Date:19980604
Docket: 96-116-GST-I
BETWEEN:
PAUL RAJ,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Rip, J.T.C.C.
[1] In late fall 1993, while he was a student at the
University of Alberta and a licensed real estate agent,
Paul Robert Raj, the appellant, started construction on
land owned by him in the City of Edmonton of a one and a half
story house ("house"). Construction of the house was
completed in March 1994 but the appellant never moved into
the house. In February 1994, the appellant accepted an offer of a
summer job from Syncrude Limited in Fort McMurray, Alberta.
Because he was going to leave the City of Edmonton for
Fort McMurray, the appellant declared, he put the house up
for sale in February 1994 and sold the property on
July 5, 1994. Mr. Raj stated that when he commenced
construction of the house, he intended to move into it upon its
completion. It was only because he obtained the unexpected job in
Fort McMurray that he sold the house. He complained he had
been unsuccessful in his attempts to obtain employment in his
field of study. When he did get such a job out of town, he
decided to sell the house. Mr. Raj is appealing an
assessment issued by the Minister of National Revenue
("Minister") imposing Goods and Services tax
("GST"), pursuant to the Excise Tax Act
("Act"), on the sale of the house.
Mr. Raj claims that the sale of the house in July 1994 is
exempt from GST since the sale is an exempt supply under
Part I of Schedule V of the Act. He also claims
the new housing rebate contemplated by subsection 256(2) of
the Act. At all relevant times Mr. Raj was not a
registrant under the Act.
[2] The Minister's position is that the house was a
residential complex and that Mr. Raj was a builder within
the meaning of subsection 123(1) of the Act.
Therefore, the house sold by the appellant was a supply in the
course of a business or an adventure or concern in the nature of
trade and is therefore taxable under the Act.
[3] Mr. Raj's parents owned a real estate agency,
Ranger Realty Ltd., and in 1992, Mr. Raj became a licensed
real estate agent. He said it was not his intention to make real
estate his occupation. He wanted to be a mining engineer. He
began his studies in 1987 at the Faculty of Engineering of the
University of Alberta and then studied minerals and resources at
the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. He returned to the
University of Alberta in 1992 and graduated at the end of
1994.
[4] During 1993 and 1994 Mr. Raj worked part-time for
Ranger Realty Ltd. and was not optimistic he would obtain a
position as a mining engineer on graduation. If he did not obtain
employment in his chosen field, he was prepared to continue to
work for his parents. Accordingly, he said, he decided to build
the house.
[5] The appellant testified that job prospects for mining
engineers were not too good in Edmonton in the 1993. The best
prospects for mining engineers were in Fort McMurray and in
northern Canada. In October 1993 he was interviewed by
Syncrude for a summer position. He knew any position he obtained
either with Syncrude or other employer would be outside of
Edmonton, if he obtained a job at all.
[6] Mr. Raj obtained financing from his parents for the
purchase of the land and for the construction of the house. He
testified he purchased the land ("house lot") before
1993.
[7] The house had an area of 2,000 square feet. It had
three bedrooms and a den, a kitchen, a family room, and a living
room. The basement was unfinished. The cost of the house and land
was approximately $190,000 and he sold the property in July 1994
at his cost.
[8] At all relevant times Mr. Raj was not married. In 1993 he
was 25 years old.
[9] Mr. Raj stated that he consulted an accountant to
determine whether or not he was subject to GST on the sale of the
house. The accountant informed him that since he paid GST during
construction of the house, no GST was exigible a second time when
he sold the house.
[10] Mr. Raj's parents previously carried on the
business of building contractors under the name Adria Homes Ltd.
Mr. Raj asked his mother to "take care" of the
construction of the house and she did so. According to the
appellant, he was "bystander" insofar as actual
construction of the house is concerned.
[11] The house was completed in March 1994. Mr. Raj
authorized his parents to sell the house as his agents. He left
Edmonton at the end of April 1994 and moved to
Fort McMurray. The offer to purchase the house was accepted
in July 1994. The house was vacant between March and
July.
[12] Mr. Raj acknowledged that the Syncrude job offer was
only for the summer of 1994 but, he declared, Syncrude had the
reputation of hiring back summer students as permanent employees.
Indeed, Mr. Raj stated he did get an informal offer in July
1994 from Syncrude for a full time position. He returned to
school in September 1994. Syncrude expressed interest in October
1994 in hiring Mr. Raj as a full time employee and
Mr. Raj indicated that he was interested in such a position.
He was eventually hired as a permanent employee by Syncrude and
on March 1, 1995 commenced working in Fort McMurray. He
worked at Fort McMurray until 1997.
[13] Mr. Ralph Lee, an auditor with Revenue Canada,
testified that when he received the file to review the Notice of
Objection to the assessment in issue he contacted Mr. Raj by
telephone. Mr. Raj informed Mr. Lee that the house was
built for resale. The appellant referred Mr. Lee to his
mother for additional information. When Mr. Lee spoke to
Mrs. Raj, she insisted no GST was payable on the sale of the
house since the sale was between individuals.
[14] On the facts before me I am not satisfied that Mr.
Raj's sole intention when purchasing the house lot and then
building the house was to live in the house. He did not use any
of his own money to acquire the property and build on it.
Although he was a licensed real estate agent, his main
occupational thrust was studying at the University of Alberta.
His goal was to secure employment as a mining engineer and in
1993 the prospects of attaining this goal were not good. He was
prepared to work as a real estate agent in Edmonton if he was
unable to find work in his chosen field. At best, as I appreciate
the evidence, working as a real estate agent was a poor second
option.
[15] For the above reasons - and even if I ignore the evidence
of Mr. Lee who testified that Mr. Raj informed him the house was
built to sell - I find it questionable that when Mr. Raj
undertook and commenced to build the house (or even earlier, when
he acquired the house lot) he was satisfied in his mind that he
was prepared to take up residence in the house. That he was
prepared to sell the property on the basis of a summer job, a
temporary job only confirms that if not when he purchased the
house lot, then when he decided to build the house, the
possibility of selling the property was an operating motivation
for the acquisition of the house lot and the construction of the
house.1
Mr. Raj must have had in his mind that upon a certain type of
circumstances arising, such as securing employment away from
Edmonton, he would sell the house instead of using it as his
residence.
[16] Mr. Raj had, at the time he decided to build the house, a
"secondary intention" of selling the house if
circumstances require and I have no doubt that he intended to
make a profit on any such sale. Hence, purchase of the land, the
construction of the house and sale of the property constituted a
commercial activity to Mr. Raj within the meaning of subsection
123(1) of the Act: the transactions constituted an
adventure or concern in the nature of trade. There was no
evidence that Mr. Raj did not have a reasonable expectation of
profit, when he commenced the activity.
[17] Mr. Raj was a builder, as defined by subsection 123(1) of
the Act. He had an interest in the real property, the
land, on which a residential complex, the house, is situated and
engaged another person to carry on for him the construction of
the house in the course of an adventure or concern in the nature
of trade. Thus, GST was exigible on the sale of the house.
[18] With respect to the new housing rebate requested by Mr.
Raj, there is no evidence, among other things, that Mr. Raj
applied for the rebate within the time required by subsection
121(4) of the Act. It may be, as suggested by
respondent's counsel, that Mr. Raj is entitled to a rebate
pursuant to section 252 of the Act as it read in 1994. I
understand he had not applied for the rebate at time of trial and
I advised him to do so forthwith since the application is to be
filed within four years after the day the consideration for the
supply became due or was paid without becoming due, that is, on
or about July 5, 1994.
[19] The appeal is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 4th day of June 1998.
"Gerald J. Rip"
J.T.C.C.