Bowman
J.T.C.C.:—
These
appeals
are
from
assessments
for
the
1990,
1991,
1992
and
1993
taxation
years.
There
are
two
issues:
the
deductibility
of
losses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
property
owned
by
him
at
867
Dorchester
Drive,
Sarnia,
Ontario,
and
the
correctness
of
the
Minister’s
inclusion
in
the
appellant’s
income
of
employment
income
earned
by
him
in
Saudi
Arabia,
at
a
time
at
which
he
was
resident
in
that
country
and
not
in
Canada.
Concerning
the
first
issue,
the
appellant
bought
the
property
in
1987
as
his
principal
residence.
His
position
with
Shell
Canada
Resources
Limited
as
an
engineer
came
to
an
end
in
or
prior
to
1989
and
he
and
his
wife
moved
to
Toronto
where
they
bought
a
condominium
as
their
principal
residence.
He
took
up
employment
with
an
engineering
firm
in
Toronto,
Stone
and
Webster
Canada
Limited.
He
decided
to
rent
the
Sarnia
property
unfurnished
and
arranged
with
his
daughter
to
remove
the
furniture
if
a
suitable
tenant
was
found.
He
consulted
with
a
real
estate
firm
but
was
told
that
because
of
economic
conditions
in
Sarnia
at
the
time,
resulting
in
part
from
the
recession
and
in
part
from
the
downsizing
that
was
occurring
in
the
resources
sector
of
the
economy,
there
was
little
hope
of
his
being
able
to
rent
the
property.
Nonetheless
he
made
vigorous
efforts
to
do
so
himself.
He
advertised
in
local
newspapers
and
posted
notices
in
prominent
places.
He
talked
to
the
managers
of
all
personnel
departments
in
Sarnia.
Unfortunately
in
1990,
1991,
1992
and
1993
his
efforts
yielded
no
results
and
the
property
remained
vacant
from
the
middle
of
1989,
when
he
moved
to
Toronto,
until
August
1993,
when
he
moved
back
to
Sarnia.
The
property
yielded
no
income.
He
claimed
in
each
of
those
years,
as
expenses,
the
cost
of
utilities,
insurance,
realty
taxes,
advertising
and
a
small
amount
for
maintenance
and
upkeep.
The
amounts
claimed
in
each
year,
and
the
resulting
losses,
were
as
follows:
1990:
$7,977.66
1991:
$5,029.47
1992:
$4,800.62
1993:
$3,292.22
He
did
not
claim
mortgage
interest.
He
was
denied
these
losses
on
the
basis
that
he
had
“no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit”.
Mr
Grocott,
with
some
justification,
feels
affronted
at
the
use
of
this
hackneyed
phrase,
and
at
the
suggestion
that
he
did
not
try
hard
enough
to
find
a
tenant.
The
chanting
of
the
phrase
“no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit”
as
a
ritual
incantation
by
the
officials
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
as
a
substitute
for
rational
analysis
lies
at
the
root
of
the
problem
in
this
case.
It
was
perfectly
reasonable
for
him
to
expect
a
profit
had
he
not
been
in
a
difficult
economic
climate
and
had
he
been
able
to
obtain
the
rental
that
he
was
seeking.
Moreover
he
made
all
reasonable
efforts
to
find
tenants.
Had
he
been
given
a
rational
explanation
for
the
disallowance
rather
than
the
ritual
repetition
of
a
mantra,
he
might
never
have
appealed.
It
is
not
however
my
function
to
judge
the
behaviour
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
My
concern
is
the
correctness
of
the
assessment.
The
short
answer
is
that
for
there
to
be
a
deduction
of
rental
expenses
there
must
be
a
rental
operation.
Mr.
Grocotf
s
proposed
rental
operation
never
got
off
the
ground.
The
house
was
originally
his
principal
residence
and
although
the
condominium
in
Toronto
became
his
principal
residence
when
he
moved
there,
the
Sarnia
property
was
not
converted
to
a
rental
operation
until
he
started
using
it
as
such.
A
mere
intention
to
rent
it
out
does
not,
in
itself,
convert
an
asset
originally
acquired
for
personal
reasons
to
a
rental
property,
even
if
attempts
to
rent
it
are
made.
A
more
difficult
aspect
of
this
appeal
is
the
application
of
section
114.
In
1991
the
appellant
took
up
employment
in
Saudi
Arabia
with
a
company
in
the
Shell
group.
On
February
19,
1991
he
submitted
a
form
NR73
-
Determination
of
Residency
Status
—
setting
out
that
he
would
be
out
of
Canada
from
April
1991
to
April
1993.
On
the
basis
of
the
information
submitted,
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
confirmed
that
he
would
be
considered
an
emigrant
commencing
April
1,
1991.
Moreover,
on
September
23,
1994
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(Customs,
Excise
and
Taxation),
Mr.
Pierre
Gravelle,
Q.C.
wrote
to
him
and
stated:
I
have
been
advised
that
information
provided
by
you
in
1991,
and
more
recently
in
correspondence
with
Mr.
Gallaway,
indicates
that
you
did
not
maintain
significant
residential
ties
with
Canada
during
your
stay
abroad,
which
you
have
indicated
commenced
April
1,
1991
and
ended
August
1,
1993.
I
wish
therefore
to
confirm
that,
for
Canadian
income
tax
purposes,
you
were
a
non-resident
of
Canada
during
this
period.
It
is
therefore
accepted
by
the
respondent
that
for
that
part
of
1991
after
April
1
he
was
not
a
resident
of
Canada.
His
problem
stems
from
his
membership
in
an
Ontario
limited
partnership,
Fidelity
Partnership
1990.
It
was
a
small
participation
(100
units
at
$100
each).
The
evidence
is
not
as
clear
as
it
might
have
been
concerning
the
nature
of
the
partnership’s
activities
-
evidently
it
involved
the
fees
paid
on
the
acquisition
or
redemption
of
interests
in
mutual
funds.
Only
the
unit
certificate
was
put
in
evidence
—
not
the
partnership
agreement
or
the
prospectus.
On
the
evidence
it
is
clear,
in
my
view,
that
Fidelity
Partnership
1990
carried
on
business
in
Canada.
The
question
therefore
is,
if
a
limited
partnership
carries
on
business
in
Canada,
does
a
limited
partner,
such
as
Mr.
Grocott,
who
does
not
participate
in
any
way
in
the
activities
of
the
partnership
beyond
sharing
in
its
profits
(or,
as
was
the
case
here,
its
losses),
himself
carry
on
business
in
Canada.
He
took
no
part
in
the
day-to-day
operations
of
the
partnership.
Indeed
he
had
only
a
rudimentary
knowledge
of
just
what
it
did.
I
accept
that
his
participation
was
passive.
Does
his
participation
as
limited
partner,
however
passive,
bring
him
within
section
114
of
the
Income
Tax
Act?
That
section,
in
1991,
read
as
follows:
114.
Notwithstanding
subsection
2(2),
where
an
individual
was
resident
in
Canada
during
part
of
a
taxation
year,
and
during
some
other
part
of
the
year
was
not
resident
in
Canada,
was
not
employed
in
Canada
and
was
not
carrying
on
business
in
Canada,
for
the
purpose
of
this
Part,
his
taxable
income
for
the
taxation
year
is
the
aggregate
of
(a)
his
income
for
the
period
or
periods
in
the
year
throughout
which
he
was
resident
in
Canada,
was
employed
in
Canada
or
was
carrying
on
business
in
Canada,
computed
as
though
such
period
or
periods
were
the
whole
taxation
year
and
as
though
any
disposition
of
property
deemed
by
subsection
48(1)
to
have
been
made
by
reason
of
the
taxpayer
having
ceased
to
be
resident
in
Canada
were
made
in
such
period
or
periods,
and
(b)
the
amount
that
would
be
his
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
the
year
if
at
no
time
in
the
year
he
had
been
resident
in
Canada,
computed
as
though
the
portion
of
the
year
that
is
not
in
the
period
or
periods
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
were
the
whole
taxation
year,
minus
the
aggregate
of
such
of
the
deductions
permitted
for
the
purpose
of
computing
taxable
income
as
may
reasonably
be
considered
wholly
applicable
to
the
period
or
periods
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
and
of
such
part
of
any
other
of
those
deductions
as
may
reasonably
be
considered
applicable
to
such
period
or
periods.
Section
2
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reads
as
follows:
2.(1)
An
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
the
taxable
income
for
each
taxation
year
of
every
person
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year.
(2)
The
taxable
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
is
his
income
for
the
year
plus
the
additions
and
minus
the
deductions
permitted
by
Division
C.
(3)
Where
a
person
who
is
not
taxable
under
subsection
(1)
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
was
employed
in
Canada,
(b)
carried
on
business
in
Canada,
or
(c)
disposed
of
a
taxable
Canadian
property,
at
any
time
in
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
an
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
his
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
the
year
determined
in
accordance
with
Division
D.
Section
115,
which
forms
part
of
Division
D
starts
with
the
words:
115.
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
the
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
person
who
at
no
time
in
the
year
is
resident
in
Canada
is
the
amount
of
his
income
for
the
year
that
would
be
determined
under
section
3
if
(a)
he
had
no
income
other
than
(i)
incomes
from
the
duties
of
offices
and
employments
performed
by
him
in
Canada,
(ii)
incomes
from
businesses
carried
on
by
him
in
Canada,
(iii)
taxable
capital
gains
from
dispositions
described
in
paragraph
(b),
From
these
provisions
it
will
be
apparent
that
subsection
2(1)
alone
would
subject
to
tax
the
world
income
for
the
year
of
any
person
who
was
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year.
Section
115
is
aimed
at
persons
who
are
resident
in
Canada
at
no
time
in
the
year
and
taxes
them
on
employment
and
business
income
earned
in
Canada
and
dispositions
of
taxable
Canadian
property
as
well
as
a
number
of
other
types
of
income
arising
in
Canada.
Part
XIII
deals
with
interest,
rent,
dividends
and
certain
other
types
of
passive
income
earned
by
non-residents.
All
of
these
provisions
relating
to
non-residents
are
subject
to
any
applicable
treaties.
Canada
has
none
with
Saudi
Arabia.
Section
114
endeavours
to
fill
in
the
gap
left
between
section
2
and
section
115
and
relates
to
persons,
such
as
Mr.
Grocott,
who
are
resident
in
Canada
part
of
the
year
and
non-resident
part
of
the
year.
Section
114
effects
a
modification
of
subsection
2(2).
It
applies
only
to
a
person
who
during
part
of
the
year
was
a
resident
and
during
part
of
the
year
was
not
only
a
non-resident
but
also
was
not
employed
in
Canada
and
was
not
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
If
during
part
of
the
year
he
was
a
non-resident
who
was
employed
in
Canada
or
carried
on
business
in
Canada
his
taxable
income
for
the
year
is
treated
as
his
world
income
for
the
period
in
which,
although
a
non-resident,
he
was
employed
in
Canada
or
carried
on
business
in
Canada.
Therefore,
if
he
carried
on
business
in
Canada
during
the
period
in
which
he
was
resident
in
Saudi
Arabia,
his
Saudi
Arabian
income
would
be
included
in
his
world
income
for
1991
and
taxable
in
Canada.
Did
his
participation
in
the
Fidelity
Partnership
1990
constitute
carrying
on
business
in
Canada?
Unfortunately
I
think
that
it
did.
The
partnership
carried
on
business
in
Canada.
The
partnership’s
income
or
loss
is
from
the
source
of
carrying
on
business
and
under
paragraphs
96(1
)(/)
and
(g)
the
partner’s
income
or
loss
is
an
income
or
loss
from
that
source.
This
applies
in
my
view
whether
the
partnership
is
general
or
limited.
Limited
partnerships
are
created
by
statute.
In
Ontario,
unlike
certain
other
provinces,
the
Limited
Partnerships
Act
is
a
separate
statute
from
the
Partnerships
Act.
One
of
the
most
salient
features
is
that
the
liability
of
the
limited
partner
is,
under
section
9,
limited
to
his
capital
contribution.
Also,
under
section
13
a
limited
partner
is
not
liable
as
a
general
partner
unless,
in
addition
to
exercising
rights
and
powers
as
a
limited
partner,
the
limited
partner
takes
part
in
the
control
of
the
business.
Mr.
Grocott
took
no
part
in
the
control
of
the
business.
A
limited
partner
of
course
has
the
right
to
be
informed
as
to
the
business
of
the
partnership
and
to
receive
his
or
her
share
of
the
income.
A
limited
partner
is
nonetheless
a
partner
in
a
partner
ship.
It
is
simply
that
his
liability
is
limited
by
statute
provided
that
he
does
not
participate
in
running
the
business.
I
do
not
think
it
can
be
said
that
this
limitation
of
liability
and
prohibition
against
any
active
part
in
the
control
of
the
business
means
that
he
is
not
carrying
on
business
through
the
partnership.
A
non-resident
partner
who
did
not
actively
participate
in
the
business
of
a
general
partnership
but
who
was
nonetheless
a
participant
in
the
profits
was
held
in
Randall
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Randall
v.
The
Queen,
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
268,
85
D.T.C.
5208
(F.C.T.D.)
to
be
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
I
do
not
think
that
the
fact
that
the
partnership
is
a
limited
partnership
alters
the
nature
of
the
nonresident
limited
partner’s
participation.
I
trust
that
I
am
being
neither
(C.T.C.
114),
(D.T.C.
6506),
(N.R.
333)
“results
oriented”
(Tennant
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Tennant
v.
Canada),
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
113,
94
D.T.C
6505,
175
N.R.
332
(F.C.A.))
nor
(C.T.C.
384),
(D.T.C.
6635),
(N.R.
226)
“purely
mechanical”
(Swantje
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Swantje
v.
Canada),
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
382,
94
D.T.C.
6633,
174
N.R.
224
(F.C.A.))
in
my
interpretation
of
these
provisions
when
I
observe
that
it
would
be
a
rather
surprising
result
if
a
non-resident
who
is
a
limited
partner
in
a
Canadian
limited
partnership
that
carried
on
business
in
Canada
could
escape
taxation
under
section
115
on
his
Canadian
source
profits
from
the
partnership
on
the
basis
that
he
was
not
carrying
on
business
in
Canada.
The
result
in
this
case
is
unfortunate
and
possibly
unforeseen.
Indeed
section
114
was
amended
with
application
to
1992
so
as
to
avoid
the
problem,
but
the
plain
wording
of
section
114
in
1991
has
the
effect
that
I
have
indicated.
The
appeals
are
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.