Bowman
J.T.C.C.
(orally):-!
will
now
render
judgment
in
the
case
of
Dr.
Gregory
Harvey
v.
The
Queen,
No.
92-69.
This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1983
taxation
year.
Originally
an
appeal
for
1982
was
set
down
for
hearing
at
the
same
time
but
it
was
adjourned
sine
die
on
consent
of
the
parties
pending
the
final
determination
of
the
case
of
Schultz
v.
The
Queen.
The
1983
appeal
raises
essentially
four
issues:
A.
the
attribution
to
Dr.
Harvey
of
$11,910
being
interest
earned
on
moneys
which
Dr.
Harvey
states
he
loaned
to
his
infant
children;
B.
the
treatment
of
certain
so-called
soft
costs
relating
to
a
yacht
called
"Sweet
Serenity",
purchased
by
him
in
1983
and
transported
to
the
British
Virgin
Islands;
C.
investment
tax
credits
on
the
yacht;
D.
certain
arguments
under
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
I
shall
deal
first
with
attribution
of
income
to
the
children.
In
years
prior
to
1983
Dr.
Harvey
transferred
substantial
amounts
to
his
wife
as
"guardian"
of
their
three
children,
Kara,
Andrew
and
Jenny
who
were
born
in
1976,
1978
and
1980.
Documents
described
as
promissory
notes
were
signed
by
Shelly
Harvey,
Dr.
Harvey’s
wife
and
the
children’s
mother,
I
will
read
one
as
representative:
Promissory
note
$40,000,
Wheatly,
Ontario,
due
on
demand.
May
31,
1978.
On
demand,
I
Andrew
Harvey
covenant,
agree
and
promise
to
pay
to
Greg
Harvey
the
sum
of
$40,000
without
interest.
In
the
event
I
default
interest
shall
be
paid
from
the
date
of
default
at
the
rate
of
20
per
cent
per
annum.
This
note
is
deemed
for
all
purposes
to
be
a
specialty
instrument.
To
be
used
as
an
educational
trust
fund
with
Shelly
Harvey
as
trustee.
It
is
signed
by
Shelly
Harvey
and
the
witness
appears
to
be.
R.
D.
Clarkson.
The
note,
all
of
the
notes,
are
in
Dr.
Harvey’s
handwriting.
Dr.
Harvey
admitted
that
he
had
no
idea
what
"specialty
instrument"
meant.
The
note
contains
quite
a
remarkable
provision
in
the
event
of
default.
Interest
is
to
be
paid
at
20
per
cent
per
annum.
This
by
a
child
aged
two
or
three
years
old.
No
formal
trust
agreement
was
ever
signed
and
no
trust
was
created
other
than
whatever
legal
fiduciary
relationship
might
have
arisen
out
of
Shelly
Harvey’s
signing
the
notes.
A
schedule
of
repayment
was
prepared
as
the
notes
were
paid
off.
The
Minister
attributed
the
interest
on
the
moneys
so
advanced
by
Dr.
Harvey
to
him
on
the
basis
that
there
was
no
genuine
loan
of
money
to
the
children.
The
appellant
relies
upon
the
decision
of
Thurlow
J.
in
Dunkelman
v.
[1959]
C.T.C.
375,
59
D.T.C.
1242
(Ex.
Ct.),
which
held
that
for
the
purposes
of
the
attribution
a
bona
fide
loan
was
not
a
transfer.
Subsection
75(1)
as
it
applied
to
1983
read
in
part,
as
follows:
Where
a
taxpayer
has,
since
1930,
transferred
property
to
a
person
who
was
under
18
years
of
age,
either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatever,
any
income
or
loss,
as
the
case
may
be,
for
a
taxation
year
from
the
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
shall,
during
the
lifetime
of
the
transferor
while
he
is
resident
in
Canada,
be
deemed
to
be
income
or
a
loss,
as
the
case
may
be,
of
the
transferor
and
not
of
the
transferee,
unless
the
transferee
has,
before
the
end
of
the
year,
attained
the
age
of
18
years.
The
Dunkelman
case
is
good
law
in
Canada
and
has
been
followed
on
numerous
occasions.
The
appellant
relies
also
on
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-260R,
paragraphs
3
and
4:
For
the
purposes
of
subsection
75(1),
a
transfer
does
not
include
a
genuine
loan
made
by
a
taxpayer
to
a
trust
for
the
benefit
of
a
minor.
No
all-inclusive
statement
can
be
made
as
to
when
a
loan
can
be
considered
to
be
"genuine",
but
a
written
and
signed
acknowledgment
of
the
loan
by
the
borrower
and
agreement
to
repay
it
within
a
reasonable
time
ordinarily
is
acceptable
evidence
that
it
was
so.
If,
in
addition,
there
is
evidence
that
the
borrower
has
given
security
for
the
loan,
that
interest
on
the
loan
has
been
paid,
or
that
actual
repayments
have
been
made,
it
is
accepted
that
the
loan
was
genuine.
The
fact
that
no
interest
is
required
to
be
paid
does
not
mean,
in
itself,
that
a
genuine
loan
has
not
been
made.
Where
a
loan
has
characteristics
of
a
genuine
loan
(see
3
above)
and
there
is
no
evidence
that
the
terms
of
that
loan
are
not
being
honoured
by
the
minor,
the
Department
considers
that
such
a
loan
made
directly
to
a
minor
is
not
a
transfer
of
property
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
75(1).
I
do
not
think
that
we
can
push
the
principle
in
Dunkelman
too
far.
A
bona
fide
loan
to
a
properly
constituted
trust
may
well
meet
the
criteria
in
Dunkelman
to
avoid
the
provisions
of
subsection
75(1).
A
somewhat
loose
arrangement
between
husband
and
wife
where
the
wife,
without
any
form
of
documentation,
calls
herself
a
guardian
of
the
infant
children
does
not.
It
must
be
recognized
that
subsection
75(1)
is
designed
to
prevent
income
splitting
and
if
one
wishes
to
avoid
the
section
on
the
basis
of
Dunkelman
the
formalities
of
a
real
trust
must
be
set
up.
While
a
real
trust
could
presumably
borrow
funds,
an
infant
cannot
to
do
directly.
Such
a
contract
is
void.
In
Upper
v.
Lightening
Fastener
Employees
Credit
Union
(St.
Catharines)
Ltd.
(1966),
9
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
211
(Colt.),
I
think
it
is
9
Bankruptcy
Reports.
It
is
a
decision
of
the
County
Court
of
Ontario
of
His
Honour
Judge
Leach.
He
says
at
page
212:
In
English
law,
apart
from
statute,
an
infant
does
not
possess
full
legal
competence.
Since
he
is
regarded
as
of
immature
intellect
and
immature
discretion,
English
law,
while
treating
all
the
acts
of
an
infant
which
are
for
his
benefit
on
the
same
footing
as
those
of
an
adult,
will
carefully
protect
his
interests
and
not
permit
him
to
be
prejudiced
by
anything
to
his
disadvantage.
He
goes
on
to
say
at
page
212:
Infant’s
contracts
are
at
common
law
generally
voidable.
However,
there
are
certain
exceptions
to
this
rule
where
the
contracts
are
void
ab
initio.
And,
he
quotes
from
Halsbury
where
he
says
at
page
212:
Contracts
which
are
obviously
prejudicial
to
an
infant
are
wholly
void;
thus
an
infant
cannot
contract
a
loan
or
give
a
penal
bond.
Judge
Brule
of
this
Court
in
what
appears
to
be
an
unreported
decision
Kallaur
dealt
with
the
situation
that
was
virtually
identical
to
this
one.
He
stated:
Prior
to
the
period
under
appeal
and
during
this
period
the
appellant
transferred
funds
to
his
wife
purportedly
as
"loans”
were
non-interest
bearing
and
payable
on
demand.
The
investments
made
with
the
transferred
funds
earned...(substantial
sums
of
money)
in
1984.
He
goes
on
to
say
on
page
2:
The
Minister
has
relied
on
subsection
75(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
then
existed
for
the
years
under
appeal.
That
provision
contemplated
the
transfer
of
property
to
minors
did
not
include
a
genuine
loan.
However
minors
cannot
contract
and
be
parties
to
a
proper
loan.
The
accepted
method
of
achieving
a
desired
result
in
similar
circumstances
was
by
way
of
a
bona
fide
trust.
In
the
present
case
a
form
of
trust
was
eventually
obtained
but
this
was
not
completed
in
such
a
manner
to
satisfy
the
requirements
of
a
valid
trust.
And
to
distinguish
the
Dunkelman
case
he
goes
on
to
cite
Lakeview
Gardens
Corp.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1973]
C.T.C.
586,
73
D.T.C.
5437
(F.C.T.D.),
which
states
the
frequently
cited
observation
that
just
because
you
might
have
been
able
to
achieve
a
particular
result
in
one
way
doesn’t
mean
that
if
you
go
about
it
another
way
you
are
going
to
achieve
that
result.
I
am
in
complete
and
respectful
agreement
with
the
decision
of
Judge
Brule
and
I
am
following
his
decision.
We
come
now
to
the
matter
of
the
boat.
Dr.
Harvey
has
some
reason
for
concern.
He
bought
a
boat,
in
Canada,
at
the
end
of
November
1983
and
had
it
transported
to
the
British
Virgin
Islands
where
he
agreed
with
North
South
Yacht
Charter
Ltd.
that
it
would
charter
it
on
his
behalf.
He
treated
the
cost
as
$119,450
and
sought
to
deduct
$14,000
as
a
current
revenue
expense
in
1983.
This
amount
was
made
up
of:
|
Commissioning
|
$2,000
|
|
Transportation/delivery
$8,500
|
|
Import
duty
|
$3,500
|
|
Total
|
$14,000
|
The
commissioning
as
I
understand
the
evidence
is
the
work
necessary
to
put
the
boat
into
shape
to
carry
on
the
charter
business.
Originally
he
met
with
a
Mr.
Seeley
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
who
indicated
that
he
thought
the
expenditure
should
be
added
to
the
cost
of
the
yacht
and
agreed
to
give
Dr.
Harvey
an
additional
$14,000
capital
cost
allowance
in
lieu
of
the
current
deduction
he
had
sought.
Dr.
Harvey
agreed.
The
Department
changed
its
mind
twice.
The
first
time
it
decided
to
give
him
only
$3,707
that
is
1/
12th
of
the
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
yacht,
on
the
basis
that
it
had
to
prorate
the
claim
over
only
one
month.
This
resulted
in
a
claim
of
$3,707
because
of
the
provisions
of
Regulation
1100(3)
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
chartering
business
had
started
in
December
1983
and
its
fiscal
period
was
only
one
month
in
1983.
Then
the
Department
retreated
further
from
that
position
and
applied
this
so-called
one-half
year
rule,
reducing
the
claim
to
$1,853.
Dr.
Harvey,
quite
rightly,
took
the
position
that
if
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
was
to
renege
on
his
original
deal
he
could
revert
to
his
original
argument
that
the
costs
were
currently
deductible.
I
shall
consider
first
the
question
whether
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
can
retreat
from
the
original
deal
made
in
Mr.
Seeley’s
letter
of
December
3,
1985.
Unfortunately
for
Dr.
Harvey
I
think
he
can.
The
Minister’s
obligation
is
to
assess
in
accordance
with
the
law.
It
would
throw
the
administration
of
taxation
in
this
country
into
chaos
if
the
Minister
were
bound
by
every
private
deal
he
made,
whether
in
accordance
with
the
law
or
not.
A
recent
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
I
think
underlines
exactly
that,
in
Cohen
v.
R.,
[1980]
C.T.C.
318,
80
D.T.C.
6250
(F.C.A.),
case
where
a
deal
had
been
made
between
the
taxpayer
and
the
Montreal
office
to
the
effect
that
they
would
treat
one
transaction
as
being
on
a
capital
account
and
treat
the
other
one
on
revenue
account.
The
Minister
reneged
on
the
deal
and
the
taxpayer
argued
that
a
deal
is
a
deal.
The
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
said
at
page
319
(D.T.C.
6251):
In
my
view,
the
trial
judge
correctly
dismissed
that
argument,
"that
Minister
has
a
statutory
duty
to
assess
the
amount
of
tax
payable
on
the
facts
as
he
finds
them
in
accordance
with
the
law
as
he
understands
it.
It
follows
that
he
cannot
assess
for
some
amount
designed
to
implement
a
compromise
settlement...."
And
he
cites
Galway
v.
M.N.R.,
[1974]
C.T.C.
454,
74
D.T.C.
6355
(F.C.T.D.),
at
page
456
(D.T.C.
6357):
The
agreement
whereby
the
Minister
would
agree
to
assess
income
tax
otherwise
than
in
accordance
with
the
law,
would,
in
my
view,
be
an
illegal
agreement.
Therefore,
even
if
the
record
supported
the
appellant’s
contention
that
the
Minister
agreed
to
treat
the
profit
here
in
question
as
a
capital
gain,
that
agreement
would
not
bind
the
Minister
and
would
not
prevent
him
from
assessing
the
tax
payable
by
the
appellant
in
accordance
with
the
requirements
of
the
statute.
And
I
observe
that
it
follows
as
a
corollary
that
where
the
taxpayer
agrees
with
the
Minister
in
a
private
deal
like
that
the
taxpayer
should
not
be
bound
either.
I
might
also
refer
to
a
much
older
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
Woon
v.
M.N.R.,
[1950]
C.T.C.
263,
50
D.T.C.
871,
where
the
Minister
was
held
not
to
be
bound
by
a
prior
advance
ruling
that
he
had
given
on
the
basis
that
estoppels
do
not
bind
the
Crown.
Secondly,
I
do
not
agree
that
the
$14,000
are
currently
deductible
costs.
They
were
incurred
prior
to
the
income
earning
process
and
form
essentially
part
of
the
cost
of
the
vessel.
They
are
admittedly
laid
out
to
earn
income
but
that
is
true
of
any
capital
expenditure
made
for
business
purposes.
I
think
they
form
part
of
the
cost
of
the
vessel.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
said
that
these
were
laid
out
essentially
as
an
expenditure
that
was
anterior
to
the
income
earning
process.
I
think
I
agree
with
that
to
a
point
and
this
position
certainly
seems
to
be
supported
by
a
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
by
Mr.
Justice
Thorson
in
Daley
v.
M.N.R.,
[1950]
Ex.
C.R.
516,
[1950]
C.T.C.
254.
However,
I
think
the
classic
statement
of
what
is
cost
is
found
in
the
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
Sherritt
Gordon
Mines
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
262,
68
D.T.C.
5180,
where
Mr.
Justice
Kerr
says
at
pages
287-88
(D.T.C.
5195):
In
the
absence
of
any
definition
in
the
statute
of
the
expression
"capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
property",
and
in
the
absence
of
the
authoritative
interpretation
of
those
words
as
used
in
paragraph
11
(1
)(a)
insofar
as
they
are
being
considered
with
reference
to
the
acquisition
of
capital
assets,
I
am
of
opinion
that
they
should
be
interpreted
as
including
outlays
of
the
taxpayer
as
a
business
man
that
were
the
direct
result
of
the
method
the
adopted
to
acquire
the
assets.
In
the
case
of
the
purchase
of
an
asset,
this
would
certainly
include
the
price
paid
for
the
asset.
It
would
probably
include
the
legal
costs
directly
related
to
the
acquisition.
It
might
well
include,
I
do
not
express
any
opinion
on
the
matter,
the
cost
of
moving
the
asset
to
the
place
where
it
is
to
be
used
in
the
business.
When,
instead
of
buying
property
to
be
used
in
the
business,
the
taxpayer
has
done
what
is
necessary
to
create
it,
the
capital
cost
to
him
of
the
property
clearly
includes
all
moneys
paid
out
for
the
site
and
to
architects,
engineers
and
contractors.
I
regard
it
as
being
of
some
significance
that
the
agreement
itself
shows
the
cost
as
not
being
$119,000
but
$133,000
that
the
Minister
says
is
the
cost
of
the
yacht.
And
indeed
the
insurance
was
based
on
this
as
the
cost
of
the
yacht.
I
think
the
entire
$14,000
represented
part
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
asset.
So
far
as
prorating
is
concerned
I
have
some
concerns.
Clearly
the
half
year
rule
in
Regulation
1100(2)
applies.
The
property
was
purchased
in
1983
and
the
rule
that
restricts
the
taxpayer’s
50
per
cent
of
the
capital
cost
to
which
he
would
otherwise
have
been
entitled
is
applicable.
However,
I
raised
with
counsel
my
concerns
about
the
appropriateness
of,
in
addition
to
giving
the
taxpayer
only
50
per
cent
of
the
CCA
he
might
otherwise
have
been
entitled
to,
reducing
that
again
to
1/
12th,
1/
12th
of
the
50
per
cent.
I
have
concluded
that
the
Minister
was
wrong
in
doing
that.
My
reasoning
is
as
follows.
If
am
wrong
I
presume
a
higher
Court
will
straighten
me
out.
Paragraph
1100(3)
of
the
Regulations
reads
as
follows:
Where
a
taxation
year
is
less
than
12
months,
the
amount
allowed
as
a
deduction
under
this
section,
other
than
paragraphs
1(c),
(e),
(f)
and
(g),
shall
not
exceed
that
proportion
of
the
maximum
amount
otherwise
allowable
that
the
number
of
days
in
the
taxation
year
is
of
365.
The
key
word
is
"taxation
year".
The
taxation
year
is
defined
in
subsection
249(1)
and
says:
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
"a
taxation
year"
is:
(a)
in
the
case
of
a
corporation,
a
fiscal
period
and
(b)
in
the
case
of
an
individual,
a
calendar
year
and
when
a
taxation
is
referred
to
by
reference
to
a
calendar
year
the
reference
is
to
the
taxation
year
or
years
coinciding
with,
or
ending
in,
that
year.
Now,
nothing
in
that
section
leads
me
to
believe
that
a
taxation
year
of
an
individual
should
be
shortened
because
he
starts
a
business
in
the
final
months
of
that
year.
That
does
not,
in
my
view,
reduce
or
curtail
or
limit
the
length
of
his
taxation
year.
Now
a
short
taxation
year
might
arise
if
a
new
company
were
incorporated
in
the
middle
of
the
year
and
it
shows
the
calendar
year
as
its
fiscal
period.
I
can
accept
that
without
any
difficulty.
Or,
let
us
say
a
corporation
has
a
fiscal
period
that
ends
on
April
30
and
in
a
preceding
calendar
year
it
changed
its
fiscal
period
to
December
31
where
it
has
a
shorter
fiscal
period
and
prorating
would
obviously
be
appropriate.
I
can
see
nothing
in
the
Act
that
requires
a
person
who
starts
a
new
business
to
shorten
his
taxation
year
simply
because
the
business
is
not
in
operation
for
the
full
year.
I
think
this
is
consistent
with
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-172R
and
I
am
reading
particularly
from
paragraph
3:
Because
capital
cost
allowance
is
based
on
the
length
of
the
taxation
year
and
not
on
the
period
during
the
year
the
depreciable
property
may
have
been
used
in
earning
income,
an
individual
entitled
to
capital
cost
allowance
on
any
property
can
claim
a
full
12
months’
allowance
except
with
the
restriction
in
Regulation
1100(3)
applies
or
when
the
individual
dies.
Well,
patently
if
the
restriction
under
1100(2)
applies
that
is
certain,
but
I
do
not
see
how
the
restriction
in
1100(3)
could
apply
simply
because
he
buys
property
at
the
end
of
the
year.
I
shall
deal
next
with
the
claim
for
investment
tax
credit.
The
appellant
claims
investment
credit
under
subsection
127(9)
on
the
basis
that
the
vessel
was
qualified
transportation
equipment
and
I
shall
read
only
a
portion
of
that
definition:
Qualified
transportation
equipment
of
a
taxpayer
means
prescribed
equipment
acquired
by
him
after
November
16,
1978
that
has
not
been
used,
or
acquired
for
use
or
lease,
for
any
purpose
whatever
before
it
was
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
and
that
is
(i)
to
be
used
by
him
principally
for
the
purpose
of
transporting
passengers,
property
or
passengers
and
property
in
Canada
or
to
and
from
Canada,
in
the
ordinary
course
of
carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada....
The
property
was
acquired
to
carry
on
a
charter
business
in
the
British
Virgin
Islands
and
no
one
can
seriously
contend
that
the
boat
falls
into
that
category.
So
far
as
the
arguments
under
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
are
concerned
I
do
not
need
to
review
the
jurisprudence
on
this
point.
I
do
not
think
the
appellant’s
Charter
of
Rights
have
been
infringed
by
the
Minister’s
actions.
If
the
pace
at
which
the
Minister
dealt
with
his
objection
seemed
to
be
leisurely
he
could
always
have
appealed
to
this
Court
after
180
days
elapsed
from
the
time
of
filing
notice
of
objection
under
section
169.
The
appeal
is
therefore
allowed
solely
for
the
purpose
of
allowing
the
appellant
such
further
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
yacht
as
he
may
claim
in
accordance
with
the
Income
Tax
Act
but
without
applying
the
prorating
formula
in
paragraph
1100(3)
of
the
Regulations
but
applying
the
half
year
rule
in
paragraph
1100(2).
In
the
circumstances
I
do
not
think
it
is
appropriate
that
costs
be
awarded.
Appeal
allowed
without
costs.