Roland
St-Onge:—The
appeal
of
SBI
Properties
Limited
came
before
me
on
January
23,
1981,
at
the
City
of
Montreal,
Quebec
and
the
issue
is
whether
the
appellant
is
allowed
to
report
a
portion
of
its
income
as
being
“active”
and
another
portion
as
being
“passive”
for
its
1972,
1973,
1974,
1975,
1976
and
1977
taxation
years.
The
facts
of
this
appeal
are
well
set
forth
in
the
notice
of
appeal
at
paragraphs
1
to
12
inclusive,
which
read
as
follows:
1.
The
Company
reported
a
portion
of
its
income
relating
primarily
to
land
matters—as
being
active—and
another
portion
of
its
business
as
being
passive.
2.
The
assessment
purports
to
transfer
all
of
the
income
into
the
active
category.
3.
The
company’s
income
which
is
reported
as
passive
involves
income
not
from
the
operation
of
a
business
but
rather
from
investment
in
properties.
4.
These
properties
are
revenue-bearing
properties.
As
a
result
of
investment
by
the
company,
it
earns
rental
income.
5.
This
rental
income
accrues
to
the
company
while
the
company
exercises
an
entirely
passive
role,
in
view
of
the
fact
that
the
entire
business
operation
and
management
of
the
properties
are
vested
in
another
company
(SBI
Management
Limited)
and
not
in
the
company
itself.
6.
The
company
has
no
employees
and
no
operations
and
simply
receives
the
net
rent
which
is
collected
by
the
other
company
hereinabove
referred
to.
/.
The
assessment
appears
to
obliterate
the
distinction
between
active
and
passive
business
which
is
prescribed
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
8.
The
appellant’s
classification
of
active
and
passive
business
income
was
and
is
correct
and
the
effective
reclassification
under
which
the
passive
business
income
is
ignored
in
the
assessment
is
incorrect.
9.
Under
reserve
of
the
foregoing,
the
assessment
overlooks
a
preliminary
distinction
between
income
from
a
business
and
income
from
property.
The
provisions
of
Section
129(4)(a)
contemplate
a
“Canadian
Investment
income”
and,
accordingly,
entitlement
to
refundable
dividend
tax
income
both
from
a
source
in
Canada
that
is
a
“property”
(“other
than
a
property
used
or
held
by
the
corporation
in
the
year
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
a
business”)
as
well
as
“income
for
the
year
from
a
source
in
Canada
that
is
a
business
other
than
an
active
business”.
This
reflects
the
distinction
between
income
from
property
and
income
from
a
business,
whether
active
or
passive.
In
the
present
instance,
the
income
derived
from
the
ownership
of
appellant’s
buildings
is
income
from
property
which
is
different
and
distinguishable
from
income
from
a
business.
Accordingly,
as
we
are
not
dealing
with
income
from
a
business
but
rather
income
from
property,
it
become
irrelevant
to
enquire
whether
the
nonexistent
business,
as
distinguished
from
the
income
from
property,
should
be
classified
as
active
or
passive.
10.
By
hypothesis,
Section
129(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
deals
with
income
of
a
corporation
as
compared
with
income
from
an
individual.
If,
as
implied
in
the
assessment,
all
income
of
all
corporations
is
ipso
facto
active
business
income
simply
because
it
is
the
income
of
a
corporation,
then
such
an
interpretation
of
the
section
would
render
it
and
the
various
constituent
provisions
thereof
completely
meaningless.
11.
The
relevant
Section
129(4)
clearly
provides
for
and
postulates
exactly
the
kind
of
distinction
that
was
reflected
in
the
appellant’s
returns
and
which
are
ignored
as
though
they
were
nonexistent
in
the
assessments
under
appeal.
12.
For
protective
reasons,
exception
is
also
taken
to
the
reference
to
the
amount
of
“refundable
dividend
tax”
reflected
in
the
assessment
under
appeal.
The
respondent
alleged
the
following:
4.
In
assessing
the
appellant
for
its
1972
to
1976
taxation
years,
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
the
following
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
The
appellant
owns
several
shopping
centres
in
Canada;
(b)
The
purposes
and
objects
of
the
appellant
as
set
forth
in
the
letters
patents
creating
the
appellant,
in
1971,
include:
“(a)
to
acquire
by
purchase,
lease,
exchange
or
otherwise
moveable
and
immoveable
property
and
rights
including
lands,
buildings,
business
or
industrial
concerns
and
undertakings
mortgages,
hypothecs,
contracts,
concessions,
franchises,
patents,
licenses,
securities,
and
any
other
interest
in
moveable
and
immoveable
property;
to
take,
build
upon,
hold,
own,
maintain,
work,
develop,
sell,
lease,
exchange,
improve
or
otherwise
deal
in
and
dispose
of
such
moveable
and
immoveable
property;”
(c)
Since
incorporation
in
1971,
the
main
activity
of
the
appellant
has
been
the
renting
of
the
properties
it
owns
as
evidence
inter
alia
by
the
following:
(i)
the
opening
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
lists
revenue
properties
to
have
a
capital
cost
of
$12,628,684
out
of
total
assets
of
$14,155,917;
(ii)
gross
rental
income
from
the
date
of
incorporation
to
July
1978
have
been
over
$19,000,000
as
compared
to
less
than
$2,400,000.00
derived
from
other
activities:
(d)
The
appellant
through
its
employees,
does
participate
in
the
administration
of
the
shopping
centres
although
most
of
the
work
related
thereto
is
done
by
an
associated
company
SBI
Management
Limited
which
acts
as
agent
for
the
appellant:
(e)
The
shareholders
with
voting
rights
in
both
the
appellant
and
SBI
Management
Limited
are
the
following:
|
SBI
Manage
|
Appellant
|
|
ment
Limited
|
Ezekiel
Schouela
|
40%
|
40%
|
Edouard
Schouela
|
20%
|
20%
|
Maurice
Schouela
|
20%
|
20%
|
Gamil
Schouela
|
20%
|
20%
|
(f)
Services
provided
to
tenants
by
the
appellant
include
security
and
maintenance
services
to
buildings
and
parking
lots;
(g)
In
addition
to
those
services
the
appellant’s
representatives
are
active,
in
association
with
tenants,
in
various
associations
designed
to
“promote
and
advertise
and
otherwise
carry
out
activities
to
increase
the
volume
of
business
of
the
tenants
of
the
Shopping
Centre”.
(h)
Clauses
in
the
various
leases
signed
by
the
appellant
and
its
tenants
contain
provisions
relating
to
the
selling
price
of
merchandise,
the
hours
and
days
of
openings,
the
personnel
requirements,
the
types
of
business
found
in
specified
areas
and
advertising;
(i)
In
addition
to
shopping
centres
Appellant
also
owns
commercial
buildings,
service
stations
and
schools
which
accounted
for
6
or
7%
of
its
gross
income
in
1976;
(j)
During
the
years
in
issue
the
Appellant
carried
on
an
active
business;
Mr
Edouard
Schouela,
vice-president
of
the
appellant
company,
testified
as
follows:
the
appellant
company
owns
real
estate
in
Canada
such
as
shopping
centres,
commercial
buildings,
service
stations
for
a
capital
cost
of
some
$12,500,000,
which
properties
are
administered
by
another
taxpayer,
SBI
Management
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Management”)
for
a
fixed
fee
or
percentage
of
the
gross
income.
The
said
properties
were
owned
either
completely
by
the
appellant
or
in
association
with
other
companies.
All
the
leases
were
negotiated
by
using
a
printed
form
by
Management,
with
the
exception
of
some
leases
with
the
Government
who
insisted
on
dealing
directly
with
the
owner
of
the
buildings.
However,
in
that
last
instance,
the
administration
was
given
to
Management.
The
appellant
had
no
employees
and
paid
only
the
Directors
and
Management
fees
and
also,
in
some
instances,
the
cost
of
heating
and
cleaning
the
properties
in
which
case
the
appellant
was
reimbursed
by
Management.
Management
collected
the
rents
and
charged
the
operating
and
management
expenses
to
each
property
and,
at
the
end
of
each
year,
remitted
the
net
proceeds
to
the
owner
of
the
properties.
Management
also
paid
the
mortgage
payments
and
the
insurance
premiums
but
the
expenses
that
were
deductible
from
earned
rental
income
were
deducted
by
the
appellant
company
for
each
year
in
its
income
tax
return.
Management
had
two
clients:
Capital
City
Centre
Ltd
and
the
appellant
company
and
hired
50
employees.
Upon
cross-examination,
the
witness
admitted:
that
80%
of
the
appellant’s
assets
was
rental
properties;
that
the
appellant
company
was
the
half
owner
with
a
Mexican
group
of
Capital
City
Centre
Ltd
which
owns
seven
shopping
centres
in
Canada;
that
the
appellant
company
had
a
telephone
number,
an
office
in
Montreal
and
a
permanent
establishment
in
Alberta
and
lent
money
to
third
parties
for
an
amount
of
$2,000,000
in
1972
and
$1,000,000
in
1976.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
argued
that
the
most
important
portion
of
the
appellant’s
income
was
from
properties
and
not
from
an
active
business.
He
first
based
his
argument
on
sections
3
and
129
to
say
that
the
said
income
was
from
a
source,
that
is
some
properties
valued
at
over
12
million
dollars
and
consequently,
section
129
would
find
its
application.
Alternatively,
the
said
income
was
not
from
an
active
business
and
in
both
cases,
a
taxpayer
is
allowed
to
receive
a
dividend
refund.
Prior
to
the
hearing,
he
sent
written
submissions
to
Revenue
Canada
which
were
filed
as
Exhibit
A-4
and
referred
to
substantial
jurisprudence
and
enunciate
the
appellant
company’s
contention,
part
of
which
reads
as
follows:
The
distinction
as
it
applies
to
real
estate
is
evident
in
the
leading
case
of
Henry
Wertman
v
MNR,
[1964]
CTC
252.
While
the
issues
related
to
rights
as
between
husband
and
wife,
the
main
desideratum
of
the
judgment
was
that
the
rental
income
from
an
apartment
building
constructed
in
Vancouver
at
a
cost
of
approximately
$450,000
was
income
from
a
property
and
rules
relating
to
a
husband
and
wife
being
partners
in
a
“business”
were
not
applicable
thereto.
As
expressed
in
the
Exchequer
Court
judgment:
“There
may
well
be
cases
wherein
the
extent
of
various
services
provided
by
the
landlord
under
the
terms
of
the
leasing
contract
is
such
that
the
rental
paid
by
the
tenant
can
be
regarded
as
in
a
substantial
measure
a
payment
for
such
services
as
well
as
for
the
use
of
the
property
and
the
interrelation
of
the
use
of
the
premises
with
the
use
of
such
services
may
be
so
extensive
that
the
whole
sum
paid
could
readily
be
regarded
not
as
mere
rental
of
property
but
as
true
receipts
of
a
business
of
providing
apartments
and
services
to
tenants
but
I
do
not
regard
this
as
a
case
of
that
kind.
The
nature
of
the
services
provided
in
my
opinion
also
has
a
bearing
on
the
question
some,
such
as
maid
service
and
linen
and
laundry
service,
being
more
indicative
of
a
business
operation
than
the
heating
of
the
building
which
in
my
view
is
so
closely
concerned
with
the
property
itself
as
to
offer
no
definite
indication
one
way
or
the
other.
Nor
do
I
think
that
the
fact
that
the
management
of
the
property
occupies
the
appellant’s
time
or
the
fact
that
he
uses
his
car
to
go
to
and
from
the
property
indicate
that
the
operation
is
a
business
for
at
most
these
facts
indicate
that
he
renders
a
service
to
himself
and
to
the
other
owners
of
the
building
which
so
far
as
charged
for
represents
a
proper
outgoing
against
revenue
for
the
purpose
of
ascertaining
the
net
profit
divisible
among
the
owners
regardless
of
whether
the
rentals
are
mere
income
from
property
or
income
from
a
business.”
It
will
be
noted
that
in
the
foregoing
case
the
taxpayer
had
actually
undertaken
certain
management
activities
not
applicable
in
the
present
instance
and,
even
then,
these
management
activities
were
not
judged
sufficient
to
reclassify
the
income
as
being
income
from
a
business
as
distinct
from
income
from
a
property.
In
the
case
of
Harry
Walsh
and
Archie
Robert
Micay
v
MNR,
[1965]
CTC
478,
the
taxpayers
had
an
interest
in
two
large
apartment
buildings
and
a
shopping
centre.
The
management
was
entrusted
to
a
company
controlled
by
the
taxpayers.
The
court
affirmed
that
they
were
receiving
income
from
a
property
and
they
were
not
receiving
income
from
a
business.
As
a
result,
the
court
concluded
that
the
rules
relating
to
a
“business”
in
respect
of
capital
cost
allowances
could
not
apply.
As
the
Exchequer
Court
expressed
it
at
pages
484
and
485:—
“In
my
view,
prima
facie
the
perception
of
rent
as
landowner
is
not
the
conduct
of
a
business,
but
cases
can
arise
where
the
extent
of
the
various
services
provided
by
the
landlord
under
the
terms
of
a
leasing
contract
and
the
time
and
labour
devoted
by
him
are
such
that
the
rental
paid
by
the
tenant
can
be
regarded
as
in
a
substantial
measure
payment
for
such
services
as
well
as
for
the
use
of
the
property
and
the
interrelation
of
the
use
of
the
premises
with
the
use
of
such
services
may
be
so
extensive
that
the
whole
sum
could
readily
be
regarded
not
as
mere
rental
of
property,
but
as
true
receipts
of
a
business
of
providing
apartment
suites
and
services
to
tenants.
It
is
a
question
of
fact
at
what
point
mere
ownership
of
real
property
and
the
letting
thereof
has
passed
into
commercial
enterprise
and
administration.
In
the
present
case
I
do
not
consider
it
necessary
to
decide
whether
the
appellants
engaged
Silver
Heights
Development
Co,
Ltd
as
their
management
agent
with
respect
to
the
properties
in
question
in
the
capacity
as
agent
or
independent
contractor.
It
is
obvious
that
if
the
management
agent
had
not
been
engaged
then
the
services
undertaken
by
it
would
have
been
performed
by
the
appellants
personally
or
in
such
proportions
as
might
be
agreed
upon
among
themselves
and
the
other
two
co-owners.
On
the
evidence
I
think
that
the
rentals
received
by
the
appellants
should
be
regarded
as
having
accrued
to
them
as
owners
of
the
properties
rather
than
as
traders
and
that
the
rentals
accrued
from
use
by
the
tenants
of
the
property
in
that
the
rentals
represent
payments
for
their
occupation
thereof
rather
than
from
a
combination
of
such
use
and
the
other
services
from
which
the
tenants
benefited.
I
regard
the
additional
services
which
were
provided
to
tenants
as
being
relatively
insignificant
and
insufficient
to
convert
the
appellants
from
landowners
into
the
conductors
of
a
business.
The
services
such
as
the
provision
of
heat,
electric
stoves
and
refrigerators,
janitorial
services
to
the
common
hallways,
snow
removal,
carpeting
in
some
rooms
of
the
suites
and
drapes
for
windows
are
those
which
tenants
have
come
to
expect
and
are
those
which
landlords
normally
provide
in
living
accommodation
of
this
kind.
These
are
refinements
offered
to
the
tenants
in
connection
with
the
occupation
of
suites
and,
in
most
instances,
are
also
property
for
the
use
of
which,
along
with
the
Suites
themselves,
rent
is
paid.
The
heating
of
the
building
and
snow
removal
are
ancillary
to
the
property
itself
and
are
exercised
in
the
landlord’s
capacity
as
owner
of
the
property
rather
than
as
a
service
to
tenants
although
the
tenants
incidentally
enjoy
the
benefits
therof.
While
the
nature
of
services
provided
has
a
bearing
on
the
question,
the
services
above
described
are
not
such
as
would
characterize
the
rental
received
therefor
as
income
from
a
business
rather
than
income
from
property,
as
services
such
as
the
provisions
of
breakfast,
maid,
linen,
laundry
and
such
like
services
might
do.”
In
the
leading
cases
which
have
established
the
now
prevailing
rules
on
active
versus
passive
income,
the
courts
were
dealing
with
companies
operating
mortgage
businesses.
The
distinction
above
drawn
could
not
be
made
and
did
not
apply.
Since
these
leading
cases,
the
issue
came
out
very
clearly
in
Spence
Building
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
2104.
It
might
be
noted
that
it
was
the
Department
which
contended
in
Spence
Building
Ltd
that
the
company,
while
receiving
income
from
the
operation
of
a
building,
was
not
conducting
an
active
business.
The
Department’s
assessment
was
affirmed
in
the
judgment.
The
judgment
itself
points
out
the
fundamental
necessity
for
first
considering
whether
or
not
there
is
income
from
a
business
before
one
determines
whether
the
business
is
active
or
passive.
The
court
concluded
that
in
this
instance
the
income
was
from
the
property
and
therefore
there
was
no
income
from
a
business
whether
active
or
passive.
This
same
point
was
made
in
favour
of
the
Department
in
Smithers
Plaza
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1975]
CTC
2171
in
which
the
Department
successfully
affirmed
the
proposition
that
the
company
which
operated
a
shopping
centre
was
not
carrying
on
an
active
business.
In
that
case,
incidentally,
they
had
an
employee
as
a
janitor
and
they
undertook
a
greater
measure
of
activities
by
far
than
is
applicable
in
any
of
the
Schouela
cases.
As
expressed
at
pages
2173-74
of
the
judgment:
“I
do
not
believe
that
anyone
would
seriously
quarrel
with
the
definition
of
an
investment
as
being
the
investing
of
money
or
capital
to
secure
profitable
returns
in
the
form
of
interest
or
income.
Nor,
I
believe,
would
anyone
disagree
with
the
proposition
that
a
person
may
invest
his
money
in
a
business
in
order
to
derive
a
profit
from
its
active
operation
or
he
may
choose
to
invest
in
property
and
passively
derive
revenue
from
rentals
or
from
interest
on
his
investment.
However,
the
Income
Tax
Act
has
made
an
important
and
consistent
legal
distinction
between
income
from
a
business
and
income
from
investment
or
property,
and
it
seems
to
me
that
this
basic
distinction
is
an
essential
consideration
in
determining
whether
or
not
the
appellant
falls
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
125(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
my
opinion
investment
in
movable
or
immovable
property
on
a
long-term
basis
cannot
in
general
be
considered
to
be
a
profit-producing
business
enterprise.
Whether
the
taxpayer
invests
in
one
or
in
a
dozen
rental
properties,
whether
he
leases
the
premises
and
collects
the
rent
himself
or
has
an
agent
do
it
for
him,
whether
or
not
he
provides
janitorial
services,
does
not
in
my
view
change
the
nature
of
his
investment
if
the
services
rendered
are
aimed
at
and
limited
to
the
leasing
and
the
maintenance
of
his
property
and
the
structural
upkeep
of
the
leased
premises.
The
provision
of
usual
maintenance
services
and
looking
after
their
attending
cost
is,
in
my
view,
an
integral
and
necessary
part
of
a
taxpayer’s
investment
in
property,
which
gives
rise,
not
to
a
business
profit,
but
to
rental
income.
I
do
not
believe
that
the
degree
or
the
extent
of
the
_~
taxpayer’s
activity
in
connection
with
the
normal
operation
and
maintenance
of
a
long-term
rental
property
can
automatically
transform
the
taxpayer’s
investment
in
such
property
into
an
investment
in
a
business.
The
nature
of
the
two
investments
is,/in
my
view,
basically
and
fundamentally
different
and,
for
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
should
not
be
confused.”
Reference
may
be
made
to
the
Department’s
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-73R2
on
“Income
from
an
Active
Business”.
Paragraph
5(a)
offers
illustrations
of
income
derived
fro
the
assets
being
an
incident
of
an
active
business.
The
only
relevant
illustration/is
in
subparagraph
(g)
dealing
with
“Rent
on
property
which
is
inventory
of
thé
active
business
while
it
is
being
held
for
sale”.
This
is
an
implicit
recognition
that
where,
as
in
the
present
case,
the
property
is
not
being
held
for
sale,
the
income
from
such
property
is
not
an
incident
of
any
active
business.
It
was
established
many
years
ago
in
a
series
of
cases
that,
even
when
a
company
was
carrying
on
the
routine
work
of
maintaining
and
caring
for
rented
property/
it
was
held
not
to
be
“active”.
Amongst
cases
illustrating
this
point
is
Mansori
v
MNR,
52
DTC
433
and
Sawle
Estate
v
MNR,
67
DTC
524.
It
is
the
Tax
Department
which
has
to
a
relentless
and
extreme
degree
pursued
the
policy
of
assessment
exactly
the
opposite
of
that
which
it
is
seeking
to
affirm
in
the
present
case.
While
the
Department
failed
to
succeed
in
the
Rockmore
line
of
cases,
there
are
a
number
of
instances
where
the
assessments
relating
to
real
estate
have
been
upheld.
Thus,
for
example,
in
Centennial
Shopping
Centre
Ltd,
the
Department
submitted
and
the
Board
affirmed
that
the
operation
of
a
shopping
centre
was
not
an
active
business.
The
Department’s
position
was
expressed
in
the
following
terms
at
2256
of
the
judgment:—
“The
respondent’s
position
is
that
the
appellant
contracted
the
management
and
operation
of
the
shopping
centre
to
an
independent
organization
on
a
fee
basis
and
accordingly
is
not
in
active
business
itself.”
When
it
suits
its
purpose,
and
notwithstanding
the
judgment
in
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
(of
which
more
anon),
the
Department
continues
in
its
assessing
practices
to
affirm
that
the
taxpayer
is
not
entitled
to
advance
the
interpretation
of
the
law
which
the
Department
is
seeking
to
advance
in
the
present
instance.
Thus,
as
recently
as
February
28,
1988,
in
a
judgment
rendered
four
months
after
the
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
case,
the
Department’s
position
was
upheld
in
denying
active
business
status
to
the
taxpayer
company.
The
judgment
observes
that,
according
to
the
testimony
of
the
principal
witness,
“It
seems
that
there
were
not
very
many
employees”.
Perhaps
you
have
abandoned
judgment
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer
in
this
case
in
view
of
what
appears
to
be
a
change
of
policy.
However,
as
the
record
stands,
your
position
in
that
instance
is
in
sharp
conflict
with
your
present
contentions,
all
the
more
serious
in
view
of
the
fact
that
your
position
was
upheld.
A
recent
incidental
illustration
of
the
first
point
in
the
present
submissions
is
afforded
by
the
judgment
in
March
Shipping
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
2527.
The
case
did
not
deal
with
active
business
for
purposes
of
section
125.
It
did
decide
that
the
corporate
income
was
not
business
income
but
simply
investment
income.
While
this
related
to
the
appellant’s
refundable
dividend
tax
on
hand,
the
underlying
distinction
is
the
same.
Apparently
the
Department
seeks
to
justify
its
“volte-face”,
inconsistent
though
it
may
be,
by
the
judgment
in
Her
Majesty
the
Quenn
and
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd,
[1977]
CTC
186.
Admittedly,
in
dealing
with
the
second
part
of
this
submission,
this
judgment
goes
very
far
in
suggesting
that
once
the
company
has
income
from
a
business
it
does
not
take
very
much
to
constitute
such
income
as
active
business
income.
The
judgment,
however,
acknowledges
that
there
must
first
be
income
from
a
business
before
one
can
reach
the
conclusion
that
it
is
income
from
an
active
business.
It
also
acknowledges
in
conclusion
5
at
the
end
of
the
judgment
that
‘‘part
of
the
income
of
a
private
corporation
in
Canada
can
be
income
from
an
‘‘active
business’’
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
125(1)
of
the
Act
and
another
part
of
its
income
can
be
income
within
the
meaning
of
section
129
of
the
Act”.
The
latter
income
is
obviously
not
‘‘active
business
income”.
However,
even
Cadboro
Bay
recognized
the
possibility
of
a
company
earning
passive
income.
All
of
the
judgments
generally
affirm
the
proposition
that
each
case
must
be
considered
in
accordance
with
its
relevant
facts.
In
the
Cadboro
Bay
case
you
will
note
that
there
was
no
management
company
to
look
after
the
real
estate.
The
characterizations
of
income
from
property
applied
in
Walsh
and
Micay
and
as
would
be
involved
in
the
present
case
had
no
application.
For
the
Department
to
proceed
from
one
extreme
to
another
is
scarcely
warranted
by
the
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
judgment
in
the
context
of
all
of
the
applicable
jurisprudence.
It
also
violates
general
principles
of
consistency
and
uniformity
in
assessing
practice.
When
it
suits
its
purpose
the
Department
does
not
mechanistically
adhere
to
the
dicta
pronounced
by
the
courts,
let
alone
those
dicta
which
are
characterized
by
lawyers
as
“obiter
dicta”.
The
very
same
judge
who
rendered
the
judgment
in
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
was
the
author
in
another
case
of
very
sharp
criticism
of
the
departmental
practice
of
pleading
in
the
alternative.
In
N
C
Brewster
v
Her
Majesty
the
Queen,
[1976]
CTC
107,
Mr
Justice
Gibson
observed:—
“It
seems
therefore
that
it
is
fundamentally
wrong
in
law
to
plead
assumptions
in
the
alternative.
In
like
manner,
it
is
fundamentally
wrong
in
law
for
any
assessors
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
assess
or
reassess
and
not
tell
precisely
the
basis
for
such
assessment
or
reassessment
but
instead
as
certain
assessors
often
do,
namely
assess
or
reassess
in
the
alternative,
or
merely
record
the
basis
as
contrary
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
on
the
premise
that
thereby
they
are
keeping
their
options
open,
and
that
they
are
entitled
in
law
to
do
so.”
Notwithstanding
this
very
categoric
observation,
the
Department
seems
to
have
no
hesitation
in
continuing
the
practice
which
he
so
sharply
criticizes.
In
the
last
case
but
one
that
I
had
occasion
to
plead
before
the
courts,
within
the
past
month
or
so,
the
Department
not
only
proceeded
on
the
basis
of
two
alternative
assumptions
but
with
varying
degrees
of
persistence,
withdrawal
and
reiteration
on
four
types
of
alternative
assumptions.
It
can
thus
be
seen
tht
there
is
nothing
in
departmental
precedent
or
the
way
In
which
it
has
reacted
to
past
judgments
of
the
courts
or
of
the
same
judge
which
would
require
it
to
apply
the
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
conclusion
with
such
rigidity
as
to
reverse
completely
the
standard
it
had
previously
taken
in
cases
such
as
those
with
which
we
are
now
concerned.
An
added
responsibility
devolves
upon
the
Department
to
avoid
an
overly
rigid
approach
in
a
situation
of
this
kind.
It
was
the
government
which
chose,
in
the
face
of
previously
prevailing
inconsistent,
shaky
and
insecure
jurisprudential
foundations
about
the
difference
between
an
active
and
a
non-active
business,
to
adopt
this
distinction
as
an
important
element
of
its
1972
tax
reform
program.
This
was
done,
as
it
were,
“en
pleine
connaissance
de
cause”.
It
scarcely
seems
appropriate
to
come
forward
seven
years
after
the
law
has
been
in
operation
to
assert
with
inflexible
rigidity
against
the
taxpayer
that
by
reason
of
the
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
judgment
the
law
does
not
mean
anything
at
all
approaching
what
the
Department
and
everybody
elso
understood
and
was
told
that
it
means.
This
inflexibility
is
all
the
more
striking
in
that
the
Department
seems
perfectly
capable
of
sensing
variations
depending
upon
the
facts
when
these
variations
are
invoked
in
assessments
which
contest
the
taxpayers’
returns.
May
I
respectfully
draw
your
attention
to
another
serious
contradiction
in
departmental
policy
and
interpretation
if
it
now
throws
up
its
hands
and
applies
the
Cadboro
Bay
judgment
to
mean
that
all
income
is
active
income.
The
whole
structure
of
the
Foreign
Accrual
Property
Income
concept
for
offshore
investments
is
based
upon
an
intensely
regulated,
detailed,
complicated
series
of
rules
designed
to
subject
to
immediate
Canadian
taxation
the
passive
investments
of
subsidiaries
or
affiliates
in
offshore
locations.
There
is
excluded
from
all
of
this
the
income
from
‘‘an
active
business
of
a
foreign
affiliate”.
If
practically
everything
is
an
active
business,
which
you
have
now
indicated
to
be
the
departmental
reaction
to
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings,
does
this
mean
that
the
Department
is
abandoning
without
any
effort
application
of
all
of
the
FAPI
rules
except
in
relationship
to
those
companies
where,
under
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
standards
as
you
now
postulate
them,
there
is
passive
income?
I
think
you
can
take
it
for
granted
that
you
and
your
lawyers
will
argue,
as
I
am
arguing,
that
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
has
a
more
limited
application.
Indeed,
your
assessing
practice
has
been
such
that
it
might
be
said
(and
I
am
amongst
those
who
have
said
it)
that
you
have
even
been
inclined
to
apply
the
FAPI
rules
before
they
were
legally
operative.
In
any
event,
when
viewed
from
this
context,
I
am
sure
that
the
Department
would
be
the
first
to
affirm
that
neither
the
Cadboro
Bay
Holding
judgment
nor
the
combination
of
all
the
applicable
jurisprudence
has
had
the
effect
which
you
are
claiming
is
applicable
in
the
present
case:
that
for
all
practical
purposes
all
corporate
income
is
active
business
income.
I
would
respectfully
request
you
to
apply
to
the
present
case
the
arguments
which
you
will
be
invoking
and
have
invoked
in
those
situations
where
the
Department
has
asserted
that
the
corporate
income
is
passive.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
referred
among
other
cases
to
the
decision
in
King
George
Hotels
Limited
v
The
Queen
and
R
Cavalier
Enterprises
Ltd
v
The
Queen,
a
1980
Federal
Court
decision
([1981]
CTC
78;
81
DTC
5062.)
In
this
decision,
Mr
Justice
Smith
referred
to
The
Queen
v
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd,
[1977]
CTC
186,
77
DTC
5115,
in
which
Mr
Justice
Gibson
made
a
thorough
study
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
decisions
in
The
Queen
v
Rockmore
Investments
Ltd,
[1976]
CTC
291;
76
DTC
6156;
ESG
Holdings
Ltd
v
the
Queen,
[1976]
CTC
295;
76
DTC
6158,
and
The
Queen
v
MRT
Investments
Ltd,
[1976]
CTC
294;
76
DTC
6158.
In
Rockmore,
the
concept
of
active
business
is
not
used
to
exclude
a
business,
ie
for
an
absolute
state
of
suspension
because
subparagraph
125(1)(a)(i)
is
dealing
with
income
from
an
active
business
and
it
must
be
assumed
that
the
word
“active”
was
used
to
exclude
some
business
having
sufficient
activity
in
the
year
to
give
rise
to
income.
Mr
Justice
Gibson
further
said:
‘‘What
quantum
of
activity
must
there
be
in
a
taxation
year
that
gives
rise
to
income
from
an
active
business?”
The
answer
was:
“That
any
quantum
of
business
activity
that
gives
rise
to
income
in
a
taxation
year
for
a
private
corporation
in
Canada
is
sufficient
to
make
mandatory
the
characterization
of
such
income
as
income
from
an
active
business.”
In
King
George
Hotels
Limited
decision,
Mr
Justice
Smith
then
concluded
that:
“There
was
nothing
in
section
125
to
justify
a
conclusion
that
a
corporation
whose
entire
income
came
from
investment
could
not
be
considered
as
carrying
on
an
active
business
when
the
making
of
investment
was
the
very
purpose
for
which
it
was
incorporated.”
In
the
case
of
ESG
Holdings
Ltd
whose
business
was
merely
turned
over
to
another
company
without
further
intervention
or
supervision,
the
Federal
Court
decided
that
it
was
not
active
business
but
the
Court
of
Appeal,
on
a
unanimous
decision,
stated
that
there
was
no
material
difference
in
principle
if
it
was
carried
on
through
the
agency
of
an
independent
contractor.
from
a
‘business
other
than
an
active
business’
must
mean
income
from
a
business
that
is
an
‘absolute
state
of
suspension’
.
.
.
(that
is
devoid
of
any
quantum
of
business
activity,
but
which
has
some
assets
which
produces
income)”.
In
Cadboro
Bay
Holdings
Ltd
Mr
Justice
Gibson
said:
|
.
.
what
is
income
|
Counsel
for
the
appellant
then
cited
the
following
pages
of
the
King
George
Hotels
Limited
decision:
The
only
person
who
was
called
as
a
witness
at
the
trial
was
Donald
R
Leier.
He
is
the
president
of
both
plaintiffs
an
also
of
JP
Management
Services
Ltd,
whose
function
will
be
indicated
below.
He
and
his
brothers
and
sister
held,
at
all
relevant
times,
the
great
majority
of
the
shares
of
all
three
companies.
Donald
R
Leier
was
and
still
is
manager
of
JP
Management
Services
Ltd,
in
which
he
holds
50%
of
the
shares,
which
company,
for
convenience,
is
herein
generally
referred
to
as
JP.
The
plaintiff
companies
are
generally
referred
to
respectively
as
King
George
and
Cavalier.
Donald
R
Leier
is
paid
a
salary
by
JP
and
is
also
paid
$50
per
year
by
King
George,
but
receives
no
salary
from
Cavaier.
The
leases
with
which
we
are
concerned
all
relate
to
premises
located
in
one
or
other
of
three
buildings
situate
on
portions
of
the
land
described
as
Lots
16
to
25,
both
inclusive,
all
in
Bolck
149
in
the
City
of
Saskatoon
in
the
Province
of
Saskatchewan,
according
to
a
plan
of
record
in
the
land
titles
office
for
the
Saskatoon
land
registration
district
as
No.
(Q
2)
C195.
Exhibit
P-7
is
a
master
lease
for
10
years
of
all
the
land
described
in
the
foregoing
paragraph,
from
Cavalier
to
King
George
at
a
rental
of
$228,000
for
the
first
year,
payable
$19,000
monthly.
Under
the
lease
King
George,
has
the
right
to
assign
or
sublet
all
or
any
part
of
the
demised
premises
and
all
the
leases
in
question
herein
have
been
made
by
it
(through
the
agency
of
JP)
to
various
tenants
for
various
business
enterprises.
The
King
George
Hotel
itself
is
one
of
the
buildings
on
part
of
the
described
land,
as
are
the
King
George
Arcade
and
the
King
George
Parkade.
Some
of
the
premises
leased
to
tenants
by
King
George
are
in
the
hotel,
but
most
of
them
are
in
the
Arcade,
or
Parkade,
and
one
is
a
lease
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
a
building
known
as
the
Royal
Bank
building.
Some
of
the
stalls
in
the
Parkade
are
also
leased
on
a
monthly
basis.
While
the
plaintiffs
operate
their
own
hotels,
the
overall
management
of
the
plaintiff
companies
is
not
handled
by
King
George
or
Cavalier,
but
is
in
the
hands
of
JP
as
it
has
been
since
about
1965.
Both
King
George
and
Cavalier
pay
JP
for
its
services.
Donald
R
Leier,
as
manager
of
JP,
looks
after
this
business
himself,
including
the
leased
premises.
In
nearly
all
instances
he
negotiates
with
prospective
tenants
both
for
new
leases
and
for
renewals,
settles
the
rent
and
other
terms
and
draws
the
leases.
When
vacancies
occur
there
is
generally
a
new
tenant
either
waiting
or
readily
available
to
take
over
the
vacated
premises.
In
the
rare
instances
where
this
is
not
so,
JP
engages
McClocklin
Real
Estate
Limited
to
find
a
tenant.
The
experience
has
been
that,
practically
speaking,
all
those
premises
have
been
fully
occupied
at
all
times.
Cavalier
owns
the
land
and
buildings
of
the
King
George
Hotel,
including
the
Arcade,
and
also
the
Royal
Bank
building.
The
net
income
from
the
commercial
leases
we
are
concerned
with
is
turned
over
to
Cavalier,
which
has
always
shown
it
aS
inactive
income
on
its
income
tax
returns.
Under
the
leases
the
tenants
are
responsible
for
taking
care
of
the
buildings,
including
the
replacement
of
plate
glass
windows.
They
pay
the
electricity
bills
for
their
premises.
The
lessor
is
responsible
for
structural
defects
in
the
buildings,
including
the
replacement
or
repair
of
broken
or
leaking
water
or
gas
pipes,
electric
wiring
or
fixtures,
lavatories,
radiators,
heating
and
air-conditioning
apparatus,
but
is
not
responsible
for
damage
to
persons
or
property
in
the
premises,
whether
caused
by
non-repair,
dis-repair,
or
negligence
of
the
lessor,
its
servants
or
agents,
unless
the
lessor
disregards
a
reasonable
notice
thereof
and
fails
to
repair.
The
tenants
undertake
to
repair
damage
caused
by
the
misuse
of
any
of
the
foregoing
or
by
any
negligence
of
the
lessee.
The
lessor
is
responsible
for
supplying
adequate
heat
to
the
demised
premises.
In
the
few
premises
that
do
not
have
bathrooms
the
tenants
are
accorded
the
right
to
use
the
public
facilities
of
the
hotel.
The
lessor
is
responsible
for
hallways
and
interior
approaches
to
leased
premises.
On
the
other
hand
the
tenants
are
responsible
for
removing
snow
and
ice
from
their
premises
and
for
cleaning
windows.
One
marked
difference
between
these
cases
and
the
Transregent
Holdings
case
is
that
there
was
only
one
tenant
in
the
Transregent
case
whereas
in
the
present
cases
there
are,
as
indicated
by
Exhibits
P-6
to
P-26
about
a
dozen
premises,
perhaps
more,
leased
to
as
many
separate
tenants.
Mr
Leier
stated
that
about
5%
of
the
total
income
of
King
George
was
from
the
commercial
rentals,
varying
from
the
commercial
rentals,
varying
from
about
$90,000
to
$104,000
per
year.
The
balance
was
from
the
hotel
business
proper,
ie:
rooms,
meals
and
beverages,
varying
from
about
$1,800,000
to
$2,000,000
per
year.
The
net
income
from
the
leases
is
about
40%
to
50%
of
the
gross,
while
that
from
the
hotel
business
is
about
20%
to
30%
of
the
gross.
In
the
result
the
net
rental
from
the
leases
is
about
10%
of
total
net
income.
Assuming
that
these
figures
are
approximatey
correct,
it
is
clear
that
the
income
from
the
leases
is
not
insignificant.
The
fee
paid
to
JP
by
King
George
and
Cavalier,
is
in
both
cases,
a
lump
sum
fee
for
all
JP’s
services,
and
is
not
broken
down
so
as
to
show
separate
charges
for
the
leasing
business.
The
amounts
of
the
fees
charged
to
them
are
not
disclosed
in
the
evidence.
Mr
Leier
stated
that
the
time
devoted
by
JP
to
work
in
connection
with
the
leases
averages
about
one
hour
per
month
or
twelve
hours
per
year.
It
is
not
clear
whether
these
times
refer
to
the
work
of
Mr
Leier
alone
or
include
work
by
stenographers
or
other
employees
of
JP.
Mr
Leier
said
JP
had
five
employees
during
the
years
in
question.
If
all
the
time
worked
by
all
five
employees
of
JP
is
included,
the
time
required
for
the
work
is
very
short.
The
leases
vary
in
length
from
six
to
ten
double
spaced
pages
of
typewritten
foolscap.
Many
of
the
clauses
in
them
are
similar,
but
there
are
many
differences
due
to
the
nature
of
the
tenant’s
business
and
the
location
of
the
particular
premises.
In
some
leases
there
are
escalator
clauses,
under
which
the
tenant
is
required
to
pay
a
specified
portion
of
increases
in
taxes
and
fuel
costs
for
the
building
in
which
the
tenant
is
located.
In
one
there
are
special
over-ride
provisions
which
call
for
increased
rental
payments
related
to
increases
in
the
tenant’s
volume
of
business.
These
things
require
the
attention
of
JP
from
time
to
time.
In
one
case
JP
assisted
a
new
tenant
who
was
opening
a
beauty
parlor
by
lending
her
the
money
to
renovate
and
decorate
the
premises.
These
are
examples
of
services
rendered
by
JP
in
connection
with
the
leases.
The
activities
of
JP
in
connection
with
the
leases
must
be
treated,
in
so
far
as
these
cases
are
concerned,
as
activities
of
King
George.
Those
activities,
according
to
the
evidence,
are
not
extensive
or
onerous,
and
they
do
not
require
daily
attention.
In
total,
however,
with
other
activities,
they
involve
a
not
inconsiderable
amount
of
activity.
I
consider
the
facts
and
circumstance
here
to
be
clearly
distinguishable
from
those
in
the
Transregent
case.
In
my
view
they
are
more
nearly
in
line
with
those
in
the
Cadboro
Bay
case,
and
certainly
within
the
language
used
in
that
case
and
those
cited
therein,
more
particularly
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
decision
in
the
Rockmore
case,
in
describing
what
the
term
“active
business”
means.
My
conclusion
is
that
the
income
from
the
leased
premises
received
by
JP
for
King
George
for
the
years
1973,
1974,
1975
and
1976
was
income
from
an
active
business
and
it
remained
income
from
an
active
business
when
remitted
to
Cavalier.”
According
to
the
King
George
Hotels
Limited
decision,
there
is
no
doubt
that
because
the
appellant
company
was
incorporated,
among
other
things,
for
the
purpose
of
investment
income,
any
quantum
of
business
activity
that
gives
rise
to
income
in
a
taxation
year
is
sufficient
to
make
mandatory
the
characterization
of
such
income
as
income
from
an
active
business.
The
evidence
has
revealed
that
the
appellant
company
received
substantial
rental
income;
that
it
paid
directors
and
management
fees
and,
in
some
instances,
the
cost
of
heating
and
cleaning
the
properties;
that
80%
of
the
appellant’s
assets
was
rental
properties;
that
the
appellant
company
was
the
half-owner
with
a
Mexican
group
of
“Capital
City
Centre”
which
owns
seven
shopping
centres
in
Canada;
that
the
appellant
company
had
a
telephone
and
an
office
in
Montreal
and
a
permanent
establishment
in
Alberta
and
that
some
substantial
leases
with
the
Government
were
negotiated
directly
with
the
appellant
company.
As
may
be
seen,
this
activity
in
the
light
of
the
above
decisions
was
sufficient
to
brand
the
appellant
as
being
in
an
active
business.
Also,
the
fact
that
the
management
was
transferred
to
other
taxpayers
is
immaterial
in
the
light
of
the
ob/ter
dictum
mentioned
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
decision
to
the
effect
that
there
was
“no
material
difference”
in
principle
if
it
is
carried
on
through
the
agency
of
an
independent
contractor.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
situation
is
worse
since
the
management
was
not
carried
on
through
the
agency
of
an
independent
contractor
but
by
an
affiliated
company.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.