Date: 20010201
Docket: 1999-4986-IT-I; 1999-4985-IT-I
BETWEEN:
TRACEY L. JOHNSON,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bowman, A.C.J.
[1]
These appeals were heard together. The appellants are married to
each other. They appeal from assessments for the 1996 and 1997
taxation years.
[2]
In 1995 they purchased a property at 8807 Findlay Creek
Road, Canal Flats, British Columbia, in which they intended to
carry on a bed and breakfast business. They sustained losses in
1996 and 1997 of $22,772.75 and $21,209.57, which they shared
equally. The losses were denied on assessment.
[3]
At that time both appellants worked for Syncrude Canada Ltd. at
Fort McMurray. Tracey Johnson is a chemical engineer. They
decided to make a career change. Tracey Johnson found the job
stressful and her husband had health problems. They bought the
Findlay Creek property with a view to carrying on a bed and
breakfast operation. The property consists of a 4,000 square
foot house and 20 acres.
[4]
In preparation for the venture they took a business course at a
local college and studied books on running a bed and breakfast.
They looked for a suitable place and when they found the Findlay
Creek property they decided to buy it because it was ideally
located. It consisted of living area for the owners and also had
space for four bedrooms with bathrooms, as well as a kitchen and
seating area.
[5]
They prepared a detailed business plan and took it to a firm of
chartered accountants in Fort McMurray.
[6]
At the outset they rented the property to Ms. Johnson's
sister and her husband for $550 per month for 11 months.
This figure was determined to be fair market value after checking
what prices were being charged for comparable accommodation. In
addition, they paid the appellant's sister's husband $200
per month to maintain the property.
[7]
After Ms. Johnson's sister moved out they rented the
property on a nightly basis for $75 per night to third parties
and occasionally to Ms. Johnson's sister. I find as a
fact that the rent charged to third parties and to
Ms. Johnson's sister was fair market value and the
amount paid to her husband was reasonable.
[8]
In 1998 they closed the operation down and added three more
bedrooms and enlarged the kitchen. To finance this the spouses
sold their respective houses in Fort McMurray and took money
out of their company savings plan. They did not borrow any
further funds beyond the original mortgage when this property was
bought. When they reopened in September 1998 they advertised the
property extensively in Fort McMurray in posters and on
bulletin boards.
[9]
They did not charge the cost of the renovation as a current
expense, nor did they claim capital cost allowance.
[10] They put
the property in the hands of a management company who projected
revenues of $400 per night from April to October for one half the
time. This would have worked out to about $6,000 per month for
seven months, or $42,000 annually. This projection did not in
fact happen. The property was rented for only 32 days in the
period April to October 1999 and the rent was only $200 per
night. They had to close down in September 1999 because the water
system was not working.
[11] In 2000
they put the property up for sale and have it rented out at
$1,500 per month.
[12] The
question is whether this is truly a business entitling them to
deduct their losses.
[13] I
reproduce in full paragraph 6 of the reply to the notice of
appeal in the case of Tracey Johnson. Adrian D'Silva's
reply is substantially the same, mutatis mutandis.
6.
In so reassessing the Appellant, the Minister relied on the
following assumptions:
a)
the Appellant and Adrian D'Silva (the "Spouse")
began a rental activity (the "Activity") in 1996;
b)
the address at which the Activity took place is 8807 Findlay
Creek Road, Canal Flats, British Columbia (the
"Property");
c)
the Appellant and her Spouse bought the Property for $299,000.00
and took possession of the Property in September 1995;
d)
the Property's legal description is Lot 1, District lot 4596,
Kootenay District Plan NEP 20894;
e)
the Property consists of a 4,000 square feet house on 20 acres of
land;
f)
the Property has one open bedroom and one bathroom;
g)
the Property was rented to David and Tammy Heard for $550.00 per
month;
h)
Tammy Heard is the Appellant's sister;
i)
David and Tammy Heard rented the Property for 11 months of the 24
months under review;
j)
the Appellant and her Spouse paid David Heard $200.00 per month
for yard work;
k)
the Appellant and her Spouse claimed the $200 paid to David Heard
per month as yard work expense;
l)
the net rent received from Tammy and David Heard was only $350.00
per month;
m)
for the remaining 13 months of the 24 months under review, the
Property was rented at various times on a nightly basis at $75.00
per night (see Schedule B);
n)
the rental income was $4,700.00 for the 1996 taxation year in
which $4,400.00 was received from Tammy and David Heard and
$300.00 was received from third parties not related to the
Appellant and her Spouse;
o)
the rental income was $7,275.00 for the 1997 taxation year in
which $1,650.00 was received from Tammy and David Heard and
$5,625.00 was received from other relatives as well as third
parties not related to the Appellant and her Spouse;
p)
the rent charged included utilities and telephone;
q)
the Losses were shared equally between the Appellant and her
Spouse;
r)
during the 24 months under review, the Appellant and her Spouse
resided at 117 Brintnell Road, Fort McMurray, Alberta;
s)
the Activity is undercapitalized;
t)
the Appellant and her Spouse have no training in the
Activity;
u)
at all material times the Appellant was earning full time
employment income from Syncrude Canada Ltd.;
v)
before starting the Activity, the Appellant and her Spouse
prepared no business plan to determine if it would be
profitable;
w)
the Appellant and her Spouse did not advertise the Activity;
x)
the Activity was not a commercial venture;
y)
the Appellant and her Spouse ended the Activity in 1998 when they
made plans to renovate the Property to convert it into a bed and
breakfast operation;
z)
from 1996 to 1997 the Appellant and her Spouse reported the
following income (losses) from the Activity:
Taxation Year
Gross Income Expenses
Net Income/(Loss)
1996 4,700.00
27,472.75*
(11,386.27)**
1997 7,275.00
28,484.57*
(10,604.79)**
*
Expenses detailed in Schedule A
**
Loss shared equally between the Appellant and her Spouse
aa)
the Appellant and her Spouse did not have a reasonable
expectation of profit from the Activity during the 1996 and 1997
taxation years; and
bb) the
expenses claimed in relation to the Activity were personal or
living expenses of the Appellant and her Spouse.
[14]
Paragraph (l) is clearly wrong. The rent received was
$550.00 per month. The $200.00 paid to David Heard was a
necessary and reasonable maintenance cost.
[15]
Paragraphs (s), (t), (v) and (w) are contrary to the
evidence before the court and in fact contrary to the facts that
were put before the CCRA. I find it wholly unacceptable that the
persons in the CCRA who draft the replies to notices of appeal in
the informal procedure simply push a button in a computer and
spew forth pre-programmed boilerplate of the sort found in
paragraphs (s), (t), (v) and (w). The
"assumptions", so called, are supposed to be an
accurate and honest disclosure of the particulars upon which the
CCRA based its assessment. A blind and automatic recitation of
this sort of stuff does not constitute a fulfilment of the
respondent's obligations to this court or to an
appellant.
[16] Moreover,
pleaded assumptions which demonstrate, as they often do, that the
Minister has recklessly and mindlessly pleaded
"assumptions" that bear no relation to the facts form
no basis on which to defend an assessment. This court will accord
to boilerplate the respect and attention that it deserves.
[17]
Paragraph (x) states that the activity was not a commercial
venture. I do not see how it can be other than a commercial
venture. They embarked upon it in an organized, businesslike way
and put a substantial amount of their own time and resources into
it. For reasons beyond their control the project was not a
success but not because of any inherent lack of commerciality.
Their projections were made with professional assistance.
[18]
Paragraph (y) is clearly wrong on the evidence. The plan
from the outset was to carry on a bed and breakfast
operation.
[19] Four
further points should be noted.
(a)
The argument is that the activity did not have a reasonable
expectation of profit in the years in question. The basis of this
allegation is that since it did not have a profit in those years
it necessarily could not have a reasonable expectation of profit.
Obviously if this were the test no one with a loss could ever
challenge the Minister's disallowance of that loss. The
assertion begs the question and is logically fallacious.
(b)
The fact that in 1996 the property was rented to Tracey
Johnson's sister makes the expenses personal or living
expenses. That is not what the definition in section 248
says. The property has to be maintained "for the use or
benefit of the taxpayer or a person connected with the taxpayer
...". Where property is rented to a relative at fair
market value at the same rental as would be charged a third party
I do not see how that condition can be met.
(c) A
substantial part of the losses were the result of mortgage
interest. Since paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Income
Tax Act permits the deduction of interest on moneys borrowed
to acquire property to be used in carrying on a business, the
Minister cannot rely upon the deductible interest as a basis for
invoking the "no reasonable expectation of profit"
mantra. This is clear from the decision of this court in Allen
et al. v. The Queen, 99 DTC 968, aff'd
2000 DTC 6559.
(d)
Finally, it was argued that the business did not start until 1998
and that the expenses in 1996 and 1997 were capital expenditures
incurred prior to the commencement of the business.
Even if this point had merit — which I doubt, in light of
Gartry v. The Queen, [1994] 2 C.T.C. 2021
— it was not the basis of the assessments and was not
pleaded. It cannot now be put forward as a ground for upholding
the assessments. Had it been the basis upon which the Minister
proceeded it would have resulted in fundamentally different
assessments, involving a capitalization of expenses, a resultant
higher capital cost, and a terminal loss on the ultimate
sale.
[20] The basis
upon which the assessments were made has been thoroughly
demolished. The appeals are allowed with costs and the
assessments are referred back to the Minster of National Revenue
for reconsideration and reassessment to allow the deduction of
the losses claimed. The appellants are allowed only one set of
counsel fees at trial.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of February 2001.
"D.G.H. Bowman"
A.C.J.