Bowman
T.C.J.:
This
appeal
is
from
an
assessment
for
the
1994
taxation
year.
Mr.
Kaye
is
an
air
attack
officer.
This
is
a
dangerous,
difficult
and
extremely
important
profession
of
flying
water
bombers
to
fight
forest
fires.
His
work
is
seasonal
and
lasts
from
about
April
to
October.
He
lives
in
Hudson
Bay,
a
town
of
approximately
2,400
persons
about
a
three
hour
drive
north
of
Saskatoon.
He
has
also
been
interested
in
collecting
antiques
since
at
least
1984.
The
issue
is
the
deductibility
of
losses
sustained
in
what
he
claims
is
a
business
of
buying
and
selling
antiques
and
collectibles,
“Kaye
Kollectibles”.
The
Department
of
National
Revenue
has
denied
the
deduction
on
the
basis
that
he
had,
to
use
the
phrase
that
is
familiar
to
everyone
who
has
a
passing
acquaintance
with
tax,
“no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit”.
It
was
also
alleged
that
the
amounts
claimed
as
expenses
were
not
proved,
were
not
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income,
were
personal
or
living
expenses
and
were
unreasonable.
Ultimately
the
counsel
agreed
that
the
major
question
was
whether
there
was
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
in
1994.
I
do
not
find
the
ritual
repetition
of
the
phrase
particularly
helpful
in
cases
of
this
type,
and
I
prefer
to
put
the
matter
on
the
basis
“Is
there
or
is
there
not
truly
a
business?”
This
is
a
broader
but,
I
believe,
a
more
meaningful
question
and
one
that,
for
me
at
least,
leads
to
a
more
fruitful
line
of
enquiry.
No
doubt
it
subsumes
the
question
of
the
objective
reasonableness
of
the
taxpayer’s
expectation
of
profit,
but
there
is
more
to
it
than
that.
How
can
it
be
said
that
a
driller
of
wildcat
oil
wells
has
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
and
is
therefore
conducting
a
business
given
the
extremely
low
success
rate?
Yet
no
one
questions
that
such
companies
are
carrying
on
a
business.
It
is
the
inherent
commerciality
of
the
enterprise,
revealed
in
its
organization,
that
makes
it
a
business.
Subjective
intention
to
make
money,
while
a
factor,
is
not
determinative,
although
its
absence
may
militate
against
the
assertion
that
an
activity
is
a
business.
One
cannot
view
the
reasonableness
of
the
expectation
of
profit
in
isolation.
One
must
ask
“Would
a
reasonable
person,
looking
at
a
particular
activity
and
applying
ordinary
standards
of
commercial
common
sense,
say
‘yes,
this
is
a
business’?”
In
answering
this
question
the
hypothetical
reasonable
person
would
look
at
such
things
as
capitalization,
knowledge
of
the
participant
and
time
spent.
He
or
she
would
also
consider
whether
the
person
claiming
to
be
in
business
has
gone
about
it
in
an
orderly,
businesslike
way
and
in
the
way
that
a
business
person
would
normally
be
expected
to
do.
This
leads
to
a
further
consideration
—
that
of
reasonableness.
The
reasonableness
of
expenditures
is
dealt
with
specifically
in
section
67
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
but
it
does
not
exist
in
a
watertight
compartment.
Section
67
operates
within
the
context
of
a
business
and
assumes
the
existence
of
a
business.
It
is
also
a
component
in
the
question
whether
a
particular
activity
is
a
business.
For
example,
it
cannot
be
said,
in
the
absence
of
compelling
reasons,
that
a
person
would
spend
$1,000,000
if
all
that
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
be
earned
was
$1,000.
Ultimately,
it
boils
down
to
a
common
sense
appreciation
of
all
of
the
factors,
in
which
each
is
assigned
its
appropriate
weight
in
the
overall
context.
One
must
of
course
not
discount
entrepreneurial
vision
and
imagination,
but
they
are
hard
to
evaluate
at
the
outset.
Simply
put,
if
you
want
to
be
treated
as
carrying
on
a
business,
you
should
act
like
a
businessman.
I
turn
now
to
Mr.
Kaye’s
activity.
Essentially
what
he
has
attempted
to
do
in
1994
is
to
change
direction
from
a
hobby
as
a
collector
to
a
business
as
a
seller
of
collectibles
and
antiques.
He
struck
me
as
an
honest
and
credible
witness,
telling
the
truth
as
he
saw
it.
Many
of
the
decisions
with
respect
to
the
claims
that
he
made
appear
to
have
been
those
of
his
wife,
who
was
an
accountant.
She
did
not
testify.
In
1994
he
claimed
in
his
return
of
income
$11,810
as
a
business
loss.
His
other
income
included
$13,832
as
employment
income
and
$9,449
as
unemployment
insurance
benefits.
At
the
assessment
level
his
loss
was
revised
to
$5,523,
that
is
to
say,
$6,287
was
disallowed.
Although
the
1995
taxation
year
is
not
before
me,
in
that
year
he
claimed
$21,776
as
a
loss
and
this
loss
was
revised
on
audit
to
$10,999.
$10,777
was
disallowed.
The
disallowance
was
based
not
on
an
assumption
that
there
was
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
(although
this
point
was
thought
of,
but
not
pursued)
but
simply
on
the
basis
that
insufficient
documentation
had
been
provided.
In
each
of
those
years
the
gross
income
was
$150.
It
appears
that
in
1994
two
hockey
cards
were
sold.
It
is
not
clear
what
was
sold
in
1995.
In
1996
a
loss
of
$1,535
was
claimed
but
this
was
revised
in
a
T-1
adjustment
request
to
$16,147.
It
is
unclear
whether
there
were
any
Sales.
Following
the
objections
for
1994
and
1995
the
appeals
auditor
concluded
that
the
entire
claim
should
be
disallowed
on
the
basis
that
there
was
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
and
reassessments
ensued.
After
most
of
the
evidence
had
been
adduced
counsel
agreed
to
abandon
the
claim
for
the
additional
$6,287
and
limited
it
to
a
claim
for
$5,523.
This
was
probably
on
the
basis
that
it
was
clear
that
many
of
the
expenses
could
not
be
substantiated.
For
example,
some
$3,000
was
claimed
as
an
opening
inventory
although
the
appellant
was
unable
to
state
just
what
was
in
the
opening
inventory,
some
of
which
he
agreed
was
purchased
from
his
father-
in-law’s
wife.
I
should
have
thought
that
if
there
was
$3,000
worth
of
opening
inventory
and
only
$150
worth
was
sold
the
balance
together
with
purchases
in
the
year,
valued
at
the
lower
of
lost
or
market
or
on
some
other
basis
as
may
be
appropriate,
would
have
appeared
in
the
closing
inventory.
The
statement
of
business
activities
shows,
in
computing
as
cost
of
goods
sold
an
opening
inventory
of
$3,000,
purchases
of
$4,300
for
a
total
of
$7,300,
less
a
closing
inventory
of
$5,500
for
a
cost
of
goods
sold
of
$1,800.
This
means
that
the
goods
sold
of
$150
(two
hockey
cards)
had
a
notional
cost
attributed
to
them
of
$1,800.
I
cite
this
as
one
example
of
the
somewhat
unrealistic
way
in
which
the
computation
of
the
income
or
loss
was
approached.
Many
of
the
other
expenses
appear
to
have
been
ballpark
guesstimates.
The
other
expenses
claimed
are
round
figures
-
such
as
salaries
($2,450)
travel
($1,500)
motor
vehicle
expenses
($3,250)
and
so
forth.
There
was
no
separate
business
bank
account
and
it
was
impossible
to
tell
from
the
bank
statement
that
was
put
in
evidence
just
what
the
money
withdrawn
from
the
account
was
spent
on.
Quite
apart
from
the
rather
fundamental
question
of
what
the
loss,
if
any
was,
this
somewhat
haphazard
method
of
record
keeping
is
quite
inconsistent
with
the
assertion
that
a
real
business
was
being
carried
on.
I
do
not
question
Mr.
Kaye’s
good
faith,
nor
do
I
suggest
that
he
did
not
at
some
point
formulate
the
idea
of
making
a
business
out
of
what
had
previously
been
a
hobby.
However,
I
do
not
think
a
business
existed
in
1994,
the
year
under
appeal.
If
one
wishes
to
make
a
business
out
of
acquiring
and
selling
collectibles
such
as
old
Coca-Cola
bottles,
and
claim
substantial
losses
from
it,
there
have
to
be
more
indicia
of
commerciality
than
are
evident
here.
I
make
no
finding
on
the
later
years.
Mr.
Kaye
stated
that
in
1997
he
sold
more
-
perhaps
$3,200
worth
-
by
using
the
Internet.
Those
years
will
have
to
be
considered
on
their
own.
The
appeal
for
1994
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.