Date: 19990129
Docket: 98-814-IT-I
BETWEEN:
WILFRED H. NORDICK,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for judgment
O'Connor, J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal was heard at Saskatoon, Saskatchewan on
January 20, 1999 pursuant to the Informal Procedure of this
Court.
Issue
[2] The issue is whether the Appellant is entitled to
deductions from income of losses of $9,068.63 in 1994 and
$10,520.39 in 1995 resulting from the operation of an Amway
distributorship.
Facts
[3] The basic facts are as follows. The Appellant was employed
as a heavy duty mechanic at a potash corporation in Saskatchewan
and had been with that employer for the last 23 years. In several
years there were frequent periods when the Appellant and other
employees were laid off for considerable periods of time, in some
cases, for three or four months. The Appellant testified that he
desired to leave the mine either on retirement or earlier and
wanted to be his own boss. Thus he was looking forward to
starting his own business with a minimum investment. In early
1992 he started up the Amway business under the name of WM
Enterprises. He relied on the Amway brochures setting forth
business plans and projections. He intended hopefully some day to
have substantial profits. He attended meetings and conventions,
listened to tapes and examined the literature supplied by
Amway.
[4] He explained that for no personal reasons but simply to
improve the Amway business he moved from his home in Humboldt,
Saskatchewan (population 5,000) to Saskatoon (population
approximately 180,000). The reasons for the move to Saskatoon
were supported by the testimony of the Appellant's wife.
There was some suggestion by counsel for the Respondent that the
move may have been motivated by the fact the Appellant and his
wife had two children in Saskatoon. This possible motive is
mitigated by the fact that the Appellant and his wife also had
one child in Humboldt. One certain non-reason for the move was
proximity to the mine as Humboldt is only 20 miles from the mine
whereas Saskatoon is approximately 72 miles therefrom.
[5] In both cities the Appellant made efforts to attract
customers and distributors down line.
[6] The Appellant confirmed that his other business
experiences were minimal at best and that he did no advertising
personally but relied on the input of Amway and its marketing
policies. He made his own attempts at marketing by visiting
malls, airshows and other public places. Further he obtained a
telephone list of all of the employees at the mine and stated
that he contacted many of them in an effort to sell Amway
products or obtain distributors. He also engaged the services of
Welcome Wagon in Saskatoon in an effort to meet new prospects
whether as customers or distributors. He did register the
business name and also registered for GST purposes.
[7] He employed his wife as his secretary, bookkeeper and
salesperson but the business paid no salary to her. The
Appellant's wife also attended Amway meetings and took
copious notes of what went on at those meetings. Those notes were
not submitted as exhibits but several copy books were shown to
the Court as evidence of the considerable amount of
note-taking.
[8] The books and records kept by the Appellant's wife
were extremely detailed. These were filed as Exhibits A-12, A-13
and A-14.
[9] The Appellant testified and was generally confirmed in
this respect by the testimony of his wife that when he was not
working at the mine, i.e., lay-off periods, he would spend as
much as 100 hours a week in the Amway business. When he was
working at the mine his shift was 40 hours a week and his
testimony was to the effect that he used time after work and
weekends in Amway activities.
[10] Despite his efforts the Appellant reported losses as
follows:
|
TAXATION YEAR
|
GROSS INCOME
|
GROSS PROFIT
|
OPERATING EXPENSES
|
NET
LOSSES
|
|
1992
|
$812.14
|
($382.73
|
$11,960.27
|
($12,343.00)
|
|
1993
|
$5,551.61
|
($1,564.78)
|
$13,524.72
|
($15,089.50)
|
|
1994
|
$4,834.74
|
$871.27
|
$9,937.90
|
($9,068.63)
|
|
1995
|
$4,900.32
|
($90.19)
|
$10,430.20
|
($10,520.39)
|
In 1996, a year in which his Amway losses were $3,489 he
finally determined that the vision was gone and consequently the
Amway business was closed.
Submissions
[11] Counsel for the Respondent submitted that the Appellant
had no reasonable expectation of profit from the Amway activity
in 1994 and 1995. He referred to several decisions in similar
Amway situations where, with I believe one exception, the Amway
distributor in question was considered not to have had a
reasonable expectation of profit. Counsel also indicated that the
Minister had given the Appellant a reasonable start-up period,
namely the years 1992 and 1993. He pointed out further that the
Appellant had no business plan, made no inquiries of possible
markets whether in Humboldt or Saskatoon and that he had no other
business experience.
[12] Counsel for the Appellant naturally takes the opposite
viewpoint. He suggests that there was a reasonable expectation of
profit. This was not a normal Amway case and Amway
distributorships should not necessarily be considered as
non-businesses. He pointed out that the dramatic action of the
Appellant in moving from Humboldt to Saskatoon to improve the
Amway business is certainly an indication that wanted to improve
the business and realize a profit once he moved to the larger
market. He thus argues that the startup period should be
recommenced at the point when the move was made, namely in August
of 1993 and that the years 1994 and 1995 can be considered as
further reasonable startup years. He argues that the indicia of a
business being carried on were evidenced by the fact of
registering the business name, registering for GST purposes,
although not required to do so because of the amount of sales,
the time put in by the Appellant and his wife and the record
keeping which was minute in detail as evidenced by Exhibits A-12,
A-13 and A-14.
[13] He adds that this was clearly not a tax driven plan as no
costs for use of house space were charged to the business and no
salary was paid to the Appellant's wife. He submits that the
Appellant had a reasonable expectation of profit and when he
concluded it was realistically unattainable, he did the logical
thing and closed the business after the 1996 year. Further,
although the Appellant had no personal business plan, it was not
unreasonable for him to rely on Amway's plans, projections
and marketing and advertising.
[14] He referred to all of the usual cases dealing with the
subject of reasonable expectation of profit. Moreover, he quoted
Bowman, T.C.C.J. in Kaye v. Her Majesty the Queen, 98 DTC
1659 as follows at 1659 and following:
[4] I do not find the ritual repetition of the phrase
particularly helpful in cases of this type, and I prefer to put
the matter on the basis "Is there or is there not truly a
business?" This is a broader but, I believe, a more
meaningful question and one that, for me at least, leads to a
more fruitful line of enquiry. No doubt it subsumes the question
of the objective reasonableness of the taxpayer's expectation
of profit, but there is more to it than that. How can it be said
that a driller of wildcat oil wells has a reasonable expectation
of profit and is therefore conducting a business given the
extremely low success rate? Yet no one questions that such
companies are carrying on a business. It is the inherent
commerciality of the enterprise, revealed in its organization,
that makes it a business. Subjective intention to make money,
while a factor, is not determinative, although its absence may
militate against the assertion that an activity is a
business.
[5] One cannot view the reasonableness of the expectation of
profit in isolation. One must ask "Would a reasonable
person, looking at a particular activity and applying ordinary
standards of commercial common sense, say 'yes, this is a
business'?" In answering this question the hypothetical
reasonable person would look at such things as capitalization,
knowledge of the participant and time spent. He or she would also
consider whether the person claiming to be in business has gone
about it in an orderly, businesslike way and in the way that a
business person would normally be expected to do.
[6] This leads to a further consideration -- that of
reasonableness. The reasonableness of expenditures is dealt with
specifically in section 67 of the Income Tax Act, but it
does not exist in a watertight compartment. Section 67 operates
within the context of a business and assumes the existence of a
business. It is also a component in the question whether a
particular activity is a business. For example, it cannot be
said, in the absence of compelling reasons, that a person would
spend $1,000,000 if all that could reasonably be expected to be
earned was $1,000.
[7] Ultimately, it boils down to a common sense appreciation
of all of the factors, in which each is assigned its appropriate
weight in the overall context. One must of course not discount
entrepreneurial vision and imagination, but they are hard to
evaluate at the outset. Simply put, if you want to be treated as
carrying on a business, you should act like a businessman.
Analysis and Decision
[15] In my opinion the situation of the Appellant in this case
differs from the normal Amway distributor case.
[16] The following are the principal factors leading to my
conclusion that there was a business with a reasonable
expectation of profit.
1. I accept the credibility of the Appellant and his wife.
2. The activity was operated as a business. Witness the
registration of the name and the registration for GST purposes
and the extremely detailed books and records kept by the
Appellant's wife.
3. The Appellant and his wife went to great efforts to learn
and attempt to grow the business, including reviewing the books
and tapes and attending at numerous meetings, sometimes on a
weekly basis. Moreover, much time was devoted to the
business.
4. The Appellant did increase gross sales considerably from
the year 1992 to 1993 and succeeded in reducing expenses by
approximately 25% in 1994versus 1993. Also losses were reduced in
1996.
5. The move to Saskatoon was a clear indication that the
Appellant and his wife were attempting to run and improve a
business.
6. There was no tax driven scheme. No salary was paid to his
wife and no house space charges were assessed to the
business.
7. The business was terminated when the Appellant finally
realized profits were not realistically attainable.
8. There may have been a small personal element, but in my
view, in an Amway situation such as the present that is, at best,
a minor consideration.
9. Counsel for the Appellant is not unreasonable in suggesting
that a new startup period should have been considered at the time
of the move to Saskatoon in August of 1993 and therefore losses
in 1994 and 1995 should be permitted.
[17] For all of the above reasons, the appeals are allowed
with costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 29th day of January
1999.
"T.P. O'Connor"
J.T.C.C.