The
Assistant
Chairman:—This
is
the
appeal
of
Philrick
Limited
from
an
assessment
of
the
1967,
1968,
1969
and
1970
taxation
years
which
was
heard
at
Toronto
on
March
30,
1973.
The
points
to
be
determined
in
this
appeal
are—first
whether
the
chief
source
of
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
years
pertinent
to
this
appeal
was
from
farming
or
from
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
and
secondly
whether
the
allocation
by
the
respondent
of
one-half
of
the
management
salary
of
the
appellant
company’s
sole
shareholder
to
farming
operations
was
legally
justified.
Philrick
Limited
was
incorporated
on
June
5,
1957.
At
that
time
50%
of
the
shares
were
held
by
Herbert
Richards
and
50%
by
William
Phillips.
On
June
1,
1959
Mr
Richards,
having
purchased
all
of
Mr
Phillips’
interest
in
the
company,
became
the
beneficial
owner
of
all
issued
and
outstanding
shares
of
the
appellant
company.
The
company
was
then
engaged
in
the
purchase
and
the
development
of
land
in
the
Haliburton
and
Kawartha
areas
of
Ontario,
the
subdivision
of
the
land
into
cottage
lots
and
the
sale
of
these
lots
with
or
without
cottages
erected
thereon.
In
1961
Mr
Richards
bought
two
horses
which
were
boarded
out.
From
that
time
on
Mr
Richards’
intentions
were
to
phase
out
the
“land
and
cottage
business’’
and
make
a
living
on
the
breeding
and
the
racing
of
horses.
For
this
purpose
Mr
Richards
purchased
a
farm
and
a
stable
with
fourteen
stalls
built
in
it
and
constructed
a
half-mile
jogging
track.
The
number
of
horses
kept
by
Mr
Richards
was
continually
increasing.
In
1967
Mr
Saunders,
a
real
estate
agent
who
was
closely
associated
with
Mr
Richards,
convinced
the
latter
to
buy
land
for
cottage
development
in
Deer
Bay
Reach,
Buckhorn
area,
and
Mr
Richards’
cottage
business
continued
until
1970
when
all
the
cottages
were
sold.
During
that
period
Mr
Richards
acquired
other
horses
and
bred
and
raced
them.
In
1969
another
farm
was
leased
on
which
there
was
a
better
track
and
most
of
Mr
Richards’
time
was
devoted
to
the
horses.
No
land
for
the
development
of
cottage
lots
was
purchased
by
Mr
Richards
subsequent
to
1970.
From
the
financial
statements
filed
by
the
company
with
its
income
tax
returns,
the
following
figures
were
extracted
for
the
years
pertinent
to
this
appeal:
Cottage
Property
Business
|
1967
|
1968
|
1969
|
1970
|
|
Gross
sales
|
$166,078
|
$135,678
|
$233,004
|
$205,170
|
|
Cost
of
sales
|
83,929
|
86,344
|
114,484
|
87,748
|
|
Gross
profit
|
82,149
|
49,334
|
118,520
|
117,422
|
|
Operational
Expenses
|
38,835
|
31,128
|
72,979
|
48,473
|
|
Net
profit
|
43,314
|
18,206
|
45,541
|
68,949
|
|
Farm
Operations
|
|
|
1967
|
1968
|
1969
|
1970
|
|
Expenses
|
17,183
|
26,720
|
28,180
|
55,423
|
|
Income
(purses)
|
1,987
|
8,458
|
3,038
|
1,719
|
|
Loss
|
(15,196)
|
(18,252)
|
(25,142)
|
(53,704)
|
It
is
to
be
noted
that
although,
from
evidence
adduced
to
the
effect
that
most
of
Mr
Richards’
time
was
devoted
to
the
horses,
all
of
the
managerial
salary
was
charged
to
the
cottage
property
business.
and
none
to
the
farm
operations.
The
losses
of
the
farm
operations
were
deducted
from
the
net
profits
of
the
“cottage
property
business”.
The
Minister
disallowed
the
deduction
on
the
grounds
that
the
only
source
of
income
for
the
years
under
appeal
was
from
the
sale
of
lots
and
that
no
income
was
derived
from
the
farm
operations—so
the
appellant’s
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
from
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
The
appellant’s
farming
operations
date
back
to
1961
and
no
evidence
was
produced
to
indicate
that
income
was
ever
derived
from
these
operations.
There
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind,
however,
that
in
the
years
pertinent
to
the
appeal
the
appellant
was
operating
a
racehorse
farm
but
it
certainly
cannot
be
held
that
the
operation
of
the
farm
was
the
chief
source
of
the
appellant’s
income.
Nor,
in
the
circumstances,
can
it
be
held
that
the
main
source
of
the
appellant’s
income
was
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
because
no
income
was
derived
from
the
horse
farm
up
to
and
including
the
years
pertinent
to
the
appeal.
The
fact
that
Mr
Richards
was
contemplating
the
eventual
phasing
out
of
the
cottage
business
does
not
alter
the
fact
that
the
appellant
company’s
sole
income
in
the
years
1967,
1968,
1969
and
1970
was
exclusively
from
the
cottage
business.
The
facts
of
the
case
would
indicate
that
Mr
Richards’
intention
was
to
invest
in
and
to
operate
the
horse
farm
exclusively
on
a
full-time
basis,
and
no
doubt
his
main
source
of
income
will
eventually
be
from
the
horse
farm
or
from
a
combination
of
the
horse
farm
and
some
other
source
of
revenue,
but
in
the
years
pertinent
to
the
appeal
this
was
certainly
not
the
case.
On
the
basis
of
the
facts
pertinent
to
the
years
under
appeal,
I
hold
that
the
main
source
of
the
appellant
company’s
income
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
but
was
exclusively
from
the
appellant
company’s
cottage
business
and
the
deductible
farming
losses
of
the
appellant
company
are
subjected
to
the
limitation
of
section
13
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Considering
the
allocation
to
the
horse-farm
operations
of
one-half
of
Mr
Richards’
managerial
salary
which
had
been
wholly
charged
to
the
cottage
business,
it
seems
to
me
that
because
most
of
Mr
Richards’
time
was
admittedly
devoted
to
the
horses,
the
equal
division
of
his
managerial
salary
between
the
“cottage
business”
and
the
“horse
farm”
is
not
only
an
equitable,
but
a
generous,
allocation
of
Mr
Richards’
salary
and
should
not
be
altered.
For
these
reasons
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.