Date: 19990129
Docket: 97-3019-IT-I
BETWEEN:
LYSE NADEAU,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for judgment
TARDIF, J.T.C.C.
[1] This case concerns appeals in respect of the 1990 and 1991
taxation years. The appellant was represented at the hearing by
her son Claude Nadeau. He testified and was much better informed
than the appellant herself about all the facts relating to the
assessments at issue in the instant appeals.
[2] At the start of the hearing the appellant admitted all the
facts assumed by the respondent to justify the assessments,
except for the following allegations:
[TRANSLATION]
. . .
(r)
as a consequence of the aforementioned series of transactions a
tax benefit was conferred on the appellant and the Minister
considered that the increase in the paid-up capital of the class
C shares from $1.00 to $76.40 a share was an abuse;
. . .
(t) the reassessments made by the Minister on June 9, 1994 for
the 1990 and 1991 taxation years do not violate the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[3] The appellant’s agent admitted all the other facts
assumed in support of the reassessments at issue in the instant
appeal.
[4] The facts on which the reassessments were based are not at
issue, since the appellant has admitted and recognized that they
are accurate, so it is appropriate to set them out below:
[TRANSLATION]
4(a) on July 13, 1982 the appellant and her son Claude Nadeau
incorporated the holding company L. & C. Nadeau Ltée
(“the company”) under Part IA of the Quebec
Companies Act;
(b) the company has only one investment, namely the shares in
its wholly owned subsidiary, Maurice Delgrave Inc. (“the
subsidiary”);
(c)
the subsidiary has operated a furniture retail business for a
number of years;
(d)
the appellant and her son Claude respectively hold 51% and 49% of
the outstanding common shares in the company;
(e)
in April 1990 the market value and tax consequences of the
company’s shares were the following;
No. of Paid-up
shares FMV ACB
capital
Appellant 61 $467,687 $6,100 $6,100
Claude Nadeau 59 $452,353 $5,900
$5,900
120 $920,040 $12,000 $12,000
PER SHARE $7,667 $100
$100
(f) in early 1990 the appellant decided that it was a good
time for her to withdraw from the furniture retail business;
(g) on June 8, 1990 numbered company 2757-6958 was
incorporated under the Quebec Companies Act with the
appellant’s son Claude Nadeau as its sole proprietor;
(h)
on July 20, 1990 the appellant and her son Claude transferred
their Class A shares to the company in consideration of new
Class A shares of the company with the following values:
No. of Legal paid-up
shares FMV ACB
capital
Appellant 61 A $467,687 $467,687 $6,100
Claude Nadeau 59 A $452,353 $400,000
$5,900
120 A $920,040 $867,687
$12,000
PER SHARE $7,667 $7,667
$100
(i)
on July 20, 1990 the appellant’s son Claude Nadeau
subscribed and paid $100 for 100 Class B shares;
(j)
on July 24, 1990 the company altered its articles as follows:
i.
all the authorized shares that had not been issued were
cancelled;
ii.
an unlimited number of no par value Class A, B, C and D
shares were created;
iii.
the 120 shares described in paragraph 4(e) were converted to 120
Class A shares as described in paragraph 4(h);
iv.
each of these new shares had rights of participation and voting
rights attached to it and was convertible into a Class C or
D share at the option of the holder and the company;
v.
each issued and outstanding Class A share was split into 100
shares;
vi.
the Class B shares came with the usual rights of common
shares;
vii.
the Class C shares:
(I)
were non-voting shares;
(II)
were retractable at the market value received by the company in
consideration of their issue; and
(III)
carried the right to a cumulative 10% dividend calculated based
on the redemption price, and this right was held in preference to
the Class A, B and D shares; and
viii.
the Class D shares came with the same rights, privileges and
restrictions as the Class C shares, but the dividend was 9% and
had to be paid in preference to the Class A and B
shares;
(k)
on July 31, 1990 the appellant and her son Claude Nadeau
converted their Class A shares into new Class C and D shares
at the following values:
No. of Legal paid-up
shares FMV ACB
capital
Appellant 6,100C $467,687 $467,687 $6,100
Claude Nadeau 5,900D $452,353 $400,000
$5,900
PER SHARE $76.67 $76.67
$1.00
(l) on August 8, 1990, 2757-6958 Québec Inc.
(“2757-6958”) subscribed and paid $460,000 for one
Class C share in the company, and the company’s
Class C paid-up capital thus rose from $6,100 to $466,100
while the paid-up capital of each share, which had been $1.00,
became $76.40 (($460,000 + $6,100)/6,101);
(m) 2757-6958 borrowed $460,000 from the National Bank of
Canada (“the Bank”) payable on a demand note
guaranteed by the appellant and her son Claude Nadeau;
(n) on August 9, 1990 the company redeemed the Class C
share held by 2757-6958 for $460,000 and 2757-6958 repaid the
Bank and paid $198.49 in interest;
(o) 2757-6958 reported receiving a deemed dividend of $459,924
in 1990, and as of the date of the assessment it had engaged in
no transactions other than the ones mentioned above;
(p) on August 17, 1990 the appellant and her son Claude Nadeau
agreed as shareholders in the company to have the company redeem
407 of the appellant’s Class C shares each year beginning
in 1990 and for the following 13 years, and 402 shares in the
fifteenth year, at a price of $76.67 a share;
(q)
the appellant asked the company to redeem the Class C shares
on the following dates:
Date Number of shares
-
August 20, 1990 237 shares
-
December 28, 1990 170 shares
- April
24, 1991 136 shares
- August
29, 1991 136 shares
-
December 26, 1991 135 shares
(r)
as a consequence of the aforementioned series of transactions a
tax benefit was conferred on the appellant and the Minister
considered that the increase in the paid-up capital of the
Class C shares from $1.00 to $76.40 a share was an
abuse.
(s)
as the appellant did not report the disposition of the said
Class C shares in her tax returns for the 1990 and 1991
taxation years, the Minister considered that there had been a
deemed dividend of $38,498 in each of those years;
(t)
the reassessments made by the Minister on June 9, 1994 for the
1990 and 1991 taxation years do not violate the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[5] After admitting and subsequently repeating that the
alleged facts were correct, the appellant maintained that the tax
planning arrangements at issue had been devised and carried out
by experts in taxation and that this had been done in strict
compliance with all provisions of the Act.
[6] She accordingly concluded that the respondent had
arbitrarily applied the tax avoidance provisions and in the same
breath argued on the basis of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms that she was being treated unfairly and in a
completely discriminatory manner because of the mother-son
relationship.
[7] Claude Nadeau constantly repeated that everything was done
in a proper, legitimate and legal fashion: he argued that the
Department could not make reassessments and that the said
assessments should thus be vacated because they were improper,
unfair and discriminatory.
[8] The appellant adduced no real evidence in support of her
arguments; her submissions were confined to repeating that if
Claude Nadeau's mother had sold to a third party her tax
burden would have been considerably reduced. Although the Court
insisted that she explain how she had reached her conclusions,
the appellant was unable to give a clear, precise and coherent
explanation of the basis for her arguments.
[9] The content of the Notice of Appeal signed on September
15, 1997 was much more complete and elaborate than the evidence
submitted to the Court, which consisted primarily of her son
Claude's testimony.
[10] I therefore think it is worth reproducing the content of
the Notice of Appeal dated September 15, 1997:
[TRANSLATION]
Ste-Julie, September 15, 1997
Revenue Canada
500 Place D’Armes
Bureau 1800
MONTREAL, QUEBEC
H2Y 2W2
NOTICE OF APPEAL
Lyse Nadeau
SIN: 212-910-418
Dear Sir/Madam:
With reference to the Notification of Confirmation, form
T-2008A, dated August 25, 1997, by Claude Grégoire,
Chief of Appeals, Montérégie-Rive-Sud T.S.O., we
are appealing to the Tax Court of Canada under the
“informal procedure”.
The Minister stated :
That the series of transactions by which the common shares of
L. & C. Nadeau Ltée were converted to Class [[C]]
shares, with immediate issue and redemption of one such share
held by 2757-6958 Québec Inc., took place in such
circumstances that the transaction is an avoidance transaction
with the meaning of s. 245(3) of the Income Tax Act; you
are therefore deemed, pursuant to s. 84(3) of the Act, to have
received a dividend amounting to $30,798 for each of the years
1990 and 1991 at the time of the acquisition by L. & C.
Nadeau Ltée of Class [[C]] shares belonging to
you.
We are appealing because the result of the series of
transactions was the same as if Ms. Nadeau had disposed of her
shares to a third party.
This transaction was not contrary to the Act. It is not an
abuse of the Act read as a whole. The Act contains a number of
specific rules which do not apply in our case. The
non-application of these various rules cannot constitute an abuse
having regard to the Act read as a whole.
The Act is incorrect: these transactions cannot result in an
abuse having regard to the Act when the Act is abusing someone.
Under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms the federal
government and the provincial and territorial governments must
respect this Charter, which protects, among other things, the
equality rights of every individual.
By applying the general anti-avoidance provision the Minister
of National Revenue reduced the paid-up share capital, which
meant that the redemption produced a dividend instead of a
capital gain. The application of this anti-avoidance rule is
contrary to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, section
15(1) of which reads as follows:
Equality rights: Every individual is equal before and under
the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal
benefit of the law without discrimination . . .
based on race . . . .
Accordingly, there has been discrimination here and, as we
have been injured by the anti-avoidance provision, we are
applying to your Court as provided for in s. 24(1) of the
Charter:
Enforcement: Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as
guaranteed by this Charter, have been infringed or denied may
apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy
as the court considers appropriate and just in the
circumstances.
This is why: as this transaction was at the fair market value,
which the Minister accepted, it conferred no greater tax benefit
on Ms. Nadeau than if she had disposed of her shares to a third
party.
To sum up: why would Ms. Nadeau be taxed on the proceeds, the
benefit of her 30 years' work with Delgrave Meubles, and why
should she pay tax on a (dividend) share retraction by someone
who is related to her when if she had sold to a stranger it would
be regarded as a disposition of shares (capital gain) to a third
party and tax-free.
This is an infringement of individual rights and freedoms and
we ask that you correct this injustice.
LYSE NADEAU
LN/sp
[11] In court the appellant’s agent essentially made
gratuitous statements, referring constantly to a handwritten
document which, according to him, contained the essence of the
appellant’s arguments.
[12] In view of the importance attached by the appellant to
this document, which moreover made up the gist of the evidence
(Exhibit A-1), I feel that it too should be reproduced. It reads
as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
Your Honour, we do not deny the Minister’s arguments, as
the result of the series of transactions was the same as if
Mrs. Nadeau had disposed of her shares to a third party;
however, we contest his conclusion.
We have not contravened the Act in applying certain of its
provisions but have merely structured the truth as permitted by
the Act, so as to maximize the tax benefit for both the seller
and the purchaser.
In equity, the transaction is beyond reproach. However,
because the seller is Mrs. Nadeau and the purchaser, myself, her
son, there is a presumption by the Minister of I don't know
what, fraud or guilt? But the [illegible] in that Mrs. Nadeau has
been very harshly penalized.
If the purchaser were anyone else, someone not related, and
Mrs. Nadeau made a capital gain, the same thing would happen
as when we bought the Maurice Delgrave Inc. business in 1982,
that is, the former owner and founder Maurice Delgrave made a
capital gain.
In this case, the Minister’s reasoning, made possible
only by the general anti-avoidance provision, which allows
the tax authorities to ignore the application of any other
provision of the Act, is in violation of s. 15(1) of the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which states that:
“Every individual . . . has the right to the . . . equal
benefit of the law”.
In this case the conclusion based on the Minister’s
reasoning is an improper, unfair, discriminatory and incorrect
application of the tax system.
All we are asking is to be treated fairly and equitably, that
is, as Mrs. Nadeau would be treated if she had disposed of her
shares to a third party.
All we are asking is the equal benefit of the law, the benefit
of a disposition of shares to a third party.
Thank you.
[13] At the hearing the Court twice told the appellant and her
agent that the burden of proof was on them. Thus, I clearly told
them that they had to show on a balance of probabilities that
their arguments were valid.
[14] The evidence established that the appellant intended to
sell her 51 percent of the shares to her son Claude rather than
to a third party: her son, Claude Nadeau, himself held 49 percent
of the shares in the same company, L. & C. Nadeau
Ltée.
[15] However, the appellant and her son had very specific
concerns about how to conduct the transaction and especially
about the tax consequences and implications of the
transaction.
[16] They wanted the capital gain from the shares to benefit
the appellant’s son. Since the son did not have the
financial ability to pay the value of the shares, it became
necessary, and also safer for the appellant, for her shares to be
purchased by the company first.
[17] The appellant and her son therefore instructed the firm
Maheu and Noiseux to organize and plan the transfer of the
shares, the result of which would enable them to attain the
following specific objectives:
· the
appellant would receive fair market value for her shares;
· her
son Claude would receive the capital gain from L. & C. Nadeau
Ltée;
· the
appellant would pay a minimum of tax as a result of the transfer
of her shares; and
· the
appellant and her son Claude would benefit from the capital gains
exemption.
[18] These instructions required painstaking, complex work.
The experts prepared various scenarios, which they submitted to
the appellant and her son.
[19] The appellant adopted the plan with the least costly
consequences in terms of the tax burden, and she did so even
though the proposed plan mentioned the possibility that it might
be questioned under the general anti-avoidance provision set out
in s. 245(2) of the Income Tax Act (“the
Act”), which reads as follows:
Where a transaction is an avoidance transaction, the tax
consequences to a person shall be determined as is reasonable in
the circumstances in order to deny a tax benefit that, but for
this section, would result, directly or indirectly, from that
transaction or from a series of transactions that includes that
transaction.
[20] The details of the adopted scenario were set out in the
Reply to the Notice of Appeal, the relevant paragraphs of which
were reproduced earlier in these reasons.
[21] The respondent raised the following three grounds in
support of the merits of the assessment:
· an
incomplete transaction;
· the
use of separate share classes; and
·
application of the general anti-avoidance provision.
[22] The respondent first argued that L. & C. Nadeau
Ltée could not increase the paid-up capital of Class C
shares on August 8, 1990, as the said shares had not been paid
for when 2757-6958 Québec Inc. gave it a cheque in the
amount of $460,000.
[23] Arguing that there had been no increase in the paid-up
capital of Class C shares, the respondent maintained that
the capital remained at $6,100, which corresponded to $1.00 a
share. She accordingly concluded that the redemption of the
shares in 1990 and 1991 should result in a deemed dividend of
$75.67 per share pursuant to s. 84(3) of the Act.
[24] In arriving at the deemed dividend of $75.67 per share,
the respondent relied on s. 123.61 of the Companies Act,
stating that a company may increase the amount of its issued and
paid-up share capital only if a by-law to that effect is adopted,
except where the increase is a result of payment for shares. She
further relied on the rule of precedent that the substance of a
transaction must take precedence over its form.
[25] It was very clearly established in the instant case that
the transaction of August 8 was certainly genuine, but completely
devoid of meaning, in that the issue of a single share in return
for a cheque for $460,000 had and was intended to have only one
purpose: ensuring logic and continuity in order to attain the
desired end.
[26] This observation is supported in particular by
significant facts which leave no room for ambiguity. The amount
of $460,000 at issue essentially proved to be simply an
accounting transaction, with no real effect on the parties
associated with the transactions. The intention was that within a
few hours after the share was issued, it would be redeemed and
the amount of the consideration would immediately be returned to
the bank, which had loaned it.
[27] Not only did L. & C. Nadeau Ltée stand surety
for the $460,000 loan, it left the amount of the loan as security
for the loan. In other words, the money did not leave the bank
even though the company paid out $198.49 in interest.
[28] The delivery of the $460,000 cheque by 2757-6958
Québec Inc. to L. & C. Nadeau Ltée
proved to be the payment for the single share issued by
L. & C. Nadeau, which suggests that the
paid-up capital of the Class C shares had been increased by
$460,000.
[29] Was this a genuine increase? The answer is important
since this is determinative as to whether form took precedence
over substance.
[30] The $460,000 amount was certainly a payment in form, but
was it one in substance? Certain articles of the Civil Code of
Lower Canada dealing with the concept of payment are relevant
here:
1139. By payment is meant not only the delivery of a sum of
money in satisfaction of an obligation, but the performance of
any thing to which the parties are respectively obliged.
1140. Every payment presupposes a debt; what has been paid
where there is no debt may be recovered.
There can be no recovery of what has been paid in voluntary
discharge of a natural obligation.
[31] In the instant case L. & C. Nadeau Ltée
received the cheque but the evidence showed that it was never
free to dispose of the amount as it wished: it had been agreed in
advance that the loan would simply be repaid.
[32] All the facts surrounding the various transactions fully
support the respondent’s argument that the continuity of
the transactions had only one purpose: decreasing the tax burden.
In other words, form was the distinguishing characteristic of the
transactions; there were no genuine effects on or consequences
for the asset bases of the entities in question.
[33] These same facts also support the respondent’s
second argument, that this was an incomplete transaction.
[34] Although the respondent also alleged a departure from the
rule that shares in the same class should be equal, I will now
turn to the respondent’s final argument, that the general
anti-avoidance provision should be applied.
[35] This is an extremely interesting point which has not been
considered often by the courts. The respondent cited two leading
cases dealing with s. 245 of the Act:
William J. McNichol et al. v. Her Majesty the Queen,
94-1577(IT)G, 94-1578(IT)G, 94-1579(IT)G and 94-1667(IT)G;
and
RMM Canadian Enterprises Inc. v. Equilease Corporation and
Her Majesty the Queen, 94-1732(IT)G and 94-1753(IT)G.
[36] To begin with, I feel it is worth reproducing the
provisions dealing with tax avoidance:
245. (2) Where a transaction is an avoidance transaction, the
tax consequences to a person shall be determined as is reasonable
in the circumstances in order to deny a tax benefit that, but for
this section, would result, directly or indirectly, from that
transaction or from a series of transactions that includes that
transaction.
(3) An avoidance transaction means any transaction
(a) that, but for this section, would result, directly
or indirectly, in a tax benefit, unless the transaction may
reasonably be considered to have been undertaken or arranged
primarily for bona fide purposes other than to obtain the
tax benefit; or
(b) that is part of a series of transactions, which
series, but for this section, would result, directly or
indirectly, in a tax benefit, unless the transaction may
reasonably be considered to have been undertaken or arranged
primarily for bona fide purposes other than to obtain the
tax benefit.
(4) For greater certainty, subsection (2) does not apply to a
transaction where it may reasonably be considered that the
transaction would not result directly or indirectly in a misuse
of the provisions of this Act or an abuse having regard to the
provisions of this Act, other than this section, read as a
whole.
[37] In order to conclude that the anti-avoidance provisions
apply, the following three elements are required:
· a tax
benefit;
· an
avoidance transaction; and
·
misuse of or abuse having regard to the Act.
[38] The term “tax benefit” is defined as
follows:
. . . a reduction, avoidance or deferral of tax or
other amount payable under this Act or an increase in a refund of
tax or other amount under this Act . . . .
[39] The evidence on this point is conclusive: the appellant
admitted adopting the plan proposed by her experts because of the
tax benefit.
[40] This plan enabled the appellant to withdraw the surpluses
accumulated in the company without paying tax on a dividend.
[41] The Court must next consider whether the transaction
which resulted in the tax benefit should be excluded from the
operation of s. 245(3) of the Act on the basis that the
transaction can reasonably be considered to have been undertaken
or arranged primarily for bona fide purposes. It must be
borne in mind that the obtaining of a tax benefit is not regarded
as a bona fide purpose.
[42] Although it is legitimate and natural for taxpayers to
organize and plan their affairs in order to pay as little tax as
possible, they should not initiate actions intended solely to
reduce the amount of tax they would otherwise pay.
[43] In other words, a taxpayer cannot be a party to an act or
transaction the only bona fide purpose of which is to
obtain a tax benefit without running the risk of having his or
her case treated as if the act or transaction had never taken
place.
[44] The following comment by Judge Bonner in William J.
McNichol et al., supra, amplified our understanding of
these provisions:
It is not necessary or helpful to attempt to restate the
subsection 245(4) test in language consistent with each word
of both the French and English language versions. It is
sufficient to note that on any view of subsection 245(4),
the transaction now in question, which was, or was part of, a
classic example of surplus stripping, cannot be excluded from the
operation of subsection (2). After all, Bec's surplus
was, at the very least, indirectly used to fund the price paid to
the appellants for their shares. The appellants have sought to
realize the economic value of Bec's accumulated surplus by
means of a transaction characterized as a sale of shares giving
rise to a capital gain in preference to a distribution of a
liquidating dividend taxable under section 84. The scheme of
the Act calls for the treatment of distributions to
shareholders of corporate property as income. The form of such
distributions is generally speaking irrelevant. On the one hand a
distribution formally made by a corporation to its shareholders
as a dividend to which the shareholders are entitled by virtue of
the contractual rights inherent in their shares is income under
paragraph 12(1)(j) of the Act. On the other
hand, the legislature by section 15 of the Act, which
expands the former section 8, demonstrates the existence of
a legislative scheme to tax as income all distributions by a
corporation to a shareholder, even those of a less orthodox
nature than an ordinary dividend.
. . .
The former subsection 247(1) of the Act was, prior to
the enactment of section 245, one of the legislative responses to
the practice of surplus stripping. It was repealed simultaneously
with the coming into force of section 245 and I therefore do not
suggest that it applies to the present case. However, I do
suggest that the repeal cannot be regarded as a basis for a
conclusion that the legislature intended to relax the strictures
against surplus stripping. In light of the foregoing, subsection
245(4) cannot be invoked by the appellants. The transaction in
issue which was designed to effect, in everything but form, a
distribution of Bec's surplus results in a misuse of sections
38 and 110.6 and an abuse of the provisions of the Act,
read as a whole, which contemplate that distributions of
corporate property to shareholders are to be treated as income in
the hands of the shareholders. It is evident from section 245 as
a whole and paragraph 245(5)(c) in particular that the
section is intended inter alia to counteract transactions
which do violence to the Act by taking advantage of a
divergence between the effect of the transaction, viewed
realistically, and what, having regard only to the legal form
appears to be the effect. For purposes of section 245, the
characterization of a transaction cannot be taken to rest on form
alone. I must therefore conclude that section 245 of the
Act applies to this transaction.
[45] In RMM Canadian Enterprises v. Equilease
Corporation, supra, at p. 26, Judge Bowman added:
. . . the Income Tax Act, read as a
whole, envisages that a distribution of corporate surplus to
shareholders is to be taxed as a payment of dividends. A form of
transaction that is otherwise devoid of any commercial objective,
and that has as its real purpose the extraction of corporate
surplus and the avoidance of the ordinary consequences of such a
distribution, is an abuse of the Act as a whole.
[46] Did the transaction in the instant case pursuant to which
2757-6958 Québec Inc. subscribed for a single Class C
share in the capital stock of the other company,
L. & C. Nadeau Ltée, have a bona
fide purpose? What was its purpose?
[47] I have to answer this question in the negative, since the
evidence clearly showed that the sole underlying purpose had but
one real end, the tax benefit. The aim of the transaction was
essentially to redeem the appellant's shares in such a way
that the amount involved would not be dealt with as a dividend,
thereby evading the inherent consequences.
[48] The evidence in the instant case provided no explanation
or justification from which it could be concluded that the
transaction was needful or had given rise to consequences other
than the tax benefit. Everything was arranged to strip the
company of its surpluses, which in itself is sufficient to
conclude that there was an abuse having regard to the provisions
of the Act.
[49] By means of several of its provisions the Act provides
that a shareholder cannot withdraw surpluses accumulated in a
company over and above the paid-up capital other than by means of
a dividend. Consequently, any transaction or series of
transactions designed to achieve indirectly what the Act does not
permit an individual to do directly is an abuse of the Act.
[50] Any payment in the form of a dividend is subject to tax.
The rule is therefore that a corporation cannot divest itself of
accumulated surpluses to vest them in its shareholders other than
by declaring a dividend. Obviously, paid-up or invested capital
is not part of a surplus.
[51] In the instant case the capital invested by the appellant
for the Class C shares was $6,100. At the time of the
transaction in 1990 her shares had a fair market value of
$467,687. Any withdrawal relating to the difference had to be
regarded as a dividend.
[52] The evidence in fact showed that the transaction
essentially consisted of enabling the appellant to strip the
company of accumulated surpluses other than by means of a
dividend.
[53] The appellant has not proven that this did not constitute
an abuse having regard to the provisions of the Act. She
essentially argued first that the entire transaction was legal,
and second that the respondent's reliance on the general
anti-avoidance provision was discriminatory and contrary to s.
15(1) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[54] Here again, the evidence was not very persuasive since
the appellant argued essentially that she had been penalized for
selling to her son. How, and why? The appellant did not show this
and did not see fit to elaborate or to provide reasons to support
her arguments.
[55] The respondent argued, first, that this Charter issue
could not be pleaded as notice to that effect had not been given
to the Attorney General of Canada. It appears that notices were
in fact given, but they may have been misdirected.
[56] I do not think the appellant can rely on s. 15(1) of the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, dealing with equality
rights, to challenge the anti-avoidance provision contained in s.
245 of the Act.
[57] At the time the appellant decided to hand control of the
company over to her son, a number of scenarios were available for
giving effect to her intention.
[58] Like any sensible and well-informed person, she consulted
specialists for advice and guidance as to how all her objectives
might be attained. The fact that her son was at the centre of the
eventual purchase undoubtedly tended to make her more flexible:
in other words, the appellant was undoubtedly more
co-operative and conciliatory as she had a clear and
natural interest in having the business remain in the family.
[59] That being so, the experts she hired studied and analysed
all the information and considered the special concerns of the
appellant and her son; they suggested various scenarios,
describing the tax consequences of each. The plan adopted was
clearly the least costly in terms of taxes payable, although
there were risks as to what the tax authorities would eventually
think of it.
[60] After failing the test, the appellant pleaded
discrimination under s. 15(1) of the Charter of Rights
and Freedoms.
[61] I do not feel this argument is valid, since the
assessment resulted essentially from the choice she herself made
and accepted in full knowledge of the consequences.
[62] In my view, the following passage from the decision of
Judge Bowman of this Court in Dr. John V. Hover v. M.N.R.,
90-2976(IT), at pages 3-5 of the English version, is both
appropriate and relevant:
In a broad sense it might be said that any fiscal law that
dictates different treatment for different classes of persons
discriminates among those classes. Yet the Act abounds in
such distinctions. Farmers are treated differently from those
engaged in manufacturing who in turn receive a different
treatment from those engaged in the resource industry. Employees
are treated differently from persons in business. Married persons
are accorded treatment that differs from that accorded to single
persons.[1]
It must be recognized that taxing statutes have economic and
social objectives that far transcend the mere raising of money
and it is difficult to conceive of any way in which a modern
industrialized state such as Canada could avoid making such
distinctions in its fiscal legislation. Such distinctions may
appear superficially to be arbitrary and possibly unfair and the
appellant has raised squarely whether the category to which the
Minister's assessment under section 31 relegates him in
the fiscal scheme of things infringes upon his right of equality
under the Charter.
In considering this question, one cannot view section 31
in isolation or attempt to excise it from the complex code that
governs farmers generally under the Act. It is not only
category II farmers that are singled out for special
treatment. Farmers generally enjoy a variety of advantages not
accorded to other taxpayers such, to mention only a few, as the
right to use the cash basis of accounting, family farm rollovers,
accelerated capital cost allowance on certain property, current
deductibility of certain expenses that would otherwise be
regarded as capital, block averaging, and the exemption from the
requirement to make quarterly instalments. Many more examples
might be cited but they serve to illustrate the virtual
impossibility of striking down as discriminatory one aspect of a
complex code of fiscal legislation dealing with a particular
segment of the community without doing violence to the overall
scheme envisaged by Parliament. As stated by McIntyre J. in
Andrews at p. 303:
It is not every distinction or differentiation in treatment at
law which will transgress the equality guarantees of s. 15
of the Charter. It is, of course, obvious that legislatures may -
and to govern effectively - must treat different individuals and
groups in different ways. Indeed, such distinctions are one of
the main preoccupations of legislatures. The classifying of
individuals and groups, the making of different provisions
respecting such groups, the application of different rules,
regulations, requirements and qualifications to different persons
is necessary for the governance of modern society.
For the appellant to succeed on this aspect of his case he
must establish that the discrimination of which he complains is
based upon the enumerated grounds set out in section 15 of
the Charter or grounds analogous thereto. The
appellant's contention is that the "discrete and insular
minority"[2]
to which he belongs is that group of farmers who have other
sources of income and that the very fact of their special
treatment under section 31 is sufficient to make the special
treatment of such a group discriminatory on grounds analogous to
those enumerated in section 15.
I am, notwithstanding Mr. Shea's thorough and
articulate submission, unable to accept this argument. There is a
world of difference between persons who are accorded unequal
treatment under the law because of personal characteristics over
which they have no control such as race, colour, sex, age,
citizenship or mental or physical disability and persons who
voluntarily choose a form of economic activity which carries with
it a mix of fiscal advantages and disadvantages. The latter do
not, in my view, form a discrete or insular minority in the sense
in which the expression has been used in Andrews. It is
not open to such persons to invoke the Charter to enable
them to avoid the fiscal burdens of the economic endeavour that
they have chosen and yet retain the benefits. To give effect to
such a contention would be to distort the purpose of the
Charter.[3]
[63] For all these reasons, the appeals are dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, January 29, 1999.
"Alain Tardif"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 25th day of February
1999.
Stephen Balogh, Revisor