value, and some of it is taken in in the form of goods or land at an
agreed money value. I think it also, when read with sub-sec, 4,
applies to the case of an owner purchasing for cash for the purposes
of his business some asset as part of his working capital. It will be
noticed that the phrase is " the amount of its capital," that is, the
capital of the business as it stands at the appropriate moment.
Then it is such amount of that capital as is actually " paid up," and
by "the owner," that is, by the person who was owner, or the
Tespective persons who were owners, of that business at the time or
times when any of the still existing capital was "paid up" at any
stage in the life of the business, And, however it was " paid up,"
whether in money or money's-worth, it would, so far as sub-sec. 1
is unaffected by any other provision, be computed in terms of money
at the nominal sum " paid up." So far for the actual capital paid in
as such from the moment of its introduction into the business,
Then to this are to be added all accumulated trading profits made
at any time and invested in the business, that is, treated as capital,
and this adjusted by the addition or subtraction of balances brought
forward from previous years to the credit or debit of profit and loss
account. This, with the exception of the capital provided for in
sub-secs. 2 and 3, is generally speaking the capital to be computed,
which represents the money value of the business as the machine
by which the profits for the given period have been made.