Guy
Tremblay:—This
case
was
heard
in
Toronto,
Ontario,
on
September
30,
1980.
It
was
taken
under
advisement
after
the
filing
of
the
last
written
submissions
on
November
26,
1980.
1.
The
Point
at
Issue
In
accordance
with
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
the
Reply
to
Notice
of
Appeal,
the
point
is
whether
the
appellant,
in
computing
his
income
for
the
1977
taxation
year,
is
correct
in
deducting
the
sum
of
$2,055.76
as
rental
loss.
According
to
the
calculation
of
the
respondent,
there
was
a
profit
of
$758.72
from
the
property
and
not
a
$2,055.76
loss.
2.
Burden
of
Proof
2.01
The
burden
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent’s
assessment
is
incorrect.
This
burden
of
proof
results
especially
from
several
judicial
decisions,
including
the
judgment
delivered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
2.02
According
to
that
judgment,
the
assumptions
of
fact
on
which
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
bases
the
assessment
is
deemed
to
be
correct
unless
they
are
contradicted
by
the
appellant.
In
the
present
case,
the
assumptions
of
fact
are
described
in
paragraph
4
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal:
4.
In
assessing
the
Appellant
as
aforesaid,
the
Respondent
relied
upon
the
following
findings
or
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
from
the
period
January
1
—
July
31,
1977,
the
Appellant
and
John
Lockwood
were
co-owners
of
a
2
bedroom
condominium
apartment
at
5
Massey
Square,
Toronto,
Ontario,
each
owner
holding
a
50%
interest;
(b)
on
August
1,
1977,
the
Appellant
became
the
sole
owner
of
the
apartment
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
herein;
(c)
the
total
area
of
the
apartment
was
approximately
1,000
square
feet;
(d)
throughout
the
1977
taxation
year,
one
bedroom,
occupying
100
sq.
ft.
of
the
apartment,
was
rented
consecutively
to
tenants
@
$160.00
per
month,
for
a
total
rental
income
of
$2,920.00
(sic);
(e)
the
total
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
furnishings
in
the
rented
bedroom
at
December
31,
1977
was
$950.50;
(f)
the
furnishings
in
the
rented
bedroom
are
property
included
in
Class
8
of
Schedule
Il
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations,
and
the
Appellant
therefore
was
entitled,
in
his
1977
taxation
year,
to
a
deduction
for
capital
cost
allowance
at
the
rate
of
20%
on
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
of
the
class
at
December
31,
1977,
in
the
amount
of
$190.10;
(g)
all
other
furnishings
in
the
condomimium
apartment
were
not
acquired
by
the
Appellant
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property,
but
amounts
expended
therefor
were
personal
and
living
expenses
of
the
Appellant;
(h)
an
amount
not
greater
than
$461.30,
being
10%
of
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
Appellant
in
his
1977
taxation
year,
was
expended
by
the
Appellant
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
property;
(i)
an
amount
not
less
than
$4,151.63,
being
90%
of
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
Appellant,
were
personal
and
living
expenses
of
the
Appellant.
3.
The
Facts
3.01
In
computing
his
income
for
the
1977
taxation
year,
the
appellant
attempted
to
deduct
the
sum
of
$2,055.76
as
a
rental
loss,
which
loss
he
calculated
as
follows:
January
1-July
31,
1977
|
|
Rental
Income
|
|
$1,120.00
|
Expenses
|
$2,482.23
|
|
Less:
1
/
Personal
|
827.41
|
1,654.82
|
Net
Loss:
|
|
$(534.82)
|
Allocated:
1
Z>
John
M
Kanzo
|
|
267.41
|
1
/2
John
S.
Lock
wood
|
|
267.41
|
August
1-December
31,
1977
|
|
Rental
Income
|
|
$
800.00
|
Expenses
|
$2,130.70
|
|
Less:
%
Personal
|
1,065.35
|
1,065.35
|
|
(265.35)
|
Capital
Cost
Allowance
|
|
$(1,523.00)
|
Net
Loss
|
|
1,788.35
|
Total
Net
Loss
|
|
$
2,055.76
|
3.02
The
respondent
did
not
permit
the
appellant
to
deduct
the
amount
of
$2,055.76
as
a
rental
loss
in
his
1977
taxation
year
and
recomputed
the
appellant’s
income
as
follows:
January
1-July
31,
1977
|
|
Rental
Income
|
|
$1,120.00
|
Less:
Expenses
|
$2,482.23
|
|
Less:
Personal
Portion
|
2,234.00
|
248.23
|
Rental
Profit
|
|
871.77
|
A.
Appellant’s
Share
(
1
Z>)
|
|
$
435.88
|
August
1-December
31,
1977
|
|
Rental
Income
|
|
$
800.000
|
Expenses
|
$2,130.70
|
|
Personal
Portion
|
1,917.63
|
213.07
|
Rental
Profit
|
|
586.93
|
Less:
Capital
Cost
Allowance
|
|
190.10
|
|
396.83
|
Less:
Interest
Expense
|
|
63.99
|
Net
Rental
Profit
|
|
$
322.84
|
B.
Appellant’s
Share
(100%)
|
|
$322.84
|
Total
Net
Rental
Profit:
(A
&
B)
|
|
$
758.72
|
3.03
Concerning
the
period
from
January
1
to
July
31,
1977,
the
expenses
of
$2,482.23
claimed
by
the
appellant
are
detailed
as
follows.
They
appear
in
Exhibit
A-2:
Interest:
1st
mortgage
|
$
619.71
|
2nd
mortgage
|
579.02
|
Taxes:
451.79
annual
|
263.48
|
7
months
at
$37.64
monthly
|
263.48
|
Maintenance:
$97.86
monthly
for
7
months
|
685.02
|
Insurance:
$109.00
(cash
payment)
|
109.00
|
Telephone:
$18.00
monthly
for
7
months
|
126.00
|
Repairs—Supplies
(no
vouchers)
|
100.00
|
|
$2,482.23
|
3.04
During
the
trial,
the
appellant
changed
the
portion
of
personal
use
from
/3
($827.41)
to
/3
($1,654.82)
including
in
fact
the
portion
of
the
coowner
who
also
lived
there.
The
real
expense
claimed
was
$827.41
and
the
net
income
was
$292.59
($1,120-$827.41).
The
profit
for
the
appellant
is
$146.30.
3.05
For
the
period
of
August
1st
to
December
31,
1977,
the
expenses
of
$2,130.70
claimed
by
the
appellant
are
detailed
as
follows.
They
appear
in
Exhibit
A-2.
Interest:
1st
mortgage
|
$
760.12
|
2nd
mortgage
|
393.04
|
Property
Taxes:
5
months
at
$37.64
|
188.24
|
Maintenance:
5
X
$97.86
|
489.30
|
Insurance
Condo
(cash
payment
on
Dec.
1)
|
110.00
|
Telephone:
$18.00
X
5
|
90.00
|
Supplies
&
Repairs,
etc
(no
vouchers)
|
100.00
|
|
$2,130.70
|
This
gross
amount
of
expenses
is
not
disputed
by
the
respondent.
3.06
The
amount
of
$1,523
was
claimed
as
a
capital
cost
allowance
by
the
appellant.
In
his
written
submission,
the
appellant
reduced
the
said
amount
to
$1,230.40.
3.07
Originally,
in
fact,
the
appellant
claimed
no
capital
cost
on
the
assets
of
the
bedroom
used
by
himself;
100%
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
assets
of
the
bedroom
used
by
the
tenant;
and
50%
on
the
assets
of
the
kitchen,
dining
room,
living
room,
vestibule,
bathroom
and
patio.
The
reduction
of
$292.60
($1,523-$1,230.40)
applied
to
items
in
the
kitchen
and
to
an
antique
display
cabinet,
a
china
cabinet
and
a
mirror.
3.08
The
appellant
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1,
the
plan
of
his
two
bedroom
suite;
as
Exhibit
A-3,
“The
capital
cost
allowance
schedule
worksheet”
(8
pages)
concerning
the
items
(description,
date
of
acquisition,
cost,
estimated
replacement
value
on
January
1,
1977,
estimated
depreciation
and
estimated
fair
market
value);
as
Exhibit
A-4
the
“capital
cost
allowance”
of
the
items
located
in
the
different
rooms.
The
appellant
also
filed
as
Exhibit
A-5
clippings
from
the
Toronto
Star
of
October
13,
1979
which
announced
in
the
column
“Shared
Accommodation”:
luxurious
apartment
for
$150
per
month;
and
fully
furnished
2
bedroom
apartment
for
$45
per
week.
Mr
Wilkinson,
the
tenant,
confirmed
the
testimony
of
the
appellant
to
the
effect
that
he
rented
more
than
just
a
bedroom
and
that
he
actually
used
all
rooms
of
the
apartment
except
the
master
bedroom.
4.
Law-Analysis
4.01
Law
The
main
dispositions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Regulations
involved
in
the
present
case
are
3,
9(1),
18(1)(a),
(h),
20(1)(a)
(of
the
Act)
and
1100(1
)(a)
of
the
Regulations.
4.02
Analysis
The
main
contention
of
the
respondent
concerns
the
capital
cost
allowance
claimed
by
the
appellant.
The
latter
indeed
claims
50%
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
items
despite
the
fact
that
during
the
first
seven
months
of
the
year
there
were
two
owners
and
one
tenant.
In
this
case,
the
income
involved
is
income
from
property
and
not
income
from
a
business.
It
is
the
Board’s
opinion
that,
after
the
correction
made
in
paragraphs
3.04
and
3.06,
the
appellant
computed
the
income
and
mainly
the
capital
cost
allowance
according
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Regulations
and
according
to
generally
accepted
accounting
principles.
Moreover,
the
expenses
were
made
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
and
they
were
reasonable.
Therefore
the
appeal
is
allowed
in
part.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
allowed
in
part
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
the
above
Reasons
for
Judgment.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.