Date: 20010109
Docket: 1999-3633-IT-I
BETWEEN:
SAMIR OSMAN,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
O'Connor, J.T.C.C.
[1]
These appeals were heard at Edmonton, Alberta on December 15,
2000.
[2]
So far as material, the Reply to the Notice of Appeal reads as
follows:
7.
In reassessing the Appellant for the 1995 and 1996 Taxation
Years, the Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") included an automobile standby charge and
operating cost benefit in the amount of $11,556.00 and $11,556.00
respectively. Furthermore the Minister included an interest
benefit in respect of an overdrawn shareholder's loan account
for the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years in the amount of $278.00 and
$403.00 respectively.
8.
In so reassessing the Appellant, the Minister made the following
assumptions of fact:
(a)
the Appellant is the 100% shareholder in 338806 Alberta Ltd. (the
Company");
(b)
the Appellant is an employee of the Company;
(c)
the Appellant's spouse was not an employee or a shareholder
of the Company;
(d)
the Appellant and his spouse did not own any personal vehicles
during the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years;
(e)
the Company provided various corporate vehicles for the Appellant
for business and personal travel during the 1995 and 1996
Taxation Years;
(f)
the Company owned a 1994 Dodge Caravan (the
"Automobile");
(g)
the Automobile cost the Company a total of $32,100.00 ($30,000.00
+ (G.S.T.) $2,100.00);
(h)
the Automobile was made available to the Appellant's spouse
during the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years;
(i)
the Appellant or his spouse did not maintain a log to accurately
detail personal and business use of the automobile;
(j)
the Automobile was not used more than 90% for business
purposes;
(k)
the Company paid all operating costs of the Automobile;
(l)
during the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years the Appellant or his
spouse did not pay any amounts to the Company or otherwise
reimburse the Company for the use of the Automobile;
(m) the
standby charge was calculated in both the 1995 ad 1996 Taxation
Years as follows:
Standby charge
|
|
Cost of the Automobile including G.S.T.
|
$32,100.00
|
|
x 12 months
|
|
x 2%
|
|
$7,704.00
|
Plus Operating Cost Benefit
|
|
Standby charge x ½
|
$ 3,852.00
|
Gross Benefit
|
$11,556.00
|
(n)
in the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years the Company loaned funds to
the Appellant throughout the year;
(o)
throughout the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years the shareholder loan
account of the Appellant was in a debit position;
(p)
the Appellant did not pay the Company any interest in respect of
the borrowed funds throughout the 1995 and 1996 Taxation
Years;
(q)
in the 1995 and 1996 Taxation Years the Company conferred a
benefit of $278.00 and $403.00 respectively on the Appellant in
the capacity of shareholder.
[3]
At the hearing of these appeals, the Appellant stated that he
agreed with all of the facts set forth in the Reply as mentioned
above but that he considered the 2% x 12 i.e. 24% rate
for the calculation of the standby charge and the calculation of
the operating cost benefit, based on that rate were excessive and
usurious.
[4]
The Appellant pointed to interest rates charged from time to time
on the financing costs of new automobiles and attempted to
compare that to the 24% rate for calculating the standby charge.
The Auditor called by counsel for the Respondent stated that the
Appellant was in effect comparing apples and oranges and that the
standby charge was meant to quantify the value of the benefit
obtained by the Appellant and/or his wife in having available to
them for the entire two years a vehicle worth approximately
$32,000.00. In other words there is little or no relationship
between the standby charge rate and the interest charge on the
financing of a car purchase.
ANALYSIS AND
DECISION
[5]
The relevant provisions of the Income Tax Act are as
follows:
6(1) There shall be included in computing the income of a
taxpayer in a taxation year as income from an office or
employment such of the following amounts as are applicable:
6(1)(e) - where the taxpayer's employer ... made an
automobile available to the taxpayer, or to a person related to
the taxpayer, in the year, the amount, if any, by which
(i)
an amount that is a reasonable standby charge for the automobile
for the total number of days in the year during which it was made
so available
exceeds
(ii)
the total of all amounts, each of which is an amount (other than
an expense related to the operation of the automobile) paid in
the year to the employer or the person related to the employer by
the taxpayer or the person related to the taxpayer for the use of
the automobile;
...
6(1)(k) Automobile operating expense benefit -
where
(i)
an amount is determined under subparagraph (e)(i) in
respect of an automobile in computing the taxpayer's income
for the year,
(ii)
amounts related to the operation (otherwise than in connection
with or in the course of the taxpayer's office or employment)
of the automobile for the period or periods in the year during
which the automobile was made available to the taxpayer or a
person related to the taxpayer are paid or payable by the
taxpayer's employer or a person related to the taxpayer's
employer (each of whom is in this paragraph referred to as the
“payor”), and
(iii)
the total of the amounts so paid or payable is not paid in the
year or within 45 days after the end of the year to the payor by
the taxpayer or by the person related to the taxpayer,
the amount in respect of the operation of the automobile
determined by the formula
A - B
where
A is
(iv)
where the automobile is used primarily in the performance of the
duties of the taxpayer's office or employment during the
period or periods referred to in subparagraph (ii) and the
taxpayer notifies the employer in writing before the end of the
year of the taxpayer's intention to have this subparagraph
apply, 1/2 of the amount determined under subparagraph
(e)(i) in respect of the automobile in computing the
taxpayer's income for the year, and
...
B is the total of all amounts in respect of the operation of
the automobile in the year paid in the year or within 45 days
after the end of the year to the payor by the taxpayer or by the
person related to the taxpayer; and
...
6(2) Reasonable standby charge. For the purposes of paragraph
(1)(e), a reasonable standby charge for an automobile for
the total number of days (in this subsection referred to as the
“total available days”) in a taxation year during
which the automobile is made available to a taxpayer or to a
person related to the taxpayer by the employer of the taxpayer or
by a person related to the employer (both of whom are in this
subsection referred to as the “employer”) shall be
deemed to be the amount determined by the formula.
(There follows a formula which in simple terms provides that
the reasonable standby charge is 2% of the cost of the car times
the number of months the vehicle is made available.)
6(2.1) Where in a taxation year
(a)
a taxpayer was employed principally in selling or leasing
automobiles,
(b)
an automobile owned by the taxpayer's employer was made
available by the employer to the taxpayer or to a person related
to the taxpayer, and
(c)
the employer has acquired one or more automobiles,
the amount that would otherwise be determined under
subsection (2) as a reasonable standby charge shall, at the
option of the employer, be computed as if
(d)
the reference in the formula in subsection (2) to
“2%” were read as a reference to “11/2%”,
and
(e)
the cost to the employer of the automobile were the greater
of
(i)
the
quotient obtained by dividing
(A) the
cost to the employer of all new automobiles acquired by the
employer in the year for sale or lease in the course of the
employer's business
by
(B)
the number of automobiles described in clause (A), and
(ii)
the quotient obtained by dividing
(A) the
cost to the employer of all automobiles acquired by the employer
in the year for sale or lease in the course of the employer's
business
by
(B)
the number of automobiles described in clause (A).
[6]
As I mentioned to the Appellant at the hearing of these Appeals,
I am in no position to change the provisions of the Income Tax
Act, even if I were to consider them usurious in certain
aspects. The calculation is clear as set out in the above
provisions and as applied by counsel for the Minister in the
calculation made in the Reply.
[7]
In other words, the Appellant in comparing the interest rate
charged on the financing of the purchase of a new vehicle to the
24% rate was comparing apples to oranges. A comparison which is
more reasonable would be between the 24% rate on a purchased
vehicle and the rate charged on a leased vehicle. In this
connection I quote from M. Tang and G. Katz, "Automobile
Taxable Benefits and Expenses: Part 1" (1997), 45
Canadian Tax Journal 1150 at 1161.
MINIMIZATION OF THE STANDBY CHARGE
Lease Versus Buy
Although the federal government had intended that two-thirds
of lease costs would generally be equal to 2 percent of the cost
of an automobile, the standby charge for an employer-owned
automobile is generally higher than for a comparable
employer-leased automobile. The assumptions behind the
legislation are that the monthly lease payments equal 3 percent
of the cost of the automobile. However, this does not take into
account the fact that the lease payments do not recover the
entire cost of the automobile to the lessor; in other words, the
lease payments assume that the vehicle has a residual value at
the end of the lease term. The example set out in table 1
illustrates that the standby charge benefit on a $30,000 car is
substantially less where the car is leased, rather than
purchased. The lease payments would have to be $1,035 per month
(including 15 percent sales taxes) in order for the standby
charge to be equal to that for the purchased vehicle. This would
be the case if the lease term were 36 months, the residual value
were nil, and the interest rate were 6 percent.
[8]
The only benefit I suggested that might be available to the
Appellant was that provided in paragraph 6(2.1) of the
Act, which in essence reduces the 2% per month rate
to 1.5% with respect to automobile salesmen. However after due
consideration, I believe the position of the Minister is correct.
The reduction from 2% to 1.5% is at the option of the employer
and the calculation is based upon automobiles acquired by the
employer for sale or lease in the course of the employer's
business. Those conditions were not present in these appeals. It
was not the employer (or even the Appellant) who opted for the
1.5% rate and moreover the vehicle in question was not acquired
by the employer for sale or lease in the course of the
employer's business. The vehicle in fact was made available
to the Appellant and his wife for the entire two years. It was
not advertised for sale and was not part of the fleet of
automobiles available for sale or lease.
[7]
For the above reasons, the appeals are dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 9th day of January,
2001.
"T. O'Connor"
J.T.C.C.