Citation: 2010 TCC 467
Date: 20100910
Docket: 2006-1880(IT)G
2006-2490(IT)G
2006-2580(IT)G
2006-2587(IT)G
2006-2879(IT)G
2006-3336(IT)G
2006-3337(IT)G
BETWEEN:
E.F. ANTHONY MERCHANT,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Paris J.
[1] These are appeals from reassessments of Mr.
Merchant’s 1994 to 2000 taxation years. While the Notices of Appeal raise many
issues, the parties reached a settlement with respect to the majority of these
matters prior to the hearing. Particulars of the settled issues are appended to
these reasons.
Background
[2] Mr.
Merchant is a lawyer and businessman and lives in Regina.
[3] Merchant (2000) Ltd. (“Merchant 2000”) is a
Canadian corporation, the shares of which are owned by Mr. Merchant and members
of his family. Merchant 2000 was incorporated in the early 1980s.
[4] Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc. (“Merchant U.S.”)
is a U.S. corporation wholly owned by Merchant 2000.
Merchant U.S. was incorporated in the mid-1980s.
Issues
[5] The issues remaining in appeal are:
1994
i) whether the
Appellant received a shareholder benefit of $162,500 from Merchant 2000 in his
1994 taxation year within the meaning of subsection 15(1) of the Income
Tax Act;and
if so,
ii) whether the Minister was entitled
to reassess the Appellant’s 1994 taxation year beyond the normal assessment
period to include the unreported amount;
iii) whether the
Minister properly imposed a penalty under subsection 163(2) of the Act on
the unreported amount;
1995 to 1998 and 2000
i) whether the
Appellant’s shareholder loan balance with Merchant 2000 was in a deficit
balance at the end of his 1995 to 1998 and 2000 taxation years by the following
amounts:
1995 $325,781
` 1996 $141,014
1997 $153,750
1998 $198,250
2000 $20,000
thereby requiring him to include these amounts
in income pursuant to subsection 15(2) of the Act, and requiring
him to include deemed interest with respect to his outstanding shareholder loans
as required by subsection 80.4(2) of the Act; and, if so;
(ii) whether the Minister properly
imposed subsection 163(2) penalties on the unreported amounts.
1994
[6] The reassessment of the shareholder benefit
of $162,500 in the Appellant’s 1994 taxation year arose as a result of his
receipt of this amount from Merchant U.S. on December 19, 1994. While the
actual amount received by the Appellant was $165,000, he returned $2,500 to as
an overpayment.
[7] The payment of $165,000 was made by a
transfer from an investment account belonging to Merchant U.S. at CIBC Wood
Gundy to another CIBC Wood Gundy account owned by the Appellant. The Appellant
directed CIBC Wood Gundy to make the transfer.
[8] Previously, on November 16, 1994 the Appellant had
directed CIBC Wood Gundy to transfer $162,500 from an account held by Merchant
2000 to the account of Merchant U.S. Before the transfer from Merchant 2000 to
Merchant U.S., the balance in the latter’s CIBC Wood Gundy account was $325.48.
[9] The Respondent maintained that the
Appellant did not give any consideration for the transfer to either Merchant U.S.
or Merchant 2000 and that it was an appropriation by him from Merchant 2000 by
means of an indirect transfer. Therefore he was required to include this amount
in income pursuant to subsection 15(1) the relevant portions of which read:
15(1) Where at any time in a taxation year a
benefit is conferred on a shareholder, or on a person in contemplation of the
person becoming a shareholder, by a corporation …
the amount or value thereof shall, except to the extent that it is deemed
by section 84 to be a dividend, be included in computing the income of the
shareholder for the year.
[10] The Appellant said that the payment from
Merchant U.S. to the Appellant on December 19, 1994 was a partial
repayment of loans he had made to Merchant U.S.
[11] According to the Appellant’s evidence, he
had loaned money directly to Merchant U.S. and Merchant 2000 on an ongoing
basis since their incorporation to fund various business ventures in which
those companies were involved. He stated that he had kept a record of the loans
he had made to Merchant U.S. and Merchant 2000. These records consisted of
tally sheets, partly handwritten and partly typed, recording loans and
repayments by date and a brief note regarding the nature of the payment. The
loan tally sheets presented by the Appellant at the hearing included an entry
dated November 20, 1994 showing a repayment of $162,500 from Merchant U.S. to
the Appellant. According to the loan record,
the $162,500 repayment reduced indebtedness of Merchant U.S. to the Appellant
from $320,800 to $158,400. (It was admitted by the Appellant that the correct
balance should have been $158,300.)
[12] The Appellant said that the Merchant U.S. repaid
the amount to the Appellant out of the proceeds received by Merchant U.S. from a
sale of property by it to Merchant 2000.
[13] Merchant U.S., along with a group of
investors organized by Mr. Eli Fluter, a friend and business associate of the
Appellant, had purchased a number of real estate interests in the U.S. Merchant
U.S. was apparently a passive investor in these deals, providing cash as
required to purchase and maintain the properties. At some point prior to 1993,
Merchant U.S. had acquired a 75% interest in an agreement for sale of property in Phoenix, Arizona (the Phoenix property). The Appellant said that Merchant
U.S. had sold three-quarters
of the 75% interest to Merchant 2000 in 1993 for $650,000. The Appellant said
that the remaining one‑quarter of Merchant U.S.’s original interest was
the property that was sold to Merchant 2000 in 1994 for $162,500, and the payment
by Merchant 2000 to Merchant U.S. on November 16, 1994 was the consideration
for that purchase.
[14] The Appellant referred to a letter he wrote
to CIBC Wood Gundy dated January 30, 1995 in which he stated:
Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc. sold the remaining portion of its
ownership of property in Phoenix to Merchant (2000) Ltd. Merchant (2000) was to have paid $162,500
in connection with the sale. As a result of my mistake, $165,000 was paid.
Please transfer $2,500 from my account to the account of Merchant (2000) Ltd.
The Appellant also presented documents
referring to a subsequent sale of the Phoenix property by Merchant 2000 to a related company,
Merchant Arizona (2000) Ltd., for $625,000 in 1995. Finally, the Appellant also
produced a copy of Merchant 2000’s tax return for its 1995 taxation year in
which it reported a disposition of the Phoenix property for $625,000. It showed
its cost of the property as $812,500, and claimed a capital loss of $187,500.
[15] Later, in 1998,
Merchant 2000 sought to amend this return on the basis that the sale to
Merchant Arizona did not proceed, and submitted revised capital loss schedules
to the CRA. Those schedules and the capital loss amendment were apparently
accepted by the CRA. The Appellant said that he and his accountant had decided
to “unwind” the transaction because Merchant 2000 could not use the capital
loss.
[16] Respondent’s counsel submitted that the
Appellant’s explanation for the $162,500 transfer from Merchant U.S. to the
Appellant was not credible. He said that the Court should not accept the
Appellant’s evidence that Merchant U.S. owed the Appellant money or that it transferred
an interest in the Phoenix property to Merchant 2000. Counsel said
that the Appellant refused to provide any documents from Merchant U.S. to the
Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) auditor during the course of the audit which led to
the reassessments before the Court, which should affect the weight given to the
Merchant U.S. loan tally sheet presented by the Appellant.
[17] Furthermore, the Respondent counsel argued
that the Appellant’s evidence that Merchant U.S. transferred an interest in the
Phoenix property to Merchant 2000 for $162,500 was
inconsistent with the Appellant’s statement in a letter to the CRA auditor in
May 2000 that suggested that the property had always been owned by Merchant
U.S. In
that letter, the Appellant was responding to a CRA demand for information from
Merchant Arizona. One of the CRA’s requests was that Merchant Arizona provide
“all documentation regarding the acquisition and disposal of the Phoenix property”. The
Appellant, on behalf of Merchant Arizona, wrote back that:
If you have some case
authority for the proposition that Merchant Arizona (2000) Ltd., now defunct,
has some responsibility to produce information regarding an American company
owned by the same shareholders, and in particular the affairs of the American
company regarding ownership of property in Phoenix, Arizona, in the United
States, I would be interested in that authority and may change my mind but I
can not imagine that there is anything that supports the proposition that you
advance. I care about the principle. You are not entitled to documents from
Canadian companies or individuals about property purchased by a US Company and
always owned by that US company.
The Appellant told the Court that
the representation that the Phoenix property had always been owned by a U.S. company was incorrect,
but offered no explanation for what he wrote.
[18] On the balance of the evidence, I am
satisfied that the $162,500 payment from Merchant U.S. to the Appellant in 1994
was a repayment of money owing to him by Merchant U.S. I accept the
Appellant’s evidence that the loan tally sheets are an accurate statement of loans
he made to Merchant U.S., and of the repayments from Merchant U.S. to him.
There is nothing that would lead me to conclude that the loan record sheets or
entries on those sheets were fabricated by the Appellant.
[19] It is not clear whether the Appellant ever gave
these documents to the CRA auditor. At the hearing, he said he did not recall
if he had, and the auditor was not called as a witness. The Respondent asked
that I infer that the documents were not provided, on the basis of the
Appellant’s refusal to comply with the auditor’s request to Merchant Arizona to
produce documents relating to the acquisition and disposition of the Phoenix property, and the Appellant’s statement that the CRA
did not have authority to demand documents from a U.S.
corporation. I am not prepared to do so in the absence of evidence from the
auditor that the loan records for Merchant U.S were not given to him or in the
absence of any evidence of a specific request and a specific refusal by the
Appellant to provide them.
[20] While it is not
necessary to decide the question, the $162,500 payment from Merchant 2000 to Merchant U.S. immediately
prior to this transfer of the same amount by Merchant U.S. to the Appellant, I
find that this was consideration for the sale of Merchant U.S.’s remaining
interest in the Phoenix property. This is supported by the contemporaneous
reference to the sale in the Appellant’s January 30, 1995 letter to CIBC
Wood Gundy. It is also supported by Merchant 2000’s recording of its cost of
the Phoenix property in its 1995 tax return. The cost
shown, $812,500, is consistent with the acquisition of the interest in two
stages: a three-quarter interest for $650,000 in 1993 and a one-quarter
interest for $162,500 in December 1994. Merchant 2000 was also represented as
the owner of the Phoenix property in the documents relating to what
I will refer to as the aborted sale of the property to Merchant Arizona. The
documents dating from the time when the transfer was alleged to have occurred
are, in my view, the best indicators of what, in fact, took place.
[21] The Appellant’s representation in his May
13, 2000 letter that the property was always owned by Merchant U.S. was
inconsistent with the earlier documentary evidence, and was, as far as I can
determine, not accurate. By itself, however, this misrepresentation is not a
sufficient basics to find that the evidence given by the Appellant at the
hearing was not reliable.
[22] Before I leave the issue of the ownership of the Phoenix property, I would also note that the assumptions on
this point, as pleaded in paragraph 18 of the Reply to Notice of Appeal
relating to the 1994 taxation year are contradictory. Subparagraphs 18(g), (h)
and (i) state:
(g) on July 27, 1993, Merchant (2000) Ltd. purchased
an interest in land in Phoenix Arizona legally described as:
SE 1/4 of NE ¼ of section 21
Township of North Range 1
East
Maricopa County, Arizona
[hereinafter the “Phoenix
Property]
from Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc. for
$650,000;
(h) on July 28, 1993, the Appellant loaned
$650,000 to Merchant (2000) Ltd.;
(i) on July 28, 1993, Merchant (2000) Ltd.
paid $650,000 to Merchant U.S. (2000) Inc. in consideration for the interest in
the Phoenix Property;
Subparagraphs (u) and (v) read:
(u) in 1998, Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc. sold
the Phoenix Property to an arm's length party;
(v)
the Phoenix Property was purchased by and was
always owned by Merchant (2000) U.S.
And subparagraphs 18(z), (aa), (bb)
and (cc) read:
(z) Merchant (2000) Ltd. purchased
the Phoenix Property for $812,500;
(aa) the Appellant
credited his shareholder account with Merchant (2000) Ltd. by $650,000 in
August 1993;
(bb) in December 1994, the Appellant
directed the transfer of $162,500 from
Merchant (2000) Ltd. to
himself through Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc
(cc) the sum of the shareholder’s loan credit
described in paragraph 18(aa) and the transfer described in paragraph 18(bb) is
$812,500, the original purchase price of the Phoenix Property described in
paragraph 18(z).
[23] The Minister’s assumption that Merchant
2000 purchased the property for $812,500 in two transactions (for $650,000 and
$162,500) and his assumption that Merchant U.S. always owned the property are clearly
inconsistent. In Loewen v. The Queen,
the Federal Court of Appeal, per Sharlow JA stated:
9 It
is the obligation of the Crown to ensure that the assumptions paragraph is
clear and accurate. For example, the Crown cannot say that the Minister
assumed, when making the assessment, that a certain car was green and also that
the same car was red, because it is impossible for the Minister to have made
both of those assumptions at the same time: Brewster v. R. (1976), 76
DTC 6046, [1976] C.T.C. 107 (Fed. T.D.).
[24] Since the Appellant has shown that the $162,500 payment from Merchant U.S. to the
Appellant in 1994 was a repayment of amounts owing by Merchant U.S. to the
Appellant and was not an appropriation from Merchant 2000, it is not necessary
for me to decide what effect pleading of inconsistent assumptions would have on
the onus of proof in this case. However, it would seem logical that the onus
would shift to the Respondent to prove the basis of the assessment where the
assumptions that are pleaded are contradictory and effectively cancel each
other out.
[25] Given my findings above, there is no need
to consider the submissions relating to subsection 152(4) or subsection 163(2)
of the Act as they relate to the Appellant’s 1994 taxation year.
1995 to 1998
and 2000
[26] The next question to be determined is whether
the Appellant was indebted to Merchant 2000 at the end of the 1995, 1996, 1997,
1998 and 2000 taxation years by the following amounts:
1995 $325,781
1996 $141,014
1997 $153,750
1998 $198,250
2000 $20,000
If he was, he would be required by subsection 15(2) of
the Act to include the amount he owed to the corporation in his income and
would be required by subsection 80.4(2) to include a deemed interest benefit in
respect of the outstanding debt. The relevant parts of those provisions read as
follows:
15(2) Where a person … is … and the person …
has in a taxation year received a loan from or has become indebted to the
particular corporation, …the amount of the loan or indebtedness shall be
included in computing the income for the year of the person or partnership …
80.4(2) Where a person …was
(a) a shareholder of a corporation,
…
and by virtue of that shareholding that person … received a loan
from or otherwise incurred a debt to, that corporation…the person … shall be
deemed to have received a benefit in a taxation year equal to the amount, if
any, by which
(d) all interest on all such loans and
debts computed at the prescribed rate on each such loan and debt for the period
in the year during which it was outstanding
exceeds
(e) the amount of interest for the year
paid on all such loans and debts not later than 30 days after the later of the
end of the year and December 31, 1982.
[27] The auditor made two adjustments to the
Appellant’s shareholder loan account with Merchant 2000 which resulted in the
Appellant owing the corporation the amounts set out above. The first adjustment
was to correct an alleged adding mistake of $85,996 in the Appellant’s favour
in respect of an entry to the account dated November 9, 1984. The auditor also
reversed a credit of $650,000 in the shareholder loan account dated August 8,
1993 on the basis that the Appellant did not loan this amount to the
corporation.
Adding Error
[28] In examining the shareholder
loan account register, the CRA
auditor found what appeared to be four adding errors in the following amounts:
November 9, 1984
|
$85,996
|
1986
|
(500)
|
1987
|
(600)
|
1991
|
1,400
|
Total
|
$86,296
|
The Appellant is only challenging
the adjustment relating to the alleged error of $85,996.
[29] The shareholder loan register showed a loan
of $38,000 by the Appellant to the company on November 9, 1984. The previous
entry in the register showed that Merchant 2000 owed the Appellant $100,494.
After the $38,000 loan, the balance in the account was recorded as $224,490 owing
to the Appellant. On its face, this was an $85,996 overstatement of the amount
owing to the Appellant.
[30] The Appellant testified that the
shareholder loan record was incomplete for the period prior to November 9, 1984
and that the November 9, 1984 balance of $224,940 owing to him was supported by
a memo he wrote on November 6, 1984. That memo referred to the purchase by
Merchant 2000 of his spouse’s and mother’s interest in certain Phoenix properties
for $363,678 of which $186,490 was paid by the Appellant and treated as a loan
to the company. The memo states that “the balance remaining due to [the
Appellant] as an interest free loan to the company is $186,490.” This amount,
along with the $38,000 he advanced to Merchant 2000 on November 9, 1984 made up
the total shareholder loan credit of $224,490 recorded on that date.
[31] In argument, the Respondent did not challenge the
authenticity of the November 6, 1984 memo referring to the shareholder loan
balance of $224,490 owing to the Appellant, and agreed that the document
appeared to account for the discrepancy in issue. Counsel expressed surprise,
though, that this memo had not been included with the shareholder loan
register.
[32] In my view, the Appellant has provided
sufficient evidence that his shareholder loan balance in Merchant 2000 was not
overstated by $85,996 in 1984. The explanation provided by the Appellant is
plausible, given the documentary proof he has provided. The figures from the
November 6, 1984 memo tie in exactly to the shareholder loan balance at
November 9, 1984 and provide a basis for that entry. It should also be kept in
mind that the audit which led to these reassessments occurred in 2000, some 16
years after the day of the entry. In these circumstances, I find that the memo
provides prima facie evidence that the correct shareholder loan balance
was $224,490 on November 9, 1984.
$650,000 Entry
[33] The next question to be determined is
whether the Appellant loaned $650,000 to Merchant 2000 on August 8, 1993.
[34] The evidence shows that on July 27, 1993
Merchant 2000 entered into a written agreement to purchase an interest in the Phoenix property from Merchant U.S. for $650,000. The
Appellant testified that Merchant U.S. repaid him $650,000 of the money it owed
him, and he loaned these funds to Merchant 2000 to enable it to pay Merchant
U.S.
[35] The tally sheet of the Appellant’s loans to
Merchant U.S. shows an entry on July 28, 1993 indicating a repayment of
$650,000 to the Appellant. The Appellant’s shareholder loan account in Merchant
2000 was credited in the amount of $650,000 on August 8, 1993 with the notation
“lent by me (Phoenix property).”
[36] While no money changed hands between the
parties, there was an offsetting of funds owing by Merchant U.S. to the
Appellant, by the Appellant to Merchant 2000, and by Merchant 2000 to Merchant
U.S.
[37] The Appellant maintains that the entries in
the Appellant’s Merchant U.S. loan account and his Merchant 2000 shareholder
loan account are consistent with the Appellant’s evidence and intention.
Counsel submitted that the reduction of the Appellant’s loan balance with
Merchant U.S. was valid consideration for the increase to his shareholder loan
to Merchant 2000. There was no net change to the aggregate amount owing to him
by the two companies as a result of the transactions relating to the purchase
of the Phoenix property.
[38] The Respondent’s position is that there was
no transfer of an interest in the Phoenix property to
Merchant 2000 in 1993 and that there was no proof that Merchant U.S. ever owned
such an interest in the first instance. The Respondent asserts, therefore, that
there was no loan made by the Appellant to Merchant 2000 on August 8, 1993
because there was no property purchased by Merchant 2000 from Merchant U.S. at
that time.
[39] My first observation is that in reassessing
the Appellant, the Minister appears to have accepted that Merchant U.S. owned
an interest in the Phoenix property. At subparagraph 18(v) of the
Reply to the Notice of Appeal from the reassessment of the Appellant’s 1995
taxation year, it is pleaded that the Minister assumed that:
(v) the Phoenix Property was purchased by and
was always owned by Merchant (2000) U.S. Inc.
[40] The issue would be then whether the
Appellant has shown that a part of this interest was transferred to Merchant
2000 in 1993. The Appellant produced a copy of an executed written agreement stating
that Merchant U.S. was transferring 75% of its interest in the Phoenix property to Merchant 2000 for consideration of
$650,000. This agreement, along with Merchant 2000’s tax filings as outlined
earlier in these reasons, all treat the property as having been transferred to
Merchant 2000 in two stages in 1993 and 1994, and I accept that it was transferred
in that manner.
[41] Although no money was exchanged at the time
of the sale in 1993, the accounting by the parties between themselves for the
amounts owing that arose from the transaction are consistent with description
of the transaction given by the Appellant and corroborated by the loan records
kept by him, and by the sale agreement between Merchant U.S and Merchant 2000.
Parties may agree to set off amounts due rather than pay money back and forth,
and the set off will constitute payment and receipt of the amounts,
respectively. (see for example: Armstrong v.
Minister of National Revenue 88 DTC 1015).
[42] I find that the offsetting of the amount
the Appellant was owed by Merchant U.S. against the amount due from Merchant
2000 to Merchant U.S. for the purchase of the Phoenix
property was valid consideration for the $650,000 credit to the Appellant’s shareholder
loan account with Merchant 2000.
[43] The Respondent’s counsel also submitted
that the Appellant had not shown that the value of the interest in the Phoenix property was equal to $650,000 at the time of the
transfer. This position, though, was not raised in the Reply and no application
to amend the pleadings was made. Therefore it is not properly before the Court
and it is not necessary to analyse this submission.
[44] Given my finding in favour of the Appellant
with respect both adjustments made by the auditor to the shareholder loan
account, it follows that the subsection 80.4(2) deemed interest benefit
and the gross negligence penalties should also be reversed.
Conclusion
[45] The appeals will therefore be allowed, in
part, in accordance with these reasons and in accordance with the partial
settlement between the parties set out in the appendix to these reasons. The
Appellant’s counsel requested the opportunity to make further representations
regarding costs, and dates will be set by the Registrar of the Court to allow
the parties to do so.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 10th day of September, 2010.
“Brent Paris”