Date: 20090416
Docket: A-265-08
Citation: 2009 FCA 113
CORAM: DESJARDINS
J.A.
NOËL
J.A.
TRUDEL
J.A.
BETWEEN:
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Appellant
(Respondent by Cross-appeal)
and
GARY LANDRUS
Respondent
(Appellant by Cross-appeal)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
NOËL J.A.
[1]
This is an appeal and
a cross-appeal from a decision of Paris J. of the Tax Court of Canada (the Tax
Court Judge) allowing Gary Landrus’ appeal (the respondent) from a reassessment
issued by the Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) denying the deduction
of a terminal loss in the amount of $29,130 claimed in computing his income for
the 1994 taxation year. In confirming the reassessment at the objection stage
the Minister relied exclusively on the General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) set
out in section 245 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th
Supp.), as amended (the Act).
[2]
It was conceded
before the Tax Court that the deduction of the terminal loss pursuant to
subsection 20(16) of the Act was a tax benefit within the meaning of subsection
245(1). Although the Tax Court Judge further found that the transactions which
gave rise to this benefit where avoidance transactions, he held that the GAAR
did not apply because there was no misuse of the provisions relied upon to
claim the loss, and no abuse having regard to the Act read as a whole.
[3]
On appeal, Her
Majesty the Queen (the appellant) challenges the Tax Court Judge’s conclusion
that the transactions in issue did not give rise to a misuse or abuse of the
provisions of the Act. The respondent by way of cross-appeal maintains that the
Tax Court Judge committed a reviewable error in failing to recognize that the
transactions were entered into primarily for business reasons. As such, the
transactions in issue were not “avoidance transactions” within the meaning of
subsection 245(3). Although this last argument is properly before us, it is
useful to note that the respondent did not have to bring a cross-appeal in
order to raise it since no order was made against him by the judgment under
appeal.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[4]
Section 245 and the
provision pursuant to which the terminal loss was claimed provide respectively:
245. [General Anti-Avoidance Rule — GAAR) —
(1) Definitions
-— In this section,
“tax
benefit” means a reduction, avoidance or deferral of tax or other amount
payable under this Act or an increase in a refund of tax or other amount
under this Act, and includes a reduction, avoidance or deferral of tax or
other amount that would be payable under this Act but for a tax treaty or an
increase in a refund of tax or other amount under this Act as a result of a
tax treaty;
“tax consequences”
to a person means the amount of income, taxable income, or taxable income
earned in Canada of, tax or other amount payable by or refundable to the
person under this Act, or any other amount that is relevant for the purposes
of computing that amount;
“transaction”
includes an arrangement or event.
…
(3) Avoidance
transaction — An: avoidance transaction means any transaction
(a) that, but for this section, would result directly or
indirectly, in a tax benefit, unless the transaction may reasonably be
considered to have been undertaken or arranged primarily for bona fide
purposes other than to obtain the tax benefit; or
(b) that is part of a series of transactions, which series, but
for this section, would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax benefit,
unless the transaction may ,reasonably be considered to have been undertaken
or arranged primarily for bona fide purposes other than to obtain the
tax benefit,
(4) Application
of subsec. (2) — Subsection (2) applies to a transaction only if it may
reasonably be considered that, the transaction
(a) would, if this Act were read without reference to this
section, result directly or indirectly in a misuse of the provisions of any
one or more of
(i) this.Act,
(ii) the Income Tax Regulations,
(iii) the Income Tax Application Rules,
(iv) a tax treaty, or
(v) any other enactment that is relevant in computing tax or any
other amount payable by or refundable to a person under this Act or in
determining any amount that is relevant for the purposes of that computation;
or
(b) would result directly or indirectly in an abuse having regard
to those provisions, other than this section, read as a whole.
(5) Determination
of tax consequences — Without restricting the generality of subsection
(2), and notwithstanding any other enactment, -
(a) any deduction, exemption or exclusion in computing income,
taxable income, taxable income earned in Canada or tax payable or any part thereof may be allowed or disallowed
in whole or in part.
(b) any such deduction, exemption or exclusion, ally income, loss
or other amount or past thereof may be allocated to any
(c) the nature of any payment or other amount may be recharacterized,
and
(d) the tax effects that would otherwise result from the
application of other provisions of this Act may be ignored,
in determining
the tax consequences to a person as is reasonable in the circumstances in
order to deny a tax benefit that would, but for this section, result,
directly or indirectly, from an avoidance transaction.
|
ARTICLE 245: Définitions.
(I) Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent au présent article.
« attribut
fiscal » S’agissant des attributs fiscaux d’une personne, revenu.
revenu imposable ou revenu imposable gagné au Canada de cette personne, impôt
ou autre montant payable par cette personne, ou montant qui lui est
remboursable, en application de la présente loi, ainsi que tout montant à
prendre en compte pour calculer, en application de la présente loi, le
revenu, le revenu imposable, le revenu imposable gagné au Canada de cette
personne ou l’impôt ou l’autre montant payable par cette personne ou le
montant qui lui est remboursable.
« avantage
fiscal » Réduction, évitement ou report d’impôt ou d’un autre
montant exigible en application de la présente loi ou augmentation d’un
remboursement d’impôt ou d’un autre montant visé par la présente loi. Y sont
assimilés la réduction, l’évitement ou le report d’impôt ou d’un autre
montant qui serait exigible en application de la présente loi en l’absence
d’un traité fiscal ainsi que l’augmentation d’un remboursement d’impôt ou
d’un autre montant visé par la présente loi qui découle d’un traité fiscal.
[…]
(3) Operation
d’évitement. L’opération d’évitement s’entend:
a) soit de l‘opération dont, sans le
présent article, découlerait, directement ou indirectement, un avantage
fiscal, sauf s’il est raisonnable de considérer que l’opération est
principalement effectué pour des objets véritables – l’obtention de
l’avantage fiscal n’étant pas considérée comme un objet véritable;
b) soit de l’opération qui fait partie
d’une série d’opérations dont, sans le présent article, découlerait,
directement ou indirectement, un avantage fiscal, sauf s’il est raisonnable
de considérer que l’opération est principalement effectuée pour des objets
véritables – l’obtention de l’avantage fiscal n’étant pas considérée comme un
objet véritable.
(4) Application
du par. (2).
Le paragraphe
(2) ne s’applique qu’à l’opération dont il est raisonnable de considérer,
selon le cas :
a) qu’elle entraînerait, directement
ou indirectement, s’il n’était pas tenu compte du présent article, un abus
dans l’application des dispositions d’un ou de plusieurs des textes
suivants :
(i) la présente loi,
(ii) le Règlement de l’impôt sur le revenu,
(iii) les Règles concernant l’application de l’impôt sur
le revenu,
(iv) un traité fiscal,
(v) tout autre texte législatif qui est utile soit pour le calcul
d’un impôt ou de toute autre somme exigible ou remboursable sous le régime de
la présente loi, soit pour la détermination de toute somme à prendre en
compte dans ce calcul;
b) qu’elle entraînerait, directement
ou indirectement, un abus dans l’application de ces dispositions compte non
tenu du présent article lues dans leur ensemble.
(5) Attributs
fiscaux à déterminer. Sans préjudice de la portée générale du paragraphe
(2) et malgré tout autre texte législatif, dans le cadre de la détermination
des attributs fiscaux d’une personne de façon raisonnable dans les
circonstances de façon à supprimer l’avantage fiscal, qui, sans le présent
article, découlerait, directement ou indirectement, d’une opération
d’évitement :
a) toute déduction, exemption ou
exclusion dans le calcul de tout ou partie du revenu, du revenu imposable, du
revenu imposable gagné au Canada ou de l’impôt payable peut être en totalité
ou en partie admise ou refusée;
b) tout ou partie de cette déduction,
exemption ou exclusion ainsi que tout ou partie d’un revenu, d’une perte ou
d’un autre montant peuvent être attribués à une personne;
c) la nature d’un paiement ou d’un
autre montant peut être qualifiée autrement;
d) les effets fiscaux qui
découleraient par ailleurs de l’application des autres dispositions de la
présente loi peuvent ne pas être pris en compte.
|
20. (16) Terminal
loss. – Notwithstanding paragraphs 18(1)(a), 18(1)(b) and
18(1)(h), where at the end of a taxation year,
(a) the total of all amounts used to determine A to D in the
definition “undepreciated capital cost” in subsection 13(21) in respect of a
taxpayer’s depreciable property of a particular class exceeds the total of
all amounts used to determine E to J in that definition in respect of that
property, and
(b) the taxpayer no longer owns any property of that class,
in computing the taxpayer’s income for
the year
(c)
there shall be deducted the amount of the
excess determined under paragraph 20(16)(a), and
(d) no amount shall be deducted for the year under paragraph 20(1)(a)
in respect of property of that class.
|
20. (16) Perte
finale.
Malgré les alinéas 18(1)a), 18(1)b)
et 18(1)h), lorsque, à la fin d’une année d’imposition :
a)
d’une part, le total des montants utilisés
pour le calcul des éléments A à D de la formule figurant à la définition de
« fraction non amortie du coût en capital » au paragraphe 13(21)
est supérieur au total des montants utilisés pour le calcul des éléments E à
J de la même formule, au titre des biens amortissables d’une catégorie
prescrite d’un contribuable;
b)
d’autre part, le contribuable ne possède
plus de biens dans cette catégorie,
dans le calcul de son revenu pour
l’année :
c)
il doit déduire l’excédent déterminé en
vertu de l’alinéa 20(16)a);
d)
il ne peut déduire aucun montant pour
l’année en vertu de l’alinéa 20(1)a) à l’égard des biens de cette
catégorie.
|
THE TRANSACTIONS IN ISSUE
[5]
The matter proceeded
before the Tax Court on the basis of a Partial Agreed Statement of Facts.
Several witnesses were also heard. The Tax Court Judge in his reasons provides
a detailed account of the evidence with respect to which neither party takes
issue (Reasons, paras. 7 to 52). It suffices for present purposes to provide
the following summary of the transactions which gave rise to the terminal loss
claimed by the respondent.
[6]
Roseland I was formed
in 1988 as a limited partnership to acquire and operate a condominium building
consisting of 94 residential suites located at 858 Commissioners Road East, London, Ontario (the Roseland I Building). Its general
partner was Roseland Park (I) General Partner Ltd. until
December 1991, at which time it was replaced by Roseland Park I Management Inc.
[7]
Roseland II was
formed in 1989 as a limited partnership to acquire and operate a condominium
building consisting of 110 residential suites located next to Roseland I at 860 Commissioners Road East (the Roseland II Building). Its general
partner was Roseland Park (II) General Partner Limited until June 23, 1993,
when all of the outstanding shares of Roseland Park (II) General Partner
Limited were acquired by Allied Canadian Corporation (ACC).
[8]
In December of 1988,
limited partnership units of Roseland I were offered for sale to the public
pursuant to a prospectus. Roseland I acquired the Roseland I Building on
December 30, 1988 and began its rental operations in February 1989. In the same
way, limited partnership units of Roseland II were offered for sale in February
1989. Roseland II acquired the Roseland II Building on January 31, 1990 and
began its rental operations in February 1990.
[9]
The sale of units in
Roseland I and Roseland II was marketed in accordance with the same model. Each
interest in Roseland I and Roseland II had a particular condominium unit
referenced to it. The price paid by the limited partner for a partnership
interest varied depending on the attributes of the referenced condominium unit
that was associated with the partnership interest (such as floor plan, the
floor number, and view). On exercising their right to withdraw from the
partnership, every partner in Roseland I and Roseland II had the right to
receive their referenced condominium unit in satisfaction of his or her
partnership interest.
[10]
The rental income
from all the units was pooled for each building respectively, and net profit
was allocated to each limited partner based on his or her percentage interest
in the partnership.
[11]
On May 10, 1989, the
respondent subscribed for one partnership unit in Roseland II for a purchase
price of $107,650. His referenced condominium was unit 1005A. A certain Mr.
Froio who was a witness at trial, together with three friends, acquired two
units in Roseland I. Their referenced condominiums were units 101A and 508B.
[12]
Soon after the
respondent made his investment in Roseland II, and continuing into the early
1990s, real estate prices began to decline. Cash flow was less than anticipated
and resale prices for condominium units fell below the prices paid originally
for the partnership interests to which the units were referenced. By 1994 the
fair market value of the units in both buildings had undergone the same decline
and stood below their undepreciated capital cost (UCC).
[13]
Certain partners also
expressed dissatisfaction with the fact that they could not claim a terminal
loss reflecting this decline in value until all of the condominium units were
sold. They expected the income tax consequences of their investment to be those
associated with a direct investment in real estate given the flow through
nature of partnerships. At the initiative of ACC, a proposal was developed and
presented to the limited partners of Roseland I and Roseland II which, among
other things, was intended to address this concern.
[14]
The proposal involved
transferring the assets of both Roseland I and Roseland II to a new limited
partnership at fair market value thereby triggering a terminal loss. The
respondent and the other limited partners of both partnerships would continue
as partners of the new partnership and each of their limited partnership
interest in this new partnership would continue to be referenced to their
current condominium unit in the respective Roseland building.
[15]
By special
resolutions dated September 8, 1994 and September 22, 1994, the limited
partners of Roseland I and Roseland II, including the respondent and Mr. Froio,
approved the transfer of Roseland I and II Buildings to a new partnership at
fair market value. The transfer was completed before year end.
[16]
The steps involved in
giving effect to the conveyance of the Roseland I and Roseland II Buildings in
accordance with the plan were as follows:
-
A new partnership
named Roseland Park Master Limited Partnership (RPM) was formed and registered
on December 21, 1994.
Roseland II Transactions
-
On December 23, 1994,
Roseland II subscribed for 4,448 limited partnership units in RPM. The
subscription price was $4,448,000, being equal to the total fair market value
of each of the Roseland II condominium units.
-
On December 23, 1994,
Roseland II directed RPM to issue the limited partnership units subscribed for
in RPM to the limited partners of Roseland II in proportion to their existing
interests in Roseland II.
-
Pursuant to a
Purchase Agreement dated December 28, 1994, Roseland II sold all of its
condominium units to RPM for $4,448,000.
Roseland I Transactions
-
On December 23, 1994,
Roseland I subscribed for 3,243 limited partnership units in Roseland Park
(I-A) Limited Partnership (Roseland I-A). The subscription price was
$3,243,000, being equal to the total fair market value of each of the Roseland
I condominium units.
-
Pursuant to a
Purchase Agreement dated December 28, 1994, Roseland I sold all of its assets
to Roseland I-A for $3,243,000.
-
On December 30, 1994,
Roseland I subscribed for 3,243 limited partnership units in RPM. The
subscription price was $3,243,000.
-
On December 30, 1994,
Roseland I directed RPM to issue the limited partnership interests subscribed
for in RPM to the limited partners of Roseland I in accordance with their
existing interests in Roseland I.
-
On December 30, 1994,
Roseland I transferred 3,243 units of Roseland I-A to RPM for $3,243,000.
-
By general conveyance
dated December 31, 1994 Roseland I-A transferred all of its assets to RPM.
-
Roseland I-A was
dissolved on December 31, 1994.
[17]
The reorganization
had the following two practical consequences: terminal losses of $1,709,454 and
$2,916,612 resulted from the sale of the Roseland I and II Buildings
respectively and the two buildings were now owned by a single partnership and
subject to the same management. There was evidence that this resulted in
improved performance both in terms of increased revenue per unit and reduced
operating costs (Appeal Book, Vol. I, pp. 212, 217, 218, and 223; Vol. IV, p.
1235).
[18]
The appellant
withdrew from RPM in 2000, and exercised his option to take title to unit
1005A. He then sold that unit to an unrelated party for $63,500. He reported
the difference between the sale price and his share of the cost at which RPM
purchased the Roseland II assets in 1994 on income account. At the time of the
hearing, Mr. Froio was still a member of RPM.
[19]
In computing his
income for the 1994 taxation year, the respondent deducted his pro rata
share of the terminal loss resulting from the disposition of the Roseland II to
RPM. The terminal loss represents the difference between the UCC of his
referenced condominium unit and its selling price at fair market value.
[20]
The Minister denied
the terminal loss claimed by the limited partners of Roseland I and II,
including the respondent’s. The Minister initially took the position that there
was no change in the beneficial ownership and that the “stop-loss” rules
(subsection 85(5.1)) applied to deny the terminal loss. In the alternative, the
Minister relied on the GAAR to justify the refusal. At the objection stage, the
Minister confirmed the reassessment, relying only on the GAAR.
[21]
The respondent
appealed the reassessment made by the Minister to the Tax Court of Canada.
DECISION OF THE TAX COURT
[22]
The Tax Court Judge
identified the issue before him as follows:
[6]
Since the Appellant has conceded that there was a tax benefit, the issues in
this appeal are whether the assets of Roseland II were transferred to RPM
primarily to obtain the tax benefit, and if so, whether this constituted
abusive tax avoidance. If both conditions are met, the GAAR would apply, and
the Appellant concedes that the Minister would be entitled to deny the terminal
loss deduction pursuant to subsection 245(5) of the Act.
[23]
The Tax Court Judge
first found that the disposition of the assets by Roseland Park II to RPM was
an “avoidance transaction” within the meaning of subsection 245(3) of the Act
on the basis that the disposition could not be considered to have been
undertaken or arranged primarily for a purpose other than to obtain a tax
benefit (Reasons, para. 96).
[24]
Consistent
with the guidelines set out by the Supreme Court in Canada Trustco Mortgage
Co. v. Canada, 2005 SCC 54, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 601 (Canada
Trustco Mortgage) (paras. 44 and 45), the Tax Court Judge first
conducted a contextual and purposive analysis of the provisions relied upon by
the respondent in order to claim the terminal loss, specifically subsection
20(16) (Reasons, paras. 98 and 99).
[25]
He first noted that the disposition by Roseland
I and Roseland II of the respective buildings to RPM triggered a terminal loss.
As a result of this disposition, the two conditions set out in 20(16) were met
since Roseland I and II no longer owned any property of the class to which the
buildings belonged to (20(16)(b)), and the UCC in each case was a
positive amount (20(16)(a)). Since the respective buildings were
disposed of for an amount below their UCC, Roseland I and II were entitled to
deduct the remaining balance as a terminal loss (Reasons, paras. 104 to 106).
[26]
The Tax Court Judge earlier noted that although
section 96 is also relevant in the sense that the terminal loss was calculated
at the partnership level, that section in and of itself gave rise to no benefit
(Reasons, para. 101).
[27]
Turning to subsection 20(16), the Tax Court
Judge first noted that there is no ambiguity in the wording of that provision.
It is common ground that on the facts of the present case, the conditions
precedent to the application of this provision are met (Reasons, para. 107).
[28]
The Tax Court Judge
further noted that there is no provision which restricts the right to claim a
terminal loss where both the transferor and the transferee of depreciable assets
are partnerships. He also noted that subsection 20(16) does not prevent a
taxpayer from claiming a terminal loss where depreciable property is disposed
of to a related party (Reasons, para. 108).
[29]
According to the Tax
Court Judge, the purpose of subsection 20(16) is to adjust the aggregate of
annual deductions of capital cost allowance (CCA) taken by a taxpayer on a
class of depreciable property when subsequent events demonstrate that the
property in that class has been undepreciated. The adjustment occurs when a
taxpayer no longer owns any property of that class at the end of a given
taxation year and is predicated on the fact that the taxpayer is no longer able
to use the property to earn income because that property is no longer available
to him or her. It is intended to match the total CCA deduction under the Act in
respect of property used to earn income by a taxpayer to the actual cost of
that property to the taxpayer (Reasons, para. 112). As the transactions in
issue provided this exact result, no misuse of subsection 20(16) could be said
to have arisen on the facts of this case.
[30]
The Tax Court Judge
acknowledged that there are a number of provisions that are designed to prevent
the deduction of terminal losses in specific circumstances. In this respect, he
referred to paragraph 40(2)(e), subsection 85(4) and subsection 85(5.1).
He concluded from his review of these provisions that they create exceptions to
the general policy of allowing losses on the disposition of depreciable assets
where the conditions set out in subsection 20(16) are met (Reasons, paras. 115
to 121). These provisions do not evidence the existence of an overall policy
prohibiting losses on a transfer between parties forming an economic unit as
the Minister contended (Reasons, para. 122).
ALLEGED ERRORS
[31]
The appellant
reiterates before us each of the arguments made before the Tax Court Judge. The
appellant submits that the Tax Court Judge erred in his analysis of the object,
spirit and purpose of subsection 20(16) and the partnership provisions of the
Act as well as the stop-loss rules including subsection 85(5.1). According to
the appellant, the Tax Court Judge placed excessive importance on the wording
of the relevant provisions of the Act and failed to give sufficient weight to
the context and purpose of these provisions.
[32]
In its supplementary
submissions filed after the Supreme Court released its decision in Lipson v.
Canada, 2009 SCC 1 (Lipson), the appellant maintains that the
majority decision in that case supports its view that two tax benefits result
from the transactions in issue: first, the creation of a terminal loss; and
second, the actual deduction of the loss claimed by the respondent in
application of the partnership rules.
[33]
The respondent for
its part supports the misuse and abuse analysis conducted by the Tax Court
Judge, relying essentially on the reasoning of the Tax Court Judge. It adds
that the appellant’s reliance on the Lipson decision to find two
separate benefits is a misguided attempt to fit the present case within the
decision of the majority in Lipson.
[34]
By way of his
cross-appeal, the respondent challenges the Tax Court Judge’s finding that the
transactions which gave rise to the terminal loss were avoidance transactions.
In particular, the respondent contends that the evidence does not support the
Tax Court Judge’s conclusion that the transactions were entered into primarily
in order to obtain a tax benefit.
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[35]
According to the
appellant, the Tax Court Judge misconstrued the relevant provisions of the Act,
and erred in failing to hold that subsection 20(16) had been misused on the
facts of this case. In the words of the appellant (Memorandum of Fact and Law,
para. 63):
The transaction herein
resulted in a misuse of subsection 20(16) of the Act when that provision is viewed
in its context and in accordance with the scheme and intent of the Act in
relation to:
(i)
the
CCA regime of which subsection 20(16) forms a important part;
(ii)
the
partnership provisions contained in sections 96 of the Act; and
(iii)
the
specific anti-avoidance rules contained in the Act that limit or deny losses
arising from certain dispositions of property.
[36]
Two questions arise
from this proposition. The first is whether the Tax Court Judge properly
construed the provisions of the Act on which the respondent relied to obtain
the tax benefit. This is a question of law which stands to be reviewed on a
standard of correctness. The second issue is whether the Tax Court Judge
properly determined that there was no misuse or abuse of the benefit conferring
provisions on the facts of this case. Whether there has been a misuse or an
abuse gives rise to a mixed question of fact and law which is necessarily fact
intensive and therefore only reviewable if the Tax Court Judge can be shown to
have omitted a palpable and overriding error (Canada
Trustco Mortgage, supra,
paras. 44 and 45; Lipson, supra, para. 25).
Object, spirit and purpose of subsection 20(16)
[37]
In ascertaining the
object, spirit and purpose of subsection 20(16), the Tax Court Judge considered
the CCA regime within which subsection 20(16) operates, the partnership
provisions contained in section 96 of the Act, as well as the anti-avoidance
rules that limit or deny losses arising from certain dispositions in certain
circumstances.
[38]
The Tax Court Judge
identified the scheme of the CCA system as follows (Reasons, para. 111):
CCA is allowed as
deduction under 20(1)(a) to the extent provided by the Income Tax
Regulations.
Eligible assets, referred to as “depreciable
property”, are grouped into prescribed classes in accordance with Schedule II
of the Regulations.
Regulation
1100 prescribes the rates of CCA that can be deducted each year for each class
of depreciable property. This rate is a percentage of the “undepreciated
capital cost” of the property in the class.
“Undepreciated
capital cost” is defined in subsection 13(21) and, roughly speaking, is
the cost to the taxpayer of all of the property in that class minus the amount
of any CCA taken on the property in that class in previous years and minus the
proceeds from the disposition of any assets in the class before that time (up
to the cost of the assets).
On
disposal of assets, to the extent that the proceeds of disposition exceed the
“undepreciated capital cost” of the class, capital cost allowance previously taken
is “recaptured” (i.e. added back into income) pursuant to subsection 13(1) of
the Act.
Upon disposal of all the
assets in a particular class any remaining balance of “undepreciated capital
cost” for the class is deductible in the year as a terminal loss under
subsection 20(16).
[39]
His assessment of the
object, spirit and purpose of subsection 20(16) is summed up in the following
passage:
[112] The purpose of the terminal
loss provision is to adjust the aggregate of the annual deductions of CCA taken
by a taxpayer on a class of depreciable property when subsequent events
demonstrate that the property in that class have been undepreciated. The
adjustment occurs when a taxpayer no longer owns any property of that class at
the end of a given taxation year and is predicated on the fact that the
taxpayer is no longer able to use the property to earn income because that
property is no longer available to him or her. It is intended to match the
total CCA deduction under the Act in respect of property used to earn
income by a taxpayer to the actual cost of that property to the taxpayer.
[40]
In my respectful
view, this is an accurate assessment of the object, spirit and purpose of
subsection 20(16) (compare Water’s Edge
Village Estates (Phase II) Ltd. v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2002 FCA 291, [2002] F.C.J. No. 1031, paras
41 and 44). I do not understand the appellant to take issue with this
assessment. Rather, the appellant contends that since subsection 20(16) is
predicated on the fact that the taxpayer is no longer able to use the property,
this provision was misused since in this case the partnership property remained
available to the partners despite the disposition. This issue is addressed
below in the misuse analysis.
[41]
The Tax Court Judge
also considered the partnership rules embodied in section 96 of the Act:
[101] While section 96 is
relevant to the Appellant’s claim in the sense that the terminal loss was
calculated at the partnership level because the transaction involved the
disposition of the partnership assets, that section, in and of itself, gives
rise to no benefit. In this case its effect is limited to the flow through of
the losses on the disposition of the partnership property to the partners of
the limited partnership. In Mathew v. Canada, 2005 DTC 5538, the
Supreme Court said at paragraph 51 that:
“The partnership rules
under s. 96 are predicated on the requirement that partners in a partnership
pursue a common interest in the business activities of the partnership, in a
non-arm's length relationship. …”
[102] It is not
disputed that, at the time of the transfer of the partnership property by
Roseland II to RPM, the partners of Roseland II were carrying on business in
common in a non-arm’s length relationship. The flowing of the terminal loss to
the limited partners accords with the underlying purpose of the partnership
rules. It is not necessary therefore to consider the context and purpose of the
partnership rules beyond this point.
[42]
The conclusion that
Roseland II and RPM are genuine partnerships and that the flowing of the
terminal loss to the limited partners accords with the underlying purpose of
section 96 is correct. In particular, subsection 96(1) provides for the
computation of partnership income "as if" the partnership was a
person and contemplates that the income so computed be allocated to the
partners. The appellant insists on the fact that although a terminal loss was
recognized at the partnership level the deduction of the loss was claimed by
the limited partners (Appellant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, paras. 41 to 46).
No doubt this is so, but the Tax Court Judge had this in mind when he noted
that although the terminal loss is recognized at the partnership level the
deduction flows through to the partners.
[43]
The Tax Court Judge
further considered the impact of the stop-loss provisions in subparagraph
40(2)(g)(i), subsection 85(4), paragraph 40(2)(e) and subsection
85(5.1) of the Act, and certain amendments thereto. These anti-avoidance rules
are part of the legislative context within which subsection 20(16) is to be
considered (Reasons, para. 114).
[44]
Although it is common
ground that none of these rules are applicable on the facts of this case, the
argument advanced before the Tax Court Judge (and before us) is that they
evidence a general policy to disregard dispositions of property to persons
amongst related parties or parties within "the same economic unit"
(Reasons, para. 114). The Tax Court Judge held that these stop-loss provisions
fell short of evidencing such a policy (Reasons, para. 115). In his view, the
precise and detailed nature of these provisions show that they are intended to
deny losses in the limited circumstances set out in these provisions (Reasons,
para. 117).
[45]
In particular the
variation as to the degree of connection required by these provisions, the
different scope of their application, the restrictions based on the particulars
of the property transferred, and the different range of transferees targeted,
are such that it is reasonable to infer that Parliament intended to promote
particular purposes rather than a general unexpressed policy (Reasons, paras.
118 and 119). The specificity of these rules is indicative of the fact that
they are exceptions to a general policy of allowing losses on all dispositions
(Reasons, para. 120).
[46]
With specific
reference to subsection 85(5.1) (now subsection 13(21.2)), the Tax Court Judge
noted that Parliament has chosen to define the circumstances in which the
terminal loss will be denied on transfers of depreciable property between
partnerships. The Tax Court Judge infers from this that Parliament has chosen
to allow taxpayers who do not come within the ambit of this provision to claim
their terminal losses (Reasons, para. 123).
[47]
I agree with the
appellant that the fact that specific anti-avoidance provisions can be
demonstrated not to be applicable to a particular situation does not, in and of
itself, indicate that the result was condoned by Parliament (Canada v. Central
Supply Company (1972) Ltd., [1997] 3 F.C. 674 (F.C.A.). However, where it can be shown that an
anti-avoidance provision has been carefully crafted to include some situations
and exclude others, it is reasonable to infer that Parliament chose to limit
their scope accordingly.
[48]
While the appellant
takes issue with this conclusion, it has been unable to show any error in the
Tax Court Judge’s reasoning. The assessment of the object, spirit and purpose
of subsection 20(16) made by the Tax Court Judge is, in my respectful view,
correct.
Misuse and abuse
[49]
The next task is to
determine whether the Tax Court Judge properly held that the transactions in
issue do not misuse subsection 20(16). As stated by the Supreme Court in Canada
Trustco Mortgage, supra, at paragraph 46: “Once the provisions of the Act
are properly interpreted, it is a question of fact for the Tax Court Judge
whether the Minister, in denying the tax benefit, has established abusive tax
avoidance under subsection 245(4).” (See also Lipson, supra, para. 22).
[50]
The appellant’s
attack is based on a variation of the same theme, i.e. that the limited
partners continued to have available to them the partnership property, albeit
through another partnership, after the disposition. According to the appellant
this evidences a misuse of subsection 20(16) since, as was recognized by the
Tax Court Judge, this provision contemplates that a terminal loss only be
recognized when the property is no longer available to the taxpayer.
[51]
In support of this
position, the appellant makes the point that a partnership is not a person and
cannot as a legal matter own property. As such, so called "partnership
property" belongs to the partners and not to the partnership (Manzer R.
Alison, A Practical Guide to Canadian Partnership Law, Aurora: Canada Law
Book, 2007, para. 4.820; VanDuzer J. Anthony, The Law of Partnerships and
Corporations, Toronto: Irwin Law, p. 27). It is only by reason of the
fiction created by subsection 96(1), which requires that partnership income be
computed "as if" the partnership was a separate person, that property
can be said to belong to the partnership.
[52]
According to the
appellant, the limited partners did not finally end their investment when the
terminal loss was recorded. They continued to own an interest in the Roseland
II Building as part of their undivided interest in the RPM assets, and
continued to earn rental income through RPM. As such the loss realized upon the
disposition was not a "true" loss.
[53]
The prime difficulty
with the appellant’s position is that it is inconsistent with its own
concession. The appellant has conceded that Roseland II disposed of its legal
and beneficial interest in the Roseland II Building to RPM with the result that
it did not own property of that class at the end of its 1994 taxation year
(Reasons, para. 107). It now suggests that the conveyance to RPM should be
ignored.
[54]
Obviously, a
transaction cannot be ignored or overlooked in a misuse and abuse analysis on
the ground that it was conducted in compliance of a specific statutory
requirement. Subsection 96(1) contemplates that the Roseland II Building be
treated as partnership property, and the limited partners complied with that
requirement.
[55]
The more cogent
argument is that despite the transfer of the partnership property to a new
partnership, nothing in fact has changed in that the Roseland partners, now as
partners of RPM, continued to own an interest in the Roseland II Building as
part of their undivided interest in the RPM assets and they continued to enjoy
the right to acquire title to their referenced condominium units upon
withdrawal from the partnership (Appellant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, paras.
66 to 71).
[56]
I accept that the
transactions in issue would be arguably abusive if they had given rise to the
tax benefit in circumstances where the legal rights and obligations of the respondent
were otherwise wholly unaffected. However, this is not what happened here.
[57]
The transactions
altered the respondent’s legal rights and obligations. He ceased to be a
partner in Roseland II and joined RPM, thereby becoming associated with the former
partners of both Roseland I and Roseland II. As a result, he acquired an
undivided interest in assets double in size and shared in an extended rental
pool which accounted for the revenues generated by both Roseland I and Roseland
II. These changes are material both in terms of risks and benefits. The
appellant has a selective view of the evidence when it asserts that nothing
changed as a result of the transactions.
[58]
The burden of
establishing abusive tax avoidance rested on the Minister (Canada Trustco Mortgage, supra, paras. 66 and 66(4)). The appellant has
been unable to show that the Tax Court Judge committed a palpable or overriding
error in concluding that the transactions in issue did not misuse subsection
20(16) or abuse the Act read as a whole.
Lipson
[59]
The appellant
contends that the Lipson decision provides additional support for its
contention that the decision of the Tax Court Judge is flawed. A number of
submissions have been made in this regard. In my respectful view only two need
be addressed.
[60]
In Lipson,
Lebel J. writing for the majority identified two tax benefits: the deduction of
the interest on the loan obtained by Mrs. Lipson to purchase the shares by
virtue of the application of paragraph 20(1)(c) and subsection 20(3) of the
Act, and the application of the attribution rule (subsection 74.1(1)) which
allowed Mr. Lipson to deduct the interest paid on the mortgage loan (Lipson,
supra, paras 22 and 23).
[61]
Likewise, the
appellant claims that two tax benefits were derived in the present case: the
creation of the terminal loss on the transfer of the Roseland Buildings to RPM
and the actual deduction of the loss by the respondent by virtue of his
partnership interest and the application of the partnership rules (subsection
96(1)). As such, the Tax Court Judge erred in not conducting an object, spirit
and purpose analysis of subsection 96(1) beyond demonstrating that this
provision had been complied with at the time of the transfer.
[62]
Even if I were to
assume that the Tax Court Judge has failed to conduct the required analysis,
the appellant has not identified any policy behind subsection 96(1) which was
frustrated by the transactions in issue. In my respectful view, the Tax Court
Judge correctly held that the tax benefit arose as a consequence of the
interaction of subsection 20(16) with subsection 96(1). In particular,
subsection 96(1) is the provision which allowed tax benefit arising from the
operation of subsection 20(16) to be allocated to the limited partners.
However, it is clear that the tax benefit arose under subsection 20(16).
[63]
Relying on Lipson,
the appellant further contends that subsection 85(5.1) was misused or abused
because the transactions in issue were structured so as to avoid its
application. However, Lipson establishes that the improper use of an
avoidance provision in order to obtain a tax benefit gives rise to a misuse of
that provision (Lipson, supra, para. 42). There is no suggestion in this
case that subsection 85(5.1) was used in order to obtain a tax benefit.
[64]
The appellant did
raise the further argument that the transactions in issue were structured so as
to avoid the application of subsection 85(5.1), thereby giving rise to an abuse
(Appellant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law, para. 56 and Appellant’s Supplementary
Memorandum of Fact and Law, para. 24). In this respect, reference is made to Canada
Trustco Mortgage where it was suggested (para. 45) that an abuse may result
from an arrangement entered in to in order to circumvent a specific
anti-avoidance rule.
[65]
This issue was not
raised before the Tax Court Judge. Furthermore, subsection 85(5.1), which was
initially advanced as a ground of assessment, was not relied upon at the
confirmation stage. Counsel for the respondent indicated that material evidence
going to the issue of whether an attempt was made to circumvent subsection
85(5.1) could have been filed, but was not. In these circumstances, I decline
to consider this argument.
[66]
In Lipson,
Lebel J. confirmed the contextual and purposive approach to the GAAR analysis
set out in Canada Trustco Mortgage (Lipson, supra, paras. 26 and
27). He also expressed the view that although the “overall purpose” of the
transactions is not relevant to the analysis, it is useful to consider the
“overall result” and ask whether the result frustrates the object, spirit and
purpose of the relevant provisions (Lipson, supra, paras. 34 and 38).
[67]
In my respectful
view, the overall result in this case does not frustrate the object, spirit and
purpose of subsection 20(16). When the respondent made his investment in
Roseland II, it was in the expectation that the real estate market would
improve over time. A significant downturn occurred resulting in an important
decrease in the value of the two Roseland Buildings. At that juncture, it became
clear that the buildings were under depreciated.
[68]
The amount of the
terminal loss which resulted from the disposition of the buildings at fair
market value reflects a real economic loss and the cost at which RPM acquired
these assets (again fair market value) reflects their true economic value. It
follows that any CCA claimed thereafter had to be computed by reference to that
cost, and any subsequent sale beyond this cost would be recaptured. I can
detect no misuse or abuse in that result.
[69]
Another way to
demonstrate the appropriateness of this result is to point out, as the Tax
Court Judge did, that the same terminal loss would have been realized if the
limited partners, rather than proceeding with the transactions in issue, had simply
dissolved the partnership and distributed the partnership assets to the
partners (Reasons, para. 52).
[70]
The appellant has
failed to establish that the Tax Court Judge erred in concluding that the
transactions in issue are not abusive.
Cross-appeal
[71]
Having concluded that
the appeal cannot succeed, it is not necessary to dispose of the cross-appeal.
However, in the event that the disposition of the appeal which I propose was found
to be incorrect, it is useful to consider the merits of the cross-appeal.
[72]
In support of its
cross-appeal, the respondent maintains that the Tax Court Judge erred in
concluding that the transactions were not entered into primarily for business
reasons. In this respect, the respondent submits that the prime purpose of the
transactions was saving costs and eliminating competition for the rentals. The
respondent recognizes that the conclusion of the Tax Court Judge that this was
not the prime purpose is a factual finding which cannot be overturned absent a
palpable and overriding error.
[73]
The respondent contends
that the Tax Court Judge committed such an error by improperly focusing his
analysis on the effect of the transactions rather than their purpose.
Paragraphs 92, 93 and 95 of the Reasons are referred to as evidencing this
error. In making this submission, the respondent relies on the decision of the
Tax Court Judge in MIL (Investments) S A v. The Queen, (2006) 60 DTC
3307 (Can LII) at paragraphs 50 and 53 where it is explained that in assessing
the prime purpose of a transaction, the “how” of the transaction is subordinate
to the “why”. This decision was confirmed on appeal (2007 FCA 236), but on
other grounds.
[74]
The wording of
subsection 245(3) makes it clear that it is the “purpose” of a transaction that
is relevant to the analysis. It follows that if a transaction was entered into
primarily for business reasons, the fact that it also procures one or more tax
benefits does not alter that purpose.
[75]
That said, the extent
of the tax benefit obtained is a relevant consideration in determining the
prime purpose of the transaction. For instance, the fact that the tax benefit
achieved in this case dwarfed the costs to be saved supports the finding that
tax benefit was the prime motivator. In addition, the Tax Court Judge
considered documentary evidence which showed that at the planning stage,
exclusive emphasis was placed on the “significant income tax benefits” which
the proposal would produce (Reasons, paras. 85 and 86). There was also evidence
that ACC had prior experience in obtaining the type of tax benefit which the
transactions in issue procured (Reasons, para. 88).
[76]
In my respectful
view, there was evidence to support the Tax Court Judge’s conclusion that the
transactions were primarily motivated by the tax benefit.
[77]
For these reasons, I
would dismiss both the appeal and the cross-appeal with costs to the
respondent.
“Marc
Noël”
“I concur.
Alice Desjardins
J.A.”
“I
agree.
Johanne Trudel J.A.”