Cardin,
TCJ
[TRANSLATION]:—In
his
tax
returns
for
the
1977,
1978
and
1979
taxation
years,
Claude
Bernard
claimed
deductions
of
$19,756.36,
$23,164.47
and
$15,765.25
respectively
as
business
expenses.
In
a
notice
of
assessment,
dated
June
22,
1983,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
reduced
the
expenses
claimed
by
disallowing
the
amounts
of
$1,550,
$1,485
and
$725
which
represented
travelling
expenses
for
each
of
the
years
in
question.
In
addition,
the
appellant
claimed
$138.78
as
representation
expenses
in
1977
and
$90
in
1978
as
the
cost
of
promoting
the
sale
of
a
property.
Summary
of
Facts
During
the
1977,
1978
and
1979
taxation
years,
the
appellant
lived
in
Quebec
and
was
employed
full-time
by
the
Government
of
Quebec.
In
1976,
the
appellant
bought
a
rooming
house
on
St
Hubert
Street
in
Montreal,
which
he
sold
in
1979.
The
property
had
three
storeys
and
20
rooms,
and
included
a
four
and
one-half
room
apartment
and
two
garages.
There
was
a
common
kitchen
on
each
floor.
Regular
maintenance
was
carried
out
by
a
janitor.
Neither
the
appellant
nor
the
janitor
performed
any
services
beyond
those
which
a
tenant
would
normally
expect
from
a
landlord.
According
to
the
appellant's
tax
returns
and
his
notice
of
appeal,
he
undertook
extensive
renovations
on
his
St
Hubert
Street
property
in
1977,1978
and
1979.
These
expenses
were
allowed
by
the
respondent.
A
brief
calculation
shows
that
expenses
relating
to
the
improvement
of
this
property
amounting
approximately
to
$18,000,
$22,000
and
$15,000
were
allowed
for
each
of
the
years
in
question.
The
respondent
acknowledged
that
the
appellant’s
St
Hubert
Street
house
was
an
income-producing
property
and
that
the
appellant
had
invested
in
it
with
a
view
to
earning
income
from
it
.
.
.
but
it
was
income
from
property,
not
from
business.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
quoted
several
decisions
showing
how
the
courts
have
distinguished
between
income
from
property
and
income
from
business.
The
distinction
is
sometimes
rather
blurred
and
hard
to
make,
but
one
way
of
approaching
it
is
to
look
at
the
number
and
nature
of
services
rendered
by
the
taxpayer.
In
this
case,
the
services
performed
by
the
appellant
for
the
tenants
consisted
mainly
in
providing
rooms
in
a
building
that
he
maintained
with
the
result
that
the
income
was
generated
by
the
property
itself
and
not
by
any
special
services
rendered
by
the
landlord.
When
a
landlord
offers
his
tenants
services
in
addition
to
lodging
such
as
those
that
might
be
provided
to
clients
in
a
hotel
or
even
in
an
establishment
offering
room
and
board,
such
income
may
be
business
income,
and
the
expenses
are
often
deductible.
However,
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
appellant
do
not
fall
in
that
category.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
evidence
is
clear
that
the
appellant's
income
derived
from
property
and
not
business.
The
cost
for
the
appellant
of
travel-
ling
between
Quebec
and
Montreal
to
supervise
work
on
his
property
or
collect
his
rents
are
not
expenses
made
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
property
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended,
which
must
be
interpreted
narrowly.
Even
if
it
were
income
from
business,
the
costs
of
travel
between
Quebec
and
Montreal
would
not
be
deductible,
just
as
personal
expenses
are
not
deductible
under
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
thought
that
the
representation
expense
of
$138.78
in
1977
in
connection
with
the
appellant’s
property
was
deductible.
However,
the
$90
spent
in
1978
in
promoting
the
sale
of
that
property
could
not
be
allowed,
since
this
expense
was
of
a
capital
nature.
The
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
whole
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
taking
into
account
that
the
representation
expenses
of
$138.78
in
1977
are
deductible.
In
all
other
respects,
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.