Date: 19980731
Docket: 96-2347-IT-G
BETWEEN:
JIM JOHNSTON,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the bench at Toronto, Ontario on
June 19, 1998)
Bell, J.T.C.C.
ISSUES:
[1] The issues in this appeal, as stated in the Notice of
Appeal and Reply to the Notice of Appeal are:
(a) whether the Appellant had a reasonable expectation of
profit from certain activities carried on by him in the 1991 and
1992 taxation years, and
(b) whether the expenses incurred and claimed by the Appellant
were incurred for the purpose of gaining or producing income from
a business within the meaning of paragraph 18(1)(a) of the
Income Tax Act ("Act").
[2] Although the Reply to the Notice of Appeal posed a
question as to whether, in the alternative, the expenses claimed
were reasonable in the circumstances, no submission was made by
Respondent's counsel in that regard and, accordingly, will
not be considered in these Reasons.
FACTS:
[3] The Appellant described himself as a "business
principal". He completed high school and two years at York
University, leaving because he wanted to commence business. While
a student, he purchased inoperative cars and repaired and sold
them. In summers, he was involved with swimming pool installation
and construction. After school, his first business was a chemical
cleaning products distribution. Before his marriage, he picked up
bundles of Toronto Star newspapers in a van and delivered them to
street corners for delivery.
[4] His view of the results of the oil crisis in 1974 and
subsequent years led him to believe that well-off people would be
moving from the cottage country to areas such as Caledon Hills
where he had grown up. He planned to build and maintain swimming
pools. For personal reasons this business was never commenced. He
then bought a distributorship for chemical cleaners to be sold on
a door-to-door basis so that his wife, he having married in 1976,
could also participate and earn income. He stated that he could
do this on a part-time basis, his full-time employment at that
time being with the post office.
[5] In 1978, he founded Custom Design Installation Ltd.
("Custom"). It delivered and installed office
furniture. It took several years for the business to develop. The
Appellant testified that steady pay cheques for him and his wife
were first received in 1981. By 1988 Custom had 20 full-time
installers working for it and the company had gross revenue of
between $1.2 million and $1.3 million.
[6] The Appellant was deeply affected by the death of his
father in 1984 and realized that he should change his seven days
per week working habit. He took his first vacation in nine years,
going to the Bahamas on a yacht trip. In 1985 he took a one week
vacation to the Caribbean and again went on a charter boat on a
"day sail". He repeated this experience in 1986 in
Antigua.
[7] After consulting with Clarkson Gordon respecting his
decision not to work as intensely and after a period of
approaching and interviewing different persons, he sold 50
percent of his company to a Mr. Love whose ambitions respecting
the business were like those of the Appellant, namely to work at
same until his retirement.
[8] The Appellant was always looking for business
opportunities. Particularly, he was observing how the yacht
people ran their operations. He noted that they seemed to have a
line-up of people and that he and his wife had to wait several
days for a booking.
[9] He was also looking at fixing cars and selling them on a
sophisticated level after restoration and to that end purchased a
property with a three bay heated garage. He has not yet commenced
that business. He was interested in cars and boats. As a child,
his father had a hobby farm where he said he learned how to fix
tractors and equipment and learned about hard work. He said that
he gravitated towards fixing things. He also said that he worked
closely with his chartered accountant at Clarkson Gordon, that he
had no business training, and that when he had ideas or received
information interesting to him he would talk to his accountant.
That firm was preparing a prospectus for Bimini, a charter
company in the Virgin Islands doing what the Appellant wanted to
do. Clarkson Gordon, he said, was quite informed about these
operations.
[10] A large number of exhibits were filed with the Court,
obviously intended to demonstrate that the Appellant was serious
about commencing a yacht charter operation as well as the
experiences and difficulties he had after the commencement of
same. There were 25 such exhibits, ranging from rate schedules
for yacht charters for Bimini, invoices from Clarkson Gordon in
1987 and 1988 with respect to consultations connected with that
type of business, other information on charter rates and a number
of different hand-written notes comprising about 14 pages on how
different charter ventures operated. They summarized the
computation of transactions, and reported on conversations with
persons experienced in the businesses and attendances at the
Toronto boat show, et cetera. He was impressed with the weather
in the Virgin Islands where he first went in 1987, they,
according to him, being beautiful islands with a year round
temperature of 75 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit. On return to Toronto,
he called the British Virgin Islands' Minister of Tourism and
Industry and met with him in Toronto at the Toronto boat show.
The British Virgin Islands ("BVI") had a booth at that
show. Yacht charter companies were also represented at the show,
all based in the Virgin Islands, most in the BVI. The Minister
steered him to the appropriate yacht management companies and he
had discussions with them. He said that he was "looking at
how" to make money and what kind of investment would produce
that result. He collected a number of "hand outs" at
the boat show, took them to Clarkson Gordon and asked them to
review them. In November, 1987, he went to the Virgin Islands to
do a close-up examination of the yacht business, having made
appointments for that purpose. He wanted to see the facilities
and to analyze whom he thought would be the best group with which
to do business. He was impressed with Tropic Island Yacht
Management ("Tropic Island") which had well maintained
used boats that were docked in the middle of a city. He said the
location was important because of the ability to obtain
provisions nearby for charter parties. There was also a hotel
there together with first class facilities. He had met Rolf
Steinhueble ("Rolf"), the owner of Tropic Island at the
Toronto boat show. He obtained copies of contracts and rate
schedules. He was advised by Rolf that he would accept a used
boat in his fleet. They discussed the types of boats that would
be acceptable.
[11] The Appellant had the rate schedule for a Whitby 42. He
prepared estimates of what revenue he could expect based upon the
number of weeks per year when the operation could be conducted.
He received different proposals from various companies as to the
percentage of revenue that could be retained. He finally decided
to purchase a Whitby 42. He started looking in Toronto and then
outside the city because there were, in his words, "quite a
few such boats in the Great Lakes area". He did not find one
in Ontario. The next closest market according to the Appellant
was the eastern United States. He found prospects in Annapolis,
Maryland, in the Chesapeake Bay area, being prime chartering
grounds. He contacted a broker who found a Whitby 42 to his
satisfaction. This boat was named ORION. The Appellant said that
it looked like it had never sailed, that it had been owned by a
fastidious gentleman and that it had little use over its six
seasons. He described it as being in perfect condition. He
obtained all the specifications of this boat and engaged the
services of Manning Marine Survey to prepare a survey report of
the boat. That report consisted of nine and one-half pages. It
concluded with the statement that,
This vessel is generally well built using good materials and
acceptable methods. She also appears to have been fairly well
maintained, and is currently in need of relatively few
corrections and repairs as reported.
The conclusion also stated that an appraisal of current market
value was $110,000 whereas the estimate of replacement would be
$180,000. The Appellant took photographs of the boat and with
this report, flew to Tortola and was advised by Rolf that he
would accept the boat. The Appellant then returned to Annapolis,
made an offer on the boat, and purchased same for $105,000 U.S.
This was paid by a down payment of $15,000 Canadian and a bank
loan for the balance of $125,000 with the boat being given as
collateral. Other documents show the engagement of the services
of Seven Seas Yacht Deliveries to take the boat to BVI. The boat
arrived at that destination. The August 18, 1988 contract for
charter management with Tropic Island and a credit note of
January 4, 1989 respecting the first charter fee were filed as
exhibits.
[12] The Appellant's testimony was that he had a number of
problems with Tropic Island. He said that a lot of unnecessary
work was done on the boat, that he had been billed for work which
was not done, that he had been double billed for some work and
that the company was not generating charters as promised.
[13] On visiting the BVI the Appellant learned that Tropic
Island was moving from Rhodetown, the hub, to a marina facility
in a remote location. It had been abandoned by a bankrupt yacht
charter company. He said that this needed repair and that there
was no facility for provisions. The relationship with Rolf
deteriorated quickly.
[14] He obtained a new marine survey in June, 1989 for
insurance purposes. On August 18, 1989, the Appellant received
two letters from James C. Hall, a man said to be experienced in
the travel business recommending an "honest and trustworthy
charter operator in the Caribbean". He entered into a
charter management agreement with that company
("Tortola") in September, 1989, the first charter
voyage to be made in November of that year. This association also
proved to be unsatisfactory. The Appellant said that he was with
Tortola for about two and one-half years and that the experience
was like that with Tropic Island but with a bit more charter
activity. He said the repair bills were the same or worse, that
business was not great for that company and that it sought to
earn its money with unnecessary repairs to his craft. He also
stated that a hurricane in 1988 affected business and that
another hurricane in 1989 devastated the Virgin Islands. He went
to the islands to assess the damage and stated that yachts were
strewn up the hillside over 100 feet, that a number were sunk and
facilities had simply been wiped out. He said that he reached the
point where he told Tortola to cease repairs unless he was
advised and given estimates in advance. He said that he learned
that his boat was used to take hotel guests out on one day
charters and that he received his share of only one trip. He said
also that a letter of July 10, 1990 advised that costs were
escalating and that the mechanical fees would be increased as
would fees for boat watching, advertising, storage lockers,
insurance and owner's use. He also spoke of a terrorist
bombing over Scotland affecting air traffic to the Virgin Islands
adversely. Appellant's counsel also filed as an exhibit a
facsimile message recommending someone who could manage the boat.
That was not pursued.
[15] The Appellant also gave evidence on how he had tried to
cut expenses, among other things, moving the boat to Nanny Cay, a
not nice but inexpensive dock space. He also decided not to use
bare boat charters anymore but to "crew charter" which
he opined would result in less damage to the boat.
[16] He became involved with a gentleman by the name of Billy
Flynn ("Flynn") who was to help him look after the boat
and find charters. None resulted.
[17] The Appellant then, describing these disappointments,
said that he explored the Toronto market and decided to return to
that city. He said that after two months of homework he found a
crew to bring the boat to Toronto. He went to BVI to see the boat
off, the principal crew member having papers for celestial
navigation. He made many repairs to the boat himself, the people
he had engaged to do same having done little or nothing. He
purchased a Global Positioning System ("GPS"). However,
the crew had not taken enough batteries to use it. The boat left
in the first week of October, 1992 but the crew got lost. The
Appellant stated that due to panic and fatigue the boat was run
into a reef in Bermuda. He was advised that there was not a great
deal of damage but that proved not to be the case. He received a
telephone call from a marine facility in Bermuda saying that the
boat needed a lot of work and he consequently went to Bermuda. He
recovered his GPS and had the skipper removed from the island.
The boat laid over in Bermuda until July, 1993. He assembled a
new crew of competent people and they arrived in Toronto. He said
that most of the repair work done in Bermuda was faulty, that all
systems failed between Bermuda and the U.S.A., that the boat was
sinking and that the U.S. Coast Guard saved them. In Toronto the
boat was taken to Pickering, where it stayed for two years, to a
boat repair facility selected by the insurance company. The
Appellant testified that he was involved in other activities and
so the boat sat another year - until 1997. It was then taken to
Bluffer's Park Marina for more repairs. He said that his plan
is to put it in the charter business with a crew from there. On
cross-examination, it was established that little or no capital
cost allowance on the boat had been claimed.
[18] Whereas the Appellant stated that he thought the interest
rate at the bank was approximately 10 1/4 percent,
Respondent's counsel suggested that the amount was at least
13 percent. There was no satisfactory evidence to establish the
actual rate. The Appellant said that he had documents with
respect to the bank loan but that his wife had control of that
file and that she, for purposes of divorce proceedings, had taken
some of the documents to her lawyer and that this material
disappeared. His divorce was finalized in 1993. Respondent's
counsel also asked questions with regard to the number of times
the Appellant's wife accompanied him to BVI. This culminated
in the Appellant's statement that the expenses of those
journeys were deducted by the company. He also said that they
stayed on the boat as opposed to staying in an expensive
hotel.
[19] It was established that losses and relevant figures were
as follows:
Taxation Year
|
Gross Income
|
Expenses
|
Net Income (Loss)
|
1988
|
nil
|
$17,719
|
($17,719)
|
1989
|
$15,144
|
$43,821
|
($28,377)
|
1990
|
$22,973
|
$64,109
|
($41,136)
|
1991
|
$ 7,227
|
$39,232
|
($32,005)
|
1992
|
nil
|
$60,927
|
($60,927)
|
1993
|
nil
|
$51,450
|
($51,450)
|
[20] The Appellant was also asked questions, on
cross-examination on two occasions, respecting why he did not get
rid of the boat.
[21] Appellant's counsel read into the record extracts
from the examination for discovery of Joseph Florentino, business
auditor with the Department of National Revenue as follows:
54. Q. In the Minister's assumptions that are in the reply
-- I would like to take you through those items. In 15(a) when
the reply says that the appellant had no training in the
activity, was that as assumption as at say 1987 or 1988 or was
that an assumption applied to 1991?
A. At the beginning when he commenced the charter
operation.
55. Q. 15(b), did you have any information that he had any
other businesses other than Custom Design Installation Limited
and the yacht charter business?
A. No. No.
56. Q. 15(c), says that the appellant prepared no business
plan to determine if it would be profitable. Now, today your
counsel went through in some detail the -- a folio of handwritten
notes that Mr. Johnson (sic) produced and, indeed, his
explanation. Did you see that material when you did your
audit?
A. No, I did not.
57. Q. Today was the first time you had seen that
material?
A. Yes.
58. Q. The figures that are in paragraph 15(d) follow the
figures that are in the tax returns. Are we agreeable, Mr. Ghan,
that the receipts and the amounts of the expenses are not for the
purpose of this trial in dispute and have to be individually
proved? We can just get on with the legal point?
MR. GHAN: I don't think so. We are contesting --
THE DEPONENT: No, we're not contesting on that.
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION:
[22] Moldowan v. Her Majesty The Queen, 77 DTC 5213, is
almost always cited in reasonable expectation of profit cases, no
matter what fact situation exists. In that case, Dickson, J., in
discussing the question of whether the Appellant's chief
source of income was neither farming nor a combination of farming
and some other source of income,[1] said, at 5215,
Although originally disputed, it is now accepted that in order
to have a "source of income" the taxpayer must have a
profit or a reasonable expectation of profit. Source of income,
thus, is an equivalent term to business.
The word "business" is defined in Section 248 of the
Act as follows:
"business" includes a profession, calling, trade,
manufacture or undertaking of any kind whatever and, except for
the purposes of paragraph (c), section 54.2 and paragraph
110.6(14)(f), an adventure or concern in a nature of trade
but does not include an office or employment.
[23] The seemingly endless parade of reasonable expectation of
profit cases has advanced with little, if any, attention paid to
this definition of business. It is pointed out that the question
in many other cases, and in the case at bar does not involve the
determination of whether there was a source of income. In those
other cases there was, and in this case there is, a business. One
wonders whether the life of the concept of "reasonable
expectation of profit", spawned and nourished by the quest
to determine the existence or non-existence of a source of
income, should have faltered in the face of what was
unquestionably a "business". The facts in this case
establish, clearly, that the Appellant was involved in an
"undertaking of any kind whatever" and certainly in an
"adventure or concern in the nature of trade". This
seems, in a number of cases, not to have been brought to the
attention of the Courts. It certainly has not been discussed in
what are described as major decisions in the world of reasonable
expectation of profit. Indeed, the jurisprudence seems to have
leap-frogged from its "source of income" origins to
become the matrix of deductibility of business expenses.
[24] In the words of Linden, J.A. at page 6006 of Tonn v.
Her Majesty the Queen, 96 DTC 6001, with respect to the
Moldowan quotation above:
These words, well known to practitioners and departmental
personnel alike, have become the first and often last resort for
most cases involving the question of business expense
deductibility. The words "reasonable expectation of
profit" have assumed the status of a benchmark test by which
questions of business expense deductibility are normally
determined.
[25] The learned Justice's discussion of the issue of the
origin of the reasonable expectation of profit test dealt with
the "source of income" and it constituting a test
stricter than the business purpose test set out in subsection
9(1) and paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Act. He stated
at 6008 that the test requires the presence of a profit motive
and must be objectively reasonable. In the face of a number of
decisions which have literally exhausted the discussion
possibilities of "reasonable expectation of profit" I
have no intention of seeking to challenge the foundation
supporting that belaboured sculpture. Given the fact that I am
literally instructed by jurisprudence to apply that test even
where there is no doubt about the evidence of a legitimate
business I will refer to certain segments of the Reasons for
Judgment of Linden, J.A. in Tonn. At 6009 Linden, J.A.
said:
I have dwelt upon the issue of the origin of the
"reasonable expectation of profit" test because a
proper understanding of it is necessary to the resolution of this
application. As a common law formulation respecting the purposes
of the Act, the Moldowan test is ideally suited to
situations where a taxpayer is attempting to avoid tax liability
by an inappropriate structuring of his or her affairs. One such
situation is the attempted deduction of an expense incurred to
gain a tax refund. Another is an attempt by a taxpayer to deduct
personal housing expenses under the guise of a free-lance typing
business operated by his wife. These cases are merely instances
where an inappropriate use of the Act is attempted, and where the
Moldowan test has rightly denied deductibility on the
basis that the Act's purposes would otherwise be
violated.
But do the Act's purposes suggest that deductions of
losses from bona fide businesses be disallowed solely
because the taxpayer made a bad judgment call? I do not think so.
The tax system has every interest in investigating the bona
fides of a taxpayer's dealings in certain situations, but
it should not discourage, or penalize, honest but erroneous
business decisions. The tax system does not tax on the basis of a
taxpayer's business acumen, with deductions extended to the
wise and withheld from the foolish. Rather, the Act taxes on the
basis of the economic situation of the taxpayer - as it is in
fact, and not as it should be, subject to what is said below.
...
The Moldowan test, therefore is a useful tool by which
the tax-inappropriateness of an activity may be reasonably
inferred when other, more direct forms of evidence are lacking.
Consequently, when the circumstances do not admit of any
suspicion that a business loss was made for a personal or
non-business motive, the test should be applied sparingly and
with a latitude favouring the taxpayer, whose business judgment
may have been less than competent.
I do not intend the use of those latter words to apply to the
present Appellant.
At page 6012, Linden, J.A. said:
The primary use of Moldowan as an objective
test, therefore, is the prevention of inappropriate reductions in
tax; it is not intended as a vehicle for the wholesale judicial
second-guessing of business judgments. A note of caution must be
sounded for instances where the test is applied to commercial
operations. Errors in business judgment, unless the Act
stipulates otherwise, do not prohibit one from claiming
deductions for losses arising from those errors.
He then cites an author and two cases which reinforce that
view.
[26] The Appellant was a wholly credible witness. I accept his
evidence. He has been and is an entrepreneur who believes in
instituting business enterprises and pursuing them or abandoning
them in the absence of a conviction that they will succeed. The
evidence supports this entrepreneurial spirit and activity. It
points clearly to his success in establishing and continuing
Custom.
[27] It is hard to imagine that he could have done more to
ensure not only a reasonable but a thorough examination of the
yacht business he was seeking to enter. The evidence is clear
that he consulted with experts with respect to the boat and with
respect to the type of operation and with respect to other
matters where he turned to experience for assistance. It does not
militate against his business acumen that he encountered
difficulties in an environment where it appears that not only
were business ethics ignored but fraud was practiced. He
encountered problems both from man and from nature which could
not be foreseen. It might be said that he was extremely
unfortunate with regard to a number of the events described
above. However, it is clear to me that this man set out in the
yacht charter business with the purpose of succeeding in turning
it to account in an economic way. The Reply to the Notice of
Appeal stated that the Appellant, before starting the
"Activity ... prepared no business plan to determine if it
would be profitable." That is clearly incorrect as palpably
demonstrated by the Appellant's evidence and the admissions
of the tax department's auditor.
[28] Linden, J. says that the test should be used sparingly
and with a latitude favouring the taxpayer, whose judgment may
have been less than competent. His reasons in Tonn allow
for honest but erroneous business decisions. I do not, in this
case, find that the Appellant made erroneous business decisions.
I do not find his judgment to have been less than competent.
Linden, J. also said that errors in business judgment do not
prohibit one from claiming deductions for losses arising from
those errors. It seems clear that he meant the deduction was not
prohibited, not simply that claiming deductions was not
prohibited.
[29] It is my perception that the Appellant tried to make this
business work, even in the face of adversity. He finally decided
(and this was a business decision) to move the operation to
Canada. The fact of the catastrophic events in Bermuda and on the
journey between Bermuda, after a lengthy reparation, and the
United States of America, were totally beyond his control. He now
plans to recommence his operation in Canada and will,
undoubtedly, use the experience he has gained to this date.
[30] It is not the place of the tax department to suggest that
a businessman should cease his activity. That is the
businessman's prerogative in an entrepreneurial and free
society. If he fails for some reason which is unrelated to his
earnest endeavours, that should not necessarily compromise his
ability to deduct losses. It is axiomatic that an individual,
even with expert opinions in advance that he or she had no
reasonable expectation of profit and who made profits in the
first year of an enterprise, would be taxed on same. Assume that
he or she could adduce evidence from Masters of Business
Administration, Chief Executive Officers of corporations,
accountants knowledgeable in business, et cetera, that would
establish beyond doubt that no reasonable expectation of profit
existed. That taxpayer would have little success arguing with the
tax collector that he should not be taxed because he had no
"reasonable expectation of profit". And so courses that
one way street.
[31] In the circumstances, I have no hesitation in concluding
that the Appellant had commenced a business with the intention
and expectation of realizing a profit. Given all of the surveys
he had commissioned and steps he had undertaken, which continued
in the years under appeal, that expectation was reasonable. It is
not the place of the tax collector or the Court to comment on
what business steps he should have taken. My conclusion is based
upon what he did, not what he could have done.
[32] I find, not only that the Appellant had a reasonable
expectation of profit but that the expenses incurred and claimed
by him are properly deductible with the meaning of paragraph
18(1)(a) of the Act as having been incurred for the
purpose of gaining or producing income with the result that the
claimed losses are deductible.
[33] Accordingly, the appeal is allowed with costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 31st day of July, 1998.
J.T.C.C.