Garon
T.C.J.:
These
are
appeals
from
income
tax
reassessments
for
the
1992,
1993
and
1994
taxation
years.
By
his
reassessments,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
the
deduction
claimed
by
the
Appellant
of
rental
losses
in
the
amounts
of
$2,696,
$5,104,
and
$11,905
for
the
1992,
1993
and
1994
taxation
years
respectively.
In
assessing
the
Appellant
for
the
three
years
at
issue,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
relied
on
the
assumptions
of
fact
set
out
in
paragraph
4
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
Paragraph
4
reads
thus:
In
so
reassessing
the
Appellant,
the
Minister
made
the
following
assumptions
of
fact:
(a)
in
the
1992
taxation
year,
the
Appellant
resided
at
32
Southview
Crescent,
North
Bay,
Ontario
(the
‘Residence’);
(b)
the
Appellant’s
son
resided
with
the
Appellant
in
the
1992
taxation
year
and
compensated
the
Appellant
in
the
amount
of
$4,800.00;
(c)
in
the
1993
and
1994
taxation
years,
the
Appellant
moved
from
North
Bay,
Ontario
to
the
United
States
and
then
to
British
Columbia;
(d)
the
Appellant’s
son
continued
to
live
in
the
Residence
in
the
1993
and
1994
taxation
years
and
compensated
the
Appellant
in
the
amounts
of
$9,600.00
and
$2,000.00,
respectively;
(e)
in
the
1992,
1993
and
1994
taxation
years,
Appellant
reported
the
following
rental
income
(losses)
in
filing
his
income
tax
returns
for
those
years;
|
Taxation
|
Gross
|
Expenses
|
Net
Income
(Loss)
|
|
Year
|
Income
|
|
|
1992
|
$4,800.00
|
$
7,496.00
|
($
2,696.00)
|
|
1993
|
$9,600.00
|
$14,704.00
|
($
5,104.00)
|
|
1994
|
$2,000.00
|
$13,905.00
|
($11,905.00)
|
(f)
the
Appellant
did
not
have
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
from
the
Residence
during
the
1992,
1993
and
1994
taxation
years;
(g)
at
all
material
times,
the
Appellant
was
not
dealing
at
arm’s
length
with
the
Appellant’s
son;
(h)
the
expenses
claimed
were
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
Appellant
and
were
not
incurred
for
the
purposes
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
a
business
or
property.
The
Appellant
was
the
only
one
to
testify.
The
Appellant
admitted
the
allegations
of
fact
referred
to
in
subparagraphs
(a),
(b),
(c),
(d),
(e),
and
(g)
of
paragraph
4
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
He
denied
the
allegations
set
out
in
subparagraphs
(f)
and
(h)
of
paragraph
4
of
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal.
The
Appellant
stated
that
he
bought
the
subject
house
in
1989.
He
took
out
a
five-year
mortgage
to
finance
the
acquisition
of
this
house.
The
rate
of
interest
payable
on
the
mortgage
was
at
that
time
11
/4
per
cent.
The
mortgage
was
renewed
in
1994
at
a
rate
of
interest
of
about
seven
per
cent,
the
Appellant
being
unable
to
state
precisely
the
then
rate
of
interest.
The
house
was
sold
in
August
1996.
This
house
had
been
acquired
to
be
used
as
a
residence
for
the
Appellant
and
his
wife.
In
1992,
the
Appellant
was
offered
employment
in
British
Columbia,
which
he
accepted.
Accordingly,
the
Appellant
and
his
wife
after
living
in
U.S.
for
a
few
months
moved
to
British
Columbia.
In
1992,
the
Appellant
decided
to
rent
the
house.
He
rented
half
of
the
house
in
1992
to
his
son,
Mathew.
In
1993
and
1994,
the
full
house
was
rented
to
the
same
son.
The
Appellant
claimed
that
the
rent
charged
to
his
son
in
1992
and
1993
was
reasonable
and
in
line
with
market
conditions.
During
the
year
1994,
the
son
was
unemployed
and
the
Appellant
charged
him
the
rent
that
the
son
could
afford
to
pay.
An
attempt
was
also
made
in
1994
to
find
another
person
who
could
share
in
renting
half
of
the
house;
these
efforts
were
unsuccessful.
The
Appellant
decided
not
to
rent
the
house
in
1995
and
in
1996.
In
this
connection,
the
Appellant
asserted
that
there
were
three
reasons
justifying
his
decision.
One
consideration
was
that
his
wife
could
use
the
house
when
visiting
the
family
living
in
the
area
of
North
Bay.
Another
consideration
related
to
the
fact
that
there
was
a
fair
amount
of
uncertainty
regarding
his
employment
with
the
employer
for
whom
he
was
working
in
British
Columbia.
The
Appellant
agreed
that
maintaining
the
ownership
of
the
house
was
a
“safety
net”
under
the
circumstances.
The
third
consideration
had
to
do
with
the
point
that
he
could
decide
to
sell
the
house
at
an
appropriate
time,
taking
into
account
market
conditions.
Also,
it
is
to
be
noted
that
in
the
course
of
giving
evidence,
the
Appellant
indicated
that
he
was
prepared
to
accept
the
reassessment
in
respect
of
the
1994
taxation
year.
Analysis
The
question
to
be
determined
is
whether
the
Appellant
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
in
the
years
1992,
1993
and
1994
when
he
rented
out
the
subject
residence.
First,
it
was
clearly
established
that
the
Appellant,
at
the
outset,
acquired
the
subject
house
as
a
personal
residence.
When
the
Appellant
decided
to
rent
a
portion
of
the
house
in
1992,
and
the
entire
house
in
the
years
1993
and
1994,
he
was
influenced
by
personal
considerations,
quite
apart
from
the
making
of
a
profit
from
the
rental
operation.
These
personal
considerations
had
to
do
perhaps
primarily
with
the
uncertainty
of
his
new
job
in
British
Columbia.
This
decision
not
to
sell
the
house
in
1992
or
in
subse-
quent
years,
1993
and
1994,
made
sense,
having
regard
to
the
situation
in
which
the
Appellant
found
himself
at
that
time.
Moreover,
I
am
satisfied,
on
the
evidence,
that
there
was
not
any
realistic
hope
that
the
Appellant
could
derive
a
profit
from
the
rental
of
the
house
in
the
reasonably
near
future.
The
Appellant
did
not
refer
to
any
concrete
plan
that
he
might
have
had
at
the
time
according
to
which
a
profit
could
likely
be
made
from
the
rental
of
the
property
in
the
not
too
distant
future.
In
this
connection
he
only
said
that
he
was
hoping
that
interest
rates
on
mortgages
particularly
would
go
down.
It
was
not
even
established
that
the
likelihood
of
the
Appellant
making
a
profit
in
the
near
future
from
the
rental
of
the
subject
property
was
a
realistic
one
after
the
mortgage
had
been
renewed
in
1994
at
a
much
lower
rate
of
interest
having
regard
to
the
economic
conditions
prevailing
in
North
Bay
at
the
time,
as
described
by
the
Appellant.
Here,
I
am
not
confronted
with
a
case
where
an
operation
turns
out
to
be
less
profitable
than
anticipated
because
of
an
unexpected
and
unfavourable
turn
of
events.
The
present
case
is,
rather,
one
where
the
embarking
on
a
rental
operation
of
the
subject
property
involved
important
considerations
of
a
personal
nature.
The
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
was
not
the
dominant
feature
behind
this
rental
operation.
The
personal
elements
permeating
the
rental
operation
are
particularly
striking,
when
the
Appellant
leased
the
subject
property
for
a
very
low
rent
in
1994
because
his
son,
being
unemployed,
could
not
afford
to
pay
a
higher
rent.
This
happened
in
the
year
of
the
renewal
of
the
mortgage
when
the
rate
of
interest
payable
in
respect
of
the
latter
mortgage
had
declined
substantially.
I
also
understand
that
the
Appellant
became
indignant
at
the
bureaucratic
treatment
that
he
had
from
the
Revenue
officials,
and
I
do
not
have
any
reason
to
doubt
his
testimony
in
this
regard.
Notwithstanding
this,
the
fact
remains
that
the
Appellant
did
not
have
a
reasonable
expectation
of
profit
at
the
material
times
when
he
was
engaged
in
this
rental
operation.
He
is
not
therefore
entitled
to
the
deduction
of
rental
losses
in
the
three
years
in
issue.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeals
from
the
income
tax
reassessments
for
the
1992,
1993
and
1994
taxation
years
are
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.