Citation: 2009 TCC 165
Date: 20090424
Docket: 2008-1645(IT)I
BETWEEN:
JOHN F. GROSCKI,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
For the Appellant: The Appellant himself
Counsel for the Respondent:
Saba Zarghami and Laurent Bartleman
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered
orally from the bench on
January 28, 2009, in Toronto, Ontario.)
Miller J.
[1] This
appeal is allowed and referred back to the Minister of National Revenue for
reconsideration and reassessment on the following basis. First, as agreed
between the parties, the Appellant is entitled to an additional interest
expense deduction of $30,752; second, travel expenses as claimed by the Appellant
in the amount of $21,357 are deductible. The balance of the assessment I find
to be correct.
[2] The
only two items left for determination by me at this trial were
Mr. Groscki's expenses in connection with travel and bad debts. I have
been satisfied by Mr. Groscki's evidence that his extensive travel
requirements, in connection with his work as a C.A., are more properly
reflected in his claim than the auditor's and appeals officer's adjustments. I
understood that the dollar amount of expenses were not at issue, but the
dispute was a question of personal versus business use.
[3] I
appreciate that Mr. Groscki did not provide me with logs or detailed
records, but I accept his oral evidence with respect to the kilometers traveled
by each vehicle, and I find the percentage of business use he has attached to
each vehicle is reasonable in the circumstances. I therefore allow that aspect
of the appeal.
[4] The
second issue I have to deal with is the matter of a $12,000 bad debt expense
Mr. Groscki claims on his income tax return. He calculated this expense by
determining an allowance for doubtful accounts in year one and in year two, and
determining the difference. When the appeals officer attempted to explain to
Mr. Groscki that such a determination was not a bad debt for income tax
purposes, but an increase in an allowance for doubtful accounts,
Mr. Groscki accused the appeals officer of not knowing what he was talking
about. With respect, that was unfair, and was inaccurate.
[5] I wish to repeat a
brief excerpt that I read to you already from the CCH commentary, but I wish to
have it in my reasons:
In view of the fact that many
taxpayers keep their accounts on an accrual basis and consequently include in
their incomes accounts which are receivable but of which payment has not been
received, it is obvious that some provision must be made for deductions in
respect of debts which are doubtful or which have proved to be uncollectible. The
system provided in the Income Tax Act for dealing with bad and
doubtful debts can be determined only by reading paragraphs 20(1)(l)
and 20(1)(p) together with paragraphs 12(1)(d) and 12(1)(i).
Paragraph 20(1)(l) provides that a taxpayer may deduct a
reasonable amount as a reserve for certain doubtful debts. Paragraph 12(1)(d)
provides for the inclusion in income of the amount which the taxpayer deducted
as a reserve for doubtful debts in the previous year. Consequently, there must
be an annual re‑appraisal of the doubtful accounts receivable of a
company in order to arrive at the net deduction in each year. When a
debt is no longer doubtful but is finally established to be bad, it may be
deductible under paragraph 20(1)(p).
Under the
provisions of the Act, there is clearly a distinction between an
allowance for doubtful accounts and bad debts. They are not the same thing.
[6] What
the Appellant has done is simply determined his doubtful accounts, and yes, the
result of doing so is to effectively create a $12,000 deduction in the 2002
taxation year, but it is not a deduction for bad debts as that expression is
used in the Income Tax Act. If I were to allow your claim, I would be
endorsing an unacceptable methodology for bad debt deductibility as it is meant
to be set up in the income tax returns.
[7] The
taxpayer who makes a reasonable effort to assess his doubtful accounts is
entitled to deduct such amount one year, but bring it into income the next
year. In Mr. Groscki's case, if he can satisfy Canada Revenue Agency that
he brought $226,000 in income in 2002, and that $238,000 is a reasonable
estimate of his 2002 doubtful accounts, then he should have been able to deduct
the 238,000. Instead, Mr. Groscki claims he has $12,000 bad debt expense
which, as I have said, is not the same thing. I do have some concern, based on
Mr. Groscki's comments, about where is he supposed to put this adjustment
to the reserve on a T1? Certainly not as a bad debt.
[8] The
statement of professional activities does include a line item to bring in
reserves deducted from the previous year. When you look at the statement of
professional activities, it indicates income, professional fees, minus a number
of things, plus work-in-progress, and then there is a line: "Reserves
deducted last year." So the form does indicate that, but it does not go
further. It would be helpful if there was a line for the deduction of reserves
in the current year, and that is certainly something I suggest the Department
of Finance needs to consider.
[9] The
issue before me, however, is not whether Mr. Groscki has properly
calculated his allowance for doubtful accounts, but whether he has proven he
had $12,000 of bad debts in 2002. He has not provided me any evidence with
respect to bad debts for 2002. I hope that, in future, filings will be made in
accordance with the Income Tax Act to obtain the deductions that you are
indeed entitled to.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada,
this 24th day of April,
2009.
“Campbell J. Miller”
CITATION: 2009 TCC 165
COURT FILE NO.: 2008-1645(IT)I
STYLE OF CAUSE: JOHN F. GROSCKI and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: January 28, 2009
AMENDED REASONS
FOR
JUDGMENT BY: The Honourable Justice Campbell J. Miller
DATE OF JUDGMENT: February 6, 2009
APPEARANCES:
For the Appellant:
|
The
Appellant himself
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Saba Zarghami and Laurent Bartleman
|
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the Appellant:
Name: N/A
Firm: N/A
For the Respondent: John
H. Sims, Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa,
Canada