| Citation: 2004TCC793 | 
| Date:20041207 | 
| Docket:2004-925(IT)I | 
| BETWEEN: | 
| G. WILLIAM KEITH, | 
| Appellant, | 
| and | 
|   | 
| HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, | 
| Respondent. | 
 
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
 
Miller J.
 
[1]       Mr. Keith appeals by way of the
      informal procedure the 1999, 2000 and 2001 assessments, whereby
      the Minister of National Revenue brought standby charges of
      $14,348 for each of those years into Mr. Keith's income.
      Mr. Keith maintains he is entitled to a reduced standby
      charge as the company vehicle was used substantially all of the
      time for business purposes.
 
[2]       Throughout 1999, 2000 and 2001,
      Mr. Keith was President and 50% owner of Conventional Holdings
      Ltd. (Conventional Holdings): Mrs. Keith was the remaining 50%
      shareholder. Conventional Holdings owned Seafood Express (PEI)
      Ltd. (Seafood Express), a transport business, which during the
      relevant period operated approximately 40 trucks, trailers and
      refrigerator units, with over 40 available drivers. Seafood
      Express supplied Prince Edward Island products (e.g. lobster,
      potatoes) throughout the eastern United States, central Canada
      and as far away as Nevada and California. The trucks would bring
      produce back to Prince Edward Island. My impression is that
      Seafood Express was a successful, thriving business in large
      measure due to Mr. Keith's personal efforts in marketing
      and maintaining personal contacts with both suppliers and
      customers.
 
 
 
[3]       Seafood Express operated from
      premises at 20 Upton Road in Charlottetown. Mr. Keith
      maintained an operating office at those premises from which he
      managed the Seafood Express business. His services in that regard
      were provided to Seafood Express through the auspices of a
      management agreement between Conventional Holdings and Seafood
      Express. Mr. Keith, at all material times, was an employee of
      Conventional Holdings.
 
[3]       Conventional Holdings, as well as
      owning the operating company and providing management services to
      it, also was involved in the real estate business, owned a
      disinfection building and contracted with Ultramar to rent
      property to manage a diesel fuel centre. In 2001 it also had an
      interest in a newly developing golf resort in Prince Edward
      Island. Mr. Keith sat on the board of the golf project.
 
[4]       Mr. Keith maintained a home office
      for Conventional Holdings, from which he retained control of both
      Conventional Holdings and Seafood Express finances. Mrs. Keith
      served as bookkeeper for both companies. The financial books,
      ledgers, accounts receivable, accounts payable, depreciation
      schedules and other records were all dealt with from the home
      office. It was evident that Mr. Keith had a real concern about
      maintaining the privacy of his private companies' records.
      Also at the home office, Mr. Keith maintained a (GPS) computer
      system, so that he could constantly be aware of where all Seafood
      Express's trucks were at any given time. He could also remain
      in constant contact with his drivers through the GPS. He referred
      to this as the bloodline to what was happening in his business.
      He remained available in off hours at home to deal with any and
      all emergencies that might arise with the trucks whether in
      Canada or the United States. As Mr. Keith put it, the business
      was 24/7.
 
[5]       Mr. Keith described his daily
      routine of leaving home early, going to pick up the mail and then
      heading to the operating office. He there dealt with the mail and
      the other managerial concerns of the transport business until
      11:00 or 11:30 in the morning. He would return to his home
      address and have lunch and work at the home office until 2:30
      p.m. or 3:00 p.m., but he would then return to the operating
      office to check on the employees and do other necessary chores.
      He would normally be the last one to leave the office before
      returning home for the day.
 
 
[6]       Mr. Keith also did a considerable
      amount of travelling off the island in servicing his customers
      and dealing with his suppliers. He travelled 12 to 16 times a
      year for trips of one, two or three days. Approximately half of
      these trips appear to have been to Moncton, New Brunswick with
      several to Halifax, Nova Scotia over the three-year period. Also,
      two of his major customers had locations in Prince Edward Island,
      for example in Souris, a 60 or 70 kilometre drive from
      Conventional Holdings' office.
 
[7]       Mr. Keith relied primarily on what
      he referred to as his business vehicle to carry out the business
      travel. His business vehicle was a black 1998 Mercedes Benz
      convertible owned by Conventional Holdings, though initially
      leased. Mr. Keith was the only person to drive this vehicle.
      The Keith family (wife and two teenagers, though only one was old
      enough to drive during the relevant period) had a Honda Acura, a
      full-size Mercedes Benz sedan and a Harley Davidson bike for
      personal use. Mr. Keith was the sole driver of the bike; he would
      put 17,000 kilometres in a summer on the bike.
 
[8]       Based on service records, Mr.
      Keith estimated the business vehicle travelled 13,382 kilometres
      in 1999, approximately 15,000 in 2000 and 16,700 in 2001. Mr.
      Keith believed the business vehicle was used 95% to 98% for
      business trips only. He acknowledged there may have been an
      occasional personal errand or personal use when his wife
      accompanied him on a business trip that might also have involved
      some recreation. Only one trip was specifically acknowledged in
      that regard, a trip to Nova Scotia in June 1999 for which only
      800 kilometres of the 1,600 kilometre trip was claimed as
      business. Given Mrs. Keith's involvement in the business, Mr.
      Keith asserted that the few times that she travelled with him she
      was extremely helpful from a business perspective.
 
[9]       Of the total kilometres travelled
      by the business vehicle in 1999, 2000 and 2001, Mr. Keith
      estimated 2,500 kilometres in 1999 and 2000, and 3,000 kilometres
      in 2001 were for visiting island customers, 3,360 kilometres were
      for travelling between the offices twice a day and the balance
      was for off-island business trips. In support of the off-island
      trips, Mr. Keith submitted mainly receipts or invoices for the
      bridge toll and for gas. The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) appeals
      officer found such supporting documentation insufficient to
      justify the off-island travel. She arbitrarily estimated two
      trips per year to major customer/supplier locations. This
      resulted in considerably less off-island business mileage than
      estimated by Mr. Keith. On balance, I find Mr. Keith's
      supporting materials, combined with his oral testimony, more
      compelling than the very rough estimate by CRA, and I accept Mr.
      Keith's numbers as accurately reflecting the on- and
      off-island business travel. The following chart summarizes Mr.
      Keith's estimate of his mileage for the business vehicle:
 
| Year | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 
| Total kilometres | 13,382 | 15,000 | 16,700 | 
| Visiting island customers | 2,500 | 2,500 | 3,000 | 
| Visiting Glasgow golf development |   |   | 1,700 | 
| Travel between office/week day | 2,400 | 2,400 | 2,400 | 
| Weekend | 960 | 960 | 960 | 
| (2 trips a day) |   |   |   | 
| Off-island business | 7,522 | 9,140 | 8,640 | 
 
[10]      The Respondent considered the travel
      between offices as personal, and also concluded the receipts
      could not justify the extent of the on- and off-island business
      travel, in reaching a determination that not all or substantially
      all the kilometres were in connection with business. The Minister
      therefore assessed the full standby charge in accordance with
      section 6(2) of the Income Tax Act.
 
[11]      I differ with Mr. Keith's mileage
      estimates in a couple of respects. First, regarding the travel
      between offices, I find that of the two trips per day between his
      home office and operating office, only one represents business
      travel. Mr. Keith, like any other employee, left his
      principal residence to go to work in the morning and returned at
      the end of the day. Simply because he had a home office does not
      turn this daily commute into business travel. The mid-day trip,
      however, to go from his operating office to the home office,
      where he worked two or three hours every day, and then back to
      the operating office does constitute business travel. For that
      reason I am designating half of the 3,360 daily inter-office
      travel as personal. Second, Mr. Keith acknowledged that up to 5%
      of his travel in the business vehicle could pertain to personal
      errands. I find therefore that 5% of the on-island business
      travel of 2,500, 2,500 and 3,000 kilometres in 1999, 2000 and
      2001 was personal; that is, 125, 125 and 150 kilometres. Finally,
      Mr. Keith acknowledged that on a trip in 1999, 800 kilometres in
      the business vehicle were more properly personal travel. I
      conclude that of the total kilometres in 1999, 2000 and 2001
      travelled by the business vehicle, 2,605, 1,805 and 1,830 were
      personal kilometres. As a percentage, the business travel
      represents 80.5%, 88% and 89% of total kilometres travelled.
 
[13]      Turning now to the standby charge
      legislation, the pertinent parts of subsection 6(2) of the
      Income Tax Act read as follows for the relevant years:
 
6(2)        For the purposes of
      paragraph (1)(e), a reasonable standby charge for an
      automobile for the total number of days (in this subsection
      referred to as the "total available days") in a taxation year
      during which the automobile is made available to a taxpayer or to
      a person related to the taxpayer by the employer of the taxpayer
      or by a person related to the employer (both of whom are in this
      subsection referred to as the "employer") shall be deemed to be
      the amount determined by the formula
 
            
      A/B × [2% × (C x D) +  2/3 × (E - F)]
 
where
 
A           is the
      lesser of
(a)          the total
      kilometres that the automobile is driven (otherwise than in
      connection with or in the course of the taxpayer's office or
      employment) during the total available days, and
 
(b)          the value
      determined for B for the year under this subsection in respect of
      the standby charge for the automobile during the total available
      days,
 
except that the amount determined under paragraph (a)
      shall be deemed to be equal to the amount determined under
      paragraph (b) unless
 
(c)          the
      taxpayer is required by the employer to use the automobile in
      connection with or in the course of the office or employment,
      and
 
(d)          all or
      substantially all of the distance travelled by the automobile in
      the total available days is primarily in connection with or in
      the course of the office or employment; ...
 
[14]      The taxpayer can only claim a reduced
      standby charge if he is required to use the car in connection
      with his employment, and all or substantially all of the distance
      travelled is in connection with his employment. Other cases, for
      example, see Keefe v. R.,[1] McKay v. R.[2] and Ruhl v. R.[3] have
      considered that the administrative rule of thumb that 90%
      business use constitutes substantially all must be an elastic not
      formulaic application. Mr. Keith's percentages are just short
      of the 90% mark, but viewing his use of the business vehicle in
      context of what he did for the company, that is, maintaining that
      personal contact with suppliers and customers vital to the
      success of his business, I am satisfied that some minimal
      commuting travel does not detract from the position that the car
      was used substantially all in connection with his employment.
      This finding is supported by the fact that Mr. Keith was the sole
      driver and that he had other vehicles available for personal use.
      Indeed, during the summer he spent considerable time on his
      motorcycle.
 
[15]      In summary, Mr. Keith meets both
      criteria set forth in subsection 6(2) of the Act, which
      qualify him for a reduced standby charge. I therefore allow the
      appeals with costs and refer the matter back to the Minister for
      reconsideration and reassessment allowing a reduced standby
      charge on the basis of 2,605, 1,805 and 1,830 personal kilometres
      driven in 1999, 2000 and 2001 on the business vehicle.
 
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 7th day of December, 2004.
 
 
 
Miller J.