Bowman
J.T.C.C.:
-
In
this
appeal
from
an
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1984
taxation
year,
two
issues
are
raised:
(a)
whether
payments
totalling
$15,852,000
made
by
the
appellant
to
lenders
as
part
of
the
disengagement
of
five
of
its
fifth-tier
U.S.
subsidiaries
from
a
number
of
unsuccessful
U.S.
real
estate
partnerships
or
joint
ventures
give
rise
to
a
capital
loss
to
the
appellant
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
and
(b)
whether
the
cost
of
obtaining
zoning
changes
permitting
a
higher
density
in
buildings
which
the
appellant
proposed
to
build
on
land
owned
by
it
in
Toronto,
amounting
to
$11,227,444,
formed
part
of
the
cost
of
the
land,
or
of
the
buildings,
or
was
an
eligible
capital
expenditure.
The
appeal
was
originally
heard
by
Judge
Kempo
of
this
court.
She
retired
from
the
court,
on
which
she
had
served
with
distinction
for
many
years,
before
she
could
render
judgment.
Counsel
were
asked
by
the
court
whether
they
wished
to
have
the
case
reheard
before
another
judge
or
have
it
decided
by
another
judge
on
the
basis
of
the
transcript
of
the
evidence
and
argument
that
had
been
presented
before
Judge
Kempo.
They
chose
the
latter
and
the
case
was
assigned
to
me.
On
January
31,
1996,
the
Registrar,
at
my
suggestion,
wrote
to
both
counsel.
In
his
letter,
he
stated:
Judge
Bowman
expects
to
have
his
review
of
the
transcript
completed
by
the
end
of
this
week.
He
has
suggested
that,
in
fairness
to
counsel,
in
light
of
the
delay
that
has
occurred
in
disposing
of
the
case
and
the
fact
that
a
new
judge
who
did
not
preside
at
the
trial
will
be
deciding
it,
counsel
should
be
offered
the
opportunity,
if
they
wish,
of
making
any
further
oral
representations
to
him
that
they
may
consider
appropriate.
The
letter
also
invited
counsel,
if
they
wished
to
make
further
representations,
to
communicate
with
the
court
as
soon
as
possible
to
arrange
a
time.
Neither
Mr.
Templeton
nor
Ms.
Van
Der
Hout
responded.
Capital
loss
issue
It
would
appear
useful,
in
order
to
give
some
focus
to
the
factual
background
to
the
capital
loss
issue
which
follows,
if
I
summarize
briefly
the
principles
that
I
think
apply
in
a
case
of
this
type.
The
appellant’s
claim
to
an
allowable
capital
loss
is
premised
upon
the
allegation
that
it
guaranteed
the
indebtedness
of
its
fifth-tier
U.S.
subsidiaries,
that
it
paid
lenders
in
satisfaction
of
those
guarantees,
that
it
became
subrogated
to
the
rights
of
the
lenders,
that
it
disposed
of
these
rights
for
nil
proceeds
and
that
it
thereby
incurred
a
capital
loss.
To
arrive
at
the
conclusion
that
a
capital
loss
has
been
sustained
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act
it
is
clear
from
sections
3,
38
and
39
that
there
must
have
been
an
actual
or
deemed
disposition
of
property.
The
mere
making
of
a
capital
payment
does
not,
of
itself,
give
rise
to
a
capital
loss.
Where
a
guarantee
of
a
primary
debtor’s
obligation
is
given
and
the
guarantor
is
required
under
the
guarantee
to
pay
and
does
pay
to
the
creditor
the
primary
debtor’s
obligation,
the
guarantor
is
in
the
normal
course
sub-
rogated
to
the
position
of
the
creditor
unless
it
has
explicitly
or
implicitly
waived
those
rights
of
subrogation
or
other
circumstances
prevent
such
rights
from
arising.
Absent
such
a
factual
or
legal
impediment,
by
operation
of
law
a
debtor-creditor
relationship
arises
between
the
guarantor
and
the
primary
debtor.
The
guarantor’s
cost
of
the
debt
would
normally
be
the
amount
that
it
paid
under
the
guarantee.
If,
as
is
frequently
the
case,
the
principal
debtor
cannot
pay,
the
debt
may
be
regarded
as
having
become
bad.
Section
50
of
the
Act
deems
the
debt
to
have
been
disposed
of
by
the
guarantor
at
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
in
which
it
became
bad
and
to
have
been
reacquired
at
a
cost
of
nil
immediately
thereafter.
Thus,
through
the
combined
operation
of
the
law
of
subrogation
and
section
50
of
the
Act
the
disposition
necessary
to
support
the
claim
for
a
capital
loss
is
achieved.
Subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
provides:
a
taxpayer’s
loss,
if
any,
from
the
disposition
of
a
property,
to
the
extend
that
it
is
ii)
a
loss
from
the
disposition
of
a
debt
or
other
right
to
receive
an
amount,
unless
the
debt
or
right,
as
the
case
may
be,
was
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
(other
than
exempt
income)
or
as
consideration
for
the
disposition
of
capital
property
to
a
person
with
whom
the
taxpayer
was
dealing
at
arm’s
length.
is
nil.
In
many
cases
if
a
guarantor
is
obliged
to
make
good
under
a
guarantee
it
is
because
the
principal
debtor
in
unable
to
pay
the
obligation.
From
this,
it
follows
that
the
guarantor’s
right
of
subrogation
against
the
principal
debtor
is,
at
the
time
of
acquisition,
likely
to
be,
in
many
instances,
worthless
or
virtually
worthless.
A
narrow
and
mechanical
reading
of
subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii)
would
lead
one
to
conclude
that
on
the
payment
of
the
guaranteed
amount
the
guarantor’s
acquisition
of
the
worthless
subrogated
debt
could
not
possibly
have
as
its
purpose
the
gaining
or
producing
of
income
from
a
business
or
property.
Such
an
interpretation
in
my
view
lacks
commercial
sense.
A
functional
and
more
commercially
realistic
interpretation
would
subsume
in
the
purpose
of
the
acquisition
of
the
subrogated
debt
the
purpose
for
which
the
guarantee
was
originally
given.
The
analysis
of
the
facts
requires
that
the
following
questions
be
answered:
(a)
Were
the
subsidiaries’
obligations
to
the
banks
guaranteed
by
the
appellant?
(b)
Was
the
appellant’s
payment
of
the
amounts
in
question
made
pursuant
to
the
obligation
under
the
guarantees?
(c)
Did
the
appellant
acquire
by
subrogation
a
debt
owing
by
the
subsidiary
to
the
lenders?
(d)
Was
that
debt
disposed
of
in
the
year?
The
appellant
argues
that,
quite
apart
from
its
position
that
the
debt
became
bad,
with
the
consequent
deemed
disposition
under
section
50
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
appellant,
in
the
case
of
four
of
the
five
subsidiaries
involved
here,
disposed
of
the
debts
by
waiving
its
rights
of
subrogation.
The
effect
of
the
waiver
is,
in
my
view,
critical,
for
reasons
upon
which
I
shall
elaborate
more
fully
below.
(e)
Was
that
debt
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
of
the
appellant?
More
specifically,
based
on
the
analysis
set
out
above,
if
the
payments
were
made
pursuant
to
the
guarantees,
were
the
guarantees
given
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
The
appellant
pleaded
that
the
payments
were
made
pursuant
to
the
guarantees
and
this
allegation
was
denied.
Counsel
for
the
appel
ant
argued
that
since
the
Minister
had
not
pleaded
that
he
“assumed”
that
the
payments
were
not
made
pursuant
to
the
guarantees
the
Minister
had
the
onus
of
establishing
that
the
payments
were
not
made
pursuant
to
the
guarantees.
The
question
is,
if
not
a
pure
question
of
law,
at
least
a
mixed
one
of
law
and
fact.
In
any
event
the
basic
assumption
made
on
assessing
was
that
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
the
capital
loss
claimed
and
it
was
for
the
appellant
to
establish
the
several
legal
components
entitling
it
to
the
deduction
claimed.
An
inordinate
amount
of
time
is
wasted
in
income
tax
appeals
on
questions
of
onus
of
proof
and
on
chasing
the
will-o’-the-
wisp
of
what
the
Minister
may
or
may
not
have
“assumed”.
I
do
not
believe
that
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Ltd.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
294,
[1964]
D.T.C.
5184,
has
completely
turned
the
ordinary
rules
of
practice
and
pleading
on
their
head.
The
usual
rule
—
and
I
see
no
reason
why
it
should
not
apply
in
income
tax
appeals
—
is
set
out
in
Odgers’
Principles
of
Pleading
and
Practice,
2nd
edition
at
page
532:
The
“burden
of
proof”
is
the
duty
which
lies
on
a
party
to
establish
his
case.
It
will
lie
on
A,
whenever
A
must
either
call
some
evidence
or
have
judgment
given
against
him.
As
a
rule
(but
not
invariably)
it
lies
upon
the
party
who
has
in
his
pleading
maintained
the
affirmative
of
the
issue;
for
a
negative
is
in
general
incapable
of
proof.
Ei
incumbit
probatio
qui
dicit,
non
qui
negat.
The
affirmative
is
generally,
but
not
necessarily,
maintained
by
the
party
who
first
raises
the
issue.
Thus,
the
onus
lies,
as
a
rule,
on
the
plaintiff
to
establish
every
fact
which
he
has
asserted
in
the
statement
of
claim,
and
on
the
defendant
to
prove
all
facts
which
he
has
pleaded
by
way
of
confession
and
avoidance,
such
as
fraud,
performance,
release,
rescission,
etc.
a
business
or
property
of
the
appellant?
If
the
answer
to
all
five
of
the
questions
is
in
the
affirmative
the
appellant
must
necessarily
succeed.
If
the
answer
to
any
one
of
them
is
in
the
negative,
it
must
fail,
whatever
commerciality
may
have
motivated
the
payments.
In
a
broad
commercial
sense
the
appellant
lost
money
but
its
entitlement
to
the
relief
it
claims
is
based
upon
legal
concepts
of
some
specificity.
To
arrive
at
the
result
it
seeks
the
appellant
must
bring
itself
within
those
concepts.
In
particular,
it
must
demonstrate
that
it
acquired
a
debt
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
and
that
the
debt
either
became
bad
in
1984
or
was
otherwise
disposed
of
at
a
loss.
Facts
In
1984,
the
appellant
was
a
large
Canadian
public
company
whose
principal
business
was
the
purchase,
development,
leasing
and
management
of
commercial,
retail,
industrial
and
residential
real
property
and
the
sale
of
residential
real
property.
This
business
was
carried
on
either
directly
or
through
subsidiaries.
It
owned
many
subsidiaries
in
Canada
and
the
United
States.
It
provided
management
and
financial
support
to
its
subsidiaries,
for
which
it
charged
no
fees.
As
the
parent
company
of
a
vast
corporate
empire
it
evidently
looked
to
other
forms
of
economic
reward.
There
can
be
little
doubt
that
its
objects,
in
providing
financial
support
or
management
services,
were
purely
commercial.
The
five
companies
with
which
we
are
here
concerned
were
incorporated
in
the
United
States.
They
were:
CF
Parkside
Inc.
(“Parkside”),
CF
Cleveland
Inc.
(“Cleveland”),
CF
Jocelyn
Inc.
(“Jocelyn”),
CF
Prospect
Inc.
(“Prospect”)
and
CF
Society
Hill
Inc.
(“Society
Hill”).
The
chain
of
ownership
was
as
follows:
The
appellant
owned
CFI
Properties
B.V.,
(“BV”),
a
Netherlands
Antilles
company.
BV
owned
Cadillac
Fairview
U.S.
Inc.
(“CFUS”).
CFUS
owned
Cadillac
Fairview
Residential
Holdings
Inc.
(“Holdings”).
Holdings
owned
Cadillac
Fairview
Residential
Properties
Inc.
(“Properties”).
Properties
owned
Society
Hill,
Prospect,
Jocelyn,
Cleveland
and
Parkside.
Society
Hill
Society
Hill,
a
Delaware
corporation,
formed
a
general
partnership
with
Greenwood
Properties
Inc.
(“Greenwood”)
called
Independence
Place
Associates
(“IPA”)
in
December
1979
to
construct
two
residential
condominium
apartments
for
sale
in
Philadelphia.
IPA
borrowed
$53,000,000
US
from
the
New
York
Agency
of
the
Bank
of
Montreal.
The
appellant,
on
August
5,
1980,
gave
an
unconditional
continuing
guarantee
of
the
loan
both
as
guarantor
and
as
principal
obligor.
The
guarantee
was
to
be
construed
in
accordance
with
the
law
of
Ontario.
A
similar
guarantee
was
given
by
Greenwood,
to
be
construed
under
Pennsylvania
law.
On
March
1,
1983,
Society
Hill,
Greenwood,
Greenwood
Management
Company
and
IPA
entered
into
an
agreement
whereby
Society
Hill
withdrew
as
a
partner
from
IPA.
Among
the
conditions
to
the
withdrawal
of
Society
Hill
from
IPA
were
the
following,
as
contained
in
paragraph
2(2):
On
or
before
June
1,
1983,
Bank
[i.e.
the
Bank
of
Montreal,
New
York
Agency]
shall
have
issued
its
undertaking
to
enter
into
a
modification
agreement
if
and
at
such
time
as
the
closing
takes
place
hereunder,
which
modification
shall
have
the
effect
of
discharging
and
relieving
CF
[i.e.
Society
Hill]
and
The
Cadillac
Fairview
Corporation
Limited
of
all
obligations
and
liabilities
under
the
Construction
Loan,
the
Cadillac
Fairview
Surety
Agreement,
and
the
CF
Bond,
and
all
other
documents
or
instruments
relating
to
the
foregoing.
The
agreement
went
on
to
provide
that
the
undertaking
by
the
Bank
may
be
conditioned
upon
the
delivery
of
other
documents,
essentially
a
restructured
financial
arrangement
between
the
Bank,
Greenwood
and
IPA.
Clause
3A
of
the
agreement
provided
that:
CF
shall
contribute
the
cash
sum
of
Three
Million
Five
Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
($3,500,000),
as
the
same
may
be
adjusted
pursuant
to
paragraph
2A(3),
to
IPA,
which
amount
shall
thereupon
be
applied
in
reduction
of
the
principal
balance
of
the
Construction
Loan.
Paragraph
2A(3)
of
the
agreement
provided
that:
CF’s
[i.e.
Society
Hill’s]
internal
auditors
shall
have
conducted
an
audit
of
the
Partnership’s
books
and
records
to
determine
the
net
sum
owed
by,
or
to,
CF
as
of
February
28,
1983
under
the
terms
of
paragraph
9
of
the
Partnership
Agreement
(the
“Audited
Net
Sum”).
The
full
amount
of
the
Audited
Net
Sum
(if
and
to
the
extent
reconciled,
compromised
and/or
settled,
as
aforesaid)
shall
be
added
to,
or
subtracted
from,
as
applicable,
the
amount
of
the
additional
capital
contributions
required
to
be
made
by
CF
under
the
terms
of
paragraph
3A
hereof.
Section
9
of
the
Partnership
Agreement
dealt
with
loans
by
the
partners
to
the
partnership.
The
adjustment
made
under
paragraph
2A(3)
resulted
in
$3,266,324
being
payable
as
a
contribution
to
the
partnership
under
clause
3A
of
the
Agreement
of
March
1,
1983.
In
the
result
it
was
the
appellant
that
paid
the
amount
and
it
paid
it
directly
to
the
Bank
of
Montreal.
On
July
4,
1983
Mr.
John
MacDonald
wrote
to
the
New
York
Branch
of
the
Bank
of
Montreal
and
stated,
inter
alia:
This
letter
will
confirm
our
present
intention
to
pay
to
you
pursuant
to
our
guarantee
of
the
subject
loan
a
sum
of
$3,266,324.00
in
partial
fulfillment
of
one
of
the
conditions
precedent
to
the
restructuring
of
the
loan.
The
Bank
signified
its
confirmation
that
the
arrangement
was
satisfactory,
the
payment
was
made,
and
on
July
20,
1983
the
Bank
of
Montreal
released
the
appellant
from
its
guarantee.
Although
Mr.
Wood,
manager
of
taxation
of
the
appellant,
testified
that
the
amount
was
paid
because
of
the
obligations
under
the
guarantee,
and
the
letter
of
July
4,
1983
reflects
the
same
view,
the
agreement
of
March
1,
1983
makes
it
clear
that
it
was
paid
on
behalf
of
Society
Hill,
in
fulfilment
of
Society
Hill’s
obligation
under
that
agreement
to
contribute
$3,500,000,
as
adjusted.
I
do
not
think
that
the
fact
that
the
appellant
paid
Society
Hill’s
obligation
under
the
March
1,
1983
agreement
constituted
a
fulfilment
of
the
appellant’s
obligation
under
its
guarantee
to
the
Bank.
Moreover,
there
is
no
evidence
in
the
record
to
show
that
the
appellant
ever
treated
Society
Hill
as
its
debtor
by
subrogation
of
the
amount
so
paid,
or
that
Society
Hill
ever
regarded
itself
as
having
any
liability
to
the
appellant.
Mr.
Wood
testified
that
at
the
end
of
the
1984
taxation
year
the
appellant
did
not
show
on
its
financial
statements
any
amounts
owing
by
any
person
on
account
of
the
amounts
paid
to
the
Bank
of
Montreal.
The
$3,266,324
paid
by
the
appellant
was
a
payment
made
by
it
on
behalf
of
Society
Hill
as
the
price
of
Society
Hill’s
being
allowed
to
extricate
itself
from
the
IPA
partnership.
Nothing
in
the
record
indicates
that
the
appellant
thereby
acquired
a
debt
to
itself
from
Society
Hill
that
was
capable
of
becoming
bad
within
the
meaning
of
section
50
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
of
being
otherwise
disposed
of
by
the
appellant.
Prospect,
Parkside,
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland
Prospect
formed
a
general
partnership
on
January
22,
1980
with
Chateau
Corporation
(“Chateau”)
called
Prospect
House
Associates
(“PHA”)
to
acquire
an
existing
building
in
Virginia
for
conversion
into
condominiums
for
sale.
PHA
borrowed
$26,600,000
U.S.
from
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia,
Atlanta
Agency,
(“BNS”)
and
the
appellant
guaranteed
50%
of
the
loan
to
BNS
and
Bank
of
Nova
International
(Curacao)
N.V.
(“BNSI”).
Parkside,
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland
each
formed
a
separate
partnership
with
Chateau
in
December
1979
to
acquire
existing
buildings
in
the
Washington
D.C.
area
for
conversion
into
condominiums
for
sale.
The
partnerships
were
called
Parkside
Associates
(“PA”),
Jocelyn
House
Associates
(“JHA”)
and
Cleveland
Terrace
Associates
(“CTA”).
Each
of
PA,
JHA
and
CTA
borrowed
from
the
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago
(“FNBC”)
as
follows:
PA
$48,512,600
U.S.,
JHA
$2,387,400
U.S.
and
CTA
$3,200,000
U.S.
A
condition
of
the
loans
was
that
the
appellant,
Gary
H.
Nordheimer,
Scott
A.
Nordheimer
and
Myer
Feldman
would
jointly
and
severally
guarantee
the
principal
and
interest
of
the
loans.
The
Nordheimers
and
Feldman
were
principal
shareholders
of
Chateau.
The
guarantees
were
given.
PA
was
dissolved
on
June
25,
1982
and
Parkside
and
Chateau
became
joint
venturers.
The
ventures
encountered
serious
financial
problems.
The
manner
in
which
the
appellant
withdrew
its
economic
involvement
in
the
projects
was
accomplished
in
a
manner
that
differed
from
the
IPA
arrangement,
in
that
Properties,
the
immediate
parent
of
Prospect,
Parkside,
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland,
sold
its
shares
of
these
companies
to
the
principals
of
Chateau.
In
the
case
of
Prospect,
the
original
agreement
dated
February
1983
was
between
Properties,
as
seller,
and
the
Nordheimers
and
Feldman
as
purchasers.
Clause
1.2
provided
that,
upon
closing,
the
purchasers
should
pay
to
the
lender
(presumably
BNS
or
BNSI)
the
outstanding
balance,
principal
and
interest,
of
the
amounts
owing
under
notes
to
the
lenders
in
the
amounts
of
$26,600,000
less
the
amount
that
the
seller
(Properties)
would
pay
to
the
lender
under
clause
1.4
of
the
Agreement
($2,756,000).
The
agreement
was
amended
to
include
other
parties,
including
the
appellant.
Clauses
8,
9,
10,
11
and
13
of
the
amended
agreement
read
as
follows:
(In
this
agreement
CF
is
Prospect
and
CFCL
is
the
appellant).
8.
The
payment
to
be
made
by
Seller
pursuant
to
Section
1.4
of
the
Prospect
Agreement
shall
be
$3,756,000.00
plus
certain
interest
which
was
accrued
since
the
date
of
the
Prospect
Agreement
rather
than
$2,756,000.00
and
the
payment
to
be
made
by
Purchaser
pursuant
to
Section
1.2
of
the
Prospect
Agreement
shall
take
into
consideration,
and
be
reduced
by
the
payments
to
be
made
by
Seller
pursuant
to
Section
1.4
of
the
Prospect
Agreement
as
modified
by
this
paragraph
8.
9.
At
the
Closing,
CFCL
shall
pay
to
The
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia,
Atlanta
Agency
(“BNSA”)
or
The
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
International
(Curacao)
N.V.
(“BNSI”),
as
the
case
may
be
(BNSA
and
BNSI
are
hereinafter
collectively
referred
to
as
“Lender”),
the
sum
of
THREE
MILLION
SEVEN
HUNDRED
NINETYSEVEN
THOUSAND
ONE
HUNDRED
SEVENTY-
SEVEN
AND
57/100
($3,797,177.57)
DOLLARS,
in
satisfaction
of
CFCL’s
obligation
pursuant
to
that
certain
guaranty,
dated
April
8,
1980,
in
favor
of
Lender
(“Guarantee”),
with
respect
to
payment
of
the
Prospect
Notes,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
Lender.
10.
At
the
Closing,
SEEF
shall
pay
to
Lender
an
amount
equal
to
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
Lender
under
the
Prospect
Notes
and
any
amounts
owed
by
reason
of
legal
fees
and
disbursements
incurred
by
Lender
in
connection
with
the
Prospect
Notes,
as
of
the
date
thereof,
after
first
deducting
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
9
above,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
lender.
11.
Immediately
following
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
10
above,
CFCL
hereby
waives
any
claims,
by
way
of
subrogation
or
otherwise,
which
it
may
have
against
CF
for
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
under
the
Guarantee
and
hereby
releases
CF
from
any
liability
in
connection
therewith.
12.
Simultaneously
with
the
waiver
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
11
above,
CF
hereby
waives
any
claim
it
may
have
against
CFCL
under
the
Guarantee
and
hereby
releases
CFCL
from
any
liability
in
connection
with
any
such
claim.
In
the
end,
only
the
appellant
paid
$3,797,177.57
to
the
Bank,
to
be
applied
against
the
loan.
Properties
was
also
to
pay
$3,756,000
to
the
Bank,
but
evidently
it
did
not
do
so.
With
respect
to
the
loan
to
PA,
JHA,
and
CTA,
a
default
would
occur
under
the
loan
if
100%
of
the
issued
and
outstanding
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
Parkside,
Jocelyn,
or
Cleveland
ceased
to
be
owned
by
the
appellant,
or
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
the
appellant.
A
letter
dated
March
17,
1983
from
the
appellant
to
The
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago,
and
confirmed
by
the
Bank,
indicated
the
position
of
the
Bank
concerning
the
proposed
share
sale:
You
have
been
advised
previously
that
Cadillac
Fairview
Residential
Properties,
Inc.,
an
indirect
wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
The
Cadillac
Fairview
Corporation
Limited,
intends
to
sell
the
shares
of
capital
stock
of
CF
Parkside
Inc.,
CF
Jocelyn
Inc.,
and
CF
Cleveland
Inc.,
to
a
certain
purchaser.
Under
certain
Deeds
of
Trust
dated
July
31,
1980,
The
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago
has
the
right
to
approve
the
sale
of
the
shares
of
capital
stock
of
CF
Parkside
Inc.,
CF
Jocelyn
Inc.,
and
CF
Cleveland
Inc.,
or
may
request
payment
of
any
outstanding
indebtedness.
It
is
our
understanding
that
the
Bank
does
not
approve
of
the
sale
of
the
capital
stock
of
these
companies,
and,
in
the
event
the
sale
should
proceed
and
close,
the
Bank
requests
the
repayment
in
full
of
the
outstanding
loans
to
which
these
three
companies
are
a
party
as
borrower.
Your
acknowledgement
and
confirmation
of
these
facts
is
requested
by
signing
and
returning
the
duplicate
of
this
letter.
The
Bank
did
not
consent
to
the
sale
of
the
shares
and
as
a
result
the
parties
negotiated
among
themselves
to
effect
the
withdrawal
of
the
economic
interest
of
the
appellant’s
corporate
organization
in
the
ventures.
This
included
dealing
with
the
Bank
loans.
In
the
original
Stock
Purchase
Agreement
for
the
Parkside
shares
between
Properties
and
the
principals
of
Chateau,
all
the
shares
of
Parkside
were
to
be
sold
to
the
principals
of
Chateau
for
$10,500,000.
Under
the
original
agreement,
Properties
was
to
pay
to
PA’s
lenders
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
the
lender
pursuant
to
the
loan
which
the
appellant
had
guaranteed.
This
agreement
was
later
amended
in
March
1983,
under
which
Chateau
was
to
pay
to
the
seller
$1,000
for
the
shares,
and
it
was
to
pay
to
the
lender
$10,499,000
as
partial
satisfaction
of
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
the
lender.
In
addition,
the
appellant
was
to
pay
to
the
lender
an
amount
equal
to
the
outstanding
principal
balance
in
satisfaction
of
the
loan.
In
the
end,
the
appellant
paid
$4,994,500.86
to
the
Bank.
In
the
original
Stock
Purchase
Agreement
for
the
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland
shares
between
Residential
and
the
principals
of
Chateau,
all
the
shares
of
Cleveland
and
Jocelyn
(along
with
other
subsidiaries
of
the
appellant
which
are
not
at
issue)
were
sold
to
the
principals
of
Chateau
for
$1.00.
Under
this
original
agreement,
Properties
was
to
pay
to
The
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago
$1,700,000
to
be
applied
to
the
loan
which
the
appellant
had
guaranteed.
The
purchaser
was
responsible
for
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
on
this
loan.
This
agreement
was
later
amended
in
March
1983,
under
which
the
purchase
price
was
$1,000,
and
the
appellant
was
to
pay
to
the
lender
$1,701,000
as
partial
satisfaction
of
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
the
lender
under
the
loan
guaranteed
by
the
appellant.
In
addition,
the
purchasers
were
to
pay
to
the
lender
an
amount
equal
to
the
outstanding
principal
balance
in
satisfaction
of
the
loan.
In
the
end,
the
appellant
paid
$1,194,400
to
the
Bank
in
respect
of
the
CTA
loan,
and
$506,600
in
respect
of
the
J
A
loan.
Clauses
4,
5,
6,
7,
and
8
of
the
amending
agreement
relating
to
the
sale
of
the
Prospect
shares,
dated
April
26,
1983
read
as
follows:
(CF
refers
to
Parkside
and
CFCL
refers
to
the
appellant).
5.
At
the
Closing,
Chateau
shall
pay
to
The
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago
(“Lender”),
the
sum
of
TEN
MILLION
FOUR
HUNDRED
NINETY-NINE
THOUSAND
and
00/100
($10,499,000.00)
DOLLARS,
as
partial
satisfaction
of
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
Lender
pursuant
to
the
Notes,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
Lender.
6.
At
the
Closing,
CFCL
shall
pay
to
Lender
an
amount
equal
to
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
Lender
under
the
Notes,
as
of
the
date
thereof,
after
first
deducting
the
payment
made
by
Chateau
pursuant
to
Paragraph
5
above,
in
satisfaction
of
CFCL’s
obligations
pursuant
to
that
certain
guaranty,
dated
July
31,
1980,
in
favor
of
Lender
(“Guaranty”),
with
respect
to
payment
of
the
Notes,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
Lender.
7.
Immediately
following
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
6
above,
CFCL
hereby
waives
any
claims,
by
way
of
subrogation,
or
otherwise,
which
it
may
have
against
CF
for
the
payment
made
CFCL
under
the
Guaranty
and
hereby
releases
CF
from
any
liability
in
connection
therewith.
8.
Simultaneously
with
the
waiver
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
7
above,
CF
hereby
waives
any
claim
it
may
have
against
CFCL
under
the
Guaranty
and
hereby
releases
CFCL
from
any
liability
in
connection
with
any
such
claim.
Similarly,
in
the
amending
agreement
dated
as
of
March
23,
1983
relating
to
the
sale
of
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland
shares
(described
as
the
“DC
Stock
Purchase
Agreement”
because
it
dealt
with
the
sale
by
Properties
of
the
shares
of
a
number
of
other
subsidiaries
besides
those
of
Jocelyn
and
Cleveland).
Clauses
4,
5,
6,
7
and
8
read
as
follows:
4.
The
Purchase
Price
for
the
Shares
shall
be
ONE
THOUSAND
and
00/100
($1,000.00)
DOLLARS,
subject
to
adjustment
as
provided
in
the
D.C.
Agreement,
payable
at
the
Closing
by
good
certified
or
official
bank
check
drawn
on
a
bank
or
trust
company
which
is
a
member
of
the
New
York
Clearing
House
Association,
to
the
direct
order
of
CFRP.
5.
At
the
Closing,
CFCL
shall
pay
to
The
First
National
Bank
of
Chicago
(“Lender”),
the
sum
of
ONE
MILLION
SEVEN
HUNDRED
ONE
THOUSAND
and
00/100
($1,701,000.00)
DOLLARS,
in
satisfaction
of
CFCL’s
obligations
pursuant
to
that
certain
guaranty,
dated
July
31,
1980,
in
favor
of
Lender
(“Guaranty”),
with
respect
to
the
FNBC
Notes,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
Lender.
6.
At
the
Closing,
Chateau
shall
pay
to
Lender
an
amount
equal
to
the
outstanding
principal
balance
and
accrued
interest
owed
to
Lender
under
the
FNBC
Notes,
as
of
the
date
thereof,
after
first
deducting
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
5
above,
by
wire
transfer
of
immediately
available
federal
funds
to
an
account
or
accounts
designated
by
Lender.
7.
Immediately
following
the
payment
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
5
above,
CFCL
hereby
waives
any
claims,
by
way
of
subrogation,
or
otherwise,
which
it
may
have
against
CF
for
the
payment
made
CFCL
under
the
Guaranty
and
hereby
releases
CF
from
any
liability
in
connection
therewith.
8.
Simultaneously
with
the
waiver
made
by
CFCL
pursuant
to
Paragraph
7
above,
CF
hereby
waives
any
claim
it
may
have
against
CFCL
under
the
Guaranty
and
hereby
releases
CFCL
from
any
liability
in
connection
with
any
such
claim.
CF
refers
collectively
to
Jocelyn,
Cleveland
and
the
other
companies
whose
shares
were
being
sold.
If
we
look
broadly
at
the
appellant’s
venture
into
real
estate
operations
in
the
United
States
it
will
be
evident
that,
as
an
economic
matter,
it
suffered
substantial
reverses
as
the
ultimate
parent
of
a
number
of
subsidiaries
whose
real
estate
ventures
were
unsuccessful.
It
paid
the
amounts
of
money
that
are
in
issue
here
to
extricate
the
subsidiaries
within
its
corporate
empire
from
those
ventures.
It
is
however
not
sufficient
to
say
that
the
capital
amounts
expended
were
laid
out
as
part
of
its
overall
commercial
operation
and
were
therefore
laid
out
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business.
That
is
not
the
relevant
question
here.
The
question
is
whether
the
appellant
disposed
of
property
or
was
deemed
to
have
disposed
of
property
in
circumstances
giving
rise
to
a
capital
loss.
I
do
not
think
that
it
became
the
owner
of
a
debt
from
Jocelyn,
Cleveland,
Parkside
or
Prospect.
As
part
of
the
agreement
under
which
it
participated
in
the
sale
by
Properties
of
the
shares
of
these
companies
to
Chateau
it
had
to
pay
amounts
that
could
be
related
to
the
guarantees.
The
payments
were
however
attributable
to
the
much
more
complex
arrangements
under
which
the
appellant
assisted
its
subsidiary
Properties
to
extricate
itself
from
the
various
real
estate
ventures
in
which
its
subsidiaries
had
become
involved.
The
payment
of
the
guaranteed
amounts
did
not
result
from
any
default
by
the
partnerships.
It
was
related
to
a
condition
in
the
agreement
with
the
Bank
that
an
event
of
default
would
be
deemed
to
occur
if
the
shares
of
the
subsidiaries
were
sold
without
the
Bank’s
consent
but
this
fact
was
incidental
to
the
entire
transaction.
The
triggering
of
the
deemed
default,
the
payment
of
the
negotiated
amounts
and
the
simultaneous
waiver
of
any
rights
of
subrogation
(if
indeed
any
could
otherwise
have
come
into
existence
considering
that
the
event
of
default
was
occasioned
by
the
act
of
Properties,
a
sub-
sidiary
of
the
guarantor,
a
transaction
in
which
the
appellant
itself
was
intimately
involved)
were
part
of
an
interrelated
series
of
transactions
which
achieved
the
overall
economic
goal
of
extricating
the
Cadillac
Fairview
organization
from
the
U.S.
ventures.
They
did
not
result
in
the
appellant’s
acquiring
by
way
of
subrogation
any
debt
that
could
be
disposed
of
under
section
50
or
otherwise.
The
waiver
of
any
rights
of
subrogation
by
the
appellant
as
an
integral
part
of
the
overall
transaction
prevented
such
a
debt
from
coming
into
existence.
I
do
not
accept
the
appellant’s
argument
that
it
acquired
by
subrogation
debts
of
the
subsidiaries
when
it
paid
the
agreed
amounts
under
the
amended
share
purchase
agreements,
and
that
it
then
disposed
of
those
debts
by
reason
of
its
waiver.
The
words
“hereby
waives
any
claims,
by
way
of
subrogation,
or
otherwise,
which
it
may
have
against
CF”
constituted
an
anticipatory
waiver
that
prevented,
and
was
intended
to
prevent,
any
right
of
subrogation
from
coming
into
existence.
It
is
clear
that
the
entire
transaction
was
structured
to
ensure
that
the
appellant,
by
reason
of
the
payment,
would
acquire
no
enforceable
subrogated
rights
against
any
of
the
subsidiaries
whose
shares
were
being
sold.
It
is
inaccurate
and
unduly
simplistic
to
see
this
as
a
garden-
variety
payment
by
a
guarantor
of
a
principal
debtor’s
obligation,
followed
by
a
subsequent
waiver,
for
no
consideration,
of
the
subrogated
debt.
The
waiver
was
an
essential
ingredient
in
the
entire
transaction,
and
even
if
I
accepted
the
appellant’s
analysis
(which
I
do
not)
that
it
acquired
a
debt
which
it
waived,
the
consideration
for
that
waiver
cannot,
either
as
a
matter
of
law
or
as
a
matter
of
commercial
common
sense,
be
regarded
as
nil.
The
price
paid
for
the
appellant’s
role
in
the
matter,
including
the
payment
to
the
bank
and
the
waiver,
was
Chateau’s
participation
in
enabling
the
Cadillac
Fairview
organization
to
disengage
itself
from
the
fiasco.
In
light
of
this
conclusion,
I
need
not
deal
at
length
with
Ms.
Van
Der
Hout’s
argument
that
the
guarantees
were
not
given
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income.
If
the
guarantees
were
not
given
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property
of
the
appellant,
I
have
difficulty
in
conceiving
of
any
other
basis
on
which
they
could
have
been
given.
The
respondent’s
argument
seems
to
be
that
if
the
appellant
had
charged
a
fee
for
giving
the
guarantees
it
would
have
met
the
“for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income”
test
but
that
because
it
charged
no
fee
it
had
no
such
purpose.
The
ultimate
purpose
of
any
parent
company
of
a
corporate
organization
is
to
earn
income
from
its
subsidiaries,
generally
in
the
form
of
dividends.
To
have
the
treatment
of
capital
losses
that
it
sustains
in
respect
of
shares
or
debts
of
its
subsidiaries
depend
upon
whether
interest
or
guarantee
fees
are
charged
is,
in
today’s
world
of
business,
simply
not
an
acceptable
criterion
to
apply.
That
theory
has
been
laid
to
rest
in
such
cases
as
Brown
v.
R.,
[1996]
1
C.T.C.
276,
96
D.T.C.
6091
(F.C.T.D.),
Byram
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Byram
v.
Canada),
[1995]
1
C.T.C.
66,
95
D.T.C.
5069,
Business
Art
Inc.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
2001,
86
D.T.C.
1842
and
National
Developments
Ltd.
v.
R.
(sub
nom..
National
Developments
Ltd.
v.
Canada),
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
3027,
94
D.T.C.
1061.
The
respondent
relied
heavily
on
Canada
Safeway
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1957]
S.C.R.
717,
[1957]
C.T.C.
335,
57
D.T.C.
1239.
For
the
reasons
given
in
Mark
Resources
Inc.
v.
R.
(sub
nom.
Mark
Resources
Inc.
v.
Canada),
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
2259,
93
D.T.C.
1004,
at
page
2268
(D.T.C.
1011)
the
Canada
Safeway
case
has
no
application
in
the
circumstances
involved
here.
It
is
unnecessary
for
me
to
deal
with
the
other
arguments
advanced
by
the
respondent.
I
have
concluded
that
the
payments
made
by
the
appellant
under
the
restructuring
arrangements
did
not
give
rise
to
the
acquisition
and
disposition
of
debts
resulting
in
the
creation
of
a
capital
loss.
Density
rights
issue
In
the
appellant’s
1984
taxation
year
it
engaged
in
a
number
of
transactions
in
anticipation
of
the
development
of
Phase
II
of
the
Eaton
Centre.
These
transactions
involved
land
exchanges
with
the
City
of
Toronto
and
the
Church
of
the
Holy
Trinity,
conveyances
to
the
City
of
Toronto
of
four
land
sites
and
a
purchase
from
the
Holy
Trinity
Church
of
209,000
square
feet
of
commercial
development
rights
(density
rights)
which
were
transferred
to
the
land
upon
which
was
to
be
situated
the
proposed
Phase
II
of
the
Eaton
Centre.
These
transactions
cost
the
appellant
$11,227,444.
Their
result
was
that
the
appellant
obtained
a
zoning
change
to
a
purely
commercial
zoning
and
eliminated
a
requirement
that
the
development
on
the
site
include
residential
construction
and
enhanced
the
commercial
density
permitted
on
the
site
by
“transferring”
density
from
four
sites
that
were
conveyed
to
the
City
of
Toronto
and
from
the
site
of
Phase
I
of
the
Eaton
Centre
and
by
“purchasing”
rights
to
density
from
the
Holy
Trinity
Church.
The
appellant
contends
that
these
costs
form
part
of
the
capital
cost
of
the
buildings
that
it
proposed
to
erect
on
the
land
and
that
they
therefore
fall
within
Class
3
of
Schedule
II
to
the
Income
Tax
Regulations
as
“a
building
or
other
structure.”
The
respondent
contends
that
these
costs
form
part
of
the
land.
The
appellant
contends
in
the
alternative
that
the
cost
is
an
“eligible
capital
expenditure”
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
14(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as:
any
outlay
or
expense
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer...
on
account
of
capital
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
business,
other
than
any
such
outlay
or
expense
(c)
that
is
the
cost
of,
or
any
part
of
the
cost
of,
(i)
tangible
property
of
the
taxpayer.
To
begin
with,
we
should
be
clear
on
just
what
“density
rights”
are
and
what
the
appellant
was
getting
for
its
$11,227,444.
We
may
start
from
the
proposition
that
in
the
absence
of
legislative
or
other
legal
restrictions
a
landowner
is
free
do
to
what
it
wants
on
its
land.
It
can
farm
it,
build
highrise
apartments
or
office
buildings,
or
build
the
Tower
of
Babel.
Its
rights
inhere
in
the
ownership
of
the
land.
The
exercise
of
those
rights
can,
however,
be
restricted,
regulated
or
prohibited
by
legislation.
In
this
case
the
authority
having
that
jurisdiction
is
the
province
and
it
delegates
the
power
to
the
municipal
authorities.
The
power
of
municipal
zoning
is
conferred
upon
the
municipality
by
the
Planning
Act.
Section
34
of
the
Planning
Act
of
Ontario
R.S.O.
1990,
c.
P-13
reads
in
part
as
follows:
(1)
Zoning
by-laws
may
be
passed
by
the
councils
of
local
municipalities:
1.
For
prohibiting
the
use
of
land,
for
or
except
for
such
purposes
as
may
be
set
out
in
the
by-law
within
the
municipality
or
within
any
defined
area
or
areas
or
abutting
on
any
defined
highway
or
part
of
a
highway.
2.
For
prohibiting
the
erecting,
locating
or
using
of
buildings
or
structures
for
or
except
for
such
purposes
as
may
be
set
out
in
the
by-law
within
the
municipality
or
within
any
defined
area
or
areas
or
upon
land
abutting
on
any
defined
highway
or
part
of
a
highway.
3.
For
prohibiting
the
erection
of
any
class
or
classes
of
buildings
or
structures
on
land
that
is
subject
to
flooding
or
on
land
with
steep
slopes,
or
that
is
rocky,
low-lying,
marshy
or
unstable.
4.
For
regulating
the
type
of
construction
and
the
height,
bulk,
location,
size,
floor
area,
spacing,
character
and
use
of
buildings
or
structures
to
be
erected
or
located
within
the
municipality
or
within
any
defined
area
or
areas
or
upon
land
abutting
on
any
defined
highway
or
part
of
a
highway,
and
the
minimum
frontage
and
depth
of
the
parcel
of
land
and
the
proportion
of
the
area
thereof
that
any
building
or
structure
may
occupy.
(3)
The
authority
to
regulate
provided
in
paragraph
4
of
subsection
(1)
includes
and,
despite
the
decision
of
any
court,
shall
be
deemed
always
to
have
included
the
authority
to
regulate
the
minimum
area
of
the
parcel
of
land
mentioned
therein
and
to
regulate
the
density
of
development
in
the
municipality
or
in
the
area
or
areas
defined
in
the
by-law.
The
origin
of
that
section
is
S.O.
1983,
c.
1.
Presumably
the
zoning
by-laws
of
Toronto
were
enacted
by
it
under
the
authority
of
a
predecessor
to
that
section,
possibly
section
39
of
the
Planning
Act,
R.S.O.
1980,
c.
379
which
is
substantially
the
same
as
that
contained
in
R.S.O.
1990.
It
is
important
to
recognize
that
zoning
does
not
constitute
a
conferral
of
a
right
but
rather
a
restriction
of
the
otherwise
unlimited
right
of
a
landowner
to
do
what
it
wishes
with
its
land.
It
is
less
accurate
to
describe
a
change
in
zoning
to
allow
a
further
use
of
land
as
the
conferral
of
a
right
than
to
describe
it
as
a
lifting
or
relaxation
of
a
restriction
on
the
otherwise
unrestricted
use
of
the
property.
It
follows
that
the
right
to
use
property,
whether
restricted
by
zoning
by-laws
or
not,
is
a
right
that
inheres
in
the
ownership
of
the
property.
It
is
part
of
the
bundle
of
rights
that
a
landowner
has
by
reason
of
ownership
of
property.
The
cost
of
a
modification
of
the
restrictions
of
the
rights
that
a
landowner
has
with
respect
to
the
use
of
land
is
a
part
of
the
cost
of
the
land.
The
cost
of
lifting
restrictions
on
the
exercise
of
those
rights
clearly
relates
to
the
cost
of
the
bundle
of
rights
that
ownership
entails.
Density
rights
have
to
do
with
what
the
owner
can
do
with
the
land.
If
a
landowner
is
successful
in
improving
the
zoning
of
a
parcel
of
land,
and
then
sells
it,
it
is
inconceivable
that
the
revenue
authorities
could
demur
at
the
inclusion
of
the
cost
of
that
rezoning
in
the
cost
of
the
land
sold.
The
position
was
put
with
clarity
by
the
New
York
Court
of
Appeals
in
a
decision
MacMillan,
Inc.
v.
CF
Lex
Associates
(sub
nom.
MacMillan
v.
Cadillac
Fairview
Corporation)
(1982),
Ct.
App.,
452
N.Y.S.
2d
377.
It
said
at
page
380:
Moreover,
air
rights,
at
the
heart
of
the
concept
of
zoning
lot
merger,
have
historically
been
conceived
as
one
of
the
bundle
of
rights
associated
with
ownership
of
the
land
rather
than
with
ownership
of
the
structures
erected
on
the
land.
Air
rights
are
incident
to
the
ownership
of
the
surface
property
-
the
right
of
one
who
owns
land
to
utilize
the
space
above
it.
This
right
has
been
recognized
as
an
inherent
attribute
of
the
ownership
of
land
since
the
earliest
times
as
reflected
in
the
maxim,
“[c]ujus
est
solum,
ejus
est
usque
ad
coelum
et
ad
inferos”
[“to
whomsoever
the
soil
belongs,
he
owns
also
to
the
sky
and
to
the
depths”]
(Butler
v.
Frontier
Tel.
Co.,
186
N.Y.
486,
491,
79
N.E.
716;
2
Blackstone’s
Comm.,
page
18;
see
Ball,
Vertical
Extent
of
Ownership
in
Land,
76
U.
of
Pa.L.Rev.
631
in
which
the
maxim
is
attributed
to
the
early
14th
century
scholar
Cino
da
Pistoia).
The
decision
is
of
course
not
binding,
but
it
is
persuasive.
The
cost
of
modifying
rights
relating
to
what
one
can
do
with
land
are
in
my
view
a
cost
attributable
to
the
land.
They
inhere
in
the
land,
whether
or
not
a
structure
is
erected
on
the
land.
In
this
case
the
proposed
Phase
II
has
not
been
erected.
It
requires
something
of
a
leap
of
faith
to
claim
capital
cost
allowance
under
Class
3
on
a
building
that
does
not
exist
and
may
never
exist.
The
land
however
does
exist,
along
with
all
of
the
rights
that
inhere
in
it.
The
rights
do
not
exist
independently
of
the
ownership
of
the
land.
If
the
ownership
of
the
land
is
transferred,
the
rights
follow
it.
Although
one
speaks
colloquially
of
“acquiring”
density
rights
from
an
adjoining
landowner,
this
process
involves
persuading
that
landowner
to
accept
on
its
land
a
“lower”
zoning
and,
armed
with
that
concession,
persuading
the
municipality
to
give
to
that
adjoining
land
a
lower
zoning
and
a
correspondingly
higher
zoning
to
the
neighbouring
land.
It
is
not
a
simple
transfer
of
rights
between
owners.
Zoning
is
not
a
commodity
that
can
be
bought
and
sold
on
the
open
market.
It
is
something
that
the
municipality
confers
on,
or
takes
away
from,
the
land
itself.
Accordingly
it
is
not
necessary
for
me
to
consider
the
alternative
argument
that
the
costs
are
eligible
capital
expenditures.
Since
I
have
concluded
that
the
cost
of
obtaining
zoning
that
permitted
a
higher
density
on
the
land
is
a
cost
of
land,
it
follows
that
it
cannot,
by
reason
of
paragraph
14(5)(c)(i),
be
an
eligible
capital
expenditure.
Appeal
dismissed.