Date: 20020430
Docket: 2000-3636-IT-G
BETWEEN:
FREDERICK W. HILL,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasonsfor
Judgment
Miller, J.T.C.C.
      [1]            
      This is an appeal by Mr. Frederick Hill of the Minister's
      reassessments of his 1996 and 1997 taxation years. Canada Customs
       &  Revenue Agency ("CCRA") disallowed interest
      expenses claimed by Mr. Hill in the amounts of $1,455,089 and
      $1,288,612 in 1996 and 1997 respectively, as well as disallowing
      the deduction in 1996 of non-capital losses from 1992 and 1993
      totalling $631,402.63. The 1992 and 1993 losses also relate to
      interest expenses from those years.
      [2]            
      Given the Appellant's reliance in argument on the carefully
      drafted Partial Agreed Statement of Facts, it is appropriate to
      reproduce those facts as agreed:
      1.              
      The Appellant is an individual, resident in Regina,
      Saskatchewan.
      2.              
      On February 18, 1974, the Appellant as to 25%, a company
      controlled by the Appellant as to 25% (Regent Realty Ltd. which
      changed its name to Harvard Developments Ltd.
      ("HDL")), and two others as to the remaining 50% (the
      "Co-owners"), acquired land in downtown Calgary for
      the purpose of building thereon an office building (the
      "Project"). Immediately after acquiring the land the
      Co-owners sold it to the Trustees of the Post Office
      Superannuation Scheme of the United Kingdom ("POSS").
      (POSS was replaced by Postel Properties Limited
      ("Postel"), who in turn leased the land back to the
      Co-owner for a term of 99 years.
      3.                     
      POSS lent the Co-owners $17,450,000 to erect an office building
      on the property, which loan was secured by a mortgage on the
      property, also for a term of 99 years.
      4.              
      The relationship between the Co-owners and POSS was set forth in
      a Master Agreement, a Mortgage Agreement and a Lease Agreement,
      all of which were entered into on February 18, 1974. Taken
      together these agreements provided that:
      (a)            
      Interest Expense under the Mortgage escalated from 9% at the
      outset to 15% commencing in 2005, and was based on principal and
      unpaid interest and was payable monthly.
      (b)            
      The Lease Agreement provided that after the building was
      completed, 40.5692% of the cash flow from the project was to go
      to the Co-Owners. The remaining 59.4308% of cash flow was defined
      as "Balance of net Cash Flow", and was to be paid to
      POSS as interest or as rent.
      (c)            
      The Schedule provided:
"The Mortgagors shall pay to the Mortgagee the Interest
      Payment on each Payment Date during the Term, PROVIDED, HOWEVER,
      if the Interest Expense on any Payment Date exceeds the Balance
      of Net Cash Flow payable to the Mortgagee, then the amount of the
      said excess shall accrue due and be payable to the
      Mortgagee".
      (d)            
      If on any monthly payment date the Balance of Net Cash Flow
      exceeded the stated Interest Expense the difference was to be
      paid to POSS as rent.
      (e)            
      Payments of principal and unpaid interest were to commence in
      1995, and were to be payable over the balance of the term of the
      Mortgage with the balance to be paid no later than at the end of
      the term of the Mortgage.
      5.              
      During the period 1974-1999, with the exception of the year 1983,
      no lease payments were required to be made as the Balance of Net
      Cash Flow from the building was not sufficient to trigger lease
      payments. In 1983, the Balance of Net Cash Flow for that year
      exceeded the Interest Expense by $77,377.
      6.              
      On December 22, 1983, HDL purchased the interests in the lease
      and assumed the obligations under the Mortgage of those Co-owners
      other than the Appellant, borrowing a further $7,550,000 from
      Postel to do so. Accordingly, after the purchase the balance
      owing to Postel secured by the Mortgage was:
Balance under existing mortgage       
      $22,394,889
Borrowing for
      purchase                       
        7,550,000
      Commission                                                           
            100,000
                                                                                       
      $30,044,889
      7.              
      At the same the parties amended the agreements.
      (a)            
      The stated Interest Expense under the Mortgage was changed,
      escalating from 13% to 21% for the period commencing in 1995 to
      the end of the term.
      (b)            
      The Mortgage Agreement continued to provide for Interest Payments
      to be made on monthly Payment Dates as specified in Schedule A to
      the Mortgage, but paragraph 2 was amended and paragraph 3 was
      added:
      "2.            
      The Mortgagor shall pay to the Mortgagee the Interest Payment on
      each Payment Date during the Term, Provided However, if the
      Interest Expense on any Payment Date exceeds the Balance of Net
      Cash Flow Payable to the Mortgagee, then the amount of said
      excess shall accrue due and be payable to the Mortgagee on the
      31st day of December in each year. Up to and including
      the year 1994, upon payment by the Mortgagor of any excess as
      aforesaid, Mortgagor may request in writing from the Mortgagee an
      advance of such excess. Mortgagee shall, within thirty (30) days
      of such request, advance to the Mortgagor the amount of such
      excess requested by Mortgagor, provided that the Principal of the
      Mortgage shall never exceed Thirty Five Million Dollars
      ($35,000,000).
      3.              
      Subject to paragraph 2 above, if the Mortgagor does not pay the
      Mortgagee the excess of the Interest Expense on any Payment Date
      over the Balance of the net Cash Flow, such excess shall be added
      to the balance of the principal and shall bear interest at the
      rate stipulated in this Schedule at the relevant
      period."
      (c)            
      That same Schedule defined the words "principal" and
      "principal payments" as follows:
"‘Principal' means the balance from time to
      time of the advances made by Mortgagee to Mortgagor pursuant to
      this mortgage, together with any accrued interest due and
      payable.
‘Principal Payments' means the amount of the
      Principal, together with accrued interest due and payable by the
      Mortgagor to the Mortgagee, which said Principal and accrued
      interest as aforesaid shall be paid by the Mortgagor to the
      Mortgagee by consecutive monthly instalments, the first of such
      instalments to be made on the first Payment Date in the twentieth
      (20th) year of the Term (as defined in the Lease) and
      continuing thereafter during the balance of the Term, and the
      balance, if any, on the day preceding the last day of the Term of
      the Lease. The amount of each monthly instalment payable
      hereunder in any year during the Term shall be a sum which shall
      be determined by the application of the following formula:
1/12x 1(X Principal)=monthly instalment in
      applicable year
                       
        1
where:
X means the number of year before the end of the Term of the
      Lease."
      (d)            
      The Lease Agreement was amended to provide that Postel's
      portion (the "Balance of Net Cash Flow) became 81.3663% of
      cash flow and the Co-owner's portion 18.6337%.
      8.              
      During the period from December 31, 1983 up to November 30, 1995,
      the Interest Expense on each Payment Date exceeded the Balance of
      Net Cash Flow available for payment, with the result that on
      December 29, 1995, the amount of unpaid interest owing by the
      Co-owners to Postel was approximately $60,369,999.
      9.              
      On January 1, 1995, the parties further amended the Mortgage
      Agreement and Lease Agreement by removing the $35,000,000 maximum
      referred to in paragraph 7 above, by reducing the annual Interest
      Expense to 10% per annum, and by altering the percentage of net
      cash flow such that 90% went to Postel and 10% to the Co-owners.
      The newly amended mortgage read:
      "2.            
      The Mortgage shall pay to the Mortgagee the Interest Payment on
      each Payment Date during the Term, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if the
      Interest Expense on any Payment Date exceeds the Balance of the
      Net Cash Flow Payable to the Mortgagee, then the amount of the
      said excess shall accrue due and be payable to the Mortgagee on
      the 31st day of December in each year. Upon the
      payment by the Mortgagor of any such excess as aforesaid the
      Mortgagor may request in writing from the Mortgagee an advance of
      such excess and the Mortgagee shall, forthwith following such
      request, advance to the Mortgagor the amount of such excess and
      any such amount so advanced shall be added to and included in
      Principal."
      10.            
      All other provisions of the Mortgage remained in force.
      11.            
      On or about December 19, 1995:
      (a)            
      HDL (on behalf of itself and the Appellant) borrowed $60,370,000
      or 28,816,230 Pounds Sterling from CIBC;
      (b)            
      CIBC paid the 28,816,230 Pounds Sterling to Postel's bank
      account at Royal Bank of Scotland on the condition that an
      identical amount would be in Postel's account at that bank
      with instructions from Postel to be transferred to HDL's
      account at CIBC;
      (c)            
      Royal Bank of Scotland transferred 28,816,230 Pounds Sterling to
      HDL's bank account at CIBC and Postel was given credit for
      the 28,816,230 Pounds Sterling transferred by CIBC; and
      (d)            
      CIBC was paid a financing fee of $50,000.
all of which will be more particularly described at the
      hearing of this matter.
      12.            
      In 1992 and 1993 the Appellant's portion of the Interest
      Payment exceeded the Balance of Net Cash Flow by $1,526,221 and
      $1,817,132 respectively. Those amounts were due and payable on
      December 31, 1992 and December 31, 1993 respectively, and in 1995
      those unpaid amounts were part of the transaction described in
      paragraph 10. If those amounts are deductible in 1992 and 1993,
      then the non-capital losses for those years available for carry
      forward and deduction in 1996 were $305,846.86 and $325,555.82
      respectively.
      13.            
      In 1996 and 1997 the Appellant's portion of the Interest
      Expense exceeded the Balance of Net Cash Flow by $1,404,045 and
      $1,588,612 respectively. Those amounts were due and payable on
      December 31, 1996, and December 31, 1997 respectively, and in
      1998 the Appellant entered into a similar transaction to that
      described in paragraph 11, with the amount of the purported
      payment being $2,714,095.
      14.            
      By further amendments of January 1, 1999, the parties agreed to
      reduce the stated interest rate from 10% per annum to 4-1/4% per
      annum, and by altering the cash flow percentage such that 95% of
      cash flow goes to Postel, 5% to the Co-owners.
      15.            
      Over the period 1974 the Appellant received the following cash
      payments pursuant to the Lease as amended:
| 1975 | 3,799 | 
| 1976 | 92,657 | 
| 1977 | 130,330 | 
| 1978 | 185,704 | 
| 1979 | 201,665 | 
| 1980 | 226,284 | 
| 1981 | 239,870 | 
| 1982 | 307,870 | 
| 1983 | 352,268 | 
| 1984 | 300,701 | 
| 1985 | 247,780 | 
| 1986 | 476,671 | 
| 1987 | 371,693 | 
| 1988 | 318,920 | 
| 1989 | 268,871 | 
| 1990 | 247,219 | 
| 1991 | 243,496 | 
| 1992 | 21,259 | 
| 1993 | 51,903 | 
| 1994 | 187,633 | 
| 1995 | 247,979 | 
| 1996 | 175,451 | 
| 1997 | 230,384 | 
| 1998 | 169,400 | 
| 1999 | 222,337 | 
| 2000 | 165,376 | 
| 2001 | 62,466 | 
|  | 5,749,986 | 
These amounts were included in computing his income, but
      because of the Interest Expense the Appellant has to date
      reported no net profits for tax purposes.
      16.            
      The Appellant was first assessed for his 1995 taxation year on
      May 16, 1996, which year was statute barred by the date of the
      issuance of the reassessments now appealed from, which
      reassessments were issued on May 19, 2000 for 1996 and July 17,
      2000 for 1997.
      [3]            
      In addition to the Partial Agreed Statement of Facts, I heard the
      testimony of Mr. Clayton Bzdel, an officer of Harvard
      Developments Ltd. ("HDL"). He clarified the discrepancy
      in paragraph 13 of the Agreed Statement of Facts between the
      excess interest expense of $2,992,657 in 1996 and 1997 and the
      amount of $2,714,095 paid in 1998. The difference arose due to a
      partial prepayment in 1995 and an accounting miscalculation which
      was rectified by a payment in 2000. Mr. Bzdel also explained that
      the reason for the reduction in the interest rate in 1995 and
      1999, with an increase in the cash flow to Postel was to
      "try to get this mortgage in a form that would allow it to
      be paid out within the term". He acknowledged that the 4.25
      percent interest rate was not the market rate, but was a rate
      negotiated in 1998 that would allow the mortgage to be paid out
      within the term.
      [4]            
      As well as the segments of documents reproduced in the Partial
      Agreed Statement of Facts, I wish to highlight the following
      excerpts from certain of the documents:
      (a)                  
      Paragraph 7 and 8 of the December 22, 1983 mortgage:
SEVENTHLY: That if the Mortgagor shall make
      default in payment of the moneys hereby secured or any part
      thereof or any interest thereon at any of the hereinbefore
      appointed times and such default continuing for one (1) month
      after notice thereof is given by the Mortgagee to the Mortgagor,
      then the Mortgagee shall have the right and power and the
      Mortgagor doth hereby covenant with the Mortgagee for the said
      purpose and doth grant to the Mortgagee full license and
      authority for such purpose, when and so often as in its
      discretion the Mortgagee shall see fit, to enter into possession
      by its agent or otherwise, of the said lands, and receive and
      take the rents, issues and profits thereof, and whether in or out
      of possession thereof to make any demise or lease of the said
      lands or any part thereof for such terms, period, and at such
      rent as it shall think proper.
EIGHTLY: That in case default is made in payment of any of the
      sums hereby secured and such default continuing for one (1) month
      after notice thereof is given by the Mortgagee to the Mortgagor,
      the Mortgagee may sell and convey the said lands, without
      entering into possession of the same, and without giving any
      notice to the Mortgagor, and either before or after and subject
      to any demise or lease made by the Mortgagee as hereinbefore
      provided, PROVIDED that any sale made under the powers hereby
      given may be on such terms as to credit and otherwise as shall
      appear to the Mortgagee most advantageous, and for such price as
      can be reasonably obtained therefor, and that sales may be made
      from time to time to satisfy any interest or any part of the
      principal overdue, leaving the principal or balance thereof to
      run at interest payable as aforesaid, and the Mortgagee may make
      any stipulation as to title or otherwise as to the Mortgagee may
      seem proper, and the Mortgagee may buy in or rescind or vary any
      contract for sale of any of the said lands, and resell without
      being responsible for any loss occasioned thereby, and for any of
      the said purposes may make and execute such agreements and
      assurances as shall be by the Mortgagee deemed necessary.
and paragraph 23 and 24 of the December 22, 1983 mortgage:
TWENTY-THIRDLY: Notwithstanding anything
      contained herein, it is expressly agreed by and between the
      Mortgagor and the Mortgagee that the Mortgagee's rights to
      recover principal and interest owing under this Mortgage shall be
      restricted to the lands including, without restricting the
      generality thereof, those items described in paragraph Eighteen
      of this mortgage.
TWENTY-FOURTHLY: In the event of a bona fide
      offer from a third party to purchase
      (a)            
      all Mortgagor's rights and interest as Lessee in the Lease
      and in the building and land herein mortgaged, together with
      (b)            
      the Mortgagee's interest in this Mortgage and its
      reversionary interest in the mortgaged land,
Mortgagee shall be entitled to require payment of a prepayment
      entitlement equal to sixty (60) months' interest on the
      then outstanding balance of principal under this Mortgage at the
      prevailing interest rate set forth in Schedule "A"
      hereunder in recognition of the long term, unique nature of the
      commitment and the credit granted by Mortgagee with respect to
      the Lease and this Mortgage and of the substantial investment by
      Mortgagee therein, but in no event will the operation of the
      above obligate the Mortgagor to pay Mortgagee in excess of eighty
      per cent (80%) of the proceeds of the sale or transfer.
      (b)             A
      memo from Bill Berezan (Chief Financial Officer of HDL) of
      December 22, 1995:
      1.              
      On Wednesday, the CIBC-Regina will obtain the exchange rate for
      conversion of Canadian dollars into Pounds Sterling and purchase
      the equivalent of $60,370,000 Canadian in Pounds Sterling
      (hereinafter referred to as " £  Amount").
      2.              
      CIBC-Regina will wire transfer to Barclays Bank - London
      ("Barclays") the  £  Amount. Barclays is
      CIBC's correspondent bank as the CIBC does not have a
      retail bank in London, England. Accordingly, the wire transfer
      will take two business days to settle, and therefore the money
      will probably not be in Barclays for CIBC - London's
      purchases until Friday, December 29, 1995.
      3.              
      Upon the CIBC - Regina obtaining the  £  Amount (Step
      1), they will advise Harvard Developments Limited
      ("Harvard") who in turn will advise Postel of the
       £  Amount which will be required. Postel will make
      arrangements with the Royal Bank of Scotland ("RBS")
      such that Postel will deposit with the RBS the  £  Amount on
      Friday, December 19, 1995. RBS will have a bank draft in the
       £  Amount prepared.
      4.              
      Barclays shall deliver to the CIBC - London a bank draft
      (Step 2) in the  £  amount first thing Friday morning, and
      the CIBC will walk this bank draft over to RBS.
      5.              
      RBS and CIBC - London shall exchange the bank drafts which
      they each hold on behalf of their clients, Postel and Harvard
      respectively. The bank draft CIBC-London will be presenting on
      behalf of Harvard shall represent the accrued interest Harvard
      owes to Postel. The bank draft which RBS will be presenting on
      behalf of Postel represents the advancing of principal funds by
      Postel to Harvard.
      6.              
      RBS will then deposit the Barclays bank draft to the Postel
      account.
      7.              
      CIBC - London will return to Barclays to deposit the RBS bank
      draft and in turn, Barclays will wire transfer this money to CIBC
      - Regina.
      (c)            
      Paragraphs 1 to 3 of the Memorandum of December 27, 1995 from
      Bill Berezan:
      1.              
      Today, Wednesday, December 27, 1995, CIBC - Regina has
      wired for delivery on Friday  £ 28,476,415.09 to Barclays
      Bank - London ("Barclays") for the account of
      CIBC - London. The exchange rate utilized was $2.12 Cdn. =
       £ 1.
      2.              
      Tomorrow, Thursday, December 28, 1995, CIBC - London will
      present to the Royal Bank of Scotland ("RBS") an
      agreement relating to the electronic exchange of funds. This
      agreement will basically state that RBS will not credit to Postel
      Properties Ltd. ("Postel") bank account the funds
      transferred from the CIBC
      3.              
      On Friday, December 19, 1995, Barclays Bank - London shall
      wire transfer to RBS  £ 28,476,415.09 to RBS to the credit of
      Postel bank account (subject to the agreement mentioned in number
      2 above). These funds represent the accrued interest due Postel
      by Harvard Developments Limited ("Harvard"). At the
      same time, RBS will wire transfer to CIBC - Regina to the
      bank account of Harvard  £ 28,476,415.09. These funds
      represent the further advancement of principal funds by Postel to
      Harvard.
      (d)            
      Letter of December 28, 1995 from CIBC:
December 28, 1995
The Royal Bank of Scotland, PLC
4th Floor, Waterhouse Square,
138/142 Holborn
London EC1N 2TH
Attention : Ms F James
RE :           Norcen
      Building, Calgary, Alberta
Postel Properties Ltd. Mortgage
We are advised by our customer, Harvard Developments Ltd. that
      they owe  £ 28,476,415.09 to Postel Properties Ltd in respect
      of accrued interest outstanding under a mortgage advance. We are
      also advised that on condition that the interest payment is made,
      Postel Properties Ltd have agreed to advance a further capital
      sum of  £ 28,476,415.09 under the existing mortgage and that
      both payments are to be made simultaneously.
We have been asked to make the interest payment on behalf of
      Harvard Developments Ltd and we are informed that you will be
      instructed to make the corresponding payment on behalf of Postel
      Properties Ltd.
For value December 29, 1995 we are therefore paying to you
       £ 28,476,415.09. These funds are to be held in Trust for our
      account and may only be released to Postel Properties Ltd
      simultaneously with you actioning transfer of
       £ 28,476,415.09 to Barclays Bank, St Swithins House, St
      Swithins Lane London, sort code 20-32-53 for account of CICB
      London A/C no 00121347 re Harvard Developments Ltd.
We record your agreement to refund the funds to us in full by
      3 pm on December 29, 1995 if you have not actioned an instruction
      from Postel Properties Ltd. as outlined above.
Please confirm agreement to the above terms on the attached
      duplicate of this letter.
Yours faithfully
 «  signature  » 
A.D. Craig
General Manager,
Credit Risk Management.
Agreed 28th December 1995
For and on behalf of :
The Royal Bank of Scotland PLC
      [5]             I
      find the following to be the chronology of events in December,
      1995:
      1.              
      December 27, 1995 Appellant received approval to borrow
      28,476,415 Pounds from CIBC (Regina), which is deposited to the
      Appellant's account in Regina.
      2.              
      December 27, 1995 CIBC (Regina) wired 28,476,415 Pounds to
      Barclay's Bank (London) for the account of CIBC (London).
      3.              
      December 28, 1995 CIBC (London) presented an agreement to the
      Royal Bank of Scotland which stated that the Royal Bank of
      Scotland will not credit Postel's bank account with the funds
      transferred from CIBC (London) until the Royal Bank of Scotland
      has wire transferred to CIBC (Regina) the identical amount of
      funds.
      4.              
      December 29, 1995 Barclay's Bank wire transferred 28,476,415
      Pounds to Royal Bank of Scotland to the credit of Postel's
      bank account.
      5.              
      Coincidentally, Royal Bank of Scotland wire transferred to CIBC
      (Regina) to the bank account of HDL 28,476,415 Pounds.
ISSUES:
      [6]            
      The parties agreed prior to trial that the issues were:
      1.              
      Whether the differences between the balance of net cash flow and
      the interest expense in the years 1992 and 1993, and 1996 and
      1997 were amounts payable in those years or were contingent
      liabilities.
      2.              
      Whether the differences between the balance of net cash flow and
      the interest expense in 1996 and 1997 were compound interest,
      deductible only when paid. This will occur:
      (a)            
      if the purported payment of interest and borrowing of a like
      amount of principal can be ignored at law; or
      (b)            
      if the general anti-avoidance rules apply to permit the Minister
      to ignore the purported payment of interest in 1995 and the
      borrowing of a like amount as principal.
      3.              
      Whether the Appellant's investment in the project had a
      reasonable expectation of profit.
      [7]            
      While there was some suggestion by Mr. Gosman at trial that he
      was relying on the compound interest argument with respect to the
      1992 and 1993 years, he did not pursue this avenue in his written
      argument.
ISSUE: Were the excess interest amounts in 1992, 1993,
      1996 and 1997 amounts payable in those years or contingent
      liabilities?
APPELLANT'S SUBMISSIONS:
      [8]            
      The Appellant submitted that the answer lies within the documents
      themselves and particularly the wording of paragraph 2 of
      Schedule A of the Mortgage. This, the Appellant claimed, is not
      impacted by paragraph 3 which is subordinate to paragraph 2 and
      is simply a mechanism for interest to be charged on the unpaid
      excess amount if such excess is not paid on December 31 of each
      year. Paragraph 3 does not deprive the mortgagee of the right to
      demand payment of the excess interest. The Agreement is clear
      that the excess interest is payable. The Appellant also argued
      that the Respondent had admitted both in the Reply and in the
      Agreed Statement of Facts that the excess amounts were
      payable.
      [9]            
      In connection with the contention that the interest payment was
      contingent, the Appellant relied on Justice Sharlow's
      comments in Wawang Forest Products Ltd. v. Canada [2001]
      F.C.J. No. 449:
Returning to the Winter test, the correct question to ask, in
      determining whether a legal obligation is contingent at a
      particular point in time, is whether the legal obligation has
      come into existence at that time, or whether no obligation will
      come into existence until the occurrence of an event that may not
      occur.
The Appellant argued that there was an enforceable legal
      obligation on December 31 in each year, which obligation was not
      dependent upon any future event. The recourse of the mortgagee to
      a percentage of sale proceeds in the event of a third party sale
      is a credit risk, not a contingency denying the mortgagee of his
      right to demand payment annually. In any event, by the payments
      made in 1995 and 1998 the enforceable liability for the
      outstanding interest was paid.
[10]           The
      Appellant refuted the applicability of the Barbican Properties
      Inc. v. The Queen, 97 DTC 122, affirmed 97 DTC 5008 (F.C.A.),
      Global Communications Limited v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5377
      (F.C.A.) and Redclay Holdings v. R., 96 DTC 1207 on the
      basis that in each of those cases there was no enforceable legal
      obligation to pay the interest in the year in which the deduction
      was sought.
RESPONDENT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[11]           The
      Respondent argued that the Appellant was not under a legal
      obligation to pay the excess interest on December 31. In support
      of this argument the Respondent referred to paragraph 3 of
      Schedule A of the mortgage. This paragraph stipulates that unpaid
      excess interest is to be added to the principal owing. The
      Respondent cited the conduct of the parties as evidence that they
      did not intend to enter into a legally binding obligation to pay
      the excess interest, mentioning specifically the comments of the
      Chief Financial Officer of HDL in a letter of December 17, 1996
      which read in part as follows:
There is nothing in this wording that suggests the excess must
      be actually paid on December 31, but only that it shall accrue
      and become payable, presumably meaning it can actually be paid on
      any subsequent date.
[12]           The
      Respondent cited other examples of conduct confirming that there
      was no intention that the excess interest be paid: firstly, the
      fact that Postel never demanded payment and secondly, that the
      $35,000,000 cap on principal was removed. This confirmed that the
      parties' intent was that the excess interest would be
      automatically added to principal.
[13]           With
      respect to the contingent liability argument, the Respondent
      submitted that as the mortgagee's recourse on the debt was
      limited to the value of the property, or 80 percent of the
      proceeds if sold, the Appellant's liability for excess
      interest was a contingent liability. The Respondent highlighted
      that as of the end of 1998 the principal had accumulated to over
      $110,000,000, while the value of the property was only $42 to
      $44,000,000, suggesting that there was no reasonable certainty
      that the interest would ever have been paid.
[14]           In
      support of the notion that the Appellant's liability is a
      contingent liability the Respondent cited a number of cases
      (Barbican, Global Communications, supra and
      McLarty v. Canada, 2001 T.C.J. No. 59). The Respondent
      attempted to distinguish the decision in Wawang on the
      basis that in Wawang the Court was dealing with payments
      under a construction contract being held back, and further, that
      there was no doubt the amounts held back were legally required to
      be paid.
ISSUE: Did the transactions in December, 1995 constitute
      the payment of interest and the borrowing of a like amount as
      principal, resulting in the excess interest in 1996 and 1997
      being simple interest as opposed to compound
      interest?
APPELLANT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[15]           The
      Appellant's position was that the Court simply could not
      ignore the payment by the Appellant of outstanding interest in
      1995 and the borrowing of a like amount of principal at the same
      time. As the Respondent conceded that the 1995 transaction was
      not a sham, it was the Appellant's position that there was
      no legal basis for the Court to ignore the legal relationships
      created by the written agreements and executed by the parties in
      December, 1995. The Appellant relied on the case of MacNiven
      v. Westmoreland Investment Ltd., 2001 H.L.J. No. 6 to support
      its assertion. In Westmoreland, the company owned by a
      pension plan was loaned money by the plan to repay its debt to
      the plan. The Court found that although the taxpayers in that
      case were passing money around in a circle, it did constitute a
      legal payment. As indicated by Lord Nicholls:
Leaving aside sham transactions, a debt may be discharged and
      replaced with another even when the only persons involved are the
      debtor and creditor.
[16]           Finally,
      the Appellant indicated that it was not open for the Court to
      adopt an economic reality approach, citing the rejection of such
      an approach by the Supreme Court of Canada in John R.
      Singleton v. The Queen, 2001 S.C.C. 61 where Justice Major
      said:
In examining the Minister's argument about the need to
      consider the economic realities of a transaction rather than
      being bound to its strict legal effects, McLachlin, J. recognized
      (in Shell Canada v. The Queen) that the Courts must be
      sensitive to the economic realities of a transaction. However,
      she stated that (paragraphs 39 to 40):
This Court has never held that the economic realities of a
      situation can be used to recharacterize a taxpayer's
      bona fide relationship. To the contrary, we have held
      that, absent a specific provision of the Act to the contrary or a
      finding that they are a sham, a taxpayer's legal
      relationships must be respected in tax cases.
RESPONDENT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[17]           The
      Respondent argued that the purported "payment" in
      1995 was a not a legally valid payment and as such the interest
      on the interest was not "converted" to principal but
      remained compound interest.
[18]           It was
      the Respondent's position that no valid payment occurs
      where the amounts are conditionally and simultaneously exchanged
      between parties in a single transaction. In support of this
      argument, the Respondent submitted that in M.N.R. v. Cox,
      71 DTC 5150 (S.C.C.) the Court found that the simultaneous
      exchange of cheques was a single transaction and not a payment.
      The Respondent indicated the Cox decision was cited in
      Western Union Insurance Co. v. R., 83 DTC 5388 (F.C.T.D.)
      where the Court found that a cheque given over and immediately
      returned did not constitute payment.
[19]           The
      Respondent stated that the transaction purporting to effect the
      payment of interest and a re-loaning of the funds was a single,
      simultaneous transaction, whereby each transfer was conditional
      upon the identical amount of funds being transferred to the
      other. The Respondent quoted Black's Law Dictionary
      definition of payment as follows:
The fulfilment of a promise, or the performance of an
      agreement. A discharge of an obligation or debt, and part
      payment, if accepted, is a discharge pro tanto. In a more
      restricted legal sense payment is the very performance of a duty,
      promise or obligation or discharge of a debt, or liability, by
      the delivery of money or other value by a debtor to a creditor,
      where the money or other valuable things tendered and accepted as
      extinguishing debt or obligation in whole or in part.
[20]           The
      Respondent argued that a valid payment required the extinguishing
      of the debt. In the present circumstances the Respondent
      submitted that as the transactions were simultaneous and
      conditional upon re-loaning of funds, at no point was the debt
      extinguished.
[21]           The
      Respondent's position was not that the 1995 transaction was
      a sham or that any particular aspect should be ignored, rather
      that such a conditional exchange simply does not legally affect
      payment.
[22]           As the
      Respondent claimed that there was no legal payment of the excess
      interest in 1995, the amounts sought to be deducted by the
      Appellant are properly characterized as compound interest.
      Pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d) compound interest can only
      be deducted when actually paid in the year. As the amounts were
      not paid in the years in which they are being claimed they are
      not deductible.
ISSUE: Did the Appellant's investment have a
      reasonable expectation of profit?
APPELLANT'S SUBMISSION:
[23]           The
      Appellant argued that the Respondent did not raise this issue in
      issuing the reassessment. Relying on the case of Coleman v.
      R., (1999) 1 C.T.C. 38 the Appellant maintained that because
      the assertion was not a basis of reassessment and was only first
      raised in the pleadings, the onus rests on the Respondent to
      prove that the expectation of profit was "irrational,
      absurd, or ridiculous". Relying on the recent case of
      Ludco Enterprises v. The Queen, 2001 S.C.R. 62, the
      Appellant rejected the notion of profit or net income as being
      the appropriate test, but rather the test was an expectation of
      income. In this case, the Appellant maintained, there can be no
      doubt that there was a reasonable expectation of substantial
      income. In fact, the Appellant received a cash return of
      approximately $5,750,000.
RESPONDENT'S SUBMISSION:
[24]           The
      Respondent submitted that not only was there never any profit
      during the life of the project but that in fact the losses were
      intentional.
[25]           The
      Respondent rejected the notion that the Coleman case stood
      for the proposition that the appropriate test is whether the
      expectation of profit was "irrational, absurd, or
      ridiculous". However, the Respondent went on to indicate
      that even following such a proposition the expectation of profit
      in this case was indeed irrational, absurd or ridiculous.
ISSUE: Do the general anti-avoidance rules
      ("GAAR") apply to permit the Minister to ignore the
      purported payment of interest in 1995 and the borrowing of a like
      amount as principal?
APPELLANT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[26]           The
      Appellant did not deny that the arrangement was entered into to
      ensure that interest payable on the indebtedness was simple
      interest and not compound interest. However, the Appellant
      maintained that subsection 245(4) requires that there has been a
      misuse of the provisions of the Act or an abuse having
      regard to the provisions of the Act read as a whole and in
      this instance neither has been proven.
[27]           The
      Appellant relied on Justice Rothstein's approach in OSFC
      Holdings Ltd. v. The Queen, and in particular his view that
      the Respondent must demonstrate a relevant, clear and unambiguous
      policy. The Appellant maintained that there is no policy, let
      alone a clear and unambiguous policy that would prevent a
      taxpayer from borrowing to meet an obligation to pay interest,
      even if the purpose is to avoid the subsequent incidence of
      compound interest on that interest. As Justice Rothstein
      indicated:
There is no onus to be satisfied by either party at this stage
      of the analysis. However, from a practical perspective, the
      Minister should do more than simply recite the words of
      subsection 245(4) and allege there has been a misuse or abuse.
      The Minister should set out the policy with reference to the Act
      or its intrinsic aids upon which he relies.
RESPONDENT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[28]          
      Similarly, the Respondent acknowledged that the argument in
      connection with GAAR can be limited to a "misuse and
      abuse" analysis. The Respondent indicated that the violence
      done to the Act in this situation was the avoidance of the
      application of paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Act utililizing a
      legal form to convert non-deductible unpaid compound interest
      into deductible simple interest. With respect to the requirement,
      as outlined in Justice Rothstein's comments in OSFC
      Holdings Ltd. that there be a clear and unambiguous policy, the
      Respondent repeated the provisions of the Act allowing the
      deduction of simple interest on an accrual basis and denying the
      deduction of compound interest on an accrual basis.
[29]           The
      Respondent also suggested that the policy of the Income Tax
      Act and its treatment of interest can be gleaned from a
      consideration of section 80, the debt forgiveness rule. Paragraph
      80(2)(b) applies to forgiven interest amounts for which
      deductions have been taken but payments have not been made. Since
      compound interest is not deductible unless paid, this provision
      does not apply to forgiven yet unpaid compound interest. The
      Respondent reiterated that this is illustrative of the policy of
      the Act being that compound interest must be paid in order to be
      deductible.
ANALYSIS:
ISSUE:     Were the excess interest amounts in
      1992 and 1993, and 1996 and 1997 amounts payable in those years
      or contingent liabilities?
[30]           The
      starting point is the Mortgage Agreement itself and it is
      worthwhile to repeat the first part of section 2 and section 3 of
      Schedule A of that Agreement:
      2.              
      The Mortgagor shall pay to the Mortgagee the Interest Payment on
      each Payment Date during the Term, Provided However, if the
      Interest Expense on any Payment Date exceeds the Balance of Net
      Cash Flow Payable to the Mortgagee, then the amount of said
      excess shall accrue due and be payable to the Mortgagee on the
      31st day of December in each year. Up to and including
      the year 1994, upon payment by the Mortgagor of any excess as
      aforesaid, Mortgagor may request in writing from the Mortgagee an
      advance of such excess. Mortgagee shall, within thirty (30) days
      of such request, advance to the Mortgagor the amount of such
      excess requested by Mortgagor, provided that the Principal of the
      Mortgage shall never exceed Thirty Five Million Dollars
      ($35,000,000).
      3.              
      Subject to paragraph 2 above, if the mortgagor does not pay the
      mortgagee the excess of the interest expense on any payment date
      over the balance of the net cash flow, such excess shall be added
      to the balance of the principal and shall bear interest at the
      rate stipulated in this schedule at the relevant period.
What is missing from this wording, which is fatal to the
      Respondent's submissions, is any suggestion that the
      Appellant's rights have been restricted such that section 3
      is the Appellant's only relief in the event of non-payment.
      The provision just does not go that far. The agreement does not
      expressly state, nor can it even be implied, that the Appellant
      has agreed to give up its right to sue for the excess interest. I
      find that the use of the term "shall accrue due and be
      payable to the mortgagee on the 31st day of December
      in each year" (found in paragraph 2 of Schedule A) is not
      so fundamentally different from "shall pay" as
      suggested by the Respondent. On December 31 of each year the
      mortgagee could sue for its excess interest based on the wording
      of sections 2 and 3.
[31]           I also do
      not find that the contractual right of the Appellant to request
      the excess interest from Postel with a corresponding obligation
      from Postel to lend such funds to the Appellant negates
      Postel's right to seek payment every December 31. The
      consequence flowing to Postel if it insisted upon payment of the
      excess interest was that it might have to lend the Appellant the
      money to make the payment. The Agreement does not state that the
      Appellant can only pay with funds borrowed from Postel but just
      that the Appellant may request such funds.
[32]           I do not
      accept the Respondent's suggestion that the parties'
      behaviour leads to the conclusion that they never intended to do
      anything other than add the excess interest to the principal, and
      that there was therefore no legal obligation to pay on December
      31 of each year. The Respondent cannot simply impose a form of
      promissory estoppel on the parties. Whatever the parties'
      business conduct might lead a third party to surmise, I find the
      parties remained bound to an agreement that in clear terms gave
      the mortgagee the right to seek the excess interest every
      December 31. Nothing in the agreement itself deprives the
      mortgagee of this right. Further, I have not been made aware of
      any principle, other than promissory estoppel, (which is not here
      raised by a party to the contract) which stipulates that the
      subsequent conduct of the parties displaces the clear wording of
      the agreement.
[33]           Having
      found there was a liability to pay the excess interest, I must
      now determine if that liability was contingent due to the limited
      recourse nature of the indebtedness. I wish first to comment on
      the applicability of paragraph 24 to the situation facing the
      Appellant in 1996 and 1997, as I do not see it as relevant to the
      Respondent's contingency liability argument. The provision
      requires a two pronged offer. One to the mortgagor for its
      leasehold interest, and the other to the mortgagee for its
      interest under the mortgage. This offer would make perfect sense
      in a situation where the mortgage is not in arrears and the
      purchaser wishes to acquire the property outright, unencumbered.
      The purchaser would make a payment to each of the parties with an
      interest in the property. The mortgagor (the Appellant) would
      then be obliged to pay part of its payment (five years'
      prepayment of interest) over to the mortgagee, subject to the
      eighty percent of proceeds restriction. There is no
      "contingency" regarding the interest in this
      situation.
[34]           However,
      consider also the actual circumstances in 1996 and 1997 when the
      principal and interest far exceeded the value of the property: no
      third party purchaser would ever make any offer to the Appellant
      as the Appellant's interest was worthless. The only
      reasonable offer would be to the mortgagee to take over its
      interest under the mortgage and its reversionary interests, and
      then be in a position to simply foreclose on the mortgagor. If
      Postel was prepared to sell its interest in the mortgage to a
      third party for something less than the amount owed by the
      mortgagor, that does not relieve the mortgagor of its liability
      for interest. It simply replaces Postel as mortgagee. The only
      situation where the mortgagor is relieved of any interest
      obligation is pursuant to paragraph 7 and 8 and paragraph 23 of
      the mortgage, where the mortgagee may take possession of the
      land, or sell the land, but cannot seek any deficiency. This can
      be the only "contingency" at issue.
[35]           Assuming
      then that the mortgagee demanded payment, presumably the
      Appellant could have responded by simply surrendering the lease
      and handing back the property. In December 1995, according to a
      letter of December 21, 1995 from HDL to Postel's lawyers,
      the total indebtedness was principal of approximately $30,000,000
      and interest of approximately $60,000,000. The value of the
      property in 1996 and 1997 was estimated to be in the range of
      $42,000,000 to $44,000,000. So, had the property been simply
      delivered back to Postel, Postel would have been limited to
      receiving value equivalent to all of the principal plus some
      interest. The Respondent suggested that this situation
      highlighted that there was no reasonable certainty that the
      outstanding interest would ever be paid. But is this a contingent
      liability as contemplated by paragraph 18(1)(e) which
      would deny the Appellant the interest deduction? It is not.
[36]           Justice
      Sharlow in the Wawang case reiterated the test for the
      determination of a contingent liability as set out in Winter
      and Others (Executors of Sir Arthur Munro Sutherland (deceased))
      v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, [1963] A.C. 235 (H.L.), as
      follows:
I should define a contingency as an event which may or may not
      occur and a contingent liability as a liability which depends for
      its existence upon an event which may or may not happen.
Justice Sharlow went on to say:
Returning to the Winter test, the correct question to
      ask, in determining whether a legal obligation is contingent at a
      particular point in time, is whether the legal obligation has
      come into existence at that time, or whether no obligation will
      come into existence until the occurrence of an event that may not
      occur. For example, Winter establishes that where tax is
      payable on the gain realized on the sale of an asset, the
      obligation to pay the tax is a contingent liability unless the
      asset is sold.
Finally, Justice Sharlow further addressed the risk of
      collection of a debt as follows:
For example, with respect to the uncertainty as to payment, a
      taxpayer may incur an obligation at a time when it is in
      financial difficulty, with the result that there is a significant
      risk of non-payment, but that uncertainty cannot mean that the
      obligation was never incurred. Similarly, an obligation to pay a
      certain amount does not become a contingent obligation merely
      because events may occur that result in a reduction in the
      quantum of the liability.
[37]           The
      existence of the Appellant's liability to pay the mortgagee
      the excess interest was not contingent on any future event. If
      the property values did not increase significantly, the mortgagee
      had contractually bound itself to accepting less than the
      outstanding indebtedness by simply taking the property back,
      however, there always existed a liability which did not depend on
      the vagaries of the Alberta real property market for its very
      existence.
[38]           The
      Respondent relies on the earlier decisions of Barbican and
      Global for support that a limited recourse loan does
      indeed constitute a contingent liability. I do not read those
      cases as going that far. In the Barbican case the Tax
      Court Judge found there was no legal obligation to pay unless and
      until one of two conditions were met; the conditions were that
      net cash flow exceeded the interest payable or that there was a
      sufficient capital appreciation of the properties at the time of
      sale. I can find no wording in the documents in this case to
      suggest there is no legal obligation to pay interest until the
      value of the property increased to greater than the outstanding
      indebtedness. The relevant provisions are not framed in such
      terms.
[39]           In the
      Global Communications case what was at issue was a limited
      recourse promissory note, described by Justice Robertson as
      follows:
Under the promissory note given by Global to Technical,
      interest accrued at the rate of five percent per annum and was
      not payable until the note matured on August 29, 1998 or the
      extension date August 29, 2001. Recourse under the note was
      limited to that which could be realized on the sale of the Global
      data and any Canadian oil and gas leases that Global held at the
      time the note came due. In short, Global could not be sued for
      any deficiency under the note.
[40]           In his
      analysis, Justice Robertson goes on to say:
In the present case, the limited recourse promissory note
      represents a contingent liability, since it only arises to the
      extent that licensing revenue is generated which, by definition,
      is an uncertain event. There is no question that there is an
      underlying debt in respect to Global's purchase of the
      seismic data. It is equally true that personal liability will
      attach to Global with respect to licensing revenues actually
      received. Until such revenues are received however,
      Global's liability to pay the proceeds and ultimately the
      balance of the purchase price is a contingent one.
      Understandably, tax law does not permit the deduction of an
      expense which may not have to be paid.
[41]           That does
      not accurately describe the situation before me. Postel at any
      time could have demanded payment of the excess interest. The
      Appellant, if in a position to do so, could have paid it, could
      have borrowed from Postel to pay it, or could have surrendered
      its leasehold interest back to Postel. Had the Appellant taken
      the latter route and transferred property worth an amount that
      covered all of the principal and some of the interest, would the
      result have been a windfall to the Appellant; that is, would the
      Appellant have obtained a deduction of an interest expense which
      was ultimately not paid? No, as the debt forgiveness rules in
      section 80 would operate to adjust the tax impact of the
      previously deducted interest.
[42]           To deny
      interest deductibility on the basis that a limited recourse
      mortgage creates a contingent liability, creates the possibility
      of every such mortgagor being denied any interest deductibility.
      For example, what is the result if interest is accrued, its
      deductibility is denied, and the property is subsequently sold
      with most of the accrued interest being paid from the sale
      proceeds? Does the interest paid in the year of sale qualify for
      a deduction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(c)? In this
      scenario to qualify under paragraph 20(1)(c) requires that
      the cash method was the method regularly followed by the
      taxpayer. It could be argued that one payment of accrued interest
      in the year of sale does not constitute the cash method. This
      leads to something of an absurdity in that it denies the
      deductibility of a legitimate interest expense payment. This
      suggests to me a potential pitfall in finding a limited recourse
      loan transforms the interest liability into a contingent
      liability only.
[43]           A further
      reason for remaining unconvinced the liability arising every
      December 31 is contingent relates to the timing of that
      determination. To determine the contingency nature of the
      liability at any point in time could require an assessment of the
      fair market value of the property at that point with a comparison
      to the outstanding indebtedness. If the value of the property
      surpasses the outstanding indebtedness in a limited recourse
      mortgage, how can it be found that there is any contingency;
      whereas, conversely, if the fair market value is significantly
      less than the outstanding indebtedness, such as the case at hand,
      it may be that the annual interest payable amount may or may not
      ever be collected by the mortgagee. The commercial prospect of
      frequent real estate appraisals to determine how contingent is
      the liability and consequently whether interest is deductible,
      would send shivers down the backbone of the Canadian real estate
      industry. It also leads me to the conclusion that the
      determination of whether the interest liability arising from a
      limited recourse mortgage is contingent should not be a frequent
      determination, but should be gleaned from the wording of the
      mortgage and the circumstances existing at the time the mortgage
      was entered into. Presumably at that time the debt is less than
      the value of the property. The interest liability should not
      subsequently be considered contingent due to the possibility of a
      declining real estate market or skyrocketing interest rates.
[44]           There is
      no evidence at the time this provision was agreed to that there
      were any exceptional circumstances to suggest it was some
      interest deductibility scam. It is a limited recourse mortgage;
      if there was a default, the mortgagee could get back the property
      and make a decision whether or not to sell the property. I find
      the interest liability was not one which depended for its
      existence on the mortgagee's right to foreclose; it is not
      a contingent liability.
ISSUE: Did the transactions in December, 1995 constitute
      the payment of interest and the borrowing of a like amount as
      principal, resulting in the excess interest in 1996 and 1997
      being simple interest as opposed to compound
      interest?
[45]           This
      issue hinges entirely on the true legal nature of the
      transactions in December, 1995. If what transpired at that time
      was indeed the payment of the accrued excess interest, then the
      interest owing in 1996 and 1997 was not interest on that accrued
      interest, but was simple interest and therefore deductible. If
      the December, 1995 transaction does not constitute payment of the
      accrued interest, then the 1996 and 1997 interest liability is
      compound interest, only deductible when paid.
[46]           The
      starting point for the analysis is the following wording of the
      mortgage agreement:
Upon the payment by the mortgagor of any such excess as
      aforesaid the mortgagor may request in writing from the mortgagee
      an advance of such excess and the mortgagee shall forthwith
      following such request advance to the mortgagor the amount of
      such excess and any amount so advanced shall be added to and
      included in the principal.
[47]           So,
      clearly Postel obliged itself to lend to the Appellant, on
      request, an amount equal to any amount of excess interest paid by
      the Appellant to Postel. The document contemplates a payment of
      funds from the Appellant to Postel followed by an additional
      loan.
[48]           The
      Appellant intended to, and indeed did take great pains to
      structure the December, 1995 transaction as the payment of one
      debt and the borrowing of a new debt. The purpose was to ensure
      the deductibility of interest, by getting around the compound
      interest obstacle.[1] I am satisfied that both the Appellant and Postel made
      arrangements to have the requisite funds (approximately
      $60,000,000 Cdn or 28.8 million Pounds) available for what the
      parties refer to as the "cheque exchange". The
      Appellant arranged for its funds by way of loan from the CIBC.
      There is no evidence of where Postel came up with its
      $60,000,000, but clearly it did.
[49]           The
      Respondent argues that as the steps in this "cheque
      exchange" were conditional on one another, no debt was ever
      extinguished, and a debt must be extinguished to constitute
      payment. I have difficulty in identifying any moment in time when
      the Appellant did not owe Postel exactly $60,000,000; the
      Appellant never for an instant owed $120,000,000 to Postel, nor
      did the Appellant ever for an instant owe Postel nothing. There
      was a continual outstanding indebtedness of $60,000,000. At the
      exact same moment in time that the Appellant released $60,000,000
      to Postel, Postel released $60,000,000 to the Appellant. The
      Supreme Court of Canada indicated in the Cox case :
The simultaneous exchange of cheques, where neither
      would be honoured due to insufficient funds were it not for the
      offsetting entry of the other cheque, can only be viewed
      as a single transaction.
(emphasis added)
[50]           However,
      the cheque exchange before me is distinguishable as both the
      Appellant and Postel had arranged for sufficient funds such that
      the cheques (wire transfers) would indeed be honoured, and in
      fact were honoured. There were readily identifiable funds of
      $60,000,000 from each side of the transaction: it was not a
      matter of each side relying on the other side's funds for
      their cheques to be honoured. If the conditions were met, that
      is, if you have your money ready and I have mine ready, the
      exchange is completed. This is quite different from parties
      recognizing that neither side really needs to have any money
      ready for an exchange.
[51]           I agree
      with the Respondent that "payment" means discharge of
      an obligation or a debt, and that in this case there was a
      continuous obligation of the $60,000,000, yet something did
      intervene to change the nature of that indebtedness. What
      intervened was the creation of certain legal relationships. The
      Supreme Court of Canada addressed the role of legal relationships
      vis-à-vis the economic realities of a situation in the
      recent Singleton case in the following manner:
In examining the Minister's argument about the needs to
      consider the economic realities of a transaction rather than
      being bound to its strict legal effect, McLachlin, J. recognized
      (in Shell Canada v. The Queen) that the Courts must be
      sensitive to the economic realities of a transaction. However,
      she stated that (paragraphs 39-40):
This Court has never held that the economic realities of a
      situation can be used to recharacterize the taxpayer's
      bona fide relationships. To the contrary we have held that
      absent a specific provision of the act to the contrary or the
      finding that they are a sham, the taxpayer's relationship
      must be respected in tax cases.
and at paragraph 32:
The Tax Court Judge found that the purpose in using the money
      was to purchase a house and that this purpose could not be
      altered by the "shuffle of cheques" that occurred on
      October 27, 1988. I respectfully disagree. It is this
      "shuffle of cheques" that defines the legal
      relationship which must be given effect.
[52]           I find I
      am faced with a similar dilemma. I feel much as Lord
      Nicholl's must have felt when he indicated in the House of
      Lords case of MacNiven v. Westmoreland Investments Ltd.,
      2001 U.K.H.L. 6 :
My Lords, I confess that during the course of this appeal I
      have followed the same road to Damascus as Peter Gibson L.J. Like
      him, my initial view, which remained unchanged for some time, was
      that a payment comprising a circular flow of cash between
      borrower and lender, made for no commercial purpose other than
      gaining a tax advantage, would not constitute payment within the
      meaning of 2. 338. Eventually, I have found myself compelled to
      reach the contrary conclusion.
...
I must elaborate a little. In the ordinary case the source
      from which a debtor obtains the money he uses in paying his debt
      is immaterial for the purpose of s. 338. It matters not whether
      the debtor used cash-in-hand, sold assets to raise the money, or
      borrowed money for the purpose. Does it make a difference when a
      payment is made with money borrowed for the purpose from the very
      person to whom the arrears of interest are owed? In principle, I
      think not. Leaving aside sham transactions, a debt may be
      discharged and replaced with another even when the only persons
      involved are the debtor and creditor.
[53]           The
      Respondent argues that the MacNiven is distinguishable as
      the facts do not support a single transaction, as the lender in
      that case did not appear to attach any conditions to the loaning
      of funds. The Respondent submits that the Appellant's and
      Postel's exchange was "in reality a single
      transaction". I believe that the Respondent is attempting
      to hang its hat on an economic reality test which is not
      appropriate given the comments from Justice Major in
      Singleton. I find that what transpired in December, 1995
      between the Appellant and Postel constituted payment of the
      accrued excess interest, and consequently the excess interest in
      1996 and 1997 was not compound interest.
ISSUE: Did the Appellant's investment in the
      project have a reasonable expectation of profit?
[54]           I cannot
      imagine a better example to illustrate the foibles of the
      oft-maligned REOP test than this case. The Respondent, by the
      application of the REOP test, concludes that the operation of a
      multi-million dollar office building over a lengthy period of
      time does not constitute a business for tax purposes. A review of
      every possible indicia of a business that one could identify
      would result in the resounding response that yes, this project
      was a business. The time spent on the project by the co-owners,
      the very duration of the building's existence, the
      significant capital invested, the maintenance of books and
      records, the organizational structure, the behaviour of the
      co-owners as operating a business, the lack of any personal
      element of the Appellant and the receipt by the Appellant of
      approximately $5,750,000 from the project over a 25 year period
      are just some of the factors that are conclusive that indeed a
      business existed. Yet out trots Moldowan and this project
      is subjected to the REOP examination, with the Respondent
      concluding that it does not pass the test. I cannot conceive that
      Chief Justice Dickson intended to de-business (I apologize for
      the bastardization of the English language, but the term seems to
      fit) a project such as this, stripping it of the status of a
      "source".
[55]           However,
      until further guidance from the Supreme Court of Canada, I am
      compelled to analyze those factors which might take a legitimate
      business out from under the taxing provisions of the Income
      Tax Act, due to a failure to meet the REOP test. Those
      factors are the Appellant's past profit and loss, the
      Appellant's motivation, the capability of the project to
      earn a profit and the nature and stage of the business. Given the
      advancement of the REOP argument was not a basis of reassessment,
      and was first raised in the Respondent's pleadings, the
      onus is on the Respondent to prove the Appellant had no
      reasonable expectation of profit. The Appellant argued, relying
      on the Kuhlmann case, that this required proof that the
      expectation of profit was irrational, absurd or ridiculous. I
      agree with Judge Bowman's analysis of the Kuhlmann
      case in Cober, 2001 T.C.J. No. 311 that Kuhlmann
      does not establish such a new principle.
[56]           The
      Respondent has not proven on a balance of probabilities that the
      Appellant had no reasonable expectation of profit. The Respondent
      states in his argument:
The weight of the factors showing that there was no reasonable
      expectation of profit (indeed that there was even no intention of
      profit) is sufficient to warrant a finding of no reasonable
      expectation of profit.
Yet the only factors raised in the Respondent's argument
      are the following:
      1.                     
      No profit has been reported since 1974.
      2.                     
      No substantial steps were taken to turn the project around.
In a project anticipated to exist for a century, the lack of
      profit in a real estate development for the first quarter of its
      existence, given the volatility of both the real property market
      in Alberta and the volatility of interest rates, can not be the
      sole determinative of a businessperson's expectation of
      profit. The Respondent has not shown that the Appellant's
      motivation was other than to earn a profit over the life of this
      project. The evidence from the Appellant's discovery was
      that he anticipated a pay-out of the mortgage over approximately
      a 15 year period, though some later evidence from his discovery
      suggested that the pay-out might have been as much as 30 years.
      While the period for pay-out was significantly increased, the
      evidence still supports on balance an expectation of an ultimate
      pay-out of the mortgage, with an expectation of profit.
[57]           With
      respect to the Respondent's contention that no substantial
      steps were taken to turn the project around, the Respondent gave
      no examples of what those steps might have been. The Appellant by
      the mid-90's did take some steps in negotiating a lower
      interest rate and increasing the net cash flow that went to
      Postel. This may be interpreted more as a move for the survival
      of the project; but nonetheless it was a common sense business
      decision which neither the Respondent nor I should second guess.
      Evidence was presented at the trial in the form of a projection
      of the mortgage, illustrating the pay-out of the mortgage over
      the next 41 years. Granted, this was based on a negotiated 4.25
      percent rate, it does still suggest to me that, contrary to the
      Respondent's assertions, the Appellant has taken steps to
      salvage this project and to yield a profit.
[58]           The
      nature and stage of the business in the mid to late 1990's
      was that of an established office building struggling for
      survival and an owner adjusting expectations to a longer term
      return but retaining profit expectations nonetheless. I find the
      Appellant had a business, and that for tax purposes that business
      had a reasonable expectation of profit.
ISSUE: Do the general anti-avoidance rules apply to
      permit the Minister to ignore the purported payment of interest
      in 1995 and the borrowing of a like amount of
      principal?
[59]           I now
      find myself at GAAR's doorstep in a case that enticingly
      beckons me to open the door and apply the GAAR provisions in
      favour of the Respondent. Yet when those provisions are applied
      in the manner as set forth by Justice Rothstein in the OSFC case,
      the result is by no means inevitable. Indeed while I am led to
      the inexorable conclusion that the transactions are avoidance
      transactions within the meaning of subsection 245(3) of the
      Act, they are saved from the application of subsection
      245(2) by the grace of subsection 245(4) as they are not
      avoidance transactions which result in a misuse of the provisions
      of the Act nor an abuse of the provisions of the
      Act read as a whole. My reasons for this conclusion
      follow.
[60]           It is
      unnecessary to go through the first several steps of the GAAR
      analysis as outlined by Justice Rothstein, as the Appellant
      acknowledges the arrangement constitutes avoidance transactions.
      The only question to be addressed is the application of
      subsection 245(4). Justice Rothstein suggested the following
      approach:
I think, therefore, that to deny a tax benefit where there has
      been strict compliance with the Act on the ground that the
      avoidance transaction constitutes a misuse or abuse requires that
      the relevant policy be clear and unambiguous.
and:
Where Parliament has not been clear and unambiguous as to its
      intended policy, the Court cannot make a finding of misuse or
      abuse.
and:
The Court's only role is to identify a relevant, clear
      and unambiguous policy, so that it may determine whether the
      avoidance transactions in question are inconsistent with the
      policy, such that they constitute an abuse of the provisions of
      the Act, other than GAAR, read as a whole.
and:
If, by reasons of rules and exceptions of the Act, clear and
      unambiguous relevant policy could not be ascertained, I would
      agree with the Appellant that the application of the statutory
      provisions must prevail.
and:
There is no onus to be satisfied by either party at this stage
      of the analysis. However, from a practical perspective, the
      Minister should do more than simply recite the words of
      subsection 245(4) and allege there has been a misuse or abuse.
      The Minister should set out the policy with reference to the Act
      or its intrinsic aids upon which he relies.
[61]           What
      policy did the Respondent identify, as clearly it is for the
      Minister to set out the policy. Let me quote paragraphs 63 and 64
      of the Respondent's written argument:
      63.                  
      In addition, the policy of the Act as a whole regarding the
      deductibility of interest should take account the following
      factors. Paragraph 20(1)(c) permits a deduction for computing
      income from a business or property of interest paid or payable in
      the year. A specific provision is required in respect of such a
      deduction because courts have held that interest is on capital
      account. Absent a statutory provision permitting the deduction,
      interest would not be an income deduction, owing to the general
      limitation regarding capital deductions found in paragraph
      18(1)(b) of the ITA. The statutory provisions enacted by
      Parliament permit the deduction of simple interest on an accrual
      basis and compound interest only when paid.
      64.                  
      The policy of the ITA in its treatment of interest can also be
      gleaned from a consideration of section 80, the debt forgiveness
      rules. Paragraph 80(2)(b) applies to forgiven interest amounts
      for which deductions have been taken but payments have not been
      made. Since compound interest is not deductible unless paid, this
      provisions does not apply to forgiven yet unpaid compound
      interest. The policy of the Act is that compound interest must be
      paid in order to be deductible. The avoidance transactions here
      constitute an abuse, having regard to that policy.
[62]           I can
      glean no identifiable policy from this argument. It is simply a
      reiteration of what the Act itself says, that is, simple interest
      can be deducted on a paid or payable basis and compound interest
      must be paid to be deductible. That is not an underlying policy
      statement, that is a summary of the legislation. I was not
      referred by the Respondent to any materials that would assist me
      in understanding why the government permitted the deduction of
      simple interest on a payable basis and only permits the deduction
      of compound interest on a paid basis. What is the policy? It is
      not my role to speculate; it is the Respondent's role to
      explain to me the clear and unambiguous policy. He has not done
      so. I am therefore unable to find that there has been a misuse or
      abuse as contemplated by subsection 245(4) of the Act.
      Consequently, subsection 245(2) does not apply to the
      Appellant's avoidance transactions.
[63]           The
      Appellant has most deliberately relied on the sanctity of legal
      relationships, not to be impugned by the economic realities of a
      situation, in achieving his goal. I am satisfied that indeed the
      law supports his position, and while GAAR may be the ultimate
      weapon for the government to undo such legal relationships, in
      this instance the application of GAAR is simply ineffective.
[64]           The
      appeal is allowed and the assessments are referred back to the
      Minister for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that
      the Appellant is entitled to deduct interest in the amounts of
      $1,455,089 and $1,388,612 in respect of the 1996 and 1997
      taxation years respectively, and is further entitled to deduct
      non-capital losses from 1992 and 1993 in the sum $631,402.63 in
      respect of the 1996 taxation year.
[65]           The
      Appellant is entitled to costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 30th day of April,
      2002.
 « Miller » 
J.T.C.C.
COURT FILE
      NO.:                                                 
      2000-3636(IT)G                      
STYLE OF
      CAUSE:                                               
      Frederick W. Hill v. Her Majesty the Queen
PLACE OF
      HEARING:                                         
      Winnipeg, Manitoba
DATE OF
      HEARING:                                           
      February 14, 2002
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY:       The
      Honourable Judge C.J. Miller
DATE OF
      JUDGMENT:                                       
      April 30, 2002
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the Appellant: Ian Gamble and Warren J.A.
      Mitchell
Counsel for the
      Respondent:              
      Robert Gosman and Jeff Pniowsky
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the
      Appellant:                 
      Name:                                
      Warren J.A. Mitchell
      Firm:                  
      Thorsteinssons
                                                                                                       
      Vancouver, British Columbia
For the
      Respondent:                             
      Morris Rosenberg
                                                                                       
      Deputy Attorney General of Canada
                                                                                                       
      Ottawa, Canada