Robertson,
J.A.:—
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
a
trial
judge
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
principal
issue
is
whether
an
employee
who
has
been
relocated
is
required
to
include,
as
"income
from
employment",
an
amount
received
from
his
or
her
employer
to
offset
higher
housing
prices
at
the
new
work
location.
In
a
decision
dated
January
25,
1990,
the
Tax
Court
found
that
a
$10,000
payment
received
by
the
respondent
from
his
employer
to
defray
higher
housing
prices
encountered
when
relocating
from
Moncton
to
Winnipeg,
was
not
taxable
([1990]
1
C.T.C.
2372,
90
D.T.C.
1274).
On
appeal,
by
way
of
trial
de
novo,
the
trial
judge
reached
the
same
conclusion
by
characterizing
the
payment
as
a
non-
taxable
reimbursement
for
expenses
incurred
as
a
consequence
of
employment
([1993]
2
C.T.C.
27,
93
D.T.C.
5247).
The
appellant
argued
before
this
Court
that
the
$10,000
payment
is
tantamount
to
a
housing
subsidy
or
a
cost
of
living
allowance
and
therefore
taxable
either
as
a
"benefit"
or
an
“allowance”
under
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
or
6(1
)(b)
respectively
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
With
great
respect
to
the
learned
trial
judge,
I
cannot
accede
to
his
legal
characterization
of
the
payment
in
question.
In
my
view,
the
$10,000
did
not
restore
the
respondent
to
his
previous
financial
state.
Rather
it
increased
his
net
worth
by
$10,000.
The
following
analysis
leads
to
the
conclusion
that
the
$10,000
falls
outside
the
legal
parameters
for
tax-free
benefits
established
in
The
Queen
v.
Savage,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
428,
[1983]
C.T.C.
393,
83
D.T.C.
5409,
Ransom
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
C.T.C.
346,
67
D.T.C.
5235
and
Canada
v.
Splane,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
199,
90
D.T.C.
6442
(F.C.T.D.),
aff’d
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
224,
92
D.T.C.
6021
(F.C.A.).
I
The
respondent
taxpayer
was
employed
as
a
carman
by
Canadian
National
Railway
("CNR")
at
its
Moncton
Shops
when
CNR
announced
that
the
facility
would
close
in
1987.
The
planned
closure
affected
the
livelihoods
of
1200
employees
and
presented
a
substantial
setback
to
that
community.
Following
a
number
of
emotional
protests,
demonstrations
and
calls
for
political
intervention,
an
agreement
was
reached
between
CNR
and
the
various
unions
involved.
The
respondent
was
a
member
of
one
of
the
unions
which
ratified
the
agreement.
The
agreement
created
60
new
carman
positions
in
Winnipeg
and
established
a
$10,000
relocation
payment
for
employees
who:
(a)
owned
a
house
in
Moncton;
(b)
transferred
from
Moncton
to
Winnipeg;
(c)
sold
the
Moncton
house;
(d)
purchased
a
house
in
Winnipeg;
and
(e)
reported
for
work
in
Winnipeg.
No
restrictions
were
placed
on
the
use
of
the
$10,000
payment.
The
trial
judge
canvassed
the
respondent's
reasons
for
declining
to
transfer
to
another
Moncton
facility
known
as
the
Gordon
Yard
instead
of
moving
to
Winnipeg.
First,
he
would
not
have
been
performing
the
same
work
in
Gordon
Yard.
Second,
employment
at
that
location
involved
shift
work
which
was
not
required
in
Winnipeg.
Finally,
the
respondents
believed
that
Winnipeg
provided
greater
long-term
job
security.
No
issue
was
taken
with
whether
the
respondent
was
"required"
by
CNR
to
move.
In
these
circumstances,
it
is
evident
that
the
notion
of
personal
choice
is
a
chimera.
The
trial
judge
concluded
that
CNR
was
motivated
by
two
considerations
to
pay
each
of
the
Moncton
carmen
$10,000:
first,
it
reduced
CNR's
overall
operating
costs
by
facilitating
the
closure
of
its
Moncton
Shops;
and
second,
the
payments
helped
offset
Winnipeg's
higher
housing
prices.
It
is
agreed
that
the
average
cost
of
a
detached
bungalow
in
Winnipeg
in
1987
was
at
least
$23,000
higher
than
the
cost
of
a
detached
bungalow
in
Moncton.
The
respondent
sold
his
Moncton
house
for
$63,000.
It
is
significant
to
the
analysis
which
follows
that
he
did
not
sell
it
at
a
loss.
In
the
same
year
he
purchased
a
house
in
Winnipeg
for
$91,000
(a
difference
of
$28,000).
Having
satisfied
the
conditions
of
the
agreement,
he
received
$10,000.
Within
this
factual
framework,
the
trial
judge
concluded
that
the
$10,000
payment
was
not
taxable
under
either
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
or
6(1)(b)
of
the
Act.
In
rejecting
the
depiction
of
the
payment
as
a
taxable
benefit,
he
reasoned
at
page
33
(D.T.C.
5251):
There
is
no
evidence
in
the
present
case
to
support
a
finding
that
the
payment
in
question
meets
the
criteria
of
a
benefit.
The
Crown's
contention
that
Mr.
Phillips
did
not
have
to
move
to
Winnipeg,
and
having
done
so,
did
not
have
to
purchase
a
house,
has
no
merit.
To
maintain
his
current
employment
status
with
CNR,
which
included
performing
work
as
a
carman
and
which
was
of
a
secure
and
long-term
nature,
Mr.
Phillips
was
required
to
relocate
from
Moncton
to
Winnipeg.
He
incurred
expenses
in
doing
so,
most
significantly
in
terms
of
increased
housing
prices.
As
those
expenses
arose
in
consequence
of
his
employment,
his
employer
undertook
to
partially
indemnify
him
against
them.
I
cannot
see
that
he
has
acquired
any
profit
from
the
reimbursement
of
those
expenses
whatsoever.
As
in
Splane,
supra,
Mr.
Phillips
was
merely
restored,
although
only
partially,
to
the
financial
state
he
was
in
before
he
moved.
In
short,
the
trial
judge
characterized
the
payment
as
partial
indemnification
against
expenses
incurred
as
a
consequence
of
the
respondent's
employment.
He
rejected
the
argument
that
it
was
a
taxable
allowance
on
the
same
grounds.
I
note
that
the
trial
judge's
reasons
in
the
case
under
appeal
were
also
applied
by
him
in
a
companion
case,
Lao
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
2718,
91
D.T.C.
330
(T.C.C.);
aff'd
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
25,
93
D.T.C.
5251
(F.C.T.D.).
The
facts
in
that
case
resemble
those
before
us
except
that
the
employee
in
Lao
had
been
hired
on
the
condition
that
he
relocate,
bringing
into
issue
the
effect
of
paragraph
6(3)(c)
of
the
Act.
As
in
Phillips,
the
payment
was
held
not
taxable.
I
understand
that
Lao
is
also
under
appeal.
II
The
scheme
of
the
Act
as
it
relates
to
taxable
income
is
deceptively
straightforward.
Subsection
5(1)
directs
the
taxpayer
to
include
in
employment
income
conventional
remuneration,
such
as
"salary"
and
"wages",
received
in
a
taxation
year.
Section
6
seeks
to
capture
in
employment
income
various
ancillary
or
"fringe"
benefits,
whether
or
not
they
are
strictly
monetary.
Paragraphs
6(1
)(a)
and
6(1
)(b)
are
relevant
to
this
appeal:
6(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
as
income
from
an
office
or
employment
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(a)
Value
of
benefits.
—
the
value
of
board,
lodging
and
other
benefits
of
any
kind
whatever
received
or
enjoyed
by
him
in
the
year
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment,
except.
.
.
.
(b)
Personal
or
living
expenses.
—
all
amounts
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
an
allowance
for
personal
or
living
expenses
or
as
allowance
for
any
other
purpose,
except.
.
.
.
It
is
common
ground
that
none
of
the
exceptions
in
these
paragraphs
is
relevant
to
the
case
at
bar.
Ill
Paragraph
6(1
)(a)
brings
into
employment
income
"the
value
of.
.
.other
benefits
of
any
kind
whatever
received
or
enjoyed.
.
.in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment".
The
early
jurisprudence
held
that
this
provision
only
applied
to
benefits
received
as
remuneration
in
exchange
for
employment
services.
In
Phaneuf
Estate
v.
The
Queen,
[1978]
2
F.C.
564,
[1978]
C.T.C.
21,
78
D.T.C.
6001
(T.D.),
Thurlow,
A.C.J.
(as
he
then
was)
stated
at
page
27
(D.T.C.
6005):
While
the
language
of
the
statutes
differs,
the
test
expressed
by
Viscount
Cave,
L.C.
(in
Seymour
v.
Reed,
[1927]
A.C.
554
at
page
559).
.
.appears
to
me
to
express,
as
well
as
it
can
be
expressed,
the
essence
of
what
falls
within
the
taxing
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Is
the
payment
made
"by
way
of
remuneration
for
his
services”
or
is
it
"made
to
him
on
personal
grounds
and
not
by
way
of
payment
for
his
services"?
It
may
be
made
to
an
employee
but
is
it
made
to
him
as
employee
or
simply
as
a
person.
Another
way
of
stating
it
is
to
say
is
it
received
in
his
capacity
as
employee,
but
that
appears
to
me
to
be
the
same
test.
To
be
received
in
the
capacity
of
employee
it
must,
as
I
see
it,
partake
of
the
character
of
remuneration
for
services.
That
is
the
effect
that,
as
it
seems
to
me,
the
words
“in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment"
in
paragraph
6(1)(a)
have.
In
Savage,
supra,
the
Supreme
Court
accepted
that
a
taxable
benefit
must
be
conferred
on
the
taxpayer
in
his
or
her
capacity
as
an
employee.
It
rejected,
however,
the
understanding
that
to
be
received
in
this
capacity,
the
payment
must
be
in
exchange
for
services
performed
by
the
employee.
Speaking
for
tne
majority,
Dickson,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
stated
at
page
399
(D.T.C.
5414):
With
great
respect,
however,
I
do
not
agree
with
the
latter
part
of
the
passage
last
quoted
and
in
particular
the
statement
that,
to
be
received
in
the
capacity
of
employee,
the
payment
must
partake
of
the
character
of
remuneration
for
services.
Such
was
the
conclusion
in
the
English
cases
but
based
on
much
narrower
language.
Our
Act
contains
the
stipulation,
not
found
in
the
English
statutes
referred
to,
“benefits
of
any
kind
whatever.
.
.in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment”.
The
meaning
of
“benefit
of
whatever
kind”
is
clearly
quite
broad;
in
the
present
case
the
cash
payment
of
$300
easily
falls
within
the
category
of
"benefit".
Further,
our
Act
speaks
of
a
benefit
“in
respect
of"
an
office
or
employment.
In
Nowegijick
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
1
S.C.R.
29,
[1983]
C.T.C.
20,
83
D.T.C.
5041
this
Court
said,
at
page
39
(C.T.C.
25,
D.T.C.
5045),
that:
The
words
"in
respect
of"
are,
in
my
opinion,
words
of
the
widest
possible
scope.
They
import
such
meanings
as
"in
relation
to",
“with
reference
to”
or
“in
connection
with".
The
phrase
"in
respect
of"
is
probably
the
widest
of
any
expression
intended
to
convey
some
connection
between
two
related
subject
matters.
The
above
passages
dictate
that
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
be
given
a
broad
interpretation.
Nonetheless,
the
reasoning
in
Savage
provided
for
guarded
exceptions,
all
of
which
are
rooted
in
the
employee-person
dichotomy.
Referring
to
The
Queen
v.
Poynton,
[1972]
C.T.C.
411,
72
D.T.C.
6329
(S.C.),
Dickson,
J.
concluded
at
page
441
(C.T.C.):
I
agree
with
what
was
said
by
Evans,
J.A.
in
R.
v.
Poynton,
[1972]
C.T.C.
411,
72
D.T.C.
6329
(S.C.)
at
page
420
(D.T.C.
6335-36)
speaking
of
benefits
received
or
enjoyed
in
respect
of,
in
the
course
of,
or
by
virtue
of
an
office
or
employment:
I
do
not
believe
the
language
to
be
restricted
to
benefits
that
are
related
to
the
office
or
employment
in
the
sense
that
they
represent
a
form
of
remuneration
for
services
rendered.
If
it
is
a
material
acquisition
which
confers
an
economic
benefit
on
the
taxpayer
and
does
not
constitute
an
exemption,
e.g.,
loan
or
gift,
then
it
is
within
the
all-embracing
definition
of
section
3.
And
further
on
[in
Savage,
supra,
at
page
400
(D.T.C.
5414)]:
[T]here
was
no
element
of
gift,
personal
bounty
or
of
consideration
extraneous
to
Mrs.
Savage’s
employment.
An
economic
advantage
received
by
an
employee
from
his
or
her
employer
will
be
deemed
a
benefit
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
6(1)(a)
unless
the
employee
can
demonstrate
that
the
payment
was
not
a
benefit
in
respect
of
employment,
but
made
in
his
or
her
capacity
as
a
person.
Framed
in
this
manner,
the
test
is
able
to
embrace
conveniently
the
categories
of
gifts,
loans
and
other
contractual
arrangements.
The
question
of
whether
a
payment
is
a
gift,
loan
or
the
result
of
considerations
extraneous
to
the
employment
relationship
is
often
approached
with
reference
to
the
employer's
intention
or
the
purpose
of
the
payment.
The
terms
of
CNR's
agreement
with
the
respondent
clearly
defeat
the
characterization
of
the
$10,000
as
a
gift
or
a
loan.
In
my
view,
it
is
also
apparent
that
if
an
employee
receives
a
payment
on
the
condition
that
he
or
she
continues
to
work
for
the
employer,
as
is
the
case
before
us,
then
that
payment
can
hardly
be
said
to
have
stemmed
from
considerations
extraneous
to
the
employment
relationship.
Collateral
contracts,
like
all
contracts,
are
only
a
means
of
providing
objective
evidence
of
subjective
intent.
By
itself,
a
collateral
contract
cannot
therefore
be
conclusive
of
whether
a
payment
is
received
in
the
capacity
of
person
or
employee.
To
focus
on
the
existence
of
a
collateral
contract
to
the
exclusion
of
its
context
—
the
employment
relationship
—
is
to
allow
the
form
of
the
document
to
prevail
over
its
substance.
The
fact
that
the
parties
in
the
case
at
bar
chose
to
effect
a
post-contractual
modification
supported
by
consideration
does
not
in
any
way
diminish
the
employment
relationship
in
question.
On
the
contrary,
the
employees’
continuing
employment
was
facilitated.
Considering
that
one
of
the
terms
of
CNR's
agreement
with
the
respondent
is
that
he
remain
in
CNR's
employ,
I
fail
to
see
how
it
can
be
said
that
the
respondent
received
the
payment
other
than
as
an
employee.
This
is
not
to
suggest
that
the
“collateral
contract
theory”
will
necessarily
be
inapplicable
in
all
cases;
see
Blanchard
v.
Canada,
[1992]
2
C.T.C.
403,
92
D.T.C.
6585
(F.C.T.D.),
McNeil!
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
352,
86
D.T.C.
6477
(F.C.T.D.);
Segall
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
364,
86
D.T.C.
6486
(F.C.T.D.);
but
compare
Sheldon
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
2039,
88
D.T.C.
1392
(T.C.C.).
Putting
aside
the
form-substance
issue,
the
respondent
sought
to
persuade
us
that
CNR's
motivation
in
making
the
payment
was
somehow
relevant
to
the
issue
at
hand
—
that
is,
in
effect,
manifested
a
consideration
extraneous
to
the
employ-
ment
relationship.
This
approach
would
be
understandable
if
the
facts
before
us
involved
a
$10,000
payment
to
an
employee
whose
uninsured
house
was
destroyed
by
fire.
All
but
the
extreme
skeptic
would
likely
concede
that
the
employer
was
motivated
primarily
by
altruism.
It
is
difficult
to
appreciate
how
motivation
could
be
the
deciding
factor
on
the
facts
before
us.
It
is
indisputable
that
CNR’s
agreement
with
the
respondent
was
motivated
primarily
by
a
desire
to
protect
and
promote
both
arties’
economic
interests
by
providing
a
mutually
acceptable
solution
to
a
labour
dispute.
Any
secondary
motivations
for
entering
the
agreement
are
irrelevant.
The
unvarnished
reality
is
that
labour
negotiations
and
relocation
compensation
schemes
are,
today,
integral
aspects
of
the
employer-employee
relationship.
This
is
especially
true
in
an
economy
where
the
downsizing
of
work
forces
has
become
commonplace.
The
closure
of
the
Moncton
Shops,
while
tragic
for
its
employees,
is
by
no
means
an
extraordinary
occurrence.
Applying
the
law
as
outlined
in
Savage,
supra,
I
am
driven
to
the
inescapable
conclusion
that
the
respondent
received
the
$10,000
payment
in
his
capacity
as
employee.
That
determination,
however,
does
not
dispose
of
the
appeal.
The
appellant
had
to
consider
whether
the
$10,000
payment
was
a
non-taxable
reimbursement
of
an
expense
incurred
as
a
consequence
of
employment
and
whether
it
conferred
an
economic
advantage
on
the
respondent.
With
respect
to
the
first
question,
both
the
respondent
and
the
trial
judge
were
convinced
that
the
$10,000
payment
fell
within
the
rule
recognized
in
Ransom,
supra.
IV
In
Ransom,
supra,
the
taxpayer
was
required
to
move
from
Sarnia
to
Montreal.
The
employer,
acting
pursuant
to
its
policy,
reimbursed
the
taxpayer
$2,809
for
the
loss
he
incurred
on
the
sale
of
his
house.
Noël,
J.
concluded
that
this
reimbursement
did
not
economically
benefit
the
taxpayer
but
merely
restored
him
to
the
same
position
he
would
have
been
in
had
he
not
incurred
the
loss
by
virtue
of
his
employment.
The
payment
in
question
was
held
to
be
neither
a
"benefit"
nor
an
"allowance"
and
therefore
not
taxable.
The
rule
in
Ransom
is
straightforward.
Reimbursement
by
an
employer
for
the
loss
suffered
by
an
employee
in
selling
a
house
following
a
job
transfer
is
not
taxable
to
the
extent
that
the
payment
reflects
the
employee's
actual
loss;
see
also
Greisinger
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
2441,
86
D.T.C.
1802
(T.C.C.).
I
would
only
observe
that
when
calculating
"actual
loss",
Ransom
must
be
applied
today
with
due
regard
to
section
62
of
the
Act
(“moving
expenses").
The
potential
dangers
of
applying
an
abstract
rule
of
law
to
variegated
factual
circumstances
is
highlighted
by
the
wholesale
application
of
Ransom
to
employee
relocation
cases.
A
review
of
the
relevant
jurisprudence
reveals
that
relocation
compensation
packages
are
intended
to
address
the
financial
repercussions
of
employee
relocation
on
two
levels:
the
losses
suffered
on
the
sale
of
the
employee's
house
and
the
expenses
incurred
in
purchasing
a
replacement
property.
Payments
made
to
compensate
for
increased
housing
costs
on
the
purchase
of
a
replacement
property
are
the
subject
of
this
appeal.
I
turn
now
to
the
matter
of
identifying
specifically
the
types
of
losses
which
fall
within
each
category,
as
reflected
in
the
jurisprudence.
Losses
incurred
on
a
sale
As
a
general
proposition,
relocation
payments
which
reimburse
the
employee
for
actual
losses
incurred
on
a
sale
are
immune
from
taxation.
This
is
the
thrust
of
the
legal
rule
articulated
in
Ransom
and,
as
will
be
explained,
in
Splane,
supra.
Two
kinds
of
losses
can
arise
upon
the
sale
of
an
employee's
house:
a
capital
loss
and
a
loss
associated
with
the
discharge
of
a
mortgage
with
an
interest
rate
lower
than
prevailing
market
rates.
It
is
necessary
to
distinguish
these
losses
from
the
expenses
occasioned
by
a
new
mortgage
with
both
a
higher
interest
rate
and
a
principal
amount
which
reflects
the
higher
housing
prices
at
the
new
work
location.
For
example,
if
an
employee
had
a
$50,000
outstanding
mortgage
at
ten
per
cent
and
relocated
to
purchase
a
house
requiring
a
$70,000
mortgage
at
15
per
cent,
only
the
five
per
cent
differential
on
the
$50,000
can
truly
be
considered
a
loss.
Assuming
that
the
$20,000
difference
in
principal
is
attributable
solely
to
higher
housing
costs
at
the
new
work
location
(a
task
which
itself
is
fraught
with
uncertainty),
interest
rate
compensation
with
respect
to
that
amount
must
be
classified
as
reimbursement
for
an
expense
incurred
in
the
purchase
of
a
replacement
house.
The
tax
treatment
of
compensation
directed
only
to
the
loss
of
a
favourable
mortgage
rate
on
the
sale
of
a
house
is,
in
my
view,
governed
by
Splane.
Unfortunately,
the
trial
judge's
recital
of
the
facts
in
that
case
is
not
comprehensive.
This
Court
affirmed
the
trial
judge’s
decision
with
brief
oral
reasons.
We
do
know
that
in
Splane,
the
taxpayer
sold
his
Ottawa
house
for
$63,000
and
purchased
one
in
Edmonton
for
$65,000.
We
also
know
that
his
employer
reimbursed
him
for
the
costs
of
the
1.75
per
cent
higher
mortgage
rate
on
the
replacement
house.
The
facts,
however,
do.
not
disclose
whether
the
principal
amount
of
the
new
mortgage
loan
exceeded
that
owing
under
the
original
mortgage.
The
trial
judge
relied
on
Ransom
as
persuasive
authority
in
reaching
the
following
conclusion
that
the
payments
were
not
taxable
(at
page
204
(D.T.C.
6446)):
The
taxpayer
gained
no
extra
money
in
his
pocket.
Instead
the
payments
only
allowed
him
to
maintain
the
same
position
as
that
which
he
occupied
prior
to
his
transfer,
and
prevented
him
from
having
accepted
the
lateral
transfer
position
at
a
loss.
In
light
of
these
comments,
I
think
it
reasonable
to
infer
that
the
Court
in
Splane
was
dealing
with
a
capital
loss
as
contemplated
by
Ransom.
I
acknowledge,
however,
that
it
is
also
plausible
that
the
compensation
in
Splane
was
directed
at
the
acquisition
costs
of
the
new
residence.
In
any
case,
the
circumstances
in
Splane
are
not
before
this
Court
today.
Fortunately,
the
facts
at
bar
are
less
ambiguous.
Expenses
incurred
in
acquiring
a
new
house
Compensation
may
be
awarded
for
two
kinds
of
expenses
incurred
in
acquiring
a
new
house.
The
first
is
a
larger
capital
outlay
on
the
employee's
part
as
a
result
of
on-average
higher
housing
prices
at
the
new
work
location.
The
other
relates
to
higher
financing
costs
with
respect
to
that
portion
of
the
mortgage
principal
attributable
to
higher
housing
costs
as
explained
above.
It
is
recognized
that
paragraph
62(3)(f)
of
the
Act
deals
explicitly
with
the
tax
treatment
of
certain
acquisition
expenses
—
legal
fees
and
transfer
taxes
—
but
the
Act
goes
no
further.
The
companion
cases
of
McNeil],
supra,
and
Segall,
supra,
illustrate
the
types
of
expense
included
in
this
category.
In
those
cases,
the
taxpayers
were
air
traffic
controllers
living
in
Quebec
during
a
period
of
continual
disputes
between
anglophone
and
francophone
controllers.
The
employer
offered
to
provide
the
taxpayers
a
time-limited
"Accommodation
Differential
Allowance”
if
they
transferred
to
Ottawa.
It
is
true
that
MacNeil!
and
Segall
are
distinguishable
from
the
case
before
us
in
that
the
payments
were
made
to
the
employees
in
their
capacities
as
persons
rather
than
employees.
However,
it
is
interesting
to
note
that
the
employees
were
only
compensated
for
the
mortgage
rate
differential
on
the
difference
between
the
appraised
value
of
the
property
at
the
old
work
location
and
the
assessed
value
of
similar
accommodation
at
the
new
location.
V
The
case
under
appeal
is
distinguishable
from
Ransom
in
one
salient
respect:
CNR's
compensation
scheme
made
no
provision
for
losses
incurred
on
the
sale
of
the
respondent's
house.
Yet
it
is
one
matter
to
distinguish
Ransom
on
the
facts
and
quite
another
to
determine
whether
that
distinction
is,
in
law,
valid.
The
appellant
argues
that
if
no
valid
distinction
exists
in
law,
then
Ransom
must
be
regarded
as
having
been
wrongly
decided.
On
what
legal
basis
can
one
conclude
that
relocation
compensation
directed
toward
losses
suffered
on
the
sale
of
a
house
is
not
subject
to
tax
while
that
directed
toward
expenses
incurred
in
purchasing
its
replacement,
is?
The
answer
to
that
question
lies
in
the
legal
rationale
underlying
Ransom.
Once
that
rationale
is
isolated,
it
is
apparent
that
it
has
no
application
to
relocation
compensation
directed
at
defraying
higher
housing
costs
at
a
new
work
location.
Ransom
revisited
It
cannot
be
denied
that
the
wisdom
of
Ransom
has
been
questioned
not
only
by
the
appellant
but
by
at
least
one
commentator;
see
B.G.
Hansen,
"The
Taxation
of
Employees"
in
B.G.
Hansen,
V.
Krishna
&
J.A.
Rendall,
eds.,
Canadian
Taxation
(Toronto:
De
Boo,
1981)
117
at
pages
133-35.
Others
have
queried
whether
McNeil!
and
Segall
may
have
overextended
Ransom
by
inviting
taxpayers
to
treat
personal
living
subsidies
as
tax-free
benefits;
see
R.B.
Thomas,
"Some
Benefit!”
(1987)
36
Canadian
Tax
Journal
398
at
page
400;
and
R.B.
Thomas
and
T.E.
McDonnell,
"A
Hole
You
Could
Drive
a
Moving
Van
Through”
(1990)
38
Canadian
Tax
Journal
937
at
page
938.
Not
surprisingly,
the
appellant
argues
that
the
$10,000
payment
is
nothing
but
a
de
facto
subsidy
for
a
personal
living
expense.
The
foundation
of
the
appellant's
argument
doubtless
rests
upon
the
following
excerpt
from
Noël,
J.’s
reasons
in
Ransom,
where
he
draws
an
analogy
between
travelling
expenses
and
a
capital
loss
on
the
sale
of
a
house
at
page
310
(C.T.C.
361,
D.T.C.
5243-44):
In
a
case
such
as
here,
where
the
employee
is
subject
to
being
moved
from
one
place
to
another,
any
amount
by
which
he
is
out
of
pocket
by
reason
of
such
a
move
is
in
exactly
the
same
category
as
ordinary
travelling
expenses.
His
financial
position
is
adversely
affected
by
reason
of
that
particular
facet
of
his
employment
relationship.
When
his
employer
reimburses
him
for
any
such
loss,
it
cannot
be
regarded
as
remuneration,
for
if
that
were
all
that
he
received
under
his
employment
arrangement,
he
would
not
have
received
any
amount
for
his
services.
Economically,
all
that
he
would
have
received
would
be
the
amount
that
he
was
out
of
pocket
by
reason
of
the
employment.
Noël,
J.'s
analogy
seems
to
conflate
all
travelling
expenses
incurred
in
respect
of
employment
and
suggests
that
compensation
for
all
out-of-pocket
expenses
be
tax-free.
Yet
there
are
at
least
two
disparate
types
of
“travelling
expenses".
There
are,
for
example,
those
incurred
travelling
to
and
from
work
and
those
incurred
when
an
employer
sends
an
employee
on
a
business
trip.
It
could
be
argued
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
that
a
capital
loss
incurred
when
selling
a
house
is
to
be
treated
as
a
personal
or
living
expense.
Like
the
transportation
costs
of
travelling
to
and
from
work,
these
expenses
are
matters
of
personal
choice
unrelated
to
employment.
It
could
be
maintained
with
some
force
that
losses
associated
with
a
general
decline
in
housing
market
prices
or
attributable
to
the
employee's
folly
in
paying
"too
much"
for
"too
little"
should
not
be
accorded
special
tax
treatment.
This
position
is
weakened,
of
course,
when
the
capital
loss
is
a
consequence
of
the
forced
and
hasty
disposition
of
a
house.
The
taxpayer
could
counter
that
a
capital
loss
suffered
on
the
sale
of
a
house
is
akin
to
travelling
expenses
of
an
employee
dispatched
on
a
business
trip
by
his
or
her
employer.
Such
an
employee
has
little
choice
but
to
incur
an
expense.
For
this
reason,
reimbursement
is
not
viewed
as
a
benefit
but
as
righting
a
potential
injustice.
It
accords
with
the
equitable
principle
of
restitutio
in
integrum.
Similarly,
a
general
decline
in
housing
markets,
of
itself,
results
only
in
a
paper
loss
to
the
employee.
It
is
not
until
the
employee
is
required
by
the
employer
to
relocate
that
a
capital
loss
is
thrust
upon
him
or
her.
Thus,
any
reimbursement
received
from
the
employer
in
respect
of
a
capital
loss
should
be
a
tax-free
benefit.
The
merits
of
these
competing
arguments
can
only
be
properly
assessed
by
reference
to
the
object
and
purpose
of
section
6,
as
understood
through
the
“words
in
context"
canon
of
statutory
interpretation:
see
Stubart
Investments
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
1
S.C.R.
536,
[1984]
C.T.C.
294,
84
D.T.C.
6305,
Estey,
J.
at
pages
575-78
(C.T.C.
314-16,
D.T.C.
6322-23);
and
Lor-Wes
Contracting
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
79,
85
D.T.C.
5310,
MacGuigan,
J.A.
at
page
83
(D.T.C.
5313).
It
is
well
recognized
that
any
decision
to
include
or
exclude
benefits
from
employment
income
impacts
significantly
on
government's
ability
to
raise
revenue:
see
Royal
Commission
on
Taxation,
Specific
Types
of
Personal
Income
(Study
No.
16)
by
D.
Sherbaniuk
(Ottawa:
Queen's
Printer,
1967)
at
32;
and
V.
Krishna,
"Employee
Benefits”
(1984)
1:2
Canadian
Current
Tax
C-7.
Quite
obviously,
section
6
of
the
Act
seeks
to
limit
tax
avoidance
relating
to
monetary
and
nonmonetary
compensation
not
reflected
in
wages
or
salaries.
Another
primary
and,
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal,
overriding
objective
of
section
6,
is
to
ensure
that
"employees
who
receive
their
compensation
in
cash
are
on
the
same
footing
as
those
who
receive
compensation
in
some
combination
of
cash
and
kind’’;
see
B.G.
Hansen,
supra,
at
127:
and
V.
Krishna,
“Taxation
of
Employee
Benefits"
(1986)
1:35
Canadian
Current
Tax
C-173.
Two
employees
performing
the
same
work
for
the
same
employer
should
receive
the
same
tax
treatment
in
respect
of
their
employment.
This
is
simply
one
manifestation
of
our
conception
of
tax
equity
and,
in
my
view,
is
the
true
rationale
underlying
Ransom.
I
am
not
the
first
to
reach
this
conclusion.
In
Greisinger,
supra,
Brulé,
J.T.C.C.
astutely
reasoned
at
page
2444
(D.T.C.
1805):
The
rationale
why
this
reimbursement
should
not
be
taxable
is
that
there
must
be
harmony
and
balance
between
the
employee
that
is
transferred
to
another
city
and
the
employee
that
is
not.
Indeed,
the
first
may
suffer
losses
as
the
second
is
in
a
stable
position.
A
company,
in
order
to
render
those
transfers
more
economically
favourable,
will
compensate
its
employee.
Consequently,
an
economical
balance
has
been
created
and
for
this
reason,
this
reimbursement
should
not
be
taxed.
This
explanation
accords
with
Parliament's
intent
that
employees
receive
equal
tax
treatment
in
respect
of
their
employment
incomes.
Every
employee
incurs
some
expense
travelling
to
and
from
work.
This
is
a
necessary
cost
of
being
available
for
employment.
Not
every
employee
however,
is
required
by
his
or
her
employer
to
travel
or
relocate
to
perform
is
or
her
office.
It
is
simply
not
equitable
for
one
of
two
employees
to
bear
that
capital
loss;
see
also
Canada
v.
Huffman,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
32,
89
D.T.C.
5006
(F.C.T.D.);
aff’d
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
132,
90
D.T.C.
6405
(F.C.A.).
Once
policy
considerations
are
brought
into
play,
it
is
admittedly
proper
to
ask
whether
it
is
the
prerogative
of
Parliament
alone
to
decide
whether
or
not
a
particular
kind
of
"reimbursement"
should
or
should
not
be
taxed.
I
would
respond
by
noting
that
nothing
in
the
Supreme
Court's
reasons
in
Savage
indicates
that
Ransom
was
overruled
per
se.
Ransom
was
cited
and
quoted,
but
only
set
aside
in
respect
of
its
conclusion
that
taxable
benefits
must
have
been
received
in
exchange
for
services
performed
by
the
employee.
In
the
27
years
since
Ransom
was
decided,
the
Act
has
undergone
extensive
revisions
which
touch
on
the
issues
under
consideration.
None,
however,
contradicts
or
represents
a
threat
to
the
rule
in
Ransom.
Some
even
complement
it;
see,
for
example,
paragraph
62(3)(d)
of
the
Act,
which
addresses
the
loss
suffered
by
a
tenant/employee
in
cancelling
a
lease.
Moreover,
Ransom
has
been
applied
by
this
Court
on
several
occasions.
In
my
opinion,
Ransom
has
become
so
enmeshed
in
our
conception
of
taxable
benefits
that
it
is,
in
my
view,
for
the
Supreme
Court
or
Parliament
to
set
aside
its
logic.
The
limits
of
Ransom
Just
as
the
appellant
sought
to
convince
us
that
Ransom
should
be
deemed
to
have
been
wrongly
decided,
so
would
the
respondent
have
us
extend
Ransom
to
embrace
CNR's
$10,000
payment
to
him.
While
I
support
the
rule
in
Ransom,
it
has
no
application
in
a
case
concerning
an
expenditure
as
opposed
to
a
capital
loss.
This
interpretation
is
compelled
both
by
the
Supreme
Court's
decision
in
Savage,
the
concept
of
tax
equity
underlying
section
6
and
the
structure
of
the
Act
as
a
whole.
It
is
apparent
on
the
facts
before
us
that
the
respondent's
net
worth
qua
employee
increased.
Even
if
the
$10,000
payment
is
taxable,
he
gains
considerable
disposable
income.
The
compensatory
payment
effectively
represents
a
temporary
wage
increase
not
available
to
all
employees.
Second,
he
gains
an
advantage
over
fellow
employees
resident
in
the
community
with
higher
housing
costs.
I
find
it
difficult
to
accept
that
the
respondent
has
a
valid
claim
to
a
$10,000
tax-free
benefit
which
can
be
used
in
the
purchase
of
a
house,
while
other
Winnipeg
employees
are
forced
to
expend
after-tax
dollars
in
order
to
gain
entry
into
the
housing
market.
The
extension
of
the
Ransom
principle
as
a
stop-gap
cost-of-living
equalizer
may
well
also
negate
the
effect
of
other
provisions
of
the
Act.
Parliament
has
explicitly
recognized
and
addressed
potential
injustices
relating
to
dramatic
cost-
of-living
variations
from
one
part
of
the
country
to
another;
see
Report
of
the
Task
Force
on
Tax
Benefits
for
Northern
and
Isolated
Areas
(Ottawa:
Supply
and
Services
Canada,
1989).
Section
110.7
of
the
Act,
for
example,
entitles
taxpayers
in
prescribed
areas
of
Canada
to
make
special
deductions
with
respect
to
housing
and
travel
expenses
in
computing
taxable
income.
Similarly,
section
80.4
brings
into
income
the
benefit
accrued
when
an
employer
loans
an
employee
funds
at
lower
than
the
prevailing
interest
rate,
subject
to
a
deduction
created
in
paragraph
110(1
)(j).
The
potential
impact
of
extending
Ransom
prompted
one
commentator
to
query
whether
it
could
offer
an
opportunity
to
circumvent
the
policy
underlying
the
imputed
interest
rules
in
section
80.4
of
the
Act:
see
V.
Krishna,
“Taxation
of
Employee
Benefits”,
supra,
at
C-175.
After
all,
a
$10,000
payment
can
as
easily
be
used
to
prepay
interest
as
to
reduce
the
principal
amount
of
a
mortgage
loan.
Perhaps
the
most
persuasive
rationale
for
limiting
the
application
of
Ransom
lies
in
the
myriad
expenses
which
its
extension
could
exempt
from
taxation.
The
respondent
effectively
argues
that
any
payment
received
from
an
employer
to
compensate
an
employee
for
higher
housing
costs
in
a
new
work
location
only
serves
to
make
the
employee
whole.
As
we
have
seen,
this
rationale
is
flawed.
Moreover,
nothing
bars
the
extension
of
this
same
faulty
reasoning
to
other
purchases,
such
as
new
cars
or
appliances,
in
provinces
with
higher
costs
of
living.
I
also
observe
that
the
problem
of
compensation
directed
at
tax
equalization
is
apparently
of
concern
to
tax
lawyers
familiar
with
the
U.S.
multi-national
practice
of
“grossing
up"
salaries
of
executives
transferred
to
Canada:
see
J.D.
Bradley,
“Measuring
Employee
Benefits",
Report
of
Proceedings
of
the
Forty-Third
Tax
Conference
(Canadian
Tax
Foundation,
1991)
8:56
at
8:59;
and
R.B.
Thomas
and
T.E.
McDonnell,
supra,
at
941-42.
What
of
the
employee
who
moves
to
a
province
with
higher
marginal
rates
of
taxation?
Why
should
he
or
she
not
be
able
to
claim
a
tax-free
benefit
as
well,
assuming
the
employer
is
willing
to
provide
such
compensation?
In
my
opinion,
it
is
evidence
that
the
decision
below
creates
a
window
of
opportunity
for
those
intent
on
structuring
tax-free
compensation
packages
for
employees
required
to
relocate
to
urban
centres
where
costs
of
living
are
appreciably
higher.
When
the
above
concerns
are
contemplated
in
light
of
the
clear
wording
of
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
of
the
Act,
the
reasoning
in
Savage,
supra
and
Parliamentary
intent,
it
seems
plain
that
the
$10,000
payment
is
a
taxable
benefit
unless
the
respondent
can
satisfy
this
Court
that
it
did
not
confer
an
economic
advantage
upon
him.
This
marks
the
respondent's
final
effort
to
gain
a
$10,000
tax-free
benefit
and
his
real
complaint.
VI
The
respondent
relies
on
the
finding
of
the
Tax
Court
judge
that
his
house
in
Winnipeg
is
inferior
to
the
one
in
Moncton
and
argues
that
he
is
still
out-of-pocket
from
being
required
to
pay
$28,000
"more"
for
“less”.
Leaving
aside
the
fact
that
such
a
finding
is
clearly
irrelevant
on
an
appeal
from
a
de
novo
decision,
I
note
that
the
trial
judge
made
no
similar
finding,
most
likely
for
compelling
reasons.
Comparative
analyses
of
floor
space
and
house
amenities
comprise
personal
value
judgments.
To
contrast
a
storey-and-a-half
house
in
Moncton
with
a
Winnipeg
bungalow
by
reference
to
ball
park
figures"
regarding
on-average
housing
costs
is
valuable
to
the
consumer
but
unacceptable
as
a
legal
benchmark
for
determining
so-called
actual
loss.
There
is
an
obvious
reason
why
an
employer
would
only
partially
compensate
employees
for
higher
housing
costs.
House
selection
is
as
dependent
on
personal
taste
and
lifestyle
as
it
is
on
cost.
After
all,
location
is
the
touchstone
for
determining
value
in
real
estate.
The
foregoing
criticisms
are
not
intended
to
detract
from
the
respondent's
conviction
that
he
received
"less"
for
"more".
What
is
important
for
him
and
the
other
CNR
employees
who
await
the
outcome
of
this
decision
to
recognize
is
that
"economic
benefit”
cannot
be
assessed
on
the
basis
of
subjective
criteria
and
that
the
taxation
of
benefits
cannot
be
made
to
depend
on
the
perceptions
of
individual
taxpayers.
The
Tax
Court's
decision
in
Cutmore
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
2230,
86
D.T.C.
1146
(T.C.C.),
illuminates
this
point.
In
Cutmore,
the
taxpayer's
employer
decided
that
all
senior
executives
should
have
their
income
tax
returns
prepared
by
tax
specialists
at
its
expense.
The
employer's
purpose
was
to
avoid
any
embarrassment
and
loss
of
reputation
that
might
arise
from
improperly
prepared
returns.
The
taxpayer
argued
that
this
free
service
should
not
be
deemed
a
taxable
benefit
as
he
was
more
than
capable
of
completing
competently
his
own
return.
The
payment
was
nonetheless
taxed.
Once
the
subjective
value
argument
is
dismissed,
it
is
quite
evident
that
the
$10,000
payment
enabled
the
respondent
to
acquire
a
more
valuable
asset.
CNR
did
more
than
save
his
pocket
—
it
put
money
into
it.
Of
course,
the
respondent
will
doubtless
suffer
short-term
hardships
which
inevitably
accompany
job
relocation.
However,
grasping
for
a
tax-free
benefit
is
neither
an
appropriate
nor
meaningful
way
of
acknowledging
the
true
costs
of
employment
relocation.
VII
Having
decided
that
the
$10,000
payment
to
the
respondent
is
a
taxable
benefit
under
paragraph
6(1
)(a)
of
the
Act,
I
need
not
consider
whether
it
is
also
a
taxable
allowance
under
paragraph
6(1
)(b).
The
appeal
should
be
allowed,
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
dated
May
6,
1993,
set
aside
and
the
Minister's
reassessment
restored.
As
proposed
by
the
appellant,
the
Minister
shall
pay
all
reasonable
and
proper
costs
of
the
respondent.