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A-371-75
The Queen (Appellant)
v.
Rockmore Investments Ltd. (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Jackett C.J., Pratte J. and Hyde
D.J. Montreal, April 1 and 2, 1976.
Income tax—Small business deduction Meaning of active business income—Associated companies investing in mort- gages—Whether "carrying on active business in Canada" Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 3(a), 125, 129, 248.
Respondent and two other companies M.R.T. and E.S.G. were incorporated to invest in mortgages. Messrs. Godel and Reinhart own M.R.T. and Rockmore, and manage all three. Most of the loans made by the companies are through independent agents. Respondent appealed its assessment to the Trial Division, where appellant argued that, in 1972, the com panies were not carrying on active business in the sense intend ed under section 125. The appeals by Rockmore and M.R.T. were allowed, on the basis that income for 1972 was "from an active business carried on in Canada" within the meaning of section 125(1). Appellant appealed.
Held, the appeal is dismissed. The first step is to determine whether there is a "business", which is defined in section 248. Section 3(a) makes it clear that a line must be drawn between mere investment in property and "an adventure ... in the nature of trade" or a "trade" in the sense of those expressions in section 248. Otherwise, each problem as to whether a business is being carried on depends on the particular facts. There is no reason for interfering with the finding of the Trial Judge. Secondly, as to whether the "business" was "active", each case must once again depend on the circumstances. The concept is not used to exclude a business in an absolute state of suspension, because section 125(1)(a)(i) is dealing with "income ... from an active business", and it must be assumed that "active" was used to exclude some businesses having sufficient activity to give rise to income.
Clevite Development Limited v. M.N.R. [1961] Ex.C.R. 296, considered.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
G. W. Ainslie, Q.C., and T. W. Ocrane for appellant.
A. Gauthier and M. Noël for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
Verchère, Primeau & Gauthier, Montreal, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment delivered orally in English by
JACKETT C.J.: This is an appeal from a judg ment of the Trial Division allowing an appeal from the respondent's assessment under Part I of the Income Tax Act for the 1972 taxation year and referring that assessment back to the Minister of National Revenue, in effect, for reassessment on the basis that the respondent's income for that year was income "from an active business carried on in Canada" within the meaning of those words as found in that part of section 125(1) of the aforesaid Act that reads as follows:
125. (1) There may be deducted from the tax otherwise payable under this Part for a taxation year by a corporation that was, throughout the year, a Canadian-controlled private corporation, an amount equal to 25% of the least of
(a) the amount, if any, by which
(i) the aggregate of all amounts each of which is the income of the corporation for the year from an active business carried on in Canada,
exceeds
(ii) the aggregate of all amounts each of which is a loss of the corporation for the year from an active business car ried on in Canada,
The main thrust of the very able argument of counsel for the appellant, as I understood it, was that
(a) alleviation of income tax of private corpora tions under Part I of the Income Tax Act is to be found, in so far as income from active busi nesses is concerned, in section 125, and, in so far as income from businesses other than active businesses is concerned, in section 129;
(b) a study of the schemes involved in section 125 and section 129 reveals a limitation that must be read into the phrase "active business"
See: M.R.T. Investments Ltd. v. The Queen [1976] 1 F.C. 126.
in order to implement the Parliamentary inten tion; and
(c) such limitation either is, or includes (I am not sure which), an exclusion from the concept of active business of any business that consists of lending money on mortgages.
Counsel made it clear that the application of those two sections has given rise to much difficulty and that many matters are being held in abeyance in the hope that guidance may be obtained from the decision in this case.
The task of counsel was not easy because inter alia the provisions in question are not so framed as to make their raison d'être patent to the uninitiat ed. In spite of my best efforts to follow counsel in his attempt to show that Parliament must have intended some limitation on the scope of the words "active business" that it did not expressly state, I have to confess my complete inability to detect any such Parliamentary intent.
In considering whether there is an "active busi ness" for the purposes of Part I, the first step is to decide whether there is a "business" within the meaning of that word. Section 248 provides that that word, when used in the Income Tax Act, includes "a profession, calling, trade, manufacture or undertaking of any kind whatever" and includes "an adventure or concern in the nature of trade" but does not include "an office or employment". Furthermore, the contrast in section 3(a) of the Act between "business" and "property" as sources of income makes it clear, I think, that a line must be drawn, for the purposes of the Act, between mere investment in property (including mortgages) for the acquisition of income from that property and an activity or activities that constitute "an adventure or concern in the nature of trade" or a "trade" in the sense of those expressions in section 248 (supra). Apart from these provisions, I know of no special considerations to be taken into account from a legal point of view in deciding whether an activity or situation constitutes the carrying on of a business for the purposes of Part I of the Income Tax Act. Subject thereto, as I understand it, each problem that arises as to whether a business is or was being carried on must
be solved as a question of fact having regard to the circumstances of the particular case.
In this case, I can see no ground for interfering with the finding of the Trial Division that the respondent's activities, which are carefully analyzed by the learned Trial Judge, constituted the carrying on of a money-lending business.
Having reached that conclusion, the second question to be answered is whether the business that was being carried on was an "active" business within the intent of section 125. Obviously, the concept of "active" business is not used to exclude a business that is in an absolute state of suspension because section 125(1)(a)(i) is dealing with "income ... from an active business" and it must be assumed that the word "active" was used to exclude some businesses having sufficient activity in the year to give rise to income. 2 More than that, as it seems to me, nothing can be said in a general way, at this stage, as to what is meant by the word "active" in section 125(1)(a)(i). 3 Each case must be dealt with by the fact finder according to the circumstances of the case. It may be that experi ence in the application of the provision will make evident other conclusions of a general nature that can be deduced from the statute as to how the concept of "active" business is to be applied. I do not, myself, feel capable of deducing any such general conclusion at the present time.
In so far as this case is concerned, I agree with the learned Trial Judge that the evidence shows that the respondent was "actively carrying on busi ness in the year 1972" and, in the circumstances, in my view, its income for that year was therefore "income ... from an active business".
2 Compare Clevite Development Limited v. M.N.R. [1961] Ex.C.R. 296.
3 As I read section 125(1)(a)(i), the question is whether the "business" was "active" and the question as to how active the proprietor was in the business activities would not seem to be relevant. To me, this would seem self-evident and its statement does not constitute the enunciation of any general principle.
In my opinion, the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
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PRATTE J. concurred.
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HYDE D.J. concurred.
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