Date: 19971125
Docket: 95-2988-IT-G
BETWEEN:
HARCHARAN S. SENDHER,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Teskey, J.T.C.C.
[1] The Appellant appeals his assessment of income tax for the
year 1990.
Issue
[2] The sole issue before me is whether a sale of a parcel of
property containing approximately 3.03 acres, upon which the
Appellant's principal residence was situated thereon, can be
characterized as a sale of his principal residence which would
reduce his capital gain to nil.
Facts
[3] The Appellant purchased a parcel of land having a frontage
of 209 feet on the south side of what is now known as 64th Avenue
having a depth of 628 feet, more or less containing approximately
3.03 acres or 1.226 hectares, upon which was situated his
principal residence. The property is municipally known as
12274-64th Avenue, Surrey, British Columbia. When the
parcel of land was purchased, the Appellant did not want the
whole parcel but had to purchase the whole parcel.
[4] At the time of purchase and right up to the date of sale,
the property was zoned as such that the minimum lot size was
1 acre and the minimum required frontage was 165 feet. I am
satisfied an application to sever the property or subdivide the
property in any manner, prior to 1988, would have been refused.
By the end of 1987, the normal municipal services such as
sanitary sewer, storm sewer and water had been installed up to or
very near the Appellant's property.
[5] In November of 1988, the Appellant caused to be filed with
the municipality an application to subdivide the property into
6,000 square feet lots and to rezone the property for this size
of lot. The services of an engineering firm were retained, which
services were paid for as invoices were rendered, as well as all
the required municipal fees. The plan of subdivision subdivided
the Appellant's lot into 12 full size (6,000 square feet)
lots, and a four part lots which combined with other property of
the Appellant, which is immaterial to this appeal.
[6] Preliminary approval was granted for this change on March
9, 1989. By-law 10042 effecting the requested change was
read a first and second time on May 1, 1989. A public hearing was
held on the 5th day of June 1989. The by-law was read a
third time on the 13th day of June 1989. Between June 13, 1989
and June 28, 1989, the engineering was completed, a
subdivider's agreement was executed and the required
financing was put in place. On June 28, 1989, the Appellant
knew for all intents and purposes everything had been completed
for the proposed subdivision and the rezoning was a mere
formality. On this date in a non-arm's length sale, the
property was conveyed for $700,000. On July 13, 1989, by-law
10042 was reconsidered and finally adopted allowing the plan of
subdivision to be registered and zoning the property to allow lot
sizes of 6,000 square feet.
Analysis
[7] The Income Tax Act (the "Act")
provides an exemption from capital gains tax on a principal
residence. Section 54(g)(v) deals with the amount of land
to be included with the principal residence, the pertinent
portion thereof reads:
(v) ... the principal residence of a taxpayer for a taxation
year shall be deemed to include, except where the property
consists of a share of the capital stock of a co-operative
housing corporation, the land subjacent to the housing unit and
such portion of any immediately contiguous land as may reasonably
be regarded as contributing to the taxpayer's use and
enjoyment of the housing unit as a residence, except that where
the total area of the subjacent land and of that portion exceeds
1/2 hectare, the excess shall be deemed not to have contributed
to the individual's use and enjoyment of the housing unit as
a residence unless the taxpayer establishes that it was necessary
to that use and enjoyment ...
[8] The evidence before me does not establish actual use of
the lands in excess of 1/2 hectare (1.23 acres) as being required
for the use and enjoyment of the residence. The question of the
excess land over the 1/2 hectare, where the zoning of the
lands in question prevents a disposition of the excess land, has
been dealt with by the Federal Court of Appeal on three different
occasions, namely:
The Queen v. Yates 86 DTC 6296
Augart v. The Queen 93 DTC 5265
Carlile v. The Queen 95 DTC 5483
Re The Queen v. Yates
[9] The Federal Court of Appeal herein agreed that Mahoney,
J., the Trial Judge did not err in concluding that the
disposition of 9.5 acres (3.7 hectares) was a disposition of
a principal residence. The trial decision is reported at
83 DTC 5158. Mahoney, J., stated that the critical time is
the moment of disposition and he stated at page 5159:
The Defendants could not legally have occupied their housing
unit as a residence on less than ten acres. It follows that the
entire ten acres, subjacent and contiguous, not only "may
reasonably" be regarded as contributing to their use and
enjoyment of their housing unit as a residence; it must be so
regarded. It also follows that the portion in excess of one acre
was necessary to that use and enjoyment.
Re Augart v. The Queen
[10] Robertson, J.A. with Heald, J.A. concurring, said at page
5209:
Counsel for the respondent argued that that approach had the
effect of "collapsing" the definition of principal
residence prescribed by the Income Tax Act. Therein, the
exemption is premised on the excess land being necessary to the
individual's use and enjoyment of the housing unit as a
residence. The respondent maintains that the right of alienation
and of severance might have a bearing on whether a housing unit
can be enjoyed, but not on whether a housing unit can be enjoyed
as a residence.
I would agree with the respondent, but only to the extent that
subdivision restrictions, or for that matter minimum site
requirements, in force at the date of disposition cannot be
determinative of the issue under consideration. A determination
regarding the area of land to be deemed a principal residence
should not, in my opinion, be resolved by the mechanical
application of a single criterion such as a minimum lot size on
the date of disposition. Certainly, the reasoning in Yates
does not support such an approach. In fact, minimum lot size at
the time of acquisition was specifically addressed. At page 5188,
Mr. Justice Mahoney stated:
When they bought, the Defendants did not want ten
acres; they wanted only enough land for their residence but
had to buy at least ten acres. They did not use more than
an acre for residential purposes.
and at page 5210, he said:
In conclusion, the minimum amount of property, zoned for
residential use, that the appellant was legally required to have
both at the time of purchase and at the moment before disposition
was 8.99 acres.
Re Carlile v. The Queen
[11] In this case, Desjardins, J.A. with MacGuigan, J.A.
concurring, concluded that the taxpayer (whose total parcel was
32.75 acres) therein both on V-day or at the time of disposition
had met the objective test, not only vis-à-vis the 25-acre
minimum allotment size for his property, but also for the whole
property since the local authority would not have authorized a
partition of her lot between 25 acres and the remaining portion.
She therefore concluded that the Appellant therein should be
exempt from capital gains for the entire 32.75-acre parcel.
[12] The facts herein are quite similar to the Carlile
facts. Herein, the area the Appellant only needed was 1 acre.
However, the property was subjected to the further restriction
that each parcel required a frontage of 165 feet. I am satisfied
that the municipality would not have allowed at any time a
severance allowing the Appellant to sell or create a lot with him
retaining only 1 acre with a 165-foot frontage, as the severed
parcel would only have had a 44-foot frontage. The creation of
this type of panhandle lot in the circumstances of the location
of the property herein would have been against the municipal
policy as expressed in a report dated February 29, 1988 (Exhibit
A-4).
[13] The Respondent accepts that $700,000 was the fair market
value of the whole parcel (municipally known as 12274-64th
Avenue) at the time of disposition. The Appellant did not take
issue that if there was excess acreage, it had a fair market
value of $397,300.
[14] Although there is no evidence before me, I believe that I
can safely conclude that the reason this 3.03-acre parcel was
worth $700,000, was because of the subdivision approval and the
imminent rezoning of the land to allow 6,000 square feet
lots.
[15] I see no difference herein than a taxpayer who buys a run
down poorly kept single family residence on a 1/2 hectare lot and
where the landscaping is a complete mess. The new purchaser
taxpayer in his or her spare time, paints the house, cares for
the lawn and gardens and that by the time three years have
elapsed, what was an eyesore has now become a place of beauty
with lush trim lawns and well cared for gardens and shrubbery.
This property is worth more, the gain which is a direct result of
the taxpayer's efforts is tax free.
[16] Herein the large value was because of the taxpayer's
efforts but the lot size and frontage restriction were in place
at all times. The Appellant herein moved with due dispatch as
soon as it was practical to ask for a rezoning and a plan of
subdivision. Neither of which he delayed in any way.
[17] The decision I must make is whether the overt actions of
the Appellant and his agents to obtain a rezoning of the lands
and approval to register a plan of subdivision changes the fact
that at the time of the conveyance, he had to sell the entire
parcel of land. Obviously, in November 1988, the Appellant
started in business or at the least in an adventure in the nature
of trade.
[18] Because of the frontage restriction which is as relevant
as the size restriction, the Appellant from the time of purchase
right up to the sale she was required to maintain the whole
parcel, pay municipal taxes thereon and sell the whole parcel as
a single parcel which he did. Surely, the date a taxpayer can
legally convey part of his holdings has to be the appropriate
date and not when he or she starts to obtain approval to convey
part of the holding.
[19] The appeal is allowed with costs and the matter is
referred back to the Minister of National Revenue for
reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the entire
3.03-acre parcel of land was a disposition of his principal
residence within the meaning of paragraph 54(g) of the
Act.
"Gordon Teskey"
J.T.C.C.