Citation: 2010 TCC 223
Date: 20100428
Docket: 2009-3258(IT)I
BETWEEN:
GARRY SANDHU,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent.
____________________________________________________________________
|
Agent for the Appellant:
|
Gurjant Sandhu
|
|
Counsel
for the Respondent:
|
Nalini
Persaud
|
____________________________________________________________________
ORAL REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered orally from
the bench
on April 7, 2010 at Winnipeg, Manitoba,
modified for clarity and accuracy)
[1]
The issue in the current appeal is whether the Appellant
was entitled to a credit under section 118.62 of the Income Tax Act
in the computation of his non‑refundable tax credits for the 2007
taxation year.
[2]
The Appellant did not appear at the hearing. He
was represented by his father, who also provided testimony.
[3]
Mr. Sandhu noted that the Appellant was
currently in a residency program with respect to his medical education and was
not able to attend. However, Mr. Sandhu noted that he was the person who had
negotiated the relevant loan with the Royal Bank.
[4]
In 2002, while attending university, the Appellant
obtained a loan from the Royal Bank. It appears that the loan was for an
amount of up to $45,000, which was increased to $99,000 in later years.
[5]
When filing his income tax return, the Appellant
claimed a credit under section 118.62 in respect of the interest paid on the
loan from the Royal Bank. When assessing the Appellant's 2007 income tax
return, the Minister disallowed the section 118.62 credit.
[6]
The Court was not provided with any documents
evidencing the Royal Bank loan. Mr. Sandhu noted that when the Appellant
required money, the Royal Bank manager would draw funds from the student
loan and place the funds in the Appellant's account.
[7]
Mr. Sandhu provided the Court with a letter from
a Mr. Jack Musgrove, addressed to “whom it may concern”, dated April 1, 2010,
that states the following:
Due to my busy schedule, I will not be able to appear
personally on April 7, 2010. The student loan to Gurdarshan Sandhu was made
under the Canada Student Loan program.
Please contact the writer directly at [a phone number]
if you have any further questions.
[8]
Unfortunately, for a number of reasons, I can
give no weight to this letter.
[9]
Mr. Musgrove did not appear at the hearing and
thus the letter is hearsay.
[10]
Further, the letter is extremely general in that
it does not provide any details with respect to the referenced loan. The Court
has no way of knowing if the loan referred to in the letter is the same
loan as the loan before the Court.
[11]
Also, I am concerned that the writer may be
confusing a student loan made under the Canada Student Loans Act with a
student loan made by the Royal Bank under an internal lending program for
students enrolled in professional graduate programs such as medical schools.
[12]
Section 118.62 allows a taxpayer to claim a tax
credit equal to the appropriate statutory percentage for the year times certain
qualifying interest. The interest will only qualify if it is paid in the year
on a loan made to, or other amounts owing by, the individual under one of the
following, the Canada Student Loans Act, the Canada Student Financial
Assistance Act or a law of a province governing the granting of financial
assistance to students at the post‑secondary school level.
[13]
As this Court noted in Wilkins v. Canada,
2009 TCC 61, at paragraph 6:
It is not,
however, simply a purpose test in section 118.62 of the Act as this
section does not provide for a tax credit based only on the purpose of the
loan, regardless of how the loan was obtained. The tax credit is only available
if the loan was made to the Appellant under one of the statutes listed or
described in that section (or the amount is owing under one of those statutes).
[14]
The Minister has assumed, at paragraph 8(c) and
(d) of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal, that the loan from the Royal Bank was
not made to the Appellant under the Canada Student Loans Act, the Canada
Student Financial Assistance Act or a law of a province governing the
granting of financial assistance to students at the post secondary school
level.
[15]
The Appellant has not provided the Court with
any evidence to rebut these assumptions. Perhaps the Appellant would have been
able to rebut the assumptions if he had produced loan documentation or if he
had chosen to testify. This did not occur.
[16]
As a result, I have no choice but to accept the
Minister's assumptions that the loan was not made under one of the statutes
listed or described in section 118.62.
[17]
As a result, the appeal is dismissed without
costs.
Signed at
Ottawa, Canada, this 28th day of April, 2010.
“S. D’Arcy”