A-686-96
John R. Singleton (Appellant)
v.
Her Majesty the Queen (Respondent)
Indexed as: Singletonv.
Canada (C.A.)
Court of Appeal, Linden, Rothstein and McDonald
JJ.A."Vancouver, April 26; Ottawa, June 11, 1999.
Income tax
"
Income calculation
"
Deductions
" Deductibility, under ITA, s. 20(1)(c), of
interest on law firm partner's bank loan to replace funds
withdrawn from law firm's capital account to buy house, both
transactions taking place same day "
Transactions must be treated independently, not as series
of connected transactions " S. 20(1)(c) not
excluding refinancing with borrowed funds partner's
investment of own funds in firm, withdrawn for non-eligible
purpose " Direct use doctrine applied
" Fact phrase "series of
transactions", used 41 times in ITA, not used
in s. 20(1)(c) indication no legislative intent to import
"series test".
The appellant, a partner in a law firm, took $300,000 from
his capital account in his law firm to purchase a house and,
on the same day, contracted a bank loan to replenish his
capital account. Income Tax Act, paragraph
20(1)(c) provides that interest on borrowed money used
for the purpose of earning income (such as capital investment
by a partner in a law firm) is deductible. The Minister and
the Tax Court of Canada both found that, on any realistic
view of the matter, the borrowed funds were not used for the
purpose of earning income but for the purpose of purchasing a
house. This was an appeal from the Tax Court decision that
the interest on the borrowed funds were not deductible under
paragraph 20(1)(c).
Held (Linden J.A. dissenting), the appeal should be
allowed.
Per Rothstein J.A. (McDonald J.A. concurring): The
question of how to treat the transactions for purposes of
paragraph 20(1)(c), i.e. independently or as a
connected series, is a question of law because it involves a
determination of the legal test against which the factual
transactions are to be assessed. Since it is a question of
law, an appellate court is entitled to re-examine it.
In this case, the transactions must be viewed
independently. The capital account was financed with the
appellant's own funds; it was not financed by personal
borrowing. When the $300,000 was withdrawn from the firm, the
firm's assets would have been reduced, and the liabilities of
the firm would have been increased if the firm had had to
borrow to pay the appellant his $300,000. In order to replace
the firm's reduction of assets or eliminate the firm's need
to incur the increased liability caused by the withdrawal of
his capital funds, the appellant borrowed the money from the
bank and paid $300,000 into the firm. There was no suggestion
that the firm did not require the funds that the appellant
paid to it in replacement of the amount withdrawn. Nor was
there any suggestion that the transactions were not bona
fide. If the transactions are viewed independently, it is
clear that the funds the appellant used for the purpose of
assisting in the acquisition of the home were his own funds
that he withdrew from the law firm and the funds he used for
the purpose of replenishing his capital account at the firm
were those borrowed from the bank.
An initial capital investment or subsequent refinancing
thereof by a partner in a law firm can be financed with
borrowed funds for which the interest payable is deductible.
The Minister has presented no logical reason why, if a
partner invested his own funds in his firm, he cannot
withdraw those funds for personal use and refinance the
investment in the firm with borrowed money in respect of
which interest is deductible. The requirement of paragraph
20(1)(c) is that the borrowed money be used for the
purpose of earning income. Its application is not limited to
the initial investment made nor to the refinancing of prior
borrowed funds. Its application does not exclude refinancing
with borrowed funds, a partner's investment of his own funds
in his firm which he withdraws for a non-eligible purpose.
Provided the transactions are properly structured and there
is no sham, there is no reason why transactions occurring the
same day should not be treated independently and each be
given meaning.
Two requirements for interest deductibility set forth in
Bronfman Trust v. The Queen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32 are
relevant to this case. First, the taxpayer must trace the
borrowed funds to an identifiable use which triggers the
deduction. Here the funds borrowed from the bank were used to
refinance the appellant's capital account at his law firm.
The second requirement is consideration of the direct
use of the borrowed funds. The direct use of the borrowed
funds herein was to refinance the appellant's capital account
at the firm.
The obiter dicta in Bronfman Trust (that a
taxpayer should be denied the deduction where the direct
purpose satisfies paragraph 20(1)(c) but the indirect
purpose does not) was difficult to reconcile with the
ratio therein. Further, the application of the
obiter dicta to this case would also be inconsistent
with more recent pronouncements of the Supreme Court which
suggest that in the absence of sham or an artificial
transaction, a taxpayer should not be denied the benefit of
provisions of the ITA with which he or she complies, even if
the taxpayer's motivation is solely tax planning.
Finally, in the context of the ITA in which the phrase
"series of transactions" appears 41 times, its absence from
paragraph 20(1)(c ) implies that there is no
legislative intent to import the series test into that
paragraph or, in other words, to link a series of individual
transactions as if they were one transaction.
Per Linden J.A. (dissenting): the appeal
should be dismissed.
The determination of the purpose for which borrowed money
was used is primarily a factual determination which should
not be interfered with by an appellate court. Past cases have
without exception denied the deductibility of interest in
transactions such as these. The concluding paragraphs of
Bronfman Trust are good law, as are Robitaille v.
R., [1997] 3 C.T.C. 3031 (T.C.C.) and Zwaig, M. v.
MNR, [1974] C.T.C. 2172 (T.R.B.). The ultimate task of
this Court is to examine the "whole picture", that is, the
commercial and economic realities underlying the transaction
in order to determine if the borrowed funds were used "for
the purpose of earning income". If there is no purpose to
earn income, any approach which seeks to secure the
deductibility of otherwise non-deductible interest through
transactional form alone is unacceptable. The entire picture
must be examined. It is impossible to seek the "commercial
and economic realities" or the "bona fide purpose" of
a transaction within the confines of any one or more steps of
the transaction. Such a view deprives paragraph
20(1)(c ) of meaning, and permits sophisticated
taxpayers to improperly "manipulate a sequence of events to
achieve a patina of compliance with the apparent
prerequisites for a tax deduction". It is hard to imagine a
transaction which could not be manipulated to comply with the
words "used for the purpose of earning income" if the direct,
current use of the borrowed funds is the only segment to be
considered.
There is no rigid rule which demands that complex
transactions be viewed as separate steps or as one
transaction. The task at hand is to discover the economic and
commercial reality of the transaction in order to discover
whether the borrowed money was used for the purpose of
earning income. The economic reality herein is that the
taxpayer's borrowed money was used to buy a house. Not a
single new cent of capital investment was created in this
personal-use borrowing.
It was argued that the taxpayer could have organized his
affairs in such a way as to achieve compliance with the Act,
and that he should not be penalized for choosing a different
mechanism by which to achieve his goals. However, what must
be examined is what the taxpayer actually did, not what he
could have or should have done. Where the taxpayer's purpose
in borrowing money is at odds with the purpose of paragraph
20(1)(c), there can be no bona fide purpose to
earn income. The Act and the case law teach that
recapitalization is deductible only when the use of
the borrowed funds has an income earning purpose. Paragraph
20(1)(c) was not designed to promote debt refinancing.
It was designed to encourage the accumulation of capital,
hence the requirement that borrowed money must be "used for
the purpose of earning income".
| statutes and regulations
judicially considered |
| An
Act to amend The Income War Tax Act, 1917, S.C.
1923, c. 52, s. 2. |
| Income
Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s.
20(1)(c). |
| Income
Tax Act (The), S.C. 1948, c. 52, s. 11. |
| cases judicially
considered |
| Canada
(Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam
Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748; (1997), 144 D.L.R. (4th)
1; 50 Admin. L.R. (2d) 199; 71 C.P.R. (3d) 417; 209
N.R. 20; Bronfman Trust v. The Queen, [1987] 1
S.C.R. 32; (1987), 36 D.L.R. (4th) 197; [1987] 1 C.T.C.
117; 87 DTC 5059; 25 E.T.R. 13; 71 N.R. 134; Canada
v. Antosko, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 312; (1994), 94 DTC
6314; 168 N.R. 16; Continental Bank Leasing Corp. v.
Canada, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 298; (1998), 163 D.L.R.
(4th) 385; [1998] 4 C.T.C. 119; 98 DTC 6505; 229 N.R.
58; Neuman v. M.N.R., [1998] 1 S.C.R. 770;
(1998), 159 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1998] 3 C.T.C. 177; 98 DTC
6297; 225 N.R. 190. |
| R.
v. Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507; (1996), 137
D.L.R. (4th) 289; [1996] 9 W.W.R. 1; 23 B.C.L.R. (3d)
1; 80 B.C.A.C. 81; 109 C.C.C. (3d) 1; [1996] 4 C.N.L.R.
177; 50 C.R. (4th) 1; 200 N.R. 1; 130 W.A.C. 81;
Zwaig, M v. MNR, [1974] C.T.C. 2172; (1974), 74
DTC 1121 (T.R.B.); Robitaille v. R., [1997] 3
C.T.C. 3031; [1998] 2 C.T.C. 2047; 97 DTC 1286
(T.C.C.); Mark Resources Inc. v. Canada, [1993]
2 C.T.C. 2259; (1993), 93 DTC 1004 (T.C.C.); Les
Entreprises Ludco Ltée et al. v. The Queen
(1999), 99 DTC 5153 (F.C.A.); Canada v. Shell
Canada Ltd., [1998] 3 F.C. 64; (1998), 157
D.L.R. (4th) 655; [1998] 2 C.T.C. 207; 98 DTC 6177; 223
N.R. 122 (C.A.). |
| Ryan
v. Victoria (City), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 201; (1999),
168 D.L.R. (4th) 513; 117 B.C.A.C. 103; 44 C.C.L.T.
(2d) 1; 50 M.P.L.R. (2d) 1; 40 M.V.R. (3d) 1; 234 N.R.
201; In re Estate of Smith & Hogan, Ltd.,
[1932] S.C.R. 661; [1932] 4 D.L.R. 145; (1932), 14
C.B.R. 20; Wildenburg Holdings Ltd. v. Ontario
(Minister of Revenue), [1999] 2 C.T.C. 161; (1998),
98 DTC 6462; 67 O.T.C. 179 (Ont. Gen. Div.); R.P.M.
Tech Inc. v. Harvey & Co. (1993), 111 Nfld.
& P.E.I.R. 12; 105 D.L.R. (4th) 746; 348 A.P.R. 12
(Nfld. S.C.T.D.); Milos Equipment Ltd. v. Insurance
Corp. of Ireland (1988), 34 C.C.L.I. 102; [1989]
I.L.R. 1-2395 (B.C.S.C.); revd [1990] 5 W.W.R. 757;
(1990), 47 B.C.L.R. (2d) 296; 45 C.C.L.I. 25; [1990]
I.L.R. 1-2630 (C.A.); Singleton v. R., [1996] 3
C.T.C. 2873; (1996), 96 DTC 1850 (T.C.C.); Tennant
v. M.N.R., [1996] 1 S.C.R. 305; (1996), 132 D.L.R.
(4th) 1; [1996] 1 C.T.C. 290; 96 DTC 6121; 192 N.R.
365; Douglas Chisholm, Harvey Chisholm and Paul
Chisholm v. R., [1999] 1 C.T.C. 2498; (1998), 99
DTC 150 (T.C.C.); Chase Manhattan Bank of Canada v.
R., [1997] 2 C.T.C. 3097; (1997), 97 DTC 349
(T.C.C.); Gibson Petroleum Co. v. R., [1997] 3
C.T.C. 2453; (1997), 97 DTC 1420 (T.C.C.); Garneau
(J.V.) v. Canada, [1995] 1 C.T.C. 2978 (T.C.C.);
Mara Properties Ltd. v. Canada, [1993] 2 C.T.C.
3189; (1993), 93 DTC 1449 (T.C.C.); Ludmer v.
Minister of National Revenue, [1998] 2 C.T.C. 104;
(1997), 98 DTC 6045; 139 F.T.R. 241 (F.C.T.D.);
Canada Safeway Limited v. The Minister of National
Revenue, [1957] S.C.R. 717; (1957), 11 D.L.R. (2d)
1; [1957] C.T.C. 335; 57 DTC 1239; Canwest
Broadcasting Ltd. v. Canada, [1995] 2 C.T.C. 2780;
(1995), 96 DTC 1375 (T.C.C.); 74712 Alberta
Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1997] 2 F.C. 471; [1997] 2
C.T.C. 30; (1997), 97 DTC 5126; 208 N.R. 348 (C.A.); Canada v.
Fording Coal Ltd., [1996] 1 F.C. 518; [1996] 1
C.T.C. 230; (1995), 95 DTC 5672; 190 N.R. 186
(C.A.). |
| Felesky,
Brian A. and Sandra E. Jack "Is there Substance to
"Substance Over Form' in Canada?" in Report of
Proceedings of the Forty-fourth Tax Conference,
1992 . Toronto: Canadian Tax Foundation, 1992. |
| Krishna,
Vern. The Fundamentals of Canadian Income Tax,
5th ed. Toronto: Carswell, 1995. |
APPEAL from a Tax Court of Canada decision refusing the
deductibility, under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the
Income Tax Act, of interest on a law firm partner's
bank loan to replace funds withdrawn from his capital account
at his law firm in order to purchase a house, where both
transactions took place on the same day. Appeal allowed.
| John H. Saunders for
appellant. |
| Donald G. Gibson for
respondent. |
| Davis & Company,
Vancouver, for appellant. |
| Deputy Attorney General
of Canada for respondent. |
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in
English by
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Linden J.A. (dissenting): I respectfully
disagree with the reasons of my esteemed colleagues.
Introduction
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]A
man takes $300,000 out of his law firm and buys a house. On
the same day, he borrows $300,000 from a bank and deposits it
with his law firm, replacing what he took out. He seeks to
deduct the interest on the borrowed money pursuant to
paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act [S.C.
1970-71-72, c. 63] (ITA or the Act), which reads:
20. (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs 18(1)(a),
(b) and (h), in computing a taxpayer's income
for a taxation year from a business or property, there may be
deducted such of the following amounts as are wholly
applicable to that source or such part of the following
amounts as may reasonably be regarded as applicable
thereto:
. . .
| (c) an amount paid
in the year or payable in respect of the year
(depending upon the method regularly followed by the
taxpayer in computing his income), pursuant to a legal
obligation to pay interest on |
| (i)
borrowed money used for the purpose of earning income
from a business or property . . . |
| or a reasonable amount in
respect thereof, whichever is the lesser; |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
issue in this case is whether the interest on the loan is
deductible. Specifically, the focus of the case is whether
the borrowed funds were used for the purpose of earning
income.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
facts of the case are adequately summarized by my colleague
and by Bowman T.C.J. at the Tax Court.1 Unlike my
colleagues, I have come to the conclusion that the Tax Court
Judge was correct in deciding these borrowed funds are not
properly deductible under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the
Act. I have three reasons for my conclusion, which are as
follows:
1. The determination of the purpose for which
borrowed money was used is primarily a factual determination
which should not be interfered with.
2. Past cases have, without exception, denied the
deductibility of interest in transactions such as these.
3. The task of the Court under paragraph
20(1)(c) of the Act is to examine the commercial and
economic realities underlying the transaction to determine if
the borrowed funds were "used for the purpose of earning
income," which, in my view, they were not.
Let me expand on each of these points as they relate to
this case.
| 1. The determination of
the purpose for which borrowed money was used is
primarily a factual determination which should not be
interfered with |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Paragraph 20(1)(c) of the ITA instructs
courts to determine whether the amount in question was
"borrowed money used for the purpose of earning income."
While the assessment of deductibility under paragraph
20(1)(c ) of the Income Tax Act is a question
of mixed fact and law, ascertaining the purpose for which
borrowed money was used, one of the constituent elements of
the larger question of deductibility, is primarily a question
of fact. Marceau J.A. came to this very conclusion in the
recent case of Les Entreprises Ludco Ltée et al. v.
The Queen,2 where he wrote at, page 5156
that:
And I will say right away that in my view this
finding"that the appellants' true purpose in investing in the
two companies as structured was to defer tax and transform
the income into capital gains"is a finding of fact.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]I
agree with Marceau J.A. Tax Court judges listen to witnesses,
assess their credibility, examine documents, and weigh the
evidence before coming to a conclusion. While the conclusion
regarding deductibility requires the analysis of facts in
light of a legal test, and is therefore more than simply a
question of fact, the determination of the facts themselves
is the role of the trier of fact. In this case, Bowman T.C.J.
weighed the evidence before him and concluded that:
On any realistic view of the matter it could not be
said that the money was used for the purpose of making a
contribution of capital to the partnership. The fundamental
purpose was the purchase of a house and this purpose
cannot be altered by the shuffle of cheques that took place
on October 27, 1988.3 [Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]This conclusion is based on the Tax Court
Judge's finding about the purpose of the taxpayer at the time
of contracting, which is a finding of fact.4 The
Supreme Court has repeatedly taught us that, barring some
palpable or overriding error, it is unwise for Appeal Courts
to reverse findings of fact. For example, in R. v. Van der
Peet, Chief Justice Lamer wrote for the Court that:
It is a well-settled principle of law that when an
appellate court reviews the decision of a trial judge that
court must give considerable deference to the trial judge's
findings of fact, particularly where those findings of fact
are based on the trial judge's assessment of the testimony
and credibility of witnesses. In Stein v. The Ship
"Kathy K", Ritchie J., speaking
for the Court, held at p. 808 that absent a "palpable and
overriding error" affecting the trial judge's assessment of
the facts, an appellate court should not substitute its own
findings of fact for those of the trial judge:
| These authorities are not
to be taken as meaning that the findings of fact made
at trial are immutable, but rather that they are not to
be reversed unless it can be established that the
learned trial judge made some palpable and overriding
error which affected his assessment of the facts. While
the Court of Appeal is seized with the duty of
re-examining the evidence in order to be satisfied that
no such error occurred, it is not, in my view, a part
of its function to substitute its assessment of the
balance of probability for the findings of the judge
who presided at the trial. |
This principle has also been followed in more recent
decisions of this Court: Beaudoin-Daigneault v.
Richard. . .; Laurentide Motels Ltd. v.
Beauport (City). . .; Hodgkinson v.
Simms. . . . In the recently released
decision of Schwartz v. Canada, La Forest J. made the
following observation at para. 32, with which I agree,
regarding appellate court deference to findings of fact:
| Unlimited intervention by
appellate courts would greatly increase the number and
the length of appeals generally. Substantial resources
are allocated to trial courts to go through the process
of assessing facts. The autonomy and integrity of the
trial process must be preserved by exer-cising
deference towards the trial courts' findings of
fact . . . This explains why the rule
applies not only when the credibility of witnesses is
at issue, although in such a case it may be more
strictly applied, but also to all conclusions of fact
made by the trial
judge . . . . |
I would also note that the principle of appellate court
deference has been held to apply equally to findings of fact
made on the basis of the trial judge's assessment of the
credibility of the testimony of expert witnesses, N.V.
Bocimar S.A. v. Century Insurance Co. of
Canada . . .5 [Citations
omitted.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this case, the Tax Court Judge heard and weighed the evidence
of the parties and made a decisive finding of fact that the
borrowed money in this case was used for the purpose of
buying a house. In my view, the Tax Court Judge made no
palpable or overriding errors in coming to this conclusion,
and I would, therefore, not interfere with that finding.
| 2. Past cases have
without exception denied the deductibility of interest
in transactions such as these |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Cases which are factually similar to the case at
bar have already been decided against the position of the
taxpayer. The first case, Robitaille v. R. is
factually identical to the case at bar.6 In that
case, the taxpayer withdrew $100,000 from his law firm
partnership account on June 12, 1985, purchasing a personal
residence with those funds on June 13, 1985. On the same date
he took out a $100,000 mortgage on that residence, and on
June 14, 1985, he reimbursed his partnership account. The
Minister disallowed all mortgage interest deductions claimed
by Mr. Robitaille in respect of the mortgages, from which the
taxpayer appealed.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Dussault T.C.J., after agreeing with the
analysis of Bowman T.C.J. in Mark Resources Inc. v.
Canada, [1993] 2 C.T.C. 2259 (T.C.C.), based his
conclusion primarily on the well-known concluding remarks
found in the Bronfman Trust case [Bronfman Trust v.
The Queen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32]. He explained:
I consider that essentially the facts in the instant case
are sufficiently close to those described by Dickson C.J. to
be bound by his remarks. In each case there was within a
short period a reallocation of money originally used to
produce income to a personal purpose and then a loan the
proceeds of which were immediately returned to the original
productive use.
While the binding effect of an obiter stated in the
form of a simple observation made in passing may be open to
question, it is not so when an opinion supported by reasons
is given with respect to specifically described transactions.
The binding effect of an obiter becomes clearly more
so when such an unambiguous opinion is stated in a unanimous
judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada.7
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]My
colleague's reasons in this case suggest that the well-known
final paragraphs of Bronfman Trust have no application
to the case at bar, as there is no allegation of sham. This
ignores the reasoning in Robitaille, supra. In
my view, this is incorrect, because Dickson C.J. mentioned
sham as only one of the reasons for which a court
would rightly disallow a transaction such as the one at bar.
He wrote that:
In any event, I admit to some doubt about the premise
conceded by the Crown. If, for example, the Trust had sold a
particular income-producing asset, made the capital
allocation to the beneficiary and repurchased the same asset,
all within a brief interval of time, the courts might well
consider the sale and repurchase to constitute a formality or
a sham designed to conceal the essence of the transaction,
namely that money was borrowed and used to fund a capital
allocation to the beneficiary. In this regard, see
Zwaig v. Minister of National Revenue,
[1974] C.T.C. 2172 (T.R.B.), in which the taxpayer sold
securities and used the proceeds to buy a life insurance
policy. He then borrowed on the policy to repurchase the
securities. Under s. 20(1)(c)(i) the use of borrowed
money to purchase a life insurance policy is not a use
entitling the taxpayer to an interest deduction. The Tax
Review Board rightly disallowed the deduction sought for
interest payments, notwithstanding that the form of the
taxpayer's transactions created an aura of compliance with
the requirements of the interest deduction provision. The
characterization of taxpayers' transactions according to
their true commercial and practical nature does not always
favour the taxpayer. The taxpayer Trust in this appeal asks
the Court for the benefit of a characterization based on the
alleged commercial and practical nature of its transactions.
At the same time, however, it seeks to have the commercial
and practical nature of its transactions determined by
reference to a hypothetical characterization which reflects
the epitome of formalism. I cannot accept that it should be
allowed to succeed.8 [Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this passage, the Supreme Court expressly approved of
Zwaig, M v. MNR,9 the other case
denying deductibility which is factually similar to this
case.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
Zwaig, the taxpayer sold income-producing securities
to a brokerage firm and with the proceeds purchased a life
insurance policy of a nominal value of approximately
$560,000, for a cash payment of a unique premium of
approximately $250,000. After purchasing this non-deductible
property he borrowed money from the insurance company, and
with this money he repurchased the securities which he had
previously sold to the brokerage firm. Thus in Zwaig,
the taxpayer liquidated shares and purchased a life insurance
policy. He then took money from the bank and repurchased the
shares. The similarity to this case is
self-evident.10 The Tax Review Board denied the
taxpayer's attempt to deduct the interest. Zwaig was
not adjudicated on the basis of the sham doctrine. The Tax
Review Board wrote:
According to the evidence adduced, it appears that Mr.
Dunn's intention was always to keep his securities and by the
same token the control of his companies. It also appears that
he wanted to purchase a personal asset, namely a life
insurance policy and therefore he sold some securities for
about $250,000.
. . .
In the present appeal the borrowed money was not converted
into bricks and mortar, part of it was not paid out for
inventory and by way of salaries, or used to acquire plant
and machinery and to pay running expenses. On the contrary,
according to the form of the transaction, it was used to
repurchase the securities that had just been sold and,
according to the substance of the transaction, to purchase a
life insurance policy.
. . .
In the case at bar the proceeds of the sale of the
securities was [sic] not used to earn
income from the business. In Trans-Prairie Pipelines
(supra) the preferred shares were used in the business to
earn income. So, when Mr. Dunn borrowed monies on his life
insurance policy, it was not to fill the hole left by the
redemption of preferred shares, as is the case in
Trans-Prairie Pipelines. On the contrary, the business
was deprived of about $250,000 to earn income because the
life insurance policy did not contribute in any way
whatsoever to increase the power of the business to earn more
income.
. . .
One must look at the whole picture of the transaction
to discover its substance and by the same token to find out
if the borrowed money was used to earn income in the
business.
It is self-evident that the borrowed money did not go
back into the business to earn income but was used to
purchase a life insurance policy. Consequently, the
appeal is dismissed.11 [Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
my view, the concluding paragraphs of Bronfman Trust
are good law, as are Robitaille and Zwaig. The
ultimate task of this Court is to examine the "whole
picture", that is, the commercial and economic realities
underlying the transaction in order to determine if the
borrowed funds were "used for the purpose of earning income."
If there is no purpose to earn income, any approach which
seeks to secure the deductibility of otherwise non-deductible
interest through transactional form alone is
unacceptable.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Thus, in my view, transactions similar to those
of the taxpayer in this case were considered and rejected by
Bronfman Trust, supra, by Zwaig,
supra, and by Robitaille, supra, and the
matter of interest deductibility in cases such as this one
has been settled.
| 3. The ultimate task
under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the
Act is to examine the commercial and economic realities
underlying the transaction to determine if the borrowed
funds were "used for the purpose of
earning income" |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
a world where transactions regularly occur in multiple steps,
it is not feasible for a court analyzing whether borrowed
money was "used for the purpose of earning income" to ignore
the reality of the transaction by looking only at only one of
the steps prior to the use in question. The Supreme Court has
twice mandated that, in cases determining compliance with
paragraph 20(1)(c ) of the ITA, the task of the courts
is to "reflect the economic reality of the
situation."12 The entire picture must be examined.
It is impossible to seek the "commercial and economic
realities"13 or the "bona fide
purpose"14 of a transaction within the confines of
any one or more steps of the transaction. Such a view
deprives the word "purpose" in ITA paragraph 20(1)(c )
of meaning, and permits sophisticated taxpayers to improperly
"manipulat[e] a sequence of events to achieve a patina of
compliance with the apparent prerequisites for a tax
deduction."15
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
order to reduce the possibility of ambiguity, let me be clear
about the nature of the task which Parliament has entrusted
to the courts in interpreting paragraph 20(1)(c).
| 3.1 What do we mean
by "purpose"? |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]It
is trite to recall that, in absence of paragraph
20(1)(c), interest on a capital investment would not
be deductible at all. The original reasoning prohibiting the
deduction of interest was that the accumulation of capital is
by definition on capital account, and cannot be deducted
against revenue. This proposition stems from an earlier
belief that business was to be organized with one's own
capital, and that companies which did not have the money to
commence enterprises were not entitled to deductions in order
to do so.16 The deductibility of interest was
first permitted in a limited form in 1923, permitting the
deduction of borrowed funds which were used to earn income,
provided that the stipulated rate was
reasonable.17 The interest deductibility provision
was amended in 1948,18 and the provision which is
in force today is substantially similar to the 1948
provision, specifically including the phrase "borrowed money
used for the purpose of earning income."
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]There have been many adjectives used to describe
what is meant by the word "purpose" in paragraph
20(1)(c ) of the ITA. What, exactly, is it that judges
are looking for? In this case, the Tax Court Judge referred
to the "fundamental purpose"19 and the "reality of
the situation."20 The recent case of Les
Entreprises Ludco, supra, used numerous adjectives
to describe what type of purpose is being sought. At page
5157, Marceau J.A. wrote that:
. . . no one can be in any doubt that what
Parliament has in mind is the actual or true,
not feigned or merely claimed, intention.
[Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]At
page 5160, Desjardins J.A. made a similar observation, noting
that:
I agree with my colleague Létourneau, J.A. that the
respondent cannot succeed in her submission that in order for
the essential condition of subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) to
be met and interest to be deductible, the investor's
dominant purpose must have been to derive income from
the borrowed amounts. [Underlining added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Létourneau J.A. disagreed, dissenting on
the point. In his view, any income producing purpose is
sufficient to ground a finding of deductibility under
paragraph 20(1)(c). At page 5167, he wrote:
As I have already mentioned, subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i) does not stipulate that the borrowed money
has to be used "mainly" for the purpose of earning
income from property. The interest deduction is intended to
encourage and allow for the acquisition of potentially
income-generating capital. That is the conclusion to which
the words "used for the purpose of earning income from
property" lead us. It is therefore sufficient for the
investor to have a reasonable expectation of income when
investing borrowed money. It is not necessary for the
investor to have an expectation of reasonable income.
[Underlining added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Les Entreprises Ludco, supra,
turned on the holding that the purpose to be sought in
analyzing interest deductibility is the "actual", "true", or
"dominant" purpose of the transaction. These adjectives
reflect the fact that the courts are seeking to discover the
purpose in the light of the commercial and economic reality
of the transactions. If the dissent in Les Entreprises
Ludco is correct, and any acceptable purpose will satisfy
paragraph 20(1)(c) of the ITA, then that paragraph is
rendered marcescent. It is hard to conceive of a loan
transaction which could not be manipulated in such a way as
to be deductible under the minority view in Les Enteprises
Ludco. Further, the dissent in Les Entreprises
Ludco treats paragraph 20(1)(c) as if it read
"used with a view to earning income." Such wording
would permit ancillary income-earning purposes to satisfy
paragraph 20(1)(c ), as is the case with partnership.
The paragraph, however, does not use the indefinite article
"a"; rather it employs the definitive article "the"; thus,
borrowed funds are only deductible under paragraph
20(1)(c ) if they are used for the purpose of
earning income.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]If
borrowed money is divided and used for two purposes, one
income-earning, and one personal, could it be argued that the
entire amount could be deducted, since one of the purposes of
the use was acceptable? This cannot be. The wording in the
paragraph requires that borrowed funds must be used for
the purpose of earning income, not a purpose to
earn income. If the borrowed money is divided and used for
two purposes, a deduction can be taken only to the extent
that the money is used to earn income. It is obvious that no
deduction is available for the portion of the money used for
non-income earning purposes. Further, if the funds are
commingled and used for a variety of purposes there may be no
deduction at all allowed.21
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]If
courts are to look only at the direct, current use of the
borrowed money, then paragraph 20(1)(c) would permit
the deduction of all manner of personal-use borrowing. It is
hard to imagine a transaction which could not be manipulated
to comply with the words "used for the purpose of earning
income" if the direct, current use of the borrowed funds is
the only segment to be considered.22 Such a narrow
reading of paragraph 20(1)(c) is untenable.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]This discussion is more than one of semantics.
The Act says that the borrowed money must be "used for the
purpose of earning income." Parliament thus intended that
borrowed money must be used for the purpose of earning
income. Courts have not missed this point: the Supreme Court
has twice instructed courts to seek the "commercial and
economic reality" of the transaction in order to assess
whether the borrowed money was used for the purpose of
earning income. It is impossible to seek the commercial and
economic realities of a situation by confining the analysis
to only the last two steps of any given transaction. Courts
must look at the whole transaction and discover the true
purpose for which the borrowed money was used.
| 3.2 There is no rigid
rule regarding the separation of the steps in a loan
transaction. |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Much is made in this case of whether a court
searching for "purpose" should view transactions such as this
as two separate transactions or as one. A similar problem
arose in Shell Canada , a case recently decided by
this Court.23 In that case, the Court took a view
of the transaction which adequately and accurately described
the economic realities underlying the transaction. In that
case, the Court was faced with finding the economic reality
underlying a very complex series of transactions by which
Shell took loans at a high (foreign) interest rate and
purchased currency forwards at the commensurately high
(foreign) forward discount. The result was that Shell
achieved its borrowing needs at a high interest rate,
receiving at the end of the transaction a forward gain equal
to the difference between the foreign interest rate and the
domestic interest rate at the date of the transaction. The
Court chose to describe the economic realities of that
transaction by viewing the debt offering and the forward
contracts as separate transactions and applying interest rate
parity theory to explore the true rate of interest in the
transaction.24
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]There is no rigid rule which demands that
complex transactions be viewed as separate steps or as one
transaction. The task at hand is to discover the economic and
commercial reality of the transaction in order to discover
whether the borrowed money was used for the purpose of
earning income.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this case, the economic reality is that the taxpayer's
borrowed money was used for the purpose of buying a house.
Not a single new cent in capital investment was created in
this personal-use borrowing. As the Tax Court Judge found,
the fundamental purpose of the transaction was the purchase
of a house. I would not turn ITA paragraph 20(1)(c)
into a two-step dance. I prefer instead to watch the entire
ballet and come to a more sophisticated and realistic view of
the performance. Such a view was taken by the Tax Court Judge
in this case, and I would not interfere with his
decision.
| 3.3. We must examine what
the taxpayer actually did, not what he could have or
should have done. |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]As
with every interest deduction case which comes before this
Court, it was argued that the taxpayer could have organized
his affairs in such a way as to achieve compliance with the
Act, and that he should not be penalized for choosing a
different mechanism by which to achieve his goals. It is said
that if the appellant had disguised his conduct and waited
for a period before buying the house or had varied the amount
borrowed or did something else, he might have been allowed
the deduction. Dickson C.J. fully answered this argument in
Bronfman Trust, noting that it is not what the
taxpayer could have done which is before the Court, but what
was actually done:
Before concluding, I wish to address one final argument
raised by counsel for the Trust. It was submitted"and the
Crown generously conceded"that the Trust would have obtained
an interest deduction if it had sold assets to make the
capital allocation and borrowed to replace them. Accordingly,
it is argued, the Trust ought not to be precluded from an
interest deduction merely because it achieved the same effect
without the formalities of a sale, and repurchase of assets.
It would be a sufficient answer to this submission to
point to the principle that the courts must deal with what
the taxpayer actually did, and not what he might have
done . . . .25 [Underling
added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this case, the taxpayer took $300,000 from the bank and put
that money into his law firm on the same day that he took
$300,000 from his law firm and bought a new home. The Tax
Court Judge found that the borrowed money was used for the
purpose of buying a home. In my view there is no room to
argue that the personal use of the money should be ignored
because better tax planning might have yielded an interest
deduction that was acceptable under the Act.
| 3.4. Where the taxpayer's
purpose in borrowing the money is at odds with the
purpose of Income Tax Act
paragraph 20(1)(c), there can
be no bona fide purpose to earn
income |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
Supreme Court has twice held that "[t]he purpose of the
interest deduction provision is to encourage the accumulation
of capital which would produce taxable income."26
In this case, no capital was accumulated which will create
taxable income. The appellant took money from his law firm
and bought a house. The only capital which was accumulated
was personal-use capital. The Tax Court Judge made a
fact-based finding that the purpose of the transaction was to
purchase a house. Given that the taxpayer's behaviour in this
matter contradicts the purpose of the paragraph, it cannot
reasonably be said that the taxpayer (has satisfied) the
Court that his "bona fide purpose in using the funds
was to earn income."27
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]My
colleague argues that men and women who own equity in firms
or businesses must be able to refinance their equity with
debt. I agree. Where we disagree is whether this
appellant may refinance his equity stake in this way
on these facts and be allowed to deduct the interest on the
borrowed funds under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act. In
my view, a transaction which has no income-earning purpose
will always contradict ITA paragraph 20(1)(c),
because, as Dickson C.J. wrote:
It seems to me that, at the very least, the
taxpayer must satisfy the Court that his or her
bona fide purpose in using the funds was to
earn income.28 [Emphasis added.]
Dickson C.J. fully answers my colleague's point. The
taxpayer in this transaction cannot satisfy the Court that
his or her bona fide purpose in using the funds was to
earn income.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]My
colleague's point that refinancing must be permitted is also
answered by the reasoning of Dickson C.J. regarding the
legislative history of the provision. Dickson C.J. noted that
deductibility results from only one of the possible
uses of borrowed funds:
I agree with Marceau J. as to the purpose of the interest
deduction provision. Parliament created s.
20(1)(c)(i), and made it operate notwithstanding s.
18(1)(b), in order to encourage the accumulation of
capital which would produce taxable income. Not all borrowing
expenses are deductible. Interest on borrowed money used
to produce tax exempt income is not deductible. Interest on
borrowed money used to buy life insurance policies is not
deductible. Interest on borrowings used for non-income
earning purposes, such as personal consumption or the making
of capital gains is similarly not deductible. The
statutory deduction thus requires a characterization of the
use of borrowed money as between the eligible use of earning
non-exempt income from a business or property and a variety
of possible ineligible uses. The onus is on the taxpayer to
trace the borrowed funds to an identifiable use which
triggers the deduction. Therefore, if the taxpayer
commingles funds used for a variety of purposes only some of
which are eligible he or she may be unable to claim the
deduction . . . .29 [Emphasis
added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
Act and the jurisprudence teach us that recapitalization is
only deductible when the use of the borrowed funds has
an income earning purpose. The refinancing of equity with
debt is perfectly permissible, but the interest on that debt
may only be deducted if the borrowed funds are "used for the
purpose of earning income." There is nothing ambiguous about
Parliament's statement. Paragraph 20(1)(c ) of the Act
was not designed to promote debt refinancing. It was designed
to encourage the accumulation of capital, hence the
requirement that borrowed money must be "used for the purpose
of earning income." In this case not one cent of new capital
was accumulated. The appellant's borrowing in this case was
personal-use borrowing. Mr. Singleton took $300,000 from his
law firm and bought a house on the same day that he took
$300,000 from the bank to reimburse his law firm. Interest on
borrowing used to buy a house is not deductible.
Disposition
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]For
all the foregoing reasons, I would dismiss the appeal, with
costs to the respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in
English by
Rothstein J.A.:
Issue
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]This is an appeal from the Tax Court of Canada
involving the deductibility of interest under paragraph
20(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act, S.C.
1970-71-72, c. 63, as amended. Subparagraph
20(1)(c)(i) permits the deduction of:
20. (1) . . .
| (c) an amount paid
in the year or payable in respect of the year
. . . , pursuant to a legal obligation
to pay interest on |
| (i)
borrowed money used for the purpose of earning income
from a business or property . . . |
or a reasonable amount in respect thereof, whichever is
the lesser;
The issue is whether money borrowed by the appellant was
used for the purpose of earning income from his law firm or
whether it was used for the purpose of financing the purchase
of a home. If the former, the interest is deductible; if the
latter, it is not.
Facts
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]On
October 27, 1988, the appellant was one of two partners in
Singleton Urquhart, a law firm with offices in Vancouver and
Calgary. In addition to the two partners, the firm employed
eleven associate lawyers and various other employees. On
October 27, 1988 the amount in the appellant's capital
account at Singleton Urquhart was at least $300,000. On that
date, Singleton Urquhart paid out $300,000 from his capital
account to the appellant. The appellant used the $300,000 to
assist in the purchase of a home registered in the name of
his wife.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Later on October 27, 1988, the appellant
borrowed $298,750 from the Bank of British Columbia and
together with $1250 of his own money, paid a total of
$300,000 back into his capital account at Singleton
Urquhart.30
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
appellant paid interest of $3,688.52 in 1988 and $27,415.46
in 1989 and deducted the interest on his tax returns for
those years. The Minister reassessed, denying the interest
deduction. The appellant appealed to the Tax Court of
Canada.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Essentially, the learned Tax Court Judge found
that at the end of October 27, 1988, the appellant had
financed the purchase of a home and had become indebted to
the Bank of British Columbia. Viewing the matter in this way,
he concluded that the funds borrowed by the appellant were
used to purchase the home. The following excerpts from his
reasons explain his analysis of the facts [at pages
2876-2879]:
What happened on October 27, 1988 is that money came from
the bank, went through the firm and immediately went out to
the appellant and was used in the purchase of the house.
Without suggesting that there was any sham or dissimulation,
that is the reality of the situation.
. . .
On any realistic view of the matter it could not be said
that the money was used for the purpose of making a
contribution of capital to the partnership. The fundamental
purpose was the purchase of a house and this purpose cannot
be altered by the shuffle of cheques that took place on
October 27, 1988.
. . .
The true purpose of the use of the borrowed funds subsumed
the subordinate and incidental links in the chain.
Theoretically one might, in a connected series of events
leading to a predetermined conclusion, postulate as the
purpose of each event in the sequence the achievement of the
result that immediately follows but in determining the
"purpose" of the use of borrowed funds within the meaning of
paragraph 20(1)(c) the court is faced with practical
considerations with which the pure theorist is not
concerned.
. . .
What the appellant purported to do, he did. I am basing my
decision on the fact that, even if one accepts the legal
validity of the steps that were taken and also treats the
obvious tax motivation as irrelevant, one is still left with
the inescapable factual determination that the true economic
purpose for which the borrowed money was used was the
purchase of a house, not the enhancement of the firm's income
earning potential by a contribution of
capital. . . .
The appeals are dismissed with costs.
Standard of Review
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
learned Tax Court Judge used the term "inescapable
factual determination" [underlining added] in
referring to the "true economic purpose for which the
borrowed money was used" [underlining added]. It is a
well-settled principle of law that, absent a palpable and
overriding error affecting the trial judge's assessment of
the facts, an appellate court should not substitute its own
findings of fact for those of the trial judge. See R. v.
Van der Peet .31
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Iacobucci J. explained the difference between
questions of law, fact and mixed law and fact in Canada
(Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam
Inc.:32
Briefly stated, questions of law are questions about what
the correct legal test is; questions of fact are questions
about what actually took place between the parties; and
questions of mixed law and fact are questions about whether
the facts satisfy the legal tests.
In distinguishing questions of law from questions of mixed
law and fact, one of the considerations is whether the point
in controversy is one of general principle that might
potentially arise in cases in the future. If so, the question
is one of law.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this case, the facts are the transactions that took place on
October 27, 1988. There are no issues of credibility. There
is no dispute about these facts. What is at issue in this
appeal is how the transactions are to be analyzed for
purposes of paragraph 20(1)(c). Clearly, if all the
appellant's transactions of October 27, 1988 are treated as
one transaction or as a series of connected transactions, the
conclusion arrived at by the learned Trial Judge will be
reached. However, if each transaction is treated
independently (i.e. withdrawal of funds from the capital
account on the one hand and replacement of those funds on the
other), the bank borrowings will be found to be used for the
purposes of refinancing the appellant's capital investment in
the law firm.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
question of how to treat the transactions for purposes of
paragraph 20(1)(c), i.e. independently or as a
connected series is, I think, a question of law because it
involves the determination of a legal test against which the
factual transactions are to be assessed. Because what is at
issue is a question of law, it is not inappropriate for this
Court to re-examine the conclusion of the learned Tax Court
Judge on
Analysis
| A. Rationale for treating
transactions independently |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]As
I have already indicated, what is at issue is whether the
transactions in this case are to be treated independently or
as a series of connected transactions. I am of the respectful
opinion that in this case the transactions must be viewed
independently. Only in this way will the reality of the
appellant's circumstances and what he actually did be taken
into account. The appellant had his own funds in his capital
account in his firm which he withdrew for use in the purchase
of a home. He borrowed funds to replenish the funds he
withdrew from his capital account. If the purchase of the
home and the borrowing of the funds are viewed as one
transaction or as transactions in a connected series, these
facts are given no meaning. A more detailed consideration of
the transactions demonstrates why it would be incorrect not
to give meaning to the individual transactions in this
case.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]At
the start of October 27, 1988, the appellant had in excess of
$300,000 in his capital account at the firm. From his
personal point of view, the capital account was financed with
his own funds, that is, not financed by personal borrowing.
While it is not possible to specify exactly what the $300,000
was used for by the firm at any given time, it would be
generally used to finance assets of the firm such as cash,
short-term investments, furniture, fixtures and equipment,
accounts receivable and perhaps other assets not financed
through liabilities of the firm or the other partner's
capital. When the $300,000 was withdrawn from the firm, the
firm's assets would be reduced, (i.e. probably cash), and the
liabilities of the firm would be increased if the firm had to
borrow to pay the appellant his $300,000. In order to replace
the firm's reduction of assets or eliminate the firm's need
to incur the increased liability caused by the withdrawal of
his capital funds, the appellant borrowed $298,750 from the
bank and together with $1,250 of his own funds, paid $300,000
into the firm. At the end of October 27, 1988, the
appellant's capital account was the same as at the start of
the day. However, now it was refinanced with a personal bank
loan of the appellant.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]There is no suggestion that the firm did not
require the funds the appellant paid to the firm in
replacement of the funds withdrawn from his capital account.
Indeed, it is obvious that the withdrawn funds were required
because they were replaced the same day. Nor is there any
suggestion that the transactions were not bona fide,
i.e. a sham contrived to make it appear that something was
taking place that was not, in reality,
occurring.33 The evidence is that the funds paid
into the firm on October 27, 1988 were the funds borrowed
from the Bank of British Columbia and with respect to which
the appellant had a legal obligation to pay interest.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]If
the transactions are viewed independently, therefore, it is
clear that the funds the appellant used for the purpose of
assisting in the acquisition of the home were his own funds
that he withdrew from the law firm and the funds he used for
the purpose of replenishing his capital account at the firm
were funds borrowed from the Bank of British Columbia.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]If
the transactions are not viewed independently, an unexplained
inconsistency arises. An initial capital investment by a
partner in a law firm can be financed with borrowed funds for
which the interest payable is deductible. A subsequent
refinancing of that capital investment can also be financed
with borrowed funds for which the interest is deductible,
e.g. if the partner changes banks. The Minister has presented
no logical reason why, if a partner invests his own funds in
his firm, he cannot withdraw those funds for personal use and
refinance the investment in the firm with borrowed money in
respect of which interest is deductible. Yet that is the
result if the transactions are viewed as one or as a series
of connected transactions, in which the ineligible use of the
withdrawn funds is linked to the refinancing with borrowed
funds. The requirement of paragraph 20(1)(c) is that
the borrowed money is used for the purpose of earning income.
Its application is not limited to the initial investment made
nor to the refinancing of prior borrowed funds. Its
application does not exclude refinancing with borrowed funds,
a partner's investment of his own funds in his firm which he
withdraws for a non-eligible purpose.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]During argument, there was a suggestion by
counsel for the Minister that perhaps if there was an
interval of time between the withdrawal of the funds from the
firm for an ineligible use and the payment into the firm of
borrowed replacement funds, that the use of the borrowed
funds might be considered to be for the purpose of earning
income, i.e. there would be no link between the ineligible
use of the withdrawn funds and the borrowed funds. However, I
fail to see how an interval of time has any bearing on the
issue. Certainly, the interval of time might make the purpose
for which the withdrawn funds were used less obvious, but
that is hardly a principled basis upon which to find that the
funds borrowed to replace the withdrawn funds were or were
not used for the purpose of earning income for purposes of
paragraph 20(1)(c). Of course, if all transactions
occur on the same day, there is a greater risk to the
taxpayer that he or she might not structure them so as to
ensure that the borrowing comes within the requirements of
paragraph 20(1)(c), e.g. taking shortcuts. However,
provided the transactions are properly structured and there
is no sham, I see no reason why transactions occurring on the
same day should not be treated independently and each be
given meaning.
| B. Bronfman
Trust"Ratio
decidendi |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]Two
requirements for interest deductibility set forth in
Bronfman Trust v. The Queen34 are relevant
in this case. The first is tracing. At page 45, Dickson C.J.
states:
The onus is on the taxpayer to trace the borrowed funds to
an identifiable use which triggers the deduction.
In the case at bar, the funds borrowed from the Bank of
British Columbia can be traced to an identifiable, eligible
use, refinancing the appellant's capital account at his law
firm. The funds physically flowed from the Bank of British
Columbia to the appellant's capital account at the firm.
Indeed, the Minister has conceded that tracing is not an
issue.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
second is consideration of the direct use of the
borrowed funds. At page 48, Dickson C.J. states:
In my view, neither the Income Tax Act nor the
weight of judicial authority permits the courts to ignore the
direct use to which a taxpayer puts borrowed money.
In Bronfman Trust, supra, the borrowed funds
were used to make capital allocations to beneficiaries:
There is no dispute concerning the immediate and direct
use to which the borrowed funds were put. They were used to
make the capital allocations to the beneficiary and not to
buy income-earning properties.35
It was argued by the Trust that in borrowing to pay
allocations to beneficiaries, the Trust was permitted to
retain income producing assets. The result would be the same
as if assets were sold to pay the allocations and then
borrowed money used to replace them. This argument was
rejected on the basis that the direct use was ineligible,
even though the indirect use was eligible.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]Had
the appellant in this case used the borrowed funds directly
for the financing of the acquisition of the home and then
argued that the result would be the same as if he had used
his own funds from the firm for the acquisition and replaced
them with borrowed funds, he would be in the same position as
the taxpayer in Bronfman Trust, supra, and
would not be entitled to interest deductibility. However,
that is not what was in fact done.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
the case at bar, the direct use of the borrowed funds was to
refinance the appellant's capital account at the firm.
Treating the borrowed funds as used for financing the
purchase of the home ignores what the appellant actually did,
i.e. used the borrowed funds to replace the funds required
for his capital account at the firm. As stated by Dickson,
C.J. in Bronfman Trust, the Court cannot ignore the
direct use to which the appellant put the borrowed money.
| C. Bronfman
Trust"obiter
dicta |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]I
have also had regard to the obiter dicta in
Bronfman Trust:36
If, for example, the Trust had sold a particular
income-producing asset, made the capital allocation to the
beneficiary and repurchased the same asset, all within a
brief interval of time, the courts might well consider the
sale and repurchase to constitute a formality or a sham
designed to conceal the essence of the transaction, namely
that money was borrowed and used to fund a capital allocation
to the beneficiary. In this regard, see Zwaig v. Minister
of National Revenue, [1974] C.T.C. 2172 (T.R.B.), in
which the taxpayer sold securities and used the proceeds to
buy a life insurance policy. He then borrowed on the policy
to repurchase the securities. Under s. 20(1)(c)(i) the use of
the borrowed money to purchase a life insurance policy is not
a use entitling the taxpayer to an interest deduction. The
Tax Review Board rightly disallowed the deduction sought for
interest payments, notwithstanding that the form of the
taxpayer's transactions created an aura of compliance with
the requirements of the interest deduction provision.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
the case at bar, the Minister does not suggest that what was
occurring here was a sham or that there was any
concealment.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Nonetheless, a reading of this obiter
dicta in isolation and Dickson C.J.'s apparent agreement
with the result in the Zwaig [Zwaig v. Minister of
National Revenue, [1974] CTC 2172 (T.R.B.)] case, could
lead one to conclude that even in the absence of a sham, the
appellant in this case should not be allowed to deduct
interest payments. This Court and the Supreme Court of Canada
have not had occasion to consider the obiter dicta or
cases similar to Zwaig since Bronfman Trust was
decided. However, there is commentary suggesting that there
is difficulty reconciling the Supreme Court's ratio
with the obiter dicta in Bronfman Trust. For
example, Brian A. Felesky and Sandra E. Jack in their
article, "Is there Substance to `Substance over Form' in
Canada?"37 argue that the obiter dicta in
Bronfman Trust is inconsistent with the approach
ultimately adopted in that case. They say that the
application of the direct use doctrine is inconsistent with
the Court's observation in the obiter dicta that a
taxpayer should be denied the deduction where the direct
purpose satisfies paragraph 20(1)(c) but the indirect
purpose does not. They state:
Indeed, it is interesting, if not perplexing, that after
endorsing a broad look into commercial reality, the Supreme
Court in Bronfman Trust took a strict approach with
respect to paragraph 20(1)(c). Only the direct purpose was
ultimately adopted, not the indirect purpose. This is
inconsistent with the judgments of the lower courts and many
other cases, including those referred to in the obiter dicta.
Arguably, it is also inconsistent with the court's own
conclusion as to the result that should follow in different
circumstances"that is, when a taxpayer's direct
purpose satisfies paragraph 20(1)(c) but the indirect purpose
does not. [Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]In
this appeal, the appellant's direct purpose satisfies
paragraph 20(1)(c) but his indirect purpose does not.
Applying the obiter dicta to the facts of this case
fails to recognize the direct use approach actually mandated
by the Supreme Court in Bronfman Trust. Further, the
application of the obiter dicta to this case would
also be inconsistent with more recent pronouncements of the
Supreme Court which suggests that in the absence of sham or
an artificial transaction, a taxpayer should not be denied
the benefit of provisions of the Income Tax Act with
which he or she complies, even if the taxpayer's motivation
is solely tax planning. In Continental Bank Leasing Corp.
v. Canada, supra, Bastarache J., dissenting in the
result but speaking for a unanimous Court on this issue,
adopted the approach of Iacobucci J. in Canada v.
Antosko,38 and outlined three important
principles of law which are relevant here. First, a taxpayer
who complies with the provisions of the Income Tax Act
ought not to be denied the benefit of such provisions simply
because the transaction was motivated for tax planning
purposes. Second, in the absence of evidence that the
transaction was a sham or an abuse of the provisions of the
Act and where the words of the Act are clear, it is not the
role of the Court to decide the case based on the Court's
view as to whether the taxpayer is deserving of a deduction.
Third, it is an error for the Court to ignore the legal and
commercial reality of a transaction.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]At
pages 328-330 of Continental Bank, Bastarache J.
states:
A taxpayer who fully complies with the provisions of
the Income Tax Act ought not to be
denied the benefit of such provisions simply because the
transaction was motivated for tax planning purposes. In
Stubart Investments, supra, this Court
unanimously rejected the "business purpose test" and affirmed
the proposition that it is permissible for a taxpayer to take
advantage of the terms of the Income Tax Act by
structuring a transaction that is solely motivated by the
desire to minimize taxation. Similarly, in Canada v.
Antosko, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 312, Iacobucci J., for a
unanimous Court, found at p. 328:
| In this appeal, despite
conceding that these factual elements are present, the
respondent is asking the Court to examine and evaluate
the transaction in and of itself, and to conclude that
the transaction is somehow outside the scope of the
section in issue. In the absence of evidence that
the transaction was a sham or an abuse of the
provisions of the Act, it is not the role of the court
to determine whether the transaction in question is one
which renders the taxpayer deserving of a deduction. If
the terms of the section are met, the taxpayer may rely
on it, and it is the option of Parliament specifically
to preclude further reliance in such
situations. |
Iacobucci J. went on to say, at p. 330:
| This transaction was
obviously not a sham. The terms of the section were met
in a manner that was not artificial. Where the words
of the section are not ambiguous, it is not for this
Court to find that the appellants should be disentitled
to a deduction because they do not deserve a
"windfall", as the respondent contends. In the absence
of a situation of ambiguity, such that the Court must
look to the results of a transaction to assist in
ascertaining the intent of Parliament, a normative
assessment of the consequences of the application of a
given provision is within the ambit of the legislature,
not the courts. |
Having found that the transaction was not a sham, the
Court of Appeal should not have found that the parties lacked
the requisite intention to form a valid partnership simply
because the transaction was motivated by a resulting tax
benefit. The Court of appeal proceeded on the basis that the
predominance of fiscal motives or the absence of a concurrent
business purpose justifies or compels the court to disregard
the legal form of the transaction which the parties
intended.
The legal and commercial reality in the present case is
that Leasing intended to and did enter into a partnership
with Central within the meaning of s. 2 of the
Partnerships Act. The Court of Appeal erred
by ignoring the substance of a legally effective
transaction. [Emphasis added.]
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]On
the first point, there is no doubt that what the appellant
did in this case was solely for the purpose of reducing his
tax liability. The appellant deliberately and without deceit
structured his transactions on October 27, 1988, in order to
bring his borrowing and legal obligation to pay interest
within paragraph 20(1)(c). His motivation does not
deny him the benefit of paragraph 20(1)(c), where he
has fully complied with its provisions. As Iacobucci J.
stated in Neuman v. M.N.R.,39 taxpayers are
entitled to arrange their affairs, including non-arm's length
transactions, for the sole purpose of achieving a favourable
position regarding taxation:
However, as mentioned above, taxpayers are entitled to
arrange their affairs for the sole purpose of achieving a
favourable position regarding taxation and no distinction is
to be made in the application of this principle between arm's
length and non-arm's length transactions (see Stubart,
supra). The ITA has many specific
anti-avoidance provisions and rules governing the treatment
of non-arm's length transactions. We should not be quick to
embellish the provision at issue here when it is open for the
legislator to be precise and specific with respect to any
mischief to be avoided.
There is no justification for denying the appellant
interest deductibility on this basis.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]On
the second point, the Minister does not suggest that what was
occurring here was a sham or that there was any concealment;
nor does he suggest that the words of paragraph
20(1)(c) are ambiguous. The appellant's borrowing met
the terms of paragraph 20(1)(c) in a manner that was
not artificial. It would be inappropriate for the Court to
decide the question of deductibility of interest on the basis
of whether, in the Court's view, the appellant was deserving
of interest deductibility.
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur
inconnu.]Finally, the legal and commercial reality of
this transaction is that the appellant withdrew his own funds
from his law firm to purchase a house. On the same day, he
borrowed funds to replace the funds required for his capital
account at the firm. In Bronfman Trust, the Court
adopted an approach which required the taxpayer to trace the
borrowed funds to an identifiable direct use which triggered
deductibility of interest under paragraph 20(1)(c). As
I have found earlier in these reasons, the appellant has met
these requirements. It would be incorrect to ignore the
substance of a legally effective borrowing transaction for an
income earning purpose in the present appeal.
| D. Construction of
Paragraph 20(1)(c) |
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]I
think there is a further reason for finding that the
connected series of transactions approach must be rejected.
In The Fundamentals of Canadian Income Tax,
supra,40 Professor Krishna states:
Mark Resources necessarily implies that in
multi-step arrangements, the deductibility of interest
expense depends upon the real purpose of the "series of
transactions" and not the purpose of the immediate and direct
use of the funds. There is, however, no authority for
importing a series of transactions approach into paragraph
20(1)(c) of the Act. The phrase "series of transactions",
which appears 41 times in the Act, is not used in paragraph
20(1)(c). Where the Act uses the phrase "series of
transactions" the series is deemed to include any related
transactions or events completed in contemplation of the
series. It is reasonable to infer from the absence of the
phrase in paragraph 20(1)(c) that there is no legislative
intention to import the series test into that paragraph.
I agree with the view expressed by Professor Krishna. In
the context of the Income Tax Act in which the phrase
"series of transactions" appears 41 times, its absence from
paragraph 20(1)(c ) implies that there is no
legislative intent to import the series test into that
paragraph or, in other words, to link a series of individual
transactions as if they were one transaction as the Minister
purports to do in this case.
Disposition
[Erreur ! Argument de commutateur inconnu.]The
appeal should be allowed, the judgment of the Tax Court of
Canada should be set aside as should the Minister's
reassessment. The Minister should be required to reassess in
accordance with these reasons. The appellant should be
entitled to costs in this Court and in the Tax Court of
Canada.
McDonald J.A.: I agree.
1 The reasons of the Tax Court Judge are
reported at [1996] 3 C.T.C. 2873.
2 Les Entreprises Ludco Ltée et
al. v. The Queen (1999), 99 DTC 5153 (F.C.A.). Further
discussion of Les Entreprises Ludco follows
infra.
3 Reasons on appeal, at p. 2876.
4 See, e.g., In re Estate of Smith
& Hogan, Ltd., [1932] S.C.R. 661, at p. 673 ("The
execution of the conditional sales agreements, however, is,
in my opinion, just as consistent with an intention to take
security on the automobiles for advances made, but with a
misconception of the legal effect which would follow the
taking of security in that form, as it is with an intention
on the part of the appellants to purchase the automobiles. It
is wholly a question of the intention of the parties, and
that is a question of fact on which we have the concurrent
finding of two courts."); see also Wildenburg Holdings
Ltd. v. Ontario (Minister of Revenue), [1999] 2
C.T.C. 161 (Ont. Gen. Div.), at p. 166 ("It is well
established that whether any particular property used in a
partnership business is or is not partnership property does
not depend on how the title happens to be held but is a
question of fact based upon the intention of the parties.");
R.P.M. Tech Inc. v. Harvey & Co. (1993),
111 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 12 (Nfld. S.C.T.D.), per
Wells J., at p. 22 ("It is in my view, a question of fact as
to what the intention of the parties was, and the court has
to do its best to ascertain that intention."); Milos
Equipment Ltd. v. Insurance Corp. of Ireland
(1988), 34 C.C.L.I. 102 (B.C.S.C.), at p. 108; revd on other
grounds [1990] 5 W.W.R. 757 (B.C.C.A.) ("As the parties'
intention is essentially a question of fact, case law brings
little to bear on the issues.").
5 ;R. v. Van der Peet,
[1996] 2 S.C.R. 507, at para. 81, pp. 564-566. I would note
that the Supreme Court reiterated this principle in one of
its most recent judgments: see Ryan v. Victoria
(City), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 201, at para. 57, p. 239.
6 The reasons in Robitaille are
reported at [1997] 3 C.T.C. 3031 (T.C.C.).
7 [1997] 3 C.T.C. 3031, at p. 3041.
8 Bronfman Trust, supra, at p.
55.
9 Zwaig, M v. MNR, [1974]
C.T.C. 2172 (T.R.B.).
10 And, on account of these striking
similarities, the appellant does not attempt to distinguish
it, choosing instead to argue before this Court that
Zwaig was wrongly decided.
11 Supra, note 9, at pp.
2174-2175.
12 See Tennant v. M.N.R.,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 305, at para. 26, p. 322; Bronfman Trust
v. The Queen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32, at pp.
52-55.
13 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
pp. 52-53.
14 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
p. 54.
15 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
p. 53.
16 See, e.g., Canada Safeway Limited v.
The Minister of National Revenue, [1957] S.C.R. 717, at
p. 727.
17 See An Act to amend the Income War
Tax Act, 1917, S.C. 1923, c. 52, s. 2.
18 See The Income Tax Act, S.C.
1948, c. 52, s. 11.
19 Reasons on appeal, at p. 2876.
20 Ibid.
21 See: Bronfman Trust,
supra, at p. 45, quoted below at note 29, per
Dickson C.J.
22 At para. 63 of his reasons, my
colleague accepts the reasoning in the writings of Vern
Krishna, that Mark Resources Inc. v. Canada, [1993] 2
C.T.C. 2259 (T.C.C.) was wrongly decided. I disagree. Mark
Resources is widely accepted as good law regarding
transactional analysis. At the Tax Court of Canada, it is
regularly cited on this point: see, e.g., Douglas
Chisholm, Harvey Chisholm and Paul Chisholm v.
R., [1999] 1 C.T.C. 2498 (T.C.C.), at p. 2510; Chase
Manhattan Bank of Canada v. R., [1997] 2 C.T.C. 3097
(T.C.C.), at p. 3102 ("All must be assessed with an eye to
commercial and economic realities."); Gibson Petroleum Co.
v. R. , [1997] 3 C.T.C. 2453 (T.C.C.), at paras. 32-35,
pp. 2465-2466; Robitaille v. R., [1997] 3 C.T.C. 3031
(T.C.C.), at pp. 3036-3037; Canwest Broadcasting Ltd. v.
Canada, [1995] 2 C.T.C. 2780 (T.C.C.), at pp. 2791-2794;
Garneau (J.V.) v. Canada, [1995] 1 C.T.C. 2978
(T.C.C.), at pp. 2979-2980; Mara Properties Ltd. v.
Canada, [1993] 2 C.T.C. 3189 (T.C.C.), at pp. 3199 and
3202. Mark Resources was cited with approval on this
point by the Federal Court"Trial Division in Ludmer v.
Minister of National Revenue , [1998] 2 C.T.C. 104
(F.C.T.D.), at p. 126. Mark Resources has thrice been
cited with approval by this Court: see, e.g., Canada v. Shell Canada
Ltd., [1998] 3 F.C. 64 (C.A.), at para. 43, p. 88;
see also 74712
Alberta Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1997] 2 F.C. 471 (C.A.), at
p. 509, per Robertson J.A. (concurring in the result);
Canada v.
Fording Coal Ltd., [1996] 1 F.C. 518 (C.A.), at p.
537, per MacDonald J.A. (dissenting). In my view, the
reasoning in Mark Resources is consistent with the
primary task of the courts"i.e., determining the commercial
and economic realities of the transaction at hand. That the
legislature did not make reference to analysis of a "series
of transactions" is irrelevant, especially in light of the
Supreme Court's clear instruction to seek the commercial and
economic realities of the case at bar, and in light of the
provision, which dictates that borrowed money must be "used
for the purpose of earning income" [underlining
added].
23 ;Canada v. Shell
Canada Ltd., [1998] 3 F.C. 64 (C.A.).
24 A similar result would have obtained,
however, by viewing the debt offering and the forward
contracts as one transaction and calculating the actual rate
of interest by reading the documents together. Reading the
documents in that fashion, the rate of interest would be (a)
the interest on the foreign debt minus; (b) the forward
discount gained from the forward contracts, which would, of
course, yield the domestic interest rate at the time of that
single, risk-free transaction. This is because currency
forwards are priced according to the interest rate
differential between the two jurisdictions. Purchasing
currency forwards in a high-interest foreign jurisdiction,
for instance, yields a forward premium equal to the
difference between the high- and lower-interest
jurisdictions. Note also that the forward gain was risk-free:
the risk in purchasing forwards is interest-rate risk, which
in the Shell Canada case was eliminated by the
concurrent debt offering. Thus, viewed from a different
perspective, the proper interest rate in that case would
still be the (lower) domestic rate.
25 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
pp. 54-55.
26 Tennant, supra, at para.
16, p. 316. See also Bronfman Trust, supra, at
p. 45 ("I agree with Marceau J. as to the purpose of the
interest deduction provision. Parliament created s.
20(1)(c )(i) . . . in order to encourage the
accumulation of capital which would produce taxable income.
Not all borrowing expenses are deductible.")
27 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
p. 54.
28 Ibid. I would also note that
these statements, made in the context of ITA s.
20(1)(c) have the effect of limiting the applicability
of the so-called "Duke of Westminster" principle in cases
regarding interest deductibility. While it is trite law that
the Duke of Westminster may arrange his manor so as to
minimize his taxable income, it is similarly trite law that
the Duke may not ignore the established laws of Parliament
while doing so. In the context of interest deductibility, the
Duke would have to "satisfy the Court that his or her bona
fide purpose in using the funds was to earn income."
29 Bronfman Trust, supra, at
pp. 45-46. I reviewed the legislative history of the interest
deduction in Shell Canada, supra, noting at
para. 30, p. 81 that interest deductibility was considered by
Parliament to be a legitimate expense to the extent that it
is a business expense incurred to earn taxable income. See
Shell Canada, supra, at paras. 28-33, pp.
80-83.
30 The amount actually borrowed was
$400,000, but only $298,750 is relevant here. The learned Tax
Court Judge found that it was the appellant's wife who
borrowed the funds from the Bank of British Columbia
apparently on the security of an existing home. However, he
found that the appellant signed the mortgage as covenantor
and had a legal obligation to pay principal and interest on
the loan, not as guarantor but as principal obligor. The
evidence does not indicate why Mr. Singleton used only
$298,750 of borrowed funds to replenish his capital account
and not $300,000. Nothing turns on the difference. The
evidence is clear that $300,000 was withdrawn from the
appellant's capital account before it was replaced by the
$298,750 of borrowed funds and $1250 of the appellant's own
funds.
31 [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507, at para. 81, pp.
564-566.
32 [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, at para. 35, pp.
766-767.
33 In Continental Bank Leasing Corp. v.
Canada, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 298, Bastarache J. (although in
dissent in the result) reflects the views of a unanimous
Court in the following passage at p. 316, par. 20:
| The sham doctrine will not
be applied unless there is an element of deceit in the
way a transaction was either constructed or conducted.
This requirement was outlined by Estey J. as follows in
Stubart Investments Ltd. v. The Queen, [1984] 1
S.C.R. 536, at pp. 545-46: |
| A sham transaction: this
expression comes to us from decisions in the United
Kingdom, and it has been generally taken to mean (but
not without ambiguity) a transaction conducted with an
element of deceit so as to create an illusion
calculated to lead the tax collector away from the
taxpayer or the true nature of the transaction; or,
simple deception whereby the taxpayer creates a facade
of reality quite different from the disguised
reality. |
In The Fundamentals of Canadian Income Tax, 5th
ed., Toronto: Carswell, 1995, Professor Vern Krishna, at p.
1371, defines sham as: "an arrangement that does not, in
fact, create the legal rights and obligations that it
purports to create is a `sham' and may be ignored for the
purposes of determining its tax consequences".
34 [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32.
35 At p. 37.
36 At p. 55.
37 Report of Proceedings of the
Forty-fourth Tax Conference, 1992. Toronto: Canadian Tax
Foundation, 1992, at p. 50:33.
38 [1994] 2 S.C.R. 312.
39 [1998] 1 S.C.R. 770, at p. 793, para.
63.
40 At p. 1274.