Date: 20000823
Docket: 98-1593-IT-G
BETWEEN:
BRIAN ROY FINCH,
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
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan on August 8 and 9, 2000. Mr. Finch and
his wife, Brenda, testified.
[2] The Appellant has appealed assessments for his 1992, 1993
and 1994 taxation years restricting his farm losses pursuant to
section 31 of the Income Tax Act (the
"Act"). The following portions of section 31 are
important to this case:
31. (1) Where a taxpayer's chief source of income for a
taxation year is neither farming nor a combination of farming and
some other source of income, for the purposes of sections 3 and
111 the taxpayer's loss, if any, for the year from all
farming businesses carried on by the taxpayer shall be deemed to
be the total of ...
...
(2) For the purpose of this section, the Minister may
determine that a taxpayer's chief source of income for a
taxation year is neither farming nor a combination of farming and
some other source of income.
Subsection 9(2) of the Act reads:
(2) Subject to section 31, a taxpayer's loss for a
taxation year from a business or property is the amount of the
taxpayer's loss, if any, for the taxation year from that
source computed by applying the provisions of this Act respecting
computation of income from that source with such modifications as
the circumstances require.
[3] Mr. Finch was born April 11, 1949 and raised on his
parents' farm north of Kelvington, Saskatchewan, where he
worked his parents' lands together with his father and a
brother. Mrs. Finch was born on March 6, 1953, and was raised on
her parent's farm, south of Kelvington, Saskatchewan, where
she also worked on her parents' farm from early childhood.
Mr. Finch lived with his parents on the family farm until June of
1971 when he married Brenda. Upon marriage Brian and Brenda lived
on Mr. Finch's parents' farm in a house trailer, without
running water or toilet facilities.
[4] In 1968 Mr. Finch took employment from November to May of
1969 as a labourer working upon a dam in northern Manitoba. With
his wages he purchased a mower for cutting hay and a welder, both
of which he used on his parents' farm. He worked on the farm
throughout the summer and fall of 1969. During the period from
November, 1969 to May, 1970 he again worked in northern Manitoba
returning to his parents' farm in May 1970 where he worked
with his father until harvest was completed in the fall. With his
earnings of the previous winter he purchased a half share in a
706 IHC tractor. In September of 1970, and in contemplation of
marrying and needing a farm of his own, Mr. Finch negotiated for
a half section (320) acres of farm land being the E1/2
26-39-12-W2 for a price of $15,500. As Mr. Finch only had $7,500
he applied to the Farm Credit Corporation for a loan and upon the
Farm Credit Corporation classifying him a being entitled under
the statute loaned the balance of the purchase price taking a
mortgage upon the land as security with a 29 year payment term.
During the winter of 1970-71 Mr. Finch again took employment in
northern Manitoba returning to his parents' farm in May.
During the period May to November he again worked on his
parents' farm and seeded his first crop on the land purchased
in 1970.
[5] After their marriage Mr. Finch continued to work on his
parents' land and Mrs. Finch continued to work on her
parents' farm. They bought a cream separator and started
milking Mr. Finch's cows and selling the cream. During the
winter of the year 1971-72 they left their animals in the care of
his father and they found employment at The Pas, Manitoba, where
Brian worked as a caretaker of the skating rink and Brenda worked
as a secretary in a store. In the spring of 1972 they returned to
the farm where again Mr. Finch assisted his father and Mrs. Finch
helped her father. In this season they seeded his land, the cows,
then numbering 6, were milked and cream sold. Mr. Finch, using
the combined money of himself and Brenda, bought a 14 foot IHC
100 series drill with grass seeder and packers.
[6] During the winter of 1972-73 they sought employment in
Edmonton and both found jobs and worked during that winter. In
May, 1973, they returned to the farm and Mr. Finch again helped
his father and Brian and Brenda farmed their land. Again, cows
were milked and cream marketed. In July, 1973 Mr. Finch
purchased the SE1/4 19-39-11-W2 for $12,000 and, again, the Farm
Credit Corporation assisted advancing a further $6,000 and
combining said land in the security granted on the purchase of
the prior half section. The $6,000 payment was a gift from
Brenda's father. In 1973 Mr. Finch purchased a 1965 Deutz
tractor with front-end loader, a one-way disc, harrows, grain
auger, hopper box and grain trailer. Their herd at this stage had
reached 20 animals. As Mr. Finch's father-in-law had
sold his land, Brenda was free to help in all aspects of their
family farm. In December they had their first child, Clint.
[7] Mr. Finch and his wife remained on the farm during
the following winter, and in the spring of 1974, they commenced
building a house and to do so borrowed from the Kelvington Credit
Union. In September, 1974, Mr. Finch purchased two parcels of
land totalling 15 acres adjoining his land. In 1974 the creamery
to which they sold cream closed and their market for cream was
lost. Thereafter the milk was fed to the pigs. In 1974 they added
pigs and chickens to their operation.
[8] In 1975 Mr. and Mrs. Finch farmed his three quarter
sections and worked with Brian's father in his father's
farming operations. An 18 foot IHC vibrashank cultivator and a 14
foot IHC deep tillage cultivator were purchased. Their second
child, Brandy, was born in March. Mrs. Finch operated field
equipment and helped with the animal chores throughout the summer
and fall of 1975.
[9] In 1976 Mr. Finch acquired a 460 Case combine and a
cultivator. Mr. Finch and his wife farmed their land and
still helped Mr. Finch's father. The herd consisted of 13
cows and they had pigs, goats and chickens. In 1977 they had 15
cows, together with pigs, goats, chickens and horses. A well was
dug and the house connected up for water as were watering bowls
for livestock. Mr. Finch still helped his father. In 1978 a
third child, Neil, was born. Mr. Finch had 11 cows and they
were milking the cows along with the goats. A 1954 three ton
truck was purchased. Mr. Finch still worked with his father.
[10] In 1979 they started farming on their own. Mr. Finch
purchased a nine foot hay scythe by trading in a 1969 IHC
pull-type combine. Throughout all of these years all of the
equipment that they purchased was old and second-hand. Together,
they maintained and repaired it. In the vernacular, this is
called "sweat equity".
[11] In January, 1980 Mr. Finch purchased a further 169.9
acres for $20,000.00 financed by Farm Credit Corporation. The
combined loans were renewed for a further 29 years. In this year
Mr. Finch had 28 days of employment as a diamond driller's
helper. A 1968 IHC 856 tractor was purchased financed by the
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, a 50 foot sprayer and a #12
MF square baler, and a garden tiller were purchased. Their fourth
child, Earl, was born in October.
[12] In 1981 Mr. Finch got most of three months off-farm
employment during January through March as a diamond driller.
During his absence from the farm his wife and children did the
chores. The herd was then 17 cows plus the other animals. A water
pump for dugouts and a bale trailer were purchased. Due to
medical problems suffered by Mr. Finch, seeding was carried out
by his wife and children. At this point, it should be appreciated
that, since 1981, Mrs. Finch has operated the farm and handled
the cattle at all the times that Mr. Finch has been away. In
calving season, continuing for about two months and ending in
May, this means checking the cows every four hours, day and
night; herding a birthing cow from the cold outdoors into a
calving shed, which is essentially unheated but a shelter;
pulling the calf with bare, wet hands and arms and keeping this
pattern up. If Mrs. Finch was working in the fields, their young
children would check the cows and run out into the field and call
Mrs. Finch if there was a problem. In 1981 there were 17 cows;
today there are 101 cows. They have to be fed on the farm with
hay in the winter; calves have to be weaned and fed chop and they
have to be herded and checked in the pasture in the summer. All
the while field work, machinery operation and maintenance must
continue. Major machinery repairs had to wait for Mr. Finch's
return at times, but Mrs. Finch operated the farm and repaired
and maintained machinery. The two of them worked the farm in
tandem and decided on farming practices together. To them and to
everyone who was in the courtroom, they are a team. All of their
equipment was old and second hand and cheap. They acquired other
old machines for parts and repaired their own. Therefore, capital
cost allowance and repair costs and capital costs were kept down.
There is no barn, just a calving shed; they shelter their cattle
with straw and hay bales. Simultaneously, until he began working
in the Cominco mine near the North Pole in 1990, Mr. Finch
was living in tents at nights during January, February and March
in Northern Saskatchewan and the North West Territories and
working outside during the days, diamond drilling. There it is
often 50 degrees below. It was a tough, difficult life for the
whole family and to this day it has not become easier because,
since 1990 began, it has gone on for 12 months of the year as
they tried to maintain their farm obligations and struggle to
adapt to the agricultural marketplace. It has been a way of life
that people on salaries and with benefits who work less than 40
hours a week in an office cannot comprehend and, in many cases,
cannot believe exists in Canada.
[13] In 1982 the herd was 15 cows. Mr. Finch purchased a
front-end loader with which to handle stacked bales. In 1983 Mr.
Finch purchased an IHC 1086 tractor with cab financed by John
Deere Financing. In 1984 Mr. Finch had close to three months
off-farm employment in January through March, diamond drilling.
In 1985 Mr. Finch obtained work in January until March in the
North West Territories as a driller's helper. Mr. Finch's
wife and children took care of the herd in his absence. Mr. Finch
purchased a 14 foot Kello disc which was financed by the Canadian
Imperial Bank of Commerce. He also purchased a hopper box and a
utility trailer. Early frost conditions resulted in crop loss and
a realization under crop insurance of $2,166.92 in place of the
normal crop. No crop was combined; it was cut and baled for
feed.
[14] In 1986 Mr. Finch purchased of 160 acres (NE 13-18-12)
for $54,000. Farm Credit Corporation approved the acquisition and
loaned Mr. Finch the purchase money plus additional funds with
which to pay Mr. Finch's obligation to the Canadian Imperial
Bank of Commerce on the purchase of the 1985 disc. The amounts
advanced totalled $63,000. Mr. Finch also purchased 320 acres for
$160,000. financed by Farm Credit Corporation. The loan was
consolidated with the prior loans from Farm Credit Corporation.
The land purchased in 1986 was sumerfallowed. To farm the now
seven quarter section farm Mr. Finch purchased a 1979 IHC 1086
tractor with loader. The tractor was financed through John Deere
Finance. Mr. Finch also purchased a 2000 bushel hopper bin.
Drought and early frost conditions were encountered. With loss of
crop in 1985 followed by loss in 1986 Mr. Finch started having
difficulty in meeting financial commitments. In 1986 Mr. Finch
had three months work in January through March, in northern
Saskatchewan.
[15] In 1987 Mr. Finch got off-farm employment from February
until May and applied his earnings to acquire an IHC 402 combine
and a drill with packers. The Kelvington area farmers suffered
from drought and $20,937.79 was received from crop insurance. Mr.
Finch's loan with Farm Credit required payments of about
$36,000 a year. In addition, payments to the Kelvington Credit
Union were required. In 1987, various negotiations first began
with creditors. In 1988 Mr. Finch secured off-farm
employment for three months being January through March.
[16] During the period from January 1, 1972 until December 31,
1988, Mr. Finch showed net farm profits and during 12 of the
17 years his income from agriculture exceeded off-farm income
even after the interest payments were charged as an expense. Mrs.
Finch's calculations are as follows:
YEAR
|
FARM INCOME
BEFORE INTEREST DEDUCTION
|
INTEREST DEDUCTION
|
NET FARM PROFIT
|
OFF-FARM INCOME
|
1972
|
$ 1,323.27
|
$ 922.63
|
$ 400.64
|
$ 2,508.49
|
1973
|
$ 646.12
|
$ 91.02
|
$ 555.10
|
--
|
1974
|
$ 2,193.57
|
$ 1,143.85
|
$1,049.72
|
--
|
1975
|
$ 2,172.95
|
$ 1,316.26
|
$ 856.69
|
--
|
1976
|
$ 4,555.52
|
$ 2,045.95
|
$2,509.57
|
--
|
1977
|
$ 5,450.96
|
$ 3,150.41
|
$2,300.55
|
--
|
1978
|
$ 4,501.38
|
$ 3,260.23
|
$1,241.15
|
--
|
1979
|
$10,325.60
|
$ 3,371.45
|
$6,954.15
|
--
|
1980
|
$ 7,113.12
|
$ 4,811.46
|
$2,301.66
|
$ 7,569.50
|
1981
|
$16,473.77
|
$ 9,188.87
|
$7,284.90
|
$ 4,920.18
|
1982
|
$16,998.50
|
$ 7,619.42
|
$9,379.08
|
$ 28.01
|
1983
|
$10,169.60
|
$ 8,465.44
|
$1,704.16
|
--
|
1984
|
$17,170.23
|
$ 9,329.20
|
$7,841.03
|
$ 6,502.51
|
1985
|
$11,207.84
|
$10,157.27
|
$1,050.37
|
$13,133.00
|
1986
|
$ 7,940.87
|
$ 6,914.07
|
$1,026.80
|
$ 2,858.84
|
1987
|
$ 7,062.00
|
$ 6,500.00
|
$ 562.00
|
$11,342.33
|
1988
|
$ 5,314.03
|
$ 3,653.77
|
$1,660.26
|
$12,712.53
|
|
$130,619.13
|
|
$48,677.83
|
$61,575.39
|
[17] Early in 1989 Farm Credit Corporation threatened
foreclosure against the lands and seizure and disposal of pledged
farm machinery. Mr. Finch applied to the Farm Debt Review Boards
apparently under both Canada's Farm Debt Review Act,
S.C. 1986 c. 33 and Saskatchewan's Farm Land Security
Act, SS 1984-5-6, C.F. 8.01. Mrs. Finch did virtually all of
the negotiations, calculations and correspondence. The mediator
arranged a debt adjustment with the Farm Credit Corporation which
required Mr. Finch to pay forthwith $45,000 with the refinancing
subject to Mr. Finch seeking and taking full-time employment off
the farm until the debt was retired in order to earn at least
$20,000 per year to inject into the farm. The $20,000 clause was
a condition which Farm Credit officials imposed orally in May,
1989, during early negotiations. Their view was that without off
farm income to carry their loan, the farm could not be made
viable. This evidence came in as hearsay which was not objected
to. However the Court finds that as a result of the May meeting,
the Finches clearly understood that to be a condition of the 1989
settlement. Mr. Finch's father loaned him the $45,000
which was paid to Farm Credit Corporation upon interest owed.
(Eventually, his father forgave that loan.) Mr. Finch
secured a short term job as a driller's helper in the North
West Territories until the end of March when employment was
secured with Cominco. The employment required Mr. Finch to live
in drilling camps in the Territories which moved from place to
place as drilling programs were changed. Mr. Finch got time off
to put in the crop with the help of his family and on September
1st got further time off to help with harvest. All
earnings went toward payment of the debt load.
[18] Commencing in January, 1990 Mr. Finch obtained a
full-time mining job with Cominco to work 8 weeks in camp then 4
weeks at home at their mine on Cornwallis Island, 600 miles from
the North Pole in what is now Nunavut. The family members
performed the labour requirements on the farm in Mr. Finch's
absence. A part of Mr. Finch's earnings was used to purchase
a 601 White pull- type swather. Brian has no holidays but after
the first five years employment he could and has taken extended
leaves from time to time to work the farm. He works seven days
every week for 11 hours per day when in and lives in
motel-like accommodations.
[19] In January and December, 1992, purebred Shorthorns were
purchased and added to the herd and, so that the cattle could be
handled by Brenda and the children, a calving chute was purchased
as well as a chop feeder. In 1992 the entire crop was lost from
frost and there was no harvest and in 1993 the crop was snowed
under and no harvest resulted. After further relief application
to the Farm Debt Review Board resulted in a further compromise
with Farm Credit Corporation in December, 1992.
[20] The Finches summerfallowed alternate halves of grain land
every year, a normal Saskatchewan practice. However, they
suffered from weather problems from 1987 on as follows:
1987 frost
1988 drought
1989 drought
1990 drought
1991 drought
1992 drought
1993 2 old combines broke down and before custom combining
could begin, the crop was snowed under
1994 wet late crop in the field over the winter
1995 frost
1996 frost
1997 frost
1998 slight frost
Low grain prices persisted and worsened through these
years.
[21] Exhibit R-1 details the Appellant's financial history
from 1987 through 1999. ("Farm Loss after adjustment"
is the column showing Revenue Canada's assessment loss
figures before the restriction was assessed under section 31). It
reads:
BRIAN ROY FINCH
SCHEDULE OF INCOME AND LOSSES
Year
|
Salary
|
Farm Gross
|
Total Farm Expenses
|
Ratio of Expense to Income
|
Land Interest Included
|
CCA Included
|
Note
|
Farm
Loss
After Adj
|
Actual Farm Loss Recorded
|
1987
|
$11,842
|
$54,627
|
$54,065
|
1.0
|
$6,500
|
$8,868
|
|
$562
|
$562
|
1988
|
12,712
|
61,963
|
60,303
|
1.0
|
3,653
|
15,522
|
|
1,660
|
1,660
|
1989
|
32,808
|
73,392
|
110,369
|
1.5
|
69,065
|
|
(a)
|
(21,977)
|
(36,977)
|
1990
|
86,563
|
55,994
|
97,264
|
1.7
|
12,626
|
24,468
|
(a)
|
(56,270)
|
(41,270)
|
1991
|
75,083
|
78,775
|
130,449
|
1.7
|
19,902
|
18,438
|
(a)
|
(29,557)
|
(51,673)
|
1992
|
74,507
|
51,331
|
88,405
|
1.7
|
|
16,759
|
(b)
|
(50,110)
|
(37,074)
|
1993
|
72,601
|
101,479
|
132,512
|
1.3
|
42,820
|
15,199
|
(c)
|
(28,264)
|
(31,033)
|
1994
|
89,272
|
24,941
|
90,065
|
3.6
|
16,549
|
11,872
|
(d)
|
(60,099)
|
(65,124)
|
1995
|
87,228
|
20,477
|
90,605
|
4.4
|
15,304
|
6,546
|
(e)
|
(70,128)
|
(70,128)
|
1996
|
103,092
|
26,523
|
102,202
|
3.9
|
26,691
|
8,082
|
(f)
|
(75,679)
|
(75,679)
|
1997
|
104,620
|
24,938
|
90,832
|
3.6
|
6,989
|
6,222
|
(g)
|
(65,894)
|
(65,894)
|
1998
|
97,288
|
42,381
|
112,831
|
2.7
|
16,355
|
9,828
|
|
(70,450)
|
(70,450)
|
1999
|
81,661
|
58,413
|
122,158
|
2.1
|
|
|
|
(63,745)
|
(63,745)
|
|
$929,277
|
$675,234
|
$1,282,060
|
|
$236,454
|
$141,804
|
|
($589,951)
|
($606,825)
|
Notes:
89-90 (a) Adjusted loss includes $15,000 cattle inventory
election
91-92 (a) Adjusted loss includes $22,116 cattle inventory
election
1992 (b) After audit and appeals adjustments of $9,080. Loss
restricted
1993 (c) After audit and appeals adjustments of $2,769. Loss
restricted
1994 (d) After audit and appeals adjustments of $5,025. Loss
restricted
1995 (e) Loss restricted
1996 (f) Loss restricted
1997 (g) Loss restricted
[22] Mr. and Mrs. Finch's circumstances were very
difficult. They were forced to deal with a number of government
agencies because they were unable to pay their creditors and
their property taxes. In particular these government agencies and
the years and advice or orders they gave are as follows:
Year
|
Agency
|
Result
|
1986
(Exhibit A-1)
|
Farm Credit Corporation (Federal Government lending
agency) Advisory Services Program
|
Provided financial and farm planning to the
Appellant
|
1986
(Exhibit A-2)
|
Saskatchewan Farm Purchase Program (Saskatchewan
Department of Agriculture)
|
Provided interest rebate subsidy for money borrowed to
purchase farm land
|
1987
(Exhibit A-3)
|
Farm Debt Review Board (under the Farm Debt Review
Act) and correspondingly a Board under the Saskatchewan
Farm Land Security Act
|
3 November 1987
applied for assistance because behind in FCC
payments
|
1989
(Exhibits A-10 and A-11)
|
Farm Land Security Board
|
16 January 1989
Offered mediation to Appellant
|
1989
(Exhibit A-13)
|
Farm Credit Corporation proposal accepted by Mr. and
Mrs. Finch
|
7 June, 1989
terms:
1. (Oral) Get additional $20,000 per year off-farm
income into the farm
2. Inject $45,000 by July 1, 1989
3. Etc.
|
1992
(Exhibit A-23)
|
Farm Credit Corporation proposal accepted by Mr. and
Mrs. Finch
|
December 24, 1992 after another mediation new terms were
agreed upon which have been carried out.
|
The Saskatchewan Farm Purchase Program, and similar program
for home purchasers, was instituted to provide general interest
subsidies to farmland and home purchasers in Saskatchewan during
the high interest years of the 1980's. These were general
programs available to everybody. Similarly, the Farm Land
Security Board and the Farm Debt Review Board were instituted in
the mid-1980s when governments realized how general and
all-consuming the farm financial crisis had become.
[23] In 1999 Brian's father died and left him ¼
section of land and $80,000, which he used to pay down his
indebtedness. As a result, on August 8, 2000 the Appellant's
only debt to Farm Credit Corporation was about $21,000. His
property taxes are current. In 1998 they purchased a new baler
and financed it for $18,500 and a new conditioner and hopper bin;
in January, 2000, they purchased a second-hand grain truck for
$10,000.
[24] In 1992 the Finches converted to organic farming in order
to obtain better grain prices. They are more than double normal
grain prices. (The organic grain certification process to convert
the land, and allow it to clear itself of fertilizers and
chemicals required five years in 1992. Organic farming reduces
costs dramatically by removing the expense of chemicals and
fertilizers.) They also began the purchase of purebred Shorthorn
cattle, purchasing 15 cows in January, 1992 and 12 cows in
December, 1992 to convert the farm to a cow-calf operation. This
conversion was occurring during the 1992 mediation process and
before the December 10, 1992 Farm Credit Corporation
proposal was presented, which they accepted on December 24, 1992.
They are now certified organic grain growers and are in the
process of obtaining qualification as organic beef farmers. They
now have 101 cows and 65 calves. Everything is in Mr. Finch's
name.
[25] These innovations in 1992 were a response to the weather
problems that the grain operation had encountered.
[26] Their son, Clint, is now a journeyman high power lineman
in Australia; Brenda has a Bachelor of Education and is in
Australia; Neil has a Bachelor of Education and is presently in
Saskatchewan; and Earl graduated from high school in 1998 and is
presently at home. All of the children paid for their own
educations with student loans.
[27] Mr. Finch's entire employment income went into the
farm, as did all the gifts and inheritances he received from his
parents. Until 1998, all of the equipment the Finches purchased
was second hand, and often quite old. But it was cheap and the
repair and maintenance costs were very low by any standard,
including the repair and maintenance costs which new machinery
requires. From the examination and argument of the Respondent
during the Hearing, it appears that Revenue Canada found the old
equipment objectionable – it reduced C.C.A. But some
people, including the Finches, try to buy what they can afford,
and try to pay for it somehow. This degree of responsibility has
become rare in Canada; nonetheless, people are entitled to run
their businesses as they see fit. The Court finds that their
equipment purchases were responsible and business-like, and
represent ordinary and modest operating purchases.
[28] The 1992 occurrences on the Finch farm must be itemized
to emphasize their importance as a turning point for the
Appellant and the farm. In chronological order they are:
1. January, the purchase of the beginning of an organic
Shorthorn purebred cattle herd, leading to a cow-calf farm
operation. This plus the December purchase of Shorthorn's
constitutes a start up of a purebred cow-calf farm, and the phase
out of the old mixed farm. It was the beginning of a learning
phase.
2. May-June, the start-up of an organic grain operation
without fertilizers or sprays in order to realize higher grain
prices. This was also the beginning of a learning process and a
transition, which at that time required a five year interval to
achieve organic certification. Moreover, their hay and feed
grains also required a somewhat shorter season than wheat, so as
to avoid early frosts.
(These changes, together, were similar to a tax solicitor with
an office practice converting to a courtroom criminal law
practice. Both of these changes were known and understood by the
Board mediator and by Farm Credit Corporation when the December,
1992, agreement was achieved.)
3. The realization by the Finches, their creditors and the
mediator that after six years of weather problems and low
commodity prices, they were in a major farm depression (which has
since unexpectedly continued to 2000) which required very large
off-farm income to enable the farm and the farmer to survive. For
this to happen Mr. Finch's off-farm income, which commenced
in 1990 at the insistence of Farm Credit Corporation, combined
with the farm's income were together treated by the
creditors, the mediator and the Finches as the chief source of
income to meet the farm obligations for the years to come. The
goal of all parties in both 1989 and 1992 was to restore the farm
to economic viability (See Exhibit A-24, Farm Credit Corporation
document). All of these knowledgeable parties treated
Mr. Finch as a farmer with off-farm income, both in law and
in fact.
4. On December 24, 1992, the Finches accepted Farm Credit
Corporation's proposal.
[29] This case is different from other reported cases in that
both Mr. and Mrs. Finch were born and raised on farms,
farmed all their working lives and together farmed throughout
their married life on their own farm. Mr. Finch had to go outside
the farm operation to obtain the income necessary to operate the
farm during what the Court finds is a farm depression caused by
the continued persistent unusual weather conditions and
continuous low commodity prices. The ordinary section 31 case
occurs where a high income person acquires a farm which loses
money.
[30] Since 1990, the farm operation and work has largely
fallen upon Mrs. Finch. She has worked the crops, and tended
the cattle without pay. The children have helped for very nominal
pay totalling around $10,000 per year. They began chores at age
3, took responsible chores at age 6 and were doing some farm
operations on their own at 11 years of age - all in a district
that has 40 º below winters regularly. Simultaneously Mr.
Finch devoted himself to the farm when out of the mine site and
took all the leave that he could to participate in farm
operations. A number of questions were asked relating to Mr.
Finch's time at the mine in the Arctic. The premise of the
questions was that he could not spend all that time in the Arctic
and be on the farm at the same time. However Mr. Finch and the
family (and the government farm authorities) understood from 1989
that Mr. Finch had to take this job if the farm operation was to
survive, and at the same time Mr. Finch, Mrs. Finch, and the
family would have to devote themselves wholly to the farm. This
is what they did.
[31] In the light of these facts, the definition of
"farming" in subsection 248(1) of the Act
reads:
"farming" includes tillage of the soil, livestock
raising or exhibiting, maintaining of horses for racing, raising
of poultry, fur farming, dairy farming, fruit growing and the
keeping of bees, but does not include an office or employment
under a person engaged in the business of farming;
There is no definition of a farmer in the Act. But
Canada's Farm Debt Review Act, 1986, c. 33 describes a
"farmer" in section 2 as an "individual ...
engaged in farming". It then defines "farming" as
"the production of field-grown crops..., the raising of
livestock, poultry ..."
Black's Law Dictionary defines a "family
farmer" as:
"A person or entity whose income and debts primarily
arise from and family-owned and operated farm;"
The Appellant, Mrs. Finch and their children lived on the
farm. All of them, from an early age, produced field-grown crops
and raised livestock and poultry. The farm is still the residence
of both Brian and Brenda Finch. (This is noteworthy because
Brian's income taxes in the North West Territories would be
less than in Saskatchewan.) It was the residence of all of their
children while they grew up and did their chores. Farming was the
principal occupation of each of them while they resided on the
farm, whether they got paid or not. Brenda has foregone outside
employment, a salary and possible benefits to operate the farm.
All of Brian's debts arise from a family owned and operated
farm. Brian obtained employment and the consequent salary for the
sole purpose of operating the farm and paying down its debts. His
salary has been devoted to paying those debts and operating the
farm. They have no registered retirement savings plans or similar
savings. In these circumstances, both Brian's income and his
debts primarily arise from a family owned and operated farm as
does Brenda's lack of income and their apparent lack of
equity of any kind in the farm for many of its years of
operation. It is a farm at which, and for which, the entire
family works. It is and has always been a family farm.
[32] It was clear during the hearing that Revenue Canada
misapprehended the concept of a family farm as it relates to the
Finches when it reassessed them under section 31. In Rathwell
v. Rathwell [1978] 2 S.C.R. 436, Dickson, J. speaking for the
majority (including Laskin, C.J.) adopted the reasoning of
Laskin, J. in his great and solitary dissent in Murdoch v.
Murdoch [1975] 1 S.C.R. 423 at 439. Mr. Justice Bora Laskin,
failed to move his fellow judges of that day. But he moved every
provincial legislature in Canada to amend its laws to allow wives
a half share in their spouse's property. In adopting Laskin,
J.'s thinking for the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada
in 1978, Dickson, J. described to the traditional view of the
married woman and married man, when he said at page 443 of
Rathwell:
"In earlier days the view was taken that on marriage
"man and woman are one and that one is the man." The
introduction generally of Married Women's Property
Acts made it possible for wives to hold separate property but
did little otherwise to improve the lot of married women. The
custom by which real estate acquired by a married couple was
taken in the name of the husband, coupled with the reverence paid
to registered title, militated against wives. The view expressed
in Rimmer that matrimonial property ought not to be
governed by the strict considerations commonly applied between
strangers survived Gissing and Pettitt, but was
coldly received by the Court in Thompson v.
Thompson".
That earlier cold view is reflected by the assessments in this
case respecting Mr. Finch's employment income. The
Minister's Reply pays reverence to the quantum of
Mr. Finch's employment cheque. But the assessments
failed to look to the cause of that employment which is the dire
straits of the Finch family farm and of the family living and
working on that farm.
[33] In The Queen v. Andrew Donnelly (F.C.A.) 97 DTC
5499 at 5503 Robertson, J.A. said:
In the end, Graham stands or falls on its unique facts. But
there is at least one lesson that can be derived from the case.
It seems to me that Graham comes closer to a case in which an
otherwise full-time farmer is forced to seek additional income in
the city to offset losses incurred in the country. The second
generation farmer who is unable to adequately support a family
may well turn to other employment to offset persistent annual
losses. These are the types of cases which never make it to the
courts. Presumably, the Minister of National Revenue has made a
policy decision to concede the reasonable expectation of profit
requirement in situations where a taxpayer's family has
always looked to farming as a means of providing for their
livelihood, albeit with limited financial success. The same
policy considerations allow for greater weight to be placed on
the capital and time factors under section 31 of the Act, while
less weight is given to profitability. I have yet to see a case
where the Minister denies such a taxpayer the right to deduct
full farming losses because of a competing income source. Perhaps
this is because it is unlikely a hog farmer such as Mr. Graham
would pursue the activity as a hobby.
As is well known, section 31 of the Act is aimed at preventing
"gentlemen" farmers who enjoy substantial income from
claiming full farming losses: see The Queen v. Morrisey,
supra at 5081-82. More often then [sic] not it is invoked in
circumstances where farmers are prepared to carry on with a
blatant indifference toward the losses being incurred. The
practical and legal reality is that these farmers are hobby
farmers but the Minister allows them the limited deduction under
section 31 of the Act. Such cases almost always involve
horse-farmers who are engaged in purchasing or breeding horses
for racing. In truth, there is rarely even a reasonable
expectation of profit in such endeavours much less the makings of
a chief source of income.
[34] The Finches are not gentlemen farmers. In fact, this case
is in direct contradiction to Robertson, J.'s judgment in the
first paragraph quoted. Moreover, Mr. Finch's off-farm work
was as a direct result of Farm Credit Corporation's
requirement that Mr. Finch obtain $20,000 in off-farm income in
1989. This off-farm income was known and recognized in the
mediation that followed, particularly in 1992, by both provincial
and federal government agencies. To them the job was subordinate
to the farm and Mr. Finch was a farmer within the meaning of
Canada's Farm Debt Review Act.
[35] Moreover, that 1992 mediation and Farm Credit proposal in
December, 1992 indicates that subjectively Mr. Finch
expected to profit and objectively the government authorities
expected that the farm itself would be viable with the off-farm
income in 1992. Those determinations were prospective and did not
constitute the hindsight of the years of drought and frost which
followed, accompanied, as Mrs. Finch pointed out, by very low
farm commodity prices. None of these continuous disasters could
be foreseen. Furthermore, the December, 1992 proposal terms were
met by the Finches in 1993 and 1994 despite their subsequent
vicissitudes. To the Court this means that they expected a profit
and thought, as Mrs. Finch testified, that within 2 or 3 years
from December, 1992 they would be clear of arrears of debt and
that Mr. Finch could quit his mining job and just farm. The Court
believes that to have been correct in each of 1992, 1993 and
1994. If that had occurred, the profit from the farm would have
been significant, because it would have supported the family in
the same way that it had during its earlier profitable years. It
might have been modest, but that is their way of life and they
could have lived off of it on the farm without any outside
income. But that could not occur in the face of continuing
drought and frost conditions, which reduced grain sales as
follows:
1989 $41,493
1990 $21,688
1991 $19,764
1992 $17,249
1993 $ 6,021
1994 nil
1995 $7,326
(Exhibit R-2)
[36] For the same reasons, cattle feed problems related to the
weather caused feed costs to rise and their second hand farm
machinery purchases (because they could not afford new machinery)
resulted in repair costs in the $10,000 to $15,000 range which
the Court finds are very modest for a farm operation of this
size.
[37] Mrs. Finch (the farm's bookkeeper) was asked to
estimate the income which the farm could achieve from organic
grain farming. She estimated wheat production, on average, as
follows:
Seeded acres 240
Bushels per acre x25
6,000
Organic Price per bushel
$5 - $8 (average calculated by the Court) $6.50
$39,000
They expect their Shorthorn herd (presently 100 cows) to
become a total of 120 cows. Annual calf production should then be
about 100 calves which, carried over the winter, are presently
selling at around $750 per head according to Mrs. Finch's
evidence. This would yield:
$75,000
Total: $114,000
$114,000 and constitutes what the Court considers to be an
average, conservative, income to the farm as taken from Mrs.
Finch's testimony. The farm's average expenses claimed
from 1992 to 1999 inclusive are between $103,000 and $104,000 per
year, including about $10,000 per year of interest and capital
cost allowance. (Interest costs are now reduced significantly.)
To the Court this amounts to a viable farm with
"significant" income. To expect that is to expect a
reasonable profit. It is clear that the Farm Debt Review Board
and Farm Credit Corporation thought that in 1992, or they would
never have permitted that deal to proceed.
[38] However the Court must determine objectively if the
Appellant had a reasonable expectation of a significant profit in
1992, 1993 and 1994 prospectively, having regard to his income in
those years.
[39] For this purpose, the Court finds that the Appellant was
in fact starting up an organic grain and a Shorthorn cow-calf
operation in 1992. Therefore, the Appellant is entitled to a
start up period. While Dickson, J.'s criteria were laid out
for the "taxpayer", this is a true family farm. Mr. and
Mrs. Finch are and have always been a team. Thus, the
Moldowan and other judicial criteria should be applied to
them jointly. Using the criteria described by Dickson, J. in
Moldowan v. The Queen, 77 DTC 5213, the Finches had both
profits and losses in their previous 20 years of farming; they
had complete practical training; their course of action was to
develop a cow-calf operation and to operate an organic grain farm
with the existing equipment and land and to use off-farm income
to help pay off debts and operate the farm pursuant to the deals
they had made and were making in 1992 with the approval of the
Farm Debt Review Board and Farm Credit Corporation. As
calculated, the venture had a reasonable expectation of a
reasonable profit.
[40] The question then remains as to whether the
Appellant's employment income and the farm income, together,
constitute a chief source of income. Bowman, J. reviewed this
question in Dr. John V. Hover v. The Minister of National
Revenue, 93 DTC 98, an "old" 1990 tax case. After
extensive quotes from Moldowan he said:
The aspect of "combination" causes me concern. We
have it on high authority that there is no reason why there
should be any connection between farming and another source of
income with which it is combined to create a chief source of
income. We have it on equally high authority that a
"combination" cannot mean a mere addition of two
sources (see also The Queen v. Poirier). I am faced
therefore with the conceptual problem of determining whether two
unconnected sources of income which bear no physical relationship
to one another can be combined into one chief source. The Supreme
Court of Canada dealt with the question in the following
frequently quoted passage in Moldowan at page 5216:
In my opinion, the Income Tax Act as a whole envisages
three classes of farmers:
(1) a taxpayer, for whom farming may reasonably be expected to
provide the bulk of income or the centre of work routine. Such a
taxpayer, who looks to farming for his livelihood, is free of the
limitation of s. 13(1) in those years in which he sustains a
farming loss.
(2) the taxpayer who does not look to farming, or to farming
and some subordinate source of income, for his livelihood but
carried on farming as a sideline business. Such a taxpayer is
entitled to the deductions spelled out in s. 13(1) in respect of
farming losses.
(3) the taxpayer who does not look to farming, or to farming
and some subordinate source of income, for his livelihood and who
carried on some farming activities as a hobby. The losses
sustained by such a taxpayer on his non-business farming are not
deductible in any amount.
The reference in s. 13(1) to a taxpayer whose source of income
is a combination of farming and some other source of income is a
reference to class (1). It contemplates a man whose major
preoccupation is farming, but it recognizes that such a man may
have other pecuniary interests as well, such as income from
investments, or income from a sideline employment or business.
The section provides that these subsidiary interests will not
place the taxpayer in class (2) and thereby limit the
deductibility of any loss which may be suffered to $5,000. While
a quantum measurement of farming income is relevant, it is not
alone decisive. The test is again both relative and objective,
and one may employ the criteria indicative of "chief
source" to distinguish whether or not the interest is
auxiliary. A man who has farmed all of his life does not become
disentitled to class (1) classification simply because he comes
into an inheritance. On the other hand, a man who changes
occupational direction and commits his energies and capital to
farming as a main expectation of income is not disentitled to
deduct the full impact of start-up costs.
The portion of the passage quoted that causes me concern is
contained in the description of a category II farmer, in the
words:
farming and some subordinate source of income
(emphasis added)
and in the subsequent portion:
It contemplates a man whose major preoccupation is farming,
but it recognizes that such a man may have other pecuniary
interests as well, such as income from investments, or income
from a sideline employment or business.
(emphasis added)
The same language was used by the Federal Court of Appeal in
The Queen v. Roney, 91 DTC 5148 at 5153-4. At page 5155,
Desjardins, J.A., speaking for the court states:
In the light of the evidence before us, I do not think that
the respondent was a person whose major preoccupation was
farming. He was someone who was testing the water, so to speak.
For him, farming was a sideline.
The same cannot be said of Dr. Hover. Farming was for him no
sideline nor was he merely testing the water. He had plunged
fully and without reservation into the water. As early as 1984,
and increasingly thereafter, it was for him a major
preoccupation. If Class II farmers are those who carry on farming
as a sideline business, as Moldowan and Roney
suggest, I cannot conclude that Dr. Hover falls into that
category. His commitment of time, capital, energy and dedication
to farming precludes such a finding.
The Act does not specifically require that the other source of
income be either subordinate or sideline. It would seem that if
farming can be combined with another source of income, connected
or unconnected, it can as readily be combined with a substantial
employment or business as with a sideline employment or business.
Indeed, if the other source were merely subordinate or sideline
it would not prevent farming alone from being itself the
taxpayer's chief source of income without combining it with
some other unrelated subordinate source.
[41] In the light of these and other comments, the following
should be pointed out in this case:
1. Farming was the Appellant's only business, and it was a
family farm in every sense of the phrase.
2. Mr. Finch took permanent employment in 1990 to help carry
the farm on the direction of Farm Credit Corporation and the Farm
Debt Review Board to save the farm, expecting it would only
require two or three years of employment, whereupon it would be
making a reasonable profit and he could quit his job. Moreover,
all of that income and all of the gifts Mr. Finch received went
into the farm. In these circumstances, the question becomes:
"How much more 'combined' can you get?"
3. The continual, long-lasting occurrences of weather and low
prices which have been described, are real and are public
knowledge. They have occurred to farmers generally in North
America and constitute a farm depression, which in this
Court's view exceeds the farm disaster of the Great
Depression of the 1930's: that view is generally and publicly
expressed throughout the North American agricultural industry.
Every year, something different and unexpected has happened which
has prevented a recovery - the loss of the Crow Rate in western
Canada, the removal of rail lines and cheap transport, drought,
frost, low prices, higher costs (Mr. Finch testified that
during the last five years when cattle prices rose, farm
equipment prices associated with a livestock farm doubled),
higher fuel costs, and the amalgamation of farm suppliers and
customers into oligopolies. More than 80% of Saskatchewan farmers
work at off-farm jobs to survive.
4. The water analogy of Desjardins and Bowman, J.J. is rather
pretty in those cases compared to the Appellant's: he took a
job to try and get his farmer's head above the water.
[42] In this case the Finches looked to farming and the
employment income for their livelihood. The farm was their
livelihood for almost 20 years before full-time employment was
required so that they and their farm could survive. Mrs. Finch
worked the farm while her husband was away at the mine in a
manner that would shame the average employee. They are a team and
he came back to the farm whenever he could to work it and,
together, they put all of this employment income into it as they
had agreed to do. It was not a sideline business to either of
them - it was their whole life and they have devoted their lives
to it. It was the centre of their work routine for both of them
and the major preoccupation of each of them. All of their capital
and income was devoted to it and all of their time was devoted to
it. His job was only taken to keep the farm operating. With that
assistance, and on a start-up basis, the farm operation had a
reasonable expectation of achieving a significant profit as a
result of the conversion in 1992 during each of 1992, 1993 and
1994. The combination of the income from the farm and from Mr.
Finch's employment constituted a chief source of income in
this case. The appeal is allowed.
[43] In the Court's view this assessment and appeal should
never have occurred for the following reasons:
1. Robertson, J.A.'s judgment as quoted in Donnelly
described a reasonable government policy respecting professional
farmers;
2. the fact that there are not cases brought by the Government
of Canada where farmers in this position have been in the
Courts;
3. the mediations of 1989 and 1992 by provincial and federal
government bodies and their requirements upon the Appellant to
obtain employment which were repeatedly told to the
Respondent;
4. the great majority of farmers across Canada are in similar
positions and file income tax returns reporting that to the
Respondent;
5. the farm depression which is general public knowledge and
is surely known to the Government of Canada; and
6. the fact that the organic and cow-calf conversion start-up
occurred in 1992.
This view is not intended to point a finger at either the
assessment auditor or the Justice counsel. The evidence is that
the Finches copied various correspondence respecting these
assessments to high government officials and representatives.
Thus, it appears that Revenue Canada may have some kind of a
bureaucratic number of years beyond which the losses are
reassessed, which was applied in this case.
[44] In these circumstances, this case is an abuse of the
Appellant and of the Court process. It required him to hire a
very able and well known farm and commercial lawyer, who has
approximately 45 years experience at the bar and is well
experienced in tax litigation. He conducted the case efficiently
and well. The Appellant is entitled to the equivalent of
solicitor-client costs. The case began in 1998 and the trial
lasted a full day and one-half in Saskatoon, although two full
days were correctly set aside for the Hearing. This judge
practised in Saskatchewan for more than 25 years. The preparation
and conduct of a two-day trial by a counsel junior to Mr.
Sanderson, would require a modest fee of about $30,000 for a
two-day trial through to 1990. This Hearing only lasted a day and
a half, because of the thorough preparation and efficient conduct
of counsel. For these reasons, the Appellant is awarded costs,
which are fixed in the lump sum of $25,000.
Signed at Vancouver, British Columbia, this 23rd day of
August, 2000.
"D. W. Beaubier"
J.T.C.C.