Guy
Tremblay
[TRANSLATION]:—The
case
at
bar
was
heard
at
Montreal,
Quebec,
on
November
18,
1977.
The
last
pleadings
were
received
on
January
20,
1978
and,
since
no
reply
was
subsequently
received,
the
Tax
Review
Board
took
the
whole
under
advisement
on
February
10,
1978.
1.
Point
at
Issue
The
issue
is
whether:
(a)
in
1973
and
1974
the
appellant,
as
the
City
of
Granby’s
industrial
commissioner,
met
the
requirements
of
paragraph
8(1
)(f)
of
the
new
Act,
and
was
employed
“in
connection
with
the
selling
of
property
or
negotiating
of
contracts’’
for
his
employer,
the
City
of
Granby;
and
(b)
for
1973
and
1974,
the
sums
of
$3,500
and
$5,500
respectively
can
be
allowed
as
deductions
against
commissions
of
$3,035.70
and
$10,595.04.
2.
Burden
of
Proof
The
burden
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent’s
assessments
are
incorrect.
This
burden
of
proof
results
not
from
any
particular
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
but
from
several
court
decisions,
including
the
judgment
rendered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
F?
W
S
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
3.
Facts
3.1
The
appellant
has
been
acting
as
industrial
commissioner
for
the
City
of
Granby
since
1970.
A
written
contract,
signed
on
February
25,
1971,
gave
effect
to
the
verbal
agreement
concluded
in
1970.
This
contract
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1.
3.2
The
contract
reads
as
folows:
CITY
OF
GRANBY,
a
duly
incorporated
body
politic,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“the
City”
and
represented
by
Mr
Jean-Louis
Tétreault,
Mayor
and
Mr
Donat
Brosseau,
Clerk,
duly
authorized
for
the
purposes
of
this
contract,
—and—
MR
PIERRE-HORACE
BOIVIN,
industrial
consultant,
having
his
domicile
and
residence
at
85
Elgin
St,
Granby,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Mr
Boivin”;
THE
ABOVE
PARTIES
AGREE
AS
FOLLOWS:
The
City
retains
the
professional
services
of
Mr
Boivin
as
an
industrial
consultant,
who
accepts
on
the
following
terms
and
conditions.
1.
The
said
undertaking
is
for
a
period
of
one
(1)
year,
from
February
1,
1971
to
January
31,
1972,
with
no
provision
for
renewal
by
tacit
agreement.
2.
Mr
Boivin’s
remuneration
is
set
as
follows:
—$20,000
a
year
plus,
as
additional
remuneration
for
each
new
business
which
constructs
a
plant:
(a)
on
land
belonging
to
the
City:
—$0.03
per
square
foot
of
the
constructed
plant
area
which
is
to
be
used
for
production,
and
of
any
additions
made
thereto;
—$0.01
per
square
foot
of
the
constructed
plant
area
which
is
to
be
used
for
warehousing,
and
of
any
additions
made
thereto;
no
remuneration
will
be
paid
for
the
rental
of
existing
buildings;
(b)
on
other
land
situated
within
the
City
limits:
—$0.015
per
square
foot
of
the
constructed
plant
used
for
production,
and
of
any
additions
thereto;
no
remuneration
will
be
paid
for
rentals
or
for
warehousing;
the
whole
provided
that
these
new
plants
are
built
as
a
result
of
representations
made
by
the
industrial
consultant.
The
said
additional
renumeration
shall
only
be
payable
once
construction
has
begun.
The
said
remuneration
for
additions
shall
be
applicable
to
and
payable
for
all
construction
erected
after
January
1,
1970.
No
renumeration
shall
be
payable,
claimable
or
due
after
the
departure
of
Mr
Boivin
or
the
termination
of
his
employment,
unless
an
agreement
has
previously
been
reached
between
the
parties
with
respect
to
a
particular
company
which
has
already
decided
officially
to
settle
in
Granby.
3.
The
parties
agree
that
any
dispute
as
to
the
interpretation
of
this
contract
and
its
practical
implications
with
respect
to
the
calculation
of
additional
remuneration
shall
be
submitted
to
a
single
arbitrator
who
is
hereby
designated
as
the
municipal
judge
of
the
City
of
Granby.
The
parties
agree
in
advance
to
accept
any
decision
of
the
said
arbitrator,
which
shall
be
final
and
shall
have
the
force
of
law
between
the
parties.
4.
This
contract
cancels
any
previous
agreement,
written
or
verbal,
which
may
have
been
made
by
the
parties.
5.
This
contract
is
retroactive
to
February
1,
1971,
the
date
of
the
resolution
authorizing
this
contract.
The
parties
entirely
subscribe
thereto.
GRANBY,
this
twenty-fifth
day
of
February,
1971.
3.3
This
contract
was
subsequently
renewed,
and
was
still
in
force
in
1973
and
1974.
3.4
In
addition
to
this
written
contract,
a
verbal
agreement
was
reached
concerning
the
appellant’s
car
expenses
when
he
used
his
car
to
travel
outside
the
city
limits
on
official
business.
He
received
$0.16
a
mile.
These
expenses
will
be
referred
to
hereinafter
in
these
reasons
for
judgment
as
extra
muros.
The
evidence
showed
that
the
appellant
often
used
his
car
for
such
purposes
as
picking
up
visitors
from
abroad
at
the
Dorval
airport.
3.5
The
matter
of
other
expenses
inherent
in
his
employment
(expenses
related
to
receiving
guests
at
home
or
at
his
residence
in
Magog
and
car
expenses
in
Granby
and
Magog)
was
discussed
before
the
contract
was
signed.
It
was
agreed
that
the
commissions
provided
for
in
paragraph
2
of
the
contract
would
fairly
compensate
for
the
said
expenses.
These
expenses
will
be
referred
to
hereinafter
as
intra
muros.
When
the
appellant
invited
guests
to
dine
at
a
restaurant,
however,
the
City
paid
the
bills.
Two
trips
to
Europe
made
by
the
appellant
in
1973
in
the
performance
of
his
duties
were
also
paid
for
by
the
City.
3.6
The
appellant
did
not
present
the
City
with
bills
for
expenses
incurred
for
intra
muros
receptions,
since
the
commissions
which
he
received
were
intended
to
compensate
for
these.
It
was
in
fact
agreed
that
these
expenses
would
be
compensated
for
through
the
commissions
rather
than
being
paid
for
directly
by
the
City;
as
the
appellant
pointed
out,
it
would
have
been
difficult
and
“politically”
embarrassing
to
claim
these
expenses,
because
it
was
difficult
to
calculate
the
exact
expenditures
for
each
occasion.
3.7
Both
parties
admitted
that
the
following
commissions
were
earned
and
expenses
claimed
for
the
year
in
question:
|
Commissions
|
Expenses
|
1973
|
$
3,035.00
|
$3,500
|
1974
|
$10,595.04
|
$5,500
|
3.8
The
evidence
showed
that
94
industrial
prospects
visited
Granby
in
1973,
and
62
visited
in
1974.
3.9
The
details
concerning
these
prospects
were
filed
as
Exhibit
A-5
and
A-6.
The
Board
cites
the
first
prospect
on
the
1973
list
as
an
example:
INTERNATIONAL
RESEARCH
ORGANIZATION
37
rue
Tailbout,
Paris
9e,
France
Mr
Berghgracht,
President
Norbert
Laplume,
Manager
40,000
square
foot
plant—10
acres
Investment:
$1,200,000
Lot
near
railway—110
jobs
Paper
products
3.10
According
to
Mr
Boivin,
an
average
of
three
to
five
years
was
required
between
the
first
contract
with
the
foreign
industrialists
and
the
actual
investment.
3.11
According
to
Mr
Boivin,
when
he
entered
into
the
contract
with
the
City
of
Granby,
the
latter
knew
that
he
would
receive
guests
in
his
home,
and
indeed
was
counting
on
this.
The
appellant
had
a
family
home
in
Granby
and
a
summer
residence
in
Magog.
Both
these
residences
were
used
to
receive
visitors
and
to
provide
sleeping
accommodation.
3.12
The
appellant
filed
a
partial
list
of
organization
representatives
received
in
1974,
either
at
home
in
Granby
or
his
summer
residence
in
Magog,
as
Exhibit
A-7.
Twenty-two
visiting
organizations
were
listed,
including
one
party
of
375
people
and
another
of
72.
The
number
of
visitors
usually
ranged
between
2
and
8
people,
the
average
being
6.
The
Board
cites
two
cases
taken
from
the
list:
Case
No
1:
File
No
404
Company:
LANDES
CANADA
LTD,
GERMANY
NAME:
Mr
Landes
and
party
Number
of
persons:
4
Number
of
days:
1
Expenses:
$54
Case
No
2:
File
No
336
Company:
LES
INDUSTRIES
CANSACO
LTEE,
PARIS,
FRANCE
Name:
Mr
M
Berghgracht
and
associates
Number
of
persons:
5
Number
of
days:
3
Expenses:
$135
3.13
The
total
expenses
recorded
on
this
partial
list
were
$3,227.20.
3.14
Not
all
the
appellant’s
time
was
spent
in
meetings
with
visitors,
however.
According
to
the
evidence,
he
spent
approximately
70%
of
his
working
time
at
the
office,
if
a
working
day
is
considered
to
be
from
9
am
to
5
pm.
3.15
Evidence
was
submitted
that,
as
at
September
1976,
the
industrial
commissioner’s
work
since
1970
had
brought
the
following
results:
—visits
by
industrial
groups:
580;
—
new
industries
established:
89;
—new
investment:
$65,705,087;
—grants
obtained
for
the
investment:
$22,365,00;
—jobs
created:
4,682.
3.16
The
appellant
filed
a
letter
from
the
respondent
relating
to
expenses
authorized
in
1970
as
Exhibit
A-4.
The
respondent
objected
to
the
filing
of
this
document.
The
Board
allowed
it
to
be
filed,
subject
to
the
decision
to
be
rendered
during
deliberation
on
the
case.
The
decision
appears
in
paragraph
4.4.
4.
Act,
Precedents
and
Comments
4.1
Act
The
applicable
section
is
paragraph
8(1
)(f)
of
the
new
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
8.
Deductions
allowed.
(1)
In
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
an
office
or
employment,
there
may
be
deducted
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
wholly
applicable
to
that
source
or
such
part
of
the
following
amounts
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
applicable
thereto:
(f)
Salesman’s
expenses:—where
the
taxpayer
was
employed
in
the
year
in
connection
with
the
selling
of
property
or
negotiating
of
contracts
for
his
employer,
and
(i)
under
the
contract
of
employment
was
required
to
pay
his
own
expenses,
(ii)
was
ordinarily
required
to
carry
on
the
duties
of
his
employment
away
from
his
employer’s
place
of
business,
(iii)
was
remunerated
in
whole
or
part
by
commissions
or
other
similar
amounts
fixed
by
reference
to
the
volume
of
the
sales
or
the
contracts
negotiated,
and
(iv)
was
not
in
receipt
of
an
allowance
for
travelling
expenses
in
respect
of
the
taxation
year
that
was,
by
virtue
of
subparagraph
6(1
)(b)(v),
not
included
in
computing
his
income,
amounts
expended
by
him
in
the
year
for
the
purpose
of
earning
the
income
from
the
employment
(not
exceeding
the
commissions
or
other
similar
amount
fixed
as
aforesaid
received
by
him
in
the
year)
to
the
extent
that
such
amounts
were
not
(v)
outlays,
losses
or
replacements
of
capital
or
payments
on
account
of
capital,
except
as
described
in
paragraph
(j),
or
(vi)
outlays
or
expenses
that
would,
by
virtue
of
paragraph
8(1)(l),
not
be
deductible
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
year
if
the
employment
were
a
business
carried
on
by
him.
4.2
Conditions
to
be
met
4.2.1
The
first
condition
to
be
met
is
that,
in
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant
must
have
been
“employed
...
in
connection
with
the
selling
of
property
or
negotiating
of
contracts
for
his
employer”.
The
respondent
maintains
that
if
the
appellant’s
mandate
was
to
attract
industries
to
settle
in
the
territory
of
the
City
of
Granby,
this
did
not
necessarily
imply
that
the
land
acquired
by
the
owners
of
the
new
plants
was
owned
by
the
City
of
Granby.
Consequently,
the
appellant
did
not
meet
the
basic
requirement
of
paragraph
8(1)(f).
At
first
glance,
this
agreement
appears
rather
conclusive.
A
closer
look
at
the
contract
of
employment,
however,
reveals
in
paragraph
2
that
certain
commissions
were
to
be
paid
for
new
plants
constructed
on
“land
belonging
to
the
City”,
while
others
were
to
be
paid
for
new
plants
constructed
on
“land
situated
with
the
City
limits”.
First
of
all,
the
Board
feels
that
the
appellant’s
duties
were
related
to
the
sale
of
goods
(land).
Secondly,
it
feels
that
even
if
none
of
the
lots
had
belonged
to
the
City
of
Granby,
the
appellant
had
nonetheless
received
a
mandate
from
his
employer
to
negotiate
contracts
in
the
larger
sense
of
the
word.
Setting
up
a
plant
in
a
city
necessarily
implies
a
number
of
conditions
which
must
be
approved
by
the
city.
The
appellant
served
as
an
intermediary.
According
to
the
evidence
presented,
an
average
of
three
to
five
years
elapsed
between
the
first
contact
and
the
actual
investment.
This
required
not
only
a
lot
of
subsequent
contacts
and
information,
but
also
discussions
and
negotiations
in
which
the
City
had
an
interest,
even
though
it
may
not
always
have
been
directly
involved.
4.2.2
Was
the
condition
pursuant
to
which
the
appellant
“under
the
contract
of
employment
was
required
to
pay
his
own
expenses”
was
fulfilled?
As
a
result
of
the
verbal
contract
proven,
which
was
described
in
paragraphs
3.4
and
3.5,
certain
expenses
(car
expenses
for
trips
outside
the
City,
restaurant
expenses
and
so
on)
were
directly
reimbursed
upon
presentation
of
vouchers.
Intra
muros
expenses,
however,
such
as
those
incurred
in
receiving
visitors
at
his
residences,
car
expenses
when
travelling
in
the
city
and
so
on,
were
reimbursed
through
the
commissions
he
earned.
In
his
written
submissions,
the
respondent
maintains
that:
The
taxpayer
moreover
repeatedly
stated
that
the
only
reason
he
was
given
commissions
was
to
help
defray
personal
expenses
he
could
not
charge
to
the
City.
If
he
was
reimbursed
by
his
employer,
he
cannot
claim
that
he
was
required
to
pay
his
own
expenses.
The
Board
feels
that
if
the
respondent
wanted
to
be
logical
in
this
reasoning,
it
would
not
include
the
commissions
received
in
the
calculation
of
the
appellant’s
income
at
all,
since
they
were
really
no
more
than
the
reimbursement
of
expenses.
The
Board
will
not
decide
to
this
effect,
however,
since
the
verbal
agreement
extends
the
written
contract,
but
cannot
contradict
it.
The
Board
notes
that
the
contract
provided
for
remuneration
to
be
paid
partly
through
commissions
on
sales
made
or
contracts
negotiated
(subparagraph
8(1
)(f)(iii)).
The
commissions
must
be
included
as
part
of
the
income.
However,
appellant
as
required
to
pay
his
own
expenses
in
accordance
with
a
verbal
agreement
(subparagraph
8(1
)(f)(i))
precisely
because
of
the
commissions,
and
in
principle
he
should
be
allowed
to
subtract
these
expenses
from
his
commissions.
4.2.3
Was
the
requirement
described
in
subparagraph
8(1
)(f)(ii),
to
the
effect
that
the
appellant
was
“ordinarily
required
to
carry
on
the
duties
of
his
employment
away
from
his
employer’s
place
of
business”
met
by
the
appellant?
According
to
the
evidence,
the
appellant
spent
60
to
70%
of
the
time
normally
worked
by
an
employee,
whose
hours
are
9
to
5,
at
the
office.
However,
nothing
in
the
contract
(Exhibit
A-1)
stated
that
the
appellant
was
required
to
work
from
9
to
5.
On
the
contrary,
the
very
nature
of
his
work
implied
that
his
working
hours
could
not
be
calculated
in
this
manner.
The
evidence
showed
that
the
appellant’s
evenings,
weekends
and
time
taken
for
the
trips
to
Europe
also
had
to
be
included
in
the
calculation.
An
examination
of
Exhibit
A-7
and
of
the
testimony
of
the
appellant
convinced
the
Board
that
over
60%
of
the
time
devoted
by
the
appellant
to
carrying
out
his
mandate
was
spent
“away
from
his
employer’s
place
of
business”.
4.2.4
Was
the
requirement
of
subparagraph
8(1)(f)(iv),
that
the
appellant
“was
not
in
receipt
of
an
allowance
for
travelling
expenses
.
.
.
that
was,
by
virtue
of
subparagraph
6(1
)(b)(v),
not
included
in
computing
his
income”
met
by
the
appellant?
To
answer
this
question,
subparagraph
6(1
)(b)(v)
must
be
cited:
6.
Amounts
to
be
included
as
income
from
office
or
employment.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
as
income
from
an
office
or
employment
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(b)
Personal
or
living
expenses.—all
amounts
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
an
allowance
for
personal
or
living
expenses
or
as
an
allowance
for
any
other
purpose,
except
(v)
reasonable
allowances
for
travelling
expenses
received
by
an
employee
from
his
employer
in
respect
of
a
period
when
he
was
employed
in
connection
with
the
selling
of
property
or
negotiating
of
contracts
for
his
employer.
The
evidence
showed
in
this
respect
that
the
car
expenses
which
were
reimbursed
were
only
for
those
trips
outside
the
city,
namely
to
Montreal
(to
pick
up
visitors
at
the
airport,
bring
them
back
and
so
on).
Other
car
expenses,
for
use
of
his
car
within
the
City
of
Granby
or
to
take
visitors
to
his
summer
residence
in
Magog
and
bring
them
back,
were
not
paid.
Although
the
evidence
did
not
indicate
the
intra
muros
mileage,
the
appellant’s
activities
and
the
number
of
visitors
were
sufficient
to
show
that
it
was
substantial.
It
can
therefore
be
concluded
that
the
appellant’s
car
was
used
intra
muros
in
proportion
to
these
activities.
The
commissions,
however,
were
explicitly
intended
to
compensate
for
these
intra
muros
expenses
related
to
his
car
and
the
receptions
in
his
home.
Moreover,
a
strict
interpretation
of
subparagraphs
8(1)(f)(iv)
and
6(1
)(b)(v)
would
seem
to
imply
that
since
the
appellant’s
travelling
expenses
were
paid,
the
condition
stipulated
was
not
met;
and
since
all
the
conditions
must
be
met
for
subparagraph
8(1)(f)
to
apply,
this
section
does
not
apply
in
the
case
at
bar.
In
answer
to
the
above
reasoning
it
may
be
argued
that
since,
according
to
the
evidence,
the
commissions
were
intended
to
compensate
solely
for
intra
muros
expenses,
no
travelling
allowance
was
paid
in
this
regard.
Moreover,
if
one
considers
the
activities
of
the
appellant
as
a
whole,
intra
and
extra
muros,
one
could
conclude
that
the
travelling
allowance
was
not
reasonable.
It
is
clear
that
if
only
subparagraph
6(1)(b)(v)
is
taken
into
account,
the
allowance
would
be
considered
reasonable
because
it
is
not
excessive.
This
subparagraph
is
in
fact
an
exception
to
the
first
part
of
paragraph
(b),
which
imposes
a
tax
on
reimbursed
personal
expenses.
If
the
expenses
were
excessive—for
example,
one
dollar
a
mile
for
the
use
of
a
car—the
allowance
would
not
be
considered
reasonable
and
would
therefore
be
taxable.
The
Board
does
not
see
how
the
respondent
can
use
this
section
to
show
that
an
allowance
of,
for
example,
two
cents
a
mile
is
taxable
because
it
is
insufficient
and
therefore
unreasonable.
Should
the
word
“reasonable”
in
subparagraph
6(1
)(b)(v),
seen
in
the
light
of
subparagraph
8(1)(f)(v),
that
is,
seen
as
an
expense
to
be
deducted
and
not
only
as
income
not
to
be
taxed,
not
be
interpreted
in
its
fullest
sense,
that
is,
with
both
its
meanings,
as
an
excessive
or
an
insufficient
allowance?
Is
this
not
the
normal
interpretation?
The
Board
believes
so
and
does
not
see
why
such
an
interpretation
should
not
be
given
to
the
word,
although
some
earlier
decisions,
including
one
by
the
former
Member
of
the
Board
F
S
W
Fordham,
Stanley
Karp
v
MNR,
[1968]
Tax
ABC
1018;
68
DTC
742,
seem
to
indicate
otherwise.
Other
decisions
in
cases
similar
to
the
one
at
bar
do
use
this
interpretation
R
Cossette
v
MNR,
13
Tax
ABC
170;
55
DTC
365.
Each
decision
is
naturally
dependent
on
the
evidence
as
to
whether
the
allowance
paid
in
accordance
with
subparagraph
6(1)(b)(v)
is
reasonable
or
not.
In
terms
of
activities
intra
and
extra
muros,
is
it
reasonable
for
only
extra
muros
expenses
to
be
paid
when
a
large
proportion
of
the
car
expenses
are
the
result
of
intra
muros
activities?
The
Board
does
not
believe
so.
In
terms
of
the
intra
muros
activities
only,
no
allowance
was
paid
other
than
the
commissions
provided
for
in
the
contract—commissions
provided
explicitly
to
compensate
for
intra
muros
activities,
according
to
the
evidence.
Since
the
said
commissions
must
be
included
in
the
appellant’s
income,
it
is
only
natural
that
the
intra
muros
expenses
be
deducted
from
such
income.
The
Board
feels
that
this
interpretation
of
the
wording
of
the
text
is
consistent
with
its
usual
meaning.
Where
tax
legislation
is
interpreted
in
a
restrictive
manner,
the
usual
meaning
of
words
must
not
be
excluded.
4.3
Commissions,
Expenses
and
Vouchers
The
last
condition
involves
determining
whether
the
expenses
incurred
were
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
and
whether
they
exceeded
the
commissions
received.
According
to
the
evidence
submitted
(paragraph
3.7
of
the
Facts),
the
commissions
and
expenses
were:
|
Commissions
|
Expenses
|
1973
|
$
3,035.70
|
$3,500
|
1974
|
$10,595.04
|
$5,500
|
No
figures
were
given
to
show
what
proportion
of
the
$3,500
and
$5,500
claimed
was
for
car
expenses.
No
figures
were
submitted
with
respect
to
expenses
other
than
the
partial
list
(Exhibit
A-7)
showing
expenses
for
receptions
in
1974,
in
the
amount
of
$3,227
(paragraph
3.12
and
3.13
of
the
Facts).
In
fact,
on
other
supporting
documents
were
submitted
to
the
Board
with
respect
to
expenses.
It
is
true
that
the
Act
does
not
require
supporting
documents
as
such.
Nevertheless,
in
matters
of
taxation
the
principles,
methods
and
practices
of
business
and
accounting
must
be
used
as
the
bases
for
interpretation,
unless
the
case
is
specifically
provided
against
the
Act,
Royal
Trust
Co
v
MNR,
[1957]
CTC
32;
57
DTC
1055.
The
fact
that
vouchers
are
required
wherever
possible
to
justify
the
payment
of
expenses
is
a
well-known
accounting
principle.
The
Board
feels
that
in
practice
it
would
be
impossible
to
produce
vouchers
for
expenses
related
to
receiving,
and
providing
meals
and
sleeping
accommodation
for,
visitors
in
the
appellant’s
residences.
How
can
one
distinguish
between
purchases
made
exclusively
for
the
family
and
those
relating
to
guests?
The
fact
of
entertaining
numerous
guests
throughout
the
year
also
tends
to
lead
to
other
expenses
for
home
improvements,
painting,
new
carpeting
and
so
on.
How
can
these
expenses
be
calculated?
Clearly,
it
was
partly
because
of
the
problems
involved
in
producing
such
vouchers
that
the
commissions
were
stipulated
in
the
contract.
4.4
Decision
on
the
Objection
to
Exhibit
A-4
As
explained
in
paragraph
3.16
of
the
Facts,
the
appellant
filed
a
document
sent
by
the
respondent
relating
to
expenses
in
1971
as
Exhibit
A-4.
The
respondent
objected
to
this
exhibit,
arguing
that
it
was
not
relevant
to
1973
and
1974.
The
respondent
cited
two
recent
decisions,
one
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
Cam
Gard
Supply
Limited
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
143;
77
DTC
5134,
and
the
other
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada,
William
A
Gibbon
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1977]
CTC
334;
77
DTC
5193.
Moreover,
the
appellant
seemed
to
rely
on
this
exhibit
to
show
that
supporting
documents
were
not
required,
since
it
related
to
an
agreement
between
the
respondent
and
the
appellant.
The
Board
examined
the
two
decisions
mentioned
above,
in
which
it
was
held
that
action
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
in
one
year
could
not
bind
it
for
other
years.
The
appellants
had
pleaded
estoppel
against
the
Crown.
The
fact
that
the
department
had
allowed
maintenance
payments
to
be
deducted
one
year,
even
though
they
were
not
the
result
of
a
judgment
or
written
agreement,
did
not
bind
the
department
for
the
following
years.
Exhibit
A-4
is
a
document
which
was
attached
to
the
notice
of
assessment
for
the
1970
taxation
year.
It
contains
the
following
sentence:
“Your
entertainment
costs
have
been
allowed
in
the
amount
of
$3,500,
the
maximum
amount
allowable
on
the
basis
of
the
information
provided.”
The
Board
does
not
feel
that
this
statement
was
an
understanding
for
subsequent
years.
The
respondent
is
in
no
way
bound
by
this
document.
The
Board
feels
that
the
respondent
is
not
bound
by
the
fact
that
in
1970,
1971
and
1972
he
considered
the
appellant’s
expenses
for
receiving
guests
at
his
residence
as
entertainment
costs.
The
respondent
may
dispute
the
nature
of
these
expenses
in
subsequent
years.
4.5
For
the
years
in
question,
the
respondent
held
that
the
expenses
related
to
receiving
guests
were
not
incurred
to
earn
income,
but
were
personal
expenses
or,
at
the
most,
preliminary
expenses
which
would
enable
the
appellant
to
be
in
a
position
to
earn
income.
Alternatively,
it
might
be
a
capital
expenditure
for
goodwill.
The
respondent
cited
No
337
v
MNR,
[1957]
CTC
384;
57
DTC
20,
in
which
the
appellant
claimed
$1,570
as
entertainment
expenses.
The
court
concluded
that
the
expenses
were
not
entertainment
expenses,
but
did
not
state
what
the
nature
of
the
expenses
really
was.
The
judgment
simply
stated
that
they
were
preliminary.
Several
cases
were
cited
to
support
the
decision.
In
one
case,
the
expenses
related
to
a
trip
to
Europe
to
try
to
obtain
a
shipping
agency
and
borrow
money,
Knud
Birch
Schioler
v
MNR,
2
Tax
ABC
211;
50
DTC
316.
In
another
case,
a
fire
insurance
company
went
bankrupt,
and
the
insurance
agent
paid
his
clients’
premiums
to
another
fire
insurance
company
Raymond
Hing
Leong
v
MNR,
5
Tax
ABC
177;
51
DTC
407.
Both
these
cases,
like
many
others,
involved
the
protection
of
goodwill
or
an
attempt
to
obtain
assets,
such
as
the
shipping
agency.
They
were
considered
capital
expenditures.
The
respondent
also
cited
Maxwell
Raber
v
MNR,
10
Tax
ABC
202;
54
DTC
170.
In
this
case,
unsupported
expenditures
by
an
agent
for
meals,
gifts,
drinks,
hockey,
football
and
theatre
tickets
for
customers
or
prospective
customers
were
considered
capital
expenditures
for
purposes
of
goodwill.
It
should
be
remembered
that
this
judgment
was
written
in
1954.
The
courts
have
long
since
moved
beyond
this
point
of
view.
In
this
case
under
consideration,
I
feel
that
an
industrial
consultant
should
not
be
considered
in
the
same
way
as
an
ordinary
salesman
of
goods
or
an
insurance
agent,
even
though
subparagraph
8(1
)(f)
also
applies
to
such
persons.
Negotiating
contracts,
most
of
the
time
with
strangers,
for
millions
of
dollars
worth
of
investments,
cannot
be
done
in
a
matter
of
weeks.
The
evidence
showed
that
these
negotiations
may
take
an
average
of
three
to
five
years
to
finalize.
It
is
clear
that
each
customer
must
be
looked
upon
as
a
special
case.
When
an
individual’s
territory
covers
Europe
and
America,
there
is
really
no
question
of
building
up
goodwill.
Each
client
must
be
convinced
that
it
would
be
to
his
financial
advantage
to
build
his
plant
in
Granby.
No
one
builds
a
million
dollar
plant
in
the
same
way
that
he
buys
insurance
or
a
car.
The
first
is
based
solely
on
financial
interests,
while
the
others
can
to
a
great
extent
be
based
on
the
confidence
one
has
in
the
salesman.
The
respondent
also
claimed
that
the
appellant’s
expenses
at
his
residences
were
personal
expenses.
He
argued
that
in
fact
the
meetings
were
more
social
gatherings
than
anything
else.
In
addition,
these
expenses,
which
could
have
been
charged
directly
to
the
City,
were
paid
by
means
of
commissions
because
they
were
“politically”
embarrassing
(paragraph
3.6
of
the
Facts).
If
these
expenses
were
politically
embarrassing,
it
was
because
they
were
personal
expenses,
the
respondent
concluded;
and
if
they
were
considered
personal
with
regard
to
the
City,
they
were
also
personal
with
regard
to
calculating
income
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
fact
of
producing
bills
for
receptions
at
one’s
private
residence
is
also
a
touchy
matter
from
a
psychological
viewpoint.
These
bills
are
in
fact
the
type
always
likely
to
be
brought
up
at
municipal
council
meetings
and
be
subject
to
comments
from
taxpayers,
even
though
they
are
part
of
the
individual’s
work
and
help
to
bring
millions
of
dollars
of
investments
into
the
town.
It
is
a
well-known
fact,
to
anyone
who
has
in
any
way
lived
close
to
and
observed
political
life,
and
especially
municipal
politics,
that
pettiness
and
meanness
can
be
very
common
indeed.
The
Board
understands
why
the
appellant
can
say
it
was
embarrasing,
without
this
implying
that
the
expenses
were
personal.
On
the
contrary,
the
Board
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
expenditures
were
made
to
earn
income.
4.6
The
respondent
refused
to
allow
expenses
of
$3,500
(1973)
and
$5,500
(1974).
As
was
stated
earlier,
supporting
documents
are
in
practice
impossible
to
obtain.
The
partial
list
included
as
Exhibit
A-7
for
1974,
honestly
estimated
the
expenses
related
to
receiving
22
organizations
at
$3,227.
Moreover,
according
to
Exhibits
A-5
and
A-6,
62
organizations
visited
Granby
in
1974.
No
evidence
was
presented
to
show
that
receptions
at
the
appellant’s
residence
were
held
for
each
of
these
organizations.
It
was
simply
stated
that
the
list
of
22
organizations
was
a
partial
list.
That
leaves
40
organizations.
No
evidence
was
presented
to
indicate
what
proportion
of
these
remaining
organizations
were
received
at
the
appellant’s
residence.
The
Board
feels
that
the
evidence
is
not
sufficiently
complete.
It
does,
however,
consider
it
to
be
just
and
reasonable
that
$5,000
be
allowed
on
the
$4,800.
Moreover
if
it
takes
into
account
intra
muros
car
expenses,
in-
eluding
depreciation,
the
Board
must
allow
the
entire
sum
of
$5,500
claimed.
As
for
1973,
the
Board
cannot
allow
more
than
the
commissions
received,
that
is,
$3,035.70,
because
paragraph
8(1)(f)
authorizes
expenses
only
to
a
maximum
of
the
amount
of
commissions
received.
The
Board
allows
the
entire
$3,035.70
claimed,
even
though
it
does
not
have
a
list
of
the
visiting
organizations
which
were
received
in
1973,
as
it
does
for
1974.
It
relies
on
the
fact
that
in
1973,
94
organizations
visited
Granby
and
the
cost
of
the
receptions
and
car
expenses
must
easily
have
totalled
$3,035.70.
Even
though
the
Board
is
convinced
that
the
expenses
were
incurred
and
therefore
allows
them,
it
feels
that
a
complete
account
of
receptions
given
and
of
intra
muros
car
mileage
would
facilitate
the
evaluation
of
expenses.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
allowed
in
part
and
the
whole
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
the
above
reasons
for
judgment.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.