      (1928),
      12
      TC
      1017;
      and
      
        Peter
       
        Merchant,
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Stedeford
       
        (HM
       
        Inspector
      
        of
       
        Taxes)
      
      (1948),
      30
      TC
      496.
      He
      also
      read
      from
      
        Southern
       
        Railway
       
        of
      
        Peru
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Owen,
      
      [1957]
      AC
      334;
      
        James
       
        Spencer
       
        &
       
        Co
      
      v
      
        Commissioners
      
        of
       
        Inland
       
        Revenue
      
      (1950),
      32
      TC
      111;
      and
      
        Federal
       
        Commissioner
      
        of
       
        Taxation
      
      v
      
        James
       
        Flood
       
        Proprietary
       
        Limited
      
      (1953),
      88
      CLR
      
      
      492.
      
      
      
      
    
      While
      these
      cases
      illustrate
      principles
      applied
      in
      other
      jurisdictions,
      
      
      I
      do
      not
      find
      them
      of
      much
      assistance
      in
      resolving
      the
      present
      problem.
      
      
      It
      must,
      I
      think,
      be
      remembered
      that
      they
      are
      decisions
      on
      provisions
      
      
      of
      the
      statutes
      applicable
      to
      the
      situations
      with
      which
      they
      
      
      deal
      and
      that
      such
      provisions
      are
      not
      necessarily
      the
      same
      as
      those
      
      
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act.
      
      The
      difference
      between
      the
      English
      statute
      
      
      and
      the
      Australian
      statute
      is
      brought
      out
      in
      the
      following
      passage
      
      
      from
      the
      judgment
      in
      the
      
        Flood
      
      case
      at
      page
      505;
      it
      is
      also
      apparent
      
      
      from
      the
      passage
      that
      both
      statutes
      are
      different
      from
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
      
        Act:
      
        In
        considering
        such
        questions
        the
        difference
        should
        never
        be
        overlooked
        
        
        between
        the
        English
        income
        tax
        law
        and
        the
        Commonwealth
        statute.
        The
        
        
        Report
        of
        1936
        of
        the
        Income
        Tax
        Codification
        Committee,
        par
        76,
        contains
        
        
        the
        following
        description
        of
        the
        English
        system:
        
        
        
        
      
        “It
        has
        often
        been
        the
        subject
        of
        judicial
        comment
        that
        the
        existing
        Acts
        
        
        contain
        no
        general
        direction
        as
        to
        the
        ascertainment
        of
        business
        profits.
        
        
        Such
        guidance
        as
        they
        give
        is
        confined
        to
        a
        statement
        that
        the
        amount
        
        
        to
        be
        assessed
        is
        ‘the
        balance
        of
        the
        profits
        or
        gains’
        of
        the
        business,
        
        
        Subject
        to
        a
        series
        of
        provisions
        prohibiting
        certain
        specific
        deductions—
        
        
        some
        of
        which,
        being
        in
        the
        form
        of
        limitations,
        are
        taken
        as
        authorisations
        
        
        of
        deductions
        within
        the
        limits.
        It
        has
        been
        left
        to
        the
        Courts
        to
        lay
        
        
        down
        that
        ‘the
        balance
        of
        the
        profits
        or
        gains’
        must,
        in
        the
        absence
        of
        
        
        express
        provision
        to
        the
        contrary,
        be
        arrived
        at
        in
        accordance
        with
        
        
        ordinary
        commercial
        principles,
        and
        to
        formulate
        the
        principle
        that
        a
        
        
        proper
        debit
        item
        in
        a
        trading
        or
        in
        a
        profit
        and
        loss
        account
        is,
        in
        
        
        general,
        a
        proper
        debit
        item
        in
        an
        income
        tax
        computation.’’
        
        
        
        
      
        The
        principle
        of
        the
        Commonwealth
        Act,
        on
        the
        other
        hand,
        is
        to
        calculate
        
        
        the
        taxable
        income
        as
        the
        amount
        remaining
        after
        deducting
        from
        the
        assessable
        
        
        income
        all
        allowable
        deductions
        and
        to
        restrict
        allowable
        deductions
        
        
        to
        deductions
        allowable
        under
        the
        Act.
        What
        losses
        and
        outgoings
        arising
        
        
        in
        the
        course
        of
        business
        are
        to
        be
        deducted
        is
        a
        matter
        which
        must
        be
        
        
        governed
        by
        s
        51(1)
        of
        the
        
          Income
         
          Tax
         
          Assessment
         
          Act.
        
        Under
        its
        provisions
        
        
        all
        losses
        and
        outgoings
        may
        be
        deducted
        to
        the
        extent
        to
        which
        
        
        they
        are
        incurred
        in
        gaining
        or
        producing
        the
        assessable
        income,
        or
        are
        
        
        necessarily
        incurred
        in
        carrying
        on
        a
        business
        for
        the
        purpose
        of
        gaining
        
        
        or
        producing
        such
        income,
        provided,
        of
        course,
        they
        are
        not
        of
        a
        capital
        
        
        nature
        or
        otherwise
        excluded.
        The
        word
        “outgoing”
        might
        suggest
        that
        
        
        there
        must
        be
        an
        actual
        disbursement.
        But
        partly
        because
        such
        an
        interpretation
        
        
        would
        produce
        very
        strange
        and
        anomalous
        results,
        and
        partly
        
        
        because
        of
        the
        use
        of
        the
        word
        “incurred”,
        the
        provision
        has
        been
        interpreted
        
        
        to
        cover
        outgoings
        to
        which
        the
        taxpayer
        is
        definitively
        committed
        
        
        in
        the
        year
        of
        income
        although
        there
        has
        been
        no
        actual
        disbursement.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      scheme
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act,
      
      so
      far
      as
      it
      is
      applicable
      to
      the
      
      
      present
      situation,
      is
      found
      in
      sections
      3,
      4,
      and
      12.
      By
      section
      3,
      the
      
      
      income
      of
      a
      taxpayer
      (which,
      under
      paragraph
      139(1)(av),
      includes
      
      
      any
      person)
      for
      a
      taxation
      year
      includes
      
        inter
       
        alia
      
      income
      from
      all
      
      
      businesses.
      By
      section
      4
      subject
      to
      the
      other
      provisions
      of
      Part
      I
      of
      
      
      the
      Act,
      income
      for
      a
      taxation
      year
      from
      a
      business
      or
      property
      Is
      
      
      the
      profit
      therefrom
      for
      the
      year.
      It
      is
      well
      established
      that
      the
      profit
      
      
      from
      a
      business
      is
      the
      profit
      as
      ascertained
      by
      the
      application
      of
      
      
      ordinary
      commercial
      principles,
      but
      for
      income
      tax
      purposes
      the
      profit
      
      
      so
      established
      is
      subject
      to
      such
      limitations
      or
      alterations
      as
      are
      required
      
      
      to
      give
      effect
      to
      the
      other
      provisions
      of
      Part
      I
      of
      the
      Act.
      Among
      
      
      these
      is
      section
      12
      which
      provides
      
        inter
       
        alia
      
      that:
      
      
      
      
    
        12.
        (1)
        In
        computing
        income,
        no
        deduction
        shall
        be
        made
        in
        respect
        of
        
        
        
        
      
        (a)
        an
        outlay
        or
        expense
        except
        to
        the
        extent
        that
        it
        was
        made
        or
        incurred
        
        
        by
        the
        taxpayer
        for
        the
        purpose
        of
        gaining
        or
        producing
        income
        
        
        from
        property
        or
        a
        business
        of
        the
        taxpayer,
        
        
        
        
      
        (e)
        an
        amount
        transferred
        or
        credited
        to
        a
        reserve,
        contingent
        account
        
        
        or
        sinking
        fund
        except
        as
        expressly
        permitted
        by
        this
        Part,
        
        
        
        
      
      Under
      these
      provisions,
      in
      order
      to
      qualify
      for
      deduction
      an
      outlay
      or
      
      
      expense
      that
      is
      deductible
      in
      computing
      profit
      on
      ordinary
      commercial
      
      
      principles
      must
      also
      fall
      within
      the
      exception
      to
      paragraph
      12(1
      )(a).
      If,
      
      
      on
      the
      other
      hand,
      the
      item
      to
      be
      claimed
      is
      not
      an
      actual
      outlay
      
      
      or
      expense
      but
      an
      amount
      set
      aside
      or
      taken
      into
      account
      to
      provide
      
      
      for
      some
      anticipated
      outlay
      or
      expense
      for
      which
      liability
      has
      not
      yet
      
      
      arisen,
      it
      will
      be,
      in
      substance
      and
      in
      fact,
      a
      reserve
      and
      will
      fall
      under
      
      
      the
      prohibition
      of
      paragraph
      12(1)(e).
      
      
      
      
    
      On
      the
      facts
      of
      the
      case,
      it
      appears
      to
      me
      to
      be
      impossible
      to
      
      
      regard
      the
      allowance
      or
      payment
      of
      $48,750
      made
      by
      Bedford
      to
      New
      
      
      Newfoundland
      in
      the
      transaction
      of
      January
      1,
      1969
      as
      in
      any
      relevant
      
      
      sense
      a
      reserve
      within
      the
      meaning
      of
      paragraph
      12(1)(e).
      The
      amount
      
      
      of
      $48,750
      set
      up
      by
      Bedford
      in
      its
      accounts
      for
      the
      period
      ending
      
      
      December
      31,
      1968
      was
      a
      reserve,
      and
      was
      deductible
      as
      such,
      in
      
      
      computing
      income
      for
      1968,
      under
      paragraph
      11
      (1
      )(ea)
      and
      the
      regulations,
      
      
      notwithstanding
      paragraph
      12(1)(e).
      But
      what
      was
      allowed
      or
      
      
      paid
      to
      New
      Newfoundland
      on
      January
      1,
      1969
      was
      not
      a
      reserve.
      It
      
      
      was,
      if
      it
      was
      anything
      at
      all,
      an
      item
      of
      disbursement
      and
      the
      fact
      
      
      that
      its
      amount
      was
      calculated
      or
      arrived
      at
      as
      an
      estimate
      of
      the
      
      
      cost
      of
      the
      survey
      does
      not
      make
      it
      in
      any
      sense
      a
      reserve.
      Paragraph
      
      
      12(1
      )(e)
      accordingly
      has
      no
      application
      to
      prohibit
      its
      deduction.
      
      
      
      
    
      On
      the
      other
      hand,
      adverting
      to
      paragraph
      12(1)(a),
      while
      I
      think
      
      
      the
      disbursement
      must
      be
      taken
      to
      have
      been
      “made”
      or
      “incurred”
      
      
      within
      the
      meaning
      of
      those
      terms
      in
      the
      paragraph,
      I
      am
      not
      satisfied
      
      
      that
      it
      was
      made
      or
      incurred
      “for
      the
      purpose
      of
      gaining
      or
      producing
      
      
      income
      from”
      the
      business
      of
      Bedford,
      within
      the
      meaning
      of
      that
      
      
      paragraph.
      The
      business
      had
      been
      that
      of
      operating
      the
      
        Bedford
       
        II.
      
      
      
      But
      the
      amount
      was
      not
      allowed
      or
      paid
      to
      enable
      Bedford
      to
      continue
      
      
      to
      operate
      the
      ship,
      and
      the
      transaction
      in
      which
      the
      amount
      
      
      was
      allowed
      or
      paid
      was
      not
      a
      transaction
      in
      the
      course
      of
      the
      business.
      
      
      It
      was
      a
      transaction
      that
      disposed
      of
      the
      assets
      employed
      in
      
      
      the
      business
      and
      put
      an
      end
      to
      it.
      Such
      a
      transaction
      is
      not
      one
      for
      
      
      the
      purpose
      of
      gaining
      or
      producing
      income
      from
      the
      business.
      Nor
      
      
      is
      the
      amount
      which
      Bedford,
      in
      the
      transaction,
      agreed
      to
      pay
      or
      
      
      allow
      an
      outlay
      or
      expense
      incurred
      “for
      the
      purpose
      of
      gaining
      or
      
      
      producing
      income
      from”
      the
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      exception
      to
      paragraph
      12(1
      )(a)
      is
      not
      a
      narrow
      one.
      Speaking
      
      
      generally,
      it
      includes
      any
      expense
      that
      is
      an
      incident
      or
      part
      of
      the
      
      
      profit-earning
      operation.
      But,
      even
      if
      it
      is
      broad
      enough
      to
      include,
      
      
      in
      some
      instances,
      an
      expenditure
      incurred
      in
      a
      transaction
      by
      which
      
      
      the
      business
      is
      terminated,
      of
      which
      there
      may
      be
      some
      question
      and
      
      
      which
      it
      is
      not
      necessary
      now
      to
      decide,
      it
      does
      not
      appear
      to
      me
      to
      
      
      embrace
      an
      expenditure
      of
      the
      kind
      here
      in
      question,
      that
      is
      to
      say,
      
      
      an
      expenditure
      not
      for
      a
      survey
      of
      the
      ship
      but
      simply
      to
      give
      the
      
      
      purchaser
      of
      the
      capital
      assets
      of
      the
      business,
      including
      the
      ship,
      
      
      an
      allowance
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      anticipated
      cost
      of
      a
      survey
      which
      he
      
      
      might
      thereafter
      use
      or
      not
      use
      for
      that
      purpose,
      as
      he
      might
      see
      fit.
      
      
      Plainly
      it
      was
      not
      an
      outlay
      for
      a
      survey
      because
      no
      survey
      was
      made.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      defendant’s
      position
      was
      that
      the
      expense
      of
      a
      quadrennial
      
      
      survey
      is
      really
      incurred
      while
      the
      ship
      is
      being
      operated
      but,
      as
      there
      
      
      is
      no
      annual
      outlay
      made
      or
      expenses
      incurred
      for
      it,
      nothing
      could
      
      
      be
      deducted
      in
      respect
      of
      it
      in
      any
      of
      the
      first
      three
      years
      because
      
      
      of
      paragraph
      12(1)(e);
      that
      Parliament
      recognized
      this
      as
      being
      unfair
      
      
      and
      has
      provided
      for
      it
      by
      paragraph
      11(1)(ea);
      that
      if
      and
      when
      a
      
      
      taxpayer
      pays
      anyone
      else
      to
      do
      with
      respect
      to
      a
      quadrennial
      survey
      
      
      what
      otherwise
      the
      taxpayer
      would
      ultimately
      have
      to
      do
      and
      then
      
      
      becomes
      entitled
      to
      deduct
      the
      cost,
      what
      the
      taxpayer
      pays
      equally
      
      
      relates
      to
      the
      operation
      of
      the
      vessel
      in
      the
      preceding
      years
      and
      the
      
      
      payment
      takes
      its
      character
      from
      that
      of
      the
      expense
      for
      which
      it
      
      
      was
      submitted.
      He
      cited
      as
      an
      instance
      of
      this
      the
      common
      practice
      
      
      of
      apportioning
      current
      taxes
      between
      vendor
      and
      purchaser
      in
      closing
      
      
      real
      estate
      transactions.
      It
      is
      a
      tempting
      argument,
      but
      I
      do
      not
      think
      
      
      it
      can
      prevail.
      
      
      
      
    
      With
      respect
      to
      the
      submission
      that
      the
      expense
      of
      a
      quadrennial
      
      
      survey
      is
      incurred
      while
      the
      ship
      is
      being
      operated,
      it
      is
      to
      be
      observed
      
      
      that
      the
      material
      before
      me
      provides
      no
      guide
      as
      to
      how
      the
      matter
      
      
      is
      regarded
      or
      dealt
      with
      in
      ordinary
      commercial
      practice.
      It
      was
      said,
      
      
      however,
      that
      for
      income
      tax
      purposes
      the
      amount
      of
      the
      reserve
      
      
      deducted
      under
      paragraph
      11(1)(ea)
      in
      1968
      was
      equal
      to
      three-
      
      
      quarters
      of
      an
      estimate
      of
      what
      the
      survey
      would
      cost,
      based
      on
      the
      
      
      experience
      of
      the
      actual
      cost
      of
      the
      previous
      quadrennial
      survey.
      
      
      Throughout
      that
      stage,
      however,
      there
      was
      no
      outlay
      made
      or
      expense
      
      
      incurred
      for
      the
      survey.
      There
      was
      only
      a
      reserve
      which,
      so
      far
      as
      
      
      income
      tax
      purposes
      are
      concerned,
      fell
      under
      the
      prohibition
      of
      paragraph
      
      
      12(1)(e)
      except
      to
      the
      extent
      permitted
      by
      paragraph
      11(1)(ea).
      
      
      It
      appears
      to
      me
      to
      follow
      that
      in
      the
      statutory
      scheme
      the
      incurring
      
      
      of
      the
      need
      for
      a
      survey
      is
      not
      equivalent
      to
      the
      making
      of
      an
      outlay
      
      
      or
      the
      incurring
      of
      expense
      for
      a
      survey
      and
      cannot
      be
      considered
      
      
      or
      treated
      as,
      in
      itself,
      an
      expense.
      There
      was,
      thus,
      in
      fact
      and
      in
      law
      
      
      no
      expense
      incurred
      by
      Bedford
      to
      which,
      in
      computing
      income
      for
      
      
      income
      tax
      purposes,
      the
      allowance
      or
      payment
      made
      by
      Bedford
      to
      
      
      New
      Newfoundland
      could
      relate
      or
      from
      which
      it
      could
      acquire
      or
      
      
      take
      the
      character
      of
      an
      expense
      for
      a
      quadrennial
      survey.
      
      
      
      
    
      With
      respect
      to
      the
      practice
      in
      real
      estate
      transactions,
      the
      analogy
      
      
      appears
      to
      me
      to
      break
      down
      because
      in
      such
      situations
      there
      is,
      in
      
      
      fact,
      a
      liability
      for
      taxes
      which
      is
      an
      expense
      incurred
      by
      one
      party
      
      
      or
      the
      other
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      year
      in
      which
      the
      sale
      occurs.
      Here
      
      
      there
      was
      no
      quadrennial
      survey
      and
      no
      cost
      was
      incurred
      by
      vendor
      
      
      or
      purchaser
      for
      one.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      course
      of
      argument,
      counsel
      for
      the
      defendant
      suggested
      
      
      that,
      if
      I
      should
      conclude
      that
      the
      $48,750
      was
      simply
      a
      reduction
      in
      
      
      the
      price
      of
      the
      ship,
      the
      matter
      should
      be
      referred
      back
      to
      the
      
      
      Minister
      with
      a
      direction
      to
      deduct
      a
      terminal
      capital
      cost
      allowance.
      
      
      The
      point,
      however,
      was
      not
      raised
      in
      the
      defence
      and,
      in
      any
      case,
      
      
      I
      have
      not
      concluded
      that
      the
      $48,750
      was
      a
      reduction
      in
      the
      price
      
      
      of
      the
      ship.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      appeal
      accordingly
      succeeds
      and
      will
      be
      allowed
      with
      costs
      
      
      and
      the
      reassessment
      will
      be
      restored.