Date: 19980414
Docket: 95-3729-IT-G
BETWEEN:
E.F. ANTHONY MERCHANT,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bowman, J.T.C.C.
[1]These appeals are from assessments for the
appellant’s 1990, 1991 and 1992 taxation years. The issues
as they appear from the notices of appeal and the replies are as
follows:
(a) whether the 1990 reassessment dated December 2, 1994 is
statute-barred;
(b) whether the appellant is entitled to deduct professional
expenses of $10,838 and carrying charges of $31,133;
(c) whether the Minister of National Revenue was correct in
adding $33,525 professional income from partnerships;
(d) whether the Minister was correct in imposing
penalties.
[2]The notice of appeal for 1990 also refers to the
Minister’s failure to respond to a T-1 adjustment.
[3]The trial lasted 7 days — August 11, 12, 13 and 14,
1997 and February 23, 24 and 25, 1998. Yet it boiled down
essentially to a number of factual issues that could and should
have been resolved at the assessments level or the appeals
level.
[4] I find as a fact that Mr. Merchant was uncooperative in
the course of the audit by the assessor Mr. Steven Kendall Button
to the extent that Mr. Button was unable to perform the audit in
a manner that would in all probability have resolved many of the
issues. Mr. Merchant had a second chance when the matter was at
the appeals level after the filing of notices of objection. He
refused to make any representations to the appeals officer,
evidently on the theory that he would take the matter to court.
The production of documents and the examination for discovery of
Mr. Merchant were a shambles largely as a result of Mr.
Merchant’s stonewalling tactics. This necessitated the
bringing of motions by the Crown that should not have been
necessary.
[5]The system of assessment, objection and appeals from income
tax assessments in Canada is one that works very well. Indeed, in
my experience it is one of the best in the world. At every stage
taxpayers or their representatives are entitled to meet with
representatives of the Government in an attempt to resolve
outstanding issues. The result is that many disputes are settled.
The success of the system requires however good faith and
openness on both sides. It does not work if the appeal process is
treated, as it was here, as an exercise in gamesmanship and
obfuscation.
[6] In this case, documents were produced right up to the last
minute. The proceedings lasted seven days. Any issues of
substance (as opposed to the laborious proof of receipts that
should have been produced at the audit or objection level) could
have been disposed of in a day. A substantial part of the trial
was devoted to proving small expenditures - a matter that should
have been resolved at the assessments level when Mr. Button was
auditing the file.
[7]Where a large number of documents, such as invoices, have
to be proved it is a waste of the court's time to put them in
evidence seriatim. The approach set out in Wigmore on
Evidence (3rd Ed.) Vol IV, at s. 1230 commends
itself:
s. 1230(11): ... Where a fact could be ascertained only by the
inspection of a large number of documents made up of very
numerous detailed statements -- as, the net balance
resulting from a year's vouchers of a treasurer or a
year's accounts in a bank-ledger -- it is obvious that it
would often be practically out of the question to apply the
present principle by requiring the production of the entire mass
of documents and entries to be perused by the jury or read aloud
to them. The convenience of trials demands that other evidence be
allowed to be offered, in the shape of the testimony of a
competent witness who has perused the entire mass and will state
summarily the net result. Such a practice is well-established to
be proper.
[8]This passage was cited with approval by Wakeling J.A.
in Sunnyside Nursing Home v. Builders Contract Management Ltd.
et al., (1990) 75 S.R. 1 at p. 24 (Sask. C.A.)
and by MacPherson J. in R. v. Fichter, Kaufmann et al.,
37 S.R. 128 (Sask. Q.B.) at p. 129. I am in respectful
agreement.
[9]The practical result of this, apart from the fact that a
case that should either have been settled or should, at most,
have taken one day, lasted seven days, is that the case comes
before the court without any of the preliminary factual
determinations being made by the Minister that normally form the
basis of the identification of the issues that must be decided by
the court. An example of this is the expenses that were claimed
by Mr. Merchant and disallowed. Mr. Button stated that as
part of the normal audit procedure he would examine vouchers,
receipts and other records to determine if the taxpayer had in
fact incurred the expenses. He would then routinely examine the
records of other entities with which the taxpayer was associated
to ensure that none of them was also claimed by one of the
several partnerships of which the appellant was a member or by
his corporation, or whether he was reimbursed by them. The
assessor was prevented from determining this.
[10]Mr. Merchant has come before this court expecting the
court to perform functions that should have been performed at an
audit by an assessor. In doing so he assumes an onus of
establishing all constituent elements entitling him to relief. It
is not the court that imposes on him a higher onus than that
imposed on other litigants. It is he who, by his own actions at
all levels right up to his appearance in court, has imposed on
himself a heavy burden resulting from his preventing the
officials of the Department of National Revenue or counsel for
the respondent from determining any facts that would facilitate
the identification of the points, if any, that ought to be in
issue. The assessor, Mr. Button, was in the court room
throughout the proceedings and he testified. Contrary to the
highly unfair criticisms levelled at him I found him an honest
and trustworthy witness who went about his job in a workmanlike
and fair way but he was faced with impossible obstacles. To the
extent that there is any conflict between Mr. Button's
and Mr. Merchant's testimony in respect of the conduct
of the audit I accept Mr. Button's testimony. As new
documents kept being produced — right up to almost the last
day — he was forced to examine them in rather difficult
circumstances in an attempt to fill in some of the gaps left in
the audit that had been frustrated by Mr. Merchant. In this I
imply no criticism of Mr. Tochor, who presented the case
skilfully and professionally. However, he had an impossible
client.
1990
Statute-barred issue
[11]The first point is whether the 1990 assessment is
statute-barred, by reason of having been made outside the normal
reassessment period, which is three years from the date of the
original assessment.
[12]The appellant attached some importance to the fact that
the original assessment for 1990 was not issued until December 4,
1991. It was also contended that the notice of the original
assessment was never received.
[13]The reassessment for 1990 that is under appeal is dated
December 2, 1994. If, as contended by the appellant, the original
assessment was never issued, the three year period did not start
running and so the reassessment of December 2, 1994 is the
original assessment and is not statute-barred. If the original
assessment was in fact issued on December 4, 1991 the assessment
of December 2, 1994 is within the three year period. Neither
hypothesis supports the appellant’s position that the year
was statute-barred.
[14]Although the point was not pleaded, the appellant argued
also that the assessment was not made with due dispatch. I am not
prepared to find that the original assessment was not made on
December 4, 1991. In any event the due dispatch requirement
applies to the initial assessment under paragraph 152(1), not to
a subsequent reassessment. A reassessment made within three years
of the date of the original assessment is not unduly delayed.
Indeed, given Mr. Merchant’s deliberate attempts to
frustrate the audit, it is surprising that it did not take
longer.
[15] A number of issues arise in 1990 having to do with the
computation of Mr. Merchant’s income. As a preliminary
matter it should be observed that Mr. Merchant is, and,
during the years in question, was a very successful legal
practitioner in Saskatchewan and elsewhere. He was a rainmaker
— a person who brought to the firm a large number of
clients, and contributed significantly to the prosperity of the
law firms in which he was a partner. Some of the difficulty in
determining Mr. Merchant’s income in the years in question
is the fact that each time a new partner joined him in the
practice of law a new partnership was formed. Hence, Partnerships
P1, P2, P3, P4 and P5, the last one being the Merchant Law Group.
He also had a corporation known as Merchant 2000 Ltd. Whatever
confusion may have been engendered by this proliferation of
business organizations was exacerbated by Mr. Merchant’s
stonewalling tactics vis-à-vis the Department of National
Revenue. The only way in which I can impose some sort of order on
the somewhat chaotic state of affairs is to take the replies to
the notices of appeal item by item and deal with the issues that
appear from them. The notices of appeal are unhelpful.
[16]Paragraphs 5(d) and (e) of the reply for 1990 state that
Mr. Merchant declared income from Partnership P4 of $12,176
whereas it should be $13,176. The appellant concedes this
point.
[17]Paragraph 5(f) states that P3 transferred certain expenses
in the amount of $22,530.78 to P4, without any corresponding
reduction in P3’s expenses. Mr. Button’s
assumption was that both partnerships were claiming the same
amount. That assumption has not been rebutted. He reduced
P3’s expenses by $22,530.78. There has been no evidence to
cast any doubt on the correctness of what he did. The statement
by the appellant’s accounting witness, Mr. Eli
Fluter CA, that the books of the two partnerships balanced
in my view proves nothing. It does not prove that both
partnerships were not deducting the same amount.
[18]Paragraph 5(g) refers to the fact that P3 paid expense
allowances of $6,000 allocated to the partners in predetermined
monthly amounts, without any accountability for their use.
Paragraph 5(k) states that the same was true of P4, in the amount
of $11,725. Mr. Button disallowed these amounts in computing the
income of the two partnerships and this increased Mr.
Merchant’s proportionate share.
[19]This raises an arguable point. The non-accountable expense
allowances for which apparently no vouchers or receipts were
required by the partnerships is not an acceptable way of
proceeding where substantial amounts are involved. Expenses
incurred on firm business, if charged to the firm by partners or
employees, should ideally be backed up by specific
substantiation. Is it so difficult, even in a busy law firm where
undoubtedly travel and entertainment expenses are incurred, to
provide vouchers to the office manager? Although the allowance
may have been reasonable in light of the fact that, after
Mr. Merchant started claiming specific expenses of the type
that this allowance was designed to cover, his claims exceeded
the amount paid to him as an allowance, I see no reason why such
indemnification cannot be substantiated. I therefore disallow the
claim.
[20]Paragraph 5(h) refers to a deemed disposition of goodwill
on the dissolution of P3, in the amount of $1,507. The respondent
concedes this point.
[21]Paragraph 5(i) simply summarizes the effect of the
adjustments in paragraphs 5(f), (g) and (h) so that the increase
to Mr. Merchant’s income from P3 is $17,722.29. This figure
will have to be adjusted to take into account the concession in
respect of paragraph 5(h).
Partnership P4
[22]Paragraph 5(j) alleges the deduction of $15,436.48 in
expenses by the partnership without any supporting
documentation.
[23]It is my view that there is no requirement in law that
expenses be supported by receipts or other corroboration if such
expenses can be supported by credible viva voce testimony
and the amounts can be identified with a reasonable degree of
specificity (Weinberger v. M.N.R., 64 DTC 5060).
Subsection 230(2.1) of the Income Tax Act specifically
requires persons carrying on business as lawyers to keep books
and records. Why lawyers are singled out is uncertain, but I do
not regard compliance with section 230 to be a prerequisite to
the deductibility of expenses if they can otherwise be proved.
Failure to keep books and records carries its own sanction but
had Parliament intended that sanction to include
non-deductibility of expenses it would have been quite capable of
saying so.
[24] I am satisfied from an examination of Tab C of Exhibit A
that $6,587.50 has been established. A number of other items
listed in that exhibit totalling $15,436 lack the degree of
specificity as to the purpose of the expenditures to justify my
interfering with the assessor’s decision.
Paragraph 5(m)
[25] The respondent concedes that a further deduction of
$10,838.39 is justified. Penalties were imposed in respect of
this item. Since the Department is allowing the deduction the
penalties on this item should be deleted.
Paragraph 5(p)
[26]The appellant deducted interest and carrying charges of
$33,113.71. He now claims $32,629.85. These expenses are listed
under Tab K (Exhibit A-14) and I am satisfied that they were
paid. They should be allowed as deductions and the penalties in
respect of this item should be deleted.
1991
[27]Paragraph 5(c) lists amounts of $24,574.38 claimed as
expenses. The largest item in this amount is $17,931.51. Of that
$5,186.80 was for contributions to charities and participation in
events.
[28]So far as the charitable donations are concerned, the
appellant is claiming anything for which he did not have a
charitable receipt as a promotional expense. I am not prepared to
extend the decision of the Exchequer Court of Canada in
Olympia Floor & Wall Tile (Québec) Ltd. v.
M.N.R., 70 DTC 6085 to the point contended for by the
appellant. Mr. Merchant may be an indefatigable self-promoter but
it would require far more cogent evidence than I have seen to
bring him within the principle stated in Olympia. The same
is true of his political contributions. The deduction of
charitable contributions and political contributions is covered
by a very specific regime under the Income Tax Act. I do
not propose to drive a coach and four through those
provisions.
[29] The appellant claims $7,860 for entertainment expenses of
a promotional nature. Of this, $6,379.46 was for a gala party
“Your Friendly Neighbourhood Solicitor”. This latter
amount has been proved and I regard it as a legitimate
promotional expense.
[30] The appellant claims $4,768.55 for government promotion
expenses. He is very prominent as a Liberal politician. Many of
these expenses are undoubtedly intended to promote his fortunes
within the Liberal party. I cannot however for that reason alone
hold that they are not intended to promote his business. His
politics and his law practice are inseparable and seem to have a
symbiotic relationship. Nonetheless, I am not prepared to allow
the expenditures because the printouts under Tab Q are
insufficient to establish either the incurring of the expenses or
their purpose.
[31]Business taxes, fees, and licenses are claimed in the
amount of $4,438.76. The appellant now claims $10,158.80. I am
prepared to accept the Balfour Moss legal costs of $6,105.23.
This was in connection with a legal action brought by
Mr. Merchant against the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
The other expenses may have been incurred but it has not been
established that one or other of his law firms did not pay them.
They appear to be the sort of expenses that the law firm would
pay. If Mr. Merchant expects this court to act as an income
tax auditor he should not be surprised if the court draws an
adverse inference from his failure to establish every constituent
element necessary to the deductibility of a claimed expense. It
was precisely this sort of thing that Mr. Button, having
found other instances where expenses were claimed twice, was
unable to verify.
[32]The respondent concedes $1,100 as a home office
expense.
[33]Carrying charges and interest charges — The
appellant claims $39,044. These have been proved and I accept
that they are deductible, except for the Rosecrest mortgage
interest of $7,413.69. The appellant never owned Rosecrest and
there is no legal basis upon which he can deduct the mortgage
interest under paragraph 20(1)(c). The penalties on this
item should be deleted.
[34]Bad debt expense — $111,672. The Partnerships P4 and
P5 had already deducted a reserve for bad debts or doubtful
debts. The appellant then claimed the balance of the debts as a
bad or doubtful debt. I must confess I have seldom seen anything
quite so far-fetched. The proposition is that one partner in a
firm can, after the firm has deducted a bad or doubtful debt
allowance, take the remainder of the firm’s debts and
personally claim a bad or doubtful debt allowance in respect
thereof. The proposition needs only to be stated to be defeated
by its own patent absurdity. The claim was properly disallowed
and the penalties were properly imposed. The conduct is well
within the type contemplated by subsection 163(2).
[35]Business losses — $728.26. These have been proved
and are allowed.
[36]Rental losses — $3,995.20. The appellant now claims
$20,646. The additional amount was not claimed in the notice of
appeal. Although financial statements were produced at trial
there was no acceptable evidence adduced in support of their
accuracy or to support the losses claimed by the appellant.
[37]Expense allowance — $10,502. This claim has not been
pleaded and no error in the Minister's treatment of this
amount has been established. It is disallowed.
1992
[38]Accounting, legal and consulting expenses in the amount of
$3,517.50 were claimed. Of this, $2,318.87 was proved and should
be allowed.
[39]Advertising and promotion — The appellant has
claimed $15,682.35. This amount has been proved and is
deductible.
[40]It has not been established that the cost of $9,252.71
relating to the Austrian Consulate is an appropriate business
expense. In the absence of adequate evidence to the contrary I
think the cost of the appellant’s being the honorary consul
of Austria should be treated as personal.
[41]Business tax, fees, licence, dues — $3,842.72. The
payment of this amount has been proved. It has not however been
established that one or other of Mr. Merchant's law
partnerships did not pay this amount or that they did not already
deduct the cost. Given the manner in which these expenses have
essentially been dumped on the court's doorstep at the
eleventh hour, it would be dangerous to find, on a balance of
probabilities, that they had been paid by Mr. Merchant and
were deductible by him. The point was not pleaded in the notice
of appeal and, according to the reply $3,842.72 was claimed.
Mr. Merchant now claims $5,059.43, including, as an example
of the fatuity of the behaviour of Mr. Merchant, $8.37 for
dry cleaning of his vest and gown. To clutter up the record with
this sort of thing is an insult to the court.
[42]Insurance — $1,550.45. This has not been proved.
[43]Office expenses — $2,077.52. It has not been
established that these expenses relate to the earning of
income.
[44]Salary — $180. This was allegedly paid to Mr.
Merchant’s wife allegedly for doing some filing in
connection with some board that Mr. Merchant was on. This
claim is ridiculous.
[45]Collection costs — $5,674. Collection costs are
generally a permissible deduction. Mr. Merchant should
however have charged the firm for it and the firm should have
claimed it, with the result that Mr. Merchant would have
been entitled to his proportionate share.
[46]Business use of home — $1,496. The Crown concedes
this item.
[47]Carrying charges and interest charges — The
appellant claims $40,878.04. He proved $35,136.45. This is
deductible, except for the Rosecrest mortgage renewal fee of
$85.
[48]Rental losses — $13,180 was allowed. The appellant
claims an additional $6,713. It has simply not been proved that
there were additional losses.
[49]Expense allowance — $10,808.84. There is
insufficient evidence on this point to warrant any
adjustment.
[50]Partnership P4 income — $75,592. The appellant
simply failed to declare $75,592 as income from partnership P4.
This amount is plainly taxable and its omission from his return
was at least grossly negligent, if not deliberate. The penalty is
affirmed.
[51]Exploration and development expenses — $2,500. This
has been proved.
[52]Non-capital losses from other years — $46,117. This
has not been proved but I assume if it is available the Minister
of National Revenue will take it into account in reassessing.
[53]Assignment of tuition from child — $4,000. This was
not pleaded and has simply not been proved.
[54]The appeals are allowed and the assessments are referred
back to the Minister of National Revenue for reconsideration and
reassessment in accordance with these reasons.
[55]In considering the substantive merits of the issues raised
I have ignored Mr. Merchant's unacceptable behaviour and
focused solely on the legal and factual issues. In the
determination of the merits of a case a litigant's behaviour
is generally irrelevant. The place to deal with unacceptable
conduct is in the award of costs.
[56]Mr. Merchant has been given all that he could
reasonably expect in respect of the substantive issues. Moreover,
he has been given great leeway in respect of the production of
documents and the raising of issues. He has, however, treated
this court, its rules, the orders of the court and counsel for
the respondent, who is an officer of the court, with disdain.
[57]It is not inconceivable that had he behaved less
outrageously at the audit, objection and appeals level he might
have obtained further relief that I am not, on the evidence,
prepared to give him. However the court is not the place to
perform an income tax audit and to foist that function upon a
judge is a dangerous and risky game and, as will be apparent from
my award of costs, an expensive one.
[58]It is unusual to award costs against a party who has been
partially successful, and particularly solicitor and client
costs. The matter is discussed in Young v. Young, [1993] 4
S.C.R. 3. The general rule is that a successful litigant is
entitled to party and party costs. Where success is divided it is
not unusual for no order to be made for costs. To depart from the
usual rule requires unusual circumstances. For a successful or
partially successful litigant
(a) to be deprived of costs,
(b) to be ordered to pay party and party costs,
(c) to be ordered to pay costs to the other party on a
solicitor and client costs,
requires a measure of reprehensibility. To award solicitor and
client costs against a litigant who has achieved the degree of
success that Mr. Merchant has requires a high degree of
reprehensible conduct. There must, to use the words of
McLachlin J. in Young (supra) at p. 134, be
"reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous conduct on the part
of one of the parties".
[59]The jurisprudence on this point has been thoroughly
reviewed by Sarchuk J. in Bruhm v. The Queen, 94 DTC
1400 (T.C.C.), and I shall not repeat what he has said. I agree
that to award solicitor and client costs against a partially
successful party is rare and should be done only in exceptional
circumstances. The presiding judge has, under section 147 of the
General Procedure Rules, wide discretionary power in
respect of the awarding of costs. This is a case for ordering
Mr. Merchant to pay the Crown's costs on a solicitor and
client basis. From the outset he has done everything possible to
obstruct the Crown in its attempt to put its case forward in an
orderly way. He has produced documents up to the last minute. He
has rendered impossible the conduct of the discovery. The abuse
of the assessor, who acted properly throughout, is intolerable.
Generally speaking, conduct prior to the commencement of the
action is not relevant to the award of costs. The rule is not
invariable. Here Mr. Merchant has deliberately frustrated
the audit process and the objection process with a view to having
matters dealt with by the court that should never have had to
come before it. His conduct prior to commencement of the appeal
and prior to trial has had a direct impact upon the manner in
which the trial proceeded. He has caused a trial that should have
lasted no more than one day to last seven days. Moreover such
success as he has achieved at trial is no more than he could have
achieved at the audit, objection or discovery level had he not
seen fit to obstruct the orderly process of assessment and
objection laid down in the Income Tax Act and the
procedures set out in the rules of this court.
[60] I find Mr. Merchant's conduct warrants the awarding
of costs against him on a solicitor and client basis.
[61]The respondent is entitled to her costs, including the
costs of the trial and of all motions prior to trial, on a
solicitor and client basis.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 14th day of April 1998.
"D.G.H. Bowman"
J.T.C.C.