Citation: 2009 TCC 073
Date: 20090206
Docket: 2006-3611(GST)I
BETWEEN:
MARVIN ANSORGER,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Paris, J.
[1]
The issue in this
appeal is whether the Appellant was required to collect and remit GST of
$11,585 on a sale of land in 2003.
[2]
Under the Excise Tax
Act, (the “Act”) the sale of land is a taxable supply and is subject
to GST unless the supply is explicitly exempted. Exempt supplies are listed in
Schedule V to the Act, and the supplies of real property which are exempt
supplies are set out in Part I of Schedule V.
[3]
The relevant portion of
Part I of Schedule V for the purpose of this appeal is subparagraph 9(2)(a)(i)
which reads as follows:
Schedule V: Exempt Supplies
Part I : Real Property
…
9(2) A supply of real property made by way of sale by an individual
or a personal trust, other than
(a) a supply of real property that is, immediately before the
time ownership or possession of the property is transferred to the recipient of
the supply under the agreement for the supply, capital property used primarily
(i) in a business carried on by the individual or trust with a
reasonable expectation of profit, or
[4]
The Respondent says
that prior to its sale the real property disposed of by the Appellant was
capital property used by him primarily in the business of farming carried on
with a reasonable expectation of profit and therefore, that the exception in
subparagraph 9(2)(a)(i) applied and the sale by the Appellant did
not constitute an exempt supply.
[5]
The Appellant takes the
position that he did not use the land in the business of farming prior to its
sale and therefore that the sale was exempted under subsection 9(2) of Part I
of Schedule V.
Facts
[6]
The Appellant inherited
two diagonally adjacent parcels of land from his father, who passed away in
1995. The first, legally described as the SE ¼ of Section 5, Township 50, Range
23 W4M (the “SW¼”), consisted of approximately 160 acres. The family home and
some farm buildings were located on this parcel. The second parcel, legally
described as the NW ¼ of Section 5, Township 50, Range 23 W4M (the “NW¼”), consisted
of approximately 151 acres. The two parcels were transferred to the Appellant
on December 17, 2001.
[7]
In 2003, the Appellant
subdivided the NW ¼ into two roughly equal lots, which were referred to as the
“North Lot” and the “South Lot”. He sold the North Lot on October 7, 2003 for $165,500 and did not collect any GST from the
purchasers. The Minister subsequently assessed the Appellant for GST in respect
of this sale. (Although the South Lot was also sold and no GST collected, this
sale is not in issue because the sale was to a G.S.T. registrant.)
[8]
The Appellant testified
that prior to the sale of the North and South Lots, they were not being farmed
by him “in a profitable manner”, and that only the SE ¼, which he called “the
home quarter” was farmed in a “farm manner”. He said that as a favour to his
cousin, he let him take hay crops off the NW ¼ because his cousin had lent him
money to pay some outstanding property taxes. He said that he may have received
some of the hay taken from the NW ¼ but that the operation was not really done
for profit. The Appellant also testified that he let his cousin take the hay
from the NW ¼ in order to prevent the County from spraying the property to
prevent the spread of weeds.
[9]
With respect to the SE ¼,
the Appellant said that he had another deal with his cousin whereby the latter
would take the hay off in exchange for 20 to 40 % of the hay. Apparently, his
cousin would sell the Appellant’s hay on his behalf and pay him the proceeds in
cash. There was some evidence that the Appellant also maintained some livestock
on the SW ¼.
[10]
In each of his 2000 to
2004 income tax returns the Appellant reported income from farming and filed a
statement of farming activities for each year with the returns. Those
statements showed revenue of $7,000 from the sale of crops in 2000, 2001, 2002
and 2003. They also showed that the Appellant owned 320 acres and farmed 270
acres in 2000, 2001 and 2002 and owned 160 acres and farmed 155 acres in 2003.
[11]
The Appellant testified
that the amount of farming revenue shown in the tax returns ($7,000 per year)
were estimates or “ball park” figures and that had not kept a record of what he
received from his cousin. For the SE ¼ he said he and his cousin had estimated
the Appellant’s share of the proceeds from the sale of hay at $3,500 and that
his accountant must have mistakenly extrapolated from this estimate that he had
total revenue of $7,000 from hay sales from both the SE ¼ and NW ¼ combined. At
another point in his evidence, though, the Appellant said that he himself told
the accountant to “ball park” the revenue from farming at $7,000. The Appellant
maintained however that he did not receive any money for hay taken from the NW
¼.
[12]
For 2004, after the
Appellant transferred half of the SE ¼ property to his daughter he reported
$1,750 revenue from the sale of hay. The Appellant showed a profit from his
farm business each year after the deduction of expenses.
[13]
The Appellant also
reported income from a welding business. In each year except 2002 the revenue
from welding was less than the revenue from the Appellant’s farming business.
[14]
On his 2003 income tax
return, the Appellant reported a taxable capital gain of $53,390 on the sale of
the North and South Lots, but offset the gain by claiming a capital gains
deduction on the basis that the Lots were “qualified farm property” under
subsection 110.6(2) of the Income Tax Act.
[15]
The Appellant said that
his accountant prepared his tax returns and that he did not read them before he
signed them. He said he was not aware that the Lots were reported as qualified
farm property for income tax purposes.
Position of the Parties
[16]
The Appellant argued
that the sale of the North Lot did not attract GST because he did not use
the property primarily in a business prior to the sale.
[17]
Counsel for the
Respondent took the position that prior to the sale of the North Lot, the
Appellant used the NW ¼ (including the North Lot) in commercial activity by
virtue of the sharecropping arrangement he had with his cousin. According to
counsel, the evidence showed that the Appellant earned revenue from the
sharecropping agreement and he reported that revenue as revenue from a farming
business. Counsel also noted that the Appellant reported a profit from farming
in each of his 2000, 2001 and 2002 taxation years, Therefore, prior to the sale
of the North Lot, the property was capital property used in a business carried
on by the Appellant with a reasonable expectation of profit and
subparagraph 9(2)(a)(i) of Part I of Schedule V to the Act excepted
the sale of the property from the exemption from GST accorded in Schedule V to
sales of real property.
Analysis
[18]
In light of all of the
evidence I find that the Appellant was not carrying on the business of farming
on the North Lot before its sale and therefore that he was
not required to collect GST on the sale.
[19]
I accept the
Appellant’s evidence that he allowed his cousin to remove hay from the NW¼ in
exchange for part of the hay produced. This arrangement was referred to by both
parties as sharecropping, which can be likened to a rental of the property,
with the rent paid in produce from the land.
[20]
The evidence shows that
the Appellant did not expend any labour or effort to obtain the share of the
hay from the property, and none of his farm equipment was used by his cousin. All
that the Appellant was required to do was to supply the land. In my view, any
income received by the Appellant from this arrangement would be income from
property rather than income from business.
[21]
I recognize that the
Appellant reported the value of the hay he received as revenue from a farming
business, but for the reasons given already, I find that this reporting was not
correct. The inclusion of the revenue received by the Appellant from
sharecropping the NW¼ in the revenues he reported on the statement of farming
activities in his returns cannot convert the sharecropping revenue to business revenue.
The only expenses that the Appellant claimed against the total reported farming
revenue were property taxes in each year, and some capital cost allowance in
2001 and 2002 which related to equipment and buildings located and used on the
SW¼. The fact that no expenses other than property tax were claimed in respect
of the NW¼ in my view supports the conclusion that the Appellant was not using
the property in a business.
[22]
I also recognize that
the Appellant’s position in this appeal is inconsistent with his claim in his 2003
income tax return that the North and South Lots were “qualified farm property” when
they were sold in 2003. Under subsection 110.6(1) of the Income Tax Act,
“qualified farm property” is property “used principally in the course of
carrying on the business of farming in Canada”.
The Respondent however did not argue that the Appellant was estopped from
taking the position that the NW¼ was not used by him in carrying on a farming
business, and the evidence I have before me satisfies me that the property was
not in fact so used by him.
[23]
This conclusion is
sufficient to dispose of the appeal in favour of the Appellant.
[24]
I am aware that it
could also have been argued that the sale of the North Lot was not an exempt
supply by virtue of subparagraph 9(2)(a)(ii) of Part I of Schedule V
which provides that where the vendor of real property is a registrant and prior
to the sale the real property is used primarily in making taxable supplies by
way of lease, licence or similar arrangement, the sale of the real property is
not an exempt supply. It is likely that under the arrangement that the
Appellant had with his cousin for sharecropping on the NW ¼ the Appellant made
a taxable supply of the land by way of a licence. However, this argument was
not raised by the Respondent, and it would be unfair to the Appellant to
consider it without having received submissions of the parties on the point
(see: Nunn v. R. 2006 FCA 403).
[25]
For all of these
reasons, the appeal is allowed.
Signed at Ottawa,
Canada, this 6th day of February 2009.
“B.Paris”