2007 FCA 113
A‑231‑06
Earl Lipson (Appellant)
v.
Her Majesty the Queen (Respondent)
A‑230‑06
Jordan B. Lipson (Appellant)
v.
Her Majesty the Queen (Respondent)
Indexed as: Lipson v. Canada (F.C.A.)
Federal Court of Appeal, Décary, Noël and Sexton JJ.A.—Vancouver, March 6; Ottawa, March 16, 2007.
Income Tax — Reassessment — Tax avoidance — Appeals from T.C.C. decision denying appeals from reassessments issued on basis of tax avoidance transactions by appellants, contrary to Income Tax Act, s. 245 — Transactions resulting in deduction of mortgage interest against income derived from shares — Tax Court Judge entitled to consider transactions as whole and overall purpose in conducting misuse, abuse analysis — Where tax benefit resulting from series of transactions, series relevant in ascertaining whether any individual transaction giving rise to abuse of provision of Act — As no error in construction of relevant provisions, analytical approach, no basis for interfering with Tax Court Judge’s conclusion transactions giving rise to abusive tax avoidance — Appeals dismissed.
These were appeals from a decision of the Tax Court of Canada denying appeals from reassessments for 1994, 1995 and 1996. The appellants, Earl Lipson and his wife, Jordanna wanted to buy a house and finance the cost of acquisition. Jordanna obtained an unsecured loan from the bank and bought $562,500 worth of shares from the appellant’s family corporation. The appellant then used this money to purchase the house, and the proceeds from the bank’s mortgage loan were used to repay the unsecured loan. Since the mortgage on the home provided financing in substitution for the demand loan used to acquire the shares, Jordanna was able to deduct the mortgage interest against income derived from the shares by virtue of paragraph 20(3) of the Income Tax Act.
The reassessments, as modified, stated that the transaction between the appellant and his wife was an avoidance transaction under subsection 245(3) of the Act. Subsection 245(2) contemplates the denial of a tax benefit that would result from a transaction that is an avoidance transaction “or from a series of transactions that includes that transaction.” Paragraph 245(3)(b) extends the definition of an avoidance transaction to a transaction “that is part of a series of transactions, which series, but for this section, would result, directly or indirectly in a tax benefit. The Tax Court concluded that this transaction formed part of a series of transactions, the overall purpose of which was to make interest on money used to buy a personal residence deductible, and as such, these transactions resulted in a misuse and abuse of the provisions of the Act. At issue was whether the admitted avoidance transactions constituted an abuse or misuse as contemplated by subsection 245(4), whether the Tax Court Judge was entitled to consider the overall purpose of the transactions in his misuse and abuse analysis, and whether he placed too much weight on this purpose.
Held, the appeals should be dismissed.
It follows from section 245 that where a tax benefit results from a series of transactions, the series becomes relevant in ascertaining whether any transaction within the series gives rise to an abuse of the provisions relied upon to achieve the tax benefit. Although subsection 245(4) (which stipulates when subsection 245(2) applies) makes no reference to a series of transactions, it must be read in context and where the tax benefit results from a series of transactions under subsection 245(3), the series cannot be ignored in conducting the abuse analysis.
The series of transactions herein unfolded in two sequences. At the end of the first sequence, the appellant and his wife were the owners of a new home; at the end of the second, the appellant had deducted the financing costs. The Tax Court Judge considered each transaction in light of the series and concluded, when regard is had to the tax benefit claimed, that these transactions resulted in an abuse of paragraph 20(1)(c) and other provisions of the Act when read purposively in the context of the Act, and specifically, that the appellant engaged in abusive tax avoidance. The Tax Court Judge was entitled to give substantial weight to the series of transations. The Supreme Court has made it clear in both Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada and Mathew v. Canada that where there is no error in the construction of the relevant provisions or in the analytical approach, the question of whether the transactions give rise to abusive tax avoidance belongs to the Tax Court Judge. There was no basis for interfering with the Tax Court Judge’s decision.
statutes and regulations judicially
considered
Income Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1, ss. 3(a),(d), 9(1),(2), 20(1)(c) (as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 7, Sch. II, s. 15), (3) (as am. by S.C. 1995, c. 21, s. 45), 73(1), 74.1(1), (2) (as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 7, Sch. VII, s. 4), (3), 74.2 (as am. idem, Sch. II, s. 51), 74.3, 74.4 (as am. idem, s. 52), 74.5 (as am. idem, s. 53), 245(1),(2),(3),(4), 248(10).
Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970‑71‑72, c. 63, s. 245(1).
cases judicially considered
applied:
Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 601; (2005), 259 D.L.R. (4th) 193; [2005] 5 C.T.C. 215; 2005 DTC 5523; 340 N.R. 1; 2005 SCC 54; Mathew v. Canada, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 643; (2005), 259 D.L.R. (4th) 225; [2005] 5 C.T.C. 244; 2005 DTC 5538; 339 N.R. 323; 2005 SCC 55.
considered:
Singleton v. Canada, [1996] 3 C.T.C. 2873; (1996), 96 DTC 1850; Evans v. Canada, [2006] 2 C.T.C. 2009; 2005 DTC 1762; 2005 TCC 684; Shell Canada Ltd. v. Canada, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 622; (1999), 178 D.L.R. (4th) 26; [1999] 4 C.T.C. 313; 99 DTC 5669; 247 N.R. 19; Canada v. Canadian Pacific Ltd., [2002] 3 F.C. 170; (2001), 2002 DTC 6742; 284 N.R. 216; 2001 FCA 398; affg [2001] 1 C.T.C. 2190; 2000 DTC 2428 (T.C.C.).
referred to:
Canada v. Fording Coal Ltd., [1996] 1 F.C. 518; [1996] 1 C.T.C. 230; (1995), 95 DTC 5672; 190 N.R. 186 (C.A.); Novopharm Ltd. v. Canada, [2003] 3 C.T.C. 1; (2003), 2003 DTC 5195; 301 N.R. 275; 2003 FCA 112; Craven v. White, [1989] A.C. 398 (H.L.); W.T. Ramsey Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, [1981] 1 All E.R. 865.
APPEALS from a Tax Court of Canada decision ([2006] 3 C.T.C. 2494; 2006 DTC 2687; 2006 TCC 148) dismissing appeals from reassessments issued on the basis that transactions entered into by the appellants in order to enable them to deduct mortgage interest constituted an avoidance transaction under subsection 245(3) of the Income Tax Act. Appeals dismissed.
appearances:
Edwin G. Kroft for appellants.
J. Paul Malette, Q.C. and J. S. Gill for respondent.
solicitors of record:
McCarthy Tétrault LLP, Vancouver, for appellants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
[1]Noël J.A.: These are appeals from a decision by Bowman C.J., [2006] 3 C.T.C. 2494 (T.C.C.) denying the appeals brought by the appellants with respect to reassessments issued for their 1994, 1995 and 1996 taxation years.
[2]The appeals were heard by the Tax Court on the basis of common evidence. Although separate statements of agreed facts were filed, the argument was presented by reference to the statement of agreed facts filed in the Earl Lipson appeal only, and counsel agreed that the decision with respect to the Earl Lipson appeal would also be determinative of the appeal brought by Jordan B. Lipson.
[3]At the beginning of the hearing before this Court, counsel for the appellants sought leave to make separate submissions in support of the Jordan B. Lipson appeal. Given that the judgment under appeal was rendered by reference to the statement of agreed facts in the Earl Lipson appeal only, and that the parties agreed that the decision with respect to Earl Lipson would apply to Jordan B. Lipson, we denied this request.
[4]Accordingly, these reasons dispose of the appeal brought by Earl Lipson in docket A‑231‑06, and a copy will be filed in docket A‑230‑06 as reasons for judgment disposing of the appeal brought by Jordan B. Lipson.
BACKGROUND
[5]The sole issue is whether the transactions involved in this case, which are admitted to be avoidance transactions within the meaning of subsection 245(3) of the Income Tax Act [R.S.C., 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1] (the Act), constitute an abuse or a misuse as contemplated by subsection 245(4), thereby justifying the reassessments in issue. Bowman C.J. held that such abuse and misuse had been established. The appellants contend that he erred in reaching this conclusion.
[6]No evidence was adduced at trial other than the statement of agreed facts which is reproduced as Schedule A to the decision under appeal. According to this statement, Earl Lipson (the appellant) and Jordanna Lipson (Jordanna) are husband and wife. They wanted to buy a home in Toronto and finance the cost of acquisition. At the relevant time, the appellant also owned shares of Lipson Family Investments Limited (the family corporation).
[7]They entered into an agreement to purchase the property with a closing date of September 1, 1994. The purchase price was $750,000 with a $50,000 deposit being paid.
[8]On August 31, 1994, Jordanna borrowed $562,500 from the bank and gave the bank an interest-bearing demand promissory note. The appellant concedes that the bank would not have lent $562,500 to Jordanna on an unsecured basis without his covenant to repay Jordanna’s loan from the mortgage funds to be advanced the next day.
[9]On the same day, the appellant sold 20 and 5/6th of the shares he held in the family corporation to Jordanna for $562,500. The number of shares transferred was determined so that in the aggregate their fair market value would be equal to Jordanna’s bank loan.
[10]Still on the same day, Jordanna using the borrowed funds gave the appellant a cheque for $562,500 as payment for the shares. The appellant forwarded that amount to the trust account of the solicitor retained for the purchase of their new home who was under irrevocable instructions to retire Jordanna’s loan with the proceeds of the bank’s mortgage loan.
[11]The next day (September 1, 1994), the appellant’s solicitor paid the $562,500 to the vendor towards the purchase price of their new personal residence; the transfer/deed of land, showing the appellant and Jordanna as joint tenants, was registered on the land as was the charge/mortgage; the bank advanced $562,500 to the appellant’s solicitor in trust as proceeds from the mortgage on the personal residence and the solicitor, as instructed, directed the $562,500 mortgage proceeds back to the bank to repay Jordanna’s loan.
[12]Because the appellant did not elect out of the attribution rules (subsection 73(1)) the shares were deemed to have been sold to the appellant and acquired by Jordanna for proceeds equal to their adjusted cost base (ACB) (thereby deferring any taxable gain or loss until a subsequent sale). A further consequence is that any income or loss from the shares computed in the hands of Jordanna would be attributed back to the appellant under subsection 74.1(1) of the Act.
[13]In addition, since the mortgage on the home provided financing in substitution for the demand loan used to acquire the shares, Jordanna was able to deduct the mortgage interest against income derived from the shares by virtue of paragraph 20(3) [as am. by S.C. 1995, c. 21, s. 45] of the Act.
REPORTING BASIS
[14]In reporting his income for the three years in issue, the appellant complied with the attribution rules and declared as his, the income and losses derived by Jordanna in respect of the shares.
[15]Accordingly, in the return filed for his 1994 taxation year, the appellant claimed a loss in the amount of $12,948, representing interest expenses paid under the mortgage for that year.
[16]For his 1995 taxation year, the appellant reported income consisting of a taxable dividend paid in respect of the shares in the amount of $53,546 less interest expenses of $47,371 paid under the mortgage for that year.
[17]For his 1996 taxation year, the appellant claimed a loss resulting from the difference between the interest expenses paid under the mortgage for that year in the amount of $44,572 and a taxable dividend paid in respect of the shares in the amount of $12,895.
BASIS OF REASSESSMENTS
[18]The initial reassessments were issued on the basis that “the true economic purpose for which the borrowed money was used was to purchase a principal residence for the taxpayer and his wife.” The letter announcing the reassessments indicates the Minister’s decision, relying on the decision of Bowman A.C.J. (as he then was) in Singleton v. Canada, [1996] 3 C.T.C. 2873 (T.C.C.), to deny the interest expenses claimed by the appellant for the three years in issue while leaving the attribution of the income from the shares untouched (see notice of appeal, at paragraph 13, as quoted in paragraph 10 of the reasons). The results were additions to the appellant’s income in the amounts of $12,948; $47,371; and $44,572 for the 1994, 1995 and 1996 taxation years respectively.
[19]At the confirmation stage, which took place after the Supreme Court released its decision in Singleton v. Canada, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 1046, the Minister modified the basis of the reassessment as follows:
. . . the transaction between the Appellant and the Appellant’s spouse “was an avoidance transaction under subsection 245(3). The tax consequences have been determined according to subsections 245(2) and 245(5) of the Act. The deductions you claimed, amounting to $12,948 in 1994, $47,371 in 1995 and $44,572 in 1996 have been disallowed according to subsection 245(5)”. [See notice of confirmation as quoted in the notice of appeal and reproduced at para. 10 of the reasons.]
DECISION OF THE TAX COURT
[20]Bowman C.J., at paragraph 15, began his analysis by asking whether the Minister should have persisted and relied upon the true economic purpose of the transactions:
I asked counsel for the respondent, Mr. Gill, if the Crown was abandoning the original basis of assessment, i.e. the principle quoted by the assessor from Singleton. His answer was not quite as clear cut as it might have been, as I believe he was endeavouring to keep the concept of “true economic purpose” alive within the context of the GAAR.
[21]Addressing this concept in the context of the GAAR [general anti-avoidance rule], Bowman C.J. first referred to his decision in Evans v. Canada, [2006] 2 C.T.C. 2009 (T.C.C.), in which he summarized the decisions of the Supreme Court in both Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v. Canada, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 601 and Mathew v. Canada, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 643 (Kaulius). He said with respect to these decisions, at paragraph 18:
I think that what the Supreme Court of Canada directs is a unified textual, contextual and purposive analysis not only of the sections giving rise to the tax benefit but of the very section which the Minister says denies the benefit, i.e. section 245. It is a general principle of statutory interpretation of broad application and I can think of no reason for not applying it to section 245 as well as to any other section of the ITA. It would be a mistake to fail to give to section 245 the same type of textual, contextual and purposive interpretation as the Supreme Court of Canada requires be given to all of the other provisions of the ITA.
[22]After reviewing the provisions relied upon by the appellant and the transactions in light of the tax benefit sought, Bowman C.J. held, at paragraph 23, that:
The overall purpose as well as the use to which each individual provision was put was to make interest on money used to buy a personal residence deductible.
Earlier on, at paragraph 16, he had put the matter this way:
The purpose of the series of transactions was to make the interest deductible that would not be deductible if the money was simply used to buy the house.
[23]Given this purpose (i.e., borrowing money in such a way as to make the interest deductible), Bowman C.J. found that the transactions resulted in a misuse and abuse of the provisions of the Act, specifically paragraph 20(1)(c) [as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 7, Sch. II, s. 15] section and subsection 20(3). Subsection 73(1) and section 74.1 were also misused to the extent that they were used to execute the scheme as a whole (reasons, at paragraphs 25 and 26). This conclusion was reached in light of Bowman C.J.’s assessment of the object, spirit and purpose of each of these provisions.
[24]Bowman C.J. went on to state, at paragraphs 31-32:
This case is, in my view, an obvious example of abusive tax avoidance. Whatever commercial or other non‑tax purpose, if any, is served by transferring Earl’s shares to Jordanna, it is subservient to the objective of making the interest on the purchase of the house deductible by Earl.
In this case I am not looking to any “overarching policy” that supersedes the specific provisions of the ITA. I am simply looking at the obvious purpose of the various provisions that are relied on and have concluded that those purposes have been subverted and those sections turned on their heads. I mentioned above that section 245 must itself be subjected to a textual, contextual and purposive analysis. If there ever was a case at which section 245 was aimed, it is this one.
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[25]In support of the appeal, the appellant contends that Bowman C.J. erred by improperly importing into the GAAR analysis the concepts of economic purpose and reality and by recharacterizing the transactions in issue. He conducted the abuse and misuse analysis on the basis that the borrowings were used to buy the home rather than by reference to the transactions as they actually took place and the legal relationships which were created. In so doing, Bowman C.J. strayed from the “principled approach” set out in Canada Trustco and Kaulius.
[26]The appellant first relies on a line of cases, notably Singleton [S.C.C.] and Shell Canada Ltd. v. Canada, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 622, which have held in a non‑GAAR context that avoidance transactions should be assessed in light of what actually took place, and not by recharacterizing the transactions on the basis of a Judge’s perception of their economic reality or overall purpose (Singleton, at paragraphs 30‑35; Shell Canada, at paragraphs 38-39).
[27]According to the appellant, this approach has subsisted under the GAAR. In Canada v. Canadian Pacific Ltd., [2002] 3 F.C. 170 (F.C.A.), a decision of this Court involving complex and allegedly circuitous transactions (the transactions were virtually identical to those scrutinized by the Supreme Court in Shell Canada), the Court rebuked the Crown’s attempt to recharacterize the transactions. Sexton J.A., writing for the Court, quoted with approval the following passage of the reasons of the Tax Court Judge [[2001] 1 C.T.C. 2190, at paragraph 16], at paragraph 31:
In my view the Minister put the cart before the horse when, as already explained, he attempted to recharacterize events by asserting that issuing the debt in A$ was an abuse of the Act as a whole because it converted non‑deductible Canadian principal repayments to a deductible expense. That, I repeat, is not what happened.
[28]Sexton J.A. added at paragraph 33:
This does not mean a recharacterization cannot occur. A recharacterization of a transaction is expressly permitted under section 245, but only after it has been established that there has been an avoidance transaction and that there would otherwise be a misuse or abuse. A transaction cannot be portrayed as something which it is not, nor can it be recharacterized in order to make it an avoidance transaction.
[29]According to the appellant, the framework of analysis proposed by the Supreme Court in Canada Trustco and Kaulius is consistent with this approach. Reference is made to the passage in Canada Trustco, at paragraph 44, where the Supreme Court introduces the discussion with respect to the misuse and abuse analysis:
The heart of the analysis under s. 245(4) lies in a contextual and purposive interpretation of the provisions of the Act that are relied on by the taxpayer, and the application of the properly interpreted provisions to the facts of a given case. The first task is to interpret the provisions giving rise to the tax benefit to determine their object, spirit and purpose. The next task is to determine whether the transaction falls within or frustrates that purpose. The overall inquiry thus involves a mixed question of fact and law. The textual, contextual and purposive interpretation of specific provisions of the Income Tax Act is essentially a question of law but the application of these provisions to the facts of a case is necessarily fact‑intensive.
[30]This dual test for misuse under the GAAR is a key element in the framework of analysis. According to the appellant, it bears little resemblance to the approach concerning “artificial reductions” in income under former subsection 245(1) [Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63]: Canada v. Fording Coal Ltd., [1996] 1 F.C. 518 (C.A.); Novopharm Ltd. v Canada, [2003] 3 C.T.C. 1 (F.C.A.), at paragraphs 24‑34. Although economic substance remains relevant to the analysis under subsection 245(4), it cannot be isolated from the factual context (Canada Trustco, at paragraphs 51‑60, 76). The appellant places particular reliance on the following passage, at paragraph 60:
We should reject any analysis under s. 245(4) that depends entirely on “substance” viewed in isolation from the proper interpretation of specific provisions of the Income Tax Act or the relevant factual context of a case.
[31]Based on the foregoing, the appellant submits that the task in a misuse analysis is to first construe the provisions giving rise to the tax benefit in order to determine their object spirit and purpose and then to determine whether the transactions, as they actually took place, fall within or frustrate this purpose. The appellant concedes that Bowman C.J. properly performed the first task. However, Bowman C.J. committed a reviewable error by performing the second task by reference to the overall purpose of the transactions rather than by reference to the actual transactions and the legal relationships which they created. In any event, Bowman C.J. placed too much weight on this overall purpose and not enough on the legal relationships actually created.
[32]The issue therefore is whether Bowman C.J. was entitled to take the overall purpose of the transactions into account in his misuse and abuse analysis and attribute to this purpose the weight that he did.
[33]I agree with the appellant that if the transactions are considered without regard to the overall purpose identified by Bowman C.J., it is difficult to find that there has been a misuse or abuse of any of the provisions relied upon. This is the conclusion that one must reach when regard is had to Bowman C.J.’s assessment of the object, spirit and purpose of the relevant provisions.
[34]Beginning with the attribution rules, Bowman C.J. analysed the text, context and purpose of subsection 73(1), at paragraph 21 of his reasons:
Subsection 73(1) has as its purpose the facilitation of inter‑spousal transfers of property without immediate tax consequences. Such transfers, in the case of non‑depreciable property, are deemed to take place at the transferor’s acb unless the transferor elects to have subsection 73(1) not apply. If the operation of subsection 73(1) is excluded by an election, the transfer is deemed to take place at fmv [fair market value]. In fact, the transfer did take place at fmv but the deemed transfer price was Earl’s acb. In other words Jordanna acquired the property for tax purposes at Earl’s acb. If the property is sold, the capital gain is attributed back to Earl in any event.
[35]Bowman C.J. further explained (reasons, at paragraph 22), that subsection 74.1(1) is part of the rules (section 74.1 through 74.5 [ss. 74.1(2) (as am. by S.C. 1994, c. 7, Sch. VII, s. 4), 74.2 (as am. idem, Sch. II, s. 51), 74.4 (as am. idem, s. 52), 74.5 (as am. idem, s. 53)]) which are designed to prevent income splitting. In the context of this appeal, it is useful to add that the income which section 74.1 attributes is “net income” (i.e., income within the meaning of paragraphs 3(a) and (d) and subsections 9(1) and (2) of the Act).
[36]Considering the transactions as they unfolded, the purposes of subsections 74.1(1) and 73(1) were fulfilled. The appellant (presumably in a higher tax bracket his counsel suggests) transferred the shares to his spouse with the result that (pursuant to subsection 74.1(1)) any income or loss incurred by Jordanna with respect to the shares was attributed back to the appellant.
[37]Subsection 73(1) also operated as intended. The shares were transferred from the appellant to Jordanna on a rollover basis (i.e., at the appellant’s ACB) and any future gain or loss resulting from the disposition of the shares by Jordanna will be attributed back to the appellant.
[38]Turning to paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act, Bowman C.J. identified at paragraph 19 of his reasons, its purpose as follows:
Generally speaking, interest on borrowed money is deductible when the money is used for a commercial purpose. It is not deductible when the money is used for an ineligible (i.e. non commercial or personal) purpose. A purpose of paragraph 20(1)(c) is to “create an incentive to accumulate capital with the potential to produce income by allowing taxpayers to deduct interest costs associated with its acquisition”. (Ludco Enterprises Ltd. v. Canada, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 1082, quoted in Novopharm Limited v. The Queen, 2003 DTC 5195, at 5204‑5205; Tennant v. The Queen, 96 DTC 6121 at 6126‑6127 (S.C.C).)
[39]In this case, Jordanna borrowed money to acquire shares which had the potential to produce and did produce non‑exempt income. The change in the respective ownership positions of the appellant and his spouse is real from both a legal and an economic perspective, and this is unaltered by the distinct treatment which the attribution rules provide for the purposes of the Act. The shares no longer belong to the appellant; they belong to Jordanna.
[40]Jordanna having acquired an income producing asset and having financed the cost of acquisition, there is an obvious link between the borrowed money and a current eligible use. As such, paragraph 20(1)(c) cannot be said to have been misused.
[41]Lastly, Bowman C.J. identified, at paragraph 27 of his reasons, the purpose of subsection 20(3) as follows:
…, imprinting on the refinancing loan the tax incidents arising from the use of the money borrowed by the initial loan.
[42]In this case, the mortgage loan was used to repay the money which had been previously borrowed to purchase the shares. As such, the text, context and purpose of subsection 20(3), is to attribute to the mortgage loan the same purpose as the demand loan. Again, ignoring the overall purpose identified by Bowman C.J., I see no basis for holding that there has been an abuse or a misuse of that provision.
[43]However, I believe that Bowman C.J. was entitled to consider the transactions as a whole and their overall purpose in the conduct of his misuse and abuse analysis and to give this factor the weight that he did. In the course of his reasons, Bowman C.J. found as a fact that these transactions formed part of a series, the purpose of which was to make interest payable on the mortgage deductible (reasons, at paragraphs 16 and 23). Although, the appellant takes issue with this finding, I am of the view that it reasonably flows from the statement of agreed facts.
[44]This finding impacts on the analysis to be conducted pursuant to section 245. Subsection 245(2) contemplates the denial of a tax benefit that would result from a transaction that is an avoidance transaction “or from a series of transactions that includes that transaction” [emphasis added]. Paragraph 245(3)(a) describes in turn an “avoidance transaction” as one which “would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax benefit”. Notably, paragraph 245(3)(b) extends this definition to a transaction “that is part of a series of transactions, which series, but for this section, would result directly or indirectly, in a tax benefit” (emphasis added).
[45]It follows in my view that where a tax benefit results from a series of transactions, the series becomes relevant in ascertaining whether any transaction within the series gives rise to an abuse of the provisions relied upon to achieve the tax benefit. Counsel for the appellant pointed out that no reference is made to a series of transactions in subsection 245(4). That is so. However subsection 245(4) must also be read in context and where the tax benefit results from a series of transactions under subsection 245(3), the series cannot be ignored in conducting the abuse analysis.
[46]Indeed, this is how the Supreme Court approached the matter in Kaulius, at paragraph 46:
The task is to determine, in light of the series of transactions, whether to allow the appellants to claim the losses would frustrate or defeat the object, spirit or purpose of the treatment of losses under s. 18(13) and the partnership rules, notwithstanding that the tax benefit might arise from the application of a literal interpretation of these provisions.
The Court later added, at paragraph 56:
This brings us to the ultimate question of whether the only reasonable conclusion is that the series of transactions on which the appellants rely for the tax benefits they claim results in abusive tax avoidance when s. 18(13) and s. 96(1) are interpreted purposively, and in the context of the Act as a whole.
[47]In Canada Trustco, at paragraph 25, the Supreme Court confirmed that the expression “series of transactions” in section 245 refers to transactions that are “pre‑ordained in order to produce a given result” with “no practical likelihood that the planned events would not take place in the order ordained” (Craven v. White, [1989] A.C. 398 (H.L.), at page 514; W.T. Ramsey Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, [1981] 1 All E.R. 865). Subsection 248(10) extends the meaning of this expression to include “related transactions or events completed in contemplation of the series.”
[48]Keeping this in mind, the series of transaction in this case unfolded in two sequences. First, on August 31, 1994 and September 1, 1994, Jordanna obtained a demand loan from the bank; she used the money to purchase the shares from the appellant’s family corporation; the appellant used the proceeds to buy the home; the appellant and Jordanna obtained permanent financing secured by a mortgage on the new home, and used the proceeds to retire the demand loan.
[49]The following events were later completed in contemplation of the series: Jordanna deducted the financing costs of the shares pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(c), which costs extended to the mortgage loan by reasons of the deeming provision contained in subsection 20(3); the appellant at filing time allowed the attribution rules to apply (by not electing out) and therefore continued to treat the shares as his own for income tax purposes.
[50]At the end of the first sequence, the appellant and Jordanna were the owners of a new home; at the end of the second, the appellant had deducted the financing costs. Bowman C.J. was unable to attribute any other purpose to the series. He considered each transaction in light of the series and concluded, when regard is had to the tax benefit claimed by the appellant, that these transactions result in an abuse of paragraph 20(1)(c) (and the other provisions relied upon) when read purposively in the context of the Act. Specifically, the use of these provisions to make the interest payments to finance the purchase of the home deductible results in abusive tax avoidance (compare Kaulius, at paragraph 58).
[51]The appellant contends that in coming to this conclusion Bowman C.J. gave the series too much weight and did not pay enough attention to the legal relationships created. Reference is made in particular to the legally binding sale of shares worth $562,500. Bowman C.J. discounted the importance of this sale. He found that it was part and parcel of the plan and subservient to its purpose. He also noted that the effect of the sale was to a significant extent nullified since the plan contemplated that the appellant would continue to be treated as the owner of the shares for taxation purposes. In the end, he attributed little or no importance to this sale.
[52]Similarly, Bowman C.J. attributed no importance to the fact that taxable dividends were paid with respect to the shares in two of the three years in issue. Although he did not say so much, it is apparent from the reasons that Bowman C.J. was of the view that this was also part and parcel of the plan, and intended to give it a degree of substance. I note in this respect that the appellant did not see fit to adduce any evidence with respect to the circumstances which led to the payment of the dividends.
[53]Although no single element is determinative of whether there has been abusive tax avoidance, Bowman C.J. gave substantial weight to the series of transactions, and its purpose, something which he was entitled to do. The Supreme Court has made it clear in both Canada Trustco and Kaulius that where there is no error in the construction of the relevant provisions or in the analytical approach, the question whether the transactions give rise to abusive tax avoidance belongs to the Tax Court Judge. Bowman C.J. concluded that the appellant engaged in abusive tax avoidance, and I can see no basis for interfering with this decision.
[54]I would dismiss the appeals with one set of costs in docket A‑231‑06.
Décary J.A.: I agree.
Sexton J.A.: I agree.