Bonner,
T.C.J.:—The
appellant
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
1981
and
1983
taxation
years
and
from
a
determination
of
a
loss
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1982
taxation
year.
In
making
the
assessments
and
the
determination
the
respondent
disallowed
the
deduction
of
interest
on
borrowed
money
which
the
appellant
used
initially
at
least
to
acquire
newly
issued
shares
in
a
company
which
was
already
its
wholly
owned
subsidiary.
That
company,
Dabil
Investments
Limited
(hereinafter
"Dabil")
was
then
wound
up
and
its
assets
were
distributed
to
the
appellant.
Its
only
asset
of
any
significance
was
a
parcel
of
one
hundred
acres
of
land
located
in
Smith
Township
just
north
of
Peterborough.
Dabil
bought
the
land
in
1973
for
the
purpose
of
eventual
development.
It
was
the
appellant's
position
that
it
was
entitled
by
virtue
of
paragraph
20(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
("Act")
to
deduct
the
interest
on
the
borrowed
money.
Paragraph
20(1)(c)
provides:
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:
an
amount
paid
in
the
year
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
year.
.
.
pursuant
to
a
legal
obligation
to
pay
interest
on
(i)
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property
....
The
appellant
asserted
that
the
borrowed
money
was
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
the
common
shares
of
Dabil
acquired
with
the
proceeds
of
the
loan
or
from
the
former
property
of
Dabil
which
the
appellant
acquired
upon
Dabil’s
winding-up.
The
property
so
acquired
included
the
Smith
Township
land.
Although
that
land
was
later
sold
at
a
loss,
it
was
asserted
that
the
appellant's
sole
shareholder,
who
was
its
directing
mind
and
will,
was
of
the
view
at
all
relevant
times
that
the
land
could
eventually
be
developed
and
sold
at
a
profit.
The
respondent's
position
was
that
what
is
relevant
for
purpose
of
paragraph
20(1)(c)
is
the
direct
use
of
the
borrowed
money.
The
purpose
for
which
the
borrowed
money
was
used
in
this
case
was
the
acquisition
of
the
Dabil
shares.
It
was
never
contemplated
that
those
shares
would
yield
a
dividend
because,
from
the
outset,
the
winding
up
and
dissolution
of
Dabil
was
planned.
According
to
the
respondent
it
was
not
correct
to
view
the
transaction
as
one
involving
nothing
more
than
an
indirect
acquisition
of
land.
Rather,
it
was
said,
the
appellant
acquired
shares
of
a
company
whose
liabilities
immediately
before
the
issuance
of
those
shares
exceeded
the
fair
market
value
of
its
assets
and
whose
future
prospects
were
bleak.
The
first
witness
called
was
William
Edward
Cocks
who,
since
1972,
has
been
president
and
sole
shareholder
of
the
appellant
company.
Mr.
Cocks
has,
since
1950,
been
in
the
real
estate
business.
He
testified
that
the
parcel
of
land
owned
by
Dabil
was
bought
by
that
company
in
December
of
1973
at
a
cost
of
$90,000.
It
was
located
1,000
feet
north
of
the
boundary
of
the
city
of
Peterborough
and
the
same
distance
to
the
west
of
the
University.
There
were,
he
said,
a
number
of
residential
developments
in
the
area
at
the
time
of
purchase.
One
had
been
developed
in
1956,
another
in
1962
and
yet
another
in
1968.
The
land
use
designation
on
the
official
plan
was
restricted
rural.
Mr.
Cocks
stated
that
he
felt
that
development
permission
for
a
rural
subdivision
or
an
estate
lot
development
could
be
obtained.
He
said
that
he
spoke
several
times
during
the
period
from
1974
to
1981
to
William
Ben-
ninger
in
furtherance
of
the
proposal
to
subdivide
the
property.
Mr.
Ben-
ninger
was
an
Ontario
Land
Surveyor
who
possessed
experience
in
the
process
of
subdivision
of
land.
Mr.
Benninger
also
gave
evidence.
He
stated
that
in
the
early
years
in
smaller
communities
it
was
common
for
a
surveyor
to
deal
with
planning
matters,
that
is
to
say,
to
advise
on
how
land
might
be
developed,
to
design
subdivisions
and
to
make
presentations
to
local
authorities.
Mr.
Benninger
said
that
his
firm
was
involved
in
about
one
third
of
the
development
projects
in
Peterborough.
He
stated
that
Mr.
Cocks
had
asked
him
to
look
at
the
Smith
Township
property
and
to
consider
what
could
be
done
with
it.
He
said
that
he
could
recall
three
or
four
times
during
the
period
from
1974
to
1981
when
the
possibility
of
development
of
the
property
was
discussed
by
him
and
Mr.
Cocks
in
a
general
way.
However,
nothing
was
ever
resolved.
Mr.
Benninger
expressed
the
opinion
that
the
property
did
have
potential
for
development
although
rezoning
might
have
been
required.
He
said
there
were
many
things
that
might
have
been
done
with
it
subject
to
obtaining
the
necessary
approval.
His
opinion
as
to
the
potential
of
the
property
did
not
change
in
1981.
He
asserted
that
the
potential
existed
then
and
that
in
his
opinion
it
still
exists.
He
was
of
the
view
that
annexation
by
the
City
of
Peterborough
would
speed
up
development.
When
asked
whether
annexation
appeared
to
be
a
possibility
in
1974
his
answer
was
that
anything
is
possible
and
that
it
was
reasonable
to
assume
that
at
some
time
in
the
future
land
bordering
on
the
city
would
be
annexed.
The
efforts
to
develop
the
property
appear
to
have
been
of
a
casual
and
insubstantial
nature.
Mr.
Benninger
admitted
that
he
never
checked
the
zoning
of
the
property
and
that
he
did
not
open
a
file
with
respect
to
its
development.
He
said
that
nothing
concrete
was
ever
done.
Mr.
Cocks
loaned
to
Dabil
the
$20,000
down
payment
required
to
purchase
the
property.
The
balance
of
the
purchase
price
was
secured
by
a
mortgage
back
to
the
vendor
for
a
term
of
ten
years
repayable
in
annual
instalments
of
$10,000
of
principle
and
interest.
Initially
the
shares
of
Dabil
were
held
by
Mr.
Cocks
and
his
sons.
Dabil
carried
the
property
by
means
of
bank
loans
secured
by
personal
guarantees.
Then
the
sons
declined
to
put
up
any
money
and
in
March
of
1981
Mr.
Cocks
took
over
their
shares.
In
October
of
1981
Mr.
Cocks
sold
all
six
of
the
issued
shares
of
Dabil
to
the
appellant.
On
November
25,
1981
the
appellant
borrowed
$700,000
from
the
bank
and
used
$290,000
of
the
proceeds
of
that
loan
to
subscribe
for
an
additional
290,000
shares
of
Dabil.
Immediately
before
that
subscription
was
made
Dabil's
liabilities
exceeded
the
total
fair
market
value
of
its
assets
by
some
$181,000.
Dabil’s
balance
sheet
as
at
November
26,
1981
showed
a
deficit
of
approximately
$57,000
with
assets
being
shown
at
current
fair
market
value.
A
note
to
that
balance
sheet
shows
that
the
costs
relating
to
the
Smith
Township
land
totalled
some
$252,000
including
approximately
$80,000
in
bank
interest
and
charges
and
about
$37,000
in
mortgage
interest.
Mr.
Cocks
conceded
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
at
the
time
was
not
greater
than
$131,000.
By
special
resolution
passed
November
26,
1981
the
winding
up
and
dissolution
of
Dabil
under
the
Business
Corporations
Act
of
Ontario
was
authorized.
The
Smith
Township
land
was
immediately
conveyed
to
the
appellant.
Mr.
Cocks
stated
that
in
winding
up
Dabil
he
was
consolidating
the
two
companies
and
putting
all
the
property
into
one
main
company
thereby
saving
audit
fees.
Also,
he
added,
the
bank
was
interested
in
cutting
down
the
number
of
companies
which
he
had.
I
may
note
at
this
point
that
neither
reason
seems
particularly
compelling.
The
Smith
Township
property
was
sold
by
the
appellant
to
William
Clifford
Cocks
son
of
the
witness
William
Edward
Cocks
in
February
of
1983.
The
witness
explained
that
interest
rates
shot
up
in
1982,
that
the
market
for
vacant
land
disappeared,
and
that
the
best
offer
that
could
be
secured
from
an
outsider
for
the
Smith
Township
property
was
$70,000.
After
receiving
appraisals
at
$90,000
and
$86,000
the
land
was
sold
to
his
son
for
$100,000.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
that
the
inquiry
in
this
case
must
focus
on
the
use
made
by
the
appellant
of
the
borrowed
money.
The
relevant
use
was,
he
said,
the
use
made
from
time
to
time.
Initially
the
borrowed
money
was
used
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
shares
and
thus
earning
dividend
income.
The
substituted
use,
in
Mr.
Smith's
submission,
was
also
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income,
namely
income
from
the
former
business
of
Dabil,
namely,
the
development
of
the
land.
He
pointed
out—correctly,
in
my
view,
that
it
was
not
necessary
that
the
borrowed
money
should
in
fact
have
resulted
in
the
earning
of
income
by
the
appellant
in
the
taxation
years
in
which
the
interest
expense
was
incurred.
In
this
regard
he
referred
to
four
decisions.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
argued
that
it
was
necessary
to
look
to
the
direct
use
made
by
the
appellant
of
the
borrowed
money
and
that
such
use
was
the
acquisition
of
shares
not
of
land.
When
the
appellant
acquired
those
shares
it
had
already
been
decided
that
Dabil
would
be
wound
up
and
dissolved
and
thus
it
could
not
be
said
that
the
shares
were
purchased
in
order
to
secure
a
source
of
dividend
income.
Mr.
Pigeon
argued
further
that
even
if
it
could
be
said
that
the
shares
continued
to
exist
as
a
source
of
potential
income
up
to
the
time
of
dissolution
of
Dabil
in
October
of
1982,
the
source
disappeared
upon
dissolution.
Thus
he
submitted
that
interest
costs
subsequent
to
dissolution
were
not
deductible.
Mr.
Pigeon
speculated
on
various
reasons
which
might
have
led
Mr.
Cocks
and
his
advisors
to
structure
the
transaction
as
it
was
in
fact
structured.
He
pointed
out
for
example
that
if
Dabil
had
simply
sold
its
land
it
would
have
been
unable
to
realize
sufficient
proceeds
to
enable
it
to
retire
its
bank
loan
with
the
consequence
that
Mr.
Cocks
would
have
been
called
on
under
his
guarantee
to
the
bank.
The
appellant
was,
he
said,
in
a
better
position
than
Dabil
to
save
Mr.
Cocks
harmless
on
the
guarantee.
In
The
Queen
v.
Bronfman
Trust
,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
had
occasion
to
analyse
the
operation
of
paragraph
20(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
At
page
5064
(C.T.C.
page
125)
Dickson
C.J.C.,
speaking
for
the
Court,
said:
The
cases
are
consistent
with
the
proposition
that
it
is
the
current
rather
than
the
original
use
of
borrowed
funds
by
the
taxpayer
which
is
relevant
in
assessing
deductibility
of
interest
payments:
see,
for
example,
Lakeview
Gardens
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.,
[1973]
C.T.C.
586;
73
D.T.C.
5437
(F.C.T.D.),
per
Walsh,
J.,
for
a
correct
application
of
this
principle.
A
taxpayer
cannot
continue
to
deduct
interest
payments
merely
because
the
original
use
of
borrowed
money
was
to
purchase
income-bearing
assets,
after
he
or
she
has
sold
those
assets
and
put
the
proceeds
of
sale
to
an
ineligible
use.
To
permit
the
taxpayer
to
do
so
would
result
in
the
borrowing
of
funds
to
finance
the
purchase
of
income-earning
property
which
could
be
sold
immediately
without
affecting
the
deductibility
of
interest
payments
for
an
indefinite
period
thereafter.
In
the
present
case
it
cannot
realistically
be
said
that
the
borrowed
money
was
used
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
the
Dabil
shares.
It
is
clear
on
the
evidence
that
the
acquisition
of
those
shares
was
but
the
first
step
in
a
transaction
intended
from
the
outset
to
lead
to
the
disappearance
of
Dabil
and
the
acquisition
by
the
appellant
of
Dabil’s
assets
the
only
significant
one
of
which
was
the
land.
It
was
for
that
purpose
that
the
appellant
borrowed
and
used
the
money.
The
money
was
borrowed,
the
Dabil
shares
were
acquired,
the
special
resolution
authorizing
winding-up
of
Dabil
was
passed
and
the
deed
conveying
the
land
was
delivered
to
the
appellant
all
within
a
matter
of
a
few
days.
Deductibility
of
the
interest
must
therefore
in
my
opinion
stand
or
fall
on
the
use
of
the
borrowed
funds
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
by
acquiring
the
Smith
Township
land
for
development
and
sale.
The
evidence
does
not
establish
on
the
balance
of
probabilities
that
the
appellant
acquired
that
land
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income.
In
1981
Mr.
Cocks
may
still
have
entertained
some
hope
of
causing
the
appellant
to
develop
or
sell
the
land
but
it
does
not
follow
that
the
appellant's
purpose
in
acquiring
the
lands
in
1981
was
the
same
as
Dabil’s
purpose
in
acquiring
it
seven
years
earlier.
Reference
was
made
in
argument
to
section
88
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
However
there
is
nothing
in
section
88
which
requires
that
Dabil's
1973
purpose
be
attributed
to
the
appellant
following
the
winding-
up.
If
in
October
of
1981
it
was
still
thought
possible
to
profitably
dispose
of
the
Dabil
land
some
effort
to
carry
out
that
intention
would
without
doubt
have
been
made
and
evidence
as
to
that
effort
would
have
been
led.
Furthermore,
it
is
difficult
to
imagine
that
the
appellant's
purpose
was
the
earning
of
income
from
the
development
of
the
land
when
it
acquired
the
land
by
means
of
a
transaction
involving
a
cost
far
in
excess
of
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land
at
the
time.
In
Bronfman
Dickson,
C.J.C.,
said
the
following
at
pages
124-5
(D.T.C.
5064):
Parliament
created
subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i),
and
made
it
operate
notwithstanding
paragraph
18(1)(b),
in
order
to
encourage
the
accumulation
of
capital
which
would
produce
taxable
income.
Not
all
borrowing
expenses
are
deductible.
Interest
on
borrowed
money
used
to
produce
tax-exempt
income
is
not
deductible.
Interest
on
borrowed
money
used
to
buy
life
insurance
policies
is
not
deductible.
Interest
on
borrowings
used
for
non-income
earning
purposes,
such
as
personal
consumption
or
the
making
of
capital
gains
is
similarly
not
deductible.
The
statutory
deduction
thus
requires
a
characterization
of
the
use
of
borrowed
money
as
between
the
eligible
use
of
earning
non-exempt
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
a
variety
of
possible
ineligible
uses.
The
onus
is
on
the
taxpayer
to
trace
the
borrowed
funds
to
an
identifiable
use
which
triggers
the
deduction.
Therefore,
if
the
taxpayer
commingles
funds
used
for
a
variety
of
purposes
only
some
of
which
are
eligible
he
or
she
may
be
unable
to
claim
the
deduction:
see,
for
example,
Mills
v.
M.N.R.,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
2334;
85
D.T.C.
632
(T.C.C.);
No.
616
v.
M.N.R.,
22
Tax
A.B.C.
31;
59
D.T.C.
247
(T.A.B.).
In
summary,
although
the
appellant
has
established
that
the
use
of
the
borrowed
funds
has
resulted
in
the
acquisition
by
it
of
the
Smith
Township
lands,
it
has
failed
to
show
how,
given
the
chosen
structure
of
the
transaction,
it
used
the
borrowed
money
for
the
purpose
of
producing
taxable
income.
In
the
result
the
appeals
fail
on
the
main
issue.
The
appeals
from
the
assessments
for
the
1981
&
1983
taxation
years
will
be
dismissed.
The
appeal
from
the
1982
determination
will,
as
counsel
agreed,
be
allowed
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
redetermination
by
the
addition
of
$12,450
to
the
non
capital
loss
as
referred
to
in
paragraph
5
of
the
amended
notice
of
appeal.
Appeal
dismissed.