Microsoft word - court case re shareholder benefits.doc
Appeals heard on June 22, 2005, at Ottawa, Ontario.
Before: The Honourable Justice Lucie Lamarre
Agent for the Respondent: Andrew MacSkimming
The appeals from the assessments made under the Income
Tax Act ("Act") for the 1998 and 1999 taxation years are
allowed and the assessments are referred back to the
Minister of National Revenue for reconsideration and
reassessment on the basis that the shareholder benefits to
be included in the appellant's income shall be reduced by an
amount of $5,702 for 1998 and $6,733 for 1999.
The appeal from the assessment made under the Act for
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 29th day of November 2005.
[1] These are appeals from assessments made by the Minister
of National Revenue ("Minister") under the Income Tax Act
("Act") for the appellant's 1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation
[2] At the outset, the appellant withdrew his appeal for the
2000 taxation year as he had not filed a notice of objection
with respect to that year, as required by subsection 169(1)
of the Act in order for a notice of appeal to be validly
[3] In assessing the appellant for the 1998 and 1999
taxation years, the Minister, among other things, added to
his income amounts of $21,526 and $14,048 as shareholder
benefits pursuant to subsection 15(1) of the Act. The so-
called shareholder benefits are, according to the Minister,
personal expenses of the appellant that were assumed by
Renova Corporation Inc. ("Renova"), of which the appellant
is the owner, president and sole shareholder. Those expenses
are itemized in Schedule A to the Reply to the notice of
SHAREHOLDER'S BENEFIT ASSESSED - PERSONAL EXPENSES
AS PER NOTICES OF ASSESSMENT, DATED JUNE 6, 2003
[4] Ms. Rajashree Narayan, an auditor with the Canada
Customs and Revenue Agency ("CCRA"), testified to explain
why the expenses referred to above were included in the
appellant's income as shareholder benefits.
[5] With respect to the motor vehicle and meal and
entertainment expenses, these expenses that were claimed by
Renova as business expenses were considered by the CCRA as
personal expenses of the appellant. The motor vehicle
expenses related to mileage and parking and were incurred
mostly when the appellant travelled to meet his son,
daughter and spouse at various restaurants and at movie
theatres ($100 over three years for movie tickets). These
meetings happened three or four times a week and sometimes
more often. More than 50 per cent of the meal and
entertainment expenses claimed by Renova were related to the
family meetings. Those expenses were described in Renova's
books as being for "director's meetings", although the
appellant was the sole director of the corporation.
[6] In the corporation's books, a credit was posted to the
"due to shareholder's loan" account for those expenses. By
reducing that account, the corporation was reducing any
amounts that it had showed in its books as owing to it by
[7] The CCRA found in the first place that these expenses
claimed by the corporation were unreasonable and were
personal expenses of the appellant, and in the second place,
that there was a benefit conferred on the appellant through
the reduction of his shareholder's loan account by
[8] With respect to the travel expenses, for 1998 these were
related to a so-called annual director's meeting that took
place in Orlando, Florida. The meeting was with the
appellant's family. Although the appellant said during the
audit that he organized this meeting to discuss future
business possibilities and the possibility of his son's
working for the corporation in the future, Ms. Narayan found
that it looked more like a personal vacation than a
legitimate business meeting. As a matter of fact, some of
the expenses claimed by the corporation for that trip were
for visits to Universal Studios and Disney World.
Furthermore, the corporation did not do, and did not plan to
do, any business in Florida. Included in the travel expenses
claimed were air tickets, passports for the appellant's
children, photographic supplies and the development of
[9] Here again, the corporation had credited the majority of
those expenses to the "due to shareholder's loan" account,
and few of the expenses were paid directly by the
corporation from its bank account. In the CCRA's view, there
was a benefit conferred on the appellant as a shareholder of
[10] For 1999, the travel expenses claimed were related to a
trip to Cubaand were described in the corporation's books as
[11] The appellant explained during the audit that the trip
to Cubahad two purposes. The first had to do with the
possibility of developing vacation properties there. The
second was related to the corporation's involvement in
developing travel guide type books on scuba diving in Cuba.
[12] However, Ms. Narayan said that the appellant never
produced any travel writings that he had published. No
income was earned from travel writings. No drafts of travel
guide manuscripts were exhibited to the CCRA. The appellant
was not able to show that he had approached any newspapers,
publishers or editors about his travel writings. He never
received any feedback from the Cuban government on the
travel guide project. With respect to the possibility of
developing vacation properties in Cuba, no property was ever
purchased and no serious steps were taken to purchase
anything there. There was no business plan relating to
property development. Again, only a few expenses related to
the Cubatrip were directly paid by the corporation and the
other expenses were recorded as a credit to the "due to
shareholder's loan" account. Ms. Narayan concluded that
these travel expenses were personal expenses of the
appellant and that the corporation conferred a benefit on
[13] With respect to the office supplies, these were
expenses incurred to purchase CDs, tapes, earphones and a CD
player. The appellant said to the auditor that he needed
these items to minimize background noise at clients' work
sites. However, he also said that more than 60 per cent of
his work was done at his home office. The expenses also
included the purchase of history books, non-fiction works on
war history, works on mythology, and novels, none of which
had anything to do with the systems consulting business
operated by Renova. All these expenses were considered
personal by the auditor. As they were recorded as a credit
to the "due to shareholder's loan" account in the
corporation's books, they were considered by the CCRA as a
[14] As to mileage and parking, these expenses were related
to the appellant's commuting to clients' work sites from
home. Although the appellant told the auditor that his usual
place of work was at home (60 per cent of his work was done
from home), the auditor had the impression that he was
spending most of his work time and performing his
contractual obligations on clients' premises. Her reason for
thinking so, she said, was that the appellant did not give
her his home phone number for the purpose of reaching him,
but rather a cellular phone number and the phone number of
the client for whom he was working at the time of the audit
(in 2002). She also mentioned that in at least two contracts
it was indicated that the work had to be done on site. Ms.
Narayan noticed as well that the appellant reported mileage
and parking expenses for as many as 20 to 22 days per month
at different client locations and claimed amounts for full-
day parking close to clients' sites (see the second page of
Exhibit A-1). She said that the appellant even occasionally
purchased monthly parking. She therefore considered that the
appellant's usual place of work was not his home and
therefore the expenses claimed for commuting to work sites
were personal in nature. As these expenses were credited to
the appellant's "shareholder's loan account" with the
corporation, she considered that there was a benefit
conferred on the appellant as a shareholder.
[15] Lastly, the additions to capital cost refer to personal
assets that were transferred by the appellant into his
corporation. Such assets were books not related to software
consulting, decorative objects, a stereo system and a camera
(see first page of Exhibit A-1). The appellant said to the
auditor that he did not meet clients at home. She therefore
considered that these items were not used for the purpose of
earning income. According to her, spy novels and science
fiction novels were personal interests of the appellant, and
not a legitimate business interest. The appellant has only
published one technical book, in 1983, and has never
declared any income earned from it. He has also prepared
papers that he presented at conferences that have been
recorded on CD-ROMS (see Exhibit R-1), but he has published
nothing in magazines or elsewhere. As the cost of all the
above items was credited to the "due to shareholder's loan"
account of the corporation, the CCRA considered that this
was a benefit conferred by the corporation on the appellant
[16] At trial, the appellant described his home office as
being the place where he did his writing and drew up
proposals for contracts. In October 1998, he moved into a
house in Woodlawn, Ontario, in which he had a large computer
room (18' x 28') with six computers, four printers, a
scanner, a computer desk, a filing cabinet and various
operating systems. He also had a conference room (8' x 12')
that was never used, a corporate administrative office (8' x
12') and an assembly area (8' x 12'). In total, about 750
square feet of his home were devoted to office space. All
the corporate records were kept there and the corporation's
[17] The appellant obtained through Renova contracts for
work with private firms and the Treasury Board. In a
questionnaire filled in by him and filed as Exhibit A-2, the
appellant indicated at question 25 the approximate portion
of his work that was completed at his home office. The
answer shows that, depending on the contract, the appellant
in some cases worked mostly from home, and in others, from
the client's site. From the questionnaire I note that the
division is approximately half and half. The appellant also
explained that he wrote all his proposals at home.
[18] According to the appellant, only 10 per cent of the
time do tenders submitted by him materialize into contracts.
He claimed mileage and parking expenses when he worked at a
client's site or when he needed to consult people and meet
with current and potential clients. The appellant testified
that, when he was working at a client's site, he was not
provided with a specific office. In some places (for his
largest contracts), he had a desk that was provided to him
because he had to work on site on the data system. He also
sometimes needed access to the client's main terminal.
[19] The respondent called Ms. Dalal Esber, a manager of
data architecture at Human Resources Development Canada
("HRDC"). This witness said that the appellant worked for
their organization in 1999. She was not certain, but her
recollection was that the appellant had to share an office
on HRDC premises at the beginning of his contract (for the
first two months). For the bulk of the one-year contract,
she said, the appellant would normally have had an office
available to him. She said that the appellant would
generally be present on HRDC premises during regular
business hours from Monday to Friday. This witness
acknowledged, however, that a lot of consultants work from
their homes due to a lack of offices on their clients'
premises. She said that 75 per cent of the time,
nonetheless, the consultants were present on site.
[20] The appellant testified that he was the sole employee
of Renova. His son, a web developer, apparently did
subcontract work for Renova through his own corporation. His
daughter worked as an editor. They both left home in the
summer of 1998 to live in an apartment in downtown Ottawa.
[21] The appellant testified that half of his home belongs
to his wife, who is a schoolteacher. He said that she
painted and cleaned the house and was acting as an advisor
for the corporation. He testified that he held meetings with
his children and his wife downtown, mostly during lunchtime,
because he did not want to pay taxi fare for them to come to
Kanata, where he lives. He did not pay his children for
[22] With respect to the writing business, the appellant
said at trial that he published books and received royalties
from that activity. He did not file anything, though, to
support this claim. There is no evidence of any royalties
declared in the corporation's tax returns either.
[23] The appellant argued that the expenses in question were
reasonable expenses for which his corporation reimbursed him
in his capacity as an employee. The corporation did not have
a car and its place of business was the appellant's home.
According to the appellant, he did not receive any benefit
from Renova by virtue of his being that corporation's sole
shareholder, and while he was reimbursed for his expenses,
these were for negotiating contracts on the corporation's
[24] He argued that subsection 15(1) of the Act is not
applicable here and that, pursuant to subparagraph
6(1)(b)(v) of the Act, none of the expenses at issue are
taxable in his hands as the reimbursement qualifies as a
reasonable allowance for travel expenses received by an
employee from his employer in connection with the
negotiating of contracts for that employer.
[25] The appellant argued that the expenses incurred to
entertain his children and spouse were business expenses.
Renova could not afford to pay for a consultant and so, the
appellant said, his whole family was working on a Y2K
[26] In the appellant's view, the project in Cubawas also a
business venture and it is unreasonable for the CCRA to
second-guess the business intentions of the corporation.
[27] The respondent argued that the appellant received from
his wholly-owned corporation benefits within the meaning of
subsection 15(1) of the Act. In her view, there is no
evidence that the appellant was an employee of Renova (that
is, no evidence of T4s having been issued, or of salary
expenses having been claimed by the corporation, or of
amounts having been withheld at source).
[28] The respondent argued that even if the appellant was an
employee of Renova, the question to be asked is in what
[29] It was said in Minister of National Revenue v.
Pillsbury Holdings Ltd., [1965] 1 Ex. C.R. 676, quoted with
approval in Canada v. Fingold (C.A.), [1998] 1 F.C. 406,
[1997] F.C.J. No. 1250 (QL) (FCA), that a corporation
normally makes payments to shareholders in the form of
dividends unless the payment is part of a bona fide business
transaction, in which event, it is not a benefit accruing to
the shareholder qua shareholder. In Youngman v. The Queen,
90 DTC 6322, [1990] F.C.J. No. 341 (QL) (FCA), it was stated
that a shareholder receives no benefit for the purposes of
subsection 15(1) if, in the same circumstances, he would
have received the same benefit from a company of which he
[30] It is the respondent's view that the appellant would
never have received the benefits in question here but for
his status as sole shareholder of the corporation. Indeed, a
corporation operating at arm's length from the appellant
would not have conferred these benefits upon him, as the
expenses at issue were personal expenses of the appellant.
[31] With respect to the travel expenses for the trip to
Cuba, the respondent argued that these expenses were not
related to activities that were carried on in accordance
with objective standards of businesslike behaviour. Neither
the appellant nor his corporation has published anything nor
has the appellant contacted any publishers, agents or
editors in the fields of travel, science fiction and spy
novels, nor has he earned a cent from any writings in these
genres. The same can be said of the appellant's interest in
developing property in Cuba. No steps were undertaken to buy
any property; no agents were retained; no potential
properties were identified. In the corporation's tax returns
for 1998 and 1999 (Exhibits R-2 and R-3), there is no income
percentage recorded with respect to any of these activities,
the sole commercial activity of Renova shown being
[32] With respect to mileage and parking, the respondent is
of the view that the usual place of work of the appellant
was not at his home but at his clients' sites. Counsel for
the respondent therefore concludes that the appellant's
travel between home and his usual place of work was a
personal expense (see Daniels v. The Queen, 2004 DTC 6276
[33] Finally, the respondent is of the view that
subparagraph 6(1)(b)(v) of the Act does not apply here as
the travel expenses were not incurred for the purpose of
negotiating contracts for the employer, but solely for the
purpose of performing work at the usual place of work on the
(1) Amounts to be included as income from office
or employment. There shall be included in
computing the income of a taxpayer for a taxation
year as income from an office or employment such
of the following amounts as are applicable:
(b) Personal or living expenses - all amounts
received by the taxpayer in the year as an
allowance for personal or living expenses or
as an allowance for any other purpose, except
the employee's employer in respect of a
period when the employee was employed in
connection with the selling of property
Subsection 15(1) reads in part as follows:
(1) Benefit conferred on shareholder. Where at any
time in a taxation year a benefit is conferred on
a shareholder, or on a person in contemplation of
the person becoming a shareholder, by a
. . . the amount or value thereof shall . . . be
included in computing the income of the
[35] The object of subsection 15(1) of the Act was described
in Pillsbury Holdings Ltd., supra (referring to its
statutory predecessor, subsection 8(1) of the Income Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1952., c. 148), as follows at pages 682, 683 and
The normal payments and distributions by a
corporation to a shareholder qua shareholder are
(a) dividends during the lifetime of the
(b) payments and distributions in respect of
reductions in capital during the lifetime of
(c) payments and distributions on the occasion of
. . . While the subsection does not say so
explicitly, it is fair to infer that Parliament
intended, by section 8, to sweep in payments,
distributions, benefits and advantages that flow
from a corporation to a shareholder by some route
other than the dividend route and that might be
expected to reach the shareholder by the more
orthodox dividend route if the corporation and the
shareholder were dealing at arm's length. . . .
Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section 8 may
be expected, therefore, to apply to cases where
benefits or advantages have been conferred on a
shareholder in such circumstances that the effect
is, in substance, equivalent to the payment of a
. . . there are transactions between closely held
corporations and their shareholders that are
devices or arrangements for conferring benefits or
advantages on shareholders qua shareholders and
transactions. . . . It is a question of fact
whether a transaction that purports, on its face,
to be an ordinary business transaction is such a
[36] In Servais v. The Queen, 2003 DTC 5597 (FCA), the
Federal Court of Appeal dealt with the issue raised here by
the appellant, namely whether a benefit attributed to a
person was attributed to that person in his capacity as an
employee rather than in his capacity as a shareholder.
Sharlow J.A. stated the following at paragraphs 14, 16 and
[14] Put simply, any use by a shareholder of
corporate property is potentially subject to tax
[16] I turn now to the first argument, which is
that Mr. Servais' use of the Ford Ranger was
attributable to his status as an employee, not his
[17] In any case, it would appear that if the Tax
Court Judge had held that Mr. Servais was
permitted to use the Ford Ranger only because he
was an employee, the result would simply be that
the taxable benefit would have been taxed under
section 6 of the Income Tax Act, rather than
section 15. Although the Tax Court pleadings were
not included in the record, the panel was advised
that the Crown had raised section 6 in its
pleadings as an alternative basis for the
assessment. In my view, the analysis relating to
section 15 would apply as well to section 6. Thus,
an employee who derives a personal benefit, qua
employee, from the use of any motor vehicle owned
by his employer is subject to tax under section 6.
If the motor vehicle meets the definition of
"automobile", the value of the benefit must be
determined as a standby charge under paragraph
6(1)(e). In any other case, the value of the
benefit must be determined on the basis of the
[37] In Youngman, supra, Pratte J.A. summarized the
principles governing the application of subsection 15(1) as
It is now well settled that paragraph 15(1)(c)
applies only when a shareholder has received, qua
shareholder, a benefit or advantage from a
corporation. . . . A shareholder receives no
benefit for the purposes of paragraph 15(1)(c) if,
in the same circumstances, he would have received
the same benefit from a company of which he is not
[38] I agree with counsel for the respondent that, with the
exception of the mileage and parking expenses, all the
expenses claimed (motor vehicle, meals and entertainment,
travel, office supplies, additions to capital cost) were
personal expenses of the appellant and that those expenses
would not have been reimbursed by a corporation of which he
was not a shareholder. The motor vehicle and meal and
entertainment expenses were related to family meetings. The
evidence disclosed that the son worked through his own
corporation, that the daughter, an editor, was not really
involved in the appellant's business, and that the
appellant's spouse was a schoolteacher. The appellant did
not convince me that those family meetings occurred for
business purposes. Apart from the appellant himself, no one
testified on his behalf, and the evidence does not disclose
that Renova remunerated, or subcontracted work out to, the
appellant's spouse and daughter. As for his son, it seems
from the questionnaire filed as Exhibit A-2 that only in
2000-2001 did he start subcontracting for Renova. There is
no other evidence that he worked for the appellant's
[39] With respect to the travel expenses, for 1998 they were
related to a family trip to Florida. No business was
conducted there. This was in my view a personal getaway.
[40] For 1999, the travel expenses were related to a trip to
Cuba. The appellant has not convinced me that he or his
corporation intended to carry on an activity for profit in
that country. At least, there is no evidence to support the
existence of any such intention. Indeed, I am not convinced
that the appellant's or Renova's predominant intention was
to make a profit from writing activities or from the
purchase of properties in Cuba or that these activities had
been carried on in accordance with objective standards of
businesslike behaviour (see Stewart v. Canada, [2002] 2
S.C.R. 645, [2002] S.C.J. No. 46 (QL), at paragraph 54). I
am of the view that this trip was more personal in nature
and was not related to activities carried on in a commercial
[41] With respect to the office supplies and additions to
capital cost, the evidence revealed that in the latter case
the items involved were personal objects (such as music and
books in fields having nothing to do with the corporation's
consulting business), that were not related to the
corporation's business. The appellant also acknowledged that
he never received clients at his home office.
[42] I therefore consider that these were personal expenses
that were charged to Renova. There was conferred on the
appellant, as the sole shareholder of that corporation, a
benefit within the meaning of subsection 15(1) of the Act
that had to be included in his income for the taxation years
at issue. It is obvious that, had he not been a shareholder
of the corporation, such expenses would not have been
reimbursed. Furthermore, even if the appellant was an
employee of Renova, as the Federal Court of Appeal said in
Servais, supra, the same analysis applies to an employee who
receives a personal benefit, qua employee, from his
employer. If not taxable under section 15, he would
nonetheless be subject to tax under section 6 of the Act.
[43] With respect to the mileage and parking expenses,
however, the appellant has convinced me that his home office
was his usual place of work. The work space occupied a large
part of the appellant's home. All the corporate records were
kept there and it was the business address of the
corporation. The appellant testified that he drew up all his
proposals at his home office, and that of these only 10 per
cent materialized into actual contracts for Renova. Exhibit
A-2 shows that approximately half of the contracts required
the appellant to work at the client's site. Otherwise, he
worked from his home. Even Ms. Esber from HRDC testified
that a lot of consultants worked from their homes.
[44] As a matter of fact, we see from the second page of
Exhibit A-2 that the appellant spent more days at the
client's site when he was working on contracts that required
him to work less at home. I do not find, however, that a
consultant's having to work on a client's premises is reason
for saying that his usual place of work is not his home
office. In Daniels v. The Queen, 2004 DTC 6276 (FCA), it was
recognized that where a person has two places of work and
the trips that gave rise to the claims for expenses were for
travel from one place of work to the other, such expenses
were not personal but were incurred in the performance of
that person's duties (see Campbell et al. v. the Queen, 2003
[45] I therefore consider that the mileage and parking
expenses totalling $5,702 ($4,393 + $1,309) in 1998 and
$6,733 ($5,750 + $983) in 1999 were not personal expenses
but were incurred for the purpose of earning business
income. The appellant did not receive a benefit as a
shareholder within the meaning of subsection 15(1) by being
reimbursed by the corporation for those expenses.
Furthermore, the respondent did not argue that the amounts
thereof should be included in the appellant's income as a
taxable allowance received in the course of his employment,
pursuant to section 6 of the Act. In fact, the respondent
even disputed the fact that the appellant was an employee of
Renova, and anyhow no evidence was brought before the Court
[46] Accordingly, the appeals will be allowed without costs
and the assessments referred back to the Minister for
reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the
shareholder benefits to be included in the appellant's
income shall be reduced by an amount of $5,702 for 1998 and
[47] The appeal from the assessment for the 2000 taxation
Signed at Ottawa, Ontario, this 29th day of November 2005.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY: The Honourable Justice
Agent for the Respondent: Andrew MacSkimming
IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences (JDMS) ISSN: 2279-0853, ISBN: 2279-0861. Volume 1, Issue 5 (Sep-Oct. 2012), PP 29-30 www.iosrjournals.org Neurological Disorders in Children / the Sheikh’s Syndrome Prof. Dr. Shahid Hussain Sheikh , MBBS, PhD. Chairman: NIDS Treatment & Research Center Department of Neurology & Neuro Virology ABSTRACT : The label of “Cereb