REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
C. Miller J.
[1]
Mr. Howard Berger appeals by way of the Informal
Procedure the Minister of National Revenue’s (the “Minister”)
assessments of his 2011 and 2012 taxation years. The Minister denied Mr. Berger
the business losses he claimed in those years of $26,540 and $37,866 on the
basis Mr. Berger did not conduct any business activities - in tax parlance he
had no source of income.
[2]
Mr. Berger studied journalism at Humber College
for one year of a three‑year program as he landed a job with the
Etobicoke Guardian. His passion was clearly in sports journalism and he engaged
in some freelance work in that regard before being lured in 1988, at the age of
29, by a radio station in Toronto known as the Fan 590, at that time owned by
Telemedia. In 1992, FAN 590 became an all sports station and Mr. Berger, though
initially covering all sports, became by 1994 a hockey, and specifically a
Maple Leafs, reporter. He had a regular twice a day slot reporting on FAN 590
and developed a sports fan following for his insights into hockey and the Maple
Leafs. Part of his job as an employed sports reporter was to follow the team at
both games and practices, including attending their away games. He developed
significant contacts with media relations personnel on teams across the
National Hockey League.
[3]
In 2002, Rogers took over FAN 590 and after the
economic downturn in 2008 a new management team was introduced which, according
to Mr. Berger, had a different approach. Senior personnel were laid off and
travel budgets were cut, including Mr. Berger’s. He testified that he grew
increasingly apprehensive about his future prospects remaining with FAN 590.
[4]
Since 2006 part of his job with FAN 590 had been
to write 3 or 4 blogs a week for the FAN 590 website: indeed, he described this
as becoming an important part of his job. Given his ongoing concern about his
future with FAN 590 he devised a plan that, if he lost his job, he would
continue to write a hockey sports blog and make a living doing so. His plan was
simple: he would write a quality hockey blog that would attract sufficient
readership that sponsors would want to advertise on his site.
[5]
The inevitable occurred on June 1, 2011 when Mr.
Berger was indeed let go by FAN 590. He started his first blog that same month
and has been blogging ever since.
[6]
His research in the early days suggested the
cheapest way to blog was on Google through something called Blogspot.com, which
he did just to get the site up and going.
[7]
After a couple months, however, he decided he
should have a more professional website created, and in September 2011 he hired
Rank Xpress to devise a more professional site, which they did. He established
his own website, Bergerbytes.ca.
[8]
Mr. Berger continued to travel with the Maple
Leafs to their away games, relying on his connections with directors of media
relations with the various NHL teams to provide access, as he no longer had the
media accreditation that he had had with FAN 590. He described the ability to
travel with the team as the gold standard in the sports journalism industry.
The following is a schedule of his income and the expenses he incurred in 2011-2012:
|
2011
|
Gross Income/Revenue
Reported
|
$0
|
Expenses Claimed
|
|
Air flights &
Auto Rentals
|
16,279
|
Hotels
|
8,107
|
Blog Design
|
$1,500
|
To Reconcile to Loss
Claimed
|
654
|
Total Business
Expenses
|
26,540
|
Net Income before
Adjustments
|
(26,540)
|
Less: Business Use of
Home
|
0
|
Net Income (Loss)
|
(26,540)
|
|
2012
|
Gross Income/Revenue
Reported
|
7,500
|
Expenses Claimed
|
|
Air Flights &
Auto Rentals
|
19,110
|
Hotels
|
14,759
|
Meals ($2,200 * 50%)
|
1,100
|
Motor Vehicle
Expenses
|
2,897
|
Total Business
Expenses
|
37,866
|
Net Income before
Adjustments
|
(30,366)
|
Less: Business Use of
Home
|
3,000
|
Net Income (Loss)
|
(33,366)
|
[9]
Clearly, the travel expenses are the vast
majority of Mr. Berger’s costs. He testified that he relied on funds from his
severance package to finance these costs, though acknowledged that the fund has
since been depleted. Recently he has determined such amount of travel is no
longer economically viable.
[10]
Mr. Berger maintained that he concentrated on a
quality blog, believing to this day this would increase readership and attract
sponsors. He has not approached potential sponsors directly. The sole
sponsorship that he has acquired over the years came from a lawyer, Mr. Bogoroch,
who he had met at a party in July 2011. Mr. Bogoroch emailed Mr. Berger in July
2011 intrigued by his idea and suggested a meeting. Mr. Berger did not feel he
had sufficient readership and wanted to improve his site, which he did in
September, so he did not get back to Mr. Bogoroch until December. Mr. Bogoroch
was prepared to pay $7,500 to have his logo on Berger Bytes throughout the 2012
Stanley Cup Playoffs, requesting Mr. Berger attend the games directly. Mr.
Berger has sought no other sponsors in 2011 or 2012, or since.
[11]
Mr. Berger did email about 500 contacts,
including the likes of Don Cherry and Ron MacLean to advise them of his
blog.
[12]
Mr. Berger not only wrote the blogs but included
photos of players and arenas, and news conferences as well as shots of sights
in the cities visited, even including several pages of photos taken from an
airplane window. He had taken photos for the FAN 590 blog previously.
[13]
While Mr. Berger claimed readership showed a
general trend upwards, he was unable to provide any detailed numbers. There was
one exhibit of the number of daily visits to the site for a brief period in
2014, which showed an average of just over 5,000 visits a day. He acknowledged
there would have been less in 2011 and 2012.
[14]
Mr. Berger agreed that his approach did not pay
him to report: he was not in fact selling subscriptions. Revenue was to come
from sponsors who would see his site as attracting a significant number of
readers, potential customers for the sponsor.
[15]
Mr. Berger did not prepare a formal business
plan, nor a formal budget or any financial projections. As he put it, his full
effort went to content, a process still underway.
[16]
The Parties agreed that the expense numbers were
not in issue, other than $1,100 claimed for meal expenses. The sole issue was
whether Mr. Berger had a source of income, in other words, was he operating a
business?
[17]
Both Parties referred me to the seminal case of Stewart
v R.,
the 2002 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada knocking the former “reasonable expectation of profit” test on the head
and instituting a new process for addressing this type of issue.
[18]
Under the Supreme Court of Canada’s guidance the
first inquiry is whether the nature of the activity is clearly commercial, in
which case there is no need to analyse the taxpayer’s business decisions.
Second, if there is a personal element, did the taxpayer intend to carry on the
activity for profit, and is there evidence to support that intent? The Supreme
Court of Canada points out that even where there is a personal pursuit, if it
is undertaken in a sufficiently commercial manner, the venture will be
considered a source of income. The court stipulated in this analysis that “this requires the taxpayer to establish that his or her
predominant intention is to make a profit from the activity and that the
activity has been carried out in accordance with objective standards of
businesslike behaviour”. It goes on to cite the objective factors to be
considered as:
1. the profit and loss experience in
past years;
2. the taxpayer’s training;
3. the taxpayer’s intended course of
action;
4. the capability of the venture to
show a profit; and
5. any other factors.
[19]
Mr. Burgess, counsel for Mr. Berger, argued that
I need look no further than the first inquiry, that this venture is clearly
commercial and that there is no personal element. Mr. Gotfried, counsel for the
Crown, suggests otherwise, that a sports fan such as Mr. Berger travelling
across North America following a hockey team is indicative in and of itself of
a strong personal element.
[20]
Mr. Burgess argued that the activity for which I
must determine its commerciality is solely the blogging. With respect, I
disagree. It is the venture: everything that comprises the alleged commercial
enterprise. The Supreme Court of Canada gave two examples of clear commercial
activities: a law practice and a restaurant. The court implies that it is
unreasonable that such types of commercial activity would be practiced on a
hobby basis. Mr. Berger’s venture was not blogging in isolation, but attending
games, practices, conferences, taking photos, blogging reports and photos,
attracting readers and selling advertising: that was the activity in question.
And, while I recognize the commercial aspect of these activities taken
together, I also conclude that for a sports fan like Mr. Berger to be
travelling to New York City, for example, to watch the Maple Leafs play
the Rangers, does have a personal element, as does the blogging itself. Indeed,
while presented with no evidence in this regard, common sense suggests “blogging” is by its nature as much a recreational pastime
as possibly a commercial practice. I conclude that there is a personal element
to Mr. Berger’s activities: they are not clearly commercial as that
concept is defined by the reasoning in Stewart. That case is clear that
there does not have to be a strong personal element: the weight of the personal
versus commercial aspect of the venture arises in the next stage of the
analysis. As already indicated, sufficient badges of commerciality can outweigh
the personal element and still lead to a finding of a source of income.
[21]
Proceeding then to the second aspect of the
analysis, and referencing the Supreme Court of Canada’s test, did Mr. Berger
establish his predominant intention was to make a profit from the activity, and
has it been carried out in accordance with objective standards of businesslike
behaviour?
[22]
Mr. Burgess quite rightly pointed out that this
stage of the analysis is not intended to be an attack on the taxpayer’s
business acumen: making bad business decisions does not mean one is not in
business. I agree with that position but at the same time, I am directed by the
Supreme Court of Canada to address objective standards of businesslike
behaviour. It can be a fine line between poor commercial decision making and
failure to meet those objective standards. In effect, are decisions so weak
that no reasonable business person on an objective standard of businesslike
behaviour would have made them? In Mr. Berger’s case this would be a harsh
judgment for someone just 18 months into a venture. More on that shortly.
[23]
I will address the factors identified by the
Supreme Court of Canada in assessing Mr. Berger’s businesslike behaviour.
Profit and loss experienced in past years
[24]
This is not a significant factor for the obvious
reason there are no past years to address. The years in issue, 2011 and 2012,
represent the first 18 months of Mr. Berger’s activities, and in 2011 the hockey
season he covered was for just four months. In commercial terms, Mr. Berger was
in a start-up phase and the nature of the activity was such that immediate
profits in this media‑type business would be unlikely. Like a struggling
artist (singer, dancer, writer…) in the early stages of a career, some
businesses inherently take time.
Taxpayer’s training
[25]
This is not the case of a hockey fan
believing he could be a sportswriter. This is the case of a professional sportswriter
believing he could be a businessman. Mr. Berger’s training, while limited
from an educational perspective, is vast from an experiential perspective. For
over 20 years he got paid for reporting on sports stories, mainly in connection
with the Maple Leafs (I cannot resist adding that it is taking immense
internal restraint to not comment on the ongoing Leafs “legacy”).
The Respondent would hasten to remind me, however, that Mr. Berger was not
selling his sports reports, there were no subscriptions as such. He made money
from selling advertising on his blog. Mr. Berger would counter that he
could only attract the advertising if he had sufficient readers, which he would
only get if he produced outstanding sports reporting.
[26]
I certainly take
the Respondent’s point that, while Mr. Berger had significant sports reporting “training”,
he had no education or experience on selling advertising or running a media
business. I find, however, that this is not fatal. Mr. Berger has taken a
commercial activity, sportswriting, for which he got paid for 20 years and used
that experience to attempt to continue to get paid. As indicated earlier, this
is not just a sports enthusiast having a crack at making money from his passion.
Mr. Berger has some impressive credentials to suggest his approach.
Intended course of action
[27]
First, put Mr. Berger’s intended course of
action into context: here is someone in his 50’s, who could see that his job was
in jeopardy and who had relied on his ability to earn income from sportswriting
for 20 plus years. He gained some experience blogging, while still with FAN 590,
and when the inevitable happened he made the decision to use his strength, sportswriting,
to earn a living.
[28]
What was his plan? Mr. Berger testified that his
plan was simple, to continue to follow the Leafs, write a quality blog, gaining
sufficient readers that he could then attract sponsors to pay to advertise on
his blog. He did not write a formal business plan nor make any financial
projections. He concentrated on the product, and indeed after a short spell on
Blogspot.com he paid to have a professionally created website. He sent out 500
emails to major players in the hockey media industry advising of his blog.
[29]
The Respondent concentrated on what Mr. Berger’s
intended course of action did not include: no active plans for soliciting
advertisers and no financial planning. He just carried on doing what he had
done, paying for it out of his severance package with a hope that advertisers
would come to him. That is not, according to the Respondent, a businesslike
course of action. The only revenue Mr. Berger received came through no active
effort on his part.
[30]
The first factor was neutral. The second factor
favoured Mr. Berger operating a business. This factor is where the dilemma
arises between judging Mr. Berger’s business acumen versus simply comparing his
actions to objective standards of businesslike behaviour. And the businesslike
behaviour specifically to be addressed is the soliciting of sponsors. He did
nothing in the hopes that the product would effectively sell itself. And, in
the first 18 months at issue before me, what happened? A sponsor did indeed
fall into his lap, in effect bearing out his view that a good idea
well-presented would have sponsors knocking on his door. I heard no evidence as
to what is the norm when it comes to selling “blog advertising”
but I am swayed by two factors: first, this was the very early stages of a fledgling
“business” and concentrating on a quality
product to attract readers (which concentration is evidenced by paying for help
to get a professional website) is a businesslike decision with some foundation.
Second, Mr. Berger’s idea and his product did result in attracting a
sponsor. While I might view his intended course of action (or inaction) as poor
business judgment, it is not so devoid of commercial reasoning to conclude the
venture was personal and nothing more. On balance, I find Mr. Berger did intend
to pursue profit and did take, in those 18 months, commercial steps to do so.
There will come a time, however, where continuing on this course without any
sponsors knocking on his door can only lead to a conclusion that a commercial
expectation has been overtaken by personal dreams. I do not have years after
2012 in front of me.
Capability of venture to show a profit
[31]
Mr. Berger fails in this regard to have provided
me with any projections, comparisons, readership numbers, anything at all
frankly to allow me to accurately assess the venture’s capability to make a
profit. It is all conjecture. No solid data, just a suggestion his readership
numbers were trending upwards. This factor works against Mr. Berger’s position
that this was not a hobby but a business. Businesses are out to make money and
generally have an idea of how much and how feasible the money-making venture
is. Mr. Berger does not seem to have a handle on this. It leaves me to guess
whether a steady readership in the few thousands is sufficient to attract
sponsors to cover expenses of $30,000‑$40,000 a year.
[32]
I conclude the lack of evidence on this aspect,
while not helpful to Mr. Berger, is also not fatal. I simply have not been
convinced one way or the other that this venture is capable of showing a
profit. But, given the very early stage of his venture, and taken together with
the other factors, I find that the activity does go beyond hobby. I conclude
Mr. Berger had a predominant intention to make a profit, and in the first 18
months behaved in a reasonable businesslike manner to pursue that end. As I
hope I have made clear to Mr. Berger, my view is limited to the short term
start-up phase of his venture.
[33]
The Appeals are allowed and the matters are
referred back to the Minister for reassessment and reconsideration on the basis
that Mr. Berger was carrying on a business entitled to business losses in
2011 and 2012 as claimed other than the meal expenses of $1,100, which the
Parties have agreed are not deductible.
Signed at Ottawa,
Canada, this 19th day of June 2015.
“Campbell J. Miller”