Dickson,
J
(per
curiam):—At
issue
in
this
appeal
is
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
deduct
for
tax
purposes
the
entire
amount
of
farming
losses
suffered
by
him
in
the
1968
and
1969
taxation
years.
The
several
tribunals
which
have
to
date
considered
the
matter
have
held
adversely
to
the
appellant.
Central
to
the
appeal
is
the
construction
of
subsection
13(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended,
an
awkwardly
worded
and
intractable
section
and
the
source
of
much
debate.
It
reads,
in
English:
13.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
his
income
for
the
year
shall
be
deemed
to
be
not
less
than
his
income
from
all
sources
other
than
farming
minus
the
lesser
of
(a)
his
farming
loss
for
the
year,
or
(b)
$2,500
plus
the
lesser
of
(i)
one-half
of
the
amount
by
which
his
farming
loss
for
the
year
exceeds
$2,500,
or
(ii)
$2,500.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
section,
the
Minister
may
determine
that
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
(3)
For
the
purposes
of
this
section,
“farming
loss”
means
a
loss
from
farming
computed
by
applying
the
provisions
of
this
Act
respecting
the
computation
of
income
from
a
business
mutatis
mutandis.
and
in
French:
13.
(1)
Lorsque
le
revenu
d’un
contribuable
pour
une
année
d’imposition
ne
provient
principalement
ni
de
l’agriculture
ni
d’une
combinaison
de
l’agriculture
et
de
quelque
autre
source,
son
revenu
pour
l’année
est
considéré
comme
n’étant
pas
inférieur
à
son
revenu
obtenu
de
toutes
sources
autres
que
l’agriculture,
moins
le
plus
faible
des
deux
montants
suivants:
(a)
ses
pertes
provenant
de
son
exploitation
agricole
pour
l’année,
ou
(b)
$2,500
plus
le
moindre
des
chiffres
suivants:
(i)
la
moitié
du
montant
par
lequel
ses
pertes
provenant
de
son
exploitation
agricole,
pour
l’année,
excèdent
$2,500,
ou
(ii)
$2,500.
(2)
Pour
l’application
du
présent
article,
le
Ministre
peut
décider
que
le
revenu
d’un
contribuable
pour
une
année
d’imposition
ne
provient
principalement
ni
de
l’agriculture
ni
d’une
combinaison
de
l’agriculture
et
de
quelque
autre
source.
(3)
Aux
fins
du
présent
article,
une
perte
provenant
d’une
exploitation
agricole
est
une
perte
provenant
d’une
exploitation
agricole,
calculée
en
appliquant
les
dispositions
de
la
présente
loi
relatives
au
calcul
du
revenu
tiré
d’une
entreprise,
mutatis
mutandis.
The
effect
of
subsection
13(1)
is
to
limit
to
$5,000
the
farming
losses
which
a
taxpayer
may
claim
as
a
deduction
in
a
taxation
year.
The
appellant’s
farming
losses
exceeded
this
amount
in
the
years
1968
and
1969.
He
contends
that
his
chief
source
of
income
for
those
taxation
years
was
either
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
and
therefore
the
constraint
of
the
section
does
not
apply
to
him.
In
an
alternative
argument,
he
submits
that
subsection
13(1)
is
meaningless
and
incomprehensible;
therefore,
it
should
not
be
applied
to
his
detriment.
In
effect,
he
would
have
us
write
the
subsection
out
of
the
Act.
I
do
not
think
we
can
accede
to
that
submission.
We
must
endeavour
to
construe
the
language
of
Parliament.
It
is
not
an
impossible
task.
The
appellant
is
a
Vancouver
businessman.
During
the
years
1960
to
1967
he
was
a
half-owner
of,
and
employed
by,
Active
Trading.
Ltd,
a
scrap
company.
His
annual
salary
during
those
years
ranged
from
$11,500
to
$15,900.
In
1967
he
sold
his
interest
in
Active
Trading
Ltd,
and
in
the
same
year
started
another
company,
Cascade
News
Ltd,
for
the
distribution
of
racing
forms,
from
which
company
he
received
dividends.
The
following
year
he
organized
Cascade
Fasteners
Ltd
as
a
manufacturer
of
screw
products
and
from
that
company
received
a
salary
in
1969
amounting
to
$17,833.40.
Parallel
to
these
activities
the
appellant
was
actively
engaged
from
the
early
1960’s
in
training,
boarding
and
racing
horses
for
himself
and
others.
He
began
with
one
or
two
horses
but
upon
the
disposal
of
his
interest
in
Active
Trading
Ltd
he
extended
his
horse-racing
activities.
He
leased
an
acre
of
land
adjoining
Lansdowne
Race
Track
in
the
municipality
of
Richmond,
a
Vancouver
suburb,
upon
which
was
located
a
small
house,
occupied
by
his
trainer,
three
paddocks
and
some
box
Stalls.
During
the
years
1962
to
1969
he
bought
53
horses
at
a
total
cost
of
$183,463
and
sold
horses
to
the
value
of
$121,091.
He
raced
horses
at
tracks
in
British
Columbia,
Eastern
Canada
and
in
the
United
States,
winning
purses
totalling
$184,018.
From
his
“farming”
operations
the
appellant
realized
a
small
profit
in
1963
($1,593)
and
in
1964
($1,368)
but
after
1964
he
sustained
a
succession
of
losses,
peaking
in
1968
($21,097)
and
1969
($20,810).
Thereafter,
he
reduced
his
farming
activities,
discontinued
the
Lansdowne
operation
and
disposed
of
almost
all
of
his
horses.
A
summary
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
years
1960
to
1972
is
set
out
below:
|
Farming
|
Rentals
|
|
Office
or
|
Business
|
Business
|
Net
Income
|
Net
Income
|
Year
|
Employment
|
Investment
|
Income
|
or
(Loss)
|
or
(Loss)
|
1960
|
$11,500.00
|
|
—
|
—
|
$
(1,213.55)
|
$2,700.00
|
1961
|
15,600.00
|
|
—
|
—
|
(2,235.28)
|
(872.00)
|
1962
|
15,600.00
|
$
|
300.00
|
—
|
(1,718.48)
|
(750.00)
|
1963
|
15,900.00
|
|
38.66
|
—
|
1,593.44
|
(1,131.00)
|
1964
|
16,200.00
|
|
37.84
|
—
|
1,368.64
|
—
|
1965
|
15,900.00
|
|
1,364.08
|
—
|
(1,684.19)
|
—
|
1966
|
15,900.00
|
|
1,193.86
|
—
|
(885.05)
|
—
|
1967
|
13,500.00
|
|
1,625.43
|
—
|
(8,504.75)
|
—
|
1968
|
1,750.00
|
|
8,822.43
|
$12,500.00
|
(21,097.46)
|
—
|
1969
|
17,833.40
|
17,048.65
|
—
|
(20,810.72)
|
—
|
1970
|
17,309.39
|
|
19,919.72
|
(913.68)
|
(7,535.76)
|
—
|
1971
|
6,607.04
|
|
7,656.55
|
17,415.65
|
(7,538.42)
|
—
|
1972
|
22,306.00
|
13,384.66
|
—
|
(4,038.94)
|
(312.10)
|
In
reporting
his
income
for
the
1968
and
1969
taxation
years
the
appellant
deducted
the
full
amount
of
the
farming
losses
suffered
in
those
years,
$21,097.46
and
$20,810.72,
respectively.
In
the
earlier
proceedings
argument
was
addressed
to
the
question
of
whether
a
ministerial
determination
of
chief
source
of
income
had
been
made
pursuant
to
subsection
13(2),
but
before
this
Court
counsel
for
the
Crown
stated
that
he
was
abandoning
any
support
which
subsection
13(2)
might
provide.
Therefore,
the
sole
issue
in
the
appeal
is
whether
the
farming
business
carried
on
by
the
appellant
in
1968
and
1969
was
his
chief
source
of
income
or
whether
it,
in
combination
with
another
source,
was
his
chief
source
of
income.
If
the
answer
is
in
the
affirmative
the
appellant
is
not
precluded
by
subsection
13(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
from
deducting
the
full
amount
of
the
farming
losses;
if
the
answer
is
in
the
negative
he
is
subject
to
the
limitation
imposed
by
subsection
13(1)
and
entitled
to
a
deduction
of
$5,000
only
in
respect
of
farming
losses
for
each
of
the
1968
and
1969
taxation
years.
In
the
absence
of
section
13
a
taxpayer
carrying
on
a
farming
business
would
combine
his
entire
profits
and
losses
from
inside
and
outside
Canada
and
be
liable
to
income
tax
on
the
net
taxable
income.
The
first
thing
to
note
when
one
comes
to
examine
section
13
is
the
extended
meaning
which
the
Income
Tax
Act
has
given
to
the
word
“farming”.
Paragraph
139(1)(p)
of
the
Act
provides:
(p)
“farming”
includes
tillage
of
the
soil,
livestock
raising
or
exhibiting,
maintaining
of
horses
for
racing,
raising
of
poultry,
fur
farming,
dairy
farming,
fruit
growing
and
the
keeping
of
bees,
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment
under
a
person
engaged
in
the
business
of
farming;
In
maintaining
horses
for
racing,
the
appellant
was
“farming”
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.
The
next
thing
to
observe
with
respect
to
subsection
13(1)
is
that
it
comes
into
play
only
when
the
taxpayer
has
had
a
farming
loss
for
the
year.
That
being
so,
it
may
seem
strange
that
the
section
should
speak
of
farming
as
the
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
the
taxation
year;
if
in
a
taxation
year
the
taxpayer
suffers
a
loss
on
his
farming
operations
it
is
manifest
that
farming
would
not
make
any
contribution
to
the
taxpayer’s
income
in
that
year.
On
a
literal
reading
of
the
section,
no
taxpayer
could
ever
claim
more
than
the
maximum
$5,000
deduction
which
the
section
contemplates;
the
only
way
in
which
the
section
can
have
meaning
is
to
place
emphasis
on
the
words
“source
of
income”.
Although
originally
disputed,
it
is
now
accepted
that
in
order
to
have
a
“source
of
income”
the
taxpayer
must
have
a
profit
or
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
Source
of
income,
thus,
is
an
equivalent
term
to
business:
Dorfman
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
151
;
72
DTC
6131.
See
also
paragraph
139(1)(ae)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
includes
as
“personal
and
living
expenses”
and
therefore
not
deductible
for
tax
purposes,
the
expenses
of
properties
maintained
by
the
taxpayer
for
his
own
use
and
benefit,
and
not
maintained
in
connection
with
a
business
carried
on
for
profit
or
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
If
the
taxpayer
in
operating
his
farm
is
merely
indulging
in
a
hobby,
with
no
reasonable
expectation
of
profit,
he
is
disentitled
to
claim
any
deduction
at
all
in
respect
of
expenses
incurred.
There
is
a
vast
case
literature
on
what
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
means
and
it
is
by
no
means
entirely
consistent.
In
my
view,
whether
a
taxpayer
has
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
is
an
objective
determination
to
be
made
from
all
of
the
facts.
The
following
criteria
should
be
considered:
the
profit
and
loss
experience
in
past
years,
the
taxpayer’s
training,
the
taxpayer’s
intended
course
of
action,
the
capability
of
the
venture
as
capitalized
to
show
a
profit
after
charging
capital
cost
allowance.
The
list
is
not
intended
to
be
exhaustive.
The
factors
will
differ
with
the
nature
and
extent
of
the
undertaking:
The
Queen
v
Matthews,
[1974]
CTC
230;
74
DTC
6193.
One
would
not
expect
a
farmer
who
purchased
a
productive
going
operation
to
suffer
the
same
start-up
losses
as
the
man
who
begins
a
tree
farm
on
raw
land.
Whether
a
source
of
income
is
a
taxpayer’s
“chief
source’’
of
income
is
both
a
relative
and
objective
test.
It
is
decidedly
not
a
pure
quantum
measurement.
A
man
who
has
farmed
all
of
his
life
does
not
cease
to
have
his
chief
source
of
income
from
farming
because
he
unexpectedly
wins
a
lottery.
The
distinguishing
features
of
“chief
source’’
are
the
taxpayer’s
reasonable
expectation
of
income
from
his
various
revenue
sources
and
his
ordinary
mode
and
habit
of
work.
These
may
be
tested
by
considering,
inter
alia
in
relation
to
a
source
of
income,
the
time
spent,
the
capital
committed,
the
profitability
both
actual
and
potential.
A
change
in
the
taxpayer’s
mode
and
habit
of
work
or
reasonable
expectations
may
signify
a
change
in
the
chief
source,
but
that
is
a
question
of
fact
in
the
circumstances.
There
has
been
difference
of
opinion
on
whether
the
word
“combination’’
in
subsection
13(1)
requires
some
“connection”
by
way
of
physical
relationship
or
integration
or
inter-connection
between
farming
and
the
subordinate
activity
which
provides
another
source
of
income.
Paragraph
3(f)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
of
1917,
as
amended,
made
reference
to
“connection”
in
defining
the
permissible
deductions
from
income
derived
from
the
chief
business,
trade,
profession
or
occupation
of
the
taxpayer
in
determining
his
taxable
income.
Paragraph
3(f)
read:
(f)
deficits
or
losses
sustained
in
transactions
entered
into
for
profit
but
not
connected
with
the
chief
business,
trade,
profession
or
occupation
of
the
taxpayer
shall
not
be
deducted
from
income
derived
from
the
chief
business,
trade,
profession
or
occupation
of
the
taxpayer
in
determining
his
taxable
income.
The
word
“connected”
is
not
found
in
section
13
of
the
present
Act.
As
Thorson,
P
said,
obiter,
in
Simpson
v
MNR,
[1961]
CTC
174;
61
DTC
1117,
there
is
no
reason
why
there
must
be
such
a
limitation.
I
share
this
view.
See
also
Dorfman
v
MNR
(supra)
at
page
154
[6134]
and
Bert
James
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
457
at
464;
73
DTC
5333
at
5337.
It
is
clear
that
“combination”
in
section
13
cannot
mean
simple
addition
of
two
sources
of
income
for
any
taxpayer.
That
would
lead
to
the
result
that
a
taxpayer
could
combine
his
farming
loss
with
his
most
important
other
source
of
income,
thereby
constituting
his
chief
source.
I
do
not
think
subsection
13(1)
can
be
properly
so
construed.
Such
a
construction
would
mean
that
the
limitation
of
the
section
would
never
apply
and,
in
every
case,
the
taxpayer
could
deduct
the
full
amount
of
farming
losses.
In
my
opinion,
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
a
whole
envisages
three
classes
of
farmers:
(1)
A
taxpayer
for
whom
farming
may
reasonably
be
expected
to
provide
the
bulk
of
income
or
the
centre
of
work
routine.
Such
a
taxpayer,
who
looks
to
farming
for
his
livelihood,
is
free
of
the
limitation
of
subsection
13(1)
in
those
years
in
which
he
sustains
a
farming
lOSS.
(2)
The
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
but
carried
on
farming
as
a
sideline
business.
Such
a
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
the
deductions
spelled
out
in
subsection
13(1)
in
respect
of
farming
losses.
(3)
The
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
and
who
carried
on
some
farming
activities
as
a
hobby.
The
losses
sustained
by
such
a
taxpayer
on
his
non-business
farming
are
not
deductible
in
any
amount.
The
reference
in
subsection
13(1)
to
a
taxpayer
whose
source
of
income
is
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
is
a
reference
to
class
(1).
It
contemplates
a
man
whose
major
preoccupation
is
farming,
but
it
recognizes
that
such
a
man
may
have
other
pecuniary
interests
as
well,
such
as
income
from
investments,
or
income
from
a
sideline
employment
or
business.
The
section
provides
that
these
subsidiary
interests
will
not
place
the
taxpayer
in
class
(2)
and
thereby
limit
the
deductibility
of
any
loss
which
may
be
suffered
to
$5,000.
While
a
quantum
measurement
of
farming
income
is
relevant,
it
is
not
alone
decisive.
The
test
is
again
both
relative
and
objective,
and
one
may
employ
the
criteria
indicative
of
“chief
source”
to
distinguish
whether
or
not
the
interest
is
auxiliary.
A
man
who
has
farmed
all
of
his
life
does
not
become
disentitled
to
class
(1)
classification
simply
because
he
comes
into
an
inheritance.
On
the
other
hand,
a
man
who
changes
occupational
direction
and
commits
his
energies
and
capital
to
farming
as
a
main
expectation
of
income
is
not
disentitled
to
deduct
the
full
impact
of
start-up
costs.
In
the
instant
case,
it
is
common
ground
that
the
appellant
was
farming
and
that
his
farming
constituted
a
source
of
income.
There
are
concurrent
findings
below
that
farming
was
not
his
chief
source
of
income.
I
would
not
disturb
those
findings.
Additionally,
I
do
not
think
it
can
fairly
be
said
that
appellant
was
a
person
whose
chief
source
of
income
was
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
in
the
sense
I
have
indicated.
He
devoted
considerable
effort
towards
launching
new
ventures.
Horse-racing
consumed
only
several
hours
of
his
day
and
that
for
part
of
the
year
only.
His
commitment
of
capital
was
cautious.
The
nature
of
the
enterprise
is
risky.
It
is
difficult
reasonably
to
plan
to
devote
energies
to
it
principally
in
the
expectation
of
a
steady
living.
He
suffered
constant
and
increasing
losses
with
the
exception
of
two
years
in
which
minor
profits
were
made.
Although
none
of
the
above
is
alone
determinative,
together
they
suggest
only
one
business
venture
of
several,
with
nothing
distinguishing
in
the
way
of
‘a
chief
source
of
income”.
In
my
opinion
this
appeal
fails.
Counsel
for
the
Crown
told
the
Court
that
the
Crown
was
prepared
to
forgo
costs
in
this
Court
in
the
event
of
success.
I
would
accordingly
dismiss
the
appeal
without
costs.