Date: 19991214
Dockets: 96-3190-IT-G; 96-3191-IT-G; 96-3810-IT-G;
96-3811-IT-G; 96-3812-IT-G; 96-3813-IT-G; 96-3814-IT-G;
96-3815-IT-G
BETWEEN:
LOUIS DROUIN, NABIL MANSOUR, CURTIS KUNKEL, WILLIAM
WHEATON,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Lamarre Proulx, J.T.C.C.
[1] These appeals were heard on common evidence. The question
at issue is whether the Appellants are entitled, for their 1986
taxation year, to deduct non capital losses from, and claim an
investment tax credit ("ITC") for, the scientific
research and experimental development ("R & D")
activities allegedly carried on by a partnership of which they
were limited partners. More specifically, the question at issue
is whether capital expenditures in the amount of $7,930,000 were
indeed incurred, and if they were incurred in this amount, were
they incurred for the acquisition of equipment and software for
the purpose of R & D activities, within the meaning of
section 2900 of the Income Tax Act Regulations
(the "Regulations").
[2] The limited partnership, Alexis Limited Partnership
("ALP") was formed on January 15, 1986, under the
Partnership Act of British Columbia. The nature of the
business intended to be carried on by ALP was to conduct R & D
activities relating to electronics and wood products industries.
Its initial general partner was Solkan Research Inc.
("Solkan") which was owned 100 % by
Mr. Rav Solanki. On February 20, 1986, AMC
Research Corp. ("AMC"), another corporation owned by
Mr. Rav Solanki, replaced Solkan as a general partner of ALP. On
November 1, 1986, Mr. Robert A. Chester
purchased all the shares of AMC.
[3] During the course of 1986, units of the partnership were
offered at the price of $1,000 per unit. These units were
financed by the investors or the limited partners to the extent
of 40% by cash payment and the balance, 60% by way of loans from
Alexis Holdings Limited ("AHL"), a company incorporated
under the laws of Guernsey. As will be seen later, the loans were
non recourse loans and no interest was paid.
[4] A person investing in 100 units of the partnership
would pay as follows: cash, $40,000, promissory note, $60,000,
total $100,000. In the case of the Appellant Louis Drouin,
the subscription amount was of $75,000; the partnership losses
claimed $60,401.25 and the ITC claimed $14,598.75. In the case of
the Appellant Nabil Mansour, the subscription amount was
$150,000; the partnership losses claimed $120,802.50 and the ITC
claimed $29,197. For the Appellant Curtis Kunkel, the
subscription amount was $100,000; the partnership losses claimed
$80,535 and the ITC claimed $19,465. For the Appellant
William Wheaton, the amount of the subscription was
$200,000; the losses $161,070 and the ITC claimed $38,930.
[5] The Appellants stated in their Notice of Appeal that the
proceeds of the 1986 issue, cash and loans, were fully expended
in that year: on December 31, 1986, the partnership incurred
R & D capital expenditures in the amount of $7,930,000 for the
acquisition of equipment and software from an arm's length
vendor, Tinbon Trading Ltd. ("Tinbon") of Kowloon,
Hong Kong, pursuant to a sale and trade agreement dated
February 14, 1986, originally entered into by AMC on behalf
of the partnership and Ravina International Limited
("Ravina") and later assigned to Tinbon.
[6] The Respondent stated in the Reply to the Notice of Appeal
that neither Ravina nor Tinbon had a history of selling and
trading R & D equipment, that the major part of the purchase
price was fictitious money and that there were no R & D
activities. The Reply explains as follows the round journey made
by the amount of $6,500,000 and the actual purchase costs of the
equipment:
t) On December 31, 1986, at the closing of the First
Offering, AHL electronically transferred $6.5 million from the
Staten Bank Holland to AMC for the purported purpose of advancing
funds to ALP pursuant to the Loan Agreement between ALP, AHL and
the investors.
u) However, the electronic transfer was conditional on AMC
providing a $6.5 million cheque to the Staten Bank Holland for
payment of Tinbon equipment purchases. It is evidenced from the
bank statements of Royal Bank and the Staten Bank Holland that
there was a circularization of the $6.5 million fund from AHL to
AMC to Tinbon and back to AHL on the same day. It should be noted
that AHL did not advance any loans required to facilitate the
research to the Partnership. The $6.5 million cheque presented at
the closing of the First Offering was immediately returned back
to AHE through AMC and Tinbon. Based on the bank statements from
the Staten Bank Holland, AHL did not have funds in the bank.
...
v) Tin Bon issued invoices totalling $7,930,000.00 (net of
subsequent credit notes) to ALP for equipment and software
ordered under the Sales and Trading Agreement. The invoices were
dated December 18, 1986. By a letter dated December 29,
1986 written on Ravina's letterhead, Ravina, on behalf of
Tin Bon, confirmed that title to the equipment had been
transferred from Tin Bon to ALP.
w) Based on the invoices ALP claimed to have incurred
qualified R & D capital expenditures in the amount of
$7,930,000 for the 1986 taxation year.
x) According to information obtained from Inland Revenue
(U.K.) Tinbon purchased all equipment for ALP from the following
companies:
Northwest Industries U.S U.S. $211,383.30
GTCO Internal Corp. U.S. $3l,420.10
Storagetek U.S. $190,422.55
Lattice Logic U.S.A. U.S. $164,335.00
Data Hardware Inc. U.S. $61,105.26
Tomo Brite Inc. U.S. $43,111.47
TOTAL $707,777.68
y) The equipment was first shipped from the suppliers to
various warehouses for re-labelling before being delivered
to ALP.
z) ALP, assisted by Coopers & Lybrand
("Coopers"), prepared a T661 for the 1986 taxation year
which was distributed to the limited partners for filing as
follows:
Investment tax credit on equipment $1,586,000.00
purchased from Tinbon
(20% x $7,930,000.00)
R & D equipment purchased $7,930,000.00
Less: I.T.C. claimed 1,586,000.00
Total 1986 R & D expenditures $6,344,000.00
Less: Total R & D expenditures claimed 5,347,711.00
claimed in 1986
Unclaimed R & D expenditures
end of 1986 $ 996,289.00
[7] Mr. Kamlesh Solanki, a computer consultant,
Mr. Emile Ghattas, a certified accountant, Mr. George
Franklin Shaw, a semi-retired accountant,
Mr. Nabil Mansour, one of the Appellants,
Mr. Tim Flessas, a business consultant and
Ms. Josée Beaudry, testified on behalf of the
Appellants. Mr. Paul William Lancaster, a
professional engineer, and Mr. Walter Wong, auditor at
Revenue Canada testified for the Respondent. Three books of
documents were produced by the Appellants as
Exhibit A-1. Three books were produced by the
Respondent as Exhibit R-1.
[8] The documents referred to by Mr. Kamlesh Solanki
during his testimony are contained in the first of the books of
Exhibit A-1. This book includes Tabs 1 to 8, and
Tab 36. Mr. Kamlesh Solanki is the brother of Mr. Rav
Solanki. He explained that in the year 1986, he had been in the
field of computers for 20 years. He was, at that time, a
project manager for a corporation called Soltech Systems Inc.
("Soltech"). In Soltech, he had 25% of the shares, his
brother Rav had the main part. Soltech was in the design of
portable computers. Mr. Solanki stated that Soltech subcontracted
a great deal. He had no idea what happened to the Soltech papers.
Soltech had made a design of a compatible portable computer and
had come to Philips in Montreal to develop a prototype. This is
how Mr. Rav Solanki met Mr. Tim Flessas, the
Appellants' expert witness. Philips manufactured the
computers for Soltech that sold many of them. Mr. Solanki
believed that there were 15 employees in Soltech when it
began to have financial problems and in the middle of the year
1986 it could not survive.
[9] Tab 1 is an R & D agreement between the partnership
and Digital Research Corporation ("DRC") dated
February 24, 1986. DRC was a corporation organized by
Rav Solanki. Under this agreement, DRC was appointed agent
for the partnership with a mandate to hire and manage the staff,
which would undertake the R & D project. The project was
digital signal processing, surface mounting technology including
very large scale mounting. Regarding the acquisition of assets,
article 4.01 says that: "All assets required by the
Agent to carry out the Program, which assets are generally
described in Section 4 of Schedule A, will be purchased
by the Partnership and will remain the property of the
Partnership". The assets are described in general terms.
Regarding the scientific personnel, Mr. Kamlesh Solanki is named
with a few others as part of it.
[10] Mr. Kamlesh Solanki stated that when he left Soltech to
work for DRC, he brought with him a few people to do the
research. In 1986, four or five people worked at DRC. He stated
that he gave his brother the specifications of the equipment he
needed. When was he consulted for the first time on the purchase
of equipment and software? In the early part of 1986. In 1986, he
used Soltech's equipment or his own personal equipment
because the equipment purchased for DRC's activities did not
begin to arrive until a few months into 1987. He did not know at
that time of any equipment of the make Abbot. Were any tests
ordered or processed prior to purchase? To that question, he
answered that he had asked his brother Rav what he needed. The
software was Lattice Logic Software. He also stated that when he
left DRC, in the year 1988, DRC was still active and the
preliminary work had been done: a mask had been developed that
was ready to go to the foundry. He left sometime in the summer or
fall of 1988. The research work would have come to a halt on
February 19, 1989.
[11] At Tab 36 of Exhibit A-1, is found the description
of all the equipment that was purchased on December 18,
1986. There are invoices from Tinbon to ALP. The first invoice
bearing number 8701 is for $850,000 and it refers to an
Abbot VLSI Design and Engineering System, complete with
integrated Peripherals and Software, as detailed on attached
pages two and three. There is another invoice, bearing
number 8702, for the same amount, with the same
descriptions, except that it is detailed on pages two, three
and four. A third one, bearing number 8703, has the same
descriptions, except that it says "as detailed on
attached" and the amount is for $750,000. Another one,
bearing number 8704, is described exactly in the same manner
as the preceding. It is for the same amount, except that if we
look at the serial numbers in the preceding invoice, they would
end with "03" and this one, they would end with
"04" or "05. Invoice bearing 8708, in the
amount of $630,000, invoice 8713 in the amount of $830,000
and they are all for equipment of the brand name of Abbot.
[12] At Tab 2 of Exhibit A-1 is found the description of a
project prepared by a consultant for DRC.
[13] At Tab 4, there is an agreement between ALP and
Datacalc Research Corporation. It is an agreement to perform
research in the field of Very Large Scale Integration
("VLSI") technology for ALP. It is dated
February 13, 1987 and it is for an amount of $150,000. There
is no evidence of the results.
[14] At Tab 5, there is an evaluation of the proposed
objectives for research and development to be made by DRC. It is
dated June 17, 1987 and it is from R.H.S. Hardy and
Associates. The comments were based on documents supplied by DRC.
They are the same documents that appear at Tab 2 and that
had been described by a consultant. The evaluation agrees with
the project as described.
[15] The testimony of Mr. Ghattas was in relation to the
prospectus and various financial aspects such as the
certification given by a well known firm of accountants. He
explained that, according to him, all papers were in proper form
and substance. Mr. Ghattas commented on the documents appearing
at Tabs 9 to 25 of Exhibit A-1.
[16] At Tab 9 of Exhibit A-1, is found the
Offering Memorandum. It is stated in the definition of
investor loan agreement, at page 3, that subscribers are
granted a loan possibility of up to 60% of the subscription
price. The return to investors is described at
page 2: for the year ending December 31, 1986, an
investment in the amount of $100,000 would incur an estimated
1986 tax saving of $64,000. Therefore, the after tax cost of the
investment is $36,000. The estimated 1986 tax savings consist
of an investment tax credit of $20,000 and a tax reduction of
$44,000, being 55% of net eligible scientific research and
experimental development expenditures amounting to 80% of
$100,000. Secondary investor is defined, at page 4, as
meaning Alexis Holdings Limited, a corporation subsisting under
the laws of Guernsey. The manners to subscribe for units are
described at pages 6 and 7. The manner followed by the
Appellants was that for each unit of $1,000, a cheque for $400
payable to National Trust Company in trust and a promissory note
for $600, payable on demand to Alexis Holdings Limited. At
page 42, the investor loan agreement provides that the
limited partner pledge the units as security for repayment of the
loan and that the recourse of the Secondary Investor will be
limited to realizing on the security of the units.
[17] "Research and development agreement" is defined
at page 4 as the agreement dated February 24, 1986, made
between the partnership and a research company. At page 17,
it is stated that five corporations will act as agents for the
partnership, under the research and development agreement, to
hire and manage technical staff to undertake the scientific
research and experimental development required for each of the
five projects on behalf of the partnership. Each agreement
provides for a budget of approved expenditures to cover staff
salaries and the research company will receive funds from the
partnership based on such budget. The partnership will purchase
all assets and other services directly. At page 19, it is
stated that the research companies were incorporated for the
purpose of participating in the projects described in this
memorandum. They presently have no assets or other resources
other than arrangements with the partnership in the form of the
license and research and development agreements, which are
conditional upon adequate funds being raised pursuant to this
offering. It is accepted by both parties that there had been no
other R & D agreement than the agreement mentioned at paragraph
9 of these Reasons.
[18] At Tab 10 are the 1986 financial statements of
Alexis Limited Partnership. Attached is the evaluation of the
research project made by Dr. R.H.S. Hardy (T661E.1(a))
and the description of the project (T661E.(b)). It is stated on
the last page numbered T661.E(d) that as of December 31,
1986, the Partnership had purchased approximately
$7.9 million worth of specialized computer hardware and
software. ... No expenditures of a current nature for the
propagation of research and development had been incurred at that
time. Research staff have been put in place in 1987 and progress
has been made on the projects, as outlined in parts (a) and (b)
above.
[19] At Tab 11, there is a letter from
Mr. Thomas W. Calvert, Ph.D., P.Eng. He states in
this letter that he is a professor at Simon Fraser University
with appointments in computing science and engineering science.
He knows Dr. R.H.S. Hardy, Professor of Engineering
Science at Simon Fraser University and it is his opinion that
Dr. Hardy is familiar with the area of research and
experimental development outlined in the project description, and
that he is technically qualified to give an opinion on whether
the project is scientific research and experimental
development.
[20] At Tab 15 is found the sales and trading agreement,
made effective February 14, 1986 and executed by the
parties this 16th day of December, 1986, between Ravina
International Limited, subsisting under the laws of England and
AMC as general partner. In Schedule A of this agreement
there is the list of the equipment required for all five
projects. They are the same projects described in the offering
memorandum and the same equipment.
[21] At Tab 16 is the deed of assignment and release
whereby on December 18, 1986 the trading agreement was
assigned by Ravina to Tinbon.
[22] At Tab 17 is the loan agreement between AHL and AMC,
dated December 31, 1986. AHL agreed to lend money to the
extent of $90 million. Schedule A of the loan agreement
shows the budgets of the five projects with the five R & D
corporations.
[23] Article 2.3 of the loan agreement reads as follows:
... The Lender will make an Advance to the Partnership on
the Closing Date under the Discretionary Credit in the amount of
$500,000, either by making and delivering to the partnership a
promissory note in like amount payable at any time after
January 15, 1987 on demand to the Lender by the Partnership
or by advancing cash in the amount of $500,000 to the Partnership
on December 31, 1986.
[24] At Tab 18 is a promissory note given by ALP to AHL
in the amount of $500,000. It is dated December 31,
1986.
[25] At Tab 19 is the loan agreement for the limited
partners. It is dated for reference December 31, 1986. It is
between AHL, and the Limited Partner and AMC. At
Article 2.4, there is an Election to Accrue Interest:
[... the investor may elect not to pay the interest due
on December 31, 1987 or on any December 31 thereafter
but rather to have interest accrue until, and pay interest on,
the date the Loan is otherwise due hereunder.]
Article 2.5 concerns the Repayment of Loan: [The investor
will repay the Loan and all accrued interest thereunder on the
earlier of: (a) December 31, 1996; (b) a declaration by the
Lender pursuant to paragraph 8.2(a); and (c) exercise by the
Investor of his option to require the lender to purchase some or
all of his Units under the Option Agreement, except that if the
option is exercized for a portion of such Units, the Investor
will repay then an amount equal to 60 % of the subscription
price of the Units in respect of which the said option is
exercized.] Article 8.3 stipulates clearly that it is a
non recourse loan on any property of the investors except on the
investors' units. It has been admitted that no interest has
ever been paid on those so-called loans.
[26] At Tab 26, there is a cheque made to the Staten Bank
Holland in the amount of $6.5 million. It is dated
December 31, 1986 and it says: "For Tinbon equipment
purchase". It is issued from The Royal Bank of Canada, Main
Branch, Royal Bank Plaza in Toronto. Although there is only a
signature without the name of the corporation, the signature is
the same as the one appearing on the various agreements signed by
the president of ALP and AMC, that is
Mr. Robert Chester.
[27] At Tab 27 there is a letter from The Royal Bank of
Canada, Vancouver, dated January 15, 1987 addressed to the
Toronto branch. This letter says: "... [... The
wire transfer from Staten Bank Holland, was originated on
December 31, 1986, in the amount of $6,500,000.00. ... Mr.
Robert Chester, President of AMC Research Corp., was notified of
the wire on December 31, 1986, and was able to draw a cheque
against the account payable to Tinbon Trading Co. on that
day ...].
[28] Mr. George Franklin Shaw is a limited partner. He
testified that in August 1987, he went unannounced to the
office of ALP at the Discovery Park, in Burnaby, B.C. Discovery
Park, is a prestigious government building at the disposal of
some industries. There were signs identifying the location of
ALP's office. He saw the manager, Mr. Chester. There
were 10 to 15 computer stations. He asked questions and
received satisfactory answers. Everything appeared to him as
state-of-the-art equipment. Besides Mr.
Chester, there were two other people working and wearing white
smocks. He stayed there for about one hour and 45 minutes.
Pursuant to this visit, he acquired some more units in
December 1987. He admitted in cross-examination that
he did not know much about electronic equipment although he is
interested in electronic research.
[29] Mr. Tim Flessas was presented as an expert witness
who also had actual dealings with the facts of this case. He is a
business consultant residing in Athens, Greece. He has a Bachelor
of Aeronautical Engineering. At Philips, he was a director of
logistics or procurement. He was involved in the deal made by
Soltech with Philips regarding the 400 to 500 personal
computers manufactured by Philips for Soltech. He stated that he
believed that Abbot was an electronic company situated in
California.
[30] On December 23, 1986, Mr. Flessas signed a
letter (Tab 34) to AMC confirming the report (Tab 33) that
he had signed in June 1986. The report is entitled Technical
Report on Digital Signal Processing ("DSP") and Surface
Mount Technology ("SMT") including Very Large Scale
Integration ("VLSI"), prepared for DRC and ALP. The
list of equipment appearing in this report is identical to the
one appearing at Tab 15 of Exhibit A-1, the sales
and trading agreement. It is also identical to the list of
equipment appearing in the R & D agreement at Tab 1 of
Exhibit A-1. The description of the project is also
similar to the description found in these two documents.
[31] In cross-examination, Mr. Flessas was asked how he
proceeded for the purchase of the equipment at Philips. He stated
that the engineers would tell him: "I need those
capabilities". Mr. Flessas would contact various
companies and was involved in the selection or what the equipment
was able to do. Engineers would make the test run, they would
make sure that the equipment did the job. They used the ordinary
precautions. The engineers will make sure that the performance is
going to be what they want it to be. The choice of the software
would belong to the engineers involved with the testing and
sorting of the equipment to ensure the compatibility of the
hardware and the software.
[32] Mr. Paul Lancaster was the Respondent's
expert in this matter. He is a professional engineer who has
since 1963 worked in the field of broadcast and
telecommunications. He has worked as the head of design and
manufacture of various telecommunications undertakings. His
report was produced as Exhibit R-3. He explained that
his first visit to ALP in Burnaby was on June 27, 1988. At that
time, he met Mr. Rav Solanki. Although this was an
announced visit, the numerous work stations, six at best, were
not working. The software did not seem to work as there were
integration difficulties. Mr. Lancaster said that he did not see
any libraries or books. He asked that some documentation be sent
to him later, and although a written request was made to this
effect, no documentation was ever received. There were no copies
of their benchmark expectations. The expectation associated with
any product development cycle was completely absent from all the
projects reviewed. Abbot was and still is a new name for
him. He does not know anything about this corporation. There were
just no reports to refer to, there was no R & D done.
[33] The conclusions of his report are as follows:
CONCLUSIONS ON ELIGIBILITY
The evidence of normal systematic record keeping and
documentation associated with any new product development cycle
is completely absent from all the projects reviewed.
The capability of the management to organize and provide
facilities and necessary skills in order to address these
projects is inadequate. Over the period 1986 to 1988 I was unable
to identify any documented or demonstrated proof of novel
process, concept or technique normally associated with an R &
D environment.
The costs for the equipment purchased appears excessive when
the delivery and activation dates are taken into account. The use
of the clean room, judging from its current condition seems
highly unlikely.
I judge that all the projects reviewed, fail to meet the
requirements of Section 37, regulation 2900 of the Income
Tax Act.
[34] Mr. Lancaster explained the normal practice followed
in a matter of purchasing equipment. First there is a need to
survey the suppliers for hardware and software. Then requirements
should be indicated to the suppliers and bids should be
requested. Then a demonstration should occur to establish that
the equipment can do what it is supposed to do. If the hardware
is going to be customized, the specifications should be in
writing.
[35] Mr. Walter Wong, auditor at the Tax Avoidance
Section, was the last witness. Exhibit R-1 contains
100 tabs. At Tab 22 is an extensive report prepared by
Mr. Wong on the facts of this appeal. The report is dated
March 2, 1995. The problems encountered by Revenue Canada
are stated at the beginning of this report. It says: The
Partnership had no identifiable R & D work done. The R & D
expenditures were inflated for tax purposes ....
[36] At paragraph 11 of his report, Mr. Wong states that:
On December 31, 1986,... AHL electronically transferred
$6.5 million from the Staten Bank Holland to AMC. ...
conditional on AMC providing a $6.5 million cheque to the
Staten Bank Holland for payment of Tinbon equipment purchases....
there was a circularization of the $6.5 million fund from
AHL to AMC to Tinbon and back to AHL on the same day. At page
25: the bank statements from the Staten Bank Holland show that
AHL did not have funds in the bank. All these assertions are
based on documents produced in R-1.
[37] At the bottom of page 13 and at page 14 of his
report: Our Science Advisors did not conclude that the
projects were unfeasible. Rather, in their review of the proposed
projects, no identifiable R & D activities could be traced to
support existence of an ongoing research effort. There were not
suitably qualified R & D personnel in ALP with experience in
the field who were able to undertake work of the magnitude
proposed. The equipment acquired for the R & D projects was
incompatible and therefore, not operational ....
[38] At page 18: The scientific research and
development activity of ALP was reviewed by our in-house
science advisor, Dr. Morley Lipsett. In his opinion, no
evidence of a systematic investigation or anything existed. The
project descriptions were only hypothetical. There was no
evidence of a systematic review of potential research equipment.
There was also insufficient evidence of suitably qualified
R & D personnel in the company with experience in the field who
were able to undertake work of the magnitude proposed.
Dr. Lipsett further stated in his report that the capital
equipment seemed redundant and in any event, destined for use in
routine and custom engineering.
[39] Mr. Wong also stated in his report that
Mr. T. C. Flessas did not inspect the equipment
before rendering his opinion on the reasonableness of the
acquisition value of the equipment. The equipment was not
available for inspection until January 14, 1987.
Mr. Flessas expressed his opinion only on the nature of the
proposed research program and not a review of the actual R & D
program. The feasibility of the proposed research program is not
disputed. What is disputed is the actual R & D efforts that
characterize the equipment purchased as qualified R & D
expenditures and the R & D that occurred.
[40] Mr. Wong indicated that a value of $701,777.68 had
been attributed to the equipment by Inland Revenue. At tabs 60 to
62, 65 and 66 are the reports or notes made by Inland Revenue,
Special Office London 1, on the value of the electronic equipment
purchased. More particularly, a report at tab 61 at paragraph 10,
states that: A statement of money received and paid up to 31
March 1988 shows purchases totalling US $596,412.84 whereas the
purchases schedule shows a total of US $6,111,552.12.
Mr. Wong inferred from all the facts of this case that only
an amount of $1,345,000 had been paid by ALP to Tinbon
(Tab 22 of the Exhibit R-1,
Schedule 10).
[41] Other auditors at Revenue Canada made the following
comments (Tabs 8 and 9): The capital equipment claimed was not
purchased according to commonly accepted standards for diligent
assurance of proper functioning. Tinbon is not an household name
in computer, nor is Abbot. The equipment was picked from
different suppliers without performing the necessary benchmark
testing. Accordingly, ALP ended up with incompatible equipment.
Normal practice for $7.9 million worth of equipment would
include a detailed review of what is available and from whom,
prior to a directed procurement from an unknown supplier. It is
unlikely that the equipment, were it new when delivered, and it
is not clear that it was, was worth more than a fraction of the
claimed amounts. Technical material provided appears to be
extracted from unknown sources and does not demonstrate that work
was carried out to meet the criteria.
[42] At Tab 95 of Exhibit R-1, is a letter from Revenue Canada
to ALP. It is dated March 15, 1988 and it requests
information concerning the scientific research and experimental
development made for the period ending December 31, 1986.
The same request was made April 20, 1988 (Tab 96). On August 3,
1988, there is a letter (Tab 97) addressed to
Mr. Rav Solanki, stating the following:
...
During our meeting on June 27th, 1988 with respect to the
valuation of the equipment purchased to carry out R & D, you
promised to provide Mr. Paul Lancaster with further information
which you had available. Mr. Lancaster had requested specifically
the following:
- the system specification documentation.
- records of the "benchmark" tests done on the
system.
- packing lists itemizing the equipment received.
To date, we have not received any of the material listed
above, in spite of our repeated phone calls and your promises to
courier the information.
We again request you to provide the information as soon as
possible. If we have not received it within 14 days of the date
of this letter, we will ask Mr. Lancaster to proceed with his
valuation based on the information provided by you to date.
...
[43] Tab 98 of Exhibit R-1, is a letter from
Revenue Canada, dated October 6, 1988 stating that the claim
for the project did not qualify as R & D.
[44] At Tab 1 of Exhibit R-1, is a letter
addressed to the Appellant Kunkel, on February 23, 1990. It
is a long letter explaining why the research and development
expenditures and the investment tax credit were disallowed. At
Tab 2, there is another letter from Revenue Canada,
this time originating from Mr. Wong, addressed to
Mr. Kunkel, explaining at length the facts relative to the
disallowance of the Appellant's claim.
Arguments
[45] Counsel for the Appellants submitted that the Appellants
were limited partners and as such did not have to take part in
the management of the business. He referred to section 64 of
the Partnership Act of British Coulumbia: A limited
partner is not liable as a general partner unless he takes part
in the management of the business. Counsel also submitted
that it is in February 1990, more than three years after the
Appellants had made their contribution, that they were informed
by Revenue Canada that the latter disputed the purchase costs of
the equipment and the existence of R & D activities. Counsel
referred also to the fact that Mr. Rav Solanki died in
September 1991 in a car accident. This made it very
difficult to adduce the evidence that the Appellants would have
endeavoured to do. Counsel, as examples, indicated that it is by
chance that they have obtained the address of Mr. Flessas
and that they have learned about
Mr. Kamlesh Solanki's existence and role in the
partnership. The burden of proof of the Appellants should be
evaluated in this perspective.
[46] Counsel for the Appellants submitted that there were two
opposed versions: the Appellants' version is that the
equipment had been acquired in accordance with the current
practices, that it was in conformity with the proposed projects,
that the purchase price was reasonable, that indeed,
$6.5 million had been paid, leaving a balance of $1,430,000
and that R & D activities were undertaken. The Respondent's
version is the opposite.
[47] Counsel for the Appellants referred to some points of the
evidence: First relating to the purchase of the equipment:
Mr. Kamlesh Solanki testified that his brother Rav had
gone to computer trade shows prior to purchasing the equipment;
Mr. Kamlesh Solanki had participated in the development
of the specifications; on the instructions of Tinbon, Kamlesh and
Rav Solanki went to Lattice Logic to ensure the
compatibility of certain equipment; Mr. Flessas had
estimated that the equipment was worth the price that was paid
and that it was the appropriate equipment.
[48] Regarding the R & D activities, counsel for the
Appellants reminded the Court that the Respondent did not contest
the value of the R & D project. Therefore, the project was a
valid project. The personnel was qualified and the equipment was
functional, at least it was in August 1987, when Mr. Shaw visited
ALP's office. When Mr. Kamlesh Solanki left DRC to go to
England, a mask had been prepared ready to go to the foundry.
Counsel submitted that the Respondent's evidence on the
matter of the absence of R & D activities was based only on the
testimony of the expert witness of the Respondent and on the
point of absence of documentation, counsel referred to the
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in RIS-Christie v.
R., [1999] 1 C.T.C. 132 and more specifically to the
following excerpts:
... Regulation 2900 speaks of research undertaken for the
advancement of knowledge and for the purpose of creating new
products. It does not state that eligible research must actually
achieve those ends.
...
... In the circumstances of this case, I see no need to
impose an additional evidentiary burden on the taxpayer of having
to adduce documentary evidence relating to the repeatability of
testing data.
[49] Counsel for the Respondent submitted that it is up to the
taxpayer who wishes to claim business losses for R & D
activities to bring forward the evidence of such activities.
Counsel contended that the Respondent had adduced complete
evidence that the cost of the equipment was inflated, the
purchase of the equipment was made contrary to normal practices,
and that any systematic investigation was absent.
Conclusion
[50] Paragraph 2900(1) of the Regulations reads as
follows:
2900(1) For the purposes of this Part and sections 37 and 37.1
of the Act, “scientific research and experimental
development” means systematic investigation or search
carried out in a field of science or technology by means of
experiment or analysis, that is to say,
(a) basic research, namely, work undertaken for the
advancement of scientific knowledge without a specific practical
application in view,
(b) applied research, namely, work undertaken for the
advancement of scientific knowledge with a specific practical
application in view,
(c) experimental development, namely, work undertaken
for the purposes of achieving technological advancement for the
purposes of creating new, or improving existing, materials,
devices, products or processes, including incremental
improvements thereto, or
(d) work with respect to engineering, design,
operations research, mathematical analysis, computer programming,
data collection, testing and psychological research where that
work is commensurate with the needs, and directly in support, of
the work described in paragraph (a), (b) or
(c),
but does not include work with respect to
(e) market research or sales promotion,
(f) quality control or routine testing of materials,
devices, products or processes,
(g) research in the social sciences or the
humanities,
(h) prospecting, exploring or drilling for, or
producing, minerals, petroleum or natural gas,
(i) the commercial production of a new or improved
material, device or product or the commercial use of a new or
improved process,
(j) style changes, or
(k) routine data collection.
[51] I understand that it is difficult for the limited
partners in the present case, to be those who have to adduce the
evidence of a systematic investigation or search carried out for
the advancement of scientific knowledge and that the equipment
had been genuinely acquired for that purpose. They confided in
reports made by well known firms of accountants and lawyers,
whose role is not in question here. The Appellants were pleased
to contribute capital in R & D activities. At the same time
that they encouraged research, they obtained tax advantages. It
must be said, however, that as limited partners, they have the
rights described at section 58 of the Partnership
Act:
58. A limited partner has the same right as a general
partner
(a) to inspect and make copies of or take extracts from the
limited partnership books at all times;
(b) to be given, on demand, true and full information of all
things affecting the limited partnership and to be given a formal
account of partnership affairs whenever circumstances render it
just and reasonable; and
(c) to obtain dissolution and winding up of the limited
partnership by court order.
[52] It seems to me that the economy of the Act
requires that when a limited partner wishes to claim the business
losses of a partnership, as for any taxpayer claiming business
losses, evidence of the existence of the business and of the
losses incurred must be adduced, and, where the claim is for
R & D losses, the evidence of R & D activities must be
adduced. I was not referred to any case law and I am not aware of
any that found that such evidence did not have to be adduced by a
limited partner claiming such business losses.
[53] I will now refer to the decision of RIS-Christie v.
R., referred to by counsel for the Appellants, on the absence
of documentation. This decision of the Federal Court of Appeal
was based on the findings made by the Tax Court Judge, as related
at paragraph 16 of that decision, that testing had been
undertaken and that the research efforts of Slonimsky and his
assistant constituted a technological advancement.
[54] In the present case, there is no evidence of any
systematic investigation of any sort or that the research led to
a technological advancement, as no pertinent records or
information was provided to the Respondent's officials. The
evidence revealed that Mr. Rav Solanki, the directing
mind, as much on the organization aspect as on the scientific
aspect, has been met many times by officials of Revenue Canada
and was given ample time and space to provide satisfactory
answers.
[55] I refer to paragraphs 32 and 42 of these reasons
concerning announced visits and letters requesting information.
Notes made by Mr. Lancaster (Exhibit R-6) state
that on August 24, 1988, there was a meeting with
Mr. Rav Solanki: "Rav was the only contact so
far that I had met and claimed to be the spec writer, project
manager and in charge of the Alexis group". If the
specifications had been written by him or by
Mr. Kamlesh Solanki there was no reason at that time
why they could not have been provided to Mr. Lancaster as ALP was
still in operation. If a mask had been prepared before
Mr. Kamlesh Solanki’s departure for London in the
middle of 1988 (paragraph 10 of these reasons), it surely
could have been shown to the Respondent’s scientific
officials and experts since the meetings with
Mr. Rav Solanki were at that exact time. If work had
been subcontracted, the subcontractors could have provided
documentary evidence of their scientific investigation.
[56] It appears evident that the equipment was not purchased
according to normal practices. The equipment was purchased
without quotation from other suppliers, without specifications,
without benchmark testing or performance guarantees and from an
unknown electronic maker. On what constitutes normal practices
for the acquisition of equipment, the descriptions of these
practices given by Mr. Flessas and by Mr. Lancaster on
this subject are in concordance (paragraphs 31 and 34 of
these Reasons). We have to remember that Mr. Flessas was the head
of procurement at Philips (paragraph 29 of these Reasons).
It is therefore strange that Mr. Flessas, on whose testimony the
Appellants rely, affirms that the equipment was worth the price
paid, without ever having seen it, without being able to find the
Abbot equipment in any existing catalogue, and this equipment not
having been purchased according to the normal practice that he
himself followed.
[57] With what money was the equipment purchased? Based on
complete documentary evidence appearing at various tabs of
Exhibit R-1, the Respondent affirms that most of it,
up to the amount of $6,500,000, was fictitious money. A review of
this evidence makes it impossible to disagree with this finding.
Moreover, commercial logic calls for the same conclusions.
[58] Commercial corporations do not loan money without
interest. AHL, without evidencing its financial capabilities,
would want us to believe that it loaned millions of dollars
without interest: loans were non recourse loans and the interest
could have been paid in ten years. Lending businesses do not loan
money of this magnitude and R & D businesses, as well, do not
spend money of this magnitude, for the purchase of equipment,
unless the acquisition is made in a scientific and competitive
manner.
[59] There is no other conclusion based on documentary
evidence and commercial logic that the amount of
$6.5 million made a round trip in the same day and there was
no money other than the cash provided by the limited partners in
the acquisition costs of the equipment.
[60] It is my view that the evidence brought forward by the
Respondent in this case is thorough and the assumptions made by
the Minister of National Revenue were satisfactorily proven. This
evidence had been provided to the Appellants for a long time and
it surely did not take them by surprise.
[61] For the reasons that the purchase cost of the equipment
was inflated by $6.5 million and that no systematic
investigation was carried on, the appeals are dismissed with
costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 14th day of December, 1999.
“Louise Lamarre Proulx”
J.T.C.C.