Date: 19980407
Docket: 96-1136-IT-G
BETWEEN:
EDWARD MULLIN,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
McArthur, J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal is from assessments for the Appellant’s
1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years.
[2] The Appellant was assessed $14,000 in 1991, $23,000 in
1992 and $16,000 in 1993 being the profit from the sale of
houses.
[3] The issue is whether the building and selling of homes by
the Appellant is an adventure in the nature of trade and, if so,
what was his profit.
[4] The question can only be answered after an examination of
the facts and looking at all of the circumstances.
[5] The Appellant and his wife Lisa gave evidence together
with Mr. Blanchard, who testified as an expert witness. The
Appellant has worked over ten years with a family land
development corporation as a heavy equipment operator. Lisa is a
hair stylist and operates her own business.
[6] The Appellant built five houses between 1990 and 1994.
Each of the three houses at issue was owned by him for less than
a year.
[7] House #1
In the fall of 1990, the Appellant, with assistance,
constructed a single family home on lot 89-26 in
Hampton, New Brunswick (house #1) in which the
Appellant and his wife lived approximately six months before
selling it in June 1991 at a profit of $14,000. This was
Lisa Mullin’s first house and she was delighted with
every aspect of it but its location. It was located some
30 kilometres from the Appellant’s new place of
employment in Fairvale, and given his failing eyesight and other
factors, they decided to move to a location closer to his
employment. His place of employment changed locations frequently.
In addition to operating earth moving equipment, wherever he was
needed, he was a snowplow operator.
[8] House #2
In July 1991, the Appellant purchased lot 18-D
(house #2) in Fairvale/Quispamsis where he built a home in
which he and his wife lived until it was sold for $115,000 at a
profit of $23,000 in October 1992. He sold this house
because his work moved back to Hampton where he purchased
lot 89-29.
[9] House #3
He purchased lot 89-29 (house #3) in November 1992.
This lot contained a partially completed house and was located
near to and on the same street as house #1. Upon his
completion of this house he and his wife moved in until he
constructed a house on lot 89-30 (house #4) where he
constructed a fourth residential house. Lisa Mullin, in
particular, was not happy with the size and floor plan of
house #3 and complained about its inadequacies. The
Appellant sold house #3 in May 1993 to construct a home
more suitable to their needs.
[10] Houses #4 and #5 have not been assessed.
[11] House #4
In April 1993, he purchased lot 89-30 and constructed a
house into which he and his family moved. He sold house #4 in
March 1994 because he and his wife found it unsuitable.
[12] House #5
He purchased lot 87-1 in March 1994 whereupon he
constructed a residential home in which he and his family
presently reside.
[13] The Appellant’s employment with his father’s
company was mainly seasonal. The Respondent’s Counsel
demonstrated a pattern during the relevant period that when he
was laid off he went on unemployment insurance (u.i.), built a
house, went back on payroll, was laid off, went back on u.i.,
built a house, went off u.i. and sold the house. This pattern was
repeated.
[14] No records in terms of invoices and cancelled cheques
exist because they were not kept or were destroyed in a fire.
Position of the Appellant
[15] The Appellant’s position is that he did not have a
primary or secondary intention to embark on an adventure in the
nature of trade. All three homes in question were intended to be
the Appellant’s principal residence and therefore were
exempt from tax upon disposition.
[16] Counsel for the Appellant referred the Court to several
cases, including:
(a) The tests set out in M.N.R. v. Taylor, 56
DTC 1125 (Ex. Ct.)
(b) The six criteria identified in Happy Valley Farms
Ltd. v. The Queen, 86 DTC 6421
(F.C.T.D.)
[17] Counsel argued that there are several factors which
indicate that the Appellant’s intention when constructing
and selling homes was not to embark on an adventure in the nature
of trade. The Appellant’s motives for the sales included
his health problems associated with diabetes and the long
distance to his places of work.
[18] In the alternative, if it is determined that the
Appellant was involved in an adventure in the nature of trade,
Counsel urged the Court to consider the estimated costs of
construction (as calculated by the expert witness, Mr. Blanchard)
and conclude that the sales of the three houses yielded profits
in the amounts of approximately $4,560, $1,000 and $5,560.
Position of the Respondent
[19] There are two issues in this appeal: whether the building
and selling of homes was an adventure in the nature of trade and
if it was, what amount of profit was realized from these
sales.
[20] Counsel for the Respondent referred to several decisions,
including:
(a) Happy Valley Farms Ltd. v. The Queen,
86 DTC 6421 at page 6423 (F.C.T.D.), which lists
the criteria used to determine whether a profit is of an income
or capital nature:
"1. The nature of the property sold. [...]
2. The length of period of ownership. [...]
3. The frequency or number of other similar transactions by
the taxpayer. [...]
4. Work expended on or in connection with the property
realized. [...]
5. The circumstances that were responsible for the sale of the
property. [...]
6. Motive."
(b) Litvinchuk v. The Queen,
96 DTC 1315 at page 1319 (T.C.C.), which stands
for the following principle:
Inferences flowing from the circumstances, and the conduct and
actions of a taxpayer, are better indications of intention than
assertions and direct evidence of witnesses. And at page
1321:
"To repeat J. Bowman's statement "It really
boils down, I suppose, to a matter of common sense and a matter
of looking at all the circumstances...".
(c) Pierce Investment Corp. v. M.N.R., 74 DTC
6608 at page 6612 (T.A.B.):
"I am also of the view, as has been expressed in other
cases, that while the evidence of the witnesses is helpful in
endeavouring to determine their intentions, their actual conduct
and the steps they took to carry out these intentions gives a
much better indication of what they actually were. Without
intending to cast any aspersions on the credibility of the
witnesses in the present case it is nevertheless evident that in
any case where a distinction must be made between a transaction
which constitutes an adventure in the nature of trade and one
which leads to a capital gain, one must expect the witnesses to
insist that their intentions were solely to make an investment
and that the idea of reselling the property at a profit had never
occurred to them even as a secondary intention at the time of
making the original investment, but was merely forced on them
subsequently by some event beyond their control. If they were not
in a position to testify to this effect they would have little or
no ground for appealing against the assessment.
(d) M.N.R. v. Taylor, 56 DTC 1125 at
page 1137 (Ex. Ct.):
"But "trade" is not the same thing as "an
adventure in the nature of trade" and a transaction might
well be the latter without being the former or constituting its
maker a "trader". And whatever merit the singleness or
isolation of a transaction may have in determining whether it was
a trading or business transaction it has no place at all in
determining whether it was an adventure in the nature of trade.
The very word "adventure" implies a single or isolated
transaction and it is erroneous to set up its singleness or
isolation as an indication that it was not an adventure in the
nature of trade. Lord Simonds put the matter explicitly in
Edwards v. Bairstow (supra) when he said, at
page 54:
The determination that a transaction was not an adventure in
the nature of trade because it was an isolated transaction was
clearly wrong in law.
In my opinion, it may now be taken as established that the
fact that a person has entered into only one transaction of the
kind under consideration has no bearing on the question whether
it was an adventure in the nature of trade. It is the nature of
the transaction, not its singleness or isolation, that is to be
determined."
[21] With respect to the criteria listed in Happy Valley
(supra), Counsel argued that the circumstances indicate that
the Appellant was involved in an adventure in the nature of
trade. The Appellant built five houses between 1990 and 1994. In
addition, each of the three houses at issue in this appeal was
owned for less than a year.
[22] In reference to the fifth element in Happy Valley
(supra), regardless of the Appellant’s contentions, at
no time was there a great distance between the various work
locations and his home. During the relevant period of this
appeal, it was a 15 to 20 minute drive between Hampton and
Fairvale/Quispamsis. Counsel also pointed out that it is
suspicious that the construction of each house commenced at a
time when the Appellant was on, or had just filed for, a claim
for unemployment insurance benefits. Furthermore, with respect to
the diabetes issue which was raised by the Appellant at trial,
Counsel for the Respondent argued that if it was such an
important factor in his decision to sell each home, it would have
been mentioned in the Notice of Appeal.
[23] The circumstances also indicate the Appellant’s
motive in this matter. He would work for his father’s
company, go on unemployment insurance, buy a lot, build a house
while receiving unemployment insurance benefits, sell the house,
go back to work for his father and repeat the pattern.
[24] With respect to the cost of construction issue, Counsel
for the Respondent argued that the Appellant did not provide the
necessary documentation to overcome the Minister of National
Revenue’s (the "Minister") assumptions of fact
and therefore the amounts assessed as profit should stand.
Analysis
[25] House #1 was built when Edward and Lisa were
recently married. Mr. and Mrs. Mullin liked everything about
the house but agreed to sell for several reasons, the most
dominant one being that the Appellant’s place of employment
changed from Hampton to Fairvale/Quispamsis about
30 kilometers away. Mrs. Mullin did not want her
husband driving that distance to and from work because his
eyesight was deteriorating from a diabetic condition, along with
other factors. While the Respondent’s Counsel in
cross-examination left some doubt as to the
Appellant’s motivation for selling house #1, I am
prepared to accept the Appellant’s reasoning that it should
not form part of the three homes under appeal. It was their first
home as newlyweds. It sold privately. A mortgage prepayment had
to be paid. It had been built with their specific needs in mind.
Mrs. Mullin was concerned with the safety of her husband
while driving to and from work. While the Appellant’s
deteriorating eyesight was not pleaded nor mentioned in
discovery, the explanation of Mrs. Mullin to the effect
that, the Appellant actively avoids mentioning his health
problems, is accepted.
[26] With respect to houses #2 and 3, I accept the
position of the Respondent. As stated by Bowman, J.T.C.C. in
F. Dicecca v. Canada, [1994] 1 C.T.C. 2087
at 2088:
"Cases in this area (trading) are legion, and very little
purpose would be served by my referring to the numerous tests
that have been enunciated by the courts over the years. It really
boils down, I suppose, to a matter of common sense and a matter
of looking at all of the circumstances ..."
[27] Looking at all of the circumstances and attempting to
apply common sense, I find the following.
[28] The Appellant built five houses between 1990 and 1994.
These were similar transactions. Each property, with the
exception of house #5 was built in subdivisions owned by the
Appellant’s father’s company.
[29] The Appellant knew the market in the areas where he
built. He had construction skills and valuable contacts to assist
him in the construction. He and his wife purchased vacant lots
but house #3, purchased from his father’s company,
required considerable work to complete.
[30] He constructed the houses, primarily during the winter
months while laid off from his employer. The stated circumstances
that were responsible for the sales are shallow. The inferences
from all the circumstances are better indications of intention
than the assertions and direct evidence of the Appellant and his
wife (Pierce Investment Corp. (supra)).
[31] The Appellant did the landscaping and put in new
appliances in the homes because it made them easier to sell. The
Appellant installed the kitchen cabinets, the drywall, framing
(with assistance) and the finishing work. Upon the sale of
house #3 they moved three doors down the street. He
purchased materials cheaper through his father’s company,
again approaching the construction as a business. He obviously
had the skills to construct single family homes. The Appellant
had the burden of proving the Minister’s conclusion that
there was an adventure in the nature of trade was incorrect. He
has failed to do so. The inferences flowing from the
circumstances are overwhelmingly in favour of the
Respondent’s position for houses #2 and #3.
[32] It does not serve a useful purpose to review in any
detail the evidence with respect to the cost of construction.
Mr. Blanchard is no doubt qualified to give expert evidence
with respect to the cost of construction of single family homes
in the St. John, New Brunswick area. He is a close
friend of the Appellant and helped in the construction, of at
least one home, apparently without charge. I agree with the
Respondent’s Counsel that he was biased in his evidence.
Even in accepting his evidence, I am not persuaded that the
Respondent’s calculations are incorrect. No documents were
submitted to substantiate the Appellant’s position. The
burden was on the Appellant to demonstrate that the
Minister’s assessments were incorrect and he has not done
so.
[33] Finally, the Appellant raised in the Notice of Appeal
that should the Court find there was an adventure in the nature
of trade, half of any profit on the sale of the homes should be
attributed to Mrs. Mullin’s income. The
Appellant’s Counsel did not refer to this in his closing
argument giving the inference that it was not a serious
contention. There is insufficient evidence to conclude that
Mrs. Mullin was a business partner. In answer to the
Appellant's Counsel's question about her involvement, she
stated that she “picked out things and helped make
decisions”. This does not give a basis to divide the
income.
[34] In conclusion, the appeal is allowed for house #1
being lot 89-26. In all other respects, the appeal is
dismissed.
[35] The Respondent being substantially successful, costs are
awarded to the Respondent.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 7th day of April 1998.
" C.H. McArthur "
J.T.C.C.