Décary
J.A.:—The
issue
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
was
whether
the
applicant
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
during
the
1987
and
1988
taxation
years
from
carrying
on
his
profession,
the
practice
of
law,
so
that
he
could
deduct
the
losses
incurred
in
his
practice
from
the
income
he
received
from
other
sources.
After
examining
the
evidence,
Judge
Garon
reached
the
following
conclusion:
From
the
evidence
as
a
whole
it
seems
clear
that,
on
an
objective
view
of
the
facts,
the
appellant
did
not
have
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
in
the
two
years
in
question
in
light
of
the
principles
stated
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
notorious
decision
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
[1978]
1
S.C.R.
480,
[1977]
C.T.C.
310,
77
D.T.C.
5213.
He
added:
I
see
no
reason
why
the
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
test
should
not
apply
to
any
profession,
liberal
or
otherwise,
any
occupation
or
activity
which
purports
to
be
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
a
business.
As
I
see
it,
the
reasonable
expectation
of
a
profit
is
a
general
rule
applicable
to
any
activity
which
may
give
rise
to
business
income.
The
courts
have
in
fact
used
this
test
in
various
types
of
factual
situations.
[Official
translation.]
These
comments
and
conclusions
appear
to
me
to
be
immune
to
any
criticism
and
are
not
in
any
way
open
to
judicial
review.
It
is
possible
for
someone,
with
the
best
will
in
the
world,
to
practise
an
activity
that
takes
all
his
or
her
time
and
that
activity
may
still
not
be
a
business
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
’’Act”).
For
the
purposes
of
determining
whether
there
is
a
source
of
income,
only
an
activity
that
is
profitable
or
that
is
carried
on
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
is
a
business.
If
one
thing
is
clear
in
what
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
said
in
Moldowan,
it
is
the
passage
in
which
Mr.
Justice
Dickson,
as
he
then
was,
summarized
the
present
state
of
the
law
with
respect
to
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
(at
S.C.R.
485-86,
C.T.C.
313-14,
D.T.C.
5215):
Although
originally
disputed,
it
is
now
accepted
that
in
order
to
have
a
"source
of
income"
the
taxpayer
must
have
a
profit
or
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit....
There
is
a
vast
case
literature
on
what
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
means
and
it
is
by
no
means
entirely
consistent.
In
my
view,
whether
a
taxpayer
has
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
is
an
objective
determination
to
be
made
from
all
of
the
facts.
The
following
criteria
should
be
considered:
the
profit
and
loss
experience
in
past
years,
the
taxpayer’s
training,
the
taxpayer’s
intended
course
of
action,
the
capability
of
the
venture
as
capitalized
to
show
a
profit
after
charging
capital
cost
allowance.
The
list
is
not
intended
to
be
exhaustive.
The
factors
will
differ
with
the
nature
and
extent
of
the
undertaking....
It
would
be
incorrect
to
try
to
reduce
the
scope
of
this
passage
to
include
only
farm
losses
such
as
were
in
issue
in
Moldowan.
Mr.
Justice
Dickson
was
referring
to
the
general
law
as
it
stood,
before
undertaking
a
more
specific
analysis
of
the
case
of
farm
losses,
and
he
was
careful
to
specify
that
the
factors
he
identified
were
not
exhaustive
and
would
vary
depending
on
the
nature
and
size
of
the
business.
There
comes
a
time
in
the
life
of
any
business
operating
at
a
deficit
when
the
Minister
must
be
able
to
determine
objectively,
after
giving
someone
a
head
start
for
a
number
of
years,
as
the
case
may
be,
that
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
has
turned
into
an
impossible
dream.
As
Mr.
Justice
Pigeon
noted
in
Deputy
Minister
of
Revenue
(Que).
v.
Lipson,
[1979]
1
S.C.R.
833,
[1979]
C.T.C.
247,
at
page
839
(C.T.C.
250):
The
only
evidence
submitted
was
as
to
the
expectations
they
had
on
signing
the
lease,
but
these
expectations
were
not
realized,
and
the
factors
which
caused
the
losses
in
the
first
three
years
were
still
present
when
the
lease
was
renewed.
No
one
could
therefore
imagine
that
a
loss
would
not
be
incurred....
Apart
from
the
tests
set
out
by
Mr.
Justice
Dickson,
the
tests
that
have
been
applied
in
the
case
law
to
date
in
order
to
determine
whether
there
was
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
include
the
following:
the
time
required
to
make
an
activity
of
this
nature
profitable,
the
presence
of
the
necessary
ingredients
for
profits
ultimately
to
be
earned,
the
profit
and
loss
situation
for
the
years
subsequent
to
the
years
in
issue,
the
number
of
consecutive
years
during
which
losses
were
incurred,
the
increase
in
expenses
and
decrease
in
income
in
the
course
of
the
relevant
periods,
the
persistence
of
the
factors
causing
the
losses,
the
absence
of
planning,
and
failure
to
adjust.
Moreover,
it
is
apparent
from
these
decisions
that
the
taxpayer’s
good
faith
and
reputation,
the
quality
of
the
results
obtained
and
the
time
and
energy
devoted
are
not
in
themselves
sufficient
to
turn
the
activity
carried
on
into
a
business.
These
comments
by
Chief
Justice
Couture
in
Zolis
at
page
185
(C.T.C.
2201)
appear
to
me
to
provide
a
good
summary
of
the
approach
that
should
be
taken
by
a
judge
who
must
determine
whether
there
is
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit:
The
aspirations
or
ambitions
that
a
taxpayer
may
have
entertained
in
respect
of
an
activity
in
which
he
was
engaged
are
not
alone
sufficient
to
bring
it
within
the
strict
meaning
of
business
in
the
relevant
legislation
no
matter
how
genuine
they
might
have
been.
What
must
be
examined
apart
from
the
structural
features
of
the
undertaking
is
the
manner
in
which
it
is
carried
on
or
operated
by
the
taxpayer
and
from
the
interplay
of
these
elements
a
determination
made
whether
it
is
capable
of
yielding
a
profit
in
due
course.
The
Court
has
to
deal
with
concrete
facts
and
from
those
facts
alone
assess
the
validity
of
the
contention
of
the
existence
of
a
business
for
the
purpose
of
the
Act.
The
profession
of
lawyer
is
not
exempt
from
these
rules,
although
the
very
nature
of
that
profession
suggests
that
the
tests
that
may
have
been
developed
for
businesses
which
are,
for
example,
entirely
commercial
in
nature
should
not
be
blindly
applied.
Thus
the
test
of
the
profit
and
loss
Situation
must
take
into
account
certain
forms
of
billing
that
are
undoubtedly
unique
to
the
profession
of
lawyer;
I
am
thinking
specifically
of
fees
the
amount
of
which
will
depend
on
whether
there
is
ultimate
victory
or
which
are
expressed
as
a
percentage
of
the
amount
ultimately
obtained.
Certainly
the
services
rendered
by
a
lawyer
are
not
always
as
easily
and
quickly
converted
into
cash
as
in
other
fields
and
losses
incurred
in
a
year
may
conceal
short-,
medium-
and
long-term
income.
What
do
we
have
in
this
case,
when
we
examine
the
sparse
and
confused
evidence
offered
by
the
applicant?
The
applicant
returned
to
the
practice
of
law
in
1979,
at
the
age
of
71
years,
after
a
23
year
interruption
during
which
he
worked
as
an
impresario
for
various
artists.
He
started
over
in
1979
as
he
had
started
out
in
1936,
without
adjusting
his
method
of
practice
to
the
new
facts
of
life,
without
planning
a
budget,
without
keeping
billings
or
books
of
account,
without
looking
for
clients
other
than
by
publishing
his
name
in
the
telephone
directory,
and
not
billing
or
billing
small
amounts
where
the
case
was
unsuccessful.
The
evidence
does
not
even
tell
us
whether
he
saw
fit
to
enrol
in
refresher
courses.
He
identified
only
two
clients
over
the
period
from
1979
to
1992;
one
large
client,
for
which
he
did
a
lot
of
work,
and
which
allegedly
owes
him
some
$100,000
(we
do
not
know
at
what
point
he
earned
these
fees,
in
the
course
of
this
period
which
stretched
over
14
years,
and
we
have
no
information
from
which
we
could
determine
how
and
why
the
appellant
arrived
at
that
amount)
but
which
we
know
has
serious
financial
problems;
and
a
nephew,
to
whom
he
rendered
services
of
which
we
do
not
know
the
nature
or
the
value.
He
mentioned
other
persons
he
says
consulted
him,
but
here
again
we
know
nothing
about
them,
we
know
nothing
about
the
services
allegedly
rendered
to
them
and
we
do
not
know
the
value,
if
any,
of
those
services.
He
says
that
some
cases
are
awaiting
judgments
from
the
Court
of
Appeal,
but
we
do
not
know
what
they
are
about,
we
do
not
know
the
amounts
involved
and
we
do
not
know
their
chances
of
success.
It
is
not
surprising,
in
the
circumstances,
that
during
the
eight
years
(1979-86)
preceding
the
period
in
issue
(1987-88),
as
well
as
the
four
years
(1989-92)
that
followed
that
period,
year
after
year,
the
applicant
suffered
losses
carrying
on
his
professional
activities,
as
he
himself
admitted.
For
example,
the
evidence
established
that
the
amount
of
the
losses
claimed
rose
from
$10,169
in
1986
to
$23,140
in
1987,
$31,137
in
1988
and
$38,136
in
1989,
while
gross
income
fell
from
$2,975
in
1986
to
$2,100
in
1987,
$2,000
in
1988
and
$2,020
in
1989.
Even
the
$100,000
allegedly
owing
to
him
by
his
principal
client
would
not
eclipse
the
total
amount
of
the
losses
incurred
from
1986
to
1989.
It
should
be
noted
that
the
Minister
did
not
decide
to
intervene
until
1989,
when
gross
income
was
stagnant
and
the
losses
claimed
were
mounting
considerably.
In
short,
the
applicant,
who
candidly
acknowledged
that
he
had
not
changed
his
way
of
practising
since
1936,
incurred
loss
upon
loss,
and
the
losses
grew
each
year.
He
had
no
plan
for
operating
or
for
adapting,
and
no
alternative
plan.
He
made
no
effort
to
alter
a
way
of
practising
which,
to
all
appearances,
had
been
overtaken
by
time
and
events
and
which,
on
the
evidence,
was
not
leading
and
could
not
lead
anywhere.
A
lawyer
may
indeed
operate
at
a
loss
for
a
number
of
years,
while
maintaining
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
within
the
meaning
of
the
case
law.
However,
he
must
still
find
some
way
of
succeeding
or
at
least
some
bases
for
having
an
objective
expectation
of
succeeding
some
day.
I
do
not
believe
that
in
concluding
that
the
applicant,
on
whom
the
burden
of
proof
rested,
’’was
unable
to
show
realistically
that
he
expected
to
derive
income
from
his
professional
activities
during
the
period
at
issue”
Judge
Garon
committed
any
error
which
is
subject
to
judicial
review.
I
doubt
that
he
could
have
concluded
otherwise,
but
regardless
of
whether
he
could,
I
see
nothing
unreasonable
in
the
conclusion
he
drew
after
examining
the
evidence
as
a
whole.
At
the
hearing,
counsel
for
the
applicant
referred
the
Court
to
only
two
decisions:
the
decision
of
the
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
in
Québec
(Sous-
ministre
du
Revenu)
v.
Comtois,
[1988]
R.D.F.Q.
199
(Que.
C.A.),
affirming
[1983]
R.D.F.Q.
98
(P.C.)
and
the
decision
of
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
of
the
Trial
Division
of
this
Court
in
Tobias
v.
The
Queen,
[1978]
C.T.C.
113,
78
D.T.C.
6028.
Neither
of
these
decisions
is
of
any
assistance
to
the
applicant.
In
Comtois,
the
Dean
of
the
Faculty
of
Law
of
the
Université
de
Montréal,
who
was
a
notary
by
profession,
carried
on
a
small
practice
in
his
home.
He
had
incurred
losses
(the
amount
of
which
is
not
given
in
the
judgment)
from
1973
to
1976,
and
deduction
of
business
losses
of
$4,649
for
1978
(fees
of
$9,993
and
expenses
of
$14,642)
had
been
disallowed.
The
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
stated
that
it
was
bound
by
the
decision
of
the
trial
judge
who
had
found
for
Dean
Comtois,
as
follows
(at
[1988]
R.D.F.Q.
199
at
page
201,
as
per
Jacques
J.
A.):
The
Court
of
Appeal
is
not
to
substitute
its
own
interpretation
of
the
facts
when
no
rule
of
law
has
been
violated
by
the
trial
judge,
or
when
the
trial
judge’s
interpretation
of
the
evidence
is
reasonable....
I
would
add,
however,
that
the
trial
judge’s
interpretation
lies
on
the
borderline
of
what
may
be
accepted
as
business
losses
and
reasonable
expenses
"in
order
to
make
a
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit”.
[Translation.]
If,
taking
the
extreme
position,
the
case
at
bar
is
a
borderline
case,
it
is
not
for
me
any
more
than
it
was
for
the
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
in
Comtois
to
substitute
my
opinion
for
that
of
the
trial
judge.
In
Tobias
the
issue
was
the
particularly
well-documented
search
for
a
treasure
and
the
evidence
established
that
the
taxpayer
hoped
to
succeed,
where
others
before
him
had
failed,
inter
alia
because
he
had
more
modern
methods
and
equipment.
If
indeed
that
decision
dealt
with
reasonable
expectation
of
profit,
I
do
not
see
its
relevance
in
this
case,
other
than
that
it
establishes
the
point
to
which
planning
and
adjustment
of
working
methods
are
important
factors
in
determining
whether
there
is
such
an
expectation.
The
application
for
judicial
review
should
be
dismissed.
Marceau
J.A.
(dissenting):—I
regret
that
I
cannot
concur
in
the
opinion
of
my
colleague
Décary
J.A.
On
the
contrary,
I
believe
that
this
application
for
judicial
review
is
sound
and
should
succeed.
The
reason
why
I
would
like
to
express
my
disagreement,
with
respect,
but
with
some
insistence,
is
that
the
scope
of
the
decision
a
quo
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
the
first
of
its
kind
in
the
case
law,
to
my
knowledge,
appears
to
greatly
exceed
the
Specific
case
in
issue
here.
I
am
of
course
not
disputing
that
the
trial
judge
and
my
colleague
have
correctly
formulated
the
question
that
must
ultimately
be
resolved:
did
the
applicant
practise
his
profession
as
a
lawyer
in
1987
and
1988
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit?
I
believe,
however,
that
it
is
important
not
to
forget
how
that
question
arises.
Naturally,
we
must
start
from
the
basic
rule
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
’’Act”)
which
provides
that
a
taxpayer
is
taxed
in
a
year
on
his
or
her
total
income
from
all
sources,
less
losses
from
all
his
or
her
sources
of
income.
Accordingly,
under
the
general
scheme
of
the
Act,
a
source
of
income
to
a
taxpayer
is
a
source
of
income,
despite
the
fact
that
he
or
she
may
have
suffered
a
loss
during
the
year,
and
all
reasonable
expenses
attaching
to
one
of
the
taxpayer’s
sources
of
income
are
deductible
from
his
or
her
total
income.
As
a
result,
any
activity
carried
on
by
a
taxpayer
which
is
undertaken
not
solely
for
his
or
her
personal
benefit
but
with
the
aim
and
expectation-reasonable,
the
courts
have
held-of
earning
a
profit
therefrom
will
be
a
source
of
income
to
the
taxpayer
and
any
normal
expenses
resulting
from
that
activity
will
be
deductible.
The
expenses
that
a
taxpayer
may
not
deduct
are
those
expenses
that
are
for
personal
or
living
expenses
(cf.
section
3,
paragraph
18(1
)(h),
subsection
248(1)).
In
his
income
tax
return
for
each
of
the
two
years
in
issue
the
appellant
had
included
in
his
total
income
the
fees
he
earned
as
a
lawyer,
but
in
determining
his
taxable
income
he
had
also
deducted
all
the
expenses
that
resulted
from
the
practise
of
his
profession.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
expenses,
in
so
far
as
they
exceeded
income,
not
because
they
could
be
connected
only
artificially
to
the
practice
or
because
they
seemed
excessive,
but
because
the
expenses
were
not
incurred
by
him
with
the
aim
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
earning
a
profit.
The
Minister
contended
that
they
were
non-deductible
personal
expenses.
The
question
then
really
comes
down
to
deciding
whether
the
applicant
practised
his
profession
as
a
lawyer
during
the
two
years
in
issue
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
earning
a
profit.
However,
it
may
be
formulated
differently,
and
in
the
opposite
way,
and
it
then
takes
on
a
perhaps
more
striking
meaning:
did
the
appellant
incur
the
expenses
connected
with
the
practise
of
his
profession
at
a
time
when
he
knew
or
ought
to
have
known
that
he
had
no
possibility
of
earning
a
profit,
and
accordingly
solely
for
his
personal
benefit
and
as
a
’’hobby"?
We
should
also
note
immediately,
in
passing,
that
an
affirmative
response
to
the
question
necessarily
affects
all
expenses
and
not
only,
as
the
Minister’s
assessment
would
have
it,
those
in
excess
of
the
fees
earned.
I
am
of
course
also
not
disputing
the
accuracy
of
the
facts
set
out
by
my
colleague
to
explain
his
point
of
view.
However,
we
have
an
obvious
difference
of
opinion
with
respect
to
the
impact
of
those
facts,
and
this
is
why
I
would
like
to
give
a
quick
outline
of
the
fact
situation
as
a
whole,
as
it
is
established
by
the
evidence,
in
order
to
more
easily
identify
the
aspects
that
appear
to
me
to
be
most
significant.
During
the
two
years
in
issue,
1987
and
1988,
the
applicant
was
a
member
in
good
standing
of
the
Barreau
du
Québec
and
entitled
to
practise
the
profession
of
lawyer.
He
had
an
office
in
his
home,
used
the
services
of
a
special
telephone
system
and
an
agency
to
do
secretarial
work
and
was
protected
by
a
professional
liability
insurance
policy.
He
devoted
himself
full-time
to
his
practice
in
that
he
made
himself
entirely
available.
In
fact,
over
the
two
years,
he
rendered
professional
services
to
several
clients,
among
them
one
in
particular
which
was
caught
up
in
a
series
of
legal
difficulties
and
which
he
had
to
represent
on
numerous
occasions.
His
bookkeeping
and
billing
system
was
abbreviated,
but
it
was
the
same
as
he
had
always
had
since
his
first
years
n
practice.
Since
he
returned
to
the
practice
of
law
in
1979,
after
an
interruption
of
more
than
20
years,
he
had
not
succeeded
in
earning
an
annual
profit,
but
in
fact
he
had
several
accounts
receivable
and
certain
services
already
rendered
could
not
be
billed
for
some
time.
What
is
certain
is
that
in
1987
and
1988,
when
he
offered
his
services
as
a
lawyer
and
devoted
himself
to
the
practice
of
law
it
was
always
with
the
aim
and
expectation
of
earning
an
income
which
would
be
in
addition
to
his
investment
and
pension
income,
as
had
been
the
case
since
he
returned
and
as
is
moreover
still
the
case
today.
There
are
several
aspects
of
the
situation
that
emerges
from
these
facts
that
should
be
clearly
noted.
Here
we
have
an
activity
in
which
the
taxpayer,
whose
ability
to
work
is
not
diminished
by
any
physical
disability,
is
engaged
full-time,
not
in
any
subsidiary,
connected
or
secondary
manner.
(The
applicant
has
other
sources
of
income,
certainly,
since
we
are
talking
about
deductions,
but
not
because
of
parallel
activities,
since
that
other
income
was
rental
and
pension
income;
the
applicant
is
also
of
a
certain
age,
since
he
is
over
70
years
old,
but
there
is
nothing
to
suggest
that
his
physical
ability
has
diminished
especially.)
Also,
the
issue
is
practising
a
profession,
not
carrying
on
a
business
or
a
commercial
activity
where
the
possibility
of
profit
depends
directly
and
necessarily
on
a
physical
base
and
underlying
infrastructure.
The
profession
in
question
is
that
of
lawyer,
the
monetary
success
of
which
depends
on
the
personal
aptitudes
and
qualities
of
the
person
practising
it,
undoubtedly,
but
also
on
favourable
circumstances
which
are
often
unforeseen
and
uncertain
and
which
may
almost
always
arise.
Let
us
now
come
to
the
decision
a
quo.
The
answer
given
by
the
trial
judge
to
the
question
posed
is
thus
that
during
the
years
in
issue
the
applicant,
contrary
to
what
he
may
have
thought
in
good
faith,
had
no
reasonable
expectation
of
earning
a
profit
from
the
practise
of
his
profession
as
a
lawyer,
and
accordingly
the
Minister
was
correct
to
consider
these
expenses,
for
renting
an
office,
secretarial
services,
transportation
and
advertising,
which
he
incurred
in
order
to
maintain
his
practice,
as
reasonable
as
they
may
have
been,
to
have
been
merely
non-deductible
personal
or
living
expenses.
The
only
passage
of
his
reasons
in
which
the
judge
attempts
to
explain
his
conclusion
comes
after
a
brief
statement
of
the
facts
and
a
review
of
some
of
the
allegations
in
the
Minister’s
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
and
is
as
follows:
It
was
established
that
in
the
eight
years
preceding
the
period
at
issue
as
well
as
the
four
years
following
it,
the
appellant
sustained
large
losses
in
the
pursuit
of
his
professional
activities
as
a
lawyer.
From
the
evidence
as
a
whole
it
seems
clear
that,
on
an
objective
view
of
the
facts,
the
appellant
did
not
have
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
in
the
two
years
in
question
in
light
of
the
principles
stated
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
notorious
decision
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
[[1978]
1
S.C.R.
480,
[1977]
C.T.C.
310,
77
D.T.C.
5213].
[Official
Translation.]
The
reason
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
this
decision
cannot
stand
is
not
solely
because
the
judge’s
conclusion
does
not
appear
to
me
to
be
validly
Supported
by
the
evidence;
it
is
because
it
does
not
seem
to
me
to
have
been
reached
as
the
Act
intended.
What
I
see
are
two
errors
of
law
in
the
judge’s
approach
and
analysis.
The
first
is
that
in
trying
to
answer
the
question
put
to
him,
the
judge
failed
to
take
into
account
all
the
factors
before
him;
this
was
contrary
to
the
objective
assessment
he
was
required
to
make
and
precisely
contrary
to
what
the
Supreme
Court
said
in
Moldowan,
to
which
he
referred.
While
he
stated
that
he
based
his
decision
on
the
whole
of
the
evidence
and
knew
the
principles
laid
down
in
Mo
Ido
wan,
that
statement,
I
repeat
with
respect,
appears
to
me
to
be
gratuitous.
The
only
fact
on
which
he
specifically
relied
was
the
series
of
years
with
no
profit.
Certainly,
while
this
is
a
significant
fact,
a
factor
that
must
be
considered,
there
is
no
doubt
that
without
the
support
of
other
significant
facts
it
cannot
be
truly
decisive.
The
judge
did
not
refer
expressly
to
any
other
fact,
and
moreover,
I
believe
that
there
was
none.
I
alluded
directly
to
this
in
my
earlier
comments
on
the
facts.
I
do
not
believe
that
the
mere
age
of
a
person
whose
physical
or
mental
powers
are
not
diminished,
or
a
return
to
practice
after
a
prolonged
absence,
is
a
fact
that
can
support
the
conclusion;
moreover,
it
is
not
rare
for
lawyers
to
return
to
practice
after
a
long
absence
in
the
public
service
or
elsewhere.
Nor
do
I
believe
that
the
use
of
billing
or
bookkeeping
methods
that
were
entirely
up-to-date
30
years
ago
for
lawyers
practising
alone,
but
which
have
become
somewhat
outmoded
today,
when
practitioners
are
almost
always
in
partnerships,
is
a
fact
that
can
support
the
conclusion.
Finally,
I
do
not
believe
that
examination
of
annual
balance
sheets
at
this
point,
when
the
issue
is
not
to
determine
whether
or
not
the
expenses
were
excessive,
but
solely
to
determine
whether
there
was
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit,
can
support
the
conclusion.
It
seems
to
me
that,
in
the
case
of
a
lawyer,
basing
a
conclusion
on
the
single
factor
of
the
years
without
profit
is
a
particularly
poor
response
to
the
need
for
objective
examination
in
that
it
amounts
to
giving
effect
to
a
judgment
of
aptitude
made
retroactively
on
the
basis
of
negative
results.
In
the
case
of
a
business
or
a
commercial
activity
it
may
perhaps
be
concluded
from
the
history
of
losses
that
the
business
or
activity
does
not
in
itself
present
any
possibility
of
profit.
However,
in
the
case
of
the
practise
of
the
profession
of
lawyer
(like
the
practise
of
many
other
professions,
artists
being
one
example),
in
order
to
deduce
from
a
series
of
years
with
losses
that
it
would
be
unreasonable
to
think
that
the
years
to
come
might
be
different
the
lack
of
success
would
have
to
be
linked
directly
with
the
individual’s
personal
lack
of
aptitude,
of
the
aptitude
for
properly
carrying
out
the
role
of
lawyer
or
attracting
clients.
In
my
view,
this
is
certainly
not
the
sort
of
assessment
that
the
Act
intended
to
entrust
to
the
Minister.
The
second
error
of
law
that
the
judge
committed,
in
my
opinion,
was
to
take
into
consideration
the
lack
of
profit
during
the
four
years
following
the
period
in
issue.
In
his
reasons,
the
judge
even
gave
a
lengthy
description
of
the
taxpayer’s
income
and
expenses
statement
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
on
December
31,
1990.
What
we
are
trying
to
determine
is
whether,
in
1987
and
1988,
the
applicant
was
practising
his
profession
as
a
lawyer
with
the
reasonable
expectation
of
making
a
profit.
It
is
hard
to
see
what
the
results
of
subsequent
years
could
tell
us
about
this,
unless
it
were
an
attempt
to
obtain
even
better
confirmation
of
a
judgment
of
personal
lack
of
aptitude.
I
would
repeat,
however,
that
in
my
opinion
Parliament
certainly
did
not
intend
its
tax
legislation
to
enable
the
Minister
to
disapprove
of
the
manner
in
which
a
taxpayer
practised
a
particular
liberal
profession
on
the
ground
of
incompetence
or
personal
lack
of
aptitude.
I
therefore
believe
that
the
judge
did
not
do
the
analysis
he
was
required
to
do
in
order
to
answer
the
question
put
to
him
in
the
manner
required
by
the
Act.
Accordingly,
his
conclusion
cannot
stand.
Moreover,
that
conclusion
in
itself
seems
to
me
to
be
difficult
to
accept,
and
for
that
reason
I
contend,
even
though
the
applicant
had
the
burden
of
proof,
that
since
the
allegation
was
made
by
the
Minister,
the
facts
must
be
taken
as
speaking
for
themselves:
I
find
it
hard
to
see
how
it
could
be
unreasonable
for
a
lawyer
in
good
physical
health
to
expect
to
make
a
profit
from
practising
his
profession,
even
by
making
himself
completely
available
to
his
potential
clients
after
securing
all
the
tools
that
he
may
need;
I
admit
that
I
find
it
just
as
hard
to
see
how
a
lawyer
could
devote
himself
full-time
to
the
practice
of
law
simply
to
pass
the
time,
for
his
own
pleasure.
I
would
allow
the
application
and
I
would
return
the
matter
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
for
reconsideration
in
order
to
give
effect
to
these
reasons.
Application
dismissed.