Date: 19990401
Docket: 96-2202-IT-G
BETWEEN:
THE CANADIAN BAR INSURANCE ASSOCIATION,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Mogan, J.T.C.C.
[1] The Appellant was incorporated by Letters Patent dated
August 17, 1981 under the Canada Corporations Act. The
Appellant is known as a non-profit corporation and, specifically,
part III of the Letters Patent (Exhibit 1) states the objects to
be as follows:
III
The objects of the Corporation are:
(a) to make available insurance plans and similar plans and
benefits to members of the legal community in Canada and such
other persons as the Board of Directors may determine from time
to time,
(b) to negotiate and contract with insurance companies with
respect to the insurance plans and benefits referred to in (a)
above,
(c) to supervise the provision to certain persons as
determined by the Board of Directors from time to time of pension
or retirement funds and plans including registered retirement
savings plans and registered retirement income funds;
(d) to prepare and distribute informational material relating
to the availability of such insurance and registered retirement
savings plans and benefits,
(e) to provide the administrative services required in
connection with the provision and supervision of said insurance
and registered retirement savings plans and benefits, and
(f) to do all such other things as are incidental or conducive
to the attainment of the above objects,
In no event shall the purposes of organization and/or
operation of the Corporation include profit.
[2] In the nine-year period from 1986 to 1994 inclusive, the
Appellant reported a profit for income tax purposes in each of
the years 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1993 and 1994. The Appellant
reported losses in the years 1990, 1991 and 1992. The Minister of
National Revenue issued assessments under the Income Tax
Act in respect of the four taxation years 1986, 1987, 1988
and 1994. When issuing those four assessments, the Minister
assumed that the Appellant was not organized and operated for
purposes other than profit. The Appellant has appealed from those
four assessments claiming that it is exempt from tax under the
provisions of paragraph 149(1)(l) of the Act
which states:
149(1) No tax is payable under this Part on the taxable income
of a person for a period when that person was
...
(l) a club, society or association that, in the opinion
of the Minister, was not a charity within the meaning assigned by
subsection 149.1(1) and that was organized and operated
exclusively for social welfare, civic improvement, pleasure or
recreation or for any other purpose except profit, no part of the
income of which was payable to, or was otherwise available for
the personal benefit of, any proprietor, member or shareholder
thereof unless the proprietor, member or shareholder was a club,
society or association the primary purpose and function of which
was the promotion of amateur athletics in Canada;
[3] The parties are in agreement that the Appellant has
satisfied all of the conditions in paragraph 149(1)(l)
except for the following two conditions which are challenged by
the Respondent: (i) whether the Appellant was organized for any
purpose except profit; and (ii) whether the Appellant was
operated for any purpose except profit. That is the primary issue
in the appeals for those four taxation years. There is a second
issue concerning the computation of the Appellant's taxable
income for 1987 and 1988 but that second issue will have to be
decided only if it is determined that the Appellant is not exempt
from tax. Following an agreement between counsel, no evidence was
led on the second issue. Therefore, in these reasons for
judgment, I shall be concerned only with the primary issue.
[4] The only witness to testify at the hearing of these
appeals was Charles D. Whelly, a lawyer who was called
to the Bar of New Brunswick in 1978. Mr. Whelly was
appointed a director of the Appellant in August 1985 and
continued as a director until November 30, 1995. In 1987, he
became a member of the management board which is like the
executive committee of the Appellant. In 1989, he was appointed
vice-president of the Appellant. He was appointed acting
president at the end of 1990 and held that office until November
30, 1991 when he was appointed president for a two-year term
until November 30, 1993. He was a member of the management board
from 1987 to November 30, 1995. I was favourably impressed with
Mr. Whelly's comprehensive knowledge of the Appellant, its
history and its method of operation. He commenced his evidence by
reviewing the manner in which The Canadian Bar Association
("CBA") became involved with the insurance needs of
lawyers. Some of that information is helpful as background for
the primary issue.
[5] Lawyers in different parts of Canada had sponsored
insurance programs for many years, back to the 1950s. A sponsored
insurance program is a group of insurance products which, within
a particular area, are sponsored by a particular group (lawyers,
doctors, teachers, accountants, etc.). The insurance products
could include sickness and accident, disability, term life, and
business expenses during disability. During the 1950s and 1960s
within the Canadian legal community, sponsored insurance programs
were usually segregated and tended to be operated by a county law
association in Ontario or a provincial branch of the CBA or the
law society of a particular province. An association of lawyers
would negotiate an arrangement with an insurance company to
provide the required products.
[6] In the sponsored insurance programs, the association of
lawyers never accepted any risk in the sense of paying claims.
The arrangement was always with a licensed commercial insurer
which accepted the risks. The association of lawyers would
negotiate with a commercial insurer to get the required products
at the best price through the collective buying power of the
association. The Ontario Branch of the CBA established an
insurance committee which eventually persuaded the various county
law associations to merge their insurance programs so that there
was one major program for all lawyers in Ontario. Lawyers in
certain other provinces were thinking of merging their programs,
and that was the impetus for the development of a national
program for lawyers.
[7] The CBA established a special insurance committee which,
over a period of years, negotiated with lawyers' insurance
programs across the country to convince them of the merits of
pooling the buying power of all lawyers in Canada. By the late
1970s, most of the provincial programs had moved into the
national program. By about 1980, the CBA had a sponsored
insurance program which was truly national. The special insurance
committee of the CBA had representatives from all across Canada
but it had no staff and no paid employees. The administrative
services which the committee required had been contracted out to
Murray Bolger & Associates which carried on business as a
benefit plan administrator.
[8] Murray Bolger & Associates provided a number of
services for the sponsored insurance program of the CBA. It
billed and collected premiums on behalf of the insurer. It
marketed the program to persuade the maximum number of lawyers to
participate. It provided actuarial advice to the CBA special
insurance committee. That committee needed actuarial advice
because it comprised only lawyers who did not possess the
sophisticated knowledge required to negotiate with the insurance
companies who were providing the products. The actuarial advice
permitted the lawyers to negotiate appropriate programs with
better policy terms and lower premiums than could be found in the
open market. The above situation existed until 1981 when a
significant change took place.
[9] Around 1980, a lawyer died after allowing his life
insurance policy to lapse. His widow sued the insurer and the
CBA. The executive of the CBA were surprised that it would be
sued because of its insurance related activities and, as a
result, the CBA concluded that all insurance related activities
should be carried on in a separate organization isolated from the
CBA. For that reason, The Canadian Bar Insurance Association (the
Appellant herein) was incorporated. About the same time, the CBA
special insurance committee had been advised that when its
program grew to a sufficient size it should take over the
administrative functions which had previously been contracted
out. The committee concluded in 1980-1981 that its program had
grown to that sufficient size. Upon its incorporation in 1981,
the Appellant decided that it would handle all of the
administrative functions which had previously been contracted
out. As a result of that decision, the Appellant opened an office
in Ottawa and hired a director of insurance and a staff of five
or six clerical persons.
[10] The Appellant's most important function is
negotiating with insurance companies with respect to particular
products in the insurance program and the cost of those products.
For example, all life insurance in the Appellant's program
contains a provision for waiver of premium if a lawyer becomes
disabled. That provision adds only about 4% to the cost whereas a
separate provision for waiver of premium would add about 15% to
the cost of life insurance acquired outside the Appellant's
program. The Appellant also negotiates more stable premiums to
avoid the insurance industry practice of bouncing premiums up and
down in response to experience changes. Because the Appellant has
what might be called a captive or special interest market which
is attractive to insurance vendors, the Appellant is able to
negotiate favourable commission rates with insurance companies
and sales representatives for products sold within the
Appellant's program. The commissions charged on products
within the program are below what would normally be charged on
the same products outside the sponsored program.
[11] The Appellant acts as a review board for a lawyer whose
claim is rejected by the insurance company. Usually, the
Appellant will agree with the insurer but, on occasion, has
persuaded the insurance company to change its mind. Since 1981,
the Appellant through its administrative office has kept track of
who the insured lawyers are and has issued the necessary invoices
for premiums. It collects the premiums and turns them over to the
insurance company providing the product. The Appellant does not
underwrite any risks at all. Only licensed insurance companies
underwrite the risks. The Appellant is not in the brokerage
business; it does not receive any part of any commission from the
sale of insurance to its members. The commissions are paid by the
insurance companies to the sales representatives who sell the
products. A sales representative is not permitted to sell to a
lawyer an insurance product outside the Appellant's program
if the same product is a sponsored product within the
program.
[12] Exhibit 4 is an organizational chart showing the
management of the Appellant since 1992. Prior to 1992, the
director of insurance and his staff of five or six were in Ottawa
but the Appellant had a marketing director who worked out of
Toronto because he was required to travel so much to other cities
in Canada. In 1992, the Appellant had its main office in Ottawa
and a smaller office in Toronto. It decided to combine both
offices in Toronto to be close to the insurance industry and to
the professional advisors who would be needed by the Appellant.
With regard to Exhibit 4, the Board of Directors is made up of
volunteer lawyers from all across Canada. The Management Board
and the five committees are each small groups of directors and,
accordingly, also volunteers. When the two offices were combined
in Toronto in 1992, the director of insurance in Ottawa did not
want to move to Toronto and so the Appellant hired a new
Executive Director as its most senior employee. It also hired an
administrative manager. The marketing director was already in
Toronto. From 1992 to the present, those three senior employees
listed on Exhibit 4 plus a clerical staff of about 10 have worked
in the Appellant's Toronto office.
[13] Prior to December 1992, the Appellant had three basic
sources of annual revenue which will be described in greater
detail below but which may be summarized as follows:
1. The retained amount; a 5% administration fee which the
Appellant retained (from all premiums) for providing
administrative services.
2. The remitted amount; an amount which the insurance company
remitted to the Appellant each year (depending upon results for
the year) pursuant to a retention agreement for the purpose of
funding a stabilization reserve.
3. Investment income; the amount earned from the investment of
funds in the stabilization reserves.
Exhibit 5 is a chart with the title "Cash Flow Chart
Pre-December 1992" which Mr. Whelly used to describe the
three basic sources of annual revenue summarized above. I have
already described the administrative services formerly contracted
out which the Appellant took over in 1981. Those services
continued to expand as more lawyers participated in the
Appellant's sponsored insurance programs. Those services are
described on the left side of Exhibit 5 in the box with seven
items headed by "overhead expenses". The Appellant
needed a source of revenue to pay for those services. It
collected all of the premiums for insurance in the full service
category (life, disability, business expenses, etc.). It
negotiated with those insurers for the right to retain 5% of all
premiums as compensation for providing administrative services.
This 5% of premiums is the first source of revenue summarized
above as the "retained amount".
[14] As a convenience for describing the cash flow on Exhibit
5, I will visualize the chart as a map with funds going from left
to right as going "east" and funds going from top to
bottom as going "south". The reverse directions will of
course apply. On Exhibit 5, in the upper left corner, the
Appellant sends invoices west to the lawyers and related persons
who (as "insured") participate in the Appellant's
programs. In exchange, the insured send the premium payments east
to the Appellant which then deposits the full payments in a joint
account with the insurer. This joint account is the small box
marked "A" at the top centre of Exhibit 5. Out of this
joint account, (i) the 5% administration fee (i.e. the retained
amount) is allocated between the Appellant and the CBA when 4% is
paid west to the Appellant and 1% is paid south as a user fee to
the CBA; (ii) the negotiated sales commissions and service fees
are paid north to the agent; and (iii) the balance of the premium
is paid east to the insurer.
[15] The second source of revenue, the remitted amount, is
more complicated and arises from what the Appellant calls
retention agreements. A retention agreement is between the
Appellant and an insurer. Out of the premiums, the insurer has to
pay its own expenses and any valid claims which arise. One cannot
predict what the claims will be in any given year. Over a period
of years, there would be some years when the insurer would
receive enough money from premiums to pay all expenses and claims
and still have a residue which I will call a surplus; and there
would be other years when the premium money would not be enough
to pay expenses and claims. In those years when the premium money
was more than enough and resulted in a surplus, that surplus
would be set aside. In other years when the premium money was not
enough to pay expenses and claims, the Appellant would draw an
amount from the surplus to subsidize the program. The central
idea was that over a long term of years, the persons insured
should pay only the true cost of the insurance. In the
Appellant's mind, true cost is the total of expenses
associated with a particular program plus the claims actually
experienced by the legal community in that program.
[16] The main purpose of the retention agreements was premium
stabilization over the long term. The Appellant (and prior to
1981 the CBA) wanted stable premiums. The Appellant wanted to
avoid fluctuations in premiums, upward and downward, as the
insurer would attempt to respond quickly to its own claim and
loss experience. In the preceding paragraph, the surplus which I
described as "set aside" was in fact the
"stabilization reserve". It gets its name from its
function which was to stabilize premiums. Prior to 1985, the
stabilization reserves were held by the respective insurers but
reported (as to amounts) to the CBA and later to the Appellant.
In 1983, when those reserves were substantial, the Appellant was
concerned as to their disposition if an insurer became insolvent.
In 1985, by agreement, each stabilization reserve was transferred
from the insurer to the Appellant.
[17] The insurer was required to deliver to the Appellant each
year a report (referred to as an "experience report")
which showed how much premium money came in, how much went out,
where it went and for what expenses or costs. At the end of each
year, depending upon the result shown in the experience report,
the insurer could be called upon to remit an amount to the
Appellant's stabilization reserve or, because the Appellant
was actually holding such reserve, the Appellant could be called
upon to pay an amount to the insurer. A number of experience
reports are bound in Exhibit 3.
[18] The retention agreement for term life begins at page 71
in Exhibit 1. According to Mr. Whelly (Transcript p. 82) the cash
flow chart in Exhibit 5 reflects what is described in words in
that retention agreement. I will follow Mr. Whelly's use
of Exhibit 5. In paragraph 14 above, I referred to the joint
account which is the small box marked "A" at the top
centre of Exhibit 5, and I described how the balance of the
premium is paid east to the insurer. If it were not for the
retention agreement, the balance of the premium would simply
remain with the insurer. Under the retention agreement, however,
the insurer is required to perform certain computations in the
experience report. The insurer is entitled to deduct certain
expenses, claims, regulatory reserves, taxes, etc. which are
described on the right side of Exhibit 5 in the box with six
items headed by "Underwriting and Issue Expenses". One
of those six items "Other WCL Charges" includes the
insurer's profit margin which is a margin negotiated between
the Appellant and the insurer.
[19] The experience report for a particular year would
determine whether the insurer makes a payment to the
Appellant's stabilization reserve or whether the Appellant
withdraws an amount from its stabilization reserve to make a
payment to the insurer. The formula is shown across the bottom of
Exhibit 5. If the net volume of premiums received in a year minus
the aggregate of (i) sales commissions, service fees and
administrative charges from Box "A"; plus (ii) the
insurer's charges from Box "B" was positive, then
the insurer would make a payment to the Appellant's
stabilization reserve. This is the "remitted amount"
described in paragraph 13 above as the second basic source of
annual revenue. If the result of that same computation was
negative, then the Appellant would withdraw an amount from its
stabilization reserve to make a payment to the insurer.
[20] There were two limits on any amount which the Appellant
might have to pay to the insurer as the result of a negative
computation. The overriding limit was that the Appellant could
not be required to pay to the insurer any amount greater than it
had in its stabilization reserve. The second limit was that the
Appellant did not have to pay for any claims or reserves for
claims. That was the risk assumed by the insurer. In other words,
if there were a negative computation, the Appellant could not be
required to pay any amount greater than the expenses (sales
commissions, service fees, the 5% administrative charge,
underwriting expenses, claims expenses, premium taxes and other
WCL charges). The third basic source of annual revenue was
investment income earned from the funds in the stabilization
reserves.
[21] There was a separate stabilization reserve for each
insurance program. For the years 1986 to 1994, the only
stabilization reserves were for life, disability and business
expenses. Although the Appellant's actuaries kept track of
the amount in the stabilization reserve for each program through
the years, those reserves were consolidated into one fund. In
theory, the Appellant could never be required to put the
stabilization reserve with respect to a particular program into a
negative balance but the Appellant could voluntarily do so.
[22] As stated above, the primary purpose of the stabilization
reserve was to stabilize premiums over the long term. There were
also secondary purposes. First, the investment income from the
stabilization reserve was often used to subsidize the
Appellant's operating expenses when the 5% administration
charge was not sufficient to pay those expenses. Second,
depending upon the insurer's experience in certain plans, the
Appellant was able to negotiate enhanced benefits to lawyers and
other insured without any increase in premiums because the
insurer was persuaded that it had sufficient protection through
the retention agreement (i.e. stabilization reserves) if the cost
of the program increased as a result of the enhanced benefits.
And third, the Appellant was able to finance the cost of certain
studies to determine if a new type of program should be offered
to lawyers. The presence of the stabilization reserves and the
income earned by those reserves allowed the Appellant to pay for
such studies.
[23] Mr. Whelly described an additional way in which the
Appellant used the stabilization reserve to achieve a benefit for
the insured. By following the term life program, the Appellant
with the advice of its actuaries was able to determine in 1986
that the premiums charged were more than necessary to cover the
true cost of the insurance. The Appellant then negotiated with
the insurer a premium discount of from 10% to 30% depending upon
how long the insured had been in the program; the longer the
participation, the greater the discount. An insured who had been
in the program for a long time received a 30% discount. For 1987,
the aggregate premium discounts in the life program were
$856,786. See Exhibit 3 at page 539. Without the premium
discounts, the life program would have produced a positive margin
of $696,496 to the insurer (see page 539); but after deducting
the aggregate premium discounts of $856,786, the life program
produced a negative margin of $160,290 which the Appellant had to
pay from its life stabilization reserve. (Page 539 shows a
negative margin of $162,290 which appears to be in error.) It is
worth noting that the aggregate premium discounts to the many
persons insured in the life program in 1987 was $856,786, an
amount much greater than the payment ($160,290) from the
Appellant's stabilization reserve to the insurer
[24] Under the retention agreements, the insurer reported on
all three programs (term life, disability and business expenses)
when preparing its experience reports. The insurer was entitled
to offset good experience in one plan against bad experience in
another plan for the purpose of determining whether a payment
would or would not be made to a stabilization reserve. After the
premium discounts were implemented in the life program, it did
produce a negative margin for a number of years but the other
programs in those years produced positive margins which were more
than sufficient to make up the negative margin in the life
program. The premium discounts in the life program did not result
in any payment to the insurer in 1987 or 1988 but those discounts
did require the Appellant to pay an amount to the insurer in
1991.
[25] Exhibit 1 at page 149 is a table which attempts to show
how much money was in the stabilization reserve of each program
for the years 1981 through to 1994 with an aggregate for each
year. The aggregate reserves show a steady growth from $5,273,600
to $24,336,100 for the years from 1981 to 1989. In the next three
years 1990, 1991 and 1992, the total drops to $21,982,500;
$14,601,900 and $7,857,500, respectively. Mr. Whelly explained
that this table was prepared by the Appellant's actuaries who
showed only the cash on hand in the reserves without any
adjustment for two extraordinary amounts which the Appellant had
paid out of the reserves. In 1992, the total is shown as
$7,857,500 but in that year the Appellant paid $2,200,000 to
Revenue Canada with respect to the assessments under appeal
herein and the Appellant also invested $5,000,000 in its
wholly-owned subsidiary, Chancery Reinsurance Company
("Chancery"). Those two special payments were pro-rated
and charged against the stabilization reserves for the three
programs. But for those two special payments, the total for 1992
would be about $14,500,000. Similarly, the totals for 1993 and
1994 would be about $14,800,000 and $15,600,000,
respectively.
[26] Having regard to the table at page 149 (Exhibit 1), the
stabilization reserve for the disability program had grown so
well to 1987 that the Appellant negotiated with the insurer for
enhanced benefits under that program. The reserve in that program
continued to grow to $9,565,400 at the end of 1989. Over the next
five years to 1994, the reserve for the disability program went
into a negative balance of $6,727,100 making an aggregate
negative reversal of $16,292,500. According to Mr. Whelly, the
main reason for the negative reversal was the recession in the
national economy in the early 1990s and the dramatic increase in
disability claims based on mental depression.
[27] In May 1991, the insurer gave notice to the Appellant of
its intent to discontinue the disability program effective
December 1, 1991. To avoid the termination of the disability
program, the Appellant posted with the insurer a contingency
reserve equal to 25% of the annual premiums on the two disability
programs. That contingency reserve was paid to the insurer from
the stabilization reserves. It was a voluntary payment but,
according to Mr. Whelly, consistent with the purpose of the
stabilization reserves to maintain stable premiums and benefits.
There was another voluntary payment to the insurer to subsidize
the premium discount program. And then there was a contractual
payment to the insurer under the retention agreement in
accordance with the formula set out at the bottom of Exhibit 5.
These payments are reflected at page 149 of Exhibit 1 where the
amounts in the "total" column decline after 1989.
[28] In paragraph 25 above, I have summarized Mr. Whelly's
explanation as to how the 1994 total of $9,255,500 on page 149 of
Exhibit 1 should really be adjusted to $15,600,000 after taking
into account the two special payments to Revenue Canada and
Chancery. That adjusted total of $15,600,00 is only $2,600,000
higher than the total of $13,029,000 at the end of 1985. In other
words, although the total reached $24,000,000 in 1989, the
nine-year experience from 1986 to 1994 showed a net increase of
only $2,600,000 in the total column. In Mr. Whelly's view,
this is the way the stabilization reserves were intended to
operate. Over the same nine-year period, the premium revenue on
these three programs increased from $9,500,000 in 1986 to
$22,500,000 in 1994.
[29] The operation of the retention agreements as shown in
Exhibit 5 came to an end on December 1, 1992. In June 1992,
Chancery was incorporated in Barbados as a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Appellant. The paid-up capital of Chancery was
$5,000,000 paid by the Appellant out of its stabilization
reserves as described in paragraph 25 above. Effective December
1, 1992, Chancery agreed with the insurer of the three programs
(life, disability and business expenses) to reinsure the risk of
the Appellant's programs. The old retention agreements came
to an end and new retention agreements were signed effective
December 1, 1992. Mr. Whelly said that the new agreements were
more like reporting agreements because they could not result in
any payments between the Appellant and the insurer.
[30] Exhibit 6 is a chart showing the cash flow after the new
structure was put in place on December 1, 1992. The cash flow
starts out the same as in Exhibit 5 with respect to the Appellant
issuing the invoices; receiving the premiums; depositing the
premiums in the joint account and receiving back the 5%
administrative charge. The agents are paid out of the joint
account, and the balance of the premium is paid to the insurer
which then pays the expenses described on the right side of
Exhibit 6 in the box with seven items headed by
"Underwriting and Issue Expenses". At year end, the
insurer produces a report still called an experience report but
it does not trigger any payment between the Appellant and the
insurer as in Exhibit 5. Any profit or loss remains with the
insurer. The big difference is the involvement with Chancery.
[31] The insurer reinsures its risk under the Appellant's
sponsored programs with Chancery on what is referred to as a
"modified co-insurance basis". The insurer has 10% of
the risk and Chancery has 90% of the risk. If there are any
profits, the insurer keeps 10% of the profits and Chancery
receives 90% of the profits. The coinsurance is
"modified" in the sense that the insurer keep all the
premium money until the end of the year when it completes its
calculations. At that time, any profit is divided 90-10.
[32] According to Mr. Whelly's answers in
cross-examination, Chancery enters into real reinsurance
contracts with arm's length parties and uses some of its
paid-up capital to purchase such contracts. Chancery is a
"for profit" corporation in Barbados and has some
retained earnings. Since Chancery arrived on the scene on
December 1, 1992 and all the old retention agreements were
terminated, there are no more "remitted amounts" (see
paragraph 13 above) flowing from the insurer to the three
stabilization reserves. The consolidated stabilization reserves
are frozen at the level of about $10,000,000 (since December
1992) and, according to Mr. Whelly, the investment income earned
from that $10,000,000 fund is used to subsidize the
Appellant's administrative expenses.
[33] Exhibit 7 shows the amounts of income or (loss) reported
by the Appellant for income tax purposes for the nine years ended
November 30, 1986 to 1994 inclusive. Those amounts are as
follows:
1986 $163,717
1987 2,577,277
1988 1,549,925
1989 4,968,767
1990 (869,884)
1991 (6,361,566)
1992 (1,932,215)
1993 40,707
1994 556,791
Total (income minus losses) $693,519
During the first seven years, the accumulated income for the
positive years and the accumulated losses for the negative years
were almost in balance at the end of 1992.
[34] I am required to determine whether the Appellant is
exempt from tax under paragraph 149(1)(l) of the
Act (set out in paragraph 2 above). It is implicit in the
opening words of subsection 149(1) that a person described in
that subsection may very well have income and taxable income but
no tax to pay if certain conditions are met. If the simple act of
earning income from any source disqualified a person from relying
on the exemption, then the exemption itself would be redundant
and meaningless. The exemption has meaning only if a qualified
person has income which can be exempt from tax. Specifically, a
"club, society or association" within the meaning of
paragraph 149(1)(l) may have income but that income will
be exempt from tax if the club, society or association satisfies
the conditions in that paragraph. The only two conditions in
paragraph 149(1)(l) which are in dispute are whether
the Appellant was organized for any purpose except profit and
whether the Appellant was operated for any purpose except
profit.
[35] The years under appeal are 1986, 1987, 1988 and 1994. The
table in paragraph 33 above shows that the Appellant reported
income for tax purposes in each of the years under appeal but the
Appellant claimed to be exempt under paragraph 149(1)(l).
The primary issue in this case is the purpose for which the
Appellant was organized and operated and whether that purpose was
for profit. The Appellant argues that there is no restriction on
the range of permitted purposes which would entitle it to rely on
the exemption so long as earning a profit was not one of those
purposes. Accordingly, the Appellant acknowledges that its
particular activity is in an area populated by commercial
enterprises (i.e. insurance companies) but the Appellant argues
that that fact does not disqualify it from the exemption if its
purpose was not profit-making. The Appellant claims that its
non-profit purpose was to facilitate certain insurance products
being made available to the Canadian legal community at
reasonable and stable rates. This is consistent with paragraph
(a) of the Appellant's corporate objects quoted in paragraph
1 above.
[36] The Respondent argues that it is not possible to separate
the Appellant's claimed non-profit purpose (to facilitate the
availability of certain insurance products at reasonable and
stable rates) from the need to make a profit because premium
stability could not be achieved, given the essential
participation of insurance companies, unless the Appellant
received part of the profits from the insurance companies. The
Respondent also argues that the Appellant could not receive a
share of the insurer's profit without sharing the risk. In
the Respondent's submission, the potential payment from the
Appellant to the insurer under the retention agreement and the
insurer's restrictions on the Appellant's use of the
stabilization reserves are evidence of the Appellant's
sharing of the risk.
[37] For the reasons set out below, I have concluded that the
Appellant had a non-profit purpose in the years under appeal and
was entitled to the exemption under paragraph 149(1)(l). I
do not ordinarily place much weight on the objects clause of a
corporation's charter but it is a place to start. Article III
of the Appellant's Letters Patent quoted in paragraph 1 above
concludes with these words:
In no event shall the purposes of organization and/or
operation of the Corporation include profit.
When determining purpose or object or motive, the conduct of a
corporation is more important than a declared object in its
charter.
[38] The Appellant's by-law no. 1 (a lengthy general
by-law) provides for two classes of members: (a) active
members who are designated by the council of the CBA together
with certain officers of the CBA; and (b) general members who are
the persons who from time to time constitute the members in
good-standing of the CBA. I note that membership in the Appellant
is not tied in any way to those members of the legal community in
Canada who purchase one or more insurance products through the
facilities of the Appellant. Under Article IV of the
Appellant's Letters Patent, the following provision prohibits
any members of the Appellant from receiving any benefit upon its
dissolution or winding up:
... In the event of dissolution or winding-up of the
Corporation, those assets which the Corporation is properly
entitled to distribute that remain after the discharge by the
Corporation of its liabilities shall be distributed to The Canada
Bar Association.
The CBA itself is a non-profit organization. On the question
of whether the Appellant was organized for any purpose
except profit, its Letters Patent and general by-law support its
claim and there was no evidence to the contrary.
[39] On the question of whether the Appellant was
operated for any purpose except profit, it is necessary to
take a broad view of everything which the Appellant did and why
it was done. Mr. Whelly stated clearly that the Appellant was
operated to facilitate insurance products being made available to
members of the Canadian legal community at reasonable and stable
rates. He was more precise in stating that the Appellant's
goal was to deliver insurance products at cost if possible. Mr.
Whelly described a number of the Appellant's activities and
explained how each activity was aimed at cost recovery. His
evidence in this area was not challenged on cross-examination
although counsel for the Respondent later argued that profit must
have been a purpose of the Appellant if it was to achieve its
declared goals of stable premiums and cost recovery.
[40] The Appellant's profit and loss results seem to
support the Appellant's declared non-profit purpose. Those
results are in Exhibit 7 and summarized in paragraph 33 above. It
is a fact that over the seven-year period 1986 to 1992, the
profits and losses were in balance. And in the nine-year period
1986 to 1994, profits exceed losses by only $693,519 when the
Appellant's annual operating expenses in 1994 exceeded
$1,000,000. Those excess profits of $693,519 over a nine-year
period are even less significant when measured against gross
premium revenue of about $20,000,000 in 1994. See Exhibit 1, page
155.
[41] There is no doubt that the Appellant engages in a high
level of commercial activity. It invoices and collects premiums.
It negotiates lower commission rates for vending agents. It
enters into complicated retention agreements with insurers. And
in the period 1985 to 1992, it would receive an amount or pay an
amount each year depending upon the result in the insurer's
experience report. The formula for receiving or paying is
summarized in Exhibit 5 and explained in paragraph 19 above. That
high level of commercial activity, by itself, does not prove that
the Appellant operated for profit.
[42] In The Gull Bay Development Corporation v. The
Queen, 84 DTC 6040 (Federal Court Trial Division), the
corporation was incorporated by the Gull Bay Indian Reserve to
promote the economic and social welfare of the members of the
Reserve. Some members of the Reserve were employed by the
corporation to carry on a logging operation. In 1975, the
Minister of National Revenue assessed tax on the
corporation's profit from its logging operation. The
corporation claimed it was exempt under paragraph
149(1)(l). When allowing the corporation's appeal,
Walsh J. stated as page 6048:
The real issue in the present case appears to he that the
corporation was not set up, as its Letters Patent indicate, to
carry on a commercial activity although it is no doubt true that
the motive for forming the corporation may have been that it was
desirable to provide employment and training to otherwise
unemployed Indians on the Reserve by engaging in a commercial
activity which would not only provide such employment but raise
funds to be used for the very worthy social and charitable
activities required on the Reserve. ...
The social and welfare activities of Plaintiff are not a cloak
to avoid payment of taxation on a commercial enterprise but are
the real objectives of the Corporation.
... The Corporation is operated "exclusively"
for the purpose set out in Section 149(1)(l) pursuant
to its charter, even though it may raise funds for this purpose
by its commercial lumbering enterprise.
[43] In Gull Bay, the profit was earned from a
competitive logging operation and it was not fortuitous, but the
corporation was nevertheless held to have a non-profit purpose.
The Appellant's situation is quite different. It does not
compete with insurers or brokers but acts on behalf of a
restricted class of consumers. If the competitive logging
operation in Gull Bay did not cause the corporation to
lose its tax-exempt status, then the Appellant's
non-competitive activities in the commercial area of
insurance ought not to be regarded as proof of a profit
purpose.
[44] When issuing the assessments under appeal, the Minister
may have been influenced by the size of the reserves. For
example, the aggregate of the three stabilization reserves was
$24,336,100 in 1989 and that may have been just prior to an audit
by Revenue Canada. See Exhibit 1, page 149. Counsel for the
Appellant characterized those reserves as being in substance
over-paid premiums. That may be too simplistic but the fact is
that the Appellant used its large stabilization reserves to
enhance benefits either directly or indirectly. All of the
reserves were used to stabilize the disability program when it
began a period of significant negative results from 1990 to 1994.
The life reserve was used to obtain premium discounts starting in
1987 as described in paragraph 23 above. And the income earned
from investing the funds in the reserves was used to subsidize
the Appellant's operating expenses.
[45] In a perfect world, the cost of insurance could be
determined each year like the cost of a manufactured product but
the world is not perfect, and it is in the nature of insuring a
specific risk that the cost of such insurance can be determined
only over a period of many years. Therefore, it is not possible
to fix an annual premium on a pure cost recovery basis. It seems
to me that the Appellant has done the next best thing if its goal
is to achieve reasonable and stable premiums because (i) it
negotiated a fixed margin of profit with the insurer; and (ii) it
required the insurer to remit any excess profit (the
"remitted amount") so that the Appellant could
accumulate such remitted amounts in a reserve to stabilize
premiums and, if the reserve grew too big, the Appellant could
obtain enhanced benefits for the insured without increasing
premiums.
[46] If I accept the uncontradicted evidence of Mr. Whelly and
documents like the retention agreements and the tables at pages
149 and 155 of Exhibit 1, a big stabilization reserve proves the
difficulty in measuring the cost of an insured risk in advance
and on an annual basis. The fact that a particular reserve could
grow very big like the life reserve does not prove that the
Appellant was operated for profit. The stabilization reserves
were really a tool by which the Appellant obtained reasonable and
stable premiums. Although the stabilization reserves were big in
an objective sense, they maintained a relatively stable
relationship with the size of the programs measured in premium
income. See Exhibit 1, page 155.
[47] In considering the Appellant's activities in the
commercial world, I have focused on the retained amount (the 5%
of premiums) and the remitted amount (payments under the
retention agreements 1985-1992). When I consider the
Appellant's third source of revenue which is income earned
from investing the funds in the stabilization reserves, there is
even less reason to regard that third source as evidence of a
profit purpose. In L.I.U.N.A. Local 527 Members' Training
Trust Fund v. The Queen, 92 DTC 2365, the trust fund was
established with a grant from the union's existing training
and recreation fund. Both the union and the Ottawa Construction
Association contributed to the trust fund at a fixed rate per
employee per hour worked. In reassessing the trust fund for the
years 1985, 1986 and 1987, the Minister refused to accept the
trust fund's claim for exemption under
paragraph 149(1)(l) of the Income Tax Act. The
problem seemed to arise from the fact that, in the years under
appeal, the trust fund had accumulated money not used for
training purposes in the amounts of $600,000 to $900,000. The
question was whether investment income earned on the use of those
monies was subject to income tax. In allowing the appeal of the
trust fund, my colleague Bowman J. concluded that the fund was a
purpose trust and that it was an association within the meaning
of paragraph 149(1)(l). With respect to the question of
whether it was exempt from tax, Bowman J. stated at page
2380:
For an organization to be operated for the purpose of earning
a profit so as to disqualify it for the exemption under paragraph
149(1)(l) it would be necessary that it do more than
merely earn passive investment income. The earning of such income
would need to be both an operating motivation of the fund and a
focus of its activity. The evidence does not support this
conclusion. On the evidence the earning of the interest income
was not the purpose — primary or secondary — for
which the fund was operated. The earning of interest was simply
an incident of the only purpose for which the fund was operated,
the training of the members of the union; it was a means to an
end and not an end in itself.
[48] I have no hesitation in accepting the decision of this
Court in L.I.U.N.A. and applying it to the Appellant's
third basic source of annual revenue. That particular source of
revenue is on all fours with the income earned in the
L.I.U.N.A. case and, if the Appellant had no other source
of revenue, I should think that the L.I.U.N.A. case would
be conclusive in the Appellant's favour. This case is
complicated, however, by the fact that the Appellant has the
other two sources of annual revenue identified as the retained
amount and the remitted amount.
[49] With respect to the 5% retained amount, I have accepted
the Appellant's evidence and argument that, on an annual
basis, the retained amount is not adequate to cover the
Appellant's annual operating expenses, and the shortfall must
be made up from the stabilization reserves. With respect to the
remitted amount and its accumulation in the stabilization
reserves, although that amount arises out of the Appellant's
involvement in the insurer's business, I find that the growth
of the stabilization reserves was caused (i) by the impossibility
of measuring on a year-by-year basis the cost of insuring a
particular risk; and (ii) by the need of the insurer to err
on the side of caution when establishing the rate of premium for
a particular insurance product. If I may adapt the words of Walsh
J. in Gull Bay, the Appellant's attempt to
provide insurance products at cost to the legal community in
Canada is not a cloak to avoid payment of tax on a commercial
enterprise but is the real purpose of the Appellant. In other
words, the accumulation of remitted amounts in the stabilization
reserves was only incidental to the Appellant's true object
of providing insurance products at cost.
[50] Counsel for both parties made reference to the decision
of the Supreme Court of Canada in The Regional Assessment
Commissioner and the Municipal Clerk of the Corporation of the
Town of Hearst v. Caisse populaire de Hearst
Limitée, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 57. The Caisse
populaire ("CP") was assessed for business tax under
the Ontario Assessment Act with respect to property it
occupied in connection with its operations. The assessment notice
described CP as a banker but CP was successful in having the
assessment set aside in the lower courts. In particular, the
trial judge found as a fact that the preponderant purpose of CP
was "to provide loans to members for provident or productive
purposes at a low cost". The Supreme Court of Canada
dismissed an appeal by the Town. When delivering judgment for the
Court, McIntyre J. commented on the "commercial
activity" test cited in the Ontario Court of Appeal and then
stated at page 70:
...Many community and charitable organizations, relying
from time to time on what would be termed commercial activity to
raise funds for the fulfilment of their objectives, could be
classed as businesses by such a test. To attach primary
importance to the commercial aspect of an operation in question
will offer, in my opinion, no sure or helpful guide. In my view,
the commercial activity test is too indefinite to allow
consistent application. I agree that, in deciding whether or not
any activity may be classed as a business under the provisions of
s. 7(1)(b) of The Assessment Act, all relevant
factors regarding an operation must be considered and weighed.
However, they must be considered and weighed in order to
determine not whether in some general sense the operation is of a
commercial nature or has certain commercial attributes, but
whether it has as its preponderant purpose the making of a
profit. If it has, it is a business; if it has not, it is not a
business.
[51] The Supreme Court of Canada has said that
"commercial activity", by itself, is not a helpful
guide for purposes of the Ontario Assessment Act. If the
preponderant purpose test as accepted by the Supreme Court in
Hearst has any application in cases arising under
paragraph 149(1)(l), I would have no hesitation in finding
that the Appellant's preponderant purpose was to facilitate
the availability of certain insurance products at cost to the
legal community in Canada. Because the Appellant's
preponderant purpose was the availability of certain insurance
products at cost, it did not have a profit purpose at all.
[52] I view the incorporation of Chancery, the Barbados
subsidiary, as a red herring in this appeal. Its incorporation
was prompted by two factors. First, the disappearance of the
stabilization reserve for the disability program and the
insurer's notice of intent to discontinue that program caused
the Appellant to look for a reinsurable vehicle to permit the
program to continue. And second, Chancery's access to the
reinsurance market would help the Appellant to obtain reasonable
and stable premiums. Quite apart from those two factors, Chancery
is a separate legal entity distinct from the Appellant.
[53] Returning briefly to the stabilization reserves, it could
be said that the Appellant is parking money in those reserves for
future use in bad (i.e. negative) years. The large reserves do
not reflect a profit purpose but a service to members purpose. A
person (individual or corporate) with a profit purpose will
usually want to use any profit as some method of personal gain by
the payment of dividends or salaries or by the increased value of
issued shares. The Appellant did not use the stabilization
reserves in any of those ways. When it could do so, the Appellant
decreased the premium costs or increased the benefits to members.
These were genuine services to members which partly justified the
Appellant's characterization of the stabilization reserves as
overpaid premiums.
[54] In my opinion, the Appellant was neither organized nor
operated for a profit purpose. Accordingly, the appeal on the
primary issue is allowed with costs. Counsel for both parties
agreed not to present evidence on the second issue pending a
decision on the primary issue. I will withhold signing the formal
judgment for 30 days in case either party should want to make
submissions with respect to the second issue.
Signed at Regina, Saskatchewan, this 1st day of April,
1999.
"M.A. Mogan"
J.T.C.C.