Date: 19971124
Dockets: 97-183-IT-I; 97-184-IT-I
BETWEEN:
KATHLEEN CHAMBERS, DAVID ALLEN,
Appellants
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Brulé, J.T.C.C.
[1] These two appeals were heard on common evidence and
involve the disallowance by the Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") of certain items claimed by the Appellants
as income deductions. All of them were made in repairing a
rundown rental building and were claimed in the 1992 and 1993
taxation years. In dispute were amounts of $10,866.46 in 1992 and
$1,681.00 in 1993 for each Appellant.
Issue
[2] The sole issue is whether the total expenses disallowed by
the Minister were deductible rental expenses within the
provisions of the Income Tax Act (the
"Act") for the 1992 and 1993 taxation years.
Facts
[3] The property involved is located in Chatham, Ontario,
whereas the co-owners, i.e. the Appellants, lived in
Brampton, Ontario and this was their only rental property. The
three main items of contention were: 1) repairs and maintenance;
2) telephone charges, and 3) travel expenses between Brampton and
Chatham.
[4] The Minister assessed the Appellants saying that the
expenses sought to be deducted for repairs and maintenance were
capital in nature and had to be treated as such. The deductions
for telephone and travel were personal or living expenses of the
Appellants and therefore not deductible expenses in accordance
with paragraph 18(1)(h) of the Act.
Analysis
[5] The Courts on considering this problem over the years have
come on different occasions to different conclusions.
[6] The Appellants dealt with the Ontario Mortgage Corporation
successfully to obtain funds for the restoration of the property.
This loan was for an interest free second mortgage, the interest
waived by the Minister because the loan was for the purpose of
producing income to the Appellants.
[7] In argument the Agent for the Appellants referred to
Interpretation Bulletin IT-128R. While the Court is
aware that such bulletins do not reflect the law in its entirety,
under the heading "Capital Expenditures on Depreciable
Property versus Current Expenditures on Repairs and
Maintenance", we find:
"The following guidelines may be used in determining
whether an expenditure is capital in nature because depreciable
property was acquired or improved, or whether it is currently
deductible because it is in respect of the maintenance or repair
of a property:
...
(b) Maintenance or Betterment - Where an expenditure made in
respect of a property serves only to restore it to its original
condition, that fact is one indication that the expenditure is of
a current nature. This is often the case where a floor or a roof
is replaced. Where, however, the result of the expenditure is to
materially improve the property beyond its original condition,
such as when a new floor or a new roof clearly is of better
quality and greater durability than the replaced one, then the
expenditure is regarded as capital in nature. Whether or not the
market value of the property is increased as a result of the
expenditure is not a major factor in reaching a decision. In the
event that the expenditure includes both current and capital
elements and these can be identified, an appropriate allocation
of the expenditure is necessary. Where only a minor part of the
expenditure is of a capital nature, the Department is prepared to
treat the whole as being of a current nature.
(c) Integral Part or Separate Asset - Another point that may
have to be considered is whether the expenditure is to repair a
part of a property or whether it is to acquire a property that is
itself a separate asset. In the former case the expenditure is
likely to be a current expense and in the latter case it is
likely to be a capital outlay. For example, the cost of replacing
the rudder or propellor of a ship is regarded as a current
expense because it is an integral part of the ship and there is
no betterment; but the cost of replacing a lathe in a factory is
regarded as a capital expenditure because the lathe is not an
integral part of the factory but is a separate marketable asset.
Between such clear-cut cases there are others where a replaced
item may be an essential part of a whole property yet not an
integral part of it. Where this is so, other factors such as
relative values must be taken into account."
[8] The Agent also referred the Court to the case of Gold
Bar Developments Ltd. v. The Queen, 87 DTC 5152, wherein the
purpose of the repair was considered and because it represented
only part of the value of the asset the Court held the cost of
repairs was a current expense.
[9] Counsel for the Respondent referred several cases to the
Court including Better Plumbing Company Limited. v.
M.N.R., 52 DTC 146. Here the Court considered the assets to
be of a capital nature as such were to last for a long time in
this rented building, not a residential premise.
[10] The case of Minister of National Revenue v. Haddon
Hall Realty Inc., 62 DTC 1001, set out as follows:
"...Among the tests which may be used in order to
determine whether an expenditure is an income expense or a
capital outlay, it has been held that an expenditure made once
and for all with a view to bringing into existence an asset or an
advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade is of a capital
nature.
Expenditures to replace capital assets which have become worn
out or obsolete are something quite different from those ordinary
annual expenditures for repairs which fall naturally into the
category of income disbursements..."
[11] The Court said at page 1002 that expenditures for
replacing refrigerators, stoves and blinds were clearly capital
outlays.
[12] In Boyd Building Limited v. M.N.R., 54 DTC 271, it
was held that repairs in the nature of replacements which do
appreciably prolong the life of the property and arrest
deterioration should be classed as capital expenditures. Here
there was an office building involved and the Court found that
all repairs were of a capital nature.
[13] In addition to the above, reference was made to the
following: Coleman v. M.N.R., 84 DTC 1637; Audrey B.
Wager v. M.N.R., 85 DTC 222; Jean Méthé v.
M.N.R., 86 DTC 1360.
[14] It would seem that if the repairs resulted in virtually
the same old building as before the repairs were undertaken then
such should be properly expensed, but if on finishing the repairs
a virtually new building or at least quite a different building
results then the repairs should be on capital account.
[15] One criteria to make such a determination apart from the
appearance inside and out of the structure and whether or not the
place had to be vacated before repairs were undertaken is the
dollar amount of the repairs in relation to the value of the
asset. Here these were not extraordinarily large in relation to
the building. The items for travel and telephone are to be
allowed. There is no way that the Appellants had any personal
interest in these. All were incurred to put the property in
rental condition.
[16] The result, that apart from any refrigerators, stoves or
window blinds forming part of the repairs, is that the appeal is
allowed. The other items mentioned in this paragraph must be
considered as capital expense. The matters are to be returned to
the Minister for reconsideration and reassessment.
"J.A. Brulé"
J.T.C.C.