Tremblay,
T.C.C.J.:—This
appeal
was
heard
on
June
6,
1990
at
the
City
of
Halifax,
Nova
Scotia.
I.
Point
at
Issue
The
point
at
issue
is
whether
the
appellant,
a
commission
salesman
involved
in
the
business
of
door-to-door
sales
of
encyclopedias,
is
correct
to
consider
himself
to
be
an
independent
contractor
for
the
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
The
respondent
considered
the
appellant
to
be
an
employee
for
the
litigious
years.
He
consequently
disallowed
a
substantial
part
of
sales
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
the
following
amounts:
Year
|
Disallowed
Expenses
|
1982
|
$11,870
|
1983
|
$15,515
|
1984
|
$40,138
|
1985
|
$23,590
|
The
appellant
says
that
all
of
the
expenses
incurred
by
him,
and
which
have
been
disallowed
by
the
respondent,
were
expenses
which
he
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
and
producing
income
from
his
business,
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
They
were
therefore
expenses
which
he
was
entitled
to
deduct
in
calculating
his
profit
from
his
business
pursuant
to
subsection
9(1)
of
the
Act.
This
Court
will
also
have
to
deal
with
the
validity
of
the
waivers
obtained
by
the
respondent
in
respect
of
1982
and
1983
taxation
years.
2.
Burden
of
Proof
2.01
The
burden
of
proof
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent's
reassessments
are
incorrect.
This
burden
of
proof
results
particularly
from
several
judicial
decisions,
including
the
judgment
delivered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Johnston
v.
M.N.R.,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486,
[1948]
C.T.C.
195,
3
D.T.C.
1181.
3.
Facts
3.01
Throughout
the
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years,
the
appellant
was
a
commission
salesman
in
the
business
of
door-to-door
sales
of
encyclopedias.
The
appellant
was
associated
with
P.F.
Collier
&
Sons
Ltd.
(hereinafter
called
Collier)
for
the
early
part
of
1982
and
the
latter
part
of
1985,
and
with
Grolier
Ltd.
(hereinafter
called
Grolier)
for
the
remainder
of
the
four-year
period.
3.02
Both
Collier
and
Grolier
were
structured
the
same
way.
The
very
first
position
in
which
a
person
may
be
involved
is
"sales
representative".
These
persons
are
hired
strictly
to
sell
encyclopedias.
They
incur
no
financial
responsibilities
in
the
course
of
their
work.
The
sales
representatives
are
under
the
control
of
a
"field
manager".
The
field
manager
has
to
plan
road
trips
to
be
made
by
his
group
of
sales
representatives.
He
has
the
authority
to
assign
each
"sales
representative"
a
particular
area
to
be
covered
during
the
day.
He
is
responsible
for
dropping
his
personnel
off
in
the
field
and
picking
them
up
at
the
end
of
the
day.
He
generally
assumes
most
of
the
travelling
costs
such
as
gas
and
oil
expenses,
the
vehicle
use
itself
and
hotel
bills.
The
field
manager
often
pays
sales
representatives'
meals
while
the
group
is
on
the
road.
The
"sales
manager"
and
the
"district
sales
manager"
are
respectively
the
two
next
positions.
The
sales
manager
supervises
the
work
of
the
field
managers.
His
job
is
to
keep
the
efficiency
and
the
motivation
of
the
various
groups
of
sales
representatives
at
its
highest
level.
He
usually
goes
on
the
road
to
support
his
personnel.
The
"district
sales
manager"
does
mainly
the
same
work
as
the
sales
manager.
However,
he
often
has
to
hire
and
train
sales
representatives
because
of
the
high
turnover
of
employees
in
the
sale
of
encyclopedias
field.
3.03
Though
there
was
no
restriction
on
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
territory
where
he
could
work,
he
primarily
conducted
business
in
the
maritime
provinces
as
a
sales
manager
and
district
sales
manager.
Despite
the
numerous
responsibilities
related
to
the
appellant's
position,
he
sometimes
had
to
supervise
his
own
group
of
sales
representatives
on
road
trips.
The
lack
of
field
managers
to
adequately
supervise
the
sales
representatives
was
the
main
reason
of
such
occasional
involvement
of
the
appellant
as
a
field
manager.
3.04
The
appellant
was
remunerated
for
the
most
part
by
commission
income.
These
commissions
were
earned
from
both
his
own
sales
of
encyclopedias
(5
per
cent
of
his
total
income)
and
the
sales
of
the
persons
under
his
supervision
(95
per
cent
of
his
total
income).
3.05
The
appellant
had
to
pay
all
the
expenses
incurred
by
him
in
the
performance
of
his
work
other
than
monthly
rent
of
an
office
located
in
Halifax,
basic
furniture
to
be
put
in
the
said
office
such
as
a
desk
and
some
chairs,
monthly
telephone
charges
other
than
long
distance
calls
and
the
newspaper
advertising
costs
in
order
to
recruit
sales
personnel
for
the
office.
These
latter
expenses
were
paid
by
Collier
and
Grolier.
3.06
The
oral
evidence
given
by
Mr.
Tim
Chesnutt,
former
field
manager
of
the
appellant
at
Collier
and
Grolier,
by
Mr.
Robert
Craig,
president
of
Collier
during
the
litigious
years
and
by
the
appellant
himself
clearly
states
that
Mr.
Qureshi
was
totally
free
to
use
any
kind
of
strategy
in
order
to
stimulate
the
sales
of
encyclopedias
by
his
personnel.
The
relevant
excerpts
of
the
testimonies
read
as
follows:
Direct
examination
of
Mr.
Robert
Craig
Now,
on
the
expenditure
side,
you
mentioned
some
items
earlier
that
the
company,
Collier,
does
pay
certain
things.
You've
told
us
about
those.
Right.
On
these
types
of
expenditures,
for
incentives
for
salespeople
and
so
on,
is
there
any
control
over
those
expenditures
by
the
company?
No,
there
isn't.
For
example,
do
you
dictate
to
Mr.
Qureshi
that
he
must
spend
a
certain
minimum
amount
every
month?
No,
we
don't,
no.
Okay.
So
he's
totally
up
to
his
own
devices
to
decide
what
he's
going
to
spend
his
money
on?
Exactly.
And
where
he
spends
it
and
what
types
of
things.
Exactly.
I
mean,
as
far
as
we're
concerned,
it's
his
show,
so
to
speak.
He
earns
a
healthy
commission
on
every
sale
that's
made,
you
know,
say,
roughly
in
the
neighbourhood
of—even
at
just
the
district
through
general
sales
manager
level,
roughly
10%.
The
more
he
is
able
to
generate
by
way
of
sales—and,
again,
whatever
methods
he
chooses
to
use
to
motivate
those
people,
the
more
money
he's
going
to
make.
(T.S.,
page
96-97)
Direct
examination
of
Mr.
Abdul
Qureshi
What
control
did
Grolier
have
over
you
in
terms
of
your
need
to
spend
a
particular
amount
in
a
particular
time
period?
Anything
like
that?
There
was
no
control.
Did
you
have
to
show
to
Grolier
how
much
you
spent
in
any
time
period?
No.
What
control
did
Grolier
have
over
your
day-to-day
or
month-to-month
operations?
None
whatsoever.
Did
they
dictate
to
you
as
to
where
you
had
to
do
your
sales
or
take
your
salespeople?
As
long
as
sales
were
produced
accordingly,
they
do
not
care
where
they
were
produced.
(T.S.,
pages
64-65)
3.07
This
absence
of
control
by
Collier
and
Grolier
about
the
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellant
highlights
the
importance
of
keeping
his
sales
representatives
motivated
on
road
trips.
The
importance
of
motivating
his
personnel
and
providing
them
with
all
sorts
of
incentives
was
regularly
mentioned
in
the
appellant's
testimony.
This
excerpt,
extracted
from
pages
78
to
80
of
the
appellant's
oral
evidence,
presents
quite
clearly
such
an
idea.
It
reads
as
follows:
The
types
of
amounts
you
were
deducting,
Mr.
Qureshi,
were
those
required
by
either
Grolier
or
Collier
to
be
made
by
you?
In
a
written
form,
no.
In
any
form?
I
was
expected
to
travel
and
incur
business.
And
it
was
understood
that
those
expenses
have
to
be
incurred
in
order
to
run
a
successful
business.
But
I
believe
we
touched
on
this
earlier.
Did
either
company,
in
a
particular
time
frame,
specify
to
you
what
expenses
had
to
be
paid?
No.
Your
expenses
then
relate
to
what
types
of
expenses,
generally?
Generally,
it
would
be
my
personal,
meaning
my
business
travelling.
There
will
be—that
pertain
to
motivational
meetings
that
were
held
with
salespeople.
MR.
QURESHI
Your
Honour,
my
clients
were
my
salespeople
that
worked
under
my
supervision.
BY
MR.
QURESHI
My
business—my
income
was
based
on
how
well
they
performed.
So
for
me
to
earn
any
income,
I
would
have
to
motivate
my
salespeople.
If
they
do
not
make
any
sale,
I
do
not
earn
any
income.
3.08
Different
kind
of
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
the
course
of
his
work
were
revised
by
the
respondent
by
way
of
notices
of
reassessment
dated
December
14,
1987.
The
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
included
a
detailed
analysis
of
the
reasons
disallowing
such
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
The
major
reasons
for
such
disallowance
are
that
the
appellant
was
not
required
by
the
terms
of
his
employment
to
incur
these
expenses
and
that
these
latter
expenses
represented
expenditures
of
a
personal
nature.
3.09
The
first
category
of
expenses
that
were
revised
is
the
automobile
expenses.
These
expenses
were
claimed
for
one
automobile
in
1982
and
1983
and
for
two
automobiles
in
1984
and
1985.
During
all
these
years,
the
overall
personal
use
of
the
only
vehicle
used
in
1982
and
1983
and
of
the
two
vehicles
used
in
1984
and
1985
was
stated
at
25
per
cent
by
the
appellant.
According
to
the
appellant's
testimony,
the
automobile
expenses
were
incurred
in
order
to
transport
the
highest
number
of
salespeople
from
the
Halifax
office
to
differ
ent
locations
within
the
Maritimes,
to
supervise
them,
to
make
sure
everything
was
going
right
and
to
meet
everybody
at
the
end
of
every
day.
3.10
The
appellant
also
claimed
large
amounts
of
travel
expenses
which
principally
included
hotel,
meal,
plane
and
rail
fare
expenses.
Regarding
the
hotel
expenses,
Mr.
Tim
Chesnutt
stated
that
the
appellant
sometimes
paid
the
bills
for
the
field
manager
and
his
group
of
salespeople.
The
appellant
also
paid
such
hotel
costs
for
the
sales
representatives
under
his
direct
supervision.
The
appellant
did
not
maintain
any
type
of
record
to
indicate
who
was
staying
in
the
hotel
rooms
that
were
used
by
his
personnel.
The
receipts
provided
by
the
appellant
however
showed
quite
clearly
that
a
certain
number
of
hotel
expenses
were
assumed
by
Mr.
Qureshi.
The
meal
expenses
were
generally
incurred
in
order
to
stimulate
his
personnel
when
things
were
not
going
very
well
on
certain
road
trips.
Such
motivational
meetings
used
to
generate
a
lot
of
excitement
and
enthusiasm
among
the
salespeople.
Once
again,
the
appellant
did
not
maintain
any
kind
of
record
to
indicate
who
specifically
was
at
any
individual
meal
with
him.
However,
a
great
number
of
meal
expenses
receipts
indicated
the
name
of
individuals
to
whom
were
paid
such
expenses.
The
plane
and
rail
fares
were
generally
incurred
to
compensate
for
the
lack
of
sales
representatives
while
the
group
was
on
the
road.
According
to
the
appellants
testimony,
it
was
necessary
in
such
circumstances
to
send
people
to
join
the
rest
of
the
team
in
order
to
generate
sufficient
enthusiasm
and
efficiency
(Exhibit
A-9).
3.11
The
appellant
claimed
expenses
in
respect
of
money
advanced
to
his
personnel.
These
loans
were
incurred
when
some
sales
representatives
did
not
sell
enough
in
order
to
pay
basic
living
expenses.
Though
these
amounts
of
money
were
expected
to
be
reimbursed
sooner
or
later,
some
of
these
sales
representatives
left
the
company
without
paying
back
the
advances
made
by
the
appellant.
Despite
the
numerous
attempts
of
the
appellant
to
get
in
touch
with
these
people,
he
never
recovered
the
amounts
identified
as
bad
debts
in
Exhibit
A-2.
No
lawsuits
were
launched
by
the
appellant
against
these
persons
in
order
to
recover
his
money.
According
to
the
oral
evidence
given
by
Messrs
Tim
Chesnutt
and
Robert
Craig,
such
loans
of
money
appear
to
be
a
very
common
thing
in
the
encyclopedia
sales
business.
These
advances
of
money
constituted
an
investment
in
promising
sales
representatives
in
order
to
provide
them
sufficient
time
and
experience
to
become
successful
in
such
a
rough
business.
The
appellant
submitted
no
written
or
oral
evidence
with
regard
to
such
advances
of
money
except
three
receipts
which
clearly
indicate
the
name
of
the
sales
representative
involved
and
the
sum
of
money
that
was
advanced
by
the
appellant.
3.12
In
1984
and
1985,
the
appellant
claimed
expenses
in
order
to
maintain
an
office
in
his
residence.
This
office
in
the
appellant's
home
was
in
the
immediate
area
of
the
local
office
provided
by
Collier
and
Grolier
to
the
appellant
(3.05).
These
expenses
were
mostly
related
to
the
purchase
of
a
desk,
a
few
chairs
and
a
computer.
This
office
in
the
appellant's
home
was
set
up
in
order
to
hold
meetings
with
his
field
managers
who
were
working
up
in
Halifax.
These
meetings,
which
generally
took
place
at
night,
were
thus
held
in
a
business
atmosphere.
Moreover,
a
computerized
letter
to
the
purchaser
was
always
prepared
by
the
appellant
when
a
sale
was
completed
by
his
personnel.
Such
a
letter,
which
was
expected
to
be
received
the
day
following
the
transaction,
was
sent
in
order
to
avoid
any
change
of
mind
from
the
eventual
purchasers
before
the
administration
personnel
of
Collier
and
Grolier
could
call
to
confirm
the
sale.
The
importance
of
the
above
procedure
was
another
reason
to
set
up
an
office
in
the
appellant's
home.
3.13.
The
appellant
claimed
sales
promotion
expenses
as
well.
These
expenses
were
related
to
different
kinds
of
entertainment
activities
offered
to
his
personnel
in
order
to
keep
them
motivated.
This
excerpt,
extracted
from
pages
81
and
82
of
the
appellant's
testimony,
presents
the
reasons
that
induced
the
appellant
to
incur
such
expenses.
It
reads
as
follows:
I
personally
realized
that
one
of
the
most
important
parts
of
my
success,
or
one
of
the
main
things
that
pertained
to
my
success,
is
the
fact
that
I
must
have
people
that
are
motivated
and
are
willing
to
work
under
my
supervision.
The
tickets
to
concerts
or
sports
games
and
movies
would
pertain
to,
on
occasions,
instead
of
taking
people
to
a
club
or
to
a
bar
and
having
drinks.
And
it
[promotion
expenses]
could
be
concerning
somebody
wants
to
leave
the
business.
A
lot
of
times,
on
a
day-to-day
basis
when
they
face
a
lot
of
rejection
from
the
customers
when
they
go
to
work,
or
in
my
own
case,
and
in
other
people's
cases,
when
they
get
negative
influence
from
their
friends
and
from
their
parents,
saying,"Encyclopedia
salesman.
Ha,
ha,
ha.
You're
not
going
to
make
any
money."
And
they
would
want
to
quit
because
they
cannot
stand
the
pressure.
So
to
give
them
a
relaxed,
you
know,
environment
and
understanding
of
the
business,
you
would
want
to
relate
to
them
on
that
basis,
a
one-to-one
basis
in
a
different
setting
than
an
office
setting.
Dinner
and
banquet
expenses
were
also
included
within
the
said
promotion
expenses.
Once
again,
such
sales
meetings
on
an
individual
basis
or
for
the
entire
staff
were
held
in
order
to
motivate
his
people
at
the
beginning
of,
during
or
at
the
end
of
national
sales
contest
organized
by
either
Collier
or
Grolier.
3.14
The
appellant
claimed
expenses
in
respect
of
salaries
paid
in
1984
and
1985
to
casual
employees
who
occasionally
performed
clerical
tasks
for
him
during
the
litigious
years.
No
receipt
or
any
other
paper
evidence
was
provided
in
order
to
prove
such
expenses.
3.15
Bonus
expenses
were
equally
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
Such
bonuses
were
one
of
the
numerous
strategies
used
by
the
appellant
in
order
to
stimulate
the
sales
of
his
personnel
in
difficult
periods.
The
appellant
described
the
importance
of
such
bonuses
on
page
119
of
his
testimony.
This
excerpt
reads
as
follows:
And
we
use
that
a
lot
of—quite
often,
Your
Honour,
because
if
somebody
doesn't
have
any
money
at
all
and
they
really
want
to
make
money,
well,
we'll
use
that.
We'll
say,
“Look,
you
want
money
and
I
know
that
the
cheque
will
not
be
here
for
about
ten
days
or
so,
because
that's
the
time
it
takes
to
process
the
application
form,
if
you
need
some
money,
go
out
and
write
two
good
sales
today
and
I'll
give
you
fifty
dollars
($50)
as
a
bonus.”
So
it
would—for
them
to
have
some
cash,
they
will
go
out
and
be
really
inspired.
And
instead
of
working
till
9
o’clock
and
then
getting
discouraged,
they
will
put
a
little
bit
extra
effort
in
the
evening
to
be
able
to
win
that
extra
bonus.
No
written
evidence
was
submitted
by
the
appellant
in
order
to
prove
the
amount
of
bonus
expenses
that
were
claimed
in
respect
of
the
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
3.16
The
appellant
claimed
office
expenses
in
respect
of
an
answering
machine,
computer
software
and
basic
office
supplies
such
as
pencils,
clipboards,
pads,
envelopes
and
paper
clips.
These
expenses
were
related
to
the
office
that
was
provided
to
the
appellant
by
Collier
and
Grolier.
The
appellant
also
included
the
cost
of
his
subscriptions
to
the
Harvard
Business
Review
and
Time
Magazine
in
his
deduction
for
office
expenses.
3.17
In
1984,
the
cost
of
shipping
live
lobsters
to
the
head
office
of
his
employer
was
also
claimed
as
a
deductible
expense
by
the
appellant.
This
excerpt,
extracted
from
pages
136
and
137
of
the
appellant's
testimony,
illustrates
the
reason
for
such
an
expense.
It
reads
as
follows:
Well,
one
of
the
important
part
of
running
as—being
an
office
manager,
my
job
is
to
make
sure
that
when
sales
are
made
by
sales
representatives,
those
sales
are
looked
favourably
somewhat
by
the
credit
manager
or
by
people
at
head
office
in
Toronto—I
mean,
in
Montreal
or
in
Toronto.
Of
course,
if—for
example,
a
sale
is
written.
It
is
sent
to
Montreal.
They
look
at
it.
Sitting
in
the
office
and
not
appreciating
what
the
representative
has
gone
through
to
make
that
sale,
just
looking
at
the,
you
know,
facts
on
the
statement
itself,
they
can
make
a
decision
whether
it's
accepted
or
not.
Some
of
them
will
be
gray
area.
For
example,
if
some—a
family,
while
they
might
have
previously
a
record
of
not
paying
on
time,
the
company
would
either
accept
it
or
not.
It
really
depends
on
the
credit
manager's
judgment.
Now,
we
always
made
a—so
it's
very
important
for
me
to
have
a
good
rapport
with
those
credit
managers
in
Montreal
or
in
Toronto
head
office,
whatever
it
might
be.
And
a
way
of
keeping
a
good
rapport,
we
will—
in
this
instance,
we—I
sent
them
lobsters
to
head
office.
Of
course,
head
office,
I
would
send
lobsters
not
for
any
reason
but
business
reason.
I
mean,
I
don't
see
any
reason
why
it
would
be
a
personal
reason.
3.18
In
1984
and
1985,
a
capital
cost
allowance
was
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
a
typewriter
that
was
used
for
the
office.
A
capital
cost
allowance
was
also
claimed
for
a
computer
whose
use
was
described
above
(3.12).
3.19
The
company
(either
Collier
or
Grolier)
determined
the
price
of
the
product
being
sold
and
had
final
approval
of
all
sales.
Most
of
these
sales
were
made
on
credit
terms
with
the
said
company.
3.20
The
appellant
was
expected
to
render
services
to
the
company
only.
This
excerpt,
extracted
from
page
190
of
the
appellant's
testimony,
confirms
the
validity
of
this
statement.
It
reads
as
follows:
We
heard
yesterday,
that
these
people
are
main
competitors.
So
the
point
I’m
trying
to
make
is,
I
assume
that
you
worked
for
Grolier,
or
you
worked
for
Collier.
You
didn't
work
for
both.
You
weren't
out
there
freelancing
for
all
different
companies.
No,
that
is
correct.
Yes.
3.21
The
appellant's
booking
system
was
rather
simple.
The
appellant
saved
all
receipts
which
pertained
to
business
purposes.
These
receipts
were
then
stored
in
bags
until
the
tax
preparation
period.
At
that
time,
all
these
receipts
were
categorized
and
calculated
by
a
receptionist
of
the
appellant's
office.
3.22
The
appellant
did
not
maintain
a
separate
bank
account
that
was
solely
used
for
business
purposes.
3.23
Neither
did
the
appellant
maintain
a
cash
disbursement
journal
to
show
specifically
where
he
was
spending
his
cash.
3.24
The
appellant
never
employed
any
accountant
to
help
him
keep
proper
books.
4.
Law—Cases
at
Law—Doctrine
4.01
Law
The
Court
will
mostly
rely
on
paragraphs
18(1)(a),
18(1)(h),
section
67
and
subsection
230(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
These
provisions
read
as
follows:
18.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
from
a
business
or
property
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;
(h)
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
taxpayer
except
travelling
expenses
(including
the
entire
amount
expended
for
meals
and
lodging)
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
while
away
from
home
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
his
business;
67.
In
computing
income,
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
an
outlay
or
expense
in
respect
of
which
any
amount
is
otherwise
deductible
under
this
Act,
except
to
the
extent
that
the
outlay
or
expense
was
reasonable
in
the
circumstances.
230.
(1)
Every
person
carrying
on
business
and
every
person
who
is
required,
by
or
pursuant
to
this
Act,
to
pay
or
collect
taxes
or
other
amounts
shall
keep
records
and
books
of
account
(including
an
annual
inventory
kept
in
prescribed
manner)
at
his
place
of
business
or
residence
in
Canada
or
at
such
other
place
as
may
be
designated
by
the
Minister,
in
such
form
and
containing
such
information
as
will
enable
the
taxes
payable
under
this
Act
or
the
taxes
or
other
amounts
that
should
have
been
deducted,
withheld
or
collected
to
be
determined.
4.02
Cases
at
Law—Doctrine
Counsel
for
the
parties
referred
the
Court
to
the
following
cases
at
law
and
doctrine:
1.
Stevenson,
Jordan
and
Harrisson
Ltd.
v.
Macdonald
and
Evans,
[1952]
1
T.L.R.
101;
2.
Hauser
v.
M.N.R.,
[1978]
C.T.C.
2728,
78
D.T.C.
1532
(T.R.B.);
3.
M.N.R.
v.
Parsons
et
al.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
352,
84
D.T.C.
6345;
4.
Wiebe
Door
Services
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
200,
87
D.T.C.
5025
(F.C.A.);
5.
Optical
Recording
Corp.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
325,
86
D.T.C.
6465
(F.C.T.D.),
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
417,
87
D.T.C.
5248
(F.C.A.);
6.
McMillen
Holdings
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
2327,
87
D.T.C.
585
(T.C.C.);
7.
Devor
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
155,
88
D.T.C.
6370
(F.C.T.D.);
8.
Wolofsky
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
2470,
90
D.T.C.
1345
(T.C.C.);
9.
Graves
v.
Canada,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
357,
90
D.T.C.
6300
(F.C.T.D.);
10.
Atiyah,
P.S.,
Vicarious
liability
in
the
law
of
torts,
London,
Butterworths,
1967;
11.
Noël,
M.,
Contract
of
services—A
tax
perspective
and
analysis,
Twentyninth
Tax
Conference,
1977,
Canadian
Tax
Foundation,
page
712;
12.
Archambault,
P.
"Employé
et
travailleur
autonome:
distinction
juridique
et
le
problème
des
sources
du
droit",
Revue
de
planification
fiscale
et
successorale,
(1987)
vol.
9,
page
287;
13.
Thivierge,
Y.
L'évolution
jurisprudentielle
de
la
distinction
entre
employé
et
travailleur
autonome”,
Revue
de
planification
fiscale
et
successorale,
(1984)
vol.
6,
page
9.
5.
Analysis
5.01
The
counsel
for
both
parties
provided
written
submissions
to
this
Court
in
order
to
present
their
respective
arguments.
They
agreed
to
debate
the
same
questions
of
law.
Thus,
this
judgment
will
have
to
deal
with
the
following
issues:
1.
Should
the
Reassessments
against
the
appellant
be
vacated
on
the
basis
that
the
theory
of
the
Assessment
by
the
respondent
was
incorrect,
in
that
he
was
assessed
as
being
an
employee,
when
in
fact
he
was
self-employed
for
all
years
under
appeal?
2.
Should
the
Reassessment
relating
to
1983
be
vacated
on
the
basis
that
the
respondent
did
not
assume
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
"at
the
time
of
the
Assessment"?
3.
Should
the
Reassessments
relating
to
1982
and
1983
be
vacated
because
they
are
dependent
on
Waivers
which
are
invalid
because
of
duress
and/or
misrepresentation?
4.
Was
the
appellant
self-employed
or
an
employee
for
some
or
all
of
the
years
under
appeal?
5.
Depending
on
whether
the
appellant
was
self-employed
or
an
employee,
what
amount
is
he
entitled
to
deduct
for
each
of
the
years
under
appeal?
5.02
Should
the
reassessments
against
the
appellant
be
vacated
on
the
basis
that
the
theory
of
the
assessment
by
the
respondent
was
incorrect
in
that
he
was
assessed
as
being
an
employee
when,
in
fact,
he
was
self-employed
for
all
years
under
appeal?
5.02.1
This
Court
cannot
accept
this
appellants
contention.
In
effect,
the
usual
way
to
appeal
against
an
assessment
of
the
respondent
was
presented
in
M.N.R.
v.
Parsons,
supra,
where
the
appeal
division
held
(at
35
(D.T.C.
6346)):
We
are
all
of
opinion
that
the
appeal
must
succeed
on
the
narrow
ground
that
the
only
way
in
which
the
assessments
made
against
the
respondents
could
be
challenged
was
that
provided
for
in
sections
169
and
following
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
our
view,
the
Income
Tax
Act
expressly
provides
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Federal
Court
from
assessments
made
by
the
Minister;
it
follows,
according
to
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
that
those
assessments
may
not
be
reviewed,
restrained
or
set
aside
by
the
Court
in
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
under
sections
18
and
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
5.02.2
However,
an
exception
to
this
general
principle
was
stated
by
the
Trial
Division
of
the
Federal
Court
in
Optical
Recording
Corporation,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
325,
86
D.T.C.
6465
(4.02(5)).
It
reads
as
follows
(at
pages
332-33
(D.T.C.
6471)):
The
issues
to
be
determined
here
are
much
broader
than,
and
different
from,
matters
of
extension
of
time
to
appeal,
the
validity
of
a
notice
of
assessment
and
appeal
therefrom.
The
issues
here
raise
questions
of
fundamental
administrative
illegality,
unfair
treatment
and
estoppel
which
engage
the
superintending
jurisdiction
of
a
superior
court,
such
that
even
if
this
Court's
disposition
of
them
be
ultimately
adjudged
to
be
wrong,
the
Court's
decision
to
encertain
[sic]
them
should
be
seen
to
be
correct.
The
case
at
bar
is
therefore
quite
distinct
from
the
Parsons
case.
5.02.3
We
can
infer
from
the
latter
statement
that
the
Federal
Court
may
dismiss
an
assessment
when
the
acts
of
the
respondent's
officers
raise
questions
of
fundamental
administrative
illegality
and
unfair
treatment.
In
such
a
case,
the
judicial
review
of
the
Federal
Court
will
be
raised
in
order
to
quash
the
assessment
of
the
respondent.
5.02.4
This
Court
does
not
believe
that
the
alledged
[sic]
mistake
of
the
respondent
in
assessing
the
appellant's
legal
status
may
constitute
the
kind
of
fundamental
error
that
was
contemplated
in
the
Optical
Recording
Corporation
(4.02(5))
case.
Moreover,
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
does
not
have
the
jurisdiction
to
vacate
an
assessment
on
such
a
basis.
The
jurisdiction
issue
will
be
discussed
in
detail
in
the
analysis
of
the
third
issue,
namely
the
validity
of
the
waivers
obtained
by
the
respondent.
5.03
Should
the
reassessment
relating
to
1983
be
vacated
on
the
basis
that
the
respondent
did
not
assume
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
“at
the
time
of
the
assessment"?
5.03.1
It
is
submitted
that
the
reassessment
relating
to
1983
should
be
vacated
because
the
appellant
has
proved
that
the
assumption
of
facts
referred
to
by
the
respondent
in
the
reply,
namely
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
in
1983,
was
not
the
assumption
of
facts
made
by
the
respondent's
assessor
at
the
time
the
reassessment
was
issued.
Accordingly,
there
should
be
a
shift
in
the
burden
of
proof
about
the
assumption
of
facts
made
by
the
respondent
for
the
1983
taxation
year.
5.03.2
The
state
of
law
regarding
such
a
shift
in
the
burden
of
proof
is
well
presented
in
the
Wolofsky
case
(4.02(8))
as
follows
(at
page
2473
(D.T.C.
346-47)
):
As
I
understand
it,
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
expresses
the
view
that
there
may
be
a
shift
in
the
burden
of
proof
between
the
facts
known
to
the
Minister
at
the
time
of
the
assessment
and
those
known
to
him
after
the
time
of
the
assessment
albeit
they
are
described
in
the
Minister's
reply.
It
is
a
view
that
seems
to
have
been
accepted
by
the
courts
as
it
has
often
been
cited
though
I
am
not
sure
that
it
was
the
ratio
decidendi
of
these
cases.
With
respect
to
the
position
expressed
by
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach,
to
take
advantage
of
it,
the
appellants
must
show
that
the
assumptions
of
facts
as
described
in
the
respondent's
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
were
not
those
made
by
the
respondent's
assessors
at
the
time
the
assessment
was
made.
This
evidence
was
not
adduced
and
therefore
the
submission
as
to
the
burden
of
proof
fails.
The
burden
of
proof
rests
on
the
taxpayer
to
question
the
facts
assumed
by
the
Minister
as
described
in
the
reply.
5.03.3
The
fact
that
the
respondent
originally
considered
the
appellant
as
an
independent
contractor
during
the
1983
taxation
year
is
not
in
dispute
(see
notice
of
confirmation
dated
January
20,
1989
and
Exhibit
A-24).
5.03.4
Moreover,
paragraph
3(b)
of
the
reply
states
that
the
appellant
was
presumed
to
be
an
employee
for
the
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
Consequently,
the
case
law
clearly
states
that
the
respondent
will
have
to
prove
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
during
the
1983
taxation
year.
The
appellant
will
however
have
to
prove
the
assumptions
of
facts
made
by
the
respondent
for
the
other
taxation
years.
5.03.5
The
reassessment
relating
to
1983
will
have
to
be
vacated
if
the
respondent
cannot
prove
the
fact
that
the
appellant
was
an
employee
during
this
taxation
year.
Further
development
will
be
made
on
this
question
later.
5.04
Should
the
reassessments
relating
to
1982
and
1983
be
vacated
because
they
are
dependent
on
waivers
which
are
invalid
because
of
duress
and/or
misrepresentation
?
5.04.1
This
issue
raises
two
questions
of
law.
Firstly,
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
declare
null
and
void
the
waivers
which
were
signed
by
the
appellant
must
be
investigated
in
the
light
of
the
recent
jurisprudence.
Moreover,
this
Court
will
have
to
analyze
the
conduct
of
the
respondent's
servants
when
the
waivers
were
signed
in
order
to
find
any
kind
of
wrongdoing
from
their
part
susceptible
to
render
null
such
waivers.
5.04.2
The
jurisdiction
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
was
analyzed
in
several
decisions,
namely
Optical
Recording
Corporation
(4.02(5)),
McMillen
Holdings
Ltd.
(4.02(6))
and
Devor
(4.02(7)).
5.04.3
This
latter
decision
provided
a
complete
development
on
this
issue.
Rouleau,
J.
analyzed
the
limitations
on
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
by
presenting
the
main
decisions
where
this
issue
was
considered.
These
excerpts,
from
pages
159-62
(D.T.C.
6373-74)
of
the
Trial
Division
decision,
present
the
reasons
that
may
be
relevant
to
the
present
issue:
The
Federal
Court-Trial
Division
is
of
course
charged
with
the
supervision
of
the
activities
of
federal
boards,
commissions
and
tribunals
which
include
individuals
exercising
or
purporting
to
exercise
powers
conferred
under
the
laws
of
Canada
(sections
18
and
2,
Federal
Court
Act).
It
is
equally
clear
that
this
jurisdiction
may
be
lost
pursuant
to
section
29
of
the
Act.
In
my
view
therefore,
it
would
appear
that
where
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
or
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
has
been
specifically
empowered
by
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
hear
an
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
the
supervisory
jurisdiction
of
this
Court
is
lost
and
the
plaintiff
must
proceed
with
the
appeal
as
laid
out
in
the
Act.
Where,
on
the
other
hand,
the
relief
that
he
seeks
cannot
be
granted
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
or
the
Federal
Court
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
step
outside
the
Act
and
seek
relief
from
this
Court
under
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
The
appeal
route
set
out
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
appears
in
sections
169
and
following.
Once
a
taxpayer
has
served
a
Notice
of
Objection
to
an
assessment
(under
section
165),
he
may
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
provided
that
the
Minister
has
confirmed
the
assessment
or
has
not
notified
the
taxpayer
of
any
change
in
the
assessment.
The
taxpayer
may
then
appeal
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
the
Federal
Court-Trial
Division.
The
taxpayer
may
also
appeal
the
Minister's
decision
directly
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
in
lieu
of
commencing
his
appeal
procedure
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
powers
of
the
Tax
Court
to
dispose
of
an
appeal
is
set
out
in
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act.
The
interplay
of
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
was
briefly
considered
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
case
of
M.N.R.
v.
Parsons,
[1984]
C.T.C.
352,
84
D.T.C.
6345.
The
matter
had
commenced
in
the
Trial
Division
before
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
as
a
review
of
thd
Minister's
actions
under
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
(Parsons
v.
M.N.R.,
[1983]
C.T.C.
321,
83
D.T.C.
5329).
The
Parsons
case
concerned
the
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
the
Directors
of
a
corporation
as
liable
for
taxes
owing
by
the
corporation
pursuant
to
section
159
of
the
Act
as
it
then
read.
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
proceeded
to
grant
the
relief
sought
by
the
applicants
on
the
merits
of
their
case.
The
Minister
appealed
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
In
a
very
brief
decision,
Mr.
Justice
Pratte
stated
at
page
352
(D.T.C.
6345):
We
are
all
of
the
opinion
that
the
appeal
must
succeed
on
the
narrow
ground
that
the
only
way
in
which
the
assessments
made
against
the
respondents
could
be
challenged
was
that
provided
for
in
sections
169
and
following
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This,
in
our
view,
clearly
result
from
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
In
our
view,
the
Income
Tax
Act
expressly
provides
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Federal
Court
from
assessments
made
by
the
Minister;
it
follows,
according
to
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
that
those
assessments
may
not
be
reviewed,
restrained
or
set
aside
by
the
Court
in
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
under
sections
18
and
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
Since
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
there
have
been
several
decisions
of
the
Trial
Division
which
have
followed
Parsons,
supra,
namely
Be-
chthold
Resources
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
3
F.C.
116,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
195
(T.D.),
Danielson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
341,
86
D.T.C.
6495,
G.R.
Block
Research
&
Development
(1981)
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
253,
87
D.T.C.
5137
and
my
own
decision
in
the
case
of
Gibbs
v.
M.N.R.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
434,
84
D.T.C.
6448.
There
have
also
been
several
decisions
which
have
maintained
that
Parsons
can
be
distinguished
on
its
facts.
The
case
of
WIC
Western
Technologies
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
110,
86
D.T.C.
6027
held
that
where
the
Minister
had
acted
without
jurisdiction
by
assessing
a
taxpayer
before
the
taxpayer
was
required
to
file
a
return,
the
assessment
was
a
nullity
and
an
application
to
quash
would
be
entertained
by
the
Court.
Mr.
Justice
Collier
characterised
the
Parsons
case
as
one
where
the
Court
was
being
asked
to
determine
whether
or
not
the
Minister
had
erred
in
law
and
not
whether
the
Minister
had
acted
outside
his
jurisdiction.
In
the
case
of
Optical
Recording
Corporation
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
325,
86
D.T.C.
6465,
.
.
.
the
taxpayer
was
assessed
by
the
Minister
by
a
notice
of
reassessment
which
on
its
face
provided
that
under
certain
circumstances,
the
Minister
was
prepared
to
modify
or
withhold
its
usual
collection
action”.
The
taxpayer
did
not
file
a
Notice
of
Objection
to
the
assessment
in
reliance
on
the
representations
made
by
the
Minister.
Mr.
Justice
Muldoon
hence
characterised
the
action
before
him
as
follows:
The
case
at
bar
raises
issues
about
the
paragraph
attached
to
the
purported
notice
of
assessment
.
.
.
and
the
respondent
Minister's
policy
of
collections
.
.
.
Which
are
quite
beyond
the
scope
of
the
appeal
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
upon
which
the
Appeal
Division
relied
in
order
to
invoke
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
in
derogation
of
the
Trial
Division's
jurisdiction
in
the
Parsons
Case.
The
issues
to
be
determined
here
are
much
broader
than,
and
different
from,
matters
of
extension
of
time
to
appeal,
the
validity
of
a
notice
of
assessment
and
appeal
therefrom.
The
issues
here
raise
questions
of
fundamental
administrative
illegality,
unfair
treatment
and
estoppel
which
engage
the
superintending
jurisdiction
of
a
superior
court,
such
that
even
if
this
Court's
disposition
of
them
be
ultimately
adjudged
to
be
wrong,
the
Court's
decision
to
entertain
them
should
be
seen
to
be
correct.
The
case
at
bar
is
therefore
quite
distinct
from
the
Parsons
case.
I
am
persuaded
by
Mr.
Justice
Muldoon's
reasoning
that
there
is
residual
jurisdiction
in
this
Court
to
supervise
administrative
acts
for
which
no
right
of
appeal
is
provided
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
note
that
this
decision
is
under
appeal,
but
until
this
issue
is
dealt
with
by
a
higher
Court,
in
my
view,
this
case
expresses
accurately
the
state
of
this
Court's
jurisdiction.
How
is
the
relief
sought
by
the
plaintiff
to
be
characterised?
He
seeks
to
have
the
waivers
which
he
signed
declared
null
by
reason
of
the
duress
and
undue
influence
exerted
on
him
by
the
Minister's
servants.
In
my
view
the
relief
sought
by
the
plaintiff
is
not
merely
the
variance
or
vacation
of
a
specific
reassessment
under
subsection
171(1).
He
is
seeking
a
declaration
of
nullity,
and
makes
a
plea
of
non
est
factum
with
respect
to
the
waivers,
relief
which
I
have
not
been
persuaded
could
be
provided
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
latter
may
only
examine
a
particular
reassessment
and
dispose
of
it
according
to
section
171,
supra.
It
could
not
issue
a
declaration
that
the
waivers
signed
by
the
plaintiff
are
void
and
of
no
effect.
The
fact
that
the
relief
sought
by
the
plaintiff
in
this
Court
might
incidentally
affect
an
assessment
whose
validity
can
be
challenged
before
the
Tax
Court
is
not
in
itself
a
bar
to
the
bringing
of
an
application
for
judicial
review.
The
attack
mounted
by
the
plaintiff
raises
some
very
serious
questions
about
the
conduct
of
the
Minister's
servants
which
I
do
not
believe
the
Tax
Court
is
empowered
to
hear.
5.04.4
In
McMillen
Holdings
Ltd.
(4.02(6)),
Judge
Rip
made
the
following
observations
on
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
at
page
2336
(D.T.C.
591-92):
Section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
grants
this
Court
original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
on
matters
arising
under
the
Act
and
other
statutes.
Subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
regulates
how
the
Court
may
exercise
its
original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
an
appeal
under
the
Act.
Section
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
simply
grants
the
Court
all
powers,
rights
and
privileges
as
are
vested
in
a
superior
court
of
record
in
respect
of
witnesses,
documents
and
other
matters
necessary
or
proper
for
the
due
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction,
that
is,
to
hear
and
determine
appeals,
but
section
13
does
not
increase
the
Court's
jurisdiction
to
that
of
a
superior
court
of
record.
The
due
exercise
of
this
Court's
jurisdiction
on
matters
arising
under
the
Act
is
to
hear
and
determine
an
appeal
from
a
tax
assessment.
I
cannot
overemphasize
that
the
Court's
original
jurisdiction
is
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
in
matters
arising
under
the
Act;
an
action
against
the
Crown
based
on
the
Act,
but
is
not
an
appeal
from
an
assessment,
is
not
an
appeal
arising
under
the
Act,
which
is
within
the
jurisdiction
of
this
Court.
5.04.5
This
Court
totally
agrees
with
the
reasoning
elaborated
in
Optical
Recording
Corporation
(4.02(5)),
McMillen
Holdings
Ltd.
(4.02(6))
and
Devor
(4.02(7))
cases.
Therefore,
it
must
be
concluded
that
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
does
not
have
the
jurisdiction
to
pronounce
the
nullity
of
the
waivers
obtained
by
the
respondent
under
duress
and
because
of
misrepresentation.
5.04.6
Though
the
following
comments
are
not
necessary
to
dispose
of
the
present
issue,
this
Court
is
not
convinced
that
the
respondent
officers
grossly
mispresented
the
purpose
of
the
said
waivers.
The
evidence
provided
by
both
parties
demonstrates
that
the
waivers
were
signed
in
order
to
avoid
a
hasty
reassessment
by
the
respondent.
It
also
allowed
more
time
for
the
appellant
to
make
further
representations
to
support
his
claim.
In
the
Courts
view,
the
fact
that
the
respondent's
officer
did
not
recommend
that
the
appellant
obtain
legal
advice
prior
to
signing
the
waivers
would
not
be
determining
enough
to
void
the
said
waivers.
5.05
Was
the
appellant
self
employed
or
an
employee
for
some
or
all
of
the
years
under
appeal?
5.05.1
Regarding
this
issue,
it
has
to
be
noted
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
not
give
any
applicable
definition
of
employee
and
independent
contractor
concepts.
It
therefore
appears
that
the
determination
as
to
whether
an
individual
who
provides
services
to
a
third
party
is
an
employee
or
an
independent
contractor
for
income
tax
purposes
must
be
made
in
accordance
with
the
common
law
or
civil
law
concepts.
The
eventual
use
of
either
common
law
or
civil
law
principles
depends
on
whether
the
legal
relationship
to
be
ascertained
arose
in
the
province
of
Québec
or
another
Canadian
province.
It
is
not
in
dispute
that
the
legal
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
Collier
or
Grolier
companies
took
place
in
Nova
Scotia
and
other
maritime
provinces
(3.03).
It
will
be
therefore
necessary
to
apply
to
this
case
the
tests
which
were
evolved
by
the
common
law
courts
on
such
matter.
5.05.2
A
certain
number
of
tests
have
been
elaborated
by
the
courts
in
the
course
of
decisions
pertaining
to
the
distinction
between
an
employee
and
an
independent
contractor.
These
tests
are
aimed
to
highlight
the
major
characteristics
which
may
differentiate
an
employee
from
an
independent
contractor.
It
is,
however,
important
to
keep
in
mind
that
no
single
test
is
decisive
or
universally
correct.
This
quotation,
extracted
from
Atiyah
work
titled
"Vicarious
Liability
in
the
Law
of
Torts"
at
page
38,
is
frequently
cited
in
different
texts
relating
to
the
legal
qualification
of
employment
contracts
in
order
to
ensure
a
global
application
of
the
test
elaborated
by
the
courts.
It
reads
as
follows:
The
most
that
can
profitably
be
done
is
to
examine
all
the
possible
factors
which
have
been
referred
to
in
these
cases
as
bearing
on
the
nature
of
the
relationship
between
the
parties
concerned.
Clearly
not
all
of
these
factors
will
be
relevant
in
all
cases,
or
have
the
same
weight
in
all
cases.
Equally
clearly
no
magic
formula
can
be
propounded
for
determining
which
factor
should,
in
any
given
case,
be
treated
as
the
determining
one.
The
plain
fact
is
that
in
a
large
number
of
cases
the
court
can
only
perform
a
balancing
operation,
winding
up
the
factors
which
point
in
one
direction
and
balancing
them
against
those
pointing
in
the
opposite
direction.
In
the
nature
of
things
it
is
not
to
be
expected
that
this
operation
can
be
performed
with
scientific
accuracy.
5.05.3
Therefore,
this
Court
will
have
to
consider
the
overall
evidence
taking
into
account
those
of
the
tests
which
may
be
applicable
and
giving
to
all
the
evidence
the
weight
which
the
circumstances
may
dictate.
5.05.4
This
Court,
bearing
these
preliminary
remarks
in
mind,
will
then
present
the
main
guides
expressed
by
the
case
law
and
the
doctrine
over
the
past
few
years.
This
Court
will
rely
in
particular
on
an
outstandingly
well
documentâtes
paper
prepared
by
Marc
Noël
about
the
independent
contractoremployee
legal
distinction.
The
four
main
tests
whose
application
was
suggested
by
the
author
are
the
following
ones:
the
test
of
control,
the
integration
test,
the
economic
reality
test
and
the
specified
result
test.
5.05.5
This
Court
will
briefly
present
each
of
the
above
criterion.
Such
comments
will
mainly
be
extracted
from
Marc
Noël,
Esq.
text
as
cited
above
(4.02(11)).
Afterwards,
the
facts
of
the
present
case
will
be
investigated
in
the
light
of
such
jurisprudential
and
doctrinal
guides.
5.05.5.1
Test
of
control
Underlying
the
test
of
control
is
the
fact
that
in
usual
circumstances,
servants
or
employees
are
subject
to
a
considerable
measure
of
control,
extending
not
only
to
the
work
which
is
done
but
also
to
the
manner
in
which
it
is
done.
The
control
test
clearly
refers
to
the
fact
that
in
usual
circumstances,
an
employee
or
servant
will
be
subject
to
the
supervision
of
his
employer
or
master.
In
a
similar
fashion,
one
who
is
engaged
as
an
independent
contractor
under
a
contract
for
services
will
usually
be
at
liberty
as
to
the
manner
in
which
the
services
are
performed.
Accordingly,
where
the
control
test
is
assessed
positively,
the
existence
of
control
will
point
strongly
towards
the
existence
of
an
employer/employee
relationship.
However,
the
development
of
the
law
in
the
last
60
years,
and
particularly
in
the
last
15
or
20
years,
clearly
indicates
that
the
emphasis
has
shifted
and
that
the
test
of
control
is
no
longer
decisive.
Control
remains,
of
course,
an
important
factor,
but
it
no
longer
has
the
universal
application
which
it
was
thought
to
have
at
the
turn
of
the
century.
The
shortfalls
of
the
test
of
control
became
apparent
when
its
application
led
to
the
conclusion
of
the
existence
of
an
independent
contractor
relationship
in
cases
where
it
was
clear
that
the
relationship
was
one
of
employer/employee.
For
instance,
clearly
superintendence
and
control
cannot
be
decisive
where
one
is
dealing
with
a
professional
man
or
a
man
of
some
particular
skill
and
experience.
The
above
clearly
shows
that
a
test
of
control
does
not
have
the
universal
application
which
it
was
thought
to
have
during
the
early
19005.
However,
it
also
shows
that
the
failures
of
the
test
of
control
occur
themselves
in
marginal
cases
where
employees
perform
their
services
in
circumstances
where
the
employer
cannot,
because
of
the
nature
of
the
work,
exercise
any
control
or
supervision
over
the
manner
in
which
the
work
is
performed.
Outside
this
particular
context,
it
would
seem
that
the
test
of
control
should
retain
its
full
value
since
control
and
supervision
remain
one
of
the
most
important
elements
underlying
an
employer/employee
relationship.
5.05.5.2
Th
e
integration
test
The
integration
or
part
and
parcel
test
was
first
enunciated
by
Denning,
L.J.,
in
Stevenson,
Jordon
and
Harrison
Ltd.
v.
MacDonald
and
Evans
(4.02(1)),
where
the
following
proposition
was
advanced
at
page
1T1:
One
feature
which
seems
to
run
through
the
instances
is
that,
under
a
contract
of
service,
a
man
is
employed
as
part
of
the
business,
and
his
work
is
done
as
an
integral
part
of
the
business;
whereas,
under
a
contract
for
services,
his
work,
although
done
for
the
business,
is
not
integrated
into
it,
but
is
only
accessory
to
it.
Stephenson
Jordan
and
Harrison
Ltd.
v.
McDonald
and
Evans
(4.02(1))
offers
a
further
authoritative
test
of
employment
as
opposed
to
a
contract
for
services
in
considering
the
element
of
integration.
Therefore,
the
essential
question
underlying
such
a
test
was
the
following
one:
Was
the
work
performed
integral
to
the
business
of
the
party
who
engaged
the
worker?
However,
this
authoritative
decision
must
now
be
considered
in
relation
to
Wiebe
Door
Services
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.
(4.02(4)).
That
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
has
in
effect
considerably
limited
the
application
of
the
integration
test.
MacGuigan,
J.
states
at
pages
205-206
(D.T.C.
562-63):
Lord
Denning's
test
may
be
more
difficult
to
apply,
as
witness
the
way
in
which
it
has
been
misused
as
a
magic
formula
by
the
Tax
Court
here
and
in
several
other
cases
cited
by
the
respondent,
in
all
of
which
the
effect
has
been
to
dictate
the
answer
through
the
very
form
of
the
question,
by
showing
that
without
the
work
of
the
"employees"
the
"employer"
would
be
out
of
business
("Without
the
installers,
the
appellant
would
be
out
of
business”).
As
thus
applied,
this
can
never
be
a
fair
test,
because
in
a
factual
relationship
of
mutual
dependency
it
must
always
result
in
an
affirmative
answer.
If
the
businesses
of
both
parties
are
so
structured
as
to
operate
through
each
other,
they
could
not
survive
independently
without
being
restructured.
But
that
is
a
consequence
of
their
surface
arrangement
and
not
necessarily
expressive
of
their
intrinsic
relationship.
.
.
.
Of
course,
the
organization
test
of
Lord
Denning
and
others
produces
entirely
acceptable
results
when
properly
applied,
that
is,
when
the
question
of
organization
or
integration
is
approached
from
the
persona
of
the
"employee"
and
not
from
that
of
the
"employer,"
because
it
is
always
too
easy
from
the
superior
perspective
of
the
larger
enterprise
to
assume
that
every
contributing
cause
is
so
arranged
purely
for
the
convenience
of
the
larger
entity.
In
conclusion,
the
new
approach
that
was
developed
in
the
Wiebe
Door
Services
Ltd.
(4.02(4))
case
regarding
the
application
of
the
integration
test
considerably
affected
the
importance
of
the
latter
guide
in
the
employee/
independent
contractor
determination.
5.05.5.3
The
economic
reality
test
The
economic
reality
test,
as
the
words
indicate,
relates
to
the
economic
implications
which
usually
flow
from
an
employer-employee
relationship,
or
an
independent
contractor
relationship
as
the
case
may
be.
The
aim
and
purpose
of
the
economic
reality
test
is
to
verify
the
existence
of
various
factors
of
an
economic
nature
and
draw
from
their
existence
an
inference
as
to
the
nature
of
the
relationship
which
is
sought
to
be
ascertained.
The
existence
of
an
independent
contractor
relationship
could
be
concluded
if
the
application
of
the
economic
reality
test
reveals
that
the
alleged
employee
has
opportunities
for
profit
through
his
working
relationship.
In
effect,
the
notion
of
profit
is
inconsistent
with
an
employer-employee
relationship.
The
underlying
elements
of
an
employer-employee
relationship
to
which
the
economic
reality
test
relates,
such
as
the
fact
that
an
employee
generally
incurs
no
expenses
in
the
course
of
his
employment,
bears
no
financial
risk
and
has
no
chance
of
profit,
are
consistent
and
important
enough
to
make
the
economic
reality
test
a
very
useful
tool
in
many
determinations.
Similarly,
applying
the
economic
reality
test
to
an
independent
contractor
relationship,
the
chances
of
profit
and
the
risk
of
loss
clearly
typify
the
undertaking
of
one
who
carries
on
business
independently.
The
above
is
particularly
true
with
reference
to
the
determination
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
where
the
very
scheme
of
the
Act
appears
to
be
based
on
the
economic
reality
which
surrounds
a
business
undertaking,
where
the
chance
of
profit
and
the
risk
of
loss
generally
exists,
and
where
expenditures
must
be
made
to
earn
income
as
opposed
to
employment
where,
generally,
these
factors
do
not
exist.
5.05.5.4
The
specified
result
test
Where
a
party
agrees
that
certain
specified
work
will
be
done
for
the
other,
it
may
be
inferred
that
an
independent
contractor
relationship
exists.
On
the
other
hand,
an
employer-employee
relationship
usually
involves
the
employee
putting
his
personal
services
at
the
disposal
of
his
employer
during
a
given
period
of
time
without
reference
to
a
specified
result,
and
generally
envisages
the
accomplishment
of
work
on
an
ongoing
basis.
5.05.6
The
Court
mostly
relied
on
the
test
of
control
and
the
economic
reality
test
to
analyze
the
legal
status
of
the
appellant.
The
application
of
these
guides
convinced
this
Court
that
the
appellant
must
be
considered
as
an
independent
contractor.
5.05.7
In
effect,
the
facts
of
this
case
clearly
showed
that
there
was
no
control
on
the
appellant's
conduct
of
his
business
(3.06).
I
totally
agree
with
the
appellant’s
submission
to
the
effect
that
every
time
the
appellant
spent
money
on
his
sales
staff,
he
was
making
an
informed
business
decision
to
put
his
sales
representatives
in
a
situation
whereby
they
could
increase
the
total
commissions
for
the
appellant
and
thereby
increase
his
overall
profit
for
the
year
(3.07).
The
fact
that
the
company
(either
Collier
or
Grolier)
paid
office
rent
and
provided
basic
furnishings
and
telephone
service
(3.05),
it
has
a
fixed
remuneration
structure
by
which
the
appellant
was
paid,
had
final
approval
of
all
sales
(3.19),
and
had
the
exclusive
use
of
the
appellant
services
(3.20)
might
suggest
the
appellant
was
an
employee.
However,
these
facts
are
not
important
enough
to
outweigh
the
absence
of
control
on
the
appellant's
conduct
and
the
financial
risk
that
were
closely
related
to
most
of
the
appellant's
expenses
for
his
staff.
5.06
Depending
on
whether
the
appellant
was
self-employed
or
an
employee,
what
amount
is
he
entitled
to
deduct
for
each
of
the
years
under
appeal?
5.06.1
Though
this
issue
does
not
raise
controversial
legal
questions,
it
is
nevertheless
of
the
highest
importance
for
the
appellant
from
a
practical
point
of
view.
However,
the
huge
number
of
receipts
produced
by
the
appellant
to
the
respondent's
officer
and
the
small
number
filed
as
evidence
before
the
Court
complicate
the
determination
of
the
quantum
of
deductible
expenses
that
will
be
allowed
by
this
Court.
Such
determination
will
rely
principally
on
Exhibit
A-19
which
lists
the
amount
of
expenses
being
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
addition
to
the
amounts
that
were
allowed
by
the
respondent
in
respect
of
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years.
5.06.2
Different
factors
are
relevant
in
determining
the
percentage
of
expenses
to
be
allowed
in
a
case
like
the
present
one.
Among
them,
the
credibility
of
the
appellants
oral
evidence,
the
reasonableness
of
the
expenses
being
claimed,
as
well
as
the
quality
of
evidence
provided,
will
be
considered
by
this
Court.
5.06.3
Before
dealing
with
the
evaluation
of
the
different
categories
of
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant,
this
Court
wants
to
express
its
conviction
that
the
oral
evidence
given
by
the
appellant
is
without
any
doubt
credible.
However,
his
ambition
and
enthusiasm
to
succeed
in
business
led
him
to
incur
a
large
amount
of
expenses
which
do
not
meet
the
reasonableness
criterion
provided
in
section
67
of
the
Act.
5.06.4
The
first
group
of
expenses
that
will
be
dealt
with
are
for
the
automobile,
hotel
as
well
as
plane
and
train.
Firstly,
the
reasonable
character
of
these
expenses
cannot
be
disputed.
In
effect,
the
majority
of
the
work
of
the
appellants
personnel
was
done
on
the
road.
Moreover,
these
expenses
were
expected
to
be
assumed
by
the
field
manager
(3.02)
or
the
appellant
himself
during
road
trips.
It
is
therefore
clear
that
these
expenses
were
not
frivolous
but
necessary
in
the
encyclopedia
sales
business.
Moreover,
this
Court
does
not
think
the
appellant
was
compelled
to
indicate
on
each
hotel
receipt
who
was
staying
in
the
rooms
which
were
paid
by
him
in
order
to
respect
section
230
of
the
Act
(3.10).
It
is
clear
that
the
persons
who
were
staying
in
those
rooms
were
the
appellants
sales
personnel.
Can
it
be
seriously
contended
that
the
appellant
paid
for
more
than
one
room
for
a
night
in
order
to
satisfy
his
own
personal
needs?
It
was
therefore
not
necessary
to
keep
any
kind
of
record
to
indicate
precisely
who
was
staying
in
the
hotel
rooms
used
by
the
appellants
staff.
Neither
was
it
necessary
to
keep
any
kind
of
mileage
log
or
any
records
to
show
how
much
the
appellants
automobiles
were
used.
In
fact,
this
Court
would
distort
the
real
object
of
section
230
of
the
Act
by
imposing
such
a
burden
on
the
appellant.
The
receipts
provided
by
the
appellant
were
amply
sufficient
to
determine
the
amounts
that
could
be
deducted
regarding
the
automobile,
hotel,
plane
and
train
fare
expenses
incurred
by
him.
This
latter
conclusion
will
not
be
affected
by
the
few
receipts
which
were
in
the
names
of
other
persons
such
as
Exhibits
A-10
and
A-23.
It
must
be
said
that
the
appellant's
testimony
clearly
describes
the
circumstances
surrounding
these
isolated
evidence
problems.
This
Court
will
consequently
allow
the
totality
of
the
additional
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
Exhibit
A-19
with
regard
to
the
automobile,
hotel,
plane
and
rail
fare
expenses.
5.06.5
The
second
category
of
expenses
that
will
be
studied
concerns
meal
and
promotion
ones.
The
meal
expenses
were
paid
by
the
appellant
to
his
personnel
on
road
trips
(3.10).
The
promotion
expenses
included
banquets,
meals,
entertainment
tickets
and
gifts
(3.13).
The
main
objective
of
these
expenses
was
to
generate
enthusiasm
among
the
staff
in
order
to
increase
the
number
of
sales.
It
cannot
be
doubted
that
the
aim
of
such
expenses
is
to
generate
profit.
In
effect,
the
more
the
sales
representatives
sell,
the
more
the
appellant
earns
profit
from
their
sales.
However,
the
appellant
claimed
large
amounts
of
such
expenses.
It
is
particularly
obvious
when
one
sums
up
all
the
additional
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
these
categories
of
expenses
(Exhibit
A-19).
The
total
of
such
expenses
is
$9,627.
It
seems
reasonable
to
this
Court
to
allow
60
per
cent
of
the
additional
promotion
and
meal
expenses
namely
$5,776
in
order
to
respect
the
limitation
enacted
in
section
67
of
the
Act.
5.06.6
Bad
debts,
salaries
and
wages,
bonus
and
tip
expenses
must
be
analyzed
as
well
(3.11,
3.14
and
3.15).
Regarding
these
latter
expenses,
the
appellant
clearly
admitted
that
no
receipts
could
be
provided
in
order
to
prove
the
quantum
of
such
expenses
(see
pages
118-119
and
169-170
of
the
appellant's
testimony).
The
lack
of
evidence
should
be
fatal
to
the
appellant.
However,
the
high
credibility
of
his
testimony
incites
this
Court
to
allow
him
20
per
cent
of
the
additional
claims
of
the
appellant
with
regard
to
these
items,
namely
$2,548.
5.06.7
Regarding
the
additional
claims
of
the
appellant
related
to
the
office
in
his
home,
dues
and
subscriptions
and
office
expenses,
this
Court
will
confirm
the
assessment
of
the
respondent.
It
must
be
recalled
that
a
deductible
expense
has
to
be
reasonable
as
required
by
section
67
of
the
Act.
Therefore,
to
use
the
words
of
Justice
Mackay
in
Graves
(4.02(9))
at
page
362
(D.T.C.
6300-6304):
"The
type
of
deductions
contemplated
under
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
do
not
include
expenses
arising
simply
by
virtue
of
casual
connection
to
a
business
activity.
.
.
.
they
must
also
be
reasonable
expenses."
This
Court
does
not
believe
it
was
necessary
to
maintain
an
office
in
his
home.
Collier
and
Grolier
rented
an
office
for
the
appellant
in
Halifax
(3.05).
The
appellant
lived
in
Halifax
during
the
litigious
years.
The
reasons
given
by
the
appellant
in
his
oral
evidence
are
not
convincing
enough
to
induce
this
Court
to
allow
such
expenses
(3.12).
It
is
obvious
that
the
dues
and
subscriptions
are
personal
expenses
(3.16).
Finally,
this
Court
believes
the
appellant
claimed
too
many
office
expenses
to
conduct
his
business.
(3.16).
In
effect,
the
biggest
part
of
the
appellant's
responsibilities
are
management
tasks
rather
than
bureaucratic
ones.
The
office
expenses
allowed
by
the
respondent
appear
to
be
fully
reasonable.
5.06.8
It
must
be
said
that
the
appellant
provided
no
evidence
to
support
the
additional
claims
in
respect
of
parking
and
tolls
as
well
as
the
car
rental
expenses.
This
Court
has
no
choice
but
to
disallow
these
additional
claims.
5.06.9
The
cost
of
shipping
live
lobsters
to
the
head
office
of
his
"employer"
was
also
claimed
as
a
deductible
expense
by
the
appellant.
The
reasons
that
motivated
such
an
expense
were
very
well
presented
in
the
appellant's
oral
evidence
(3.17).
This
Court
is
impressed
by
the
way
the
appellant
conducts
his
business.
Everything
looks
prepared
and
well
thought
out.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
appellant
is
an
alert,
ambitious
and
successful
businessman.
However,
section
67
of
the
Act
restricts
the
expenses
being
claimed
by
any
person
involved
in
business.
It
would
not
be
reasonable
to
allow
the
totality
of
such
an
expense.
This
Court
will
therefore
allow
50
per
cent
of
that
additional
claim,
namely
$139.
5.06.10
Finally,
the
appellant
claimed
a
capital
cost
allowance
in
respect
of
a
typewriter
and
a
computer
(3.18).
The
independent
contractor
legal
status
was
previously
stated
by
this
Court
(5.05.7).
The
appellant
was
therefore
entitled
to
claim
such
deductions
in
the
amounts
of
$356.
and
$102.
6.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs
by
varying
the
reassessment
pursuant
to
the
above
reasons
for
judgment.
Appeal
allowed.