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T-1311-72
M.W.A. Gas and Oil Limited (Plaintiff)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Defendant)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Calgary, Novem- ber 12 and 13, 1973; January 21, 1974.
Income tax—Deductions—Expenses of business in oil and gas production—Construction business of corporation suc ceeded by oil and gas business in same taxation year— Whether oil business principal business—Corporation held entitled to deduction—Income Tax Act, s. 83A(3bXa).
The plaintiff corporation abandoned its construction busi ness in March 1968. A hiatus of activity ensued, during which the corporation wound up its construction operation. Activity was resumed in October 1968 with the entry of the corporation into the oil and gas field with subsequent expen diture on exploration of $995,000. In 1969, the corporation effected a change of name to that appearing in the style of cause.
Held, allowing the appeal, the corporation's construction business was succeeded by the oil and gas business as the "principal business" in the taxation year 1968. The corpora tion was entitled to the deduction of moneys expended under section 83A(3b)(a) of the Income Tax Act.
Sorbara v. M.N.R. [1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 191; American Metal Company of Canada v. M.N.R. [1952] C.T.C. 302 and M.N.R. v. Consolidated Mogul Mines Limited 68 DTC 5284, considered.
INCOME tax appeal. COUNSEL:
J. G. McDonald, Q.C. and D. C. Nathanson for plaintiff.
F. Dubrule, Q.C. and F. Fryers for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
McDonald & Hayden, Toronto, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
CATTANACH J.—This in an appeal from an assessment to income tax by the Minister for
the plaintiff's taxation year ending October 31, 1968.
The issue in this appeal and the rival conten tions with respect to the issue resolved them selves into a very narrow compass.
The issue is whether the principal business of the plaintiff in its 1968 taxation year, was pro duction, refining or marketing of petroleum, petroleum products or natural gas or exploring or drilling for petroleum or natural gas within the meaning of section 83A(3b)(a) of the Income Tax Act.
If that is the case then the plaintiff, in accord ance with formulae outlined in section 83A(3b), may deduct in computing its income under Part I of the Act, in effect the aggregate of its drilling and exploration expenses incurred in the year to the extent that those expenses were not previ ously deducted.
The amount of those expenses total $955,000. Expenses in the amount of $55,000 were incurred by the plaintiff for exploring and drill ing for oil in October 1968 and the plaintiff acquired oil and gas exploration rights at a cost of $900,000 also in October 1968.
It is admitted by the Minister that the expen diture of $900,000 by the plaintiff was for the acquisition of exploration and drilling rights within the meaning of section 83A(5a) and as such are deemed by section 83A(5a) to be a drilling and exploration expense for the pur poses of section 83A(3b).
The pertinent portion of section 83A(3b) reads as follows:
83A. (3b) A corporation whose principal business is (a) production, refining or marketing of petroleum, petroleum products or natural gas, or exploring or drilling for petroleum or natural gas,
may deduct, in computing its income under this Part for a taxation year, the lesser of ... .
The formulae for determining the amounts deductible are then outlined in paragraphs (f)
and (g) of subsection (3b) of section 83A but there is no dispute between the parties as to the deductibility of a total amount of $955,000 pro vided the plaintiff qualifies as a corporation whose principal business is as outlined in para graph (a) of subsection (3b) of section 83A reproduced above.
The contention of the plaintiff is that the principal business of the plaintiff was, in the taxation year in question, as described in para graph (a) whereas the Minister contends that its principal business was otherwise. Therein lies the dispute between the parties.
The plaintiff was incorporated pursuant to the laws of the Province of Ontario by letters patent dated May 18, 1966 under the name of McDou- gall Walbridge Aldinger (Ontario) Limited for the purpose of carrying on the business of build ers and general contractors. The company was formed by the Walbridge, Aldinger Company of Detroit, Michigan, and by W. A. McDougall Ltd. of London, Ontario each of whom held 50% of the issued shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff.
In effect the plaintiff was a combination of the resources of the Detroit based and London based companies. The Detroit based company had done work for the Ford Motor Company and the London based company had construc tion equipment in that area.
The plaintiff company so formed was the successful bidder for the construction of an automobile assembly plant for Ford Motor Company of Canada Limited (hereinafter referred to as Ford) at St. Thomas, Ontario.
The original contract with Ford was for the foundation work, footings, caissons and con crete work. If I recall the evidence correctly the plaintiff's bid was in the neighbourhood of $5,000,000. However over a period of 14 months from the beginning of construction in 1966 the contract went through some 338 change orders or amendments so that the plain tiff was continuously engaged in the completion of the project which was the construction of the Ford assembly plant and turning it over to Ford
in an operable condition. Again it is my recollec tion that the total cost of the project was approximately $27,850,000. The contract was referred to as a turn-key contract.
In October and November 1967 there were about 200 employees of the plaintiff all of whom were iron workers doing the final work of completing the conveyor assembly in the plant.
Ford went into production before Christmas 1967. Mr. McDougall bought an automobile which came off the assembly line in December 1967.
There were no employees of the plaintiff working on the site as at February 1, 1968. There were no sub-trades on the site except about 20 men doing the final landscaping.
The job superintendent left the job in Novem- ber 1967 and returned to the employ of W. A. McDougall Ltd. on projects underway in East ern Canada.
Mr. McDougall testified that the work was completed on February 1, 1968 subject to cleaning up exercises in which he estimated that some 200 man-days were expended by employees of the plaintiff and 400 man-days by employees of the sub-trades.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the project was completed in February 1968.
On the other hand counsel for the Minister contended that the construction business of the plaintiff continued throughout the plaintiff's financial year ending October 31, 1968 and into the next ensuing financial year.
He based that contention by analogy to remarks made in Sorbara v. M.N.R.' where it was said at page 199:
... In my view, the business of acquiring land for disposi tion at a profit includes all operations essential to the successful completion of the project, including not only sale or other disposition, but collection of the proceeds of disposition.
He then pointed out that there were approxi mately 20 work-order amendments, the invoices
[1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 191.
for which were dated from April 1968 to August 1968.
Mr. McDougall explained that the work had been done and the officers of the plaintiff were negotiating with Ford as to the amounts payable under the work-order amendments. When this was settled the invoices issued. The officers of the plaintiff had a meeting each month with Ford to negotiate the amounts payable.
The job superintendent had been paid a bonus of $67,000. He left the job in the fall of 1967. In the July previous he had been paid $15,000. The balance of $52,000 was paid to him August 1969 which was well into the next fiscal period of the plaintiff.
The financial statement of the plaintiff for the year ending October 31, 1968 disclosed as an asset an amount of $378,000 due from Ford.
The final invoice to Ford in the amount of $318,000 was sent on October 23, 1968, seven days before the fiscal year end and was paid in November 1968.
The explanation of the discrepancy between the amounts of $378,000 and $318,000 was that the negotiations with Ford resulted in the lesser amount.
The plaintiff was originally incorporated to construct one project, namely, the Ford motor assembly plant. Therefore the construction busi ness of the plaintiff would come to an end of its own weight on the completion of that project. The evidence is that the plant was completed before March 1, 1968 and all that remained to be done was to negotiate with Ford and collect the amounts determined to be payable.
On completion of the Ford plant the Wal- bridge Aldinger Company of Detroit wanted out of the plaintiff company. This separation was arranged. The profits resulting from the con struction of the Ford plant were divided. W. A. McDougall Ltd. became the sole beneficial shareholder of the plaintiff and there remained in the plaintiff liquid assets in the approximate
amount of $1,273,000 being the appropriate share of the profits from the construction business.
The plaintiff therefore sought other forms of business activity. After investigation it was decided to enter the oil and gas business.
By supplementary letters patent dated Octo- ber 16, 1968 the objects authorizing the plaintiff to engage in the construction business were deleted and objects authorizing it to engage in an oil and gas business were substituted therefor.
The plaintiff obtained an extra provincial licence from the Province of Alberta in October 1968 authorizing it to carry on business in that Province.
By supplementary letters patent dated April 30, 1969 the corporate name of the plaintiff was changed from McDougall Walbridge Aldinger (Ontario) Limited to M.W.A. Gas and Oil Lim ited which name appears in the style of cause.
As previously recited the plaintiff incurred oil and gas drilling and exploration expenses in the amount of $55,000 and acquired oil and gas exploration and drilling rights at a cost of $900,- 000 both of which amounts were paid by the plaintiff by cheque in October 1968.
In its 1968 taxation year the plaintiff received revenue from its oil and gas business in the amount of $8,124 and in its 1969, 1970 and 1971 financial years it received revenue in the approximate amount of $350,000 in each year. From these figures I observe that the plaintiff recouped its expenses in three years.
The contention of the Minister, as I under stood it, is that the language of section 83A(3b) reading, "A corporation whose principal busi ness is", of necessity means that a corporation can have only one principal business in a taxa tion year and that no particular period of time
within the taxation year is of more paramount importance than any other period.
Assuming the Minister's contention to be cor rect, it follows that I must decide which of the two businesses, namely, the construction busi ness and the business of exploring and drilling for gas and oil carried on by the plaintiff in its 1968 taxation year, was its principal business.
In contradistinction the position taken by the plaintiff is that until March 1, 1968 the plaintiff was exclusively in the business of construction. Since that was its sole business at that time it was its principal business.
However it was the plaintiff's contention that the active construction business ended on March 1, 1968 on the completion of the project and from that time forward the plaintiff was dormant until October 1968 when it actively embarked on an oil and gas business.
The crux of the argument on behalf of the plaintiff, as I understood it, was that a corpora tion can have two principal businesses within a taxation year provided there is an hiatus between the conclusion of one business and the inception of another.
In American Metal Company of Canada Ltd. v. M.N.R. 2 Cameron 'J. had occasion to consider which of two businesses being carried on con currently was a corporation's "chief" business. The pertinent words of the section then in effect were "a corporation whose chief business is that of mining or exploring for minerals is en titled to deduct from income" expenses incurred for prospecting, exploration and by develop ment in the taxation year.
He said at page 306:
"Chief business" is not defined in either of the Acts and the phrase, so far as I am aware, has not been the subject of judicial interpretation. In my view it is a question of fact to be determined by an examination and comparison of all the facts concerning each of the various types of business in which the company is engaged.
2 [1952] C.T.C. 302.
In M.N.R. v. Mogul Mines Limited 3 Spence J. speaking for the Supreme Court of Canada, quoted and approved the foregoing statement by Cameron J. and applied the test therein set forth.
He noted that the statute then under consider ation contained no definition of "principal busi ness" although "business" is defined in section 139(1)(e) in a manner not relevant to the ques tion under review.
The same circumstance is applicable in the present instance. There is no distinction conse quent upon the use of the adjective "principal" in place of the adjective "chief". In their respective contexts the words are synonymous.
I therefore revert to the contention of the Minister, without purporting to decide the matter, that a corporation can have only one principal business in a taxation year.
As I have said before it is implicit in the submission that a corporation can have only one principal business that the question to be decid ed, as one of fact, is which of the plaintiff's businesses in its 1968 taxation year was its principal business.
In this case the only business of the plaintiff following its incorporation in 1966 was the con struction of the Ford assembly plant at St. Thomas, Ontario. The plaintiff was incorporated for that project only. There is ample justifica tion for that conclusion. The Detroit based com pany had a long association with and was favourably known to Ford. The London based company had experience in the construction business in that area. The Detroit based com pany became a shareholder in the plaintiff for the construction of this particular plant only. This is borne out by the subsequent event that upon the completion of the plant it severed its connection with the plaintiff.
3 68 DTC 5284.
The plant, in an operable state, was com pleted in December 1967. Ford motor cars came off the assembly line in that month. All that remained to be done was in the nature of a cleaning up exercise, the landscaping and the installation of external iron railings. This work was completed by March 1, 1968. As of that date the plaintiff had no more employees on the job, its job superintendent had left the site and the plaintiff's employ in November 1967. All employees of the sub-trades had left the site prior to that date.
In short the physical construction of the plant was completed as of that date. All that remained to be done was for the officers of the plaintiff to settle with Ford the compensation for the work done pursuant to change orders and accept the payment of those amounts when determined. The actual work covered thereby had been undertaken and completed by the plaintiff prior to March 1, 1968.
I do not accept the testimony of Mr. McDou- gall that the plaintiff then became dormant and remained dormant until October 1968 when it became engaged in exploring and drilling for oil and gas. The plaintiff performed numerous cor porate acts in the interval. However I do accept as a fact that the plaintiff ceased to be engaged actively in the construction business as of that date. To all intents and purposes the plaintiff's active engagement in the construction business ended as of that date never to be revived again nor was it the intention of the plaintiff from its inception to engage in the construction business on completion of this particular Ford plant. What the plaintiff did after that date was direct ed merely to winding up its construction business.
It is quite true that the revenue that the plain tiff received in its 1968 taxation year from the completed construction work exceeded the revenue from the oil and gas business in which the plaintiff engaged in October 1968 and so too the profit from the construction business received by the plaintiff in its 1968 taxation
year far exceeded the profit from the oil and gas business in that year which was a negative quantity.
However, Mr. Justice Cameron said in the American Metal (supra) case that the compara tive income received by a corporation from two businesses carried on by it is an important ele ment to be considered in determining which is the chief business but that is not the only matter to be considered and is not necessarily the determining factor.
On the other hand the plaintiff abandoned its construction business in the 1968 taxation year and became engaged in the oil and gas business in that year.
In that year supplementary letters patent were obtained authorizing the plaintiff to carry on an oil and gas business to the exclusion of a con struction business and it exercised those changed objects in 1968.
From that time forward the sole business of the plaintiff was that of exploring and drilling for oil and gas and in its 1969, 1970, 1971 and 1972 financial years it derived substantial income from that business. Because that was the sole business from October 1968 on, it follows as from that date it was the plaintiff's principal business.
The plaintiff did not have employees, as dis tinct from officers, engaged in the oil and gas business. It operated through the facilities of Voyager Petroleum Limited.
Again in the American Metal (supra) case Cameron J. pointed out that the number of employees in the respective businesses is an element in determining which of the two busi nesses is the chief business but that it is not necessarily the determining factor.
It was preordained from the inception of the plaintiff that its construction business would end on the completion of the Ford project. That end was readily foreseeable in the early part of the plaintiff's 1968 taxation year from the beginning of that year. What the plaintiff was doing from November 1967 to March 1968 of its 1968 taxation year was drawing its construc tion business to its inevitable end. In the initial four months of that financial year the plaintiff's construction business was on the wane until its ultimate demise on March 1, 1968.
There then followed a period of inactivity, but for passive corporate acts, until the oil and gas business was conceived and actively engaged in in October 1968.
In the plaintiff's 1968 taxation year its con struction business was in its death throes while the oil and gas business was born and in its dynamic infancy reaching maturity in the suc ceeding year.
In my opinion these facts establish that while the construction business had been the plain tiff's principal business that business was superseded by the oil and gas business as the plaintiff's principal business in its 1968 taxation year.
For the foregoing reasons I conclude, as a question of fact, that the plaintiff's principal business was that of exploring or drilling for petroleum or natural gas, and so falls precisely within the qualification for the deduction of exploring and drilling expenses incurred by it in computing its income for its 1968 taxation year in accordance with section 83A(3b).
Because of the conclusion I have reached, it becomes unnecessary for me to decide between the rival contentions on behalf of the parties, which were, on the one hand, that section 83A(3b) prescribes that a corporation can have only one principal business in a taxation year and, on the other hand, that a corporation can
have two principal businesses in one taxation year, within the meaning of section 83A(3b), provided that there is an hiatus between the conclusion of one business and the inception of another.
The appeal is, therefore, allowed with costs to the plaintiff.
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