Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-2027-79
Brooke Bond Foods Ltd. (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Decary J.—Montreal, January 19 and February 15, 1983.
Income tax — Income calculation — Deductions — Appeal from reassessment — Plaintiff proposing to build head office in Sheridan Park Research Community — Outlays for plans and specifications required by Ontario Development Corp., and soil analysis of site — Community vetoing project because insufficient research space provided — Expenses capital not current — Related to creation of capital property — Plans and specifications having value — Abandonment of project not altering nature of expenses — Not part of constant evaluation of business resources nor otherwise usual outlays of business consisting in income-production from building — Certain "nothings" formerly excluded from cost of depreciable prop erty made deductible under "eligible capital property" provi sions of 1972 amendments — Soil-analysis expenditures made to determine site's suitability so deductible under s. 20(1)(dd) — Plans and specifications prepared after decision as to suitability and not figuring in Community's decision so costs thereof eligible capital expenditures and deductible under s. 20(1)(b) — Appeal allowed in part — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 14(5)(a),(b), 18(1)(a),(b),(c), 20(1)(a),(b),(dd), 54(d) (French version rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 4, s. 77 (Item 5)).
The plaintiff corporation wished to construct a head-office building in the Sheridan Park Research Community. Before it could do so, it had to submit plans and specifications for the building to the Ontario Development Corporation, and obtain the approval of the Community. The plans and specifications were duly, and carefully, prepared. Moreover, a soil analysis of the proposed site was performed. The Community, however, would not consent to construction, because an insufficient portion of the building's space was to be devoted to scientific research. Consequently, the building was not erected.
The Minister issued a reassessment in which the monies spent on the plans and specifications and on the soil analysis were treated as a capital outlay—more particularly, as an outlay deductible under paragraph 20(1)(b) as a cumulative eligible capital amount. The plaintiff appealed, maintaining that the monies constituted current expenses. In the alternative, it argued that if the sums spent were in fact capital outlays,
then they were site-investigation expenses deductible under paragraph 20(1)(dd).
Held, the appeal should be allowed in part and dismissed in part.
If the building had been constructed, the expenses in question would (as the parties agree) have formed part of its capital cost. They related to the creation of a capital property, and the plans and specifications which they yielded had value; hence they were payments on account of capital. The abandonment of the project does not alter the nature of the expenses. The plaintiff was not in the business of purchasing and selling real estate, and did not regard the proposed building as a substan tive element of such a business. Nor was the plaintiff interested in renting out the building. It had no intention of generating income from the building by either of these direct means; and the expenditures at issue were not the current or usual outlays involved in the realization of such an intention. In particular, they were not expenses attendant upon a constant evaluation of resources, such as might occur in the carrying-on of a real- estate or other business. They related instead to a one-shot assessment of the plaintiffs needs with respect to a head office.
Until 1972, the Income Tax Act did not allow any deduction in respect of special capital outlays that were not included in the cost of depreciable property, and such outlays were there fore referred to as "nothings". The treatment accorded them was, however, considerably altered by the 1972 amendments, which made certain of these expenditures deductible under the provisions governing "eligible capital property".
All of the expenses in question are, prima facie, within the ambit of those provisions; but to be considered an "eligible capital expenditure", a capital outlay must be deductible nei ther under the capital cost allowance sections, nor under certain other provisions of the Act. Paragraph 20(1)(dd) is one of those other provisions, and the plaintiff is correct in his contention that the monies spent on the soil analysis are within its scope. The balance of the plaintiffs expenditures, though, were not made with a view to determining the site's suitability. The plaintiff had already arrived at the conclusion that the site was very suitable for it—had done so independently of and prior to the preparation of the plans and specifications. The issue which really confronted the plaintiff was whether its projected opera tions suited the Community. Furthermore, in the final analysis, the plans and specifications did not figure in the Community's decision on that point.
It follows that, while the expenses relating to the soil analysis are deductible under paragraph 20(1)(dd), those incurred in drawing up the plans and specifications are not. The latter are instead deductible under paragraph 20(1)(b).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Siscoe Gold Mines Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1945] Ex.C.R. 257; 2 DTC 749; Queen & Metcalfe
Carpark Limited v. Minister of National Revenue (1973), 74 DTC 6007 (F.C.T.D.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Bowater Power Company Limited v. Minister of Nation al Revenue, [1971] F.C. 421; 71 DTC 5469; [1971] C.T.C. 818 (T.D.); Pigott Investments Limited v. Her Majesty the Queen, [1973] CTC 693; 73 DTC 5507 (F.C.T.D.); Minister of National Revenue v. Freud, [1969] S.C.R. 75; 68 DTC 5279.
REFERRED TO:
Collins v. Joseph Adamson and Co. (1937), 21 T.C. 400 (Eng. K.B.); Henderson v. Meade-King Robinson & Co., Ltd. (1938), 22 T.C. 97 (Eng. K.B.); Sherbrooke Street Realty Corporation v. Minister of National Revenue (1951), 51 DTC 105 (T.A.B.); Afrukhteh v. Minister of National Revenue (1972), 73 DTC 12 (T.R.B.); Interna tional Nickel Company of Canada Limited v. Minister of National Revenue (1969), 69 DTC 5092 (Ex. Ct.); Oriole Park Fairways Limited v. Minister of National Revenue
(1956), 56 DTC 537 (T.A.B.). COUNSEL:
L. J. Giroux for plaintiff. R. Roy for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Bronstetter, Wilkie, Penhale, Donovan, Giroux & Charbonneau, Montreal, for plain tiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment rendered by
DECARY J.: The fundamental issue in this case is as follows:
(a) whether the expense is a current expense of plaintiff, making the amount deductible under paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Act [Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 (as am. by S.C. 1970- 71-72, c. 63, s. 1)], or whether the expense is a payment on account of capital, which would bring paragraph 18(1)(b) into play and prevent it from being deducted except as expressly per mitted by Part I of the Act;
(b) if the expense is a capital outlay, there then arises the issue of whether the amount is deduct ible under paragraph 20(1) (b) of the Act, as in the assessment, or under paragraph 20(1)(dd) of the Act, as plaintiff maintains.
Defendant alleges that the expense constitutes a payment on account of capital. The parties agree that if the building had been constructed as planned, the expense in question would have been part of the capital cost of the building. This is how plaintiff treated the expense in its financial state ments before the project was abandoned.
The fact the project was abandoned does not alter the nature of the expense, which remains an outlay on account of capital. As Thorson P. of the Exchequer Court wrote in Siscoe Gold Mines Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1945] Ex.C.R. 257; 2 DTC 749, at page [266 Ex.C.R.]:
The fact that it was decided to abandon the option and not to acquire the [mining] claims cannot change the character of the disbursements. They were losses incurred in connection with a capital venture .... I think it is clear that an expenditure incurred for the purpose of enabling a taxpayer to decide whether a capital asset should be acquired is an outlay or payment on account of capital .... '
Counsel for the plaintiff relied on the judgments of Noël A.C.J. in Bowater Power Company Lim ited v. Minister of National Revenue, [1971] F.C. 421; 71 DTC 5469; [1971] C.T.C. 818 (T.D.), and Pigott Investments Limited v. Her Majesty the Queen, [1973] CTC 693; 73 DTC 5507 (F.C.T.D.). We are of the view, with respect, that the facts of these two cases are very different from those in the case at bar.
In Bowater, the company operated an electricity development and marketing business. As appears from the reasons, this type of business involved a constant evaluation not only of the energy resources available but also of development meth ods. In the case at bar the situation was entirely different as regards the building that was planned to be constructed. Plaintiff was not at all involved in the purchase and sale of real property and was not trying to generate income by renting the build ing. Bowater Power Company Limited continually evaluated the energy resources available and the
See also, to the same effect: Collins v. Joseph Adamson and Co. (1937), 21 T.C. 400 (Eng. K.B.), at page 408; Hender- son v. Meade-King Robinson 8c Co., Ltd. (1938), 22 T.C. 97 (Eng. K.B.), at page 105; Sherbrooke Street Realty Corpora tion v. Minister of National Revenue (1951), 51 DTC 105 (T.A.B.). By analogy, see also Afrukhteh v. Minister of Na tional Revenue (1972), 73 DTC 12 (T.R.B.).
expenses incurred were current in nature. The situation is entirely different in the case at bar; the expenses in question are not current or usual. Plaintiff evaluated its needs with respect to its head office only once, when it incurred the expenses in question.
Similar comments apply, with respect, to the same Judge's judgment in Pigott Investments Limited. In that case the company operated a construction business. As the Judge wrote, at page 5514 [DTC] (page 702 CTC):
... the benefit sought by the payments made was sought by Pigott and for Pigott was not of a capital nature but rather of a revenue nature to Pigott's construction business and, therefore, the expenses are deductible.
Noël A.C.J. applied Minister of National Reve nue v. Freud, [1969] S.C.R. 75; 68 DTC 5279, where the facts, we respectfully believe, have noth ing to do with the case currently before the Court.
The facts in these two cases can therefore be distinguished from the facts in the case at bar. To our knowledge there is no judgment to the effect that the cost of plans and specifications for the construction of a building constitutes a current expense if the building is not constructed.
The treatment reserved for special outlays that are not included in the cost of depreciable property under the Act was altered considerably by the provisions added to the Income Tax Act in 1972 [S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63]. Under the old Act such expenses were commonly referred to as "nothings" because they did not qualify for any deduction in computing income.
At present certain such capital outlays are deductible under the provisions governing "eligible capital property". Such property is defined in paragraph 54(d) of the Act [French version rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 4, s. 77 (Item 5)] as "any property, 1/2 of any amount payable to the taxpayer as consideration for the disposition of which would, if he disposed of the property, be an
eligible capital amount in respect of a business within the meaning given that expression in sub section 14(1)".
Section 14 of the Act provides for the creation of an account called "cumulative eligible capital". This account is composed of "1/2 of the aggregate of the eligible capital expenditures" (paragraph 14(5)(a)).
"Eligible capital expenditure" is defined in paragraph 14(5)(b). It means the portion of any outlay or expense made or incurred by a taxpayer on account of capital for the purpose of gaining or producing income from his business. A capital expenditure will be regarded as an "eligible capital expenditure" only if it is not an outlay or expense (14(5)(b)(i)):
that would be deductible but for any provision of the Act limiting the quantum of the deduc tion. This provision implies that an amount deductible under paragraph 20(1) (a) is exclud ed (the words "otherwise than under paragraph 20(1) (b)" were added because 20(1) (b) limits the quantum but this is precisely what was intended with respect to the "cumulative eligible capital" account); or
that would not be deductible under the provi sions of the Act. This would apply, for example, to a paragraph 18(1)(c) deduction (the words "other than paragraph 18(1)(b)" were added because the draftsman wished specifically to provide for capital outlays under paragraph 18(1)(b) that would not otherwise be deductible by creating the "cumulative eligible capital" account).
An "eligible capital expenditure" is thus a capi tal outlay that is not deductible under the Act either under the capital cost allowance provisions or under the provisions of section 20, for example. Thus if the outlays in question constituted amounts deductible under paragraph 20(1)(dd) they would not constitute "eligible capital expendi tures" even if the expense was otherwise capital in nature.
It follows that some of the former "nothings" can now be deducted in computing a taxpayer's income under the "eligible capital property" provisions. 2 It is clear that the outlays in question constitute such property. The amounts are pay ments on account of capital because they relate to the creation of a capital property and because the plans and specifications that were prepared had a certain value, as the witness McDiarmid clearly stated. If plaintiff had decided to construct a building these plans could have been used since they had been prepared carefully. The witness explained that there had been up to seven revisions of these documents.;
With respect to plaintiff's argument based on paragraph 20(1)(dd) of the Act, finally, we are of the view that this provision applies only to the amounts paid for investigating the suitability of the site. As Sweet D.J. wrote in Queen & Metcalfe Carpark Limited v. Minister of National Revenue (1973), 74 DTC 6007 (F.C.T.D.), at page 6013:
... it is the suitability of the site which is to be investigated not a building to be erected on the site.
In the case at bar the evidence adduced showed that a sum of $625 was paid by Dominion Bridge Co. Ltd. to a firm specializing in soil analyses to conduct such a study. This sum of $625 is there fore deductible under paragraph 20(1)(dd) of the Act and the appeal should be allowed with respect to this amount.
The remainder of the amount was paid for the preparation of plans and specifications for the building. 4 Even though plaintiff had to submit plans and specifications to the Ontario Develop ment Corporation and receive approval from the
2 See International Nickel Company of Canada Limited v. Minister of National Revenue (1969), 69 DTC 5092 (Ex. Ct.), at pages 5094 and 5095, for an example of capital outlays that would probably constitute an "eligible capital expenditure" under section 14 of the Act.
3 See Oriole Park Fairways Limited v. Minister of National Revenue (1956), 56 DTC 537 (T.A.B.), at page 540, for an example of a case where the outlays for architects' fees were regarded as being capital in nature.
° See Queen & Metcalfe Carpark Limited, at page 6013, where the Judge disallowed the amount spent on preparing plans and specifications under item 4.
Sheridan Park Research Community before the Ontario Development Corporation would agree to sell, this procedure had nothing to do with the issue of the site's suitability. According to the evidence, plaintiff was very keen to build its head office on the lot, which could not have been more suitable for it. The site was located in a prestigious area. Furthermore, it was easily accessible from downtown Toronto or from the Toronto airport, it was close to attractive residential neighbourhoods, it was an ideal size and, finally, it was very reason ably priced compared with other sites considered.
The stumbling-block in the way of the construc tion project was the Sheridan Park Research Com- munity's insistence that the part of the building that was to be used by the executive personnel and the administration and financial and accounting services staff not exceed 33 1 / 2 per cent of the building. This requirement was designed to protect the distinctive character of Sheridan Park, whose primary function was to promote scientific research and development.
In the final analysis the plans and specifications played no part in the refusal to allow plaintiff to construct its building in Sheridan Park. The deter mining factor was the fact that plaintiff was not devoting sufficient space to scientific research.
Moreover, we are of the view that the problem was not determining whether the site was suitable for plaintiff. The issue was rather whether the operations plaintiff wished to carry out suited the Sheridan Park Research Community.
We are of the opinion that plaintiff cannot avail itself of the provisions of paragraph 20(1)(dd) to deduct the sum in question except for the amount of $625.
For these reasons we are of the view that the appeal should be allowed in part and the reassess ment referred back to the Minister so that he may issue a reassessment allowing plaintiff to deduct the sum of $625 in computing its income under paragraph 20(1)(dd), but for the remainder, namely $52,935 less $625, or $52,310, the assess ment should be upheld, with costs against plaintiff.'
5 See Queen & Metcalfe Carpark Limited, supra, at page 6014.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.