Lamarre
Proulx,
T.C.J.:
—The
appellant
is
appealing
from
reassessments
by
the
respondent
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
1984,
1985
and
1986
taxation
years.
The
issue
is
the
extent
of
the
benefit
conferred
by
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.
(R.T.)
on
the
appellant,
as
a
shareholder,
by
placing
at
the
appellant's
disposal
a
condominium
in
Florida
owned
by
R.T.
The
facts
on
which
the
respondent
relied
in
making
his
reassessments
are
described
in
paragraph
7
of
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
and
are
as
follows:
[Translation]
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
1984,
1985
and
1986
the
respondent
Minister
of
National
Revenue
relied
inter
alia
on
the
following
presumptions
of
fact:
(a)
during
the
1984,
1985
and
1986
taxation
years,
the
appellant
was
a
shareholder
in
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.;
(b)
in
1983,
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.
bought
a
condominium
in
Florida;
(c)
the
condominium
was
bought
primarily
for
the
appellant's
benefit;
(d)
the
condominium
was
not
rented
on
a
regular
basis;
(e)
the
appellant
decided
on
renting
of
the
condominium
and
could
use
the
condominium
as
he
wished,
without
telling
anyone;
(f)
the
condominium
was
not
rented
on
a
commercial
basis;
(g)
no
advertising
was
done
for
renting
the
condominium
except
for
word
of
mouth;
(h)
the
appellant
selected
persons
who
rented
the
condominium
from
among
customers
of
the
Maxime
Inc.
hairdressing
salon;
(i)
the
condominium
was
available
primarily
to
the
appellant
throughout
the
1984,
1985
and
1986
taxation
years;
(j)
renting
the
condominium
was
only
incidental
to
the
use
made
of
it
by
the
appellant;
(k)
by
having
the
condominium
at
his
disposal,
the
appellant
received
a
benefit
which
was
worth
$10,400
in
1984,
$11,440
in
1985
and
$12,480
in
1986.
In
his
notice
of
appeal
the
appellant
gave
the
following
version
of
the
facts:
[Translation]
1.
During
the
1984
to
1986
taxation
years
the
appellant
was
a
shareholder
in
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.,
which
operated
a
hairdressing
salon
business
and
held
real
estate
for
rental
purposes;
2.
in
1983,
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.
bought
a
condominium
in
Florida
for
investment
and
rental
purposes;
3.
from
the
time
it
was
bought,
the
said
condominium
was
always
available
for
rental
and
was
in
fact
offered
for
rental
directly
at
the
hairdressing
salon
and
through
travel
agencies.
In
this
regard
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.
earned
rental
income
of
one
thousand
seven
hundred
dollars
($1,700),
one
thousand
and
fifty-five
dollars
($1,055),
two
thousand
four
hundred
dollars
($2,400)
and
six
thousand
one
hundred
and
eighty
dollars
($6,180)
for
the
taxation
years
1984,
1985,
1986,
1987
and
1988
respectively
[sic];
4.
during
the
years
1984
to
1986,
the
appellant
used
the
said
condominium
for
personal
purposes
for
ten-day
periods
during
the
following
months:
November
1984,
March
and
November
1985
and
February,
April
and
October
1986;
10.
the
only
benefit
conferred
on
the
appellant
by
R.T.
Coiffure
Inc.
was
allowing
him
to
use
its
condominium
for
the
ten-day
periods
mentioned
above
in
paragraph
4,
and
so
the
only
taxable
benefit
which
should
be
added
to
the
appellant's
income
is
four
hundred
dollars
($400)
in
1984,
eight
hundred
and
eighty
($880)
in
1985
and
one
thousand
four
hundred
and
forty
dollars
($1,440)
in
1986.
The
evidence
disclosed
that
the
appellant
and
his
corporation
respectively
held
rental
property.
It
appeared
that
it
was
always
the
appellant
who
was
responsible
for
renting
the
rental
property
located
in
Quebec.
It
is
therefore
not
surprising
that
the
appellant
decided
at
the
outset
to
look
after
the
renting
of
the
Florida
condo
himself.
However,
as
he
explained
in
his
testimony,
this
did
not
prove
to
be
feasible.
Because
of
the
distance
involved,
he
was
not
able
to
check
on
things
or
to
see
that
the
rental
condo
was
properly
maintained.
The
condo
was
bought
when
a
new
development
was
in
the
planning
stages
and
all
phases
of
the
development
were
not
completed
on
schedule.
This
led
to
other
problems
with
rental,
as
the
external
appearance
was
not
attractive.
When
the
development
was
completed,
the
rental
office
was
organized
and
the
appellant
instructed
this
office
to
rent
the
condo.
A
study
was
initially
made
by
the
appellant's
accountant
showing
that
the
rental
income
could
easily
exceed
the
condo
charges:
Exhibit
a-6.
It
appears
that
this
was
true
for
all
the
years
in
question
and
especially
now
that
the
condo
is
rented
by
a
rental
office
on
the
site.
In
the
years
in
question
the
appellant
tried
to
rent
the
condo
himself
because
it
was
his
practice
and
also
for
fear
of
having
the
condo
damaged
by
irresponsible
tenants.
The
appellant
accordingly
offered
the
condo
to
his
customers
and
spoke
to
two
travel
agents
as
well,
as
indicated
by
Exhibits
A-4
and
A-5.
He
made
the
development
rental
office
responsible
for
renting
it
in
late
1986.
The
rental
income
was
reported
in
tax
returns.
I
have
reviewed
the
decisions
to
which
I
was
referred
by
either
party,
and
which
are
as
follows:
Mary
Jane
Soper
v.
M.N.R.,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
2199;
87
D.T.C.
522;
Sylvio
Gendron
v.
M.N.R.,
[1989]
2
C.T.C.
2378;
89
D.T.C.
582;
Youngman
v.
Canada,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
10;
90
D.T.C.
6322.
I
consider
that
unlike
Soper
and
Gendron,
the
evidence
in
the
instant
case
indicated
that
the
condo
was
not
reserved
for
the
appellant
at
all
times
and
that
his
intention
as
a
shareholder
and
director
of
R.T.
has
always
been
to
use
the
condo
only
for
certain
periods
in
the
year
and
rent
it
in
other
periods.
The
evidence
is
not
specific
regarding
the
choice
of
periods
of
use.
However,
I
do
not
think
it
is
important
for
this
choice
to
be
made
at
the
start
of
the
vacation
season
or
based
on
non-rented
periods.
What
matters
is
that
the
appellant
did
not
arrange
his
affairs
so
he
could
use
the
condo
whenever
he
wanted.
he
intended
only
to
use
it
for
certain
periods
in
the
year
and
usually
rent
it.
The
fact
that
he
initially
thought
he
could
rent
it
himself
to
people
he
knew
cannot
in
my
opinion
be
held
against
him.
This
was
a
mistake
and
when
he
realized
it
was
not
possible,
he
handed
over
rental
of
the
condo
to
the
development
rental
office.
There
is
no
doubt
that
when
a
corporation
buys
a
condo
in
Florida,
it
is
natural
to
think
in
terms
that
a
benefit
was
conferred
on
a
shareholder;
but
it
is
also
quite
natural
to
think
in
terms
of
a
profitable
investment,
since
this
is
a
place
much
sought
after
by
vacationers.
The
appellant
presented
evidence
that
this
is
what
he
wanted:
a
real
estate
investment
the
value
of
which
would
increase
and
which
could
be
rented
in
the
meantime.
Youngman,
supra,
Was
cited
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
with
regard
to
determining
the
value
of
a
benefit,
and
I
quote
the
passage:
In
order
to
assess
the
value
of
a
benefit,
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
15(1)(c),
it
is
first
necessary
to
determine
what
that
benefit
is
or,
in
other
words,
what
the
company
did
for
its
shareholder;
second,
it
is
necessary
to
find
what
price
the
shareholder
would
have
had
to
pay,
in
similar
circumstances,
to
get
the
same
benefit
from
a
company
of
which
he
was
not
a
shareholder.
In
the
present
case,
the
benefit
or
advantage
conferred
on
the
appellant
was
not
merely
the
right
to
use
or
occupy
a
house
for
as
long
as
he
wished;
it
was
the
right
to
use
or
occupy
for
as
long
as
he
wished
a
house
that
the
company,
at
his
request,
had
built
specially
for
him
in
accordance
with
his
specifications.
How
much
would
the
appellant
have
had
to
pay
for
the
same
advantage
if
he
had
not
been
a
shareholder
of
the
company?
Certainly
more
than
what
the
two
experts
referred
to
as
the
free
market
rental
value
since,
in
my
view,
the
company
would
have
then
charged
a
rent
sufficient
to
produce
a
decent
return
on
its
investment.
It
is
impossible
to
determine
with
accuracy
the
amount
of
that
rent.
However,
subject
to
one
important
reservation,
I
cannot
say
that
it
would
have
been
less
than
what
the
Minister
assumed
it
to
be.
That
reservation
is
that
if
the
appellant
had
been
dealing
with
a
company
of
which
he
was
not
a
shareholder,
consideration
would
certainly
have
been
given,
in
determining
the
rent
payable,
to
the
fact
that
he
had
himself
lent
more
than
$100,000
without
interest
to
the
company
in
order
to
help
to
finance
the
construction
of
the
house.
As
long
as
that
loan
remained
outstanding,
the
rent
otherwise
payable
would,
in
my
view,
have
been
reduced
by
an
amount
equal
to
the
interest
that
should
normally
have
been
paid
on
the
balance
of
the
loan.
[Emphasis
added.]
It
is
not
necessarily
easy
to
determine
the
correct
way
of
calculating
a
benefit
conferred
on
a
shareholder
through
his
corporation.
In
the
event
that
I
found
that
the
condo
was
bought
by
R.T.
to
be
placed
solely
at
the
disposal
of
the
appellant,
counsel
for
the
appellant
suggested
that
this
benefit
should
be
calculated
only
for
the
peak
period
of
a
condo
in
Florida,
that
is
the
five
months
of
the
Quebec
winter,
and
that
it
was
obviously
excessive
for
the
respondent
to
calculate
the
benefit
for
the
entire
year.
It
was,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
this
five-month
basis
which
was
used
by
the
accountant
to
estimate
the
rental
income
from
the
condo.
Since
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
on
the
evidence
before
me
the
condo
was
bought
for
investment
purposes,
and
that
the
appellant
did
not
have
exclusive
use
of
the
condo—on
the
contrary,
his
intention
was
to
use
the
condo
only
for
short
periods,
the
other
time
being
for
rental—the
benefit
conferred
by
R.T.
should
be
equivalent
to
the
price
the
shareholder
would
have
had
to
pay
in
similar
circumstances
to
get
the
same
benefit
from
a
company
of
which
he
was
not
a
shareholder.
It
must
be
admitted
that
the
evidence
in
this
regard
was
not
very
precise.
In
the
circumstances,
the
amounts
mentioned
in
paragraph
10
of
the
notice
of
appeal
already
referred
to
seem
to
be
reasonable.
The
appeal
is
accordingly
allowed
with
costs,
and
the
matter
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reconsideration
and
reassessments
on
the
basis
that
the
benefits
conferred
on
the
appellant
as
an
R.T.
shareholder
are
those
admitted
by
the
appellant
in
paragraph
10
of
the
notice
of
appeal.
Appeal
allowed.