Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-1627-83
The Queen (Appellant)
v.
Paul E. Graham (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Urie, Mahoney and Marceau JJ.—Ottawa, March 21 and May 7, 1985.
Income tax — Income calculation — Deductions — Farm ing losses — Appeal from Trial Judge's conclusion taxpayer's main preoccupation farming — Taxpayer employed full time, but spending more time on hog operation than on job — Taxpayer investing salary, savings, borrowings and income from cash crops in farm — Reference to statement in Moldo- wan v. The Queen, /19787 1 S.C.R. 480 that "whether source of income 'chief source' of income both relative and objective test" — Taxpayer entitled to deduct all farming losses and not restricted to $5,000 per year prescribed by s. 31 — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 31 (as am. by S.C. 1973-74, c. 14, s. 7; 1979, c. 5, s. 9), 248(1) — Income War Tax Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 97, s. 10 — The Income Tax Act, S.C. 1948, c. 52, s. 13.
(See the Editor's Note for a summary of the fact situation.)
The issue is whether the respondent was entitled to claim losses incurred in the carrying on of a farming operation, or whether the deductibility of such losses was to be restricted to $5,000 per year as prescribed by section 31 of the Income Tax Act.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
Per Urie J. (Mahoney J. concurring): The Trial Judge found that the respondent fell within category 1 of the three classes of farmers enumerated in Moldowan v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 480, so that he was entitled to deduct his farming losses in their entirety from his two sources of income. In so doing, he did not proceed on a wrong principle nor err in his appreciation of the facts nor in his findings with respect thereto. The appellant submitted that farming could not provide a reason able expectation of being a chief source of income. The submis sion ignores what Dickson J. said about "chief source" of income in the Moldowan case, i.e., that the distinguishing features of "chief source" are the taxpayer's reasonable expec tation of income from his various revenue sources and his ordinary mode and habit of work. The reasonable expectation of profit having been conceded, the next step is to consider the taxpayer's "ordinary mode and habit of work". These tests involve weighing the facts objectively and relatively. The Trial Judge was aware of the two-step process. He objectively assessed the evidence and the relative importance of the sources of income. He found that the cumulative effect of the unusual circumstances satisfied him that the main preoccupation of the respondent was farming, but he had income from a sideline employment. The appellate Court should not interfere with the
Trial Judge's findings of fact unless they were unsupportable and the proper law was not applied.
Per Marceau J. (dissenting): The appeal should be allowed. The meaning of section 31 is not fully clear and easily appli cable. The three relevant facts are: (1) the respondent held a full-time job that he had held for many years, but he was also seriously involved in farming activities; (2) he intended to go slowly, but he was determined to build up a genuine and profitable operation; (3) he could not expect a profit from the operation as then developed, but even at full maturity and fully exploited, the operation his set-up permitted would not be capable of yielding a significant profit.
Section 3 prescribes that a taxpayer's taxable income shall be his total income less the losses he may have sustained from all sources. A source of income remains a source of income notwithstanding that he may have suffered a loss therefrom. On the basis of the principle established by section 3, people involved in farming activities should come in two groups: those for whom farming is a hobby, who do not expect a profit and whose expenses are non-deductible "personal or living expenses", and those whose loss sustained in carrying on their farming activities would be deductible from their total income. Section 31 is a departure from the general rule of deductibility in the case of farm losses sustained by taxpayers for whom farming is a source of income, but not the only one. Those involved in farming for actual or eventual profit must be further divided into those for whom farming, or a combination of farming and some other source of income, is the "chief source of income". This second determination is difficult because the meaning of "chief source of income" and "combi- nation" are unclear. In this case, the taxpayer cannot be regarded as having made farming his chief source of income. The comparison between several sources of income to deter mine the chief source of income cannot omit their respective actual capacity to produce profit. For the determination to have a practical meaning, only expectations real and actual are relevant, not mere plans and long-term goals. These expecta tions must be that the source will now provide at least part of the income the man may need for his own and his family's living needs.
The definition of a class 1 farmer in the Moldowan case readily applies to a man for whom farming is "the centre of work routine" regardless of the income he may expect to derive therefrom. But a man who has a full-time job does not have farming as "the centre of work routine". The second part of the definition emphasizes that the farmer referred to is one who "looks to farming for his livelihood". Someone who holds a full-time job cannot reasonably "look to farming for his liveli hood" until his operation is at least capable of yielding a profit. A man's "major preoccupation" does not refer simply to physi cal activities, but to actual income earning activities.
The concept that a man should not be disentitled to deduct the full impact of start-up costs, does not extend to a period of several years during which the taxpayer plans to build up slowly an operation that will finally yield a significant profit.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Moldowan v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 480.
REFERRED TO:
Stein et al. v. "Kathy K" et al. (The Ship), [1976] 2 S.C.R. 802; Lewis v. Todd and McClure, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 694; Jaegli Enterprises Ltd. et al. v. Taylor et al., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 2.
COUNSEL:
Wilfrid Lefebvre, Q.C. and Deen C. Olsen for
appellant.
William G. D. McCarthy for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
McCarthy & Phillips, Ottawa, for respon dent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: The sole issue in this appeal from a judgment of Cattanach J. in the Trial Division [(1983), 83 DTC 5399] is whether the respondent was entitled to claim, in the computation of his taxable income for the taxation years 1977, 1978 and 1979, losses incurred in the carrying out of a farming operation or whether the claim for the deductibility of such losses was to be restricted in each year to the sum of $5,000 as prescribed by section 31 of the Income Tax Act [S.C. 1970-71- 72, c. 63 (as am. by S.C. 1973-74, c. 14, s. 7; 1979, c. 5, s. 9)] ("the Act").
As it was argued, the resolution of this issue was dependent upon whether or not the respondent fell within category 1 of the three classes of farmers
which Dickson J. (as he then was) envisaged under the Act in the judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada in Moldowan v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 480, at pages 487-488, as the respondent urged, or under category 2 of such classes as counsel for the appellant submitted. The learned Trial Judge found that the respondent fell within category 1 so that he was entitled to deduct his farming losses in their entirety from the combina tion of his two sources of income, namely, from his "major preoccupation", farming and his employ ment, his "subsidiary interest".
EDITOR'S NOTE
This is the Editor's abridgment of Urie J.'s detailed review of the facts.
The respondent, a farmer's son, was a full-time employee of Ontario Hydro. He was a stationary engineer. Having a dream of farming, he obtained a transfer to a generating station in a rural area. He purchased a farm and in 1975 began a hog operation. The respondent's routine was to work 11 hours a day on his farm, 8 hours for the utility and to sleep for only 5 hours. Evidence was called at trial which demonstrated that the respondent was both a compulsive worker and a progressive farmer. The respondent had, in effect, two full-time occupations.
At the relevant time, the respondent was earn ing about $30,000 a year from Hydro. All of his money went into the farm. Over a five-year period, the respondent's annual losses from farm ing ranged from a low of $5,418 in 1975 to a high of $12,702 in 1979. The appellant took the posi tion that the respondent's chief source of income was neither farming nor a combination of farming and some other source of income. The assump tion was made that the respondent was farming in his spare time. As noted by Cattanach J., this "spare time" was more than double the time which the respondent spent at his place of employment.
Urie J. referred at length to the opinion of Dickson J. in Moldowan, stressing the point that whether "a source of income is a taxpayer's 'chief source' of income is both a relative and
objective test". It was not merely a quantum measurement.
The Trial Judge found that the respondent had changed his occupational direction when he applied for a transfer to a rural area. He invested all his capital in the farm, worked hard and gener ated a substantial cash flow which was not, how ever, adequate to cover start-up expenses for machinery and land acquisition. The Trial Judge concluded that the respondent's main preoccupa tion was farming and the Hydro employment a mere sideline.
Ude J. held that the findings of fact made at trial were supported by the evidence and should not be disturbed.
Did the learned Trial Judge err in law? In determining this aspect of the appeal, it should not be overlooked that counsel for the appellant conceded that the farming operations of the respondent constituted a "business" within the meaning of the Act and that he had a reasonable expectation of deriving a profit therefrom. How ever, counsel said, despite this concession, in deter mining whether or not section 31 should be applied it was necessary (employing the language of Dick- son J. in Moldowan) to decide whether the source of income—farming—was a "chief source of income on a relative and objective" basis. In the appellant's submission, on that basis "although the farming activities of the Respondent were for him a way of life, they did not constitute a chief source of income" because of:
(a) the absence of profit,
(b) the comparison of employment income to farming losses,
(c) the cash flow analysis over the years in issue,
(d) the optimum capacity of the Respondent's operations,
(e) the fact that the Respondent made no change in his occupational direction to demonstrate that farming provided his main expectation of income.
In counsel's submission, although the respon dent's preoccupation with farming was subjectively to him major, objectively speaking it could not provide him with a reasonable expectation of being a chief source of income either in the taxation years in question or in subsequent years.
I do not agree, in part for the reasons given by the Trial Judge in disposing of the Minister's assumptions in making the assessments in issue. In addition, it seems to me that the submission ignores what Dickson J. had to say about "chief source of income" at page 486 of the Moldowan judgment, supra, which, for convenience sake, I repeat:
The distinguishing features of "chief source" are the taxpayer's reasonable expectation of income from his various revenue sources and his ordinary mode and habit of work. These may be tested by considering, inter alia in relation to a source of income, the time spent, the capital committed, the profitability both actual and potential. A change in the taxpayer's mode and habit of work or reasonable expectations may signify a change in the chief source, but that is a question of fact in the circumstances. [Emphasis added.]
It would thus appear that the reasonable expec tation of profit from the farming operations having been conceded (and such a concession was a proper one having regard to the evidence objective ly) the next step in the determination of the "chief source of income" is to consider the taxpayer's "ordinary mode and habit of work" employing tests of the kind suggested by Mr. Justice Dickson in the last two sentences of the quotation, supra. These, of course, involve a weighing of the facts objectively and relatively. It is abundantly clear from his reasons that Cattanach J. was well aware of the two-step process required for the determina tion of "chief source" and that it involved his objective assessment of the evidence and the rela tive importance of the sources of income. He did so with considerable care as is shown in the excerpts from his reasons for judgment at pages 5406 and following. He found that the cumulative effect of the rather unusual circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this case was to satisfy him that the main preoccupation of the respondent "is farming but he has income from a sideline employment".
In so finding, he clearly applied principles enun ciated by Dickson J. and, in so applying them to the evidence in this case, he neither proceeded on a wrong principle nor erred in his appreciation of the facts nor in his findings with respect thereto. In so saying it should not be overlooked that the Trial Judge had the inestimable advantage of hearing the witnesses, observing their demeanour and weighing their testimony having regard thereto. The task with which he was confronted here having been essentially a fact-finding one for the application of the appropriate law, an appellate Court should not interfere with it unless the find ings of fact were unsupportable and the proper law was not applied.' I am of the opinion that the findings were amply supported by the evidence, there was no "palpable and overriding error" in the assessment thereof and the learned Judge did not err in the application of the proper law thereto. Accordingly, he correctly held that the respondent fell within category 1 of the three classes of farmer contemplated by subsection 31(1) of the Act and was thus entitled to deduct all of his farming losses in the computation of his taxable income in the taxation years in issue. I do not think that in the very unusual circumstances of this case his other source of income, namely, his employment at Ontario Hydro, precluded him from doing so.
I would dismiss the appeal, therefore, with costs.
MAHONEY J.: I concur.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MARCEAU J. (dissenting): Section 31 of the Income Tax Act, which is concerned with the right of a taxpayer engaged in farming to deduct for tax
' See: Stein et al. v. "Kathy K" et al. (The Ship), [1976] 2 S.C.R. 802; Lewis v. Todd and McClure, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 694; Jaegli Enterprises Ltd. et al. v. Taylor et al., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 2.
purposes the farm losses he may sustain, has been a main feature of our income tax legislation for quite some time (it was formerly section 13 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 as amend ed). Its construction has given rise to much debate in the casebooks and many decisions in the case law. And finally, in 1978, it was the subject of a thorough analysis by Mr. Justice Dickson (as he then was), in the well-known case of Moldowan v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 480. One would have thought that, after such a long process, its exact meaning would have been fully clarified and its provision made easily applicable. Yet it is not so to me, since my understanding of the rule in the light of the decision of the Supreme Court does not lead me to the same result as my brothers Urie and Mahoney JJ. when applied to the clearly estab lished facts of this case; accordingly, I feel obliged to respectfully dissociate myself from their conclu sion that this appeal has no merit. Let it be emphasized that my disagreement is not due to a different perception of the facts. I may not give to each of the different aspects of those facts the same relative importance as that presupposed by the judgment a quo, but I accept all the basic findings of the Trial Judge. If I considered that this appeal raised a mere question of fact, I cer tainly would not have felt obliged to register this dissent. My disagreement is essentially due, at least as I see it, to a different perception of the law, and this is why I feel compelled to express it.
The facts are set forth in great detail in the reasons of the Trial Judge, and they are carefully reviewed by Mr. Justice Urie. A further complete account would of course serve no purpose. I need however to underline again the highlights of the evidence, from which a proper formulation of the issue, as I see it, can be drawn.
During the years 1977, 1978 and 1979 the respondent was a full-time employee of Ontario Hydro. He had been with Ontario Hydro for
nearly twenty years, and the first-class stationary engineer certificate he had acquired through train ing and studies had allowed him to assume respon sibilities that were both operational and manageri al in nature. During those years 1977, 1978 and 1979, the respondent was also involved in farming operations. Son of a farmer, he had always had the dream of returning to farming. In furtherance of that dream he had obtained from his employer, in 1966, a transfer to a rural district, where two years later he purchased a property on which he could start and carry on the hog-producing operation he wished to undertake. The house and the barns on the property needed remodelling and he wanted to do the work himself; in addition some equipment had to be purchased, which he wanted to do only with the money he could save from his salary; so he had to delay his project but, in 1977, the operation was definitely on its feet.
There may be some discussion about the exact amount of time the respondent was required to devote to his hog operation from the time it was started, but the evidence he gave remains to the effect that, in the crop season during which he could be relieved from his duties at Ontario Hydro, he spent most of his time at farming; the rest of the year, in spite of his regular work on a three eight-hour rotational shift at Ontario Hydro, he managed to spend considerable amount of his time at it in the early morning and at night. The seriousness and good faith of the respondent in his resolve, to build up a genuine and sound operation, his dedication and efficiency as a farmer and his exceptional capacity to work are, on the evidence, simply beyond doubt.
During the years 1977, 1978 and 1979, the respondent incurred losses in carrying out his farming operation much in excess of $5,000, since they were in the amounts of $10,727, $10,017 and $12,702 respectively. The exact figures are, of course, of no particular importance, but it is, in my opinion, absolutely fundamental to bear in mind that, on the evidence, those losses were totally unavoidable. It was indeed established: a) that the respondent's livestock at January 1 of each of the
three relevant years was 13, 18 and 28 sows and the maximum he ever had was 31 (page 57 of the transcript); b) that the ultimate capacity of his barns during the whole period was 40 sows and the barns could not be expanded; c) that even brought up to its full potential, his operation in those years would have been unable to yield any significant profit, he himself acknowledging that a 40-sow operation is "probably not" even viable (page 146 of the transcript). The learned Trial Judge, in the course of his reasons, after having spoken of a peak of 39 sows reached by the plaintiff, went on to say (at page 5403):
That number and those he owned previously did not support the standard of living that the plaintiff wished to provide for his family. To reach that standard he considered it expedient to continue in his employment at Ontario Hydro having reached the capacity of 40 sows on the home place expropriated in 1982 and to achieve the objective of 64 sows on the new farm.
At the time of trial in September 1983, the respondent was installed on a new location with much greater capacity than the one he had initial ly which had been expropriated in 1982, and I suppose the learned Judge's observation was meant to describe the intention of the respondent on a long-term basis and for a period of his life extend ing way beyond 1979. As applied to the relevant years 1977, 1978 and 1979, the observation would definitely be misleading. As I appreciate the evi dence, during that period, the respondent could, in no way, expect any profit from his operation.
A summary of these three paragraphs in which I have restated the facts focuses on, in my view, the three components of the factual situation that will have to be applied to the law. During the years in question, the respondent was still holding the full- time job he had been holding for many years at Ontario Hydro but he had also become seriously involved in farming activities. His intention was to go slowly, but with his capacity and his experience he was determined to build up, over the years, a genuine and profitable operation. However, in those years, not only could he not expect a profit from the operation as then developed, but, even at full maturity and fully exploited, the operation his
set-up permitted was not capable of yielding any significant profit.
I turn now to the law.
Section 31 of the Act (on which the Deputy Minister had based the assessment set aside by the judgment under appeal) is clear enough as to its purpose and general meaning. It provides that in certain circumstances a taxpayer engaged in the business of farming will not be allowed to deduct, in the computation of his taxable income for a year, the whole of the farming loss that he may have incurred during that year. He will then be entitled to deduct a maximum of $5,000 and his only possibility with respect to the portion of the loss not absorbed will be to carry it back one year and forward five years for it to be deducted from his farming income during those years. The prob lem with the section is to see clearly how it fits into the scheme of the legislation and to understand in what circumstances it was meant to be applicable, the words used therein being simply:
31. (1) Where a taxpayer's chief source of income for a taxation year is neither farming nor a combination of farming and some other source of income, for the purposes of sections 3 and Ill his loss, if any, for the year from all farming businesses carried on by him shall be deemed to be ...
It should here be recalled that the law respect ing the right of a taxpayer, in computing his taxable income for a year, to deduct the losses he may have sustained during the year was complete ly changed in 1952. Prior to 1952, to be deduct ible, the losses had to be directly related to or "connected with" what was referred to until 1948 as the taxpayer's "chief position, occupation, trade, business or calling" [Income War Tax Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 97, s. 10], and after 1948, as the taxpayer's "chief source of income" [The Income Tax Act, S.C. 1948, c. 52, s. 13]. Since 1952, the deductibility of losses is subject to no such general condition. Section 3 of the Act now prescribes that the income of the taxpayer shall be his total income from all sources, whether business, employment, property or other, and his taxable income shall be this total income less the losses he may have sustained from all his sources. It obvi ously follows from this that, in the scheme of the Act as it is today, a source of income remains for a taxpayer a source of income jn spite of the fact
that he may have sustained a loss therefrom during a year. So, if farming is a taxpayer's source of income, the losses he may sustain from farming should normally be fully and unconditionally deductible. And farming obviously will be a source of income for a taxpayer if it is for him a business so as to make it impossible to categorize the expenses he may incur in doing it as non-deduct ible "personal or living expenses" within the mean ing given to that expression in the light of the interpretation subsection 248(1) of the Act which reads in part:
248.(1)...
"personal or living expenses" includes
(a) the expenses of properties maintained by any person for the use or benefit of the taxpayer or any person connected with the taxpayer by blood relationship, marriage or adop tion, and not maintained in connection with a business carried on for profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit,
On the basis of the principle established by section 3 of the Act, therefore, people involved in farming activities should normally come into two groups only: those for whom farming is not a business but a hobby, who do not expect profit from their farming activities and whose expenses in farming must simply be treated as non-deductible "person- al or living expenses" and the others whose loss sustained in carrying on their farming activities would be deductible from their total income as any other business loss. Section 31 is obviously aimed at departing somewhat from the general rule of deductibility in the case of farm losses sustained by taxpayers for whom farming is a source of income, but not the only one. The group of "real farmers", that is to say those involved in farming not for leisure but for actual or eventual profit, will have to be further divided into those for whom farming or a combination of farming and some other source of income is the "chief source of income" and those for whom it is not.
So, two successive determinations are required to know whether the farm losses of a taxpayer will be non-deductible, partially deductible or fully deductible against other sources of income. With reference to the first determination, based on the notions of business and expectation of profit, Mr. Justice Dickson, in the Moldowan case, supra, had this to say (at pages 485 and 486):
There is a vast case literature on what reasonable expectation of profit means and it is by no means entirely consistent. In my view, whether a taxpayer has a reasonable expectation of profit is an objective determination to be made from all of the facts. The following criteria should be considered: the profit and loss experience in past years, the taxpayer's training, the taxpayer's intended course of action, the capability of the venture as capitalized to show a profit after charging capital cost allow ance. The list is not intended to be exhaustive.
A determination that requires the consideration of so many factors is bound to be difficult at times but it remains, it seems to me, a basic one having to be made in relation to two quite disparate groups, that is to say those who farm as a pastime and for their leisure and those who do it seriously with a view to gain from it a profit. The character istics of the two groups are so distinct that the role of each factor in the determination will be simpli fied. For instance, the plan followed by an individual in building up a farming operation, including the length of time he gives himself to fulfill his expectation of profit, can have no bear ing in determining in which group he belongs unless the plan is formulated in such a way as to doubt his statement that he is not farming as a hobby or a pastime. I do not suppose anyone apprised of the facts would have any difficulty in our case to realize that the respondent was certain ly not farming as a hobby. It is obviously the second determination required by section 31 that raises the real problem, not so much because it concerns a further division, but for the obvious enough reason that the criteria given by Parlia ment is ill defined. What makes a source of income the chief one among the several that a taxpayer may have and what meaning is to be given to the word "combination"?
In addressing these two questions in the Moldo- wan case, supra, Mr. Justice Dickson opens his remarks thus (at page 486):
Whether a source of income is a taxpayer's "chief source" of income is both a relative and objective test. It is decidedly not a pure quantum measurement. A man who has farmed all of his life does not cease to have his chief source of income from farming because he unexpectedly wins a lottery. The distin guishing features of "chief source" are the taxpayer's reason able expectation of income from his various revenue sources and his ordinary mode and habit of work. These may be tested by considering, inter alia in relation to a source of income, the time spent, the capital committed, the profitability both actual and potential. A change in the taxpayer's mode and habit of work or reasonable expectations may signify a change in the chief source, but that is a question of fact in the circumstances.
And at page 487, after having made reference to the law as it was framed under the Income War Tax Act of 1917, he went on as follows:
The word "connected" is not found in s. 13 of the present Act. As Thorson P. said, obiter, in Simpson v. Minister of National Revenue [[1961] C.T.C. 174] there is no reason why there must be such a limitation. I share this view. See also Dorfman v. Minister of National Revenue, supra, at p. 154 and Bert James v. Minister of National Revenue [[1973] C.T.C. 457], at p. 464.
It is clear that "combination" in s. 13 cannot mean simple addition of two sources of income for any taxpayer. That would lead to the result that a taxpayer could combine his farming loss with his most important other source of income, thereby constituting his chief source. I do not think s. 13(1) can be properly so construed. Such a construction would mean that the limitation of the section would never apply and, in every case, the taxpayer could deduct the full amount of farming losses.
But exactly what constituted a "chief source" and what was meant by the word "combination" remained to be clarified. It is at this point that the learned Chief Justice gave his definition of the three classes of farmers envisaged by the Income Tax Act as a whole, namely (at pages 487 and 488):
(1) a taxpayer, for whom farming may reasonably be expect ed to provide the bulk of income or the centre of work routine. Such a taxpayer, who looks to farming for his livelihood, is free of the limitation of s. 13(1) in those years in which he sustains a farming loss.
(2) the taxpayer who does not look to farming, or to farming and some subordinate source of income, for his livelihood but carries on farming as a sideline business. Such a taxpayer is
entitled to the deductions spelled out in s. 13(1) in respect of farming losses.
(3) the taxpayer who does not look to farming, or to farming and some subordinate source of income, for his livelihood and who carries on some farming activities as a hobby. The losses sustained by such a taxpayer on his non-business farming are not deductible in any amount.
And then he wrote:
The reference in s. 13(1) to a taxpayer whose source of income is a combination of farming and some other source of income is a reference to class (1). It contemplates a man whose major preoccupation is farming. But it recognize [sic] that such a man may have other pecuniary interests as well, such as income from investments, or income from a sideline employ ment or business. The section provides that these subsidiary interests will not place the taxpayer in class (2) and thereby limit the deductibility of any loss which may be suffered to $5,000. While a quantum measurement of farming income is relevant, it is not alone decisive. The test is again both relative and objective, and one may employ the criteria indicative of "chief source" to distinguish whether or not the interest is auxiliary. A man who has farmed all of his life does not become disentitled to class (1) classification simply because he comes into an inheritance. On the other hand, a man who changes occupational direction and commits his energies and capital to farming as a main expectation of income is not disentitled to deduct the full impact of start-up costs.
The case at bar involves a man whose ability and dedication as a farmer is special and, in that sense, it is an extraordinary case, but nevertheless it presents a pattern that is certainly not unique and the question it poses goes beyond its particular facts. I think counsel for the appellant could right ly present the case as a test case. The general question raised is the following. Can a full-time employee who starts a farming operation without leaving his employment be regarded as having made farming his chief source of income, within the meaning of section 31 of the Act, before he even puts himself in a situation where he can develop an operation that can yield a profit? As I read the reasons in the Moldowan case and under stand, through them, the intention of the statute, it seems to me that the answer to the question simply cannot be otherwise than in the negative.
I took care to note previously that the determi nation that a man is farming not only as a hobby but as a business ought not to be really influenced by the actual profitability of his farming activities,
the length of time the operation he is building up may require to reach a certain maturity and the remoteness of his expectation of real profit. But I simply fail to see how the comparison between a man's several sources of income for the purpose of determining which is the chief one amongst them could leave aside, to the same extent, their respec tive actual capacity to produce profit. Of course, the expectations of the man are involved but for the determination to have a certain practical meaning only expectations real and actual are relevant not mere plans and long-term goals. These expectations must be that the source will provide, not in the far future but now, at least part of the income the man may need for his own and his family's living needs.
It is true that the definition given by Mr. Justice Dickson of a first class farmer, in the Moldowan case, supra, would readily apply to a man for whom farming is "the centre of work routine"— regardless of the income he may expect to derive therefrom. Of course, the definition had to cover the case of a man who is dedicated totally to farming, it being his only source of income or his sole on-going income-earning activity. But I do not think that a man who has a full-time job can be seen as having nevertheless farming as "the centre of work routine" within the meaning given to those words in the definition. Besides, in the second part of his definition, Mr. Justice Dickson emphasizes that the farmer referred to is one that "looks to farming for his livelihood" and I fail to see how a man who, while holding a full-time job, starts and carries on a farming operation can reasonably "look to farming for his livelihood" until his opera tion is at least capable of yielding a profit. It is also true that Mr. Justice Dickson refers to a "man's major preoccupation" but in the context in which it is used the phrase does not appear to me to refer simply to physical activities (in which case, in any event, it would be doubtful that a man can be said to have a major preoccupation other than his full-time job), but to actual income earning activities. Otherwise, it would simply mean a return to the old abandoned concept of the Income Tax War Act, that of the "chief occupation". Finally, I am not oblivious of Mr. Justice Dick-
son's last observation to the effect that a man should not be disentitled to deduct the full impact of start-up costs. But, I do not think that the concept of start-up expenses can be extended to a period reaching over several years during which the taxpayer plans to build up slowly, through gradual development, expansion and acquisition, an operation that will finally yield a significant profit.
The limit placed by section 31 on the deductibil- ity of farming losses is extremely difficult to explain as it is obviously meant to apply not only to "hobby farmers", who in any event would have difficulty in establishing that farming is for them a source of income, but also and even primarily to some serious and dedicated farmers engaged in farming as a business. Of course one must assume that the goal is to prevent abuses which in this area could be more difficult to detect. But it remains that no such limit appears to have been placed on the deductibility of any other type of business losses. The view I take of the nature and scope of the limit is all the more dissatisfying to me and I wish I would not have felt bound to adopt it. Unfortunately, my understanding of the mean ing of the words used in the section does not allow me to support the finding of the Trial Judge that the provision is not applicable in this case.
I would therefor grant the appeal, quash the judgment of the Trial Division and restore the reassessments of the Minister.
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