REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Owen J.
I. Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal by Sun Life Assurance Company
of Canada (“Sun Life”) from a reassessment by notice number 071310187229G0002 dated May 1,
2009, issued under the Excise Tax Act (the “ETA”) for the reporting period of
January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2006. The reassessment denied Sun Life’s claim for certain input tax
credits (ITCs) in the amounts of $1,279,180.49, $53,700.33 and $2,954.43. Sun
Life objected to and then appealed the denial of the first amount of
$1,279,180.49 but did not object to or appeal the denial of the other two
amounts. Accordingly, only Sun Life’s claim for ITCs in the aggregate of
$1,279,180.49 is in issue in this appeal. According to the Amended Reply to the
Amended Notice of Appeal (the “Reply”), the $1,279,180.49 comprises the following amounts: (i) ITCs of
$398,411.58 claimed for the reporting period ending December 31, 2006; (ii)
ITCs of $484,020.97 claimed by retroactive adjustment for the reporting period
ending December 31, 2005; and (iii) ITCs of $396,747.96 claimed by retroactive
adjustment for the reporting period ending December 31, 2004.
II. Facts
[2]
Sun Life called as a witness Mr. Stéphane
Coutu. Mr. Coutu is a CA and a CPA and holds the office of Assistant
Vice-President of Indirect Tax and Transfer Pricing at Sun Life. The Respondent
called as a witness Mr. Gilles Lazure. Mr. Lazure is employed by the
Agence du Revenu du Québec (the “Quebec Revenue Agency” or “Revenu Québec”) and has
been responsible for auditing insurance companies since 1985. The Quebec
Revenue Agency is responsible for administering the federal GST in the province of Québec. The parties also introduced into evidence a joint book of documents
consisting of nine tabs and marked as Exhibit A-1 (the “Joint
Book”).
[3]
Sun Life is a corporation incorporated under the
laws of Canada that operates as an insurance company. Sun Life sells a range of
financial products and services that are primarily insurance-based but that
also include wealth management products, such as investments and retirement
products (collectively, the “Financial Products”).
The Financial Products are sold through many different channels, including
through independent contractors called sales advisers (“Advisers”).
The sale of Sun Life’s Financial Products is considered to be the supply of a
financial service that is an exempt supply by virtue of Part VII of Schedule V
to the ETA.
[4]
Sun Life maintains financial centres across Canada which focus on the sale of Financial Products. The financial centres house both
employees of Sun Life and Advisers. The space occupied by the financial centres
is leased from third party landlords and Sun Life pays GST on the rent it pays
for each financial centre as well as on any leasehold expenditures associated
with the financial centre.
[5]
The rent paid by Sun Life to the third party
landlords varies from location to location but is generally composed of a base
rent, an additional rent and, in some cases, other charges. The base rent is
stated as a dollar amount per square foot per annum. The additional rent is
made up of Sun Life’s share of expenses incurred by the landlord, namely,
building operating costs, property taxes, janitorial services, electricity
costs, heating costs, air conditioning costs and such other costs as may be
agreed. The amount of additional rent can be stated as a dollar amount per
square foot per annum.
[6]
A sample lease at Tab 7 of the Joint Book
describes a lease of space in Brossard, Quebec consisting of 8,855 usable
square feet and Sun Life’s share of common areas of 1,328 square feet, for a
total area under lease of 10,183 square feet. The rent charged is composed of
base rent of $11.75 per square foot per annum and additional rent estimated to
be approximately $10 per square foot per annum. The base rent and estimated additional
rent are applied to the total area of 10,183 square feet to determine the
amount payable by Sun Life. The lease has an addendum that increases the total
leased space to 12,454 square feet, extends the term of the lease by three
years and increases the base rent to $12.15 per square foot per annum. No
estimate is given for additional rent, but Sun Life’s share of the landlord’s
costs that is incorporated into additional rent is stated to be 17.79 percent
of those costs.
[7]
A chart at paragraph 32. h) of the Reply,
with which Mr. Coutu agreed, summarizes the information regarding the total
space rented by Sun Life for financial centres (collectively, the “Leased Space”)
and the GST paid on the rent for the Leased Space, as follows:
|
Space Rented by the Appellant (Square
feet)
|
GST Paid by the Appellant
|
2004
|
742,298
|
$1,298,125
|
2005
|
714,674
|
$1,485,882
|
2006
|
712,789
|
$1,303,551
|
[8]
The Advisers are entitled to rent space in the
financial centres from Sun Life but are not obligated to do so. Sun Life
estimates that approximately 50% of the Advisers do rent space and that the
space rented by the Advisers typically ranges from 100 to 140 square feet.
[9]
The rental arrangement is implemented through a sublease
agreement between the Adviser and either Sun Life or a predecessor of Sun Life.
The financial terms of the sublease are set out in an e-mail to the Adviser,
which is referenced in the body of the sublease agreement. Generally, the rent
is calculated as the area of the Adviser’s office in square feet times a monthly
rate per square foot plus GST. The Adviser is also subject to a monthly charge
for the telephone and ethernet connection in the rented office. In
cross-examination, Mr. Coutu acknowledged that, although the Adviser was
renting a specific office within the financial centre, under the sublease the
Adviser would have full access to the financial centre and the building common
areas and would access the financial centre through the same entrance as the
employees of Sun Life.
[10]
Tab 8 of the Joint Book contains a copy of a sublease
agreement for an Adviser’s office in the Brossard financial centre comprising
123 square feet leased at a rate of $2.66 per square foot per month or $31.92
per square foot per annum plus applicable tax. Mr. Coutu testified that the difference
between the rate charged to the Adviser of approximately $32 per square foot
per annum and the rate paid by Sun Life of approximately $23 per square foot
per annum reflected Sun Life’s attempt to recover the effective cost of the
office from the Adviser. Mr. Coutu also testified that if there was any
discount in the rental charged to the Adviser as compared to Sun Life’s
effective cost of the office, it was minimal. In cross-examination, Mr. Coutu
explained that the situation described in paragraph 20 of the Amended Notice of
Appeal, which states that the consideration payable by Advisers to Sun Life was
less than the consideration payable by Sun Life to its landlords, reflected the
fact that Sun Life may not achieve full recovery of the effective cost of the
space rented to Advisers but that “significantly all”
of that cost is recovered.
[11]
A chart at paragraph 32. p) of the Reply,
with which Mr. Coutu agreed, summarizes the information regarding the space
rented by the Advisers in each year, as follows:
|
Space Subleased by the Appellant to the
Advisors (Square feet)
|
GST charged by the Appellant
|
2004
|
210,008
|
$338,994
|
2005
|
207,804
|
$351,605
|
2006
|
194,381
|
$316,218
|
[12]
Each financial centre houses one or more
employees of Sun Life who are charged with the supervision of the financial
centre and the providing of support for the Advisers. The task of recruiting
Advisers falls on these employees and, as there is a high turnover of Advisers,
a large portion of these employees’ role is to recruit and support new Advisers.
According to Mr. Coutu, the focus is always on the recruitment of Advisers, not
on the renting of space to the Advisers.
[13]
Mr. Coutu testified that Sun Life’s model
targets a ratio in each financial centre of one employee of Sun Life to eight
Advisers. This ratio dictates the amount of space at each financial centre that
is considered by Sun Life to be available to Advisers. On average, a portion of
the space allocated to Advisers is vacant. A chart at paragraph 32. r) of
the Reply, with which Mr. Coutu agreed, summarizes the information regarding the
amount of vacant space in each year as follows:
|
Vacant Office Space (Square feet)
|
2004
|
83,566
|
2005
|
82,924
|
2006
|
81,932
|
[14]
Mr. Coutu testified that the vacant office space
varies from financial centre to financial centre and represents space that is
kept available for new Advisers who choose to rent space from Sun Life, so that
the financial centres have the capacity to grow. The variability of the vacancy
rate from financial centre to financial centre during 2004, 2005 and 2006 is
shown in three charts at Tabs 1, 2 and 3 of the Joint Book under the column
titled “Vacant Space As a % of Total Area under Lease”.
[15]
In cross-examination, Mr. Coutu conceded that
the vacancy rate could be as high as 50% if measured as a percentage of the
area available for rent to Advisers instead of the total area under lease. Mr.
Coutu further stated that the vacant space would not be rented to someone who
was not an Adviser but that a vacant office could be used by an employee of Sun
Life, at which point it would no longer be considered Adviser space. If the
area of a financial centre is determined to be too large for Sun Life’s needs,
the excess space may be returned to the landlord or it may be physically
segregated and subleased. Mr. Coutu did not know whether this had occurred
during the periods in issue.
[16]
In filing its GST returns for the reporting
periods from January 1, 2004 to December 31, 2004 and from January 1, 2005 to
December 31, 2005, Sun Life claimed ITCs in respect of the space sublet to
Advisers in an amount equal to the GST collected from the Advisers on the rent
charged to the Advisers for space in the financial centres. Mr. Coutu
explained that Sun Life did not have the information needed to claim higher
ITCs and that using the GST collected was a “good floor”
on which to claim some ITCs. Sun
Life subsequently revised its ITC claim for 2004 and 2005 and applied the
revised approach to 2006, resulting in the claim for additional ITCs of
$1,279,180.49 which is the subject of this appeal.
[17]
With respect to the new method for calculating
ITCs, in 2006, Sun Life started measuring the physical dimensions of some of
its financial centres to obtain a clearer picture of the actual use of the
space. Initially, Sun Life prepared diagrams for 11 financial centres, which
divided the space into four categories and provided the floor area for each
category (the 11 diagrams are reproduced at Tab 6 of the Joint Book): (1) space
used, or intended for the use of, Advisers (shown in yellow); (2) space used by
Sun Life (shown in blue); (3) space used by both Sun Life and the Advisers (shown
in pink); and (4) interior corridor and hallway space (shown in various ways in
green). In addition to the four categories of coloured space, the building
common areas such as elevators, stairways, washrooms and public hallways are
shown without any colouring.
[18]
The floor area for each category was determined
and, in the case of the third and fourth categories and the public common
areas, was allocated between the Advisers and Sun Life. The 11 samples were
used to estimate the use of space in every financial centre for 2004, 2005 and
2006. Mr. Coutu testified that in subsequent years Sun Life measured every
financial centre so that it did not have to rely on estimates.
[19]
Sun Life’s revised methodology for the
calculation of ITCs for 2004, 2005 and 2006 is found in worksheets reproduced
at Tabs 1, 2 and 3 of the Joint Book and in supporting materials found at Tabs
4 and 5 of the Joint Book. Mr. Coutu provided an explanation of this
methodology, using as an example the calculation of ITCs for the Toronto East
financial centre for 2004, found at Tab 1, page 2 of the Joint Book:
- Column A, titled “Total Rent/Maintenance”,
sets out the total rent paid for the financial centre in 2004, which for
Toronto East is $520,188.
- Column B, titled “GST Paid on Rent Per GL”,
sets out the total GST paid on the rent in column A, which for Toronto
East is $33,279.15.
- Column C, titled “Leasehold Expense”,
sets out any other expenses that Sun Life incurred in respect of the
financial centre, such as maintenance charges (Mr. Coutu was not certain
of the details). The amount stated is $741.
- Column D, titled “Leasehold Capital”,
was not explained, but appears to set out any capital expenditures made by
Sun Life on leaseholds.
- Column E, titled “Total Leaseholds”,
was not explained, but is described under the heading as the sum of
Columns C and D, which for Toronto East is $741.
- Column F, titled “Calculated GST on
Leaseholds”, was not explained, but is described under the heading
as Column E times 7/115, which for Toronto East is $45.10.
- Column G, titled “Total GST on Rent and
Leaseholds”, sets out the total GST payable by Sun Life in respect
of its lease of the financial centre. It is described under the heading as
the sum of Columns B and F, which for Toronto East is $33,324.25.
- Column H, titled “Square Footage under
Lease”, sets out the square footage leased by Sun Life from the
landlord as stated in the relevant lease, which for Toronto East is 16,550
square feet. No explanation was provided by Sun Life as to why this number
differed from the 11,500 square feet stated on the diagram for that
financial centre at Tab 6, page 22 of the Joint Book. Only the diagrams
for Hamilton and Barrie also included a figure for the area under lease and
in both cases it differed from the number in Column H – one being lower
and the other being higher.
- Column I, titled “Square Footage
Available for Rent to Advisors”, sets out the total space in the
financial centre available to rent to Advisers, including any such space
that is not occupied, which for Toronto East is 5,838 square feet. This is
the space shown in yellow on the diagram of the Toronto East financial
centre at Tab 6 of the Joint Book. The percentage of vacant space is indicated
in an undesignated adjacent column titled “Vacant
Space As a % of Total Area under Lease” as being 13.06%. Mr. Coutu
acknowledged that there was a small discrepancy between the area stated in
Column I of 5,838 square feet and the area stated on the diagram for
Toronto East at Tab 6 of the Joint Book of 5,948 square feet. He suggested
that the amount in Column I represented how much of the yellow space on
the diagram was actually available to rent to Advisers.
- The undesignated column titled “Vacant
Space As a % of Total Area under Lease” sets out the vacancy rate
in the financial centre as a percentage of the total area under lease,
which for Toronto East is 13.06%.
- Column J, titled “Square Footage of
Specific Common Elements Attributed to Advisors”, sets out the
portion of the space used by Sun Life and the Advisers (the space shown in
pink on the diagram at Tab 6 of the Joint Book) that is allocated to the
Advisers, expressed in square feet. The allocation was done on a room-by-room
basis, but in the aggregate 65% of the jointly used area was allocated to
the Advisers, which in Toronto East represented an area of 534 square feet.
For financial centres that were not measured, the aggregate jointly used
space was assumed to be 664 square feet, which was the average amount of
such space in the 11 financial centres that were measured. The amount
allocated to Advisers was 65% of 664 square feet, or 431 square feet. The
rationale for the allocation of the jointly used space is found at Tab 4
of the Joint Book, where it is stated:
Telecommunications Room – This room
handles the equipment and services related in order to service the offices with
their telecommunication needs. Using the average of advisor occupied space as
a percentage of total occupied space.
Closing Room – This is a meeting room
where the independent advisors meet with clients to finalize/close sales. This
is allocated to the advisors at a 100% [sic]
Reception Area Seating – This area is
allocated to the advisors using the average of advisor occupied space as a
percentage of total occupied space.
Supply Room – Area for storage of
stationary [sic] and supplies. This is allocated to the advisors at a rate
of 50% rather than the average rate.
Kitchen – This area is allocated to the
advisors using the average of advisor occupied space as a percentage of total
occupied space.
Touch Down Station – An area for agents
that do not occupy an office in the building. There is no consideration
received for this space from the advisors. Therefore this are [sic] has
been fully allocated to management.
- Column K, titled “Total measured footage
attributed to advisors”, is the sum of Columns I and J, which for
Toronto East is 6,372 square feet.
- An undesignated column titled “Common
Area Gross-Up Based on Floorplan” sets out the interior corridor
area as a percentage of the total measured area of the financial centre. In
the case of Toronto East, the calculation is 2,176 square feet divided by
10,461 square feet, which yields 20.80%. This column is relevant only to
the 11 financial centres that were measured. For the other financial
centres, 12% is used, which, Mr. Coutu noted, was lower than the
26.02% average for the measured financial centres.
- Column L, titled “Interior common area
Gross Up Factor”, is column K multiplied by a percentage that is
intended to attribute a portion of the interior corridor area to the
Advisers. The column’s description of the math is not correct but I have
assumed from the numbers presented that it should read K multiplied by one
plus either 12% or the percentage based on the actual measurements as determined
in the immediately preceding column). The calculation of the gross-up
percentage for the measured financial centres is described in more detail
in Tab 5 of the Joint Book. The result stated for Toronto East is 7,697
square feet, which is 6,372 times 1.208.
- Column M, titled “Straight Ave Building
Gross Up Factor” sets out as a percentage the ratio of the common
building area attributed to Sun Life under the relevant lease to the
useable floor area as set out in the lease. For example, the lease for the
Brossard financial centre reproduced at Tab 7, page 27 of the Joint Book
states in section 1.01 that the leased area consists of 8,855 square feet
of useable area and an additional 1,328 square feet of building common area
as described in section 8.01 g), for a total area under lease of 10,183
square feet. This yields a percentage ratio of 1,328 divided by 8,855 or
approximately 15%. If the lease did not support such a calculation then,
Mr. Coutu testified, 5% was used. The gross-up used for Toronto East is
12%. A note accompanying the column states:
The
building gross-up factor is a specific factor provided by the landlord to
account for building common spaces. In those instances where Sun Life office [sic]
are located in storefronts, there is [sic] no building common spaces. However
in these instances, there is typically additional interior common space. As a
result Sun Life has found that the common space gross-up is insufficient and
adds an additional 5% factor. Both the Interior Common Space and Building
Grossup [sic] is [sic] included in the total area under lease.
- Column N, titled “Building Gross Up
Footage”, sets out in square feet the result of multiplying column
L by column M, which for Toronto East is 924 square feet.
- Column O, titled “Total footage with
Building Gross up”, sets out the sum of column L and column N and
is intended to represent the total floor area attributable to the
Advisers. The result stated for Toronto East is 8,621 square feet, which
is 7,697 plus 924.
- Column P, titled “% of Inputs Allocatable
to Advisors”, sets out the result, as a percentage, of dividing
column O by column H. For Toronto East, the calculation is 8,621 divided
by 16,550, which yields 52.09%.
- Column Q, titled “GST Allocated to
Advisors”, sets out the result in dollars of multiplying column P
by column G. For Toronto East, the calculation is 52.09% of $33,324.25,
which for Toronto East is $17,358.94.
[20]
In a nutshell, Sun Life determined what it
considered to be the area acquired for the use of Advisers in each financial
centre (including the area of any vacant space held for such use) and then
grossed up that area by three factors intended to attribute to the Advisers
their share of (1) the jointly used spaces within the financial centre, (2) the
internal corridors and hallways of the financial centre, and (3) the building
common areas attributed to Sun Life in the lease for the financial centre (for
clarity, I will refer to these three areas collectively as the common-use
space). The total so allocated to the Advisers was then divided by the total
area under lease to provide the percentage of the GST paid by Sun Life on rent
and leasehold expenditures that was attributable to the Advisers.
[21]
Mr. Coutu testified that the foregoing
methodology used for 2004 was also applied to the 2005 and 2006 periods. The
calculations for these periods are found at Tabs 2 and 3 of the Joint Book,
respectively. Mr. Coutu testified that for 2007 and subsequent years, Sun
Life used actual measurements for each of the financial centres and that, as a
result, the total ITCs claimed by Sun Life increased. According to Mr. Coutu,
this was because of the conservative percentages used to take into account the
common-use space. The actual percentages were on average higher, with the
result that the percentage of the square footage under lease attributed to the
Advisers was on average higher when using actual measurements for each
financial centre.
[22]
The witness for the Respondent, Mr. Lazure,
testified that his on-site audit of the Brossard financial centre confirmed
that the Advisers rented a specific office that was accessed through the main
entrance of the financial centre and that the Advisers had access to the
common-use space.
[23]
Mr. Lazure testified that Revenu Québec had no issue with the measurements taken by Sun Life. The issue
for Revenu Québec revolved around the perceived attempt by Sun Life to claim ITCs
in respect of space that was leased by Sun Life from a third party in order for
Sun Life to carry on a financial services business. Specifically, the view of
Revenu Québec is that the only evidence of a use of that space by Sun Life to
provide a taxable supply is found in the subleasing of specific office space to
Advisers. Any space that was not sublet to Advisers was being used by Sun Life
in the course of its financial services business and not for the purpose of
making taxable supplies and therefore it was unreasonable for Sun Life to claim
ITCs in respect of any of that space.
A. The Appellant’s Position
[24]
Sun Life submits that the ITCs that may be
claimed by it in respect of the receipt of taxable supplies from the third
party landlords are not limited to the GST collected from the Advisers as a
result of the taxable supply of office space made by it to the Advisers.
Rather, the determination of the ITCs is based on a narrow independent purpose
test that focuses on each particular supply in order to determine if it is
being made in the course of a commercial activity and can be tracked to a
particular input. The purpose of the particular input determines whether the
input is in relation to the making of taxable or of exempt supplies. Where a
registrant such as Sun Life acquires or uses inputs (the Leased Space) for the
purpose of making both taxable supplies (subleasing a portion of the Leased
Space to the Advisers) and exempt supplies (selling Financial Products), the
ETA limits the claim for ITCs to reflect only the GST paid on the inputs
acquired for the purpose of making taxable supplies. It is up to Sun Life,
however, to determine an allocation method that is fair and reasonable and used
consistently throughout the year. There is no rule that requires the use of a
specific method, and once a fair, reasonable and consistent method has been
chosen by Sun Life, the Minister is not entitled to replace that method with
one of her own choosing simply because she believes it is a better method or
even the best method.
[25]
Sun Life submits that the method chosen by it
was fair and reasonable because, to determine the amount of the ITCs, it relied
on the area of the space acquired for the purpose of supply to the Advisers.
The inclusion of the vacant space in the area acquired for the purpose of
making taxable supplies was fair and reasonable for three reasons. First, Sun
Life intended to sublet the vacant space to the Advisers. Second, the inclusion
of that space on the basis of intended use was consistent with the text and
context of subsections 169(1) and 141.01(2) of the ETA. Finally, the vacant
space accounted for only 11% of the total space leased by Sun Life. The
inclusion of the three gross-ups in the area acquired for the purpose of making
taxable supplies was fair and reasonable because without these adjustments the
result would present an unrealistic view of how the property was being used by
the Advisers. In addition, Sun Life submits that the gross-ups were consistent
with the approach taken by the Tax Court of Canada in Bay Ferries Limited v.
The Queen, 2004 TCC 663 and by the Federal Court of Appeal in Ville de
Magog v. The Queen, 2001 FCA 210.
B. The Respondent’s Position
[26]
The Respondent states that the facts and the
numbers in this appeal are not in dispute. The Respondent’s position is simply
that the method chosen by Sun Life is not a “fair and
reasonable” method for determining the extent to which the acquisition
of the Leased Space was for the purpose of making taxable supplies for
consideration. The Respondent submits that the primary business of Sun Life is
the rendering of financial services, which is an exempt supply under the ETA and
does not give rise to ITCs. Sun Life also carries on a side business which
consists of subleasing office space to Advisers.
[27]
The Respondent submits that, while there is no
doubt that the subleasing of the office space to Advisers is a taxable supply
that entitles Sun Life to ITCs, the method chosen to determine those ITCs does
not reflect the fact that Sun Life’s efforts are focused not on the subleasing
of the space but on the recruitment of Advisers, who may or may not sublease
space from Sun Life. The intention to sublease the vacant space is thus
secondary to the intention to recruit Advisers to sell Financial Products for
Sun Life. The Respondent argues that the Advisers play two roles. The first is
as tenants of Sun Life. The second is as workers helping Sun Life carry on its
business of selling Financial Products. In the Respondent’s view, the
allocation of the common space to the taxable supply of space to the Advisers
fails to recognize that the Advisers are using the common space not because
they are tenants but because they are selling Financial Products on behalf of
Sun Life. The Respondent says that this is most evident in the allocation of
the closing room space to the taxable supply of space to the Advisers. When
using that space, the Adviser is not acting as a tenant but as a seller of Financial
Products for Sun Life.
[28]
To support this position, the Respondent points
to the fact that the percentage of vacant space is considerable when compared
to the space actually subleased to the Advisers and that there was no evidence
of any attempt by Sun Life to downsize the space rented by it from the third
party landlords. As well, Sun Life admitted that it would not rent the vacant
space to anyone other than an Adviser. The Respondent submits that this
situation is therefore different from the case of a landlord who is in the
business of subleasing space but has vacancies due to economic conditions. The
Respondent also states that Sun Life’s assertion that all the vacant space is intended
for Advisers ignores the possibility that the space could be used for another
purpose, such as occupation by an employee of Sun Life.
III. The
Law
[29]
The statutory provisions of the ETA relevant to
the issue in this case are as follows:
123(1)
“commercial activity” of a person
means
(a)
a business carried on by the person (other than a business carried on without a
reasonable expectation of profit by an individual, a personal trust or a partnership,
all of the members of which are individuals), except to the extent to which the
business involves the making of exempt supplies by the person . . .
“exempt supply” means a supply
included in Schedule V;
Schedule
V, Part VII - Financial Services
1.
A supply of a financial service that is not included in Part IX of Schedule VI.
“taxable supply” means a supply that
is made in the course of a commercial activity;
165.(1) Imposition
of goods and services tax — Subject to this Part, every recipient of a taxable
supply made in Canada shall pay to Her Majesty in right of Canada tax in
respect of the supply calculated at the rate of 5% on the value of the consideration
for the supply.
169.(1) General rule
for [input tax] credits — Subject to this Part, where a person acquires or
imports property or a service or brings it into a participating province and,
during a reporting period of the person during which the person is a
registrant, tax in respect of the supply, importation or bringing in becomes
payable by the person or is paid by the person without having become payable,
the amount determined by the following formula is an input tax credit of the
person in respect of the property or service for the period:
A × B
where
A is the tax
in respect of the supply, importation or bringing in, as the case may be, that
becomes payable by the person during the reporting period or that is paid by
the person during the period without having become payable; and
B is
. . .
(c) in any
other case, the extent (expressed as a percentage) to which the person acquired
or imported the property or service or brought it into the participating
province, as the case may be, for consumption, use or supply in the course of
commercial activities of the person.
141.01 [Allocation
of input tax credits] - (1) Meaning of “endeavour”
— In this section, “endeavour” of a person means
(a)
a business of the person;
(b)
an adventure or concern in the nature of trade of the person; or
(c)
the making of a supply by the person of real property of the person, including
anything done by the person in the course of or in connection with the making
of the supply.
. . .
(2) Acquisition for
purpose of making supplies [limitation on ITCs] — Where a person acquires or
imports property or a service or brings it into a participating province for
consumption or use in the course of an endeavour of the person, the person
shall, for the purposes of this Part, be deemed to have acquired or imported
the property or service or brought it into the province, as the case may be,
(a)
for consumption or use in the course of commercial activities of the person, to
the extent that the property or service is acquired, imported or brought into
the province by the person for the purpose of making taxable supplies for
consideration in the course of that endeavour; and
(b)
for consumption or use otherwise than in the course of commercial activities of
the person, to the extent that the property or service is acquired, imported or
brought into the province by the person
(i)
for the purpose of making supplies in the course of that endeavour that are not
taxable supplies made for consideration, or
(ii)
for a purpose other than the making of supplies in the course of that
endeavour.
(3) Use for purpose
of making supplies — Where a person consumes or uses property or a service in
the course of an endeavour of the person, that consumption or use shall, for
the purposes of this Part, be deemed to be
(a)
in the course of commercial activities of the person, to the extent that the
consumption or use is for the purpose of making taxable supplies for
consideration in the course of that endeavour; and
(b)
otherwise than in the course of commercial activities of the person, to the
extent that the consumption or use is
(i)
for the purpose of making supplies in the course of that endeavour that are not
taxable supplies made for consideration, or
(ii)
for a purpose other than the making of supplies in the course of that
endeavour.
(5) Method of
determining extent of use, etc. — Subject to section 141.02, the methods used
by a person in a fiscal year to determine
(a)
the extent to which properties or services are acquired, imported or brought
into a participating province by the person for the purpose of making taxable
supplies for consideration or for other purposes, and
(b)
the extent to which the consumption or use of properties or services is for the
purpose of making taxable supplies for consideration or for other purposes,
shall be fair and
reasonable and shall be used consistently by the person throughout the year.
[30]
The current version of subsection 141.01(5), contained
in the Appellant’s Book of Authorities, references section 141.02, and was
enacted in 2010 effective for fiscal years that begin after March 2007. Section
141.02 sets out special rules for allocating the ITCs of financial institutions
such as Sun Life. These rules were not applicable during the periods in issue
in this appeal.
IV. Analysis
[31]
The general scheme and purpose of the GST provisions
of the ETA were explained by the Federal Court of Appeal in CIBC World
Markets Inc. v. The Queen, 2011 FCA 270, [2013] 3 F.C.R. 3 as follows:
A. The statutory
scheme: an overview
5 I shall
begin with a broad, conceptual review of the general scheme and purpose of the
GST provisions of the Act. This will provide context for interpreting the
specific provisions at issue in this appeal.
(1) The purpose of the GST provisions of the Act
6 The GST
is a consumption tax. The GST provisions of the Act show that it is meant to be
paid by the final consumers of goods and services. An early technical paper
issued by the Minister on the GST confirms this: Canada, Department of Finance,
“Goods and Services Tax: Technical Paper” (Ottawa: Department of Finance,
1989).
(2) The key liability
provision: subsection 165(1) of the Act
7 Subsection
165(1) of the Act sets out a general rule: those who receive services or
property, such as goods, in the course of a commercial activity (known under
the Act as a “taxable supply”) are liable to pay GST.
(3) Who is subject to GST
8 The
general rule in subsection 165(1) of the Act applies to all, even those who are
not final consumers.
9 In
particular, each recipient of taxable goods and services is potentially liable
to pay GST, even if it, as an intermediary, ultimately delivers those goods and
services to others. For example, a wholesaler may supply goods to a retailer
who supplies them to a consumer. The retailer is liable to pay GST under the
general rule in subsection 165(1).
10 Were the
matter left there, the GST would lose its character as a consumption tax
imposed on the final consumers of goods and services. It would attach, full
force, to each party in a chain of transactions culminating in the final
receipt by consumers.
(4) Input tax credits: the general concept
11 One way in
which the Act prevents this consequence is by giving parties credits for “inputs”
that they receive.
12 For
example, for the purpose of the selling of goods to consumers, a retailer might
receive “inputs,” such as inventory. That “input” to the retailer is necessary
in order for it to make a supply of the goods to the consumer. Depending on the
particular business, there may be all sorts of necessary “inputs.”
13 Obviously,
if, in the example above, the retailer were not given credit for the GST paid
on inputs needed for the making of a taxable supply of goods to a consumer, the
GST would be imposed full force on it and, for that matter, on every
intermediary in the chain of distribution. If that happened, the GST would lose
its character as a consumption tax imposed on the final consumer of goods and
services.
14 To achieve
the purpose of taxing the final consumers of goods and services, the Act allows
tax credits for inputs received by parties to make an onward taxable supply.
These credits are called input tax credits.
15 The input
tax credits, as explained above, ensure that the fundamental character of the
GST as a consumption tax on final consumers is maintained. In the words of the
Minister:
A fundamental principle underlying the
GST/HST is that no tax should be included in the cost of property and services
acquired, imported or brought into a participating province by a registrant to
make taxable supplies...in the course of the commercial activities of the
registrant. To ensure that a property or service consumed, used or supplied in
the course of commercial activities effectively bears no GST/HST, registrants
are generally eligible to claim an input tax credit (ITC) for the GST/HST paid
or payable on such property or service. Consequently, the ITC enables each
registrant to recover the tax incurred in that registrant's stage of the
production and distribution process.
(Canada Revenue
Agency, “GST Memorandum 8.1 — General Eligibility Rules” (May 2005) at
paragraph 1.)
(5) Input tax credits: a further complication
16 A further
complication needs to be mentioned. Some supplies under the Act are not
taxable, because they do not fall under section 165(1) of the Act, or they are
otherwise exempt under the Act.
17 A person
may be a supplier of both taxable and exempt goods or services, but is entitled
to input tax credits only for inputs relating to the taxable supplies.
18 Where a
person is a supplier of both taxable and exempt supplies, a method must be
found to limit the claim for input tax credits to reflect only goods and
services acquired or used for making taxable supplies.
19 The Act
solves this problem by allowing parties (in subsection 141.01(5)) to adopt a
general allocation method.
20 Not all methods are acceptable. Subsection 141.01(5)
provides that the method must be “fair and reasonable” and must “be used
consistently by the person throughout the year.”
[32]
The starting point in this case is subsection
169(1). For Sun Life to claim the ITCs in issue, the space leased from third
party landlords to house the financial centres must have been acquired for
consumption, use or supply in the course of commercial activities of Sun Life. The
commercial activities of Sun Life include any business carried on by Sun Life,
except to the extent to which the business involves the making of exempt
supplies by Sun Life. The definition of “commercial
activity” is worded in such a way that only the portion of any business
that involves the making of exempt supplies is excepted from the definition. The
provision of financial services by Sun Life is an exempt supply unless the
service is included in Part IX of Schedule VI.
[33]
Where Sun Life acquires property or a service
for consumption or use in the course of an endeavour, as it
has done here,
subsection 141.01(2) deems it to have acquired the property or service for
consumption or use in the course of commercial activities of Sun Life to the
extent that the property or service is acquired by Sun Life for the purpose of
making taxable supplies for consideration in the course of that endeavour. On
the other hand, to the extent that the property or service is acquired by Sun
Life (i) for the purpose of making supplies in the course of that endeavour
that are not taxable supplies made for consideration, or (ii) for a purpose
other than the making of supplies in the course of that endeavour, the property
or service is deemed to have been acquired by Sun Life for consumption or use
otherwise than in the course of commercial activities of Sun Life.
[34]
Subsection 141.01(2) focuses on Sun Life’s
purpose in acquiring property or a service. It is up to Sun Life to explain its
purpose in acquiring property or a service, and that explanation must be
neither improbable nor unreasonable (see, generally, Canada v. Placer Dome
Inc., [1997] 1 F.C. 780 (FCA) at paragraph 19).
[35]
Subsection 141.01(5) presupposes that a
particular acquisition has more than one purpose and in such a case requires
the person acquiring the property or service to determine the extent to which
the property or service is acquired for the purpose of making taxable supplies
for consideration or for other purposes. The method used to make this
determination must be fair and reasonable and must be used consistently throughout
the year. Subsection 141.01(5) thus requires that the method chosen by Sun Life
to determine the extent to which a dual-purpose property or service is acquired
by it for the purpose of making taxable supplies for consideration or for other
purposes be fair and reasonable.
[36]
One definition of the word “fair” in the Oxford English Dictionary (Second
Edition) suggests that the approach taken by Sun Life must be equitable, honest
and impartial (see “fair”, adverb, (definition)
4.), which in my view is an appropriate interpretation of the word as used in
subsection 141.01(5). The use of the word “justes”
in the French version of the provision supports this interpretation.
[37]
The definition of the word “reasonable” in the Oxford English Dictionary
(Second Edition) that is in my view most appropriate is A.2.a: “Having sound judgement; sensible, sane. . . . Also, not asking
for too much.” The use of the word “raisonnables”
in the French version of the provision supports this interpretation.
[38]
The use of a reasonableness requirement in tax
legislation has been considered in other contexts. In Bailey v. M.N.R.,
[1989] T.C.J. No. 602 (QL), 89 DTC 416, the Court stated (at page 420):
What
is “reasonable” is not the subjective view of
either the respondent or appellant but the view of an objective observer with a
knowledge of all the pertinent facts: Canadian Propane Gas & Oil Limited
v. M.N.R., 73 DTC 5019 per Cattanach J. at 5028.
[39]
In Maege v. The Queen, 2006 TCC 117, the
Court adopted the general approach to determining reasonableness set out in Tsiantoulas
v. Canada, [1994] T.C.J. No. 984 (QL), where the Court stated at paragraph
11:
Reasonableness is a
question of fact and requires the application of a measure of judgement and
common sense.
[40]
I can see no reason why the general approach to
determining reasonableness in these cases would not also apply to determining
whether a particular method is “fair and reasonable”.
That is to say, what is “fair and reasonable” is a
question of fact and requires the application of a measure of judgment and common
sense. The determination is not based on the subjective view of either the
Appellant or the Respondent but is based on the view of an objective observer
with knowledge of all the pertinent facts. It is also important to recognize
that the tax authorities cannot simply substitute their approach for that of
Sun Life and that there may be more than one method that is fair and reasonable
in the circumstances (see Ville de Magog v. The Queen, supra).
V. Conclusion
[41]
Mr. Coutu testified that one purpose for which
Sun Life acquired the Leased Space was to rent a portion of that space to
Advisers (that is, one purpose for acquiring the Leased Space was to make
taxable supplies for consideration in the course of Sun Life’s business). The
objective facts support this stated purpose, as offices in the Leased Space
were rented by Sun Life to Advisers who in turn used the space to conduct their
own businesses, which included the sale of Financial Products. The evidence is
that Leased Space was also acquired by Sun Life for the purpose of making
exempt supplies in the course of its financial services business (that is, for
the purpose of making supplies in the course of its business that are not
taxable supplies made for consideration).
[42]
The dual purpose for the acquisition of the
Leased Space requires Sun Life to adopt a method for determining the extent to
which the Leased Space was acquired for the purpose of making taxable supplies
for consideration or for other purposes. The method chosen must be fair and
reasonable and must be used consistently throughout the year. The consistency
requirement is not in issue in this case.
[43]
Initially, Sun Life claimed ITCs in respect of
the portion of the Leased Space subleased to the Advisers on the basis of the
rent paid by the Advisers for the subleased space. This resulted in a claim for
ITCs by Sun Life essentially equal to the amount of GST collected from the
Advisers on the rent. According to Mr. Coutu, the rent charged to the Advisers
was grossed up to estimate the effective cost to Sun Life of the subleased
space. Hence, this method did take into account the GST paid by Sun Life on a
portion of the common-use space because the rent charged to the Advisers
reflected a portion of the cost of that space to Sun Life. In other words, by
including a portion of the cost of the common-use space in the calculation, the
original method assumed that a portion of the common-use space was acquired by
Sun Life for the purpose of making taxable supplies for consideration in the
course of its business.
[44]
The original method did not, however, take into
account the GST paid by Sun Life on the vacant space that Sun Life says was
reserved for the use of Advisers, nor did it take into account the GST paid by
Sun Life on the portion of the common-use space that might be attributed to the
use of that vacant space.
[45]
Sun Life replaced this simple method for
determining its ITCs with a more complicated method based on the total amount
of Leased Space used by, or reserved for, Advisers and a gross-up that Sun Life
says attributes an appropriate percentage of the common-use space to that
space. The question is whether the new method is fair and reasonable.
[46]
It is of note that both methods attribute to a
portion of the common-use space the purpose of making taxable supplies for
consideration in the course of Sun Life’s business. The original method
achieved this result because it was based on the rent charged to the Advisers
for the subleased space, which in turn was set at a level that was intended to
recoup “significantly all” of the effective cost of that space to Sun Life. The
effective cost included a portion of the cost of the common-use space. The new
method, on the other hand, used measurements and assumptions as to use in order
to determine the purpose of acquiring the common-use space. The evidence was
that the assumptions were conservative and did not overstate the purpose for
acquiring the common-use space. The Respondent did not challenge the accuracy
of the measurements used under the new method.
[47]
The Brossard financial centre example lease and sublease
suggest that the gross-up for common-use space implicit in the rent charged to
the Advisers at that financial centre was approximately 1.391 (that is,
$32/$23). The gross-up for the same space under the new approach was 1.394
(that is, 7,299 sq ft/5,236 sq ft) in 2004. Although Brossard is only one
example, the difference is slight, so it is difficult to see how the inclusion
of common-use space under the new method is not fair and reasonable if it was
fair and reasonable under the original method. Both methods appear to yield
ITCs commensurate with the GST on the true cost to Sun Life of the Leased Space
that was sublet to Advisers.
[48]
The Respondent argued, however, that the explicit
allocation of the common-use space to the taxable supply of space to the
Advisers that occurs under the new method fails to recognize that the Advisers
are using the common-use space not because they are subtenants but because they
are selling Financial Products on behalf of Sun Life. In my view, this argument
fails to recognize that the Advisers are independent contractors and that their
use of the subleased space is in furtherance of their own business objectives,
which include the sale of products other than the Financial Products.
[49]
I also note that the Advisers cannot use the subleased
space without also using the common-use space. From a practical point of view,
it seems somewhat obvious that Sun Life would need to rent common-use space in
order to be able to sublet office space to the Advisers, and therefore, attributing
that purpose to a portion of the common-use space accords with common sense.
The fact that the rent charged to the Advisers reflects the cost of essentially
that same portion of the common-use space further supports this observation.
[50]
The Respondent also argued that Sun Life’s
efforts were focused not on the subleasing of the space but on the recruitment
of Advisers, which was admitted by Mr. Coutu. I have no doubt that the
availability of space to rent would have aided the recruitment of Advisers. However,
recruitment was a benefit derived from having space available to rent to
Advisers and was not the direct purpose of the available space. In that regard,
the situation is similar to that in London Life Insurance Co. v. The Queen,
266 N.R. 130 (FCA), where the Court distinguished between the direct purpose
for the acquisition of property (supplying leasehold improvements to the
landlord) and the indirect (or ultimate) purpose for the acquisition of
property (leasing improved premises for a financial services business) and held
that the direct purpose governed London Life’s claim for ITCs. In this case,
the direct purpose of the available space was to rent the space to Advisers and
the indirect (or ultimate) purpose of having space available was to aid
recruitment and to facilitate the sale of Financial Products.
[51]
The major difference between the original method
used by Sun Life and the new method is that the new method attributes the
purpose of making taxable supplies for consideration to the vacant space
reserved for the Advisers as well as to the portion of the common-use space
attributable to that vacant space. The attribution of common-use space to the
vacant space is not materially different in result from the attribution of common-use
space to the subleased space under the original method. Hence, the only real
distinction between the original method and the new method is the inclusion of
the vacant space itself.
[52]
I accept Mr. Coutu’s uncontradicted testimony
that the vacant space was reserved for the use of Advisers to accommodate the
growth of the financial centres. In my view, attributing the purpose of making
taxable supplies for consideration to the vacant space is fair and reasonable
in the circumstances of this case because it accurately reflects Sun Life’s
purpose with respect to the direct use of that vacant space. The attribution of
common-use space to that vacant space in accordance with the new methodology is
fair and reasonable for the reasons already stated in respect of the subleased
space.
[53]
The Respondent did suggest that the vacant space
could be used for a different purpose, such as to house an employee of Sun
Life. However, there was no evidence that this in fact occurred during 2004,
2005 or 2006. The evidence was that, if a change in use occurred, the
particular vacant space (and its associated common-use space) would be removed
from the pool of space reserved for the Advisers such that ITCs would no longer
be claimed in respect of that space.
[54]
The Respondent also pointed to the amount of
vacant space as supportive of her position. However, the fact that there was a
significant amount of vacant space reserved for the use of Advisers does not
alter Sun Life’s purpose in acquiring that space. The amount of vacant space
that is required for rental to Advisers is a business judgment that is best
left to Sun Life absent a sham or window dressing or similar vitiating
circumstances, none of which are present here.
[55]
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is allowed,
with costs to the Appellant, and the reassessment made for the reporting period
from January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2006 is referred back to the
Minister of National Revenue for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis
that Sun Life is entitled to additional ITCs of $1,279,180.49.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 16th day of February 2015.
“J.R. Owen”