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 Citation: 2004TCC244 
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 Date: 20040325 
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 Docket: 2001-3891(IT)G 
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 BETWEEN: 
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 RONALD D. SANDNES, 
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 Appellant, 
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 and 
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 HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, 
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 Respondent. 
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
 
Miller J.
 
[1]       In 1997, Mr. Ronald Sandnes
      entered a number of transactions involving shares of Canoro
      Resources Ltd. (Canoro). The Respondent maintains that by virtue
      of his conduct and special knowledge of Canoro, Mr. Sandnes was a
      trader in securities and, therefore, not entitled to capital
      gains treatment nor to elect to have the Canoro securities deemed
      capital property in accordance with subsection 39(4) of the
      Income Tax Act (the Act). Mr. Sandnes'
      position is that the circumstances do not support a finding he
      was a trader, nor even that he was engaged in an adventure in the
      nature of trade, but that his investment in Canoro was just that,
      an investment on capital account. He filed his 1997 tax return on
      that basis. On the continuum from investor to trader, I find that
      Mr. Sandnes did not exhibit sufficient indices of carrying
      on a business to constitute a trader. The close call is between
      an investor or an adventurer and, on balance, by the manner in
      which he dealt with the Canoro shares I find he was simply an
      investor.
 
Facts
 
[2]       Mr. Sandnes acquired a bowling
      centre in Trail, British Columbia, in 1974 and has since been
      operating that business. In the 1990s, Mr. Sandnes helped a
      friend in Alberta with the office administration of a mining
      company, referred to as Yellowjack. He also became involved with
      a company known as Golden Mammoth. These companies merged in
      1996 to become Canoro. Mr. Sandnes became a director of
      Canoro and continued to assist on a part-time basis with office
      administration and shareholder relations. He commuted back and
      forth between British Columbia and Alberta, as he also continued
      to run his bowling centre.
 
[3]       In the summer of 1996, Mr. Sandnes
      acquired approxiately 208,000 common shares of Canoro through a
      private placement. As part of that transaction he also received
      warrants to acquire additional common shares, exercisable on or
      before June 4, 1997. He stated that his motive at this time was
      to invest in the long term of a company he hoped would be
      successful in the oil and gas industry. In 1997, he exercised his
      rights under the warrants and acquired an additional 109,459
      common shares at 0.37 ¢  a share. The shares were then trading
      at just over $1.00 a share. Mr. Sandnes sold some shares in
      Canoro to finance his exercise of the warrants. The only other
      purchase of Canoro shares of significance in 1997 was the
      exercise by Mr. Sandnes of an employee stock option to acquire
      25,000 common shares in Canoro.
 
[4]       Mr. Sandnes engaged in numerous
      sales of his Canoro shares in 1997. In the previous year, he had
      also shown a reliance on his Canoro shares as a means of meeting
      his financial requirements. In 1996, there were approximately 16
      sales of Canoro shares and in 1997 approximately 23 sales of
      shares. The Respondent contended there was a greater number of
      actual dispositions, due to the thinly traded nature of the
      shares. So, for example, Mr. Sandnes, in May 1997, wished to sell
      5,500 Canoro shares, but had to sell in three segments of 2,200,
      3,000 and 300. I view this as one sale transaction by Mr.
      Sandnes.
 
[5]       Of the 23 sale transactions in
      1997, some were made to finance the exercise of the warrants,
      some were made to finance ongoing needs of the bowling centre,
      some were for personal needs and some were to pay debts owing to
      Canada Customs and Revenue Agency (CCRA). Mr. Sandnes indicated
      he would always advise the president of Canoro that he was
      selling his shares. Mr. Sandnes left Canoro in 2001 to work
      full-time in Trail, B.C. at the bowling centre. In 2002, Mr.
      Sandnes disposed of most of his Canoro shares.
 
Analysis
 
[6]       The Respondent contends Mr.
      Sandnes was a trader in Canoro securities. If he was a trader,
      then he is precluded from electing to receive capital treatment
      on disposition of the shares as provided by subsection 39(5) of
      the Act which reads:
 
39(5)      An election under subsection (4) does
      not apply to a disposition of a Canadian security by a taxpayer
      (other than a mutual fund corporation or a mutual fund trust) who
      at the time of the disposition is
 
(a)          a trader
      or dealer in securities, ...
 
[7]       The Respondent acknowledges that
      if Mr. Sandnes was not a trader, but simply engaged in an
      adventure in the nature of trade, then the subsection 39(4)
      election would have been available to him, but that he is too
      late to avail himself of it. Subsection 39(4) reads as
      follows:
 
39(4)      Except as provided in subsection (5),
      where a Canadian security has been disposed of by a taxpayer in a
      taxation year and the taxpayer so elects in prescribed form in
      the taxpayer's return of income under this Part for that
      year,
 
(a)          every
      Canadian security owned by the taxpayer in that year or any
      subsequent taxation year shall be deemed to have been a capital
      property owned by the taxpayer in those years; and
(b)          every
      disposition by the taxpayer of any such Canadian security shall
      be deemed to be a disposition by the taxpayer of a capital
      property.
 
[8]       Mr. Sandnes suggests that
      subsection 39(4), and consequently subsection 39(5), do not
      even come into play, as the Canoro shares were an investment
      clearly on capital account.
 
[9]       Was Mr. Sandnes a trader? The
      Federal Court of Appeal in The Queen v. Vancouver Art Metal
      Works Limited[1] confirmed that a trader or dealer applies
      to "persons who deal in merchandise who are engaged in
      buying and selling, or whose business is trade or commerce".
      The Court went on to state:[2]
 
I have no doubt that a taxpayer who makes it a profession or a
      business of buying and selling securities is a trader or a dealer
      in securities within the meaning of paragraph 39(5)(a) of
      the Act. As Cattanach, J. stated in Palmer v. R.,
      "it is a badge of trade that a person who habitually does
      acts capable of producing profits is engaged in a trade or
      business". It is, however, a question of fact to determine
      whether one's activities amount to carrying on a trade or
      business. Each case will stand on its own set of facts.
      Obviously, factors such as the frequency of the transactions, the
      duration of the holdings (whether, for instance, it is for a
      quick profit or a long term investment), the intention to acquire
      for resale at a profit, the nature and quantity of the securities
      held or made the subject matter of the transaction, the time
      spent on the activity, are all relevant and helpful factors in
      determining whether one has embarked upon a trading or dealing
      business.
 
...
 
In conclusion, a taxpayer does not necessarily lose his
      election right under subsection 39(4) when he buys and sells
      securities for his own account. However, he loses such right to
      elect when he becomes a trader or a dealer, that is to say when
      he professionally engages in the business of dealing in
      securities or when his dealings amount to carrying on a business
      and can no longer be characterized as investor's transactions
      or mere adventures or concerns in the nature of trade.
 
[10]      The Respondent also argues that Justice
      Noël in Kane v. The Queen[3] determined the factor that
      distinguishes a trader from an adventurer, where he stated:[4]
 
I believe that in determining the availability of the election
      to one who trades in securities without being licensed or
      registered, the focus should be the same, namely, does the author
      of the transactions in question possess a particular or special
      knowledge of the market in which he trades? To the extent that he
      does, he distinguishes himself from the common risk takers who
      "play the market" regularly or sporadically based on
      commonly available investment advice and information. That it
      seems is the guiding line which must delineate the scope of the
      election contemplated by section 39(4) of the Act and the
      limitation embodied in paragraph 39(5)(a).
 
In the case at hand, the Plaintiff had a special knowledge of
      the market in which Orell shares were traded. He was one of the
      directors of the corporation, its president, an insider by virtue
      of his holdings and a promoter as that term is defined in the
      B.C. Securities Act. But more importantly, he was directly
      involved in the mining ventures of Orell and in organizing its
      public financing offerings. As such he was in a position to
      anticipate market reaction to Orell's ongoing activities.
      That is the context in which the Plaintiff bought and sold Orell
      shares. His trading activities were not only stamped with the
      usual badges of trade which characterize the dealings of common
      risk takers, but they were conducted by reference to, and were
      driven by, the special knowledge which the Plaintiff had of the
      market in which the Orell shares were traded. Those in my view
      are the activities of a trader or dealer in securities as that
      term is used in subsection 39(5) of the Act.
 
[11]      To find Mr. Sandnes a trader,
      therefore, requires a finding that his course of conduct in
      respect of the Canoro shares amounted to carrying on a business
      of buying and selling securities of which he had a particular or
      special knowledge. The course of conduct is to be viewed in light
      of his intention, frequency of transactions, duration of his
      holdings, nature and quantity of securities, time spent and the
      particular knowledge he possessed.
 
Intention
 
[12]      Mr. Sandnes' stated intention was
      to hold the Canoro shares as a long-term investment. Indeed, of
      just over 300,000 Canoro shares held in 1997, he continued to
      hold 230,000 after 1997, and ultimately disposed of most of his
      shares in 2002. It was also clear, however, that in 1996 and 1997
      he used his Canoro stock holdings as a bank account. When he
      needed money, for whatever reason, he turned to his Canoro
      shares. He engaged in this modus operandi soon after
      acquiring the bulk of the shares in 1996. His intent at this
      time, that is, upon the acquisition of the shares in 1996, was
      twofold: one, for long-term gain, and two, for a source of
      immediate and accessible funding (his "banking
      objective"). A trader has only one objective, to make profit
      from a scheme of trading. Even if I was to characterize Mr.
      Sandnes' banking objective as akin to a trader's
      objective of profiting on quick resales, the fact that Mr.
      Sandnes had an equal long-term investment objective, removes him
      in that respect from the category of a trader. It is difficult in
      Mr. Sandnes' case to conclude that one objective was
      predominant and somehow trumps the other. His behaviour supports
      a finding that the two objectives could be weighed equally. This
      is important, as I do not believe a trader can deny
      classification as such by relying on some remote, clearly
      subordinate intention of long-term investment. But that is not
      the case here. The existence of a "capital" intention,
      equal or greater than a profit-seeking intention, is sufficient
      to discriminate the investor or adventurer from the trader.
 
[13]      This conclusion was premised on Mr.
      Sandnes' banking objective being the same as the
      profit-making intention. There is a difference, however, which
      further distinguishes Mr. Sandnes from the trader. The trader
      attempts to maximize profit at the earliest opportunity.
      Presumably, this would entail a close scrutiny of the market to
      ensure purchases and sales at optimal moments. There is no
      evidence that Mr. Sandnes paid any attention on a regular basis
      to how the Canoro stock was faring, prior to entering his many
      sales transactions. His sales were driven entirely by financial
      need. If his bowling centre needed a new vehicle, he looked to
      sell some stock; if CCRA required a payment, he looked to sell
      some stock; and if he needed cash to exercise warrants, he looked
      to sell some stock. This is not the picture of a trader motivated
      by profit, but of an individual motivated by need, cashing in on
      his investment.
 
[14]      The Respondent relied upon the comments
      of Justice Lemieux in Arcorp Investments Ltd. v. The Queen[5] for
      support of the notion that a need for cash does not necessarily
      negate an intention of quick profits. Justice Lemieux
      indicated:[6]
 
[22]        Mr. Hodgkinson's
      explanations do not satisfy me that the dominant purpose of the
      Arcorp transactions during 1984 and 1985 was not to earn profits
      from transacting in the securities themselves rather than looking
      to these securities as long-term investments from which interest
      and dividends would be forthcoming. Indeed, his desperate need
      for cash explains why Arcorp, of which he was the sole directing
      mind, would look to frequent buying and selling of securities for
      profit and therefore for income purposes. Moreover, Mr.
      Hodgkinson's testimony does not explain why, in those years,
      Arcorp was frequently purchasing and not only liquidating to meet
      the cash needs of its sole shareholder.
 
[15]      Arcorp is however
      distinguishable. Arcorp was an investment management
      company - that was its very business. Its sole shareholder was a
      commission security salesman. The Court reviewed
      Arcorp's securities transactions to determine if they
      had the badges or characteristics of ordinary trading in
      securities. It found that in one year all of Arcorp's
      assets were in marketable securities. It bought and sold about
      1.6 million shares in 32 resource companies and over 460
      transactions. It held the securities briefly. Under those
      circumstances it is understandable that a plaintive cry that
      securities were sold to meet financial needs did not alter a
      clear trading intention to some different intention. In Mr.
      Sandnes' situation, there was no change in intention. He
      simply looked to cash in his investment in Canoro as needs
      demanded, hopeful that the bulk of shares would be held for the
      long term.
 
[16]      The Respondent also raised McGroarty
      v. The Queen[7] in the same context. But again, that was a
      case of someone with a background consistent with that of a
      trader in securities, whose purchases were highly leveraged and
      whose transactions were substantial. Mr. Sandnes is simply not in
      the same category.
 
[17]      I conclude that intention is not a
      factor that taints Mr. Sandnes as a trader.
 
Frequency of transactions
 
[18]      In 1997, there were only two purchases
      of significance: one for approximately 109,000 Canoro shares on
      the exercise of warrants; the other the exercise of a 25,000
      share-employee stock option. The Respondent alleges that this
      illustrates a level of "trading". I do not see it that
      way. The exercise of an employee stock option is in no way
      evidence of carrying on business as a trader, and is just not a
      factor in this determination. It arises solely in the context of
      an employee, not a trader.
 
[19]      The exercise of warrants, at a time
      when the company's shares were trading at triple the warrant
      exercise price, was relied upon by the Respondent as evidence of
      Mr. Sandnes' intention to take advantage of the market as
      part of some profit-making scheme. This puts an emphasis on this
      transaction as some sort of stand-alone trade, which is not
      justified. The warrants were part of Mr. Sandnes' 1996
      acquisition of shares through a private placement. It was not a
      separate acquisition as such. And, who would not exercise
      warrants under such circumstances. This was not a matter of
      special knowledge. The warrants had to be exercised by June 4,
      1997, and Mr. Sandnes did so at the end of May 1997. He
      would have been extremely foolish not to have done so. So, in
      determining frequency of transactions, I discount reliance on
      these two purchases as proving any trading activity.
 
[20]      What is left in 1997 is approximately
      23 sales of Canoro stock. The trader, by definition, is one
      carrying on the business of buying and selling. In 1997 at
      least, Mr. Sandnes was effectively only engaged in selling. The
      buying, as indicated, relates primarily to the one major private
      placement acquisition in 1996. While the private placement was
      not an isolated transaction, it was the major acquisition of
      Canoro shares. There appear to have been some minor acquisitions
      in the predecessor corporations and two purchases in 1996 of
      approximately 30,000 shares each. With respect to the sales in
      1997 of approximately 117,000 Canoro shares, approximately 60,000
      shares were sold to provide Mr. Sandnes with sufficient funds to
      exercise his warrants and option to acquire 134,000 more shares,
      effectively cashing in some of his investment so he could carry
      on with that same investment. Mr. Sandnes increased his holdings
      in 1997 from approximately 220,000 shares to 232,000 shares.
 
[21]      There remain a number of sales in 1997
      to finance Mr. Sandnes' other requirements. The Respondent
      argues that these 20 or so remaining sales are of such frequency
      that indicate the business of trading. I disagree. Under the
      circumstances, that number of sales might support an adventure,
      something other than a long-term holding, but such frequency of
      sales in and of themselves, with no other badges of trade, are
      not determinative of trading.
 
Duration of holdings
 
[22]      The majority of Mr. Sandnes'
      holding of Canoro shares was for a number of years, not months.
      From the time of his private placement acquisition in 1996, a
      significant number however were sold on an ongoing basis over the
      next couple of years. This short-term holding is, at first blush,
      indicative of trade, but more compatible, I would suggest, with
      either an adventure in the nature of trade or simply cashing in
      on one's investment.
 
Nature and Quantity of Securities
 
[23]      The securities were all in Canoro, the
      company for whom Mr. Sandnes worked on a part-time basis. He held
      less than 5% of the issued stock of the company. Although there
      is no principle to suggest someone cannot be a trader in just one
      stock, it does stretch considerably the concept of "carrying
      on a business", if the one stock is only thinly traded.
      Again, this is more supportive of an adventure - something that
      looks like trade or simply an investment.
 
Time Spent
 
[24]      Mr. Sandnes' time was spent on
      running a bowling centre in British Columbia, with only a couple
      of months off in the summer, and on helping out at Canoro in its
      office and with shareholder relations. There was little time
      spent on his share sales, apart from calls to his broker and
      advising the president of the company. Mr. Sandnes had no
      background or training in the financial markets, and it was
      evident that he spent no time studying the market to determine
      when to sell. The time spent does not support a finding of trader
      or even someone engaged in an adventure.
 
Special knowledge
 
[25]      Mr. Sandnes did work part-time at
      Canoro, but that is not tantamount to a special knowledge of the
      company, such that he could anticipate market reaction. That was
      a key element in Justice Noël's comments in Kane.
      The Appellant in that case was not only directly involved as
      president of the company's mining ventures, but also
      organized its public financing offerings. There is no evidence
      that what little knowledge Mr. Sandnes might have had about the
      business in any way contributed to his success in the financial
      market, let alone had any influence on that market. Mr. Sandnes
      was an employee who obtained shares through stock options, and in
      the first few months of the company's merged existence,
      invested through a private placement. I fail to see any special
      knowledge such that would move him into the trader category.
 
[26]      It is important to step back from the
      individual assessment of each of the above factors and view Mr.
      Sandnes' conduct as a whole. His conduct was that of a
      part-time employee acquiring shares in a new public company for
      investment purposes and for a source of funding. The frequent
      cashing in of part of his investment did not constitute carrying
      on a business of buying and selling securities. It was his plan
      from the outset to use some of his Canoro investment for funding
      purposes. Though not trading as such, the many sales might look
      like adventures, yet adventures in the nature of trade require a
      greater degree of buying and selling than what I observe in this
      case.
 
[27]      The correct result in this case is that
      Mr. Sandnes is not subjected to income treatment on the
      disposition of his shares in 1997. My analysis tips the balance
      between a finding of capital and a finding of adventure in the
      nature of trade to a finding of capital. The overall impression
      of Mr. Sandnes' activities is of an investor regularly
      cashing in an investment rather than an adventurer in the nature
      of trade.
 
[28]      Finally, I wish to comment on
      post-trial written submissions from the parties. Initially having
      gone through the analysis, I found it was a close call, not
      between a trader and an adventurer, for I am convinced Mr.
      Sandnes was not a trader, but between income from an adventure in
      the nature of trade and capital gain from the disposition of the
      securities, a capital property. There was no doubt as to the
      consequences if I found that the dispositions were on capital
      account, but at trial the parties did not argue in depth the
      consequences if I found an adventure in the nature of trade. I
      did not want to resolve Mr. Sandnes' appeal without fully
      appreciating and weighing the practical ramifications of the
      adventure alternative. I therefore asked counsel to provide
      written submissions as to the impact of a judgment finding Mr.
      Sandnes was engaged in an adventure. Specifically, I needed the
      parties to address the practical issue of whether
      Mr. Sandnes could file an amended return containing the
      appropriate election. This opened a hornet's nest of
      conflicting views, not the least of which was the question of
      whether there exists a concept of "honest mistake",
      upon which Mr. Sandnes might rely to file a late election.
      This concept was portrayed by Justice Robertson in Nassau
      Walnut Investments Inc. v. R.,[8] as being in the womb
      stage. Does this Court have jurisdiction to order the Respondent
      to accept an amended return, not yet filed? Can this Court deem
      there to have been an election, though not in a prescribed form?
      Is there a right of a taxpayer to even file an amended return?
      (In this respect see Justice Archambault's comments in
      Lussier v. The Queen.)[9] The submissions of counsel made it
      clear that a finding of an adventure in the nature of trade would
      lead to no agreement as to the consequences which should flow
      from such a determination, but only to uncertainty and a myriad
      of complex issues of law, jurisdiction and fairness. Having
      concluded that Mr. Sandnes' dispositions ought not to be
      taxed as income, and that a finding of an adventure would create
      some uncertainty in that regard, I resolved the balance is
      rightfully tipped to a capital disposition.
 
[29]      The appeal is allowed and the matter is
      referred back to the Minister for reconsideration and
      reassessment on the basis that the disposition by Mr. Sandnes of
      the Canoro shares in 1997 was on capital account. Costs to the
      Appellant.
 
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 25th day of March, 2004.
 
 
 
Miller J.