Robertson
       
        J.A.:
      
      Though
      it
      has
      been
      twenty
      years
      since
      
        Moldowan
      
      v.
      
        R.
      
      (1977),
      [1978]
      1
      
      
      S.C.R.
      480
      (S.C.C.)
      was
      decided,
      we
      continue
      to
      hear
      appeals
      involving
      
      
      taxpayers
      who
      earn
      their
      income
      in
      the
      city
      and
      lose
      it
      in
      the
      country.
      In
      this
      
      
      appeal,
      the
      respondent
      taxpayer,
      a
      medical
      practitioner,
      sought
      to
      deduct
      
      
      from
      his
      professional
      income
      the
      full
      amount
      of
      farming
      losses
      incurred
      in
      
      
      the
      1986,
      1987
      and
      1988
      taxation
      years.
      According
      to
      
        Moldowan,
      
      the
      taxpayer
      
      
      must
      satisfy
      two
      tests
      in
      order
      to
      succeed.
      First,
      he
      must
      establish
      that
      
      
      the
      farming
      operation
      gave
      rise
      to
      a
      “reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit”
      and,
      
      
      second,
      that
      his
      “chief
      source
      of
      income”
      is
      farming
      (the
      so-called
      “full-
      
      
      time”
      farmer).
      If
      the
      taxpayer
      is
      unable
      to
      satisfy
      the
      first
      test
      no
      losses
      are
      
      
      deductible
      (the
      so-called
      “hobby”
      farmer).
      If
      he
      satisfies
      the
      first
      test
      but
      
      
      not
      the
      second
      then
      a
      restricted
      farm
      loss
      of
      $5,000
      (now
      $8,500)
      is
      imposed
      
      
      under
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Income
       
        Tax
       
        Act
      
      (the
      so-called
      “part-time”
      
      
      farmer).
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      present
      appeal
      the
      Minister
      of
      National
      Revenue
      conceded
      that
      
      
      the
      farming
      operation
      gave
      rise
      to
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit.
      That
      
      
      concession
      was
      made
      with
      full
      knowledge
      that
      the
      taxpayer’s
      farming
      endeavour
      
      
      had
      not
      generated
      a
      profit
      in
      twenty
      one
      years
      (1972-1992).
      With
      
      
      respect
      to
      the
      Minister’s
      contention
      that
      farming
      was
      not
      the
      taxpayer’s
      
      
      chief
      source
      of
      income,
      the
      Tax
      Court
      of
      Canada
      disagreed,
      holding
      that
      the
      
      
      taxpayer
      could
      reasonably
      have
      looked
      to
      his
      farming
      business
      to
      provide
      
      
      the
      “bulk”
      of
      his
      income.
      The
      Minister
      now
      argues
      that
      the
      court
      below
      was
      
      
      in
      error
      in
      making
      that
      determination.
      I
      agree.
      In
      my
      respectful
      view,
      the
      
      
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      failed
      to
      appreciate
      the
      distinction
      between
      the
      test
      to
      be
      
      
      applied
      when
      determining
      whether
      farming
      is
      a
      taxpayer’s
      chief
      source
      of
      
      
      income
      and
      that
      which
      is
      applicable
      when
      assessing
      whether
      a
      taxpayer
      has
      
      
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit.
      When
      the
      issue
      is
      placed
      in
      this
      perspective
      
      
      it
      is
      not
      difficult
      to
      understand
      why
      the
      Minister
      was
      willing
      to
      concede
      
      
      the
      latter
      point.
      As
      is
      explained
      below,
      the
      legal
      test
      for
      establishing
      farming
      
      
      as
      a
      chief
      source
      of
      income
      is,
      on
      an
      evidential
      level,
      a
      more
      onerous
      
      
      one.
      
      
      
      
    
      At
      all
      material
      times,
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      a
      practising
      urologist
      who
      between
      
      
      1959
      and
      1970
      conducted
      a
      sole
      practice.
      In
      1970
      he
      joined
      a
      partnership
      
      
      which
      enabled
      him
      to
      reduce
      his
      hours
      of
      work
      considerably.
      The
      partnership
      
      
      enabled
      the
      taxpayer
      to
      concentrate
      his
      practice
      into
      a
      24-hour
      work
      
      
      week
      and
      provided
      him
      with
      an
      annual
      vacation
      leave
      of
      between
      twelve
      
      
      and
      seventeen
      weeks.
      During
      the
      weeks
      he
      was
      practising
      medicine
      the
      taxpayer
      
      
      would
      spend
      an
      additional
      40
      hours
      a
      week
      on
      his
      farming
      operation.
      
      
      During
      vacation
      periods
      the
      taxpayer
      would
      spend
      up
      to
      16
      hours
      a
      day
      
      
      pursuing
      that
      venture.
      In
      short,
      the
      taxpayer
      “lived,
      ate
      and
      breathed
      horses”
      
      
      (Appeal
      Book,
      Appendix
      1,
      at
      116).
      
      
      
      
    
      Commencing
      in
      1972
      the
      taxpayer
      became
      involved
      in
      the
      thoroughbred
      
      
      industry.
      By
      1975
      the
      taxpayer
      determined
      that
      standardbred
      horses
      were
      a
      
      
      more
      “reliable
      investment”,
      and
      together
      with
      James
      Rankin
      and
      a
      third
      
      
      party,
      he
      turned
      his
      attention
      to
      this
      aspect
      of
      the
      horse-farming
      industry.
      
      
      By
      1980
      the
      taxpayer
      and
      his
      partners
      were
      buying,
      breeding
      and
      racing
      
      
      standardbred
      horses.
      Their
      intention
      was
      to
      race
      some
      horses
      and
      use
      the
      
      
      prize
      winnings
      to
      offset
      expenses.
      Profits
      would
      be
      derived
      from
      the
      breeding
      
      
      side
      but
      because
      of
      start-up
      losses
      the
      taxpayer
      did
      not
      anticipate
      a
      
      
      profit
      until
      at
      least
      1983
      or
      1984.
      During
      this
      period
      the
      taxpayer
      experienced
      
      
      two
      setbacks.
      In
      1983
      Mr.
      Rankin
      was
      killed
      in
      an
      accident
      at
      which
      
      
      time
      the
      taxpayer
      revised
      his
      estimate
      for
      profitability
      to
      1985
      or
      1986.
      
      
      Then
      in
      1985
      the
      North
      American
      market
      for
      both
      standardbred
      and
      thoroughbred
      
      
      horses
      collapsed
      resulting
      in
      a
      substantial
      drop
      in
      horse
      prices.
      
      
      The
      collapse
      was
      triggered
      by
      changes
      to
      American
      tax
      laws
      which
      made
      
      
      the
      treatment
      of
      horse
      syndications
      (tax
      shelters)
      less
      attractive
      to
      investors.
      
      
      This
      in
      turn
      created
      a
      glut
      in
      the
      horse
      market
      and
      a
      severe
      drop
      in
      horse
      
      
      prices.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      evidence
      accepted
      by
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      was
      that
      after
      1984
      the
      
      
      taxpayer
      had
      liquidated
      all
      of
      his
      investments
      (RRSP’s
      and
      an
      apartment
      
      
      building)
      and
      employed
      the
      proceeds
      in
      the
      horse-farming
      business.
      From
      
      
      1972
      to
      1992
      inclusive,
      the
      taxpayer’s
      breeding
      and
      racing
      activities
      produced
      
      
      losses
      approaching
      $2
      million
      dollars.
      It
      is
      common
      ground
      that
      the
      
      
      yearly
      losses
      could
      not
      have
      been
      sustained
      without
      the
      taxpayer
      drawing
      
      
      upon
      his
      professional
      income.
      For
      the
      1986,
      1987
      and
      1988
      taxation
      years
      
      
      the
      taxpayer’s
      net
      professional
      income
      versus
      net
      farming
      losses
      was
      as
      
      
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
      Despite
      the
      losses
      sustained
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      in
      each
      of
      the
      years
      spanning
      
      
      two
      decades,
      the
      Minister
      assessed
      him
      on
      the
      basis
      of
      there
      being
      a
      
      
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit.
      The
      principle
      issue
      before
      the
      Tax
      Court
      
      
      was
      whether
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      entitled
      to
      deduct
      the
      full
      amount
      of
      the
      loss
      
      
      in
      each
      of
      the
      years
      or
      restricted
      to
      the
      $5000
      amount
      imposed
      under
      sec-
      
      
      tion
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act.
      
      The
      principal
      findings
      of
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      are
      as
      
      
      follows.
      
      
      
      
    
| 
          Medical
          
         | 
          Farming
          
         | 
          Medical
          
         | 
          Farming
          
         | 
 | 
| 
          Year
          
         | 
          Gross
          Income
          
         | 
          Gross
          Income
          Net
          Income
          
         | 
          Net
          Loss
          
         | 
| 
          1986
          
         | 
          204,397.00
          
         | 
          80,338.00
          
         | 
          142,239.00
          
         | 
          (176,453.00)
          
         | 
| 
          1987
          
         | 
          222,038.00
          
         | 
          189,935.00
          
         | 
          176,020.00
          
         | 
          (128,424.00)
          
         | 
| 
          1988
          
         | 
          239,913.00
          
         | 
          106,730.00
          
         | 
          211,605.00
          
         | 
          (134,639.00)
          
         | 
      From
      1983
      and
      throughout
      the
      taxation
      years
      in
      question
      the
      standard-
      
      
      bred
      horse
      breeding
      business
      “engaged
      the
      majority
      of
      [the
      taxpayer’s]
      time
      
      
      and
      virtually
      all
      of
      his
      money.”
      The
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      observed
      that
      the
      
      
      “unimpugned”
      expert
      evidence
      of
      Dr.
      McCarthy,
      a
      veterinarian,
      friend
      and
      
      
      business
      partner
      of
      the
      taxpayer,
      was
      that
      “start
      up
      losses”
      with
      respect
      to
      
      
      the
      breeding
      side
      of
      the
      business
      can
      persist
      for
      up
      to
      ten
      years.
      Following
      
      
      these
      findings
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      began
      his
      formal
      analysis
      by
      stating
      at
      
      
      page
      15
      of
      the
      oral
      reasons:
      “It
      remains
      to
      be
      determined
      if
      [the
      taxpayer]
      
      
      was
      in
      business.”
      Following
      that
      assertion
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      concluded
      
      
      that
      in
      1980
      there
      was
      a
      “change
      in
      direction”
      from
      the
      taxpayer’s
      medical
      
      
      practice
      to
      the
      horse-farming
      business.
      The
      fact
      that
      the
      taxpayer
      had
      committed
      
      
      all
      of
      his
      capital
      to
      that
      business
      reinforced
      that
      conclusion.
      Further
      
      
      on
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      concluded
      that
      the
      practice
      of
      medicine
      had
      become
      
      
      a
      sideline
      to
      the
      “standardbred
      breeding
      business”.
      Finally,
      he
      determined
      
      
      that
      but
      for
      the
      setbacks
      endured
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      his
      horse-breeding
      operation
      
      
      would
      have
      provided
      the
      “bulk”
      of
      his
      income
      for
      the
      three
      taxation
      
      
      years
      in
      question.
      I
      turn
      now
      to
      the
      relevant
      principles
      of
      law.
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      determination
      as
      to
      whether
      farming
      is
      a
      taxpayer’s
      chief
      source
      of
      
      
      income
      requires
      a
      favourable
      comparison
      of
      that
      occupational
      endeavour
      
      
      with
      the
      taxpayer’s
      other
      income
      source
      in
      terms
      of
      capital
      committed,
      time
      
      
      spent
      and
      profitability,
      actual
      or
      potential.
      The
      test
      is
      both
      a
      relative
      and
      
      
      objective
      one.
      It
      is
      not
      a
      pure
      quantum
      measurement.
      All
      three
      factors
      must
      
      
      be
      weighed
      with
      no
      one
      factor
      being
      decisive.
      Yet
      there
      can
      be
      no
      doubt
      
      
      that
      the
      profitability
      factor
      poses
      the
      greatest
      obstacle
      to
      taxpayers
      seeking
      
      
      to
      persuade
      the
      courts
      that
      farming
      is
      their
      chief
      source
      of
      income.
      This
      is
      
      
      so
      because
      the
      evidential
      burden
      is
      on
      taxpayers
      to
      establish
      that
      the
      net
      
      
      income
      that
      could
      reasonably
      be
      expected
      to
      be
      earned
      from
      farming
      is
      substantial
      
      
      in
      relation
      to
      their
      other
      income
      source:
      invariably,
      employment
      or
      
      
      professional
      income.
      Were
      the
      law
      otherwise
      there
      would
      be
      no
      basis
      on
      
      
      which
      the
      Tax
      Court
      could
      make
      a
      comparison
      between
      the
      relative
      
      
      amounts
      expected
      to
      be
      earned
      from
      farming
      and
      the
      other
      income
      source,
      
      
      as
      required
      by
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act.
      
      The
      extent
      to
      which
      the
      evidential
      
      
      burden
      regarding
      the
      profitability
      factor
      or
      test
      differs
      from
      the
      one
      governing
      
      
      the
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit
      requirement
      is
      a
      matter
      which
      I
      
      
      will
      address
      more
      fully
      below.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      summary,
      the
      cumulative
      factors
      of
      capital
      committed,
      time
      spent
      and
      
      
      profitability
      will
      determine
      whether
      farming
      will
      be
      regarded
      as
      a
      “sideline
      
      
      business”
      to
      which
      the
      restricted
      farm
      loss
      provisions
      apply.
      These
      guiding
      
      
      principles
      flow
      from
      the
      following
      decisions:
      
        Mo
       
        Ido
       
        wan
       
        (supra),
       
        Timpson
      
      
      
      v.
      
        Minister
       
        of
       
        National
       
        Revenue
      
      (1993),
      93
      D.T.C.
      5281
      (Fed.
      C.A.),
      
        Poirier
       
        (Trustee
       
        of)
       
        v.
       
        Canada,
      
      (1992),
      92
      D.T.C.
      6335
      (Fed.
      C.A.),
      
        Connell
       
        v.
       
        Minister
       
        of
       
        National
       
        Revenue
      
      (1992),
      92
      D.T.C.
      6134
      (Fed.
      C.A.),
      
        Roney
       
        v.
       
        Minister
       
        of
       
        National
       
        Revenue
      
      (1991),
      91
      D.T.C.
      5148
      (Fed.
      C.A.),
      
        Morrissey
      
      
      
      v.
      
        R.
      
      (1988),
      89
      D.T.C.
      5080
      (Fed.
      C.A.),
      
        Gordon
      
      v.
      
        R.
      
      (1986),
      86
      
      
      D.T.C.
      6426
      (Fed.
      T.D.),
      
        Mott
       
        v.
       
        R.
      
      (1988),
      88
      D.T.C.
      6359
      (Fed.
      T.D.)
      and
      
      
      
        Mohl
       
        v.
       
        R.
      
      (1989),
      89
      D.T.C.
      5236
      (Fed.
      T.D.).
      
      
      
      
    
      There
      is
      no
      question
      in
      this
      case
      that
      the
      taxpayer
      committed
      significant
      
      
      capital
      investment
      to
      the
      horse-farming
      activity.
      As
      noted
      earlier
      his
      losses
      
      
      were
      approaching
      the
      $2
      million
      mark.
      This
      factor
      is
      in
      his
      favour.
      It
      is
      the
      
      
      two
      remaining
      elements
      of
      time
      spent
      and
      profitability
      which
      are
      more
      
      
      problematic
      for
      the
      taxpayer.
      
      
      
      
    
      With
      respect
      to
      time
      spent,
      I
      am
      not
      persuaded
      that
      the
      taxpayer
      changed
      
      
      occupational
      direction
      in
      1980
      such
      that
      medicine
      became
      a
      sideline
      to
      his
      
      
      farming
      endeavour.
      I
      reach
      that
      conclusion
      for
      three
      reasons.
      Firstly,
      the
      
      
      taxpayer’s
      shift
      in
      focus
      from
      thoroughbred
      to
      standardbred
      horses
      in
      1980
      
      
      represents
      a
      business
      decision,
      not
      a
      change
      in
      occupational
      direction.
      From
      
      
      the
      time
      he
      purchased
      his
      first
      horse
      in
      1972,
      the
      taxpayer’s
      farming
      activities
      
      
      focused
      on
      the
      purchase
      and
      breeding
      of
      horses.
      Secondly,
      the
      evidence
      
      
      indicates
      that
      the
      taxpayer
      entered
      into
      his
      current
      medical
      partnership
      arrangement
      
      
      in
      1970.
      While
      he
      may
      have
      endeavoured
      to
      reduce
      his
      workload
      
      
      or
      take
      more
      vacation
      time,
      the
      record
      does
      not
      indicate
      any
      appreciable
      
      
      change
      in
      the
      taxpayer’s
      medical
      practice.
      During
      the
      three
      years
      in
      question,
      
      
      the
      taxpayer
      continued
      to
      see
      approximately
      74
      patients
      a
      week
      at
      his
      
      
      clinic
      [Appeal
      Book,
      Appendix
      1,
      at
      197].
      In
      1988,
      he
      performed
      612
      surgeries
      
      
      
        [supra
      
      at
      196].
      As
      of
      1993,
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      still
      taking
      on
      approximately
      
      
      18
      new
      patients
      per
      week
      
        [supra
      
      at
      201].
      There
      is
      no
      indication
      he
      
      
      was
      phasing
      out
      the
      medical
      practice.
      This
      leads
      inexorably
      to
      my
      third
      
      
      point:
      the
      taxpayer
      acknowledged
      that
      he
      required
      his
      medical
      income
      to
      
      
      live
      off
      and
      fund
      the
      purchase
      of
      new
      horses
      and
      other
      aspects
      of
      the
      horse
      
      
      operations
      
        [supra
      
      at
      216].
      Under
      these
      circumstances,
      it
      is
      difficult
      to
      see
      
      
      how
      he
      can
      be
      described
      as
      having
      changed
      his
      occupational
      direction.
      It
      
      
      cannot
      be
      denied
      that
      the
      time
      devoted
      to
      horse-farming
      was
      significant,
      but
      
      
      this
      quantitative
      factor
      alone
      does
      not
      accurately
      reflect
      the
      reality
      that
      the
      
      
      taxpayer
      was
      financially
      dependent
      upon
      his
      medical
      practice
      and
      primary
      
      
      income-earning
      Occupation.
      
      
      
      
    
      Any
      doubt
      as
      to
      whether
      the
      taxpayer’s
      chief
      source
      of
      income
      is
      farming
      
      
      is
      resolved
      once
      consideration
      is
      given
      to
      the
      element
      of
      profitability.
      
      
      There
      is
      a
      difference
      between
      the
      type
      of
      evidence
      the
      taxpayer
      must
      adduce
      
      
      concerning
      profitability
      under
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act,
      
      as
      opposed
      to
      that
      
      
      relevant
      to
      the
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit
      test.
      In
      the
      latter
      case
      the
      
      
      taxpayer
      need
      only
      show
      that
      there
      is
      or
      was
      an
      expectation
      of
      profit,
      be
      it
      
      
      $1
      or
      $1
      million.
      It
      is
      well
      recognized
      in
      tax
      law
      that
      a
      “reasonable
      expectation
      
      
      of
      profit”
      is
      not
      synonymous
      with
      an
      “expectation
      of
      reasonable
      profits”.
      
      
      With
      respect
      to
      the
      section
      31
      profitability
      factor,
      however,
      quantum
      is
      
      
      relevant
      because
      it
      provides
      a
      basis
      on
      which
      to
      compare
      potential
      farm
      
      
      income
      with
      that
      actually
      received
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      from
      the
      competing
      occupation.
      
      
      In
      other
      words,
      we
      are
      looking
      for
      evidence
      to
      support
      a
      finding
      
      
      of
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      “substantial”
      profits
      from
      farming.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      present
      case,
      it
      was
      incumbent
      on
      the
      taxpayer
      to
      establish
      what
      
      
      he
      might
      have
      reasonably
      earned
      but
      for
      the
      two
      setbacks
      which
      gave
      rise
      to
      
      
      the
      loss:
      namely
      the
      death
      of
      Mr.
      Rankin
      and
      the
      decline
      in
      horse
      prices.
      I
      
      
      say
      this
      because
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      concluded
      that
      but
      for
      these
      setbacks
      
      
      the
      taxpayer
      would
      have
      earned
      the
      bulk
      of
      his
      income
      from
      farming
      in
      the
      
      
      three
      taxation
      years
      in
      question.
      While
      there
      is
      no
      doubt
      that
      the
      loss
      of
      Mr.
      
      
      Rankin,
      and
      the
      changes
      in
      American
      tax
      law
      had
      a
      negative
      and
      unexpected
      
      
      impact
      on
      the
      business,
      no
      evidence
      was
      presented
      to
      show
      what
      
      
      profit
      the
      taxpayer
      might
      have
      earned
      had
      these
      events
      not
      occurred
      and
      
      
      whether
      the
      amount
      would
      have
      been
      considered
      substantial
      when
      compared
      
      
      to
      his
      professional
      income.
      It
      was
      not
      enough
      for
      the
      taxpayer
      to
      
      
      claim
      that
      he
      might
      have
      earned
      a
      profit.
      He
      should
      have
      provided
      sufficient
      
      
      evidence
      to
      enable
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      to
      estimate
      quantitatively
      what
      that
      
      
      profit
      might
      have
      been.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      my
      respectful
      view,
      neither
      the
      taxpayer
      nor
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      pursued
      
      
      the
      issue
      in
      the
      manner
      outlined
      above.
      Rather
      they
      continued
      to
      address
      
      
      the
      matter
      solely
      in
      terms
      of
      whether
      there
      was
      a
      business,
      that
      is
      to
      
      
      say
      whether
      there
      was
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit.
      Given
      the
      Minister’s
      
      
      concession
      on
      this
      point,
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge’s
      analysis,
      commencing
      
      
      at
      page
      15
      of
      his
      reasons,
      is
      misdirected.
      This
      misdirection
      manifests
      itself
      
      
      at
      pages
      16
      and
      17
      of
      the
      reasons
      for
      judgment:
      
      
      
      
    
        Both
        the
        Crown
        and
        the
        Appellant
        consider
        that
        the
        Appellant
        can
        expect
        a
        
        
        profit.
        Given
        the
        concrete
        evidence
        of
        the
        quality
        of
        foals
        listed
        for
        sale,
        the
        
        
        Court
        finds
        that
        even
        in
        1986,
        1987
        and
        1988
        the
        Appellant
        had
        a
        reasonable
        
        
        expectation
        of
        profit
        which
        has
        been
        (in
        hindsight)
        negatively
        impacted
        by
        the
        
        
        unexpectedly
        long-term
        effects
        of
        the
        changes
        in
        the
        United
        States
        Internal
        Revenue
        
        
        Code
        and
        the
        current
        continuing
        recession.
        It
        was,
        in
        1986,
        1987
        and
        1988,
        
        
        reasonable
        to
        expect
        that
        his
        horse-breeding
        business
        would
        provide
        the
        bulk
        of
        
        
        his
        income,
        even
        compared
        to
        his
        medical
        income.
        In
        1986,
        1987
        and
        1988
        he
        
        
        could
        reasonably
        expect
        to
        look
        to
        his
        horse-breeding
        operation
        alone
        for
        his
        
        
        income,
        especially
        in
        those
        years
        when
        the
        full
        impact
        of
        the
        tax
        changes
        and
        
        
        the
        current
        recession
        had
        not
        taken
        effect.
        It
        was
        possible
        to
        anticipate
        that
        racing
        
        
        would
        cover
        current
        expenses
        and
        that
        a
        good
        breeding
        programme
        would
        
        
        provide
        substantial
        profit.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      did
      not
      engage
      in
      an
      analysis
      of
      what
      profit
      might
      
      
      have
      been
      earned
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      in
      each
      of
      the
      three
      taxation
      years
      in
      question.
      
      
      No
      doubt
      this
      gap
      was
      occasioned
      in
      part
      by
      the
      taxpayer’s
      failure
      to
      
      
      adduce
      the
      necessary
      evidence
      as
      reflected
      in
      the
      testimony
      of
      Dr.
      McCarthy.
      
      
      His
      evidence
      was
      directed
      at
      whether
      the
      horse-farming
      operation
      gave
      
      
      rise
      to
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit.
      He
      admitted
      that
      he
      had
      never
      
      
      reviewed
      the
      taxpayer’s
      books
      nor
      compared
      the
      business’
      revenue
      and
      expenses
      
      
      [see
      Appeal
      Book,
      Appendix
      1
      at
      20
      and
      79-80].
      He
      could
      offer
      no
      
      
      opinion
      on
      the
      potential
      profitability
      of
      the
      horse-farming
      business.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      oral
      argument,
      counsel
      for
      the
      taxpayer
      sought
      to
      persuade
      us
      of
      the
      
      
      profitability
      of
      the
      farming
      operations
      by
      reference
      to
      the
      evidence
      from
      the
      
      
      examination
      for
      discovery
      of
      Rosemarie
      Weber,
      the
      Revenue
      Canada
      Assessment
      
      
      Officer
      who
      handled
      this
      file.
      Portions
      of
      the
      transcript
      from
      the
      
      
      examination
      were
      read
      in
      at
      trial
      [see
      Appeal
      Book,
      Appendix
      I
      at
      221-
      
      
      227].
      Ms.
      Weber
      stated
      that
      in
      her
      opinion,
      the
      horse-farming
      activity
      had
      a
      
      
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit,
      based
      on
      the
      quality
      of
      horses
      purchased
      
      
      by
      the
      taxpayer
      and
      his
      knowledge
      of
      horses
      generally.
      That
      evidence,
      however,
      
      
      supports
      only
      the
      concession
      that
      there
      was
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      
      
      of
      profit
      [see
      Appeal
      Book,
      Appendix
      1
      at
      221-227].
      Once
      again,
      there
      is
      a
      
      
      failure
      to
      appreciate
      the
      onus
      that
      was
      on
      the
      taxpayer
      to
      satisfy
      the
      judge
      
      
      below
      that
      he
      would
      have
      or
      could
      have
      reasonably
      earned
      a
      profit
      of
      “X”
      
      
      dollars
      but
      for
      the
      unforeseen
      setbacks.
      This
      the
      taxpayer
      did
      not
      do
      and
      it
      
      
      is
      improbable
      that
      he
      could
      have
      met
      the
      evidential
      burden.
      I
      say
      this
      because
      
      
      the
      documentary
      evidence
      reveals
      that
      in
      those
      taxation
      years
      where
      
      
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      about
      to
      earn
      a
      profit,
      he
      would
      simply
      purchase
      a
      horse
      or
      
      
      two
      with
      the
      result
      that
      the
      farming
      operation
      incurred
      a
      loss.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      taxpayer
      admitted
      that
      he
      did
      not
      predetermine
      from
      year
      to
      year
      the
      
      
      amount
      he
      would
      spend
      in
      the
      purchase
      of
      new
      horses.
      His
      records
      indicate
      
      
      that
      any
      money
      earned
      from
      the
      horse
      business,
      as
      well
      as
      additional
      income
      
      
      transferred
      from
      the
      medical
      practice,
      was
      used
      to
      purchase
      new
      horses.
      
      
      Arguably,
      his
      actions
      do
      not
      indicate
      any
      desire
      to
      earn
      income
      from
      
      
      the
      horse-farming
      business
      during
      the
      taxation
      years
      in
      question.
      Rather,
      it
      
      
      would
      seem
      that
      his
      consistent
      reinvestment
      in
      new
      stock
      pointed
      to
      a
      de-
      
      
      sire
      to
      improve
      his
      stables,
      perhaps
      with
      the
      hope
      that
      he
      could
      retire
      in
      the
      
      
      future
      and
      live
      off
      the
      horse-farming
      income
      at
      that
      time.
      
      
      
      
    
      Finally,
      the
      taxpayer
      relies
      on
      
        Graham
       
        v.
       
        R.
      
      (1985),
      85
      D.T.C.
      5256
      
      
      (Fed.
      C.A.).
      To
      my
      knowledge,
      this
      is
      the
      only
      case
      where
      a
      taxpayer
      has
      
      
      succeeded
      before
      the
      Court
      of
      Appeal
      in
      arguing
      that
      his
      farming
      business
      
      
      provided
      his
      chief
      source
      of
      income,
      despite
      employment
      in
      another
      area.
      In
      
      
      my
      opinion,
      there
      are
      two
      ways
      to
      distinguish
      
        Graham.
      
      First
      it
      can
      be
      argued
      
      
      that
      the
      Court
      applied
      an
      outmoded
      test
      which
      was
      further
      redefined
      in
      
      
      subsequent
      jurisprudence:
      see
      
        Morrisey
       
        v.
       
        R.,
       
        supra.
      
      In
      
        Graham
      
      the
      Court
      
      
      applied
      a
      two
      stage
      analysis.
      Was
      there
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit
      
      
      and,
      if
      so,
      what
      was
      the
      taxpayer’s
      “ordinary
      mode
      and
      habit
      of
      work”?
      At
      
      
      page
      5263
      the
      Court
      concluded
      that,
      “in
      the
      very
      unusual
      circumstances
      of
      
      
      this
      case”,
      the
      taxpayer’s
      employment
      did
      not
      preclude
      the
      trial
      judge
      from
      
      
      finding
      that
      the
      main
      preoccupation
      of
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      farming.
      The
      second
      
      
      method
      of
      distinguishing
      
        Graham
      
      is
      the
      classical
      one
      —
      on
      the
      facts.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      
        Graham,
      
      the
      majority
      of
      the
      Court
      allowed
      a
      taxpayer
      to
      deduct
      full
      
      
      farm
      losses
      despite
      the
      fact
      that
      he
      held
      full-time
      employment
      with
      Ontario
      
      
      Hydro.
      The
      taxpayer,
      who
      was
      raised
      on
      a
      farm,
      arranged
      a
      flexible
      shift
      
      
      schedule
      around
      his
      hog-farming
      operation
      and
      took
      his
      holidays,
      days
      
      
      without
      pay
      and
      shift
      trades
      to
      accommodate
      planting
      and
      harvesting
      time.
      
      
      He
      also
      made
      arrangement
      with
      his
      employer
      to
      leave
      work
      in
      the
      case
      of
      
      
      an
      emergency
      at
      the
      farm.
      The
      taxpayer
      worked
      eight
      hours
      a
      day
      at
      his
      
      
      employment
      and
      a
      further
      eleven
      hours
      a
      day
      on
      the
      farm.
      Both
      the
      taxpayer’s
      
      
      wife
      and
      sixteen
      year
      old
      son
      performed
      the
      necessary
      tasks
      during
      
      
      his
      absences
      from
      the
      farm.
      Finally,
      the
      taxpayer
      was
      able
      to
      obtain
      needed
      
      
      financing
      from
      the
      Ontario
      Farm
      Loan
      Board
      which
      did
      not
      lend
      money
      to
      
      
      part-time
      farmers:
      see
      
        Graham
       
        v.
       
        R.
      
      (1983),
      83
      D.T.C.
      5399
      (Fed.
      T.D.),
      at
      
      
      5403.
      Against
      this
      background
      the
      majority
      viewed
      the
      principal
      issue
      in
      
      
      terms
      of
      whether
      a
      person
      could
      have
      employment
      in
      two
      full-time
      occupations
      
      
      at
      the
      same
      time.
      The
      dissenting
      judge
      (Marceau
      J.A.)
      viewed
      the
      issue
      
      
      in
      terms
      of
      a
      taxpayer
      who
      held
      a
      full-time
      job,
      was
      “seriously”
      involved
      
      
      in
      farming
      but
      who
      could
      not
      expect
      to
      generate
      “significant”
      profits
      
      
      from
      the
      latter
      enterprise.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      end,
      
        Graham
      
      stands
      or
      falls
      on
      its
      unique
      facts.
      But
      there
      is
      at
      
      
      least
      one
      lesson
      that
      can
      be
      derived
      from
      the
      case.
      It
      seems
      to
      me
      that
      
      
      
        Grahamcomes
      
      closer
      to
      a
      case
      in
      which
      an
      otherwise
      full-time
      farmer
      is
      
      
      forced
      to
      seek
      additional
      income
      in
      the
      city
      to
      offset
      losses
      incurred
      in
      the
      
      
      country.
      The
      second
      generation
      farmer
      who
      is
      unable
      to
      adequately
      support
      
      
      a
      family
      may
      well
      turn
      to
      other
      employment
      to
      offset
      persistent
      annual
      
      
      losses.
      These
      are
      the
      types
      of
      cases
      which
      never
      make
      it
      to
      the
      courts.
      Presumably,
      
      
      the
      Minister
      of
      National
      Revenue
      has
      made
      a
      policy
      decision
      to
      
      
      concede
      the
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit
      requirement
      in
      situations
      
      
      where
      a
      taxpayer’s
      family
      has
      always
      looked
      to
      farming
      as
      a
      means
      of
      providing
      
      
      for
      their
      livelihood,
      albeit
      with
      limited
      financial
      success.
      The
      same
      
      
      policy
      considerations
      allow
      for
      greater
      weight
      to
      be
      placed
      on
      the
      capital
      
      
      and
      time
      factors
      under
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act,
      
      while
      less
      weight
      is
      given
      to
      
      
      profitability.
      I
      have
      yet
      to
      see
      a
      case
      where
      the
      Minister
      denies
      such
      a
      taxpayer
      
      
      the
      right
      to
      deduct
      full
      farming
      losses
      because
      of
      a
      competing
      income
      
      
      source.
      Perhaps
      this
      is
      because
      it
      is
      unlikely
      a
      hog
      farmer
      such
      as
      Mr.
      Graham
      
      
      would
      pursue
      the
      activity
      as
      a
      hobby.
      
      
      
      
    
      As
      is
      well
      known,
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act
      
      is
      aimed
      at
      preventing
      “gentlemen”
      
      
      farmers
      who
      enjoy
      substantial
      income
      from
      claiming
      full
      farming
      
      
      losses:
      see
      
        Morrisey
      
      v.
      
        R.,
       
        supra
      
      at
      5081-82.
      More
      often
      then
      not
      it
      is
      invoked
      
      
      in
      circumstances
      where
      farmers
      are
      prepared
      to
      carry
      on
      with
      a
      blatant
      
      
      indifference
      toward
      the
      losses
      being
      incurred.
      The
      practical
      and
      legal
      
      
      reality
      is
      that
      these
      farmers
      are
      hobby
      farmers
      but
      the
      Minister
      allows
      them
      
      
      the
      limited
      deduction
      under
      section
      31
      of
      the
      
        Act.
      
      Such
      cases
      almost
      always
      
      
      involve
      horse-farmers
      who
      are
      engaged
      in
      purchasing
      or
      breeding
      horses
      for
      
      
      racing.
      In
      truth,
      there
      is
      rarely
      even
      a
      reasonable
      expectation
      of
      profit
      in
      
      
      such
      endeavours
      much
      less
      the
      makings
      of
      a
      chief
      source
      of
      income.
      
      
      
      
    
      It
      may
      well
      be
      that
      in
      tax
      law
      a
      distinction
      is
      to
      be
      drawn
      between
      the
      
      
      country
      person
      who
      goes
      to
      the
      city
      and
      the
      city
      person
      who
      goes
      to
      the
      
      
      country.
      In
      future,
      those
      insisting
      on
      obtaining
      tax
      relief
      in
      circumstances
      
      
      approaching
      those
      under
      consideration
      should
      do
      so
      through
      legislative
      
      
      channels
      and
      not
      through
      the
      Tax
      Court
      of
      Canada.
      The
      judicial
      system
      can
      
      
      no
      longer
      afford
      to
      encourage
      taxpayers
      or
      their
      counsel
      to
      pursue
      such
      litigation
      
      
      in
      the
      expectation
      that
      hope
      will
      triumph
      over
      experience.
      
      
      
      
    
      To
      summarize,
      a
      determination
      as
      to
      whether
      farming
      is
      the
      chief
      source
      
      
      of
      income
      is
      dependent
      upon
      the
      cumulative
      effect
      of
      three
      key
      factors:
      capital
      
      
      committed,
      time
      spent
      and
      profitability.
      In
      my
      respectful
      opinion,
      the
      
      
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      erred
      in
      his
      assessment
      of
      the
      evidence
      (inferences
      drawn
      
      
      from
      accepted
      facts)
      presented
      both
      in
      terms
      of
      the
      taxpayer’s
      occupational
      
      
      direction
      and
      the
      potential
      profitability
      of
      the
      horse-farming
      business.
      Having
      
      
      regard
      to
      the
      fact
      that
      no
      one
      factor
      is
      decisive
      and
      to
      the
      primary
      findings
      
      
      of
      fact
      made
      by
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge,
      I
      conclude
      that
      the
      taxpayer’s
      
      
      chief
      source
      of
      income
      for
      the
      years
      in
      question
      came
      from
      his
      medical
      
      
      practice.
      The
      horse-farming
      activity
      was
      merely
      a
      sideline
      business.
      Accordingly,
      
      
      I
      would
      allow
      the
      appeal
      with
      costs
      here,
      and
      in
      the
      court
      below,
      
      
      set
      aside
      the
      judgment
      of
      the
      Tax
      Court
      Judge
      and
      affirm
      the
      Minister’s
      
      
      reassessments
      for
      the
      taxation
      years
      in
      question.
      
      
      
      
    
        Appeal
       
        allowed.