Date: 20000203
Docket: 97-2864-IT-G
BETWEEN:
GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Rip, J.T.C.C.
INTRODUCTION
[1] General Motors Acceptance Corporation of Canada, Limited
("GMAC") appeals income tax assessments for taxation
years 1985 to 1992, inclusive. The Minister of National Revenue
("Minister") added to GMAC's income amounts it
received from General Motors of Canada Limited ("GMCL")
purportedly as compensation for participating in GMCL sponsored
low interest financing programs to promote the retail sales of
motor vehicles manufactured by GMCL and its parent, General
Motors Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and related
corporations.
[2] At all relevant times GMAC financed a significant portion
of the retail instalment sales of new General Motors vehicles by
General Motors franchise dealers. GMAC is related to GMCL. GMAC
acquires conditional sale contracts entered into by GMCL
franchised dealers and purchasers of motor vehicles whereby the
particular purchaser agrees to pay the purchase price to the
dealer in instalment payments. GMAC purchases the conditional
sale contracts from the dealer for value, usually the principal
or face amount of the contract, provided the contract bears a
rate of interest acceptable to GMAC; the purchaser, of course,
then makes instalment payments to GMAC.
[3] As part of the sales promotion programs leading to the
assessments in issue, General Motors dealers advertised to
potential customers of General Motors vehicles the availability
of financing their purchases through GMAC at "below
market" interest rates.[1] GMCL incurred the cost of the programs, referred
to individually as an "incentive financing program" or
"rate support program".
[4] Immediately before the start of a rate support program,
GMCL would inform its dealers by way of letter (sometimes
referred to as a "Home Office Letter") of a program,
describing what motor vehicles would be eligible for the program,
the term of the program and, amongst other things, the below
market interest rate.
[5] GMAC was not willing to purchase a conditional sale
contract for its face or principal amount when the contract had
an interest rate that was less than the rate of interest
acceptable to GMAC. GMAC was prepared to pay each dealer under
the program only an amount that is based on the low rate of
interest of the contract; it would "discount" the
principal amount of the contract. According to the appellant, it
paid the difference between the reduced or discounted price of
the contract and the principal amount of the contract to the
dealer on behalf of GMCL and was reimbursed by GMCL. (The
difference is referred to as a "rate support amount".)
This is the basis of the appellant's appeal: GMAC did not
receive any rate support amount for its benefit, it was
GMCL's agent or conduit.
[6] With respect to the rate support programs before 1989,
GMAC paid the aggregate amount to the dealer and GMCL reimbursed
GMAC for the rate support amounts it paid for contracts in any
given period. (This is sometimes referred to as the
"one-cheque" system.) From mid 1989, GMAC issued a
cheque for the rate support amount to the dealer out of
GMCL's bank account and paid the balance of the price of the
contract to the dealer out of its own account. (This is sometimes
referred to as the "two-cheque" system.)
[7] Revenue Canada assessed GMAC amounts equal to the
aggregate rate support amounts received in each taxation year
from GMCL as income from its business under section 9 of the
Income Tax Act ("Act") in the particular
year as compensation received by GMAC for providing low rate
financing. In other words, GMCL compensated GMAC for acquiring
the conditional sale contracts for their principal amounts when
in fact market conditions dictated GMAC should pay less.
[8] The respondent also argues that the payments by GMCL were
interest or on account of or in lieu of payment of, or in
satisfaction of, interest and are required to be included in the
appellant's income for the taxation year in which they were
made in accordance with paragraph 12(1)(c) of the
Act. The respondent claims as well that the payments were
received by GMAC in the year from GMCL as inducements for
providing the low rate financing and are therefore to be included
in the appellant's income from a business pursuant to
paragraph 12(1)(x).
[9] GMAC opposes the assessments since, in its view, it had no
entitlement to the rate support amounts. GMAC acted as agent or
conduit of GMCL when it issued cheques to GMCL dealers out of
GMCL's bank account or, in the earlier years, when it made
payments to the dealers on behalf of GMCL and was reimbursed. The
appellant submits that the amounts equal to the rate support
amounts ought properly be included in computing its income over
the term of the conditional sale contracts to which they relate
as payments are made by the retail purchasers.
[10] If I find that the rate support amounts are to be
included in GMAC's income in the year they were made by GMCL,
the appellant argues that the conditional sale contracts it
purchased from the dealers were part of its inventory and the
cost amount of the contracts is relevant to its calculation of
income. Therefore, pursuant to subsection 10(1) of the
Act, GMAC is required to value the contracts at the lower
of their cost or fair market value. GMAC should therefore be
permitted to "write down" the value of the contracts to
their fair market value. There is no evidence before me that the
conditional sale contracts were inventory to GMAC at any time. I
agree with the respondent that there is no basis to claim a write
down of the conditional sale contracts.
FACTS
Preliminary Facts
[11] Before the mid 1970s General Motors Corporation, Ford
Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation dominated the Canadian and
United States automobile markets. According to Mr. George
Peapples, a former President of GMCL, there was "little
influence of competition from offshore manufacturers" in
Europe and Japan.
[12] In the mid 1970s conditions changed. North America
experienced substantial increases in oil prices and, at the same
time, there were competitive pressures from Japanese automobile
manufacturers in Canada and the United States. The Japanese
manufacturers were taking away market share primarily at the
expense of General Motors, Mr. Peapples recalled.
[13] By the late 1970s, Mr. Peapples testified, there was a
"run-up" in interest rates and these financial
pressures added to the competitive pressures from Japan.
Consumers lost confidence and there was "a substantial
decline in overall industry volume and forecast". Pressure
was placed not only on General Motors' production systems but
also on the ability of General Motors' dealers to survive in
the marketplace, added Mr. Peapples. The dealers were pressing
GMCL to come up with an effective sales promotion.
[14] At all times relevant to these appeals, GMCL sold its
motor vehicles through franchised independent dealers. A dealer
invested capital and purchased product from GMCL for sale to the
public. A dealer's profit depended on its ability to sell
motor vehicles. Both the dealers and GMCL searched for ways to
increase motor vehicle sales in a depressed market.
Development of Marketing Programs
[15] Mr. Peapples' first position at GMCL was as its
finance manager. As such, he participated in the
corporation's monthly price review group. This group included
members of GMCL's marketing and comptroller's staff.
Generally, the members of the group prepared various proposals,
such as what they thought was necessary for GMCL to stay
competitive in the marketplace at any given time. They analyzed
factors current in the industry, including identifying products
backing up in dealers' inventory lots and what was needed to
stimulate sales. Mr. Peapples stated there was "a lot of
dialogue", "a lot of interaction", between
GMCL's marketing organization and its dealers so as "to
get a flavour of what might need to be done in different regional
markets". GMCL would work "quietly" with selected
dealers to develop a program. Attempts would be made to recognize
what program would be advantageous at a given time and the market
during a given year.
[16] The costs of GMCL's incentive type programs were
borne by GMCL, Mr. Peapples testified. In some cases GMCL
would set up a reserve at the outset of a program which would be
charged against revenue at the time, depending on the success of
the program or how much of the reserve was used.
Rate Supported Programs
[17] As part of a broad overall marketing strategy by GMCL to
stimulate the market so its dealers could sell the volume of
inventories that they had and then, in turn, purchase more
product from GMCL, the price review group proposed a rate support
program. The rate support program, Mr. Peapples declared,
was one of many marketing programs enacted by GMCL to promote its
products. The main purpose of the rate support program,
Mr. Peapples explained, was to assist dealers in selling
their vehicles, and by assisting, "we recognize that we are
going to bear the cost of helping the dealers sell ... so that
the dealer would be more inclined to move aggressively in support
of the program, recognizing that they would not be at risk in
losing any profit ... that they were able to establish in a sales
contract ... negotiated with the retail customer". Other
incentive programs included extended warranties, cash rebates,
free air conditioning and free automatic transmission. The first
rate support program appears to have taken place in 1981. In
short, a rate support program gave consumers of motor vehicles
the ability to finance the purchase of a vehicle at interest
rates that were less than GMAC's normal rates.
[18] GMAC would also give its advice in developing a rate
support program. However most of the interest rates that GMCL
believed it needed to establish, Mr. Peapples insisted, were
driven by an analysis of GMCL's own marketing people and its
dealers "getting a sense of where is the right interest rate
to move volume in the marketplace". Once the interest rate
was established, GMCL measured the cost of the program to it. The
total cost would be measured by the anticipated volume of sales
generated by the program. Advertising costs would also be
allocated to the program. When a program proposal was accepted,
GMCL would communicate with its dealer organization to put the
program in place.
[19] In brief, it was GMCL who designed the low-rate program.
It was GMCL who established the interest rate in the market that
would be rate supported. GMCL determined which particular makes
and models of vehicles would be eligible for low-rate financing
and the term of such program.
Typical Retail Transaction Requiring Financing
[20] Throughout the taxation years under appeal, a typical
transaction whereby a retail customer financed his purchase
through a low rate financing program was as follows:
(i) The dealer and the customer would negotiate the retail
price of the vehicle;
(ii) The dealer and the customer would enter into a formal
purchase and sale agreement. The agreement, among other things,
identified the purchaser and vendor of the vehicle, the
vehicle's serial number, the price of the vehicle and, where
the purchase of the vehicle was financed, the amount of the
purchase price to be financed. The amount financed was
"subject to approval" by GMAC. GMAC would never see
this agreement but was aware of its existence, of course. This
agreement was the first formal document created between the
dealer and the customer;
(iii) The customer also filled out an application for credit
through the dealer. He or she would provide information as to his
or her address, employer, monthly income and references. The
amount sought to be financed was also entered on this document.
The document was a form prepared by GMAC and provided to the
dealer by GMAC;
(iv) The dealer, together with the customer, would enter the
information on the credit application form to GMAC. The customer,
in completing the credit application form, consented to the
dealer "and/or" GMAC preparing a consumer report. For
all practical purposes, the customer was making an application to
GMAC for credit;
(v) GMAC then either approved or rejected the application.
GMAC may also suggest changes to the terms negotiated if it was
not willing to accept the application. The primary factor
influencing GMAC in approving or rejecting the application was
the credit worthiness of the customer. GMAC would take about one
hour to decide on the application;
(vi) If GMAC was satisfied with the credit worthiness of the
customer, the dealer received an approval number and a
conditional sale contract, also a GMAC form was prepared and
completed by the customer and dealer. The information on the
conditional sale contract was similar to that on the purchase and
sale agreement. The conditional sale contract provided for the
number and amount of instalments, the finance charge (or interest
rate) and the assignment of the contract by the dealer to GMAC.
The dealer assigned the contract "for value received";
no amount of consideration is specified.[2]
GMAC Interest Rates
[21] Normally GMAC acquires from dealers conditional sale
contracts having an "acceptable" interest rate that is
not less than what is referred to as GMAC's "buy"
rate at a given time and not greater than its "cap"
rate. The "buy" rate is the minimum rate of interest in
a conditional sale contract that GMAC will purchase for the
principal or face amount of the contract. The "cap"
rate is generally one to one-half basis points in excess of the
"buy" rate; the "buy" rate sets the ceiling
on what the dealer may obtain if it wanted to do business with
GMAC.
[22] In determining a "buy" rate GMAC considers its
cost of funds, administrative costs, historical experience as to
losses and prepayments as well as other factors present in
carrying on its business. GMAC will normally acquire a
conditional sale contract that has an interest rate not less than
the "buy" rate and not greater than the "cap"
rate. A contract with an interest rate above the "buy"
rate would generate additional profit to the dealer since the
purchase price paid by GMAC for the contract would be adjusted to
reflect the "cap" rate. The spread in rates is also a
tool available to the dealer when negotiating the sale of a
vehicle. GMAC would pay the dealer for an assigned contract
usually a day after the assignment. GMAC's policy was not to
acquire contracts having an interest rate above its
"cap" rate. The price GMAC pays the dealer for the
conditional sale contract is the amount that GMAC's yield to
maturity on the contract equals GMAC's buy rate.
[23] In a rate support program, GMAC finances the purchase of
a motor vehicle at a rate of interest that is less than its buy
rate. GMAC acquires the conditional sale contract having the
lower rate of interest. GMAC's position is that it acquires
the contract under a rate support program at a discount and GMCL
pays the dealer the difference between the face value of the
contract and the discounted amount paid by GMAC. This is the
"rate support" amount. The dealer receives the full
amount of the contract. This amount has been paid to the dealer
by GMAC to the extent of what, to it, is the value of the
contract based on the low interest rate and the balance of the
principal amount; the rate support amount, is paid by GMCL. The
dealer has no knowledge of the arrangement between GMAC and GMCL
for payment to it.
GMAC's Role
[24] The rate support program was made available only to
retail customers who financed the purchase of the motor vehicle
through GMAC. GMAC is an important cog in any GMCL rate support
program. GMAC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of General Motors
Acceptance Corporation of New York which, in turn, is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of General Motors Corporation. GMCL is
also a wholly-owned subsidiary of General Motors Corporation. The
business of GMAC is to finance the purchases of inventory of new
motor vehicles manufactured by General Motors Corporation and its
subsidiary corporations, including GMCL, by GMCL's dealers
and to finance the purchase of new General Motors vehicles by
retail customers of GMCL's dealers as well as used motor
vehicles of any make.
[25] Mr. Peapples explained that the most effective and
efficient way for GMCL to carry out the program with its dealer
organization was through GMAC. GMAC had a presence in many, if
not all, General Motors dealerships. GMAC carried on business
from coast to coast in Canada. GMCL was able to draw on the
resource base of GMAC and found it most efficient for GMAC to
administer the program for GMCL. One organization would deal with
multiple combinations of marketing programs that GMCL was
implementing under rate support. If a particular consumer did not
wish to have his purchase financed through GMAC, there were
existing incentive programs structured with a cash rebate
component to it. Cash rebates were paid directly by GMCL to the
consumer.
[26] Notwithstanding that GMAC and GMCL are members of the
General Motors corporate group, GMAC is a "stand alone
financial institution" that is an independent business,
stated Mr. Peapples, who at relevant times, was also a
director of GMAC. GMAC has a responsibility to earn income on its
invested capital and to meet its financial obligations on the
debt it incurs. He insisted that GMCL is not in a position to
influence GMAC in terms of rates that GMAC puts in the
marketplace; this is determined by the marketplace.
[27] As I appreciate Mr. Peapples' evidence, GMAC was
prepared to assist GMCL in developing, creating and pursuing the
rate support programs so long as GMAC was not out of pocket. To
GMAC, the more contracts it acquires from dealers, the more
profit GMAC earns. Thus, GMAC saw a financial benefit in
participating in the rate support programs since this would
result in additional instalment contracts available for purchase.
However, as far as GMAC was concerned, its income from acquiring
any single contract is determined by the actual interest rate
specified in the contract and the amount financed, without regard
to any rate support program.
[28] GMAC administered the rate support programs for GMCL.
Mr. Peapples emphasized that GMCL "would not expect
GMAC to do anything other than what they were expected to do, and
that was to buy conditional sale contracts from the dealers at
their going market buy rates and ... we would then in turn make
sure that those funds, if GMAC in the earlier years paid that
money out as a premium over the discounted rate, we would
reimburse GMAC for that ... [or] flow the money directly to the
dealers [in the latter years]."
Rate Support Programs: One-cheque System
[29] A rate support program was usually announced in a Home
Office Letter to dealers. A typical example of a program is
described in a Home Office Letter of March 21, 1985. The program
supported an interest rate of 9.9 per cent. In the
earlier years of the rate support program, including early 1985,
the dealers participated financially in the program in that they
may have surrendered their normal GMAC financing income and had
to provide rate support to GMAC of approximately
one per cent. Later on GMCL assumed all the costs of a
program. A dealer participating in a rate support program could
not negotiate an interest rate with the purchaser other than the
rate fixed by GMCL.[3] The supported rate was always less than GMAC's buy
rate.
[30] At the same time that GMCL sent a Home Office Letter to
its dealers, GMAC would write to its branch managers throughout
Canada informing them of the rate support program. GMAC also sent
a memorandum describing its participation in the plan to all
General Motors dealers. With respect to the March 1985 plan, for
example, the memorandum stated that "GMAC ... is offering
..." a low-rate interest plan and GMCL "has agreed to
rate support" GMAC on units financed under the plan. A
dealer wishing to participate in a rate support program in the
early years would sign a copy of the GMAC memorandum agreeing to
the conditions of the program. Later, the dealer had to opt out
of the program.
[31] GMAC paid the principal amount of the conditional sale
contract to the dealer. However, Mr. Peapples testified,
"At that point in time [GMAC was] incurring on our behalf
the differential of the discounted rate and their buy rate. And
so the dealer at that point had received in a sense our cost of
money to make sure ... that particular dealer was appropriately
compensated for the sale price of the vehicle. And then we in
turn would reimburse GMAC ... over a 30 or 60 day period for
having previously flowed those funds to the dealer on our
behalf."
[32] No formal written agreement was entered into between GMCL
and GMAC until 1988 because of their particular relationship,
said Mr. Peapples. "We just didn't ... feel there was a
need ...".
[33] The Board of Directors of GMAC approved each rate support
program. For example, in a report to the directors on April 3,
1985, the President of GMAC, Mr. W.J. Watson, who was also a
witness, described the March 1985 plan and advised that GMCL
... will reimburse [GMAC] for each contract purchased under
the plan for the difference between 14.50% TPA and 9.9% TPA less
a discount of 7.00% which accounts for the fact that no rebate
adjustment will be made in the event of early termination. In
view of the upfront payment of the support amount, the remaining
balance will be discounted at 13.00%. The 14.50% rate includes a
0.10% increment for non-recourse and represents the estimated
rate required to break even using a marginal cost, for mid-term
funds, of 13.00%.[4]
This information was also incorporated in the directors'
resolution approving GMAC's participation in the plan. The
"upfront payment" was the money received by GMAC from
GMCL. Mr. Watson agreed with respondent's counsel that the
amounts GMAC received from GMCL under a rate support program were
received absolutely without any restriction, subject to GMCL
"agreeing to the eligibility of all the transactions that
GMAC had financed".
[34] Rate support programs were supported by advertising.
Examples of print advertising were produced at trial. Some
advertisements represented that "... GM Dealers Association
are offering a special interest rate" provided the potential
customer qualifies under the "standard GMAC credit
payments". Or, the dealer is offering special financing on
GMAC credit.
[35] For the programs carried out during the period 1981 to
mid 1989 the appellant says that GMCL authorized GMAC to pay the
dealer the rate support amount and GMCL subsequently reimbursed
GMAC. GMAC paid the dealer one-cheque for an aggregate amount
that included the discounted price for purchase of the contract
and the rate support amount. GMAC claimed reimbursement of the
rate support amount by submitting monthly reports or statements
to GMCL setting out the make, model, vehicle identification
number and the date of sale by the dealer of the vehicles sold
during the particular program together with a calculation of the
rate support payment. GMCL would review the list and make payment
by way of cheque to GMAC. If, later on, through the regular audit
process, GMCL discovered that a dealer had included an ineligible
vehicle in the overall flow of money for a rate support program,
Mr. Peapples stated, GMCL would have the dealer refund the money
to GMCL in the normal charge-back process GMCL had with its
dealers.
[36] In cross-examination Mr. Watson agreed that once GMAC
approved an application for credit, GMAC had an obligation to
acquire the conditional sale contract from the dealer and pay the
dealer the face amount of the contract notwithstanding that the
arrangement with the customer or the dealer was premised on the
contract having the supported rate. The program and the
modalities of payment were an internal matter between GMAC and
GMCL. GMAC had to pay the dealer the principal amount of the
contract in full. Mr. Watson admitted that in GMAC's
relationship with the dealers there was no discounting of
conditional sale contracts under a rate support program. The
dealers were paid what was due to them, that is, the principal
amount of the contracts. However the principal amount, Mr. Watson
declared, was not what the value of the contracts were to GMAC;
GMAC "overpaid" the dealer for the value of the
contract. GMAC paid the dealer more than what the contract was
worth and expected to be reimbursed by GMCL for the
overpayment.
Rate Support Programs Clarified
[37] Sometime after 1985 Revenue Canada questioned whether
rate support payments by GMCL to GMAC were truly reimbursements
to GMAC. Revenue Canada took that position that GMCL compensated
GMAC, not its dealers, for the shortfall between GMAC's buy
rate and the rate supported amount. In 1987 Revenue Canada
reassessed GMAC for its 1981 to 1983 taxation years by adding the
amounts paid by GMCL to the appellant's income. In 1988 GMAC
appealed the assessments to the Federal Court; these appeals
await the disposition of the appeals at bar.
[38] The 1987 assessments, coupled with the fact that as late
as 1988 there was no attempt by GMAC and GMCL to reduce to
writing anything concerning their respective roles in the rate
support programs, caused some anxiety at GMCL.
[39] At time of trial Mr. Neil MacDonald was General Counsel
to GMCL. Mr. MacDonald worked in GMCL's legal department
until July 1987 when he was transferred to the corporation's
tax staff. One of his first jobs on the tax staff was to
"look at the tax aspects" of the rate support programs.
He was aware of the 1987 assessments and Revenue Canada's
position that the rate support payments by GMCL were taxable to
GMAC in the years they were made. GMAC had no lawyers on staff
but had access to the lawyers working at GMCL. In any event,
Mr. MacDonald reviewed the tax problem from both GMCL's
and GMAC's perspectives and considered that a major problem
was that the nature of the relationship between the two
corporations had never been documented. He decided to make
efforts to document the relationship so that it would at least
"solve the problem going forward".
[40] Mr. MacDonald reviewed the rate support programs and the
relationship with Canadian and United States personnel at GMAC.
On March 17, 1988 he prepared a memorandum together with a draft
letter for signature by GMAC's Treasurer and Comptroller that
would be sent to GMCL's Treasurer. The letter purported to
confirm past practice and outlined the agreement between GMAC and
GMCL for future programs. Various drafts, substantially similar,
were prepared. The only significant change from the first draft
was reference that the rate support amount to be paid by GMAC
would be adjusted to reflect anticipated early payments by retail
customers that, based on GMAC's experience, should be reduced
by 16.50 per cent. GMCL would have no right to refund any portion
of rate support payment in the event of early payment by a retail
purchaser. The draft letter also provided, among other things,
that:
Since the Contracts to be purchased will bear a reduced rate
of interest, GMAC will discount the amount it will purchase the
Contracts for by an amount equal to the difference between the
present value of the payments due under the below market interest
rate Contract and the present value of the payments which would
have been received had the Contract been issued with the same
face amount but carried GMAC's market rate of interest (the
"Discount").
Notwithstanding such Discount, GMAC agrees to pay to the
dealer on GM's behalf, the difference between GMAC's
purchase price as determined by the method above described and
the face amount financed under the Contract. GM will reimburse
GMAC the difference within a reasonable time thereafter, but in
any event no later than 60 days following payment by GMAC to the
dealer.
[41] A formal letter in terms substantially similar to the
draft letter was executed by the parties on or about July 7,
1988. In GMCL's Vehicle Terms of Sale Bulletin No. 89-1 to
its dealers for 1989 model motor vehicles GMCL stated its right
to institute marketing programs that included discounts and
payments to dealers in respect of certain models of vehicles.
Two-cheques
[42] On December 19, 1988 GMCL sent a Home Office Letter to
its dealers announcing a rate support program to run for five
days commencing December 27. GMCL informed its dealers that
when they assign a contract under this program to GMAC they
would
receive two-cheques at time of settlement, one from GMAC and
one from GM[CL], on eligible vehicles financed through GMAC
during the program period. The GMAC cheque will reflect the
amount of the discounted contract. The cheque from GM[CL] will
represent the price reduction to you and equal the balance of the
contract. The two-cheques will add to the total amount of the
contract.
[43] By letter dated February 13, 1989 GMCL confirmed with
GMAC another rate support program. GMCL advised the appellant
that GMCL "has agreed with the dealers to reduce the sale
price to the dealers of vehicles sold by them" during the
new program by an amount equal to the discount, that is the
difference between the amount GMAC pays the dealer for the
contract and the face amount of the contract. In order "to
provide the dealer with the reduction at the earliest
opportunity, and [...] administrative simplicity", GMCL
authorized GMAC to execute cheques drawn on GMCL's bank
account at a chartered bank. GMAC agreed to sign the cheques for
the discount on GMCL's behalf and to deliver the cheques to
the dealers at the time it purchases the contracts. A similar
letter for another program was sent to GMAC on March 14,
1989.
[44] GMAC and GMCL were then carrying on rate support programs
under a "two-cheque" system as opposed to a
"one-cheque" system referred to earlier. On April 7,
1989 the Board of Directors of GMCL adopted a resolution
authorizing GMAC to execute GMCL cheques in accordance with a
"two-cheque" agreement. By letter dated September
11, 1989 GMCL and GMAC again formalized the
"two-cheque" system for future programs. The parties
agreed, among other things:
Since the Contracts to be purchased will bear a reduced rate
of interest, GMAC will purchase each Contract for an amount (the
"Purchase Price") equal to the present value of the
payments due under the Contract discounted at GMAC's market
rate of interest for comparable Contracts. The Purchase Price of
the Contract will be increased by GMAC to reflect its experience
with prepayments of contract principal by retail customers. The
difference between the Purchase Price and the principal amount of
the contract will be referred to as the "Discount"
hereinafter.
GM has and may agree with GM dealers to reduce the sale price
to the dealers of vehicles sold by them during the Finance
Programs. In order to provide the dealer with this price
reduction at the earliest opportunity, and to accommodate
GMAC's administrative procedures, GM has authorized GMAC to
prepare and sign cheques equal to the Discount, plus such
additional amounts as GM may authorize, drawn on GM's bank
account #000 005-9 at the Royal Bank of Canada or on such
other banks as may be authorized by GM from time to time. GMAC
further has agreed to deliver such cheques to dealers
simultaneous with its payment for Contracts.
GMAC has agreed to handle and otherwise treat GM cheques
delivered to GMAC with the same degree of care, and subject to
the same safeguards, as it does its own cheques. GMAC has agreed
that only those persons who are authorized to execute GMAC's
cheques and whose names have been communicated to the Treasurer
of GM shall execute GM cheques. Any unused cheques will be
returned to GM as soon as practicable upon advice by GM. GMAC
will not be liable to GM for any matter concerning the issuance
and handling of the GM cheques other than gross negligence on
GMAC's part. GM will indemnify and hold harmless GMAC against
any loss, cost, expense, claim or demand brought against GMAC by
any party or suffered by GMAC with respect to the GM cheques not
due to negligence on GMAC's part.
[45] Mr. Watson confirmed that under the
"two-cheque" system GMAC delivered simultaneously to
the dealer its cheque and GMCL's cheque. Mr. MacDonald
acknowledged that a dealer was not aware of any understanding or
agreement between GMAC and GMCL as to the payment of the cheques,
or the earlier reimbursements, nor did it care. This was an
internal General Motors matter. The dealer knew from the Home
Office Letter that when it assigned a conditional sale contract
to GMAC, it would receive two-cheques aggregating the face amount
of the contract.
[46] Mr. Watson also acknowledged that prior to the
introduction of the two-cheque system, the dealers were not
aware of any reduction in the sale price of a vehicle, referred
to in the Home Office Letter of December 19, 1988. He agreed with
respondent's counsel that the dealer's cost of a motor
vehicle changed once the dealer negotiated its sale to a customer
under a rate support program.
Accounting and Tax Treatment By Appellant
[47] GMAC's method of accounting for the acquisition of
the conditional sale contracts is consistent in all years under
appeal, whether the contract was or was not rate supported. The
contract, when acquired, went on the balance sheet at its
acquisition cost to GMAC. That acquisition cost, in turn, was
equal to the present value of the stream of payments to be made
under the contract, discounted or reduced, at GMAC's buy
rate. The difference between the acquisition cost of the contract
and the total of all payments to be made under the contract was
recorded as unearned income and amortised into income over the
life of the contract.
[48] When GMAC acquired from the dealer a conditional sale
contract that was not rate supported, a receivable would be
entered in GMAC's books of account for the full principal
amount of the contract plus all the interest payable over the
life of the contract. The respondent's representative at the
examination for discovery agreed this was proper treatment. She
also agreed that if one assumes that GMAC acquired the rate
supported contracts at a discount, GMAC's accounting
treatment is acceptable.
[49] GMAC computed its income in respect of conditional sale
contracts in the same fashion for tax purposes as for accounting
purposes. GMAC computed its income for tax purposes on the basis
that the cost of each rate supported conditional sale contract
was equal to the full principal amount of the contract less the
rate support amount. This contract went on GMAC's balance
sheet at its acquisition cost which was equal to the present
value of the stream of payments to be made by the retail customer
under the contract, discounted or reduced at GMAC's buy rate.
The difference between the acquisition cost of the contract was
recorded as earned income and amortized into income over the life
of the contract. GMAC's treatment of rate supported
contracts, whether for tax purposes or accounting purposes, was
identical to its treatment of non rate supported contracts. The
respondent agrees that this is what in fact the appellant did but
does not agree that the appellant is correct.
SUBMISSIONS & ANAYLSES
[50] The issues before me are described in paragraphs 7, 8, 9
and 10 of these reasons.
(a) Payment of lost interest: paragraph
12(1)(c)
[51] Respondent's counsel submitted that GMAC was a lender
of money to the retail customer and, in the matter at bar, GMCL
compensated GMAC for foregone or lost interest. GMAC did not in
law acquire conditional sale contracts from GMCL's dealers,
he stated. Since the terms of the typical conditional sale
contract are determined in advance by GMAC, this was not a
"freely existing conditional sale contract", argued
counsel. A loan had been negotiated before the conditional sale
contract was completed. The contract "merely documents the
bargain that had been reached. It acts as a loan agreement
and as security". GMAC did not bargain with the dealer for
the purchase of any conditional sale contracts. The mechanism of
the conditional sale contracts, in respondent's view, was
used to acknowledge the retail customer's indebtedness to
GMAC and to provide security for the loan. The dealer was not
involved in the transaction to any significant degree. GMCL,
therefore, subsidized the loan and compensated GMAC in an amount
equal to the rate support amount and these amounts should be
included in GMAC's income as payments in lieu of interest
pursuant to paragraph 12(1)(c) of the Act.
[52] For me to accept respondent's position that GMCL
compensated GMAC for lost interest, I must ignore agreements
legitimately entered into by the retail customer and the dealer,
the dealer and GMAC, the customer and GMAC, as well as
commitments undertaken by GMCL to its dealers. Legal
relationships were created and there is nothing in the evidence
that compels me to ignore these relationships and find that GMAC
loaned money to the retail customer and that the retail customer
borrowed money from GMAC. As far as I am aware, the practice
carried on by GMAC did not vary from the practice carried on
generally in the business of financing retail sales. At least
there was no evidence that it varied. If one wants to enter the
field of ignoring a legal form of transaction, one must exercise
extreme caution. In the appeals at bar one is faced with
contracts and relationships validly created in the normal course
of business and I am not prepared to ignore them.
[53] McLachlin J., as she then was, considered the matter of
the respondent challenging a taxpayer's legal relationships
in Shell Canada Ltd. v. Canada: [5]
[39] This Court has repeatedly held that courts must be
sensitive to the economic realities of a particular transaction,
rather than being bound to what first appears to be its legal
form: Bronfman Trust, supra, at pp. 52-53, per
Dickson, C.J.; Tennant, supra, at para. 26, per
Iacobucci, J. But there are at least two caveats to this rule.
First, this Court has never held that the economic realities of a
situation can be used to recharacterize a taxpayer's bona
fide legal relationships. To the contrary, we have held that,
absent a specific provision of the Act to the contrary or a
finding that they are a sham, the taxpayer's legal
relationships must be respected in tax cases. Recharacterization
is only permissible if the label attached by the taxpayer to the
particular transaction does not properly reflect its actual legal
effect: Continental Bank Leasing Corp. v. Canada [98 DTC
6505], [1998] 2 S.C.R. 298, at para. 21, per Bastarache, J.
[40] Second, it is well established in this Court's tax
jurisprudence that a searching inquiry for either the
"economic realities" of a particular transaction or the
general object and spirit of the provision at issue can never
supplant a court's duty to apply an unambiguous provision of
the Act to a taxpayer's transaction. Where the provision at
issue is clear and unambiguous, its terms must simply be applied:
Continental Bank, supra, at para. 51, per
Bastarache, J.; Tennant, supra, at para. 16, per
Iacobucci, J.; Canada v. Antosko [94 DTC 6314], [1994] 2
S.C.R. 312, at pp. 326-27 and 330, per Iacobucci, J.;
Friesen v. Canada [95 DTC 5551], [1995] 3 S.C.R. 103, at
para. 11, per Major, J.; Alberta (Treasury
Branches) v. M.N.R., [1996] 1 S.C.R. 963, at para. 15,
per Cory, J.
[54] In the appeals at bar there are no allegations of sham by
the respondent and the evidence does not even remotely suggest
sham.
[55] GMAC did not enter into any agreements with retail
customers whereby GMAC agreed to lend money directly to the
customer. GMAC financed the purchase of vehicles. Borrowing of
money by a purchaser is but one way of financing a purchase.
Paying the balance of the purchase price by instalments over
time, where title to the vehicle does not pass to the purchaser
until payment is made in full, is another means of financing the
purchase of vehicles. The latter method of financing is the
business carried on by GMAC. [6] GMAC does not lend money directly to a retail
customer nor is GMAC ever in a lender-borrower relationship with
the retail customer. In M.N.R. v. T.E. McCool Ltd.,[7] a judgment of the
Supreme Court of Canada, Estey J. held that "terms such as
'borrowed capital', 'borrowed money', in tax
legislation have been interpreted to mean capital or money
borrowed with a relationship of lender and borrower between the
parties". This is the approach that I should apply here. As
my confrère Judge Dussault, T.C.C.J. explained in
Autobus Thomas Inc. v. The Queen,[8] the balance of the sale price in a
conditional sale contract assigned to a bank is a debt that does
not result from a loan or advance by the bank to the purchaser.
GMAC provides the mechanics to permit a retail customer without
the necessary funds with the wherewithal to purchase a motor
vehicle. GMAC, it is true, becomes the purchaser's creditor
on assignment of the conditional sale contract, but no
lender-borrower relationship is created between them.
[56] Respondent's counsel cited the reasons for judgment
of the Court of Quebec[9] and the Quebec Court of Appeal[10] in appeals by GMAC against
assessments made pursuant to the Quebec Taxation Act
(R.S.Q., c. I-3). In these appeals GMAC claimed it was a
"loan corporation" and not an ordinary corporation for
purposes of the Quebec Taxation Act and therefore liable
for a lower rate of tax on its paid up capital. The term
"loan corporation" is not defined by legislation.
[57] GMAC was not successful before the Court of Quebec but
was successful before the Court of Appeal. LeBel J.A., as he then
was, reviewed various agreements concerning GMAC, GMCL, GMCL
dealers and the retail customer, as well as the actual business
activities carried on by GMAC. He approved the comments of
Pierre André Côté in his treatise
on statutory interpretation,[11] in particular
Me Côté's conclusion respecting
the recent series of cases decided by the Supreme Court of Canada
on how statutory tax provisions are to be interpreted: e.g.
Stubart Investments Ltd. v. The Queen[12], The Queen v. Golden[13], Bronfman
Trust v. The Queen[14] and McClurg v. Canada. [15]
[58] The reasons of LeBel J.A. do not assist the respondent.
The Court of Appeal did not make any finding that GMAC is in a
lender-borrower relationship with consumers. The Court did not
consider that GMAC loaned money directly to the consumer. The
Court of Appeal held that GMAC was operating a comprehensive
wholesale and retail financing system. The conditional sale
contracts were in this context a particular form of taking of
securities which reserved to GMAC the ownership of the property.
In a subsidiary argument before the Court of Appeal, GMAC stated
that in its transactions with consumers a loan agreement exists
by implication before that of a conditional sale contract. The
Court of Appeal found that the legal form and nature of the
contracts for financing inventory and consumer sale contracts are
identical to a conditional sale or instalment sale. GMAC acquired
the rights of a vendor with a reserve of ownership. In previous
cases the Court of Appeal dealt with these contracts as such and
so it did with GMAC.[16] LeBel J.A. stated that GMAC "jouait le
rôle d'une corporation de prêts au sens
générique de ce terme, en concurrence avec
d'autres institutions reconnues comme telles. Elle avait
alors droit de bénéficier du traitement fiscal
prévu ..."[17] LeBel J.A. did not find that the activities of GMAC
were substantially different from corporations recognized as loan
corporations and therefore held that GMAC should be taxed in the
same way as these corporations.
[59] Since I have found that GMAC was not a lender of money to
the retail consumer, paragraph 12(1)(c) cannot apply. For
an amount of money to constitute interest, the amount must be
paid by the borrower of the money to a person who loaned money to
the borrower. Before paragraph 12(1)(c) can apply, GMAC
must lend money to the consumer. It would be inconsistent to
recognize the bona fides of the conditional sale contract
and its assignment for value to GMAC, which I have found, and at
the same time find that GMAC was lending money to the retail
customer and was being compensated by GMCL for foregone or lost
interest. In financing contracts with retail customers of GMCL,
GMAC has lost no interest because it did not lend money to the
customer.
(b) Agency
[60] The respondent argues that GMAC was neither an agent or
conduit of GMCL since, among other things, GMCL was not liable to
its dealers for the rate support payments. Indeed, counsel
states, GMAC was obliged to pay the face amount of the
conditional sale contract to the dealer and there is no evidence
of GMCL's commitment to pay any amount to a dealer, even with
the two-cheque system after 1988. In the respondent's
view, an agency between GMCL and GMAC cannot create the
obligation of GMCL to pay anything to the dealer and in the
absence of such an obligation the agency has no purpose. In fact,
GMAC owed the face amount of the conditional sale contract to the
dealer and GMCL owed a portion of it, equal to the rate support,
to GMAC. Even under the two-cheque system, the respondent states,
a cheque drawn on GMCL's bank account in favour of the dealer
merely discharged GMAC's liability to the dealer and
GMCL's liability to GMAC.
[61] Since GMAC and GMCL carry on business throughout Canada
one ought to consider the definition not only of agency as used
in the common law provinces but also of mandate in Quebec.
[62] Agency has been defined as follows:
(1) Agency is the fiduciary relationship which exists between
two persons one of whom expressly or impliedly consents that the
other should act on his behalf, and the other of whom similarly
consents so to act or so acts. The one on whose behalf the act or
acts are to be done is called the principal. The one who is to
act is called the agent. Any person other than the principal and
the agent may be referred to as a third party.
(2) In respect of the acts which the principal expressly or
impliedly consents that the agent shall do on the principal's
behalf, the agent is said to have authority to act; and this
authority constitutes a power to affect the principal's legal
relations with third parties.[18]
[63] Professor G.H.L. Fridman describes an agency relationship
in the following manner:
Agency is the relationship that exists between two persons
when one, called the agent, is considered in law to
represent the other, called the principal, in such a way
as to be able to affect the principal's legal position in
respect of strangers to the relationship by the making of
contracts or the disposition of property.[19]
[64] The Civil Code of Quebec defines
"mandate":[20]
Le mandat est le contrat par lequel une personne,
le mandant, donne le pouvoir de la représenter dans
l'accomplissement d'un acte juridique avec un
tiers, à une autre personne, le mandataire qui, par
le fait de son acceptation, s'oblige à
l'exercer.
Ce pouvoir et, le cas échéant,
l'écrit qui le constate, s'appellent aussi
procuration.
|
Mandate is a contract by which a person, the
mandator, empowers another person, the mandatary, to
represent him in the performance of a juridical act with a
third person, and the mandatary, by his acceptance, binds
himself to the exercise the power.
The power and, where applicable, the writing
evidencing it are called the power of attorney.
|
[65] The object of the mandate also includes the
administration, in whole or in part, of the mandator's
property.[21]
[66] The words used to describe the relationship of agency and
mandate are, of course, different but the meaning is essentially
the same: in both, one person (the principal or mandator) grants
another (the agent or mandatary) the authority to represent him
or her in the making of legal acts and to be bound by that
person's action.
[67] So what did take place between GMAC, GMCL and the dealer?
After observing Messrs. Peapples and Watson and upon
reviewing the evidence adduced at trial it appears to me that
what transpired in 1981 was the following: GMCL, under pressure
from its franchised dealers, agreed to initiate low rate
financing programs that would benefit it and its dealers. GMCL
required the help of GMAC to administer and promote the programs
and GMAC was happy to oblige since it would earn income on any
additional conditional sale contracts it could purchase. GMCL had
to ensure that its dealers would get the full face value of the
contract, except in the early years when they rate supported the
program to the extent of one per cent.
[68] In arranging GMAC's participation in the rate support
programs, GMCL insisted that the dealers receive the face value
of the contracts. This was one of the cornerstones of the
program. GMAC was not prepared to absorb any loss on a contract
and pay more than what market conditions warranted. GMCL agreed
to incur all expenses in the rate support programs, including
paying the rate support amounts. Up to this point I have no
problem. Now, GMCL may have agreed to compensate GMAC for any
cost it incurred in acquiring the contracts, that is, the rate
support amounts. This is the Minister's theory. But GMAC and
GMCL also may have agreed that while GMAC would pay the dealer
the principal amount of the contract in full, as between
themselves, GMAC's cost of the contract was the price
determined by its buy rate and that GMCL would reimburse GMAC for
the rate support amount that was included in the price paid to
the dealer. This is the appellant's view: GMAC acted as
GMCL's agent.
[69] The evidence strongly suggests that in 1980 or 1981
nobody at GMCL and GMAC gave much thought to the mechanics of how
they would proceed. All they knew was that GMAC would not be out
of pocket and would not profit from administering a rate support
program, the dealer was to be paid the principal amount of the
rate supported conditional sale contract in the same way as on
assigning non rate support contracts to GMAC, and that GMCL would
absorb the costs of the rate support program. Only in 1988 did
the officials at GMCL and GMAC begin to see what they had
wrought, and this was the result of tax assessments issued to
GMAC at the time.
[70] The respondent is of the view that agency can only exist
if GMAC "establishes that [GMCL] was liable to dealers for
rate support".[22] I cannot find support in law for this submission.
[71] Agency is a relation between the principal and the agent.
The principal has no obligation to a third party unless the agent
does something on his behalf which creates the obligation. In the
case at bar, however, GMCL represented to its dealers that it
would initiate and promote sales programs and make sure the
dealers were paid the face value, more or less, of the
conditional sale contracts they assigned to GMAC. To this extent,
GMCL had an obligation to its dealers and mandated GMAC to
administer the rate support programs.
[72] Respondent's counsel also submitted that for an
agency to exist, the dealer must have knowledge of the
relationship and that the principal and the agent are both making
payments to the dealer. As I understand the law of agency, a
third party need not be aware of the purported agency. The agency
relationship does not rely on the knowledge by third parties of
its existence or its specific terms.
[73] As Bowstead and Reynolds states:[23]
No requirement that agent purport to act for principal.
In some legal systems such reasoning would normally only be
accepted in the case of an agent who when acting purported, or at
least was understood, to do so on behalf of, or "in the name
of", a principal, though the principal need not actually be
named. The common law, however, has no such requirement: if there
is preceding authority to act for the principal, the rules so far
set out, other than those as to ratification, will apply despite
the fact that the existence of the principal, or his connection
with the transaction, is unknown to the third party. Where his
existence or connection with the transaction is not known, the
principal is referred to as undisclosed and the rules then
applicable are referred to as the doctrine of the undisclosed
principal, which can be regarded as a unique feature of common
law.
[74] The Civil Code also contemplates that the
mandatary need not disclose the identity of his or her mandator
but if the mandatary acts in his or her own name, the mandatary
is liable to the third person.[24]
[75] The two-cheque system was in effect in late 1988. There
is no doubt that in one of the first two-cheque rate support
programs, described in GMCL's Home Office Letter of December
19, 1988, GMCL was supporting its dealers. In subsequent
two-cheque programs GMCL informed its dealers that the price of
vehicles to dealers would be reduced by the rate support amount.
The letter of September 11, 1989 from GMCL to GMAC describes the
procedures to be applied on GMAC's purchase of contracts at a
reduced rate of interest, the price reduction by GMCL to the
dealers selling vehicles under a rate support program and the
making of the cheques by GMAC.
[76] The two-cheque system confirms an agency relation between
GMAC and GMCL. All the criteria of agency is present. In the
letter of September 11, 1989 GMCL authorized GMAC to issue
cheques from a designated GMAC bank account under specific terms
and conditions. The parties agree there is no evidence of any
other agreements between GMAC and GMCL affecting the rights and
obligations of these corporations. The cheques issued are payable
to only one class of person, GMCL franchised dealers, and on only
one condition, that the dealer negotiated the sale of a motor
vehicle that is the subject of GMCL's current sale promotion
program. GMAC has no right to use or allocate the money in the
bank account in any other way. GMAC has no chance of profit and
no risk of loss; it is GMCL who is undertaking the program in the
course of its business. GMCL incurs the risk of any loss from a
program.
[77] Counsel for the respondent nevertheless argued that since
under the two-cheque system dealers are informed by GMCL
that their cost of the vehicles are to be reduced by the rate
support amount, then contrary to representations to the public,
the retail customer's purchase was not financed at a lower
rate. I cannot agree. Advertisements to potential consumers are
meant to promote sales of product and the consumer is interested
only in the price and the interest rate he or she has to pay.
Advertising copy cannot affect what is actually taking place.
[78] For the purpose of these appeals it does not make a
difference if the rate support amount was a reduction to the
dealer's purchase price of the vehicle or if it represented
part payment to the dealer for the purchase of conditional sale
contracts. In both cases, the rate support amount is for a
dealer's benefit; it was never the property of GMAC. The
two-cheque system purportedly was intended to reflect the
agreement between GMAC and GMCL before 1989, under the
one-cheque system. It is true that before 1989 the dealers
were not aware of any price reduction, if that is the case. But
was a dealer really concerned? At the end of the day the dealer
received the full face amount of the conditional sale contract
from GMAC, which he expected and which was in conformity with
normal business practice with GMAC with respect to non rate
supported contracts assigned to GMAC. This is what GMCL
represented to its dealers would take place under the low rate
programs. The dealer was not concerned with the modalities of
payment.
[79] Whether or not GMCL had a legal obligation to its dealers
to pay the rate support amount to the dealer is not particularly
relevant. The fact is that GMCL was in a business relationship
with its dealers – it sold its motor vehicle products
through the dealers – and for its own business purposes had
to have a viable dealer network. The whole rate support concept
was premised on the understanding that the dealers would be paid
the full principal amounts set out in the conditional sale
contracts and it is clear under the two-cheque system GMCL
undertook to pay the rate support amounts to the dealers.
[80] The paper trail is not as clear during the years the
one-cheque system was in use. Both parties made compelling
arguments. The words used in documents and during evidence, I am
sure, gave both parties some comfort. Mr. Watson reported to
GMAC's directors that GMAC would be "reimbursed" by
GMCL for payment of the rate support amounts to the dealers. At
first blush, one could reasonably conclude that GMCL has agreed
to pay back to GMAC an amount that GMAC was not prepared to have
spent for acquiring a conditional sales contract. GMAC paid the
face amount of the contract to the dealer at no discount to the
dealer, Mr. Watson acknowledged. There are other examples. These
two facts lend some support to the validity of the assessments
for the 1985 to 1988 taxation years.
[81] However, in my view, such facts do not affect the agency
relationship the appellant claims to have had with GMCL. For
example, if GMCL agreed to incur all expenses of rate support
programs, which both parties agree is true, and reimburse GMAC
for all expenses GMAC incurs on its behalf, one may reasonably
conclude that Mr. Watson was informing GMAC's directors that
there would be no risk of loss by GMAC paying the rate support
amounts. In an agency relation, the agent has no risk of loss and
no potential for same. And this is what Mr. Watson conveyed to
GMAC's directors. The payment in full of the principal amount
of the contract to dealers does not necessarily derogate from any
understanding between GMAC and GMCL that the latter would pay a
portion of the price. GMCL represented to its dealers they would
receive the face amount of the contracts, and had to make good to
them.
[82] I accept the evidence of Messrs. Peapples and Watson. The
bases of their evidence survived cross-examination. In
cross-examination Mr. Watson agreed with respondent's
counsel that as between GMAC and the dealer, there was no reduced
rate or discount. This, too, I do not find contrary to his
evidence-in-chief. As between GMAC and the dealer, the dealer was
to be paid the whole principal amount of the contract; therefore
there was no so-called discount. As between GMAC and GMCL, the
deal, so to speak, was that GMAC was paying the dealer only the
value of the contract and the balance, the rate support amount,
was to be paid by GMCL. There is no legal requirement for the
dealer to have knowledge of the relationship between GMAC and
GMCL.
[83] I also give weight to the fact that from the outset of
the rate support programs in 1981, GMAC treated the reduced price
it paid for a rate supported contract in the same way as it
treated the price paid for a non rate supported contract. The
rate support amount was not included in the cost of the contract,
but amortized over its life. From the very beginning, therefore,
GMAC did not consider itself as the proprietor of the rate
support amount, but realized that as the retail customer made
payments, an amount equal to the rate support amount would be
included in the payments over the term of the contract and
therefore amortized the rate support amount. GMAC recognized that
with respect to the payment of the rate support amount included
in the purchase price of the contract, it did not make the
payment on its own account. This is but another indication that
GMAC acted as agent of GMCL.
[84] GMCL established the rate support programs to support its
franchised dealer network. The goal was to sell more cars and
trucks. It was GMCL who devised the programs for its own business
purposes and had an ongoing interest in making sure its dealers
sold more product and received the full purchase price for the
product. GMCL obtained the services of GMAC to administer the
plans as its agent according to its directions.
[85] Since I have held that GMAC did not receive lost interest
from GMCL and that GMAC was GMCL's agent when it administered
the various rate support programs during the years in appeal, I
need not consider the other submissions made by the parties.
[86] The appeals are allowed with costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 3rd day of February 2000.
"Gerald J. Rip"
J.T.C.C.