Date: 19990811
Docket: 96-3551-IT-I
BETWEEN:
RÉAL MICHAUD,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Lamarre Proulx, J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal under the informal procedure concerns the
1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years. The point at issue is whether
the appellant carried on a rental business involving a
condominium purchased at the start of 1998.
[2] The facts on which the Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") relied in making his assessments are set
out in paragraph 4 of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal (the
"Reply") as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
a. since 1988, the appellant has always reported rental losses
from his condominium based on the following income and
expenses:
TAXATION
YEAR
|
GROSS
INCOME
|
EXPENSES
|
NET
LOSS
|
1988
|
$5,600
|
$14,516
|
$ 8,916
|
1989
|
$7,075
|
$13,638
|
$ 6,563
|
1990
|
$5,105
|
$16,673
|
$11,568
|
1991
|
$8,104
|
$18,326
|
$10,222
|
1992
|
$6,182
|
$15,097
|
$ 8,915
|
1993
|
$ 700
|
$ 2,578
|
$ 1,878
|
1993
|
FINAL LOSS
|
$30,000
|
b. gross income has been declining since the 1991 taxation
year;
c. the fixed costs were higher than the gross rental
income;
d. the appellant's primary intention on purchasing the
condominium was eventually to live in it during his
retirement;
e. the appellant did not take the necessary steps to correct
the situation so as to make his condominium profitable;
f. the appellant has invested very little of his own money
since the mortgage loan totalled $110,000, that is,
95 percent of the cost of the asset;
g. the appellant had no reasonable expectation of profit from
the immovable property rental operation in any of the 1991, 1992
or 1993 taxation years;
h. the expenses claimed by the appellant were not incurred for
the purpose of gaining income from a business or property, but
rather constituted personal or living expenses for the
appellant;
i. the appellant has not shown that he incurred expenses for
the purpose of gaining or producing income from a business or
property in the 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years;
j. the appellant has not shown that he incurred a final loss
from the sale of an immovable used for the purpose of gaining or
producing income from a business or property in the 1993 taxation
year.
[3] The appellant's Notice of Appeal reads as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
THE FACTS
I had been the executive director of a rehabilitation centre
since 1978 and a certified general accountant (C.G.A.) since
1972. In 1988, I decided to invest in a 176-unit
condominium project known as "Au Pied du Mont" located
very close to Mont Ste-Anne. After speaking with
Pierre Lambert, the developer and general manager of the
"Au Pied du Mont" organization and checking the
previous years' results, I decided to buy a villa, as I had
done well with the sale of another condo in the same project.
I therefore believed that I was making a good deal and that
this property would become profitable starting in the second
year, considering that we expected rentals for 183 days at
$100 per day and that the break-even point was between $14,000
and $15,000, which would thus produce a net profit of $3,000 to
$4,000 a year.
After talking with my manager at the Caisse Populaire, I
signed on December 10, 1987 an agreement to purchase for
$115,000. I took possession on February 11, 1988 as the
$110,000 loan had been approved.
In the spring of 1989, Pierre Lambert gave up the
management of the "Au Pied du Mont" complex. At that
time, I was a member of the board of directors and we decided to
hire the firm Gescona to advise the co-owners on the development
of a strategic development plan to provide the vacation complex
with the elements likely to promote significant development over
the short or medium term.
The board of directors on which I sat decided to form two
companies.
Management company: Its role was to maintain the common parts
of the buildings and the lands belonging to the complex. The
board of directors consisted of the presidents of the
five phases, plus representatives of the rental company.
Rental company: Its role was to advertise and to look after
animation, rental of the company's condominium units
belonging and the day-to-day management of the complex, charging
a certain amount for condominiums other than those of the rental
company.
An investment of $2,000 was required to become a member of the
rental company. We held a meeting to ask persons who were
interested to pay the required amount.
Whereas the project could be operated year-round;
Whereas the co-owners would receive only 50 percent of
the rental revenues;
Whereas the Gescona firm of hotel industry and recreational
services consultants described the complex as follows:
The Au Pied du Mont complex is situated in the heart of an
exceptional tourist area. It offers beautiful views of Mont
Ste-Anne and is extraordinary in both its size and the interest
government has shown in it. Located at the gateway to the
Charlevoix region, 40 minutes from Québec and a few
kilometers from the Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré pilgrimage site,
it enjoys a highly enviable geographical location. In addition,
Île d'Orléans to the west and Cap Tourmente to
the east are sites that attract many tourists at certain times of
the year.
Gescona concludes from the financial projections that the
complex would be profitable if operated as a year-round family
resort while continuing the existing operation based on skiing in
winter and at the same time developing the off-seasons (spring
and fall) for a corporate clientele and pilgrims.
Whereas I know many persons in Quebec City, in the province of
Quebec and in Canada due to the fact that I have been provincial
president of my professional corporation, a member of the board
of directors of CGA Canada and the president and a member of
various organizations;
Whereas I could advertise effectively to persons whom we
knew;
Whereas we live 30 minutes from the complex;
Whereas my wife would look after maintenance of the condo in
order to cut costs;
Whereas we were convinced we could make this business
profitable in the first two years;
Whereas, by putting some effort into the business, we would
achieve better results than the other co-owners who are
part of the rental company;
Consequently,
My wife and I decided not to be part of the rental
company;
I would remain a member of the management company's board
of directors as I was president of Phase V of the
complex;
We expected to earn higher income than the rental firm if we
handled the rental ourselves, which turned out to be true;
Gescona's projections proved to be overstated;
In the fall of 1992, I had a career change: my employer put me
on early retirement as a result of the reform of the
Ministère des Services de la Santé et des Services
Sociaux (Department of Health and Social Services).
Based on the advice of a tax expert from the firm of Samson
Bélair, I decided to sell the condo; the sale took place
in the month of February 1993 and the selling price of $85,000
was equal to the market value according to the real estate
brokers at that time.
In conclusion, when I purchased the condo in 1988, it was in
order to make it profitable and thus to increase my retirement
assets because I anticipated retiring at the age of 62, in which
case my pension would give me only 44 percent of my
salary.
We used the condo a few weeks in 1990 because the roof of my
property in town had been damaged by wind; the amounts I received
from my insurance were paid as income from the "Au Pied du
Mont" condo.
The other times we slept at the condo, we did so to do
cleaning or prepare it for the arrival of clients.
I really believed I had made a good deal and the thought of
having government pay for a portion of it by using losses to
reduce my income tax never crossed my mind. On the contrary, if
my action plan had worked, I would have paid more. I can state
that all the expenses were incurred for the purpose of gaining
income from this condominium.
[4] The witnesses in this case were the appellant,
Roxanne Nadeau and Yves Côté. The latter
two testified at the request of counsel for the respondent.
[5] I have reproduced the Notice of Appeal in full because the
appellant restated that version of the facts in his
testimony.
[6] However, the Notice of Appeal fails to say that, on
December 19, 1986, the appellant had purchased a studio
condominium in the same complex for $56,000. At the time of that
purchase, the developer had also told him in glowing terms that
the rental income would be high and would pay the purchase price
(Exhibit A-1). As this turned out not to be the case,
since the gross income was $2,634 and the rental losses $6,016
for 10 months of 1987 (Exhibit I-3), the
appellant complained to the developer, who advised him at that
time to put the property up for sale, which was done. The
appellant sold the property through the real estate developer in
the fall of 1987 for $20,000 more than the purchase price. In
1987, as may be seen from Exhibit I-3, the appellant
claimed rental losses of $6,016 and reported a capital gain of
$10,306. The appellant had signed a rental agreement with the Au
Pied du Mont rental company respecting this property
(Exhibit A-1).
[7] Shortly thereafter, the appellant purchased another,
larger property—in the villa class—in the same
complex for $115,000. The mortgage was $110,000. The purchase
agreement was signed on December 10, 1987 and the purchase
was closed on February 25, 1988. (The Notice of Appeal gives
a possession date of February 11, 1988, but all the other
documents refer to a February 25, 1988 purchase date.)
[8] According to the chronology given in the Notice of Appeal,
Gescona was instructed in the spring of 1989 to work out a
development plan for the Au Pied du Mont residential and rental
project. The report was filed as Exhibit A-3 and is
dated January 1989. It was in any case subsequent to the purchase
of the property in question.
[9] The report described the deficiencies and strong points of
the Au Pied du Mont project and proposed an improvement and
management plan. While the appellant was one of the participants
in the Gescona report as a director of Phase 5 of the
project, he chose not to put his property in the group of
properties for rent by the rental company, whose role is
explained in the Notice of Appeal. He believed he could rent out
his property himself for 183 days a year at an average price
of $100 a day. He therefore estimated his annual income at
$18,000 and his expenses at $14,000. He explained that his
projections did not pan out because business at
Mont Ste-Anne declined, particularly as a result of
development at Mont-Tremblant.
[10] Exhibit I-1 consists of the statements of
rental income and expenses for the years 1988 to 1993. It may be
seen from those statements that the main expenses were interest
expenses of $9,062.42, $9,883.30, $11,666.96, $13,123.77,
$10,099.39 and $1,523.77. The interest increased because the
mortgage payments were made in part from the appellant's line
of credit. In the last year, the interest ran from January 1
to February 12, 1993, the date on which the property was
sold.
[11] Roxanne Nadeau is an auditor with the Québec
office. At the of February 1995, she wrote to the appellant
asking him to provide supporting documentation and to complete a
questionnaire entitled [TRANSLATION] Rental Property
Questionnaire. The appellant went to meet Ms. Nadeau on
March 23, 1995, taking the supporting documentation and
other documents with him, but he had not completed the
questionnaire. Ms. Nadeau asked him questions and completed
the questionnaire for him. She read the answers back to the
appellant and he signed the last page of the questionnaire. The
auditor's report was filed as Exhibit I-2 and the
questionnaire as Exhibit A-6. Ms. Nadeau stated
in her testimony that this was the first time she had heard of
the Gescona report.
[12] The questionnaire was filed by the appellant in order to
explain certain answers that appear on it. To question 4,
[TRANSLATION] "For what purpose was the property originally
purchased?" The answer was [TRANSLATION] "1. To
serve as his principal residence upon retirement, planned for
96."
[13] The appellant explained in his testimony that this was an
eventual and distant goal, but that the primary goal was to rent
the property at a profit. Question 11 was [TRANSLATION]
"If the unit was available for rental, what efforts did you
make to find tenants? Describe in detail the advertising you did,
providing where possible supporting documents concerning
advertisements placed, rental agencies used, etc." The
appellant answered [TRANSLATION] "telephone, mailings,
word of mouth."
[14] The appellant testified that he had advertised in the
newspapers. On this point, he filed Exhibit A-4, which
consists of a business card bearing a photograph of the
condominium and giving the address of the appellant and his wife,
advertising letters, some newspaper advertisements and bulletin
board advertisements. Exhibit A-5 consists of the
appellant's customer list. He and his wife sent out
advertising to those customers twice a year. The appellant did
not use the services of any rental agency.
[15] In 1990, his main residence suffered damage and the
appellant and his wife occupied the condominium for
three weeks. The appellant realized that he would not like
to live there year-round. Otherwise the appellant and his wife
stayed at the condo only 10 times or so when they went there
to do the cleaning. Their main residence is in Giffard,
20 minutes from Mont Ste-Anne.
[16] The appellant explained that, by way of corrective
action, he had done some advertising and then finally put the
property up for sale.
[17] Yves Côté, an appeals officer with
Revenue Canada, communicated with the appellant on
two occasions. The appellant did not give him any other
reasons for buying than those stated in the questionnaire. The
appellant explained to him that profitability was difficult
because the property was only rented on weekends. The appeals
officer confirmed the assessment because income never covered the
fixed costs. He found the rental losses of $48,062 over a
five-year period for a single property totally disproportionate
for a rental business. There was no reasonable expectation of
profit.
[18] Counsel for the appellant referred to the decisions in
Moldowan v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 480,
Tonn v. Canada, [1996] 2 F.C. 73, Mastri v.
Canada, [1998] 1 F.C. 66, and Mohammad v. Canada,
[1998] 1 F.C. 165, but more particularly to the decisions by
Judge Archambault of this Court in Beaudry v. The Queen,
[1995] E.T.C. 459, Jerome J. of the Federal Court, Trial
Division in McGovern et al. v. The Queen, 94 DTC
6527 and Judge O'Connor of this Court in Egger v.
The Queen, [1997] T.C.J. No. 1335, dated
December 16, 1997.
[19] Counsel for the appellant referred to the following
passages in Beaudry, supra:
In order for there to be a business or property from which
income can be gained, the taxpayer must have a reasonable
expectation of profit. Otherwise he or she is engaged in a hobby
or owns an asset for purposes other than earning income. This
reasonable expectation of profit must be determined at the time
the expense is incurred. In this case, during 1991 and 1992, it
is useful to determine whether there was such a expectation of
profit at the time the rental property was purchased. Unless
there is a change in intentions or in the conduct of a taxpayer
following the purchase, the original intention should therefore
continue to exist during the relevant years.
What was the situation in this instance? The evidence shows
that Mr. Beaudry purchased his two condominium units for the
purpose of earning a profit. If he had known in advance that he
would incur all these losses from 1988 to 1993, he would not have
bought them. Even though he was experienced in appraising
agricultural land, Mr. Beaudry, like other mortals, did not
have a crystal ball and did not know what would happen. Whether
there was a reasonable expectation of profit cannot be determined
relying solely on information known after the fact. This would be
highly unfair to taxpayers.
The situation must be analyzed as it was at the time the
taxpayer purchased the condominiums and at the time the expenses
were incurred in 1991 and 1992. It is reasonable to believe that
Mr. Beaudry had a reasonable expectation of profit in
December 1988 when he purchased the two condominium units. He
first relied on his financial adviser from Samson Bélair.
While his financial adviser was in a delicate situation because,
at the time of the offer to purchase, he was one of the owners of
the units in question, it appears that Mr. Beaudry did rely
on that adviser, who was a chartered accountant.
Mr. Beaudry did not restrict himself to his
accountant's advice. He examined a report prepared by hotel
industry and recreational services experts, who recognized the
excellence of this project and of the Mont Ste-Anne area.
The report, which followed the feasibility study, recognized that
the resort complex development program was viable.
The fact that Mr. Beaudry financed more than 97 per
cent of the purchase price of his two condominium units is a
factor that supports the Minister's argument. However, this
factor is only one of those that the Court must consider. The
fact that Mr. Beaudry had to pay more than $16,000 of his
own funds to repay the 1988 loss at the time of the purchase
somewhat offsets the negative impact of the high level of
financing.
[20] In Egger, supra, counsel for the appellant
referred to the following passage:
. . . His intention to only occupy the Property 15 years later
is consistent with an intention to rent in the interim. Interest
on the mortgage was reduced. A profit was projected for 1997 and
there is no evidence to contradict this.
[21] Judge Archambault's decision in Beaudry
concerns two properties in the same complex as the
appellant's. The rental losses amounted to $14,275 and
$12,057 for 1991 and 1992 respectively. The properties had been
purchased in 1988 and had produced rental losses for each of the
previous years of amounts similar to those for the years in
issue. The Court allowed the appeal on the ground that the
evidence had clearly showed that the properties had not been
purchased for personal purposes, that they had been bought in
December 1988 on the strength of the Gescona report and that they
had been offered for rent through the rental company. According
to the judge in that case, the appellant had every valid reason
to believe at the time he purchased the properties that the
rental income would be positive.
[22] The facts of the instant case are not identical. The
appellant had previously purchased a property in the same project
in December 1986, had been dissatisfied with the rental income
and had immediately put that property back up for sale. When he
signed the purchase agreement in December 1987, the Gescona
report had not yet been produced or even commissioned.
[23] I refer to Dickson J.'s remarks in the Supreme
Court of Canada's judgment in Moldowan, supra, at
pages 485 and 486:
There is a vast case literature on what reasonable expectation
of profit means and it is by no means entirely consistent. In my
view, whether a taxpayer has a reasonable expectation of profit
is an objective determination to be made from all of the facts.
The following criteria should be considered: the profit and
loss experience in past years, the taxpayer's training,
the taxpayer's intended course of action, the capability
of the venture as capitalized to show a profit after charging
capital cost allowance. The list is not intended to be
exhaustive. The factors will differ with the nature and extent of
the undertaking . . . .
(My emphasis.)
[24] I also refer to Linden J.A.'s comments in the
Federal Court of Appeal's decision in Tonn, supra, at
pages 102, 103 and 104:
The primary use of Moldowan as an objective test,
therefore, is the prevention of inappropriate reductions in tax;
it is not intended as a vehicle for the wholesale judicial
second-guessing of business judgments. A note of caution must be
sounded for instances where the test is applied to commercial
operations. Errors in business judgment, unless the Act
stipulates otherwise, do not prohibit one from claiming
deductions for losses arising from those errors.
. . .
. . . I otherwise agree that the
Moldowan test should be applied sparingly where a
taxpayer's "business judgment" is involved, where
no personal element is in evidence, and where the extent of the
deductions claimed are not on their face questionable. However,
where circumstances suggest that a personal or
other-than-business motivation existed, or where the expectation
of profit was so unreasonable as to raise a suspicion, the
taxpayer will be called upon to justify objectively that the
operation was in fact a business. Suspicious circumstances,
therefore, will more often lead to closer scrutiny than those
that are in no way suspect.
[25] In the instant case, the evidence showed that the
appellant purchased the property in question as a future
retirement home. This was a personal element which is not fatal,
but which calls for some circumspection in analyzing the alleged
profitability of a business. At the time he purchased the
property in question, the appellant knew that it was not easy to
achieve a return from the rental. He had been very disappointed
with an initial acquisition. As regards capitalization, the
appellant had borrowed 95 percent of the cost of purchasing
the property. In addition, the mortgage payments had to be
financed over the years by borrowing against the line of credit.
The financial structure of the purchase allowed no leeway in the
event that the rental income was insufficient. It was clear from
the outset that the capital paid to purchase the property (on
which the return from rental was problematical) was clearly
insufficient. In the circumstances, the property did not have the
capability, as capitalized, to show a profit.
[26] The appeal is accordingly dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 11th day of August 1999.
"Louise Lamarre Proulx"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]