Teskey,
T.C.J.:—The
appeals
of
Louis
Ganci
(Louis)
and
Guy
Ganci
(Guy)
were
heard
together
on
common
evidence.
They
appeal
their
1984,
1985
and
1986
reassessments
wherein
the
Minister
classified
the
appellants
as
“Class
2"
farmers
as
defined
by
Moldowan,
[1978]
1
S.C.R.
480;
[1977]
C.T.C.
310;
77
D.T.C.
5213,
thereby
restricting
their
farm
losses
to
$5,000
a
year
pursuant
to
section
31
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Issue
The
single
issue
herein
is
whether
either
or
both
appellants
are
"Class
1”
or
“Class
2"
farmers
as
defined
by
Moldowan,
supra.
Facts
Louis,
aged
60,
(born
January
2,
1929)
is
the
father
of
Guy,
aged
29
(born
June
16,
1960).
Louis
operated
and
ran
his
father’s
140-acre
mixed
farm
in
Ontario
from
1949
to
1959.
In
1959,
110
acres
of
this
farm
was
sold
off
and
Louis
purchased
the
remaining
30
acres
where
he
lived
with
his
wife
and
family
until
1974.
On
this
30-acre
parcel,
he
kept
horses,
some
cattle
and
raised
hay.
During
this
period
he
sold
a
few
beef
animals,
however
the
animals
were
basically
kept
for
his
own
family’s
consumption
and
use.
In
1974,
he
and
his
family
moved
west
to
a
10-acre
parcel
close
to
the
farm
in
question.
In
1983,
his
10-acre
parcel
and
home
were
expropriated
for
$180,000.
In
that
same
year,
Louis
and
his
wife
purchased
a
160-acre
parcel
of
land
near
Sparwood,
B.C.
for
$120,000.
They
paid
$80,000
in
cash
and
gave
to
the
vendor
a
$40,000
first
mortgage
at
10
per
cent.
Guy
then
purchased
a
one-third
interest
in
the
property
and
assumed
full
responsibility
for
paying
the
vendor's
take
back
mortgage
of
$40,000.
At
the
time
of
purchase,
151
acres
was
uncleared
land
in
its
natural
state,
the
remaining
9
acres
had
been
cleared
approximately
50
years
previously
but
had
not
been
worked
for
some
32
years.
The
fences
were
either
fallen
down
or
non-existent
and
the
land
was
vacant.
This
property
is
the
farm
in
question
and
is
now
called
the
"Elk
Valley
Santa
Gertrudis
Ranch”.
The
farm
operation
is
an
equal
partnership
with
losses
and
income
being
split
equally.
Louis
used
the
balance
of
the
money
received
from
the
expropriation
to
build
a
log
house
on
the
property
which
was
started
in
1983
and
completed
in
1984
where
he
and
his
wife
reside.
Guy
moved
a
mobile
home
onto
the
property
in
1984
where
he
and
his
wife
reside.
They
now
have
two
children
ages
five
and
two.
In
1984,
besides
completing
the
log
home
for
Louis
and
his
wife,
preparing
the
site
for
the
mobile
home
and
installing
all
the
necessary
water
and
hydro
lines,
they
started
to
clear
some
acreage,
purchased
some
equipment
and
erected
some
fences.
Louis,
a
stationary
engineer,
has
had
a
full-time
job
since
1974
with
Weststar,
a
mining
company
in
the
area.
Guy
has
had
a
full-time
job
with
Weststar
as
a
heavy
machine
operator
since
1978.
Both
men's
work
schedule
is
the
same
in
that
each
works
two
12
hour
days
with
a
two
day
break
and
then
two
12
hour
night
shifts
with
a
four
day
break.
They
are
on
alternate
shifts
so
that
one
or
the
other
is
always
at
the
farm.
Louis
has
had
five
weeks
of
paid
holidays
since
1984
and
Guy
had
four
weeks'
paid
holidays
in
1984,
1985,
1986
and
1987.
Since
last
year,
he
has
had
five
weeks'
paid
holidays.
All
holidays
and
days
off
are
spent
working
on
the
farm.
When
working,
all
daylight
hours
after
work
are
spent
working
on
the
farm.
On
occasion,
during
the
calving
period
when
their
presence
on
the
farm
is
imperative,
Guy
has
taken
unpaid
time
off
work.
A
great
deal
of
evidence
was
received
on
the
hours
worked
on
the
farm.
The
Court
is
satisfied
that
both
men
put
in
more
effort
and
time
into
the
farm
operation
than
to
their
mine
jobs.
When
the
property
was
purchased,
both
men's
lives
were
substantially
changed
and
their
occupation
directions
changed.
All
their
time
and
energies
are
directed
towards
the
farm.
All
of
the
appellants'
capital
has
been
committed
to
the
farm
as
well
as
all
available
income
after
living
expenses.
The
evidence
fully
establishes
that
the
necessary
capital
has
been,
and
will
be
ejected,
into
the
farm
from
employment
income
earned
at
Weststar.
Both
men
would
like
to
quit
their
jobs
at
Weststar
and
devote
their
entire
energies
to
farming.
Louis
and
Guy
are
pioneers
in
the
truest
sense.
They
started
with
160
acres
of
rock
and
bush
and
now
have
under
cultivation
approximately
60
acres.
They
have
another
55
days’
work
which
will
be
performed
in
1990
to
complete
the
preparation
and
placement
into
cultivation
of
approximately
another
60
acres.
This,
then
would
leave
approximately
50
acres
to
clear
and
prepare
which
will
be
accomplished
over
the
next
three
to
five
years.
All
cleared
areas
are
enclosed
with
fences
and
all
necessary
corrals
have
been
fenced.
One
barn
and
two
sheds
have
been
erected
by
their
own
labour.
The
appellants,
besides
doing
their
land
clearing,
are
presently
erecting
another
pole
barn
and
are
elk
proofing
the
winter
feeding
areas
by
raising
the
fences
to
eight
feet
in
height.
The
driving
force
behind
the
operation
is
Guy
Ganci.
He
is
a
very
hardworking
knowledgeable
cattleman.
He
loves
his
animals
and
cares
greatly
for
them.
He
and
his
father
have
now
been
working
continuously
for
five
years
to
bring
their
160
acres
of
bush
and
rocks
into
production.
They
estimate
that
it
will
take
three
to
five
years
to
bring
the
farm
into
a
significantly
profitable
operation.
They
raise
and
breed
purebred
cattle
known
as
"Santa
Gertrudis”.
They
are
3/8
Brahma
and
5/8
shorthorn.
This
breed
of
animal
is
becoming
more
and
more
popular
as
the
meat
is
lean
and
low
in
cholesterol.
The
breed
is
quite
hardy
to
both
heat
and
cold.
They
are
disease
resistant,
good
foragers
and
bear
their
young
with
ease.
Both
the
father's
and
the
son's
major
preoccupation
is
farming
and
their
employment
is
a
subsidiary
necessity
to
provide
the
necessary
cash
flow
and
capital
to
achieve
their
goals.
All
work
is
done
by
them
personally.
Their
entire
energies,
beginning
in
1984,
have
been
directed
towards
clearing
the
farm
and
bringing
it
into
a
productive
operation.
The
purchase
of
the
farm
changed
their
mode
and
habit
of
work
They
purchased
five
cows
and
one
bull
in
1985
and
an
additional
seven
cows
in
1986.
Although
they
have
been
selling
a
few
animals
each
year
since
1987,
their
herd
now
has
reached
a
total
number
of
25.
They
estimate
that
by
both
continuing
to
work
at
Weststar,
they
can
inject
into
the
farm
operation
the
necessary
capital
to
bring
it
into
full
operation
in
three
to
five
years
and
be
debt
free.
It
is
estimated
that
the
cost
to
bring
the
balance
of
the
entire
property
into
cultivation
is
$37,000.
Another
$20,000
has
to
be
spent
on
the
purchase
of
top
purebred
Santa
Gertrudis
animals.
The
plan
is
to
produce
all
necessary
winter
feed
on
the
property
to
sustain
their
herd
over
the
winter
months.
This
will
be
a
limiting
factor.
They
estimate
when
the
herd
reaches
50
animals
that
the
farm
will
be
producing
approximately
a
gross
income
of
$80,000
and
a
net
income
well
in
excess
of
$50,000.
At
that
time,
Louis
will
be
retired
and
the
farm
will
be
his
only
income.
Even
if
Guy
remains
working
after
this
period,
the
income
in
relation
to
investment
and
his
wages
will
be
substantial.
Once
the
farm
is
in
full
operation,
the
large
start-up
expenses
will
cease.
The
farm
has
two
streams
running
through
it.
Its
productive
capacity
can
be
doubled
by
irrigation.
This
is
planned
for
the
future.
Obviously
this
could
again
give
substantial
more
profits
as
the
herd
could
be
doubled.
Analysis
The
authoritative
judicial
decision
is
that
of
Dickson,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
for
the
Court
in
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
supra.
Dickson,
J.
said:
.
.
.
whether
a
taxpayer
has
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
is
an
objective
determination
to
be
made
from
all
of
the
facts.
The
following
criteria
should
be
considered:
the
profit
and
loss
experience
in
past
years,
the
taxpayer's
training,
the
taxpayer's
intended
course
of
action,
the
capability
of
the
venture
as
capitalized
to
show
a
profit
after
charging
capital
cost
allowance.
One
would
not
expect
a
farmer
who
purchased
a
productive
going
operation
to
suffer
the
some
start-up
losses
as
the
man
who
begins
a
tree
farm
on
raw
land.
Whether
a
source
of
income
is
a
taxpayer's
“chief
source"
of
income
is
both
a
relative
and
objective
test.
It
is
decidedly
not
a
pure
quantum
measurement.
A
man
who
has
farmed
all
of
his
life
does
not
cease
to
have
his
chief
source
of
income
from
farming
because
he
unexpectedly
wins
a
lottery.
The
distinguishing
features
of
“chief
source"
are
the
taxpayer's
reasonable
expectation
of
income
from
his
various
revenue
sources
and
his
ordinary
mode
and
habit
of
work.
These
may
he
tested
by
considering,
inter
alia
in
relation
to
a
source
of
income,
the
time
spent,
the
capital
committed,
the
profitability
both
actual
and
potential.
A
change
in
the
taxpayer's
mode
and
habit
of
work
or
reasonable
expectations
may
signify
a
change
in
the
chief
source,
but
that
is
a
question
of
fact
in
the
circumstances.
The
reference
in
s.
13(1)
to
a
taxpayer
whose
source
of
income
is
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
is
a
reference
to
class
(1).
It
contemplates
a
man
whose
major
preoccupation
is
farming,
but
it
recognizes
that
such
a
man
may
have
other
pecuniary
interests
as
well,
such
as
income
from
investments,
or
income
from
a
sideline
employment
or
business.
The
section
provides
that
these
subsidiary
interests
will
not
place
the
taxpayer
in
class
(2)
and
thereby
limit
the
deductibility
of
any
loss
which
may
be
suffered
to
$5,000.
While
a
quantum
measurement
of
farming
income
is
relevant,
it
is
not
alone
decisive.
The
test
is
again
both
relative
and
objective,
and
one
may
employ
the
criteria
indicative
of
"chief
source"
to
distinguish
whether
or
not
the
interest
is
auxiliary.
A
man
who
has
farmed
all
of
his
life
does
not
become
disentitled
to
class
(1)
classification
simply
because
he
comes
into
an
inheritance.
On
the
other
hand,
a
man
who
changes
occupational
direction
and
commits
his
energies
and
capital
to
farming
as
a
main
expectation
of
income
is
not
disentitled
to
deduct
the
full
impact
of
start-up
costs.
Moldowan,
supra,
has
been
considered
at
length
twice
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
Firstly;
In
1985
in
The
Queen
v.
Graham,
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
380;
85
D.T.C.
5256
a
two
to
one
decision.
There,
Urie,
J.
with
Mahoney,
J.
concurring
reported
the
trial
judge's
conclusion
of
facts
which
can
be
summarized
as
follows:
—
the
taxpayer
invested
all
his
available
capital
in
farm
land,
building
and
residence.
—
the
taxpayer
put
forth
prodigious
labour,
without
outside
help
to
establish
the
farm
operation.
—
the
plaintiff's,
every
resource
was
invested
and
devoted
to
his
farm
and
operation
which
included
all
his
savings,
his
income
from
his
employment
and
his
labour.
—
there
was
no
question
that
the
taxpayer's
personal
involvement
was
dedicated
to
farming
to
the
maximum.
—
that
the
main
preoccupation
of
the
taxpayer
was
farming
but
he
had
income
from
a
sideline
employment.
—
Urie,
J.
also
went
on
to
say:
(1)
"The
trial
judge
had
no
doubts
whatsoever
as
to
the
respondent's
credibility.”
(2)
"He
accepted
without
reservation
the
viva
voce
of
all
the
witnesses
and
drew
supportable,
proper
inferences
therefrom.”
(3)
"Found
that
the
cumulative
effect
of
the
rather
unusual
circumstances
disclosed
by
the
evidence
in
this
case
was
to
satisfy
him
that
the
main
preoccupation
of
the
respondent
is
farming
but
he
has
income
from
a
sideline
employment'."
Secondly;
In
1988
in
Morrissey
v.
Canada,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
235;
89
D.T.C.
5080,
again
a
two
to
one
decision.
There
Mahoney,
J.
with
MacGuigan,
J.
concurring
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
and
dismissed
the
taxpayer's
action
with
costs.
The
Minister
had
assessed
Morrissey
as
a
"Class
2"
farmer.
Morrissey
wished
to
be
assessed
as
a
“Class
1"
farmer.
Mahoney,
J.
said,
at
page
242
(D.T.C.
5084):
The
Appellant
has
admitted
that
the
respondent
was
farming
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
That
means
he
was
farming
as
a
business
and
is
conclusive
that
he
was
not
a
class
3
farmer.
It
also
implies
that
farming
was
a
potential
source
of
income
and
calls
for
an
enquiry
whether
it
was
potentially
a
chief
source
of
income
either
alone
or
in
combination
with
another
source.
In
considering
subsection
31(1),
it
seems
to
me
that
potentiality,
rather
than
actuality,
is
the
question
in
all
cases
since
the
provision
applies
only
where
there
is
a
loss
in
a
taxation
year.
That
is
not,
of
course,
to
say
that
actual
profitability
in
other
years
may
not
be
evidence
of
the
potential
for
profit
in
years
of
losses.
Moldowan
suggests
that
there
may
be
a
number
of
factors
to
be
considered
but
we
are
here
concerned
only
with
three:
time
spent,
capital
committed
and
profitability.
In
defining
the
test
as
relative
and
not
one
of
pure
quantum
measurement,
Moldowan
teaches
that
all
three
factors
are
to
be
weighed.
It
does
not,
with
respect,
merely
require
that
farming
be
the
taxpayer's
major
preoccupation
in
terms
of
available
time
and
capital.
In
my
opinion,
this
case
is
clearly
distinguishable
from
The
Queen
v.
Graham,
[1983]
C.T.C.
370;
83
D.T.C.
5399;
affd.
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
380;
85
D.T.C.
5256.
There,
the
trial
judge,
at
page
378
(D.T.C.
5406-7),
had
found:
In
the
circumstances
of
these
appeals
I
do
not
accept
the
premise
predicated
upon
the
evidence
that
the
plaintiff
might
not
reasonably
expect
his
farming
operations
to
"provide
the
bulk
of
income”
and
it
most
certainly
is
"the
centre
of
work
routine".
While
expressed
in
a
double
negative,
that
was
understood
by
this
Court
to
be
a
finding,
supported
by
the
evidence,
that
farming
was
both
the
centre
of
the
taxpayer's
work
routine
and
could
be
reasonably
expected
to
provide
the
bulk
of
his
income.
That
finding,
in
the
opinion
of
a
majority
of
this
Court,
placed
that
taxpayer
clearly
within
class
1.
On
a
proper
application
of
the
test
propounded
in
Moldowan,
when,
as
here,
it
is
found
that
profitability
is
improbable
notwithstanding
all
the
time
and
capital
the
taxpayer
is
able
and
willing
to
devote
to
farming,
the
conclusion
based
on
the
civil
burden
of
proof
must
be
that
farming
is
not
a
chief
source
of
that
taxpayer's
income.
To
be
income
in
the
context
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
that
which
is
received
must
be
money
or
money's
worth.
Absent
actual
or
potential
profitability,
farming
cannot
be
a
chief
source
of
his
income
even
though
the
admission
that
he
was
farming
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
is
tantamount
to
an
admission
which
itself
may
not
be
borne
out
by
the
evidence,
namely,
that
it
is
at
least
a
source
of
income.
The
Federal
Court-Trial
Division
has
commented
on
Morrissey
in
three
recent
decisions,
namely:
Mohl
v.
Canada,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
425;
89
D.T.C.
5236
Pavlakovich
v.
Canada,
[1989]
2
C.T.C.
260;
89
D.T.C.
5432
Glass
v.
Canada,
[1989]
2
C.T.C.
314;
89
D.T.C.
5497.
In
Mohl,
supra,
Strayer,
J.
concluded
on
page
428
(D.T.C.
5238):
It
now
appears
clear
from
the
Supreme
Court
decision
in
Moldowan
as
recently
interpreted
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Canada
v.
Morrissey,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
235;
89
D.T.C.
5080
that,
for
a
person
to
claim
that
farming
is
a
chief
source
of
income,
he
must
show
not
only
a
substantial
commitment
to
it
in
terms
of
the
time
he
spends
and
the
capital
invested,
but
also
must
demonstrate
that
there
is
a
reasonable
expectation
of
it
being
significantly
profitable.
I
use
the
term
"significantly
profitable”
because
it
appears
from
the
Morrissey
decision
that
the
quantum
of
expected
profit
cannot
be
ignored
and
I
take
this
to
mean
that
one
must
have
regard
to
the
relative
amounts
expected
to
be
earned
from
farming
and
from
other
sources.
Unless
the
amount
reasonably
expected
to
be
earned
from
farming
is
substantial
in
relation
to
other
sources
of
income
then
farming
will
at
best
be
regarded
as
a
“sideline
business”
to
which
the
restriction
on
losses
will
apply
in
accordance
with
subsection
31(1).
In
Pavlakovich,
supra,
Muldoon,
J.
dealing
with
the
facts,
at
pages
262-65
(D.T.C.
5434
and
5436)
said:
The
steady
reduction
of
the
loan
was
consistent
with
the
plaintiff's
unwavering
intention,
which
the
Court
accepts
as
factual,
to
quit
the
mine
and
to
be
solely
a
farmer.
The
increasing
progression
of
revenues
and
production
gives
good
reason
to
find
that
there
was
indeed
a
reasonable
expectation
of
income
which,
as
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held
in
the
Moldowan
case,
"is
a
question
of
fact
in
the
circumstances".
It
is
a
fact
which
this
Court
finds
to
be
so,
upon
the
evidence
presented
here.
The
question
in
issue
here
is
whether
his
chief
source
of
income,
including
his
reasonable
expectation
of
income,
was
such
as
to
relieve
him
of
limitation
on
losses
imposed
by
paragraphs
31
(1)(a)
and
(b)
of
the
Act.
He
concluded
his
judgment
on
page
268
(D.T.C.
5438)
where
he
said:
The
marked
similarities
of
the
Graham
case
with
the
case
at
bar
dictate
the
same
result
upon
application
of
the
same
legal
principles.
Except
for
the
part
year
1977
which
extends
only
from
autumn
to
the
end
of
1977,
in
which,
despite
some
farm
work,
the
plaintiff
was
situated
in
class
(2)
according
to
the
Moldowan
judgment,
the
losses
incurred
in
1978,1979
and
1980
are
found
to
be
deductible.
In
each
of
those
latter
three
years
the
plaintiff's
chief
source
of
income
was
farming
or
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
as
determined
according
to
the
principles
of
law
enunciated
in
the
Moldowan
and
Graham
judgment
decisions.
In
Glass,
supra,
Dubé,
J.
after
reviewing
Moldowan,
supra,
Morrissey,
supra,
and
Mohl,
supra,
concluded
on
page
321
(D.T.C.
5501
and
5502):
Applying
the
three
criteria
of
time
spent,
capital
committed
and
profitability,
I
find
in
the
instant
case
that
the
taxpayer
was
not
carrying
on
farming
merely
as
a
“sideline
business”.
He
had
truly
changed
his
mode
and
habit
of
work
and
centered
the
bulk
of
his
energy
on
sheep
farming.
The
capital
involved
was
modest
but
he
gave
all
he
had,
and
more,
cashing
in
his
RRSP
and
overextending
himself
into
debt.
His
uncontradicted
evidence
is
to
the
effect
that
he
spent
much
more
time
on
the
farm
than
he
did
at
the
Program.
His
stated
intention,
and
I
found
him
to
be
very
credible,
was
that
he
only
maintained
his
job
at
the
Program
so
as
to
bring
in
some
desperately
needed
cash
flow
while
he
was
in
the
process
of
launching
his
farm
operations.
He,
of
course,
expected
to
succeed
at
this
venture.
Unfortunately,
because
of
the
severe
economic
and
weather
conditions
experienced
during
the
early
years,
he
was
not
successful.
It
appears
that
farming
was
potentially
his
chief
source
of
income,
at
first
in
combination
with
another
source,
and
then
all
by
itself.
As
indicated
by
Mahoney,
J.
in
the
Morrissey
decision
“POTENTIALITY,
RATHER
THAN
ACTUALITY,
is
the
question
in
all
cases
since
the
provision
applies
only
where
there
is
a
loss
in
a
taxation
year”.
[Emphasis
added.]
Conclusion
Dealing
in
order
with
the
three
principal
criteria
namely;
time,
capital
and
profitability
this
Court
finds:
Time
Although
the
respondent
argued
strenuously
that
insufficient
time
in
1984
was
spent
on
improving
the
farm
for
farming
purposes
to
pass
the
quantum
test,
this
Court
finds
that
in
each
year
in
question,
the
main
preoccupation
of
both
appellants
was
farming
and
their
employment
was
secondary
in
time
and
interest
even
in
1984
when
they
completed
the
log
home
and
moved
the
mobile
home
onto
the
farm.
Capital
The
Court
is
satisfied
that
for
both
appellants
the
outlay
of
capital
is
substantial.
It
is
all
that
they
have
and
all
that
they
have
earned
in
the
last
five
years
and
will
be
all
that
they
earn
from
Weststar
for
the
next
three
to
five
years.
They
will
be
debt
free
by
1990
and
the
required
capital
investment
after
that
will
be
made
with
cash
from
their
employment.
Every
resource
of
the
appellants
is
invested
in
their
farming
operation
which
includes
all
of
their
savings,
their
income
from
their
employment
and
their
labour.
Substantial
Profitability
On
the
balance
of
probabilities
on
accepting
the
appellant's
testimony
without
reservation
which
is
uncontradicted
in
any
manner,
the
court
is
satisfied
that
after
the
start-up
period
(being
the
time
required
to
convert
160
acres
of
raw
land
into
160
acres
of
producing
farm
land,
which
period
will
end
in
another
three
to
five
years,
(i.e.
a
total
of
9
to
11
years)
that
the
farming
operation
will
produce
substantial
profits.
Their
chief
source
of
income
will
be
from
farming
or
from
a
combination
of
farming
and
other
sources.
Appeal
Allowed
For
the
above
reasons,
this
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
for
the
taxation
years
1984,
1985
and
1986
both
appellants
were
“Class
1"
farmers
and
were
entitled
to
deduct
from
income
all
their
farm
losses.
The
appellants
to
have
their
costs.
Appeals
allowed.