Simpson,
J.:—
Background
The
plaintiff,
Toronto
College
Park
Ltd.
("TCPL"),
appeals
reassessments
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
"Minister")
pursuant
to
section
169
and
subsection
172(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
The
reassessments
concern
the
proper
timing
of
the
deduction
of
tenant
inducement
payments
and
the
deductibility
of
certain
landscaping
expenses.
The
evidence
adduced
related
only
to
the
1983
taxation
year.
However,
the
parties
have
agreed
that
these
reasons
will
apply
to
the
1984
and
1987
taxation
years.
Tenant
inducements
In
1983,
TCPL
owned
a
new
commercial
building
located
at
777
Bay
Street
in
Toronto
(the
"building").
It
was
ready
for
occupancy
but
no
tenants
had
been
secured.
In
1983,
according
to
the
statement
of
agreed
facts
(the
"agreed
facts"),
TCPL
suffered
start
up
rental
losses
for
the
building
in
the
amount
of
$4,853,000.
The
agreed
facts
further
indicated
that,
in
1983,
TCPL
made
two
payments
(the
"payments")
which
were
described
as
tenant
inducements.
The
first
was
a
payment
of
$3,569,419
directly
to
McLean
Hunter
Ltd.
("MHL").
It
was
expressed
to
be
for
leasehold
improvements
but
there
was
no
obligation
on
the
recipient
to
use
it
for
that
purpose.
In
any
event,
the
agreed
facts
provided
that
it
was
for
MHL's
benefit.
The
second
payment
was
indirect.
It
was
made
to
contractors
who
were
employed
by
the
Ministry
of
Government
Services
("MGS").
It
was
a
payment
of
$1,723,289
and
was
made
for
the
benefit
of
MGS.
It
was
agreed
that
the
payments
were
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
TCPL's
business
and
no
issue
was
taken
with
the
amounts
or
their
bona
fides.
It
was
also
agreed
that
the
payments
were
made
to
earn
income.
The
issue
is
when
the
payments
can
be
deducted
under
the
Act.
TCPL
submitted
that
it
was
entitled
to
deduct
the
payments
in
full
in
the
year
in
which
they
were
made.
The
Crown
argued
that
the
payments
ought
to
have
been
amortized
and
matched
against
future
rental
revenues.
The
MHL
lease
was
for
a
period
of
20
years
with
provision
for
a
five-year
renewal.
The
MGS
lease
was
for
a
term
of
11
years
and
five
months.
The
Crown
accordingly
took
the
position
that
the
payments
should
have
been
deducted
over
25
years
in
the
case
of
MHL
and
11
years
and
five
months
in
the
case
of
MSG.
TCPL,
on
the
other
hand,
relied
on
the
decision
in
Cummings
v.
The
Queen,
[1981]
C.T.C.
285,
81
D.T.C.
5207
(F.C.A.)
to
support
its
deduction
of
the
payments
in
the
year
in
which
they
were
made.
The
case
law
Cummings,
supra,
concerned,
inter
alia,
the
nature
and
deductibility
of
a
payment
of
$200,000
by
a
prospective
landlord
to
the
owners
of
Place
Ville
Marie
("PVM")
in
Montreal.
The
payment
was
made
to
free
a
prospective
tenant
from
its
lease
obligations
at
PVM.
This
payment
was
described
as
a
lease
pick-up
payment.
The
Court
of
Appeal
decided
that
the
lease
pick-up
payment
was
an
income
expenditure
and
then
went
on
to
consider
its
deductibility.
In
so
doing,
the
Court
of
Appeal
relied
at
pages
290-91
(D.T.C.
5210)
of
its
decision
on
the
following
passage
from
Oxford
Shopping
Centres
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1980]
C.T.C.
7,
79
D.T.C.
5458
at
page
18
(D.T.C.
5466-67)
(F.C.T.D.);
aff'd
[1981]
C.T.C.
128,
81
D.T.C.
5065
(F.C.A.):
I
think
it
follows
from
this
that
for
income
tax
purposes,
while
the
“matching
principle”
will
apply
to
expenses
related
to
particular
items
of
income,
and
in
particular
with
respect
to
the
computation
of
profit
from
the
acquisition
and
sale
of
inventory,
it
does
not
apply
to
the
running
expense
of
the
business
as
a
whole
even
though
the
deduction
of
a
particularly
heavy
item
of
running
expense
in
the
year
in
which
it
is
paid
will
distort
the
income
for
that
particular
year.
Thus
while
there
is
in
the
present
case
some
evidence
that
accepted
principles
of
accounting
recognize
the
method
adopted
by
the
plaintiff
in
amortizing
the
amount
in
question
for
corporate
purposes
and
there
is
also
evidence
that
to
deduct
the
whole
amount
in
1973
would
distort
the
profit
for
that
year,
it
appears
to
me
that
as
the
nature
of
the
amount
is
that
of
a
running
expense
that
is
not
referable
or
related
to
any
particular
item
of
revenue,
the
footnote
to
Associated
Industries
of
Can.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
138,
67
D.T.C.
5096
(Ex.
Ct.),
and
the
authorities
referred
to
by
Jackett,
P.,
and
in
particular
Vallambrosa
Rubber
Co.
v.
Farmer
(1910),
5
T.C.
529,
and
Naval
Colliery
Co.
v.
C.I.R.
(1928),
12
T.C.
1017,
indicate
that
the
amount
is
deductible
only
in
the
year
in
which
it
was
paid.
All
that
appears
to
me
to
have
been
held
in
M.N.R.
v.
Tower
Investment
Inc.,
[1972]
C.T.C.
182,
72
D.T.C.
6161
(F.C.T.D.),
and
by
the
trial
judge
and
LeDain,
J.
in
Canadian
Glassine
Co.v.
M.N.R.,
[1974]
C.T.C.
63,
74
D.T.C.
6089
(F.C.T.D.);
[1976]
C.T.C.
141,
76
D.T.C.
6083
(F.C.A.),
is
that
it
was
nevertheless
open
to
the
taxpayer
to
spread
the
deduction
there
in
question
over
a
number
of
years.
It
was
not
decided
that
the
whole
expenditure
might
not
be
deducted
in
the
year
in
which
it
was
made,
as
the
earlier
authorities
hold.
And
there
is
no
specific
provision
in
the
Act
which
prohibits
deduction
of
the
full
amount
in
the
year
it
was
paid.
I
do
not
think,
therefore,
that
the
Minister
is
entitled
to
insist
on
an
amortization
of
the
expenditure
or
on
the
plaintiff
spreading
the
deduction
in
respect
of
it
over
a
period
of
years.
In
Cummings,
supra,
Mr.
Justice
Heald
concluded
with
respect
to
various
payments
including
the
payment
to
PVM
at
page
291
(D.T.C.
5211-12):
It
seems
clear
to
me
that
subject
expenditure
was
a
"running
expense”
and
in
the
same
category
as
for
example,
an
extensive
advertising
campaign
to
obtain
tenants
or
an
offer
to
a
prospective
tenant
of
a
rent-free
period
as
an
inducement
to
enter
into
a
long-term
lease
or
a
finder's
fee
for
obtaining
tenants
and
leases.
As
Mr.
Vineberg
characterized
it,
the
$790,000
was
spent
to
“prevent
a
hole
in
income",
said
moneys
being
spent
"to
plug
the
hole”.
Accordingly,
and
for
the
foregoing
reasons,
I
have
concluded
that
the
said
sum
of
$790,000
was
a
current
expenditure.
TCPL
argued
that
the
Cummings
decision
is
binding
authority
even
though
the
type
of
lease
inducement
before
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
Cummings
was
a
lease
pick-up
payment
and
this
case
concerns
inducements
in
the
form
of
payments
for
leasehold
improvements
and
indirect
payments
to
third
party
contractors.
It
was
TCPL's
position
that
the
form
of
the
inducement
is
not
important
and
that,
if
a
payment
is
in
the
nature
of
an
inducement,
it
is
a
"running
expense
that
is
not
referable
or
related
to
any
particular
item
of
revenue"
to
use
the
language
quoted
above
from
the
Oxford
decision,
supra.
The
Crown
submitted
that,
in
Cummings,
matching
the
expense
against
future
lease
revenues
and
deducting
it
over
time
was
not
possible
because
Mr.
Cummings
and
his
associates
had
sold
the
relevant
property.
The
Crown
concluded
that
the
fact
that
matching
was
impossible
was
the
underlying
rationale
for
the
decision
to
allow
the
deduction
in
one
year.
The
Crown
therefore
suggested
that
the
Cummings
decision
should
serve
as
a
precedent
only
in
situations
where
matching
cannot
occur.
However,
Crown
counsel
acknowledged
that
Mr.
Justice
Heald
made
no
reference
to
a
concern
about
the
impossibility
of
matching
as
a
factor
in
reading
his
decision.
Given
the
detailed
nature
of
His
Lordship's
reasons
I
am
not
prepared
to
limit
the
applicability
of
Cummings
by
inferring
that
an
unexpressed
concern
about
the
impossibility
of
matching
supported
his
reasoning.
The
Crown
also
argued
that
Cummings
is
not
a
binding
authority
because
it
is
limited
to
a
consideration
of
lease
pick-up
costs.
Accordingly,
comments
referring
to
other
types
of
tenant
inducements
and
running
expenses
are
obiter
dicta.
This
is
true
but,
in
my
view,
Cummings
does
serve
as
authority
for
three
general
propositions.
Firstly,
certain
tenant
inducements
may
be
classified
as
running
expenses.
Secondly,
running
expenses
may,
in
some
cases,
be
deducted
in
the
year
of
the
expense
and,
thirdly,
the
matching
principle
does
not
apply
to
running
expenses.
In
Associated
Investors
of
Canada
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
138,
67
D.T.C.
5096
(Ex.
Ct.)
at
page
143
(D.T.C.
5098),
Jackett,
P.
described
running
expenses
using
the
language
from
the
decision
of
Rowlatt,
J.
in
Naval
Colliery
Co.
v.
C.LR.
(1928),
12
T.C.
1017,
as
being
those
expenses
of
a
business
which
cannot
be
allocated
directly
to
corresponding
items
of
receipts
in
a
particular
year.
The
quotation
continued:
If
running
repairs
are
made,
if
lubricants
are
bought,
of
course
no
enquiry
is
instituted
as
to
whether
those
repairs
were
partly
owing
to
wear
and
tear
that
earned
profits
in
the
preceding
year
or
whether
they
will
not
help
make
profits
in
the
following
year
and
so
on.
The
way
it
is
looked
at,
and
must
be
looked
at,
is
this,
that
sort
of
expenditure
is
[an]
expenditure
incurred
on
the
running
of
the
business
as
a
whole
in
each
year
and
the
income
is
the
income
of
the
business
as
a
whole
for
the
year
without
trying
to
trace
items
of
expenditure
as
earning
particular
items
of
profit.
In
the
view
of
Jackett,
P.
these
kinds
of
expenses,
which
are
incapable
of
being
allocated
against
revenues,
must
be
deducted
in
the
year
made
or
not
at
all.
The
decision
in
M.N.R.
v.
Tower
Investment
Inc.,
[1972]
C.T.C.
182,
72
D.T.C.
6161
(F.C.T.D.),
related
to
intensive
advertising
campaign
expenses
which
were
classified
as
running
expenses.
Contrary
to
Associated
Investors,
supra,
the
taxpayer
in
Tower
Investments
took
deductions
in
years
other
than
those
in
which
the
payments
were
made
and
that
treatment
was
allowed
on
the
basis
that,
with
such
advertising,
the
benefit
must
reasonably
be
expected
to
extend
over
several
years.
The
deferral
of
some
of
the
advertising
expense
was
permitted
because
the
deferral
accorded
with
the
Generally
Accepted
Accounting
Principles’
("GAAP")
requirement
for
the
matching
of
income
and
expenses
to
more
accurately
reflect
the
taxpayer's
true
income
position.
Finally,
in
Cummings,
supra,
the
lease
pick-up
cost
was
identified
as
a
running
expense
and
the
taxpayer
was
permitted
to
deduct
it
all
in
the
year
made
on
the
basis
that
was
a
"current"
expenditure.
In
this
context
I
have
taken
current
to
mean
that
the
primary
benefit
was
obtained
in
the
year
in
which
the
payment
was
made
because
the
benefit
was
the
signing
of
a
lease
with
a
new
tenant.
Conclusion
I
have
concluded
that
the
case
law
suggests
the
following
approach.
1.
I
should
determine
first
whether
the
expense
is
a
running
expense
in
the
sense
that
it
cannot
be
specifically
allocated
to
a
matching
revenue
item.
2.
If
the
expense
is
a
running
expense,
I
must
decide
whether
it
is
current
or
whether
the
benefit
extends
beyond
the
year
of
payment
even
though
it
cannot
be
matched
as
the
revenues
it
generates
are
non
specific.
3.
If
I
conclude
that
the
benefit
of
a
running
expense
extends
beyond
the
year
of
the
expense,
a
taxpayer
has
two
options.
It
may
either
deduct
in
the
year
of
the
expense,
even
if
the
income
picture
is
somewhat
distorted,
or
defer
the
deduction
if
deferral
accords
with
GAAP
and
creates
a
truer
income
picture.
In
applying
the
above
analysis
to
this
case,
I
have
found
that
the
payments
were
running
expenses,
There
was
some
evidence
that,
during
the
negotiations,
the
calculation
of
the
total
rent
to
be
charged
to
MHL
and
MGS
included
amounts
which
represented
the
payments
amortized
over
the
rent.
These
amounts
changed
as
the
negotiations
developed
and
there
was
no
evidence
that
the
final
rent
charged
included
specific
amounts
attributable
to
the
payments.
On
these
facts,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
payments
were
current
running
expenses
because
their
primary
objective,
which
was
to
attract
tenants
to
the
building,
was
achieved
in
the
year
of
the
expense.
Any
secondary
benefits
in
the
form
of
non
specific
revenues
from
the
tenancies
were
too
imprecise
to
affect
this
conclusion.
It
is
clear
that
there
is
no
obligation
imposed
by
the
case
law
or
by
the
Act
to
defer
in
the
case
of
a
current
running
expense.
Accordingly,
the
deduction
of
the
full
amount
of
the
payments
in
1983
is
allowed.
I
should
note
that
there
was
no
evidence
before
me
about
whether
deferral
or
immediate
deduction
produced
a
truer
picture
of
the
TCPL's
income.
Much
was
made
of
who
bore
the
onus
to
adduce
such
evidence
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
However,
the
search
for
a
truer
picture
is
not
relevant
in
the
case
of
a
running
expense
which
the
taxpayer
does
not
elect
to
defer.
As
the
taxpayer
did
not
so
elect
in
this
case,
I
have
not
found
it
necessary
to
resolve
the
question
of
who
bore
the
onus
of
proof
on
this
issue.
Landscaping
Two
issues
arise
under
this
heading.
Firstly,
is
a
deduction
for
landscaping
possible
when
TCPL
did
not
own
the
land
and,
secondly,
must
the
deduction
be
limited
to
expenses
for
earth
and
growing
things?
In
this
case
TCPL
landscaped
a
public
park
which
adjoined
the
building.
It
did
not
own
the
parkland
in
question.
I
am
satisfied
that,
on
a
plain
reading
of
paragraph
20(1
)(aa)
(the
"paragraph")
of
the
Act,
ownership
of
land
is
not
a
condition
precedent
to
the
deductibility
of
landscaping
expenses.
I
do
not
even
find
the
paragraph
ambiguous
on
this
issue.
This
view
is
bolstered
by
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-296
entitled
Landscaping
of
Grounds
which,
while
not
binding
on
the
Crown,
does
provide
an
insight
into
the
meaning
of
the
paragraph.
It
requires
the
taxpayer
to
own
a
building
but
imposes
no
ownership
requirement
on
the
landscaped
property.
A
deduction
for
landscaping
by
TCPL
is
therefore
allowed
and
the
final
issue
is
the
amount
of
the
deduction.
The
parties
agreed
that
the
following
amounts
were
spent
to
create
the
public
park.
1.
Earth
and
growing
things
|
$344,482
|
2.
Paving
(sidewalks
and
bricks)
|
$
69,130
|
3.
Retaining
wall
and
concrete
forming
around
pool
|
$437,127
|
4.
Fountain
and
pool
|
$104,841
|
5.
Statues
and
miscellaneous
equipment
|
$
46,286
|
Landscaping
is
not
defined
in
the
Act.
However,
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-296
provides:
As
the
word
“landscaping”
is
not
defined
in
the
Act,
it
must
be
given
its
generally
accepted
meaning.
This
means
that
the
work
is
being
done
with
aesthetic
considerations,
rather
than
utility
alone,
in
mind,
and
one
of
its
principal
objects
must
be
beautification
of
the
area.
Landscaping
is
not
restricted,
however,
to
the
planting
of
trees
or
shrubs,
the
laying
out
and
planting
of
flower
beds
or
the
laying
of
sod;
it
would
extend
even
to
the
changing
of
the
contour
or
the
slope
of
land
to
improve
the
appearance
of
a
building
or
of
the
grounds
around
it.
However,
the
making
of
sidewalks
or
paths
and
the
excavating
or
filling
of
land
to
provide,
say,
a
level
area
for
a
parking
lot
or
simply
to
improve
its
drainage
would
not
be
landscaping
that
land
but
would
be
capital
expenditures
that
might
qualify
for
inclusion
under
schedule
B
of
the
Regulations.
TCPL
provided
the
following
definitions
found
in
Websters’
Dictionary
(1987):
landscape:
to
engage
in
landscape
gardening
or
landscape
architecture.
landscape
architecture:
the
planning,
modifying
and
arranging
of
a
large
piece
of
land
with
an
eye
to
scenic
beauty,
esp.
with
reference
to
the
siting
of
roads,
buildings
etc.
landscape
gardening:
the
planning
and
planting
of
gardens
and
grounds,
esp.
so
as
to
produce
picturesque
and
harmonious
effects.
I
am
not
prepared
to
read
the
definition
of
landscape
architecture
into
the
Act
insofar
as
it
extends
to
the
siting
of
roads
and
buildings.
However,
I
accept
that
landscape
in
an
urban
context
means
significantly
more
than
the
planning
and
planting
of
gardens
and
grounds.
In
an
urban
context,
the
"earth
and
growing
things”
limitation
sought
by
the
Crown
is
too
narrow.
I
have
concluded
that
landscaping
under
the
Act
involves
alterations
to
the
earth's
surface
achieved
by
manipulating
or
reforming
that
surface
to
provide
a
more
attractive
and
accessible
environment.
Landscaping
expenses
would
therefore
include
expenditures
for
earth
and
growing
things,
pathways
and
sidewalks
and
reflecting
pools
and
fountains.
However,
landscaping
does
not
include
the
provision
of
moveable
surface
items
such
as
statues.
Accordingly,
deductions
for
landscaping
may
be
taken
in
respect
of
items
1,
2,
3
and
4
above.
The
judgments
in
these
matters
will
follow
as
the
parties
have
agreed
to
submit
draft
judgments
in
accordance
with
my
reasons
for
each
of
the
three
files
before
the
Court.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.