REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Jorré J.
Introduction
[1]
Winter often makes driving and walking difficult
and sometimes dangerous. Ice is a major risk and salt is frequently used to
reduce that risk. However, the effects of salt water can be quite damaging to
reinforced concrete. In very large measure it is those effects that caused the
damage that led the Appellant to undertake the expenditure in issue here.
[2]
The issue in this appeal is whether an expenditure
of over $4,000,000 in 2010 and 2011 replacing much of a garage roof is a
current expense or a capital expenditure which must be claimed over a period of
years as capital cost allowance.
[3]
It is helpful at the outset to describe Citi
Centre Place (“Citi Centre”) where the garage is located. Citi Centre is in
Peterborough, Ontario, and occupies an entire city block.
[4]
The garage is located under the entire block and
there are three apartment buildings located on top of the garage. The apartment
buildings also have significant commercial space at ground level.
[5]
The three buildings do not cover the entire
block and, if one were looking down at the block from above, the buildings form
a “U” shape.
[6]
Where there are buildings above the garage, the
buildings are, in effect, the roof of the garage. The buildings and the garage
are structurally connected.
[7]
In the middle of the U there is a surface area
that is also the roof of that part of the parking garage; this is referred to
as the podium deck. The podium is accessible to motor vehicles and pedestrians
and has some landscaping on it.
[8]
In the area within the U the entire roof was
replaced as a result of the expenditure in issue; there was also some related
work in the same area. This is the work resulting in the expenditure in issue.
[9]
There is also an area along the bottom of the U
where the garage roof is also the surface. This area is also referred to as the
podium deck. Motor vehicles and pedestrians can also access this area. In an
earlier year, 2004, repairs were done to the roof in this area. Those 2004 repairs are not the
subject of this appeal; the 2004 repairs were performed in a very different way
from the work in issue.
[10]
In this appeal we are concerned with the
complete replacement of the roof of the podium area in the middle of the U.
[11]
The following individuals testified:
(a) Bradley Smith, the President and Chief
Executive Officer of the Appellant,
(b) Joseph Pendlebury, who was called by the
Appellant and who was qualified as an expert witness in quantity surveying
(construction cost estimating),
(c) Philip Sarvinis, a professional engineer whose
firm did work for the Appellant,
(d) Paul
Pasqualini, who was called by the Respondent and qualified as an expert on the
use and effectiveness of materials and techniques used in building envelopes.
[12]
There are no quantum issues, no credibility
issues and there are no significant factual issues; the case turns on the
proper characterization of the facts in the context of the applicable law.
The Facts
[13]
In reporting its income for the 2010 and 2011 taxation
years, AON Inc. (“AON”), the Appellant, claimed an amount of $4,364,697 as a
current expense incurred for the work in issue at its Citi Centre property.
[14]
The Minister of National Revenue reassessed AON
and disallowed these expenses as current expenses, apart from landscaping costs
of $207,312 that were included in the $4,364,697. The Minister’s position is
that the disallowed expenditures are depreciable expenditures giving rise to
capital cost allowance.
[15]
AON’s business consists primarily of land
development and property management. The business involves designing, building
and managing condominiums, multi-residential properties, commercial real
estate, retirement homes and long‑term care facilities.
[16]
Approximately 90% of AON’s income stems from
rent revenue, while the remaining sources are management fees and land sales.
AON’s business includes the rental of around 1,000 apartment units in
Peterborough.
[17]
AON’s rent income from all sources for 2010 and
2011 averaged around $29,000,000 respectively. The operating costs, maintenance
and repairs for all of AON’s properties averaged about $11,500,000 in 2010 and
2011.
[18]
The repairs at issue in this appeal were
contracted by AON Builders Inc., which is a subsidiary of AON that carries on
internal construction work.
Citi Centre Place
[19]
AON built Citi Centre Place (“Citi Centre”) in
Peterborough in 1973 and 1974.
[20]
Citi Centre consists of three towers with a
total of 310 apartments and about 21,000 square feet of commercial space. The
Citi Centre complex has a one level underground parking garage that is
approximately 92,000 square feet.
[21]
AON’s annual revenue from Citi Centre is about $3,500,000
to $4,000,000.
Parking Garage
[22]
Vehicles can access the parking garage from the
east side of the complex from Aylmer Street via a ramp. On the southwestern
part of the complex there is a loading area on the podium deck for deliveries,
garbage pickups and tenant move-ins.
[23]
The parking garage has 235 parking spaces; the
number of parking spaces has remained the same since the garage’s initial
construction. The garage is primarily used by residential and commercial
tenants of Citi Centre.
[24]
Residential tenants can rent a parking spot for
$10 per month, while commercial tenants can rent a parking spot for $30 per
month. Total revenue from the parking garage is approximately $30,000 to
$35,000 annually, less than 1% of Citi Centre’s total annual revenue.
[25]
Except where the apartment buildings are
located, the roof of the underground parking garage is a podium deck that
supports pedestrian and vehicle traffic above. The roof of the parking garage
began to deteriorate over time, in particular the portion that was not under
the apartment buildings, the podium. This part of the garage was damaged due to
the exposure to salt, snow, rain and traffic.
[26]
Of the roughly 92,000 square feet of garage
about 63,000 square feet is under the podium, the rest is under the buildings.
Of the roughly 63,000 square feet under the podium approximately a quarter, about
16,000 square feet is below the bottom of the U which was repaired in 2004 and
is not in issue. The replacement of the roof in issue here is with respect to
around 47,000 square feet of garage under the podium in the middle of the U;
this area covers about 50% of the total garage area of 92,000 square feet.
Early Repairs
[27]
In the 1990s, AON began to see significant cracks
in the podium deck, and water leaking into the parking garage. Tenants at that time began to
complain that material from the roof was dripping onto their cars.
[28]
Prior to 2003, patchwork repairs were conducted
in the parking garage. These repairs included the patching of spalled areas in
the concrete and the installation of troughs under the podium deck slab to
redirect leaking water. In addition, AON’s maintenance staff regularly
performed inspections of the garage and knocked off pieces of concrete that
looked loose due to spalling.
[29]
In 1999, to repair part of the garage, a
concrete wall was constructed to support a portion of the roof slab and
structural concrete beams that had been damaged by the ingress of water.
[30]
In 2003, Read Jones Christoffersen (“RJC”), an
engineering firm, conducted a condition survey on the parking garage. RJC came
to the following conclusions:
(a) The structural elements of this parking
structure (columns, walls, suspended slabs) are suffering from moderate to
severe corrosion‑related deterioration.
(b) The existing waterproofing system on the
surface of the suspended slab is deemed to be completely ineffective in preventing
the ingress of moisture and chlorides.
(c) The expansion joint seals are ineffective in
screening chlorides and preventing the ingress of moisture.
(d) Trough‑slab penetrations and the floor
drainage system are in need of repair, replacement and upgrading.
(e) The
suspended podium deck slab/roof slab is significantly saturated with chloride
ions above and beyond the generally accepted threshold level needed to cause
corrosion of the embedded reinforcing steel suggesting ongoing corrosion at
accelerated rates if nothing is done to prevent the further ingress of
moisture.
[31]
The survey was conducted primarily on the
portion of the garage that was not located below any of the buildings.
[32]
Following the 2003 condition survey, RJC
presented AON with two repair options: a localized repair strategy, or the
complete replacement of the podium deck.
[33]
The first option, a localized repair strategy,
involved only repairing identified areas of delamination. The process included
removing the concrete topper and original waterproofing system, repairing the
delaminated areas of the structural slab underneath and then installing a new
waterproofing membrane and topper level.
[34]
There were several disadvantages to the first
option, such as the fact that the structural slab would continue to be
saturated with chloride ions, which would lead to further localized repairs
within five to six years. A continuous cycle of recurring and ongoing localized
repairs would amount to higher long‑term maintenance costs than a
complete replacement of the podium deck slab.
[35]
The second option involved completely replacing
the topper layer, waterproofing system and structural slab. This repair option
would require a longer repair time and higher upfront costs. In the 2003
condition survey, RJC stated that this option would provide “a worry free parking slab for the next 20 to 25 years”.
[36]
AON chose to proceed with the first option and
began repairs in 2004.
Repairs from 2004 to 2009
[37]
The 2004 repairs began on the western portion of
the podium deck slab, which had more extensive signs of deterioration, as it
was the area accessed by garbage trucks and other vehicles. These repairs were
originally intended to be the first stage of multi-phase localized repairs.
[38]
In the 2004 repairs, around 25% of the topping
was removed and the waterproofing was replaced with a two‑ply hot
rubberized system. That section of the podium deck slab was also rehabilitated
but not replaced. These repairs cost over $1,000,000.
[39]
AON and RJC found during the 2004 repairs that
the podium deck had deteriorated more than initially expected. As a result more
“trough-slab” repairs were required, which led to more jackhammering and more
construction noise. The construction noise was a significant disturbance to
Citi Centre tenants. As a result of unexpected issues that arose from the
localized repairs, AON decided to not continue with the localized repair
strategy and to defer maintenance until the eventual complete slab replacement.
[40]
In 2006 RJC conducted another condition survey and
found that the extent of corrosion related deterioration was increasing. RJC
offered three options, the first two being the same as the options in the 2003
condition survey. The third option involved postponing structural repairs to
the garage roof slab for the next few years by installing additional supports.
[41]
AON decided to defer the repairs to the garage
for as long as possible. In 2007, AON, based on recommendations from RJC,
installed a temporary slab shoring system to provide additional support to the
podium deck slab.
[42]
RJC conducted another condition survey in 2009
and found that due to the corrosion of steel within the podium deck slab and
other concrete structures caused by the ingress of water and salts, the
concrete was becoming ionized, delaminating, spalling, cracking and there was a
risk that concrete could fall on patrons.
[43]
After the 2009 condition survey, AON decided
that it could no longer defer repairs to the garage and planned to replace the
portion of the podium deck that was not previously replaced in 2004.
[44]
The structural integrity of the podium deck had
been damaged and its load bearing capacity had been reduced. As a result, in
2009 RJC instructed AON that they could continue shoring up the structure while
decommissioning parts of the garage.
[45]
In addition, in 2009 RJC presented AON with two
repair options. The first option was a complete top slab replacement, while the
second was a complete podium deck slab replacement.
The Work in Issue (2010 and
2011)
[46]
AON decided to implement the second option and
to completely replace the podium deck slab in the middle of the “U” shaped area
created by the buildings. This excludes the area below the “U” repaired in
2004.
[47]
The work was carried out in three phases in 2010
and 2011.
[48]
AON was not able to just fill in the garage as
maintaining the garage was required to comply with Peterborough zoning bylaws.
[49]
The 2010-2011 work included the following:
(a) Wholesale removal and disposal of the existing
concrete topping, landscaping and asphalt felt paper waterproofing on the
surface of the garage roof slab.
(b) Wholesale removal and disposal of the garage
roof slab leaving only the existing column capitals in place. The existing
lighting system, electrical system, sprinklers and fire alarm components within
or mounted to the underside of the slab would also be removed and disposed.
(c) Repair of the expansion joint corbels in areas
where the existing slab is not to be removed.
(d) Localized repair of soffit concrete
deterioration on the section of roof slab repaired in 2004 caused by ongoing
corrosion of the embedded reinforcing steel.
(e) Reconstruction of the garage roof slab
utilizing state of the art design, high strength and low permeability concrete.
(f) Installation of a new drainage system in order
to provide adequate slopes to the roof deck.
(g) Installation of a new two-ply hot rubberized
waterproofing system and expansion joint gland seals.
(h) Installation
of new surface mounted lighting system, fire alarm, sprinkler and drainage
system within the area of the garage affected by the work.
Improvements from the Expenditure in Issue
[50]
The work did not increase any of the following:
number of parking spots, parking rates, garage revenue, or apartment unit rates
for Citi Centre tenants.
[51]
The garage also had the same load bearing
capacity after the repairs. To the end user the garage would look much the
same.
[52]
However, the work led to the following
improvements:
(a) The repair used C1 concrete which was, at the
time of the repair, required under applicable building codes, but was not required
at the time of initial construction. This concrete included silica fume which
helps prevent the ingress of water. The metals used in the repair project were
also coated with fusion coated epoxy, which would help protect the rebar from
deterioration.
(b) The waterproofing system was improved with the
addition of a two‑ply hot rubberized layer. The original garage only used
one‑ply, even though at the time of initial construction using more than
one layer was a common construction method.
(c) During the repairs the concrete topping was
reinforced with a metal mesh that was not used at the time of initial
construction. In addition, a polyester fabric reinforcing sheet, an elastomeric
reinforcing sheet, a drainage board and a protection board were added. These
additions would help channel water away from the membrane. The new water
protection system was designed to provide for upturning.
(d) The new garage roof has more drains than the
initial podium deck slab. An increase in drains was required due to changes in
the building codes. In this repair, four-inch drain grates were replaced with
twelve-inch drain grates. The drains also used a new technology.
(e) The sprinkler system was also replaced during
the repairs, and now includes four lines instead of the original two.
(f) Lastly,
the electrical and lighting systems were replaced.
[53]
Substantial improvements were made to the
waterproofing system, but were largely a result of changes to the building code
and a greater understanding of the deteriorating effects of deicing salts.
[54]
Back at the time of initial construction, it was
not commonly understood that deicing salts would cause deterioration in a
parking structure. As a result, there was less focus on waterproofing, as the
impact of chloride-contaminated water was not well understood.
[55]
It was expected that with the new waterproofing
system the replaced podium deck (the roof) would be “worry free” for 20 to 30 years.
[56]
The overall construction cost of the 2010-2011
repairs was approximately $4,157,000 excluding the landscaping costs.
[57]
Following these repairs, AON’s accountants
included the cost of these repairs as a current expenditure in AON’s financial
statements.
[58]
According to expert testimony, the reproduction
cost of the Citi Centre property was estimated to be $59,400,000 in 2011. A
reproduction cost is representative of what the cost would be to rebuild a
structure in modern times. A reproduction cost would attempt to estimate the
cost to rebuild Citi Centre in 2011 as it was originally designed and built in
the 1970s.
[59]
The reproduction cost of the underground garage
was estimated at approximately $5,000,000 but, with respect to the portion
under the buildings, it includes the floor of the garage and the outer wall but
does not include the columns and the deck slab (the roof of the garage).
The Law
[60]
Two of the fundamental rules of computing
business income are contained in paragraphs 18(1)(a) and (b) of
the Income Tax Act (Act):
18(1) . . . no deduction shall be
made in respect of
(a) an
outlay or expense except to the extent that it was made or incurred by the
taxpayer for the purpose of gaining or producing income from the business or
property;
(b) an outlay, loss or replacement
of capital, a payment on account of capital or an allowance in respect of
depreciation, obsolescence or depletion except as expressly permitted by this
Part;
[61]
There is no question that the expenditure in
issue here for the replacement of the roof was made for the purpose of
producing income from business.
[62]
The issue is whether the expenditure is a
current expenditure to be deducted in the year the expenditure is incurred, or
whether it is a capital expenditure to be deducted over a number of years in
accordance with the capital cost allowance rules.
[63]
The word capital is used in many different ways
in taxation and it may help focus on the issue by thinking of the question as
follows: Is the expenditure in issue a current expenditure or a depreciable
expenditure?
[64]
Often, the distinction between a current
expenditure and a depreciable expenditure is clear. In other situations the
borderline is a difficult one; this case falls within those borderline cases.
[65]
I note that the relevant case law regarding what
is a capital expenditure includes both capital expenditures that are
depreciable and other capital expenditures that are not.
[66]
The basic idea behind the scheme of capital cost
allowance and, in accounting, depreciation is that some expenditures will
benefit the business not only in the period of the expenditures but also in
future periods. Capital cost allowance in tax and depreciation in accounting
are intended to reflect that fact in order to try to produce a more accurate
picture of income than full deduction in the year of the expenditure.
[67]
However, to distinguish current from depreciable
expenditures the question is not as simple as answering the question: Will the
expenditure benefit the business in periods subsequent to the period during
which the expenditure was incurred? However, the question whether an
expenditure is depreciable can only arise if future periods will benefit from
the expenditure. Nor is the test, simply: Is there an “enduring benefit”? I
would note that while “enduring” suggests the same general principle — the
expenditure must be of future benefit — it also suggests some degree of
significance as to duration thereby excluding minimal expenditures and
expenditures whose future impact is brief.
[68]
Nonetheless “enduring benefit” is the starting
point for the determination of whether an expenditure is a current expenditure
or a depreciable expenditure. In British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. v.
Atherton,
the Privy Council expressed the enduring benefit test in the following way:
. . . But when an expenditure is
made, not only once and for all, but with a view to bringing into existence an
asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade, I think that there
is very good reason (in the absence of special circumstances leading to an
opposite conclusion) for treating such an expenditure as properly attributable
not to revenue but to capital. . . .
[69]
Even then, given the cited words in parentheses,
the test was not unqualified and, although the “enduring benefit” test no
longer has the weight it once had, it still remains a quite important
consideration.
[70]
The move away from prime reliance on “enduring
benefit” is clear in the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Minister
of National Revenue v. Algoma Central Railway where the Court said:
. . . We do not think that any single
test applies in making that determination and agree with the view expressed, in
a recent decision of the Privy Council, B.P. Australia Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Taxation of the Commonwealth of Australia, by Lord Pearce. In referring
to the matter of determining whether an expenditure was of a capital or an
income nature, he said, at p. 264:
The solution to the problem is not to
be found by any rigid test or description. It has to be derived from many
aspects of the whole set of circumstances some of which may point in one
direction, some in the other. One consideration may point so clearly that it
dominates other and vaguer indications in the contrary direction. It is a
common sense appreciation of all the guiding features which must provide the
ultimate answer.
[71]
That shift is visible in later cases including
the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Johns-Manville Canada v. The Queen.
[72]
There is a vast case law on this question that
is not always easy to apply. As Justice Mogan of this Court put it in Rainbow
Pipe Line Co. v. Canada:
4 The question of whether a particular
payment is to be deducted within the taxation year as a current expense or
capitalized and depreciated over a period of years has been considered in the
context of income tax appeals on many occasions. An early Canadian decision is M.N.R.
v. Vancouver Tug Boat Company Limited, 57 D.T.C. 1126 (Exchequer Court) in
which Thurlow J. stated at page 1128:
The line between what are capital
expenditures in general and what are revenue expenditures is not easy to
define, and it is no less difficult to lay down any hard or fast rule to
determine when expenditures similar to the one in question on capital assets
will and when they will not be considered to be capital expenditures ...
That statement is still true after 42 years
and many subsequent cases considering the same question. . . .
[73]
Rainbow Pipe Line
involved, among other issues, whether replacing some 44 kilometres of pipeline
was a current expense or a depreciable expense. In that case Justice Mogan then
went on to discuss the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Canderel Ltd. v.
Canada.
In Canderel, Justice Iacobucci said:
53 The outlined framework for analysis is,
of course, only as useful as its application to actual cases. Turning to the
facts of this case will illustrate how this principled approach to the
computation of income is intended to operate. Before I do this, however, it may
be both convenient and useful to summarize the principles which I have set out
above:
(1) The
determination of profit is a question of law.
(2) The
profit of a business for a taxation year is to be determined by setting against
the revenues from the business for that year the expenses incurred in earning
said income: M.N.R. v. Irwin, supra, Associated Investors,
supra.
(3) In
seeking to ascertain profit, the goal is to obtain an accurate picture of the
taxpayer’s profit for the given year.
(4) In
ascertaining profit, the taxpayer is free to adopt any method which is not
inconsistent with
(a) the
provisions of the Income Tax Act;
(b) established
case law principles or “rules of law”; and
(c) well-accepted
business principles.
(5) Well-accepted
business principles, which include but are not limited to the formal
codification found in GAAP, are not rules of law but interpretive aids. To the
extent that they may influence the calculation of income, they will do so only
on a case-by-case basis, depending on the facts of the taxpayer’s financial
situation.
(6) On
reassessment, once the taxpayer has shown that he has provided an accurate
picture of income for the year, which is consistent with the Act, the case law,
and well-accepted business principles, the onus shifts to the Minister to show
either that the figure provided does not represent an accurate picture, or that
another method of computation would provide a more accurate picture.
[74]
While the Act provides detailed rules in
respect of capital cost allowance, it does not provide any guidance as to what
is a depreciable expenditure; that is left to the case law. Also, with an
abundant case law on the subject one naturally focuses on the case law to apply
the “established case law principles” referred to in paragraph 53(4)(b)
of Algoma.
[75]
In many cases, it is still difficult to
distinguish a depreciable (capital) expenditure from a current expenditure,
particularly with respect to work on buildings. This is very well illustrated
in the excellent article in 1997 by Professor John W. Durnford, “The Deductibility of
Building Repair and Renovation Costs”,
where he says after examining the then existing case law including Johns-Manville:
What
conclusion, then, is to be drawn from this discussion of the general
application of the distinction between income expenses and capital outlays? It
is that there is no hard and fast rule, and that a common-sense appreciation of
all the relevant facts has to be taken into consideration.
[76]
I would again note, however, that in many
circumstances the result is clear‑cut although, unfortunately, not in
this case or others at the borderline between current and depreciable expenses.
[77]
Professor Durnford continued:
We shall now
study the distinction between outlays on account of capital and current
expenses within the specific context of the repair and renovation of buildings.
It will be reassuring to discover that, in spite of a certain lack of clarity
that we have seen exists with respect to the application of the distinction in
question at a general level, a whole series of guidelines has been developed by
the courts over the years which govern at least some of the situations that
present themselves. These guidelines do not always provide a simple or even a
clear solution, but they do represent a framework within which the courts deal
with problems in this area. . . .
. . .
CONCLUSION
Under our Income
Tax Act, where a building is held for the purpose of gaining or producing
income, the cost of repairs and renovations to the building may be deductible
as a current expense, or it may be classified as a capital outlay, in which
event the deductions are limited to those provided for under the capital cost
allowance provisions. Our courts have valiantly struggled with this elusive
distinction. In doing so, they have applied factors that include the following,
though not always consistently:
• a distinction must
be drawn between a repair to a building (normally a deductible expense) and an
acquisition of independent assets for use within a building (generally a
capital outlay);
• the use of new
technology will not alone cause the work done to constitute a capital outlay,
but improvements or an upgrading will;
• the sheer quantum
of the work done tends to be accorded less significance than formerly but may
be a factor where the court is of the opinion that what has really resulted
from the work is a new building; and
• the carrying out
all at one time of repairs that have accumulated over a number of years will
not alone cause the outlay to be classified as capital, but where a badly
rundown building has been acquired at a low cost and greatly increases in value
as a result of substantial repairs, at least part of the cost may be found to
constitute a capital outlay.
A review of the
application by the courts of the foregoing criteria gives the impression that
over time the courts have tended to become more liberal in classifying
renovation work as repairs that are eligible for deductibility as current
expenses, thereby narrowing somewhat the area occupied by capital outlays.
[78]
Although the article was published 20 years ago
it continues to be quite useful.
[79]
In examining the classification of expenditures
for work on a building as either current or depreciable, we thus have a
situation where one must consider a range of factors or indicia. There is no
fixed list as to what should be considered and there is no fixed weighting.
[80]
What I will do is enumerate some of the factors
to be considered and discuss them in the context of this case.
[81]
Of course, the first factor to consider is
whether or not the work in issue creates something which will last for a
certain time (the question of enduring benefit).
[82]
Other considerations include:
1. Is
the work the repair of an asset or the acquisition of an independent asset that
can exist on its own? It is quite clear that if something can exist on its own
it will point strongly towards a capital acquisition. Thus for example a new
motor that is installed in a ship is likely to be a capital expenditure whereas
the replacement of a very large part of the hull of a ship is likely a current
expenditure.
2. Repairs,
the purpose of which is to make the property repaired suitable for normal use
again,
are very likely to be current expenses whereas work which improves the asset is
more likely to be a capital expense. The degree of improvement appears to
matter.
3. However,
the use of more modern technology in itself will not necessarily constitute a
betterment such that the work will constitute a capital expenditure.
4. The
sheer quantum of the repair. To some extent a larger expense may point somewhat
towards a capital expenditure and vice versa.
5. The
value of the repair in relation to the whole. The larger the expense in
relation to the whole the more it may point towards a capital expenditure and
vice versa. Arguably this may just be another way of thinking about whether it
is really the creation of something new.
6. The
purpose of the work and the nature of the work.
7. Although
it has no application here, it may matter if a property was recently acquired
and is being fixed up. In such a case the value compared to that at acquisition
might be increased; that would make the expenditure more likely to be capital.
8. Similarly,
although, again, it has no application here, if a property is being prepared
for sale the expenditure will probably not be a current expenditure.
9. Whether
the work increases the value of the asset from what it would be assuming a good
state of repair. Arguably, this is just another way of asking whether the work
has resulted in a betterment.
10. Where
the law, for example building codes or safety requirements, imposes certain
obligations in terms of repairs or replacements that will not change the
character from what it would otherwise be. Specifically, work that would
otherwise be capital does not become current simply because of the legal
requirement.
The reverse may not be entirely symmetric; however, one would expect that work
that was current expenditure would not become capital simply because a building
code requirement required that it be done in a way that was in some sense
better unless the legal requirement in itself results in a substantial
improvement.
11. Generally,
accumulating repairs over time does not convert a larger expense spent in a
shorter one year into a capital expense.
[83]
Here we have significant work that will be
enduring in the sense that the replaced area of the roof will likely be worry
free for 20 to 30 years and will last longer than the worry free period. That is
an enduring benefit and quite clearly points towards a depreciable expenditure.
[84]
If the new replaced area of the roof were
something that could exist on its own like a motor then one would undoubtedly
come to the conclusion that this was a capital expenditure in the sense of a
depreciable expenditure.
[85]
However, the new replaced area of the roof, half
the roof, is inseparable from the floor of the garage below it and from the
entire garage. There is no structural separation between the garage and the
buildings that sit on top of the garage; in addition there is a legal
requirement for the buildings to have the parking spaces.
[86]
As a result, for the purpose of the analysis one
consider the work in issue as work on a part of the entire Citi Centre complex.
The replaced area of the roof has to be viewed as part of the whole complex.
While it is a significant part of the complex, it is not a large part of the
complex. Monetarily, the cost of some $4 million as compared with an
estimated replacement cost of the whole complex of $59 million is also
significant (about 7%) but not large in comparison to what replacing the whole
would cost.
[87]
The purpose of the work is simply to allow the
parking garage to be used in the same way as previously.
[88]
This question of simple repair as opposed to a
betterment is one of the most difficult aspects of this case because, on the
one hand, the parking garage has the same functionality after the work as
before the work. It has the same number of spaces as it had originally. It is
not better in a way that would allow the Appellant to charge or earn more
although, considering some of the photos in evidence showing visible
deterioration, it is no doubt more visually pleasing after the work than before
the work, but no more so than when built. On the other hand, the new roof was
built with newer technology with a significantly greater awareness of the
problems caused by salt than existed some 35 years earlier when Citi Centre was
built.
[89]
I have no doubt that some of the new techniques
used to fight the effects of salt, whether required by the building code or
not, result in a better roof in relation to the original construction
techniques.
[90]
However, given that it is quite clear that there
is no improvement in the functionality or profitability of the garage and given
that there is no reason to conclude that the work has had any significant
effect in terms of increasing the value of Citi Centre compared to its value
with the garage in a good state of repairs, this is not a situation where the
work has created something new. While there is a certain betterment, this is essentially a
repair.
Before the work there was a reinforced concrete roof; after the work there was
a better built concrete roof.
[91]
As a result, while the expected duration of the
work, the significance of the work and the fact that the roof uses better
construction techniques make this a close case, the scale of the work in
relation to the complex, the expected duration of the new portion of the roof
and the technical improvements, technical improvements that do not increase the
functionality of the garage, are not such as to tip the balance and make this a
depreciable expenditure as opposed to a current expenditures.
Conclusion
[92]
For these reasons, the appeal will be allowed,
with costs, and the matter will be referred back to the Minister of National
Revenue for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the expenditures
in issue are a current expense.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 31st day of August 2017.
“Gaston Jorré”