Bowie
J.T.C.C.:
—
Mr.
Fish
was
employed
by
Marriott
Corporation
of
Canada
Ltd.
in
Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan.
In
April,
1990
his
employer
offered
him
a
promotion
to
the
position
of
Manager
of
Food
Services
at
McMaster
University
in
Hamilton,
Ontario.
He
accepted
this
promotion,
because
to
do
so
enhanced
his
career
with
the
company.
This
necessitated
moving
himself
and
his
family
from
Saskatoon
to
a
location
from
which
he
could
commute
to
Hamilton.
After
a
thorough
search
of
the
housing
market.
in
the
vicinity,
he
found
a
house
in
Brantford,
Ontario
which,
although
less
desirable
than
the
home
they
owned
in
Saskatoon,
met
the
requirements
of
his
family.
The
cost
of
housing
in
southern
Ontario
proved
to
be
considerably
higher
than
in
Saskatoon,
and
the
salary
increase
that
went
with
his
promotion
was
not
adequate
compensation
for
this
increased
cost.
His
employer,
to
help
with
these
increased
housing
costs,
paid
him
a
one-time
only
allowance
of
$8,000.
The
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
or
not
that
allowance
is
taxable.
The
Respondent
relies
upon
paragraphs
6(1
)(a)
and
6(l)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
Act).
The
Appellant
relies
upon
recent
decided
cases
for
the
proposition
that
the
amount
paid
to
him
is
not
subject
to
tax.
Some
further
facts
will
help
to
put
the
issues
in
perspective.
In
Saskatoon,
the
Appellant
and
his
family
lived
in
a
very
comfortable
four-
bedroom
house
on
a
large
lot,
with
a
two-car
garage,
separate
dining
room
and
family
room,
and
an
en
suite
bathroom
for
the
master
bedroom.
He
had
the
benefit
of
a
mortgage
which
was
subsidized
under
the
Mortgage
Interest
Reduction
Plan
of
the
government
of
Saskatchewan.
This
plan
operated
to
relieve
homeowners
of
the
mortgage
interest
payable
by
them
in
excess
of
10.75
per
cent
per
annum
on
the
first
$50,000
of
their
mortgage
during
the
period
April
1,
1990
to
February
28,
1991.
Upon
moving,
the
Appellant
found
that
it
was
only
possible
for
him
to
acquire
a
smaller
house
on
a
much
smaller
lot,
and
with
lesser
amenities.
His
home
in
Saskatoon
sold
for
$89,990;
his
house
in
Brantford
cost
$121,500.
To
purchase
the
Brantford
home
he
had
to
increase
his
mortgage
indebtedness
from
$73,000
to
$121,500,
and
borrow
another
$5,000
in
addition.
His
mortgage
interest
rate
rose
from
12.25
per
cent
to
12.75
per
cent
per
annum,
and
he
lost
the
benefit
of
the
provincial
government
subsidy.
His
monthly
payments
for
principal
and
interest
on
the
mortgage
rose
from
$801.21
to
$1,323.33.
After
making
his
investigations
of
the
market,
and
before
committing
himself
to
the
purchase
in
Brantford,
the
Appellant
spoke
to
his
superiors
at
Marriott,
explaining
to
them
the
financial
difficulty
in
which
he
was
placed
by
the
move.
It
was
as
a
result
of
these
discussions
that
he
was
given
the
$8,000
payment
by
his
employer.
I
accept
his
testimony
that
the
purpose
of
this
payment
was
to
help
him
with
the
increased
cost
of
housing
which
he
suffered
as
a
result
of
the
move,
that
he
felt
obliged
to
spend
the
money
on
providing
housing
for
his
family,
and
that
he
would
have
had
to
repay
the
amount
if
he
had
left
the
company
soon
thereafter.
Mr.
Yaskowich,
appearing
for
the
Crown,
argued
that
the
$8,000
amount
is
both
an
allowance
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
it
is
used
in
paragraph
6(1
)(b)
of
the
Act,
and
a
benefit
falling
to
be
taxed
under
paragraph
6(1
)(a).
He
took
the
position
that
the
present
case
is
indistinguishable
from
Canada
(Attorney
General)
v.
MacDonald
where
a
housing
subsidy
paid
to
a
member
of
the
R.C.M.P.
upon
relocation
from
Regina
to
Toronto
was
found
to
be
taxable
under
paragraph
6(1
)(b)
as
an
allowance,
because
it
was
an
arbitrary
amount,
fixed
in
advance
of
any
expenditure,
without
reference
to
any
specific
expense
or
cost
to
the
taxpayer
occasioned
by
his
move.
He
also
relied
on
Phillips
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue^.
The
Appellant
presented
a
carefully
prepared
argument
in
which
he
asserted
that
this
case
is
similar
to
that
of
Hoefele*,
in
that
he
had
no
discretion
as
to
how
he
would
use
the
$8,000
amount,
but
must
spend
it
on
housing.
Moreover,
he
argued,
far
from
conferring
a
benefit
on
him,
this
payment
fell
short
of
compensating
him
for
the
additional
cost
to
him
of
housing
his
family
in
his
new
location,
even
though
the
new
house
provided
lesser
amenities
than
the
old
one.
He
calculated
that
for
the
remainder
of
the
term
of
his
mortgage
in
Saskatoon,
some
9
months,
the
cost
to
him
of
the
increased
rate
of
interest
which
he
was
required
to
pay
when
purchasing
in
Brantford
was
$216.72,
and
the
loss
of
the
provincial
government
subsidy
of
his
mortgage
interest
cost
him
$727.20.
These
amounts
at
least,
he
argued,
should
not
be
taxable,
on
the
authority
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal’s
decision
in
Splane
.
He
also
invoked
the
argument
that
the
Act
should
be
administered
in
a
way
that
encourages
mobility
for
Canadians,
rather
than
discouraging
it.
Confused,
and
confusing,
as
this
area
of
the
law
is
,
it
is
reasonably
clear
that
an
amount
paid
to
an
employee
to
assist
with
the
higher
cost
of
housing
in
a
location
to
which
that
employee
has
moved
at
the
request
of
the
employer
is
subject
to
tax,
at
least
to
the
extent
that
it
is
not
paid
to
compensate
the
employee
for
actual
losses
incurred
as
the
result
of
the
move,
if
the
amount
benefits
the
employee
economically.
Actual
losses
may
take
the
form
of
loss
of
capital
value
upon
the
sale
of
a
house,
or
the
loss
resulting
from
the
need
to
replace
a
mortgage
on
the
former
residence
with
one
that
bears
a
higher
rate
of
interest
on
the
new
residence.
Whether
the
amount
is
taxed
as
a
benefit
or
as
an
allowance
is
perhaps
academic;
in
most
cases
the
amount,
if
it
improves
the
financial
position
of
the
employee,
rather
than
simply
making
him
whole,
will
be
captured
within
the
words
of
both
paragraphs
(a)
and
(b)
of
subsection
6(1).
In
the
present
case
the
Appellant
is
able
to
demonstrate
that
he
has
suffered
losses
in
respect
of
his
mortgage
interest
expense.
In
Saskatoon,
he
paid
1/2
per
cent
per
annum
less
on
his
mortgage
than
in
Brantford,
and
would
have
continued
to
do
so
for
the
9
month
balance
of
its
term.
He
would
also
have
had
the
provincial
subsidy
of
1.5
per
cent
per
annum
on
the
first
$50,000
in
Saskatoon.
This
was
lost
to
him
by
the
move.
These
amounts
are:
$73,000
x
1/2
per
cent
x
3/4
=
$273.75
and
$50,000
x
1
1/2
per
cent
x
3/4
$562.50
Total
=
$836.25
The
Appellant
did
not
suffer
any
loss
of
capital
on
the
sale
of
his
home
in
Saskatoon;
he
sold
it
for
a
slightly
higher
price
than
he
had
paid
two
years
before.
There
is
at
least
a
suggestion
in
the
majority
judgment
of
Linden
J.A.
in
Hoefele
\
that
for
such
an
amount
to
escape
taxation
as
an
allowance
there
must
be
a
requirement
that
the
employee
furnish
receipts
to
the
employer.
In
the
absence
of
a
statutory
requirement
of
this
kind
it
is,
in
my
opinion,
sufficient
that
the
taxpayer
establish
that
the
purpose
of
the
amount
was
to
compensate
him
for
his
loss,
and
that
he
did
in
fact
suffer
that
loss.
The
Appellant’s
evidence
at
trial
satisfies
me
on
both
of
these
matters.
By
the
time
that
he
discussed
his
difficulty
with
his
superiors,
and
they
agreed
to
provide
the
$8,000
amount,
he
had
obtained
his
mortgage
loan
for
the
Brantford
purchase,
so
that
the
exact
amount
of
his
losses
relating
to
the
increased
rate
of
interest,
and
to
the
provincial
subsidy,
were
known
to
him,
and
they
were
part
of
that
discussion.
I
conclude,
therefore,
that
the
amount
of
$836.25
is
not
subject
to
tax
under
either
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
or
6(l)(b).
The
remaining
$7,163.75
I
find
is
taxable
under
subsection
6(1),
either
as
a
benefit
under
paragraph
(a)
or
as
an
allowance
under
paragraph
(b).
Both
provisions
are
wide
enough
to
include
it.
What
is
material
is
that,
in
a
legal
sense,
the
Appellant
was
benefitted
by
the
payment
to
that
extent
.
Certainly
the
Appellant
in
this
case
does
not
feel
benefitted.
Subjectively,
he
has
suffered
considerably
as
to
both
the
cost
and
the
standard
of
his
living
accommodation,
even
after
applying
the
$8,000
payment
to
ameliorate
the
consequences
of
the
move.
As
Robertson
J.A.
points
out
in
Phillips
,
a
subjective
comparison
of
different
houses
in
different
cities
has
no
place
in
the
analysis
of
this
issue.
What
must
govern
the
result
is
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
did
acquire
a
more
valuable
asset,
in
objective
terms,
when
he
sold
his
house
in
Saskatoon
and
replaced
it
with
the
one
in
Brantford;
his
equity
increased
by
almost
$8,000.
In
summary,
then,
of
the
$8,000
paid
to
the
Appellant
by
his
employer
to
help
him
with
the
increased
housing
costs
resulting
from
his
move
from
Saskatoon
to
Brantford,
$836.25
is
compensation
for
higher
interest
costs
relative
to
that
part
of
his
new
mortgage
which
equates
to
the
balance
of
his
old
mortgage
at
the
time
of
sale,
and
for
the
loss
of
the
provincial
subsidy
on
the
first
$50,000
of
his
mortgage.
The
remaining
$7,163.75
is
taxable
under
subsection
6(1)
of
the
Act.
The
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
assessment
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
that
basis.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.