Date: 19980903
Dockets: 97-965-IT-G; 97-966-IT-G
BETWEEN:
SUKHSAGAR K. GILL, IQBAL S. GILL,
Appellants,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent,
Reasons for Judgment
Brulé, J.T.C.C.
[1] These appeals followed a Notice of Reassessment for the
1993 taxation year. The appeals were consolidated and heard on
common evidence.
Facts
[2] Both appellants Sukhsagar K. Gill (SG) and Iqbal Gill (IG)
are residents of Ontario.
[3] During the 1989 taxation year, SG advanced funds as a
family investment totaling $613,448 to Homebank Investments Inc.
("Homebank") and IG advanced $54,448. SG and IG each
owned 8% of the issued and outstanding shares of Homebank at the
relevant time. SG and IG were unsecured creditors of
Homebank.
[4] Homebank was incorporated under the laws of the Province
of Ontario on December 2, 1988 and at all material times was
controlled by Sampuran S. Benet and his wife Rajinder K. Benet.
Mr. Benet also controlled Sampuran Enterprises Ltd. Mr. and Mrs.
Benet were Canadian residents at the relevant time. Accordingly,
Homebank was at all material times a "Canadian-controlled
private corporation" as defined in subsections 248(1) and
125(7) of the Income Tax Act ("the
Act").
[5] During 1988, Homebank purchased land located at 930 Upper
Paradise Road in Hamilton, Ontario and acted as the prime
contractor during construction of a 17 unit strip plaza with
approximately 48,000 square feet of gross leasable space.
Construction was completed in 1990. The appellants claim that Mr.
Benet had expertise in the development of commercial complexes
and that Mr. Benet was the driving force behind both Sampuran and
Homebank. They claim that Homebank attempted to acquire tenants
and negotiate leases with the goal of selling the plaza when it
was substantially leased.
[6] The appellants further claim that the property was listed
for sale with RE/MAX Dufferin Realty Ltd. but the property was
not marketable because it did not have an anchor tenant. With
respect to the plaza property, a receiver was appointed on
October 22, 1993.
[7] The advances to Homebank were never repaid and were
established to have become a bad debt in the 1993 taxation year
pursuant to subsection 50(1) of the Act.
[8] The Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") reassessed the appellants tax returns for
the 1993 taxation year on the basis that they had not shown that
the amounts claimed as a deduction from income was an
"allowable business investment loss" pursuant to
paragraph 38(c) of the Act since the funds advanced
by them to Homebank did not qualify as a "business
investment loss" pursuant to paragraph 39(1)(c) of the
Act.
Issue
[9] The sole issue involved is whether Homebank was a
"small business corporation" in 1993 within the meaning
of the Act, and therefore the appellants incurred an
allowable business loss in that year.
Analysis
[10] The Minister claims that Homebank was not carrying on an
"active business" but was involved in a "specified
investment business" as those phrases are defined in
paragraph 125(7)(a) of the Act.
[11] In confirming the reassessment for the 1993 taxation
year, the Minister made the following assumptions:
a) at all material times, the appellants were shareholders of
the company;
b) during 1993, the company became bankrupt;
c) at the time of the bankruptcy of the company, the
appellants had a loan receivable from it of $613,448;
d) at all material times, the principal purpose of the company
was to derive income from rents and its only source of income
from 1987 though 1992 was rental revenue and interest on rental
deposits;
e) the company, at all material times, employed less than six
full-time employees;
f) the company's associated corporation, Sampuran
Enterprises Ltd., did not, at any time, provide managerial,
administrative, financial, maintenance or other similar
services.
[12] Despite the well thought argument of counsel for the
appellants, Homebank is not a "small business
corporation" within the meaning of the Act. To be
considered a "small business corporation", Homebank
would have to be considered an "active business". An
"active business" expressly excludes a "specified
investment business" and upon the evidence before the Court,
Homebank was a "specified investment business".
Therefore, the loss sustained by the appellant with respect to
the loan made to Homebank is not a business investment loss
within the meaning of paragraph 39(1)(c) of the
Act. Therefore, there can not be an allowable business
investment loss within the meaning of paragraph 38(c) of
the Act. The loss sustained by the appellants is a net
capital loss and can be used to offset any capital gains.
Pursuant to paragraph 111(1)(b) of the Act, this
net capital loss can be applied against capital gains 3 years
back and can be carried forward indefinitely.
[13] By way of explanation of how the above was derived, it is
important to look at the various provisions of the
Act.
[14] A business investment loss is a loss incurred on a
disposition of capital property under the conditions set forth in
paragraph 39(1)(c). The following conditions must be met.
Firstly, the capital property must be a share of a "small
business corporation" or a debt owed to the taxpayer by such
a corporation. Secondly, the shares or debt are, unless
subsection 50(1) applies, disposed of to a person dealing with
the taxpayer at arm's length.
[15] In the facts before the Court, the Minister is not
disputing whether subsection 50(1) applies. subsection 50(1)
applies to the situation where debts are established to be bad
debts or shares of a bankrupt corporation. However, the Minister
does take issue with the other requirement namely that the
capital property is a share of a "small business
corporation" or a debt owed to the taxpayer by such a
corporation.
A. "Small business corporation"
[16] A small business corporation is defined in subsection
248(1) of the Act. The section sets out:
"'small business corporation', at any particular
time, means, subject to subsection 110.6(15), a particular
corporation that is a Canadian-controlled private
corporation all or substantially all of the fair market value of
the assets of which at that time is attributable to assets that
are
(a) used principally in an active business carried on
primarily in Canada by the particular corporation or by a
corporation related to it,
(b) shares of the capital stock or indebtedness of one or more
small business corporations that are at that time connected with
the particular corporation (within the meaning of subsection
186(4) on the assumption that the small business corporation is
at that time a "payer corporation" within the meaning
of that subsection), or
(c) assets described in paragraphs (a) and (b), including, for
the purpose of paragraph 39(1)(c), a corporation that was at any
time in the 12 months preceding that time a small business
corporation, and, for the purpose of this definition, the fair
market value of a net income stabilization account shall be
deemed to be nil;"
[italics mine]
[17] The term "active business" is defined in two
different sections of the Act. The general definition
section for the Act, namely subsection 248(1), defines
"active business" as:
"(1) Definitions
In this Act,
"active business"
"active business", in relation to any business
carried on by a taxpayer resident in Canada, means any business
carried on by the taxpayer other than a specified investment
business or a personal services business;"
[18] "active business" is also defined in paragraph
125(7)(a) of the Act;
"'active business carried on by a corporation'
means any business carried on by the corporation other than a
specified investment business or a personal services business and
includes an adventure or concern in the nature of
trade;"
[19] The obvious difference between these two definitions is
that the definition under paragraph 125(7)(a) includes
"an adventure or concern in the nature of trade". For
the purpose of the case at bar, this inclusion is of little
relevance as both definitions state that if the business is found
to be a "specified investment business" then it can not
be considered to be an active business. Parliament has expressly
stated that if a business is a "specified investment
business" then it is not an "active business" for
the purpose of subsection 248(1) and
paragraph 125(7)(a) of the Act. The issue
before this Court is whether Homebank was a "specified
investment business". Although the primary and secondary
intention of the taxpayer may provide some guidance, it is the
"principal purpose" of Homebank that must be considered
in determining whether Homebank was conducting a "specified
investment business". However, due to the fact that the
appellant went to great lengths to establish an adventure or
concern in the nature of trade, the Court shall briefly comment
upon it.
[20] As far as the Court understands the appellants argument,
the appellants submit that the definition of "business"
and "active business" in subsection 248(1) of the
Act should be read together therefore an adventure or
concern in the nature of trade is considered an "active
business". It is the Court's opinion that the definition
of "active business", read alone, in subsection 248(1)
of the Act should be operative with respect to the case at
bar and the definition of "active business" in
paragraph 125(7)(a) should be read within the framework of
the small business deduction. The case at bar deals with an
allowable business investment loss and not the small business
deduction. Instruction can be taken from the definition of
"Canadian controlled private corporation" which is also
listed in both subsection 248(1) and
paragraph 125(7)(b) of the Act. The definition
in subsection 248(1) of the Act states that:
"'Canadian-controlled private corporation'
"Canadian-controlled private corporation" has the
meaning assigned by subsection 125(7);"
[21] Paragraph 125(7)(b) of the Act reads:
"'Canadian-controlled private corporation'
"Canadian-controlled private corporation" means a
private corporation that is a Canadian corporation other than a
corporation controlled, directly or indirectly in any manner
whatever, by one or more non-resident persons, by one or more
public corporations (other than a prescribed venture capital
corporation) or by any combination thereof; ..."
[22] In the Court's opinion, the fact that subsection
248(1) refers directly to subsection 125(7) of the Act,
suggests that the intent of Parliament was for the definition of
Canadian controlled private corporation in paragraph
125(7)(b) to be controlling for the purposes of the
Act. This is not the case for the term "active
business". Parliament provided two different definitions and
the Court believes that the definition in subsection 248(1)
should be employed with respect to the whole Act, aside
from the sections where a different definition is provided with
respect to a specific section as is the case with the small
business deduction set out in paragraph 125(7)(a) of the
Act.
(The same argument applies for the definition of
"specified investment business". Subsection 248(1) of
the Act refers to paragraph 125(7)(e) of the
Act.)
B. "Active Business"
[23] By using the definition of "active business"
set out in subsection 248(1) of the Act, Homebank will
qualify as an "active business" if it was carrying on a
business that was not a "specified investment business"
or a "personal service business". On the facts of this
case, it is the Court's opinion that Homebank is not a
"personal service business" and will be considered an
active business if it does not meet the requirements of a
"specified investment business".
C. Specified Investment Business
[24] A "specified investment business" is defined in
paragraph 125(7)(e) of the Act and reads:
"specified investment business" carried on by a
corporation in a taxation year means a business (other than a
business carried on by a credit union or a business of leasing
property other than real property) the principal purpose of which
is to derive income from property (including interest, dividends,
rents or royalties), unless
(a) the corporation employs in the business throughout the
year more than five full-time employees, or
(b) in the course of carrying on an active business, any other
corporation associated with it provides managerial,
administrative, financial, maintenance or other similar services
to the corporation in the year and the corporation could
reasonably be expected to require more than five full-time
employees if those services had not been provided."
[25] Thus a "specified investment business" includes
any business with less than six full-time employees and has a
principal purpose of earning income from property or the leasing
of property. There was no evidence submitted by the appellants to
the fact that Homebank had more than five full-time employees.
The Minister relies on the assumption that Homebank at all
material times employed less than 6 full-time employees. The
Minister submits that based on Mr. Benet's testimony, that in
the early years (back in 1988) there were four or five employees.
After that date there were even less.
l. Principal Purpose
[26] The definition of "specified investment
business" requires an inquiry into the principal purpose of
the corporation. Revenue Canada's position on "principal
purpose" is set out in Interpretation Bulletin IT-73R5,
dated February 5, 1997, at paragraphs 12 and 14:
"12. "Principal purpose" is not a defined term
in the Act for the purposes of the definition of "specified
investment business" in subsection 125(7), but it is
considered to be the main or chief objective for which the
business is carried on.
...
14. The principal purpose of a corporation's business must
be determined annually after all the facts relating to that
business carried on by that corporation in that year have been
considered and analyzed. Included in this evaluation should be
such things as:
(a) the purpose for which the business was originally
commenced;
(b) the history and evolution of its operations, including
changes in its mode of operation and purpose of existence;
and
(c) the manner in which the business is conducted."
[27] The term "principal purpose" was judicially
considered in Mayon Investments Inc. et al. v. M.N.R.
[1991] 1 C.T.C. 2245, 91 D.T.C. 364, where Brulé, T.C.J.,
stated at page 369, that with respect to the definition of
"specified investment business" what is meant by
"the principal purpose of which is to derive income from
property" is " ... when the source of revenue, the
nature of the assets held and the purpose of the corporation are
to derive income from property, such as interest income.
[28] In Ed Sinclair Construction & Supplies Ltd. et al.
v. M.N.R., [1992] 1 C.T.C. 2218, 92 D.T.C. 1163, Bowman
T.C.J., considered "principal purpose" in the context
of a "specified investment business" as it related to
the small business deduction. His Honour stated at page 1165 in
the case of Ben Company Limited v. M.N.R., 89 D.T.C.
242, which is set out at page 244:
"In determining the "principal purpose" of a
business carried on by a corporation the stated object of the
person who carries it on is not necessarily the only, or even the
most important, criterion. Of critical importance is what the
corporation in fact does and what its sources of income
are."
[29] The term "principal purpose" has also been
considered in the tax literature. In a cited article by David
Phillip Jones, in Reflections on Integration: The Modified Small
Business Deduction, Nonqualifying Businesses, Specified
Investment Income, Corporate Partnership, and Personal Service
Corporations (1982) 30 Can. Tax J. 1 at 5, the author comments on
the purpose of the "specified investment income"
amendment. At page 5 of his article, Mr. Jones states:
"In a series of cases, however, the courts effectively
eliminated the idea of passive business and held that virtually
any business constituted an active business. The purpose of the
"specified investment income" amendment, therefore, was
to make certain that income from the business of renting property
did not generally constitute active business income, but rather
was assimilated to investment income, thereby effectively
reversing the jurisprudence on this point."
[30] The only income earned by Homebank was the rental income
from the tenants in the shopping plaza, interests on the rental
deposits and a management fee. The rental income from the
Unaudited Financial Statements of Homebank for the taxation years
of 1990, 1991 and 1992 was $5, $404,065 and $484,728
respectively. Interest on rental income for the above years was
$1,198, $7,669 and $0, respectively. A management fee of $180,000
was received in 1991. Thus, Homebank had a net revenue for the
above years of $1,131,277. Furthermore, the financial statements
of Homebank listed the property as a fixed capital asset and the
according depreciation (amortization) was deducted.
[31] The plaza was completed in 1990. From the evidence
provided the first lease commenced July 1, 1990 and by January
13, 1991, 13 of the 17 units had been leased to various tenants.
These 13 units represented 78% of the floor space. However, the
plaza was not listed for sale until February of 1992.
[32] Therefore, on the evidence before the Court, it is the
Court's opinion that the "principal purpose" of
Homebank was to derive income from property. I believe that
Homebank is a "specified investment business" which
would remove it from the definition of a "small business
corporation". Therefore, the appellant is not entitled to
the business investment loss as set out in paragraph
39(1)(c) of the Act.
[33] As an aside, the Court feels that a few comments with
respect to "principal purpose" are in order. It
believes that it is the "principal purpose" of the
business and not necessarily the "principal purpose" of
the individual taxpayer that must be considered in determining
whether a corporation is a "specified investment
business". SG and IG had a 16% interest in the operations of
Homebank. Mr. Benet and his wife held the controlling
interest of 52% of the issued and outstanding shares. Any inquiry
into the "principal purpose" of the corporation would
have to consider the intention of Mr. and Mrs. Benet. Mr. Benet
was the driving force behind his own corporation, Sampuran, as
well as Homebank. The "principal purpose" of Homebank,
as an entire entity, must be considered. The Minister did not
make any inquiries into the intention of Mr. Benet with respect
to Homebank. The Court believes that the profit made on
Sampuran's sale of a previous shopping development is
relevant to the case at hand. The Minister, through the
examination for discovery of Lorraine Brugaletta, an auditor for
Revenue Canada, did not feel that the $1,924,024 gain of
Sampuran, an associated company, was relevant to the review of
Homebank.
[34] In Geropoulos v. Canada [1998] T.C.C.J. No. 339,
the Tax Court of Canada considered whether the appellant could
deduct a business investment loss for a loan made to a bankrupt
corporation in which he was one of the shareholders. The
corporation was involved in the development of a shopping centre
on a vacant piece of property. In considering whether the
corporation was a "specified investment business" and
finding for the appellant, Sarchuk, T.C.J. stated:
"On the evidence, it is clear that Woodstock's
intention was as Butcher said: "to develop, to get some
money, and to go on and do something else, develop another
property" and that any potential that this development had
to provide Woodstock with rental income was entirely
subordinate."
[35] However, in the present case, the Court does not feel
that the rental income received by Homebank was subordinate. The
plaza was substantially leased at the beginning of 1991 yet not
put up for sale until February of 1992. Although Mr. Benet and
the associated corporation, Sampuran, were not considered by the
Minister when determining the "principal purpose" of
Homebank, the Court feels that this would not change the
determination that Homebank was a "specified investment
business".
[36] Accordingly, these appeals are dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 3rd day of September 1998.
"J.A. Brulé"
J.T.C.C.