McNair,
J.:—This
action
is
an
appeal
by
the
plaintiff
from
the
Minister's
reassessment
of
her
income
for
the
1982
taxation
year,
whereby
she
was
assessed
for
a
taxable
capital
gain
of
$11,850
attributable
to
the
sale
of
her
standardbred
racing
horse,
"JR's
Bandit”.
At
issue
is
the
Minister’s
allowance
of
only
$1,000
as
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
horse,
characterized
as
personal-use
property,
and
his
rejection
of
the
plaintiff's
claim
for
adding
to
such
adjusted
cost
base
her
expenses
of
maintaining
the
horse
incurred
during
the
years
1979,
1980,
1981
and
1982.
These
expenses
included
the
costs
of
boarding
and
training,
veterinary
services,
shoeing,
stake
payments,
trucking
and
the
like,
and
totalled
$13,599.
The
defendant
makes
reference
to
these
expenses
in
paragraph
4(e)
of
the
defence
and
gives
a
specific
breakdown
thereof,
but
alleges
that
they
were
personal
or
living
expenses
incurred
in
respect
of
personal-use
property.
Paragraph
7
of
the
defence
goes
on
to
make
the
following
specific
denial:
7.
The
Defendant
further
submits
the
Plaintiff
was
not
entitled
to
add
amounts
referred
to
in
paragraph
4(e)
herein
to
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
personal
use
property
as
those
amounts
were
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
Plaintiff.
The
facts
can
be
summarized
briefly.
The
plaintiff
is
a
school
teacher
by
profession
who
resides
with
her
husband
at
Tumble
Wind
Farms
near
Shub-
enacadie,
Nova
Scotia.
In
1978
she
took
up
the
hobby
farm
business
of
breeding
and
raising
standardbred
racing
horses.
Her
husband
has
been
engaged
for
thirty
years
in
the
business
of
training,
boarding
and
driving
standardbred
horses.
On
November
2,
1982
the
plaintiff
sold
JR's
Bandit
in
Massachusetts
for
$20,000
(U.S.),
the
proceeds
of
disposition
in
equivalent
Canadian
currency
being
$24,700.
In
her
1982
income
tax
return,
the
plaintiff
included
the
amount
of
$24,700
in
farming
income
and
claimed
offsetting
expenses
equal
to
the
total
farming
income
declared.
Forming
part
of
these
expenses
were
disallowed
farming
losses
for
the
1978,
1979
and
1980
taxation
years
amounting
to
$11,717.
By
notice
of
reassessment
dated
April
30,
1985,
the
Minister
assessed
a
taxable
capital
gain
of
$11,850
to
the
plaintiff
on
the
basis
that:
(a)
JR’s
Bandit
was
personal-use
property
of
the
plaintiff;
(b)
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
such
personal-use
property
was
$1,000;
(c)
in
1982
the
plaintiff
disposed
of
JR's
Bandit
for
proceeds
of
disposition
of
$24,700;
and
(d)
in
so
doing
the
plaintiff
realized
a
capital
gain
of
$23,700,
of
which
$11,850
represented
a
taxable
capital
gain.
In
a
notice
of
objection
dated
May
24,
1985,
the
plaintiff
objected
to
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
$1,000,
contending
that
"the
A.C.B.
of
this
horse
was
at
least
equal
to
the
Sale
Price”.
However,
by
notice
of
confirmation
dated
July
12,
1985
the
Minister
confirmed
the
reassessment
for
the
following
reasons:
The
taxable
capital
gain
realized
from
the
disposition
of
the
horse
known
as
JR's
Bandit
has
been
properly
determined
and
taken
into
account
in
computing
the
taxpayer's
income
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
sections
3,
53
and
54,
and
paragraphs
38(a),
39(1)(a)
and
40(1)(a)
of
the
Act.
As
indicated,
the
plaintiff
takes
the
position
that
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
JR's
Bandit
should
include
all
of
the
expenses
which
she
incurred
in
maintaining
the
horse
from
the
time
of
his
foaling
in
April
of
1979
until
the
time
of
sale
in
November
of
1982.
It
is
the
defendant's
position
that
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
JR's
Bandit
is
correctly
determined
to
be
in
the
sum
of
$1,000
in
as
much
as
the
horse
was
personal-use
property
as
defined
by
paragraph
54(f)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
that
is,
property
owned
by
the
taxpayer
that
was
“used
primarily
for
[her]
personal
use
or
enjoyment".
By
way
of
background,
I
should
note
that
the
matter
of
the
maintenance
expenses
of
the
plaintiff's
horse
in
earlier
years
had
been
previously
addressed
by
the
Tax
Review
Board.
In
his
1983
judgment
dismissing
the
plaintiff's
appeal
with
respect
to
expenses
claimed
for
the
1978,
1979
and
1980
taxation
years,
Mr.
St.-Onge
(now
the
Honourable
Judge
St.-Onge
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada)
confirmed,
without
written
reasons,
the
Minister's
disallowance
of
these
expenses
on
the
basis
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
have
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
from
her
horse
farming
activity
and
that
any
expenses
incurred
were
personal
or
living
expenses
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
248(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
thus
were
not
deductible
from
other
income
in
accordance
with
paragraph
18(1)(h).
Expenses
claimed
by
the
plaintiff
in
her
1981
taxation
year
were
similarly
disallowed,
and
the
plaintiff
filed
no
notice
of
objection
for
that
year.
Defendant's
counsel,
if
I
apprehend
her
argument
correctly,
would
have
me
conclude
from
the
plaintiff's
apparent
acceptance
of
the
determination
of
her
expenses
as
personal
or
living
expenses
that
she
cannot
now
argue
that
those
same
expenses
could
be
added
to
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
JR's
Bandit.
I
am
not
at
all
convinced
that
any
such
conclusion
can
be
drawn.
In
any
event,
I
propose
to
dispose
of
the
case
on
the
basis
on
which
it
was
pleaded
and
argued,
namely,
the
proper
determination
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
the
plaintiff's
standardbred
gelding,
JR’s
Bandit.
Subparagraph
40(1)(a)(i)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
states
the
following
general
rule
for
the
realization
of
a
capital
gain:
40.(1)
Except
as
otherwise
expressly
provided
in
this
Part
(a)
a
taxpayer's
gain
for
a
taxation
year
from
the
disposition
of
any
property
is
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
(i)
if
the
property
was
disposed
of
in
the
year,
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
his
proceeds
of
disposition
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
the
adjusted
cost
base
to
him
of
the
property
immediately
before
the
disposition
and
any
outlays
and
expenses
to
the
extent
that
they
were
made
or
incurred
by
him
for
the
purpose
of
making
the
disposition,
.
.
.
Nowhere
does
the
plaintiff
challenge
the
Minister's
assumption
that
JR's
Bandit
was
personal-use
property.
Indeed,
paragraph
4(a)
of
the
plaintiff's
statement
of
claim
would
seem
to
admit
this
fact,
by
pleading
the
following
allegation:
(a)
the
Minister
has
erred
in
his
decision
by
failing
to
properly
apply
the
provisions
of
Section
46(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
Consequently,
I
have
no
reason
to
question
the
correctness
of
the
Minister's
characterization
of
JR’s
Bandit
as
personal-use
property
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
54(4)
of
the
Act,
and
find
accordingly.
The
special
tax
scheme
provided
by
subsection
46(1)
of
the
Act
applies
in
the
present
case,
which
reads:
46.(1)
Where
a
taxpayer
has
disposed
of
any
personal-use
property
of
the
taxpayer,
for
the
purposes
of
this
subdivision
(a)
the
adjusted
cost
base
to
him
of
the
property
immediately
before
the
disposition
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
greater
of
$1,000
and
the
amount
otherwise
determined
to
be
its
adjusted
cost
base
to
him
at
that
time;
and
(b)
his
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
property
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
greater
of
$1,000
and
his
proceeds
of
disposition
of
the
property
otherwise
determined.
According
to
paragraph
54(h),
the
term
"proceeds
of
disposition”
includes
the
sale
price
of
property
which
has
been
sold.
There
appears
to
be
no
dispute
in
the
present
case
that,
by
virtue
of
paragraph
46(1)(b),
the
proceeds
of
disposition
must
be
deemed
to
be
represented
by
the
greater
sum
of
$24,700,
being
the
sale
price
of
JR's
Bandit.
The
only
contentious
issue,
as
it
seems
to
me,
is
whether
the
Minister
erred
in
limiting
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
JR’s
Bandit
to
$1,000
pursuant
to
paragraph
46(1)(a),
and
in
rejecting
the
plaintiff's
claim
for
expenses
incurred
in
keeping
and
maintaining
the
horse
until
his
sale
in
November
of
1982.
Subparagraph
54(a)(ii)
provides
the
following
definition
of
"adjusted
cost
base”
of
property,
other
than
depreciable
property,
and
reads:
54.
In
this
subdivision,
(a)
"adjusted
cost
base”
to
a
taxpayer
of
any
property
at
any
time
means,
except
as
otherwise
provided,
(ii)
in
any
other
case,
the
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
the
property
adjusted,
as
of
that
time,
in
accordance
with
section
53,
.
.
.
Section
53
of
the
Act
sets
out
by
elaborate
formulae
the
ways
and
means,
and
what
must
be
added
and
taken
away,
in
computing
the
adjusted
cost
base
of
a
taxpayer's
property,
none
of
which
apply
in
the
present
case.
Thus,
the
question
becomes
simply
this:
What
was
the
"cost
to
the
taxpayer"
of
JR's
Bandit?
In
The
Queen
v.
Stirling,
[1985]
1
F.C.
342;
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
275;
85
D.T.C.
5199
(F.C.A.),
Pratte,
J.A.,
rendering
the
judgment
of
the
court
from
the
bench,
gave
the
following
lucid
and
penetrating
interpretation
of
the
word
"cost"
in
relation
to
the
computation
of
capital
gains
(page
276
((D.T.C.
5200)):
The
only
issue
on
this
appeal
is
whether
the
Trial
Division
was
right
in
holding
that,
in
computing
his
capital
gain
from
the
disposition
of
gold
bullion,
the
respondent
could
deduct,
as
part
of
his
cost,
interest
on
the
unpaid
portion
of
the
price
of
the
bullion
and
safe
keeping
charges
that
he
had
incurred
in
respect
of
the
period
during
which
he
had
held
the
bullion.
In
deciding
that
those
interest
and
charges
could
be
deducted,
the
learned
trial
judge
did
not
rely
on
any
provision
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
but
rather
on
what,
in
his
view,
would
have
been
the
intention
of
Parliament
had
it
given
consideration
to
that
question.
We
cannot
agree
with
that
approach.
In
trying
to
support
that
judgment,
counsel
for
the
respondent
argued
in
substance
that
capital
gain
should
be
computed
according
to
the
same
rules
as
income
from
a
business
or
property.
That
argument,
while
attractive,
does
not
find
any
support
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
provides
special
rules
for
the
computation
of
capital
gain.
Under
those
rules,
as
they
are
found
in
subparagraph
40(1)(c)(i)
[sic]
and
section
54,
the
interest
and
safe
keeping
charges
here
in
question
could
be
deductible
only
if
they
were
part
of
the
cost
of
the
bullion.
In
our
opinion,
they
were
not.
As
we
understand
it,
the
word
“cost”
in
those
sections
means
the
price
that
the
taxpayer
gave
up
in
order
to
get
the
asset;
it
does
not
include
any
expense
that
he
may
have
incurred
in
order
to
put
himself
in
a
position
to
pay
that
price
or
to
keep
the
property
afterwards.
[Emphasis
added.]
On
the
evidence,
the
only
price
I
see
which
the
plaintiff
gave
up
in
order
to
get
JR's
Bandit
was
the
stud
fee
of
$1,000
paid
for
having
the
horse's
dam
bred
to
the
stallion,
Tarport
Ervin.
In
the
letter
of
February
18,
1985
from
Town
&
Country
Bookkeeping
Service
Ltd.
to
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
challenging
the
proposed
reassessment
for
the
1982
taxation
year,
there
is
reference
to
"the
cost
of
boarding,
trucking,
vet
etc.,
on
top
of
this”.
However,
none
of
these
costs
were
specifically
itemized.
I
am
therefore
bound
to
conclude
that
the
stud
fee
of
$1,000
was
the
only
price
the
plaintiff
gave
up
in
order
to
obtain
her
standardbred
horse.
In
my
view,
the
expenses
she
incurred
in
keeping
and
maintaining
JR's
Bandit
during
the
years
1979,
1980,
1981
and
1982,
on
the
authority
of
the
Stirling
case,
clearly
are
not
part
of
the
cost
to
her
of
that
personal-use
asset.
I
conclude
therefore
that
the
plaintiff
has
failed
to
meet
the
burden
of
proving
that
the
Minister's
assessment
was
erroneous.
In
the
result,
the
plaintiff's
appeal
must
be
dismissed
with
costs,
if
demanded.
Appeal
dismissed.