Date: 20011220
Docket: 98-2182-IT-G
BETWEEN:
722540 ONTARIO INC.,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent,
Docket: 98-2422-IT-G
AND BETWEEN:
NOVOPHARM LIMITED,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasonsfor
Judgment
Bowie J.
[1]
Novopharm Limited (Novopharm) appeals from assessments under the
Income Tax Act (the Act) for its taxation years
1987 and 1988. By these assessments the Minister of National
Revenue (the Minister) disallowed deductions totalling
$10,727,914 in 1987 and $9,579,540 in 1988 which were claimed by
Novopharm in computing its income.
[2]
722540 Ontario Inc. (540) appeals from a determination of its
non-capital loss for the taxation year 1988 made under subsection
152(1.1) of the Act. The Minister, in determining the
non-capital loss to be nil, disallowed the deduction of 540's
share of the reported losses of Millbank Limited Partnership
(Millbank) amounting to $270,921. There is an issue as to whether
this appeal is properly before this Court. The Minister says that
it is not because no Notice of Objection was filed under section
165 of the Act. 540 has also appealed from its assessments
for 1990 and 1991, claiming to be entitled to carry a non-capital
loss forward from 1988 and apply it to those years.
[3]
The expenses disallowed by the Minister are interest on certain
loans, and in the case of Novopharm's 1987 year, a financing
fee of $500,000 and a consulting fee of $200,000, both paid in
connection with one of those loans.
facts
[4]
The events giving rise to the appeals were a carefully
orchestrated series of transactions designed to permit Novopharm
to take advantage of the accumulated losses of $11,634,134 and
the unused Canadian exploration and development expenses (CEDE)
totalling $10,724,370 of a company called Royal Scot Resources
Ltd. (Royal Scot), which was effectively defunct. For
convenience, I shall refer to the losses and the CEDE
collectively simply as the losses. The appeals were presented on
the basis that the issue before me is whether the Appellants are
entitled to the deductions in respect of interest and the other
costs of borrowing that they have claimed. If they are, then the
amounts claimed are the correct amounts; if they are not, then
the assessments as issued must stand. Nor is it disputed that the
transactions which I shall describe took place. The Crown does
not allege sham, nor does it invoke the incomplete transactions
doctrine.
[5]
Novopharm is a very profitable company whose principal business
is the manufacture and distribution of generic pharmaceutical
products. It also has investments in real estate, and in a
variety of other businesses. Mr. Leslie Dan began the company in
1965, and he and his family still control it. Mr. Dan is
president and chief executive officer. In 1986, the pre-tax
profit was almost $14 million. In 1987 and 1988, it was $9.2
million and $10.3 million, respectively, even after the deduction
of the amounts that are in dispute in these appeals. Clearly,
Novopharm was an obvious candidate to utilize a sophisticated
arrangement for the avoidance of income taxes. In 1987, such an
arrangement was brought to Mr. Dan by Mr. Adrien Boulanger, an
accountant with the firm Laventhal & Howarth (L & H), and
Mr. Leslie Dollinger, a lawyer with the firm Fogler,
Rubinoff.
[6]
In giving his evidence, Mr. Dan tried hard to convey the
impression that to him the proposal that Mr. Boulanger and Mr.
Dollinger put before him was just another business deal, and that
he viewed it as an investment which he embarked on for sound
business reasons, because it was likely to produce a satisfactory
return for his company. On that basis, and on being assured of
the legality of the scheme, he agreed that Novopharm would
participate. He professed not to understand the details of the
scheme, or that its benefit to Novopharm arose entirely from
enabling it to utilize the losses of another company, totally
unrelated to it, against which to offset some of its profits, and
thereby pay less income tax than it otherwise would. In this he
is disingenuous. Mr. Dan is a very shrewd, experienced and
successful businessman. He makes his own evaluations of
investment opportunities on the basis of his own analysis. His
evidence suffered from a number of inconsistencies, and his
memory failed him conveniently more than once. I have no doubt
that he understood perfectly well that what Mr. Boulanger and Mr.
Bollinger proferred was a scheme which had no purpose whatsoever
other than to contrive a situation in which Novopharm could
artificially reduce its income subject to tax by putting itself
in a position to utilize the accumulated losses totalling some
$20 million of another company, at a cost to Novopharm of about
$3.5 million.
[7]
From the evidence of Mr. Boulanger and Mr. Dan, I find that the
transactions which I shall describe[1] were undertaken on the understanding
that all the transactions would take place in the way that they
in fact did; as Mr. Dan said in his evidence, it was a package
deal. I also find that Mr. Dan, on behalf of Novopharm,
authorized these transactions to be undertaken because, and only
because, he believed that they would result in a reduction of
income taxes payable by Novopharm in the order of some $20
million for an outlay of approximately $3.5 million. No other
purpose was served, or was intended to be served, by these
transactions.
[8]
The Appellants led evidence to show that during 1988 and 1989,
and thereafter until 1997, Millbank was an investment vehicle
which produced dividend and interest income for the Appellants
through its holdings of marketable securities. This income,
however, did not result from the transactions with which these
appeals are concerned, but from other, totally unrelated,
injections of capital.
[9]
Once implementation of the transactions I am about to describe
had been approved by Mr. Dan, Mr. Boulanger, through a business
associate of his, Mr. Steven Kerr, took steps to locate a
suitable company having accumulated losses of about $20 million.
Mr. Kerr did this with the help of Mr. Kenneth Taves, a Vancouver
lawyer in the firm Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy. Royal
Scot was a company with losses totalling some $22.3 million, and
no ongoing business of any substance. Its chairman, Mr. Donald
McLeod, and the Royal Bank, which as its major shareholder
exercised de facto control, were only too willing to
accept $2 million for its losses.
[10] Once
Royal Scot had been recruited, the following series of
transactions took place, orchestrated by Mr. Boulanger and Mr.
Dollinger. Appendix "A" is a series of charts, prepared
by counsel for the Respondent, which illustrates these
transactions.
[11] On June
12, 1987, 722537 Ontario Inc. (537), 722538 Ontario Inc. (538),
722539 Ontario Inc. (539) and 540 were incorporated under the
Business Corporations Act of Ontario. 537, 538 and
539 were incorporated as subsidiaries of Royal Scot, while 540
was incorporated as a subsidiary of 539. The same day, 537 and
538 entered into an agreement to create a limited partnership,
Millbank. 537 was the general partner, with a .01% interest, and
538 was the limited partner, with a 99.99% interest. 538 made a
capital contribution of $20,000.
[12] On June
23, 1987, Millbank borrowed $193,913,043 from First Marathon
Capital Corporation ("FMCC") at 11.50% per annum for a
period of one year, maturing on June 23, 1988 ("loan
#1"). In addition to the interest on loan #1, Millbank
also obligated itself to pay a $500,000 loan arrangement fee to
FMCC. It was a condition of loan #1 that Millbank lend the
proceeds of loan #1 to First Marathon Inc. ("FMI"),
FMCC's parent company, on the same day at 11.55% per annum
for an identical period of time, in return for FMI's
promissory note (the "FMI note"), and that the FMI
note be pledged by Millbank to FMCC as security for loan #1. No
loan arrangement fee was payable by FMI to Millbank. The terms of
the FMI note entitled Millbank to demand prepayment of all the
interest payable on it for the one-year term, and also that any
such prepayment was to be applied in reduction of loan #1.
To implement these transactions, FMCC issued a cheque to Millbank
in the amount of $193,913,043 as the proceeds of loan #1, in
return for Millbank's promissory note in the same amount, on
the terms I have described. Millbank immediately endorsed this
cheque in favour of FMI in return for the FMI note in that
amount, on the terms described. Millbank immediately demanded
prepayment of the interest on the FMI note, and received a cheque
from FMI in the amount of $19,991,035, the discounted value of
the future interest accruing on the FMI note from June 23, 1987
to June 23, 1988. Millbank immediately endorsed that cheque to
FMCC to reduce the balance of loan #1 from $193,913,043 to
$173,922,008, as it was required to do by the terms of the FMI
note.
[13] On June
24, 1987, Royal Scot acquired 538's 99.99% limited
partnership interest in Millbank for $20,000, which it paid for
by way of a demand promissory note in that amount.
[14] On June
25, 1987, Millbank declared its first fiscal year end, reporting
a net income for tax purposes of $19,381,440, consisting of the
prepaid interest of $19,993,775, less the loan arrangement fee
payable by Millbank to FMCC in the amount of $500,000, and two
days' accrued interest of $109,539 on loan #1, and net of the
loss for accounting purposes of $2,796. Of Millbank's net
income for tax purposes of $19,381,440, 99.99%, or $19,379,502,
was allocated to Royal Scot, and .01%, or $1,938, to 537. The
amount which was allocated to Royal Scot was offset by the
losses, and so attracted no income tax liability.
[15] On June
30, 1987, the following transactions took place.
(i)
539 acquired 537's .01% general partnership interest in
Millbank for $1.00.
(ii)
540 acquired Royal Scot's 99.99% limited partnership interest
in Millbank, for which it gave Royal Scot two non-interest
bearing promissory notes in the amounts of $20,000 and
$2,000,000.
(iii)
Novopharm acquired all of the issued shares of 539 from Royal
Scot for $10.00.
(iv)
Novopharm acquired from 539 all of its shares in 540 for
$10.00.
(v)
Novopharm purchased from Royal Scot 540's promissory note in
the amount of $2,000,000 by substituting its own promissory note
of $2,000,000 for 540's note. Novopharm's note was also
payable without interest but, unlike the 540 note which it
replaced, was payable only if certain changes to the Act
which would have prevented Novopharm from deducting the interest
payable by it on loan #2 did not come into effect.
(vi)
Novopharm subscribed for treasury shares of 540 for $20,000, and
540 then used the proceeds to pay its promissory note to Royal
Scot in the same amount. Royal Scot endorsed the cheque from 540
to pay off its $20,000 promissory note owing to 538.
(vii)
Novopharm purchased additional treasury shares of 540 for
$500,000, and 540 used the proceeds to make an additional capital
contribution to Millbank, which in turn used it to pay off the
loan arrangement fee in that amount to FMCC which it had incurred
with respect to loan #1.
(viii) Novopharm
borrowed $173,922,008 from FMCC at 11.5%, maturing on June 23,
1988 ("loan #2"). It was a condition of this loan that
Novopharm use the proceeds to purchase additional treasury shares
of 540, which it did. 540 then used the proceeds of the share
purchase to make a contribution of capital to Millbank.
(ix)
In addition to the interest that was payable on loan #2,
Novopharm paid FMCC a loan arrangement fee of $500,000 for loan
#2.
(x)
Novopharm also issued a promissory note to Westmorland Financial
Service Inc. in the amount of $200,000. This promissory note was
subject to the same condition relating to a possible amendment to
the Act as Novopharm's $2,000,000 promissory note
issued to Royal Scot.
(xi)
the FMI note was pledged to FMCC by Millbank as security for
loan #2.
[16] On August
10, 1987, Novopharm paid Messrs. Fogler, Rubinoff, $75,549.84 for
their services in connection with these transactions. On
August 13, 1987, Novopharm paid Laventhol & Horwath a
fee of $200,000.
[17] The
amendment to the Income Tax Act about which the parties
were concerned did not occur, and so in January 1988, Novopharm
paid $2,000,000 to Royal Scot and $200,000 to Westmorland
Financial Services to discharge its obligations to them.
[18] As at
June 23, 1988, the following amounts were owed on loan #1 and
loan #2, and on the FMI note:
(i)
FMI owed Millbank $193,913,043 as principal on the FMI note.
(ii)
Millbank owed FMCC interest of $383,581 on loan #1.
(iii)
Novopharm owed FMCC $193,539,458 on loan #2, made up of
$173,922,008 principal and $19,617,450 interest.
[19] On June
23, 1988, both loan #2 and the FMI note matured, as a result of
which the following events took place:
(i)
Millbank received the face amount of the FMI promissory note in
the amount of $193,913,043.
(ii)
$193,529,462 of that $193,913,043 was returned by Millbank to 540
by way of reduction of 540's capital in Millbank. The
difference between these two amounts, $383,581, was recorded by
Millbank as a reduction of accrued interest on loan #1 for the
period of June 23, 1987 to June 30, 1987. The payment to 540
took the form of a cheque issued by FMI to 540 for
$193,529,462.
(iii)
540 applied this $193,529,462 to cancel most of Novopharm's
shares in 540. 540 endorsed the FMI cheque in favour of Novopharm
for this purpose.
(iv)
Novopharm then endorsed this FMI cheque in favour of FMCC to
repay the principal amount of loan #2, which was $173,922,008,
and $19,607,454 on account of the accrued, but as yet unpaid,
interest thereon, which was $19,617,450. The remaining interest,
$9,996, was paid by Novopharm to FMCC by its own cheque.
[20] On the
cancellation of its shares in 540, Novopharm realized a deemed
dividend in the amount of $19,170,433 pursuant to subsection
84(3) of the Act, which it included in computing its
income for income tax purposes for the 1988 taxation year, and
also deducted pursuant to subsection 112(1) of the
Act.
[21]
Notwithstanding the .05 percent difference between the loan rates
on loan #1 and loan #2 (11.5%) and the rate payable on the FMI
note (11.55%), the interest paid on loan #1 ($383,581) and on
loan #2 ($19,617,450) (a total of $20,001,031) exceeded the
interest paid on the FMI note ($19,991,035), producing a
shortfall of $9,996, the amount which Novopharm paid to FMCC.[2]
[22] Novopharm
deducted for income tax purposes $10,027,914 and $9,579,540 (a
total of $19,607,454) of the interest of $19,617,450 paid or
accrued in respect of loan #2 in computing its income for its
1987 and 1988 taxation years, respectively.[3] Millbank deducted the interest of
$383,581 paid on loan #1 in its 1987 and 1988 fiscal periods.
Novopharm also deducted in computing its income for the 1987
taxation year the loan arrangement fee of $500,000 paid in
respect of loan #2, and the $200,000 fee paid to Laventhol &
Horwath.
[23] In
reassessing Novopharm for the years 1987 and 1988, the Minister
disallowed all of these deductions, on the basis that neither the
interest nor the fees were paid in respect of "borrowed
money used for the purpose of earning income from a
business or property ...", as subparagraphs
20(1)(c)(i) and 20(1)(e)(ii) require. The Minister
also based the assessment, in the alternative, on section 245 as
it existed prior to its re-enactment in 1988. In making a
determination of the non-capital loss of 540 for the 1988 year,
the Minister disallowed the deduction by it of its allocated
share of the loss of Millbank which arose out of the interest and
loan arrangement fee on loan #1, for the same reasons.
legislation
[24] The
following provisions of the Act are relevant to these
appeals:
18(1) In computing the
income of a taxpayer from a business or property 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 the business or property;
20(1) Notwithstanding
paragraphs 18(1)(a), (b) and (h), in
computing a taxpayer's income for a taxation year from a
business or property, there may be deducted such of the following
amounts as are wholly applicable to that source or such part of
the following amounts as may reasonably be regarded as applicable
thereto:
...
(c)
an amount paid in the year or payable in respect of the year
(depending upon the method regularly followed by the taxpayer in
computing his income), pursuant to a legal obligation to pay
interest on
(i)
borrowed money used for the purpose of earning income from a
business or property (other than borrowed money used to acquire
property the income from which would be exempt or to acquire a
life insurance policy),
(ii)
...
or a reasonable amount in respect thereof, whichever is the
lesser;
...
(e)
such part of an amount that is not otherwise deductible in
computing the income of the taxpayer and that is an expense
incurred in the year or a preceding taxation year
...
(ii)
in the course of a borrowing of money used by the taxpayer for
the purpose of earning income from a business or property (other
than money used by the taxpayer for the purpose of acquiring
property the income from which would be exempt)
(including a commission, fee or other amount paid or payable
for or on account of services rendered by a person as a salesman,
agent or dealer in securities in the course of the issuance, sale
or borrowing, ...) ...
84(3) Where at any time
after December 31, 1977 a corporation resident in Canada has
redeemed, acquired or cancelled in any manner whatever (otherwise
than by way of a transaction described in subsection (2)) any of
the shares of any class of its capital stock,
(a)
the corporation shall be deemed to have paid at that time a
dividend on a separate class of shares comprising the shares so
redeemed, acquired or cancelled equal to the amount, if any, by
which the amount paid by the corporation on the redemption,
acquisition or cancellation, as the case may be, of those shares
exceeds the paid-up capital in respect of those shares
immediately before that time; and
(b)
a dividend shall be deemed to have been received at that time by
each person who held any of the shares of that separate class at
that time equal to that portion of the amount of the excess
determined under paragraph (a) that the number of those
shares held by him immediately before that time is of the total
number of shares of that separate class that the corporation has
redeemed, acquired or cancelled, at that time.
111(5) Where, at any time, control of
a corporation has been acquired by a person or group of persons,
no amount in respect of its non-capital loss or farm loss for a
taxation year ending before that time is deductible by the
corporation for a taxation year ending after that time and no
amount in respect of its non-capital loss or farm loss for a
taxation year ending after that time is deductible by the
corporation for a taxation year ending before that time except
that
(a)
such portion of the corporation's non-capital loss or farm
loss, as the case may be, for a taxation year ending before that
time as may reasonably be regarded as its loss from carrying on a
business and, where a business was carried on by the corporation
in that year, such portion of the non-capital loss as may
reasonably be regarded as being in respect of an amount
deductible under paragraph 110(1)(k) in computing its
taxable income for the year is deductible by the corporation for
a particular taxation year ending after that time
(i)
only if that business was carried on by the corporation for
profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit throughout the
particular year, and
(ii)
only to the extent of the total of the corporation's income
for the particular year from that business and, where properties
were sold, leased, rented or developed or services rendered in
the course of carrying on that business before that time, from
any other business substantially all the income of which was
derived from the sale, leasing, rental or development, as the
case may be, of similar properties or the rendering of similar
services; and
(b)
such portion of the corporation's non-capital loss or farm
loss, as the case may be, for a taxation year ending after that
time as may reasonably be regarded as its loss from carrying on a
business and, where a business was carried on by the corporation
in that year, such portion of the non-capital loss as may
reasonably be regarded as being in respect of an amount
deductible under paragraph 110(1)(k) in computing its taxable
income for the year is deductible by the corporation for a
particular year ending before that time
(i)
only if throughout the taxation year and in the particular year
that business was carried on by the corporation for profit or
with a reasonable expectation of profit, and
(ii)
only to the extent of the corporation's income for the
particular year from that business and, where properties were
sold, leased, rented or developed or services rendered in the
course of carrying on that business before that time, from any
other business substantially all the income of which was derived
from the sale, leasing, rental or development, as the case may
be, of similar properties or the rendering of similar
services.
112(1) Where a corporation in a
taxation year has received a taxable dividend from
(a)
a taxable Canadian corporation, or
(b)
a corporation resident in Canada (other than a non-resident-owned
investment corporation or a corporation exempt from tax under
this Part) and controlled by it,
an amount equal to the dividend may be deducted from the
income of the receiving corporation for the year for the purpose
of computing its taxable income.
152(1.1)
Where the Minister ascertains the amount of a taxpayer's
non-capital loss, net capital loss, restricted farm loss, farm
loss or limited partnership loss for a taxation year and the
taxpayer has not reported that amount as such a loss in the
taxpayer's return of income for that year, the Minister
shall, at the request of the taxpayer, determine, with all due
dispatch, the amount of the loss and shall send a notice of
determination to the person by whom the return was filed.
152(1.2)
Paragraphs 56(1)(l) and 60(o), this Division and
Division J, as they relate to an assessment or a reassessment and
to assessing or reassessing tax, apply, with such modifications
as the circumstances require, to a determination or
redetermination of an amount under this Division or an amount
deemed under section 122.61 or 126.1 to be an overpayment on
account of a taxpayer's liability under this Part, except
that subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to determinations made
under subsections (1.1) and (1.11) and, for greater certainty, an
original determination of a taxpayer's non-capital loss, net
capital loss, restricted farm loss, farm loss or limited
partnership loss for a taxation year may be made by the Minister
only at the request of the taxpayer.
152(1.3)
For greater certainty, where the Minister makes a determination
of the amount of a taxpayer's non-capital loss, net capital
loss, restricted farm loss, farm loss or limited partnership loss
for a taxation year or makes a determination under subsection
(1.11) with respect to a taxpayer, the determination is (subject
to the taxpayer's rights of objection and appeal in respect
of the determination and to any redetermination by the Minister)
binding on both the Minister and the taxpayer for the purpose of
calculating the income, taxable income or taxable income earned
in Canada of, tax or other amount payable by, or amount
refundable to, the taxpayer, as the case may be, for any taxation
year.
152(9) The Minister may advance an
alternative argument in support of an assessment at any time
after the normal reassessment period unless, on an appeal under
this Act
(a)
there is relevant evidence that the taxpayer is no longer able to
adduce without the leave of the court; and
(b)
it is not appropriate in the circumstances for the court to order
that the evidence be adduced.
166.1(1)
Where no notice of objection to an assessment has been served
under section 165, nor any request under subsection 245(6) made,
within the time limited by those provisions for doing so, the
taxpayer may apply to the Minister to extend the time for serving
the notice of objection or making the request.
166.2(1)
A taxpayer who has made an application under subsection 166.1 may
apply to the Tax Court of Canada to have the application granted
after either
(a)
the Minister has refused the application, or
(b)
90 days have elapsed after service of the application under
subsection 166.1(1) and the Minister has not notified the
taxpayer of the Minister's decision,
but no application under this section may be made after the
expiration of 90 days after the day on which notification of the
decision was mailed to the taxpayer.
245(1) In computing income for the
purposes of this Act, no deduction may be made in respect
of a disbursement or expense made or incurred in respect of a
transaction or operation that, if allowed, would unduly or
artificially reduce the income.
preliminary issue
[25] Before
dealing with the merits of these appeals, I must consider whether
the appeal of 540 for the 1988 taxation year is properly before
me. That requires an account of the facts that pertain to this
issue. On May 18, 1993, 540 was reassessed for the 1988, 1990 and
1991 taxation years. The reassessment for 1988 disallowed the
non-capital loss which 540 had claimed for that year, being its
allocated share of the non-capital loss of Millbank. The 1990 and
1991 years were reassessed in consequence to disallow the
carry-forward of that loss. On August 16, 1993, 540 filed with
the Minister Notices of Objection for each of these three years.
The Notice of Objection for 1988 recognized that the reassessment
for that year was a nil assessment, and requested that the
Minister determine the taxpayer's non-capital loss for that
year pursuant to subsection 152(1.1) of the Act. The
Minister responded to this with a Notice of Determination of a
Loss for the 1988 taxation year of 540, which is dated May 25,
1998, which determined the loss to be nil. On June 9, 1998, the
Minister sent to 540 Notice of Confirmation of the reassessments
for the 1990 and 1991 years.[4] On August 24, 1998, 540 filed a Notice of Appeal
in this Court in respect of the three years 1988, 1990 and 1991.
In paragraphs 2 to 6 of the Reply to Notice of Appeal, which is
dated October 23, 1998, the Respondent took the position that the
Appellant had no right of appeal for any of the years, for the
following reason. The reassessment for 1988 was a nil assessment,
from which no appeal lies. The Notice of Redetermination of Loss
would be subject to appeal, if only a Notice of Objection had
been filed in respect of it, but none was. The appeals for 1990
and 1991 cannot succeed, as they depend on the success of the
1988 appeal. Upon receipt of this pleading, counsel for the
Appellant 540 wrote to the Minister on November 17, 1998 to
request an extension of time, pursuant to
subsection 166.1(1) of the Act, to file a Notice of
Objection in response to the Notice of Determination of a Loss
for 1988. At the top of this letter appear the words
"WITHOUT PREJUDICE". The Minister's
letter in reply to this, dated December 9, 1998, is not long, and
as it is central to this issue, I shall reproduce it in full:
Mr. Peter K. Guselle
Fogler, Rubinoff,
P.O. Box 95, Royal Trust Tower
T-D Centre, Toronto
M5K 1G8
December 9, 1998
Dear Sir
Re:
722540 Ontario Inc., - 1988 Taxation Year
The receipt of your Without Prejudice letter dated
November 17, 1998 is acknowledged.
We are prepared to give favourable consideration to the
request for an extension of the time to file a Notice of
Objection, but we first raise these matters for your
attention.
The letter, which is also intended to constitute the
objection, fails to state the reasons for the objection, other
than to say that "the Minister has wrongly disallowed the
interest". As the taxpayer is subject to subsection
165(1.11) of the Act, there should be a clear statement of
the facts and reasons and the amount of the relief sought.
Furthermore, we believe that it is inappropriate for an objection
to be issued "Without Prejudice". Finally, we must ask
that the objection be signed by an authorized officer of the
taxpayer.
Upon satisfying these matters, we will give prompt attention
to the request.
Yours truly,
"W.G. Wilson"
Appeals Officer
To this, counsel replied on December 22, 1998,
"I acknowledge receipt of your letter of December 9,
1998, and will respond early in the new year. I trust this is
satisfactory".
There was no further correspondence on the subject.
[26] Counsel
for 540 advances two arguments to support the validity of its
appeals. Relying on what was said by Bowman J., as he then was,
inAallcann Wood Suppliers Inc. v. The Queen,[5] he says that a valid
appeal for the 1988 year is unnecessary, because the amount of
the loss for that year may be ascertained within the appeals for
1989 and 1990, which are validly before the Court. It is the
following part of Bowman J.'s Reasons for Judgment on which
counsel relies:[6]
One preliminary procedural or possibly jurisdictional point
should be disposed of at the outset. Originally the appellant
asked that this court make a determination of its loss for 1988
as the size of that loss affected its taxable income for 1985,
1986 and 1987. The respondent took the position that in the
appeals for 1985, 1986 and 1987 the appellant could not challenge
the Minister's computation of the loss for 1988 because the
appellant had not requested a determination of loss for 1988.
The appellant acceded to this position and requested a loss
determination for 1988 under subsection 152(1.1) of the Income
Tax Act. A determination was made by the Minister, an
objection was filed, the determination was confirmed and an
appeal was brought to this court from the loss determination for
1988.
The Minister's position in the original reply to the
notice of appeal that the Minister's ascertainment of a loss
for a particular taxation year is immutable unless a loss
determination is made under subsection 152(1.1) is, however,
wrong. It is true that this court cannot make a formal
loss determination under subsection 152(1.1). That is the
Minister's function. If such a loss determination is made it
is valid and binding unless challenged by way of objection or
appeal and, if it is sustained on appeal, it stands. The purpose
of subsection 152(1.1) is to permit a taxpayer to have its loss
for a year determined definitively and, if necessary, to have the
Minister's determination reviewed by the court. One of the
reasons for the enactment of subsection 152(1.1) was that no
appeal lies from a nil assessment. In the absence of a binding
loss determination under subsection 152(1.1), it is open to a
taxpayer to challenge the Minister's calculation of a loss
for a particular year in an appeal for another year where the
amount of the taxpayer's taxable income is affected by the
size of the loss that is available for carry-forward under
section 111. In challenging the assessment for a year in which
tax is payable on the basis that the Minister has incorrectly
ascertained the amount of a loss for a prior or subsequent year
that is available for deduction under section 111 in the
computation of the taxpayer's taxable income for the year
under appeal, the taxpayer is requesting the court to do
precisely what the appeal procedures of the Income Tax Act
contemplate: to determine the correctness of an assessment of tax
by reviewing the correctness of one or more of the constituent
elements thereof, in this case the size of a loss available from
another year. This does not involve the court's making a
determination of loss under subsection 152(1.1) or
entertaining an appeal from a nil assessment. It involves merely
the determination of the correctness of the assessment for the
year before it.
It was, therefore, unnecessary for the appellant to seek a
determination of loss under subsection 152(1.1). The matter of
the 1988 loss is now before the court on two bases — both
as an appeal from the 1988 loss determination and as a component
of the taxable income for 1985, 1986, and 1987 and, to the extent
that any amount of loss remains available for carry-forward, for
1989. While it was unnecessary for the purposes of these appeals
that I deal at length with the point, the Crown's position is
so out of line with both the law and with prevailing practice and
could potentially have such far-reaching effects on any number of
appeals before this court that I considered it desirable that the
idea be nipped in the bud.
Counsel also takes the position, in the alternative, that the
letter of November 17, 1998 by which he requested an extension of
time pursuant to subsection 166.1(1) "... is a
sufficient form of Notice of Objection ...", because it
made reference to the earlier Notice of Objection filed on August
16, 1993.
[27] Counsel
for the Respondent, quite correctly, says that the passage from
Aallcann Wood Suppliers on which the Appellant relies is
obiter, because in that case, the Appellant, faced with
the Crown's argument that the loss for 1988, could not be
determined within the appeals for the years to which it was to be
carried back, rectified the problem by obtaining a Determination
of Loss from the Minister, objecting to it, and launching a
fresh, and valid, appeal from it.
[28] Although
obiter, this statement by Bowman J. has been followed in
this Court,[7] and
by the Federal Court Trial Division,[8] and I have no doubt that the
principle there stated is correct. If the sequence of events in
this case were the same, I would have no hesitation in finding
that the Appellant 540 could attack the Minister's original
nil assessment of the 1988 loss indirectly on the appeals of the
carry-forward years 1990 and 1991. There is, however, a vital
difference in the events. In both cases, the Appellant requested
and obtained a loss determination under subsection 152(1.1),
and as a result its rights with respect to the quantum of that
loss are thereafter governed by subsections 152(1.2) and (1.3).
The first of these provides the taxpayer with a right to object
to, and then to appeal from, a loss determination just as though
it were an assessment of tax. Subsection 152(1.3) provides
that:
... the determination is (subject to the taxpayer's
rights of objection and appeal in respect of the determination
and to any redetermination by the Minister) binding on both the
Minister and the taxpayer for the purpose of calculating the
income, taxable income or taxable income earned in Canada of, tax
or other amount payable by, or amount refundable to, the
taxpayer, as the case may be, for any taxation year.
The concluding words of this subsection put it beyond any
doubt that the taxpayer who obtains a loss determination cannot
thereafter launch a collateral attack on the Minister's
determination; it must be done by objection to and appeal from
that determination, or not at all. In Aallcann Wood
Suppliers, the Appellant, having obtained the Determination
of Loss, took the necessary steps to appeal from it. In the
present case, the Appellant has not done that, and any collateral
attack is foreclosed by the words of subsection 152(1.3). It
follows from this that I do not entirely agree with Judge
Bowman's statement to the effect that the matter of the 1988
loss could proceed before him on both bases; once there has been
a loss determination requested and made, it is only by filing a
Notice of Objection to it, followed by a Notice of Appeal from
it, that that determination of the loss can be brought before the
Court.
[29] I see no
merit in the Appellant's alternative position on this point.
The letter of December 9, 1998 is perhaps unfortunately worded,
in that it neither grants nor refuses the extension of time that
the taxpayer requested. Instead, it takes issue with the content
of the November 17 letter, which purported to be a Notice of
Objection as well as a request for an extension of time. The last
paragraph of that letter begins:
We therefore request that you grant the taxpayer's
application for an extension of time and accept this letter as
the taxpayer's Notice of Objection to the Notice of
Determination/Redetermination of Loss in respect of its 1988
taxation year, ...
[30] Counsel
for the Appellant argued that I should read into the letter in
reply of December 9th that the Minister granted the requested
extension of time, and accepted the letter as a Notice of
Objection validly filed. Although the writer indicated that he
was favourably disposed to the application, that letter cannot be
read as doing either of those things. The time for filing the
Notice of Objection had expired in August 1998, and it was
never extended; nor was the requested extension refused. No doubt
the taxpayer was entitled to a disposition of the application,
but it never got one. It could have applied to this Court at any
time after February 15, 1999 to grant the extension of time under
section 166.2, but it did not. The matter simply died with
counsel's letter of December 22, 1998, to which I have
already referred. In any event, an extension of time to file a
Notice of Objection granted by either the Minister or the Court,
even if that application were accepted as being the Notice of
Objection as well, could not validate an appeal already begun. It
could only enable the taxpayer to then begin a new and valid
appeal, which of course it has not done.
[31] As the
appeal from the Determination of Loss for 1988 is not properly
before the Court, and as the only relief sought by 540 in its
appeals for 1990 and 1991 must depend on a successful attack on
that determination, all three appeals must fail.
the positions of the parties on the substantive
issue
[32] Between
them, counsel for the parties produced more than one hundred
pages of written argument,[9] and occupied one full day in oral argument. They have
cited some 50 cases, and several journal articles. I shall
summarize their positions as briefly as I can. I should start
with those few, but important, matters as to which counsel for
the parties are in agreement. First, this is not a case of either
sham or incomplete transactions. The various steps were fully and
effectively carried out. They were intended to, and they did,
create binding legal relationships among the various actors, just
as they purport to do. Second, the step transaction doctrine is
not in play. The Appellants' counsel says that it is no part
of our law; the Respondent's counsel says that this is a
straw man, as he does not invoke it.
the Appellants
[33] The
fundamental position of the Appellants is that Novopharm entered
into its loan transaction to borrow money in order to purchase
shares of 540 as an investment from which it would earn income.
Income, in the context of subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i), means
gross income, not profit, and so it is irrelevant that the cost
of borrowing, made up of the interest and the fees paid to
L & H and to FMCC, would inevitably exceed the income which
Novopharm would receive from 540 by way of the deemed dividend.
So long as there is some gross income to be produced through the
use of the borrowed funds, the purpose test has been met.
[34] The
Appellant argues that it is not open to me to examine the
commercial and economic reality underlying the loan transaction
to test its purpose. To the extent that the obiter dictum
of Dickson J. in the Bronfman Trust[10] case may be said to sanction this,
it has since been overruled by the Supreme Court's later
decisions in Antosko,[11], Friesen,[12] Continental Bank[13] and Shell
Canada.[14]
In a variation of the same argument, the Appellant submitted that
only the direct and not an indirect use of the borrowed funds
must govern the availability of the deduction. The direct use in
this case is said to be the purchase of the shares of 540, and it
is impermissible to look beyond that. To do so would, in the
Appellant's view of it, be to import to Canada the step
transaction doctrine. The Appellant goes further, however,
submitting that in the present case "the transactions in
issue are not preordained"[15]. Finally, on this point, counsel for the
Appellant argued that the Court is not permitted to seek
"the ultimate or true purpose" of the borrowing, as
Bowman J. did in Mark Resources[16] and McArthur J. did in Canwest
Broadcasting,[17] because this approach has now been disapproved, by
the Supreme Court of Canada in Shell Canada, and
more recently, in Singleton andLudco. In any event,
Mark Resources and Canwest Broadcasting are, in the
Appellant's view, distinguishable on their facts.
[35] With
respect to the fees paid to FMCC and L & H ($500,000 and
$200,000, respectively), the Appellant argued that the former is
deductible under subparagraph 20(1)(e)(ii), and that
the latter is deductible under paragraph 18(1)(a), both on
the same basis that the interest is deductible under subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i). In other words, the claims to deduct these
amounts stand or fall with the claim to deduct the interest.
[36] Counsel
for the Appellant submitted that section 245 of the Act
has no application to this case. He did not accept that the
tripartite test established by the Federal Court of Appeal in the
Fording Coal case[18] is necessarily the correct one, but neither did he
suggest any alternative test. Instead, he argued that in the
present case none of the three elements of the Fording
Coal test to establish undue or artificial reduction of the
Appellants' incomes is present, for the following reasons. If
the Appellants successfully establish their entitlement to the
deductions under section 20, then those deductions cannot be
inconsistent with the object and spirit of the Act. In the
absence of any pleaded assumption by the Minister that the
borrowings were not in accordance with normal business practice,
the Respondent has the onus of proving that fact, and she has not
done so. Finally, the Appellant's counsel argued that the
third element of the Fording Coal test, absence of a
bona fide business purpose, is inconsistent with the
decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada in Stubart
Investments,[19] Continental Bank,[20] Hickman Motors[21] and Neuman[22]. He went on
then to argue that, in any event, the purchase by Novopharm of
shares of 540 was a transaction which had a business purpose,
namely earning dividend income.
the Respondent
[37] The
Respondent accepts that the Duke of Westminster[23] principle
remains the law in Canada, but says that the interpretation of
subsection 20(1) should be approached in a way that accords with
the scheme of the Act, and in particular, Subdivision b of
Division B of Part I, in which it appears. That subdivision is
concerned with the computation of income or loss from a business
or property, and is intended to permit only the deduction from
revenues of those expenses that have been laid out for the
purpose of gaining an economic profit. It is not there to advance
schemes of tax avoidance. The purpose served by permitting the
deduction of interest and other borrowing costs is to encourage
the accumulation of capital. The reference to income in
subsection 20(1), therefore, must refer to net income and not
gross income, as the Appellant contends. On the facts of this
case it was not just improbable, but impossible, for either loan
#1 or loan #2 to produce income. All the transactions which took
place were preordained, and without the tax savings, the result
would inevitably be substantial losses.
[38] The
Respondent also argued that in looking for the purpose for which
borrowed money is used, the Court should not simply look in
isolation at the first transaction following the borrowing
transaction. In a case such as this, where there are a large
number of transactions, all of which are, as Mr. Dan put in his
evidence, "a package deal", in which the money moves
from one participant to another, the Court has to look for the
true or real purpose of the borrowing, not simply the first thing
that was done with the borrowed funds. This, counsel argues, is
not to apply the step transaction doctrine, because it does not
involve ignoring for tax purposes any of the transactions.
[39] The
Respondent argues, in the alternative, that the deduction of the
interest and other borrowing costs would unduly or artificially
reduce the incomes of the Appellants, and so is prohibited by
section 245 of the Act as it stood at the relevant time.
Counsel urged me to apply the test established by the Federal
Court of Appeal in Fording Coal, and to find that all
three elements of that test are met in the present case. The
transactions here under consideration, he said, are contrary to
the object and spirit of the Act, and particularly section
20, which was enacted to enable businesses to build up their
capital, not to assist them in carrying out tax avoidance
schemes. The transactions here are not normal business
transactions; Novopharm borrowed hundreds of millions of dollars
to invest them indirectly in a partnership which could not
possibly profit from that investment. From the start it was clear
that Novopharm would suffer a multi-million dollar commercial
loss. Finally, the transactions lacked any bona fide
business purpose; their only purpose was to provide Novopharm
with access to the losses of Royal Scot for tax avoidance
purposes.
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i)
[40] The
Supreme Court of Canada has identified the four elements of
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) that a taxpayer must be able to
satisfy for interest to be a permissible deduction in the
computation of income under the Act:[24]
Section 20(1)(c)(i) allows taxpayers to deduct from
their income interest payments on borrowed money that is used for
the purpose of earning income from a business or property. It is
an exception to s. 9 and s. 18(1)(b), which would
otherwise prohibit the deduction of amounts expended on account
of capital, i.e., interest on borrowed funds used to produce
income: Canada Safeway Ltd. v. Minister of National
Revenue [57 DTC 1239], [1957] S.C.R. 717, at pp. 722-23, per
Kerwin, C.J., and at p. 727, per Rand, J.; Bronfman Trust v.
The Queen [87 DTC 5059], [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32, at p. 45, per
Dickson, C.J. The provision has four elements: (1) the amount
must be paid in the year or be payable in the year in which it is
sought to be deducted; (2) the amount must be paid pursuant to a
legal obligation to pay interest on borrowed money; (3) the
borrowed money must be used for the purpose of earning non-exempt
income from a business or property; and (4) the amount must be
reasonable, as assessed by reference to the first three
requirements.
It is only the third of these that is at issue here.
[41] In the
same case the Court reminds us that "courts must be
sensitive to the economic realities of a particular
transaction", while avoiding both a recharacterization of
transactions on the basis of economic realities, and
any policy-based deviation from the clear provisions
of the statute.[25]
[42] The
question here, as in numerous previous cases, is simply whether
the money that Novopharm borrowed (loan #2) was "used for
the purpose of earning income from a business or property
...". The Appellant's position, simply put, is that
the purchase of the common shares of 540 is such a use; common
shares can be expected to yield dividends, and dividends are
income. If the Appellant is correct in this then, subject to the
application of section 245, it must succeed.
[43] In
Shell, the borrowing was in New Zealand currency (NZ$).
Shell's requirement for use in its business was for $100
million in U.S. currency (US$). It converted the borrowed NZ$ to
US$, at the same time entering into certain futures transactions
through which it secured a tax advantage in terms of the
deductibility of interest payments. The Supreme Court held that
although the first use of the funds borrowed was to purchase US$,
it was nevertheless the borrowed funds that were applied in the
Appellant's business. Deductibility of the interest payments
was unaffected by either the conversion to US$ or the fact that
Shell had necessarily paid a much higher rate of interest to
borrow in NZ$ than it would have had to pay had it borrowed
US$.
[44] More
recently, in Ludco, the Supreme Court held that to satisfy
the purpose requirement in subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i)
requires only that one of the purposes of the borrowing must be
to earn non-exempt income from a business or property, even
though that purpose be a subsidiary one. The interest paid on
money borrowed to purchase shares is deductible, provided only
that the investment, viewed objectively, manifests a reasonable
expectation of earning gross income for the borrower. This
principle was unaffected by the fact that the earning of income,
as opposed to achieving capital gains, was only an ancillary
purpose of the use to which the money was put.
[45] The
Supreme Court of Canada decided The Queen v. Singleton on
the same day as Ludco. The taxpayer was a member of a
partnership, with a balance in his capital account of greater
than $300,000. Having decided to buy a house, he borrowed
$400,000 from the bank, $300,000 of which was deposited in the
partnership bank account, to the credit of his capital account.
On the same day, he withdrew $300,000 from the partnership
general account, debiting his capital account, which he then used
as part payment for the house. The majority of the Court held
that the interest on the loan was deductible under subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i). The purpose of the loan was to refinance the
Appellant's partnership interest. In giving the majority
reasons, Major J. said this:[26]
In my respectful opinion, it is an error to treat this as one
simultaneous transaction. In order to give effect to the legal
relationships, the transactions must be viewed independently.
When viewed that way, on either version of the facts (i.e.,
regardless of the sequence), what the respondent did in this case
was use the borrowed funds for the purpose of refinancing his
partnership capital account with debt. This is the legal
transaction to which the Court must give effect. In this regard,
I adopt the following reasons of Rothstein, J.A.
(para. 54):
In the case at bar, the direct use of the borrowed funds was
to refinance the appellant's capital account at the firm.
Treating the borrowed funds as used for financing the purchase of
the home ignores what the appellant actually did, i.e., used the
borrowed funds to replace the funds required for his capital
account at the firm. As stated by Dickson, C.J. in Bronfman
Trust, the Court cannot ignore the direct use to which the
appellant put the borrowed money.
The fact that the money was borrowed in order to allow the
respondent to use his own money to purchase the house is of no
moment. The Shell decision decided that why the money was
borrowed is irrelevant. The fact that money was transferred from
the firm to the respondent for the purchase of a residential
property has no impact on the application of s.
20(1)(c)(i) to the interest incurred on borrowed money
which was used directly for the purpose of refinancing the
capital, and as such used for the purpose of earning income from
the law firm.
It is therefore now well settled that it is the actual use to
which the borrowed money is put, not some subsequent use or some
perceived economic reality, that must govern the question of
deductibility.
[46] Counsel
for the Respondent acknowledged in his written submission filed
following the Ludco and Singleton judgments that
these decisions made much of the argument he had advanced at the
conclusion of the hearing untenable. Indeed, following these two
decisions his argument on this branch of the case became simply
that the investment in the shares of 540 was never intended to
produce income, and had no prospect of doing so. All that it was
intended to produce, and all that it did produce, was a return of
capital, which was deemed to be a dividend by the operation of
subsection 84(3) of the Act.
[47] Counsel
for the Appellant, in a written Answer to the Respondent's
Supplementary Submissions, takes the position that this is a new
argument, not previously pleaded or advanced at the hearing of
the appeal, and that it is therefore not open to the Respondent
to raise it now. I do not agree. Counsel for the Respondent does
not by this argument seek to raise any new factual issue. The
argument is simply as to the correct characterization of the
legal effect of facts that have never been in dispute, and
counsel for the Appellant has been afforded, and has availed
himself of, an opportunity to respond to the argument. If there
were any doubt about the Crown's right to raise the argument
now, it would be resolved by subsection 152(9). Counsel for the
Appellant has not suggested that there is any additional evidence
bearing on this new argument that he should be permitted to
adduce.
[48] Counsel
for the Respondent traces the source of the deemed dividend of
$19,170,433, which Novopharm received and reported as income,
back to the prepayment of interest on loan #1 by FMI to Millbank
on June 23, 1987. At that time 538 was the limited partner in
Millbank, with an interest of 99.99%. The following day 538 sold
its interest in Millbank to Royal Scot for $20,000. One week
later Royal Scot, having been allocated 99.99% of the
partnership's net income for tax purposes ($19,379,502), sold
that same interest to 540 for $2,020,000. Although there had been
a year-end allocation for purposes of the Act, there had
been no distribution of the assets of Millbank. 538's share
of the capital of Millbank therefore passed through to 540, and
was the source of the deemed dividend, which counsel argues was
in reality simply a return of part of the capital of 540 to its
sole shareholder, Novopharm.
[49]
Nevertheless, having regard to what was said by Iacobucci J. at
paragraphs 57 to 65 of his Reasons for Judgment in Ludco
as to the meaning of the word "income", I do not find
this argument to be persuasive. In particular, it cannot be
reconciled with the statement at paragraph 61 of Ludco
that "...it is clear that 'income' in s.
20(1)(c)(i) refers to income generally, that is an
amount that would come into income for taxation purposes, not
just net income". (emphasis added)
[50] In my
view, no examination of economic realities is required in order
to conclude that in the present case the Appellant Novopharm did
not invest the borrowed money (loan #2) for the purpose of
earning income. This is not a case in which there are primary and
subsidiary purposes, or real and less real purposes, for the
borrowing. Nor is it a case in which there are direct and
indirect uses to which the borrowed funds were put. These
definitions of the noun "purpose" are found in the
Canadian Oxford Dictionary:
1.
a
something to be attained; a thing intended.
b
the reason for which something is done or made, or for which it
exists.
[51] The
controlling mind of Novopharm at all times was that of Leslie
Dan. He made the decisions, on the basis of his own appreciation
of the merit of proposals brought to him, including the proposal
of Mr. Boulanger and Mr. Dollinger to enter into these
transactions. The search for "purpose" in this case
therefore begins and ends with that which Mr. Dan sought to
attain for Novopharm. My appreciation of the evidence,
particularly that of Mr. Boulanger and Mr. Dan, is that Mr. Dan
authorized these transactions with no purpose in mind other than
to secure for Novopharm the use of the accumulated losses of
Royal Scot, to be applied against the profits of Novopharm, in
order to reduce the amount of tax that Novopharm would have to
pay. There was no subsidiary purpose. I have already noted the
statement of McLachlin J. in Shell Canada that courts must
be sensitive to the economic realities of transactions.[27] I note, too, that
Iacobucci J., in Ludco, while rejecting the bona
fide and dominant purpose tests for the application of
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i), said:[28]
Presumably, a court would take such an approach in response to
concerns over tax avoidance.
[52] The
transactions in question here, as I have found, have no purpose
other than the avoidance by Novopharm of liability for income
tax. Contrary to Mr. Guselle's submission, they were
certainly pre-ordained, with that object alone in mind. Estey J.
said in Stubart v. the Queen:[29]
Today there is only one principal or approach, namely, the
words of an Act are to be read in their entire context and in
their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme
of the Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of
Parliament.
Commenting on this statement of the law, Iacobucci J. said in
Antosko v. The Queen:[30]
It is this principle that must prevail unless the transaction
is a sham or is so blatantly synthetic as to be effectively
artificial.
(emphasis added)
Sham is not an issue in this case, but in my view the second
half of this sentence describes accurately the tax avoidance
arrangement that Mr. Boulanger and Mr. Dollinger devised for
Mr. Dan. It is not, in my opinion, necessary to do more than
apply the ordinary grammatical meaning of the words of
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) to find that this borrowing does
not meet its requirements. If I am wrong in that, I would
certainly construe the words "used for the purpose of
earning income from a business or property" as not being
intended to include the use of borrowed funds to implement
schemes which have no purpose other than tax avoidance.
[53] Two
schemes similar to this one have previously been considered by
this Court. In Mark Resources,[31]the taxpayer entered into a complex
series of transactions which had as their object to make
available to the taxpayer, a Canadian resident corporation, the
accumulated losses of a subsidiary corporation resident in the
United States. As in this case, the goal was accomplished by
arranging the borrowings, and the related transactions, in such a
way as to make the profitable taxpayer liable to pay interest,
which it then sought to deduct from income under subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i), while the income yield was channeled into the
U.S. corporation, where the losses could be applied against it.
The funds then flowed to the Canadian taxpayer in the form of a
tax-free intercorporate dividend. Bowman J., as he then was,
found that what he called "the true purpose" of the use
to which the borrowed funds were put to be the importation of the
losses of the U.S. subsidiary, so that they might be deducted in
the computation of the Canadian taxpayer's income. In the
course of his Reasons for Judgment he said:[32]
Both the appellant's and the respondent's
characterizations of the purpose for which the funds were used
have a certain superficial correctness, but I think they are both
based on a logical fallacy in that they attribute to one event in
the series a purpose based upon the immediately subsequent event.
The true purpose is a broader one that subsumes all of the
subordinate and incidental links in the chain. The overriding
ultimate economic purpose for which the borrowed funds were used
was to permit the U.S. losses of PDI to be, in effect, imported
into Canada and deducted in computing PDL's
income.
(emphasis added)
and further on:[33]
What, then, is the "direct" use to which the
borrowed funds were put here? The direct and immediate use was
the injection of capital into a subsidiary with the necessary and
intended consequence that the subsidiary should earn interest
income from term deposits from which it could pay dividends. The
earning of dividend income cannot, however, in my opinion, be
said to be the real purpose of the use of the borrowed funds.
Theoretically one might, in a connected series of events leading
to a predetermined conclusion, postulate as the purpose of each
event in the sequence the achievement of the result that
immediately follows but in determining the "purpose" of
the use of borrowed funds within the meaning of paragraph
20(1)(c) the court is faced with practical considerations
with which the pure theorist is not concerned. That purpose
— and it is a practical and real one, and in no way remote,
fanciful or indirect — is the importation of the losses
from the U.S. This case is not the converse of Bronfman.
The vague purpose of protecting assets that produced virtually no
income was patently subservient to the direct and uneconomic
purpose of distributing capital to a beneficiary of the trust.
Here the immediate step of investing in a subsidiary that in
accordance with the scheme must necessarily pay dividends was not
the real purpose of the use of the funds. The earning of interest
income by PDI and the payment by it of dividends to PDL were
integral but subservient and incidental steps to the real
objective that lay behind the implementation of the plan. The
amount of dividends, albeit deductible in computing taxable
income, and based upon the interest from the term deposits, was
less than the interest paid to the Royal Bank. It is true that
the overall economic result, if all of the elements of the plan
work, is a net gain to the appellant, but this type of gain is
not from the production of income but from a reduction of taxes
otherwise payable in Canada. I am cognizant of the fact that the
dividends, although deductible in computing taxable income, are
nonetheless income. It is, however, this feature of our Canadian
tax system whereby such dividends are deductible in computing
taxable income that gives to the plan its apparent economic
viability.
Although he refers there to the "true purpose", the
"economic purpose" and "the overall economic
result", clearly Bowman J. found there, as I do here, that
there was only one purpose to which the borrowed funds were
put.
[54] In
Canwest,[34] McArthur J. reached the same conclusion for
essentially the same reasons. In that case some 32 transactions
were entered into for no purpose other than to put the Appellant
in a position to claim the right to deduct some $5,000,000 under
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i), while recovering almost all of
it in the form of a tax-free intercorporate dividend. As in
Mark Resources, there was no apparent purpose in view,
except the generation of income in the loss company and losses in
the profitable one.
[55] Counsel
for the Appellant sought to distinguish both of these cases on
their facts. He also argued that these decisions had been
effectively overruled by the decisions in Shell,
Ludco and Singleton. It is true that the series of
transactions carried out in each of Mark Resources,
Canwest and this case are not identical. What they have in
common, however, and what distinguishes them all from
Shell, Ludco and Singleton, is that in each
of these cases an elaborate series of transactions was carried
out for no other reason than to create an interest deduction in
the profitable corporation, while ensuring that the corresponding
yield from the borrowed funds became income of the loss company,
which then passed into the hands of the profitable company as an
intercorporate dividend, free of taxation. In contrast, Shell
Canada had a need to borrow money for the operation of its
business. In Ludco, the taxpayer borrowed the funds to
invest them, and thereby make money, in the form of both income
and capital gains. Singleton's purpose, like Shell's, was
to use the money in his business. In each of these cases, the
taxpayer had an income-producing goal; they all arranged their
affairs in the way that accomplished that goal most effectively
for them, as the Supreme Court of Canada has said repeatedly that
taxpayers in this country are entitled to do. The Appellant
submits that there is no business purpose test in our law; as a
general proposition that is correct. However, in order to have a
deduction under subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) there must be a
"purpose of earning income from a business or
property", even though it may be only a subservient purpose
within the whole of the taxpayer's objective, and even though
the income to be earned may be miniscule alongside the interest
cost. This is so, not because it is part of the general law, but
because those words are found in the paragraph written by
Parliament. And those words are not satisfied by an intention,
standing alone, to render the losses of one company applicable to
reduce the taxes of another. I find that Novopharm is not
entitled to the deduction which it claimed under
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i). For the same reasons, it is
not entitled to deduct either the loan arrangement fee that it
paid or the fee to L & H.
[56] Mr.
Guselle also sought to distinguish Mark Resources and
Canwest on the basis that in both those cases the
corporate vehicle used as the source of the intercorporate
dividend paid to the Appellant was dissolved once the scheme had
been executed, while 539 and 540 continued in existence, and
operated the Millbank partnership, buying and selling marketable
securities and producing profits for Novopharm until their sale
in 1995. However, neither the few investments that Millbank made
in marketable securities in 1988 and 1989, nor its continued
existence after 1989, has any bearing on the transactions with
which these appeals are concerned. These were financed by funds
other than the proceeds of loan #2, all of which Millbank used to
retire loan #1. The issue before me relates only to the purpose
for which the proceeds of loan #2 were used. This is unaffected
by other activities of Millbank, whether contemporaneous or
subsequent.
undue or artificial reduction of income
[57] Prior to
its re-enactment in 1988, subsection 245(1) provided:
245(1) In computing income for the
purposes of this Act, no deduction may be made in respect
of a disbursement or expense made or incurred in respect of a
transaction or operation that, if allowed, would unduly or
artificially reduce the income.
In Mark Resources, Bowman J. considered whether this
provision applied to the facts before him, and he concluded that
it did not. He did not, however, have the benefit of the
decisions of the Federal Court of Appeal in Fording
Coal,[35] and
The Queen v. Central Supply Company (1972) Limited et
al.[36] In
those decisions, the Court of Appeal has set out the following
three factors that are to be considered in the application of
subsection 245(1). Would the deduction, if permitted, be contrary
to the object and spirit of the Act? Are the transactions
giving rise to the deductions made in accordance with normal
business practice? Were the transactions entered into for bona
fide business purposes? The Supreme Court of Canada had
occasion to consider this formulation of the test in Shell
Canada, but chose neither to disapprove nor to endorse it.[37]
would the deductions be contrary to the object and spirit
of the Act?
[58] The
transactions under consideration were entered into for only one
purpose, as I have found. They amounted to a purchase by
Novopharm of the accumulated losses of Royal Scot for 10 ¢ on
the dollar. The Federal Court of Appeal has recently held, in
OSFC Holdings Ltd v. The Queen,[38] that such transactions, if
effective in reducing taxes, would be an abuse of the provisions
of the Act. Rothstein J.A. discussed the policy of the
Act in relation to the transfer of losses from one
taxpayer to another at some length. After considering the
academic commentary, and the provisions of subsection 111(5),
which permits the transfer of losses between corporations in
certain very limited circumstances, he concluded at paragraph 98
of his Reasons:
I have no difficulty concluding that the general policy of the
Income Tax Act is against the trading of non-capital
losses by corporations, subject to specific limited
circumstances.
Those limited circumstances to which he referred involve a
change of control of a business and its continued operation
thereafter, and, of course, have no application to the
present case. It would also be contrary to the spirit of
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) of the Act to permit
the deduction of interest in this case. As the Supreme Court has
long held,[39]
the purpose of this provision is to encourage the accumulation of
capital which would then produce taxable income. Its application
to implement a transfer of losses between unrelated corporations
in furtherance of a tax avoidance arrangement is certainly
inconsistent with this purpose. The Appellant's argument that
a deduction from income which is permitted by the specific
provisions of the Act cannot be contrary to its object and
spirit has no merit. It was considered and rejected by
Strayer J.A. in Fording Coal[40], and more recently by
Rothstein J.A. in OSFC.[41] The answer to the first question is
"yes".
are the transactions in accordance with normal business
practice?
[59] Counsel
for the Appellant argued that the purchase of common stock is a
normal business transaction, and that absent any pleaded
assumption to the contrary by the Minister, the Respondent could
only succeed as to this issue by leading evidence to establish
non-conformity with normal business practice. No such evidence
was led. There may well be cases in which evidence will be
required to resolve the question whether a transaction, or a
group of transactions, is in accordance with normal business
practice, but this is not one of them. The facts of this case
demonstrate quite clearly that the transactions are not ones that
would be entered into in the normal course of business. In
Canwest, McArthur J. described a similar, but
different, tax avoidance arrangement as "... fiscal
manipulation not commercial reality...". Those words
describe precisely the scheme which Mr. Dollinger and Mr.
Boulanger sold to Mr. Dan in the present case. Leaving aside for
the moment its tax avoidance result, these pre-ordained
transactions ("a package deal") could only
result in the loss by Novopharm of some $3.5 million.
bona fide business purpose?
[60] I did not
understand counsel for the Appellants to contend that any
business purpose other than the avoidance of taxation motivated
the Appellants in the present case. To do so would certainly
require some considerable explanation, and none was made.
conclusion
[61] The
appeals of Novopharm fail, on the basis that it cannot satisfy
the requirements of subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i), as to the
interest, the requirements of subparagraph 20(1)(e)(ii),
as to the loan arrangement fee, or the requirements of paragraph
18(1)(a) as to the fee paid to L & H. They also fail on
the basis of section 245 as it stood at the relevant
time.
[62] The
appeals of 540 fail for the reasons given at paragraph 31 above.
If 540 had a valid appeal before me for 1988, it would
nevertheless fail for the same reasons that the appeals of
Novopharm fail, and the appeals for 1990 and 1991, being
consequential, would fail as well.
[63] All of
the appeals are dismissed. The Respondent is entitled to one set
of costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 20th day of December, 2001.
J.T.C.C.
APPENDIX "A"
CHART 1
JUNE 12, 1987
Incorporation of numbered companies
ROYAL SCOT RESOURCES LTD.
("Royal Scot")
(approx. $20,000,000 of noncapital losses and Canadian
Exploration Expenses)
|
100%
100%
100%
100%
·
722537 Ontario Inc. ("722537"), 722538 Ontario Inc.
("722538") and 722539 Ontario Inc. ("722539")
incorporated as subsidiaries of Royal Scot Resources Ltd.
("Royal Scot").
·
722540 Ontario Inc. incorporated as a subsidiary of 722539.
CHART 2
JUNE 12, 1987
Formation of Millbank Limited Partnership
100%
100%
GENERAL
PARTNER
LIMITED PARTNER
(.01%) interest
(99.99%)
·
722537 and 722538 enter into an agreement to create a limited
partnership under the name of "Millbank Limited
Partnership" ("Millbank").
·
722537 is Millbank's general partner, with a .01 %
partnership interest in it.
·
722538 is Millbank's limited partner with a 99.99%
partnership interest in it.
·
722537 contributed no money to Millbank, and 722538 $20,000.
·
CHART 3
JUNE 23, 1987
Loan #1
Cheque for
$193,913,043
FMI Note for $193,913,043
Cheque for
$193,913,043
FMI Note for $193,913,043 endorsed to
FMI
· First
Marathon Capital Corporation ("FMCC") issues a cheque
for $193,913,043 to Millbank as proceeds of Loan #1, at 11.5%
p.a. A loan arrangement fee of $500,000 is payable to FMCC.
· As a
condition of Loan #1 Millbank endorses FMCC'S cheque for
$193,913,043 to First Marathon Inc. ("FMI") by way of
loan.
· In return, FMI
gives Millbank a promissory note for $193,913,043 (the "FMI
Note"), at 11.55% p.a., but no loan arrangement fee is
payable.
·
Millbank pledges the FMI Note to FMCC as security for Loan
#1.
·
CHART 4
JUNE 23, 1987
Prepayment of interest on FMI Note
Millbank endorses FMI cheque for
$19,991,035
Cheque for $19,991,035
· Millbank receives
cheque for $19,991,035 from FMI by way of prepayment of interest
demanded by Millbank on the FMI Note.
· Millbank endorses
FMI's cheque for $19,991,035 to FMCC in reduction of the
principal amount of Loan #1 from $193,913,043 to $173,922,008 as
a condition of Loan #1.
·
CHART 5
JUNE 24, 1987
Royal Scot Resources Ltd. becomes
new limited partner in Millbank
ROYAL SCOT
|
(2)
Promissory note for
20,000
|
(1)
Limited
partnership
interest in
Millbank
100%
100%
General
Partner
Limited Partner
(.01%)
(99.99%)
(1) Royal Scot
acquires 722538's limited partnership interest in
Millbank.
(2) Royal Scot gives
722538 a promissory note for $20,000.
CHART 6
JUNE 25, 1987
Millbank's first fiscal year-end
$1,938 (.01% of net
income)
$19,379,502 (99.99% of net
income)
$19,381,440 (100% of net income)
· The
first fiscal year-end of June 25, 1987 of Millbank is
declared.
·
Millbank's net income for tax purposes of $19,381,440 was
calculated, as follows:
Prepaid
interest
$19,991,035
Less: 2 days' interest
on Loan #1
$109,595
Loan arrangement fee on
Loan
#1
500,000
609,595
$19,381,440
·
$1,938 of Millbank's net income for tax purposes was
allocated to 722537 and $19,379,502 to Royal Scot.
Royal Scot offset its $19,379,502 share of Millbank's
net income allocation by its noncapital losses and Canadian
Exploration Expenses.CHART 7
JUNE 30, 1987
722537 and Royal Scot cease to be partners in
Millbank
(1) general
(2) $1.00 (3) limited
(4)
promissory
partnership
partnership
notes for
interest
interest
$20,000 and
$2,000,000
General
Partner
Limited Partner
(0.01%)
(99.99%)
(1) 722537 sells its
0.01% general partnership interest in Millbank to 722539 for
$1.00.
(2) 722537 receives
$1.00.
(3) Royal Scot sells
its limited partnership interest in Millbank to 722540.
(4) Royal Scot
receives promissory notes for $20,000 and $2,000,000.
CHART 8
JUNE 30, 1987
Novopharm's acquisition of 722539 and
722540
100%
100%
·
Novopharm acquires from Royal Scot the shares of 722539 and
acquired from 722539 the shares of 722540 for $10.00 each.
CHART 9
JUNE 30, 1987
Novopharm's purchase of $2,000,000
promissory note
(2) Novopharm's
promissory
(1) 722540's promissory
note for
$2,000,000
note for $2,000,000
(3) $2,000,000 debt
owing
(3)
(4) Conversion of 722540's
by 722540 to
Novopharm
debt owing by 722540 to
Novopharm into share
equity on July 18, 1988
(1) Novopharm
purchases Royal Scot's $2,000,000 promissory note issued by
722540.
(2) Novopharm gives
Royal Scot its own promissory note for $2,000,000 as
consideration. The payment of this promissory note is
conditional, as provided by Exhibit R-1, (107), Schedule
"A".
(3) 722540 owes
Novopharm $2,000,000 as a result of (1) and (2), above.
(4) Novopharm
converts 722540's debt of $2,000,000 owing to it into share
equity of 722540 on July 18, 1988.
CHART 10
JUNE 30, 1987
The payment of the $20,000 promissory note
(3) Royal Scot endorses
Novopharm's cheque
(1) Cheque for
$20,000 for
share subscription
100%
100%
(2) 722540 endorses
Novopharm's cheque
for $20,000
(1) Novopharm issues
a cheque for $20,000 to 722540 for the purchase of treasury
shares.
(2) 722540 endorses
the $20,000 cheque to Royal Scot in payment of its promissory
note of $20,000 owing to Royal Scot (see Chart 7).
(3) Royal Scot
endorses the $20,000 cheque to 722538 to pay off its promissory
note of $20,000 (see Chart 5).
CHART 11
JUNE 30, 1987
Loan #2
(1) Cheque for
$173,922,008
(4) Endorsement of FMCC to pay
off Loan #1. Millbank
pledge
FMI Note of $193,913,043
as
security for Loan #2.
(2) Endorsement of FMCC
cheque for $173,922,008
(3) Endorsement of FMCC
cheque for $173,922,008
(1) FMCC issues a
cheque for $173,922,008 to Novopharm as proceeds of Loan #2, at
11.5% p.a. A loan arrangement fee of $500,000 is paid by
Novopharm to FMCC.
(2) Novopharm
endorses FMCC cheque for $173,922,008 to 722540 for share
subscription.
(3) 722540 endorses
FMCC cheque for $173,922,008 to Millbank as a capital
contribution.
(4) Millbank
endorses FMCC cheque for $173,922,008 to FMCC to repay balance of
Loan #1 of $173,922,008. Millbank pledges the FMI Note for
$193,913,043 as security for Loan #2.
CHART 12
JUNE 30, 1987
Payment of loan arrangement fee on Loan #1
(3) Cheque for $500,000 for
payment of
loan
arrangement fee on Loan #1
(1) Cheque for $500,000 for
treasury
shares
(2) Cheque for $500,000 for
capital
contribution
(1) Novopharm issues
cheque for $500,000 to 722540 for treasury shares.
(2) Millbank
receives a cheque for $500,000 from 722540 for capital
contribution.
(3) FMCC receives a
cheque for $500,000 from Millbank for payment of loan arrangement
fee on Loan #1.
CHART 13
JUNE 23, 1988
Amount owing on Loan #1 and #2 and on the FMI
Note
(1) $193,913,043
Novopharm
|
(3) $193,539,458
|
(1) FMI owes
Millbank $193,913,043 as principal on the FMI Note.
(2) Millbank owes
FMCC $383,581 as interest on Loan #1.
(3) Novopharm owes
FMCC on Loan #2:
•
principal
$173,922,008
•
interest
19,617,450
$193,539,458
CHART 14
JUNE 23, 1988
Loan #2 and the FMI Note mature
(1) Cheque
for
$193,913,043
(2) Endorsement of
cheque (3)
Endorsement of
$193,529,462
cheque for
$193,529,462
Novopharm
|
(4) Cheque for $9,996
|
(1) FMI issues a
cheque for $193,529,462 to 722540, (the proceeds of the FMI note
of $193,913,043 less $383,581 of interest owing by Millbank to
FMCC).
(2) 722540 endorses
the $193,529,462 FMI cheque to Novopharm.
(3) Novopharm
endorses the $193,529,462 FMI cheque to FMCC.
(4) Novopharm issues
a cheque of $9,996 to FMCC, the difference between the total
amount of $193,539,458 owed to FMCC (Chart 13) and the
$193,529,462 FMI net cheque endorsed to FMCC.
CHART 15
JUNE 23, 1988
Flow of funds
FMI owes Millbank on FMI
Note
$193,913,043
Less: Millbank owes interest to
FMCC on Loan
#1
(383,581)
FMI net cheque to Millbank,
endorsed to 722540, endorsed
to Novopharm, endorsed to FMCC
to pay principal and interest on Loan
#2
193,529,462
Novopharm owes FMCC:
•
Principal on Loan
#2
$173,922,008
•
Interest on Loan
#2
19,617,450
193,539,458
Shortfall owed by Novopharm
to
FMCC
(9,996)
Paid by Novopharm to
FMCC
9,996
0
CHART 16
June 30, 1987 - March 4, 1988
Novopharm's Cash Outlays
(2)
722539
|
(1)
|
NOVOPHARM
|
(7)
(6)
(9)
|
(3) (4) (8)
722540
|
(6)
|
Laventhol & Horwath
|
(4)
(5)
(4)
(1) Novopharm pays
722539 for the shares of 722540
on June 30,
1987
$ 10
(2) Novopharm pays
Royal Scot for shares of 722539
on June 30,
1987
10
Forward
$
20
Brought
Forward
$
20
(3) Novopharm
subscribes for treasury shares of
722540
20,000
on June 30,
1987
(4) Novopharm funds
the payment by Millbank of the
loan arrangement fee on Loan #1 to FMCC on
June 30,
1987
500,000
(5) Novopharm pays
the loan arrangement fee on Loan #2
to FMCC on June 30,
1987
500,000
(6) Novopharm pays
legal fees to Fogler, Rubinoff on
August 10,
1987
75,550
(7) Novopharm pays
Royal Scot on January 26,
1988
2,000,000
(8) Novopharm pays
consulting fees to Laventhol &
Horwath on August 13,
1987
200,000
(9) Novopharm pays
finder's fee to Westmorland on
March 4,
1988
200,000
(10) Novopharm pays
additional interest to FMCC on
repayment of Loan #2 on June 23,
1988
9,996
Total cash
outlays
$ 3,505,566
COURT FILE
NO.:
98-2182(IT)G and 98-2422(IT)G
STYLE OF
CAUSE:
722540 Ontario Inc. and Novopharm Limited and Her Majesty the
Queen
PLACE OF
HEARING:
Toronto, Ontario and Vancouver,
British Columbia
DATE OF
HEARING:
June 19, 20, 21 and 23, 2000,
July 7 and 19, 2000
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
BY:
The Honourable Judge E.A. Bowie
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
December 20, 2001
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
Appellant:
Peter K. Guselle & Kay W. Leung
Counsel for the
Respondent:
Luther P. Chambers, Q.C.
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the
Appellant:
Name:
Peter K. Guselle
Firm:
Fogler, Rubinoff
For the
Respondent:
Morris Rosenberg
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa, Canada
98-2182(IT)G
BETWEEN:
722540 ONTARIO INC.,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Appeals heard on common evidence with the
appeals of Novopharm Limited (98-2422(IT)G) on June
19, 20, 21 and 23, 2000, at Toronto, Ontario, July 7, 2000, at
Vancouver, British Columbia and July 19, 2000, at Toronto,
Ontario, by
the Honourable Judge E.A. Bowie
Appearances
Counsel for the
Appellant: Peter
K. Guselle and Kay W. Leung
Counsel for the Respondent: Luther P.
Chambers, Q.C.
JUDGMENT
The
appeals from assessments of tax made under the Income Tax
Act for the 1988, 1990 and 1991 taxation years are
dismissed.
The Respondent is entitled to one set of costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 20th day of December, 2001.
J.T.C.C.