BIM20265 - Trade: badges of trade: quantity purchased
The quantity of a commodity, or other asset, purchased can also
be a factor.
In CIR v Fraser [1942] 24TC498 (see
BIM20230) the court commented that the
commodity in question, whisky, had been bought in quantities which
were far in excess of anything which could be used by the
individual personally, or his family and friends. This weighed in
favour of the trading view.
The same point arose in Rutledge v CIR [1929] 14TC490 where
the transaction involved the purchase and sale of one million rolls
of toilet paper.
Purchases in excess of a normal non-trade use may be a factor
in the case of any of the asset types in
BIM20245, but usually other badges of
trade must be present to establish the existence of a trade or
adventure or concern in the nature of trade.
