Date:
20010511
Docket:
96-4730-IT-G
BETWEEN:
MARCEL
LACHANCE,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons
for Judgment
Archambault, J.T.C.C.
[1]
These are appeals by Marcel Lachance from tax assessments by the
Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) for his 1991, 1992
and 1993 taxation years. The Minister included in Mr. Lachance's
income the value of the benefits conferred on him by
Comptabilité E.G.L. Inc. (EGL). Those benefits were
payments by EGL for expenses relating to Mr. Lachance's residence
(housing expenses) and his meals (meal
expenses). The following table shows the adjustments made by
the Minister.
The
facts
|
|
1991
|
1992
|
1993
|
|
Benefits: Rent
Meals
Total benefit
|
6,869
3,191
10,060
|
4,807
3,994
8,801
|
4,128
2,126
6,254
|
[2]
As indicated in paragraph 3 of the amended Reply to the Notice of
Appeal, in making the assessments, the Minister made the
following assumptions of fact:
(a)
during the years at issue, the appellant was employed by
"Comptabilité E.G.L. Inc." (the company);
(b)
the company headquarters were located in the basement of the
appellant's residence;
(c)
the company paid all expenses relating to the appellant's
residence;
(d)
in computing his income for the years at issue, the appellant
considered that he occupied only 35% of the total area of his
residence for personal use;
(e)
in an audit conducted by a representative of the Minister of
National Revenue, the representative determined that the
appellant occupied 50% of the total area of his residence for
personal use; and
(f)
in addition, during the years at issue, the company paid certain
personal expenses of the appellant for meals he had in
restaurants and in his residence.
Mr. Lachance
admitted all the above facts with the exception of those in
subparagraphs (a) and (f).
[3]
EGL was incorporated under the Companies Act of Quebec on
December 28, 1990, and its sole shareholder is Mr.
Lachance's wife. The business of EGL consists in providing
bookkeeping services and financial and accounting consulting
services. In its first financial year, which ended on January
31, 1992, EGL had a loss of $6,641. At that time, its
paid-up capital amounted to $10. In its second financial year,
EGL made a net profit of $31,997.
[4]
According to Mr. Lachance, EGL had no employees. Every one who
worked for this company was self-employed. Apart from Mr. and
Mrs. Lachance, EGL generally used the services of one other
full-time person and two other part-time persons.
Mr. Lachance devoted 80 to 90 hours weekly to EGL's clients
and to managing the company. The income reported by Mr. Lachance
as a self-employed worker was $13,500 in 1991, $11,000
in 1992 and $31,000 in 1993.
Mrs. Lachance devoted between 30
and 40 hours weekly to EGL. Among other things, she handled the
payroll and did the bookkeeping for EGL's clients. Mr.
Lachance was not a member of any
professional order, but he had studied actuarial science and
accounting.
[5]
The residence of Mr. Lachance, located in Cap-Rouge, near Québec
city, is a one-and-a-half storey Canadian-style house, built in
1980. On the ground floor, there is a kitchen, a dining room and
a living room. On the upper floor, there are two bedrooms,
including a master bedroom and a bathroom. In the basement, there
are four offices and a washroom. Only three of them are closed
offices. Mr. Lachance occupied a closed corner office, while
Mrs. Lachance and the rest of the staff used the open office. Mr.
Lachance said that the dining room on the ground floor could be
used when needed for meeting with clients. In addition, some
files were stored in the smaller bedroom on the upper
floor.
[6]
Mr. Lachance was able to locate between 90% and 97% of the
supporting documents for the meal expenses deducted by EGL in
respect of the 1992, 1993 and 1994 financial years. Approximately
7% to 10% of the meal expenses for which he provided supporting
documents consisted in home-delivered meals.
[7]
Mr. Lachance prepared a summary describing each of the supporting
documents. The date of the bill, the name of the restaurant, the
place where the meal was consumed (at home or in the restaurant),
the name of the person with whom he met, the business for which
the person worked and the reason for the meeting were indicated
on the summary. Lastly, the summary indicated, for each bill, the
cost of the meal, the amount of GST and QST and the total amount
payable.
[8]
A number of the supporting documents are bills from fast-food
restaurants for amounts as low as $5.21 (net of tax) for which
Mr. Lachance provided the name of the person he met with. For
February 1991, there are nine bills totalling less than $15
(between $5.21 and $13.23) each, and four bills for which the
total in each case is greater than $15 (the lowest is for $19.90
and the highest is for $41.17).
[9]
Mr. Lachance testified that it had never been EGL's intention to
confer a benefit on him. He told the Court that, had he and his
wife known that a portion of the housing and meal expenses
constituted personal expenses, they would have reduced their
advance account in EGL. At January 31, 1992, Mrs. Lachance's
account totalled $9,476. At January 31, 1993, the advance
accounts of Mr. and Mrs. Lachance totalled $32,268, and at
January 31, 1994, $70,323. The advances made by Mr. and Mrs.
Lachance were non-interest bearing and no repayment terms had
been provided for.
Minister's assessment
[10] In
making his assessment, the Minister assumed that Mr. Lachance was
an employee of EGL and that he had received taxable benefits the
value of which was to be included in his income by virtue of
paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act (the
Act). He considered that 50% of Mr. Lachance's residence had been used for the
business of EGL and 50% for his personal use. Since the Lachance
couple had repaid 35% of the housing expenses by reducing their
advance account, the value of the taxable benefit amounted to 15%
of the housing expenses. As for the meal expenses, the Minister
determined that 50% were personal expenses.
Analysis
[11] In my
view, the Minister was correct in considering Mr. Lachance to be
an employee of EGL. The fact that he was responsible for its
administration and that he devoted a considerable amount of time
to the business of that company leads me to believe that there
was a relationship of subordination between the company and Mr.
Lachance. Mr. Lachance's conduct was more akin to the conduct of
an employee than to the conduct of a self-employed worker. The
fact that a person has virtually only one client who keeps him so
steadily busy seems to indicate instead that the client is that
person's employer.
Housing
expenses
[12] What
must now be determined is whether the Minister was correct in
including in Mr. Lachance's employment income the value of the
benefits represented by the payment of the housing and meal
expenses. In my opinion, merely carrying on a business in a
private residence and using some of its rooms in the course of
that business does not necessarily mean that all expenses
relating to those rooms may be deducted. A number of factors must
be taken into account, including the space occupied, its quality
and the frequency of its use. Space located in a basement is not
of the same quality as space on the ground floor. The use of that
space for household purposes as well as the need for that space
to provide a minimal degree of comfort for the occupants of that
residence must also be considered.
[13] I
believe that the Minister was more than generous in this case in
considering 50% of Mr. Lachance's housing expenses as expenses
incurred by EGL for the purpose of earning income from a
business. However, I was not convinced that Mr. Lachance received
a taxable benefit under paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Act
when EGL paid his personal housing expenses. According to the
evidence that I heard, it was not at all EGL's intention to
confer a benefit on Mr. Lachance by paying those expenses.
It was by chance that Mr. Lachance's personal housing expenses
were assumed by EGL.
[14] For a
taxable benefit to be conferred by an employer on an employee, it
is essential that the benefit be granted without the employee
paying for the value of that benefit or without the employer
being entitled to such payment. In the case at bar, if Mr.
Lachance had known that part of the expenses paid by EGL were in
fact personal expenses, he would have reduced the amount of his
and his wife's advance accounts accordingly. Moreover, that
is what was done for the 35% of the housing expenses that were
paid by EGL and considered as personal expenses by Mr. and Mrs.
Lachance.
[15] Since
EGL was entitled to be reimbursed for the full portion of the
personal housing expenses and the real intention of the Lachance
couple was to do so, it is difficult to find that a taxable
benefit was conferred on Mr. Lachance. Obviously, so long as a
dispute between him and the Minister concerning the reasonable
allocation of expenses between EGL's business activities and the
couple's domestic needs was unresolved, Mr. Lachance was not in a
position to determine what he owed EGL. It would be reasonable to
expect that, once the full amount of the personal housing
expenses paid by EGL has been determined, the outstanding balance
be reimbursed to EGL. If that amount were not reimbursed, the
issue of a taxable benefit might arise once again. However, I am
not required to resolve that issue in the instant case and I
shall refrain from doing so.
Meal
expenses
[16] Mr.
Lachance submitted numerous exhibits to substantiate his
assertions that the meal expenses paid by EGL were expenses
incurred in the ordinary course of his business. However, I was
not satisfied that all these expenses were business expenses for
EGL. First, Mr. Lachance did not provide supporting documents for
3% to 10% of the meal expenses. In the case of
some of the documents, he was unable to state the name of the
person he met with or the reason for the meeting. Second, even
when the name of the person he met with and the reason for the
meeting were provided, it was rather odd to note that the amount
of the bill appeared to reflect the cost of a meal for one person
rather than for two. In the circumstances, I believe that at
least 10% of all the meal expenses paid for by EGL may reasonably
be considered to be personal expenses of Mr. Lachance. The value
of the benefit conferred on him would thus be $638 for 1991, $799
for 1992 and $425 for 1993.
[17] I am
not prepared to give the meal expenses the same treatment that I
gave to the housing expenses. In the case of the housing
expenses, there could be some uncertainty as to what a reasonable
percentage would be in allocating the business and personal use
of the residence. In the case of the meal expenses, I do not
believe that there was such uncertainty. I assume that Mr.
Lachance was well aware that some of those expenses were personal
expenses. In the circumstances, since the personal meal expenses
were not reimbursed by Mr. Lachance, I find that EGL's intention
was to confer a benefit on Mr. Lachance and that he had no
intention of reimbursing them.
[18] For
these reasons, the appeals of Mr. Lachance are allowed and the assessments for the 1991,
1992 and 1993 taxation years are referred back to the Minister
for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the only
amounts that must be included as additional income are $638 for
1991, $799 for 1992 and $425 for 1993. With regard to costs, Mr.
Lachance is entitled to his disbursements for the preparation of
his appeals before the Court, including those for
photocopying.
Signed at
Ottawa, Canada, this 11th day of May 2001.
J.T.C.C.
Translation certified
true on this 4th day of december 2002.
Sophie
Debbané, Revisor
[OFFICIAL
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
96-4730(IT)G
BETWEEN:
MARCEL
LACHANCE,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Appeals
heard in Quebec City on December 8, 2000, by
the
Honourable Judge Pierre Archambault
Appearances
For the
Appellant:
The Appellant himself
Counsel
for the
Respondent:
Anne Poirier
JUDGMENT
The appeals from the assessments made under the Income Tax
Act for the taxation years 1991, 1992 et 1993 are allowed and the assessments are
referred back to the Minister for reconsideration and
reassessment on the basis that the only amounts that should be
included as additional income are $638 in 1991, $799 in 1992 and
$425 in 1993. The appellant
is entitled to costs for the disbursements incurred in preparing
his appeals to the Court, including those for
photocopying.
Signed at
Ottawa, Canada, this 11th day of May 2001.
J.T.C.C.
Translation certified
true on this 4th day of december 2002.
Sophie
Debbané, Revisor
[OFFICIAL
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]