J
O
Weldon:—This
appeal
with
respect
to
the
appellant’s
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years
was
heard
at
Toronto,
Ontario
on
December
9,
1971
under
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
as
it
was
then
constituted.
The
parties
were
represented
by
counsel
as
follows:
J
G
Ware,
Esq,
for
the
appellant
and
F
A
A
Baker,
Esq,
for
the
Minister.
The
matters
in
dispute
herein
arose
out
of
the
disallowance
by
the
Minister
of
alleged
farming
losses
of
$2,652.77,
$4,084.57
and
$3,060.46
claimed
by
the
appellant
as
deductions
from
his
income
in
his
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years,
respectively.
It
is
the
Minister’s
contention:
that
the
taxpayer
incurred
the
expenses
which
gave
rise
to
the
aforesaid
losses
in
the
said
taxation
years
as
personal
or
living
expenses
in
connection
with
the
maintenance
and
upkeep
of
his
72.40-
acre
farm
property
situated
in
the
vicinity
of
Orangeville,
Ontario,
for
the
use
or
benefit
of
himself,
his
wife
and
children;
that
personal
or
living
expenses
are
not
allowed
as
a
deduction
in
computing
income
under
paragraph
12(1)(h)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148
as
amended:
that,
pursuant
to
paragraph
139(1)(ae)
of
the
said
Act,
“personal
or
living
expenses”
include
the
expenses
of
a
property
maintained
by
a
taxpayer
for
the
use
or
benefit
of
himself,
his
wife
and
children
and
not
maintained
in
connection
with
a
business
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit,
and
that,
since
the
present
taxpayer’s
above-mentioned
farm
property
was
not
maintained
in
connection
with
a
business
of
the
type
outlined
above,
the
said
alleged
farming
losses
had
been
properly
disallowed
in
the
taxation
years
specified.
The
taxpayer
was
first
employed
by
the
Potash
Company
of
Canada
Limited
under
a
3-year
contract
which
ran
from
May
1,
1959
to
May
1,
1962.
That
contract
was
then
renewed
for
two
further
3-year
terms
expiring
April
30,
1968.
However,
his
services
were
retained
until
some
time
in
November
1968.
From
that
time
until
about
the
middle
of
the
following
year
1969,
some
6
or
7
months,
the
taxpayer
carried
on
a
consulting
business
in
Orangeville
occupying
himself
with
one
main
client,
namely,
Potash
Imports
and
Chemicals
Corporation
—
“the
subject
of
this
consulting
period
was
particularly
the
dumping
of
potash
in
the
United
States”.
Having
completed
the
above
assignment
about
the
middle
of
1969,
the
taxpayer,
apparently,
then
obtained
his
present
employment
in
Ogden,
Utah,
as
sales
manager
with
Great
Salt
Lake
Minerals
and
Chemicals
Corporation.
That
company
was
engaged
at
the
time
in
a
new
$30
million
potash
development
which
“has
now
come
up
to
about
a
$40
million
project”.
From
the
middle
of
1969
to
October
31,
1971
the
taxpayer
has
been
commuting
from
his
farm
near
Orangeville
to
Ogden,
Utah,
and
his
wife
has
been
managing
the
farm.
The
taxpayer’s
present
salary
is
substantially
larger
than
his
former
salary
with
the
Potash
Company
of
Canada
Limited.
The
following
table
sets
out
the
relevant
particulars
of
the
appellant’s
income
from
his
earnings
as
a
salaried
employee
of
the
Potash
Company
of
Canada
Limited
covering
all
of
1967
and
11
to
12
months
of
1968,
from
his
earnings
as
a
self-employed
consultant
covering
the
first
half
of
1969,
and
from
his
earnings
as
a
salaried
employee
of
Great
Salt
Lake
Minerals
and
Chemicals
Corporation
in
the
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years
now
under
appeal:
Taxation
|
Farming
|
Farming
|
Total
|
Year
|
income
|
loss
|
earnings
|
1967
|
$165.00
|
$2,652.77
|
$24,183.75
|
1968
|
464.00
|
4,084.57
|
18,653.25
|
1969
|
988.91
|
3,060.46
|
18,845.31
|
To
round
out
the
picture,
the
taxpayer
suffered
a
further
alleged
farming
loss
in
1970
—
this
time
it
was
about
$6,100
—
and
has,
since
the
middle
of
1969
to
date
been
carrying
out
his
duties
as
a
high-
salaried
technical
man
in
the
potash
industry
in
Ogden,
Utah.
Towards
the
end
of
April
1967,
the
appellant
(now
44)
took
possession
of
the
72.40-acre
farm
property
in
question
in
this
appeal
which
he
“thought
had
a
potential
for
a
good
horse
farm”.
His
main
purposes
were,
first,
to
provide
a
residence
in
the
country
for
his
wife
and
four
young
children,
and
secondly,
to
develop
a
thoroughbred
broodfarm,
a
purpose
for
which
he
was
highly
qualified
from
a
practical,
technical
and
academic
standpoint.
According
to
the
taxpayer,
the
farm
had
been
rented
for
years
and
was
in
a
terribly
rundown
condition.
He
stated:
The
fences
were
rundown,
just
a
couple
of
strings
of
wire,
barbed
wire,
to
keep
the
cattle
in.
The
barn
was
dilapidated.
It
had
a
good
foundation,
it
has
a
good
sound
frame,
but
the
boards
of
the
roof
were
definitely
in
poor
shape.
For
another
thing
I
found
out
that
the
barn
had
not
been
cleaned
out
for
about
eight
years,
so
we
had
a
certain
amount
of
manure
in
the
barn.
In
his
evidence,
the
taxpayer
painted
a
very
pleasant
picture
of
the
farm-house
as
it
now
stands
on
the
above
property.
It
was
built
about
the
turn
of
the
century
and
is
a
very
large,
comfortable
L-shaped
house.
Taking
into
account
an
addition
thereto
which
is
completely
separate
from
the
main
house,
there
are
13
rooms
including
a
new
kitchen,
a
studio,
a
large
office,
two
new
bathrooms,
and
so
on.
The
cost
of
the
farm
property
was
$39,915
of
which
the
sum
of
$26,264
was
allocated
to
the
house
described
above.
Extensive
renovations
of
the
above
house
were
carried
out
costing
$14,976
as
of
October
23,
1967
according
to
the
taxpayer’s
1967
return.
Such
renovations
included
a
new
ceiling
in
the
living
room,
the
closing
of
four
or
five
doors,
a
new
heating
system,
new
plumbing,
re-wiring,
painting,
decorating,
and
so
on
and
on.
So,
the
overall
cost
of
the
taxpayer’s
country
home
located
on
Pt
E
1/2
Lot
7
Con
2
W
Mono
Twp
amounted
to
over
$41,000
excluding
the
cost
of
the
land
used
in
connection
therewith.
The
taxpayer
said
that
he
financed
his
project
with
a
$40,000
mortgage
and
$15,000
of
his
own
assets.
While
living
and
working
in
Ogden,
Utah,
the
appellant
filed
two
Notices
of
Appeal,
the
first
with
respect
to
his
1967
and
1968
taxation
years,
dated
April
26,
1971,
and
the
second
with
respect
to
his
1969
taxation
year
dated
August
10,
1971.
According
to
the
Minister’s
Replies
to
the
above
Notices
of
Appeal,
he
acted
upon
similar
assumptions
in
preparing
all
three
assessments
now
under
appeal.
Since
the
Minister’s
assumptions
referred
to
above
set
out
very
concisely
the
situation
which
obtains
in
this
appeal,
and
since
they
do
not
appear
to
have
been
disproved
by
the
appellant
in
any
material
matter
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal,
the
said
assumptions
will
now
be
quoted
in
full:
(a)
the
Appellant
is
an
agronomist
and
at
all
material
times
was
employed
as
a
representative
of
the
Potash
Company
of
Canada
Limited,
a
chemical
fertilizer
firm;
(b)
in
January,
1967,
the
Appellant
was
transferred
to
the
Toronto
office
of
the
Potash
Company
of
Canada
Limited;
(c)
in
March
of
1967
the
Appellant
purchased
a
farm
at
Orangeville,
Ontario;
(d)
in
August
of
1967
the
Appellant
moved
his
family
to
the
farm
in
Orangeville;
(e)
at
all
times
material
to
this
appeal
the
Appellant’s
office
was
in
Toronto,
he
was
employed
on
a
full-time
basis,
his
duties
required
constant
travel,
and
at
no
time
was
his
work
carried
on
near
the
farm
property
at
Orangeville,
except
when
he
was
working
at
Guelph
for
a
brief
period
of
time;
(f)
the
cost
of
the
aforesaid
farm
was
$39,915.00
allocated
as
follows:
Barn
|
$
7,391.00
|
House
|
26,264.00
|
Land
|
5,760.00
|
Garage
|
250.00
|
Tack
house
|
250.00
|
|
TOTAL
$39,915.00
|
(g)
the
farm
land
was
not
suitable
for
growing
grain
or
hay,
and
in
fact,
yielded
only
about
one-half
ton
of
hay
per
acre
which
is
an
uneconomical
crop;
(h)
the
fields
on
the
farm
did
not
have
adequate
fences
and
accordingly
were
not
good
for
grazing
cattle;
(i)
at
present
the
only
part
of
the
farm
under
cultivation
are
small
parcels
rented
to
other
farmers
in
the
hope
that
their
efforts
and
fertilizer
supplied
by
the
Appellant
might
improve
the
land;
(j)
the
Appellant
began
breeding
horses
on
a
very
small
scale,
which
was
commercially
unfeasible,
and
used
only
about
20
acres
of
his
farm
for
pasture;
(k)
the
Appellant
spent
in
excess
of
$20,000
renovating
the
farm-house,
whereas
very
little
money
was
spent
improving
the
farming
portion
of
the
property;
(l)
the
farm
property
was
maintained
by
the
Appellant
for
the
use
and
the
benefit
of
himself
and
his
wife
and
children
and
was
not
maintained
in
connection
with
a
business
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit;
in
fact,
the
Appellant’s
constant
absence
from
the
aforesaid
farm
property
left
little
time
for
him
to
devote
to
the
farm.
On
the
basis
of
the
appellant’s
evidence
herein
and
the
material
filed
for
the
information
of
the
Board,
there
should
be
three
findings,
namely,
first,
that
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
each
of
the
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years
were
under
the
peculiar
cir-
cumstances
of
the
matter
either
capital
outlays,
or
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
appellant
and
his
family;
secondly,
that
the
appellant
has
failed
to
show
that
the
above-quoted
assumptions
made
by
the
Minister
in
preparing
the
disputed
assessments
are
incorrect
in
any
material
respect,
and
thirdly,
that
the
appellant’s
farm
was
not
maintained
in
connection
with
a
business
carried
on
for.
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
139(1)(ae)
of
the
Act.
Accordingly,
the
appeal
in
respect
of
the
three
taxation
years
mentioned
above
should
be
dismissed
and
the
relevant
assessments
confirmed.
Several
of
the
reasons
which
prompted
me
to
reach
the
above
conclusion
are
as
follows:
1.
While
the
appellant
was,
admittedly,
engaged
in
some
farming
activities
in
his
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years,
he
completely
failed
to
convince
me
that
he
was
seriously
engaged
in
a
farming
business
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
139(1)(ae)
of
the
Act.
2.
Since
the
Minister
is
directed
by
subsection
46(1)
of
the
Act
to
examine
each
return
of
income,
with
all
due
despatch,
and
assess
the
tax
for
the
taxation
year
in
question,
it
follows
that,
where
a
taxpayer
is
alleging
the
existence
of
a
business,
the
Minister
has
no
alternative
but
to
decide
as
of
the
end
of
such
taxation
year
whether
or
not
that
business
should
be
recognized
as
such
having
in
mind
the
above-mentioned
test
contained
in
paragraph
139(1)(ae).
Thus,
it
seems
to
be
perfectly
clear
that
the
Minister,
in
making
an
assessment
under
the
above
circumstances,
is
bound
to
decide
—
whether
or
not
a
business
is
being
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
—
on
the
basis
of
the
facts
and
figures
immediately
available
to
him
and
pertinent
to
the
taxation
year
being
assessed.
In
other
words,
the
Minister
is
not
required
under
the
Act
to
predict
the
prospects
of
the
said
business
in
future
taxation
years,
and
it
would,
obviously,
be
unsound
for
him
to
attempt
to
do
so.
3.
The
figures
as
to
the
appellant’s
farming
losses
set
out
earlier
herein
speak
for
themselves.
Nobody
but
a
high-salaried
taxpayer
could
afford
the
luxury
of
such
an
unprofitable
business.
4.
The
business
of
farming
for
the
down-to-earth
purpose
of
making
a
profit
—
so
far
as
the
ordinary
individual
taxpayer
is
concerned
—
is
usually
regarded
as
a
serious,
full-time
occupation.
In
the
present
appeal,
I
was
not
satisfied
that
the
appellant
did,
in
fact,
spend
sufficient
time
on
his
farm
property
to
make
a
profit
therefrom
as
a
thoroughbred
brood-farm.
That
type
of
business
strikes
me
as
being
very
specialized
requiring
not
only
experience
and
good
judgment
in
horse
breeding
which
the
appellant
undoubtedly
has
in
good
measure
but
also
requiring
public
recognition
as
a
horse
breeder
which
the
appellant
probably
does
not
have
simply
because
he
has
not
had
the
opportunity
to
get
around
and
become
known
in
the
trade
as
a
breeder
of
fine
horses.
5.
Most
new
businesses
necessitate
the
investment
of
some
capital
therein.
In
the
present
case
involving
the
operation
of
a
thoroughbred
brood-farm,
the
appellant
should
clearly
have
expected
to
use
some
of
his
capital
to
put
the
stables,
fences
and
other
facilities
on
the
farm
in
a
good
state
of
repair
as
a
first
step
in
launching
his
business.
However,
he
seems
to
have
the
erroneous
notion
that
the
original
cost
of
putting
his
farm
property
in
a
good
state
of
repair
and
making
it
usable
was
an
income
expense
and,
therefore,
chargeable
against
income
—
which
in
this
case
was
his
salaried
earnings.
In
that
regard,
reference
should
be
had
to
Kunkel
v
MNR,
[1971]
Tax
ABC
453
and
McDonald
v
MNR,
1
Tax
ABC
357.
6.
Since
the
appellant
specifically
pleaded
the
“hobby
farm”
subsection
13(1)
of
the
Act,
reference
should
be
had
to
paragraph
numbered
4
of
the
Kunkel
case
(supra)
which
makes
it
clear
that,
before
a
taxpayer
can
bring
himself
within
that
provision,
he
must
be
able
to
establish
that
his
farm
property
was
maintained
by
him
“in
connection
with
a
business
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
139(1)(ae)
of
the
Act.
7.
It
may
well
be
that
the
taxpayer
has
now
laid
the
foundation
for
a
business
involving
the
operation
of
a
thoroughbred
brood-farm
which
could
possibly
be
recognizable
as
such
under
the
Act
sometime
in
the
future.
Whether
or
not
he
succeeds
in
due
course
in
so
establishing
his
proprietorship
business
is
something
that
only
time
can
tell.
In
the
result,
as
already
indicated,
the
appeal
with
respect
to
the
1967,
1968
and
1969
taxation
years
should
be
dismissed
and
the
relevant
assessments
confirmed.
Appeal
dismissed.