Bowman,
T.C.C.J.:—The
appellant
appeals
from
assessments
for
its
1985
and
1986
taxation
years.
At
issue
is
the
deductibility
under
paragraph
20(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
of
$193,684
and
$898,241
in
interest
that
it
paid
on
moneys
borrowed
from
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada.
Specifically
the
case
has
to
do
with
the
deductibility
of
interest
on
money
borrowed
as
an
integral
part
of
a
carefully
planned
and
meticulously
executed
arrangement
which
had
as
its
economic
object
the
utilization
in
Canada
of
losses
sustained
by
a
United
States
subsidiary
by
their
absorption
in
the
profits
earned
in
Canada
by
the
Canadian
parent.
The
facts
are
substantially
not
disputed.
The
appellant
is
a
successor
through
two
amalgamations
in
1988
and
1989
to
Precision
Drilling
Ltd.
("PDL").
PDL
was
an
Alberta
corporation
that
carried
on
a
contract
drilling
and
an
oil
and
gas
exploration
and
production
business.
In
1985
and
1986
its
business
was
extremely
successful
and
it
reported
taxable
income
of
$7.2
million
and
$6.6
million
respectively
upon
which
it
paid
taxes
totalling
about
$5
million.
In
1979
it
incorporated
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary,
Precision
Drilling
Inc.
(“PDI”),
under
the
laws
of
Colorado
to
carry
on
a
resource
related
business
in
the
United
States
of
America.
That
business
did
not
succeed
and
by
April
30,
1984
it
had
accumulated
business
losses
of
U.S.
$707,350.
These
losses
were
about
to
expire
in
1985
and
1986
under
the
loss
carry-forward
rules
of
the
U.S.
Internal
Revenue
Code.
In
October
of
1984
PDL
decided
to
liquidate
its
subsidiary
by
selling
or
writing
down
its
assets
and
thereafter
PDI
ceased
to
carry
on
an
active
business.
Although
it
still
had
a
few
oil
and
gas
properties
their
value
was
relatively
insubstantial.
PDI
had
at
this
point
become
essentially
a
shell
whose
only
real
value
lay
in
its
accumulated
losses,
provided
that
they
could
be
utilized
in
some
manner.
To
find
a
way
of
doing
that
PDL
approached
its
auditors,
Price
Waterhouse,
who
devised
a
plan
that
was
implemented
to
the
letter,
as
follows:
On
February
22,
1985
PDL
borrowed
U.S.
$7,815,468.11
from
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada.
The
amount
of
the
loan
was
calculated
precisely
to
permit
the
borrowed
funds
to
be
used
to
generate
enough
income
in
PDI
to
absorb
the
losses
that
were
about
to
expire.
The
term
of
the
loan
was
67
days,
i.e.
from
February
22,1985
to
April
30,
1985,
the
fiscal
year
end
of
both
PDL
and
PDI.
The
interest
rate,
the
London
Interbank
offering
rate
(LIBOR)
plus
one-half
a
percent,
was
95/3
per
cent
per
annum.
PDL
paid
the
borrowed
funds
into
PDI’s
account
and
the
receipt
was
recorded
as
a
capital
contribution.
On
the
same
day
the
moneys
were
used
by
PDI
to
purchase
a
term
deposit
of
the
Royal
Bank.
The
term
deposit
was
lodged
with
the
London,
U.K.,
branch
of
the
Royal
Bank
as
security
for
the
loan
to
PDL.
The
interest
paid
on
the
Royal
Bank
term
deposit
was
8.75
per
cent
per
annum.
Its
term,
like
that
of
the
borrowing,
was
67
days
and
it
matured
on
April
30,
1985
to
coincide
with
the
fiscal
year
end
of
PDI
in
order
to
ensure
that
the
interest
on
it
would
be
earned
in
1985
and
be
absorbed
by
PDl’s
loss
incurred
in
1980.
On
the
same
day
PDI
gave
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
a
guarantee
of
the
obligation
of
PDL
in
the
amount
of
$7,815,468.11
plus
interest
at
9
/a
per
cent
per
annum.
On
April
30,
1985
PDI
paid
a
dividend
of
CDN
$173,982
(U.S.
$127,273.73)
to
PDL
which
amount
represented
the
interest
earned
by
PDI
on
the
Royal
Bank
term
deposit
for
the
period
from
February
22
to
April
30,
1985.
The
amount
was
received
by
PDL,
less
10
per
cent
United
States
withholding
tax,
and
recorded
as
a
dividend
in
the
records
of
PDL.
In
its
taxation
year
ending
April
30,
1985
PDL
paid
the
U.S.
dollar
equivalent
of
CDN
$193,684
in
interest
to
the
Royal
Bank
in
respect
of
the
loan
and
it
deducted
it
in
computing
its
income.
On
April
30,
1985
PDL
and
the
Royal
Bank
extended
the
loan
with
the
Royal
Bank
at
LIBOR
plus
0.875
per
cent.
On
the
same
day
PDI
renewed
its
term
deposit
with
the
Royal
Bank
at
an
interest
rate
of
9.125
per
cent
per
annum
maturing
on
February
11,
1986.
The
only
witness
called
for
the
appellant,
Mr.
R.
Winkelaar,
was
unable
to
state
what
the
precise
rate
of
interest
on
the
renewed
loan
from
the
Royal
Bank
was
as
the
appellant
was
unable
to
obtain
the
London
Interbank
offering
rate
on
April
30,
1985.
It
was
however
agreed
that
the
rate
paid
on
the
loan
was
higher
than
the
rate
paid
on
the
term
deposit.
A
new
demand
promissory
note
was
given
to
the
bank
by
PDL
but
no
new
loan
agreement
was
executed.
PDI’s
guarantee
of
PDL's
indebtedness
to
the
Royal
Bank
remained
in
place
and
it
deposited
the
new
term
deposit
with
the
bank
as
security
for
the
obligations
of
itself
and
PDL.
On
February
11,1986,
PDI
paid
a
dividend
of
$794,603
(U.S.
$568,548)
to
PDL,
less
10
per
cent
U.S.
withholding
tax.
This
was
the
amount
of
interest
earned
by
PDI
from
the
Royal
Bank
term
deposit
for
the
period
from
April
30,
1985
to
February
11,
1986.
On
the
same
day
PDI
cashed
in
the
term
deposit
and
loaned
the
money
to
PDL
who
paid
off
the
Royal
Bank.
The
loan
from
the
bank,
the
issuance
of
the
term
deposit
and
its
deposit
with
the
bank
as
security
were
all
done
through
the
London
branch
of
the
Royal
Bank.
No
money
was
ever
transferred
to
Canada
or
the
United
States
or
used
in
the
operations
of
PDI
or
PDL,
except
for
the
dividends
that
PDI
paid
to
PDL.
Pursuant
to
a
plan
of
complete
liquidation
and
dissolution
dated
April
30,
1986
PDI
was
liquidated
and
dissolved.
Articles
of
dissolution
were
filed
with
the
Department
of
State
of
Colorado
on
May
5,
1986.
In
filing
its
return
of
income
for
1986
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
PDL
deducted
in
computing
its
income
$898,241,
the
Canadian
dollar
equivalent
of
the
interest
paid
to
the
bank
in
U.S.
dollars
in
respect
of
the
loan.
Also,
it
included
in
income
the
gross
amount
of
the
dividends
received
from
PDI
in
1985
and
1986,
$173,982
and
$794,603,
and
then
deducted
those
amounts
in
computing
its
taxable
income
pursuant
to
section
113
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
did
so
on
the
basis,
as
stated
in
an
attachment
to
its
1985
return
that:
The
dividends
received
are
deductible
under
section
113
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
PDI
has
no
exempt
or
taxable
surplus
in
its
fiscal
year
ended
April
30,
1985.
The
same
reasoning
was
presumably
applied
to
the
dividend
received
in
1986.
I
need
not
examine
the
accuracy
of
this
somewhat
cryptic
encapsulation
of
the
complex
foreign
accrual
property
income
rules.
The
passive
income
was
earned
by
a
U.S.
corporation
that
was
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
PDL
and
offset
for
U.S.
tax
purposes
by
prior
years’
losses
incurred
by
PDI
in
carrying
on
an
active
business
in
the
United
States.
It
was
common
ground
between
the
parties
that
the
amount
of
the
dividends
received
from
PDI
was
deductible
in
computing
PDL's
taxable
income.
Such
dividends
are
not
"exempt
income"
as
defined
in
section
248
of
the
Act.
They
are
to
be
included
in
income
under
paragraph
12(1)(k)
and
section
90
and
may
be
deducted
in
computing
taxable
income
under
section
113.
One
additional
result
of
the
implementation
of
the
plan
should
be
noted.
The
contribution
of
capital
had
the
effect
of
increasing
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
shares
under
paragraph
53(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
That
adjusted
cost
base
would
have
been
reduced
by
the
payment
of
the
dividends.
Each
of
these
actions
—
the
contribution
of
capital
and
the
payment
of
dividends
—
was
an
integral
part
of
the
scheme
and
has
a
specific
consequence
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Had
the
scheme
not
been
implemented
at
all
the
capital
loss
reported
on
the
liquidation
of
PDI
would
presumably
have
been
different.
As
a
result
of
the
implementation
of
the
plan,
one
of
the
integral
parts
of
which
was
the
payment
of
dividends
by
the
subsidiary,
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
shares
was
reduced
so
that
the
reported
capital
loss
in
1986
on
the
liquidation
of
PDI
was
$195,315.
In
addition
a
foreign
exchange
loss
on
capital
account
of
$117,963
was
sustained
on
the
repayment
of
the
Royal
Bank
U.S.
dollar
loan.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
asked
that,
if
I
held
that
the
interest
paid
to
the
Royal
Bank
was
not
deductible,
I
should
at
least
direct
that
the
capital
loss
of
$195,315
reported
on
the
liquidation
should
be
recalculated.
I
do
not
think
that
this
would
have
been
an
appropriate
remedy.
The
deductibility
of
the
interest
is
an
issue
that
is
quite
separate
from
the
effect
on
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
shares
of
PDI
of
the
contribution
of
capital
or
the
payment
of
dividends.
In
the
absence
of
a
finding
that
the
entire
series
of
transactions
was
a
sham
one
cannot
ignore
the
legal
effect
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
each
of
the
constituent
elements.
In
assessing
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
income
of
its
predecessor
PDL
for
the
1985
and
1986
taxation
years
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
as
a
deduction
in
computing
income
the
amounts
of
$193,684
and
$898,241
paid
as
interest
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada.
In
the
respondent's
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
essentially
four
grounds
were
advanced
in
support
of
the
assessment.
They
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
(a)
that
the
interest
was
not
interest
on
borrowed
money
"used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property"
or
an
amount
payable
for
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
therefrom
or
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraphs
20(1)(c)(i)
and
(ii);
(b)
that
the
deduction
sought
was
in
respect
of
a
disbursement
or
expense
made
in
respect
of
a
transaction
or
operation
that,
if
allowed,
would
unduly
or
artificially
reduce
the
income"
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
245(1);
(c)
that
the
transactions
or
certain
of
them
were
shams
or
subterfuges;
(d)
that
PDI
was
a
mere
nominee
or
conduit
of
the
appellant.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
abandoned
the
last
two
positions
pleaded
and
based
his
case
solely
on
paragraph
20(1)(c)
and
subsection
245(1).
The
elements
of
the
plan
are
relatively
simple.
They
are:
(a)
a
borrowing
of
funds
by
the
Canadian
parent
from
a
bank
for
a
predetermined
period
at
a
specified
interest
rate;
(b)
the
insertion
of
those
funds
in
the
U.S.
subsidiary
as
contributed
capital;
(c)
the
investment
thereof
by
the
subsidiary
in
a
term
deposit
at
a
specified
interest
rate
(which
it
was
known
from
the
outset
was
lower
than
that
paid
on
the
borrowing)
for
the
same
term
as
the
loan;
(d)
the
posting
of
the
term
deposit
by
the
subsidiary
with
the
lender
as
security
for
the
parent's
loan;
(e)
the
earning
of
interest
by
the
subsidiary
with
no
associated
cost
to
the
subsidiary;
(f)
the
absorption
of
the
subsidiary's
accumulated
U.S.
losses
by
the
interest
earned
with
the
result
that
no
U.S.
tax
is
paid;
(g)
the
payment
of
a
tax-free
dividend
to
the
parent
by
the
subsidiary
of
the
interest
so
earned;
(h)
the
transfer
of
the
funds
back
to
the
parent
by
way
of
loan
when
the
term
deposit
matured
and
the
losses
had
been
used
up;
(i)
the
repayment
to
the
bank
of
the
parent's
loan;
(j)
the
liquidation
of
the
subsidiary
and
the
disappearance
of
the
loan
to
the
parent;
(k)
the
deduction
by
the
parent
in
computing
its
income
of
the
interest
on
the
borrowed
funds.
Since
the
facts
are
clear
and
the
fiscal
objectives
undisputed
the
question
becomes
essentially
one
of
law.
I
shall
endeavour
to
formulate
it
as
follows:
Where
a
Canadian
company
borrows
funds
in
Canada
to
contribute
as
capital
to
its
U.S.
subsidiary
with
the
admitted
ultimate
object
of
utilizing
losses
sustained
by
the
subsidiary
and
with
no
expectation
of
ever
receiving
a
return
that
is
equal
to
or
greater
than
the
interest
it
pays
on
the
borrowed
funds,
is
the
interest
that
it
pays,
or
any
portion
thereof,
deductible?
In
other
words,
does
the
plan
work?
By"work"
I
mean
merely
to
achieve
its
stated
fiscal
objective.
For
it
to
work
four
elements
were
necessary:
(a)
there
had
to
be
no
interest
cost
to
the
subsidiary
of
the
funds
that
it
invested
in
the
term
deposits;
(b)
the
interest
paid
by
the
Canadian
parent
had
to
be
deductible
in
computing
its
income;
(c)
the
income
from
the
term
deposit
earned
by
the
subsidiary
had
to
be
free
of
U.S.
tax.
(d)
the
dividends
paid
by
the
subsidiary
to
the
parent
had
to
be
free
of
Canadian
tax.
Artificiality—subsection
245(1)
I
shall
deal
first
with
the
argument
under
subsection
245(1)
as
it
applied
to
1985
and
1986.
Subsection
245(1)
was,
prior
to
the
enactment
of
the
so-called
general
anti-avoidance
rule
now
contained
in
the
present
subsection
245(1),
sometimes
used
to
counteract
what
the
Minister
conceived
to
be
unacceptable
tax
avoidance.
The
Minister
has
been
somewhat
sparing
in
his
use
of
the
provision,
preferring,
it
would
seem,
to
rely
upon
other
provisions
of
the
Act
or
upon
general
broad
principles.
For
example,
in
Stubart
Investments
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
1
S.C.R.
536,
[1984]
C.T.C.
294,
84
D.T.C.
6305
the
profitable
assets
of
one
company
were
transferred
to
a
related
company
to
use
up
the
latter's
losses.
It
was
argued
that
the
transactions
were
incomplete,
shams
and
without
business
purpose.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
in
allowing
the
taxpayer's
appeal,
held
that
the
absence
of
business
purpose
was
no
impediment
to
the
effectiveness
of
the
scheme,
that
the
transaction
was
not
a
sham
and
that
it
was
complete.
Although
the
Crown
specifically
refrained
from
relying
upon
section
137
(the
predecessor
to
section
245)
Estey,
J.
commented
briefly
on
that
section
at
page
579
(C.T.C.
316,
D.T.C.
6323):
Where
the
facts
reveal
no
bona
fide
business
purpose
for
the
transaction,
section
137
may
be
found
to
be
applicable
depending
upon
all
the
circumstances
of
the
case.
It
has
no
application
here.
Since
the
Crown
did
not
rely
on
section
137
the
court
did
not
elaborate
upon
the
type
of
circumstances
that
would
justify
applying
section
137
to
a
transaction
lacking
a
business
purpose.
We
are
afforded,
however,
some
guidance
from
a
number
of
other
decisions
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
and
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
Harris
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
489,
[1966]
C.T.C.
226,
66
D.T.C.
5189
involved
a
scheme
under
which
a
service
station
was
leased
for
25
years
to
an
oil
company
and
concurrently
leased
to
the
taxpayer
for
200
years
with
an
option
to
purchase
at
the
end
of
the
term.
The
taxpayer
relied
upon
section
18
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
it
then
read,
to
claim
capital
cost
allowance
on
the
aggregate
of
the
rental
payments
over
the
200
year
term,
less
the
fair
market
value
of
the
land.
The
scheme,
had
it
succeeded,
would
have
resulted
in
the
taxpayer,
for
an
investment
of
$10,000,
being
able
to
claim
capital
cost
allowance
on
a
deemed
capital
cost
of
over
$600,000.
Cartwright,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
after
holding
that
the
option
contravened
the
rule
against
perpetuities,
went
on
to
observe
at
page
505
(C.T.C.
242,
D.T.C.
5198)
that
the
arrangement
embodied
in
the
scheme
"would
furnish
an
example
of
the
very
sort
of
“transaction
or
operation"
at
which
subsection
137(1)
is
aimed”.
In
Shulman
v.
M.N.R.,
62
D.T.C.
1166,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
without
written
reasons,
affirmed
a
decision
of
Ritchie,
D.J.
([1961]
C.T.C.
385,
61
D.T.C.
1213)
which
held
that
the
use
of
a
management
company
to
which
a
lawyer
paid
management
fees
to
administer
his
law
practice
artificially
reduced
his
income.
The
management
fees
were
disallowed
as
a
deduction
under
subsection
137(1).
Recent
jurisprudence,
such
for
example
as
Flemming
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
352,
84
D.T.C.
6447
(F.C.A.),
would
not
justify
placing
undue
reliance
on
that
decision
today.
In
Consolidated-Bathurst
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
55,
87
D.T.C.
5001,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
the
deduction
of
premiums
paid
to
an
arm's-length
insurer
where
that
insurer
reinsured
the
risks
with
the
insured's
offshore
captive
insurance
company
was
prohibited
under
subsection
245(1)
where
the
insured
guaranteed
the
captive's
potential
obligations
to
the
primary
insurer,
but
not
where
it
did
not.
In
the
former
case,
subsection
245(1)
was
held
to
be
applicable
because
there
was
no
shifting
and
distribution
of
risk
and
therefore
no
true
insurance
protection
was
obtained.
Where
no
such
guarantees
were
given
the
taxpayer's
insurance
arrangements
were
held
not
to
be
tainted
by
artificiality.
A
recent
and
significant
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
on
artificiality
is
Canada
v.
Irving
Oil
Ltd.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
350,
91
D.T.C.
5106.
In
that
case,
as
part
of
an
obvious
tax
avoidance
scheme,
an
offshore
company
was
inserted
between
the
domestic
taxpayer's
suppliers
of
crude
oil
and
the
taxpayer.
The
offshore
company
served
no
commercial
purpose
whatever.
Ithad
but
one
full-time
employee,
it
never
took
possession
of
or
insured
the
oil
and
its
operating
expenses
were
minimal.
It
took
no
part
in
the
transportation
of
the
oil
and
had
title
thereto
only
long
enough
to
increase
the
price
from
that
at
which
the
appellant
could
buy
from
its
Middle
East
suppliers
to
a
figure
that,
it
was
found,
was
fair
market
value.
Although
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
disagreed
with
virtually
all
of
the
trial
judge's
conclusions,
it
held
that
the
arrangement
was
not
a
sham
(see
Dominion
Bridge
Co.
v.
The
Queen,
[1977]
C.T.C.
554,
71
D.T.C.
5367),
and
that
the
deduction,
in
computing
the
appellant's
income
of
the
amount
by
which
the
Bermuda
company
increased
the
price
to
the
Canadian
parent
for
the
scintilla
of
time
when
it
had
legal
title
to
the
oil
did
not
“
unduly
or
artificially”
reduce
the
appellant's
income.
Leave
to
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
was
denied.
I
find
the
observations
of
Mahoney,
J.,
speaking
for
the
Court,
at
pages
360-61
(D.T.C.
5114)
particularly
instructive:
In
order
to
come
within
the
terms
of
subsection
245(1),
a
transaction
or
operation
must
have
the
effect
of
unduly
or
artificially
reducing
income;
the
artificiality
of
the
transaction
or
operation
itself
does
not
determine
the
issue.
Heald,
J.A.,
speaking
for
the
Court
in
Spur
Oil
v.
The
Queen,
[1981]
C.T.C.
336,
81
D.T.C.
5168
(F.C.A.),
at
page
342
(D.T.C.
5173),
said:
.
.
.
the
finding
of
artificiality
in
the
transaction
does
not,
per
se,
attract
the
prohibition
set
out
in
subsection
245(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
To
be
caught
by
that
subsection,
the
expense
or
disbursement
being
impeached
must
result
in
an
artificial
or
undue
reduction
of
income."Undue"
when
used
in
this
context
should
be
given
its
dictionary
meaning
of
"excessive".
In
light
of
the
Crown’s
concession
.
.
.
that
under
the
Tepwin
contract
the
appellant
would
be
paying
slightly
less
than
fair
market
value,
it
cannot
be
said
that
the
Tepwin
contract
and
the
Tepwin
charge
result
in
an
excessive
reduction
of
income.
Turning
now
to
artificial,
the
dictionary
meaning
when
used
in
this
context
is,
in
my
view,
“simulated”
or
"fictitious".
On
the
facts
in
this
case,
the
reduction
in
the
income
of
the
appellant
can,
in
no
way,
be
said
to
be
fictitious
or
simulated.
It
is
likewise
here.
Since
the
respondent
paid
Irvcal
fair
market
value,
it
cannot
be
said
that
payment
resulted
in
an
excessive
reduction
of
income.
There
was
nothing
fictitious
or
simulated
in
the
reduction
of
the
respondent's
income
as
a
result
of
paying
Irvcal
66¢
more
per
barrel
of
crude
than
the
crude
cost
Irvcal.
It
was
very
real.
The
ratio
in
Spur
Oil,
supra
was
reached
on
the
basis
that
the
result
of
a
nonarm's
length
transaction
was
the
result
that
would
have
been
reached
at
arm's
length.
The
appellant's
submission
that
the
fact,
as
found
by
the
trial
judge,
that
the
respondent
and
Irvcal
dealt
at
arm's
length
distinguishes
this
case
from
Spur
Oil
is
therefore
singularly
unpersuasive.
Conclusion
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada’s
decision
in
Stubart,
supra
reaffirmed
that
it
remains
the
law
of
Canada
that
Every
man
is
entitled
if
he
can
to
order
his
affairs
so
as
that
the
tax
attaching
under
the
appropriate
Acts
is
less
than
it
otherwise
would
be.
If
he
succeeds
in
ordering
them
so
as
to
secure
this
result,
then,
however
unappreciative
the
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
or
his
fellow
taxpayers
may
be
of
his
ingenuity,
he
cannot
be
compelled
to
pay
an
increased
tax
[/.R.C.
v.
Duke
of
Westminster,
[1936]
1
A.C.
1
at
pages
19-20].
On
the
facts
as
found
herein,
it
is
my
opinion
that
the
tax
avoidance
scheme
contrived
in
the
present
case
did
not
offend
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
is
fair
to
say
that
artificiality
is
in
the
eye
of
the
beholder,
and
where
one
draws
the
line
between
“acceptable”
and
"unacceptable"
tax
avoidance
schemes
is
a
matter
of
perception.
In
that
determination
the
fact
that
the
scheme
may
have
been
predominantly
or
exclusively
fiscally
motivated
plays
a
minor
or
even
a
non-existent
role.
(See
also:
A/berta
and
Southern
Gas
Co.
v.
The
Queen,
[1976]
C.T.C.
639,
76
D.T.C.
6362,
at
page
651
(D.T.C.
6369-70
(F.C.T.D.);
aff'd
[1977]
C.T.C.
388,
77
D.T.C.
5244
(F.C.A.);
aff’d
[1979]
1
S.C.R.
36,
[1978]
C.T.C.
780,
78
D.T.C.
6566.)
What
is
of
far
greater
importance
is
whether
the
scheme
falls
within
accepted
norms
of
commercial
reality.
The
200-year
lease
option
in
Harris
on
the
face
of
it
was
not
within
those
bounds.
Similarly,
in
Consolidated-Bathurst,
a
guarantee
by
the
insured
of
the
reinsurer's
obligations
to
the
primary
insurer
was
held
not
to
be
within
ordinary
principles
of
commercial
usage
within
the
insurance
industry.
In
Irving
Oil
the
purchase
of
crude
oil
from
a
subsidiary
at
a
price
that
was
found
by
the
trial
judge
to
be
fair
market
value
appeared
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
to
offend
no
principles
of
commercial
normality.
Wherein,
then,
lies
the
artificiality
in
this
case?
The
transactions
with
the
Royal
Bank
were
at
arm's
length.
The
rate
of
interest
charged
was
not
excessive
—
indeed
it
may
have
been
somewhat
lower
than
that
charged
domestically.
The
income
produced
by
the
investment
of
the
funds
in
a
term
deposit
arose
out
of
a
anormal
commercial
act.
There
was
nothing
unusual
about
the
payment
of
dividends.
The
documentation
necessary
to
accomplish
each
of
the
steps
was
prepared,
executed
and
delivered
as
required
and
the
transactions
were
duly
completed
in
accordance
with
the
documents.
They
were
real
transactions.
The
artificiality,
if
I
understand
the
respondent's
argument
correctly,
must
consist
in
the
overall
objective
of
utilizing
the
U.S.
subsidiary's
losses
in
Canada
and
the
attainment
of
that
end
by
borrowing
at
a
rate
that
was
higher
than
the
anticipated
return,
all
in
accordance
with
a
prearranged
plan.
Considered
separately
neither
of
these
elements
justifies
a
disallowance
of
the
interest
paid
under
subsection
245(1).
The
tax
considerations
that
motivated
the
arrangement
by
itself
do
not
by
themselves
bring
it
within
the
ambit
of
subsection
245(1).
The
borrowing
at
a
rate
that
does
not
and
cannot
yield
an
economic
return
as
a
means
of
achieving
a
predetermined
economic
result
is
in
itself
not
artificial.
To
hold
that
this
scheme
failed
for
artificiality
would
be
to
ignore
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Irving,
If
the
Irving
scheme
was
not
artificial
this
one
cannot
be.
One
final
observation
must
be
made.
We
have
here
a
series
of
interrelated
transactions.
The
Crown
has
challenged
under
subsection
245(1)
only
one
aspect
of
the
entire
arrangement,
the
deduction
of
interest,
on
the
basis
that
it
results
in
an
artificial
or
undue
reduction
of
the
appellant's
income.
Yet
it
has
chosen
to
leave
intact
the
consequences
of
all
but
one
of
the
component
parts.
Either
the
whole
structure
falls
or
it
does
not.
It
cannot
be
dismembered
piecemeal.
In
any
fiscally
motivated
scheme,
if
no
sham
is
involved,
there
must
necessarily
be
legally
effective
steps
that
have
specific
tax
consequences.
The
tax
results
of
each
of
those
steps
that
forms
an
integral
part
of
the
entire
scheme
must
be
respected
unless
the
Minister
is
prepared
to
say
that
the
scheme
as
a
whole
fails.
I
have
concluded
that
the
deduction
of
the
interest
is
not
prohibited
by
subsection
245(1).
”.
.
.
Used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property"
—
paragraph
20(1)(c)
The
appellant’s
claim
to
deduct
the
interest
is
based
upon
paragraph
20(1)(c),
the
relevant
portion
of
which
reads
as
follows:
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
18(1)(a),(b)
and
(h),
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property,
there
may
be
deducted
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
wholly
applicable
to
that
source
or
such
part
of
the
following
amounts
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
applicable
thereto:
(c)
an
amount
paid
in
the
year
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
year
(depending
upon
the
method
regularly
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
computing
his
income),
pursuant
to
a
legal
obligation
to
pay
interest
on
(i)
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
borrowed
money
used
to
acquire
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt
or
to
acquire
a
life
insurance
policy),
(ii)
an
amount
payable
for
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
therefrom
or
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
(other
than
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt
or
property
that
is
an
interest
in
a
life
insurance
policy),
or
a
reasonable
amount
in
respect
thereof,
whichever
is
the
lesser.
The
respondent's
denial
of
deductibility
is
based
on
the
position
that
the
borrowed
money
upon
which
the
interest
was
paid
was
not
“used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property"
within
subparagraph
(i)
nor
was
it
interest
on
an
amount
payable
for
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
therefrom
or
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
(ii).
I
agree
with
the
respondent's
position
that
subparagraph
(ii)
has
no
application.
The
interest
on
the
money
borrowed
from
the
bank
was
not
interest
on
an
amount
payable
for
property.
What
then
was
the
purpose
for
which
the
borrowed
money
was
used?
To
this
question
a
number
of
answers
were
given.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
stated
that
the
funds
were
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
dividend
income.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
contended
that
I
should
not
focus
on
the
"purpose"
of
the
borrowing
but,
as
directed
by
the
Supreme
Court
in
The
Queen
v.
Bronfman
Trust,
[19871
1
S.C.R.
32,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
117,
87
D.T.C.
5059,
on
the
"direct"
use
of
funds.
Indeed,
it
is
the
purpose
of
the
use,
not
the
purpose
of
the
borrowing,
to
which
the
statute
directs
us.
In
fact
the
purpose
of
the
borrowing
and
the
use
of
the
funds
are
identical.
They
were
used
for
the
very
purpose
for
which
they
were
borrowed.
Accordingly
the
distinction
is
not
meaningful.
The
respondent's
position
was
that
the
use
to
which
the
borrowed
money
was
put
was
to
contribute
capital
to
PDI
—
a
use
that
in
itself
produced
no
income
—
and
that,
based
on
Canada
Safeway
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1957]
S.C.R.
717,
[1957]
C.T.C.
335,
57
D.T.C.
1239,
I
should
not
look
to
the
"remote"
or
"indirect"
purpose
of
earning
dividend
income.
Both
the
appellant's
and
the
respondent's
characterizations
of
the
purpose
for
which
the
funds
were
used
have
a
certain
superficial
correctness,
but
I
think
they
are
both
based
on
a
logical
fallacy
in
that
they
attribute
to
one
event
in
the
series
a
purpose
based
upon
the
immediately
subsequent
event.
The
true
purpose
is
a
broader
one
that
subsumes
all
of
the
subordinate
and
incidental
links
in
the
chain.
The
overriding
ultimate
economic
purpose
for
which
the
borrowed
funds
were
used
was
to
permit
the
U.S.
losses
of
PDI
to
be,
in
effect,
imported
into
Canada
and
deducted
in
computing
PDL's
income.
In
light
of
the
strong
reliance
placed
by
the
respondent
upon
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Canada
Safeway
it
is
appropriate
that
I
deal
first
with
it.
It
does
not
support
the
respondent's
position.
It
involved
a
claim
to
deduct
interest
expense
incurred
in
1947,
1948
and
1949.
The
appellant,
which
operated
grocery
stores,
borrowed
money
with
which
to
acquire
the
shares
of
a
distributor
of
grocery
products
with
which
it
had
business
dealings.
It
sought
to
deduct
the
interest
incurred
in
1947
and
1948
under
paragraph
5(1)(b)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
as
interest
on
"borrowed
capital
used
in
the
business
to
earn
the
income”.
Its
claim
for
1949
was
based
on
paragraph
11(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1947-8
c.
52.
In
analyzing
the
effect
of
this
decision
it
is
important
to
observe
that
the
contention
was
that
the
ownership
of
the
shares
of
the
distributor
would
in
some
way
enhance
the
income
earning
potential
of
the
appellant's
own
business.
It
was
not
suggested,
nor
could
it
have
been,
that
the
use
was
merely
the
acquisition
of
shares
that
produced
dividends.
In
1947
and
1948
intercorporate
dividends
were,
under
section
4
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
“not
liable
to
taxation”
and
expenses
to
earn
such
"non-taxable
income"
were,
under
subsection
6(5),
not
allowed
as
a
deduction.
That
situation
continued
into
1949
when
paragraph
11(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(now
20(1)(c))
superseded
paragraph
5(1)(b)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Paragraph
11(1)(c),
as
does
present
paragraph
20(1)(c),
denied
a
deduction
for
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
to
earn
income
from
property
the
income
from
which
would
be
exempt.
"Exempt
income”
as
defined
in
section
139
included
intercorporate
dividends
that
were
deductible
under
section
27
in
computing
taxable
income.
It
was
not
until
tax
reform
in
1972
that
the
definition
of
exempt
income
was
changed
specifically
to
exclude
a
dividend
on
a
share.
The
error
in
relying
upon
Canada
Safeway
to
deny
the
deductibility
of
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
to
purchase
shares
or
contribute
capital
to
a
corporation
is
this:
the
purpose
relied
on
in
that
case
by
the
appellant
was
not
the
earning
of
dividends.
If
that
were
the
purpose
alleged
the
deduction
was
prohibited
in
any
event
by
subsection
6(5)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and,
in
1949,
the
words
in
parentheses
in
paragraph
11(1)(c),
which
denied
a
deduction
for
interest
expense
incurred
to
earn
exempt
income.
The
purpose
alleged
was
the
effect
on
the
appellant's
own
business
of
owning
the
shares
of
the
subsidiary.
It
was
this
purpose
that
was
rejected
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
as
being
too
remote
and
indirect
to
bring
the
deduction
within
the
restrictive
wording
of
paragraph
5(1)(b).
Under
present
legislation,
and
in
particular
the
definition
of
exempt
income
in
section
248,
dividends
are
not
"exempt
income".
The
decision
in
Canada
Safeway
is
not
an
authority
for
the
proposition
that
an
expenditure
that
has
as
its
purpose
the
receipt
of
dividends
—
such
for
example
as
a
contribution
ofcapital
to
a
subsidiary
or
the
acquisition
of
shares
—
is
a
purpose
that
is
too
remote
and
indirect
to
permit
the
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
for
that
purpose
to
be
deducted.
In
Bronfman,
interest
on
money
borrowed
by
a
trust
to
make
capital
allocations
to
a
beneficiary
was
held
to
be
non-deductible.
The
rationalization
advanced
by
the
trust
was
that
the
borrowing
was
done
to
protect
the
capital
assets
of
the
trust
that
would
otherwise
have
had
to
be
sold
to
make
the
distribution.
The
assets
that
were
allegedly
being
protected
produced
income
that
was
but
a
small
fraction
of
the
interest
expense
deducted.
Although
the
wide-ranging
observations
in
Bronfman
are
cited
in
support
of
many
propositions
the
basis
of
the
decision
is
found
in
three
paragraphs
on
pages
52-53
(C.T.C.
128-29,
D.T.C.
5067):
This
does
not
mean,
however,
that
a
deduction
such
as
the
interest
deduction
in
subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i),
which
by
its
very
text
is
made
available
to
the
taxpayer
in
limited
circumstances,
is
suddenly
to
lose
all
its
strictures.
It
is
not
lightly
to
be
assumed
that
an
actual
and
direct
use
of
borrowed
money
is
any
less
real
than
the
abstract
and
remote
indirect
uses
which
have,
on
occasion,
been
advanced
by
taxpayers
in
an
effort
to
achieve
a
favourable
characterization.
In
particular,
I
believe
that
despite
the
fact
that
it
can
be
characterized
as
indirectly
preserving
income,
borrowing
money
for
an
ineligible
direct
purpose
ought
not
entitle
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
interest
payments.
The
taxpayer
in
such
a
situation
has
doubly
reduced
his
or
her
long-run
income-earning
capacity:
first,
by
expending
capital
in
a
manner
that
does
not
produce
taxable
income;
and
second,
by
incurring
debt
financing
charges.
The
taxpayer,
of
course,
has
a
right
to
spend
money
in
ways
which
cannot
reasonably
be
expected
to
generate
taxable
income
but
if
the
taxpayer
chooses
to
do
so,
he
or
she
cannot
expect
any
advantageous
treatment
by
the
tax
assessor.
In
my
view,
the
text
of
the
Act
requires
tracing
the
use
of
borrowed
funds
to
a
specific
eligible
use,
its
obviously
restricted
purpose
being
the
encouragement
of
taxpayers
to
augment
their
income-producing
potential.
This,
in
my
view,
precludes
the
allowance
of
a
deduction
for
interest
paid
on
borrowed
funds
which
indirectly
preserve
incomeearning
property
but
which
are
not
directly
“used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
.
.
.
property”.
Even
if
there
are
exceptional
circumstances
in
which,
on
a
real
appreciation
of
a
taxpayer's
transactions,
it
might
be
appropriate
to
allow
the
taxpayer
to
deduct
interest
on
funds
borrowed
for
an
ineligible
use
because
of
an
indirect
effect
on
the
taxpayer's
income-earning
capacity,
I
am
satisfied
that
those
circumstances
are
not
presented
in
the
case
before
us.
It
seems
to
me
that,
at
the
very
least,
the
taxpayer
must
satisfy
the
Court
that
his
or
her
bona
fide
purpose
in
using
the
funds
was
to
earn
income.
In
contrast
to
what
appears
to
be
the
case
in
TransPrairie,
the
facts
in
the
present
case
fall
far
short
of
such
a
showing.
Indeed,
it
is
of
more
than
passing
interest
that
the
assets
which
were
preserved
tor
a
brief
period
of
time
yielded
a
return
which
grossly
fell
short
of
the
interest
costs
on
the
borrowed
money.
In
1970,
the
interest
costs
on
the
$2,200,000
of
loans
amounted
to
over
$110,000
while
the
return
from
an
average
$2,200,000
of
trust
assets
(the
amount
of
capital"preserved")
was
less
than
$10,000.
The
taxpayer
cannot
point
to
any
reasonable
expectation
that
the
income
yield
from
the
trust's
investment
portfolio
as
a
whole,
or
indeed
from
any
single
asset,
would
exceed
the
interest
payable
on
a
like
amount
of
debt.
The
fact
that
the
loan
may
have
prevented
capital
losses
cannot
assist
the
taxpayer
in
obtaining
a
deduction
from
income,
which
is
limited
to
use
of
borrowed
money
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income.
What,
then,
is
the
"direct"
use
to
which
the
borrowed
funds
were
put
here?
The
direct
and
immediate
use
was
the
injection
of
capital
into
a
subsidiary
with
the
necessary
and
intended
consequence
that
the
subsidiary
should
earn
interest
income
from
term
deposits
from
which
it
could
pay
dividends.
The
earning
of
dividend
income
cannot,
however,
in
my
opinion,
be
said
to
be
the
real
purpose
of
the
use
of
the
borrowed
funds.
Theoretically
one
might,
in
a
connected
series
of
events
leading
to
a
predetermined
conclusion,
postulate
as
[to]
the
purpose
of
each
event
in
the
sequence
the
achievement
of
the
result
that
immediately
follows
but
in
determining
the
“purpose”
of
the
use
of
borrowed
funds
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
20(1)(c)
the
court
is
faced
with
practical
considerations
with
which
the
pure
theorist
is
not
concerned.
That
purpose
—
and
it
is
a
practical
and
real
one,
and
in
no
way
remote,
fanciful
or
indirect
—
is
the
importation
of
the
losses
from
the
U.S.
This
case
is
not
the
converse
of
Bronfman.
The
vague
purpose
of
protecting
assets
that
produced
virtually
no
income
was
patently
subservient
to
the
direct
and
uneconomic
purpose
of
distributing
capital
to
a
beneficiary
of
the
trust.
Here
the
immediate
step
of
investing
in
a
subsidiary
that
in
accordance
with
the
scheme
must
necessarily
pay
dividends
was
not
the
real
purpose
of
the
use
of
the
funds.
The
earning
of
interest
income
by
PDI
and
the
payment
by
it
of
dividends
to
PDL
were
integral
but
subservient
and
incidental
steps
to
the
real
objective
that
lay
behind
the
implementation
of
the
plan.
The
amount
of
dividends,
albeit
deductible
in
computing
taxable
income,
and
based
upon
the
interest
from
the
term
deposits,
was
less
than
the
interest
paid
to
the
Royal
Bank.
It
is
true
that
the
overall
economic
result,
if
all
of
the
elements
of
the
plan
work,
is
a
net
gain
to
the
appellant,
but
this
type
of
gain
is
not
from
the
production
of
income
but
from
a
reduction
of
taxes
otherwise
payable
in
Canada.
I
am
cognizant
of
the
fact
that
the
dividends,
although
deductible
in
computing
taxable
income,
are
nonetheless
income.
It
is,
however,
this
feature
of
our
Canadian
tax
system
whereby
such
dividends
are
deductible
in
computing
taxable
income
that
gives
to
the
plan
its
apparent
economic
viability.
If
I
am
wrong
in
distinguishing
between
intermediate
or
subordinate
results
and
ultimate
economic
objectives
I
must
deal
with
a
further
submission
made
by
the
respondent.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
contends
that
even
if
the
purpose
was
the
earning
of
dividend
income
this
is
of
no
assistance
to
the
appellant
because
a
taxpayer's"income"
from
a
business
or
property
is
stated
in
section
9
to
be
“subject
to
this
Part
.
.
.
his
profit
therefrom"
for
the
year.
From
this
wording,
counsel
suggests
that
any
expenditure
which
necessarily
exceeds
the
income
that
it
is
designed
to
produce
must
be
denied
under
paragraph
18(1)(a)
or,
if
it
is
interest,
under
paragraph
20(1)(c)
because
it
could
not
conceivably
be
expended
to
earn
income"
in
the
sense
of
profit.
This
contention
is
based
upon
an
assumption
that
section
9
contains
a
definition
of
income
from
a
business
or
property
that
must
be
applied
throughout
the
Income
Tax
Act
unless
a
contrary
intention
appears.
(See
section
15
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
1-23,
section
1.)
I
do
not
think
that
Parliament
intended
section
9
to
be
a
definition
of
income.
The
use
of
the
word
"is",
as
opposed
to
"means",
the
word
habitually
used
in
definitions,
implies
in
my
view
that
Parliament
was
declaring,
for
greater
certainty,
a
principle
that
has
been
entrenched
in
income
tax
law
for
over
a
century,
that
the
income
upon
which
tax
is
imposed
is
the
balance
of
gain
over
loss.
In
Lawless
v.
Sullivan
(1881),
6
App.
Cas.
373,
the
Privy
Council,
in
dealing
with
a
New
Brunswick
statute
that
imposed
a
tax
on
"income",
stated
at
pages
383-84:
Their
Lordships
have
come
to
the
conclusion,
upon
consideration
of
the
Act
in
question,
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
enactment
imposing
the
tax,
nor
in
the
context,
which
should
induce
them
to
construe
the
word”
income,”
when
applied
to
the
income
of
a
commercial
business
for
a
year,
otherwise
than
in
its
natural
and
commonly
accepted
sense,
as
the
balance
of
gain
over
loss,
and
consequently
they
are
of
opinion
that
where
no
such
gain
has
been
made
in
the
fiscal
year,
there
is
no
income
or
fund
which
is
capable
of
being
assessed.
That
the
word
income"
is
susceptible
of
two
meanings
—"
net
income”
or
"gross
income”
—
is
obvious.
It
was
the
subject
of
a
lengthy
discussion
in
the
High
Court
of
Australia
in
Bartlam
v.
Union
Trustee
Co.
of
Australia
Ltd.,
[1946]
A.L.R.
162.
Latham,
C.J.
observed
at
page
164:
The
Court
was
referred,
on
the
one
hand
to
Lawless
v.
Sullivan
(1881),
6
App.
Cas.
373,
where
it
was
said
that
the
natural
meaning
of
the
word
"income"
was
the
gain,
if
any,
resulting
from
the
balance
of
profits
and
losses
of
the
business
in
a
year;
and,
on
the
other
hand,
to
R.
v.
Commissioners
of
the
Port
of
Southampton
(1870),
L.R.
4
H.L.
449,
where
it
was
said
that
“income
is
that
which
comes
in,
not
that
"which
comes
in
less
an
outgoing."
These
cases,
taken
together,
show
that
the
word
“income”
is
ambiguous.
It
may
mean
either
net
income
or
gross
income,
according
to
the
context
—
and
there
will
then
sometimes
be
room
for
argument
as
to
how
net
income
(or
gross
income)
is
to
be
ascertained.
Two
men
referring
to
the
same
state
of
facts
might
use
the
word
in
quite
different
senses.
One
man
might
say
that
he
had
a
large
income
in
a
given
year,
but
that
all
his
income
and
more
went
in
meeting
expenses
and
losses.
Another
man
might
describe
the
same
facts
by
saying
that
he
had
no
income
at
all
in
that
year,
because
he
made
a
loss
on
the
year's
transactions.
In
each
case
the
context
shows
in
what
sense
the
word
"income"
is
used.
In
the
present
case
the
words
of
the
section
show,
in
my
opinion,
that"
income
received"
means
all
receipts
other
than
receipts
on
account
of
capital.
Dixon,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
commented
as
well,
at
pages
169
to
171
of
the
report
on
the
ambiguity
of
the
word.
It
may
be
that
this
essential
ambiguity
impelled
Parliament
in
the
1948
Income
Tax
Act
to
affirm
that
the
income
that
is
subjected
to
tax
is
net
income
and
not
gross
receipts.
This
does
not
however
amount
to
a
definition
applicable
for
all
purposes
of
the
Act.
Had
that
been
the
intention
Parliament
would
have
had
no
difficulty
in
finding
words
appropriate
to
express
that
intention.
The
attempt
to
define
income
found
in
section
3
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
abandoned
in
the
1948
Act.
The
most
compelling
authority
for
the
conclusion
that
section
9
is
not
a
definition
and
that
in
the
Act
income
may
mean
gross
or
net
income
depend-
ing
upon
the
context
in
which
it
is
used,
is
a
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Interprovincial
Pipe
Line
Co.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1959]
S.C.R.
763,
[1959]
C.T.C.
339,59
D.T.C.
1229.
The
question
was
whether
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
a
foreign
tax
credit
under
subsection
38(1)
of
the
1948
Income
Tax
Act
for
1950
to
1952
and
under
subsection
41(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
applied
to
1953
and
1954
in
respect
of
withholding
tax
that
it
paid
to
the
United
States
on
interest
paid
to
it.
The
claim
was
denied
on
the
basis
that
although
it
received
interest
from
U.S.
sources
it
had
no
profit
therefrom
because
it
paid
interest
on
its
own
borrowings
equal
to
or
greater
than
its
interest
receipts.
Judson,
J.
said
at
pages
766-68
(C.T.C.
341-44,
D.T.C.
30-1231):
The
United
States
tax
credit
was
disallowed
because
the
Minister
ruled
that
Interprovincial
had
no
profit
from
the
receipts
of
interest
from
United
States
sources,
having
paid
interest
on
its
own
borrowings
to
an
amount
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
these
receipts
and
these
interest
payments
having
been
recognized
as
deductible
expenses.
The
right
to
a
tax
credit
was
therefore
made
to
depend
upon
the
existence
of
a
profit
after
setting
off
one
item
against
the
other
and
the
basis
for
the
decision
was
the
interpretation
of
section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
provides
as
follows:
24.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
The
reasoning
is
that
section
4
compels
one
to
read
the
word
"income"
as
meaning
"profit"
in
section
38(1)
of
the
Act.
This
is
indicated
very
clearly
in
the
following
paragraph
from
the
reasons
of
the
learned
trial
judge:
By
section
4
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
however,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
declared,
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
1,
to
be
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year
and,
since
the
source
of
the
interest
in
question
on
which
tax
was
paid
to
the
United
States
was
clearly
either
a
business
or
property
and
no
other
provision
of
Part
1
declares
that
interest
earnings
are
to
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
income
or
taxed
on
any
other
basis,
it
follows,
in
my
opinion,
that
what
is
to
be
regarded
for
the
purposes
of
Part
1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
the
income
from
such
business
or
property
is
not
the
gross
amount
of
such
interest
for
each
year
but
the
profit
from
such
property
or
business
for
the
year.
If
there
is
no
profit
from
a
business
or
property
for
any
year,
there
is
no
income
therefrom
for
that
year.
Section
38(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
can
thus
afford
a
tax
credit
only
in
a
year
in
which
the
appellant
had
a
profit
for
the
year
from
the
business
or
property
in
the
United
States
from
which
the
interest
in
question
flowed.
In
my
respectful
opinion,
there
is
error
here
in
stating
that
"no
other
provision
of
Part
I
declares
that
interest
earnings
are
to
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
income
or
taxed
on
any
other
basis”
for
such
a
finding
ignores
the
imperative
provisions
of
paragraph
6(b)
of
the
Act.
In
my
opinion
it
is
the
payment
of
the
withholding
tax
of
15
per
cent,
in
the
United
States
on
this
interest
receipt
—
not
profit
—
an
interest
receipt
which
the
taxpayer
is
required
to
bring
into
the
computation
of
income
by
paragraph
6(b),
which
gives
the
right
to
the
foreign
tax
deduction
under
subsection
38(1).
The
appellant
is
a
Canadian
company.
It
did
pay
a
15
per
cent
withholding
tax
to
the
United
States
on
income
from
sources
therein.
To
deprive
the
appellant
of
the
right
to
the
tax
deduction
it
is
necessary
to
substitute
for
"on
his
income
from
sources
therein”
the
words
"on
his
profits
from
sources
therein"
and
I
do
not
think
that
section
4
affords
the
statutory
basis
for
such
a
substitution.
First,
section
4
is
expressly
made
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I
of
the
Act.
One
of
these,
affecting
the
matter,
is
paragraph
6(b),
which
provides:
6.
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(b)
amounts
received
in
the
year
or
receivable
in
the
year
(depending
upon
the
method
regularly
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
computing
his
profit)
as
interest
or
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of
interest;
Paragraph
6(b)
imperatively
requires
that
the
whole
of
the
interest
from
United
States
sources
must
be
brought
into
account
in
the
computation
of
income
and
on
the
other
side
of
the
account
there
is
a
deduction
that
must
be
allowed
under
paragraph
11(1)(c)
for
interest
on
“borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property.”
This,
in
fact,
is
what
has
actually
happened.
The
full
interest
receipt
has
been
brought
into
account
and
the
full
interest
payment
has
been
claimed
and
allowed
as
a
deduction
without
allocation,
but
for
the
purpose
of
denying
the
appellant
the
right
to
the
tax
credit
under
subsection
38(1),
a
subsidiary
calculation
has
been
made
within
this
framework
for
the
purpose
of
showing
that
when
the
allocable
expense
is
set
against
the
United
States
interest
receipt,
there
is
no
profit
on
this
branch
of
the
appellant's
activity
and,
consequently,
no
right
to
a
tax
credit.
I
can
see
no
basis
for
any
allocation
of
the
appellant's
borrowings
to
its
investment
in
its
subsidiary
for
the
purpose
of
producing
this
result
under
subsection
38(1).
The
appellant’s
borrowings
and
the
interest
paid
thereon
were
related
to
the
business
as
a
whole
and
no
part
of
the
borrowings
and
the
interest
paid
thereon
can
be
segregated
and
attributed
to
the
investment
in
the
subsidiary.
The
interest
paid
by
the
appellant
to
its
own
bondholders
was,
under
paragraph
11(1)(c),
a
deduction
given
to
the
appellant
for
the
purpose
of
computing
its
income
from
all
sources.
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Act
do
not
require
a
separate
computation
of
income
from
each
source
for
the
taxpayer
is
subject
to
tax
on
income
from
all
sources.
The
deduction
against
income
given
by
paragraph
11(1)(c)
is
attributable
to
all
sources
of
income
and
there
is
no
authority
to
break
it
up
and
relate
various
parts
of
the
deduction
to
various
sources.
For
this
reason
I
do
not
regard
the
interest
paid
and
claimed
and
allowed
as
a
deduction,
as
being
related
to
the
source
of
the
United
States
interest
receipt
in
this
case,
and
consequently,
paragraph
139(1)(az),
formerly
paragraph
127(1)(av)
of
the
1948
Income
Tax
Act,
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
authorize
the
allocation
which
the
Minister
has
made
in
this
case.
It
should
be
noted
that
the
direct
attribution
of
the
interest
on
the
borrowings
to
the
investment
in
PDI
is
possible
as
a
factual
matter
in
this
case
whereas
in
Interprovincial
Pipe
Line
no
such
factual
nexus
was
evident.
This
consideration
does
not
alter
the
conclusion
that
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
did
not
interpret
section
4
(now
section
9)
as
a
definition
section
or
the
word
income
to
mean
profit
in
the
circumstances
of
that
case.
Locke,
J.
stated
at
page
774
(C.T.C.
348-49,
D.T.C.
1234):
The
judgment
appealed
from
has
interpreted
the
word
income”
in
these
subsections
as
if
it
read
"profit"
and,
admittedly,
if
that
interpretation
is
correct,
no
profit
resulted
to
the
appellant
from
the
receipt
of
these
moneys,
since
the
annual
cost
to
it
of
the
funds
used
in
the
purchase
of
the
securities
exceeded
the
amounts
paid
in
the
United
States.
I
can
find
no
support
for
this
interpretation
either
in
section
4
or
elsewhere
in
either
Act.
The
word
income"
is
used
rather
loosely
in
both
of
these
statutes.
The
attempt
to
define
"income"
made
in
subsection
3(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
not
repeated
in
either.
Thus,
in
section
3
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
is
stated
to
include
all
income,
meaning
all
receipts
from,
inter
alia,
all
businesses
and
property.
In
section
4,
however,
income
from
a
business
is
said
to
be
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year,
in
this
sense
meaning
the
taxable
income.
The
deductions
allowed
are
not
deductions
from
income
in
the
sense
that
that
expression
is
used
in
section
3
but
from
the
tax
payable
in
Canada
after
all
of
the
receipts
from
the
business
have
been
brought
into
account,
as
required.
He
was
obviously
not
using
the
expression
"taxable
income”
in
the
technical
sense
in
which
it
is
used
in
Division
C
of
Part
1.
His
reasons
however
provide
ample
support,
along
with
those
of
Judson,
J.
for
my
rejection
of
the
premise
upon
which
the
respondent's
argument
is
based
that
income
must
necessarily
mean
"profit"
in
the
phrase
"for
the
purpose
of
earning
income"
in
paragraph
Accordingly
I
am
unable
to
accept
the
interpretation
of
section
9
advanced
by
counsel
for
the
respondent.
To
reject
the
appellant's
claim
on
this
basis
would
mean
that
if
the
interest
earned
on
the
term
deposits,
and
therefore
the
dividends,
were
slightly
more
than
the
interest
paid
on
the
bank
loan,
the
entire
interest
paid
would
be
deductible,
whereas
if
the
return
were
fractionally
less,
nothing
would
be
deductible.
To
base
the
disposition
of
this
case
on
such
a
technicality,
without
considering
the
overriding
ultimate
purpose,
is
unrealistic.
Indeed,
Dickson,
J.
stated
in
Bronfman
at
pages
52-53
(C.T.C.
128,
D.T.C.
5066-67):
I
acknowledge,
however,
that
just
as
there
has
been
a
recent
trend
away
from
strict
construction
of
taxation
statutes
.
.
.
so
too
has
the
recent
trend
in
tax
cases
been
towards
attempting
to
ascertain
the
true
commercial
and
practical
nature
of
the
taxpayer's
transactions.
There
has
been,
in
this
country
and
elsewhere,
a
movement
away
from
tests
based
on
the
form
of
transactions
and
towards
tests
based
on
what
Lord
Pearce
has
referred
to
as
a
"common
sense
appreciation
of
all
the
guiding
features"
of
the
events
in
question.
.
.
.
This
is,
I
believe,
a
laudable
trend
provided
it
is
consistent
with
the
text
and
purposes
of
the
taxation
statute.
Assessment
of
taxpayers'
transactions
with
an
eye
to
commercial
and
economic
realities,
rather
than
juristic
classification
of
form,
may
help
to
avoid
the
inequity
of
tax
liability
being
dependent
upon
the
taxpayer's
sophistication
at
manipulating
a
sequence
of
events
to
achieve
a
patina
of
compliance
with
the
apparent
prerequisites
for
a
tax
deduction.
Moreover
the
interpretation
contended
for
by
the
respondent
in
my
view
attributes
to
section
9
an
effect
that
ignores
its
purpose.
Its
purpose
is
not
to
define
income.
Rather
it
emphasizes
that
in
the
computation
of
income
one
must
apply,
subject
to
the
Act,
"ordinary
principles
of
commercial
accounting
so
far
as
applicable
and
in
conformity
with
the
rules
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
[See
Whimster
&
Co.
v.
C.I.R.,
12
Tax
Cases
813,
cited
in
M.N.R.
v.
Anaconda
American
Brass
Ltd.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
311,
55
D.T.C.
1220
(P.C.)
at
page
319
(D.T.C.
1224).]
Interest
on
money
that
is
borrowed
to
invest
in
common
shares,
or
property,
or
a
business
or
corporation
is
deductible
because
it
is
laid
out
to
earn
amounts
that
must
be
included
in
the
computation
of
income.
Amounts
of
income
such
as
dividends
which
must
be
included
in
income
under
paragraphs
12(1)(j)
and
(k)
do
not
cease
to
be
income
merely
because
they
are
exceeded
by
the
cost
of
their
production.
In
the
case
of
money
borrowed
to
1
was
referred
as
well
to
a
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Deputy
Minister
of
Revenue
(Quebec)
v.
Lipson,
[1979]
1
S.C.R.
833,
[1979]
C.T.C.
247
where
a
group
of
shareholders
leased
an
apartment
from
their
own
company
in
order
to
take
advantage
of
losses
that
the
company
could
not
absorb.
It
is
not
clear
from
the
judgment
of
Pigeon,
J.
whether
what
was
disallowed
was
the
entire
expenditure
by
the
taxpayers
or
their
net
loss.
Pigeon,
J.
stated
at
page
839
(C.T.C.
250):
.
.
.it
is
the
entire
loss
which
is
not
deductible,
because
it
was
not
an
expense
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income.
.
.
.
[Emphasis
added.]
Pigeon,
J.
added
that
for
an
expense
to
be
deductible
it
must
be
incurred
to
earn
a
profit
and
that"
the
actual
purpose
of
the
operation
was
not
to
make
a
profit
but
to
put
money
into
the
company
by
incurring
a
loss
to
its
benefit”.
The
case
bears
a
certain
superficial
resemblance
to
this
one,
but
it
was
not
dealing
with
the
situation
in
which
amounts
of
income
were
in
fact
produced
as
part
of
the
scheme
and
were
specifically
required
to
be
included
in
income.
invest
by
means
of
a
contribution
of
capital
in
a
corporation
of
which
the
taxpayer
owns
all
of
the
shares,
the
purpose
is
generally
and
in
the
absence
of
some
other
overriding
purpose
such
as
we
have
here
to
earn
income
from
property
in
the
form
of
dividends
or
increased
dividends
generated
from
income
earned
by
the
subsidiary
with
the
additional
capital.
It
is
deductible
even
if
it
fails
to
achieve
that
object.
I
recognize
that
it
might
be
argued
that
where
money
is
borrowed
to
invest
in
a
manner
that
it
is
acknowledged
from
the
outset
could
not
under
any
circumstances
ever
produce
income
or
deemed
income
equal
to
or
greater
than
the
interest
expense,
it
would
be
unreasonable
to
require
both
the
inclusion
in
income
of
the
gross
revenues
produced
and
a
recognition
of
all
of
the
other
incidents
of
that
inclusion,
(such
as
the
erosion
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
shares,
as
is
the
case
here),
and
yet
deny
the
deduction
of
any
part
of
the
interest
which
is
the
cost
of
earning
those
revenues.
The
corollary
would
be
that
it
would
be
equally
unreasonable
to
permit
the
deduction
of
interest
exceeding
the
income
that
it
is
predetermined
will
be
earned,
on
the
basis
that
such
an
interpretation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
would
lead
to
an
absurdity
and
should
be
avoided.
The
result
of
this
approach
would
be
that
it
would
be
"reasonable"
to
allow
a
deduction
of
the
interest
up
to
the
amount
of
the
dividends
anticipated
and
actually
received
in
accordance
with
the
concluding
words
in
paragraph
20(1)(c)"or
a
reasonable
amount
in
respect
thereof,
whichever
is
the
lesser”.
I
have
decided,
however,
that
although
this
approach
is
superficially
attractive
it
is
not
in
accordance
with
the
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
its
object
and
spirit.
Moreover
it
ignores
the
true
purpose
for
which
the
funds
were
used.
The
true
purpose
for
which
the
borrowed
money
was
used
was
to
implement
a
plan
to
absorb
into
the
Canadian
parent's
income
the
losses
of
a
foreign
subsidiary.
That
result
is
not
contemplated
by
the
Canadian
income
tax
system
and
it
is
not
consistent
with
the
scheme
of
the
Act
which
contemplates
the
separation
for
fiscal
purposes
of
the
profits
and
losses
of
separate
corporate
entities.
As
Mr.
Chambers
observed
in
his
argument,
the
consolidation
for
tax
purposes
of
the
financial
results
of
domestic
companies
is
not
contemplated
by
our
Act
and
this
holds
true
a
fortiori
in
the
case
of
foreign
subsidiaries.
An
arrangement
that
seeks
in
effect
to
do
so
runs
counter
to
a
fundamental
principle
that
is
firmly
entrenched
in
our
Act
and
accordingly
is
not
in
accordance
with
the
object
and
spirit
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
a
whole.
The
approach
which
I
have
adopted
in
attempting
to
resolve
this
difficult
question
is,
I
believe,
consistent
with
principles
enunciated
in
two
cases,
Trans-Canada
Investment
Corp.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1953]
C.T.C.
353,
53
D.T.C.
1227;
aff'd
[1956]
S.C.R.
384,
[1955]
C.T.C.
150,
55
D.T.C.
1191
and
Highway
Sawmills
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
384,
[1966]
C.T.C.
150,
66
D.T.C.
5116.
In
the
Exchequer
Court
decision
in
Trans-Canada
Investment
Corp.,
Cameron,
J.
said
at
page
360
(D.T.C.
1231):
I
agree
that
it
is
possible
to
interpret
the
language
of
the
section
as
requiring
that
the
dividend
must
have
been
received
directly
from
the
paying
corporation.
But
in
my
view,
there
is
another
interpretation
that
may
be
put
upon
it,
an
interpretation
which
I
think
is
more
consonant
with
the
intention
of
Parliament
as
I
deem
it
to
be
from
the
language
itself.
In
Caledonian
Railway
v.
North
British
Railway
(1881),
6
App.
Cas.
114,
Lord
Selborne
said
at
page
122:
The
more
literal
construction
of
a
statute
ought
not
to
prevail
if
it
is
opposed
to
the
intentions
of
the
Legislature
as
apparent
by
the
statute,
and
if
the
words
are
sufficiently
flexible
to
admit
of
some
other
construction
by
which
the
intention
can
be
better
effectuated.
Again,
in
Shannon
Realties
v.
St.
Michel,
[1924]
App.
Cas.
192,
it
was
stated
that
if
the
words
used
are
ambiguous,
the
Court
should
choose
an
interpretation
which
will
be
consistent
with
the
smooth
working
of
the
system
which
the
statute
purports
to
be
regulating.
In
the
same
vein
Cartwright,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
stated
in
Highway
Sawmills
at
page
393
(C.T.C.
157-58,
D.T.C.
5120):
The
answer
to
the
question
what
tax
is
payable
in
any
given
circumstances
depends,
of
course,
upon
the
words
of
the
legislation
imposing
it.
Where
the
meaning
of
those
words
is
difficult
to
ascertain
it
may
be
of
assistance
to
consider
which
of
two
constructions
contended
for
brings
about
a
result
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation.
Interest
on
borrowed
money
is
deductible
to
the
extent
that
the
money
is
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property.
The
absorption
of
business
losses
of
a
foreign
subsidiary
is
unquestionably
a
legitimate
objective.
Its
overall
purpose
is
to
increase
the
net
worth
of
the
corporate
group
as
a
whole.
This
is
an
entirely
commendable
business
purpose
and
any
chief
financial
officer
who
failed
to
try
to
do
so
would
not
be
doing
his
or
her
job.
It
is
not,
however,
a
purpose
that
falls
within
paragraph
20(1)(c)
as
a
"purpose
of
earning
income”.
Accumulated
business
losses
of
domestic
subsidiaries
may
be
absorbed
by
Canadian
parent
companies
by
winding
the
subsidiary
up
into
the
parent
or
amalgamating
it
with
a
related
company
with
a
profitable
business.
Section
87,
88
and
111
contain
detailed
rules
regulating
the
extent
to
which
this
can
be
done.
No
such
procedures
are
available
in
the
case
of
foreign
affiliates.
I
was
referred
to
a
substantial
body
of
evidence
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue's
administrative
practice
in
permitting
procedures
similar
to
those
involved
here
that
would
allow
Canadian
companies
to
take
advantage
of
losses
of
other
related
Canadian
companies.
These
practices
make
a
certain
amount
of
practical
sense
insofar
as
they
are
confined
to
Canadian
companies.
The
rationale
for
what
is
possibly
an
administrative
concession
may
be
that
the
same
result
could
be
achieved
by
winding
up
or
amalgamating
the
loss
com-
pany
and
utilizing
its
losses.
This
administrative
rationale
could
not
justify
a
similar
concession
in
the
case
of
a
foreign
affiliate
with
accumulated
losses
because
the
alternative
procedures
under
sections
87
and
88
that
would
permit
the
parent's
utilization
of
the
losses
are
simply
not
available.
I
do
not
criticize
the
Department's
practices
in
this
regard,
but
they
cannot
determine
the
result
in
this
case.
My
conclusion
is
therefore
that
the
interest
paid
on
the
bank
loan
was
not
interest
on
borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.