Bowie
T.C.J.
.
The
subject
matter
of
this
appeal
is
the
Appellant’s
claim
that
she
is
entitled
to
what
she
in
her
notice
of
appeal
calls
“an
interest
expense
deduction”,
in
the
computation
of
her
income
for
tax
purposes
for
the
year
1995.
Specifically,
she
claims
to
be
entitled
to
deduct
interest
paid
upon
her
student
loans
incurred
while
she
was
a
student
attending
the
University
of
Toronto.
It
is
not
disputed
that
as
a
student
she
availed
herself
of
the
Canada
student
loans
program,
and
a
similar
program
of
the
government
of
Ontario,
borrowing
some
$30,000
in
total,
which
was
expended
towards
her
fees
and
other
educational
expenses,
and
which
she
is
now
repaying
from
the
salary
she
earns
as
an
employee
of
a
charitable
institution
for
which
she
works
as
a
development
manager.
Her
salary
before
she
graduated
from
the
University
of
Toronto
was
between
$20,000
and
$30,000
per
annum.
Now,
with
the
benefit
of
a
Bachelor
of
Arts
degree,
she
earns
in
excess
of
$40,000
per
annum.
She
attributes
this
difference
entirely
to
the
fact
that
she
has
obtained
a
Bachelor
of
Arts
degree,
and
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal,
I
shall
accept
that
as
an
accurate
statement.
Ms.
Leslie
claims
the
deduction
on
the
basis
that
the
proceeds
of
her
student
loan
were
expended
to
achieve
for
her
an
education,
and
specifically
the
Bachelor
of
Arts
degree.
This,
she
says,
is
an
investment,
and
the
money
she
now
earns
is
income
produced
by
that
investment,
thus
bringing
the
interest
within
the
provisions
of
paragraph
20(1)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
Act)
as
interest
on
“borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property”.
The
Minister’s
position,
shortly
stated,
is
that
Ms.
Leslie
does
not
earn
income
from
a
business
or
property,
that
the
tuition
fees
and
other
costs
of
her
education
were
personal
or
living
expenses,
and
that
interest
paid
upon
money
borrowed
to
pay
those
personal
or
living
expenses
is
also
a
personal
or
living
expense,
whose
deduction
is
precluded
by
paragraph
18(l)(/i)
of
the
Act.
In
support
of
her
position,
Ms.
Leslie
argued
that
she
is
a
business,
as
are
all
gainfully
employed
persons,
and
that
her
expenditure
on
education
is
an
investment
in
the
business.
As
such,
it
brings
the
interest
which
she
is
now
paying
on
the
borrowed
funds
within
paragraph
20(1)(c)
of
the
Act.
This
argument
is
supported
by
reference
to
numerous
newspaper
articles
including
a
report
of
a
recent
statement
made
by
the
Minister
of
Finance
extolling
the
virtues
of
investment
in
education.
She
also
relies
on
dictionary
definitions
which
suggest
that
any
work
or
occupation
is
a
business.
In
the
world
of
commerce
there
is
a
distinct
difference
between
the
employment
of
individuals
by
other
individuals,
or
by
business
concerns,
for
wages
or
salary,
on
the
one
hand,
and
the
conduct
of
a
business
for
profit
on
the
other.
This
fundamental
difference
is
recognized
repeatedly
throughout
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Ms.
Leslie
herself
is
not
a
business,
nor
does
she
operate
a
business.
She
works
for
a
not-for-profit
organization,
for
a
salary.
I
should
add
that
the
fact
that
her
employer
is
a
not-for-profit
organization,
is
not
material
to
the
result.
My
conclusion,
and
the
reasons
for
it,
would
be
the
same
if
she
worked
as
a
salaried
employee
of
a
profit
making
corporation.
As
is
so
often
the
case
with
words,
in
both
of
our
official
languages,
one
of
the
many
definitions
to
be
found
in
dictionaries
suits
the
Appellant’s
case,
but
this
does
not
mean
that
all
of
the
other
definitions
must
be
cast
aside.
In
the
context
of
the
taxation
of
income,
business
and
employment
are
distinct
concepts,
with
distinct
treatment.
It
is
true
that
the
practitioners
of
the
soft
sciences
speak
frequently
of
expenditures
on
education
as
an
investment
in
the
future.
It
is,
however,
a
colloquial
usage.
Within
the
realm
of
commerce,
and
in
the
taxation
of
income,
investment
is
a
much
more
precise
concept,
which
pertains
to
the
acquisition
of
income
producing
assets
which
may
be
reflected
on
the
balance
sheet
of
an
enterprise.
Education
is
an
asset
in
the
colloquial
sense
only.
The
Appellant’s
Bachelor
of
Arts
degree
may
persuade
an
employer
to
pay
her
a
higher
salary
for
her
services,
but
it
is
not
an
“income
producing
property”.
I
am
of
the
view
that
these
expenses
are
in
the
nature
of
personal
or
living
expenses.
While
that
is
sufficient
to
dispose
of
this
appeal,
I
would
not
wish
to
leave
the
impression
that
the
result
is
governed
by
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
works
on
salary
for
a
non-profit
organization.
It
is
true
that
there
are
decisions
of
the
courts
in
various
contexts
which
have
permitted
the
deduction
of
expenses
associated
with
education
as
business
expenses
in
the
context
of
an
ongoing
business.
However,
absent
an
ongoing
business
with
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
against
which
the
expenses
might
be
set,
I
am
of
the
view
that
the
expenses
of
gaining
an
education,
and
interest
paid
upon
money
borrowed
for
the
purpose
of
paying
those
expenses,
would
likewise
be
personal
or
living
expenses.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.