SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
United
Parcel Service Canada Ltd.
Appellant
-and-
Her
Majesty The Queen
Respondent
Coram: McLachlin
C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and
Cromwell JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 38)
|
Rothstein J.
(McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and
Cromwell JJ. concurring)
|
______________________________
United Parcel Service Canada Ltd. v. Canada, 2009 SCC 20,
[2009] 1 S.C.R. 657
United Parcel Service Canada Ltd. Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: United Parcel Service Canada Ltd. v.
Canada
Neutral citation: 2009 SCC 20.
File No.: 32546.
2009: January 15; 2009: April 23.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps,
Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of
appeal
Taxation — Goods and Services Tax — Rebate of payment
made in error — Overpayments made by courier acting as licensed customs
broker — Courier crediting consignees for overpayments and deducting overpayments
from its own GST liability as supplier of goods and services — Deductions
disallowed — Whether courier entitled to rebate of overpayments — Excise Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E‑15, ss. 215.1 , 216(6) , 225(1) , 261(1) , (2) ,
(3) , 296(2.1) .
UPS, in its capacity as a licensed customs broker,
overpaid $2,937,123 in GST from February 1, 1996 to
December 31, 1997. The overpayments were due to errors attributable
either to UPS or to its customers. They were not collected by UPS from its
customers. Instead, UPS reported the overpayments in its monthly GST returns
by deducting the amount of the overpayments from its own GST liability as a
supplier of goods and services. The Minister of National Revenue reassessed
UPS for the period of February 1, 1996 until December 31, 1997
and disallowed the deductions. UPS successfully appealed to the Tax Court.
The Federal Court of Appeal overturned the Tax Court’s decision and dismissed
UPS’s appeal from the Minister’s reassessment.
Held: The appeal should
be allowed.
UPS was entitled to a rebate of the overpayment. While
UPS was not the person liable for the GST, it was the person that paid an
amount on account of GST within the meaning of s. 261(1) of the Excise
Tax Act . That provision does not require an inquiry into liability for
payment. The consignees of UPS may well have the liability to pay the GST on
the imported goods, but s. 261(1) is worded broadly and it would not be in
accordance with the ordinary and grammatical meaning of the provision to read
it in such a way as to preclude persons who have actually paid or overpaid GST
in error from obtaining a rebate. [14] [16-17] [20]
Section 261(2) (c) of the Excise Tax Act
does not preclude payment of rebates under s. 261(1) just because a rebate
could have been claimed under s. 215.1(1) or 216(6) . Section 261(2) (c)
was intended to avoid the double payment of rebates and only says that a rebate
under s. 261(1) is not to be paid where a rebate is payable under
s. 215.1 or 216(6) . No rebate is payable under those provisions because
UPS did not seek a rebate under either of them. Further, since no application
for a rebate was made under s. 215.1(1) , s. 216(6) or within the two‑year
time limit provided by s. 261(3) , s. 261(1) and s. 296(2.1) were applicable.
Section 296(2.1) (c) expressly relieves against the limitation
period in s. 261(3) . The Minister has agreed that $2,900,858 (after
adjustment) is an overpayment and was not payable, and that UPS did not collect
the overpayment from its customers. By necessary implication, these
concessions must mean that had the appropriate procedures been followed, the
rebate would have been allowable. In these circumstances, the Minister was
obliged to apply the rebate to the net tax assessed against UPS pursuant to
s. 261(1) and s. 296(2.1) . [27‑28] [31‑33]
Lastly, the intermingling of rebates under
s. 261(1) for overpaid GST on imported goods and for tax collected and
remittable by UPS under Division II as a remitting supplier is authorized by
the Excise Tax Act itself. The definition of “net tax” in
s. 225(1) provides that “an amount that may be deducted by the person
under this Part” (namely, Part IX of the Act which includes both
Division II “Goods and Services Tax” and Division III “Tax on
Importation of Goods”) may be set off against tax collected by a person as a
remitting supplier under Division II. Rebates under s. 261(1) are
amounts that may be deducted under Division III in Part IX of the Excise
Tax Act . [35]
Cases Cited
Referred to: West
Windsor Urgent Care Centre Inc. v. R., 2005 TCC 405, [2005] G.S.T.C. 179,
aff’d 2008 FCA 11, [2008] G.S.T.C. 5.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 58(5) , (6) , 60 to 65 .
Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E‑15, ss. 215.1(1) , (2) , 216(2) ,
(6) , 225(1) , 261(1) , (2) , (3) , 296(2.1) , Part IX.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(Pelletier, Nadon and Sexton JJ.A.), 2008 FCA 48, 372 N.R. 347, [2008] G.S.T.C.
34, 2008 G.T.C. 1182, [2008] F.C.J. No. 178 (QL), 2008 CarswellNat 248,
reversing a judgment of Bowman C.J.T.C., 2006 TCC 450, [2006] G.S.T.C. 146,
2007 G.T.C. 660, [2006] T.C.J. No. 516 (QL), 2006 CarswellNat 3980.
Appeal allowed.
Jeff W. Galway
and David E. Spiro, for the appellant.
Wendy Burnham, David
Jacyk and Bonnie F. Moon, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Rothstein J. —
I. Overview
[1]
From February 1, 1996 to December 31, 1997, United Parcel Service Canada
Ltd. (“UPS”), in its capacity as a licensed customs broker, overpaid $2,937,123
in GST to the Minister of National Revenue on goods brought into Canada on
behalf of persons to whom it had delivered shipments from outside of Canada.
UPS reported the overpayments in its monthly GST returns by deducting the
amount of the overpayments from its own GST liability as a supplier of goods
and services. On reassessment, in March 2000, the Minister disallowed these
deductions. UPS was out of pocket for the overpayments and did not seek
reimbursement from its customers. The issue is whether, in the circumstances
of this case, UPS is entitled to a rebate of the overpayments. In my opinion,
UPS is entitled to the rebate and I would allow the appeal.
II. Facts
[2]
UPS provides delivery services to among others: (i) persons outside of
Canada who request a shipment be picked up outside of Canada and delivered to
an address within Canada (“shippers”) and (ii) persons in Canada who have
received delivery of a shipment that is located outside of Canada at an address
that is within Canada (“consignees”). The term “customers” includes both
shippers and consignees of delivered goods.
[3]
In carrying on its business as a courier, UPS acts as a licenced customs
broker for goods entering Canada from a foreign country. With some regular
consignees, UPS acted as a broker under the authority of a general agency
agreement with these consignees. With other consignees, UPS acted as a broker
through a one-time power of attorney from these consignees. Acting as a
broker, UPS was authorized to take all steps necessary to clear Canadian
customs and to pay or remit duties and taxes on behalf of its customers. Only
the overpayment of GST is at issue in this appeal.
[4]
It was not uncommon for there to be errors that resulted in the
overpayment of GST. According to the statement of agreed facts, there were
many reasons for these overpayments, including wrong value for duty, returned
shipments, Canadian goods returning to Canada, GST free goods and others. The
errors were attributable either to UPS or to its customers.
[5]
Until late 1996, UPS used two different methods to recover overpaid GST.
Where the consignee was not a GST registrant, UPS would credit the consignee’s
account for the amount of the overpayment after the error was discovered so
that, as between UPS and the consignee, the consignee was only charged the
correct GST. UPS would then deduct the same amount against its own GST
liability as a supplier of goods and services.
[6]
When there was an error pertaining to a consignee who was a GST
registrant, UPS would credit the consignee’s account with the amount of the
overpayment as it did for consignees who were not GST registrants. However,
instead of deducting the amount of the overpayment from its own GST liability,
UPS would file documentation with the Minister to recover the amount of the
overpayment. The time between the date the rebate application was made and the
time when UPS would receive the rebate varied from 30 days to one year.
[7]
Commencing in late December 1996, UPS began treating GST registrants and
non-registrants alike. When an overpayment was discovered, UPS credited the
consignee’s account for the amount of the overpayment so that all consignees
would be charged only the correct amount of GST. In all cases, UPS would then
deduct the overpayment of GST from its own GST liability. Under this
procedure, UPS no longer filed GST rebate claims on behalf of any of the
consignees. It simply deducted all of the overpayments from its own GST
liability in its monthly GST returns.
[8]
During the period of February 1, 1996 to December 31, 1997, the GST paid
in error amounted to $2,937,123.
III. Decisions Below
[9]
The Minister assessed UPS for the period of February 1, 1996 until
December 31, 1997 and disallowed the amount of $2,937,123 which UPS had
deducted from its own GST liability. By Notice of Decision, the Minister
allowed an adjustment of $36,265, leaving a reassessed balance of $2,900,858.
In addition, the Minister assessed interest of $456,606.20 and a penalty of
$632,229.77.
[10]
UPS appealed to the Tax Court. Chief Justice Bowman allowed the appeal
(2006 TCC 450, [2006] G.S.T.C. 146). The Federal Court of Appeal overturned
Chief Justice Bowman’s decision and dismissed UPS’s appeal from the Minister’s
reassessment (2008 FCA 48, [2008] G.S.T.C. 34).
IV. Issue
[11]
The issue is whether UPS is entitled to a rebate of $2,900,858 for the
period February 1, 1996 to December 31, 1997.
V. Analysis
[12]
The Statement of Agreed Facts states in its preamble and at para. 27:
The parties
also agree that the word “overpayment” as used below [in the statement of
agreed facts] reflects an amount of GST that would not have been payable had
the errors described in paragraph 19 below [in the statement of agreed facts]
not been made. The Respondent does not agree that the word “overpayment” as
used below implies any right to the repayment of that amount to UPS or to
anyone else.
. . .
27. The amount of the GST overpayments for the 1996/1997 period
that was offset against the amount of GST reported by UPS as shown on line 105
of its GST return was $2,937,120.00 [after adjustment $2,900,858]. UPS did not
collect those overpayments as GST from its customers.
[13]
From these agreed facts, four conclusions may be drawn. First, there
were overpayments of GST in the 1996-1997 period amounting to $2,937,123.
Second, it was UPS that paid the overpayments to the Minister. Third, UPS did
not collect these overpayments of GST from its customers and it was “out of
pocket” for these overpayments. And fourth, the Minister did not agree that
the word “overpayment” implied any right of repayment. However, this does not
detract from the Minister’s factual concession that there was an overpayment.
In a statement of agreed facts, it is the facts that are agreed upon, not the
legal consequences of those agreed facts.
[14]
The first question, then, is whether UPS was entitled to a rebate of the
overpayment of $2,900,858 (after adjustment by the Minister) under the
provisions of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15 . Section 261(1)
of the Excise Tax Act provides that:
261. (1)
Where a person has paid an amount
(a) as
or on account of, or
(b)
that was taken into account as,
tax, net tax,
penalty, interest or other obligation under this Part in circumstances where
the amount was not payable or remittable by the person, whether the amount was
paid by mistake or otherwise, the Minister shall, subject to subsections (2)
and (3), pay a rebate of that amount to the person.
[15]
On its face, subject to subss. (2) and (3), s. 261(1) would appear to
support UPS’s claim that it was entitled to a rebate of the GST overpayment.
UPS paid an amount on account of GST on imported goods in circumstances where
the amount was not payable or remittable because it was an overpayment. The
overpayment resulted from mistakes by UPS and its customers. In these
circumstances, s. 261(1) provides that the Minister shall pay a rebate of the
amount of the overpayment.
[16]
However, the Minister says that s. 261(1) cannot be interpreted in a
contextual vacuum. The Minister’s first argument is that UPS was not the
person who paid the amount on account of GST. He says UPS as customs broker
acted as an agent for the consignees and that it was the consignees who were
liable to pay the GST and not UPS. The Minister says that, for the purposes of
s. 261(1) , the person who “has paid an amount” is the person who has the legal
liability to pay, not the person who simply transmitted the money to the
Minister.
[17]
I cannot agree. This argument would impose an inquiry into liability
for payment instead of actual payment where no such inquiry is mandated by the
statute. It may well be that it was the consignees of UPS who had the
liability to pay the GST on the imported goods. But that does not detract from
the fact that in actuality it was UPS — and UPS alone — who paid and was out of
pocket for the GST. At first blush, the words “or other obligation” in
s. 261(1) might be thought to import the notion of liability to pay. However,
the words “other obligation” must be read in the context of the provision as a
whole. Section 261(1) applies where a person pays an amount as or on account
of “tax, net tax, penalty, [or] interest”. These terms refer to categories of
amounts that are to be paid as or on account of obligations established by the Excise
Tax Act . In this context, “other obligation” simply refers to an
obligation under Part IX of the Excise Tax Act that is not specifically
enumerated in s. 261(1) . Actual liability is not relevant in this context
since there is no liability to pay tax that was paid in error. If the
Minister’s argument were correct, a stranger who mistakenly paid GST on goods
imported by someone else (perhaps because the names of two importers were
similar) could not obtain a rebate. It cannot have been the intention of
Parliament that persons who were not liable for GST but paid GST in error could
not obtain a rebate.
[18]
The Minister relies on West Windsor Urgent Care Centre Inc. v. R.,
2005 TCC 405, [2005] G.S.T.C. 179, aff’d 2008 FCA 11, [2008] G.S.T.C. 5, to
argue that the only person entitled to a rebate is the person who was liable to
pay the GST. West Windsor does not stand for that proposition. Rather,
it stands for the proposition that the person who in fact paid and was out of
pocket for the GST is the person that can claim a rebate under s. 261(1) .
[19]
In West Windsor, Hershfield J. found that the appellant — a
remitting supplier who sought a rebate under s. 261(1) — had collected GST and
remitted it to the Minister, but had not in fact paid it. The appellant was a
clinic that supplied infrastructure to physicians who in turn provided medical
services paid by their patients or, more commonly, by insurers such as the Ontario
Health Insurance Plan. The physicians, as recipients of the clinic’s services,
paid a fee to the clinic including GST and the clinic remitted these GST
payments to the Minister. Hershfield J. found that it was the physicians, not
the clinic, who in fact paid the GST (West Windsor, at para. 49). The
clinic therefore lacked standing to seek a rebate under s. 261(1) since it had
simply collected and remitted the GST. In this case, there is no doubt that it
was UPS and UPS only who in fact overpaid the GST in error. The overpayments
were not collected by UPS from its customers.
[20]
Section 261(1) is worded broadly. There is no limitation of the kind
argued for by the Minister in the language of the provision. Nothing in the
context of s. 261(1) supports such a limitation, nor has the Minister pointed
to any other provision of the Excise Tax Act or Customs Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), to support such a limitation. It would not be
in accordance with the ordinary and grammatical meaning of the provision to
read s. 261(1) in such a way as to preclude persons who have paid or overpaid
GST in error from obtaining a rebate from the Minister.
[21]
I would therefore conclude that UPS was the person that paid an amount
on account of GST within the meaning of s. 261(1) of the Excise Tax Act .
[22]
The Minister’s second argument is that, in order to invoke s. 261(1) ,
the amount paid must be an amount that was “not payable”. The Minister says
that until a designated customs officer has revised the amount of GST owing as
the result of a reappraisal of the value of the goods or a redetermination of
their tax status, the amount reported by UPS, even if incorrect, is deemed to
be correct and is not subject to review except through the processes provided for
in the Customs Act (s. 58(5) and (6) ) and the Excise Tax Act (s.
216(2) and (6) ).
[23]
Putting aside for a moment the issue of the procedure to obtain a rebate
under the Excise Tax Act and Customs Act , which I deal with as a
third argument by the Minister, I would only observe at this point that the
Minister’s position is contradicted by the facts in the record. The Minister
has agreed that the sum of $2,900,858 constituted overpayment of GST and that
this amount would not have been payable had errors not been made. The facts
agreed to by the Minister come squarely within s. 261(1) (subject to subss. (2)
and (3)). UPS paid $2,900,858 which was not payable due to mistakes. In these
circumstances, s. 261(1) requires the Minister to rebate that amount to UPS.
[24]
I turn to the Minister’s third argument which is that UPS did not follow
the required procedure for obtaining a rebate and therefore was not entitled to
a rebate under s. 261(1) . Payment of a rebate under s. 261(1) is “subject to
subsections (2) and (3)”. Under s. 261(2)(c), no rebate is to be paid
under s. 261(1) to the extent it is payable under s. 215.1(1) or (2) or s.
216(6) . Section 261(2)(c) provides that:
261. .
. .
(2) A rebate in respect of an amount shall not be paid under subsection
(1) to a person to the extent that
.
. .
(c) a
rebate of the amount is payable under subsection 215.1(1) or (2) or 216(6) . .
. .
[25]
Under s. 261(3) an application for rebate must be made within two years
after the day the overpayment was made. Section 261(3) provides:
261. .
. .
(3) A rebate in respect of an amount shall not be paid
under subsection (1) to a person unless the person files an application for the
rebate within two years after the day the amount was paid or remitted by the
person.
[26]
The Minister says s. 215.1(1) and s. 216(6) could have applied had the
importers made a claim under these provisions. He submits that a rebate would
have been payable under s. 216(6) in a number of categories (e.g. incorrect
value for duty, incorrect tariff classification, non-taxable goods, goods
returned to Canada) or possibly under s. 215.1(1) (e.g. goods imported on
consignment, approval, sale or return basis or other similar terms) had UPS
followed the procedures provided in ss. 60 to 65 of the Customs Act or
s. 215.1 of the Excise Tax Act . He says a reappraisal or a
redetermination would have been conducted by a designated customs officer had
an application for a reappraisal or a redetermination been made by the importer
within the time specified. The Minister further submits that since a
reappraisal or a redetermination of the goods was available under the regime
prescribed in the Customs Act , recourse for seeking a rebate by the
importer was through s. 215.1(1) and s. 216(6) , not s. 261(1) and that UPS did
not follow the prescribed procedure to obtain rebates under either s. 215.1(1)
or s. 216(6) .
[27]
Section 261(2)(c) provides that a rebate shall not be paid under
s. 261(1) where a rebate “is payable under subsection 215.1(1) . . . or
216(6)”. The Minister argues that s. 261(2)(c) prevents a rebate claim
from being filed under s. 261 where a rebate is available under s.
215.1(1) or under s. 216(6) . However, s. 261(2)(c) does not say that a
rebate is not to be paid under s. 261(1) where a rebate is available through
another enumerated rebate provision. Rather, s. 261(2)(c) says that a
rebate under s. 261(1) is not to be paid where a rebate “is payable under
subsection 215.1(1) or (2) or s. 216(6) ”. No rebate is payable under
those provisions because UPS did not seek a rebate under either of them.
[28]
I do not read s. 261(1) or 261(2) (c) as precluding payment of
rebates under s. 261(1) just because a rebate could have been claimed under s.
215.1(1) or 216(6) . In my view, s. 261(2)(c) was intended to avoid the
double payment of rebates. Obviously no one may claim the same rebate under
both s. 215.1(1) or 216(6) and s. 261(1) . But s. 261(2)(c) does not say
that the only way in which a rebate may be obtained is under s. 215.1(1) or
216(6) . It only says that no rebate is to be paid under s. 261(1) “to the
extent that . . . (c) a rebate of the amount is payable under subsection
215.1(1) or (2) or 216(6) ”. It seems to me to follow that the Minister is
required to pay a rebate under s. 261(1) if no rebate is payable under s.
215.1(1) or (2) or s. 216(6) and the Minister agrees that a person has paid or
overpaid an amount on account of GST that was not payable by reason of mistake.
[29]
Further, s. 296(2.1) provides that in the assessment process, if the
Minister determines that a rebate would have been payable had it been claimed
in an application, that it was not so claimed and that the period for claiming
the rebate has expired, the Minister shall, unless otherwise requested, apply
the rebate against the net tax of the person. Section 296(2.1) provides:
296. .
. .
(2.1) Where, in assessing the net tax of a person for a reporting
period of the person or an amount (in this subsection referred to as the
“overdue amount”) that became payable by a person under this Part, the Minister
determines that
(a) an
amount (in this subsection referred to as the “allowable rebate”) would have
been payable to the person as a rebate if it had been claimed in an application
under this Part filed on the particular day that is
(i) if the
assessment is in respect of net tax for the reporting period, the day on or
before which the return under Division V for the period was required to be
filed, or
(ii) if the
assessment is in respect of an overdue amount, the day on which the overdue
amount became payable by the person,
and, where
the rebate is in respect of an amount that is being assessed, if the person had
paid or remitted that amount,
(b)
the allowable rebate was not claimed by the person in an application filed
before the day notice of the assessment is sent to the person, and
(c)
the allowable rebate would be payable to the person if it were claimed in an
application under this Part filed on the day notice of the assessment is sent
to the person or would be disallowed if it were claimed in that application
only because the period for claiming the allowable rebate expired before that
day,
the Minister shall apply all or part of the allowable rebate against that
net tax or overdue amount as if the person had, on the particular day, paid or
remitted the amount so applied on account of that net tax or overdue amount.
[30]
As I read s. 296(2.1), even if no application for a rebate was made
within the applicable limitation period, the rebate shall be applied by the
Minister against the net tax owed by the taxpayer in the reassessment process
if the Minister determines that a rebate would have been payable had it been
claimed. The section refers to “allowable rebate”. Allowable rebate must mean
a rebate that would have been allowable had the applicable procedure been
followed. In other words, where these procedures have not been followed, it is
not fatal to the rebate claim.
[31]
In the circumstances of this case, s. 215.1(1) and s. 216(6) were not
applicable because no application was made under s. 215.1(1) and no reappraisal
or redetermination by a Customs officer was made under s. 216(6) . Further, no
application was filed by UPS within the time limit provided by s. 261(3).
[32]
Because no application was made under s. 215.1(1) , s. 216(6) or within
the time limit provided by s. 261(3) , s. 261(1) and s. 296(2.1) were
applicable. Section 296(2.1)(c) expressly relieves against the time
limit of two years provided for in s. 261(3).
[33]
The Minister has agreed that $2,900,858 is an overpayment and was not
payable. The Minister has also agreed that UPS did not collect the overpayment
from its customers. By necessary implication, these concessions must mean that
had the appropriate procedures been followed, the rebate would have been
allowable. In these circumstances, the Minister was obliged to apply the
rebate to the net tax assessed against UPS pursuant to s. 261(1) and s.
296(2.1) .
[34]
In this case, the fact and the amount of the overpayment of GST by UPS
were conceded by the Minister in the Statement of Agreed Facts. In another
case, a party that has been reassessed and who wishes to rely on s. 261(1) and
s. 296(2.1) may have to prove the fact and the amount of overpayment by leading
evidence. Although one might question why the Excise Tax Act would
permit a party to lead evidence to establish that there was an allowable rebate
for the purposes of s. 261(1) and s. 296(2.1) instead of following other
procedures provided for in the Excise Tax Act or the Customs Act ,
I am compelled to reach this conclusion based on the text and context of s.
261(1) and s. 296(2.1) .
[35]
The Minister further submits that there is “no statutory basis for
intermingling Division II tax collected in respect of the appellant’s own
supplies of goods and services and deemed held in trust for Her Majesty, with
Division III tax paid by importers on their importation of goods”. However,
this “intermingling” is provided for by the terms of the Excise Tax Act itself.
The definition of “net tax” in s. 225(1) provides that “an amount that may be
deducted by the person under this Part” — namely Part IX of the Excise Tax
Act (which includes both Division II “Goods and Services Tax” and Division
III “Tax on Importation of Goods”) — may be set off against tax collected by a
person as a remitting supplier under Division II. Rebates under s. 261(1) are
amounts that may be deducted under Division III in Part IX of the Excise Tax
Act . In other words, the “intermingling” of rebates under s. 261(1) for
overpaid GST on imported goods and tax collected and remittable by UPS as a
remitting supplier is authorized by the Excise Tax Act itself.
[36]
One of the Minister’s concerns is that any of UPS’s customers could have
claimed a rebate or input tax credit for the same rebate claim made by UPS and
that there would be no way of knowing this without undertaking an audit of each
and every customer. He says that any agreement between UPS and its customers
not to claim a rebate is simply a private agreement that cannot override
statutory provisions. I agree with the Minister that a private agreement
cannot override statutory provisions. But that is not the point. The Minister
is essentially arguing that a customer of UPS could fraudulently claim a rebate
or an input tax credit knowing that UPS had already made a claim for the same
rebate. A person who fraudulently sought a rebate of a GST overpayment or an
input tax credit would be subject to criminal sanctions. With respect, I do
not think it lies in the mouth of the Minister to raise such an argument on the
facts of this case where he has agreed that there has been an overpayment and
where his position is that he is entitled to retain overpaid GST. In any
event, if this is a matter of concern to the Minister, he may ask Parliament to
amend the Excise Tax Act to address it.
[37]
Where the Minister has admitted the underlying facts for a s. 261(1)
rebate and where subss. (2) and (3) of s. 261 were not applicable, the
conclusion must be that there was an allowable rebate within the meaning of s.
261(1) and s. 296(2.1) and that the rebate should be applied to reduce the net
tax otherwise payable. The Minister should have allowed the amount of the
rebate of $2,900,858 to reduce the GST otherwise remittable by UPS.
VI. Conclusion
[38]
I would allow the appeal, set aside the decision of the Federal Court of
Appeal, restore the decision of the Tax Court and disallow the Minister’s
reassessment in its entirety. UPS is entitled to its costs in this Court and
the courts below.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Blake, Cassels & Graydon,
Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: Department of Justice,
Ottawa.