Brulé,
T.C.C.J.:—The
appellant
was
assessed
penalties
with
respect
to
his
1988
taxation
year
and
hereby
appeals
the
imposition
of
such
penalties.
Facts
In
1987,
the
appellant
purchased
some
farm
property
for
an
amount
of
$166,824.
As
a
part
of
the
purchase
price,
the
appellant
contracted
to
build
a
residence
for
the
vendor
for
an
agreed
value
of
$76,649.
This
latter
sum
was
not
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
reported
in
the
1987
taxation
year,
yet
costs
associated
with
the
building
of
the
house
were
deducted.
When
the
omission
was
discovered,
the
appellant
paid
the
necessary
tax.
The
appellant
did
not
deny
the
omission
to
income,
co-operated
all
along
with
the
authorities,
but
denied
there
was
any
gross
negligence
on
his
part.
As
in
the
previous
year,
he
delivered
all
his
books
and
records
to
his
accountant
approximately
one
month
before
the
April
filing
deadline.
The
accountant,
William
J.
McEachern,
was
ill
at
the
time
and
retained
another
person
to
prepare
the
return.
This
latter
person
did
not
fully
understand
the
records,
did
not
ask
questions,
and
as
a
result
the
omission
occurred.
This
was
discovered
before
the
1988
return
was
assessed
when
Revenue
Canada
were
conducting
an
audit
of
the
appellant’s
1986
and
1987
returns.
At
that
time
the
auditor
said
there
did
not
appear
to
be
any
fraud
or
misrepresentation,
although
he
made
the
assumption
that
information
given
to
the
accountant
at
the
last
minute,
i.e.,
within
a
week
of
the
filing
deadline,
was
a
part
of
gross
negligence.
This
was
refuted
when
it
was
shown
that
all
books
and
records
were
delivered
to
the
accountant
one
month
before
the
deadline.
Subsequently
Revenue
Canada
officials
decided
to
levy
a
penalty
claiming
gross
negligence
on
the
part
of
the
appellant
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
Analysis
The
relevant
section
of
the
Act
is
as
follows:
163(2)
False
statements
or
omissions.
Every
person
who,
knowingly,
or
under
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
in
the
carrying
out
of
any
duty
or
obligation
imposed
by
or
under
this
Act,
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
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
is
liable
to
a
penalty
of.
.
.
.
Counsel
for
both
parties
presented
certain
cases
to
the
Court
for
their
positions
in
this
appeal.
In
the
case
of
Morin
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
2334,
92
D.T.C.
1241,
counsel
for
the
Minister
referred
to
the
following
passage
at
page
2336
(D.T.C
1243)
wherein
Couture,
C.T.C.C.J.
said:
The
mere
fact
that
he
retained
the
services
of
a
chartered
accountant
does
not
exempt
the
taxpayer
from
his
obligation
to
ensure
the
accuracy
of
his
tax
returns.
Furthermore,
an
accountant's
work
cannot
be
more
complete
or
accurate
than
the
figures
and
documentation
the
taxpayer
is
prepared
to
provide
to
him.
The
taxpayer's
appeal
was
dismissed
in
that
case
but
here
the
situation
was
different.
The
appellant
is
not
an
astute
businessman,
nor
well
informed,
as
was
Morin,
supra,
nor
did
the
accountant
lack
any
information,
having
been
given
all
books
and
records.
It
was
just
not
properly
interpreted.
Both
counsel
referred
to
the
case
of
Venne
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
C.T.C.
223,
84
D.T.C.
6247
(F.C.T.D.).
In
that
case
the
taxpayer
won
an
appeal
against
imposed
penalties.
Some
statements
by
Strayer,
J.
of
the
Federal
Court
are
worth
setting
out.
At
page
234
(D.T.C.
6256),
he
said:
With
respect
to
the
possibility
of
gross
negligence,
I
have
with
some
difficulty
come
to
the
conclusion
that
this
has
not
been
established
either.
"Cross
negligence"
must
be
taken
to
involve
greater
neglect
than
simply
a
failure
to
use
reasonable
care.
It
must
involve
a
high
degree
of
negligence
tantamount
to
intentional
acting,
an
indifference
as
to
whether
the
law
is
complied
with
or
not.
I
do
not
find
that
high
degree
of
negligence
in
connection
with
the
misstatements
of
business
income.
To
be
sure,
the
plaintiff
did
not
exercise
the
care
of
a
reasonable
man
and,
as
I
have
noted
earlier,
should
have
at
least
reviewed
his
tax
returns
before
signing
them.
A
reasonable
man
in
doing
so,
having
regard
to
other
information
available
to
him,
would
have
been
led
to
believe
that
something
was
amiss
and
would
have
pursued
the
matter
further
with
his
bookkeeper.
With
respect
to
business
income,
I
can
more
readily
recognize
that
effective
surveillance
would
have
been
difficult
for
the
plaintiff
and
would
have
involved
him
making
and
reviewing
numerous
computations
of
revenues,
expenditures,
assets
and
liabilities.
In
other
words
the
errors
in
business
income,
small
in
some
years
but
very
substantial
in
others,
would
not
necessarily
have
"sprung
out"
at
a
person
of
the
taxpayer's
background
and
abilities.
While
it
may
have
been
naive
for
nim
to
trust
his
bookkeeper
as
knowing
more
about
such
matters
than
he
did,
I
do
not
think
it
was
gross
negligence
for
him
to
fail
to
challenge
the
bookkeeper
with
respect
to
the
business
computations.
However
egregious
the
errors
committed
by
the
bookkeeper
in
this
respect,
it
is
quite
conceivable
that
they
were
not
in
fact
noticed
by
the
plaintiff
and
his
neglect
in
not
noticing
them
fell
short
of
constituting
gross
negligence.
The
above
could
well
apply
to
the
present
case
except
that
here
it
was
the
accountant
who
prepared
the
tax
return
involved
rather
than
a
company
bookkeeper.
In
the
case
of
Udell
v.
M.N.R.,
[1969]
C.T.C.
704,
70
D.T.C.6019,
penalties
were
considered
under
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act,
now
subsection
163(2).
The
appellant
was
a
farmer
in
that
case
but
the
principles
are
the
same
as
here.
Cattanach,
J.,
of
the
Exchequer
Court
set
out
at
page
711
(D.T.C.
6024):
The
argument
stressed
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
as
to
why
the
penalties
assessed
by
the
Minister
are
not
properly
assessable
under
subsection
56(2)
was,
as
I
understood
it,
that
the
circumstances
under
which
the
errors
and
omissions
were
made
in
the
appellant's
tax
returns,
do
not
amount
to
gross
negligence”
on
the
part
of
the
appellant.
He
pointed
out
specifically
that
all
of
the
appellant's
farm
transactions
were
carefully
and
scrupulously
recorded
in
his
farm
account
book.
No
attempt
was
made
at
any
time
to
deny
or
hide
any
of
such
transactions.
The
complete
and
accurate
record
of
the
appellant's
transactions
were
placed
by
him
in
the
hands
of
a
qualified
professional
accountant
with
instructions
to
prepare
his
income
tax
returns.
The
appellant
considered
that
he
did
not
possess
the
qualifications
and
knowledge
to
reconcile
the
figures
in
his
farm
account
book
with
those
required
to
be
included
in
the
income
tax
returns.
He
considered
that
to
be
the
job
of
an
accountant,
not
a
farmer.
He,
therefore,
employed
an
accountant
for
that
purpose.
This
very
action
by
the
appellant,
it
was
argued,
negatived
any
implication
of
gross
negligence
on
his
part.
It
was
conceded
by
counsel
for
both
parties
that
the
errors
and
omissions
in
the
appellant's
tax
returns
were
made
by
the
accountant
and
that
the
accountant
was
grossly
negligent
in
doing
so.
I
readily
agree
with
this
concession.
And
at
pages
712-13
(D.T.C.
6025-26):
Accordingly
there
remains
the
question
of
whether
or
not
subsection
56(2)
contemplates
that
the
gross
negligence
of
the
appellant's
agent,
the
professional
accountant,
can
be
attributed
to
the
appellant.
Each
of
the
verbs
in
the
language
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in”
connotes
an
element
of
knowledge
on
the
part
of
the
principal
and
that
there
must
be
concurrence
of
the
principal's
will
to
the
act
or
omission
of
his
agent,
or
a
tacit
and
silent
concurrence
therein.
The
other
verb
used
in
subsection
56(2)
is
"has
made".
The
question,
therefore,
is
whether
the
ordinary
principles
of
agency
would
apply,
that
is,
that
what
one
does
by
an
agent,
one
does
by
himself,
and
the
principal
is
liable
for
the
actions
of
his
agent
purporting
to
act
in
the
scope
of
his
authority
even
though
no
express
command
or
privity
of
the
principal
be
proved.
In
my
view
the
use
of
the
verb
"made"
in
the
context
in
which
it
is
used
also
involves
a
deliberate
and
intentional
consciousness
on
the
part
of
the
principal
to
the
act
done
which
on
the
facts
of
this
case
was
lacking
in
the
appellant.
He
was
not
privy
to
the
gross
negligence
of
his
accountant.
This
is
most
certainly
a
reasonable
interpretation.
I
take
it
to
be
a
clear
rule
of
construction
that
in
the
imposition
of
a
tax
or
a
duty,
and
still
more
of
a
penalty
if
there
be
any
fair
and
reasonable
doubt
the
statute
is
to
be
construed
so
as
to
give
the
party
sought
to
be
charged
the
benefit
of
the
doubt.
While
there
may
have
been
a
degree
of
negligence
by
the
appellant
in
dealing
with
his
tax
return
there
certainly
was
no
gross
negligence
on
his
part
such
that
would
attract
penalties.
The
appeal
is
allowed,
with
costs,
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment.
Appeal
allowed