Christie,
A.C.
J.T.C.:—The
appellant
appeals
to
this
Court
regarding
his
1978
to
1981
taxation
years
inclusive.
In
respect
of
each
of
these
years
he
is
regarded
by
the
taxing
authorities
as
being
within
the
scope
of
subsection
31(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
("the
Act”)
with
reference
to
his
farming
operations
and
in
computing
his
income
for
these
years
he
was
confined
by
reassessment
to
deducting
the
$5,000
maximum
provided
under
the
subsection
in
relation
to
those
operations
against
other
sources
of
income.
The
appellant
asserts
entitlement
to
deduct
his
full
farming
losses
against
other
income.
The
appellant’s
farm
is
250
acres
located
near
Kars,
Ontario.
It
has
been
in
his
family
for
three
generations,
having
been
acquired
by
his
grandfather
in
the
18805.
The
appellant
was
raised
on
the
farm
and
worked
there
while
at
school
and,
when
time
permitted,
while
attending
university.
He
is
the
only
son
of
four
children.
After
completing
grade
12
he
enrolled
in
the
Kempt-
ville
College
of
Agriculture,
but
did
not
pursue
this.
Upon
graduating
from
grade
13
he
enrolled
at
Queens.
He
was
not
happy
with
what
he
was
doing
there
and
went
to
Carleton
University.
In
the
spring
of
1961
he
accepted
a
position
as
a
teacher
commencing
in
the
fall
of
that
year.
He
received
his
degree
from
Carleton
in
1962
and,
in
1963,
he
secured
a
position
at
the
South
Carleton
High
School
where
he
remained
for
18
years.
He
then
transferred
to
the
A.
Y.
Jackson
High
School
in
Kanata.
He
was
promoted
to
head
of
the
Mathematics
Department
at
A.
Y.
Jackson
and
continues
to
teach
there
to
this
day.
He
married
in
1964.
The
couple
acquired
an
apartment
in
Ottawa
where
they
resided
for
four
years.
In
1965
his
father
auctioned
his
cattle
and
machinery.
He
passed
away
in
the
spring
of
the
following
year.
The
appellant
inherited
the
farm
subject
to
a
condition,
which
is
irrelevant
to
this
appeal,
that
was
fulfilled.
In
February
1968
construction
of
a
new
home
on
the
farm
began
and
it
was
occupied
by
the
appellant
and
his
wife
the
following
August.
He
started
accumulating
his
herd
of
cattle
in
1969.
The
early
acquisitions
were
a
mix
of
breeds,
but
later
he
decided
to
focus
on
purebred
Aberdeen
Angus
stock.
By
about
1975
his
herd
was
composed
exclusively
of
this
breed.
The
appellant
gave
65
as
the
average
size
of
the
herd.
Mrs.
Wilson
testified
that
she
assisted
her
husband
in
farming
although
she
declared
that:
“I
am
not
a
true
farmer
myself.”
She
added
that
she
was
not
involved
in
the
financial
aspect
of
the
enterprise.
Paragraph
A-3
of
the
notice
of
appeal
reads:
3.
The
Appellant
and
his
family
spend
and
during
the
period
in
question
spent,
substantial
time
each
week
personally
working
on
his
farm
taking
care
of
the
63
head
of
cattle.
Mrs.
Wilson
said
that
the
children
sometimes
helped
with
the
farming.
The
children
were
not
further
identified,
but
if
they
are
the
two
in
respect
of
whom
the
appellant
sought
deductions
in
computing
his
taxable
income
for
the
years
under
review,
their
contribution,
at
least
during
that
time,
must
have
been
very
modest
having
regard
to
the
fact
that
the
daughter
was
born
on
June
29,
1969,
and
the
son
on
June
20,
1974.
In
each
of
the
years
1978
to
1981
the
appellant
reported
farming
expenses
of
about
$950
for
wages
and
salaries.
This
he
said
was
paid
to
local
teenagers
for
doing
assigned
chores.
He
also
said
that
the
necessary
ploughing
was
done
for
him
under
contract.
The
appellant
held
the
office
of
councillor
from
1974
until
he
resigned
in
1982.
During
the
first
two
years
there
were
two
or
three
meetings
a
week.
After
that
there
was
an
average
of
one
and
a
half
meetings
per
week.
Each
meeting
lasted
about
three
hours.
In
1978,
1979
and
1980
he
attended
one
convention
regarding
his
office
as
councillor.
In
1981
he
attended
two
conventions.
I
accept
that
the
appellant
is
and
was
a
knowledgeable
farmer.
I
also
accept,
as
was
stressed
by
both
him
and
his
wife,
that
he
has
been
dedicated
to
farming
for
years
and
has
aspired
to
become
what
both
described
as
“a
full-time
farmer”.
On
April
27,
1978,
he
wrote
Revenue
Canada
in
part
as
follows:
In
the
brief
description
I
have
given
you
I
would
hope
you
would
realize
I
do
not
consider
myself
a
hobby
farmer
but
rather
I
have
a
full
farm
operation.
I
am
farming
the
same
farm
my
father
farmed
&
I
have
more
machinery
(&
better)
&
more
cattle
to
look
after
than
my
father,
who
did
not
have
any
off
the
farm
job.
I
feel
that
with
a
little
luck
(i.e.
better
&
more
stable
beef
prices)
I
could
easily
in
a
few
years
have
only
1
job,
that
of
farming.
I
can
assure
you
I
could
get
all
my
enjoyment
of
being
a
hobby
farmer
with
a
much
smaller
operation.
My
intention
from
the
beginning
has
been
to
make
a
profit
each
year.
At
the
hearing
the
long
hours
devoted
to
farming
by
the
appellant
was
underscored.
It
is
that
he
was
at
it
in
the
morning
before
he
went
to
his
teaching
job,
when
he
returned
in
the
afternoon,
on
weekends
and
on
holidays.
The
testimony
leaves
the
impression
that
apart
from
time
spent
as
a
teacher
and
in
relation
to
the
office
of
councillor,
plus
ten
days
to
two
weeks’
annual
vacation,
the
appellant
was
almost
consumed
by
farming.
He
did
not
impress
me
as
a
person
who
would
be
swept
along
that
far.
Nor
did
his
wife
strike
me
as
an
individual
who
would
permit
it.
He
said
that
he
devoted
more
time
to
farming
than
to
teaching
although
the
ratio
in
this
regard
was
not
specified.
Emphasis
was
also
placed
on
the
expenditures
made
over
the
years
to
upgrade
the
quality
and
productivity
of
the
farm.
The
matter
of
installing
a
new
drainage
system
was
described
in
detail.
It
was
Said
that
this
investment
upgraded
the
quality
of
some
70
acres
to
a
very
considerable
extent.
The
losses
reported
in
his
returns
of
income
forwarded
to
the
Court
in
compliance
with
subsection
170(2)
of
the
Act
are:
1978
—
$18,887.11;
1979
—
$20,463.85;
1980
—
$14,985.74
and
1981
—
$21,804.78.
Gross
farming
income
was:
1978
—
$19,487.77;
1979
—
$16,607.14;
1980
—
$29,649.90
and
1981
—
$19,992.88.
Income
from
other
sources
during
the
same
period
is:
1978
—
$31,728.28
being
salary
received
as
a
teacher
from
the
Carleton
Board
of
Education,
$2,908.32
in
remuneration
as
councillor
received
from
the
Township
of
Rideau.
He
had
additional
income
of
$1,302.58.
The
sum
of
these
figures
is
$35,939.18.
In
1979
he
received
$34,160.22
for
teaching
and
$3,000
as
a
councillor.
Other
income
was
$1,416.18
for
a
total
of
$38,576.40.
His
1980
teaching
salary
was
$35,049.82
and
he
received
$3,050
as
a
councillor.
He
had
additional
income
of
$853.
In
total
this
is
$38,952.82.
In
1981
he
received
$39,772.57
as
a
teacher
and
$3,600
as
a
councillor.
Other
income
was
$1,093.56
for
a
total
of
$44,466.13.
From
this
it
is
deduced
that
in
1978
farming
losses
were
the
equivalent
of
97
per
cent
of
gross
farming
income.
The
same
percentages
for
the
other
years
under
appeal
are:
1979
—
123;
1980
—
50
and
1981
—
109.
If
the
same
relationship
is
drawn
between
gross
farming
income
and
the
appellant’s
salary
as
a
teacher,
it
is
seen
that
in
1978
gross
farming
income
was
61
per
cent
of
the
teaching
salary.
The
same
percentages
for
the
other
years
under
appeal
are:
1979
—
49;
1980
—
85
and
1981
—
50.
Evidence
introduced
at
the
hearing
established
that
in
1977
farming
losses
were
the
equivalent
of
107
per
cent
of
gross
farming
income.
The
same
percentages
for
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
are:
51,
24,
32*
and
31
respectively.
If
the
same
relationship
is
drawn
between
gross
farming
income
and
the
appellant's
salary
for
teaching!
the
result
is
that
in
1977
gross
farming
income
was
41
per
cent
of
the
appellant’s
salary
as
a
teacher.
The
same
percentages
for
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
are:
52,
60,
65
and
89
respectively.
In
1976
the
appellant
confined
his
claim
to
farming
losses
to
those
allowed
under
subsection
31(1)
of
the
Act.
The
appellant
placed
in
evidence
projections
regarding
his
farming
operations
for
the
years
1986,
1987
and
1988.
They
show
profit
in
those
years
of
$6,220,
$13,276
and
$16,314
respectively.
The
only
years
for
which
figures
were
adduced
regarding
gross
farm
income,
farm
expenses
and
claimed
farm
losses
are
1976
to
1985
inclusive.
They
show
that
there
was
an
increase
in
farm
expenses
in
each
year
except
1983.
This
increase
ranged
from
$21,207.92
to
$58,727.18.
The
decrease
in
1983
was
$888.
The
expenses
shown
in
the
projections
for
1986,
1987
and
1988
are:
$50,275,
$45,149
and
$46,485
respectively.
When
asked
by
his
counsel
what
his
plans
for
the
future
are,
the
appellant
replied:
“If
1
could
leave
teaching
and
have
a
reasonable
income
I
would
jump
at
it."
When
pressed
by
his
counsel
regarding
his
intentions
rather
than
his
preference,
the
appellant
said
he
intended
to
be
entirely
occupationally
engaged
in
farming
in
five
years.
When
questioned
in
this
regard
he
acknowledged
he
would
then
have
30
years’
pensionable
service
in
the
teaching
profession
and
would
be
in
a
position
to
retire
on
pension.
In
order
for
the
appellant
to
succeed
he
must
establish
that,
during
his
1978
to
1981
taxation
years,
he
was
within
the
first
of
the
three
classes
of
farmers
which
Mr.
Justice
Dickson
(as
he
then
was)
said
in
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Moldowan
v.
The
Queen,
[1977]
C.T.C.
310;
77
D.T.C.
5213,
are
envisaged
by
the
Act.
His
Lordship
described
that
class
in
these
words
at
315
(D.T.C.
5216):
(1)
a
taxpayer,
for
whom
farming
may
reasonably
be
expected
to
provide
the
bulk
of
income
or
the
centre
of
work
routine.
Such
a
taxpayer,
who
looks
to
farming
for
his
livelihood,
is
free
of
the
limitation
of
subsection
13(1)
in
those
years
in
which
he
sustains
a
farming
loss.
Mr.
Justice
Dickson
added
this
at
the
same
page:
The
reference
in
subsection
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.
In
commenting
on
these
remarks,
Bonner
T.C.J.
said
in
Timpson
v.
M.N.R.,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
2114
at
2118;
85
D.T.C.
446
at
449:
I
do
not
believe
the
Court
there
referred
to
subjective
preoccupation.
Such
preoccupation,
even
in
a
case
where
it
amounts
to
an
obsession,
will
not
convert
sideline
farming
into
a
chief
source.
“Major
preoccupation”
refers
to
major
preoccupation
from
an
income-earning
standpoint.
In
Kerr
and
Forbes
v.
M.N.R.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
2071;
84
D.T.C.
1094,
this
is
said
at
2078
(D.T.C.
1100):
While
it
is
not
impossible
for
a
person
to
fall
within
the
first
class
even
if
he
has
other
employment
which
is
usually
regarded
as
“full-time”
it
would,
in
my
view,
require
a
truly
unusual
set
of
facts
of
the
kind
described
in
Graham
v.
The
Queen,
(supra),
to
arrive
at
that
result.
This
was
said
before
judgment
was
rendered
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
on
the
appeal
taken
to
it
in
Graham.
Its
judgment
is
reported
in
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
380;
85
D.T.C.
5256.
I
find
nothing
in
the
reasons
of
Mr.
Justice
Urie,
who
wrote
for
the
majority,
that
detracts
from
the
passage
cited
from
Kerr
and
Forbes.
I
note
that
in
the
last
sentence
of
his
reasons
Urie,
J.
makes
reference
to
“the
very
unusual
circumstances
of
this
case.”
While
the
percentages
previously
cited
are
not
necessarily
of
themselves
conclusive,
they
are
certainly
something
to
be
regarded
in
the
determination
of
this
appeal.
They
reveal
that
during
the
years
1977
to
1985
farming
losses
as
a
percentage
of
gross
farming
income
ranged
from
123
per
cent
to
a
low
of
24
per
cent.
The
high
point
was
reached
in
1979,
one
of
the
years
to
which
this
appeal
pertains.
Also
gross
farming
income
as
a
percentage
of
the
appellant's
teaching
salary
ranged
from
a
low
of
41
per
cent
to
a
high
of
89
per
cent.
In
1979
it
was
49
per
cent.
The
uninterrupted
string
of
net
farming
losses
during
the
ten-year
period
1976
to
1985
is
significant
and
is
detrimental
to
the
appellant's
contentions
on
this
appeal.
These
matters,
coupled
with
the
rest
of
the
evidence,
lead
me
to
conclude
that
the
appellant
has
failed
to
discharge
the
onus
which
rests
on
him
of
showing
that
on
a
balance
of
probabilities
he
was,
during
the
years
under
review,
within
the
first
class
of
farmers
described
in
Moldowan.
I
cannot
regard
him
as
having
been
in
this
class
at
any
time
during
those
four
years.
While
it
may
well
have
been
his
profound
aspiration
since
the
commencement
of
his
farming
enterprise
in
1969
that
farming
would
reach
a
point
when
it
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
provide
the
bulk
of
his
income
or
the
centre
of
his
work
routine
that
ambition
had
not
been
attained
during
the
years
1978
to
1981
inclusive.
In
the
overall
context
of
his
existence
during
this
period
he
cannot,
in
my
opinion,
properly
be
regarded
as
looking
to
farming
as
his
means
of
living.
His
farming
enterprise
during
that
time
was
a
sideline
business.
It
was
also
a
business
which
was
required
to
be
subsidized
by
income
of
the
appellant
from
other
than
farming
income
in
order
to
keep
it
financially
afloat
until
hopefully
it
would
realize
a
profit.
While
testifying
he
remarked
that
he
was
“robbing
a
fair
amount
of
my
teaching
salary
subsidizing
my
farm.”
In
the
notice
of
appeal
one
of
the
grounds
of
appeal
was
based
on
subsection
15(1)
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
This
was
abandoned
at
the
hearing.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.