Date: 19980306
Docket: 96-1399-IT-G
BETWEEN:
BRELCO DRILLING LTD. (Formerly Trimac Limited),
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bell, J.T.C.C.
[1]
This appeal is from a determination of loss made by the Minister
of National Revenue ("Minister") in respect of the
Appellant's 1989 taxation year. The decrease in the amount of
the loss computed by the Appellant resulted from the Minister
reducing the amount of "safe income"[1] of the Appellant. This increased
the amount of capital gain alleged to have arisen under
subsection 55(2) of the Income Tax Act
("Act")[2] thus increasing the taxable capital gain. In order to
offset such increased income, a greater amount of the
Appellant's non-capital loss was deducted.
ISSUE:
[2]
The issue is whether losses incurred in foreign affiliates of the
Appellant reduce the "income earned or realized by any
corporation after 1971" for the purposes of subsection
55(2), thereby affecting the amount of "safe income"
available to the Appellant.
FACTS:
[3]
The parties filed an Agreed Statement of Facts with the Court and
advised the Court that it incorporated the admissions in the
pleadings and constituted all evidence in the case.
[4]
Attached as Schedule "A" is a chart showing the
relevant corporate structure. The names of companies used in
these Reasons are taken from that chart.
[5]
On November 29, 1989 the Appellant received a cash dividend of
$32,000,000 from Tricil and included same in income. It applied
subsection 55(2) to that dividend resulting in it being deemed to
be proceeds of disposition. It reduced the resulting deemed
capital gain by the amount of "safe income" calculated
by it. It had losses from other operations for that taxation
year, the ultimate position of the Appellant being that it had a
non-capital loss for that year.
[6]
On December 29, 1989 the Appellant sold all of its shares of
Tricil to Laidlaw Inc.
[7]
In 1995 the Minister, pursuant to the Appellant's request,
issued a Notice of Determination of Loss. It determined the loss
to be less than the amount claimed by the Appellant, the
difference relating directly to the amount of "safe
income" which could be applied to reduce the amount of the
capital gain.
[8]
Each of Inc., A, B, C, D and E had an "exempt deficit"
within the meaning of that expression for the purposes of the
Act at the end of its taxation year ending prior to
November 30, 1989. Each of B, C, D, and E incurred losses between
its last prior taxation year and November 29, 1989.
[9]
Each of F and G had an exempt surplus within the meaning of that
expression for the purposes of the Act at the end of its
taxation year ending prior to November 30, 1989.
[10] The
Appellant computed its "safe income" as being
$25,735,216 and deducted that sum from the amount of deemed
capital gain under subsection 55(2). The Minister
calculated the portion of the dividend from Tricil to Trimac
that could reasonably be considered to be attributable to income
earned or realized by Tricil and its subsidiaries after 1971
(hereinafter referred to as "Safe Income") ... to be
$23,149,721, a difference of $2,585,495.[3]
This resulted in an increase in the Appellant's taxable
capital gain of $1,723,672 and a corresponding reduction in its
non-capital loss.
[11] The
Minister prepared an Analysis of Safe Income Calculation of the
Appellant which was attached as a schedule to the Agreed
Statement of Facts[4]. It is reproduced and attached as Schedule
"B" to these Reasons. It shows, in respect of Tricil,
the amounts of $9,026,833 and $2,845,896 totalling $12,776,622.
The parties agree that the total of these two amounts should be
$11,872,729. Therefore, one-half of the resulting $903,893
overstatement of "safe income" should reduce the
Appellant's share by $451,946. It was agreed that if the
Appellant succeeds in this appeal, this calculation error will be
rectified resulting in a reduction of the Appellant's
computation of "safe income". If, however, the
Appellant is unsuccessful, the calculation error will not be
rectified because the result would be an increase in the amount
determined by the Court to be payable by the Appellant.[5]
[12] The
Respondent's computation reduces the Appellant's
"safe income" by the amount of the exempt deficits of
Inc., A, B, C, D and E. The Appellant contends that the exempt
deficits should not be "netted" with the exempt
surpluses of F and G. The Respondent submits that all exempt
deficits should be so "netted".
APPELLANT'S SUBMISSIONS:
Preliminary Submissions respecting lack of assumptions of
fact in Reply
[13]
Appellant's counsel submitted that the Respondent's
pleadings were deficient. He stated that there must be a pleading
of facts essential to the application of subsection 55(2). He
said that the Respondent cannot conclude that a dividend would
reduce the price of a share, it being possible that a dividend
can be paid without impacting on the price that a purchaser would
be willing to pay. He made this submission notwithstanding the
Appellant having submitted itself to the application of
subsection 55(2) on filing the return of income for the 1989
taxation year. Specifically, Appellant's counsel said that
the pleadings make no assumption with respect to the facts which
must exist in order to consider whether it is reasonable to apply
losses to reduce retained earnings of the parent. His position
was that there was no evidence to enable the Court to reach such
conclusion. He stated that there are three fundamental principles
relating to pleadings in an income tax case. They are as
follows:
1.
The Respondent must assume all the facts necessary to sustain the
reassessment. Counsel stated that there was no pleading with
respect to the capital gain having been reduced by the dividend
and no facts that related the income of the parent corporation
with the losses of the subsidiaries. He referred to del Valle
v. M.N.R., 86 DTC 1235 (T.C.C.) at 1237 where
Sarchuk, J., said:
In my view the respondent has failed to allege as a fact an
ingredient essential to the validity of the reassessment. There
is no onus on the appellant to disprove a phantom or non-existent
fact or an assumption not made by the respondent.
He also referred to Kit-Win Holdings (1973)
Limited, 81 DTC 5030, (F.C.T.D.) where Cattanach, J., said,
at 5038:
The Minister's assessment is based upon the assumptions
made by him and the effective manner by which the taxpayer can
establish error in the assessment made upon him is "to
demolish the basic fact upon which" the assessment was
made.
If he shows that the facts assessed by the Minister did not
exist and even if they did exist those facts do not bring the
taxpayer within the operation of the taxing provision relied upon
the assessment must fail.
He also cited in support of this proposition Her Majesty
the Queen v. Littler, 78 DTC 6179 at 6182 (F.C.A.) where the
Chief Justice said,
In my view, when a cause of action is to be supported on the
basis of a statutory provision, it is elementary that the facts
necessary to make the provision applicable be pleaded (preferably
with a direct reference to the provision) so that the opposing
party may decide what position to take with regard thereto, have
discovery with regard thereto and prepare for trial with regard
thereto. ... he did not plead facts showing that "the result
of one or more ... transactions ... is that a person confers a
benefit..." Had that been pleaded, other facts might well
have been the subject of evidence in addition to those that were
brought out at trial. In my view, it is no mere
"technicality", but a matter of elementary justice to
abstain, in the absence of very special circumstances, from
drawing inferences from evidence adduced in respect of certain
issues in order to make findings of fact that were not in issue
during the course of the trial.
Counsel stated that this referred particularly to his
submission that the Minister had not pleaded that there was a
reduction in the capital gain.
Finally, in respect of this first principle, counsel referred
to Her Majesty the Queen v. The Consumer's Gas Company
Ltd., 84 DTC 6058 (F.C.A.), where Urie, J. said at 6064:
That contention, thus, ought to have been pleaded together
with the facts which disclosed why that provision was applicable.
I do not see that the Amended Statement of Defence does so. I am
of the opinion, therefore, that the pleading does not provide the
underpinning required for the argument advanced for the first
time after the case was closed and during final argument at the
end of the trial.
2.
The second principle advanced by Appellant's counsel is that
the Appellant is not required to lead evidence in respect of
facts not assumed. He referred again to the del Valle case
and to Hiwako Investments Limited v. Her Majesty the
Queen, 78 DTC 6281 (F.C.A.) in which the Chief Justice said
at 6285:
Had the alleged assumption been that there was an expectation
on the part of the purchaser, at the time of the purchase, that,
in the event that the investment did not prove to be profitable,
it could be sold at a profit, and that such expectation was one
of the facts that induced him to make the purchase, such
assumption, if not disproved, might (I do not say that it would)
support the assessments based on "trading" if not
disproved. In my view, however, even on the most liberal
interpretation of the Statement of Defence, it cannot be
interpreted as alleging such an "assumption".
In my view, therefore, there was no assumption that was not
disproved by the evidence that would support the assessments.
3.
The third principle, according to counsel, is that the references
in the Reply to the Notice of Appeal to a statutory provision and
statements of argument and conclusions of law are not allegations
of fact or a pleading of fact. He referred to
L'Hérault et al v. M.N.R., 93 DTC 1108 (T.C.C.)
where Dussault, J. said at 1116,
From the foregoing, I consider that the statements in paras. 7
and 8 of the reply to the notice of appeal are only arguments or
conclusions of law and not allegations of fact, and in
particular, allegations of a secondary intent that might have
been the basis for the assessments.
As no secondary intent to resell at a profit was alleged, the
appellants did not have the burden of showing that it did not
exist.
[14] Counsel
stated that there is no assumption that the dividend reduced the
capital gain and there is no assumption about how the losses
arose, how the losses were funded or on a factual basis how those
losses impacted on the "safe income". Counsel then
proceeded to make submissions respecting examples of situations
in which the application of losses in the reduction of the income
of the parent would be inappropriate. He ended this portion of
his submission by saying that there was no pleading of essential
facts to support the conclusion sought by the Respondent.
Submissions respecting calculation of "Safe
Income"
[15]
Appellant's counsel submitted, in effect, that income earned
or realized by any corporation after 1971 constituted safe
income for the purposes of subsection 55(2). That subsection
reads as follows:
(2) Where a corporation resident in Canada has after April 21,
1980 received a taxable dividend in respect of which it is
entitled to a deduction under subsection 112(1) or 138(6) as part
of a transaction or event or a series of transactions or events
(other than as part of a series of transactions or events that
commenced before April 22, 1980), one of the purposes of which
(or, in the case of a dividend under subsection 84(3), one of the
results of which) was to effect a significant reduction in the
portion of the capital gain that, but for the dividend, would
have been realized on a disposition at fair market value of any
share of capital stock immediately before the dividend and that
could reasonably be considered to be attributable to anything
other than income earned or realized by any corporation after
1971 and before the transaction or event or the commencement of
the series of transactions or events referred to in paragraph
(3)(a), notwithstanding any other section of this Act, the
amount of the dividend (other than the portion thereof, if any,
subject to tax under Part IV that is not refunded as a
consequence of the payment of a dividend to a corporation where
the payment is part of the series of transactions or event)
(a) shall be deemed not to be a dividend received by
the corporation;
(b) where a corporation has disposed of the share,
shall be deemed to be proceeds of disposition of the share except
to the extent that it is otherwise included in computing such
proceeds; and
(c) where a corporation has not disposed of the share,
shall be deemed to be a gain of the corporation for the year in
which the dividend was received from the disposition of a capital
property.
[16] He then
referred to paragraph 55(5)(d) which reads as follows:
For the purposes of this section,
(d) the income earned or realized by a corporation for
a period ending at a time when it was a foreign affiliate[6] of another corporation
shall be deemed to be the aggregate of the amount, if any, that
would have been deductible by that other corporation at that time
by virtue of paragraph 113(1)(a) ... if that other
corporation
(i) owned all of the shares of the capital stock of the
foreign affiliate immediately before that time,
(ii) had disposed at that time of all of the shares referred
to in subparagraph (i) for proceeds of disposition equal to their
fair market value at that time, and
(iii) had made an election under subsection 93(1) in respect
of the full amount of the proceeds of disposition referred to in
subparagraph (ii);
[17]
Subsection 93(1) reads as follows:
Where at any time a corporation resident in Canada has so
elected, in prescribed manner and within the prescribed time, in
respect of any share of the capital stock of the foreign
affiliate of the corporation disposed of by it or by another
foreign affiliate of the corporation, for the purposes of this
Act, an amount equal to the lesser of
(a) the amount designated by the corporation in its election,
and
(b) the proceeds of disposition of the share
shall be deemed to have been a dividend received on the share
from the affiliate by the disposing corporation or disposing
affiliate, as the case may be, immediately before the disposition
and not to have been proceeds of disposition.
[18]
Subsection 113(1) states that:
Where in a taxation year a corporation resident in Canada has
received a dividend on a share owned by it of the capital stock
of a foreign affiliate of the corporation, there may be deducted
from the income for the year of the corporation for the purpose
of computing its taxable income for the year, an amount equal to
the aggregate of
(a) an amount equal to such portion of the dividend as
is prescribed to have been paid out of the exempt surplus,
as defined by regulation ...
(emphasis added)
[19] The
balance of subsection 113(1) is not applicable in this case.
[20]
Appellant's counsel advised the Court that there was no
dispute that the exempt surplus of F and G was deemed to be
income earned or realized by any corporation for the purposes of
subsection 55(2). He then submitted, in effect, that by virtue of
paragraph 55(5)(d), subsection 93(1) and subsection 113(1)
the amount of exempt surplus of F and G is deemed to have been a
dividend received by the Appellant thereby constituting
"income earned or realized by any corporation after
1971" and available as "safe income" under
subsection 55(2). Paragraph 55(5)(d) deems that exempt
surplus to be the amount that would have been deductible by the
Appellant by virtue of paragraph 113(1)(a). This follows
from the statutorily assumed existence of conditions (i), (ii)
and (iii) in paragraph 55(5)(d) in that "that other
corporation", the Appellant:
(i)
owned all the shares of its foreign affiliates F and G,
(ii)
had disposed of those shares for proceeds of disposition equal to
fair market value, and
(iii)
had elected under subsection 93(1) that those proceeds be deemed
to have been a dividend received by the Appellant from F and
G.
[21] Further,
by virtue of subsection 113(1) the amount that may be deducted by
the Appellant in computing its taxable income is an amount equal
to the exempt surplus of F and G. He stated that there was no
issue that the deemed proceeds of disposition in respect of the
shares of F and G would be at least equal to the amount of their
respective accumulated income - i.e., exempt surplus.[7]
[22]
Appellant's counsel then referred to Income Tax Regulation
5901(1) which reads as follows:
Where at any time in its taxation year a foreign affiliate of
a corporation resident in Canada has paid a whole dividend on the
shares of any class of its capital stock, for the purposes of
this Part
(a) the portion of the whole dividend deemed to have
been paid out of the affiliate's exempt surplus in respect of
the corporation at that time is an amount equal to the lesser
of
(i) the amount of the whole dividend,
(ii) the amount by which that exempt surplus exceeds the
affiliates taxable deficit in respect of the corporation
at that time.
(emphasis added)
[23] His point
seems to have been that the only deduction from the exempt
surplus of F and G would be the taxable deficit of each
respective company and that there would be no other deductions.
The evidence did not indicate that F or G had a taxable
deficit.
[24] He
submitted that there was nothing in section 55 or anywhere in the
Income Tax Act that makes any reference to losses of
foreign affiliates being taken into account in the computation of
"income earned or realized by any corporation after
1971" for the purposes of subsection 55(2). He said that
paragraph 55(5)(d) makes a specific reference to foreign
affiliates and it is by virtue of that paragraph that the income
of a foreign affiliate can be included in "income earned or
realized after 1971" for the purpose of subsection 55(2).
His submission continued with the statement that there was no
basis for reducing what otherwise would be "safe
income" by foreign affiliate losses.
[25] He
referred toJohns-Manville Canada Inc. v. Her Majesty the
Queen, 85 DTC 5373 (S.C.C.) in which Estey, J. said at page
5384:
Such a determination is, furthermore, consistent with another
basic concept in tax law that where the taxing statute is not
explicit, reasonable uncertainty or factual ambiguity resulting
from lack of explicitness in the statute should be resolved in
favour of the taxpayer.
[26] Counsel
referred to the words of Cory, J. in Pigott Project Management
Ltd. v. Land-Rock Resources Ltd., [1996] 1 C.T.C. 396
(S.C.C.) where at page 403 he said:
...that for able and experienced legal minds, neither the
meaning of the legislation nor its application to the facts is
clear. It would therefore seem to be appropriate to consider the
object and purpose of the legislation. Even if the ambiguity were
not apparent, it is significant that in order to determine the
clear and plain meaning of the statute it is always appropriate
to consider the "scheme of the Act, the object of the Act,
and the intention of Parliament".
[27] Counsel
submitted that the Court must interpret legislation in the
context of the Income Tax Act and the facts of the case.
Specifically, his submission, in accordance with the transcript,
is
I mean, if Parliament supposedly intended to address a
particular evil, if it didn't use the words to address or
deal with that particular evil, it's not for this Court or
the Minister of National Revenue to somehow bend those words, add
words, or provide an interpretation that simply isn't there
to extract tax from a particular taxpayer. So it's the vague
and indeterminate language which was used by Parliament which has
created this problem and its language, which in our submission as
Estey describes, creates a reasonable uncertainty with respect to
exactly what those words mean in the context of that particular
provision. And as I said, in our respectful submission, the only
assistance afforded by Parliament in determining 55(2) in the
context of our issue is 55(5)(d) and that only deals with income
and that should be the end of the matter in our respectful
submission.
[28]
Counsel's submission, therefore, is that the exempt deficits
of A, B, C, D, E and Inc. will not reduce the exempt surpluses of
F and G in the computation of the Appellant's "safe
income".
RESPONDENT'S SUBMISSIONS:
[29]
Respondent's counsel commenced his submission by stating that
the phrase "income earned or realized" from subsection
55(2) is not the test. In his words,
... it's like a balloon with air in it. The test is what
is left in the balloon outside the income earned or realized.
He then argued that it
... is not the part of the balloon called income earned or
realized, it's the remainder of the balloon and to do the
remainder of the balloon to determine the amount that could
reasonably be considered to be attributable to anything other
than income earned or realized, you have got to do the
consolidation that the Minister is recommending to this
Court.
[30] Counsel
then referred to my decision in Deuce Holdings Limited v. Her
Majesty the Queen, 97 DTC 921 in which I concluded that the
computation of "safe income" should be made
after tax. In my Reasons for Judgment I said:
It is logical that subsection 55(2) take into account the fact
that proceeds that would, but for a dividend, have been realized
on a disposition at fair market value of any share immediately
before that dividend, would have been computed after
ordinary tax. The fair market value of a share, so far as the
income element is concerned, would be valued on an after
tax basis. No purchaser would rationally pay a price for a share
of the capital stock of a corporation without taking into account
tax paid or payable on that corporation's income.
[31] Counsel
said that no purchaser would rationally pay a price for a share
of the capital stock of a corporation based on its earnings
without also taking into account any losses realized by the
corporation or its subsidiaries. He said,
An incomplete computation of gross foreign earnings that fails
to include foreign losses is not wholly distributable. Although
it is dangerous to speculate on what the legislation was intended
to mean, it is submitted that, in this case, it is only the
portion of the "income earned or realized" by the
dividend paying corporation remaining after the computation of
the foreign earnings that should be included in computing
"safe income".
[32]
Respondent's counsel referred briefly to the reason for the
existence of subsection 55(2). He said, in his written argument,
that as indicated in a portion of the 1979 budget speech, the
object of subsection 55(2) is to limit the reduction of capital
gains on the disposition of shares as a result of tax-free
dividends to that portion of the dividends that were from tax
retained earnings. He quoted that portion as reading:
As a general rule, the objective of the tax law is that on
most arm's length and on certain non-arm's length inter
corporate share sales, a capital gain should arise at least to
the extent that the sale proceeds reflect the unrealized and
untaxed appreciation since 1971 in the value of the underlying
assets. This objective will generally be achieved where tax-free
dividends on shares are limited to post-1971 taxed retained
earnings.
[33] He
referred to several articles, pointing out that corporate
taxpayers were minimizing capital gains on the disposition of the
shares of their subsidiaries by causing the subsidiaries to pay
tax-free dividends to their parent and then selling the shares of
the subsidiary. It is common ground in the Canadian tax community
that subsection 55(2) was enacted to halt these activities.
[34] Counsel
then referred to an article prepared and presented by Michael A.
Hiltz at the 43rd Tax Conference of the Canadian Tax Foundation.
Hiltz, at the time of delivering his paper was Director,
Reorganizations and Foreign Division, Specialty Rulings
Directorate, Revenue Canada Taxation, Ottawa. Hiltz, at 15:2
said:
The term "income earned or realized" by a
corporation is deemed to be the amount determined pursuant to
paragraph 55(5)(b), (c), or (d), as the case
may be. In order to contribute to a gain on shares, income earned
or realized must be on hand. ... The portion of gain that is
attributable to anything other than income earned or realized is
that part of the gain on the shares that is attributable to
unrealized, untaxed appraisal and accounting surpluses of a
corporation. ... It includes, for example, appreciation in the
value of property and the value of goodwill that has not been
purchased.
[35] In
addition, Hiltz wrote:
In determining the portion of the gain on a share that is
attributable to unrealized gains on property, the portion of a
gain that is so attributable should be reduced by the amount of
unrealized losses on property. Also, the amount of losses
incurred by the corporation must be included in the computation
of income earned or realized that is on hand at the time in
determining the portion of the gain attributable to income earned
or realized by a corporation. If a gain on a share is
attributable to income earned or realized (less losses incurred),
and to unrealized gains on property (less unrealized losses), a
dividend paid by a corporation is considered to reduce first the
gain on the shares attributable to income earned or realized,
and, second, the gain attributable to something else ...
[36] The point
is that Respondent's counsel relied heavily upon the Hiltz
article in his contention that the losses of foreign affiliates
must be netted with the surpluses of those affiliates in
determining "income earned or realized".
[37] In the
discussion at 15:4 of Consolidation of Income Earned or Realized
or Losses in a Corporate Group, Hiltz referred to an article by
John R. Robertson that appeared in the 1981 Conference Report of
the Canadian Tax Foundation. That article discussed section 55.
In that reference he said that when determining the income earned
or realized of a parent corporation in a corporate group, income
earned or realized and losses within the corporate group
consisting of the corporate parent and its direct and indirect
subsidiaries, must be considered. He continued, at 15:5:
This means that the income earned or realized of the parent
will be determined by including the parent's interest in the
income earned or realized, or the losses, as the case may be, of
its direct and indirect subsidiaries.
[38] Hiltz
then set forth a number of examples under the heading
"Consolidation of Income and Losses of Foreign
Affiliates" illustrating this point. He said that the exempt
loss of a foreign affiliate must reduce a Canadian company's
"income earned or realized on hand with respect to its
parent company". He said further that to fail to do so would
create an overstatement of income earned or realized. He said
this would result in the gain on the sale of the Canadian
company's shares being less than the unrealized gain inherent
in the property of another subsidiary corporation.
[39] Hiltz
said that the reference in subsection 55(2) to "any
corporation" contemplates that a gain in respect of the
shares of the parent may be attributable to income earned or
realized of a corporation other than the parent. He said:
The reference to "any corporation" permits the
income earned or realized or loss incurred by a direct or
indirect subsidiary corporation to be taken into account in
determining the part of the gain on the shares owned by the
parent corporation that could reasonably be considered to be
attributable to income earned or realized and the part that could
reasonably be considered to be attributable to something
else.
[40]
Respondent's counsel quoted the following words from page
15:5 of the Hiltz article:
Where income earned or realized by a subsidiary corporation
contributes to the fair market value of the shares of the
subsidiary owned by the parent and, therefore, the fair market
value and gain inherent in the shares of the parent, it is
reasonable that the income earned or realized or losses realized
by the subsidiary be taken into account in determining the amount
of the gain on the shares of the parent that is attributable to
income earned or realized by any corporation for the purposes of
section 55.
[41] Hiltz
then referred to the "requirement" to consolidate all
income earned or losses within a corporate group when determining
the income earned or realized of the parent corporation and its
subsidiary corporations.
[42]
Respondent's counsel stated that notwithstanding computations
under paragraph 55(5)(d) the test remains "that could
reasonably be considered to be attributable to anything other
than income earned or realized by any corporation" and
concluded with the statement that subsection 55(2) requires the
consolidated approach. He then referred to two paragraphs
contained in his Written Argument which read as follows:
16.
Section 55 is a commendable attempt to set out a code in general
terms that is properly fleshed out by administrative policy
statements and the jurisprudence. The alternative, legislation
that attempts to enumerate every possibility (for example, the
amendments to sections 79 and 80 of the Act) is not
necessarily better and this Court should not discourage the
Department of Finance from taking a minimalist approach.
17.
The Respondent's approach is consistent with Revenue
Canada's published policy. Unless the Respondent is clearly
wrong, equity among taxpayers is enhanced by this Court
confirming the administrative practice that other taxpayers have
been taxed under.
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION:
[43] I
conclude that it is unnecessary to respond in detail to
Appellant's counsel's submissions respecting certain
assumptions of fact not being pleaded. Appellant's counsel is
correct in stating that certain assumptions of fact basic to the
assessment were not contained in the Reply. However, his position
relates to the application of subsection 55(2), the very
provision applied by the Appellant itself in filing its income
tax return for the 1989 taxation year. In these circumstances,
although I accept the principles advanced by counsel as being
valid, it seems unreasonable that the Respondent not be able to
advance its case without having pleaded assumptions of fact to
support the application of a provision to which the Appellant
submitted itself.
[44] Reference
by Respondent's counsel to my decision in Deuce is of
no assistance to the Respondent. In that case the issue in
question was simply whether "safe income" was to be
determined before or after tax. It was one entity that was being
examined. Foreign affiliates were not involved. Although the
Court was confronted with a statutory deficiency in that case, it
reached its conclusion having regard to the reality of the
marketplace. In the case at bar, the Court was obliged to journey
to areas where seasoned professionals recoil with more than
feigned horror at even potential exposure to the legislative and
regulatory morass respecting section 55 and the foreign affiliate
Income Tax Regulations. In J.F. Newton Ltd. and John F.
Newton v. Thorne Riddell et al, 91 DTC 5275, Finch, J.of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia said, in respect of section
55:
It surpasses my imagination that anyone considers language
such as this to be capable of an intelligent understanding, or
that such language is thought to be capable of application to the
events of real life, such as the sale of a business.
[45]
Respondent's counsel argued, as set out above, that:
The phrase "income earned or realized" isn't in
fact the test. The test, it's like a balloon with air in it.
The test is what is left in the balloon outside the income earned
or realized.
[46] I reject
that argument on the simple basis that subsection 55(2) refers to
"anything other than income earned or realized by any
corporation after 1971". The simplest way to determine that
amount is to commence with a computation of "income earned
or realized" because paragraph 55(5)(d) states
specifically what that amount is deemed to be. There is no
provision in Part LIX of the Regulations requiring exempt
deficits to be taken into account in determining "income
earned or realized". The only statutory requirement is
contained in paragraph 55(5)(d). The inclusion of that
provision in the Act[8] ends this matter. I do not propose, in these
Reasons, to analyze the examples presented by Hiltz. I have
quoted him at length because his writing is, in effect, the
Respondent's argument. It is, of course noted, that he was,
at the time of writing this article, an official of the
Respondent. The Respondent presented no evidence to support, on
any basis, the validity of the Hiltz assumptions and computations
either generally or in relation to this appeal. Although
Hiltz's presentation appears to have been based on logic and
accounting procedures, he failed, in discussing subsection 55(2),
to come to grips with the description of "income earned or
realized" in paragraph 55(5)(d). He appears to be
attempting to give meaning to a statute which is sorely
wanting.
[47] The
Supreme Court of Canada[9] said:
Even if the ambiguity were not apparent, it is significant
that in order to determine the clear and plain meaning of the
statute, it is also appropriate to consider the "scheme of
the Act", the object of the Act and the intention of
Parliament.
[48] The
portion of the 1979 Budget speech quoted above stated that as
a general rule the objective of the tax law was that "a
capital gain should arise at least to the extent that sale
proceeds reflect the unrealized and untaxed appreciation since
1971 in the value of the underlying assets". That portion of
the Budget speech concluded by stating that its objective will
generally be achieved where tax-free dividends are limited
to post-1971 tax retained earnings. By using the words,
"general rule" and "generally" the Minister
of Finance may have intended that only surpluses and not deficits
be included in computing "safe income". The enactment
of paragraph 55(5)(d) supports this suggestion.
[49] While
paragraph 55(5)(d) is complicated by its assumptions and
references, it does not permit the interpretation urged by the
Respondent. The very existence of the lengthy article and many
examples prepared by Hiltz and the 1981 Canadian Tax Conference
article by John R. Robertson[10] referred to by him at 15:5 underline the
difficulties in comprehending the provisions. In considering the
reasons for enacting section 55, the Court, while attempting to
construe legislation and regulations in light of that purpose,
cannot properly make determinations beyond a reasonable
interpretation of same. To do otherwise would be tantamount, not
to interpreting, but to rewriting, legislation.
[50] Further,
I cannot accept the Respondent's contention that a section of
the Income Tax Act should, even if the attempt to write it
was commendable, be so construed that its application leads to an
expansive use of administrative fiat. In addition, I find the
statement of Respondent's counsel that equity among taxpayers
is enhanced by this Court confirming the administrative practice
under which other taxpayers have been taxed, to be astonishing.
The business community should not feel obliged, because it is
expedient, to observe administrative edicts when the law is
simply lacking in clarity.
[51] I am
instructed by paragraph 55(5)(d) as to what "the
income earned or realized by a corporation" is deemed to be
for the purposes of section 55. Subsection (2) of Section 55
provides that the portion of a dividend "that could
reasonably be considered to be attributable to anything other
than income earned or realized by any corporation after
1971" shall be deemed not to be a dividend but to be
proceeds of disposition. The exempt surplus of F and G, foreign
affiliates of the Appellant, is by virtue of the interaction of
paragraph 55(5)(d), subsection 93(1) and subsection 113(1)
"income earned or realized by any corporation" within
the meaning of that term in subsection 55(2). There is no
comparable legislative or regulatory instruction respecting
exempt deficits. Accordingly, I have concluded that the exempt
surplus of F and G should not be reduced by the exempt deficits
of A, B, C, D, E and Inc. in the computation of "income
earned or realized after 1971". In any event it is open to
the Court, with respect to the legislation discussed herein,
based upon the Johns-Manville decision, to conclude that there is
"reasonable uncertainty resulting from lack of explicitness
which should be resolved in favour of the taxpayer".
[52] The
aforesaid mathematical error in respect of Tricil should be taken
into account by reducing the Appellant's "safe
income" by that amount, namely $451,946. The non-capital
loss of the Appellant will be adjusted as a consequence of the
above.
[53] The
appeal is allowed and the Appellant is entitled to costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 6th day of March, 1998.
"R.D. Bell"
J.T.C.C.
SCHEDULE "A"
< IMG src="1998tcc961399.gif" alt="Schedule
A" >
SCHEDULE "B"
|
Trimac Limited
Calgary, Alberta
|
Analysis of Safe Income Calculation
|
|
|
Canadian Company
|
Revised
Dec 31, 1988
|
Revised
Nov 29, 1989
|
Trimac's Share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil (Sarnia) Ltd.
|
$15,533,430
|
$5,717,262
|
$21,250,692
|
|
Tricil Ltd.
|
9,026,833
|
2,845,896
|
12,776,622
|
|
Enterprises
|
4,952,505
|
1,662,916
|
6,615,421
|
|
Tricil (QUE)
|
3,147,980
|
1,128,049
|
4,276,029
|
|
O.H. Sanitation
|
253,488
|
0
|
253,488
|
|
B & B Disposal
|
444
|
0
|
444
|
|
Clean City Disp
|
(3)
|
0
|
(3)
|
|
Instant Waste Rem
|
(57,520)
|
0
|
(57,520)
|
|
Dominion Waste
|
(538,476)
|
0
|
(538,476)
|
|
Subtotal
|
32,318,681
|
11,354,123
|
44,576,697
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trimac Ltd Share 50%
|
15,792,745
|
5,677,062
|
22,288,349
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
U.S. COMPANIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil Environmental
|
6,982,216
|
2,182,087
|
9,164,303
|
|
Tricil Resources Inc.
|
513,371
|
0
|
513,371
|
|
Tricil Inc.
|
(161,756)
|
13,946
|
(147,810)
|
|
Total
|
7,333,831
|
2,196,033
|
9,529,864
|
|
Trimac Ltd. Share
|
3,666,916
|
1,098,017
|
4,764,932
|
|
Exchange Rate
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
|
Cdn Equv
|
4,265,356
|
1,277,213
|
5,542,569
|
|
Subtotal
|
20,058,101
|
6,954,274
|
27,830,917
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil Ene Res
|
(1,397,129)
|
(1,446,541)
|
(2,843,670)
|
|
Tricil Rec
|
(916,518)
|
(531,817)
|
(1,448,335)
|
|
Tricil N.Y.
|
(702,956)
|
603,722
|
(99,234)
|
|
Tricil Env Man
|
(286,947)
|
(3,453,423)
|
(3,740,370)
|
|
Tax Recovery
|
0
|
106,117
|
106,117
|
|
Redox Inc.
|
(1,320)
|
(22,012)
|
(23,332)
|
|
Subtotal
|
(3,304,870)
|
(4,743,954)
|
(8,048,824)
|
|
Trimac share
|
(1,652,435)
|
(2,371,977)
|
(4,024,412)
|
|
Exchange Rate
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
|
Cdn Equiv
|
(1,922,112)
|
(2,759,084)
|
(4,681,196)
|
|
Total Safe Income
|
18,135,989
|
4,195,191
|
23,149,721
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taxpayer
|
25,735,216
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Discrepancy
|
($2,585,495)
***********
|
|
See attached for details of the changes to safe income
calculation.
|
SCHEDULE "C"
|
|
Respondent's
Analysis of Safe Income Calculation of Appellant
|
|
|
Canadian Company
|
Revised
Dec 31, 1988
|
Revised
Nov 29, 1989
|
Trimac's Share
|
Appellant's
Share 50%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil (Sarnia) Ltd.
|
$15,533,430
|
$5,717,262
|
$21,250,692
|
|
|
Tricil Ltd.
|
9,026,833
|
2,845,896
|
12,776,622
|
|
|
Enterprises
|
4,952,505
|
1,662,916
|
6,615,421
|
|
|
Tricil (QUE)
|
3,147,980
|
1,128,049
|
4,276,029
|
|
|
O.H. Sanitation
|
253,488
|
0
|
253,488
|
|
|
B & B Disposal
|
444
|
0
|
444
|
|
|
Clean City Disp
|
(3)
|
0
|
(3)
|
|
|
Instant Waste Rem
|
(57,520)
|
0
|
(57,520)
|
|
|
Dominion Waste
|
(538,476)
|
0
|
(538,476)
|
|
|
Subtotal
|
32,318,681
|
11,354,123
|
44,576,697
|
22,288,349
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trimac Ltd Share 50%
|
15,792,745
|
5,677,062
|
22,288,349
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
U.S. COMPANIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil Environmental (F)
|
6,982,216
|
2,182,087
|
9,164,303
|
|
|
Tricil Resources Inc. (G)
|
513,371
|
0
|
513,371
|
|
|
Tricil Inc.
|
(161,756)
|
13,946
|
(147,810)
|
|
|
Total
|
7,333,831
|
2,196,033
|
9,529,864
|
|
|
Trimac Ltd. Share
|
3,666,916
|
1,098,017
|
4,764,932
|
|
|
Exchange Rate
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
|
|
Cdn Equv
|
4,265,356
|
1,277,213
|
5,542,569
|
5,542,569
|
|
Subtotal
|
20,058,101
|
6,954,274
|
27,830,917
|
27,830,917
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tricil Ene Res (A)
|
(1,397,129)
|
(1,446,541)
|
(2,843,670)
|
|
|
Tricil Rec (B)
|
(916,518)
|
(531,817)
|
(1,448,335)
|
|
|
Tricil N.Y. (C)
|
(702,956)
|
603,722
|
(99,234)
|
|
|
Tricil Env Man (D)
|
(286,947)
|
(3,453,423)
|
(3,740,370)
|
|
|
Tax Recovery
|
0
|
106,117
|
106,117
|
|
|
Redox Inc. (E)
|
(1,320)
|
(22,012)
|
(23,332)
|
|
|
Subtotal
|
(3,304,870)
|
(4,743,954)
|
(8,048,824)
|
|
|
Trimac share
|
(1,652,435)
|
(2,371,977)
|
(4,024,412)
|
|
|
Exchange Rate
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
1.1632
|
|
|
Cdn Equiv
|
(1,922,112)
|
(2,759,084)
|
(4,681,196)
|
(4,681,196)
|
|
Total Safe Income
|
18,135,989
|
4,195,191
|
23,149,721
|
23,149,721
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taxpayer
|
25,735,216
|
25,735,216
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Discrepancy
|
($2,585,495)
***********
|
2,585,495
|