Docket: 2001-1027(IT)G
BETWEEN:
MADELEINE
GAGNON,
In her capacity as heir
of the late Richard Boucher,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
____________________________________________________________________
Appeals heard
on March 15, 2005, at Chicoutimi, Quebec
Before: The Honourable Judge Paul Bédard
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Appellant:
|
Éric Le Bel
|
Counsel for
the Respondent:
|
Martin
Gentile
|
____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The appeals
from the assessments made under the Income Tax Act for the 1988, 1989,
1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years are allowed, with costs, and the
penalties are set aside, in accordance with the attached Reasons for Judgment.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 14th
day of June 2005.
"Paul
Bédard"
Translation certified true
on this 3rd day of January 2006.
Garth McLeod,
Translator
Citation: 2005TCC311
Date: 20050614
Docket:
2001-1027(IT)G
BETWEEN:
MADELEINE GAGNON,
In her capacity as heir
of the late Richard Boucher,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
Bédard J.
[1] In these appeals instituted under the general
procedure, the point for determination is whether the penalty assessed on the
Appellant under subsection 163(2) of the Income Tax Act (the "Act")
in respect of the tax credit for mental or physical impairment for the 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years was warranted.
[2] The facts on which the Minister of National Revenue
(the "Minister") relied in making the assessments for the years in
issue are stated in paragraph 8 of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal:
[TRANSLATION]
a. the case originated in an internal investigation of certain
employees of the Jonquière Tax Centre who had set up a scheme to enable certain
persons to receive fraudulent tax refunds in consideration of a commission
based on a percentage of the said refunds;
b. Richard Boucher is the father of Mario Boucher, who
has been employed by the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency for approximately
15 years;
c. with the aid of Mario Boucher, Richard Boucher
received tax refunds to which he would not normally have been entitled;
d. on June 16, 1994, Richard Boucher received a total
tax refund of $3,773.29 for the 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation
years, pursuant to notices of reassessment dated June 16, 1994;
e. by those notices, Richard Boucher was granted a tax credit
for mental or physical impairment;
f. in support of the tax credit claimed, Richard Boucher
provided a Disability Tax Credit Certificate dated March 22, 1994,
completed by Dr. André Couture;
g. according to the certificate, the impairment from which
Richard Boucher suffered began on February 22, 1988;
h. the certificate was falsified after it was issued by the
physician, and the impairment instead apparently began on February 22,
1993;
i. in support of the reassessments dated September 25, 2000,
the Respondent contends that, with respect to the 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992
and 1993 taxation years, Richard Boucher made a misrepresentation that is
attributable to neglect, carelessness or wilful default in supplying any
information under the Income Tax Act;
j. the disability tax credit claim for the 1988, 1989, 1990,
1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years leads the Minister to believe that
Richard Boucher knowingly, or under circumstances amounting to gross
negligence, participated in, assented to or acquiesced in the making of, a
false statement or omission in the returns of income filed for the 1988, 1989,
1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993 taxation years, as a result of which the tax that he
would have been required to pay, based on the information provided in the
returns of income filed for those years, was less than the amount of tax
payable for those years.
[3] Roland Pelletier, a special investigations
officer with the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency (the "Agency"),
testified that, in 1998, an employee of the Agency realized that the department
had made tax refunds to taxpayers without there being any supporting
documentation in their files. Mr. Pelletier explained that, together with
other persons, he had conducted an investigation into the matter. That
investigation led to the laying of charges against, and the conviction of, two
Agency employees, one of whom was Mario Boucher, the Appellant's son.
According to Mr. Pelletier, the investigation revealed that some
45 taxpayers had been contacted by those two employees or by other persons
and that the latter had received 50 percent to 66.66 percent of the
tax refunds received by the taxpayers. Mario Boucher's name was associated
with a number of cases, including that of his father, the late
Richard Boucher, who died in 2000. Mr. Pelletier added that he had
telephoned the late Richard Boucher on May 2, 2000. In that telephone
conversation, Mr. Pelletier learned from the Appellant that the late
Richard Boucher was gravely ill with cancer. He then decided on compassionate
grounds not to meet the late Mr. Boucher.
[4] It should be pointed out that counsel for the
Appellant admitted that the form T2201, entitled "Disability Tax
Credit Certificate", had been falsified. The date on which the impairment
began, February 22, 1993, in this case, had been falsified to read
February 22, 1988.
[5] The Appellant testified, with considerable emotion,
that her spouse, the late Richard Boucher, was an extremely honest man and
that he absolutely had not suspected that his son had acted in a fraudulent manner.
She added that it was her son Mario who had usually prepared the late
Mr. Boucher's returns of income. Lastly, the Appellant described her
spouse's health starting in 1993, when he had been stricken with a heart
attack. In 1994, the Appellant stated, the late Mr. Boucher's respiratory
problems were such that he constantly needed oxygen in order to survive.
Shortly thereafter, the late Mr. Boucher learned that he had lung cancer.
[6] Lastly, the evidence showed that the late
Richard Boucher had deposited only a portion, $3,000, of the tax refund
cheque of $3,700.
[7] Counsel for the Respondent essentially contended that
the late Richard Boucher had shown wilful blindness. Counsel for the
Respondent claimed that he could not imagine that the late Mr. Boucher had
not been aware, when he received the refund cheque, that he was not entitled to
a refund of that size, particularly since he had not received such a refund
from the provincial tax authorities. Counsel for the Respondent contended that
it was highly unlikely that the refund cheque was not accompanied by a notice
of reassessment, which usually states the nature of the changes resulting in
the tax refund. He therefore claimed that one could legitimately believe that
the late Mr. Boucher had therefore questioned his right to receive such a
refund. Lastly, counsel for the Respondent claimed that I should infer from the
lack of testimony by Mario Boucher (who could have corroborated the fact
that he had arranged the tax refund without his father's knowledge) that that
evidence would have been unfavourable to the Appellant.
[8] In light of the evidence, I find it more likely than
unlikely that the late Richard Boucher did not realize that he was not
entitled to such a refund.
[9] First, the tax refund cheque was not for such a large
amount that the late Mr. Boucher himself should have become suspicious,
particularly since he was in fact entitled to a tax credit for the 1993 and
following years. It is also quite plausible, in my view, that a taxpayer who,
it should be recalled, was seriously ill in 1994 might not have read or
understood the notices of reassessment. A concern for survival in such
circumstances necessarily prevails over any concern to understand the nature of
a notice of reassessment prepared by a computer in often barely comprehensible
terms. Furthermore, the late Richard Boucher was entitled to believe in
this case that he was entitled to such a refund since it was his son, an
employee of the Agency, who had prepared his returns of income. He had no
reason to believe at the time that his son was dishonest.
[10] Counsel for the Respondent claimed that I should infer
from the lack of testimony by the son (who could have testified that the scheme
had been set up without his father's knowledge) that that evidence would have
been unfavourable to the Appellant. I find the claim of counsel for the
Respondent legitimate in itself. However, I am convinced that, if
Mario Boucher had testified to that effect, counsel for the Respondent
would have been the first to claim that he was not an independent and credible
witness. Lastly, I wish to emphasize that the evidence absolutely did not
reveal that the late Richard Boucher paid a kickback or made any
withdrawals, after the refund cheque was cashed, in amounts corresponding to
the other kickbacks paid to those who had devised the scheme.
[11] For these reasons, I find that the Respondent in this
case did not satisfy me on a balance of probabilities that the late
Richard Boucher showed wilful blindness or that he knowingly made a false
statement or omission in his returns of income in issue, or that he took part
in, consented to or acquiesced in the making of a false statement or omission.
[12] I conclude that the appeals must be allowed, with
costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada,
this 14th day of June 2005.
"Paul
Bédard"
Translation certified true
on this 3rd day of January 2006.
Garth McLeod,
Translator