Date: 19990914
Dockets: 98-1165-IT-I; 98-1166-IT-I
BETWEEN:
FELIX SCAMURRA, ALBERT SCAMURRA,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Teskey J.T.C.C.
[1] The Appellant in his Notice of Appeal wherein he appealed
his reassessment of income tax for the years 1992, 1993 and 1994,
elected the informal procedure.
[2] The Minister in his Reply to the Notice of Appeal
(the "Reply") made assumptions of fact. These are
found in paragraph 6 of the Reply and it was acknowledged by
the agent for the Appellant that the facts set out in
subparagraphs A, B, C, D and F are true. Also, the Appellant
put in as Exhibit A-1 a copy of his T1 1998 tax return, which
shows again a loss.
[3] The Appellant gave evidence on his own behalf and on
behalf of his brother and both appeals were heard on common
evidence. The Appellant stated: "On the advice of my father,
and knowing that the building was managed by a professional
management company, I bought this unit". There is no
evidence before me that there were any surprises. There is no
evidence before me that he or his brother even considered that
there would be a profit in year one or any other year.
[4] It is suggested to the Court that I should take into
consideration that real estate values took a tumble very shortly
thereafter. Values of real estate did take a tumble in 1990 and
1991, but there is no evidence before me that the rental market
tumbled. There is no evidence before me at the time he made his
offer to purchase the rental unit, that the expectation of the
rentals was a certain value, and by the time the unit was
completed and the deal closed, that it was something less.
[5] There was no evidence in front of me that either the
Appellant or his brother thought that the rents would go up and
up, except he did say that next year (2000) he hoped, or it might
have been this year, to make $1,200. The Appellant also said in
cross-examination that he had never discussed the rentals with
the agent.
[6] I assume that because it was a total arm's length
transaction between him and the rental agent and all the tenants,
that the rents they received were at market value. But there is
no evidence before me that the rent received in 1990, the first
year, and/or the rent received in 1992, was something less than
he expected when he entered into the agreement.
[7] There is no evidence before me that the day he entered
into the agreement, and by the time it closed, his interest
expenses had skyrocketed and that when he bought the unit, it was
calculated on a lesser percent.
[8] In fact, the Appellant knew next to nothing. When
questioned by counsel for the Respondent and myself about his
expenses, he could not explain the various expenses. He brought
no receipts, tax bills or anything here to explain them and could
not explain them.
[9] The unit was purchased in 1989 and that from 1990 up to
and including 1998, no profit has been shown. No evidence is
before me how capital cost allowance could be calculated. I do
not have any evidence before me that would allow me to say of the
$150,000 purchase price, $50,000 is land and $100,000 is bricks
and mortar or vice versa, so I have no idea what the capital cost
allowance would be if it was to be applied. I am satisfied that
under the case-law, that there is no personal element,
except that the losses were to be written-off against other
income.
[10] Against these facts, I must look to the law. The seminal
case on business expenses is the decision of Dickson J., as he
then was, of the Supreme Court of Canada in Moldowan v. The
Queen, 77 DTC 5213. He says at paragraph 11:
Although originally disputed, it is now accepted that in order
to have a "source of income" the taxpayer must have a
profit or a reasonable expectation of profit.
[11] Then in paragraph 12, he goes on and says:
The following criteria should be considered: the profit and
loss experience in past years, the taxpayer's training, the
taxpayer's intended course of action, the capability of the
venture as capitalized to show a profit after charging capital
cost allowance. The list is not intended to be exhaustive.
[12] In this appeal, the taxpayer never gave me a course of
action of what they were going to do. They just bought it. We do
know that he refinanced in 1997 and did pay off the second
mortgage. There is no evidence that the Appellant, in 1989, had a
conversation that might have gone as follows: "We knew we
were over capitalized and we agreed to pay X number of dollars
per year off the principal and the result was with the estimated
increase in rental, by year six, we would make a profit". He
never even thought about capital and profit, the unit was just
purchased.
[13] Experience. I think that in rental losses
experience is probably of little consequence to look at and the
same with training. It's the intended course of action and
the capability of the venture as capitalized to show a profit
that must be shown.
[14] Herein, there was no intended course of action in front
of me. The taxpayer did not even mention it and there was no
course of action concerning the capitalization. It was obvious
from day one that it could not produce a profit.
[15] The only way this unit could produce a profit would be to
either escalate the rental income or to cut the expenses, and the
only way they could cut the expenses, assuming that they are
legitimate, was by paying down the over-capitalized cost of the
borrowing, paying it down to a level so that it could produce a
net profit.
[16] The only evidence that I have on paying down is that when
asked by counsel for the Respondent: "In 1992, 1993 and
1994, did you intend to pay off the mortgage"; and the
response to that: "Could not afford to pay down in those
years". He might have said: "When we bought it, I
figured in 1992 I could pay another five down, in 1993 and
1994", but he didn't say that.
[17] If the evidence had been: "In 1992, 1993 and 1994 I
had hoped and my brother hoped that we would be able to pay down
$5,000 each year, and that would have given us in 1995 a profit,
but 1992 we had a crash in our business and we didn't have
the extra money, but there was no explanation. In fact, there
wasn't any evidence that said he even intended to do that
when he bought it.
[18] Now, Moldowan has been visited by the Federal
Court of Appeal on several occasions. The first significant case
was Tonn v. The Queen, a decision by Linden J.A., and
this is reported at [1996] 1 CTC 205, and also at
96 DTC 6001.
[19] Now, Linden broke reasonable expectations of profit into
two categories. One category is where there is a strong personal
element, and the other category is where there isn't a
personal element.
[20] I am satisfied in this case that in what Linden was
saying, there is no strong personal element. Strong personal
element is where a person buys a house and rents the upper floor
or the basement floor and also occupies the house or they buy a
ski chalet at Collingwood and they use it part-time themselves
and they rent it part-time or they have a hobby farm. That's
your personal element cases.
[21] Linden says at paragraph 53:
The other group of cases consists of situations where the
taxpayer's motive for the activity lacks any element of
personal benefit, and where the activity cannot be classified as
a hobby. The activity, in these cases, seems to be operated in a
commercial fashion and not as a veiled form of personal
recreation.
This case falls within that category.
[22] Now, he says in paragraph 64:
... I otherwise agree that the Moldowan test
should be applied sparingly where a taxpayer's "business
judgment" is involved, where no personal element is in
evidence, and where the extent of the deductions claimed are not
on their face questionable. However, where circumstances suggest
that a personal or other than business motivation existed, or
where the expectation of profit was so unreasonable as to raise a
suspicion, the taxpayer will be called upon to justify
objectively that the operation was in fact a business. Suspicious
circumstances, therefore, will more often lead to closer scrutiny
than those that are in no way suspect.
[23] Now, since Tonn, we have Mastri v. The
Queen, [1997] 3 C.T.C. 234 and Mohammad v. The
Queen, [1997] 3 CTC 321. Mastri was released on
June 27th, 1997, a decision of MacGuigan, Robertson and
McDonald. Robertson J.A., wrote this decision and at
paragraph nine, he says:
First, it was decided in Moldowan that in order to have
a source of income a taxpayer must have a reasonable expectation
of profit. Second, "whether a taxpayer has a reasonable
expectation of profit is an objective determination to be made
from all of the facts". If as a matter of fact a taxpayer is
found not to have a reasonable expectation of profit then there
is no source of income and, therefore, no basis upon which the
taxpayer is able to calculate a rental loss. ...
[24] Robertson, one month later, again writing for the Court
of Appeal, wrote the Mohammad decision. Paragraph 11
thereof reads:
The above analysis is to the effect that there can be no
reasonable expectation of profit so long as no significant
payments are made against the principal amount of the
indebtedness. This inevitably leads to the question of whether a
rental loss can be claimed even though no such payment(s) were
made in the taxation years under review. I say yes, but not
without qualification. The taxpayer must establish to the
satisfaction of the Tax Court that he or she had a realistic plan
to reduce the principal amount of the borrowed monies. As every
homeowner soon learns, virtually all of the monthly mortgage
payment goes toward the payment of interest during the first five
years of a twenty to twenty-five year amortized mortgage loan. It
is simply unrealistic to expect the Canadian tax system to
subsidize the acquisition of rental properties for indefinite
periods. Taxpayers intent on financing the purchase of a rental
property to the extent that there can be no profit,
notwithstanding full realization of anticipated rental revenue,
should not expect favourable tax treatment in the absence of
convincing objective evidence of their intention and financial
ability to pay down a meaningful portion of the
purchase-money indebtedness within a few years of the
property acquisition. If because of the level of financing a
property is unable to generate sufficient profits which can be
applied against the outstanding indebtedness then the taxpayer
must look to other sources of income in order to do so. If a
taxpayer's other sources of income, e.g., employment income,
are insufficient to permit him or her to pay down purchase-money
obligations then the taxpayer may well have to bear the full cost
of the rental loss. Certainly, vague expectations that an
infusion of cash was expected from Aunt Beatrice or Uncle Bernie
will not satisfy the taxpayer's burden of proof. In practice,
the taxpayer will discharge that burden by showing that
significant payments were in fact made against the principal
indebtedness in the taxation years closely following the year of
purchase.
[25] I may say I have had several of these cases where the
taxpayer came in and said, I intended to pay down in year four, X
number of dollars, in year five, X number of dollars and
year six, and then, by the time they get to Court, years one,
two, three, four, five and six have passed and they did do
exactly what they said they had intended to do, and in those
cases those appeals were allowed.
[26] There is no evidence before me that in 1989, this man
intended to pay down on the principal any amounts of money at any
time. The only evidence before me is that in 1997, he did make
some payment by paying off the second mortgage which still was
not sufficient.
[27] Concerning the financing, Robertson says at paragraph
26:
...It is both plausible and possible that a taxpayer
could acquire property with full financing in circumstances where
the rental income is going to exceed all of the rental expenses,
including those attributable to interest payments. Astute real
estate speculators are able to ferret out the bargains. In such
circumstances, it is irrelevant whether the acquisition of the
property involved full financing and, most certainly, such a
business decision cannot be characterized as unreasonable.In my
opinion, there is no legal justification for establishing a rule
of law that permits the Tax Court to reduce arbitrarily the
amount of interest that is deductible from rental income simply
by the Minister showing that the taxpayer obtained 100 percent
financing. That being said, taxpayers who are unable or
unprepared to invest some of their own capital must prove to the
Tax Court in accordance with the standards outlined earlier in
these reasons that the rental initiative satisfies the
profitability test imposed by the Supreme Court in Moldowan.
[28] In that case, the trial judge arbitrarily disallowed 25
percent of the interest that was being claimed and that's
what Robertson is dealing with there.
[29] In this case, I must decide on the facts before me, there
is no evidence of any intended pay-down. Now, the Appellants have
put before me several cases and all of these have to be looked at
in light of the facts that have been presented.
[30] In Costello v. The Queen, [1998] 2 C.T.C.
2832, a decision of my colleague Bowman, at paragraph 18, in
the factual background, he said:
... Ms. Costello is an educated, intelligent woman who
went about finding an investment property in a rational
business-like way.
[31] I must say I cannot make that comment about the Appellant
herein. In Costello (supra), Bowman J.
said:
... Clearly the property was acquired to earn income and
her projections were reasonable. ...
There are no projections here today in which the Court could
say are reasonable or unreasonable. Again in Costello, a
number of matters converged, however, to frustrate her
expectations. There is no evidence today before me of what might
have frustrated the Appellant's expectations because there is
no evidence of what his expectations were. In Costello,
her first set back was a break-up with her fiancée which
resulted in her taking over a portion of the property. The second
was the extensive and unforeseen repairs that needed to be done
to the property. The third was the downturn in the economy and
the change in the rental market. Again, there is no evidence of
any changes in the rental market in the case at bar.
[32] Judge Bowman goes on and says:
I find as a fact that the rental operation had a reasonable
expectation of profit. Indeed her loss in 1995 was nominal and by
1996, as a result of the repairs and renovations that she did,
the decline in mortgage rates and the general improvement of the
rental market, she began earning a net profit and expects to
continue to do so.
[33] There has been no projection even put before me that I
could say yes, this property is going to produce a profit. I have
to decide years 1992, 1993 and 1994. I look on this as a purely
non-personal investment which was entered into on the advice of
somebody. We don't know what that somebody looked at. We
don't know what rents were expected. We do not know what
expenses were expected. The Appellant doesn't even know what
the expenses are. I don't know how they were calculated. We
do know that in 1994 or 1993 the condo fees were $94 a year, and
his 1998 return puts him at $325 a month. I find that astounding,
that the condo fees would be four times in four years. There is
something wrong with those figures. Also, the taxes went down,
and I do not know whether that is correct because tax bills were
not produced, but if it is, it's the only property that I
have heard on an appeal in this country where the taxes have gone
down each year. Maybe they did. I don't know. But without the
tax bills being produced, and saying this is the assessment,
it's so much for land and so much for building, all I can sit
here and say is the figures look very peculiar to me.
[34] Judge Rowe's decision in Howard & Davis v. The
Queen, 97 DTC 1340, is of strong, personal content and
just because something has a strong, personal content, I
interpret what the Federal Court of Appeal has said is take a
look at it very carefully, and there is no reason why a taxpayer
who buys a duplex and moves in to one and rents the other half,
that they cannot get a write-off of reasonable expenses. It
depends. You have to look at the facts.
[35] If 50 percent of the expenses of the duplex is $10,000
and you can rent half of the duplex for $1,000 a month,
there's nothing wrong with it even though there's a
strong personal element. All that the Federal Court of Appeal was
saying is, Judges of the Tax Court, you look at this. You look at
the facts impartially and if it passes the test, fine, and many
of them do but you have to look at the factual background that
has been set before you.
[36] The same as when you rent the duplex to your
mother-in-law, there's nothing wrong with that, provided the
rent is the market value, and that has been established by the
appropriate evidence before you, that the rental is $1,000 a
month and that's the market value. All the non-arm's
length does is put the onus on the taxpayer to make sure that it
is the appropriate rent with appropriate expenses with a
projected profit.
[37] For the years in question in front of me, I have no other
alternative but to dismiss it for these reasons just given.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 14th day of September,
1999.
"Gordon Teskey"
J.T.C.C.