Date: 19980212
Docket: 95-1090-IT-G
BETWEEN:
GERALD B. PRITCHETT,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Mogan, J.T.C.C.
[1] The Appellant has appealed from notices of reassessment
issued under the Income Tax Act for the taxation years
1985, 1986 and 1987. The Appellant claimed a “business
investment loss” of $564,745 for the 1986 taxation year.
The Minister of National Revenue accepted a business investment
loss of only $434,000 for 1986. The Appellant claims that the
business investment loss accepted by the Minister should be
increased by the aggregate of two amounts ($35,000 plus $47,260)
which are described below. The only issue in these appeals is
whether those two amounts should be added to the business
investment loss of $434,000 as accepted by the Minister.
[2] A business investment loss is defined in paragraph
39(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act. For 1985, a
taxpayer’s allowable business investment loss
(“ABIL”) was defined in paragraph 38(1)(c) as
one-half of his business investment loss. A non-capital loss is
defined in paragraph 111(8)(b) to include an ABIL. The
Appellant used his substantial ABIL in 1986 to establish a
non-capital loss which he carried back to 1985 and forward to
1987. The adjoining years of 1985 and 1987 are under appeal only
because they are affected by the amount of the Appellant’s
ABIL in 1986.
[3] In the early months of 1984, the Appellant incorporated
Stash, O’Neill Enterprises Limited (the
“Company”) under the laws of Newfoundland. The
Company owned and operated a restaurant known as a
“roadhouse” at the Village Mall in St. John’s,
Newfoundland. In the food concourse area of the Village Mall, the
Company also owned and operated a donought shop, a submarine shop
and a pizza shop. These food outlets were all operating by the
end of 1984. In the spring of 1985, the Company opened a
restaurant and bar under the name “Dallas” in
downtown St. John’s on Duckworth Street.
[4] In order to finance the development, opening and operation
of these restaurants and food outlets, the Company had borrowed
approximately $400,000 from The Toronto-Dominion Bank (“TD
Bank”) at its main branch on Water Street in
St. John’s. The bank held a fixed and floating
debenture on all of the Company’s assets. A real problem
developed immediately after the opening of Dallas because there
was a beer strike throughout Newfoundland. Other taverns and
restaurants in St. John’s either anticipated the strike and
brought in supplies or absorbed all of the available supplies
right after the strike commenced. Because Dallas was a new tavern
with no established supplier, it was out of beer immediately and
suffered severely throughout the long strike. The
Appellant’s unchallenged evidence was that the Dallas
operation was loosing approximately $13,000 per month so long as
it was operating but that the Company would lose only $7,000 per
month to maintain the premises if Dallas were shut down.
Accordingly, the Appellant decided to close down the Dallas
operation in October 1985 and it remained closed until April
1986.
[5] The significant losses in the Dallas operation put a real
strain on the financial resources of the Company. The Appellant
went back to the TD Bank to obtain additional financing. He
estimated that it would require approximately $750,000 to put the
Company back on its feet and reopen the Dallas operation.
Apparently, the lending limit of the TD Bank in Newfoundland for
a single customer was $500,000; and therefore, the
Company’s loan application had to be referred to the
regional manager in Nova Scotia. As a condition to additional
financing, the bank required firstly that the Company retain a
qualified chartered accountant to monitor the operation of the
Company’s food outlets and provide the bank with monthly
statements; and secondly a moratorium on collection action by the
Company’s other creditors.
[6] The Company retained Raymond Noseworthy, an
experienced chartered accountant in St. John’s, who
testified at the hearing of these appeals. He started in January
1986 and according to his own testimony: “I supervised the
operation of the Company for a number of months and in the
process of preparing monthly statements and cash flow projections
I had a continuous contact with The Toronto-Dominion Bank”.
(Transcript - page 10). Mr. Noseworthy described negotiations
with the other creditors apart from the bank. Specifically, the
suppliers agreed that they would not press for immediate payment
of amounts owing, and they would continue to supply on a cash
basis. The City of St. John’s agreed to withhold collection
proceedings with respect to municipal taxes. The provincial
retail sales tax authority also agreed to withhold collection
proceedings so long as taxes were paid on a current basis. And
lastly, Revenue Canada agreed to withhold collection proceedings
if the Appellant would personally guarantee the payment of
certain “source deductions” for which the Company was
in arrears with respect to its payroll. The Appellant personally
was entitled at that time to a significant refund in the range of
approximately $50,000. Instead of receiving that refund by way of
immediate payment, the Appellant agreed that Revenue Canada could
hold the refund as security for remittance of the overdue source
deductions.
[7] The Appellant and Mr. Noseworthy worked diligently in the
first months of 1986 to satisfy the bank’s conditions for
additional financing. They met the conditions concerning a
moratorium from the four identified creditors, and
Mr. Noseworthy provided monthly statements to the bank
showing that the Company was slowly working its way out of its
financial difficulties. Having satisfied those conditions, the
Appellant stated that he was relatively confident that the bank
would provide the necessary financing to get the Company’s
whole operation going again. The bank had not confirmed its
additional financing and so, in April 1986, the Appellant
reopened the Dallas tavern in downtown St. John’s as a
proprietorship of his own, paying rent to the Company for the
premises.
[8] Sometime in the latter part of May or the first days of
June 1986, the bank informed Mr. Noseworthy and the Appellant
that the additional financing would not be available, and the
bank made a demand on the Company to pay all of the outstanding
loans within five days. This demand was in effect a death knell
to the Company because it had no resources with which to pay its
outstanding loans. In that five-day period, the bank brought in a
receiver from Nova Scotia and seized all of the Company’s
assets. According to Mr. Noseworthy, the receiver was appointed
by the bank not to operate the business but to close it down
immediately. Apparently, the receiver closed down the
Company’s operations around the end of May or early June
1986 and sold off all of the available assets at prices which,
according to the Appellant, were only a fraction of the cost
and/or value of those assets.
[9] The Appellant had personally guaranteed all of the
bank’s loans to the Company. Therefore, the bank took steps
to recover what it could from the Appellant. This brings me to
the first amount in dispute which is $35,000. Exhibit A-1 is a
passbook issued by the TD Bank for account no. 157-208 at the
bank’s branch at TD Place on Water Street in St.
John’s, Newfoundland. The passbook does not contain the
name of the bank customer who owned the account and has only one
entry showing that on March 29, 1985, there was a deposit of
$30,000. That one-line entry shows a balance of $30,000 and there
is nothing else in the passbook to show what happened to the
$30,000. The Appellant is his oral testimony gave very clear
evidence as to the following facts: (i) account no. 157-208
was his personal account; (ii) he deposited the $30,000 into that
account on March 29, 1985; (iii) he left the amount on
deposit as security for part of the loans which the bank had made
to the Company; (iv) that deposit had accumulated interest of
approximately $5,000 in the following 12 months to March
1986; and (v) the bank seized $35,000 in the spring of 1986 as
part of its attempts to recover the aggregate amount of principal
and interest owing by the Company on its very substantial debt to
the bank.
[10] According to the evidence of Mr. Antle, an employee of
Revenue Canada, there had been earlier assessments issued to the
Appellant in 1990 and 1991 with respect to the three taxation
years under appeal, and those assessments had been objected to.
In the ensuing discussions between the Appellant or his
representatives and Revenue Canada, there was no documentation
provided to Revenue Canada to support the Appellant’s claim
to the $35,000 loss arising from the bank’s seizure of the
savings account evidenced by the passbook. The Appellant’s
evidence in Court was that the passbook was found by his wife
only a year before the hearing of these appeals and, therefore,
had not been available at any time during prior discussions
between the Appellant or his representatives and Revenue
Canada.
[11] I accept the Appellant’s evidence that the passbook
had been lost and was found only about a year before the hearing
of these appeals. Accepting his evidence on that narrow point
does not mean that his claim is confirmed with respect to losing
$35,000 on the seizure of the bank account. The finding of the
passbook and the failure to act on its discovery raise too many
questions concerning the ownership and ultimate use or
disposition of the $30,000. For example, there is no evidence as
to the ownership of account no. 157-208. There is no name in the
passbook. There is no evidence (other than the Appellant’s
sworn statement) as to the ultimate disposition of the $30,000
balance in the account. There is no evidence that the amount on
deposit in this account was pledged to the TD Bank to support any
loan to the Company. And lastly, there is no evidence that the
amount on deposit was seized by the TD Bank at any time.
[12] If this passbook was found about one year before the
hearing of these appeals, why did the Appellant not take it to
the local branch of the TD Bank in St. John’s and simply
present the passbook and ask it to be updated? Such a simple
procedure would have required the bank to dig into its records
(perhaps microfilmed records from 1985) and establish the
ownership of the account, and then trace the use of the $30,000
shown as being on deposit as at March 29, 1985. There is no
evidence as to why the Appellant did not pursue that simple
procedure of presenting the passbook at the bank and asking the
bank to verify both the ownership of the account and the ultimate
disposition of the $30,000 shown on deposit.
[13] In the circumstances of this case, I should not have to
rely on the uncorroborated testimony of the Appellant that
account no. 157-208 at the TD Bank was his account; that he
had a balance of $30,000 or $35,000 on deposit in that account at
all relevant times; and that the bank seized his money on
deposit. There was better evidence readily available. The best
evidence rule has been discarded as a rule for excluding evidence
but it is useful in assigning weight. The following comment on
the rule appears in “The Law of Evidence in Civil
Cases” by Sopinka and Lederman, Butterworth
1974:
Although the rule is still referred to with respect to matters
other than the admission of secondary evidence of documents, it
is rather by way of a rationale for assigning less weight to the
evidence tendered than as a reason for its exclusion.
The rule as it applies to admission of secondary evidence of
documents is not as narrow as the judgment of Lord Denning
implies. It is doubtful that he intended to make a definitive
statement of the rule in its application to documents. A party
seeking to adduce secondary evidence must do more than just show
that the document is not available in his hands.
In R. v. Swartz, (1977) 37 C.C.C. (2d) 409, the Ontario
Court of Appeal quoted with approval the following passage from
Halsbury, (4d), volume 17, page 8:
“That evidence should be the best that the nature of the
case will allow is besides being a matter of obvious prudence, a
principle with a considerable pedigree. However, any strict
interpretation of this principle has long been obsolete, and the
rule is now only of importance in regard to the primary evidence
of private documents. The logic of requiring the production of an
original document where it is available rather than relying on
... the recollection of witnesses, is clear ...”
This review of the law by the Ontario Court of Appeal in
Swartz was approved in the Supreme Court of Canada. The
Canada Evidence Act contains in section 29 a procedure for
proving an entry in any book or record of a bank. Subsection
29(2) states in part:
29(2) A copy of an entry in the book or record ... shall not
be admitted in evidence under this section unless it is first
proved that the book or record was, at the time of the making of
the entry, one of the ordinary books or records of the financial
institution, ... and such proof may be given by any person
employed by the financial institution who has knowledge of the
book or record ... and may be given orally or by affidavit sworn
before any commissioner or other person authorized to take
affidavits.
[14] Exhibit A-1 is the TD Bank passbook for account no.
157-208 at the “TD Place” branch in St.
John’s, Newfoundland. When the Appellant found that
passbook about a year before the hearing of his appeals, he had
at least two options. He could have presented the passbook at the
issuing branch of the bank and asked to have it updated to show
the history of the $30,000 deposit. Alternatively, he could have
asked a responsible bank employee at that branch to swear an
affidavit with respect to the ownership of that account and the
disposition of any funds on deposit. Subsections 29(4) and (5) of
the Canada Evidence Act provide for the use of such an
affidavit in Court. For whatever reason, the Appellant did not
pursue either option.
[15] I will paraphrase the above quoted passage from Halsbury
and simply state that any evidence should be the best that the
nature of the case will allow. I put very little weight on the
Appellant’s sworn testimony because he took no steps to
obtain readily available evidence from the bank concerning the
ownership of account no. 157-208 and the disposition of any funds
on deposit in that account.
[16] The Appellant’s failure to obtain readily available
evidence from the TD Bank with respect to the passbook
(Exhibit A-1) may justify an inference that the evidence of the
bank would have been unfavourable to the Appellant. See Murray
v. Saskatoon, [1952] 2 D.L.R. 499 at 505-506. The onus of
proof is on the Appellant and he has failed to discharge that
onus. His appeal with respect to the amount $35,000 is
dismissed.
[17] The second amount in dispute is $47,260 which is the
amount of the refund which the Appellant was personally entitled
to in 1985 when he was negotiating a refinancing of the Company
with the TD Bank. At that time, the bank required a moratorium on
any collection action by four creditors: suppliers, the City of
St. John’s, the provincial retail sales tax authority
and Revenue Canada. In 1985, the Appellant was entitled to a
personal refund in the amount of $47,260 owing to him by Revenue
Canada. At the same time, however, the Company had failed to
remit source deductions in the amount of approximately $50,000
with respect to its payroll. In the course of negotiating the
moratorium on collection action by Revenue Canada, it is the
Appellant’s evidence that Revenue Canada required him to
assign his personal refund in the amount of $47,260 to Revenue
Canada either as security for the ultimate payment of the
shortfall in remittances of source deductions or as a direct
transfer of funds which would be credited against the
Company’s liability for source deductions. Revenue Canada
admits that this arrangement was made and, in the Reply to the
Notice of Appeal, the following statement appears in paragraph
3(c) as a fact which the Minister relied upon in issuing the
assessments under appeal:
3(c) throughout 1984, 1985 and 1986, the Appellant paid a
total of $47,260 to the Respondent on account of arrears of
unremitted source deductions of the Company;
The above statement was corroborated by Mr. Antle in his
evidence on behalf of the Respondent. An additional fact relied
upon by the Minister appears in paragraph 3(g) of the Reply to
the Notice of Appeal:
3(g) further, the Appellant has not established that the said
$47,260, or any part thereof was not included in the calculation
of the Appellant’s shareholder loan balance which has been
already allowed as a business investment loss;
[18] In my view, there is an inconsistency between the two
facts pleaded by the Respondent in paragraphs 3(c) and 3(g) as
set out above. According to paragraph 3(c), the Appellant paid a
total of $47,260 “throughout 1984, 1985 and 1986”.
This indicates to me that the amount was paid over a three-year
period. According to paragraph 3(g), the Appellant has not
established that the amount of $47,260 “or any part
thereof” was not included in the calculation of the
Appellant’s shareholder loan balance. According to the
evidence of Mr. Antle, the Company’s financial statement at
November 30, 1985 was the last financial statement available to
Revenue Canada. In that financial statement, there was a
shareholder loan balance in the Appellant’s favour showing
that the Company owed to the Appellant approximately $335,000.
According to Mr. Antle, there was no analysis of the shareholder
loan account and Revenue Canada had no way of determining what
the various entries were which made up that total amount of
$335,000. In other words, Revenue Canada could not determine
whether all or any part of the $47,260 had already been credited
to the shareholder loan account as those funds were transferred
from the Appellant’s personal tax refund account at Revenue
Canada to the Company’s source deduction account which was
in a deficit balance.
[19] Mr. Antle took over the Appellant’s file in 1993.
At that time, one of Mr. Antle’s predecessors had
already agreed to allow the Appellant the total amount of
$335,000 in the shareholder loan account as part of his business
investment loss. After taking over the file, Mr. Antle stated
that he agreed to allow certain additional amounts to the
Appellant as “something else”. In explaining what the
something else was, Mr. Antle gave the following description in
his testimony:
A. And that something else was in his total claim of 564,000,
that’s the total business investment loss, two components
were those balances, those shareholder’s loan balances, one
for Mad Gerry’s and one for Stash O’Neill’s.
But there was a lot of other items listed on top of that and what
I agreed to allow -- I accepted or it was my understanding at the
time that the business ceased on November 30, 1985. So I agreed
to allow most of those expenses that were listed on his working
paper that were paid after November 30, 1985, recognizing that
they would not be in a shareholder’s loan account because
we had already allowed that balance as of November 30, 1985. And
there was several small amounts listed that I agreed to allow
that were paid after that date. The only amounts that I
didn’t allow were there was three items and two of them are
at issue today. One is the payments -- payment of the
Company’s source deductions and the other one is the
$35,000 term deposit that was taken. And the reason for not
allowing those was that Revenue Canada felt that those -- well,
with respect to the 35,000, there was absolutely no documentation
to support it and Revenue Canada felt that documentation should
have been available in the form of letters from the Bank at the
time the note was taken or legal documents. But there was
absolutely nothing, at the time, to even show me that the amount
existed, the term deposit existed. So there was nothing to
support the claim at all. With respect to the source deductions
paid by Mr. Pritchett, my understanding is those payments were
actually made in 1984, 1985 and 1986. And a lot of those payments
were made prior to the Company ceasing operations. So we get into
the same issue that they may have already been allowed as part of
the shareholder’s loan account. We don’t know. And
the amounts paid after the Company ceased operations, we felt
that due to Court cases that they are not allowable.
MR. RUSSELL:
Q. And of the total amount of ABIL claimed, being the 564,000
amount, can you tell the Court approximately what amount was
ultimately permitted by Revenue Canada?
A. Revenue Canada allowed 434,000 which amounted to 217,000
being the allowable portion.
...
Q. And what accounts for the difference between the 434
allowed and the 564 claimed?
A. Well, in the original working paper of the calculation of
the allowable business investment loss, Mr. Pritchett or whoever
prepared the working paper, estimated the amounts taken by
Revenue Canada as 50,000 as opposed to 47. And so -
Q. 47 being the 47,260 shown in the Reply?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. All right.
A. In his calculation of the allowable business investment
loss, he just put a round figure of 50,000 in and the 35,000
note. So there you have 85,000 of that right there and there was
some payments to Noseworthy, Keating, Howard and Kung of about
15,000 that no documentation was submitted for.
Q. Okay. So the difference is explained by the three elements
that you did not allow?
A. Yes.
(Transcript - pages 118 to 122)
[20] I recognize that any amounts paid by the Appellant on
behalf of the Company prior to November 30, 1985 could have been
and should have been credited to his shareholder loan account in
the Company’s books and records. Having regard to the
second amount of $47,260 which comes from the Respondent’s
own pleadings, that amount was in the possession of Revenue
Canada as a refund available to the Appellant personally and
Revenue Canada was in a better position to disclose in Court
precisely when that amount was transferred from the
Appellant’s personal refund account to the account of the
Company to pay the deficit in the source deduction account. If I
accept at face value the fact relied upon by the Minister in
paragraph 3(c) of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal, then I have
to conclude that the amount of $47,260 was taken from the
Appellant’s personal account and paid to the
Company’s source deduction account “throughout 1984,
1985 and 1986”. If a portion of that amount was paid in
each of those three years, then it is obvious that the portion
paid in 1986 could not form any part of the shareholder loan
account as at November 30, 1985 because the amount would not have
been transferred for the benefit of the Company by that date.
Accordingly, a portion of the $47,260 must have been paid in 1986
and after November 30, 1985; and that portion would not be part
of the shareholder loan account which was allowed in total to the
Appellant.
[21] There is no precise evidence as to what portion of the
$47,260 was transferred by Revenue Canada to the Company’s
source deduction account at any time in the years 1984, 1985 or
1986. Because that information is more in the hands of Revenue
Canada than in the hands of the Appellant, I propose to give the
Appellant the benefit of the doubt and assume that one-third of
that amount was transferred in each of the three years in
question. Therefore, I conclude that the amount of $15,753 was
transferred from the Appellant’s personal account to the
Company’s source deduction account some time in the early
months of 1986 before the Company was put out of business by the
receiver around June 1, 1986.
[22] I would therefore allow the appeal only for the purpose
of increasing the Appellant’s 1986 business investment loss
by the amount of $15,753 and, if the 50% allocation applied in
1985, there should be a corresponding increase in the
Appellant’s ABIL in the amount of $7,876. The appeal for
1986 is allowed only for the purpose of granting that relief and
any corresponding relief which may flow over into 1985 and 1987.
Because the Respondent achieved substantial success in the
appeals for the three years, the Respondent is entitled to
costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 12th day of February, 1998.
"M.A. Mogan"
J.T.C.C.