Christie,
A.CJ.T.C.:—This
appeal
relates
to
the
appellant’s
1978
to
1982
taxation
years.
In
respect
of
these
five
years
he
seeks
to
deduct
full
farming
losses
against
other
income.
In
reassessing,
the
respondent
confined
deductions
for
farming
losses
to
the
limited
amounts
allowable
under
subsection
31(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
allowing
these
limited
losses,
the
respondent
has
admitted
or
conceded
for
the
purposes
of
this
litigation
that
during
the
years
under
review
the
appellant's
farming
activities
were
a
business;
that
is
to
say,
in
the
years
1978
to
1982
he
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit:
Kerr
and
Forbes
v.
M.N.R.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
2071
at
2073-74;
84
D.T.C.
1094
at
1096.
Further,
by
allowing
limited
losses
the
respondent
has,
in
effect,
placed
the
appellant
in
the
second
class
of
farmers
described
by
Dickson,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
[1977]
C.T.C.
310;
77
D.T.C.
5213.
He
said
at
page
314-15
(5216
D.T.C.):
It
is
clear
that
“combination”
in
section
13
(now
section
31)
cannot
mean
simple
addition
of
two
sources
of
income
for
any
taxpayer.
That
would
lead
to
the
result
that
a
taxpayer
could
combine
his
farming
loss
with
his
most
important
other
source
of
income,
thereby
constituting
his
chief
source.
I
do
not
think
subsection
13(1)
can
be
properly
so
construed.
Such
a
construction
would
mean
that
the
limitation
of
the
section
would
never
apply
and,
in
every
case,
the
taxpayer
could
deduct
the
full
amount
of
farming
losses.
In
my
opinion,
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
a
whole
envisages
three
classes
of
farmers:
(1)
a
taxpayer,
for
whom
farming
may
reasonably
be
expected
to
provide
the
bulk
of
income
or
the
centre
of
work
routine.
Such
a
taxpayer,
who
looks
to
farming
for
his
livelihood,
is
free
of
the
limitation
of
subsection
13(1)
in
those
years
in
which
he
sustains
a
farming
loss.
(2)
the
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
but
carried
on
farming
as
a
sideline
business.
Such
a
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
the
deductions
spelled
out
in
subsection
13(1)
in
respect
of
farming
losses.
(3)
the
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
and
who
carried
on
some
farming
activities
as
a
hobby.
The
losses
sustained
by
such
a
taxpayer
on
his
non-business
farming
are
not
deductible
in
any
amount.
The
question
is
whether
the
respondent
erred
in
reassessing
in
the
manner
he
did.
The
onus
rests
on
the
appellant
to
establish
such
error.
This
onus
can
be
discharged
on
an
evidentiary
balance
of
probability.
The
returns
of
income
as
filed
by
the
appellant
show
that
during
the
last
two
months
of
1978
and
at
the
time
of
the
other
years
under
review
he
was
in
a
farming
partnership
with
Weatherall's
Farm
Consulting
Limited.
Eighty
per
cent
of
the
partnership
was
with
the
appellant
and
twenty
per
cent
with
the
corporation.
The
farming
business
operated
under
the
name
Honeywood
Farms
near
Badjeros,
Ontario.
The
returns
also
show
this:
|
Appellant's
Gross
|
|
Net
Farm
Appellant's
|
|
Professional
|
Net
Professional
|
Gross
Farm
Losses
|
Share
Farm
|
|
Income
|
Income
|
Income
|
Cash
Basis
Losses
|
|
1978
|
$340,226
|
$196,404
|
$
|
4,152
|
$221,628
|
$177,302
|
|
1979
|
377,334
|
273,271
|
|
328,841
|
305,883
|
244,706
|
|
1980
|
347,102
|
243,654
|
|
449,819
|
474,747
|
379,798
|
|
1981
|
530,172
|
420,818
|
|
624,802
|
200,266
|
160,213
|
|
1982
|
819,517
|
515,969
|
1,641,251
|
999,381
|
799,505
|
The
appellant
is
49
years
of
age.
He
was
not
raised
on
a
farm
although
as
a
child
he
visited
his
grandfather's
farm
near
Orillia,
Ontario,
during
the
summer
months.
He
graduated
in
medicine
from
the
University
of
Toronto
in
1963
and
did
his
junior
internship
at
the
Toronto
General
Hospital
in
1963-64.
He
started
his
surgical
training
in
orthopaedics
in
1964
and
completed
this
specialized
training
in
1969.
He
received
a
specialist
certificate
from
the
Royal
College
of
Surgeons
(Canada).
In
1970
he
commenced
a
spine
surgical
and
orthopaedic
practice
in
Toronto.
He
was
associated
in
particular
with
St.
Michael’s
Hospital.
In
addition
to
practising
he
did
other
things
in
the
medical
field
as
will
be
seen
shortly.
The
appellant's
medical
career
has
been
very
successful
from
the
outset.
By
the
time
he
left
Toronto
for
the
United
States
in
early
1983
he
had
developed
techniques
in
spine
surgery
which
were
favourably
acknowledged
world
wide.
He
had,
in
his
words,
become
"the
world
expert
in
one
particular
procedure."
The
bulk
of
his
practice
became
spine
surgery
with
referrals
from
all
over
North
America.
When
he
moved
to
Akron,
Ohio,
he
established
himself
in
practice
and
teaching
there,
where
he
continued
to
thrive.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
introduced
in
evidence
the
curriculum
vitae
of
the
appellant.
It
is
23
pages
in
length
and,
as
a
biographical
resumé
of
his
medical
career,
it
is
very
impressive.
Currently
he
holds
a
number
of
appointments,
including
Associate
Professor,
Department
of
Orthopaedics,
Northeastern
Ohio
University’s
College
of
Medicine,
Rootstown,
Ohio,
and
Adjunct
Assistant
Professor,
Institute
for
Biomedical
Engineering
Research,
The
University
of
Akron,
Akron,
Ohio.
Prior
to
leaving
Canada,
in
addition
to
his
practice
he
was,
during
the
years
1977
to
1983,
Assistant
Professor,
Department
of
Surgery,
and
Assistant
Professor,
Department
of
Anatomy,
University
of
Toronto.
During
the
years
1979
to
1982
he
was
Medical
Inspector,
College
of
Physicians
&
Surgeons
of
Ontario.
These
activities
relate
to
the
years
under
review
on
this
appeal:
Visiting
Professorships
Sciatica
and
Chemonucleolysis;
Rhizolysis;
University
of
Bordeaux,
Bordeaux,
France,
May
29,
1981
Chemonucleolysis,
Robert
Jones
and
Agnes
Hunt
Orthopaedic
Hospital,
Oswestry,
England,
November
3,
1981
Disorders
of
the
Low
Back
in
Adolescents
and
Children,
Children’s
Hospital
Medical
Center
of
Akron,
Dept.
of
Pediatric
Orthopaedic
Surgery,
Akron,
Ohio,
October
22-23,
1982
Papers
Published
Lateral
Lumbar
Discography,
McCulloch,
J.A.;
Waddell,
G.
British
Journal
of
Radiology,
51:498-502,
1978
Factors
Affecting
Prognosis
After
Rear-End
Motor-Vehicle
Collisions,
McCulloch,
J.A.
Advocates’
Quarterly,
Editor,
P.
Theodore
Matlow
(Lawyer),
Vol.
1:441-446,
1978
Anomalous
Root-Sleeve
Emergence,
Suzuki,
N.;
McCulloch,
J.A.;
Macnab,
I.
Journal
of
Japanese
Orthopaedic
Association,
51-252,
1978
Failed
Lumbar
Disc
Surgery
and
Repeat
Surgery
Following
Industrial
Injuries,
Waddell,
G.;
Kunnel,
E.G.;
Lotto
W.N.;
Graham,
J.;
Hall,
H.;
McCulloch,
J.A.
The
Journal
of
Bone
and
Joint
Surgery
(Am.),
Vol.
61-A,
201-207,
1979
Chemonucleolysis:
Experience
with
2000
Cases,
McCulloch,
J.A.
Clinical
Orthopaedics
and
Related
Research,
146:128-137,
1980
Nonorganic
Physical
Signs
in
Low-Back
Pain,
Waddell,
G.;
McCulloch,
J.A.;
Kum-
mel,
E.G.
Spine,
5:117-125,
1980
Variations
of
the
Lumbosacral
Myotomes
with
Bony
Segmental
Anomalies,
McCulloch,
J.A.;
Waddell,
G.
The
Journal
of
Bone
and
Joint
Surgery
(Br.),
Vol.
62-B,
475-480,
1980
Chemonucleolysis
for
Relief
of
Sciatica
Due
to
a
Herniated
Intervertebral
Disc,
McCulloch,
J.A.
The
Canadian
Medical
Association
Journal,
124:880-882,
1981
Die
Chemonukleolyse:
Erfahrunge
bei
2000
Fallen,
McCulloch,
J.A.
Extracta
Or-
thopaedica,
Bad
4,
No.
4:273-291,
1981
Outpatient
Chemonucleolysis,
McCulloch,
J.A.
and
Ferguson,
J.M.
Spine,
6:606-609,
1981
Ultrastructural
Study
of
the
“In
Vivo”
Effects
of
Chymopapain
on
Herniated
Discs,
Postacchini,
F.;
Bellocci,
M.;
Ippolito,
E.
(Rome,
Italy);
McCulloch,
J.A.
Italian
Journal
of
Orthopaedics
and
Traumatology,
Vol.
8,
pp.
445-455,
December,
1982
Papers
Presented
Non-surgical
Treatment
of
Herniated
Intervertebral
Discs
by
Use
of
Chymopapain
Injection,
Internists
of
New
York
State,
September,
1978
Chemonucleolysis,
Orthopaedic
Guild,
Toronto,
September,
1978
Chymopapain
Injection
of
Lumbar
Discs,
Annual
Orthopaedic
Symposium,
Winnipeg,
October,
1978
Chemonucleolysis,
Spine
Symposium,
Miami,
Florida,
April,
1979
Adult
Spondylolisthesis,
Spine
Symposium,
Miami,
Florida,
April
1979
Outpatient
Chemonucleolysis,
International
Society
for
the
Study
of
the
Lumbar
Spine,
Goteborg,
Sweden,
June,
1979
Chemonucleolysis
—
200
Cases,
International
Society
for
the
Study
of
the
Lumbar
Spine,
New
Orleans,
Louisiana,
May
23-28,
1980
Outpatient
Chemonucleolysis,
Canadian
Orthopaedic
Association,
Calgary,
Alberta,
June
11,
1980
Surgery
Following
Chemonucleolysis,
International
Society
for
the
Study
of
the
Lumbar
Spine,
Paris,
France,
May
20,
1981
Chemonucleolysis
and
Rhizolysis-University
of
Bordeaux,
France,
1981
Chemonucleolysis
with
Chymopapain,
Lamplighters
Orthopaedic
Association,
26th
Annual
Meeting,
Toronto,
May
30,
1981
Disorders
of
the
Spine,
Dept,
of
Orthopaedic
Surgery,
Continuing
Medical
Education,
University
of
Minnesota,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
July
29-August
1,
1981
(1)
Physical
findings
—
Nonorganic
Low
Back
Pain
(2)
Facet
Syndrome
—
Diagnosis
and
Management
(3)
Chemonucleolysis
(4)
Spondylolysis/Spondylosis
North
American
Orthopaedic
Society,
25th
Annual
Meeting,
Toronto,
October
14-17,
1981
(1)
Chemonucleolysis
with
Chymopapain
Symposium:
Psychological
and
Disability
Assessment
in
Backache,
Glasgow,
Scotland,
October
31,
1981
(1)
Workmen's
Compensation
Board:
Ontario
(2)
Legal
Reports
—
Medical
Assessment
Thermography
as
a
Diagnostic
Aid
in
Sciatica,
International
Society
for
the
Study
of
the
Lumbar
Spine,
Toronto,
June
9,
1982
Chymopapain
for
Chemonucleolysis:
An
Overview,
32nd
Annual
Meeting
of
the
Congress
of
Neurologic
Surgeons,
Toronto,
October
3-8,
1982
Instructional
Courses
Given
Anatomy
of
the
Spine
—
American
Academy
of
Orthopaedic
Surgeons,
Atlanta,
Georgia,
February,
1980
The
Spine,
The
Division
of
Orthopaedic
Surgery,
Faculty
of
Medicine,
University
of
Toronto,
April
17-19,
1980
The
Spine
—
Surgery
and
Rehabilitation,
American
Academy
of
Orthopaedic
Surgeons,
Kissimmee,
Florida,
December
1-5,
1980
Back
Pain
and
the
Role
of
Chymopapain:
(1)
Dynasty
of
the
Disc
(2)
What
is
Sciatica?
(3)
What
isn't
Sciatica?
(4)
Chemonucleolysis
The
Columbus
Orthopaedic
Society,
Columbus,
Ohio,
April
24,
1981
Chymopapain
and
Low-Back
Pain:
Painful
Disorders
of
the
Back,
Moderator,
Florida
Society
of
Neurology,
Naples
Community
Hospital,
Naples,
Florida,
June
26-27,
1981
Diseases
of
the
Lumbar
Spine:
Chemonucleolysis,
American
Academy
of
Orthopaedic
Surgeons,
Seattle,
Washington,
May
6-8,
1982
"Discolysis,"
Chymopapain
and
Collagenase,
St.
Joseph's
Hospital,
Patterson,
New
Jersey,
September
24,
1982
Chymopapain
Treatment
of
Herniated
Disc
Disease,
The
Fourth
Annual
Jersey
Shore
Symposium
on
"What's
New
in
Neurology
—
1982,”
Tinton
Falls,
New
Jersey,
October
9,
1982
Surgery
Performed
in
other
Centers
1981
—
Bordeaux,
France
—
Chemonucleolysis
and
Rhizolysis
The
biographical
data
since
the
appellant
has
been
in
the
United
States
exceeds
that
of
prior
years.
The
appellant
decided
he
wanted
a
challenge
outside
of
medicine,
so
in
1971
he
bought
a
400
acre
farm
that
produced
Christmas
trees
for
the
market.
The
purchase
price
was
$100,000
which
the
appellant
says
was
beyond
anything
he
could
afford.
He
sold
everything
he
could
to
raise
cash
and
the
vendor
was
mortgagee
in
respect
of
a
large
mortgage.
A
dramatic
increase
in
the
appellant's
medical
income
allowed
him
to
pay
this
debt
within
two
or
three
years.
By
the
time
the
appellant
met
Morley
Weatherall
in
1974,
he
had
concluded
that
he
was
bored
with
the
Christmas
tree
operation.
Weatherall
was
the
manager
of
Peace
Valley
Ranch
Limited
which
conducted
a
substantial
feed-lot
operation
near
the
appellant’s
Christmas
tree
enterprise.
It
is
also
to
be
noted
that
Weatherall
owns
the
shares
of
Weatherall's
Farm
Consulting
Limited.
The
feed-lot
operation
gripped
the
appellant's
interest.
He
was
most
favourably
impressed
by
Weatherall
and
regarded
him
as
his
expert
adviser.
The
upshot
was
that
the
appellant
took
about
12
extension
courses
on
various
aspects
of
farming
that
were
being
offered
as
evening
courses
in
Toronto
by
the
Guelph
Agricultural
College.
In
addition
he
took
three
correspondence
courses
made
available
by
the
College
on
the
business
aspects
of
farming,
feed-lot
operations
and
cow-calf
operations.
The
appellant
began
to
acquire
good
farm
land
in
1973
and
at
that
time
began
disposing
of
the
Christmas
tree
land.
It
was
sold
in
four
parcels.
The
first
farm
of
300
acres,
Dundalk,
was
purchased
from
a
person
named
Clayton.
Soon
after,
he
bought
a
second
farm
of
160
acres
almost
across
the
road.
This
gave
him
a
total
of
460
acres
of
excellent
farmland.
These
properties
were
rented
for
two
years.
The
third
acquisition
was
a
farm
of
300
acres
purchased
in
1974
near
Dunedin.
As
this
was
being
done,
two
farms
known
as
the
Maple
Valley
Farms
near
Badjeros
came
on
the
market
and
were
purchased
by
the
appellant.
All
of
these
properties
were
in
close
or
reasonably
close
proximity
to
each
other.
The
Maple
Valley
Farms
were
side
by
side
and
consisted
of
550
and
600
acres
for
a
total
of
1,150,
of
which
980
were
tillable.
They
included
six
houses
and
barns,
all
in
bad
shape
and
the
land
had
not
been
properly
fertilized
during
the
two
or
three
years
of
tenant
farming.
The
appellant
undertook
extensive
repairs
and
renovations
and
restored
the
fertility
of
the
land.
This
became
the
cornerstone
of
his
finishing
feed-lot
operation,
i.e.
calves
would
be
purchased
in
western
Canada,
transported
east
and
fed
until
they
were
of
marketable
weight.
The
first
cattle
arrived
around
1976
and
in
the
latter
part
of
that
year
or
early
1977
Weatherall
left
Peace
Valley
Ranch
Limited
and
went
to
work
for
the
appellant
as
his
manager
in
respect
of
day-to-day
farming
operations.
Hiring
of
supervisory
help
was
done
by
the
appellant
and
any
major
step
had
to
be
approved
by
him.
Weatherall
had
the
control
over
the
hiring
and
firing
of
other
help.
When
the
operation
was
at
its
peak
in
1980-81,
20
men
were
employed,
three
of
whom
were
in
the
supervisory
category.
At
one
time
all
of
the
previously
mentioned
farm
land
consisting
of
1,910
acres
was
known
as
Maple
Valley
Farms.
The
300
acres
near
Dunedin
was
sold,
but
under
terms
giving
the
appellant
rental
rights
to
farm
the
land.
On
November
1,
1978
the
appellant
and
Weatherall's
Farm
Consulting
Limited
purchased
400
acres
of
the
Peace
Valley
Ranch
on
an
80-20
basis.
It
is
located
three
or
four
miles
southeast
of
the
Maple
Valley
Farms
properties.
This
is
also
when
the
Honeywood
Farms
partnership
was
formed.
At
this
time
the
second
160
acre
farm
purchased
by
the
appellant
was
sold
to
Weatherall
and
he
took
up
residence
there.
There
were
two
related
business
ventures
that
also
deserve
mention.
In
April
1980
the
appellant
decided
to
cut
his
costs
for
grain
by
incorporating
Riding
Mountain
Grains
Limited
and
having
it
acquire
2,600
acres
of
land
near
the
Riding
Mountain
Park
in
Manitoba.
Eighty
per
cent
of
the
shares
were
owned
by
the
appellant
and
twenty
per
cent
by
Weatherall.
In
1982
the
appellant
and
Weatherall
concluded
that
this
was
turning
into
a
financial
disaster
so
it
was
disposed
of.
The
appellant
described
this
undertaking
as
the
dumbest
decision
he
ever
made.
The
second
venture
was
the
purchase
of
an
abattoir.
The
reason
for
this
decision
and
how
it
was
arrived
at
is
described
in
this
passage
from
the
appellant's
evidence:
Q.
You've
mentioned
an
abattoir.
Would
you
mind
telling
the
Court
what
that's
about?
A.
Well,
you
know,
we
were
getting
worn
out,
going
out
and
paying
.
.
.
at
one
time
we
were
paying
a
dollar-five
for
our
calves,
and
selling
them
for
eighty-five
cents;
and
we
sold
them
on
the
hoof.
We
sold
them
live
to
the
stockyards
in
Toronto.
And
we
said
that,
you
know,
it
makes
no
sense
that
we
give
this
fat
animal
to
all
those
middle
men
to
chop
pieces
out
and
the
end
cost
of
the
beef,
we're
going
to
buy
our
own
abattoir.
And
within
five
minutes
of
us,
in
Markdale,
Ontario,
an
abattoir
was
in
a
bankruptcy.
And
Wayne
pointed
it
out
to
me
that
it
was
in
the
bankruptcy.
And
he
said,
you
know,
I
think
this
is
an
opportunity
for
us
to
get
rid
of
all
these
middle
men,
and
sell
the
finished
product.
So
we
bought
this
bankrupt
abattoir,
which
was
literally
bankrupt.
It
was
physically
broken
down
as
well.
We
renovated.
We
were
good
at
renovating.
We
had
lots
of
practice.
And
we
renovated
the
abattoir,
and
hired
the
manager,
Wayne
pointed
him
out
to
me,
I
hired
him.
Markdale
Meats
Limited
was
incorporated
for
the
purpose
of
making
this
acquisition
and
conducting
the
business.
Share
distribution
was
the
appellant
40
per
cent,
his
accountant,
Mr.
Wayne
Ferris,
C.A.,
40
per
cent
and
Weatherall
20
per
cent.
The
abattoir
was
a
financial
failure.
It
was
closed
and
later
sold.
The
appellant
describes
himself
as
a
workaholic
and
his
evidence
undoubtedly
placed
him
at
the
intense
end
of
what
that
word
connotates.
Further
he
says
in
substance
that
this
trait
is
combined
with
extraordinary
efficiency.
Understandably
he
emphasized
his
commitment
to
farming.
He
said
that
from
1976
until
November
1982
when
he
decided
to
give
up
farming
altogether
he
spent
more
time
on
the
farm
than
he
did
with
his
family.
He
described
his
work
routine
in
this
way.
He
was
involved
with
medicine
on
Monday
and
Tuesday,
but
the
evening
of
these
days
was
devoted
to
matters
pertaining
to
the
business
side
of
farming.
Either
Tuesday
night
or
upon
rising
around
5
a.m.
on
Wednesday
he
would
drive
to
the
farm.
This
took
about
1
/2
hours.
He
would
meet
with
Weatherall
about
7:30
a.m.
Later
he
would
also
meet
with
his
accountant
and
the
whole
of
the
day
was
devoted
to
farming
matters.
Wednesday
evening
he
would
return
to
Toronto
arriving
at
8
or
9
o’clock.
Thursday
and
until
noon
on
Friday
were
devoted
to
medicine,
but
Thursday
evening
was
occupied
with
farming
matters.
He
returned
to
the
farm
Friday
and
remained
there
until
Sunday
evening
when
he
returned
to
the
city.
This
went
on
for
50
weeks
a
year.
He
would
take
two
weeks
off
to
vacation
with
his
family.
Later
he
added:
"I
calculated
that
I
worked
approximately
38
hours
a
week
in
medicine
and
I
worked
53
hours
a
week
in
farming
and
that
worked
out
to
an
80
[sic]
hour
work
week.
The
work
of
two
men."
It
was
obvious
that
the
appellant
was
under
considerable
emotional
stress
while
testifying.
It
was
necessary
to
adjourn
for
a
period
because
of
it.
This
may
perhaps
account
for
what
I
can
only
regard
as
some
exaggeration
in
his
evidence.
The
appellant
attributed
his
failure
in
farming
and
related
enterprises
to
such
things
as
soaring
interest
rates,
rising
fuel
and
fertilizer
costs
and
a
downward
trend
in
commodity
prices.
Weather
and
some
bad
management
by
persons
other
than
Weatherall
was
also
mentioned.
While
I
am
satisfied
that
the
appellant
was
thoroughly
devoted
to
his
farming
enterprise
and
that
he
generously
committed
his
physical,
intellectual
and
financial
resources
to
it
this,
of
itself,
cannot
resolve
the
dispute
in
his
favour.
This
commitment
must
be
considered
in
relation
to
his
dedication
to
medicine
which
obviously
was
very
substantial.
His
income
from
this
source,
the
volume
of
surgery
he
performed,
his
teaching
activities
and
his
authorship
and
presentation
of
learned
papers
all
speak,
and
speak
emphatically,
for
themselves.
A
comparison
between
the
appellant's
medical
income
and
the
financial
results
of
his
farming
activities
is
cogent.
The
whole
of
the
evidence
leads
me
to
conclude
that
the
appellant
falls
considerably
short
of
discharging
the
onus
that
rests
upon
him
to
establish
that
the
respondent
erred
in
his
reassessments.
I
go
even
further
and
say
that,
when
regard
is
had
to
what
realistically
must
have
been
his
commitment
to
farming
as
opposed
to
his
commitment
to
medicine
and
the
economic
results
of
each,
I
am
affirmatively
satisfied
that
the
appellant
falls
within
the
second
class
of
farmers
described
in
Moldowan.
During
the
times
relevant
to
the
appeal
he
did
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
a
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
living.
The
business
of
farming
was
in
a
sideline
position
with
respect
to
his
medical
business.
It
follows
that
this
appeal
cannot
succeed.
I
add
this.
There
is
an
aspect
of
this
appeal
that
I
find
perplexing.
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited
was
a
corporation
and
all
of
its
shares
were
owned
by
the
appellant.
He
was
a
director
of
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited.
He
said
that
the
corporation's
lands
at
one
time
were
made
up
of
the
300
acres
purchased
from
Clayton,
the
160
acres
acquired
across
the
road,
the
300
acres
purchased
near
Dunedin
and
the
550
and
600
acres
that
were
previously
described
as
Maple
Valley
Farms,
the
total
being
1,910
acres.
As
previously
indicated
the
300
acre
parcel
near
Dunedin
was
sold
as
was
the
160
acres,
leaving
1,450
acres.
Then
Honeywood
Farms
consisting
of
400
acres
was
acquired
and
it
is
the
farming
operations
of
this
partnership
that
is
reported
in
the
appellant's
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
under
review.
The
relationship
between
the
partnership
and
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited
is
at
best
murky.
These
questions
were
asked
of
and
replies
given
by
the
appellant:
Q.
You've
indicated
that
during
those
years
there
was
some
contribution
of
your
medical
income
in
the
farming
operation,
can
you
comment
any
further
on
that?
A.
I
.
.
.
you
know
...
I
don't
...
I
think
Wayne
can
give
.
.
.
Q.
Can
you
give
a
general
—
A.
.
.
.
the
exact
figure.
But
every
cent
I
earned
I
put
in
the
farm.
Q.
And
in
making
those
decisions,
how
would
you
break
it
down
as
to
where
those
contributions
went
with
respect
to
Maple
Valley
Farms,
Honeywood
Farms,
Riding
Mountain
Grains?
A.
Well,
there
were
two
factors
that
I
was
always
considering.
And
one
is,
that
I
would
put
the
money
where
it
was
needed.
That
was
number
one
factor.
And
the
second
factor
that
was
the
most
difficult
factor
of
all
for
me
to
control,
was
that
Morley
Weatherall
was
my
partner.
And
I
couldn't
contribute
.
.
.
I
couldn't
continue
to
contribute
unlimited
capital
to
Honeywood
Farms,
because
I
would
bury
his
20
per
cent
interest.
So
instead
of
contributing
capital,
I
contributed
some
capital
to
Honeywood
Farms,
but
instead
of
contributing
capital
to
Honeywood
Farms,
I
would
put
my
capital
into
Maple
Valley
Farms,
and
then
Maple
Valley
Farms
would
provide
the
service
to
Honeywood
Farms.
And
we
would
bill
Honeywood
Farms
for
the
service.
So
that
the
.
.
.
my
investment,
my
capital
investment,
in
Maple
Valley
Farms
would
show
up
as
an
operating
cost
in
Honeywood
Farms,
and
would
not
reflect
adversely
on
Morley's
20
per
cent
ownership
of
Honeywood
Farms.
Later
he
added:
Q.
And
as
the
farms
functioned
on
a
day-to-day
basis,
how
separate
and
distinct
were
they?
A.
They
...
it
was
a
blur.
You
know,
we
had
these
.
.
.
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited,
Markdale
Meats
Limited,
Honeywood
Farms,
the
trucking
business,
Riding
Mountain
Grains,
but
everybody
knew
us,
whatever
you
wanted
to
call
us,
it
was
Morley,
Wayne
and
John,
running
a
farming
enterprise.
Nobody
knew
that
one
was
a
corporation
and
one
was
a
partnership,
but
.
.
.
we
didn't
make
that
known
amongst
the
people
out
there.
Weatherall
in
his
evidence
spoke
of
an
"amalgamation"
having
taken
place
in
1981
involving
his
farm
and
the
Maple
Valley
Farm.
The
accountant,
Ferris,
said
that
the
amalgamation
referred
to
consisted
of
Weatherall
leasing
his
farm
to
the
Honeywood
Farms
partnership
and
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited
doing
the
same
thing.
This
occurred
between
Christmas
and
the
end
of
December
1981.
The
appellant
placed
in
evidence
financial
statements
pertaining
to
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited
that
show
that
in
1978
the
corporation's
revenue
from
cattle
sales
was
$553,030
and
in
1979
it
was
$650,634,
with
a
deficit
at
the
end
of
each
fiscal
year
of
$31,035
and
$24,309
respectively.
A
great
deal
of
the
time
and
other
resources
devoted
to
farming
by
the
appellant
during
periods
pertinent
to
this
appeal
related
directly
to
Maple
Valley
Farms
Limited.
This
raises,
in
my
mind,
the
question
whether
the
appellant
held
an
office
under
a
person
engaged
in
the
business
of
farming
thereby
precluding
a
very
considerable
portion
of
the
contributions
just
mentioned
from
being
regarded
as
farming.*
Subsection
248(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
defines
“farming”,
“office”
and
"person"
as
follows:
“farming”
includes
tillage
of
the
soil,
livestock
raising
or
exhibiting,
maintaining
of
horses
for
racing,
raising
of
poultry,
fur
farming,
dairy
farming,
fruit
growing
and
the
keeping
of
bees,
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment
under
a
person
engaged
in
the
business
of
farming.
"office"
.
.
.
includes
the
position
of
a
corporation
director
.
.
.
"person"
.
.
.
includes
any
body
corporate
..
.
.
In
coming
to
my
determination
I
have,
however,
chosen
to
disregard
this
point
because
of
the
pleadings
and
the
condition
of
the
evidence.
It
is
possible
that
there
is
an
explanation
for
it
so
I
have
treated
the
evidence
adduced
at
the
hearing
as
pertaining
to
the
partnership
alone.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.