Date: 19971023
DocketS: 96-3904-IT-I; 96-3905-IT-I
BETWEEN:
CHARLES BAYNHAM, LINDA BAYNHAM,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Margeson, J.T.C.C.
[1] Both Appellants appealed to this Court from an assessment
made by the Minister of National Revenue, (the Minister),
notices of which were dated July 7, 1995, for the 1992
taxation year.
[2] In those assessments the Minister included in their
income, bonus and income interest, which was earned by the
Appellants in the course of lending money.
[3] In addition, the Minister assessed the Appellants a
penalty under the provisions of subsection 163(2) of the
Income Tax Act (the Act) together with
arrears of interest for the year in question.
[4] It was agreed at the outset that evidence given in one
matter would apply equally to the other, where applicable.
Facts
[5] Mr. Leslie Allen Bjola was the chief executive officer of
3840 Holdings Ltd., (the borrower), a development company.
He met the Appellants in 1987, subsequently constructed a home
for them and they became very good friends.
[6] In 1992, the borrower was interested in a town house
project in Sooke, British Columbia and it needed money. Mr.
Bjola approached the Appellants with respect to a cash infusion.
Ultimately, the funds were advanced to the borrower which in turn
granted a second mortgage back to the Appellants on certain of
its properties and signed a promissory note in their favour for
$12,500 due on October 5, 1992.
[7] The loan amount of $50,000 was obtained by the Appellants
from The Royal Bank of Canada on their line of credit. They in
turn gave a mortgage back to The Royal Bank of Canada as further
security for the loan.
[8] This witness advised the Appellants that there was no risk
that they might lose their principal because he guaranteed it.
Further, the arrangements included the payment of a bonus and
interest to the Appellants. The interest was to be paid monthly
and the bonus was to be paid irregardless of whether the mortgage
went to maturity.
[9] In essence the Appellants would receive interest monthly,
$25,000 when the loan was repaid and the return of their
principal.
[10] This witness said that he was familiar with the various
requirements of commercial lenders, such as, appraisals, business
plans, lease commitments, zoning information, searches of title
and interest reserves. The Appellants, (the lenders) did
not require any of these documents before granting the loan to
the borrower.
[11] Further, they were required to obtain independent legal
advice.
[12] It was the position of this witness that the lenders did
not treat the arrangement in the same way as would a regular
lender.
[13] The witness obviously believed that there was sufficient
equity in the properties of the borrowers to protect the
interests of the lenders.
[14] The borrower was audited by Revenue Canada and
subsequently sent a letter dated 95-05-08 to the Minister. This
letter advised the Minister as to the terms of the loan from the
Appellants, the interest and bonus payments made and the dates of
the payment.
[15] The borrower treated the $25,000 as interest expense for
purposes of its accounting and reporting.
[16] The witness said that the Appellants were paying a rate
of interest of 9.25% on their line of credit. He believed that
this was the same rate as they were to receive on the mortgage
from the borrower. He confirmed that the interest payments were
made each month and that the Appellants received all interest,
bonus and principal as a result of the loan.
[17] The Appellant, Charles Baynham was the manager of a
construction products facility in Nanaimo, British Columbia. He
possessed a general arts degree but said that he had no
experience in “mortgage lending”.
[18] He confirmed that the source of the funds and the
security taken for the loan were as Mr. Bjola had indicated in
his testimony.
[19] This Appellant believed that he would be at risk in this
venture only in the event of a catastrophe.
[20] He confirmed that neither he nor his wife took any of the
precautions that he believed a common lender would take, as
outlined by Mr. Bjola in his evidence. Further, he did not pledge
the note or mortgage, discount them or use them as security. He
devoted no time to the management of this loan and held it to
maturity. He did not create any legal entity to hold the
security.
[21] He filed an income tax return in 1992 but did not report
the interest or bonus in this return. He said, “I believed
that it was a moot point. I felt that I had a $100,000 capital
gain exemption for that year. I made no claim for the interest
paid by me on the borrowed money.”
[22] After he was contacted by Revenue Canada his wife sent in
documentation referable to this transaction. He told his
accountant that he had not reported the amounts because he
believed that they were a capital gain. After speaking to Revenue
Canada, he told his accountant to file a “report”
with his 1993 or 1994 return, within three years of the event. He
believed that this would suffice. He believed that it was taken
care of after his wife delivered a packet of documents to his
accountant. However, on May 10, 1995, he received a letter from
Revenue Canada demanding payment. His accountant had not filed
anything further with Revenue Canada.
[23] At the time of his first contact with Revenue Canada, no
mention was made of a penalty.
[24] In 1995 his accountant left his business, he was unable
to work and was in a state of depression.
[25] In cross-examination he agreed that his company was a
large one and had been in the business in the area since
1990.
[26] He agreed that he and his wife were to receive a $12,500
bonus on the mortgage whether it was paid back early or not. They
would also receive a bonus of $12,500 on the note.
[27] He admitted to having received interest at the same rate
as they were paying on the line of credit. The inducement to loan
the $50,000 was the $25,000 additional payment that they would
receive.
[28] He admitted that they received $2,804.08 interest from
the borrower and paid $3,090.41 for interest on the line of
credit.
[29] He confirmed that he and his wife made a return of
$25,000 in about two months or about an 85% rate of return over
the year. This, he admitted, was significant.
[30] This Appellant identified his 1992 income tax return
which was admitted as Exhibit R-3. In it he disclosed an income
of $66,000 but he did not include any income from this loan,
either by way of bonus or interest, nor did he disclose any facts
about this transaction.
[31] He admitted at this time that he had claimed a capital
gain deduction in 1989 as a result of the sale of some shares. He
said that he had forgotten about it. Further, he had claimed
interest in each of the years 1989, 1990 and 1991, but not in
1992.
[32] The Appellant Linda Baynham also testified that she did
not act as a commercial lender at the time of this transaction.
This was the first time that she had been involved in a lending
and mortgage transaction such as took place here.
[33] She said that they accessed their equity in their home.
They did not consider it to be a speculative venture. They
trusted Mr. Bjola.
[34] She admitted that she disclosed no information about this
transaction in her 1992 income tax return. She believed it to be
a capital gain.
[35] She did not know that they had claimed a capital gain
earlier. She did not believe that in failing to report this
transaction in her 1992 return of income that they were evading
tax and did not believe that they were saving tax by not
including it.
[36] She said that she was spending a lot of time in McDonald
house that year as a result of her child’s illness.
[37] After Revenue Canada contacted her she sent documents to
them although she did not know why they were asking for them. She
also sent the mortgage documents to her accountant.
[38] She knew that three years would be up and that this
income would have to be reported but her accountant did not file
the necessary form.
[39] In cross-examination she identified her T-1 return for
1992 which disclosed income from employment of $7,775.00 and
$7,739.01. She did not report any interest income in that year.
She said that they had not received a “slip” from Mr.
Bjola for the interest.
[40] She did not discuss the matter with her accountant in
1992 when her return was filed or with Revenue Canada after being
contacted by them in 1995. No T-1 amended return was
filed.
[41] She said that she did not give any instruction to her
accountant to file an amended return and left that up to her
husband.
[42] She admitted that in the income tax return for 1989, 1990
and 1991 years she had claimed interest income.
[43] She was shown the promissory note, Tab-2 of Exhibit
A-1 which bore her initials. She said that they had obtained
independent legal advice and believed that they had taken a
second mortgage back from the borrower as a result of looking at
the documents in Court. At first she left the impression that she
may not have understood that when the documents were signed but
after she was shown them she said, “I guess so”.
Argument of the Appellant
[44] Counsel argued that what was involved here was truly a
capital gain. It was not an adventure in the nature of trade and
the amount involved was not income.
[45] With respect to the matter of the imposition of the
penalty under subsection 163(2) of the Act, the
Respondent has not met the burden of establishing the requisite
elements under this section because as soon as the Appellants
found out about the necessity of reporting the gain, they did
something about it. They were not under audit at that time.
[46] In his written submission, counsel referred to No. 632
v. The Minister of National Revenue, (1959) 59 DTC 289 and
Harold Wood v. The Minister of National Revenue, 69 DTC
5073 in support of his position that a bonus or discount received
on a mortgage investment is an accretion to capital and not
income.
[47] The taxpayer was not in the business of discounting or
bonusing mortgages and therefore the gain should not be taxed as
income. See Racine et al., v. The Minister of National
Revenue, 65 DTC 5098 (Ex. Ct.).
[48] Counsel continued that there was no adventure in the
nature of trade as can be seen by examining all the circumstances
surrounding the investment. He referred to Interpretation
Bulletin IT-114 which discussed the various criteria that
the Courts have considered in concluding whether or not a
particular transaction is an adventure or concern in the nature
of trade.
[49] It was counsel’s position that when one examines
all the facts and the circumstances as disclosed by the evidence
given in Court, the conclusion should be that this transaction
was clearly not an adventure or concern in the nature of trade,
that the taxpayers here merely realized an accretion of capital
from an investment.
[50] With respect to the question of the penalty the Minister
must establish more than a mere failure to use reasonable care.
He must establish a high degree of negligence tantamount to
intention or at least indifference as to whether the Act
was complied with. He relied upon the case of Barry J. McHugh,
Barbara L. McHugh, Inland Development Company Limited
and McHugh Minerals Limited v. Her Majesty the Queen, 95 DTC
778.
[51] He took the position that since this was a penal
provision, the Minister must establish mens rea on behalf
of the taxpayers.
[52] He referred to Richard Boileau v. The Minister of
National Revenue, 89 DTC 247 (Tax Court of Canada) in support
that proposition. In conclusion he argued that in the case at bar
the taxpayers failed to include the mortgage bonus in their
return based upon an honest belief that the bonus was a capital
gain and that they were entitled to a capital gains deduction
without filing.
[53] He asked that the appeals be allowed with costs.
Argument of the Respondent
[54] Counsel for the Respondent argued that Income Tax
Bulletin 114 is not relevant to the present cases since the law
has changed since it was prepared. Similarly, the cases referred
to by counsel for the Appellant were not relevant for the same
reason.
[55] It was the position of counsel for the Respondent that
this whole transaction was on account of profit and its purpose
was to earn income. It was an adventure in the nature of trade.
The purpose was to make a quick loan for a particular purpose.
This was a very lucrative proposition to turn a profit of
approximately 85% in approximately seven months.
[56] There were many indicia that the taxpayers acted as a
normal lender or broker would have acted. They borrowed the money
that they were using from a bank, this was secured by a mortgage
on their house. They paid more interest on their loan than they
received from Mr. Bjola in interest in order to obtain a bonus of
$25,000. This was the only reason they entered the transaction.
Otherwise, they would have lost money.
[57] There was no intention to leave the loan in place for a
long time and thereby gain interest on it. This was a “in
and out deal”.
[58] The manner in which the Appellants conducted this
transaction was consistent with an adventure in the nature of
trade in accordance with the definition of “business”
in subsection 248(1) of the Act.
[59] Counsel relied upon the case of Western Union
Insurance Company v. Her Majesty The Queen, 83 DTC 5388 at
page 5392 (Federal Court — Trial Division) indicating that
there need only be one transaction so long as the transaction is
of the same kind and is carried out in the same way as that of an
ordinary trader. In such a case the transaction may be labelled
as an adventure in the nature of trade.
[60] In the case at bar the Appellants had very strong
security for their loan. They were more than secured on the
mortgage and also held a promissory note from the borrower. There
was interest plus a bonus earned by the Appellants here as in
Western Union, supra, and the lump sum payment was not
merely payment for the use of the money.
[61] Counsel also relied upon Aaron Kagna v. The Minister
of National Revenue, 64 DTC 20, at page 23 in support of his
position that this was not merely an accretion of capital. That
case referred to the definition of “accretion” and
there as here, the taxpayers were not being reimbursed for the
risk that they were taking. What the Appellants received here
were not additions to the original fund or property but were
profits. They were making a loan to receive a profit. It was
income.
[62] In the case at bar as in John Wharton Bird v. The
Minister of National Revenue, 64 DTC 777 even though the
Appellants may not have been in the business of lending money,
they used the same methods as highly speculative money lenders
(although in the case at bar the risk was almost non-existent).
They did not intend to leave their money invested but wanted a
quick return on a short term basis. It was a scheme for quick
profit-making.
[63] On the matter of the penalty, counsel argued that under
subsection 163(2) of the Act an omission can be the
subject matter of “gross negligence”.
[64] In the returns of the Appellants there was no indication
of the transaction whatsoever. These actions were not reasonable.
Even if it were a capital gain, Revenue Canada had no way of
judging it to be such since no information was given to them. It
would not be reasonable to think that you need not include the
information in the return.
[65] The Appellants had reported capital gains before. The
gain was very substantial in relation to other income. It was not
something that one might just forget about.
[66] The Appellants cannot blame their accountant because they
did not tell him about it until after they were contacted by
Revenue Canada.
[67] Counsel argued that the case at bar is similar to that of
Alan Holley v. The Minister of National Revenue,
89 DTC 366 where the taxpayer only started to act
responsibly after being contacted by Revenue Canada.
“Wilful blindness by someone capable of acting in a
responsible manner is not a matter of ‘ignorance of the
law’ in its jurisprudential sense — it can amount to
gross negligence in appropriate circumstances.”
[68] In the case at bar the Appellants acted with such want of
care that it amounted to no care at all and that is sufficient to
amount to “gross negligence” and does so here.
[69] Counsel relied upon the case of George Sigouin v. The
Minister of National Revenue, 93 DTC 210 in support of his
position that the case at bar is demanding of the imposition of
penalties. The circumstances there were quite similar to those in
the case at bar.
[70] The appeals should be dismissed.
[71] If the appeals are allowed, there should be no costs as
the actions of the Minister were reasonable under the
circumstances.
Rebuttal
[72] In rebuttal counsel for the Appellants said that even if
the amount earned was a profit, that is not conclusive that it
was income.
[73] The cases referred to by the Respondent involve large
businesses and businessmen, but in the case at bar the taxpayers
were a nurse and a salesman.
[74] Further, the taxpayers received no information slip from
the borrower about the interest paid and no deduction was taken
by them for interest paid on the funds which they borrowed.
Analysis and Decision
[75] There are two separate and distinct issues to be decided
in this case. These issues have been identified by both counsel.
The facts are not in dispute in any real sense nor are they
complicated. However, the application of the facts to the issues
leads to two different conclusions according to counsel.
[76] The first issue is the proper characterization of the
amounts received by the Appellants as a result of their loaning
of money to the “borrower”. Neither the amounts that
they received nor the manner of their receipt is in issue nor is
the fact that neither the interest payment received nor the bonus
amounts received were included in the income tax returns of the
Appellants for the relevant years.
[77] Further, there is no doubt that the failure to report
these amounts was not due in any way to the acts of the
taxpayers’ accountant or any other person and the
responsibility there rests entirely upon the Appellants.
[78] There is some issue about whether the Appellants took any
action or any reasonable action once they were made aware of the
omission. Counsel for the Appellants contended that the taxpayers
did and counsel for the Respondent contended that they did not.
In any event they only acted after being advised by Revenue
Canada of the omission and that was already too late.
[79] On that issue the Court is in agreement with counsel for
the Respondent and the Court is satisfied that the reasonableness
of the actions of the Appellants must be considered at the time
that they filed their returns or at least at any time up to the
time Revenue Canada made it clear to them that their returns were
being reconsidered.
[80] The Court disagrees with counsel for the Appellants that
the state of the law is such that every time a bonus or discount
is received on a mortgage that the amount is an accretion to
capital and not income.
[81] The case of Harold Wood, supra, does not stand for
that proposition. The Court takes that case as having decided
that in that particular case, in light of the pattern displayed
by the activities of the taxpayer, the Supreme Court of Canada
was satisfied that the Appellant was not carrying on a business
but making a personal investment. The facts were not the same as
in the case at bar including the fact that the Appellant in that
case was making a personal investment out of his own savings. The
Court found that the amount received was an accretion to
capital.
[82] Further, the Court is not satisfied that No. 632 v.
M.N.R., supra, stands for the proposition that a bonus or
discount received on a mortgage investment is always an accretion
to capital and not income, but if it does, this finding is
inconsistent with this Court’s interpretation of Harold
Wood, supra, as early discussed.
[83] Counsel for the Appellant cited Interpretation Bulletins
IT-459 and IT-114 as revealing some of the factors
that the Minister considers in determining whether a transaction
is an adventure in the nature of trade, but this list is not
exclusive nor are such considerations binding on this Court.
However, in the case at bar there are factors present which
suggest an adventure in the nature of trade and there are factors
present which suggest an investment.
[84] It is only by examining all of the factors in light of
the evidence and the credibility attached to the evidence that a
final determination can be made.
[85] In this case it is true that the Appellants were not in
the business of “discounting or bonusing mortgages”,
in the sense that they had done it before, but one transaction
alone may be enough if they acted as an ordinary trader would
have acted.
[86] Here, the Appellants portrayed many of the attributes of
a normal trader. They borrowed the money, they did not use their
own, even though they used the equity in their house as security
for the money they borrowed.
[87] It is not insignificant that they paid more interest on
the money that they borrowed than that which they received back,
indicating that the bonus was the real reason that they loaned
the money.
[88] Further, the bonus was to be earned over a very short
period of time, at a very high rate of interest, rather than
having their investment grow over a longer period of time.
[89] Again, the Appellants took back very substantial
security, thereby reducing their risk to a negligible amount.
They earned both a bonus and interest. The amount received was
not just payment for the use of their money, as counsel for the
Respondent pointed out when he was referring to the Western
Union case, supra.
[90] This Court is satisfied that the Appellants conducted
this transaction in a manner consistent with an adventure in the
nature of trade and that the amount that they received was not
merely an “accretion to capital” as that term was
discussed in Kagna, supra.
[91] On the first issue this Court finds that the amount
received by the Appellants was on account of “income”
and was not “a capital gain” as proposed by the
Appellants.
[92] The second issue that arises is in relation to the
application of subsection 163(2) of the Act. The duty
in regards to the penalty imposed here is upon the Respondent. It
must show that the Appellants conduct amounted to “gross
negligence”. This gross negligence in this case must be
found in the “omission” of the Appellants to include
in their income the interest and bonus payments that they
received in the year in issue.
[93] The Court finds that the Appellants made no indication in
their return that they had received any such amounts. Indeed they
took no steps whatsoever, at any time, to file an amended return
or to indicate in any way to the Minister that they had received
any unreported amounts until after the Minister’s agents
had contacted them. Indeed, even then the steps that they took
were insignificant and they did nothing more than possibly
instruct their accountant to file an amended return, without
verifying that this was done and possibly forwarded some
documentation to the Minister and their accountant. That was too
little, too late, even if it were possible for them to have taken
some action at that time to explain their
“omission”.
[94] It is significant that the Appellants had reported
capital gains before, had reported interest income before and
therefore should reasonably have been aware as to the requirement
to report them even if they had an honest and reasonable belief
that the larger amounts were a “capital gain” rather
than “income”.
[95] It is not a satisfactory answer to say that they had not
received a statement of interest income from the borrower or that
they had not claimed an “interest expense” on the
money that they had borrowed on their line of credit.
[96] As argued by counsel for the Respondent, the amount
received was very substantial in relation to their other income
and it should have been realized by any reasonable taxpayer that
such amounts would at least have to have been reported.
[97] The Court is satisfied here that the Appellants acted
with such want of care, that it amounted to no care at all and
that amounted to “gross negligence” on the facts of
this case.
[98] The case of Holley, supra, is helpful in this
regard.
[99] The facts in the case at bar are not unlike the facts
referred to in Sigouin, supra, where, Dussault, T.C.J.
said:
In fact, the appellant simply claimed that he was unaware of
the obligation to declare a capital gain since, he said, he was
entitled to a deduction of at least $50,000. This explanation is
unconvincing because one need only reflect a moment in order to
realize that the competent authorities must be able to verify the
entitlement to a cumulative deduction limited in dollar terms.
Furthermore, the fact that the appellant had realized a capital
gain the previous year, that he had declared it and that he had
claimed the capital gains deduction strengthens my conviction
that I cannot allow this explanation.
[100] The Court points out that before finalizing these
Reasons for Judgment it took into account the case of Robin
O.F.J. Maltais v. The Queen, 91 DTC 1385 (T.C.C.) which
apparently was also forwarded to counsel for the Respondent.
[101] The appeals are dismissed and the Minister’s
assessments are confirmed.
"T.E. Margeson"
J.T.C.C.