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Decision Information

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A-40-80
Canadian Clyde Tube Forgings Limited (Appel- lant)
v.
The Queen (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Urie and Le Dain JJ. and Kelly D.J.—Toronto, December 1 and 3, 1981.
Income tax — Income calculation — Manufacturing or processing tax credit — Appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division dismissing an appeal from a reassessment for income tax in respect of the 1973 taxation year — Appellant included labour costs paid to an independent contractor in computing s. 125.1 deduction — Semi-finished items delivered to contrac tor for machining — Contractor supplied own machinery and work force — Contractor's operation carried on entirely in appellant's plant with no artificial barriers between areas of plant occupied by appellant and contractor — Trial Judge held that the function carried on by the contractor was not a function normally performed by the appellant's employees pursuant to the definition of "cost of labour" — Whether the payments to the contractor fall within the definition of "cost of labour" under s. 5202 of the Income Tax Regulations — Appeal is dismissed — Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 as amended by S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63 and S.C. 1973-74, c. 29, s. 125.1 — Income Tax Regulations, SOR/73-495, ss. 5200, 5202.
APPEAL. COUNSEL:
Philip F. Vineberg, Q.C. for appellant. Wilfred Lefebvre and Ian S. MacGregor for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Phillips & Vineberg, Montreal, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division [[1980] 2 F.C. 15] dismissing the appellant's appeal from a reassessment for income tax made by the Minister of National Revenue in respect of the appellant's 1973 taxa-
tion year. The appellant's appeal to the Tax Review Board had also been dismissed.
It is common ground that the sole issue in the appeal is the proper method of calculation of the manufacturing and processing tax deduction to which the appellant may be entitled by virtue of section 125.1 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 as amended by S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, section 1 ("the Act") and S.C. 1973-74, c. 29. The appellant computed the deduction at $34,940. The reassessment reduced it to $5,497. Which calcula tion is correct must be determined by deciding whether payments made by the appellant to an independent contractor, Weram Limited, fall within the definition of "cost of labour" under section 5202 of the Income Tax Regulations, SOR/73-495 ("the Regulations").
The learned Trial Judge accurately described the appellant's operations in the following fashion [at page 16]:
The plaintiff is engaged in the manufacture and processing of special pipes and fittings for the refining industry. The entire operation is carried out in the plaintiffs plant into which it receives semi-finished fittings and flanges. The semi-finished items are delivered by the plaintiff to the contractor for machining. They are then returned to the plaintiff for finishing, such as painting, and are stocked there and shipped from there to customers. The contractor supplies the necessary machines and tools, employs the machinists and is paid at agreed piece rates. The machinery is all located in the plaintiffs plant and the contractor's employees do all their work there. To any observer, the entire operation, from receiving to shipping, would appear to be a single, integrated process. There are no artificial physical barriers between the areas of the plant occupied by the plaintiff and the contractor nor superfluous segregation of the employees of one from those of the other. This modus operandi was adopted when the plant was estab lished in 1960 and continues today.
The relevant part of section 125.1(1) of the Act reds as follows:
125.1 (1) There may be deducted from the tax otherwise payable under this Part by a corporation for a taxation year an amount equal to the aggregate of
(a) 9% of the lesser of
(i) the amount, if any, by which the corporation's Canadi- an manufacturing and processing profits for the year exceed the least of the amounts determined under para graphs 125(1)(a) to (d) in respect of the corporation for the year, ...
Section 5200 and the relevant definitions in section 5202 of the Regulations read as follows:
Basic Formula
5200. Subject to section 5201, for the purpose of paragraph 125.1(3)(a) of the Act, "Canadian manufacturing and process ing profits" of a corporation for a taxation year are hereby prescribed to be that proportion of the corporation's adjusted business income for the year that
(a) the aggregate of its cost of manufacturing and processing capital for the year and its cost of manufacturing and processing labour for the year
is of
(b) the aggregate of its cost of capital for the year and its cost of labour for the year.
Definitions
5202. In this Part, except as otherwise provided in section 5203 or 5204,
"cost of labour" of a corporation for a taxation year means an amount equal to the aggregate of
(a) the salaries and wages paid or payable during the year to all employees of the corporation for services performed during the year, and
(b) all other amounts each of which is an amount paid or payable during the year for the performance during the year, by any person other than an employee of the corporation, of functions relating to
(i) the management or administration of the corporation,
(ii) scientific research as defined in section 2900, or
(iii) a service or function that would normally be per formed by an employee of the corporation,
but for the purposes of this definition, the salaries and wages referred to in paragraph (a) or other amounts referred to in paragraph (b) do not include that portion of those amounts that
(c) was included in the gross cost to the corporation of a property (other than a property that was manufactured by the corporation and leased during the year by the corporation to another person) that was included in computing the cost of capital of the corporation for the year, or
(d) was related to an active business carried on outside Canada by the corporation;
"cost of manufacturing and processing labour" of a corporation for a taxation year means 100/75 of that portion of the cost of labour of the corporation for that year that reflects the extent to which
(a) the salaries and wages included in the calculation thereof were paid or payable to persons for the portion of their time that they were directly engaged in qualified activities of the corporation during the year, and
(b) the other amounts included in the calculation thereof were paid or payable to persons for the performance of
functions that would be directly related to qualified activities of the corporation during the year if those persons were employees of the corporation,
but the amount so calculated shall not exceed the cost of labour of the corporation for the year;
It will be seen that section 125.1 of the Act is a provision which permits a taxpayer to deduct from its tax otherwise payable an amount which would not otherwise be permitted as a deduction. The "Canadian manufacturing and processing profits" are computed by the application of a formula ascertained by means of section 5200 of the Regu lations. The parties agree that the formula is:
MP = MC + ML x Adjusted business income C+L
for this purpose, the initials mean:
MP: Canadian Manufacturing and Processing Profits
ML: Cost of Manufacturing and Processing Labour
L: Cost of Labour
C: Cost of Capital
The parties agree on the amounts of all items to be used in the formula for purposes of this case except the "Cost of Labour" and "Cost of Manu facturing and Processing Labour". The appellant computed the section 125.1 deduction for its 1973 tax return by including the labour costs paid to Weram Limited both in the numerator and the denominator of the formula while the Minister in his reassessment excluded that item from each. The exclusion was founded on his contention that the machining functions were not "normally" (that is to say as a "regular occurrence") performed by employees of the appellant. The sole question is, then, which of the two computations, on applying the relevant definitions to the facts of this case, is the correct one?
The learned Trial Judge expressed his view on the question in a succinct fashion [at page 17], as follows:
It is normal for a corporation carrying on such an operation to carry it on in its entirety and the service or function performed by the contractor for the plaintiff is a service or function normally performed by employees of such corporation. It is not, however, a service or function normally performed by the plaintiff's employees. The plaintiff normally engages the con tractor, rather than its own employees, to perform that service or function. Indeed, its own employees have never, before, during or since its 1973 taxation year, performed that service or function.
Nothing in the related provisions of the Act or Regulations leads me to conclude that the pertinent words of the definition of the "cost of labour" are to be interpreted otherwise than in their plain English sense. The adverb "normally" appears clear ly to relate to the modus operandi of the manufacturer and processor claiming inclusion of the particular outlay in its cost of labour. [Emphasis added.]
Despite the able and persuasive argument of counsel for the appellant expressing a contrary view, I agree with the conclusion of the learned Trial Judge and with his reasons for reaching that conclusion. Subparagraph (b)(iii) of the definition of "cost of labour" does not refer to a service or function that would normally be performed by an employee of a (i.e. any) corporation. It uses the definite article "the" before the word "corpora- tion" thus pointing clearly to the corporation claiming the deduction from the tax otherwise payable as the relevant entity, namely, in this case, the appellant. Since normally it engages Weram Limited to do its machining, rather than using its own employees, it does not meet the requirements of the subparagraph. It cannot, therefore, unfortu nately for it, include the payment it makes to Weram Limited for its services as a cost of labour in the denominator of the fraction used in the calculation of its adjusted business income.
It follows, then, that since the definition of "cost of manufacturing and processing labour" in sec tion 5202 of the Regulations refers to "that por tion of the cost of labour of the corporation" as the latter term is defined in the same Regulation, it cannot include the payment to Weram Limited as part of the cost of manufacturing and processing labour in the numerator of the formula for the calculation under section 5200.
The appeal should, accordingly, be dismissed with costs.
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LE DAIN J.: I agree.
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KELLY D.J.: I concur.
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