Docket: 2006-1074(IT)I
BETWEEN:
CHRISTOPHER D. PALIN,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Motion heard on March 15, 2007, at Toronto, Ontario
Before: The Honourable
Justice E. P. Rossiter
Appearances:
For the Appellant:
|
The
Appellant himself
|
|
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Nimanthika Kaneira
|
ORDER
Upon
hearing a motion by the Respondent for:
1. an
Order dismissing the Appellant's Notice of Appeal in respect of his 1990, 1991,
1992 and 1993 taxation years;
2. in the alternative, an
Order extending the time within which the Respondent must file and serve its
Reply to 60 days from the date of communication of the Court's Order.
And
having heard the submissions of the parties and reading the materials filed by
the parties;
1.
The
Motion is granted and the appeal is dismissed.
2.
There
will be no Order as to costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada,
this 1st day of November, 2007.
"E. P. Rossiter"
Citation: 2007TCC255
Date: 20071101
Docket: 2006-1074(IT)I
BETWEEN:
CHRISTOPHER D. PALIN,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR ORDER
Rossiter, J.
[1] The Respondent
brought a Notice of Motion for:
1. an
Order dismissing the Appellant's Notice of Appeal in respect of his 1990, 1991,
1992 and 1993 taxation years;
2. in the alternative,
an Order extending the time within which the Respondent must file and serve its
Reply to 60 days from the date of communication of the Court's Order.
Issue
[2] The issue is whether this
Court has the jurisdiction to entertain an appeal from a matter being subject
to the Fairness Provisions in subsection 220(3.1) of the Income Tax Act (“Act”)
or if it is a matter which is within the jurisdiction of the Federal Court
of Canada.
Facts
[3] The facts in this
matter are straightforward.
1. On
December 22, 1994, the Appellant was arbitrarily assessed in respect
of his 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years. The Canada Revenue
Agency (“CRA”) found the Appellant had overpaid his tax liability and
was owed a refund.
2. On
March 9, 1995, the Appellant filed Notices of Objection with respect to all
assessments. The Objections were, in part, that CRA had miscalculated the
Appellant's taxable income too low resulting in a refund.
3. On
February 15, 1995 and June 21, 1996, CRA reassessed the Appellant for the 1990,
1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years upholding the refund and issuing a refund
cheque to the Appellant.
4. On October 7, 2004 the
Appellant filed amended returns for the 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation
years after the Appellant discovered that CRA had under-assessed the Appellant
for the taxation years in question and explained the excess refund. The
Appellant had received a refund and deposited it in a non-interest bearing
account some four and one-half years after the refund was issued. These amended
returns were treated by CRA as requests to adjust the Appellant's income tax
returns for the 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years.
5. On June
16, 2005, CRA in response to the amended returns, issued Notices of Reassessment
with respect to the Appellant's 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation
years seeking a substantial amount by way of interest on the excess
refund.
6. On September 7,
2005, after complying with this new reassessment of June 16, 2005, the Appellant
requested that CRA reduce the interest assessed to zero.
7. On January 17,
2006, the Appellant's request was refused pursuant to the Fairness Provisions
of the Act because the request was outside the relevant time period; the
Respondent’s position was that the Fairness Provisions only relate to the 10
years ending in the previous calendar years; therefore a request in 2005 would only
be accepted for 1995 and subsequent tax years.
Respondent's Position
[4] The
position of the Respondent is that:
(1) the Minister
considered the Appellant's request for interest relief under subsection
220(3.1) of the Act;
(2) under subsection
165(1.2) of the Act no objection may be made by a taxpayer to an assessment
made under subsection 220(3.1). This subsection reads:
165.(1.2) Limitation on objections -- Notwithstanding
subsections (1) and (1.1), no objection may be made by a taxpayer to an
assessment made under subsection 118.1(11), 152(4.2), 169(3) or 220(3.1) nor,
for greater certainty, in respect of an issue for which the right of objection
has been waived in writing by the taxpayer.
(3) in order to appeal the taxpayer must file a
valid Notice of Objection under subsection 169(1) of the Act. The
Respondent reasons that although the Appellant did send a letter on September
7, 2005 in response to the June 2005 reassessment, this letter is not a valid
Notice of Objection, pursuant to subsection 165(1.2);
(4) given that the Appellant
is barred from making an objection, this Court has no jurisdiction to proceed with the appeal. The
Respondent takes the position that the only way that a review could be
conducted with respect to the Fairness Provisions under subsection 220(3.1) is
by way of judicial review to the Federal Court of Canada and not by way of
appeal to the Tax Court of Canada.
Appellant'
Position
[5] The Appellant took the position that this is
not an appeal from a Fairness decision, but rather is an appeal from the
Appellant’s request for a reduction of the interest payable to zero. The
Appellant's view is that the Minister did not honour his September 2005 request
at all and simply said the Appellant was outside of the limitation period - end
of the matter. The Appellant subsequently argued that the Minister did not
interpret subsection 220(3.1) correctly.
[6] Further, the
Appellant also states that the Minister treated the Appellant's amendments as
an adjustment of the 1990 to 1993 returns and that he did not give the Minister
permission to do this reassessment.
Analysis
[7] This was not an appeal
of an interest assessment but rather an appeal from a review or failure of a
review under subsection 220(3.1) of the Act. The record reveals that the
Appellant's request for relief was reviewed under subsection 220(3.1) of the Act
and as a result subsection 165(1.2) of the Act applies. Subsection
165(1.2) of the Act precludes a taxpayer from objecting to an assessment
which was made under subsection 220(3.1) of the Act. Given the foregoing,
the Appellant may not appeal to the Tax Court of Canada because he is barred
from filing a valid Notice of Objection pursuant to subsection 169(1) of the Act.
[8] Reference should be
made to a Federal Court of Appeal decision in Armstrong v. Canada; Armstrong
v. Canada (M.N.R.), [2006] F.C.J. No. 463 wherein Justice Sharlow
stated in paragraph 8:
An amended return for a taxation year that has already been the
subject of a notice of assessment does not trigger the Minister's obligation to
assess with all due dispatch (subsection 152(1) of the Income Tax Act),
nor does it start anew any of the statutory limitation periods that commence
when an income tax return for a particular year is filed and then assessed. An
amended income tax return is simply a request that the Minister reassess for
that year.
This passage from the Federal Court of Appeal
certainly supports the proposition that when the Appellant filed the amended
returns in 2004, it was implicit the Appellant was also authorizing the
Minister to reassess his taxation years in question. Reference may also be made
to a decision by Justice Mogan of the Tax Court of Canada in Yaremy v.
Canada, [1999] T.C.J. No. 713 where subsection 165(1.2) of the Act,
was also considered. Justice Mogan stated in paragraph 10 as follows:
Having found that the reassessment under appeal was made under
subsection 152(4.2), I conclude that subsection 165(1.2) applies and no valid
objection could be made by the Appellant to that reassessment. If no valid
objection can be made, then no valid appeal can be commenced under subsection
169(1). I uphold the Respondent's preliminary objection and will quash the
appeal.
[9] Similarly, in this case,
I conclude that given the request for relief was reviewed under subsection
220(3.1) of the Act, subsection 165(1.2) of the Act applies and no
valid objection or appeal lies therefrom to this Court. A challenge to a decision
under the Fairness Provisions of subsection 220(3.1) of the Act is by
way of judicial review to the Federal Court of Canada. A challenge to a failure
of the Minister to consider a request under the Fairness Provisions is by way
of seeking mandamus to the Federal Court of Canada. There will be no Order as
to costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of November, 2007.
"E. P. Rossiter"