Citation: 2004TCC592
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Date: 20040916
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Docket: 2002-4956(IT)G
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BETWEEN:
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JAMES D. SERVICE,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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____________________________________________________________________
For the Appellant: The Appellant himself
Counsel for the Respondent: Eleanor H. Thorn
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered orally from the Bench on
July 29, 2004, at Toronto, Ontario)
Sarchuk J.
[1] This is an appeal from an
assessment of tax with respect to the Appellant's 1995
taxation year. The specific issue relates to the Minister of
National Revenue's rejection of the Appellant's assertion
that he was entitled to claim an allowable business investment
loss with respect to a loan made by him to a company, Prescient
Incorporated, the sole shareholder of which was the
Appellant's spouse.
[2] The Appellant was requested to
admit for the purposes of this proceeding the truth of certain
facts. He acceded, albeit with some qualifications, and admitted
the following:
(a) at all material
times, the Appellant was a shareholder in Homage Investments
Corp. (the "Corporation");
(b) the Corporation
was incorporated on December 22, 1988, and surrendered its
Charter on July 23, 1994. The Appellant then disposed of his
property in the Corporation, namely, his share of the capital
stock of the Corporation and the debt owed to him by the
Corporation;
(c) the fiscal
year-end of the Corporation was June 15, and the last
income tax return filed by the Corporation was for its 1991
taxation year;
(d) the Corporation
had 2,000 fully paid shares issued with $20 total share
capital;
(e) the shareholders
of the Corporation were:
the Appellant - 320 shares (certificate 001, 002 & 003);
Prescient Incorporated - 680 shares (certificate 004);
Ferdinand A. Wagner - 1,000 shares (certificate 005);
(f) in 1989,
the Corporation purchased a piece of real estate located at
2349 Queen Street East, Toronto, Ontario (the
"property") for $587,000, which was funded by a first
mortgage of $440,000 from Monarch Trust Company, a second
mortgage of 54,500 from Monte Denaburg, and non-interest
bearing loans
I believe the loan referred to by the witness, the Appellant,
amounted to approximately $100,000.
(g) the Appellant
and Mr. Wagner were guarantors of the mortgages;
(h) the property was
sold in June 1995 under power of sale by the Monarch Trust
Company's liquidator, Coopers & Lybrand Limited;
(i) neither
the Corporation, Mr. Wagner, nor the Appellant were required
to repay the outstanding balance on the mortgages;
(j) Prescient
was incorporated on May 12, 1974. It was dissolved and revived on
March 7, 1989, then dissolved again on December 24, 1994, and
revived again on January 8, 1998;
(k) Prescient's
fiscal year-end was May 31;
(l) since
March 17, 1989, the sole shareholder of Prescient was the
Appellant's spouse, Josephine Service;
(m) from 1989 to 1994,
Prescient extended interest-free loans to the Corporation,
and the Corporation owed Prescient a total of $149,150 in
Prescient's 1994 fiscal year;
(n) upon advice from
the Appellant, Prescient's interest-free loan to the
Corporation totalling $149,150 was written off by Prescient in
its 1995 fiscal year.
(o) from 1992 to
1995, the Corporation, by journal entries, increased its
liabilities to the Appellant and decreased its corresponding
liabilities to Prescient when no such additional advances were
actually received from the Appellant nor such repayments of loans
actually made to Prescient;
(p) the following is
shown on the financial statements of Prescient and the
Corporation.
Prescient
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1989
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1990
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1991
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1992
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1993
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1994
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1995
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Due from Homage
The Corporation
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$89,500
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$145,250
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$149,150
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$149,150
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$0
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Due to shareholder
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$24,081
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$45,931
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$67,065
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Due to James Service S/H
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$208,544
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$221,212
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$223,495
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$225,777
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Due to Related Corporation
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$36,500
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$96,500
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$6,250
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$9,650
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$13,650
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$13,650
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Other loans recorded by the Corporation were with respect
to Ican Corporation, Nora Smith, Jane McGivern,
and the other shareholder, F. Wagner.
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(q) as a result of
the journal entries described above, loans from Prescient to the
Corporation totalling 149,150 were eliminated from the
Corporation's records and the Corporation's shareholders
loan account for the Appellant was increased by a corresponding
$149,150 to a balance at $225,777 in 1995;
(r) at the material
times, Prescient also recorded receipt of interest-free
loans from the Appellant. The amount of loan from the Appellant
recorded by Prescient as at May 31, 1995 was $78,628;
[3] The Appellant was not dealing with
Prescient at arm's length, and the only dispute between the
parties is whether he is entitled to claim a business investment
loss for his loan to Prescient, the amount of which was recorded
by Prescient to be $78,628 as at May 31, 1995.
[4] The Appellant's position is
that the requirements of paragraph 39(1)(c), subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii) and subsection 50(1) of the Income Tax
Act have been fully satisfied by the evidence adduced. There
is no dispute that in order to avoid the nil loss consequence in
subparagraph 40(2)(g)(ii), the debt must have been
acquired for the purpose of producing income from a business or
property.
[5] The general thrust of the
Appellant's argument was that gaining or producing income
need not be the exclusive or even primary purpose for the loan so
long as it was one of its purposes, and that would be sufficient
to meet the requirements of the statutory provision. The
Appellant, by way of example, referred to Rich v. The
Queen, 2003 DTC 5115, in which the Federal Court of Appeal
concluded that:
... As long as earning income was one of the purposes of
the loan (although not necessarily the primary purpose), the
income-earning requirement of subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii) of the Act had been met. See Ludco
Enterprises v. The Queen, Supreme Court of Canada. Although
the Tax Court judge found that the "predominant
purpose" of the loan was to help the taxpayer's son, in
fact, the requirements of subparagraph 40(2)(g)(ii) were
met in the present case. The loan was interest-bearing, and
the taxpayer (as a shareholder of DSM) was entitled to dividends.
...
[6] Reference was also made to a
number of other cases in which interest-free loans were
considered. For example, in Steckel v. M.N.R., 92 DTC
1904, the Court ruled that Steckel, who had guaranteed the loans
of a corporation in which he had an interest, was entitled to an
ABIL. In that case, Mogan J. referred to the following comments
of Rip J. in Business Art Inc. v. M.N.R., 86 DTC
1842:
However, even if no interest was chargeable, I do not believe
that would be fatal to the Appellant's alternate submission.
The fact that there may have been no interest attached to the
debts in question is not relevant in deciding whether they were
acquired for the purpose of gaining or producing income.
...
... It is not unusual for a person to invest in a
Corporation by subscribing for share capital and lending money
without interest; as far as he is concerned, the shares and his
loans constitute a single investment, and if later on he is
called on to advance further funds without interest, he is only
increasing his investment. I cannot subscribe to the theory
that in such an example that non-interest bearing loans
were not incurred for the purpose of earning income from
property; if the loans were not advanced the Corporation may have
become bankrupt and the shares may have become worthless.
Clearly, the loans were made to earn income from property, that
is, to place the Corporation in a position where it will be
successful and pay dividends.
[7] The Appellant made reference to
several other similar cases. I note, for example, in Allen v.
Canada, [2000] T.C.J. No. 231, the Appellants claimed ABIL
deductions for losses in respect of advances made to a
corporation in which they were shareholders. In Air Rock
Drilling Co. Ltd. et al v. The Queen, 99 DTC 617, the
individual taxpayers own all of the shares of a numbered company
which owns all of the shares of Air Rock. Thus, a nexus existed
that permitted the Court in that appeal to specifically find that
the loans in issue were made for the purpose of producing income,
even though they were not interest-bearing. The decision of
the Federal Court of Appeal in Byram v. Canada, [1999]
F.C.J. No. 92, is, I believe, of particular relevance, and
the comments made are, in my view, to be applied in this case. I
refer specifically to paragraphs 21 and 22, which read as
follows:
21 It is equally
clear that the anticipation of dividend income cannot be too
remote. It is trite law that sections 3 and 4 of the Act,
in conjunction with the rules set out in subdivisions A through D
of division B, establish that the income of a taxpayer is to be
determined on a source-by-source basis. Furthermore,
the availability of certain deductions under the Act,
including subparagraph 40(2)(g)(ii), require that some
regard be given to the source of income that is relevant to the
deduction. Accordingly, a deduction cannot be so far removed from
its corresponding income stream as to render its connection to
the anticipated income tenuous at best. This does not preclude a
deduction for a capital loss incurred by a taxpayer on an
interest-free loan given to a related Corporation where it
had a legitimate expectation of receiving income through
increased dividends resulting from the infusion of capital.
22 The shareholders
of a company are directly linked to that Corporation's future
earnings and its payment of dividends. Where a shareholder
provides a guarantee or an interest-free loan to that
company in order to provide capital to that company, a clear
nexus exists between the taxpayer and the potential future
income. Where a loan is made for the purpose of earning income
through the payment of dividends, this connection is sufficient
to satisfy the purpose requirement of subparagraph
40(2)(g)(ii).
In Byram, it was also noted by the Federal Court of
Appeal that:
23 In situations
where the taxpayer does not hold shares in the debtor, but rather
is a shareholder of a parent company or other shareholder of the
debtor, the taxpayer is not entitled to dividend income directly
from the debtor. Generally speaking, the burden of demonstrating
a sufficient nexus between a taxpayer and a dividend income, in
such cases, will be much higher. The determination of whether
there is sufficient connection between the taxpayer and the
income-earning potential of the debtor will be decided on a
case-by-case basis depending on the particular
circumstances involved.
[8] In our case, the Appellant's
primary purpose was to keep his company, Homage, alive as he put
it, so it might become successful as a developer and contractor
and as a sales component in selling the property to "City
Hall". The taxpayer also argued that he would have expected
that in the event that Homage remained alive there would be a
return to him when Homage was selling its units and creating
dividends. He also added that he was a lawyer practising law as a
general practitioner, and thus he would have benefited in the
context of earning income as a result of the sale of the property
and would also have expected to be paid management fees or, in
the alternative, have a comparable sharing with investors. He
also argued that it would be a benefit to him, since a dividend
would flow from Homage to Prescient when the sales took place and
he argued that, with respect to the same dividend, that it
ultimately would have gone to him as a shareholder of Homage.
[9] In my view, that is not a viable
lending arrangement. To me, a viable lending arrangement
constitutes a legal contractual relationship incorporating
principal repayment terms and periodic interest payments. In the
absence of interest payments or even the mention of interest,
evidence of an expectation of an income stream arising from that
loan must be shown. The Appellant carries the burden of
demonstrating a nexus between the investment of the funds and the
generation of income. On the evidence before me, I can only reach
the conclusion that the loan does not, in my view, constitute a
lending arrangement for the purposes of the relevant sections of
the Income Tax Act. Accordingly, the appeal is
dismissed.
[10] There was really no submission on the
part of counsel for the Respondent with respect to costs. I would
be inclined not to award costs in these particular circumstances.
That issue should have been dealt with at the appropriate
time.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 16th day of September,
2004.
Sarchuk J.