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A-49-81
The Queen (Appellant) (Defendant)
v.
Antoine Guertin Ltée (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
INDEXED AS: ANTOINE GUERTIN LTÉE V. CANADA
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Marceau and Lacombe JJ.—Montréal, September 14; Ottawa, November 5, 1987.
Income tax — Income calculation — Deductions — Expenses incurred to borrow money used to earn income from business — Whole life insurance policy pledged as security for loan — Portion of whole life insurance policy premium equivalent to term life insurance policy premium not allowable deduction.
Income tax — Income calculation — Deductions — Wheth er bonuses paid by corporation to employees and immediately transferred to charitable foundation gifts by employees or disguised gift by corporation to foundation.
In 1969, the respondent company was required to take out life insurance policies on two of its officers as security for a $300,000 loan from the Industrial Development Bank. Two of the policies were whole life with surrender value and dividend option and one was term. The Trial Judge ruled that for the years 1970, 1971 and 1972, the respondent was entitled to deduct as expenses, with respect to the whole life policies, an amount equal to annual premiums for term life insurance.
In 1972, the company also deducted the sum of $39,155 which it had reportedly paid to its employees as annual bonuses but which was immediately transferred, by the employees' endorsing of their bonus cheques, to a charitable foundation created by the respondent's president. The Trial Judge found as a fact that there had been no deceit and that this deduction would not unduly or artificially reduce the company's income contrary to subsection 245(1) of the Act.
Held, the appeal should be allowed with respect to the deduction of part of the insurance premiums but dismissed with respect to the payment of bonuses to the employees.
Per Marceau J.: The 1964 Exchequer Court decision in Equitable Acceptance Corp. should be applied. In that case, the deduction of premiums for whole life insurance policies with surrender value taken out on the life of a corporate president was not allowed. It would seem that the reasoning for that decision—that there had been the acquisition of an asset of a capital nature, not an expense incurred in the course of borrow ing money within the meaning of the Act—should apply just as much to term as to whole life insurance. That decision should be understood to mean that in order to speak of an expense incurred in the course of a loan, the expenditure must have been made for no consideration other than the loan; it must be an expenditure resulting in a diminution of the borrower's
property. There is no diminution of property where equivalent value, in the form of insurance, is obtained by the payment of a premium. However, even if the reasoning in Equitable Accept ance Corp. would not apply to term insurance, the deduction herein should not be allowed since the company obtained not term but permanent insurance. It is a well- established rule that in a tax matter, what must be considered is what was done, not what might have been done.
It is on the basis of the testimony of the respondent's president that the Trial Judge found that the $39,155 had in fact been paid to the employees in the form of bonuses although they had agreed with the then president that the money should be paid to his foundation. In the Judge's opinion, there had been no deceit. While a more critical view of the testimony could have been taken, it cannot be said that the Judge made a manifest error in believing it. It cannot therefore be said that he erred in deciding as he did. Once it is admitted that the amount of the bonuses was set in the way described by the respondent's president, it cannot be concluded that a part of these bonuses represented a disguised gift made to the foundation by the respondent.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, ss. 11(1)(cb)(ii)
(as added by S.C. 1955, c. 54, s.1(1)), 12(1)(b). Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 18(1)(b),
20(1)(e)(ii), 110(1)(a), 245(1).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Equitable Acceptance Corp. Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [ 1964] Ex.C.R. 859; 64 DTC 5045; Bronfman Trust v. The Queen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 32.
REFERRED TO:
Côté-Reco Inc. v. Minister of National Revenue (1979), 80 DTC 1012 (T.R.B.).
COUNSEL:
Roger Roy for appellant (defendant).
Claude Desaulniers for respondent (plaintiff).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant (defendant).
Stikeman, Elliott, Tamaki, Mercier & Robb Montréal, for respondent (plaintiff).
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment rendered by
MARCEAU J.: This appeal, brought on behalf of Her Majesty, is against a judgment of the Trial Division [[1981] 2 F.C. 532] which vacated the assessments of the respondent company made by the Minister of National Revenue for the 1970, 1971 and 1972 taxation years. It raises two ques tions which are both of the same type, as in each case the question is whether a certain expense appearing on the company's balance sheet was deductible in computing its taxable income, but which have nothing else in common, nor do they cover the same years. There are thus two parts to the appeal, which can only be dealt with independ ently of each other.
I
The first part of the appeal covers the three years, and the expense the deduction of which is at issue was incurred to pay life insurance premiums. The facts are straightforward. In 1969 the respondent company—a Quebec family company engaged in the manufacture of feed and raising of turkeys in St-Pie, a village near Montréal—bor- rowed $300,000 from the Industrial Development Bank to purchase a piece of land and construct buildings to be used in expanding its operations. Among the many securities required by the Bank was the following:
[TRANSLATION] The transfer of a sum of insurance on the lives of Messrs. Jacques Guertin ($200,000.00) and Emile Cordeau ($100,000.00), this insurance to be held either by the company and payable to it or by Messrs. Guertin and Cordeau and payable to their estates or to the company.
To meet this requirement the company obtained two $100,000 insurance policies on the life of Jacques Guertin, who was its president, and trans ferred them to the Bank. They were whole life policies with a surrender value and dividend option, and the annual premiums totalled $4,022, $2,011 for each one. In computing its taxable income for each of the next three years, the com pany used this transaction to include the sum of $1,090 in its expenses, representing what it con sidered would be the annual premiums it would have paid if, instead of whole life policies, it had only purchased temporary [term] policies as it had
done to meet the Bank's requirement for Mr. Cordeau. The Minister challenged this procedure but the Trial Judge ruled against him, and the Deputy Attorney General submits on behalf of Her Majesty that the learned Judge was in error.
The old Income Tax Act and the new one which replaced it in 1972 are both involved in view of the years in question, but the provisions directly appli cable are to the same effect in each one. In the old Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, the sections concerned are subparagraph 11(1)(cb)(ii) (as added by S.C. 1955, c. 54, s. 1(1)) and paragraph 12(1)(b):
11. (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a), (b) and (h) of subsection (1) of section 12, the following amounts may be deducted in computing the income of a taxpayer for a taxation year:
(cb) an expense incurred in the year,
(ii) in the course of borrowing money used by the taxpayer for the purpose of earning income from a business or property (other than money used by the taxpayer for the purpose of acquiring property the income from which would be exempt),
12. (1) In computing income, no deduction shall be made in respect of
(b) an outlay, loss or replacement of capital, a payment on account of capital or an allowance in respect of depreciation, obsolescence or depletion except as expressly permitted by this Part,
In the current Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, the sections are paragraph 18(1)(b) and subparagraph 20 (1) (e) (ii):
18. (1) In computing the income of a taxpayer from a business or property no deduction shall be made in respect of
(b) an outlay, loss or replacement of capital, a payment on account of capital or an allowance in respect of depreciation, obsolescence or depletion except as expressly permitted by this Part;
20. (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs 18(1)(a), (b) and (h), in computing a taxpayer's income for a taxation year from a business or property, there may be deducted such of the following amounts as are wholly applicable to that source or
such part of the following amounts as may reasonably be regarded as applicable thereto:
(e) an expense incurred in the year,
(ii) in the course of borrowing money used by the taxpay er for the purpose of earning income from a business or property (other than money used by the taxpayer for the purpose of acquiring property the income from which would be exempt),
The Deputy Attorney General of course argued that the special and exceptional deduction allowed by subparagraphs 11(1) (cb) (ii) of the old Act and 20(1)(e)(ii) of the new was inapplicable because the cost of purchasing the two life insurance poli cies with surrender value was not "an expense incurred in the course of borrowing money" (une dépense engagée à l'occasion d'un emprunt), and he relied in this regard on the authority of the decision of the Exchequer Court in Equitable Acceptance Corp. Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1964] Ex.C.R. 859; 64 DTC 5045. The respondent argued that Cattanach J.'s judgment in that case did not support the contention of the Deputy Attorney General. The Trial Judge, it said, clearly explained the scope of that judgment when he wrote [at page 534 F.C.]: "Cattanach J. ruled that premiums for insurance policies on the life of the plaintiff Company's president were not deduct ible, precisely because this was permanent insur ance which was not restricted to the term of the loan but covered the entire life of the insured, with a surrender value". It was precisely in order to take account of the judgment in Equitable Acceptance Corp. the respondent explained, that it deliberately refrained from claiming the total pre mium it had paid; but it was quite understandable that it should deduct what it would have spent if it had purchased only a temporary policy for the duration of the loan. To this the Deputy Attorney General responded that while it is true that if the insurance obtained had only been temporary, deduction of the premium could have been approved (as it was in the case of the policy obtained on the life of Mr. Cordeau), the fact remains that this is not what was done.
I should say first that I have some difficulty understanding how the scope of the judgment in
Equitable Acceptance Corp. can be limited to cases in which the life insurance obtained and transferred is whole life insurance. In my opinion, Cattanach J.'s reasoning is entirely contained in this paragraph from his reasons [at pages 865 Ex.C.R.; 5048 DTC]:
In my view the cost of the purchase of the two life insurance policies and the maintenance in force thereof by the payment of premiums is not an expense incurred in the year in the course of borrowing money used by the taxpayer for the purpose of earning income from a business. While it is true that the purchase of these life insurance policies and their assignment to Triarch was a condition imposed by Triarch before making the loan to the appellant, nevertheless the true nature of the transaction was that the appellant acquired an asset which could be used, and was in fact used, as a collateral security necessary to borrow money to be used in its business. In short, the appellant, by the purchase of the two insurance policies, merely enhanced its position as a reliable lending risk.
It seems to me that this reasoning applies just as much to the case of temporary insurance as to that of whole life insurance. The right of the insured under a temporary life insurance contract is an "asset" in the sense in which the word is used by Cattanach J., that is, a usable security from which a benefit can be obtained, or valuable property, in the same way as the right conferred on an insured by a "permanent" life insurance contract, even though the asset is of a lower value and its trans formation into cash is of course only a contingen cy. Cattanach J.'s judgment has often been treated as based simply on an interpretation of the phrase "in the course of" (à l'occasion de) contained in the wording of the applicable provision, the Judge being of the view that the expense was prior to the loan and not "in the course of borrowing" (à l'occasion d'un emprunt) (Cf Côté-Reco Inc. v. Minister of National Revenue (1979), 80 DTC 1012 (T.R.B.)). On the contrary, the reasoning appears to me to go much further than that. I understand it to mean that, in order to speak strictly and accurately of an expense incurred in the course of a loan, the expenditure must as such have had no consideration other than the loan, or in other words, it must be an expenditure resulting in a diminution of the borrower's property. The property right represented by temporary insurance is the premium paid in another form with an equivalent value, and no diminution could possibly result in the property of the insured.
It is true that, in his reasons, Cattanach J. went on to say, in a paragraph subsequent to the one just cited, the following:
If the insured, Emil E. Schlesinger, had died while the policies were in force and before the repayment of the loan, the appellant would then be in the position of the loan being fully paid from the proceeds of the insurance policies and the amount of the loan received by the appellant would become part of the appellant's assets without any corresponding debit entry. Again if the proceeds were in excess of the amount required to repay the loan, then any such excess would have accrued to the appellant's assets. Further when the loan was repaid, as it was, there was nothing to prevent the appellant from securing another loan from the same or a different source on the strength of the security of the two life insurance policies, if the necessity arose.
In my view, however, in so doing the Judge added nothing to his reasoning and merely elucidated the various aspects of the "asset" represented by the policies at issue in the case before him. I know that this paragraph (in particular, I take it, because of what he said in the last sentence) seems to have given rise to a limiting interpretation of his judg ment, an interpretation which the Department even adopted in its Interpretation Bulletin IT-309R of January 10, 1979. I would still, with respect, dispute the legitimacy of this reaction. In my view the reasoning underlying Equitable Acceptance Corp. applies just as much to tempo rary insurance for the duration of the loan as to insurance which will continue beyond it, and it is a reasoning which appears to me to be unimpeach able.
I have taken the time to examine the question of whether temporary insurance could more ade quately meet the conditions for application of sub- paragraphs 11(1)(cb)(ii) and 20(1)(e)(ii) of the Act than permanent insurance because it was the focus of the parties' concerns and the basis of their arguments. I think nevertheless that strictly speak ing, in the circumstances of the case at bar, it is not necessary for the Court to adopt a final posi tion on the point as, even assuming that a differ ence in treatment between permanent and tempo rary insurance is warranted, there is still the response of the Deputy Attorney General that, in any case, here the company obtained not tempo rary but permanent insurance, and I think this response is conclusive. Quite recently, once again, in Bronfman Trust v. The Queen, [1987] 1 S.C.R.
32, the Supreme Court restated the rule that in a tax matter what must be considered is what was done, not what might have been done. The follow ing is an extract from the reasons of the Chief Justice, speaking for the Court, at pages 54 and 55:
Before concluding, I wish to address one final argument raised by counsel for the Trust. It was submitted — and the Crown generously conceded — that the Trust would have obtained an interest deduction if it had sold assets to make the capital allocation and borrowed to replace them. Accordingly, it is argued, the Trust ought not to be precluded from an interest deduction merely because it achieved the same effect without the formalities of sale and repurchase of assets. It would be a sufficient answer to this submission to point to the principle that the courts must deal with what the taxpayer actually did, and not what he might have done: Matheson v. The Queen, 74 D.T.C. 6176 (F.C.T.D.), per Mahoney J., at p. 6179.
I think that the first part of the appeal is definitely valid.
II
The second part of the appeal relates to a single taxation year, 1972. Though like the preceding case this one again involves a disallowed expense, the question raised is much more difficult to define, as it is rooted in a somewhat complex series of facts. However, in view of the conclusion I intend to adopt, it will not be necessary for me to go into any detail. Broadly speaking, the matter is as follows.
The respondent company was established by Antoine Guertin, the father of Jacques, who was its president in 1972. Antoine Guertin had also created a foundation whose funds were to be used for religious purposes. This foundation received gifts primarily from the respondent company and its employees; it loaned the amounts received to the respondent company in return for interest and donated this interest for use in missionary work.
In its tax returns, for the purpose of computing its 1972 income tax, the company first reported a gift of $12,400 to the foundation, and then the payment to all its employees without exception of large annual bonuses a third of which, $39,155 out of $111,600, was never received by the employees but was simply represented by cheques endorsed to
the foundation. The Minister refused to allow both the deduction of the $12,400 gift and that of the part of the bonuses paid to the foundation, on the ground that these deductions, if allowed, would unduly or artificially reduce the company's income contrary to subsection 245 (1) of the Act.
The Trial Judge dismissed the Minister's argu ments. His understanding of the evidence led him to conclude that the sum of $12,400 paid to the foundation by the respondent represented a true gift and that of $39,155 had in fact been paid to the employees in the form of bonuses, although they agreed with Antoine Guertin that it should be paid to his foundation. In the Judge's opinion, there had been no deceit.
The appellant's counsel no longer disputes that the $12,400 gift was really a gift. However, he argues that the Judge erred in allowing deduction of the sum of $39,155. This, he said, had not really been paid to the employees in the form of bonuses, it was paid to them on the basis and subject to the condition that they pay it to the foundation, so that it was in fact a gift made by the respondent to the foundation through intermediaries and this gift could not be deducted in addition to that of the $12,400, since the latter was the maximum deductible under paragraph 110(1) (a) of the Act.
This argument by counsel for the appellant of course rests on a basic assumption, that the sum of $39,155 would not have been distributed to the employees if they had not previously agreed to pay it to the foundation as Antoine Guertin asked them to do. However, the respondent's president Jacques Guertin testified to the contrary, and asserted that the amount of each employee's bonus was set by the management committee without intervention by Antoine Guertin, and regardless of whether the employee in question had agreed to make a gift to the foundation. The Trial Judge clearly could not have decided as he did unless he believed this part of Jacques Guertin's testimony. It seems to me, after reading and re-reading the evidence, that I would have been inclined to take a more critical view of the testimony, but I cannot say that the Judge made a manifest error in believ-
ing it. That being so, I also cannot say that he erred in deciding as he did. Once it is admitted that the amount of the bonuses was set in the way described by Jacques Guertin, it cannot be con cluded that a part of these bonuses represented a disguised gift made to the foundation by the respondent. Accordingly, the appellant cannot suc ceed on the second part of the action.
I therefore conclude that the appeal should be allowed and the assessments restored as to the disallowing of deductions in the amount of $1,090 for insurance premiums for each of the years 1970, 1971 and 1972, but should be dismissed as to the payment of bonuses to the employees. In view of the mixed outcome, I would let each party pay its costs.
PRATTE J.: I concur. LACOMBE J.: I concur.
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