Date: 19991119
Docket: 98-1223-IT-G
BETWEEN:
JAMES WATT,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Beaubier, J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal pursuant to the General Procedure was heard at
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan on October 5 and 6, 1999. The
Appellant testified. The Respondent's counsel read in
portions of the examination for discovery of the Appellant.
[2] The appeal is in respect to the Appellant's 1992, 1993
and 1994 taxation years. The issues are as follows:
a) whether the Appellant's chief source of income was
farming, or a combination of farming and some other source of
income in each of the relevant years;
b) whether for purposes of calculating capital cost allowance
and investment tax credits the cost of the John Deere 8960
tractor acquired by the Appellant is limited by ss. 13(33) of the
Income Tax Act to the fair market value of the transferred
property;
c) whether for purposes of calculating capital cost allowance
and investment tax credits the cost of the John Deere 8970
tractor acquired by the Appellant is limited by ss. 13(33) of the
Income Tax Act to the fair market value of the transferred
property;
d) whether the Lease Vehicle expenses incurred in 1994 are
subject to the limitation provided for in s. 67.3 of the
Income Tax Act and whether expenses in excess of the
amounts allowed for the Leased Vehicle were:
i) Personal in nature; or
ii) Reasonable in the circumstances.
Issue d) was settled by the parties before the hearing.
[3] The Appellant graduated in dentistry in 1965 and began
practising his profession in Shellbrook, Saskatchewan, a town
which is 50 km. west of Prince Albert. In 1967 he moved his
dental practice to Prince Albert. In 1967 he married a girl who
had been raised on a nearby farm which was then being farmed by
her brother and her widowed mother. The Appellant helped on their
farm and financed the breaking of 200 acres on the basis that he
would be repaid from the net proceeds of the 1968, 1969 and 1970
crops and the crops thereafter until he was paid in full. The
couple also worked on the farm in those years cleaning the
cleared land of roots and stones.
[4] In 1970 the Appellant was ill and was unable to do any
work whatsoever. In 1971 and 1972 the Appellant began to look for
farm land to buy. Land was fairly cheap and grain prices were
beginning to increase. The Appellant and his wife incorporated
Jay Bee Farms Ltd. ("JB"). It purchased farm land and
farm equipment at prices and on terms as tabulated:
|
Farm Land
|
Farm Equipment
|
1973
|
160 acres - $24,000
|
|
|
This land was farmed by his brother-in-law and was paid
for by July 31, 1974 from the crop, his wife's teaching
and his dental income.
|
|
|
|
1974
|
480 acres
|
tractor, pull combine, ½ ton truck with
grain box, discer, augers, harrows, swather, cultivator and
seeder
|
|
$60,000 for all of the above, which was borrowed from
the Bank of Montreal.
|
|
|
|
1975
|
|
John Deere 4430 tractor
$22,500 borrowed from Bank of Montreal
|
|
|
|
1976
|
|
Tandem Disc $6,700. (cash)
Cultivator $6,700.
Grain truck $15,250.
Grain dryer $13,000.
(All borrowed from the Bank of Montreal)
|
|
The grain dryer loan was paid off when Mrs. Watt cashed
in her teacher's pension and paid it.
|
|
|
|
1978
|
160 acres
$55,000 Loan from Bank of Montreal which was refinanced
by Cooperative Trust Co.
|
Packers $3,250 (cash)
Grain bins $8,000 (cash)
Swather $14,580 (Federal Business Development Bank
loan)
|
|
|
|
1979
|
|
Flexi Coil Harrow and packer bar $13,500 (cash)
|
|
|
|
1979
|
The Appellant and his wife sold their home in Prince
Albert and paid off the Bank of Montreal loans. The family
rented a trailer, put it on the farm land and lived in it
for 3 ½ years while they built an energy
efficient home on the farm, which is presently valued at
approximately $350,000.
|
|
|
|
1980
|
160 acres $85,000
Loan from Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
Quonset package, $24,000 (cash)
|
|
|
|
|
1982
|
|
TR75 Combine $85,000 loan from New Holland Finance
Corp.
|
|
|
|
1983
|
|
John Deere Seeder
$18,000 (cash)
|
|
|
|
1985
|
|
Versatile Tractor
$109,000 loan from Versatile Finance Corporation
|
|
|
|
|
|
50 ft. Bourgault
$32,500 financed by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
loan
|
|
|
|
|
|
TRNH Combine
$77,000*
|
|
|
|
|
|
Combine
$100,000*
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seeder
$20,000*
|
|
|
* All financed by New Holland Credit
|
|
|
|
|
The Appellant cashed in his RRSP's and paid off CIBC
and Versatile Finance Corp. All of the "cash"
consisted of loans to JB from the Appellant's dental
income.
|
[5] On November 15, 1985 the Appellant purchased all of the
farm machinery and 160 acres of farmland ("SE18") from
JB. Thereafter JB's land was leased to the Appellant. The
Appellant owned the equipment and had $400,000 of debt. He then
became the operator. This has remained the arrangement to the
present. The Appellant raises wheat, peas, canola, barley and
alfalfa seed. He also breeds and sells leaf cutter bees which are
used to pollinate alfalfa.
[6] Thus, on November 15, 1985 the Appellant personally
assumed the debts previously incurred against land consisting of
what then remained of the total sum of $200,000. The remainder of
his farm debt of $400,000 had been incurred on account of
equipment. He took over the going operation which he had
previously managed for JB. JB was left with the remaining
farmland and was free of all debt. Because of the Appellant's
previous experience in managing JB and the fact that he took over
a going operation, the Appellant was long past any start-up
period by 1992.
[7] Paragraph 23 of the Notice of Appeal describes wheat and
barley prices from 1985 through to July 31, 1994. It reads:
23. Unfortunately grain prices began to falter at this time
and continued downward until 1995.
Wheat
|
Metric Tonne
|
Deductions
|
Per Bushel
|
1985-86
|
$146.00
|
27.00
|
3.24
|
1986-87
|
110.00
|
27.00
|
2.26
|
1987-88
|
105.00
|
27.00
|
2.13
|
1988-89
|
187.00
|
27.00
|
4.36
|
1989-90
|
161.00
|
27.00
|
3.65
|
1990-91
|
117.00
|
27.00
|
2.45
|
1991-92
|
123.00
|
27.00
|
2.62
|
1992-93
|
145.00
|
27.00
|
3.22
|
1993-94
|
143.00
|
41.00
|
2.78
|
1994-95
|
180.00
|
41.00
|
3.79
|
These prices must be compared with the 6.00 a bushel price
when the first land was purchased.
Barley
|
Metric Tonne
|
Deductions
|
Per Bushel
|
1985-86
|
$110.00
|
26.50
|
1.82
|
1986-87
|
80.00
|
26.50
|
1.17
|
1987-88
|
69.00
|
26.50
|
.93
|
1988-89
|
124.00
|
26.50
|
2.12
|
1989-90
|
112.00
|
26.50
|
1.86
|
1990-91
|
90.00
|
26.50
|
1.38
|
1991-92
|
107.00
|
26.50
|
1.75
|
1992-93
|
102.00
|
26.50
|
1.64
|
1993-94
|
119.00
|
40.50
|
2.02
|
1994-95
|
101.00
|
26.50
|
1.62
|
These prices must be compared with the 3.30 a bushel price
when the first land was purchased.
[8] Paragraph 25 of the Notice of Appeal describes the
interest charges from 1986 through 1995. It reads:
25. The interest paid by the Appellant in each year divided
between long term debt (mainly capital acquisitions) and short
term or current debt (mainly operating expenses) were as
follows:
1986 Long Term 39,533
1987 Long Term 34,248
1988 Long Term 28,642
Current 8,365
37,017
1989 Long Term 34,616
Current 6,618
41,234
1990 Long Term 41,354
Current 4,612
45,966
1991 Long Term 25,182
Current 5,468
30,570
1992 Long Term 19,646
Current 4,954
24,500
1993 Long Term 16,281
Current 3,247
19,528
1994 Long Term 21,583
1995 Long Term 26,113
[9] In 1990 JB and the Appellant resumed purchasing farmland
and farm equipment as tabulated:
|
Farm Land
|
Farm Equipment
|
|
|
|
1990
|
|
TR80 New Holland Combine
$25,000 (cash)
Fertilizer Bin $6,700 (cash)
(Cash from dental practice loans)
|
|
|
|
1991
|
252 acres
Purchased from mother-in-law and purchased from Farm
Credit Corp)
Price $130,000
140 acres
Purchased from mother-in-law by the Appellant and his
wife
Price $50,000 (assumed loan)
|
|
|
|
1992
|
JB sold 98 acres
Price $40,000
|
John Deere 8960 tractor
$178,355 (for $67,000 cash and Versatile 936 trade-in
and a New Holland swather)
Miscellaneous Equipment for total price of $19,288
|
|
|
|
1993
|
|
John Deere 8970 Tractor
$188,800 (traded in 8960 Tractor purchased in 1992 for
credit of $160,250)
Versatile Sprayer $5,000
Air Seeder $27,250
John Deere Sweeper $561.00
|
[10] In 1994 and 1995 the Appellant purchased miscellaneous
equipment. In 1995 he commenced building a seed cleaning plant
and grain dryer, but stopped when these reassessments began. In
1996 he purchased an adjoining 192 acres for $130,000 which he
financed. In 1999 he purchased a further 120 acres from the same
neighbour.
[11] The Appellant has always lost money on the farming
operation after interest and capital cost allowance were deducted
from his farm income. He intends to carry on the farm operation
just as he always has. During the years in question he spent
about 2,000 hours per year on the farm operation and about 1,500
hours per year on his dental practice. He then farmed 1298 acres
and now farms 1790 acres. In 1992-94 the amount of land he farmed
was almost 20% larger than average in Saskatchewan.
[12] In cross-examination the Appellant admitted that Schedule
"B" to the Reply to the Notice of Appeal was correct.
It reads:
Schedule "B"
Farming Income vs Other Income
Taxation
Year
|
Gross
Revenue
Dentistry
|
Net Income
Dentistry
|
Gross
Revenue
Farming
|
Net
Income (Loss)
Farming
|
Other
Income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1987
|
$271,371
|
$118,269
|
$97,757
|
$(91,985)
|
$9,857
|
1988
|
293,502
|
119,482
|
89,403
|
(62,404)
|
3,107
|
1989
|
319,191
|
131,968
|
98,280
|
(53,409)
|
1,401
|
1990
|
323,690
|
120,339
|
99,686
|
(65,353)
|
4,043
|
1991
|
336,510
|
150,707
|
129,680
|
(47,047)
|
19,810
|
1992
|
338,699
|
135,736
|
92,196
|
(72,935)
|
26,379
|
1993
|
379,216
|
147,673
|
153,064
|
(42,345)
|
12,555
|
1994
|
396,488
|
145,252
|
146,306
|
(86,561)
|
13,989
|
[13] In The Queen v. Andrew Donnelly, 97 DTC 5499, at
5501, the Federal Court of Appeal stated that in a Section 31
case the Appellant must provide sufficient evidence to enable an
estimate quantitatively of what his profit might have been had
his year turned out as he planned. The Appellant gave evidence of
his estimated profit from farming during the years in question on
a calendar year (his tax year) basis. These estimates did not
include his leaf cutter bee breeding and sales operation or his
alfalfa seed sales operation. Nor did they allow for the
deduction of interest charges or capital cost allowance.
[14] The figures are:
|
1992
|
1993
|
1994
|
|
|
(low
|
projections)
|
Planned income
|
$168,000.
|
$96,000
|
$175,000
|
|
|
|
|
Planned expenses
|
96,800
|
73,000
|
108,500
|
|
|
|
|
Planned profit
|
$71,000
|
$23,000
|
$66,500
|
|
|
|
|
Planned profit on high
projections
|
|
$28,500
|
$321,000
|
|
|
|
|
Actual profit or (loss)
|
($31,000)
|
$51,860
|
($27,000)
|
In the same years his net reported income from bees and
alfalfa seed was:
|
1992
|
1993
|
1994
|
|
|
|
|
Bees
|
Nil
|
$4,425
|
|
Alfalfa seed
|
Nil
|
(400)
|
|
"Other commodities" (gross)
|
Nil
|
|
$9,360
|
|
|
|
|
Low Projection Totals
|
($31,000)
|
$55,885
|
($17,640)
|
[15] From these low projection totals, interest and capital
cost allowance must be deducted on the basis that the Appellant
did during these years. (The Appellant deducted "real
estate" interest in some years which is shown).
|
1992
|
1993
|
1994
|
|
|
|
|
Low Projection Totals
|
($31,000)
|
$55,885
|
($17,640)
|
Less:
|
|
|
|
Interest - Real Estate
|
(19,646)
|
(16,281)
|
|
- Other
|
(4,954)
|
(3,247)
|
(21,583)
|
Capital Cost Allowance
|
(40,966)
|
(46,062)
|
(39,499)
|
|
|
|
|
Income or (Losses)
Based on projections
|
($96,566)
|
$9,705
|
($78,622)
|
|
|
|
|
Farming losses admitted to in Schedule "B"
|
($72,935)
|
($42,345)
|
($86,561)
|
|
|
|
|
Reported after
adjustment
|
($72,935)
|
($36,994)
|
($76,589)
|
[16] The causes of failure which the Appellant testified to
respecting each year were set out in the following paragraphs of
his Notice of Appeal:
1992
40. In 1992 the region in which the Appellant's lands are
situate experienced very little precipitation leading to below
average growth. On August 21st frost hit the area
causing severe crop damage arising from reduced yields and poor
grades. The Appellant, in planning his 1992 operation, using
average yields and grades as well as current prices look forward
to achieving a profit of $68,000.00, however, the Acts of God
turned all the farms of the area into a loss position in this
year.
1993
41. In 1993 the Appellant removed 500 acres from production in
order to cope with couch grass and thistle problems in lands
purchased by him. Since the Appellant had been cropping 1000 to
1100 acres in prior years the removal of 500 acres from
production cut his operation in half. The acres removed from
production were summerfallowed after spraying with Roundup in the
spring. The land was again sprayed with Roundup in the fall.
Removal from production for the year was dictated by conditions
which would only have become much worse if not dealt with and the
summerfallowing rested the land for the 1994 crop.
42. The taking of the acres out of production was, of course,
a planned action, however, in 1993 problems not foreseen
occurred. The Appellant seeded 300 acres to peas. Unfortunately
harvest, due to weather, was late and the peas when swathed were
required to lay in the swath for an unduly long period to get to
the stage where they could be combined and geese were attracted
to the crop. The Appellant borrowed and maintained 5 goose canons
(propane timed explosives) and operated same for weeks. The
Appellant realized $11,553.00 from Ducks Unlimited as 35% of the
damage suffered but had to bear the balance of the damage
approximating $30,000.00. The Appellant seeded 285 acres to
barley and had the good fortune that on 200 acres the crop went
to 100 bushels per acre and was accepted for malt. There was no
call for malt barley until May of 1994 so there was no revenue
therefrom in 1993.
1994
43. In 1994 the Appellant had 500 acres of summerfallowed land
to seed and seeded it to canola. There was an abundance of early
season rain resulting in good growth, however, the plants not
needing to send down deep roots had only surface roots and when
hot dry weather arrived in August at the head filling stage, the
seed fried resulting in small kernels and a crop about one-half
of average. Instead of 40 to 45 bushels to the acre the harvest
realized below 20 bushels. The 1994 barley crop realized 50 to 55
bushels per acre. The barley was again of malt quality, however,
because Bonanza and Robust barleys were mixed the barley had to
be sold for feed. The Appellant had looked for 18,000 bushels of
canola at $8.00 per bushel, 200 acres of malt barley at 90
bushels to the acre and $3.50 a bushel, and 350 acres of peas at
50 bushels to the acre and $6.00 per bushel price, all of which
would have realized a $321,000.00 crop and such would have been
achieved with timely August rain.
[17] Respecting these reasons for failure, by year, the Court
finds:
1992 A frost in late August in Saskatchewan is not unusual and
will happen from time to time.
1993 The couch grass problem was foreseeable, and the expenses
incurred were for long term income. The goose problem, or
something like it, will occur from time to time over the years,
since the land is adjacent to the North Saskatchewan River. It
resulted in a $30,000 loss.
1994 The canola problem was due to the happenstance of
farming. The barley problem was an accident in that year which is
unlikely to happen again.
[18] Thus, the 1992 problem was a normal occurrence from time
to time. The 1993 loss was quantified at $30,000. The 1994
occurrences might or might not have happened; however the
Appellant's high forecast of $322,000 was wildly optimistic.
The result is that the Appellant's explanations describe
variations which can occur from time to time in farming in
northern Saskatchewan. If the $30,000 loss is removed from 1993,
the Appellant still suffered a loss of $12,345.
[19] More important is the fact that the losses have continued
from 1986 to date with no change in the operation or in the
Appellant's farming practises. Rather, the Appellant has
enlarged the operation and, correspondingly, the losses. In
cross-examination the Appellant admitted that he expected his
dental income to pay the interest on his farm loans. He also
admitted that, except for his optimism for 1994, he expected that
the bulk of his income during these years would be from
dentistry.
[20] The quantitative estimates of Dr. Watt for 1992, 1993 and
1994, taken at their realistic levels, would have yielded a loss
of $96,566, income of $9,705 and a loss of $78,622 respectively.
In fact, every year resulted in a reported loss in excess of
$40,000. Moreover, Dr. Watt admitted in cross-examination that he
relied on his dental income to pay the interest charges he
incurred in his farming operations. Finally, these interest
charges were planned for deduction from his dental income as a
policy when he took over all of the farm debt in 1985. Until 1992
the Minister of National Revenue allowed this to occur.
[21] The single profit projected for 1993 of $9,705 is
insignificant in relation to the Appellant's investment in
farming and in relation to constant large farming losses and a
constant six figure dental income. Moreover, the Appellant
admitted that due to crop year sales and calendar year
projections, the projected figures by calendar year were not
realistic from a practical point of view. His factual losses bear
out this admission. On the evidence, farming was not the
Appellant's chief source of income in 1992, 1993 or 1994. Nor
was his chief source of income a combination of the two.
Quantitatively, the Appellant could not expect a profit from
farming during the years in question. In part this was because of
his constant capital expenditures with resulting interest
expenses. These capital expenditures occurred because the
Appellant kept on buying equipment and increasing the size of his
farming operation in the face of a history of constant gigantic
losses. That is not the practice of a reasonable businessman.
[22] While the Appellant testified that he personally spent
more time farming than practising dentistry during the years in
question, the fact is that his dental practice's gross income
increased constantly during 1992, 1993 and 1994. The evidence
indicates that he continued his occupational patterns in the same
way as in the past and that dentistry predominated as his
occupation. Moreover, the evidence does not indicate that in
1992, 1993 and 1994 he could anticipate an income from farming.
In spite of this his personal capital investment in the farming
operation (excluding his home) was about $1.3 million or 13 times
his investment in his dental practice, and it continued to grow
after 1994. The farming operation was subordinate to his dental
practice. He relied on his dental income to support his family,
to pay the interest on his farm debt and to make capital
purchases for the farm. Moreover, dentistry remained the central
focus of his occupational life; it provided him with his income,
he expanded his practice and diverged it into preventative
dentistry where the market was going, and he was active in his
dental professional organization. In contrast, he continued to
operate the grain farm without major change and to enlarge his
investment in it despite continuing losses. There is no evidence
that he was active in farm organizations.
[23] Thus the appeal is dismissed in respect to issue (a). In
1992, 1993 and 1994 the Appellant's chief source of income
was neither farming nor a combination of farming and some other
source of income.
[24] With respect to issues (b) and (c), subsection 13(33) of
the Income Tax Act reads:
For greater certainty, where a person acquires a depreciable
property for consideration that can reasonably be considered to
include a transfer of property, the portion of the cost to the
person of the depreciable property attributable to the transfer
shall not exceed the fair market value of the transferred
property.
This subsection applies after November, 1992. Thus, the
trade-ins described in assumptions 18(k) and (n) are the subject
matters of these issues. Assumptions 18(i) to (n) inclusive
read:
i) On December 28, 1992 the Appellant paid $67,000.00 and
transferred a 1985 Versatile tractor 936 serial number 227132 to
acquire a John Deere 8960 tractor serial number 004325 from
Long Tractor Inc.;
j) The Appellant and Long Tractor Inc. signed a written
contract for the transaction described in subparagraph i) above
that specified a list price and total cash price of $178,355.00
for the John Deere 8960 tractor and a total allowance for the
1985 Versatile tractor 936 of $111,355.00;
k) The fair market value of the 1985 Versatile tractor 936
transferred as and when described in subparagraph i) above was
$60,459.00;
l) On October 15, 1993 the Appellant paid $25,000.00 and
transferred a John Deere 8960 tractor serial number 004325 to
acquire a John Deere 8970 tractor serial number 002026 from Long
Tractor Inc.;
m) The Appellant and Long Tractor Inc. signed a written
contract for the transaction described in subparagraph l) above
that specified a list price and total cash price of $188,800.00
for the John Deere 8970 tractor and a total allowance for the
John Deere 8960 tractor of $175,300.00;
n) The fair market value of the John Deere 8960 tractor
transferred as and when described in subparagraph l) above was
$111,176.00;
[25] The Appellant did not call expert evidence respecting the
trade-ins. Rather he relied on his own testimony and the fact
that he dealt with a licensed farm implement dealer on the
purchases and trades. It is well known that a sale and trade-in
for that sale may not reflect fair market value. Often the cash
difference is the only indicator of any relative value. But in
these times of financing and leases, even that may not reflect
fair market value.
[26] Without the testimony of a qualified expert as to the
value of the trade-ins, the assumptions of the Minister are not
refuted. Therefore, the appeals respecting issues (b) and (c) are
dismissed.
[27] At the conclusion of his oral argument, Appellant's
counsel raised an alternate ground that the deduction of the
portions of the Appellant's farm losses claimed relating to
interest and capital cost allowance may nonetheless be deducted
from the Appellant's dental income on the basis that Sections
18 and 20 of the Income Tax Act do not require that these
items be tied to a source. This ground of argument is rejected on
the basis of the maxim expressio unius est exclusio
alterius for two reasons:
(1) Section 31 is a particular section with particular
application in the Income Tax Act.
(2) In support of (1) above, subsection 9(2) of the Income
Tax Act provides for the calculation of business or property
losses "subject to Section 31."
[28] The appeal is dismissed in its entirety. The Respondent
is awarded party and party costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 19th day of November
1999
"D.W. Beaubier"
J.T.C.C.