Docket: 2010-3948(IT)I
BETWEEN:
DAVID HOMA,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
____________________________________________________________________
Application heard on March 31, 2011 at Ottawa, Ontario
By: The Honourable Justice Judith Woods
Appearances:
For the Appellant:
|
The
Appellant himself
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Shane Aikat
Andrew Miller
|
____________________________________________________________________
ORDER
Upon application by the respondent for an order quashing
purported appeals under the Income Tax Act, it is ordered:
(a)
the application is
dismissed;
(b)
the appellant is
granted an extension of time to institute an appeal in respect of assessments
reflected in notices issued as follows:
- July 19, 2010 for the 2006 taxation
year,
- July 19, 2010 for the 2007 taxation year, and
- September 14, 2010 for the 2009 taxation year;
(c)
the amended notice of
appeal received on January 6, 2011 is deemed to be a valid notice of appeal
filed on the date of this Order; and
(d)
each party shall bear
their own costs with respect to this application.
Signed at Toronto, Ontario this 28th
day of April 2011.
“J. M. Woods”
Citation: 2011 TCC 230
Date: 20110428
Docket: 2010-3948(IT)I
BETWEEN:
DAVID HOMA,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR ORDER
Woods J.
[1]
In this application,
the Crown seeks to quash an amended notice of appeal filed on January 6, 2011 by
David Homa.
[2]
The subject matter of
the appeal is the calculation of interest on unpaid taxes owing for a number of
taxation years. The amount at issue is approximately $100.
[3]
The amended notice of
appeal describes the nature of the appeal in the following manner.
TAKE NOTICE THAT David Homa appeals from the Income Tax Act to the
Tax Court of Canada from assessments of interest dated September 13, 2010* and
October 20, 2010 for the taxation years 2003 to 2009
* This date was corrected to September 23, 2010 at the hearing.
[4]
The grounds for the
Crown’s application, as stated in the notice of motion, are reproduced below
(excludes legislative references):
a) the appeal with respect to the Appellant's 2003, 2004, 2005,
2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 [sic] are not within the Court's jurisdiction;
b) in the alternative, the appeal with respect to the Appellant's
2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009 taxation years are res judicata,
specifically for the 2003, 2004 and 2005 taxation years, as well as scandalous,
frivolous or vexatious, or an abuse of process; […]
[5]
The motion materials do
not clearly explain the problem that the Crown has with the appeal but it was
explained orally at the hearing. Notwithstanding the lack of notice, Mr. Homa indicated
that he understood the Crown’s position and wished to proceed with the motion
without further delay.
[6]
The essence of the Crown’s
position is that the Tax Court of Canada lacks jurisdiction because the appeal
does not relate to an assessment. It is submitted that the documents dated
September 23, 2010 and October 20, 2010 that are referred to in the amended
notice of appeal are statements of account and not notices of assessment.
[7]
Further, the Crown
submits that Mr. Homa is out of time to appeal any assessments for the 2003 to
2009 taxation years.
Discussion
[8]
I will first consider
the Crown’s alternative position that Mr. Homa is out of time to appeal any of
the relevant assessments.
[9]
With respect to the
2003, 2004 and 2005 taxation years, the Crown appears to be correct that the
time limits have expired. However, that should not matter because any interest
imposed for those years has been waived (Aff. of Hamza Momoh, Tab P).
[10]
Assessments for the
remaining taxation years were issued as follows:
(a)
July 19, 2010 for the
2006 taxation year,
(b)
July 19, 2010 for the
2007 taxation year,
(c)
June 30, 2009 for the
2008 taxation year, and
(d)
September 14, 2010
for the 2009 taxation year.
For clarification,
the Crown presented a summary chart at the hearing which indicated that an
assessment for the 2008 taxation year was made on June 30, 2010. This is
contrary to the motion material and I have assumed that it is a clerical error.
[11]
The Crown acknowledges
that assessments for at least some of these years can be appealed if extensions
of time are granted.
[12]
Mr. Homa submits that no
time extensions are needed because he is not appealing these assessments. Rather,
his appeal relates to the determinations of interest that are reflected in
statements of account, and which he objected to on September 30, 2010. He
submits that these determinations are assessments over which this Court has
jurisdiction.
[13]
The notice of objection
dated September 30, 2010 was not included in the motion material.
[14]
The issue raised by Mr.
Homa can be stated simply. Is a determination by the Canada Revenue Agency of
interest payable on unpaid tax an “assessment?”
[15]
I am not aware of any
judicial decisions directly on point.
[16]
It is unfortunate that
I did not have the assistance of counsel on both sides on this novel issue. The
arguments presented at the hearing from both parties were not very detailed,
especially with respect to a contextual analysis of the relevant provisions. In
light of this, I am not inclined to extend the term “assessment” to include
determinations of interest that are reflected in statements of account and not
on forms that purport to be notices of assessment.
[17]
That is not the end of
the matter, however.
[18]
I have considerable
sympathy for the position advocated by Mr. Homa. Nowhere is the term
“assessment” clearly defined, and I suspect that many taxpayers would assume
that the Tax Court of Canada has jurisdiction over matters such as this.
[19]
Moreover, it is not appropriate
to quash this appeal on a preliminary basis unless it is clear that no relief
can be provided by the Court. In the context of matters governed by the informal
procedure, it is necessary for the Court to go beyond the framing of the issue
by the taxpayer and to consider the essence of the dispute.
[20]
Very recently, Binnie
J. commented on the seriousness of inefficient court procedures in British Columbia (Attorney General) v Malik, 2011 SCC 18:
[40] In a
number of decisions our Court had emphasized a public interest in the avoidance
of “[d]uplicative litigation, potential inconsistent results, undue costs, and
inconclusive proceedings” (Danyluk v. Ainsworth Technologies Inc., 2001
SCC 44, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 460, at para. 18). Inefficient procedures not only
increase costs unnecessarily, but result in added delay, and can operate as an
avoidable barrier to effective justice:
Where the same
issues arise in various forums, the quality of justice delivered by the
adjudicative process is measured not by reference to the isolated result in
each forum, but by the end result produced by the various processes that
address the issue.
(Toronto
(City) v. Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 79 (2001), 55 O.R. (3d)
541 (C.A.), per Doherty J.A., at para. 74, aff’d 2003 SCC 63, [2003] 3
S.C.R. 77 (sub num. Toronto (City) v. C.U.P.E., Local 79),
at para. 44)
[21]
It is important to look
for solutions to procedural issues such as this, not problems.
[22]
Based on the limited
information before me, it is not clear that the relief that Mr. Homa seeks cannot
be provided by an appeal of the interest reflected in notices of assessment for
taxation years that are still open.
[23]
I would note that Rip
C.J. provided a similar remedy in McFadyen v The Queen, 2008 TCC 441.
[24]
In order to have this
matter adjudicated in an efficient manner, it is appropriate in my view to permit
Mr. Homa to appeal assessments for taxation years that are still open, namely, 2006,
2007 and 2009. Mr. Homa indicated at the hearing that he did not want to appeal
these assessments, but this comment was made in the belief that he already had
a valid notice of appeal.
[25]
Where do we go from
here? One possibility is that Mr. Homa could be given the opportunity to apply
for extensions of time to appeal. That would result in an unnecessary and
undesirable delay in this proceeding, in my view.
[26]
In the circumstances,
it would be appropriate to consider that the amended notice of appeal
implicitly asks for extensions of time that are necessary to have the matter
dealt with on the merits. The extension of time will granted, and the amended
notice of appeal will be considered to be a valid notice of appeal filed on the
day of the Order. The respondent then will have the usual time to file a
reply.
[27]
The application will be
dismissed, with each party bearing their own costs with respect to this
application.
Signed at Toronto,
Ontario this 28th day of April 2011.
“J. M. Woods”