Desjardins,
J.:
—The
respondent
claimed,
against
his
1981
income
earned
after
he
became
a
resident
of
Canada,
non-capital
losses
in
the
amount
of
$212,013
incurred
in
the
taxation
years
1978
and
1979
while
he
was
a
nonresident.
He
had
elected,
during
those
years,
to
file
returns
under
subsec
tion
216(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1970-71-72
c.
63
as
amended.
The
losses
came
from
a
property
physically
situated
in
Canada.
The
issue
before
us
is
whether
the
trial
judge,
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
correctly
interpreted
paragraph
111(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
so
as
to
authorize
the
deductions
claimed
by
the
respondent.
The
Facts
The
facts
are
not
in
dispute.
They
appear
from
an
agreed
statement
of
facts
reproduced
at
length
in
the
judgment
below
to
be
found
in
Merali
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
F.T.R.
216;
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
521.
They
can
be
summed
up
in
the
following
manner.
During
the
taxation
years
1978,
1979
and
1980,
the
respondent
was
a
resident
of
the
United
States
and
the
owner
of
an
undivided
interest
in
real
property
(herein
called
the
'Property'),
situated
in
the
Municipality
of
Richmond
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
He
computed
his
liability
for
tax
in
Canada,
during
those
years
1978,
1979
and
1980,
in
respect
of
rents
received
on
the
property
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
subsection
216(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
respondent
incurred
losses
in
respect
of
the
property
in
the
amounts
of
$103,445
and
$108,568
in
the
1978
and
1979
taxation
years
respectively,
which
amounts
he
reported
in
filing
his
returns
of
income
for
the
1978
and
1979
taxation
years.
In
the
1980
taxation
year,
he
earned
no
net
income
from
the
property
for
the
reason
that
the
aggregate
of
expenses
and
capital
cost
allowance
was
equal
to
his
share
of
rental
revenue
from
the
property.
In
or
about
the
month
of
June
1981,
he
became
a
resident
of
Canada.
In
computing
his
taxable
income
for
the
portion
of
the
1981
taxation
year
during
which
he
was
a
resident
of
Canada,
the
respondent
deducted
the
sum
of
$212,013
comprised
of
the
two
sums
of
$103,445
and
$108,568
previously
mentioned
on
the
basis
that
such
amounts
were
non-capital
losses
deductible
in
computing
taxable
income
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
paragraph
111(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
reassessment,
notice
of
which
was
dated
April
6,
1983,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
the
respondent
to
disallow
the
deduction
of
non-capital
losses
in
the
amount
of
$212,013.
The
respondent
filed
a
notice
of
objection
to
the
assessment.
By
reassessment
dated
February
6,
1984,
the
Minister
confirmed
the
disallowance
of
the
deduction
of
any
portion
of
the
sum
of
$212,013.
Analysis
It
should
be
made
clear
at
the
outset
that
both
residents
and
non-residents
who
derive
income
from
Canadian
sources
are
included,
by
definition,
in
the
term
"taxpayer"
as
it
appears
in
subsection
248(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
i.e.
"any
person
whether
or
not
liable
to
pay
tax".
Section
2
in
Part
I
of
the
Act,
under
the
subtitle
“Division
A
-
Liability
for
Tax"
provides
the
following:
2.
(1)
An
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
the
taxable
income
for
each
taxation
year
of
every
person
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year.
(2)
The
taxable
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
is
his
income
for
the
year
minus
the
deductions
permitted
by
Division
C.
(3)
Where
a
person
who
is
not
taxable
under
subsection
(1)
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
was
employed
in
Canada,
(b)
carried
on
a
business
in
Canada,
or
(c)
disposed
of
a
taxable
Canadian
property,
at
any
time
in
the
year
or
a
previous
year,
an
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
his
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
the
year
determined
in
accordance
with
Division
D.
As
a
rule,
a
non-resident,
not
carrying
on
a
business
in
Canada,
is
subject
to
the
withholding
tax
provisions
of
Part
XIII
of
the
Act
with
respect
to
rental
income
derived
from
the
property.
The
rate
applicable
is
25,
subject
to
treaty
modifications.
Subsection
216(1)
provides
an
alternative
method
for
computing
the
tax
of
a
non-resident
receiving
rents.
This
election
is
often
made
whenever
the
withholding
tax
on
the
rent
(which
is
levied
on
the
gross
amount)
exceeds
the
amount
of
tax
that
would
be
payable
on
the
actual
profit
received
from
the
property
after
deducting
all
expenses.
Under
subsection
216(1),
a
taxpayer
may
file
a
return
under
Part
I
in
the
form
prescribed
for
a
person
resident
in
Canada
for
that
taxation
year.
He
then
becomes
liable
to
tax
under
Part
I
as
though
he
were
a
resident
in
Canada
and
as
though
his
income
from
his
interest
in
real
property
in
Canada
were
his
only
income.
He
is
entitled
to
deduct
actual
expenses
including
capital
cost
allowance,
but
no
Division
C
deductions
such
as
personal
exemptions,
medical
or
charitable
outlays
and
no
non-capital
losses.
He
is
clearly
barred
to
do
so
under
paragraph
216(1)(c).
Subsection
216(1)
states:
216.
(1)
Where
an
amount
has
been
paid
during
a
taxation
year
to
a
non-resident
person,
or
to
a
partnership
of
which
he
was
a
member,
as,
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
rent
on
real
property
in
Canada
or
a
timber
royalty,
he
may,
within
2
years
from
the
end
of
the
taxation
year,
file
a
return
of
income
under
Part
I
in
the
form
prescribed
for
a
person
resident
in
Canada
for
that
taxation
year
and
he
shall,
without
affecting
his
liability
for
tax
otherwise
payable
under
Part
I,
thereupon
be
liable,
in
lieu
of
paying
tax
under
this
Part
on
that
amount,
to
pay
tax
under
Part
I
for
that
taxation
year
as
though
(a)
he
were
a
person
resident
in
Canada
and
were
not
exempt
from
tax
under
section
149,
(b)
his
income
from
his
interest
in
real
property
in
Canada,
timber
resource
properties
and
timber
limits
in
Canada
and
his
share
of
the
income
of
a
partnership
of
which
he
was
a
member
from
its
interest
in
real
property
in
Canada,
timber
resource
properties
and
timber
limits
in
Canada
were
his
only
income,
and
(c)
he
were
not
entitled
to
any
deduction
from
income
for
the
purpose
of
computing
taxable
income.
[My
emphasis.]
The
definition
of
"non-capital
losses”
is
to
be
found
in
paragraph
111(8)(b)
of
the
Act:
111.
(8)
In
this
section,
(b)
"non-capital
loss"
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
means
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
(i)
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
the
taxpayer's
loss
for
the
year
from
an
office,
employment,
business
or
property,
his
allowable
business
investment
loss
for
the
year,
and
all
amounts
deductible
under
section
112
or
subsection
113(1)
or
138(6)
from
the
taxpayer's
income
for
the
year
exceeds
(ii)
the
amount
determined
under
paragraph
3(c);
and
.
.
.
During
the
taxation
years
1978-1979
and
1980,
while
he
was
a
non-resident,
the
respondent
was
barred
from
deducting
his
non-capital
losses.
In
1981,
on
becoming
a
resident,
the
respondent
was
entitled
to
claim
the
deductions
contained
in
Division
C,
including
non-capital
losses.
Could
he
however
benefit
from
the
carrying
over
provision
provided
for
in
paragraph
111(1)(a)
of
the
Act?
111.
(1)
For
the
purpose
of
computing
the
taxable
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
there
may
be
deducted
from
the
income
for
the
year
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(a)
non-capital
losses
for
the
5
taxation
years
immediately
preceding
and
the
taxation
year
immediately
following
the
taxation
year,
but
no
amount
is
deductible
in
respect
of
non-capital
losses
from
the
income
of
any
year
except
to
the
extent
of
the
taxpayer's
income
for
the
year
minus
any
amount
deductible
under
subsection
138(6)
and
all
deductions
permitted
by
the
provisions
of
this
Division
other
than
this
paragraph,
paragraph
(b)
or
section
109;
..
.
.
The
respondent
deducted
from
the
portion
of
his
income
earned
after
June
1981
(see
section
114
of
the
Act)
the
non-capital
losses
he
incurred
while
a
non-resident
which
he
could
not
claim
in
the
years
1978
and
1979
on
account
of
paragraph
216(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
The
trial
judge
concluded
that
paragraph
216(1)(c)
had
ceased
to
apply.
He
stated
(AB
88-89,
2
F.T.R.
at
page
220):
The
plaintiff
computed
in
the
1978,
1979
and
1980
taxation
years
his
income
from
property
in
accordance
with
section
9
of
the
Act.
The
net
rental
income
thus
calculated
turned
out
to
be
negative
and
losses
were
incurred.
It
is
such
losses
that
cannot
be
applied
against
income
for
the
year
[as
determined
under
paragraph
3(c)]
that
become
non-capital
losses.
The
plaintiff
is
statutorily
precluded
from
carrying
over
those
losses
during
the
period
he
is
a
non-resident
[paragraph
216(1)(c)].
From
my
reading
and
interpretation
of
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
Act,
he
is
not
barred
from
sustaining
losses.
Those
losses
exist,
but
they
cannot
be
used
until
the
taxpayer
becomes
a
resident.
Clearly
the
losses
incurred
in
the
1978
and
1979
taxation
years
fall
within
the
ambit
of
paragraph
111(8)(b)
which
defines
the
non-capital
losses.
The
statutory
authority
to
carry
over
those
non-capital
losses
is
conferred
by
paragraph
111(1)(a),
but
paragraph
216(1)(c)
is
specifically
designed
to
prevent
their
carry
over.
Paragraph
216(1)(c)
does
not,
however,
go
as
far
as
saying
that
a
non-resident
taxpayer
is
precluded
from
computing
losses
on
income
earning
property
held
by
him
in
Canada.
[My
emphasis]
The
appellant
has
pressed
upon
us
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
contains
no
provision
which
permits
respondent
to
apply
losses
incurred
in
a
nonresident
period
against
income
earned
by
him
during
a
resident
period.
In
effect,
the
respondent
is
seeking
to
retroactively
use
the
residence
rules
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
non-resident
losses.
Section
114
contemplates
a
restriction
on
the
use
of
losses
incurred
by
a
non-resident
during
a
period
when
he
becomes
resident.
The
appellant
submits
that
what
the
taxpayer
elected
to
do
under
subsection
216(1)
cannot
affect
his
tax
liability
after
he
has
become
a
resident.
Losses
not
allowed
under
subsection
216(1)
cannot
become
magically
transposed
to
losses
now
deductible
under
paragraph
111(1)(a).
I
do
not
share
this
view.
The
proper
approach
appears
to
me
to
be
the
following.
During
the
fiscal
years
1978
and
1979,
the
respondent
as
a
non-resident
was
liable
to
pay
tax
on
income
earned
from
a
source
inside
Canada.
He
was
a
"taxpayer"
within
the
purview
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Those
years
were
"taxation
years"
in
which
the
respondent
incurred
“non-capital
losses",
as
defined
in
the
Act,
except
that
they
could
not
be
deducted
on
account
of
the
bar
contained
specifically
in
paragraph
216(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
In
1981,
the
respondent
became
a
Canadian
resident.
For
that
taxation
year,
his
income
tax
liability
came
directly
under
subsections
2(1)
and
(2)
of
the
Act,
subject
to
section
114.
He
was
“a
taxpayer"
as
defined
in
the
Act
and
as
referred
to
in
paragraph
111(1)(a).
He
had
previous
"taxation
years"
under
paragraph
111(1)(a)
by
the
fact
that
he
had
been
a
taxpayer
in
1978,
1979
and
1980.
The
legal
nature
of
the
losses,
as
non-capital
losses,
was
the
same,
before
and
after
1981.
The
non-capital
losses
incurred
by
the
respondent
in
1978
and
in
1979
were
not
deductible
because
of
the
bar
pertaining
to
his
election
under
subsection
216(1),
but
they
still
were
in
the
nature
of
noncapital
losses.
The
trial
judge
held
that
"those
losses
exist,
but
they
cannot
be
used
until
the
taxpayer
becomes
a
resident".
I
agree
with
him.
The
correct
approach
to
this
issue
is
not,
as
submitted
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
whether
the
Income
Tax
Act
expressly
permits
a
resident
taxpayer
to
carry
forward
losses
incurred
while
he
was
a
non-resident
but,
as
submitted
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
whether
there
is
any
prohibition
to
that
effect
since
paragraph
111
(1)(a)
plainly
permits
that
deduction
in
the
absence
of
an
express
prohibition.
Whether
the
correct
rule
of
interpretation
of
a
taxation
statute
is
the
traditional
strict
interpretation
or
the
more
modern
liberal
approach
[Pierre-
André
Côté,
The
Interpretation
of
Legislation
in
Canada,
(Cowansville,
Quebec:
Les
Editions
Yvon
Blais
Inc.,
1984)
at
390-398]
the
result
in
the
present
case
is
the
same.
It
would
be
incorrect,
in
my
view,
for
courts
of
law
to
create
prohibitions
which
do
not
exist
in
the
statute.
There
is
nothing
in
the
Act
to
prevent
a
resident
from
carrying
over
non-capital
losses
incurred
when
he
was
a
non-resident
taxpayer
having
elected
during
his
non-resident
years
to
be
treated
as
a
resident
under
the
terms
of
subsection
216(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
restriction
on
deductions
provided
for
in
section
114
applies
only
to
those
deductions
that
cannot
reasonably
be
considered
applicable
to
the
period
of
residency
of
a
Canadian
resident
for
that
taxation
year
that
is
contemplated.
The
non-capital
losses,
in
the
case
at
bar,
were
computed
for
the
taxation
years
1978
and
1979
and
not
for
the
portion
of
the
taxation
year
that
ran
from
January
to
June
1981.
Paragraph
216(1)(c)
simply
ceases
to
apply
when
a
non-resident
taxpayer
becomes
a
resident
taxpayer.
Paragraph
111(1)(a)
then
has
its
full
effect.
The
present
case
is
to
be
distinguished
from
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
Oceanspan
Carriers
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1987]
2
F.C.
171;
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
210,
where
a
newly
resident
corporation
tried
unsuccessfully
to
deduct
noncapital
losses
earned
at
a
time
it
had
no
connection
whatsoever
with
Canada.
I
would
therefore
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.