Date: 19980720
Docket: 97-2104-IT-I
BETWEEN:
PATRICK NG,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the Bench at Toronto,
Ontario, on June 4, 1998)
Mogan, J.T.C.C.
[1] This is an appeal under the Income Tax Act for the
Appellant’s 1991 and 1992 taxation years. The Appellant has
elected the informal procedure. The assessment under appeal for
1991 was issued outside the three-year limitation period referred
to in subsection 152(4) of the Act, and the Respondent
admits that the Minister of National Revenue has the burden of
proving that he is entitled to reopen the 1991 taxation year in
accordance with the terms of that subsection. The Minister
imposed penalties under subsection 163(2) of the Act for
both 1991 and 1992 and, in accordance with subsection 163(3), the
Minister has the burden of proving that those penalties are
justified.
[2] The adjustments to the Appellant’s reported income
which are made in the assessments under appeal are not in
dispute. Therefore, the only issues before the Court are whether
the Minister was justified in imposing the penalties for 1991 and
1992, and whether the Minister was entitled to reopen the 1991
taxation year. As stated, the Respondent accepted the burden of
proving the necessary facts on those two issues and the only
evidence in this appeal was provided by Rita Benko, an auditor
with Revenue Canada.
[3] In the years under appeal, the Appellant was the sales
manager for Rowland Lincoln Mercury, a franchised Ford dealer in
the Metropolitan Toronto area. Most of his income was earned from
commissions on the sales of automobiles. It was generous in the
sense that in 1991, his commission income exceeded $110,000 and
in 1992, exceeded $80,000. The Appellant is in a highly
competitive business, selling a product with a high cost to the
retail purchaser. The evidence was that the Appellant had eight
salesmen answering to him.
[4] In reporting his income for 1991, the Appellant deducted
expenses of $44,600 from his commission earnings and, in 1992, he
deducted expenses of $41,328. Upon performing an audit for
Revenue Canada, Ms. Benko, made a determination that she would
allow expenses in 1991 of only $4,907 and disallow $39,693; and
she issued a reassessment for 1991 on those terms. Similarly for
1992, she determined that she would allow expenses of only $4,904
and disallow $36,424; and she issued a reassessment for 1992 on
those terms. Those two reassessments are the subject of this
appeal.
[5] The Appellant specifically does not dispute the
disallowance of expenses of $39,693 in 1991 or $36,424 in 1992.
What the Appellant disputes is the imposition of penalties in
both 1991 and 1992 under subsection 163(2) of the Income Tax
Act, and the fact that the Minister reopened the 1991
taxation year after the three-year limitation period. The
taxation year 1991 is, therefore, a more complex year because
there are two issues involved. I propose to deal with the 1992
taxation year first because the only issue is whether the
Minister was justified in imposing a penalty under subsection
163(2). The opening words of subsection 163(2) are:
163(2) 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 the greater of $100 and 50% of the total
of ...
[6] The items disallowed in the reassessment for 1992 are set
out in Exhibit R-4 and also in Schedule “A” to
the Respondent’s Reply to the Notice of Appeal. The
Appellant knew, in disputing this case, precisely what items he
had claimed, what portion if any of those items had been allowed,
and the amount that had been disallowed. I shall review some of
the items listed in Exhibit R-4 and the amounts which
have been claimed and allowed or disallowed, as follows:
Item
|
Claimed
|
Allowed
|
Disallowed
|
|
|
|
|
Auto/Travel
|
5,962
|
$0
|
$5,962
|
Gifts
|
4,984
|
0
|
4,984
|
Meals/Entertainment
|
5,941
|
3,600
|
2,341
|
Telephone
|
3,617
|
600
|
3,017
|
Office/General
|
3,482
|
175
|
3,307
|
Advertising/Promotion
|
3,168
|
0
|
3,168
|
Home Office Expense
|
4,200
|
0
|
4,200
|
Casual Help
Depreciation - Auto
|
4,945
4,500
|
0
0
|
4,945
4,500
|
With regard to the above items, the amount claimed by the
Appellant for meals and entertainment as listed in Exhibit R-4
was $3,617 when in fact the amount should have been $5,941. This
corrected amount was verified and assented to by both counsel for
the Respondent and the agent for the Appellant. Also, Exhibit R-4
contained the wrong amount claimed for telephone and it was
confirmed by both parties to be $3,617.
[7] I have not identified every item for 1992 but have
selected the larger amounts which were either totally or
significantly disallowed. The item for which there was the most
specific evidence was advertising and promotion of $3,168. The
Appellant gave to Ms. Benko a schedule in his own handwriting
(Exhibit R-8) listing four amounts of $4,473.81, $3,097, $320 and
$2,363.25. He identified the last amount as
“ADV-Prom” which is advertising and
promotion.
[8] For many of these claimed expenses, the Appellant provided
some form of receipt. Frequently, according to Ms. Benko, he
provided the “customer copy” of a credit card charge,
whether it was Visa or American Express or some other company.
When Ms. Benko asked him about the advertising and promotion
amount of $2,363.25 in Exhibit R-8, he produced an American
Express credit card charge in that exact amount. He told her that
it was for a party he had hosted for customers. Ms. Benko
explained that although the four amounts and the designation to
the left of each amount in Exhibit R-8 was written in the
Appellant’s handwriting, the title “Summary of
Receipts Submitted by Taxpayer in 1992” was in Ms.
Benko’s handwriting.
[9] Upon a further review of the Appellant’s records,
Ms. Benko found that there was a retail invoice to the Appellant
dated April 14, 1992, from “Cerruti 1881” in
Hazelton Lanes which appears to be a men’s clothing store.
The invoice was for precisely the same amount of $2,363.25 and it
is indicated that the invoice was paid by the Appellant’s
American Express credit card. Both the American Express customer
copy and the retail invoice from Cerruti 1881 appear in Exhibit
R-9. The retail invoice from Cerruti 1881 shows a sports
jacket for $695 and two suits for $660 and $630 making a total of
approximately $2,000 plus sales taxes, adding up to
$2,363.25.
[10] Ms. Benko concluded that this amount of $2,363.25 was
clearly not expenses for a party for customers. The Appellant did
not provide a further or better explanation to Ms. Benko, nor did
he come to Court to do so. Therefore, Ms. Benko concluded, in my
opinion reasonably, that the Appellant had not been truthful
because the American Express amount was not for a party for
customers, but was for a purchase of clothing for himself. Ms.
Benko’s clear evidence in this regard (Exhibits R-8 and
R-9) indicates that the Appellant was not just mistaken but, in
my opinion, he was positively untruthful and was attempting to
deceive Revenue Canada by submitting false expenses.
[11] Another significant item in the 1992 taxation year is
“casual help” which also appears in the 1991 taxation
year. The Appellant claimed $4,945 in 1992 and $5,125 in 1991.
Both amounts were disallowed. When he was asked by Ms. Benko what
the “casual help” was, he said that he hired high
school students to mail birthday and other greeting cards to his
customers to maintain his goodwill. According to Ms. Benko, he
had no receipts for this casual help, no names of the students
who were alleged to have been paid to do this and no
documentation to support it. If he were going to hire high school
students to maintain the goodwill of customers, he should have
had a list of his clients with their current addresses. He should
have been able to say to Ms. Benko: “I can’t tell you
who the students are but these are the people whose names and
addresses I gave them, and also here are the kinds of cards I
sent or here are the cards I purchased”. There is no paper
trail whatsoever and yet, I am dealing with two significant
alleged expenses in the range of $5,000 each of which was
disallowed. The Appellant does not even dispute the disallowance.
That to me is evidence of negligence. I will address later
whether it is gross negligence. It is certainly negligent for a
man who has the business sophistication to be the sales manager
of an automobile dealership to claim expenses in the range of
$5,000 and have nothing to back them up.
[12] I now turn to the expense of $4,984 claimed for gifts in
1992. It was 100% disallowed. The Appellant did not come to Court
to say: “Oh yes, I gave those gifts and here is how I can
link them to my business”. He accepts the disallowance of
the $4,984 for gifts but claims that he should not be penalized
for attempting to get this one by Revenue Canada. Ms. Benko said
that she was provided with many customer copies from credit card
charges but that she could not tie them down in any way to the
Appellant’s business. There was no identification on the
customer copies as to what they were for. Credit cards have been
in common use in Canada for so many decades that it is impossible
for me to accept the idea that a person can use credit cards to
purchase significant items and not note on his own customer copy
what the expense is for if he wants to deduct it for business
purposes. It has become, in my view, a common practice when
entertaining clients or buying gifts for them to note on the
credit card customer copy the date, the place and the purpose of
the expense. If a businessman like the Appellant took two clients
to lunch, I would expect him to write on the credit card voucher
“lunch, date, place and the names of the clients”. He
could throw that voucher in a box but still determine two weeks,
two months, two years later precisely where he was on that date
and who he entertained and how much it cost. To claim expenses of
this magnitude for gifts of $4,984 and not be able to identify a
paper trail which would justify them as business expenses is at
least negligence. Again, I will later consider whether it is
gross negligence.
[13] The same applies to the Appellant’s auto and travel
amounts. He claimed he owned a courtesy car which he made
available to customers when they had their cars serviced. He did
not, however, prove any ownership to Ms. Benko and she was put to
the trouble of doing a search through the motor vehicle
registration branch. He claimed he had a Porsche of his own and
that he was provided with a Lincoln by his employer. Ms. Benko
produced in evidence her motor vehicle search which was entered
as Exhibit R-7. According to her, the search turned up the
fact that the Porsche was registered in the name of the
Appellant’s wife. Ms. Benko also determined that the
costs of operating his car were borne entirely by the
Appellant’s employer, the car dealer engaged in selling
cars. Therefore, the auto travel amount of $5,962 which the
Appellant claimed for 1992 was totally disallowed. However, the
Appellant does not come to Court claiming that even one penny of
the auto claim is justifiable. He might have attended to say:
“I should be allowed to deduct part of this”, but he
accepts the 100% disallowance and yet claims that he should not
be penalized.
[14] Two cases were brought to my attention which I shall rely
on. Venne v. The Queen, 84 DTC 6247, was a decision of the
Federal Court Trial Division, The issues were opening a
statute-barred year and penalties under subsection 163(2) of
the Act. Mr. Justice Strayer of the Trial Division (as he
then was) comments on both provisions of the Act. At page
6251 he stated:
I am satisfied that it is sufficient for the Minister, in
order to invoke the power under subparagraph 152(4)(a)(i)
of the Act to show that, with respect to any one or more
aspects of his income tax return for a given year, a taxpayer has
been negligent. Such negligence is established if it is shown
that the taxpayer has not exercised reasonable care. This is
surely what the word ‘misrepresentation that is
attributable to neglect’ must mean, particularly when
combined with other grounds such as ‘carelessness’ or
‘wilful default’ which refer to a higher degree of
negligence or to intentional misconduct. Unless these words are
superfluous in the section, which I am not able to assume, the
term ‘neglect’ involves a lesser standard of
deficiency akin to that used in other fields of law such as the
law of tort.
The above passage deals with only negligence or the failure to
exercise reasonable care in connection with opening a
statute-barred year. At page 6256, Strayer J. continued with
respect to “gross negligence” as contained in
subsection 163(2):
... Gross 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 intentionally acting, an
indifference as to whether the law is complied with or not.
...
[15] I view the Appellant’s conduct in 1992 as meeting
the above standard in that he was indifferent as to whether he
complied with the law. He simply threw together a pile of
expenses and, having regard to his failure to defend any of them
in Court, the total is outrageously high at $41,328. When $36,424
is disallowed and he is allowed only $4,904, he does not dispute
the disallowance. He did not even appear in Court. In other
words, for all practical purposes, 90% of his claimed expenses
were disallowed but he does not contest the disallowance. That in
itself is an indication of an indifference as to whether or not
the law is complied with.
[16] In argument, the agent for the Appellant made the point
that unreported revenue was much more serious in terms of
misrepresentation or gross negligence than expenses which are not
identified or not vouchered. That is an interesting argument.
There may be some validity to it if we are considering a
proprietor operating a business who fails to record revenue. That
is a most serious act on the part of a taxpayer in terms of gross
negligence or even fraud. The Appellant, however, is of necessity
an employee and, therefore, in receipt of a T4. He has no control
over measuring the revenue he must report because his employer is
required to record his salary and commissions. The only way he
can cheat (to use a kind of slang word) if he wants to reduce his
income and get it down to a lower amount to pay less tax, is to
claim expenses outrageously high with an indifference as to
whether or not he is complying with the law. I find that that is
what the Appellant did. For those reasons, I will uphold the
penalty for 1992.
[17] For 1991, the Minister has opened a statute-barred year.
There is a different standard here. Curiously, it is a lower
standard. My colleague, Bowman J. referred to it in Farm
Business Consultants Inc. v. The Queen, 95 DTC 200 where
he had to consider both the reopening of a statute-barred year
and the imposition of penalties. Judge Bowman stated at 205:
A court must be extremely cautious in sanctioning the
imposition of penalties under subsection 163(2). Conduct that
warrants reopening a statute-barred year does not automatically
justify a penalty and the routine imposition of penalties by the
Minister is to be discouraged. Conduct of the type contemplated
in paragraph 152(4)(a)(i) may in some circumstances also
be used as the basis of a penalty under subsection 163(2), which
involves the penalizing of conduct that requires a higher degree
of reprehensibility. In such a case a court must, even in
applying a civil standard of proof, scrutinize the evidence with
great care and look for a higher degree of probability than would
be expected where allegations of a less serious nature are sought
to be established. Moreover, where a penalty is imposed under
subsection 163(2) although a civil standard of proof is required,
if a taxpayer’s conduct is consistent with two viable and
reasonable hypotheses, one justifying the penalty and one not,
the benefit of the doubt must be given to the taxpayer and the
penalty must be deleted. ...
[18] The agent for the Appellant argued that there were two
viable and reasonable hypotheses. He argued that the Appellant
thought in good faith that these expenses were related to his
business. By putting them to Revenue Canada, he could be taken to
have satisfied the reasonable test because, in the words of the
Appellant’s agent: “the Appellant was not possessed
of knowledge of the intricacies of the Income Tax
Act”. It is the first time he has been penalized. In my
view, a person does not have to possess knowledge of the
intricacies of the Income Tax Act. All he has to know is
whether an amount he wants to claim as an expense is connected
with his business; and the fact that he has never been penalized
before is no reason not to uphold the penalty in this case.
[19] Whether certain conduct is negligent to a level which
would permit the reopening of a statute-barred year depends upon
the business sophistication of the taxpayer, the way he files his
return, the way his income is computed and the way his expenses
are deducted. There seems to be a general attitude with respect
to expenses that people can “write it off” or it is
“deductible”. In my view, some individuals have taken
those notions to the extreme where they simply load in all kinds
of expenses without regard to whether they can be linked to a
business. As I have said in relation to the 1992 taxation year,
the Appellant must be a sophisticated person. We do not know if
he is sophisticated because he did not come to Court. Having
regard to the office he held in the years under appeal, I cannot
believe that he could not have noted on each credit card voucher
the purpose of the expense so that, at a later date, he could go
over them and identify the place, the date and the customer for
whom the expense was incurred if it was incurred for a customer,
or if it was incurred at all.
[20] From the evidence of Ms. Benko, I conclude that there
were some expenses for which there were no receipts at all such
as for casual help of $4,945 in 1992 and $5,125 in 1991. Simply
no receipts, no names of people who worked as casual help,
nothing. The same applies to gifts. If there were vouchers, there
was no way of linking them with any named customer and if the
gifts were personal, if he was buying children’s clothes
for his own children or, if he was buying gifts for friends or
family, then they are domestic gifts and not business-oriented.
In cross-examining the auditor, the Appellant’s agent
suggested that a certain expense could have been for a gift, a
dinner on a weekend could have been for business purposes. Ms.
Benko acknowledged that they could have been but that was not her
burden. Once she proved that the Appellant had been untruthful
with respect to certain expenses, and that other substantial
amounts had no supporting receipts, the onus was on the Appellant
to prove that the various credit card vouchers had a connection
with the Appellant’s business. She found an absence of a
paper trail and, in many cases, an absence of receipts altogether
to the point where she disallowed approximately 90% of his
claimed expenses in both years and yet, he did not come to Court
to dispute that.
[21] In conclusion, I would remind the Appellant that while
the burden was on the Minister to prove gross negligence with
respect to the penalties and negligence with respect to the
reopening of the 1991 taxation year, that is only a civil burden
and not a criminal burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. I
am satisfied on Ms. Benko’s evidence and the
Respondent’s exhibits that the Minister has met both of
those burdens. There was then a burden on the Appellant (if he
wanted), to come to Court, to listen to the case made against him
and, if he was advised that the Minister had met the burden of
proof, to come forward and make his own case.
[22] The Appellant seems to think that this is like a criminal
matter in which he can wait for the Crown to prove its case
beyond a reasonable doubt. It is only a civil burden of proof
and, in my view, taking the manner in which the Appellant claimed
these expenses, the extent to which they were disallowed, the
evidence of Ms. Benko who says that there were shockingly few
receipts that could connect any of these expenses with the
business and in many items (such as the casual help and the
office expenses), no receipts at all, I find that the case is
made for the reassessments. The appeals are dismissed. In my
opinion, the penalties are justified; and the Minister has
satisfied the burden for reopening the 1991 taxation year.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 20th day of July, 1998.
"M.A. Mogan"
J.T.C.C.