Citation: 2013 TCC 228
Date: 20130718
Docket: 2011-3591(IT)G
BETWEEN:
COLLEEN McLEOD,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Woods J.
[1]
Colleen McLeod’s income tax return
for the 2009 taxation year included a deduction for a business loss that was
completely fictitious. She did not carry on any business. The question in this
appeal is whether it is proper to impose a penalty for this misrepresentation.
[2]
At the commencement of the
hearing, counsel for Ms. McLeod informed the Court that her appeal with respect
to an Alberta assessment is being withdrawn. The only issue that remains is
with respect to a penalty under the federal Income Tax Act in the amount
of $17,297.41.
[3]
The relevant legislative
provisions are subsections 163(2) and (2.1) of the Act. There is
no dispute about the calculation of the penalty although counsel for Ms. McLeod
submits that it is harsh in her circumstances. The dispute is whether the
misrepresentation was made knowingly or amounts to gross negligence.
[4]
Subsection 163(2) provides in part:
163.(2) False statements or
omissions - Every
person who, knowingly, or under circumstances amounting to gross negligence,
has made or has participated in, assented to or acquiesced in the making of, a false
statement or omission in a return, form, certificate, statement or answer
(in this section referred to as a “return”) filed or made in respect of a
taxation year for the purposes of this Act, is liable to a penalty of the
greater of $100 and 50% of the total of
(a) the amount, if any, by which
(i) the amount, if any, by which
(A) the tax for the year that would
be payable by the person under this Act
exceeds
(B) the amounts that would be
deemed by subsections 120(2) and (2.2) to have been paid on account of the
person’s tax for the year
if the person’s taxable income
for the year were computed by adding to the taxable income reported by the
person in the person’s return for the year that portion of the person’s
understatement of income for the year that is reasonably attributable to the
false statement or omission and if the person’s tax payable for the year were
computed by subtracting from the deductions from the tax otherwise payable by
the person for the year such portion of any such deduction as may reasonably be
attributable to the false statement or omission
exceeds
(ii) the amount, if any, by which
(A) the tax for the year that would
have been payable by the person under this Act
exceeds
(B) the amounts that would be
deemed by subsections 120(2) and (2.2) to have been paid on account of the
person’s tax for the year
had the person’s tax payable for
the year been assessed on the basis of the information provided in the person’s
return for the year,
[…]
(Emphasis added)
Background
[5]
The assumptions of fact described
in paragraph 15 of the Reply are not in dispute. They are set out below.
15. In
determining the Appellant’s tax liability for the 2009 taxation year, the
Minister made the following assumptions of fact:
a)
The Appellant was employed by Edmonton Public Schools and earned
employment income of $42.670.00 in the 2009 taxation year;
b)
In filing her 2009 Return, the Appellant claimed a net business loss of
$157,196.40 as set out in paragraph 8, above;
c)
In filing her 2009 Return, the Appellant reported a non-capital loss for
carryback of $116,359.00;
d)
The Appellant requested that the non-capital loss be carried back to her
2006, 2007 and 2008 taxation years in the amounts of $37,743.00, $38,115.00 and
$40,501.00, respectively;
e)
The Appellant claimed in her 2009 Return that the gross business income
she reported was from “receipt as agent” and that the expenses she reported
were “subcontract” expenses;
f)
The Appellant accrued no income as an agent and incurred no subcontract
expenses in the 2009 taxation year;
g)
The gross business income, business expenses and net business loss
claimed by the Appellant were fictitious;
h)
The Appellant was an employee during the 2009 taxation year and had no
source of income with respect to the alleged business; and
i)
The Appellant did not have any non-capital losses to carryback to the
2006, 2007 and 2008 taxation years.
[6]
The fictitious claims referred to
above were made with the assistance of third parties who held themselves out as
carrying on business under the name Amed Solutions. Ms. McLeod dealt with
two persons who used the names “Amanda” and “Ed.”
[7]
Amed Solutions prepared the 2009
income tax return and a carryback request, as well as proposed submissions for
the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) in the audit and objection stages.
[8]
Some of submissions by Amed
Solutions are pure nonsense. The paragraph below is an excerpt from the first
response given to the CRA auditor.
The terms of the
private contract of agency between the free will man commonly called Colleen,
of the McLeod family, who is the principal, the contributing beneficiary and
the true party of interest for the fictional entity/person/trust called COLLEEN
MCLEOD, which, by necessity, has become the agent in commerce for the
principal; is not subject to the scrutiny of a third party entity, and
therefore; any private dealings between the principal and the agent cannot be
released to the CANADA REVENUE AGENCY.
[9]
The CRA were suspicious about the
business loss upon initial review of the income tax return. The nonsensical submissions
that were subsequently received by the CRA, of which the above is a small
sample, appears to have strengthened these suspicions. The loss was denied upon
initial review and no refunds were paid to Ms. McLeod. Instead, gross
negligence penalties were assessed.
Analysis
[10]
The issue to be decided is whether
the false statements in the income tax return were made by Ms. McLeod “… knowingly,
or under circumstances amounting to gross negligence… .”
[11]
The threshold for gross negligence
is higher than a failure to use reasonable care. The general test to be applied
is whether the conduct is tantamount to intentional acting, or indifference as
to whether the law is complied with or not: Findlay v The Queen,
2000 DTC 6345 (FCA), at para 21, 22.
[12]
In addition, the penalty in
subsection 163(2) encompasses willful blindness. In Panini v The Queen,
2006 FCA 224, Nadon J.A. described that the concept of willful blindness that
is accepted for culpability in a criminal context is also applicable for
purposes of subsection 163(2):
[43] […] the law will impute knowledge to a
taxpayer who, in circumstances that dictate or strongly suggest that an inquiry
should be made with respect to his or her tax situation, refuses or fails to
commence such an inquiry without proper justification.
[13]
The Crown has the burden to
establish the necessary facts: subsection 163(3) of the Act.
[14]
Counsel for Ms. McLeod submits
that her conduct does not come within the culpability standard above. He submits
that her conduct does not have any of the hallmarks that are typically applied
to determine gross negligence, in particular: (1) magnitude of the tax
reduction, (2) opportunity to detect the false statement, (3) experience
of the taxpayer, and (4) genuine effort to comply (Bhatti v The Queen,
2013 TCC 143, at para. 24).
[15]
Counsel refers to the following
evidence in support:
(a)
The net saving, after fees paid to
Amed Solutions, was expected to be $17,731.24 (Ex. AR-1, Tab 3). Although this
appears to be a large amount, it was not very significant because it was
expected to include deductions that were missed over the prior ten taxation
years.
(b) Ms. McLeod did not review the 2009 income tax return
before signing it. Due to an abusive marital relationship that had recently
ended in divorce, Ms. McLeod was not in a position to question Amed Solutions
when she was instructed to simply sign the income tax return and mail it.
(c)
Ms. McLeod relied on the advice of
two friends (Rebecca and Darcy) in deciding to trust Amed Solutions.
(d) Ms. McLeod had little more than high school education
and had been kept in a state of “naivety and ignorance” by her abusive former
spouse. She did not have a history of looking after her own financial affairs
and she was not permitted to review her own tax return during her lengthy
marriage.
(e)
Ms. McLeod knew that the income
tax return would be reviewed as part of the divorce proceedings and therefore
she needed it to be correct. She confirmed with Amed Solutions that this would
not be a problem.
[16]
Counsel for Ms. McLeod submits
that her circumstances are similar to those described in Fourney v The Queen,
2011 TCC 520, at para 80:
[80] […] In a self-assessing tax system, however, gross
negligence penalties are not imposed for mere mistakes by a taxpayer who lacked
the intention to misstate or omit. […]
[17]
In large part, the submissions
above rely on Ms. McLeod’s own testimony, which is self-interested. I did not
find this testimony to be persuasive on key points, and it is not consistent
with some of the documentary evidence.
[18]
Some of the key documents are
email exchanges between Ms. McLeod and Amed Solutions that were sent throughout
the audit and objection stages until a notice of confirmation was issued.
[19]
I would observe first
that the email exchanges are self‑interested
as between Ms. McLeod and Amed Solutions, and I have viewed the correspondence
with this in mind.
[20]
The conclusion that I have reached
regarding the emails is that Ms. McLeod was aware that she was claiming a false
business loss prior to filing the 2009 income tax return.
[21]
Below is an excerpt from an email
sent by Ms. McLeod to Amed Solutions on July 29, 2010 concerning a request by
the CRA for information regarding the business loss claimed. It suggests that
Ms. McLeod knew at a very early stage that she would be falsely reporting a
business to the CRA, and she was concerned at that time about the impact on
employment insurance. Conversely, she showed no concern about falsely claiming
tax refunds.
This process is very
confusing with little explanation so I want to confirm as I did before I
started with Amanda that my unemployment is not affected as I am asked the
question are you self employed and continue to say no as advised.
Also my ex husband
is taking me to court (no idea why) but they will be looking at my 2009 notice
of assessment. So trusting that as Amanda said all is legal and not sure what
to tell them if they ask about my income.
(Emphasis
added)
[22]
I reproduce as well an excerpt
from an email communication from Ms. McLeod to Amed Solutions dated March
12, 2011, which is shortly after Ms. McLeod received the assessment which
denied the business loss and imposed federal and provincial penalties in the
amount of $24,184.93. She is responding to options provided by Amed Solutions
in response to the assessment.
Well I read the
options.
Will them [CRA]
explaining this to me [referring to proposed questions] mean that I don’t have
to pay it? I doubt that.
I really have to say
that I thought this was a straightforward process since it is legal and never
expected to have to deal with this. I really just want to resolve this as
quickly as possible and get of [sic] this fine.
[23]
This email, along with the
correspondence as a whole, suggests that Ms. McLeod was an intelligent
person who was quite capable of making decisions with respect to this matter.
[24]
As for Ms. McLeod’s knowledge
of the misrepresentation in the income tax return, as mentioned earlier it is likely that Ms. McLeod knew that she was claiming a
false business loss. I do not accept that Ms. McLeod believed the non‑person
nonsense. Although she kept repeating to Amed Solutions that they told her the
arrangement was “legal,” it was in her interest to confront Amed Solutions and
to assert that she trusted them and relied on them.
[25]
This conclusion is reinforced when
one looks at the documentary evidence as a whole. Amed Solutions provided Ms.
McLeod with nonsensical submissions to be provided to the CRA. Ms. McLeod was
all too willing to go along with the game for a long time. This is not someone
who was naive and duped.
[26]
I believe that when the 2009
income tax return was filed, Ms. McLeod thought that the plan was a good idea
in the sense that she might receive refunds and the only downside risk was that
the business loss could be denied.
[27]
It appears that it was only after
the CRA questioned the income tax return that Ms. McLeod really started to
probe the risks and be more concerned about the employment insurance. She was
also concerned at that time about the impact on the divorce proceedings. In
addition, Ms. McLeod told Ed in one email that she was shocked to receive the
assessment. This is likely genuine because she did not foresee a risk of a
large penalty.
[28]
Even if I am wrong that Ms. McLeod knowingly claimed a false business loss, it
is certainly a case of willful blindness. Ms. McLeod engaged Amed Solutions to
claim a large refund on her behalf. She had no prior relationship with them. If
Ms. McLeod chose not to know how the refunds arose, and did not review the
income tax return before mailing it, as she testified, this amounts to willful
blindness.
[29]
The appeal will be dismissed, with
costs to the respondent.
[30]
Counsel for the appellant
asked for sympathy with respect to costs, noting that the penalty is extremely
harsh in this case. The harshness appears to result in part from the formula
for calculating the penalty. Under the formula, which is based on the tax that
is sought to be avoided, the tax is computed at a relatively high tax rate
which does not take into account that the actual tax savings would be spread over
four taxation years and computed at lower tax rates (s. 163(2.1)).
[31]
I am not persuaded by an argument
based on sympathy. I accept that the penalty is higher in this case than it
would be in others, but the participation of Ms. McLeod in this scheme is
reprehensible. The victims in this case are Canadian taxpayers – not Ms. McLeod.
These Amended
Reasons for Judgment are issued in substitution for the Reasons for Judgment
dated July 12, 2013.
Signed at Toronto, Ontario this 18th day
of July 2013.
“J. M. Woods”