Date: 20060821
Docket: A-424-05
Citation: 2006 FCA 281
CORAM: SEXTON
J.A.
SHARLOW
J.A.
MALONE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
DOUGLAS G. GUNN
Appellant
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
SHARLOW J.A.
[1]
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Tax
Court of Canada (2005 TCC 437) dismissing Mr. Gunn’s appeal from reassessments
made under the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th supp.),
for the years 1997, 1998 and 1999. The only issue is whether the Judge was
correct in concluding that section 31 of the Income Tax Act applied in each
of those years to limit Mr. Gunn’s farm loss deduction to $8,750.
FACTS
[2]
The facts are undisputed. For over thirty years,
Mr. Gunn has built up a law practice and a farming business through the investment
of capital and the application of skill, knowledge and hard work. His law
practice required a relatively modest investment of capital and it has been profitable.
His farming business required a greater capital investment, but it has resulted
mostly in operating losses. Despite Mr. Gunn’s record of farming losses, it is
undisputed that his farming operations comprise a business, a commercial
activity undertaken for profit and with a reasonable expectation of profit.
[3]
Mr. Gunn grew up near St.
Thomas, Ontario, on a farm settled by his grandfather.
His father raised cattle, sheep and cash crops on the farm. Mr. Gunn worked on
his father’s farm during the summers when he was attending the University of Western
Ontario. That is how he earned the money for his
education. In 1962, Mr. Gun acquired a 25% interest in a farm. His parents and
his brother were the other owners. The property was sold some years later.
[4]
In 1965, Mr. Gunn graduated from the faculty of
law of the University of Western Ontario. He was admitted to the bar of Ontario in 1967, and has practiced
law ever since. In 1984 he formed his own firm, Gunn and Associates, in St. Thomas. At the time of the Tax Court
hearing, Mr. Gunn had four lawyers working for him.
[5]
In 1972, Mr. Gunn bought the property that he
now calls his home farm. It is located near St. Thomas, a short distance from his law office. At that time the buildings
were run down, and over the next several years Mr. Gunn and his wife together
built the home that they still live in, and replaced the farm buildings on the
property. The property now has five barns, in which Mr. Gunn has been raising
pure-bred Hereford cattle for
the past 30 years. By 2005, Mr. Gunn had an established herd of approximately
50 breeding cows.
[6]
The breeding of cattle requires a considerable
amount of time, attention and expertise. Mr. Gunn does most of the work
involved in the cattle breeding operation himself, with the help of his wife.
Until September 2004 he had a hired hand as well. He makes all of the decisions
in connection with the livestock breeding. In the calving season he checks and
feeds the cattle, visiting the barns twice daily, in the early morning and in the
evening. His wife checks them during the day, and he is available to return
home on short notice if needed. He is never away from home for more than a few
days at any time. He also works on the farm during weekends, and some week days
in the summer, doing much of the manual work of seeding and haying, with the
assistance of people hired on a casual basis. He also does all of the paper
work and record-keeping required in connection with the breeding and
registration of his cattle.
[7]
Between 1990 and 1997, Mr. Gunn acquired six
additional farm properties in the vicinity of St.
Thomas, where he grows rye, hay and his major cash
crop, tobacco. Many of those properties were in very poor condition when
purchased, both in relation to the soil, and the buildings and equipment.
During that period Mr. Gunn invested considerable time and money to bring those
properties up to the high standards that he has established for his farming
operations. That work included improving the soil by adding large amounts of
fertilizer that had to be trucked long distances. He also spent a lot of time
and money on improvements to the buildings, and on repair of equipment that had
been much neglected.
[8]
More recently, Mr. Gunn has moved from the
production of flue-cured tobacco to the production of air-cured burley tobacco,
with a view to making his tobacco operation less labour intensive and more
profitable. Air cured burley tobacco is less expensive to produce and, unlike
flue-cured tobacco, it is not subject to provincial production quotas. Mr. Gunn
testified at trial that, having completed the transition to burley tobacco, his
tobacco production will come within the top ten percent of all producers in Ontario, in terms of yield and quality.
[9]
Mr. Gunn’s usual daily routine is to work on the
farm from about 6:00 a.m., and then in his law office from about 9:00 a.m. until
about 4:00 p.m., returning to the farm to do more work in the late afternoon
and evening. He estimated that he normally spends about 50 hours per week
working at his law practice, and about 20 hours on farm work.
[10]
Mr. Gunn has acted as the Chairman of the Ontario Crop Insurance Arbitration
Board, and has been involved in the work of other bodies connected with
agriculture and the cattle industry. He testified
that many clients of his law firm are people Mr. Gunn has met through
his farming connections. Clients are encouraged to contact him by telephone or
in person at the farm, and often do so. His analysis of files opened in his law
firm in the years under appeal shows that between 10% and 15% of them were for
clients he met through his farming activities. He suggested that many more
files could be attributed indirectly to his farming contacts.
[11]
Mr. Gunn’s net farming assets amount to approximately
$2 million, the greatest part being land and buildings. The capital invested in
his law practice is about $62,000 (before taking into account unbilled accounts
and goodwill). He spends approximately 30% to 35% of his working time on the
farming operations, and the balance on his law practice. Mr. Gunn’s net income
from farming and his net income from his law practice since 1987 are as
follows:
Year
|
Net professional
income ($)
|
Farm
Income
|
Gross ($)
|
Expenses ($)
|
Net ($)
|
1987
|
165,663
|
66,719
|
126,156
|
(59,437)
|
1988
|
152,682
|
59,481
|
84,575
|
(25,094)
|
1989
|
268,770
|
30,139
|
88,726
|
(58,587)
|
1990
|
280,017
|
32,307
|
82,142
|
(49,835)
|
1991
|
235,854
|
44,873
|
98,645
|
(53,772)
|
1992
|
428,077
|
82,451
|
130,360
|
(47,909)
|
1993
|
256,723
|
105,226
|
191,241
|
(86,015)
|
1994
|
270,818
|
321,246
|
377,862
|
(56,616)
|
1995
|
277,869
|
162,554
|
222,011
|
(59,457)
|
1996
|
221,013
|
295,364
|
426,683
|
(131,319)
|
1997
|
308,686
|
217,560
|
272,013
|
(54,453)
|
1998
|
204,865
|
366,877
|
474,383
|
(107,506)
|
1999
|
308,447
|
258,489
|
417,417
|
(158,928)
|
2000
|
428,189
|
395,585
|
429,213
|
(33,628)
|
2001
|
331,419
|
225,572
|
272,246
|
(46,674)
|
2002
|
305,890
|
231,452
|
192,293
|
39,159
|
2003
|
369,356
|
148,406
|
235,390
|
(85,024)
|
2004
|
247,031
|
326,109
|
229,997
|
96,112
|
[12]
Mr. Gunn testified that without the financial
support provided by his law practice, he could not have financed the
expenditures required to improve his farming operations. He also testified that
his farm losses during the 1990s and later years were greater than they might
otherwise have been because of a number of nonrecurring expenditures and unforeseen
events. First, Mr. Gunn spent considerable amounts of money on the
rehabilitation of the farm properties he bought during that period. As of the
date of trial, Mr. Gunn believed that he would have no further obligations in
that respect. Second, it took Mr. Gunn some years to change the tobacco
operation from flue-dried tobacco to the more profitable air-dried burley
tobacco. Third, for 2003 and subsequent years, the profitability of Mr. Gunn’s cattle
operation, like those of practically every cattle farmer in Canada, was adversely affected by the
discovery of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease) in some Canadian cattle. Fourth, had Mr. Gunn not
claimed elective deductions for capital cost allowance in the years 2000 to
2004, his farm profits for those years would have increased (and losses would
have decreased).
[13]
Counsel for the Crown agreed, in his submissions
at the end of the hearing in the Tax Court, that Mr. Gunn’s farming business
had a potential for income in the years in issue as well as in later years, but
he argued that the farm income potential would never match the potential for
income from Mr. Gunn’s law practice. The Judge accepted that Mr. Gunn has been
seriously committed to farming as a business for more than 35 years, that
during the years under appeal he remained as committed to it as ever, that he remains
fully committed to it, and that he intends to continue both practicing law and
farming for the foreseeable future.
Section 31 of the Income Tax Act
[14]
Section
31 of the Income Tax Act reads as follows:
Discussion
[15]
The
legal issues raised in this case require a determination of the meaning of the
opening words of section 31 of the Income Tax Act. The
interpretation of section 31 requires a textual, contextual and purposive
analysis to find a meaning that is harmonious with the Income Tax Act as
a whole, and that achieves consistency, predictability and fairness so that
taxpayers may manage their affairs intelligently: Canada Trustco Mortgage
Co. v. Canada, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 610, at paragraphs
10-12.
(a) Textual
analysis
[16]
The
opening words of section 31 set out the test for its application. The test asks
two questions. I refer to these as the “principal question” (Is farming the
taxpayer’s chief source of income?) and the “combination question” (Is the
taxpayer’s chief source of income a combination of farming and some other
source of income?). Section 31 applies only if the answer to both questions is
no.
[17]
The
remainder of section 31 states its effect (an issue which in the current case
is not controversial).
[18]
A
straightforward textual analysis leaves two important questions unanswered.
First, what is the meaning of the phrase “chief source of income” (which is not
defined in the Income Tax Act)? Second, does a positive answer to the
combination question require farming to be predominant?
(b)
Statutory context
[19]
The
relevant statutory context includes the regime in the Income Tax Act for
the determination and tax treatment of business profits and business losses, and
the special rules applicable to the determination and tax treatment of the
profit and loss of a farming business. For the purposes of the Income Tax
Act, the word “farming” is defined as follows:
“farming” includes tillage
of the soil, livestock raising or exhibiting, maintaining of horses for
racing, raising of poultry, fur farming, dairy farming, fruit growing and the
keeping of bees, but does not include an office or employment under a person
engaged in the business of farming;
|
Sont compris dans
l'agriculture la culture du sol, l'élevage ou l'exposition d'animaux de
ferme, l'entretien de chevaux de course, l'élevage de la volaille, l'élevage
des animaux à fourrure, la production laitière, la pomoculture et
l'apiculture. Ne sont toutefois pas visés par la présente définition la
charge ou l'emploi auprès d'une personne exploitant une entreprise agricole.
|
[20]
Generally,
a taxpayer who operates a business is subject to tax on the profit earned from
that business in a particular year. If the operation of the business results in
a loss for a particular year, that loss may be deducted from the taxpayer’s other
income for that year. The annual profit or loss of a
business may be determined by any method that produces an accurate picture of
the financial result of the operation of the business for the year, and is
consistent with the provisions of the Income Tax Act, established case
law principles, and well accepted business principles: Canderel Ltd. v.
Canada, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 147, at paragraph 53.
[21]
The Income Tax Act provides a number of
special rules for the determination of the profit or loss of a farming
business. They are found in sections 28 to 31.
[22]
Pursuant
to section 28, the profit or loss of a farming business may be determined by a
special method of cash basis accounting (that method also may be used to
determine the profit or loss of a fishing business). Most business are required
to use accrual accounting (that is, they must record as revenue all amounts
that are receivable, and record as expenses all amounts for which a liability
has been incurred). Accrual accounting generally is considered to produce a
more accurate picture of income than the cash method, but the statutory cash
basis method of accounting for farmers is simpler to use than accrual accounting,
and it may result in a better matching of the cash flow of the business to the
tax liability for any profit, or tax relief for any loss, as the case may be. A
taxpayer who chooses to use the cash method of computing the profit or loss of
a farming business may treat the cost of inventory as an expense (up to its
fair market value). However, a mandatory inventory adjustment precludes a
taxpayer from using inventory purchases to create or increase a farming loss
(paragraph 28(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act).
[23]
Section
29 establishes the tax consequences of the disposition of an animal that forms
part of a “basic herd”. This provision was enacted in 1972 as a transition from
the pre-1972 tax regime (in which a herd of animals could be treated as a
capital asset, the disposition of which would result in tax-free gains), to the
current regime in which a herd is treated as inventory.
[24]
Section
30 permits the cost of clearing land, levelling land or installing a land
drainage system to be deducted as a current expense of a farming business. For
most other businesses, expenditures on improvements to land would not be
deductible, but would be treated as capital expenditures comprising part of the
cost of the land.
[25]
Section
31 limits the entitlement of certain farmers to claim a deduction for the
losses of a farming business. As mentioned above, a taxpayer who incurs a loss
from the operation of a business in a year is entitled to deduct that loss from
other income of the year. Section 31 provides an exception to this general rule
in the case of certain farming losses. If section 31 applies, the maximum
deduction is $8,750 for a loss from a farming business.
[26]
I see nothing in the scheme of the Income Tax
Act relating to the determination and tax treatment of farm profits and
losses that sheds light on the meaning of the phrase “chief source of income”
in section 31, or the manner in which the combination question should be
addressed. I
have been able to find no provision of the current Income Tax Act that
is analogous to the “chief source of income” test or the combination question
in section 31.
[27]
I
turn now to the legislative history to see if it provides any clues. Section 31
has its roots in Canada’s first income tax legislation, the Income
War Tax Act, S.C. 1917, c. 28. Section 4 of that statute imposed an income
tax on “income”, which was defined in section 3 to include, among other things,
the profit of any “profession or calling, or from any trade, manufacture or
business”.
[28]
A
number of paragraphs within section 3 of the Income War Tax Act set out
specific rules for the computation of profit. In 1919, paragraph 3(f) was added
by S.C. 1919, c. 55, to prevent the income from a taxpayer’s chief source of
income from being reduced by a loss transaction that was not connected with the
taxpayer’s chief source of income.
[29]
In
1920, a further amendment was made to empower the Minister to determine whether
a transaction resulting in a loss was connected with a taxpayer’s chief source
of income. The Minister’s determination was stated to be “final and
conclusive”. That was one of a number of provisions in the Income War Tax
Act that gave the Minister very wide discretionary powers with respect to
the determination of profits and losses for income tax purposes.
[30]
By
S.C. 1923, c. 52, paragraph 3(f) was replaced with a rule that deemed the
income of a taxpayer to be not less than the income derived from the taxpayer’s
chief source of income. The Minister was given the discretion to determine,
finally and conclusively, which one or more sources of income, or which
combination of sources, constituted a taxpayer’s chief source of income. It is
worth noting that after the 1923 amendment, the word “connected” no longer
appears in paragraph 4(f), suggesting that a combination of sources of income
could include unrelated sources.
[31]
In
the 1927 consolidation of federal statutes, the Income War Tax Act was
amended in a number of minor respects (R.S.C. 1927, c. 97). Paragraph 3(f)
became section 10. The two provisions are substantially the same.
[32]
There
is no jurisprudence on section 10 of the Income War Tax Act, perhaps because
of the provision that the Minister’s determination would be final and
conclusive. Generally, the Courts respected the finality of a Ministerial
determination unless it could be shown that the Minister failed to exercise his
discretion in good faith or to act upon proper principles (Pioneer Laundry
and Dry Cleaners, Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1940] A.C. 127; D.R.
Fraser and Company, Limited v. Minister of National Revenue, [1949] A.C.
24). There are no cases relating to the proper principles for the exercise of
the Minister’s discretion under section 10 of the Income War Tax Act.
[33]
In
1948, a new Income Tax Act (S.C. 1948, c. 52) was enacted to replace the
Income War Tax Act. The 1948 Income Tax Act was similar in
structure to the current Income Tax Act. Many of the provisions that
gave the Minister discretionary authority in the matter of the determination of
income and losses were omitted, or were amended so that a Ministerial
determination would not be final and conclusive. Section 10 of the Income
War Tax Act survived as subsections 13(1) and (2) of the 1948 Income Tax
Act. Subsection 13(1) deemed the income of a person for a year to be “not
less than his income for the year from his chief source of income.” Subsection
13(2) gave the Minister the discretion to determine “which source of income or
sources of income combined is a taxpayer’s chief source of income”. As there
was no provision making that determination final and conclusive, the
determination of “chief source of income” became subject to appeal (Canada
(Minister of National Revenue) v. Robertson, [1954] Ex. C.R. 321 at page
331). However, it remained the case that no statutory guidelines were provided
for the application of section 13.
[34]
By
S.C. 1950-51, c. 51, section 4, the first statutory predecessor to the current
section 31 was enacted as subsections 13(3) and (4) of the 1948 Income Tax
Act, effective for the 1949 taxation year. Those provisions are
substantially the same as the current section 31, except that the maximum amount
of the restriction was $5,000.
[35]
Read
in the context of the 1948 Income Tax Act, the original version of the
farm loss restriction was a relieving provision. Before the enactment of the
original version of the farm loss restriction, a taxpayer who suffered a
farming loss but whose chief source of income was not farming (or a combination
of farming and something else) would be entitled to no tax relief for the farm
losses because of the general loss restriction in subsection 13(1) and (2). However,
once subsections 13(3) and (4) were enacted, that same taxpayer would be
entitled to claim farming losses to a maximum of $5,000.
[36]
The
relieving nature of the original farm loss restriction was explained in a
speech made in Parliament by the then Minister of Finance, The Honourable
Douglas Abbott (House of Commons Debates, 4th session, 21st
Parliament, Volume V, June 13, 1951, at page 4054; quoted in Morrissey v.
Canada (C.A.), [1989] 2 F.C. 418 at page 423):
[T]his section is intended to give some
measure of relief to those who may be colloquially known as gentlemen
farmers, whose principal occupation is not farming. Again this confirms what
was a practice over a great many years, during which the income tax branch
allowed 50 per cent of the cash losses incurred in this type of farming;
secondary income; and by cash losses it meant without charging depreciation.
It was a rule which as it developed, probably was not strictly justified
under the act. We had a great many representations that the practice which
had existed for many years, I believe going back to the early twenties,
should be maintained. It was felt that it would not be appropriate to do so
without any limit, because some might run very elaborate farms with very
large losses in fancy horses and that sort of thing. Probably it would not be
fair to allow such losses without limit, so the present section was inserted
fixing a limit of $5,000.
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[37]
The
general loss restriction in subsections 13(1) and (2) was repealed by S.C.
1952, c. 29, section 4, effective for the 1952 taxation year. However, the farm
loss restriction remained, and it remains still (except for the occasional change
in the formula by which the amount of the restriction is determined).
[38]
The
only explanation I can find for the 1952 amendment is in an exchange in
Parliament (House of Commons Debates, 6th session, 21st
Parliament, Volume III, May 27, 1952, at page 2626ff; quoted in Morrissey,
cited above, at page 424-5)). Mr. Abbott, the then Minister of Finance, said
that the general loss restriction was no longer needed, but the more specific farm
loss restriction was needed to deal with the problem of “gentleman farmers” who
never make money from their farms, but claim their losses for tax purposes. The
meaning of the term “gentleman farmers” is not clear, but one Member of
Parliament referred to them as people who “make their money in the city and
lose it in the country.” In my view, it remains unclear why the farmers who had
been singled out for special relief in 1949 were subjected, in 1952, to a more
onerous tax burden than the operators of other kinds of business.
[39]
In
1966, The Royal Commission on Taxation, known as the Carter Commission,
published an extensive and detailed report on income and sales tax reform. The
question of farm losses was a minor aspect of the report (three pages out of a
seven volume report). The Carter Commission accepted that in principle, the
deduction of a farm loss should not be permitted in the case of a farm maintained
primarily as a hobby or for personal rather than business purposes, but the
Commission recommended that the vague test in section 13 be replaced with a
bright line test, such as a maximum lifetime limit on farm losses, or the disallowance
of all losses from a farm that showed a loss in three years out of five. Those
recommendations were not accepted.
[40]
The
federal government’s response to the Carter Commission Report was a White Paper
entitled “Proposal for Tax Reform”, published in 1969 by then Minister of
Finance E. Benson. The 1969 White Paper had little to say about section 13. The
following appears at page 69 of the 1969 White Paper:
5.52. Section 13 of the Income Tax Act
limits the deductibility for income tax purposes of losses suffered on the
operation of what are commonly referred to as “hobby farms”. A taxpayer who
is not primarily a farmer can deduct only $5,000 of farming losses annually
from his other income – all of the first $2,500 and half of the next $5,000.
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5.53. Because this provision is
intended to prohibit the deduction of personal expenses from taxable income,
it would remain in the Act under the new system. A taxpayer would, however,
be allowed to reduce these non-deductible losses by capitalizing property taxes
on the farm and interest paid on loans related to the purchase of the farm.
This procedure would reduce the capital gain taxed on the sale of the farm,
but it would not be allowed to increase the capital loss that may be
deducted.
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[41]
Item
5.53 of the 1969 White Paper suggests that the purpose of the restriction on
farm losses in section 13 was to prohibit the deduction of hobby farm losses,
which is equated to the notion of the prohibition on the deduction of personal
expenses. That suggests to me that the term “hobby farm” was used to denote a
farming operation carried on for personal or social purposes, rather than as a
business. In my view, this reflects a misapprehension of the purpose of section
13; that misapprehension was corrected by Justice Dickson in Moldowan v. R.,
[1978] 1 S.C.R. 480 (this is discussed in more detail below).
[42]
In
1972, a new income tax law was enacted as the result of the 1969 White Paper: Income
Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63. That statute enacted major tax reforms
including the introduction of the capital gains tax. What had been section 13
of the 1948 Income Tax Act became section 31 of the 1972 Income Tax
Act, with no changes. The suggestion in Item 5.53 of the 1969 White Paper
for a capital gain adjustment for property taxes and interest incurred to
acquire farm land was accepted, and it remains part of the current Income
Tax Act. Since 1972, there have no substantial changes to the statutory
tests for the application of section 31.
[43]
The
legislative history outlined above demonstrates little more than this:
originally, the determination of whether a farmer was subject to a loss
limitation was a matter of unfettered Ministerial discretion, but it is now a
statutory test with no explicit statutory guidelines.
[44]
Nothing
in the legislative history helps to explain the meaning
of the phrase “chief source of income”, or the manner in which the combination
question should be addressed. References in the Parliamentary debates to
“gentlemen farmers”, or to those “make their money in the city and lose it in
the country”, are not helpful in elucidating the statutory test. Neither is the
reference to “hobby farmers” in the 1969 White Paper.
(c) Purpose of section 31
[45]
To
the extent that the purpose of a tax provision is determined by its effect, it
could be said that the purpose of section 31 is to preclude certain farmers
from claiming tax relief for farming losses in excess of a statutory threshold
(currently $8,750). But why are some farmers chosen for this particular tax
burden, and not others?
[46]
In
1944, Heward Stikeman, then the Assistant Deputy Minister of the Department of
National Revenue, made some comments on the general loss restriction in section
10 of the Income War Tax Act (Special Lectures of the Law Society of
Upper Canada on Taxation, published by Richard De Boo Limited, 1944, at pages
121-124). The title of his lecture was “Transactions to Avoid or Minimize Tax”.
Mr. Stikeman offered the following explanation for the existence of section 10:
An example of this would be the case of
an individual who maintained an active manufacturing business and at the same
time operated a dairy farm. It might be that both activities were carried on
equally for profit, yet the one can clearly be said to be the principal
occupation and the other a secondary occupation. In such a case the taxpayer
could not be permitted to charge his farm losses against the profits from his
manufacturing business since they did not bear any direct relationship to the
latter, nor were they properly incurred to earn them.
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[47]
This
explanation suggests that, for the purposes of section 10 of the Income War
Tax Act, two activities would not be “combined” to comprise a taxpayer’s
“chief position, occupation, trade, business or calling” unless they were
directly related, or the expenses of one were incurred to earn the income of
the other. That explanation is not particularly satisfactory. First, if either
of those conditions were met, it is arguable that there would be one
enterprise, not two. Second, this explanation ignores the 1923 amendment to the
statutory predecessor to section 10, which removed the test of “connectedness”
in the determination of a whether a taxpayer’s chief source of income was a
“combination” of two or more sources.
[48]
Mr.
Stikeman goes on to suggest that section 10 could also apply to solve the
problem of “gentleman farmers.” On that point, he says:
In the United States, somewhat the same problems arise in
connection with gentleman farmers. It should be noted, however, that there is
no provision similar to section 10 in the United States Tax Laws. There the
decided cases indicated that the bona fide intention to run a farm at
a profit cannot be denied by the fact that the farm is actually run at a
loss. This of course presupposes sufficient surrounding facts and
circumstances to establish the bona fides of the intention.
[…]
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Finally, the American jurisprudence is
effectively summed up by Smith, J., in the case of Marshall Field v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 26 U.S.B.T.A. at page 123.
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“From
a consideration of all of them (the cases) we reached the conclusion that the
intention of the taxpayer with respect to the operation of the farm is
material. . . . If the taxpayer operates a farm with the intention of making
a profit and not merely as a place of pleasure, exhibition and social
diversion, the fact that losses may be sustained from the operation of the
farm does not change the character of the enterprise from one operated for
profit to one not operated for profit.”
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[49]
It
is not clear what Mr. Stikeman meant by the phrase “gentlemen farmers.” It
would appear that when Mr. Stikeman made these remarks in 1944, there was some
concern that, but for section 10 of the Income War Tax Act or an
equivalent provision, the expenses incurred in pursing a hobby or other
activity undertaken for “pleasure, exhibition and social diversion” might be
deductible for income tax purposes, despite the lack of profit motive from such
an activity. The same concern underlies the comments in the 1969 White Paper,
quoted above.
[50]
In
1977, that concern was found to have no foundation. In that year, it was
established by Moldowan (cited above), that even without a provision
like section 10 of the Income War Tax Act (or section 31 of the current Income
Tax Act), a farm loss is not deductible unless the farming activity
constitutes a business. The following appears in the judgment of Justice Dickson,
writing for the Supreme Court of Canada in Moldowan at page 485
(emphasis added):
Although originally disputed, it is now
accepted that in order to have a "source of income" the taxpayer
must have a profit or a reasonable expectation of profit. Source of income,
thus, is an equivalent term to business: Dorfman v. M.N.R.
[[1972] C.T.C. 151.] See also s. 139(1)(ae) of the Income Tax Act
which includes as "personal and living expenses" and therefore not
deductible for tax purposes, the expenses of properties maintained by the
taxpayer for his own use and benefit, and not maintained in connection with a
business carried on for profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit. If
the taxpayer in operating his farm is merely indulging in a hobby, with no
reasonable expectation of profit, he is disentitled to claim any deduction at
all in respect of expenses incurred.
|
[51]
If
Moldowan established in 1977 that section 31 was not needed to stop non-commercial
farmers from claiming farm losses, why has section 31 remained in effect? Parliament
apparently believes that section 31 serves some purpose. However, it seems to
me that the intended target of section 31 was unclear in 1977 when Moldowan
was decided, and it remains unclear.
[52]
Generally,
when a provision of the Income Tax Act imposes a tax disadvantage on one
group of taxpayers and not others, the tax policy underlying the provision may
be inferred from the statutory conditions for its application. The distinction between
farmers who are burdened by section 31, and those who are not, is based on a
comparison between the economic characteristics of the farming business and the
farmer’s other taxable activities. What that may disclose about the tax policy
underlying section 31, the meaning of the phrase “chief source of income”, or
the problem of how to answer the combination question, however, remains obscure.
[53]
There
has been considerable judicial criticism of section 31, beginning with Justice
Dickson in Moldowan (cited above), who referred to it as “an awkwardly worded and intractable section and the source of much
debate”.
See also the comments of Justice Marceau in his dissenting reasons in The
Queen v. Graham, [1985] 2 F.C. 107 (at page 113 and following), as well as
the comments of Justice Mahoney in Morrissey (cited above) at page 430, and
Associate Chief Justice Jerome in Poirier (Estate of) v. Canada, [1986]
1 C.T.C. 308, 86 D.T.C. 6124 (F.C.T.D.). Most recently Justice Sexton, speaking
for this Court in an oral judgment in Watt v. Canada, 2001 FCA 72, said
this (at paragraph 15):
While we feel bound by the authorities
in this Court to dismiss this appeal, we cannot help but note the many
section 31 cases being brought before the Tax Court and this Court producing
sometimes conflicting results. Despite the appearance of unfairness in some
of those cases, where a taxpayer with a well-paying job is also seriously
involved in unprofitable farming but not a “hobby farm”, Parliament has not
re-examined this provision which Justice Dickson in 1977 described as an
“awkwardly worded and intractable section”. Nor has the Supreme Court of
Canada revisited this problem since 1977. Perhaps it is time to amend or at least
clarify this provision to make it more suited to our time.
|
[54]
After
reviewing the authorities available to me, I have been able to find nothing
that provides a satisfactory explanation for the existence of section 31 of the
Income Tax Act. It would appear that in the past, some tax policy makers
and tax policy advisers believed, incorrectly, that the statutory predecessors
to section 31 were needed to control a particular form of tax abuse – treating
the cost of a hobby farm (that is, a non-commercial farming activity undertaken
solely for personal or social purposes) as a business loss. If the same flawed
justification for section 31 survives to this day, there would be a cogent
argument for a Parliamentary review of section 31. However, that is not an issue
that can be resolved in this case, or by this Court.
(d)
Jurisprudence
[55]
Section
31 is one of the most litigated provisions in the Income Tax Act, but
there are only a handful of cases that may be described as jurisprudential, as
opposed to factual. The leading case on section 31 is Moldowan (cited
above). Mr. Moldowan was appealing his income tax assessments for 1968 and 1969
on the basis that section 13 of the Income Tax Act (the statutory
predecessor to section 31) did not apply to him. During the years 1960 to 1972,
Mr. Moldowan had the following income and losses:
Year
|
Employment
($)
|
Investment
($)
|
Business
($)
|
Farming
($)
|
Rental
($)
|
1960
|
11,500
|
-0-
|
-0-
|
(1,213)
|
2,700
|
1961
|
15,600
|
-0-
|
-0-
|
(2,235)
|
(872)
|
1962
|
15,600
|
300
|
-0-
|
(1,718)
|
(750)
|
1963
|
15,900
|
39
|
-0-
|
1,593
|
(1,131)
|
1964
|
16,200
|
38
|
-0-
|
1,369
|
-0-
|
1965
|
15,900
|
1,364
|
-0-
|
(1,684)
|
-0-
|
1966
|
15,900
|
1,194
|
-0-
|
(885)
|
-0-
|
1967
|
13,500
|
1,625
|
-0-
|
(8,505)
|
-0-
|
1968
|
1,750
|
8,822
|
12,500
|
(21,907)
|
-0-
|
1969
|
17,833
|
17,049
|
-0-
|
(20,811)
|
-0-
|
1970
|
17,309
|
19,920
|
(914)
|
(7,536)
|
-0-
|
1971
|
6,607
|
7,657
|
17,416
|
(7,539)
|
-0-
|
1972
|
22,306
|
13,385
|
-0-
|
(4,038)
|
(312)
|
[56]
During
the years 1960 to 1967, Mr. Moldowan owned and was employed by Active Trading
Ltd., a scrap company. His employment income during that period came from that company.
In 1967 he sold that company and started Cascade News Ltd., which carried on
the business of distributing racing forms. He received dividends from that
company (investment income). In 1968 he started a manufacturing company,
Cascade Fasteners Ltd., from which he earned a salary.
[57]
Beginning in the early 1960’s, Mr. Moldowan was
actively engaged in training, boarding and racing horses on his own behalf and
for others. He leased land near a racetrack on which was located a house
occupied by his trainer, three paddocks and horse stalls. Between 1962 and
1969, he bought 53 horses at a total cost of over $180,000, and sold horses to
the value of approximately $121,000. He raced horses in Canada and the United
States, winning purses totalling over $180,000. After
1964 he sustained losses from his horse racing activities, which peaked in 1968
and 1969. Thereafter he reduced his farming activities and disposed of almost
all of his horses.
[58]
Justice Dickson, writing for the Supreme Court
of Canada, analyzed former section 13 in some detail. His decision is most
often cited for his categorization of all farmers into three classes: Class 1
farmers – those whose farming activities comprise a business and who are
entitled to claim all of their farming losses because section 31 does not apply
to them; Class 2 farmers – those whose farming activities comprise a business
but who are not entitled to claim all of their farming losses because section
31 applies to them; and Class 3 farmers – those whose farming activities do not
comprise a business at all, and who therefore are entitled to no farm loss
deduction.
[59]
Justice Dickson also proposed a number of
principles to assist in determining how to categorize a farmer in any given
case. I summarize those principles as follows:
(1) The phrase “chief source of income” in
section 31 must be interpreted to include a farming business, even in a year in
which the farming business has resulted in a loss. Otherwise, no taxpayer with
a farm loss could ever claim losses in excess of the maximum permitted by
section 31 (page 485).
(2) A “source of income” must be an activity
carried on for profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit. For a
taxpayer who operates a farm as a hobby, with no reasonable expectation of
profit, the farm is not a “source of income” and no farm losses are deductible
(page 485).
(3) In determining whether there is a reasonable
expectation of profit from a farming operation, it is necessary to consider the
taxpayer’s profit and loss experience in past years, the taxpayer’s training,
the taxpayer’s intended course of action, the capability of the venture as
capitalized to show a profit after charging capital cost allowance, and the
nature and extent of the undertaking. For example, a farmer who purchases a
productive going operation cannot be expected to suffer the same start up
losses as one who begins a tree farm on raw land (page 485-6).
(4) The test for determining a taxpayer’s chief
source of income is both a relative and an objective test, and not a pure quantum
measurement. The factors to be considered, for each source of income, include
(a) the taxpayer’s reasonable expectation of income from his various revenue
sources, (b) his ordinary mode and habit of work, (c) the time spent, (d) the
capital committed, (e) the profitability of the operation, both actual and
potential (page 486).
(5) In considering whether a taxpayer’s chief
source of income is a “combination” of farming and some other source of income,
it is not necessary that the two sources be connected, but at the same time it
is not correct simply to add any two sources of income (page 487). The combination
question is intended to benefit a taxpayer whose major preoccupation is
farming, but who has other pecuniary interests as well, such as income from
investments, or income from a sideline employment or business (page 488).
(6) Section 31 does not apply to a taxpayer for
whom farming may reasonably be expected to provide the bulk of income or the
centre of work routine, and who looks to farming for a livelihood (page 487).
(7) Section 31 applies to a taxpayer who does
not look to farming, or to farming and some subordinate source of income, for
his livelihood but carries on farming as a sideline business (page 488-9).
[60]
Based
on this understanding of former section 13, Justice Dickson concluded that it
applied to Mr. Moldowan for the following reasons (see pages 488-489):
He devoted considerable effort towards
launching new ventures. Horse-racing consumed only several hours of his day
and that for part of the year only. His commitment of capital was cautious.
The nature of the enterprise is risky. It is difficult reasonably to plan to
devote energies to it principally in the expectation of a steady living. He
suffered constant and increasing losses with the exception of two years in
which minor profits were made. Although none of the above is alone
determinative, together they suggest only one business venture of several,
with nothing distinguishing in the way of a “chief source of income”.
|
[61]
Moldowan has been
cited in hundreds of cases. It has been particularly influential in cases
involving a relatively straightforward application of the principal question –
whether the taxpayer’s chief source of income is farming. In that regard, it
has become accepted practice to address the principal question by considering the
relevant factors listed in item (4) above, recognizing that no single factor is
necessarily determinative, and that each factor must be examined against the
broad context of the taxpayer’s history, his work routine, and his future
prospects and intentions.
[62]
However, the Moldowan treatment of the
combination question has proved to be more difficult to deal with. Among the
many section 31 cases that have reached this Court are five cases that illustrate
the difficulty in predicting the outcome of a case involving the combination
question.
[63]
The first case is The Queen v. Graham,
[1985] 2 F.C. 107 (C.A.). That case involved a stationary engineer, a full-time
employee of Ontario Hydro, who transferred to a rural work location so that he
could become a farmer. In 1975, he began a hog farm. His employment income was
approximately $30,000 per year, and he lost between $5,000 and $12,000 per year
on his hog farm, but he spent approximately twice as many hours on the farm as
on his employment. He was successful in his tax appeal, and the Crown’s appeal
to this Court did not succeed. The decision contains a short analysis in which
Justice Urie, for the majority, agreed with the trial judge that this
taxpayer’s sideline activity was employment rather than farming so that, based
on Moldowan, his chief source of income was a combination of farming and
employment.
[64]
The
second case is Poirier (Trustee of) v. Canada (F.C.A.), [1992] 2
C.T.C. 9, 92 D.T.C. 6335 (F.C.A.). The Crown relies particularly on this case.
However, I am not persuaded that it involves the combination question at all.
Rather, it seems to me that the case was decided adversely to the taxpayer on
the basis of the principal question. At trial, Associate Chief Justice Jerome,
as he then was, concluded that section 31 did not apply to a person who had
embarked upon a cattle business that “would reasonably be expected to be a
source of income combined with his other sources of income to form his chief
source of income” in the years under appeal. In an oral decision, this Court
allowed the Crown’s appeal on the basis that the trial decision incorrectly
used the combination of two sources of income to conclude that “the
respondent’s farming income as a chief source of income”, which I take to mean
that Associate Chief Justice Jerome found that farming income alone was
the taxpayer’s chief source of income. This Court considered the matter anew,
and concluded that, as the taxpayer spent about the same amount of time on
farming and his other source of income, but had invested less capital in the
farm and earned less income, his chief source of income was not farming.
[65]
The
third case is Canada v. Donnelly (C.A.), [1998] 1 F.C. 513. It involved
a successful urologist who, after practicing his profession for over ten years,
started a horse breeding operation in which he invested significant capital,
and lost approximately $2 million over a twenty year period. This Court found,
among other things, that there was no basis for concluding that the farming
activities had a prospect for profit. It seems to have been significant to the
Court that, in the years in which a profit might have been earned, the taxpayer
invariably bought another horse, turning his potential profit into a loss. It
is not clear how that situation arose, given the mandatory inventory adjustment
referred to above in paragraph 28(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act, but in
any event the conclusion was that the taxpayer's chief
source of income for the years in question came from his medical practice, and
his horse-farming activity was held to be a sideline business.
[66]
Donnelly is
particularly interesting for the following comments made by Justice Robertson
to address the differences between Donnelly and Graham:
[19] […]
It seems to me that Graham comes closer to a case in which an
otherwise full-time farmer is forced to seek additional income in the city to
offset losses incurred in the country. The second generation farmer who is
unable to adequately support a family may well turn to other employment to
offset persistent annual losses. These are the types of cases which never
make it to the courts. […] I have yet to see a case where the Minister denies
such a taxpayer the right to deduct full farming losses because of a
competing income source. Perhaps this is because it is unlikely a hog farmer
such as Mr. Graham would pursue the activity as a hobby.
|
[20] As is
well known, section 31 of the Act is aimed at preventing
"gentlemen" farmers who enjoy substantial income from claiming full
farming losses: see Morrissey v. Canada, supra, at pages
420-423. More often than not it is invoked in circumstances where farmers are
prepared to carry on with a blatant indifference toward the losses being
incurred. The practical and legal reality is that these farmers are hobby
farmers but the Minister allows them the limited deduction under section 31
of the Act. Such cases almost always involve horse farmers who are engaged in
purchasing or breeding horses for racing. In truth, there is rarely even a
reasonable expectation of profit in such endeavours much less the makings of
a chief source of income.
|
[21] It may
well be that in tax law a distinction is to be drawn between the country
person who goes to the city and the city person who goes to the country. In
future, those insisting on obtaining tax relief in circumstances approaching
those under consideration should do so through legislative channels and not
through the Tax Court of Canada. The judicial system can no longer afford to
encourage taxpayers or their counsel to pursue such litigation in the
expectation that hope will triumph over experience.
|
[67]
If
these comments are meant to suggest that section 31 ought to be applied more
assiduously to a horse breeder than a hog farmer, or to an individual with a
relatively high professional income earned in a city, than an individual with
more modest employment income earned in a small rural town, then I do not
subscribe to them. Even so, they leave open the question of how to apply section
31 to Mr. Gunn, an individual who is not a horse breeder or a hog farmer, and
whose non-farm income is not earned in the city, but in a small town in Ontario not far from
his farm.
[68]
The
fourth case is Watt (cited above). It involved a Saskatchewan dentist with
a substantial income from his practice. He worked with his wife on the family
farm growing wheat, peas, canola, barley and alfalfa. Dr. Watt spent
approximately 2000 hours per year on the farm operation, and 1500 hours per
year in his dental practice. His farm lost money every year. His case failed in
the Tax Court primarily on the basis that there was no evidence that the farm
could ever produce a profit. His appeal to this Court failed for the same
reason.
[69]
The
fifth case is Kroeker v. Canada, [2003] 1 C.T.C. 183, 2002 D.T.C. 1165
(F.C.A.). Ms. Kroeker was a partner, with her spouse, in a farming business
that suffered losses. She had significant income from employment, but her
employment activities were arranged in such a way as to accommodate her farm
work. Practically all of her employment income was invested in the farm, and
the farm actually achieved profits in the years after the years under appeal.
The evidence was that the farm was the focus of the taxpayer’s life. Her appeal
to the Tax Court failed because the Judge interpreted Donnelly (cited
above) as requiring evidence that the taxpayer’s farming activities had a
prospect of “substantial” profits, a test that Ms. Kroeker could not meet. This
Court reversed that decision on the basis that Donnelly could not be
read as adding a new substantive test of “substantial profitability” to the Moldowan
principles. In the result, this Court found little to distinguish this case
from Graham so that, based on Moldowan, her chief source of
income was a combination of farming and another source of income.
[70]
None of the cases cited above alters or purports
to alter any of the Moldowan principles; nor do they question any of
those principles, including the principles relating to the combination
question. However, the Moldowan treatment of the combination question
has attracted criticism. That criticism is focussed on Justice Dickson’s
statement that section 31 should apply to a person for whom farming is a
“sideline” business or a “subordinate” source of income. The problem is that
section 31 does not use the words “sideline” or “subordinate”, or any analogous
term.
[71]
According to Justice Dickson, the combination
question in section 31 must be answered in the negative (and therefore section
31 would necessarily apply) in the case of a taxpayer for whom farming is a
sideline business, or whose non-farming source of income is “subordinate” to
farming. Richard Thomas says, in a case comment entitled “A Farm Loss With a
Difference – the Farmer is Successful!” in “Current Cases” (1993), 41
Canadian Tax Journal, 502-517, that this view of the combination question
strips it of meaning and effect. Consider the case of a person for whom farming
is not the chief source of income, but who wishes to argue that his chief source
of income is farming and something else. Based on Justice Dickson’s view of the
combination question, that person cannot avoid the application of section 31
unless he can establish that his other source of income is subordinate to
farming. But if he could establish that, he probably would be able to establish
that farming is his chief source of income.
[72]
The same criticism is made by Chief Justice
Bowman in the case that is the subject of Mr. Thomas’ article: Hover v.
Minister of National Revenue, [1993] 1 C.T.C. 2585, 93 D.T.C. 98, and by
Justice Joyal in Hadley v. Canada, [1985] 1 C.T.C. 62, 85 D.T.C. 5058
(F.C.T.D.). Neither decision was appealed.
[73]
In my view, there is merit in this criticism.
Justice Dickson was attempting to give a rational meaning to general words,
thus avoiding the prospect of giving section 31 no meaning at all. With respect
to the principal question, he concluded reasonably that the determination of a
person’s chief source of income requires a weighing and balancing of a number
of relevant factors. But when it came to the combination question, he devised
guidelines based on an assumption as to the underlying objective of the
statute, an assumption that is not rooted in anything expressed or implied in
the statute itself. One of those guidelines is that one cannot determine
whether a person’s chief source of income is a combination of farming and some
other source of income simply by addition. The other is that a person’s chief
source of income cannot be a combination of farming and something else unless
farming predominates (or is not a side-line business).
[74]
That approach to the interpretation of the
combination question contravenes the teaching of the Supreme Court of
Canada in several recent cases that warn against the development of judge-made
rules in tax matters. See, for example, the comments of Justice Iacobucci,
writing for the majority in Royal Bank of Canada v.
Sparrow Electric Corp., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 411, at
paragraph 112:
[112]
Finally, I wish to emphasize that it is open to Parliament to step in and
assign absolute priority to the deemed trust. A clear illustration
of how this might be done is afforded by s. 224(1.2) ITA, which vests
certain moneys in the Crown "notwithstanding any security interest in
those moneys" and provides that they "shall be paid to the Receiver
General in priority to any such security interest". All that
is needed to effect the desired result is clear language of that
kind. In the absence of such clear language, judicial innovation
is undesirable, both because the issue is policy charged and because a
legislative mandate is apt to be clearer than a rule whose precise bounds
will become fixed only as a result of expensive and lengthy litigation.
|
[75]
Similarly,
Justice McLachlin (as she then was) said this in Shell
Canada Ltd. v. Canada, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 622, at paragraph 43:
[…] This Court has consistently held that courts must therefore be
cautious before finding within the clear provisions of the Act an unexpressed
legislative intention: Canderel Ltd. v. Canada, [1998[ 1 S.C.R. 147,
at para. 41, per Iacobucci J.; Royal Bank of Canada v.
Sparrow Electric Corp., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 411, at para. 112, per
Iacobucci J.; [Canada v. Antosko, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 312] at p. 328, per
Iacobucci J. Finding unexpressed legislative intentions under the guise of
purposive interpretation runs the risk of upsetting the balance Parliament
has attempted to strike in the Act.
|
[76]
The
same principle is captured in these words from P.W. Hogg and J.E. Magee, Principles
of Canadian Income Tax Law (2nd ed. 1997), at pages 475-76:
It would
introduce intolerable uncertainty into the Income Tax Act if clear
language in a detailed provision of the Act were to be qualified by
unexpressed exceptions derived from a court's view of the object and purpose
of the provision.
|
This passage
was quoted with approval by Justice Iacobucci, writing for the majority in 65302 British Columbia Ltd. v. Canada,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 804, at paragraph 51, and by Chief Justice McLachlin and
Justice Major, writing for the Court in Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v.
Canada (cited above), at paragraph 12.
[77]
Each
of the statements quoted above was made in the context of a statutory provision
that had a discernible literal meaning, where the taxpayers argued that they
should be entitled to rely on the words of the statute rather than an
unlegislated gloss proposed by the Crown. The words of section 31 that set out
the combination question are general but their ordinary grammatical meaning is
comprehensible; section 31 speaks of a combination, which in ordinary language
implies an addition or aggregation. There is nothing in section 31, or
elsewhere in the Income Tax Act, that imposes an additional requirement
that farming be the predominant element in the combination.
[78]
In the fiscal context, statutory interpretation
must be informed by the recognition that, in a self-assessing tax system that
respects the right of taxpayers to plan their tax affairs intelligently,
taxpayers require rules that are consistent, predictable and fair (Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada, cited above). These objectives are undermined by
provisions that are so vague that their application cannot be predicted with
reasonable certainty. They may be further undermined if they are applied on the
basis of a judge-made rule that has no statutory foundation. It seems to me that the Courts would do well to
approach the combination question in section 31with an eye on the case of Johns-Manville Canada Inc. v. The Queen,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 46, decided some years after Moldowan.
[79]
The
issue in Johns-Manville was whether a mining company was entitled to
deduct, as an operating expense of its open pit mine, the cost of acquiring
land around the pit to order to continue the necessary wall slope and angle of
repose of the overburden. These acquisitions occurred year in and year out as
an integral part of the operation of the mine. The Crown had argued that because
land is a permanent asset, the cost of the land was a capital outlay, the
deduction of which was prohibited by the statutory predecessor to paragraph
18(1)(b) of the Income Tax Act. The point of statutory interpretation
was the meaning to be attributed to that provision, and in particular the
principles to be applied in distinguishing capital outlays from ordinary
operating expenses.
[80]
That
issue has a lengthy history in the jurisprudence in Canada, as well as the U.K., Australia
and the United
States,
but it was not the subject of any statutory guidelines. After a fulsome analysis
of the business purpose of the expenditures in question, and noting that if the
expenditures were not deductible, the taxpayer would receive no tax relief for
them at all, Justice Estey concluded that the cost of the land was fully
deductible as an expense. He said this at page 72 (my
emphasis):
The characterization in taxation law of an expenditure is, in the
final analysis (unless the statute is explicit which this one is not), one of
policy. […] Such a determination is, furthermore, consistent with another
basic concept in tax law that where the taxing statute is not explicit, reasonable
uncertainty or factual ambiguity resulting from lack of
explicitness in the statute should be resolved in favour of the
taxpayer. This residual principle must be the more readily
applicable in this appeal where otherwise annually recurring expenditures,
completely connected to the daily business operation of the taxpayer, afford
the taxpayer no credit against tax either by way of capital cost or depletion
allowance with reference to a capital expenditure, or an expense deduction
against revenue.
|
[81]
Justice
Gonthier, writing for the Supreme Court of Canada in Québec
(Communauté urbaine) v. Corp. Notre-Dame de Bon-Secours, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 3, cautioned that the Johns-Manville
principle is to be used only as a last resort, where the application of the
ordinary principles of statutory interpretation leave a reasonable uncertainty
as to whether the provision in question is intended to apply in a particular
case. He said this at pages 19-20 of his reasons:
Two comments should be made to give Estey J.'s observations their full
meaning: first, recourse to the presumption in the taxpayer's favour is
indicated when a court is compelled to choose between two valid
interpretations, and second, this presumption is clearly residual and
should play an exceptional part in the interpretation of tax
legislation. In his text The Interpretation of Legislation in Canada
(2nd ed. 1991), at p. 412, Professor Pierre-André Côté summarizes the point
very well:
|
If the taxpayer receives the benefit of the doubt, such a
"doubt" must nevertheless be "reasonable". A
taxation statute should be "reasonably clear". This
criterion is not satisfied if the usual rules of interpretation have not
already been applied in an attempt to clarify the problem. The
meaning of the enactment must first be ascertained, and only where this
proves impossible can that which is more favourable to the taxpayer be
chosen.
[Emphasis in original document.]
|
[82]
This
caution should not preclude the application of the Johns-Manville
principle in relation to the combination question in section 31 of the Income
Tax Act, because that aspect of section 31 is not “reasonably clear”. It is
capable of bearing the meaning that Justice Dickson gave it in Moldowan,
in which the combination question must be answered in the negative unless
farming predominates as a source of income. However, the combination question is
also capable of bearing a more straightforward meaning, in which it is not
necessary for the farmer to propose a combination of sources of income in which
farming predominates.
[83]
In
my view, the combination question should be interpreted to require only an
examination of the cumulative effect of the aggregate of the capital invested
in farming and a second source of income, the aggregate of the income derived
from farming and a second source of income, and the aggregate of the time spent
on farming and on the second source of income, considered in the light of the taxpayer’s
ordinary mode of living, farming history, and future intentions and
expectations. This would avoid the judge-made test that requires farming to be
the predominant element in the combination of farming with the second source of
income, which in my view is a test that cannot stand with subsequent
jurisprudence. It would result in a positive answer to the combination question
if, for example, the taxpayer has invested significant capital in a farming
enterprise, the taxpayer spends virtually all of his or her working time on a
combination of farming and the other principal income earning activity, and the
taxpayer’s day to day activities are a combination of farming and the other
income earning activity, in which the time spent in each is significant.
The
application of section 31 to Mr. Gunn
[84]
In the case of Mr. Gunn, the Judge found that
section 31 applied because Mr. Gunn’s chief source of income is not farming, or
a combination of farming and the practice of law. The basis for that conclusion
is summarized in at paragraph 17 and 18 of the Judge’s reasons:
[17] As I
have said, the evidence does not establish that the Appellant had shifted the
focus of his working life from law to farming in the years under appeal, or
indeed that he had done so by 2005. Of the factors that I must consider, only
the capital invested might militate in favour of the Appellant. It is not
disputed that the bulk of his working time is spent in his law office, where
he has a number of fulltime employees working for him, in addition to his own
practice to attend to. I appreciate that the comparison of the taxpayer's
income from farming and from law is not simply a mathematical exercise.
However, up to and including the years in issue the record shows a decade of
very large losses, of which the largest two are the last year before the
years under appeal, and the last of the three years under appeal. Over the
same decade, the Appellant's income from law had a strong upward trend, with
the first and second years under appeal being two of the three most
productive years of his practice in the period. Nor does the evidence
establish that there is any reason to expect that to change greatly in the
future. Although there have been profits from the farming in 2002 and 2004,
the evidence does not persuade me that this is a trend that will necessarily
continue. Nor can the losses simply be discounted as startup losses. It is
true that in 1999 the Appellant went into tobacco farming on the basis of an
ownership operation, rather than through sharecropping as he had previously
operated. No doubt this exacerbated his losses in that year -- it had by far
the largest loss in the evidence before me. It was only a matter of degree,
however; his losses for the 12 prior years cannot be explained that way. It
is likely too, on the Appellant's evidence, that some, if not all, of the
modest profit in 2002 was attributable in part to expenses incurred during
the startup years of 1999 to 2001. There was evidence that the income from
tobacco is not realized until the calendar year after the majority of the
expenses have been incurred.
|
[18] It is
true that the Appellant has farming assets of approximately $3.354 million.
However $2.5 million of that is made up of land and buildings, some of which
were put to agricultural use during the relevant time period, and some of
which were not. I think it is a reasonable inference that the capital the
Appellant invested in land and buildings was not at risk in the way that
capital invested in machinery or inventory might be. I do not consider this
to be a factor strong enough to outweigh the relative application of the
Appellant's time and effort, or the relative potential for profit of the law
practice and the farm.
|
[85]
The Judge’s answer to the principal question is
based on the Moldowan principles for determining a taxpayer’s chief source
of income, combined with the comment from Morrissey v. Canada (cited
above) to the effect that if it is unlikely that the taxpayer’s farming
operations will ever be profitable, notwithstanding all the time and capital
the taxpayer is willing and able to devote to farming, the conclusion must be
that farming is not a chief source of the taxpayer’s income.
[86]
In my view, Morrissey is not an apt
precedent for the case of Mr. Gunn. The statement in Morrissey referred
to above was made in the context of a case in which the taxpayer’s own evidence
indicated that he doubted the future profitability of his farm. Mr. Gunn’s
evidence was that he anticipated that his farm had a potential for profit. The
Crown adduced no evidence to the contrary, and in fact admitted the potential
for future profit. I can find in the record no evidentiary support for the
Judge’s conclusion that Mr. Gunn’s farming operations showed no potential for
profit. That is a sufficient basis for setting aside the Tax Court judgment. However,
there is also a second reason.
[87]
Once
the Judge answered the principal question in the negative, he was obliged to
consider the combination question. In doing so, he considered only Mr. Gunn’s
argument that the financial success of his law practice
is attributable in part to a synergy between it and his farming operation. Mr.
Gunn argued that this factual link was a sufficient basis for concluding that
his farming operation and his law practice, in combination, comprise his chief
source of income, with the result that section 31 of the Act could not apply to
him. Mr. Gunn relied on Gestion A.S.P. Inc. v. Canada (Minister of National
Revenue), [1994] 1 C.T.C. 2450, 94 D.T.C. 1342 and
1349 (T.C.C.). In that case, the combination question was answered in the
taxpayer’s favour on the basis that it operated a successful grocery store that
sold high quality meat produced on its own farm. The taxpayer’s farming and
retail operations were integrally connected in that the farm owed its existence
to the retail operation, was nurtured by the retail operation, and existed for
the retail operation.
[88]
The
Judge rejected Mr. Gunn’s argument on this point because his farm was not a major
contributor to the success of the law practice, and the law practice did not
owe its existence or its success to the farm. That conclusion appears to be
based on the premise that, in determining whether section 31 applies to a
particular taxpayer, farming and a second source of income cannot be “combined”
unless there is a connection that is analogous to the connection in Gestion
A.S.P.
[89]
In
my view, that is not the correct interpretation of the combination question in
section 31. While it is true that the facts of Gestion A.S.P. are
distinguishable from the facts of this case, it does not follow that the
combination question must be answered in the negative unless the connection
between the farm and the other source of income is as close as the farm and the
grocery store in that case. As that error in principle is the foundation of the
Judge’s conclusion on the combination question, it is necessary for this Court
to consider that question anew.
[90]
A
factual connection between farming and another source of income is not a
precondition for a positive answer to the combination question in section 31.
The notion of “connectedness” has never been part of section 31; indeed it does
not appear in its statutory predecessor, section 10 of the Income War Tax
Act, after 1923.
[91]
However,
it does not follow that the existence of a connection between farming and the
other source of income is irrelevant to the combination question. In this case,
Mr. Gunn testified that his farming activities resulted in connections that
enhanced the profitability of his law practice. He did not suggest that his law
practice owed its existence to his farm, or that any of the expenses of his
farming operation were so integrally tied to his law practice that they should,
for example, be deductible in computing income from his law practice. His
point, as I understand it, was that his time and resources were not neatly
divided between farming and the practice of law. Rather, his day to day life involved
both, and the contacts he made in farming became valuable to his law practice.
This seems to me to be a “combination” in the most ordinary meaning of that
word. In my view, Mr. Gunn’s evidence of the unique “synergy” between his farm
and his law practice should have given some weight in the context of the
combination question.
[92]
In
addition to that factual connection, it is clear from the record that Mr.
Gunn’s farm and his law practice together comprise virtually all of his income
and represent most, if not all, of Mr. Gunn’s business related capital. His
farm investment and his farm losses are subsidized by his law practice, leaving
overall a substantial income. For the reasons explained in the discussion above,
I would have adopted a more generous interpretation of the combination question
in section 31 that requires an aggregation of the various relevant economic
factors (capital, income and time), leading to the conclusion that Mr. Gunn’s
chief source of income is a combination of farming and the practice of law.
[93]
In
my view, the result would be the same in this case even if the authority of Moldowan
precludes me from adopting the more generous interpretation of the combination
question. I am unable to distinguish this case from Kroeker,
particularly once it is recognized that it makes no difference that Ms.
Kroeker’s non-farm income was from employment, while Mr. Gunn’s is from a more
lucrative law practice. I also find it difficult to characterize Mr. Gunn’s
farming activities as a mere sideline, given his substantial investment of
capital, time and expertise, and his undisputed evidence as the profit
potential of his farm. When all of that evidence is considered in light of Mr.
Gunn’s evidence as to the ways in which his law practice is enhanced by the
factual connection between the farm and the law practice, I would conclude that
even on the Moldowan interpretation of the combination question, the answer
to the combination question is yes. It follows that he should be entitled to a
full deduction for his farm losses.
Conclusion
[94]
I
would allow this appeal with costs in this Court and in the Tax Court, and I
would set aside the Tax Court judgment and refer this matter back to the
Minister for reassessment on the basis that
section 31 of
the Income Tax Act did not apply to Mr. Gunn in the years under appeal.
“K.
Sharlow”
“I
agree.
J.
Edgar Sexton”
“I
agree.
B.
Malone”