Tremblay,
TCJ:—This
case
was
heard
in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba,
on
December
9,
1982.
1.
The
Point
at
Issue
The
point
at
issue
is
whether
the
appellant
is
correct
in
deducting
business
farm
losses
in
the
computation
of
his
income
for
the
taxation
years
1976
($10,960.99)
and
1977
($10,519.25).
The
respondent
contends
that
the
appellant
may
deduct
only
the
restricted
losses
provided
in
section
31
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
2.
The
Burden
of
Proof
2.01
The
burden
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent’s
assessments
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
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
2.02
In
the
same
judgment,
the
Court
decided
that
the
assumed
facts
on
which
the
respondent
based
his
assessments
or
reassessments
are
also
deemed
to
be
correct.
In
the
present
case,
the
assumed
facts
are
described
in
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
as
follows:
5.
In
reassessing
the
Appellant
for
his
1976
and
1977
taxation
years,
the
Respondent
made
the
following
assumptions
of
fact,
inter
alia',
(a)
the
Appellant
in
his
1976
and
1977
taxation
years
was
an
electrician
working
in
the
provinces
of
Manitoba
and
British
Columbia;
(b)
the
Appellant’s
income
from
office
or
employment
during
the
1976
and
1977
taxation
years
was
$26,560.59
and
$21,101.05
respectively;
(c)
during
the
1976
and
1977
taxation
years
the
Appellant
operated
a
cattle
farm
which
incurred
a
loss
in
the
amounts
of
$7,688.16
and
$10,519.25
respectively;
(d)
of
the
amount
of
$10,960.99
claimed
as
a
farm
loss
by
the
Appellant
in
his
1976
taxation
year,
the
amount
of
$3,272.83
represented
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
Appellant;
(e)
during
the
1976
and
1977
taxation
years
the
Appellant’s
chief
source
of
income
was
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
31(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
3.
The
Facts
A
Admission
by
the
Appellant
3.01
At
the
beginning
of
the
trial,
counsel
for
the
appellant
stated
that
he
was
abandoning
part
of
the
appeal:
specifically
the
sum
of
$3,272.83
which
is
considered
as
personal
expenses
for
the
year
1976.
This
admission
reduces
the
actual
business
loss
for
the
said
year
to
$7,688.16.
3.02
When
the
above
admission
was
made,
counsel
also
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1
a
summary
of
the
income
and
loss
for
the
years
1974
to
1978.
It
reads
as
follows:
|
AUGUST
Le
STRAT
|
|
|
1974
|
|
|
Farming
Income
(Gross)
|
|
nil
|
|
Farming
Income
(Net
Loss)
|
|
($
2,500.00)
|
|
Employment
Income
|
|
|
—
FA
Tucker;
(Montreal)
|
$
7,179.13
|
|
|
—
Ace
Construction;
(Calgary)
|
7,616.14
|
|
|
$14,795.27
|
|
1975
|
|
|
Farming
Income
(Gross)
|
|
$
1,299.87
|
|
Farming
Income
(Net
Loss)
|
|
($
5,219.89)
|
|
Employment
Income
|
|
|
—
FA
Tucker;
(Montreal)
|
$10,941.71
|
|
|
—
Columbia
Hydro;
(Vancouver)
|
19,072.90
|
|
|
—
Bacm
Ltd;
(Winnipeg)
|
11,247.60
|
|
|
$41,262.21
|
|
1976
|
|
|
Farming
Income
(Gross)
|
|
$
|
168.37
|
|
Farming
Income
(Net
Loss)
|
|
($10,960.99)
|
|
(After
admission
|
$
7,688.16)
|
|
Employment
Income
|
|
|
—
Columbia
Hydro;
(Vancouver)
|
$12,024.07
|
|
|
—
Joint
Electrical;
(Vancouver)
|
70.00
|
|
|
—
Bacm
Ltd;
(Winnipeg)
|
14,466.52
|
|
|
$26,560.59
|
|
1977
|
|
|
Farming
Income
(Gross)
|
|
$
1,796.26
|
|
Farming
Income
(Net
Loss)
|
|
($10,519.25)
|
|
Employment
Income
|
|
|
—
Columbia
Hydro;
(Vancouver)
|
$21,101.05
|
|
|
—
Joint
Electrical;
(Vancouver)
|
67.50
|
|
|
$21,168.55
|
|
1978
|
|
|
Farming
Income
(Gross)
|
|
$
5,125.59
|
|
Farming
Income
(Net
Loss)
|
|
($13,831.02)
|
|
Employment
Income
|
|
|
—
Columbia
Hydro;
(Vancouver)
|
$
1,194.79
|
|
|
—
Joint
Electrical;
(Vancouver)
|
30.00
|
|
|
—
Genstar
Construction;
(Winnipeg)
|
14,659.47
|
|
|
$15,884.26
|
3.03
With
Exhibit
A-1
and
the
above
admission,
it
can
be
said
that
the
assumptions
of
fact
described
in
paragraphs
(a),
(b),
(c)
and
(d)
of
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
are
admitted
as
proven.
B
Testimony
of
Mr
James
E
Court
3.04
In
the
examination-in-chief,
Mr
James
E
Court,
accountant
of
the
appellant,
testified
that:
(a)
In
1976
the
appellant
from
his
employment
worked
21
weeks
and
earned
$26,560.59
(Exhibit
A-1).
In
Manitoba
he
worked
846
/2
hours
in
11
weeks.
The
regular
hours
were
440
and
the
overtime
hours
were
406
/2.
In
these
11
weeks
he
earned
$14,466.52
(Exhibit
A-1);
(b)
In
1977
the
appellant
worked
in
British
Columbia,
generating
$21,168.55
(Exhibit
A-1)
as
employment
income;
(c)
For
the
years
1979,
1980
and
1981,
the
employment
income,
the
gross
farming
income
and
the
farm
losses
were
as
follows:
|
Employment
|
Gross
Farming
|
Farming
|
|
Income
|
Income
|
Income
|
|
1979
|
$40,356.11
|
$
1,170.66
|
($7,599.30)
|
|
1980
|
$23,850.09
|
$24,539.34
|
($6,827.91)
|
|
1981
|
$10,946.22
|
$
6,149.22
|
($7,424.84)
|
The
appellant’s
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
1979,
1980
and
1981
were
filed
as
Exhibits
A-2,
A-3
and
A-4
to
confirm
the
above
figures.
3.05
In
cross-examination,
Mr
J
Court
testified
that:
(a)
The
appellant
also
received
unemployment
insurance
benefits
as
follows
in
the
said
years:
1979
—$1,056,1980
—$4,056,
and
1981
—$6,552;
(b)
In
1980,
the
significant
increase
in
the
gross
farming
income
of
$24,539.34
is
explained
by
the
sale
of
$14,539.34
of
cattle
and
used
the
optional
value
of
livestock
rule.
He
capitalized
$10,000
of
his
livestock
as
income.
In
this
1980
taxation
year,
he
purchased
$10,600
worth
of
livestock;
(c)
The
computation
of
the
number
of
hours
and
weeks
given
above
(para
3.04(a)
and
(b))
was
made
from
letters
received
from
the
employer
and
the
T-4
slips.
C
Testimony
of
the
Appellant
3.06
In
his
examination-in-chief,
the
appellant
testified
that:
(a)
He
was
born
in
Eriksdale,
Manitoba,
and
was
brought
up
on
a
farm;
(b)
He
lived
on
his
father’s
farm
until
he
got
married
in
1969.
He
had
been
growing
hay
for
the
cattle
and
for
seeding
crops.
It
was
a
mixed
farm:
grain
and
livestock
consisting
of
8
quarter
sections
(1,280
acres);
(c)
In
1969
or
1970,
he
purchased
one-quarter
of
land
for
$500.
It
was
about
12
miles
from
his
father’s
farm.
He
bought
eight
head
of
cattle
and
a
horse
but
ordinarily
left
them
on
his
father’s
farm.
He
did
some
bulldozing
on
his
own
piece
of
land;
(d)
Around
1971,
he
moved
to
Chicago
when
he
got
a
good
job.
He
stayed
there
2
/2
years.
However,
he
came
back
two
months
of
every
year
to
bale
the
hay
and
take
the
crops
off
on
his
father’s
farm;
(e)
When
back
in
Eriksdale,
he
built
a
house,
a
barn
and
a
granary
on
his
own
quarter
section.
He
continued
to
help
his
father
on
his
farm
without
being
paid;
(f)
He
also
continued
to
do
outside
work
“to
build
up”
his
herd.
His
outside
work
then
lasted
3
or
3
/2
months
per
year.
He
ordinarily
worked
80
or
81
hours
per
week
(40
hours
at
regular
rate,
and
the
balance
at
time
and
one-half
and
sometimes
at
double
time);
(g)
In
1974,
he
separated
from
his
wife.
He
paid
her
a
$10,000
settlement
plus
support
for
the
two
children
and
all
the
lawyer’s
fees.
Before
the
separation
he
had
32
cows
and
calves.
He
had
to
sell
16
head
of
cattle
to
help
him
resolve
his
financial
difficulties;
(h)
Since
1975
he
has
been
living
with
his
common-law
wife,
Joan;
they
have
a
son;
(i)
In
1976,
he
helped
his
father
on
the
farm
but
was
not
paid
for
the
work.
He
completed
bulldozing
40
acres
on
his
own
farm
and
seeded
it
for
grass.
It
was
used
for
pasture
in
the
summertime;
(j)
He
had
a
verbal
agreement
with
his
father.
Indeed,
according
to
the
appellant
his
father
had
told
him
that
when
he
would
die
the
farm
and
everything
would
be
left
in
his
name;
(k)
In
1976
and
1977,
with
the
money
from
the
outside
work,
the
appellant
purchased
cattle
and
machinery
and
paid
for
the
repairs
to
the
equipment.
Each
year
after
1977,
until
1981,
he
continued
to
increase
his
herd;
(l)
In
December
1981,
he
started
working
on
a
deal
which
was
completed
in
November
1982:
he
acquired
six
quarter
sections
of
land
(960
acres)
for
$20,000
and
leased
five
other
quarter
sections
(800
acres)
from
the
Crown.
He
borrowed
money
from
the
Credit
Union
and
swapped
the
quarter
section
he
owned.
He
is
now
living
on
his
new
farm
which
is
located
17
miles
west
of
Eriksdale.
In
the
Spring
of
1982,
he
had
68
cows
and
calves.
Whereas
he
had
to
make
payments,
he
sold
32
head
of
cattle
in
September
1982
(25
calves
and
7
cows);
(m)
In
1976,
he
had
two
tractors.
In
1982
he
had
two
more,
“a
combine,
one
big
baler,
a
cultivator,
2
diskers
and
harrows,
augers
and
one
crusher”;
(SN
p
25)
(n)
In
1981,
when
his
father
died,
he
inherited
the
undivided
one-fourth
of
the
goods.
His
two
brothers
and
sister
inherited
the
balance;
(o)
In
1982,
the
value
of
the
farm
was
$175,000,
which
$100,000
is
for
the
land.
However,
the
debt
then
was
$76,000.
3.07
In
cross-examination
the
appellant
confirmed
his
former
testimony.
Moreover,
he
testified
that:
(a)
He
was
born
in
1941;
(b)
His
father’s
farm
had
8
quarter
sections,
which
means
1,280
acres.
It
was
an
average-sized
farm;
(c)
Eriksdale
is
96
miles
from
Winnipeg,
due
north;
(d)
His
outside
work
since
1970,
was
on
power
lines,
operating
a
bulldozer,
climbing
towers,
erecting
and
assembling
towers.
Later
he
became
a
foreman;
(e)
He
started
to
work
outside
in
about
1961,
when
he
was
about
20
years
old.
He
then
worked
for
other
farmers.
He
was
around
25
years
old
when
he
started
as.a
heavy
equipment
operator
of
a
bulldozer
to
build
a
road;
(f)
He
has
two
brothers
and
one
sister.
In
fact,
they
all
left
home
when
they
were
around
20
years
old.
They
practically
never
came
back
to
help
on
the
farm;
(g)
His
father
had
about
60
cows;
(h)
The
appellant
purchased
his
first
tractor
for
his
farm
in
1973
for
$7,950.
The
same
year
he
built
a
barn
for
roughly
$5,000
and
bulldozed
40
acres
of
his
farm.
When
he
purchased
it,
indeed,
it
was
all
bush;
(i)
In
1974,
he
worked
in
Nova
Scotia
and
New
Brunswick
for
S
A
Tucker
Atlantic
Ltd;
(j)
In
1975,
he
dois
four
head
of
cattle
for
$1,299;
(k)
In
1975,
he
earned
$41,000,
of
which
$19,000
was
earned
in
British
Columbia
on
power
jobs.
He
was
then
earning
$33
per
hour.
He
was
away
from
the
farm
for
about
4
months;
(l)
In
1977,
and
the
year
after,
he
purchased
poultry
—
50
to
60
every
spring.
4.
Law
—
Cases
at
Law
—
Analysis
4.01
Law
The
main
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
involved
in
the
present
case
are
subsections
(1)
and
(2)
of
section
31,
and
the
definition
of
“farming”
in
section
248.
They
read
as
follows:
31.
(1)
Where
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income,
for
the
purposes
of
sections
3
and
111
his
loss,
if
any,
for
the
year
from
all
farming
businesses
carried
on
by
him
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
aggregate
of
(a)
the
lesser
of
(i)
the
amount
by
which
the
aggregate
of
his
losses
for
the
year,
determined
without
reference
to
this
section
and
before
making
any
deductions
in
respect
of
expenditures
described
in
section
37,
from
all
farming
businesses
carried
on
by
him
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
his
incomes
for
the
year,
so
determined
from
all
such
businesses,
and
(ii)
$2,500
plus
the
lesser
of
(A)
/2
of
the
amount
by
which
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
(i)
exceeds
$2,500,
and
(B)
$2,500,
and
(b)
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
(i)
the
amount
that
would
be
determined
under
subparagraph
(a)(i)
if
it
were
read
as
though
the
words
“and
before
making
any
deductions
in
respect
of
expenditures
described
in
section
37”
were
deleted,
exceeds
(ii)
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
(a)(i);
and
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
(a)(i)
exceeds
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
(a)(ii)
is
the
taxpayer’s
“restricted
farm
loss”
for
the
year.
31.
(2)
For
the
purposes
of
this
section,
the
Minister
may
determine
that
a
taxpayer’s
chief
source
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
is
neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income.
248.
(1)
In
this
Act,
“farming”
includes
tillage
of
the
soil,
livestock
raising
or
exhibiting,
maintaining
of
horses
for
racing,
raising
of
poultry,
fur
farming,
dairy
farming,
fruit
growing
and
the
keeping
of
bees,
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment
under
a
person
engaged
in
the
business
of
farming;
4.02
Cases
at
Law
Counsel
referred
the
Board
to
the
following
cases:
1.
William
Moldowan
v
The
Queen,
[1977]
CTC
310;
77
DTC
5213;
2.
James
A
Wilf
ley
v
The
Queen,
[1974]
CTC
510;
74
DTC
6422.
4.03
Analysis
4.03.1
The
respondent,
in
reassessing
the
appellant
on
the
basis
of
section
31
and
allowing
a
$5,000
loss,
admits
in
fact
that
the
appellant
had
a
farming
business
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit.
The
only
problem
here
in
fact
is
whether
the
appellant’s
chief
source
of
income
is
“neither
farming
nor
a
combination
of
farming
and
some
other
source
of
income”.
On
this
point,
it
is
necessary
to
quote
the
well-known
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
the
Moldowan
case
at
314
[5215]
which
reads
as
follows:
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
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.
Further,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
also
defined
the
three
classes
of
farmer
that
the
income
tax
[Act]
envisages:
(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
s
13(1)
in
those
years
in
which
he
sustains
a
farming
loss.
(2)
the
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
but
carried
on
farming
as
a
sideline
business.
Such
a
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
the
deductions
spelled
out
in
s
13(1)
in
respect
of
farming
losses.
(3)
the
taxpayer
who
does
not
look
to
farming,
or
to
farming
and
some
subordinate
source
of
income,
for
his
livelihood
and
who
carried
on
some
farming
activities
as
a
hobby.
The
losses
sustained
by
such
a
taxpayer
on
his
non-business
farming
are
not
deductible
in
any
amount.
Moreover,
the
Court
gave
more
explanation
on
the
first
class:
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.
4.03.2
What
is
the
preponderance
of
the
evidence?
(a)
On
the
one
hand,
not
only
was
the
appellant
brought
up
on
a
farm,
but
he
always
continued
to
have,
at
least
partially,
farming
activities.
In
1969,
when
he
got
married
he
bought
a
quarter
section
of
land
and
bulldozed
40
acres
(paras
3.06(a),
(b)
and
(e)
and
3.07(e)).
After
the
divorce
in
1974,
and
despite
his
financial
problems,
he
continued
to
own
his
quarter
section
of
land,
to
live
on
it,
and
he
increased
his
herd
(para
3.06(g)
and
(k)).
In
1977,
he
purchased
poultry
(para
3.07(1)).
Even
if
he
was
five
months
outside
as
an
employee,
he
stayed
on
the
farm
for
seven
months;
(b)
On
the
other
hand,
while
he
owned
a
quarter
of
land
he
moved
to
Chicago
for
2
Z>
years.
Only
one
quarter
of
his
farm
was
cultivated.
It
is
the
Court’s
opinion
that
farming
became
his
chief
source
of
income
when
in
1981,
he
made
the
first
steps
to
acquire
the
appropriate
assets
for
the
land
and
machinery.
It
is,
in
fact,
the
objective
test
which
proves
that
the
appellant
ceased
to
be
a
gentleman
farmer
and
became
a
real
farmer.
Therefore
for
the
year
1981
and
for
the
years
after,
the
Court
considers
that
the
major
appellant’s
preoccupation
was
farming.
For
the
years
before
1981,
the
Court
considers
that
the
appellant
was
a
gentleman
farmer.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
dismissed
in
accordance
with
the
above
reasons
for
judgment.
Appeal
dismissed.