Bonner,
TCJ
[ORALLY]:—The
appellant
brought
appeals
from
assessments
of
income
tax
for
the
1977
and
1978
taxation
years.
His
counsel
indicated
at
the
outset
that
the
1977
appeal
was
abandoned
and
it
will
therefore
be
dismissed.
The
1978
appeal
raises
one
issue
only,
namely,
whether
section
31
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies
to
limit
the
deduction
of
a
loss
from
farming.
The
appellant’s
only
other
source
of
income
for
the
1978
year
was
the
operation
of
a
service
station.
The
appellant
was
brought
up
on
a
farm.
He
had,
however,
for
many
years
before
1978
earned
his
livelihood
in
other
fields.
From
1961
to
1969
he
worked
as
a
mechanic.
In
1969
he
became
a
service
manager
at
a
General
Motors
dealership.
In
1974
he
purchased
a
service
station
at
Rocky
Mountain
House.
During
the
years
1977,
1978
and
1979
the
service
station
produced
annual
incomes
for
the
appellant
in
the
order
of
$28,000.
In
1970,
2/2
quarter-sections
of
land
were
left
to
the
appellant,
his
brother
and
his
sister.
Initially
the
land
was
leased
out.
In
1976
the
appellant
bought
a
tractor
and
a
brush
mower
and
set
to
work
on
part
of
the
land.
However,
differences
with
his
co-owners
led
the
appellant
to
decide
to
purchase
land
of
his
own.
In
the
Spring
of
1978
the
appellant
bought
171
acres
for
$80,000.
He
made
a
small
cash
payment
of
$1,000
or
so
and
financed
the
rest
of
the
purchase
price
through
the
Treasury
Branch.
He
commenced
immediately,
with
the
assistance
of
a
hired
hand,
to
make
some
improvements
on
the
land.
An
entrance
road
was
built,
a
pump
was
installed
on
the
existing
casing
and
a
shed
built
at
the
site.
A
fence,
corrals
and
other
sheds
were
erected.
Machinery
and
horses
as
listed
on
Exhibit
A-2
were
acquired.
All
of
this
was
made
possible
initially
by
the
income
which
the
appellant
earned
from
operating
the
service
station.
From
1976
onwards
the
appellant
spent
less
and
less
time
working
at
the
service
station.
He
was
able
to
do
so
and
still
operate
the
business
successfully
because
he
employed
all
persons
necessary
to
carry
on
the
business.
His
own
function
was
managerial
in
nature
only.
By
1978
the
appellant
spent
about
an
hour
a
day
on
service
station
business
and
no
more.
The
rest
of
his
time
was
spent
on
the
farm.
In
1978
the
appellant
proposed
to
sell
the
service
station,
but
that
idea
was,
however,
according
to
the
appellant
“voted
down’’
by
his
family.
Much
emphasis
was
placed
on
the
fact
that
the
appellant’s
time
in
1978
was
mainly
devoted
to
work
on
the
farm.
However,
the
issue
in
this
case
must
be
tested
on
broader
considerations
than
a
simple
measurement
of
time
spent.
In
Moldowan
v
The
Queen,
[1977]
CTC
310;
77
DTC
5213,
Mr
Justice
Dickson
said
at
314
[5215
and
5216]:
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
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
be
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.
Because
the
farming
operation
in
question
here
was
just
starting,
regard
must
be
had
to
the
potential
of
the
operation
which
in
1978
was
planned.
The
evidence
indicated
that
the
operation
planned
involved
the
breeding
and
sale
of
horses.
The
evidence
was
silent,
however,
on
the
subject
of
the
scale
of
the
proposed
operation
and
on
the
anticipated
revenues
connected
with
the
operation.
It
is
thus
impossible
to
measure
the
relative
significance
to
the
appellant
of
farming
as
an
income
source.
However,
there
is
some
evidence
which
leads
me
to
doubt
that
the
farming
operation
had
the
potential
to
become
either
the
chief
source
of
income
or
one
of
a
combination
which
would
be
the
chief
source.
The
appellant
did
not
appear
to
be
willing
or
able
to
commit
much
capital
to
farming.
Little
cash
was
invested
in
the
1978
purchase
of
land.
Quite
possibly
the
appellant
could
not
invest
more
because
his
capital
was
tied
up
in
the
service
station
which
his
family
did
not
want
him
to
sell.
In
any
case
the
totality
of
the
evidence
does
not
establish,
on
the
balance
of
probabilities,
that
the
farming
operation
proposed
in
1978
had
the
potential
to
become
either
alone
or
in
combination
with
some
other
source
the
appellant’s
chief
source
of
income.
The
1978
appeal
will
therefore
be
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.