Date: 19980402
Dockets: 97-1898-IT-I; 97-1903-IT-I; 97-1886-IT-I;
97-1887-IT-I; 97-1888-IT-I; 97-1889-IT-I; 97-1890-IT-I;
97-1891-IT-I; 97-1892-IT-I; 97-1899-IT-I; 97-1901-IT-I
BETWEEN:
THOMAS CUDDIE, CHARLES J. McDONALD, RANDALL WONG, JEFFREY
WEST, YAN G. THERRIEN, ELIZABETH SHAW, DONALD MERKEL, SHELLEY
BRITTON, MAUREEN MARCOUX, M. PAUL CUFFLEY, STEPHANE LAPOINTE,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bell, J.T.C.C.
[1] This is one of eleven appeals commenced by members of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police force ("RCMP") respecting
employment expense deductions. As the issue is the same in each
case, the only difference being the type of expenses that were
claimed, these Reasons for Judgment will apply to all eleven
appeals.
ISSUE:
[2] The issue is whether the expenses claimed by the Appellant
are deductible pursuant to the provisions of paragraph
8(1)(i) of the Income Tax Act
("Act").
FACTS:
[3] The Appellant Thomas Cuddie conducted the appeal on behalf
of all eleven Appellants. He gave evidence that he had deducted
the expenses incurred by him in respect of haircuts, a pager and
basic telephone service. He testified that members of the force
were obliged to have their hair cut or arranged at a certain
length and that each member had to have a basic telephone service
which he described as a land telephone. By that he obviously
meant a fixed telephone line as opposed to a cellular telephone.
He also claimed expenses with respect to pager rentals. He
testified that the force supplied a minimal number of pagers and
that it was not only inconvenient but inappropriate in some
circumstances not to have a pager in continuous possession. He
explained that if he was expecting a call, for example, from an
informant, the informant might well call that pager number when
some other policeman was in possession of the pager. The only
way, he testified, that he could have assurance of continuous use
of a pager was to make arrangements for acquiring one himself. He
testified also that this applied to the other Appellants.
[4] Additional matters in respect of which expenses were made
by some Appellants were gloves, flashlights and handcuff keys.
Cuddie's evidence was that in certain cases it was necessary
for members to purchase special gloves and that the flashlights
issued by the RCMP force were of inferior quality and could
easily break. He said that it was essential that they have
reliable flashlights and hence the necessity to purchase same. He
also testified that some members bought an extra set of handcuff
keys for convenience. In two of the cases under appeal, amounts
which were unexplained and unsubstantiated were claimed.
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION:
[5] Section 8 of the Act provides for deductions from a
taxpayer's income from an office or employment. The
description of deductible amounts is clearly set forth in
paragraphs 8(1)(a) through (q). Subsection 8(2)
provides that except as permitted by section 8 no deductions
shall be made in computing income from an office or employment.
The other subsections are not material to this appeal.
[6] It is clear that the only paragraph which could possibly
afford these Appellants a deduction is 8(1)(i). The
pertinent part of it reads as follows:
(1) In computing a taxpayer's income for a taxation year
from an office or employment, 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:
...
(iii) the cost of supplies that were consumed directly in the
performance of the duties of the office or employment and that
the officer or employee was required by the contract of
employment to supply and pay for, ...
to the extent that the taxpayer has not been reimbursed, and
it not entitled to be reimbursed in respect thereof;
[7] The question arises, therefore, as to whether pagers,
telephones, haircuts, gloves, flashlights and handcuff keys are
"supplies" that were consumed. It is not necessary to
determine whether they were required by the contract of
employment to supply and pay for those items if they were not
supplies that were consumed.
[8] In Thibault v. M.N.R., 86 DTC 1542, this Court
determined that clothing could be considered to be
"supplies" but could not be "consumed".
InKomarniski v. M.N.R., 80 DTC 1134 this Court determined
that tools were not "supplies" but were equipment, the
cost of which was not deductible. Judge Tremblay referred to the
case of Herman Luks (No. 2) v. M.N.R., 58 DTC 1194 in
which Thurlow, J., then a Judge of the former Exchequer Court of
Canada, in discussing the distinction between
"supplies" and "equipment" said,
"Supplies" is a term the connotation of which may
vary rather widely, according to the context in which it is used.
In s. 11(10)(c) it is used in a context which is concerned
with things which are consumed in the performance of the duties
of employment. Many things may be consumed in the sense that they
may be worn out or used up in the performance of duties of
employment. The employer's plant or machinery may be worn
out. The employee's clothing may be worn out. His tools may
be worn out. And materials that go into the work, by whomsoever
they may be provided, may be used up. "Supplies" is a
word of narrower meaning that "things" and in this
context does not embrace all things that may be consumed in
performing the duties of employment, either in, the sense of
being worn out or used up. The line which separates what is
included in it from what is not included may be difficult to
define precisely but in general, I think its natural meaning in
this context is limited to materials that are used up in the
performance of the duties of the employment. It obviously
includes such items as gasoline for a blow torch but, in my
opinion, it does not include the blow torch itself. The latter,
as well as tools in general, falls within the category of
equipment.
[9] In Brownlee v. M.N.R., 78 DTC 1571, this Court
determined that the word "supplies" did not include
items of individual dress such as a police officer's
uniforms. It determined that the uniforms were not
"consumed" in the normal comprehension of that term. It
went further and said that even if the uniforms were
"supplies that were consumed", they were not
"consumed" directly in the performance of the duties of
the office or employment. The foregoing positions are confirmed
in McLeavy v. M.N.R., 54 DTC 136 and Drobot v.
M.N.R., 87 DTC 371.
[10] The submissions made by the Appellant Cuddie were
logical, and in the circumstances described by him, well based. I
have no doubt, from my appraisal of him, about his sincerity and
about his credibility. However, the statutory test that must be
met is strict. The legislature, in using the words "supplies
that were consumed" posed a firm requirement for deduction.
The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines
"consume" as,
That has been consumed.
and defines consumed, inter alia, as
Destroyed by or like fire or (formerly) disease; cause to
vanish (away), as by evaporation. ... Use, so as to destroy; take
up and exhaust; use up. ... Eat up, drink down; devour.
[11] The expenses incurred by the Appellants simply did not
result in supplies being consumed. Accordingly, the appeals are
dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 3rd day of April, 1998.
"R.D. Bell"
J.T.C.C.