Stone
J.A.:—
This
section
28
application
attacks
a
judgment
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
of
January
30,
1995.
The
issue
before
the
Tax
Court
was
whether
the
applicant
was
entitled
in
his
1990
and
1991
taxation
years,
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1985,
c.
1
(5th
Supp.)
(the
“Act”),
to
deduct
from
his
income
rental
losses
sustained
by
him
from
the
ownership
of
two
condominium
units
located
at
the
Hemlock
Valley
Recreation
resort
in
British
Columbia.
The
units
were
purchased
in
1980
with
a
view
to
earning
rental
income.
In
none
of
the
years
subsequent
to
their
purchase
was
any
profit
derived
from
the
units.
Between
1988
and
1992,
the
losses
incurred
ranged
from
$12,200
to
$33,600.
In
1990
and
1991,
the
losses
amounted
to
$19,600
and
$15,100
respectively.
Rental
income
in
this
five-year
period
never
exceeded
$2600
per
annum
while
expenses
were
never
less
than
$13,000
per
annum.
Both
units
were
sold
at
a
loss
—
one
in
1992
and
the
other
in
1995.
The
learned
Tax
Court
judge
determined
that
the
losses
were
not
deductible
in
either
of
the
years
in
question
because,
on
the
evidence,
the
applicant
had
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
It
is
perhaps
necessary
to
observe
that
a
taxpayer
who
is
able
to
deduct
losses
indefinitely
where
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
from
a
property
business
exists,
is,
in
effect,
having
those
losses
subsidized
by
the
public
at
large.
There
was
evidence
before
the
Tax
Court
judge
to
the
effect
that
from
the
beginning
the
applicant
had
anticipated
the
resort
development
becoming
a
year-round
operation
rather
than
only
a
winter
skiing
resort.
In
the
face
of
that
evidence
and
the
other
evidence
that
was
before
her,
the
Tax
Court
judge
found,
at
page
4:
My
analysis
of
the
whole
situation
is
that
while
Mr.
Poetker
acted
reasonably
with
a
reasonable
plan
and
approach
when
he
acquired
these
two
units
in
1980,
their
profitability
was,
and
remained,
fundamentally
locked
into
the
resort
being
a
year-round
facility,
a
condition
over
which
he
had
absolutely
no
control.
What
he
did
decide
to
do
was
to
continue
his
high
hopes
that
successive
owner/developers
would
keep
their
promises
in
this
respect.
In
concluding
that
the
applicant
had
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
in
the
taxation
years
in
question,
the
Tax
Court
judge
had
regard
to
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Moldowan
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Moldoxvan
v.
The
Queen),
[1978]
1
S.C.R.
480,
[1977]
C.T.C.
310,
77
D.T.C.
5213
and
to
subsequent
cases.
We
are
unable
to
distinguish
the
present
case
from
that
which
was
decided
by
the
majority
of
this
Court
in
Landry
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Landry
v.
The
Queen),
[1995]
2
C.T.C.
3,
94
D.T.C.
6624
(F.C.A.).
It
was
there
determined
that
the
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
test
was
applicable.
We
do
not
read
the
majority
decision
as
founded
upon
the
presence
of
some
personal
benefit
element
in
the
taxpayer’s
business
activity.
We
are
all
of
the
view,
therefore,
that
the
application
must
fail.
In
our
view,
it
has
not
been
demonstrated
that
the
Tax
Court
judge
made
any
reviewable
error
either
in
her
appreciation
of
the
evidence
or
the
applicable
law.
Accordingly,
the
section
28
application
will
be
dismissed.
Application
dismissed.