Date: 19990805
Docket: 98-853-IT-I
BETWEEN:
DOUGLAS ASHTON LOUCKS,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Beaubier, J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal pursuant to the Informal Procedure was heard
at Ottawa, Ontario on July 29 and 30, 1999. The Appellant
testified. The Respondent called
Jeff Johnson, C.A., Revenue Canada's auditor on the
file.
[2] The appeal is respecting reassessments for the
Appellant's 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994 and 1995 taxation years.
The Appellant testified that he filed his income tax returns for
these years and for 1989 all together in July, 1996, after he had
filed a T1 special return for 1992 (Exhibit R-1) which described
his address as in New York State. After assessment, he did not
file a Notice of Objection for 1992 so the purported appeal for
that year is quashed.
[3] The Appellant claimed business losses for the years on
appeal which were disallowed on the following bases:
1. The alleged business activity of tilling and sharpening was
commenced in 1991, not 1990.
2. There was no reasonable expectation of profit from the
alleged activity.
3. The expenses claimed were not incurred for the purpose of
gaining income from a business or property.
Schedule "B" in the Reply to the Notice of Appeal
sets out the financial history of the activity. It reads:
SCHEDULE "B"
DOUGLAS ASHTON LOUCKS v. HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
COMBINED STATEMENT OF INCOME AND LOSS
SHARPENING OF TOOLS ACTIVITY & TILLING OF GARDENS
ACTIVITY
|
DESCRIPTION
|
1990
|
|
1991
|
|
1992
|
|
1993
|
|
1994
|
|
1995
|
|
Income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sharpening Tools
|
$ 95.07
|
|
$ 256.10
|
|
$ 352.00
|
|
$ 990.53
|
|
$ 644.79
|
|
$ 1,095.95
|
|
Tilling Gardens
|
0.00
|
|
140.00
|
|
335.00
|
|
140.40
|
|
215.00
|
|
230.00
|
|
Other
|
0.00
|
|
18.80
|
|
300.00
|
|
0.00
|
|
0.00
|
|
35.00
|
|
Total Income
|
$ 95.07
|
|
$ 414.90
|
|
$ 987.00
|
|
$ 1,130.93
|
|
$ 859.79
|
|
$ 1,360.95
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Building Supplies
|
$ 833.39
|
|
$
|
|
$
|
|
$
|
|
$
|
|
$
|
|
Tools
|
452.21
|
|
44.57
|
|
654.50
|
|
1,154.78
|
|
321.73
|
|
119.10
|
|
Tool Repairs
|
25.00
|
|
25.57
|
|
65.99
|
|
|
|
2.59
|
|
|
|
Equipment Rentals
|
144.27
|
|
|
|
165.72
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vehicle Fuel
|
853.24
|
|
739.46
|
|
479.51
|
|
455.29
|
|
521.01
|
|
446.00
|
|
Vehicle Repairs
|
724.81
|
|
1,479.76
|
|
1,171.65
|
|
2,336.34
|
|
1,155.38
|
|
443.57
|
|
Hydro Telephone
|
637.01
|
|
1,126.12
|
|
614.12
|
|
470.94
|
|
652.95
|
|
528.49
|
|
Advertisement
|
4.00
|
|
|
|
180.49
|
|
18.60
|
|
|
|
8.56
|
|
Publications
|
35.95
|
|
133.92
|
|
27.45
|
|
40.73
|
|
19.26
|
|
26.75
|
|
Insurance
|
470.04
|
|
470.04
|
|
470.04
|
|
429.67
|
|
467.64
|
|
467.64
|
|
Travel Expenses
|
9.70
|
|
12.50
|
|
24.65
|
|
12.21
|
|
40.55
|
|
195.81
|
|
Rent
|
1,820.00
|
|
2,256.45
|
|
2,073.00
|
|
2,284.85
|
|
2,210.00
|
|
2,122.50
|
|
Office Expenses
|
30.35
|
|
222.22
|
|
160.23
|
|
503.02
|
|
57.85
|
|
147.91
|
|
Shop Supplies
|
185.11
|
|
574.37
|
|
1,176.52
|
|
2,003.06
|
|
3,172.67
|
|
1,306.12
|
|
Interest Bank Charges
|
667.59
|
|
696.28
|
|
823.75
|
|
3,957.34
|
|
2,168.32
|
|
2,044.78
|
|
Legal, Parking, Etc.
|
|
|
145.33
|
|
162.19
|
|
110.43
|
|
116.27
|
|
97.90
|
|
Other
|
667.59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
45.00
|
|
Capital Cost Allowance
|
6,454.39
|
|
8,710.26
|
|
10,301.81
|
|
8,569.78
|
|
7,387.31
|
|
5,753.99
|
|
Total expenses
|
$ 14,014.65
|
|
$ 16,636.85
|
|
$ 18,551.62
|
|
$ 22,347.04
|
|
$ 18,293.53
|
|
$ 13,754.12
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Loss
|
($13,919.58)
|
|
($16,221.95)
|
|
($17,564.62)
|
|
($21,216.11)
|
|
($17,433.74)
|
|
($12,393.17)
|
[4] The Appellant testified in chief and described the
following dates respecting the alleged Activities that:
1. He carried on business as "D.A. Loucks
Construction" and finished a siding contract in May, 1990.
He stated that he was paid a final payment of $1,500 in 1990, but
that he reported it as income in 1989.
2. He planned to go into cabinet making as "Dalgar
Enterprises" during the years in question. However, there is
no evidence of any income whatsoever from this alleged enterprise
or any work done respecting it during the years in appeal.
3. He began the tilling and sharpening activity in May, 1993.
He stated that this is verified by his purchase of sharpening
equipment from Robert Van Allen in February, March, April and
May, 1993 (see Exhibits A-58, 59, 61 and 63). He also purchased
business cards for this activity in July 1993 in the name of
"Dundas Sharpening Service" (Exhibit A-52). However,
his income tax return stated that this alleged enterprise began
in 1990.
[5] There is no evidence of any income from the alleged
cabinet making activity. The Appellant had been in construction,
but not cabinet making, in previous years. He stated that he
terminated the construction activity in May, 1990 after he lost
money in successive years in the late 1980s. There is no evidence
that he solicited or advertised his alleged construction or
cabinet making activities during the years in question. On his
own testimony, he was not in the construction business after May,
1990. On the evidence, he never entered the cabinet making
business. He merely toyed with the idea of entering into it. The
Appellant admitted that he was not in the cabinet making business
during the period in question.
[6] For these reasons, the appeal for 1991 is dismissed. The
Appellant was not in any business in that year. As a result, a
question which remains for the Court is whether he was carrying
on the sharpening business as "Dundas Sharpening
Service" for 1993, 1994 and 1995 with a reasonable
expectation of profit. The Appellant testified that he did not
begin the activity of Dundas Sharpening Service until 1993.
[7] With respect to 1990, he testified that he finished his
construction business in that year and stored his equipment after
terminating that business. However, the credibility of the
Appellant is in serious question concerning his alleged business
activities for a number of reasons. Among the major reasons to
question the Appellant's testimony that he carried on various
activities as businesses or that he carried them on at all are
the following:
1. He was employed full time as a commissionnaire during all
of the years appealed to the Court.
2. Except for the strange income tax return (R-1) that he
filed for 1992, he first filed income tax returns for all of the
years, including 1992, in July, 1996. Except for 1992 he never
even reported his commissionnaire income before July, 1996. These
are not the practises of a genuine businessman.
3. His testimony conflicts with his income tax returns on the
following major aspects:
(a) He testified that he was last in the construction business
in 1990, not 1989. His counsel argued that, based on this
testimony, the Appellant should be allowed 1990 and 1991 business
losses to terminate the alleged construction activity.
(b) He testified that he began Dundas Sharpening Service in
1993, not 1990, as he filed. Therefore his counsel argued that he
should be allowed 1993, 1994 and 1995 losses claimed as start-up
losses.
(c) The Appellant did not prepare or maintain any ordinary
ledgers or records or even a scribbler describing payments
received and amounts paid out during all the years in question
even though he testified that he was in the construction business
for several years before 1990.
[8] Most important of all, the Appellant's sworn testimony
is not believed. He is not a credible witness. During hours of
testimony in support of his appeal and the expenses described in
Schedule B the Appellant presented ledger sheets that he says he
prepared in 1996 and then innumerable receipts respecting a few
of the headings in Schedule B. He admitted in examination in
chief that some of the receipts supporting the ledger sheets were
not paid for business purposes. However, major items of expenses
for which receipts were filed did not bear out inclusion in
Schedule B. These are:
1. "Rent" - Allison trailer rent at approximately
$35.00 per week
This was claimed and was presented as a storage item when the
Appellant terminated his construction activity and stored
woodworking equipment. However, it first appears in January, 1990
when, on the basis of the Appellant's testimony, storage was
not necessary. Given obviously spurious claims for expenses by
the Appellant such as receipts for housewares, a candy bar, a
local newspaper subscription, cement that was clearly used to
build a pad for his new home that he never finished, eaves trough
parts that appeared to have been for his own home, soap and
household cleaning goods, the Allison claims for expenses are not
accepted without substantiation by way of independent
testimony.
2. "Vehicle Fuel" and "Vehicle
Repairs"
The Appellant was employed as a Commissionaire. The fuel and
vehicle expenses he claimed in January, 1990 totalled $105.00
respecting a siding contract. In 1991 he deducted similar fuel
expenses throughout the year when he was doing nothing by way of
alleged business. But he remained employed as a Commissionaire.
He used a truck. His wife had a car. While he alleged the truck
was used for business, in many months there was no business. The
alleged sharpening business was not particularized respecting the
alleged expenses. On the evidence, Mr. Loucks used the truck for
all his driving. He was employed at Nestle's Canada Ltd. in
Chesterville while his business was conducted from his home and
garage in Winchester, Ontario. Many of the fuel receipts were
from Chesterville. He was not in any business in 1991 and yet
testified that his fuel bills in 1991 were for business. This
testimony is incredible.
3. "Hydro & Telephone"
For the same reason and on the same basis that the fuel and
vehicle expenses were denied, the Appellant's claims for
telephone expenses are denied. With respect to the telephone bill
claims, the Appellant cut them by 50% on July 29 and then on July
30, when he testified in chief respecting 1994 and 1995, he
withdrew most long distance charges. By contrast, he filed claims
for 100% of his telephone bills. The telephone was his home
phone.
[9] Because the Appellant's testimony is not believed, the
Court finds that he was not in any business in 1990. His original
income tax returns filed in 1996 state in hindsight that he was
not in business in 1990. In both 1990 and 1991 he did not file
income tax returns. These dates are simultaneous with the alleged
construction business activity. He did not keep any ledgers or
records, a failure which does not accord with the practice an
experienced business which the Appellant states he was in 1989
and 1990. He testified that in 1990 he received $1,500 for the
completion of a 1989 construction contract. But his income tax
returns prepared in 1996 do not verify that. He submitted a bank
statement showing a $1,500 deposit in 1990. That deposit could
have come from anywhere. The, at best, ambiguous evidence of the
Appellant fails to meet his onus of proof and his overall lack of
credibility simply destroys any testimony he gave respecting
1990. His appeal for 1990 is dismissed.
[10] The Appellant testified that, contrary to his 1992 and
1993 T-1 General income tax returns filed in July, 1996, he began
his tilling and sharpening activity in 1993. This was supported
by a business plan he submitted to The Toronto-Dominion Bank in
1993 under the Ontario Ventures programme when he applied for a
$15,000 loan. The Toronto-Dominion Bank gave him that loan.
However, in his first interview with Jeff Johnson, Revenue
Canada's auditor, Mr. Loucks said that 2/3 of the $15,000 was
spent on personal items and not for business. At that time he
also said that his payments to Mr. Van Allen in 1993 were for
personal purposes. In his testimony in Court Mr. Loucks stated
that the entire loan was spent for business purposes and that he
purchased sharpening equipment from Mr. Van Allen. No bill of
sale, registration or list of the alleged sharpening equipment
was placed in evidence. Mr. Johnson is believed and Mr. Loucks is
not.
[11] The Appellant testified that he started the sharpening
and tilling business in 1993. His business plan's projections
which he presented to The Toronto-Dominion Bank were as
follows:
|
YEAR
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
|
Income
|
$4,320
|
$15,840
|
$17,424
|
$19,166
|
$21,083
|
|
Expenses
|
6,940
plus
start-up costs
|
6,940
|
6,940
|
6,940
|
6,940
|
He testified that his plan could not be carried out because he
was unable to build a new home and business premises due to
municipal permit delays. When the permit was finally granted, he
could not obtain financing for the building. A second cause for
his failure was his heart stoppage on June 1, 1994 which resulted
in the installation of his pacemaker. The Appellant was born in
1938. Appellant's counsel argued that these impediments
should permit the Appellant to have a start up period for 1993
through 1995.
[12] However the evidence is clear that many of the deductions
he claimed are personal, including vehicle fuel and repairs,
"hydro telephone", and "rent". No evidence
was tendered respecting "insurance" but some exhibits
described it as personal insurance and no basis for its deduction
was submitted. The "office expenses" were not
explained. The various bank charges were admitted to be personal
in part and no explicit detail was submitted of the bank charges
respecting the $15,000 loan which was alleged to be for the
sharpening activity. The capital cost claimed was not supported
by detailed evidence. Based on the Appellant's actions, it
may have been personal or for alleged construction or cabinet
making activities and, or, for the sharpening and tilling
activities.
[13] None of his testimony as to the 1993 start-up was
supported by the T-1 Generals filed. They were filed in 1996 when
he had both foresight and hindsight. The Appellant's tilling
and sharpening income which was finally reported in 1996 was from
a hobby, not a business. That is the way he treated it during
those years and the evidence accepted indicates that he admitted
that 2/3 of the $15,000 loan was not used for business purposes.
Whether the plan submitted to The Toronto-Dominion Bank was
genuine or not at the time was not established. But it was not
carried out by the Appellant. He testified that the Bank did not
care so long as the payments were made. He made the payments.
[14] In summary, the Appellant has, by his actions, presented
three stories respecting his alleged businesses:
1. By not filing any timely income tax returns, by his first
1992 income tax return and by his lack of records, there were no
businesses from 1990 to 1995 inclusive.
2. By his income tax returns filed in 1996 the construction
business terminated in 1989, and the sharpening and tilling
business began in 1990.
3. He testified that the construction business terminated in
1990 and the sharpening and tilling business began in 1993.
By these conflicting stories, his conflicting and incredible
testimony and his conflicting documents, the Appellant has failed
to upset the assessment and assumptions 11(b), (e), (f), (g),
(h), (i), (j), (k), (l) and (m). The Court does not accept the
Appellant's claims that he was engaged in any business in
1990, 1991, 1993, 1994 and 1995.
The appeals are dismissed.
Signed at Saskatoon, Saskatchewan this 5th day of
August, 1999.
"D.W. Beaubier"
J.T.C.C.