Rip,
J.T.C.C.:—LB.
Pedersen
Ltd.
("corporation")
appeals
from
an
assessment
with
respect
to
its
1988
taxation
year
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Taxation
("Minister"),
disallowed
a
reserve
in
the
amount
of
$152,794.14
claimed
as
a
deduction
in
computing
its
income
under
paragraph
20(1
)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act"),
or
alternatively
under
section
9
of
that
statute.
The
appellant
also
appeals
the
assessment
on
the
grounds
that
it
ought
not
to
have
included
in
its
income
for
1988
the
sum
of
$64,670.11
claimed
as
a
reserve
in
1987,
which
the
Minister
did
not
disallow.
The
corporation
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Ontario
in
1978.
At
all
relevant
times
it
operated
a
waste
landfill
site
located
near
Uxbridge,
Ontario.
The
shareholders
of
the
corporation
are
1.8.
Pedersen
("Pedersen")
and
his
wife
Earla
Pedersen.
The
landfill
site
was
operated
originally
by
Mrs.
Pedersen's
father
until
1968
when
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Pedersen
purchased
the
site.
They
continued
to
operate
the
business
until
1978
when
the
site
and
the
business
were
transferred
to
the
corporation.
The
appellant
carried
on
its
business
under
a
certificate
issued
by
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment
of
Ontario.
Essentially
the
appellant’s
landfill
site
is
an
excavation
pit
into
which
municipal
waste
or
garbage
was
dumped.
During
each
day
the
company
bulldozed
the
waste
received
that
day
into
the
pit
and
then
covered
it
with
a
layer
of
clean
fill.
The
appellant
would
continue
to
monitor
the
site
on
a
regular
basis
to
ensure
that
there
were
no
possible
adverse
environmental
results
caused
by
the
buried
waste
such
as
seepage
of
contaminated
liquid
run
off,
called
leachate,
release
of
harmful
gases
caused
by
the
decomposition
of
stored
waste,
the
escalation
of
nuisance
factors
like
vermin,
blowing
waste
and
odours.
The
Regional
Municipality
of
Durham
("municipality")
was
the
appellant's
largest
customer
in
1988,
representing
more
than
90
per
cent
of
its
business.
The
municipality
dumped
all
of
its
garbage
on
the
land
site
pursuant
to
a
written
contract
between
it
and
the
appellant.
The
contract
in
force
during
1988
was
dated
July
15
of
that
year.
Pursuant
to
clause
2
of
the
contract,
the
municipality
used
the
landfill
site
"for
the
purpose
of
receiving,
dumping
and
disposing
of
waste
on
a
monthly
basis".
The
consideration
paid
by
the
municipality
was
$16,281.83
per
month.
Clause
6
of
the
contract
provided
that:
The
contractor
shall
at
his
own
expense
obtain
all
licences
and
permits
that
may
be
required
for
or
in
connection
with
the
use
of
the
said
facilities
for
the
purposes
aforesaid.
The
licence
referred
to
was
an
operating
licence
in
the
form
of
a
certificate
of
approval
from
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment.
Section
5
of
the
appellant's
certificate
of
approval,
dated
September
4,
1985,
provided
that:
A
detailed
plan
of
closure
shall
be
submitted
to
the
Director,
Central
Region,
Ministry
of
the
Environment
by
September
30,
1986.
If
a
closure
plan
is
not
submitted,
or
if
it
is
not
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Director,
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment
will
impose
one.
It
was
anticipated
that
the
operators
of
landfills
would
provide
a
closure
plan
to
the
Ministry
which
would
provide
for
the
work
to
be
performed
by
the
operator
during
the
time
the
landfill
was
no
longer
accepting
waste.
Apparently
landfill
sites
have
at
least
two
phases,
an
active
phase
and
a
closed
phase.
During
the
active
phase
waste
is
received
and
revenue
is
earned.
During
the
closed
phase
no
waste
is
received
and
no
revenue
is
earned,
although
expenses
are
being
incurred.
By
1985
Pedersen
thought
the
landfill
site
was
reaching
capacity
and
had
"only
two
to
three
years
left"
of
active
operation.
He
stated
that
the
company
ceased
operating
the
landfill
site
in
1991
as
a
result
of
losing
its
contract
with
the
municipality
which
found
a
less
costly
landfill.
There
was
evidence
that
the
appellant
sought
an
increase
in
fees
in
part
to
cover
anticipated
expenses
during
the
closed
phase.
Pedersen
testified
that
from
time
to
time
he
subsequently
has
allowed
individuals
to
dump
on
the
site
for
a
fee.
Accordingly,
the
appellant
has
since
1991
received
very
little
income
from
carrying
on
a
business
on
the
site
or
any
other
site.
Mr.
Jim
Hiraishi,
P.
Eng.
("Hiraishi"),
an
expert
in
waste
site
management,
had
been
retained
by
the
appellant
to
prepare
a
site
closure
plan
for
1993
and
to
assist
it
to
determine
the
amount
of
financial
assistance
it
would
be
required
to
provide
to
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment.
In
1988
Hiraishi
had
assisted
in
preparing
a
report
for
the
appellant
estimating
costs
for
landfill
site
closure
and
long-term
maintenance.
According
to
Hiraishi,
a
closure
plan
generally
provides
for
(a)
on-going
monitoring
of
service
water,
ground
water
and
gas
migration;
(b)
inspection
of
landfill
cover
for
differential
settlement,
sideslope
erosion,
leachate
seeps
and
implementation
of
remedial
works
as
necessary;
(c)
maintaining
drainage
system,
including
clearing
of
debris
and
regrading;
(d)
inspection
and
repairs
of
fences
and
roads
as
required;
(e)
maintaining
the
site
in
an
orderly
and
visually
pleasing
manner;
and
(f)
submission
of
annual
reports
on
site
inspection
and
results
of
monitoring
and
maintenance
programs
to
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment.
The
contract
between
the
corporation
and
the
municipality
also
provided
that
the
corporation
secure
a
public
liability
insurance
during
the
term
of
the
contract
in
order
to
indemnify
and
save
harmless
the
region
from
all
suits
and
action
for
damages
and
costs
to
which
it
may
be
put
by
reason
of
injury
to
persons
or
property
resulting
from
negligence,
carelessness,
or
any
other
cause
whatsoever
in
the
performance
of
the
work,
in
guarding
same,
or
from
any
improper
material
used
in
the
construction.
.
.
.
During
1987
and
1988
the
Ministry
was
considering
measures
to
ensure
that
there
would
be
adequate
funds
for
site
closure
costs,
post-closure
maintenance
and
compensation,
including
financial
assurance
from
land
site
operations.
However
there
was
no
legislation
in
force
during
those
years
and
the
appellant
was
not
required
by
statute
or
by
regulation
to
provide
any
form
of
financial
assurance
to
the
Ministry.
It
was
common
knowledge
in
the
industry
that
at
some
point
in
time
the
Ministry
would
insist
upon
certain
guarantees
to
be
provided
by
landfill
operators.
Hiraishi
wrote
to
the
appellant
on
May
12,
1988
advising
that
the
certificate
under
which
it
was
operating
at
the
time
did
not
specify
any
closure
requirements
but
instead
relied
"on
a
submission
of
a
closure
plan
to
be
approved
by
the
Ministry".
He
added
that
the
plan
would
identify
the
activities
necessary
to
effect
closure
including
considerations
for
grading,
revegetation
and
long-term
monitoring
and
maintenance.
He
stated
that
"there
will
likely
be
a
requirement
for
contingency
plans
in
case
remedial
works
are
required
subsequent
to
closure".
In
his
letter
he
anticipated
conditions
that
may
impact
on
closure
costs:
standard
insurance
such
as
general
liability,
and
fire,
coverage
for
pollution
liability,
performance
bond,
a
small
claims
funds,
and
a
post-closure
fund
to
be
administered
by
the
Ministry
to
cover
costs
for
long-term
monitoring
and
maintenance
of
the
site.
Hiraishi
also
foresaw
additional
costs
for
long-term
monitoring
and
maintenance
of
the
site
itself
and
suggested
"budgeting
about
$25,000
a
year
for
the
foreseeable
future".
Hiraishi
anticipated
that
the
rules
would
provide
that
the
site,
once
closed,
would
remain
the
responsibility
of
the
operator
for
a
period
of
years
determined
by
the
Ministry,
which
he
understood
would
be
25
years.
However
Hiraishi
testified
that
although
the
appellant
was
negotiating
a
closure
plan
with
the
Ministry
in
1988
no
closure
plan
had
been
submitted
and
the
appellant
had
not
been
required
to
provide
any
form
of
financial
assurance
to
the
Ministry.
Hiraishi
stated
the
appellant
and
the
Ministry
had
been
discussing
a
closure
plan
for
eight
years
and
only
recently
had
the
appellant
submitted
such
a
plan.
Even
at
time
of
trial
no
financial
assurance
plan
had
been
provided;
apparently
such
a
plan
is
awaiting
the
decision
of
this
appeal.
The
appellant
claims
that
its
customers,
in
particular
the
municipality,
knew
that
a
significant
portion
of
fees
was
to
be
used
to
provide
for
the
safe
keeping
of
the
waste
in
the
closed
phase
even
though
this
was
not
explicitly
set
out
in
the
contract.
In
other
words,
in
the
appellant’s
view
there
is
an
implied
but
legal
obligation
in
the
contract
for
it
to
properly
maintain
and
monitor
the
site
for
years
after
garbage
is
dumped
in
the
landfill.
The
appellant
disagrees
with
the
disallowance
of
the
reserve
in
its
1988
taxation
year
because
it
maintains
that
the
amount
claimed
represents
a
reasonable
reserve
in
respect
of
services
that
it
will
be
required
to
perform,
specifically
by
law
and
implicitly
by
contract,
in
the
future
in
respect
of
maintaining
the
integrity
of
the
site.
In
the
mid-1980s
the
appellant
was
aware
its
landfill
site
eventually
would
have
to
be
closed
and
it
was
likely
costs
would
be
incurred
during
the
closed
phase.
The
appellant
deducted
amounts
in
computing
its
income
as
a
reserve
in
respect
of
services
it
would
be
required
to
perform
during
the
closed
phase.
Pedersen
testified
that
the
appellant’s
reserve
was
calculated
on
the
basis
of
the
estimated
cost
to
be
incurred
in
closing
the
site
and
maintaining
it
after
closure.
The
amount
was
equal
to
"what
we
could
afford",
that
is,
"what
we
had
in
the
bank
and
what
we
didn't
require
for
operating
expenses”.
The
appellant
deducted
as
much
as
it
could
in
calculating
the
reserve,
said
Pedersen.
He
explained
that
if,
for
example,
the
appellant
had
$100,000
in
the
bank
and
required
$25,000
for
current
operations
it
would
claim
$75,000
as
a
reserve.
Pedersen
testified
that
when
he
started
hearing
about
Ministry
Guidelines
and
other
publicity
he
felt
"we
had
a
lot
of
catching
up
to
do"
and
thought
it
best
"to
take
as
much
as
possible
[as
a
reserve]
because
we
needed
it".
Once
the
landfill
site
was
closed,
there
would
be
no
income
and
potential
expenses.
The
amounts
claimed
as
a
reserve
were
placed
in
short-term
investments
“since
we
never
knew
when
we
would
need
the
money".
Positions
of
parties
The
appellant
disputes
the
assessment
for
1988
on
the
basis
it
was
inconsistent
with
the
assessment
for
1987,
when
a
reserve
was
not
disallowed.
The
appellant
also
objects
to
the
inclusion
in
income
for
1988
of
the
amount
of
$64,670.11,
deducted
as
a
reserve
in
1987.
The
appellant
says
that
if
the
Minister
is
correct
and
the
amount
claimed
in
1988
is
not
a
reserve
allowed
under
paragraph
20(1)(m)
of
the
Act,
then
the
similar
claim
in
1987
was
not
a
reserve
either.
Thus
no
amount
ought
to
have
been
deducted
under
paragraph
20(1)(m)
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
1987
and
no
amount
is
to
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
1988
pursuant
to
paragraph
12(1)(e).
The
appellant
also
claims,
in
the
alternative,
that
the
amount
claimed
in
the
reserve
in
the
1988
taxation
year
represents
a
fixed
and
ascertainable
liability
and
is
deductible
in
accordance
with
section
9
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
amount
claimed
as
a
reserve
in
1988
on
the
basis
that
the
amount
did
not
qualify
as
such
under
paragraph
20(1)(m)
because
the
amounts
were
received
by
the
appellant
in
1988
in
the
course
of
its
business
that
was
on
account
of
services
rendered
before
the
end
of
the
year:
paragraph
12(1
)(a).
No
amount
was
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
from
its
business
for
1988
in
respect
of
services
that
it
was
reasonably
anticipated
would
have
to
be
rendered
after
1988.
Further,
the
deduction
was
prohibited
by
paragraphs
18(1)(a)
and
(e)
as
it
was
not
an
outlay
expense
made
or
incurred
in
the
1988
taxation
year
and,
in
any
event,
was
a
contingent
liability.
The
appellant
was
not
liable
in
1988
to
incur
the
expense
claimed
as
a
reserve
notwithstanding
it
may
become
liable
in
future
years.
The
Minister
also
is
of
the
view
that
the
amount
claimed
as
a
reserve
and
deducted
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
in
1987
is
to
be
included
in
income
for
1988
pursuant
to
section
9
and
paragraph
12(1)(e)
of
the
Act.
Statutory
provisions
Paragraphs
12(1
)(a)
and
(e)
read
as
follows:
12
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
as
income
from
a
business
or
property
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(a)
any
amount
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
a
business
(i)
that
is
on
account
of
services
not
rendered
or
goods
not
delivered
before
the
end
of
the
year
or
that,
for
any
other
reason,
may
be
regarded
as
not
having
been
earned
in
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
(e)
any
amount,
(i)
deducted
under
paragraph
20(1)(m)
(including
any
amount
substituted
by
virtue
of
subsection
20(6)
for
any
amount
deducted
under
that
paragraph)
or
subsection
20(7),
or
(ii)
deducted
under
paragraph
20(1)(n),
in
computing
the
taxpayer's
income
from
a
business
for
the
immediately
preceding
year;
Paragraphs
18(1)(a)
and
(e)
provide
that:
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;
(e)
an
amount
transferred
or
credited
to
a
reserve,
contingent
account
or
sinking
fund
except
as
expressly
permitted
by
this
part;
Paragraph
20(1
)(m)
states:
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:
(m)
subject
to
subsection
(6),
where
amounts
described
in
paragraph
12(1)(a)
have
been
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business
for
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
a
reasonable
amount
as
a
reserve
in
respect
of
(ii)
services
that
it
is
reasonably
anticipated
will
have
to
be
rendered
after
the
end
of
the
year
Paragraph
20(7)(a)
adds:
20
(7)
Paragraph
(1)(m)
does
not
apply
to
allow
a
deduction
(a)
as
a
reserve
in
respect
of
guarantees,
indemnities
or
warranties,
Paragraph
20(1
)(m)
of
the
Act
is
complementary
to
paragraph
12(1
)(a)
of
the
Act.
The
latter
paragraph
requires
that
amounts
that
are
received
or
receivable
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
business
be
included
in
income
whereas
the
former
recognizes
that
a
taxpayer
may
not
have
an
unfettered
right
to
all
of
the
amounts
included
in
income
and
permits
a
deduction
of
a
reasonable
reserve
in
respect
of,
among
other
things,
services
not
yet
rendered
by
the
taxpayer.
Any
reserve
deducted
in
a
year
under
paragraph
20(1
)(m)
is
to
be
included
in
computing
income
from
a
business
for
the
taxpayer's
immediately
following
taxation
year
pursuant
to
paragraph
12(1
)(e)
of
the
Act.
Appellant’s
submission
The
appellant’s
principal
submission
is
that
a
portion
of
the
fees
received
by
it
from
the
municipality
in
1988
was
included
in
its
income
pursuant
to
paragraph
12(1
)(a)
and
related
to
the
services
of
safeguarding
and
monitoring
waste
deposited
by
the
municipality
that
the
appellant
was
by
contract
to
perform
after
1988.
Moreover,
the
amount
of
$152,794.14
claimed
by
the
appellant
represented
a
reasonable
amount
that
was
deductible
by
it
in
computing
income
in
1988:
paragraph
20(1)(m).
The
facts
in
the
appeal
at
bar
are
unique,
appellant’s
counsel
stated,
and
the
reasons
set
out
in
The
Queen
v.
Nomad
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
60,
91
D.T.C.
5032
(F.C.A.)
do
not
apply.
The
appellant
may
claim
a
reserve
for
the
portion
of
its
revenue
that
is
unearned
because
it
represented
amounts
received
for
services
to
be
provided
in
the
future.
In
Nomad
Sand
&
Gravel
Ltd.,
supra,
the
nature
of
the
taxpayer's
business
did
not
give
the
taxpayer
any
on-going
connection
with
its
customers
that
would
have
allowed
the
taxpayer
to
demonstrate
it
had
to
provide
future
services.
Once
the
gravel
was
trucked
away,
the
customers
ceased
to
have
any
interest
in
the
pit.
The
appellant,
on
the
other
hand,
is
obliged
to
safeguard
and
monitor
the
site
into
the
future.
Counsel
also
argues
that
since
the
appellant
has
consistently
filed
its
tax
returns
on
the
same
basis
as
in
1988,
a
denial
of
the
reserve
would
create
a
potential
inequity
in
the
measurement
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
tax
purposes.
During
the
active
phase
of
the
site
revenue
is
received.
When
the
site
is
closed
no
revenue
is
received
but
expenses
are
incurred.
Allowing
a
reserve
during
the
years
the
site
is
open
permits
the
appellant
to
defer
recognizing
revenue
until
the
closed
phase.
In
1993,
for
example,
the
appellant
will
bring
some
of
its
deferred
revenue
into
income
and
will
deduct
therefrom
its
current
costs
of
safeguarding
and
monitoring
the
waste
site.
To
deny
the
reserve
means
the
appellant
will
have
to
pay
additional
tax
and
be
limited
in
its
ability
to
monitor
and
safeguard
the
closed
site.
Counsel
insisted
the
appellant
was
obliged
under
the
contract
with
the
municipality
to
provide
future
services.
The
contract
required
the
appellant
to
obtain
the
necessary
licences
under
which
it
may
operate
(Clause
6).
Section
5
of
the
licence
required
the
appellant
to
provide
the
Ministry
of
the
Environment
with
a
closure
plan
for
the
site.
The
closure
plan
provided
for
certain
services
to
be
provided
by
the
appellant
when
the
site
was
eventually
closed.
In
counsel's
view,
"by
requiring
that
the
appellant
be
licensed
as
a
term
of
the
contract,
the
municipality
was,
by
extension,
demanding
that
the
appellant
agree
to
undertake
the
services
of
safeguarding
and
monitoring
the
waste
after
the
closure
of
the
landfill
site".
Counsel
also
added
that
Clause
9
of
the
contract
requiring
the
appellant
to
purchase
a
public
liability
policy
during
the
term
of
the
contract
assumes
that
the
appellant
was
under
an
obligation
to
safeguard
the
disposal
of
waste.
In
counsel's
view
the
municipality
minimized
its
future
risk
by
ensuring
the
appellant
properly
monitor
the
waste
into
the
future
even
though
it
was
only
able
to
obtain
an
indemnity
in
the
contract
for
the
currency
of
the
contract.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
that
part
of
the
fees
paid
by
the
municipality
to
the
appellant
was
for
the
safeguarding
and
monitoring
of
the
site
during
the
closure
phase:
Thus
a
portion
of
the
fees
received
by
the
appellant
from
the
municipality
in
1988
was
in
respect
of
services
to
be
rendered
after
1988.
The
contract,
however,
did
not
allocate
amounts
paid
for
this
service.
However,
counsel
relies
on
Dominion
Stores
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
C.T.C.
97,
66
D.T.C.
5111
at
pages
103-04
(D.T.C.
5115-16),
per
Cattanach,
J.,
for
the
proposition
that
where
the
parties
to
a
contract
have
not
allocated
the
consideration
for
a
bundle
of
services,
a
reasonable
amount
shall
be
allocated
to
each.
The
appellant
realized
that
it
would
cost
a
significant
amount
to
provide
future
service
during
the
closure
phase
and
so
allocated
a
reasonable
portion
of
the
fees
to
the
future
services,
according
to
counsel.
The
liability
during
the
closed
phase
was
not
contingent
since
the
appellant
will
definitely
incur
these
costs.
In
accordance
with
the
application
of
paragraphs
12(1
)(a)
and
20(1)(m)
the
appellant
is
required
to
bring
into
its
income
for
1989
the
amount
of
the
reserve
taken
in
1988
and
a
new
reserve
will
be
allowed
only
if
it
is
required
to
provide
services
after
1989.
Thus
the
recognition
of
revenue
is
merely
deferred
until
the
services
are
provided,
counsel
pleaded.
Counsel
submitted
paragraph
18(1)(e)
does
not
apply
in
the
case
at
bar
because
the
reserve
claimed
in
1988
is
expressly
permitted
under
paragraph
20(1
)(m):
Sears
Canada
Inc.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
80,
86
D.T.C.
6304
(F.C.T.D.)
at
page
85
(D.T.C.
6308),
per
McNair,
J.;
aff'd
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
127,
89
D.T.C.
5039
(F.C.A.).
The
fact
that
reserves
may
be
contingent
does
not
automatically
preclude
their
deduction
under
paragraph
20(1)(m).
The
deduction
of
reserves
on
account
of
goods
and
services
that
it
is
reasonably
anticipated
will
have
to
be
delivered
after
the
end
of
the
year
are
"expressly
permitted"
by
paragraph
20(1)(m)
which
brings
the
matter
within
the
exception
set
out
in
paragraph
18(1
)(e).
Counsel
also
argued
that
subsection
20(7)
should
not
apply
to
his
client's
claims
for
reserves
under
paragraph
20(1
)(m)
because
certain
services
will
have
to
be
provided;
the
services
are
not
in
the
nature
of
a
warranty,
indemnity
or
guarantee:
Sears
Canada
Inc.,
supra.
The
appellant’s
obligations
to
safeguard
and
monitor
the
waste
are
not
in
the
nature
of
indemnifying
the
municipality,
but
to
minimize
damage.
Respondent's
submission
The
respondent's
position
is
that
no
legislation
was
in
force
in
1988
requiring
the
appellant
to
provide
financial
assurance
to
ensure
that
there
would
be
adequate
funds
for
site
closure
costs,
post-closure
maintenance
and
compensation.
Accordingly
the
appellant
was
not
obligated
to
pay
any
amount
to
anyone
with
respect
to
these
matters.
No
such
expenses
were
incurred
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act;
the
reserve
represented
amounts
transferred
to
a
contingency
account
and
therefore
are
not
deductible:
paragraph
18(1)(e).
Also
no
amount
was
deductible
as
a
reserve
under
paragraph
20(1)(m)
since
no
amount
was
included
in
the
appellant's
income
under
paragraph
12(1)(a),
and
in
any
event,
the
reserve
was
not
in
respect
of
services
that
had
to
be
rendered
after
the
end
of
the
particular
year,
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
20(1)(m)(ii).
The
amount
of
the
reserve
claimed
and
allowed
in
the
appellant’s
1987
taxation
year
is
required
to
be
included
in
income
for
1988:
section
9
and
paragraph
12(1)(e).
Analysis
There
is
no
doubt
that
during
1988
the
appellant
had
responsibilities
not
present
in
most
businesses
due
to
the
very
nature
of
its
business.
Since
at
least
the
1970s
society
has
been
environmentally
conscious
and
society,
as
well
as
government,
has
attempted
to
lay
down
guidelines
as
to
how
waste
is
to
be
treated
not
only
when
collected
and
deposited
in
a
waste
site,
but
also
as
it
decomposes
in
the
earth.
A
person
carrying
on
such
business
must
be
politically
and
environmentally
sensitive.
As
a
result
the
owners
of
the
business
may
be
called
upon
to
control
and
maintain
in
later
years
work
it
had
carried
on
earlier
and
is
responsible
for
damages
such
work
may
cause.
See,
for
example,
Nippa
v.
C.H.
Lewis
(Lucan)
Ltd,
(1991),
82
D.L.R.
(4th)
417,
7
C.E.L.R.
(N.S.)
149
(Ont.
Gen.
Div.);
Gertsen
v.
Toronto
(Municipality)
(1973),
2
O.R.
(2d)
1,
41
D.L.R.
(3d)
646
(H.C.J.);
Plater
v.
Collingwood
(Town),
[1968]
1
O.R.
81-89,
65
D.L.R.
(2d)
492-500
(H.C.J.).
It
is
obvious
and
certain
that
the
appellant
will
be
incurring
costs
in
the
future
years.
The
real
issue
is
whether
the
Act
permits
one
in
the
appellant’s
situation
to
deduct
such
expenses
from
income.
Unfortunately
for
the
appellant
I
cannot
find
any
relief
in
the
Act
permitting
it
to
deduct
these
expenses
in
computing
its
income
for
1988.
The
appellant’s
situation
is
different
from
most
ongoing
businesses
in
that
in
1988
it
operated
on
only
one
landfill
site
which
it
has
since
ceased
to
use
and,
in
fact,
has
since
ceased
to
carry
on
any
significant
business.
Thus
it
may
reasonably
be
expected—and
this
expectation
was
present
in
1988—that
in
future
years
the
appellant
will
have
to
incur
costs
which
it
will
be
unable
to
deduct
from
income
earned
in
those
years
since
it
will
have
no
income.
The
appellant
is
in
a
very
difficult
and
inequitable
situation.
In
The
Queen
v.
Burnco
Industries
Ltd.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
337,
84
D.T.C.
6348,
Pratte,
J.,
stated
that
it
was
the
opinion
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
that
an
expense
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
(C.T.C.
337,
D.T.C.
6348-
49):
.
.
is
an
obligation
to
pay
a
sum
of
money.
An
expense
cannot
be
said
to
be
incurred
by
a
taxpayer
who
is
under
no
obligation
to
pay
money
to
anyone
.
.
.
[a]n
obligation
to
do
something
which
may
in
the
future
entail
the
necessity
of
paying
money
is
not
an
expense.
It
is
the
compensation
the
appellant
may
have
to
pay
and
the
work
to
be
carried
on
by
the
appellant
during
the
closed
phase
which
in
the
appeal
at
bar
refer
to
the
“something”
which
will
entail
the
necessity
in
the
future
of
paying
money.
While
I
am
satisfied
expenses
will
be
incurred
in
the
future,
I
am
not
satisfied
that
in
1988
the
appellant
was
liable
for
these
potential
expenses.
There
was
in
1988
neither
statutory
nor
contractual
liability
for
the
appellant
to
provide
any
financial
assurance.
Any
liability
by
the
appellant
to
pay
an
amount
either
by
regulation,
statute
or
a
common
law
would
exist
after
1988
when
the
Ministry
had
adopted
regulations,
or
the
statute
had
been
amended
or
a
tort
had
been
committed.
The
appellant
is
in
a
situation
not
dissimilar
to
Nomad,
supra,
where
the
taxpayer
did
not
have
a
current
obligation
to
pay
an
expense
in
the
future.
See
also
Northern
and
Central
Gas
Corp.
v.
The
Queen,
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
192,
85
D.T.C.
5744
(F.C.T.D.).
Any
services
the
appellant
may
provide
during
the
closed
phase
will
not
be
services
to
the
municipality.
I
cannot
agree
with
the
appellant
that
a
portion
of
the
fee
paid
to
it
in
1988
by
the
municipality
was
for
future
services,
that
is,
to
close
the
waste
site,
maintain
and
supervise
the
site
during
closure
and
to
provide
compensation.
appellant’s
counsel
submitted
this
was
the
unique
difference
between
the
facts
in
this
appeal
and
Nomad.
The
appellant
did
not
produce
any
evidence
indicating
what
proportion
of
the
fees
was
attributable
to
services
to
be
performed
after
1988,
no
official
from
the
municipality
testified
with
respect
to
this
or
any
other
questions
bearing
on
the
contract.
The
contract
between
the
appellant
and
the
municipality
does
not
provide
for
the
appellant
to
provide
services
to
the
municipality
once
the
municipality
dumps
its
waste
in
the
landfill.
Clause
6
of
the
contract
simply
satisfies
the
municipality
that
it
is
dealing
with
a
bona
fide
landfill
operator.
The
requirement
of
the
appellant
to
obtain
public
liability
insurance
does
not
help
the
appellant:
no
evidence
was
adduced
to
demonstrate
such
a
provision
is
not
the
norm
in
such
contracts;
it
is
simply
comfort
to
the
municipality.
The
contents
of
the
appellant’s
certificate
of
approval
to
operate
is
a
matter
between
the
Ministry
and
the
appellant
and
in
any
event
section
5
of
the
certificate
was
not
implemented
in
1988.
Paragraph
18(1)(e)
does
not
permit
a
deduction
in
computing
income
for
the
year
with
respect
to
amounts
claimed
as
reserves
which
are
transferred
and
set
aside
as
liabilities
to
be
incurred
in
the
future:
Northern
and
Central
Gas
Corp.,
supra,
and
The
Queen
v.
Foothills
Pipe
Lines
(Yukon)
Ltd.,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
448,
90
D.T.C.
6607
(F.C.A.).
The
profit
earned
by
the
appellant
in
1988
from
its
business
was
not
held
in
1988
subject
to
any
specific
and
unfulfilled
conditions.
In
Foothills,
supra,
Urie
J.,
stated
at
pages
458-59
(D.T.C.
6614-15):
If
an
amount
received
is
.
.
.
in
the
nature
of
income,
the
fact
that
in
the
future
the
recipient
may
be
under
an
obligation
to
repay
it
does
not
change
the
character
of
the
receipt
from
income
to
a
liability
whether
deferred
or
otherwise
.
.
.
it
is
important
to
have
regard
to
the
terms
of
the
contract
under
which
the
amounts
in
question
were
paid.
It
is
clear
from
the
terms
of
the
contract
that
on
executing
the
contract
with
the
appellant,
the
municipality
agreed
to
pay
the
appellant
for
disposing
of
the
waste
and
for
the
appellant
to
be
responsible
for
the
landfill
site
in
perpetuity.
In
other
words,
the
municipality
was
paying
the
appellant
to
free
it
of
its
waste
and
any
responsibility
relating
to
the
waste
for
all
time.
Subparagraph
12(1)(a)(i)
provides
for
the
inclusion
in
income
amounts
received
by
a
taxpayer
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
business
that
is
on
account
of
service
not
rendered
before
the
end
of
the
year
or
a
previous
year.
Section
9
provides
for
receipts
or
receivables
earned
in
the
year
to
be
included
in
that
year’s
income.
Paragraph
20(1)(m)
is
available
only
in
respect
of
amounts
included
in
income
under
paragraph
12(1)(a).
All
amounts
received
by
the
appellant
in
1988
were
earned
in
1988,
were
correctly
included
in
its
income
and
were
reported
in
its
tax
return
for
1988
as
income
under
section
9.
I
am
not
satisfied
that
any
of
the
income
received
or
receivable
by
the
appellant
in
1988
was
conditional
or
contingent.
As
previously
stated,
I
cannot
find
any
evidence
that
any
portion
of
the
receipts
of
income
in
1988
was
in
respect
of
services
to
be
rendered
after
1988.
The
reserve
in
paragraph
20(1)(m)
is
not
available
to
the
appellant.
The
amount
of
reserve
deducted
by
the
appellant
in
computing
its
income
in
1987
is
to
be
included
in
its
1988
taxation
year
pursuant
to
paragraph
12
(1
)(e)
of
the
Act:
Dominion
of
Canada
General
Insurance
Co.
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
C.T.C.
190,
84
D.T.C.
6197
(F.C.T.D.);
affd
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
423,
86
D.T.C.
6154
(F.C.A.),
per
Stone,
J.,
at
pages
435-36
(D.T.C.
6163-64).
See
also
Sears
Canada
Inc.,
supra,
at
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
127,
89
D.T.C.
5039
(F.C.A.)
per
Mahoney,
J.
An
amount
purported
to
be
a
reserve
was
deducted
by
the
appellant
pursuant
to
paragraph
20(1)(m)
in
computing
its
income
for
1987.
Paragraph
12(1)(e)
provides
that
any
amount
so
deducted
“as
a
reserve"
in
the
immediately
preceeding
taxation
year
is
to
be
included
in
computing
income
for
the
year.
It
does
not
matter
that
the
taxpayer
was
not
entitled
to
the
reserve
so
long
as
it
deducted
the
amount
as
a
reserve
in
the
previous
year.
I
have
already
commented
on
the
peculiar
situation
in
which
the
appellant
finds
itself.
It
will
be
obliged
in
future
years
to
incur
expenses
when
it
probably
will
have
no
income
from
which
the
expenses
may
be
deducted.
There
is
no
provision
in
the
Act
to
write
off
in
1988
expenses
for
which
the
appellant
will
be
liable
after
1988.
The
appellant
had
not
yet
incurred
a
liability
to
pay
these
costs
and
the
quantum
of
the
costs
has
not
been
determined.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
has
requested
that
if
its
appeal
is
dismissed
I
issue
an
"order
that
the
appellant
be
allowed
to
revise
its
business
limit
for
1988
so
as
to
take
advantage
of
the
small
business
deduction
in
1988”.
Section
171
of
the
Act
does
not
permit
me
to
make
such
an
order.
However
it
is
within
the
power
of
the
Minister
to
make
such
a
revision
and
I
assume
he
will
cooperate
with
the
appellant
in
doing
so.
Appeal
dismissed.
John
Burns,
Gary
Burns
and
Deborah
Klebeck
v.
Her
Majesty
The
[Indexed
as:
Burns
(J.)
v.
Canada]
Tax
Court
of
Canada
(Rowe,
D.J.T.C.C.),
January
20,
1994
(Court
File
Nos.
91-2289/90/91).
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)—3,
18(1)(a),
38(c),
39(1)(c),
40(2)(g)(ii),
50(1)—Allowable
business
investment
The
three
appellants
were
siblings
and
were
each
shareholders
in
B
Ltd.
In
1982,
their
father,
WB,
died
and
his
shares
in
B
Ltd.
were
transferred
equally
to
his
children,
the
appellants
and
three
other
siblings.
As
a
result,
each
appellant
and
his
or
her
brothers
and
sisters
held
one-sixth
of
the
shares
in
B
Ltd.
In
1982,
WB
also
owned
a
one-half
interest
in
W
Ltd.,
a
company
which
operated
a
farm
implement
dealership.
One
of
the
appellants’
brothers,
GB,
owned
the
other
one-half
interest.
Upon
his
death,
WB
bequeathed
his
50
per
cent
interest
in
W
Ltd.
in
equal
shares
to
his
six
children.
Accordingly,
each
appellant
held
a
V12
interest
in
W
Ltd.,
which
included
a
share
in
WB's
loan
to
W
Ltd.,
amounting
to
the
sum
of
$25,695.50
to
each
appellant.
After
WB's
death,
GB
owned
/u
of
the
shares
in
W
Ltd.
In
November
1984,
the
line
of
credit
to
W
Ltd.
from
the
credit
union
had
reached
its
limit
and
the
family
decided
to
reorganize
both
B
Ltd.
and
W
Ltd.
It
was
decided
that
GB
would
sell
his
interest
in
B
Ltd.
to
his
siblings
and
the
siblings
would
sell
their
interest
in
W
Ltd.
to
GB.
In
addition,
it
was
agreed
that
B
Ltd.
would
be
able
to
obtain
machinery
from
W
Ltd.
at
a
rate
as
close
to
cost
as
possible.
Farm
Credit
Corporation
was
approached
and,
with
the
support
of
the
credit
union,
it
agreed
to
lend
the
sum
of
$520,000
to
pay
down
the
indebtedness
to
the
credit
union
and
to
buy
out
the
share
of
GB
in
B
Ltd.
In
return,
the
credit
union
would
forgive
the
guarantees
of
the
shareholders
of
W
Ltd.,
(having
inherited,
through
WB's
estate,
the
potential
liability
arising
from
the
guarantee
of
WB)
with
the
exception
of
GB,
who
held
/i2
of
W
Ltd.'s
stock.
The
credit
union
advanced
the
sum
of
$300,000
to
B
Ltd.
which
paid
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
each
shareholder
to
reduce
his/her
shareholder’s
loan
and
then
each
of
the
six
children
loaned
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
W
Ltd.
As
part
of
the
consideration
for
the
loan,
the
credit
union
required
that
the
children
postpone
any
demand
for
repayment
of
the
loans
and
any
interest
in
favour
of
the
credit
union.
Unfortunately,
W
Ltd.
did
not
fare
well
and
over
the
course
of
a
few
years,
it
became
obvious
that
W
Ltd.
would
be
unable
to
repay
the
appellants’
loans.
In
filing
their
tax
returns
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years,
each
appellant
claimed
an
allowable
business
investment
loss
("ABIL")
in
respect
of
the
$50,000
loan
and
the
inherited
$25,695.50
loan.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deductions
(although
the
Minister
was
not
entitled
to
reassess
the
1986
taxation
year
for
one
of
the
appellants
because
his
rights
had
been
statute
barred).
In
the
alternative,
the
Minister
claimed
that
the
appellants
were
not
entitled
to
deduct
50
per
cent
of
the
loss
in
each
of
their
1986
and
1987
taxation
years.
The
main
issue
was
whether
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
applied
to
deem
the
appellants’
losses
to
be
nil.
In
other
words,
did
the
appellants
make
the
loans
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
from
business
or
property?
During
the
course
of
the
hearing,
the
Crown
conceded
that
the
loan
of
$25,695.50
by
each
appellant
to
W
Ltd.
satisfied
the
requirements
of
an
ABIL.
HELD:
As
part
of
the
negotiations
at
the
time
of
the
$50,000
loans,
W
Ltd.
agreed
to
sell
machinery,
parts
and
equipment
to
B
Ltd.
at
greatly
reduced
prices.
Accordingly,
the
making
of
the
loans
to
W
Ltd.
resulted
in
reduced
costs
to
B
Ltd.,
in
which
the
appellants,
as
a
unit,
controlled
the
majority
(60
per
cent)
of
the
shares.
As
such,
the
appellants
were
able
to
use
their
money
in
a
way
that
would
lead
to
the
production
of
income,
although
not
in
a
manner
that
was
capable
of
being
placed
into
a
neat,
tidy,
labelled
pigeonhole.
In
the
result,
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
did
not
apply
to
the
appellants'
loans
of
$50,000
because
the
appellants
did
acquire
the
debt
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
In
addition,
with
respect
to
the
Minister's
alternative
argument,
the
appellants
had
demonstrated
that
there
was
no
reason
for
the
Minister
to
have
taken
the
position
that
the
loans
to
W
Ltd.
went
bad
only
during
the
1987
taxation
year.
The
apportionment
of
the
loss
equally
between
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years
was
therefore
correct.
Appeals
allowed.
C.
Stewart
for
the
appellants.
H.
Irving
for
the
respondent.
Cases
referred
to:
Lowery
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
2171,
86
D.T.C.
1649;
Casselman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1983]
C.T.C.
2584,
83
D.T.C.
522;
O'Blenes
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
2171,
90
D.T.C.
1068;
Ellis
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
2081,
88
D.T.C.
1070;
The
Queen
v.
Lalande,
[1983]
C.T.C.
311,
84
D.T.C.
6159;
Sansoucy
v.
M.N.R.,
[1980]
C.T.C.
2312,
80
D.T.C.
1276;
Business
Art
Inc.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
2001,
86
D.T.C.
1842:
Hogan
v.
M.N.R.
(1956),
15
Tax
A.B.C.
1,
56
D.T.C.
183;
Berretti
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
2293,
86
D.T.C.
1719.
Rowe,
D.J.T.C.C.:—These
appeals
were
heard
under
the
general
procedure
of
this
Court.
The
appellant,
John
Burns,
appeals
from
a
reassessment
of
income
tax
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
(the
"Minister")
in
reassessing
the
appellant,
disallowed
a
claim
for
an
allowable
business
investment
loss
(ABIL)
in
the
sum
of
$18,923.88
in
each
of
the
years
under
appeal
and
determined
the
loss
to
be
nil
in
accordance
with
the
meaning
of
paragraphs
38(c)
and
39(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
for
purposes
of
section
3
of
the
Act.
The
appellant’s
brother,
Gary
Burns,
appeals
from
a
reassessment
of
income
tax
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years,
arising
from
the
same
facts.
It
was
agreed
by
all
parties
that
his
appeal,
91-2291
and
the
appeal
of
Deborah
Klebeck,
91-2289,
from
a
reassessment
for
the
1987
and
1988
taxation
years
be
heard
together
with
the
appeal
of
John
Burns,
on
the
basis
that
evidence
taken
on
any
of
the
appeals
apply,
where
applicable,
to
the
other
appeals.
Deborah
Klebeck
is
the
sister
of
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns.
Deborah
Klebeck
claimed
an
allowable
business
investment
loss
in
her
1987
return
of
income
together
with
a
child
tax
credit
based
on
that
income.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deduction
and
calculated
the
child
tax
credit
accordingly.
In
the
1988
taxation
year,
she
claimed
a
non-capital
loss
available
for
carry
forward
from
the
1987
taxation
year,
which
was
disallowed.
The
following
facts,
as
set
forth
in
each
appellant's
notice
of
appeal,
and
as
admitted
in
the
relevant
reply
to
notice
of
appeal,
are:
1.
At
all
relevant
times,
each
appellant
was
an
individual
resident
in
Canada.
2.
At
all
relevant
times,
each
appellant
was
a
shareholder
of
the
corporation,
Burns
Farms
Ltd.
(BFL).
3.
At
all
relevant
times,
BFL
was
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Saskatchewan.
4.
In
1982,
Wendell
C.
Burns,
father
of
all
three
appellants,
died
and
his
shares
in
BFL
were
transferred
equally
to
the
three
appellants
and
their
three
other
siblings.
As
a
result,
each
appellant
and
his
or
her
brothers
and
sisters
held
one-sixth
of
the
shares
in
BFL.
5.
In
1982,
Wendell
C.
Burns,
upon
his
death,
bequeathed
his
50
per
cent
interest
in
Wynyard
Farm
Centre
Ltd.
(WFC)
in
equal
shares
to
each
appellant
and
three
other
brothers
and
sisters
with
the
result
that
each
appellant
now
held
a
'/12
interest
in
WFC,
which
included
a
share
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
shareholder
loan
to
WFC,
amounting
to
the
sum
of
$25,695.50
to
each
appellant.
6.
The
shareholder
loans
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
to
WFC
had
no
specific
terms
of
repayment
and
no
specific
rate
of
interest
thereon.
In
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
of
each
appellant,
the
Minister
conceded
that
the
loan
by
each
appellant
in
the
sum
of
$25,695.50,
obtained
by
way
of
inheritance
from
the
father’s
estate,
was
a
debt
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
would
qualify
as
an
ABIL.
However,
the
Minister’s
position
is
that
each
appellant
is
entitled
to
the
ABIL,
only
in
the
1987
taxation
year,
and
not
on
the
basis
that
50
per
cent
of
the
ABIL
can
be
claimed
in
each
of
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years.
Each
of
the
appellants
loaned
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
WFC
and
the
Minister's
position
is
that
there
is
no
entitlement
at
all
to
an
ABIL
as
the
loan
was
not
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
pursuant
to
the
requirements
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act.
In
the
alternative,
the
Minister's
position
is
that
if
the
appellants
are
entitled
to
an
ABIL
then
it
would
arise
in
the
1987
taxation
year
and
cannot
be
claimed
on
a
50-50
basis
for
each
of
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years.
Despite
the
commonality
of
the
appellants’
situation,
the
appellant,
Deborah
Klebeck,
for
her
1986
taxation
year,
claimed
an
ABIL
in
the
sum
of
$6,423.88,
being
one-
half
of
$12,847.75,
the
total
allowable
loss
on
the
inherited
loan
of
$25,695.50,
the
other
half
having
been
claimed
by
her
during
the
1987
taxation
year.
In
addition,
Deborah
Klebeck
claimed
an
ABIL
in
the
sum
of
$12,500
for
the
1986
taxation
year
as
it
related
to
the
loan
by
her
in
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
WFC,
with
the
claim
for
a
further
ABIL
of
$12,500
being
made
for
the
1987
taxation
year.
The
Minister
allowed
Deborah
Klebeck’s
claim
for
an
ABIL
in
respect
of
the
$50,000
loan
to
WFC,
despite
having
rejected
the
same
claim
by
her
brothers
and
fellow
appellants,
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns.
The
Minister,
having
run
out
of
time
to
reassess
her
for
1986,
was
able
to
reassess
with
respect
to
her
1987
taxation
year
and
took
the
position
that
she
is
not
entitled
to
an
ABIL
in
the
sum
of
$12,500
for
the
1987
taxation
year
for
the
same
reason
her
brothers
were
denied
the
claim,
namely,
that
the
loan
did
not
qualify
under
the
Act
as
having
been
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
that
the
proper
determination
of
the
loss
was
nil.
The
appellant,
Gary
Burns,
was
not
present
during
the
hearing
and
the
following
documents,
by
consent,
were
filed
as
exhibits.
Exhibit
A-1
|
1986
tax
return
|
Exhibit
A-2
|
1987
tax
return
|
Exhibit
A-3
|
letter
and
forms
re:
T1
adjustment
|
Exhibit
A-4
|
notice
of
reassessment—1986
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-5
|
notice
of
reassessment—1987
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-6
|
notice
of
confirmation—1986-87
taxation
years
|
Exhibit
A-7
|
memorandum
of
agreement
between
Gary
Burns
and
WFC
|
Exhibit
A-8
|
share
certificate
in
WFC
|
The
appellant,
John
Burns,
testified
he
resides
at
Wynyard,
Saskatchewan
and
is
a
teacher
and
a
farmer,
living
on
the
farm
property.
Filed
as
exhibits
were
the
following:
The
appellant,
John
Burns,
testified
he
is
the
brother
of
the
other
two
appellants.
Burns
Farms
Ltd.
(BFL)
was
incorporated
in
1975
and
he
was
a
shareholder
at
all
relevant
times.
The
corporation's
business
was
a
livestock
and
cropping
operation
on
1,000
cultivated
acres
and
400
acres
of
pasture.
Prior
to
1982,
the
appellant
operated
his
own
farm
and
was
a
teacher
and
program
coordinator.
In
1982,
as
a
result
of
the
death
of
his
father,
Wendell
C.
Burns
on
November
2,
he
came
to
hold,
through
inheritance,
110
shares
of
the
common
stock
in
BFL,
which
amounted
to
one-sixth
of
the
total.
He
had
not
been
a
shareholder
in
Wynyard
Farm
Centre
Ltd.
(WFC)
which
was
owned
by
Wendell
C.
Burns
and
Gordon
Burns,
brother
of
the
three
appellants.
The
value
of
the
estate
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
was
approximately
$1
million.
Pursuant
to
the
last
will
and
testament
(Exhibit
A-16)
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns,
the
residue
was
divided
equally
into
six
portions,
one
for
each
of
his
surviving
children.
Mr.
Burns
had
held
one
share—or
50
per
cent—of
the
stock
of
the
corporation,
WFC,
which
was
also
divided
equally
among
the
six
children,
with
the
result
that
Gordon
Burns,
having
previously
held
one
share
(50
per
cent)
of
WFC,
ended
up
owing
/2
of
the
shares
of
WFC,
and
each
of
tne
appellants
held
'/12,
as
did
two
other
siblings.
At
the
time
of
his
death,
WFC
was
indebted
to
Wendell
C.
Burns,
and
the
equal
portion
of
that
loan,
bequeathed
to
each
child,
amounted
to
$25,695.50.
In
due
course,
the
executor
of
the
estate
transferred
the
share
in
WFC
to
each
beneficiary
and
the
appropriate
share
certificate
was
issued.
Subsequent
to
1982,
the
scope
of
BFL
farming
operations
expanded
to
include
the
land
being
farmed
by
the
appellant
and
all
family
members
became
active
in
the
farming
business.
The
appellant
stated
he
acted
as
manager,
while
Gordon
Burns
looked
after
the
machinery
and
equipment
and
a
brother-in-law
concerned
himself
with
the
farm
buildings.
The
appellant
stated
that
his
managerial
duties
were
full-time
and
he
did
not
have
any
outside
income
until
he
returned
to
his
teaching
profession
in
1985.
Currently,
BFL
farms
4,500
cultivated
acres
together
with
400
acres
of
pasture.
Some
of
the
land
was
rented
or
leased
and
the
overall
operation
included
1,600
acres
of
land
in
his
own
name.
All
family
members
agreed
that
the
shareholder's
loan
inherited
by
them
could
continue
to
be
owed
to
them
by
the
business,
WFC,
a
farm
implement
dealership
in
Wynyard.
Exhibit
A-9
|
1986
tax
return
|
Exhibit
A-10
|
1987
tax
return
|
Exhibit
A-11
|
171
adjustment
request
re:
ABIL
|
Exhibit
A-12
|
notice
of
reassessment
for
1986
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-13
|
notice
of
reassessment
for
1987
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-14
|
notice
of
confirmation
for
1
986
and
1987
taxation
years
|
In
November,
1984,
the
line
of
credit
to
WFC
from
the
Wynyard
Credit
Union
had
reached
the
limit
and
the
manager
spoke
to
the
appellant
in
his
Capacity
as
executor
of
the
estate
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
and
also
as
a
shareholder
in
WFC.
In
the
spring
of
1984,
the
family
members
met
and
discussed
financial
matters
and
recognized
that
funding
to
WFC
was
necessary
and
that
it
would
have
to
come
from
BFL.
All
family
members
felt
WFC
was,
despite
hard
times
in
the
agriculture
industry,
still
a
viable
business
and
that
some
restructuring
would
permit
interest
on
debt
to
be
reduced
from
22
per
cent
annual
interest
to
12.5
per
cent
or
13
per
cent.
Before
it
would
advance
further
funds
to
WFC,
the
credit
union
wanted
personal
guarantees
from
each
of
the
six
beneficiary-shareholders
in
WFC
and
numerous
discussions
were
held
by
family
members
and
contact
was
made
with
absent
members,
such
as
Gary
Burns,
who
was
living
on
Vancouver
Island,
British
Columbia.
Ultimately,
it
was
decided
that
Gordon
Burns
would
sell
his
share
in
BFL
provided
that
the
remaining
shareholders
would
agree
that
BFL
be
used
as
a
vehicle
to
provide
some
funding
to
WFC.
The
appellant
stated
that
there
was
a
verbal
agreement
with
Gordon
Burns
that
BFL
would
be
able
to
obtain
machinery
from
the
WFC
dealership
at
a
rate
as
close
to
cost
as
possible.
In
addition,
parts
were
to
be
sold
to
BFL
at
a
discount
and
the
WFC
shop,
if
not
otherwise
occupied
with
other
customers,
would
be
made
available
to
BFL
for
its
needs
from
time
to
time.
Prior
to
entering
into
this
agreement
with
Gordon
Burns,
the
appellant,
John
Burns,
stated
that
while
BFL
had
gotten
some
breaks
from
WFC
in
the
past
on
commissions,
it
was
not
the
same
degree
of
advantage
to
be
obtained
under
the
new
agreement.
Farm
Credit
Corporation
was
approached
and,
with
the
support
of
the
Wynyard
Credit
Union,
the
corporation
agreed
to
lend
the
sum
of
$520,000
to
pay
down
the
indebtedness
to
the
credit
union
and
to
buy
out
the
share
of
Gordon
Burns
in
BFL.
In
return,
the
credit
union
would
forgive
the
guarantees
of
the
shareholders
in
WFC,
(having
inherited,
through
the
estate,
the
potential
liability
arising
from
the
guarantee
of
Wendell
C.
Burns)
with
the
exception
of
Gordon
Burns,
who
held
/i2,
of
the
stock.
The
target
date
for
the
restructuring
of
the
two
corporations
was
November
1,
1984
but
matters
proceeded
slower
than
anticipated.
However,
the
agreement
regarding
the
discount
on
farm
machinery
between
WFC
and
BFL
was
carried
out.
The
appellant
referred
to
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
shareholders
of
BFL,
dated
July
23,
1984
(Exhibit
A-20)
and
further
minutes
meetings
held
on
July
30,
1984
(Exhibit
A-21)
and
September
24,
1984
(Exhibit
A-22)
approving
a
loan
application
by
BFL
to
Farm
Credit
Corporation
for
a
loan
of
$520,000
of
which
$100,000
would
be
used
to
buy
out
Gordon
Burns
interest
in
BFL.
The
credit
union
advanced
the
sum
of
$300,000
to
BFL
which
then
paid
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
each
shareholder
to
reduce
their
shareholder's
loan
and
then
each
of
the
six
Burns
children
loaned
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
WFC.
The
credit
union
did
not
want
WFC
to
be
required
to
pay
any
interest
on
these
loans
and
also
insisted
that
each
of
the
lenders
execute
a
postponement
of
payment
on
the
loan.
The
agreement
to
postpone
any
demand
for
repayment
and
any
interest
in
favour
of
the
credit
union
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-19.
At
a
meeting
of
shareholders
of
WFC
held
on
November
1,
1984,
the
three
appellants
and
their
two
brothers
and
sisters,
by
written
agreement
(Exhibit
A-24)
sold
their
interest
in
WFC
to
Gordon
Burns.
At
this
point
then,
Gordon
Burns
held
no
interest
in
BFL,
the
remaining
five
Burns
siblings
held
no
shares
in
WFC
and
they
had
been
released
by
the
credit
union
from
their
guarantee
for
WFC
loans.
In
1985,
the
appellant,
John
Burns,
was
the
president
of
BFL.
He
stated
that
on
March
26,
1985,
BFL
bought
a
sprayer
from
WFC
and
purchased
it
at
the
price
noted
on
the
invoice
(Exhibit
A-26)
which
was
at
or
near
cost.
On
June
25,
1985
a
particular
blade
was
purchased
by
BFL
from
WFC
and
invoiced
at
cost
(Exhibit
A-27).
On
July
1,
1985,
BFL
purchased
from
WFC
a
used
combine
obtained
on
a
repossession
at
less
than
market
value.
In
August,
September
and
October,
1985,
the
appellant
provided
invoices
(Exhibits
A-29
to
A-32
inclusive)
indicating
purchases
by
BFL
of
certain
parts
and
equipment
from
WFC
at
cost.
In
addition,
he
stated
that
BFL
had
rented
a
tractor
from
WFC
in
1985
at
the
rate
of
$15
per
hour
when
the
normal
rate
was
$35.
The
purchases
made
by
BFL
during
1985
were
normal
for
an
operation
of
that
size.
John
Burns
also
stated
that
he
was
able
to
obtain
items
at
cost
from
WFC,
in
particular
an
auger,
and
a
tractor
for
which
he
paid
the
sum
of
$63,500
at
a
time
when
he
believed
the
market
value
of
the
unit
to
be
in
excess
of
$80,000
(Exhibit
A-35).
These
purchases
were
in
his
own
personal
capacity
for
his
own
farm.
The
appellant
stated
he
held
discussions
with
his
brother,
Gordon
Burns,
in
the
spring
of
1985
about
what
he
believed
to
be
excessive
inventory
held
by
WFC.
By
the
fall
of
1985,
the
situation
was
no
better
and
the
repair
shop
was
closed
over
the
winter
in
order
to
reduce
costs.
By
the
summer
of
1986,
the
inventory
was
depleted
and
he
believed
WFC
was
unable
to
cover
more
than
50
per
cent
of
the
debts
to
the
family
members,
each
of
whom
was
owed
the
sum
of
$50,000.
The
price
of
used
machinery
had
plummeted.
In
the
autumn
of
1986,
the
credit
union
was
owed
a
large
amount
of
money
by
WFC
and
it
had
first
call
on
all
of
its
assets.
Gordon
Burns
advised
John
Burns
that
the
ability
of
WFC
to
pay
even
50
per
cent
of
the
amount
of
the
outstanding
loans
to
the
appellants
would
be
an
optimistic
view
of
matters.
By
the
spring
of
1987,
Gordon
Burns
was
the
sole
employee
of
WFC
but
it
was
able
to
conduct
some
business
by
returning
parts
to
the
factory
for
rebate
and
holding
an
auction
of
remaining
inventory.
The
appellant
stated
there
was
no
thought
given
by
family
members
to
suing
WFC
and,
in
any
event,
the
loans
to
WFC
had
not
been
personally
guaranteed
by
Gordon
Burns.
The
appellant,
John
Burns,
accompanied
Gordon
Burns
to
visit
a
bankruptcy
trustee
in
1987.
He
stated
he
began
thinking
about
claiming
a
loss
on
the
loan
to
WFC
and
requested
an
adjustment
to
his
1986
taxation
year
by
filing
with
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
the
appropriate
form
(Exhibit
A-11).
He
stated
that
while
preparing
the
return
of
income
for
the
1986
taxation
year
that
he
had
informed
his
accountant
of
the
precariousness
of
the
financial
situation
of
WFC
and
had
also
informed
his
brother,
Gary
Burns,
of
the
state
of
affairs.
In
cross-examination,
John
Burns
stated
that
the
proceeds
of
the
loan
of
BFL
from
Farm
Credit
Corporation
went
to
pay
off
an
existing
mortgage
and
to
purchase
Gordon
Burns'
share
in
BFL
at
a
price
of
$100,000.
The
money
never
left
the
credit
union
office
and
was
part
of
an
overall
transaction
in
which
the
credit
union
made
two
loans
totalling
$300,000
to
BFL
which
debited
$50,000
from
the
shareholder's
loan
account
of
each
of
the
six
shareholders
who
then
each
loaned
$50,000
to
WFC.
He
stated
the
family
members
hoped
the
loans
could
be
repaid
as
soon
as
possible.
Gordon
Burns
also
took
out
the
sum
of
$50,000
from
his
BFL
shareholder
loan
account
before
transferring
over
his
shares
to
the
others
as
part
of
the
restructuring
of
BFL
and
WFC.
All
family
members,
except
Gary
Burns,
were
present
during
discussions
about
the
loans
to
WFC
and
while
there
was
nothing
in
writing,
the
general
rule
always
followed
by
family
members,
including
years
prior
to
1982,
was
that
interest
on
such
inter-family
loans
would
bear
interest
at
10
per
cent
per
annum.
Upon
being
shown
a
T1
adjustment
request,
dated
December
15,
1988,
for
his
1986
taxation
year,
he
stated
he
believes
that
was
a
repeat
submission
as
he
was
concerned
there
had
been
no
response
to
an
earlier
request.
He
indicated
that
his
brother,
Gary
Burns,
is
not
a
farmer
and
was
living
in
Duncan,
British
Columbia,
during
the
times
relevant
to
this
appeal.
Gordon
Burns,
testified
he
resides
in
Wynyard,
Saskatchewan
and
is
the
brother
of
the
appellants.
In
1982,
he
owned
one-sixth
of
the
issued
shares
in
BFL.
He
also
owned
one
of
the
two
issued
shares
in
WFC,
his
father,
Wendell
C.
Burns,
holding
the
other
share.
On
July
27,
1982,
he
and
his
father
guaranteed
a
$500,000
loan
to
WFC
from
the
Wynyard
Credit
Union
(Exhibit
A-36).
Following
the
death
of
his
father
in
November,
1982,
he
stated
that
at
least
two
meetings
a
month
were
held
with
other
family
members
and
several
meetings
were
held
on
a
regular
basis
with
the
management
of
the
credit
union
as
WFC
was
at
the
top
of
its
line
of
credit.
He
also
held
discussions
with
John
Burns,
who
was
the
manager
of
BFL,
and
told
him
that
the
only
real
source
of
raising
money
to
inject
into
WFC
would
have
to
be
BFL
and
the
Burns
family.
He
stated
that
“the
only
thing
he
had
to
work
with
was
that
they
could
purchase
machinery
at
cost",
and
that
this
arrangement
was
a
condition
of
the
financing
WFC
received
in
November,
1984.
In
his
view,
the
arrangement
regarding
discounted
machinery
cost
was
to
extend
to
John
Burns
to
his
own
farm
and
that
he,
as
well
as
BFL,
had
the
right
to
a
discount
on
rates
for
leasing
equipment
or
to
use
equipment
belonging
to
WFC
provided
it
was
available
at
the
time.
An
employee-manager
of
WFC
was
made
aware
of
this
arrangement.
Gordon
Burns
indicated
that
there
was
not
such
discounting
arrangement
in
place
prior
to
1984.
He
indicated
that
there
was
a
discussion
of
interest
to
be
paid
and
"we
hoped
to
be
able
to
pay
interest"
but
times
were
tough.
Pursuant
to
a
share
transfer
from
the
other
family
members
he
became
the
sole
shareholder
in
WFC.
The
arrangement
with
the
credit
union
required
that
all
six
family
members
put
$50,000
each
into
WFC
for
a
total
of
$300,000
and
the
credit
union
then
released
the
estate
of
Wendell
C.
Burns
from
the
$500,000
guarantee.
He
stated
he
had
been
in
business
with
his
father
since
1978.
He
stated
that
the
sale
of
a
blade
to
BFL
was
“almost
at
cost"
and
stated
that
it
is
difficult
to
determine
the
cost
on
trade-ins.The
tractor
rental
to
BFL
was
at
a
greatly
reduced
rate
and
other
purchases
by
BFL
were
at
cost
plus
shipping
and
handling
charges.
As
for
the
Massey
tractor
purchased
by
John
Burns,
personally,
Gordon
Burns
stated
that
the
sum
of
$60,000
paid
to
WFC
was
only
the
cost
price
or
less.
In
1986,
weekly
meetings
were
being
held
with
the
credit
union
about
the
worsening
financial
situation
of
WFC.
On
October
25,
1986
minutes
of
a
WFC
shareholders
and
director's
meeting
of
WFC
(Exhibit
A-38)
referred
to
the
intention
of
the
company
to
cease
operations
effective
December
31,
1986
and
that
the
debt
owin
to
the
appellants
and
the
other
family
members
would
not
be
paid
in
full
and
that
they
had
been
advised
that
the
most
they
could
expect
to
receive
from
WFC
would
be
50
per
cent
of
the
amount
outstanding.
He
stated
that
the
situation
regarding
inventory
and
outstanding
liabilities
was
monitored
constantly
and
after
undertaking
certain
methods
of
disposal
of
remaining
inventory,
by
the
end
of
1987,
only
the
property
itself
remained.
The
real
property
was
taken
over
by
the
credit
union
and
was
worth
less
than
the
debt
against
it.
However,
the
credit
union
agreed
to
accept
it
in
full
satisfaction
of
the
WFC
debt
and
also
released
him
from
his
personal
guarantee.
The
hope
had
been
that
the
sale
of
remaining
equipment
and
inventory
in
1987
would
have
been
sufficient
to
pay
towards
the
loans
of
the
appellants
and
the
other
members
of
the
family
but
only
the
credit
union
received
any
funds
from
WFC.
The
mark-up
on
goods
sold
by
WFC
varied
from
10
per
cent
to
25
per
cent,
depending
on
the
nature
of
the
transaction
and
the
demand.
In
cross-examination,
Gordon
Burns
identified
financial
statements
of
WEC
for
1985
(Exhibit
R-2),
1986
(Exhibit
R-3),
and
1987
(Exhibit
R-4)
and
agreed
that
the
five
loans
of
$50,000
each
by
the
family
members
to
WFC
were
not
reflected
in
any
of
those
financial
statements.
In
the
1988
financial
statement
(Exhibit
R-6)
there
is
a
reference
to
loans
to
former
shareholders
and
also
to
the
state
of
affairs
in
1987.
A
new
accountant
for
WFC
was
retained
for
the
1988
year.
At
the
time
of
receiving
the
loans
from
his
siblings,
he
believed
that
repayment
to
them
by
WFC
would
depend
on
how
well
the
business
did
and
that
there
would
be
concessions
made
regarding
the
cost
of
equipment
to
"cover
the
interest
since
there
was
nothing
documented”.
In
1987,
ne
stated
that
he
told
his
siblings
that
payment
of
their
loans
by
WFC
was
hopeless.
At
the
conclusion
of
his
testimony,
Gordon
Burns
stated
that
a
farm
equipment
dealer
in
Wynyard,
previously
handling
volumes
ten
times
that
of
WFC,
had
also
gone
out
of
business
due
to
the
terrible
conditions
in
the
farming
industry.
Roger
Nupdal
testified
he
has
been
the
loans
manager
at
the
Wynyard
Credit
Union
since
1982
and
personally
handled
the
WFC
account
subsequent
to
1984.
He
was
familiar
with
the
personal
guarantee
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
(Exhibit
A-39).
Throughout
1984,
he
testified
that
he
had
serious
concerns
about
the
financial
health
of
WFC
and
felt
that
it
needed
a
major
infusion
of
capital
to
survive.
He
spoke
to
John
Burns
and
to
Gordon
Burns
about
the
implication
to
the
estate
of
the
credit
union
calling
for
payment
on
the
WFC
loans.
He
was
later
advised
that
the
sum
of
$300,000
would
be
injected
into
WFC
and,
provided
certain
conditions
were
met,
including
a
postponement
of
payment
and
waiving
of
interest
payments
to
the
family
member
lenders,
then
the
credit
union
was
willing
to
release
the
estate
from
liability
under
the
guarantee
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns.
On
May
23,
1985
by
letter
(Exhibit
A-40),
he
confirmed
to
the
family
solicitor
that
the
beneficiaries
of
the
estate
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns,
were
not
responsible
for
the
debts
of
WFC.
By
the
end
of
1986,
Roger
Nupdal
stated
he
believed
WFC
again
required
a
major
infusion
of
capital,
failing
which
an
orderly
liquidation
would
have
to
take
place.
To
some
extent
the
process
had
already
begun
in
1985
but
by
the
end
of
1986
it
became
clear
that
the
credit
union
would
have
to
take
a
loss
on
its
loans
to
WFC.
On
June
12,
1991,
by
quit
claim
(Exhibit
A-41)
and
settlement
agreement
(Exhibit
A-42)
the
credit
union
took
the
real
property
of
WFC
with
an
agreed
upon
value
of
$195,000
together
with
accounts
receivable
in
the
sum
of
$15,000
in
full
settlement
of
the
WFC
debts
and
wrote
off
about
$80,000
in
the
process.
Deborah
Klebeck
testified
that
she
is
a
farmer
and
has
lived
at
Wynyard
since
1983.
The
following
exhibits
were
filed
at
the
beginning
of
her
evidence:
The
appellant,
Deborah
Klebeck,
stated
that
her
claim
for
an
ABIL
in
the
1986
taxation
year
was
allowed.
In
1982,
she
held
110
shares
of
BFL
and
decided
to
move
to
Wynyard
and
derive
income
from
the
farming
operation.
As
a
result
of
inheritance
from
her
father's
estate
she
also
acquired
an
interest
in
WFC.
In
1984,
she
attended
meetings
regarding
the
restructuring
of
WFC
and
BFL.
John
Burns
was
acting
as
manager
of
the
BFL
farming
business.
She
recalls
discussions
of
loans
to
be
given
to
WFC
and
also
BFL
obtaining
parts
and
machinery
at
cost.
She
did
not
recall
any
discussion
regarding
interest
on
any
loans.
In
November,
1984,
she
believed
WFC
to
be
a
viable
business.
However,
with
the
buy-out
of
Gordon
Burns
from
BFL,
the
remaining
five
shareholders
would
have
a
larger
interest
and
would
also
be
able
to
reduce
the
costs
of
machinery
and
parts.
She
stated
she
later
relied
on
the
advice
of
John
Burns
as
to
the
potential
of
collecting
on
the
loans
to
WFC
by
family
members.
For
her
1987
taxation
year,
she
claimed
a
child
tax
credit
which
was
adjusted
in
the
course
of
the
reassessment.
Exhibit
A-43
|
1986
tax
return
|
Exhibit
A-44
|
11
adjustment
request
dated
March
28,
1988
|
Exhibit
A-45
|
notice
of
reassessment
for
1987
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-46
|
notice
of
reassessment
for
1988
taxation
year
|
Exhibit
A-47
|
notice
of
confirmation
|
Exhibit
A-48
|
share
certificate
|
Exhibit
A-49
|
1987
tax
return
|
In
cross-examination,
Deborah
Klebeck
stated
that
she
received
a
letter
from
an
accountant
in
1988
suggesting
the
she
could
attempt
to
readjust
her
1986
taxation
return.
Wayne
Coleman
testified
that
he
is
an
accountant
in
Saskatoon
and
prepared
the
1986
and
1987
tax
returns
for
BFL.
He
discussed
the
matter
of
the
loans
to
WFC
by
the
family
members
and
whether
or
not
they
should
claim
an
ABIL.
Notes
of
his
discussion
were
prepared
by
him
on
May
15,
1987.
Lavina
Bukarak
testified
she
is
an
appeals
officer
for
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
and
was
familiar
with
the
files
of
all
three
appellants.
She
stated
that
Deborah
Klebeck
was
allowed
an
ABIL
in
the
1986
taxation
year
on
both
the
loan
to
WFC,
inherited
through
the
estate,
and
with
respect
to
her
$50,000
loan
to
WFC.
She
stated
there
was
no
difference
in
the
fact
situation
between
that
of
Deborah
Klebeck
and
her
brothers,
the
other
two
appellants,
except
that
a
review
of
the
file
seemed
to
indicate
that
the
assessor
had
been
operating
on
the
erroneous
assumption
that
she
had
been
a
shareholder
of
WFC
at
the
time
of
making
the
loan.
The
time
limit
during
which
a
further
reassessment
could
occur
had
expired.
In
cross-examination,
Ms.
Bukarak
stated
she
felt
all
of
the
appellants
should
be
allowed
an
ABIL
in
respect
of
the
loan
inherited
by
them
but
not
with
respect
to
the
$50,000
loan
made
by
each
of
them
to
WFC
as
they
were
not
shareholders
of
WFC
and
the
loans
bore
no
interest
requirement.
In
her
view,
the
loans
of
$50,000
were
for
the
purpose
of
obtaining
from
the
credit
union
a
release
of
the
liability
of
the
estate
flowing
from
the
personal
guarantee
of
the
late
Wendell
C.
Burns.
Counsel
for
the
appellants
submitted
that
in
light
of
the
Minister's
concession
that
the
loan
of
$25,695.50
by
each
of
them
to
WFC
would
be
subject
to
a
claim
for
an
ABIL,
the
only
issue
on
that
point
was
the
timing
of
a
claim
and
this
affected
the
appellants
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns.
The
claim
for
an
ABIL
on
this
loan
for
the
1986
taxation
year
had
been
allowed
for
Deborah
Klebeck.
In
his
submission,
the
evidence
demonstrated
the
appellants
had
made
a
reasonable
determination
that
50
per
cent
of
the
loan
was
uncollectible
at
the
end
of
the
1986
taxation
year
and
that
the
balance
of
the
loan
was
uncollectible
at
the
end
of
the
1987
taxation
year.
Further
at
issue,
was
the
matter
of
the
$50,000
loans
made
by
each
of
the
appellants
to
WFC
which
counsel
submitted
were
debts
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
that
the
evidence
indicated
that
the
appellants
had
correctly
determined
at
the
end
of
the
1986
taxation
year
that
50
per
cent
of
the
debt
was
uncollectible
and
that
at
the
end
of
the
1987
taxation
year
the
remainder
was
also
uncollectible.
Counsel
pointed
out
that
the
ABIL
for
the
1987
taxation
year
regarding
the
$50,000
loan
to
WFC
affected
the
appeal
of
Deborah
Klebeck
which
also
had
an
impact
on
a
loss
carry
forward
at
December
31,
1987
as
well
as
a
calculation
of
the
amount
of
the
child
tax
credit
to
which
she
was
entitled.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
advised
that
Deborah
Klebeck
was
entitled
to
claim
an
ABIL
in
the
sum
of
$6,423.88
for
her
1987
taxation
year,
arising
out
of
the
loan
of
$25,695.50,
acquired
by
inheritance.
However,
the
position
of
the
Minister
is
that
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns
had
made
no
determination
that
the
debt
was
partially
bad
at
the
end
of
the
1986
taxation
year
and
that
it
was
only
in
April,
1988,
that
they
submitted
their
claim
for
an
ABIL
for
their
1986
taxation
year.
As
a
result,
the
Minister
would
allow
an
ABIL
of
$12,847.75
to
each
of
them
for
their
1987
taxation
year.
As
for
the
ABIL
claimed
by
the
appellants
with
regard
to
the
$50,000
loan
made
by
each
of
them
to
WFC,
the
Minister’s
position
was
that
the
allowance
of
the
claim
for
an
ABIL
by
Deborah
Klebeck
for
the
1986
taxation
year,
was
done
in
error.
Counsel
submitted
that
the
appellants
had
failed
to
establish
the
debt
was
acquired
by
them
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
were
therefore
subject
to
the
provisions
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act.
Further,
even
if
the
appellants
had
established
that
the
debt
was
acquired
for
the
requisite
purpose,
then
they
had
failed
to
prove
that
the
debt
was
partially
bad
at
the
end
of
the
1986
taxation
year
and
an
ABIL
in
the
amount
of
$25,000
could
only
be
made
available
to
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns
in
their
1987
taxation
year.
If
the
purpose
test
were
satisfied,
then
Deborah
Klebeck
would
be
allowed
an
ABIL
in
the
sum
of
$12,500
for
her
1987
taxation
year.
The
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
regarding
ABILs
is
that
given
a
business
investment
purpose
in
certain
circumstances,
a
business
investment
loss
is
a
loss
resulting
from
a
disposition
of
shares
or
debt
of
a
small
business
corporation
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
paragraph
39(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
Where
a
taxpayer
establishes
that
an
amount
owing
to
him
on
account
of
a
disposition
of
capital
property
has
become
uncollectible,
he
is
deemed
to
have
disposed
of
the
debt,
pursuant
to
subsection
50(1).
An
allowable
business
investment
loss
or
ABIL
is
a
certain
prescribed
portion
of
the
loss
resulting
from
the
disposition
of
the
shares
or
debt
of
a
small
business
corporation
in
accordance
with
the
wording
of
paragraph
38(c)
of
the
Act.
In
the
event
of
an
allowable
business
investment
loss,
the
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
deduct
prescribed
amounts
from
any
source
of
income
under
paragraph
3(d)
of
the
Act.
The
significant
requirement
is
that
a
taxpayer
seeking
the
deduction
flowing
from
an
ABIL
must
not
be
prohibited
from
doing
so
by
the
effect
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
which
reads
as
follows:
40
(2)
Notwithstanding
subsection
(1),
(
g)
a
taxpayer's
loss,
if
any,
from
the
disposition
of
a
property,
to
the
extent
that
it
is
(ii)
a
loss
from
the
disposition
of
a
debt
or
other
right
to
receive
an
amount,
unless
the
debt
or
right,
as
the
case
may
be,
was
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
exempt
income)
or
as
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
capital
property
to
a
person
with
whom
the
taxpayer
was
dealing
at
arm's
length,
is
nil;
Since
the
Minister
has
conceded
the
loan
of
$25,695.50
by
each
appellant
to
WFC
satisfies
the
requirements
for
an
ABIL,
with
only
the
timing
of
the
bad
debt
in
issue
for
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns,
I
shall
deal
first
with
whether
or
not
the
loans
of
$50,000
made
by
each
appellant
to
WFC
were
made
under
circumstances
in
which
a
claim
for
an
ABIL
is
prohibited
by
the
effect
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act.
There
is
no
doubt
that
there
was
more
than
one
factor
motivating
the
appellants
to
each
advance,
by
way
of
loan,
the
sum
of
$50,000
to
WFC.
That
company
was
a
farm
implement
dealership
with
a
history
of
substantial
sales
and
had
been
operated
by
their
father
and
brother
since
1978.
In
1984,
despite
some
tough
economic
times,
John
Burns
and
Deborah
Klebeck
believed
that
WFC
was
a
viable
business.
It
became
obvious
that
the
Wynyard
Credit
Union
was
applying
pressure
to
reduce
the
WFC
line
of
credit.
Following
certain
discussions
among
family
members
and
with
management
of
the
credit
union,
the
restructuring
of
BFL
and
WFC
occurred
and
BFL
took
out
a
large
mortgage
from
Farm
Credit
Corporation
to
liberate
some
capital.
Contemporaneous
with
the
reorganization
of
the
two
companies,
the
credit
union,
once
the
appellants
and
other
family
members
injected
the
sum
of
$300,000
into
WFC
by
way
of
loans,
relieved
the
estate
of
tne
late
Wendell
C.
Burns
from
all
liability
flowing
from
the
personal
guarantee
of
Mr.
Burns
for
the
debts
of
WFC
to
the
credit
union.
As
a
result,
the
BFL
operation
would
be
secure
from
any
need
to
pay
off,
from
its
assets
or
cash
flow,
the
WFC
debt.
In
testimony,
John
Burns
and
Deborah
Klebeck
both
stated
that
after
buying
out
the
share
of
Gordon
Burns
in
BFL
that
they
then
owned
one-fifth
of
the
corporation,
instead
of
one-sixth,
and
could
therefore
expect
larger
dividends.
However,
that
must
be
balanced
by
the
recognition
that
the
appellants
each
sold
a
'/12
interest
in
WFC
so
that
if
it
did
undergo
a
revival,
they
would
not
derive
any
profit
therefrom
since
they
were
no
longer
shareholders.
The
credit
union
insisted
on
receiving
from
the
appellants
a
postponement
of
payment
and
also
a
waiver
of
any
interest
payments
until
the
debt
of
WFC
to
the
credit
union
had
been
fully
satisfied.
In
any
event,
the
loans
to
WFC
did
not
provide
for
any
interest
thereon
nor
were
there
any
specific
terms
of
repayment.
The
only
potential
for
gain
accruing
to
Deborah
Klebeck
and
Gary
Burns
to
lend
$50,000
to
WFC
was
that
BFL
could
purchase
parts,
and
purchase
or
rent
machinery
and
equipment
at
prices
nearly
at
cost
to
WFC.
The
reduced
cost
of
these
purchases
would
then
be
reflected
in
the
BFL
balance
sheet
at
the
end
of
the
year
and
the
amount
of
corporate
profit,
available
for
distribution
to
the
appellant
as
shareholders,
would
be
increased.
John
Burns,
because
he
owned
and
operated
a
farm
in
his
own
personal
capacity
apart
from
his
involvement
in
BFL,
purchased
machinery,
equipment
and
parts
from
WFC
at
reduced
prices,
almost
at
WFC
cost.
The
evidence
was
that
he
saved
nearly
$20,000
on
the
purchase
of
a
tractor
for
use
on
his
own
farm.
The
wording
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act
requires
that
the
debt
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
be
for
"the
purpose"
of
gaining
or
producing
income
"from
a
business
or
property".
There
are
no
words
modifying
or
qualifying
"purpose"
so
as
to
permit
consideration
whether
the
acquisition
of
the
debt
was
a
"major"
purpose
or
"motivating"
purpose
or
the
"sole"
purpose.
Similarly,
unlike
some
provisions
in
the
Act,
such
as
paragraph
18(1)(a),
the
wording
does
not
require
a
direct
link
between
the
loan
and
the
business
or
property
which
produces
the
income.
Despite
certain
broad
principles
applying
to
an
interpretation
of
the
subparagraph,
the
relevant
jurisprudence
discloses
that
there
are
situations
in
which
the
decision
turns
on
the
facts
peculiar
to
the
case.
In
Lowery
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
2171,
86
D.T.C.
1649,
the
Honourable
Judge
Sarchuk,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
made
a
positive
finding
that
the
taxpayer
did
not
give
certain
guarantees
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
but
did
so
to
help
his
son.
Further,
the
learned
judge
found
that
the
taxpayer's
guarantee
of
his
son's
debt
had
its
justification
only
in
the
context
of
the
family
relationship
and
that
there
were
no
indicia
otherwise
present
which
pointed
to
any
business
purpose
whatsoever.
In
Casselman
v.
M.N.R.,
[1983]
C.T.C.
2584,
83
D.T.C.
522,
the
Honourable
Judge
Tremblay,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
found
that
the
taxpayer's
only
motivation
in
guaranteeing
the
company's
loans
was
to
help
her
son
and
that
she
did
not
do
so
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
The
taxpayer's
appeal
in
O’Blenes
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
2171,
90
D.T.C.
1068,
was
dismissed
by
the
Honourable
Judge
Garon,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
At
page
2176
(D.T.C.
1072)
of
his
judgment,
Judge
Garon
stated:
On
the
whole
of
the
evidence
it
is
abundantly
clear
that
when
the
appellant
agreed
to
guarantee
Glenwood's
line
of
credit
and
to
pledge
through
her
husband
the
subject
term
deposits,
she
was
not
motivated
by
any
benefit
she
might
herself
receive,
Her
purposes
were
not
business
purposes
as
far
as
her
own
situation
was
concerned.
Family
considerations
played
a
key
role.
She
wanted
to
assist
Glenwood
in
which
shareholding
her
husband
owned
a
third
interest.
As
well,
that
company
was
also
at
the
time
her
husband's
employer.
Subparagraph
40(1
)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act
when
it
mentions
the
purpose
of
the
acquisition
of
a
debt
refers,
of
course,
to
the
creditor’s
purpose
of
earning
income
for
her
own
account.
The
indirect
advantage
the
appellant
would
derive
in
providing
financial
assistance
to
a
company
which
in
turn
would
procure
a
direct
financial
benefit
to
her
husband
is
definitely
too
remote
to
meet
the
requirements
of
that
subparagraph.
It
has
been
suggested
by
the
appellant
that
in
1981
as
a
result
of
the
mortgage
agreement
dated
June
1,
1981
and
of
the
debenture
of
June
18,
1981,
compensation
was
provided
to
the
appellant.
There
is
no
question
that
by
these
two
indentures
the
appellant
would
have
received
a
significant
benefit
if
Glenwood
had
been
able
to
survive
and
pay
off
its
indebtedness
to
the
appellant.
However,
as
pointed
out
by
Judge
Sarchuk
in
the
case
of
Lowery,
supra,
to
which
case
reference
will
be
made
later
that
the
critical
time
at
which
the
appellant’s
purpose
must
be
examined
is
the
time
at
which
she
gave
the
guarantee
and
pledged
her
term
deposits.
Almost
two
years
after
undertaking
to
assist
Glenwood
she
moved
to
secure
her
position
at
the
time
of
the
refinancing
of
Glenwood's
operations.
This
belated
action
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
reason
why
she
agreed
in
the
first
place
to
give
the
guarantee
an
pledge
her
term
deposits.
The
evidence
is
clear
that
in
1981
the
appellant
was
not
released
from
her
guarantee
given
to
the
Bank.
The
mortgage
and
the
debenture
given
by
Glenwood
were
not
in
respect
of
a
new
guarantee
provided
to
the
bank
or
a
new
pledge
of
the
term
deposits.
There
was
no
new
injection
of
capital
into
Glenwood's
business
on
the
appellant's
part.
On
the
whole
of
the
evidence,
I
therefore
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
appellant
has
not
established
that
when
she
undertook
to
grant
the
guarantee
to
the
Bank
and
to
pledge
her
term
deposits
she
was
motivated
by
the
prospect
of
a
financial
gain
or
reward
for
herself.
Her
motives,
however
commendable
they
are,
are
of
a
personal
or
private
nature.
In
Ellis
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
2081,
88
D.T.C.
1070,
the
Honourable
Judge
Brulé,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
dealt
with
the
taxpayer's
situation
of
not
having
been
a
shareholder
of
a
hotel
company
to
which
the
guarantee
for
a
loan
had
been
given
and
under
circumstances
in
which
his
own
company
was
only
a
minority
shareholder
in
the
hotel
company.
As
a
result,
the
taxpayer
would
be
in
no
position
to
force
the
hotel
company
to
distribute
dividend
income.
The
taxpayer's
appeal
was
dismissed.
It
is
helpful
in
the
present
appeal
to
examine
what
the
facts
do
not
disclose.
First,
the
evidence
does
not
justify
a
finding
of
the
sort
in
Lowery
or
Casselman,
supra,
that
the
loans
were
made
only
for
the
purposes
of
assisting
a
family
member
and
were
totally
without
any
business
component.
The
appellants
in
the
present
appeal
together
owned
three-fifths
of
the
shares
of
BFL
and
would
not
be
in
the
minority
position
of
the
taxpayer
in
Ellis,
supra,
when
it
came
to
distributing
dividend
income.
Because
of
the
arrangement
between
BFL
and
WFC,
entered
into
as
part
of
the
conditions
under
which
the
appellants
made
the
loans,
by
which
BFL
could
purchase
machinery,
parts
and
equipment
from
WFC
at
greatly
reduced
cost,
the
annual
profit
of
the
company,
without
more,
would
be
increased
by
the
amount
of
the
savings
and
could
be
passed
on
to
each
appellant.
The
evidence
of
John
Burns,
Gordon
Burns
and
Deborah
Klebeck
was
that
the
concessions
on
the
price
of
machinery,
parts
and
equipment
to
be
given
in
the
future
by
WFC
to
BFL
and
to
family
members
personally,
was
a
significant
part
of
discussions
surrounding
the
making
of
the
loans
by
the
appellants
to
WFC.
There
were
other
considerations
as
well
and
it
is
not
possible,
nor
is
there
any
need
in
my
view,
to
rank
in
priority
any
one
or
more
of
the
bundle
of
reasons
constituting
the
fabric
of
the
decision
of
the
appellants
individually
and
collectively
to
loan
the
money
to
WFC.
The
question
that
must
then
be
answered
is
whether
or
not
the
purpose
of
the
appellants
in
gaining
income
has
sufficient
nexus
with
the
making
of
loan.
The
benefit
to
them
had
to
travel
a
circuitous,
albeit
not
tortuous,
route
in
order
to
come
home
to
roost.
In
The
Queen
v.
Lalande,
[1983]
C.T.C.
311,
84
D.T.C.
6159,
Décary,
J.,
of
the
Federal
Court-Trial
Division,
heard
an
appeal
by
two
taxpayers
who
were
doctors
in
a
small
town.
One
of
them
also
owned
the
pharmacy.
The
taxpayers,
without
any
payment
therefor,
stood
surety
on
loans
made
by
financial
institutions
to
a
non-profit
corporation
created
for
the
purpose
of
building
a
200
bed
home
for
the
elderly,
which
would
preserve
and
expand
the
medical
practice
of
the
taxpayer-guarantors.
At
page
318
(D.T.C.
6164)
of
his
judgment,
Décary,
J.
stated:
The
question
is
whether
the
debts
at
issue
were
in
fact
acquired
”.
.
.
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
.
.
.”
This
is
essentially
a
question
of
weighing
the
facts
of
the
case.
The
fact
that
there
was
no
interest
or
costs
attached
to
the
debts
in
question
is
not
relevant
in
deciding
whether
they
were
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
In
my
view,
the
aim
was
to
increase
a
professional
practice
and
so
increase
income.
The
advances
and
security
are
subject
to
the
deduction
provided
in
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
of
the
Act.
In
Sansoucy
v.
M.N.R.,
[1980]
C.T.C.
2312,
80
D.T.C.
1276,
Mr.
Guy
Tremblay,
as
he
then
was,
of
the
Tax
Review
Board,
allowed
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
a
debt,
comprised
of
travel
expenses
paid
by
him
while
in
the
service
of
the
employer
that
were
not
reimbursed
due
to
the
bankruptcy
of
the
employer
corporation.
The
travel
expenses
had
been
incurred
during
a
trip
to
Europe
to
negotiate
certain
contracts
for
the
sale
of
goods
which
would
produce
income
to
the
company
and
increase
the
taxpayer’s
own
income
because
his
remuneration
was
based
on
a
salary
of
five
per
cent
of
the
net
profit
of
the
company.
In
terms
of
analyzing
the
relationship
of
the
debt
to
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property,
the
decision
of
the
Honourable
Judge
Rip,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
in
Business
Art
Inc.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
2001,
86
D.T.C.
1842
is
helpful.
At
pages
2008-09
(D.T.C.
1848)
of
his
judgment,
Judge
Rip
stated:
However
even
if
no
interest
was
chargeable
I
do
not
believe
that
would
be
fatal
to
the
appellant’s
alternate
submission.
The
fact
that
there
may
have
been
no
interest
attached
to
the
debts
in
question
is
not
relevant
in
deciding
whether
they
were
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
See
The
Queen
v.
Lalande,
[1983]
C.T.C.
311,
84
D.T.C.
6159
at
page
318
(D.T.C.
6164).
It
is
not
uncommon
for
a
shareholder
to
lend
money
without
interest
and
without
security
to
the
corporation
since
he
anticipates
that
the
loans
will
assist
the
corporation
to
earn
income
and
to
pay
him
income
by
way
of
dividends;
the
loan
is
made
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
property.
Although
the
shareholder
is
a
creditor
of
the
corporation
when
he
advances
money
to
the
corporation
the
shareholder
does
not
see
his
advance
of
money
to
the
corporation
and
his
subscription
for
shares
of
the
corporation
as
separate
investments
in
two
watertight
compartments;
rather
he
sees
his
money
entering
two
compartments
which
open
up
into
a
single
compartment
for
the
use
of
the
corporation.
Purchasing
shares
and
advancing
money
to
a
corporation
are
two
ways
of
making
an
investment
in
the
corporation.
This
is
a
sensible
interpretation.
Similarly
a
shareholder
of
a
corporation
who
may
have
incorporated
a
corporation
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
product
at
a
low
cost
and
so
reduce
its
own
costs
may
advance
money
without
interest
to
the
corporation
to
enable
the
corporation
to
operate
as
intended;
in
this
example
even
if
the
shareholder
is
not
making
loans
for
the
purpose
of
producing
income
from
its
business,
by
having
reduced
costs,
the
loan
is
being
made
to
earn
income
from
property,
that
is,
to
receive
dividends
on
the
shares
it
owns
in
the
corporation.
It
is
not
unusual
for
a
person
to
invest
in
a
corporation
by
subscribing
for
share
capital
and
lending
money
without
interest;
as
far
as
he
is
concerned
the
shares
and
his
loans
constitute
a
single
investment
and
if
later
on,
he
is
called
on
to
advance
further
funds
without
interest
he
is
only
increasing
his
investment.
I
cannot
subscribe
to
the
theory
that
in
such
an
example
the
non-interest
bearing
loans
were
not
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
property;
if
the
loans
were
not
advanced
the
corporation
may
have
become
bankrupt
and
the
shares
may
have
become
worthless.
Clearly
the
loans
were
made
to
earn
income
from
property,
that
is,
to
place
the
corporation
in
a
position
where
it
will
be
successful
and
pay
dividends.
The
difference
between
the
taxpayer's
situation
in
Business
Art
Inc.,
supra,
and
that
of
the
appellants
in
the
within
appeal
is
that
they
were
not
shareholders
in
WFC,
the
corporation
to
whom
the
loans
were
made.
However,
the
making
of
the
loans
to
WFC
did
in
fact
result
in
reduced
costs
of
operation
to
BFL,
in
which
they,
as
a
unit,
controlled
the
majority
of
the
shares.
As
such,
they
were
able
to
use
their
money
in
a
way
that
would
lead
to
the
production
of
income,
although
not
in
a
manner
that
was
capable
of
being
placed
into
a
neat,
tidy,
labelled
pigeonhole.
Unlike
the
taxpayer's
situation
in
Ellis,
supra,
there
was
more
than
a
possibility
of
benefit,
in
that
instance
so
remote
that
Judge
Brulé
concluded
the
loan
guarantee
was
not
undertaken
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
Having
regard
to
all
of
the
evidence
and
in
light
of
the
decisions
referred
to
herein,
I
find
that
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
does
not
apply
to
the
appellant's
loans
of
$50,000
to
WFC
and
that
they
did
acquire
the
debt
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
The
issue
that
remains
is
whether
the
appellants,
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns,
are
entitled
to
claim
an
ABIL
in
each
of
their
1986
and
1987
taxation
years
on
the
basis
that
50
per
cent
of
both
loans
to
WFC,
that
is,
the
inherited
loan
of
$25,695.50
and
the
loan
of
$50,000,
were
uncollectible
at
the
end
of
the
relevant
taxation
year.
The
decision
of
Mr.
Fisher
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
Hogan
v.
M.N.R.
(1956),
15
Tax
A.B.C.
1,
56
D.T.C.
183,
has
been
regarded
as
a
leading
case
with
respect
to
what
constitutes
a
bad
debt
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
50(1)
of
the
Act.
Reference
to
that
Hogan
decision
is
found
in
the
decision
of
the
Honourable
Judge
Sarchuk,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
in
Berretti
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
2293,
86
D.T.C.
1719,
as
he
undertook
an
analysis
of
the
appropriate
method
of
establishing
that
certain
debts
had
become
bad
in
a
particular
taxation
year.
At
pages
2297-98
(D.T.C.
1722)
of
his
judgment,
Judge
Sarchuk
stated:
Counsel
for
the
appellant
relied
upon
Hogan
v.
M.N.R.
(1956),
15
Tax
A.B.C.
1,
56
D.T.C.
183;
Gestion
Louis
Riel
Inc.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
2211,
85
D.T.C.
550;
Ferriss
v.
M.N.R.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
491,
64
D.T.C.
5304
and
Roy
v.
M.N.R.
(1958),
20
Tax
A.B.C.
385,
58
D.T.C.
676.
Certain
principles
can
be
excerpted
from
these
decisions.
There
is
for
example
no
necessity
that
a
debt
be
absolutely
irrecoverable
(vide
Hogan)
and
that
possible
recovery
in
the
future
is
not
per
se
a
bar
to
a
determination
of
uncollectibility
(vide
Riel
and
Ferriss).
These
judgments
also
confirm
the
proposition
that
the
determination
of
uncollectibility
is
to
be
made
by
the
appellant
and
not
by
an
official
of
the
respondent
or
some
other
person.
However,
one
cannot
ignore
the
fact
that
a
taxpayer's
decision
that
a
debt
is
a
“bad
debt”
must
be
made
on
the
basis
of
a
recent
consideration
of
all
of
the
known
facts.
In
Hogan,
supra,
Mr.
Fisher
stated
at
page
17
(D.T.C.
193):
For
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
therefore,
a
bad
debt
may
be
designated
as
the
whole
or
a
portion
of
a
debt
which
the
creditor,
after
having
personally
considered
the
relevant
factors
mentioned
above
in
so
far
as
they
are
applicable
to
each
particular
debt,
honestly
and
reasonably
determines
to
be
uncollectable
at
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year
when
the
determination
is
required
to
be
made,
notwithstanding
that
subsequent
events
may
transpire
under
which
the
debt,
or
any
portion
of
it,
may
in
fact
be
collected.
The
person
making
the
determination
should
be
the
creditor
himself
(or
his
or
its
employee),
who
is
personally
thoroughly
conversant
with
the
facts
and
circumstances
surrounding
not
only
each
particular
debt
but
also,
where
possible,
each
individual
debtor.
.
.
.
In
Roy,
supra,
Mr.
Boisvert
(T.A.B.)
adopted
the
views
of
Mr.
Fisher
in
the
Hogan
case
previously
referred
to
and
added
the
following
comment
at
page
403
(D.T.C.
680):
As
the
Act
does
not
define
a
bad
debt,
it
is
necessary
to
turn
to
recognized
accounting
principles
of
business
practice.
A
debt
is
recognized
to
be
bad
when
it
has
been
proved
uncollectable
in
the
year.
Reference
should
be
made
to
one
further
comment
in
Hogan,
supra,
at
page
11
(D.T.C.
190):
After
all,
the
legislation
indicates
that
it
is
the
taxpayer
who
has
to
establish
whether
debts
are
bad
or
not,
and
his
familiarity
with
the
particular
accounts
and
with
his
clients,
their
circumstances
and
all
the
other
factors
involved
is,
in
my
opinion,
to
be
accepted
if
one
is
convinced
from
his
evidence
that
he
has
acted
honestly
and
on
sound
general
principles.
[Emphasis
added.]
In
each
of
the
decisions
cited
by
counsel
there
was
evidence
upon
which
the
Court
was
satisfied
that
the
taxpayer
acted
in
a
pragmatic
businesslike
manner.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
evidence
adduced
does
not
meet
that
test.
Although
it
is
reasonable
to
infer
that
Lachman
discussed
his
calculations
with
the
appellant
at
or
about
the
time
that
he
prepared
the
appellant’s
1982
income
tax
return,
there
is
little
evidence
as
to
the
considerations
upon
which
the
appellant
acted.
It
was
critical
to
his
appeal
that
there
be
some
acceptable
evidence
as
to
the
basis
upon
which
the
taxpayer
made
the
“bad
debt’’
determination.
The
evidence
of
Gordon
Burns
was
that
on
October
25,
1986
WFC
resolved
it
would
cease
to
carry
on
business
effective
December
31,
1986,
that
the
debt
owing
to
the
appellants
would
not
be
paid
in
full
and
that
the
most
they
could
expect
to
collect
would
be
50
per
cent
of
the
amount
outstanding.
The
minutes
of
a
special
meeting
of
WFC
(Exhibit
A-38)
disclose
that
situation
to
have
been
recorded.
It
is
clear
that
the
appellants
were
well
aware
of
that
situation
prior
to
the
end
of
1986.
It
was
also
clear
on
all
of
the
evidence,
including
that
of
Mr.
Nupdal,
loans
manager
of
the
credit
union,
that
the
situation
for
WFC
was
precarious
throughout
1986
and
by
the
end
of
September,
1987,
it
was
obvious
that
there
would
be
no
money
at
all
forthcoming
from
WFC
to
pay
on
any
of
the
loans
owing
to
the
appellants.
As
a
result,
the
appellants
were
in
a
position
to
determine
that
the
balance
of
the
loans
had
become
a
bad
debt
prior
to
the
end
of
the
1987
taxation
year.
The
requests
for
an
adjustment
to
their
T1
returns
for
1986
were
made
in
March,
1988
but
the
evidence
of
Wayne
Coleman,
the
accountant,
is
that
the
appellants,
in
March,
1987,
were
well
aware
of
the
loans
to
WFC
not
being
fully
collectible
and
discussions
were
held
as
to
whether
claims
for
an
ABIL
should
be
made.
In
my
opinion,
the
appellants
have
demonstrated
that
there
is
no
reason
for
the
Minister
to
have
taken
the
position
that
the
loans
to
WFC
went
bad
only
during
the
1987
taxation
year.
The
apportionment
of
the
loss
equally
between
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years
as
claimed
by
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns
is
correct.
The
timing
of
the
bad
debts
did
not
affect
the
appeal
of
Deborah
Klebeck
and
the
only
issue
there
was
whether
or
not
her
$50,000
loan
to
WFC
was
prevented
by
the
application
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
from
a
claim
for
an
ABIL,
which
I
have
found
not
to
be
the
case.
The
appeals
of
the
appellants,
John
Burns
and
Gary
Burns
are
allowed
for
the
taxation
years
1986
and
1987
and
the
appeal
of
Deborah
Klebeck
is
allowed
for
the
taxation
years
1987
and
1988
and
the
matters
are
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
following
basis:
1.
That
the
loans
of
$25,695.50
and
$50,000
made
by
each
of
the
appellants
to
WFC
were
debts
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
2.
That
the
appellants
made
a
reasonable
determination
that
50
per
cent
of
the
loans
were
uncollectible
at
the
end
of
the
1986
taxation
year
and
that
the
balance
of
the
loans
were
uncollectible
at
the
end
of
the
1987
taxation
year.
3.
That
Deborah
Klebeck’s
child
tax
credit
for
the
1987
taxation
year
be
recalculated
and
that
her
non-capital
loss
carried
forward
from
her
1987
taxation
year
be
allowed
in
computing
income
for
her
1988
taxation
year.
As
to
the
matter
of
costs,
Gary
Burns
was
not
present
at
the
hearing
and
one
counsel
represented
all
of
the
appellants.
Therefore,
the
appellants
are
entitled
to
one
set
of
costs
on
a
party-party
basis.
Appeals
allowed.