Citation: 2010 TCC 95
Date: 20100217
Docket: 2009-986(GST)I
BETWEEN:
GABYE GOULET and GHISLAIN CANUEL,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Favreau J.
[1]
This is an
appeal from an assessment made under Part IX of the Excise Tax Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15, as amended (the Act). In an assessment dated
June 13, 2008, and bearing the number 1881221, the Minister of
National Revenue, through the Minister of Revenue of Quebec (collectively the
Minister), disallowed the application for a rebate of Goods and Services Tax
(GST) for new housing located at 3880 Mountainview Street in Saint‑Hubert,
Quebec, (new housing) in respect of which the appellants were claiming a rebate
of $3,584.13.
[2]
In making the
assessment, the Minister relied, among other things, on the following
assumptions of fact and findings:
[TRANSLATION]
(a)
The construction of the new housing in respect
of which a GST rebate was claimed ended on or about December 21, 2007. (admitted)
(b)
The new housing is a
detached house. (admitted)
(c)
The appellants did not build the new housing for the purpose of
using it as their primary place of residence.
(denied)
(d)
The new housing was not the
appellants' primary place of residence. (denied)
[3]
The only
issue in this case is whether the new housing was built to be used as the
appellants' primary place of residence.
[4]
Subsection 256(2)
of the Act states that a particular individual is entitled to a GST rebate for
new housing if he or she builds a residential complex for use as the primary
place of residence of the particular individual or his or her relation. The word
"relation" is defined in subsection 256(1) of the Act as a
former spouse or common‑law partner of the particular individual or
another individual who is related to the particular individual.
[5]
At the
objection stage, the appellants indicated in a letter dated
August 27, 2008, that, around the time that the construction of the
new housing was being finished, they were intending to rent it out, but then
they changed their minds. Their daughter lived in the new housing from
January to April 2008, and their son lived in the new housing
from May 2008 until August 31, 2008. In that letter, the appellants also stated that they had
decided that address changes were not necessary because they lived next door at
2870 Mountainview Street, Saint‑Hubert, and because they knew for a
fact that it would be for a short period of time, since the property was put up
for sale through a real‑estate agent on May 13, 2008. The new housing was sold in September 2008.
[6]
The
appellant Ghislain Canuel testified at the hearing and confirmed that
he had the new housing built during the period between
September and December 2007 and that he had put it up for sale
on May 13, 2008. A copy of the listing was filed in evidence. He also stated that he had initially intended to live in
the new housing, but that he then decided to rent it out in order to generate
income. This statement is confirmed by the
confirmation of insurance filed in evidence. The
occupancy for the new housing indicated that it was intended to be rented out
to third parties. In fact, the new housing was
never rented out to third parties, and no evidence of a correction to the
insurance policy was filed in evidence. In
addition, the witness filed no telephone (cell phone), electricity or insurance
bills with the Court.
[7]
Maude
Goulet Canuel, the appellants' daughter, also testified at the hearing. She
confirmed that she had lived in the new housing from January to April 2008
with her entire household. Electric household appliances with the exception of a
dishwasher were installed in the new housing.
[8]
The auditor
from the Ministère du Revenu du Québec, Jacques Bourbonnais, also testified at
the hearing. He indicated that, based on the records of the Société de
l’Assurance‑Automobile du Québec, the appellants and their children had
not changed their addresses to reflect the fact that they had lived in the new
housing for a period of time. In his testimony, he emphasised the temporary nature of the
appellants' children's stay in the new housing.
Analysis and conclusion
[9]
In this
case, the appellants had the burden of demonstrating that they had had the new
housing built for the purpose of using it as their primary place of residence.
The appellants produced no documentary evidence (such as changes of address,
moving invoices or invoices for installing cable, phone or internet)
demonstrating that they or any of their relations had used the new housing as a
primary place of residence.
[10]
On the
contrary, the documentary evidence shows that the appellants had intended to
rent out the new housing to generate income. The insurance certificate
with respect to said property reveals a great deal since the occupancy
indicated that the property was intended to be rented out to third parties.
It is also important to note that the policy came
into force on December 19, 2007, a date that was very close to the
end of the construction of the new housing and before the appellants' daughter lived
there.
[11]
The other
important document is the exclusive brokerage contract for the sale of the new
housing signed on May 13, 2008. That document demonstrates
that the appellants' son's stay in the new housing from May to August 2008 was
not as permanent as would be required for it to be his primary place of
residence.
[12]
The
appellants' daughter’s occupancy of the new housing for the four‑month
period without a change of address, without invoices related to moving,
installing cable, internet or telephone or notices to the insurance company or
Hydro‑Québec, is insufficient, in my opinion, to prove that the new
housing was used as her primary place of residence.
[13]
For these reasons, the
appeal is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 17th day of February
2010.
"Réal Favreau"
on this 20th day
of May 2010
François Brunet,
Revisor
CITATION: 2010
TCC 95
COURT FILE NO.: 2009-986(GST)I
STYLE OF CAUSE: Gabye
Goulet and Ghislain Canuel
and Her Majesty the Queen
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal, Quebec
DATE OF HEARING: November 25, 2009
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT BY: The Honourable Justice Réal Favreau
DATE OF JUDGMENT: February
16, 2010
DATE OF AMENDED
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT: February 17, 2010
APPEARANCES:
|
For the appellants:
|
The appellants
themselves
|
|
Counsel for the respondent:
|
Joëlle Bitton
|
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the appellants:
Name:
Firm:
For the respondent: John H. Sims, Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa, Canada