Date: 20000308
Dockets 97-2223-IT-G; 97-2226-IT-G; 97-2234-IT-G;
97-2363-IT-G
BETWEEN:
GASPARE MUNGIOVI, OSCAR BERGAMIN, DOMENICO VOMMARO, FRANCESCO
IAFANTI,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Counsel for the Appellants: Yves Majeau
Counsel for the Respondent: Marie-Andrée Legault,
Simon Crépin
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the bench on December 9, 1999, at
Montréal, Quebec)
Archambault, J.T.C.C.
[1] Oscar Bergamin, Francesco Iafanti,
Gaspare Mungiovi and Domenico Vommaro worked as
composition floor layers for Les Planchers de ciment
M. Candussi (PMC) from 1989 to 1992. By notices
of reassessment, the Minister of National Revenue
(Minister) included additional employment income in the
previously reported income of each of these appellants for each
of those years (relevant taxation years). The following
table shows not only the amounts of additional income but also
the amounts of previously reported employment income, total
revised employment income and the additional employment income as
a percentage of revised total income.
Bergamin
|
89
|
90
|
91
|
92
|
TOTAL
|
Reported income
|
33,358
|
35,125
|
26,493
|
13,957
|
108,933
|
Unreported income
|
18,064
|
28,433
|
20,057
|
22,159
|
88,713
|
Total
|
51,422
|
63,558
|
46,550
|
36,116
|
197,646
|
% of total income
|
35
|
45
|
43
|
61
|
45
|
Iafanti
|
|
Reported income
|
31,053
|
32,583
|
21,656
|
16,070
|
101,362
|
Unreported income
|
17,736
|
29,674
|
16,019
|
9,754
|
73,183
|
Total
|
48,789
|
62,257
|
37,675
|
25,824
|
174,545
|
% of total income
|
36
|
48
|
43
|
38
|
42
|
Mungiovi
|
|
Reported income
|
31,611
|
23,977
|
16,548
|
14,477
|
86,613
|
Unreported income
|
13,406
|
14,732
|
9,275
|
9,366
|
46,779
|
Total
|
45,017
|
38,709
|
25,823
|
23,843
|
133,392
|
% of total income
|
30
|
38
|
36
|
39
|
35
|
Vommaro
|
|
Reported income
|
34,713
|
35,899
|
33,530
|
24,635
|
128,777
|
Unreported income
|
6,551
|
10,789
|
5,485
|
6,089
|
28,914
|
Total
|
41,264
|
46,688
|
39,015
|
30,724
|
157,691
|
% of total income
|
16
|
23
|
14
|
20
|
18
|
[2]The parties agreed that the Minister had made these
reassessments after the normal reassessment period for the 1989
to 1991 taxation years. Furthermore, the Minister assessed
penalties under subsection 163(2) of the Income Tax
Act (Act) in respect of the additional employment
income of each of the appellants for each of the relevant
taxation years.
[3] The four appellants are among a group of 59 PMC
employees who were audited by the Minister, of whom 40 received
assessments similar to those of the appellants. According to the
investigator from the Minister's Special Investigations
Service, some employees were not reassessed, for various reasons:
either they had died or disappeared or the number of hours or
days in issue was not large. I assume as well that other
employees were office employees not involved in pouring and
finishing cement.
[4]According to the investigator, only six of the
40 persons reassessed have appeals under way at this time.
Moreover, all the appeals of those persons were to be heard
together, although two were granted an adjournment by the
Associate Chief Judge a few days prior to the hearing. The
appeals of the appellants, all of whom were represented by the
same lawyer, were heard on common evidence.
The Evidence
[5]All the appellants testified at the hearing; they all
denied that they had received the income which the Minister had
added to the income they had previously reported. The only other
person who testified at their request was a manpower consultant
from the Commission de la construction du Québec
(Commission), who filed the record of their hours worked
in the construction industry. He confirmed that those hours
corresponded to the hours reported by PMC and stated that the
Commission generally does not carry out checks to make sure that
they do in fact correspond to all of workers' hours of work
unless it receives a complaint. In this instance, the consultant
did not know whether the hours reported by PMC had been
checked.
[6]Each of the appellants described the duties he performed
for PMC. Essentially, PMC used two crews to build concrete
floors. The first poured concrete transported by cement trucks,
and the second finished the floors using floats, and trowels for
the edges. In general, the first crew began its work in the
morning and, once the pouring was complete—after a drying
period that could run from three to seven hours, depending,
among other things, on the weather—the second crew replaced
the first in the afternoon or early evening.
[7]The number of persons in a crew could range from two to 20
depending on the size of the job. A worker generally knew when he
had to start his work, having been notified the day before or
that same morning by a PMC office employee (often
Claudia Guenette), but he did not know when the work would
end. Many factors could affect this, including the weather,
equipment breakdowns, cement truck delays and the drying
rate.
[8]The two appellants who appear to have worked for PMC the
longest are Vommaro and Bergamin. Mr. Vommaro, aged 51, said
he had worked from 1973 to 1993; he belonged to the first crew.
Mr. Bergamin, aged 62, worked for PMC from 1976 to 1996 and
for the father of PMC's shareholder. He was on the second
crew. Although he has about 30 years' experience in the
cement field, Mr. Mungiovi seems to have worked the shortest
time for PMC, namely from 1982 to 1992 according to his testimony
in examination in chief, or from 1998 to 1995 according to what
he said in cross-examination. Aged 60, he also worked on the
second crew. As to Mr. Iafanti, aged 66, he has worked in
the cement field for some 30 years. I am not sure whether he
mentioned his number of years of service with PMC, but he worked
as a finisher on the second crew during all the relevant taxation
years.
[9]Although some of them had worked together for a number of
years for a business that had only 24 to 34 employees,[1] not one could
describe his fellow crew members' work habits or terms of
employment. None could say whether his fellow crew members worked
overtime. Each stated that he attended to his own duties and had
no knowledge of his fellow crew members' activities. This is
quite surprising and intriguing.
[10]Each of the appellants testified that their conditions of
employment during the relevant taxation years were as follows.
All the appellants received their remuneration in cash in a brown
envelope which also contained a pay statement showing the number
of hours paid and all source deductions. That envelope was
generally handed over to them on the work site on Fridays.
Mr. Bergamin however most often went to pick it up at
PMC's office in Laval. I note that he lived in Vimont.
[11]Messrs. Bergamin and Mungiovi stated that they had
never worked more than eight hours a day; they left after
putting in their eight hours even if the concrete finishing
was not complete. They testified that they had never worked fewer
than four days a week or more than 40 hours. They were paid for a
minimum of 32 hours and a maximum of 40 hours a week;
in addition, they never worked Saturdays. Thus, they said, they
could not have received any overtime pay calculated at an hourly
rate plus 50 percent or 100 percent (overtime
rate). Both were reimbursed by cheque for their parking
expenses.
[12]Mr. Bergamin explained his conditions of employment
as follows: [TRANSLATION] "PMC refused to pay overtime at
the overtime rate and I don't work overtime unless it's
at the overtime rate." And if he had insisted, he would
have been punished, that is to say he would not have been given
any work for a certain period of time. He also stated that he had
not worked from February 29 to April 25, 1992 or from
September to December 1992. When he worked outside Greater
Montréal, he was not paid for his travel time; he received
only a kilometrage allowance for his car.
[13] Mr. Mungiovi explained his conditions of employment
by saying that his health did not allow him to work more than
eight hours a day or 40 hours a week; his travel time
outside Montréal was included in his paid regular
hours.
[14]The conditions of employment of Messrs. Vommaro and
Iafanti were somewhat different from those of the other two.
Unlike them, Messrs. Vommaro and Iafanti could work more than
eight hours a day, but they were still paid for 32 or
40 hours of work per week, like the other two workers; their
overtime was not paid at the overtime rate. They were also
reimbursed for their parking expenses and received a kilometrage
allowance for the use of their car when travelling outside
Greater Montréal. Payment was generally made by
cheque.
[15]Mr. Iafanti testified that he had never worked fewer
than four days a week and had never worked Saturdays or more
than 40 hours a week. Once he reached 40 hours, he left
even if the job was not complete. He therefore did not carry over
to another week any of his hours worked during a given week. When
he travelled outside Montréal, his travel time was
included in his regular hours of work.
[16] Mr. Vommaro sometimes worked more than 40 hours
a week. When he did, he carried over his extra hours to the
following week or the week after that. He said he had correctly
reported all his earnings for the purposes of the Unemployment
Insurance Act. He may therefore have sometimes worked fewer
than four days a week; in that case, the missing day was
replaced by hours worked in excess of 40 during other weeks.
He admitted that he had sometimes worked Saturdays, but not
pouring or finishing cement. His travel time was paid separately
from his regular remuneration and added to the kilometrage
allowance. He admitted that this pay was not reported in his
income; however, the amounts involved were not large and the
investigator also did not take them into account in making the
reassessment.
[17] The respondent gave a completely different version of the
facts from that of the appellants. She called six witnesses: the
investigator, PMC's shareholder and president
Michel Candussi, his sister Claudia Guenette and three
of the appellants' co-workers, all of whom, like the
appellants, had been reassessed but who did not appeal from their
reassessments. The investigator was the first to testify for the
respondent. He described the various stages of his investigation.
First of all, during her audit of PMC, an auditor of the Minister
had noted certain indicators of unreported income, in particular
the fact that a bank account at the Laurentian Bank did not
appear in PMC's books. The amounts passing through that
account from January 1989 to June 1994 totalled $1,590,143.
[18]At a meeting on October 29, 1993, the investigator
informed Mr. Côté, PMC's negotiator and
representative, that PMC was being investigated. The next meeting
was held on March 18, 1994. At that time, the investigator
informed Mr. Côté that the Department had
discovered approximately $2,300,000 in unreported income and
asked him whether PMC had incurred certain expenses which it had
not claimed as deductions.
[19]In a telephone conversation on April 15, 1994,
Mr. Côté informed the investigator that the
analysis of the wages paid by PMC was almost complete, except for
1989. At the meeting of May 11, 1994,
Mr. Côté verbally provided the figures on the
wages being claimed as expenses by PMC. According to the
investigator, a letter dated June 17, 1994 restated figures
similar to those provided verbally at the meeting of May 11,
1994.
[20]At the June 21, 1994 meeting, the investigator
required that Mr. Côté have PMC provide
supporting documents for the salary amounts claimed as expenses.
He told Mr. Côté that this documentation would have
to be reliable and verifiable. In the settlement offer made by
Mr. Côté on June 17, 1994, it was proposed
that the Minister not assess penalties.
[21]After alerting Mr. Côté, the
investigator went to PMC's place of business on
August 26, 1994 with a letter from his director to take
possession of the documents that might support PMC's claims
with respect to the salary expenses that had not been claimed as
deductions. The investigator left with a number of boxes of
documents containing, in particular, weekly reports, time sheets,
the payroll and documents concerning source deductions. According
to the investigator, the boxes contained between 10,000 and
12,000 documents.
[22]The time sheets show the number of hours worked daily for
a given week. They had generally been prepared by the employees
themselves or by members of their families. They were handed over
to Michel Candussi, who used them to provide his
administrative staff with the necessary information for preparing
the weekly reports. These reports are internal documents of PMC.
It was on the strength of the weekly reports that the Minister
fixed the amounts of each appellant's unreported income in
the reassessments.
[23]The investigator said that he had made photocopies of each
of these documents obtained from PMC's office. The originals
were returned to PMC, as will be seen below. He confirmed,
however, that the originals he had consulted appeared to him to
have been handled a number of times and were stained. He observed
multiple perforations indicating that the documents had been
stapled several times. He also admitted that some of the
documents were in good condition.
[24]In his opinion, the vast majority of the documents had
been prepared by the same person. However, it was necessary to
distinguish between two periods: the first, from January to
October 1989, and the second, after October 30, 1989. During
the first period, the documents were apparently prepared by a
certain Mr. Lafrance. Starting on November 1, 1989, the
date on which she was hired, it was Claudia Guenette who
prepared the documents.
[25]Mr. Candussi used the weekly reports to prepare the
pay and the contents of the brown envelopes to be handed over to
the employees. An examination of the weekly reports revealed a
vast quantity of information. First of all, there was the
calculation of the regular hours worked by an employee during a
given week. This information is shown at the bottom of the weekly
report. The figure appearing there is the net amount of
remuneration paid at the regular rate and that figure is
generally entered in PMC's payroll.
[26]The upper portion of the weekly reports contains a
breakdown of overtime which was not entered in the payroll. These
reports also revealed that certain hours worked by some of the
appellants were carried over to another pay period.
[27]The weekly reports also provide other information. For
example, it may be seen that certain hours of work put in by
Mr. Bergamin were paid in kind, in the form of a hunting
trip. It can also be seen that overtime worked by the appellants
was converted to regular hours in order to remunerate them for
days not worked. In addition, certain hours reported as regular
work hours were apparently paid at less than the regular rate
provided for in the Construction Decree (Decree) and do not
appear in the payroll. Lastly, the weekly reports provide
information on the time spent by an employee travelling outside
Greater Montréal and on the number of kilometers travelled
on those trips in a given week.
[28]The general ledger contains entries confirming that the
figures appearing in the weekly reports were used to calculate
the kilometrage allowance and, in certain cases, the amount paid
as an allowance for travel time. The investigator stated that
these amounts were generally not included in the unreported
income, with the exception of a larger amount of $701.
[29]After completing his analysis of the documents obtained at
PMC's place of business, the investigator observed that there
were discrepancies between the total annual wages claimed by PMC
as expenses and the amounts that he himself had calculated. Thus,
on November 17 and 18, 1994, he returned the originals of
the weekly reports to PMC so that it could explain the
discrepancies.
[30]At the January 18, 1995 meeting,
Mr. Côté was able to explain the discrepancies
by saying that the annual totals that had been used corresponded
to calendar years, whereas they should have been calculated on
the basis of fiscal years which, in PMC's case, ended on
April 30. Once the adjustments were made to take this fact
into account, the figures provided appeared to the investigator
to correspond to those he had determined.
[31] The investigator and PMC's representative
subsequently agreed on the wage amounts that could be allowed as
expenses. In his letter of June 17, 1994,
Mr. Côté claimed a wage expense of $400,000 as
a deduction for 1991, but the investigator was prepared to allow
only $309,535, which Mr. Côté ultimately
accepted. The amounts of income not reported by PMC totalled
$1,448,748 for the three fiscal years 1989, 1990 and 1991. The
figures for 1992 were not provided, but it was stated that the
unreported income was equal to the wage amounts that the
Department was prepared to allow as expenses.
[32] The wage amounts that the investigator allowed as
expenses for the 1989, 1990 and 1991 fiscal years are
respectively $480,470, $361,711 and $309,535, leaving PMC with
additional net income of $72,845 in 1989, $61,617 in 1990 and
$162,570 in 1991. The investigator also included in
Michel Candussi's income additional income which he
taxed as an appropriation of funds; this additional income
amounted to $65,360 for 1989, $128,919 for 1990 and $54,190 for
1991.
[33]In addition, Crown counsel laid criminal fraud charges
against Mr. Candussi and PMC under section 239 of the
Act for 1989 and 1990. In PMC's case, the amounts of
income in respect of which it was accused of evading tax are
$72,845 in 1989 and $61,617 in 1990 for a total of $134,462. For
Mr. Candussi, the amounts are $65,360 in 1989 and $128,919
in 1990 for a total of $194,279.
[34]Those two taxpayers pleaded guilty and were fined
75 percent of the tax evaded.The investigator said that
neither Mr. Candussi nor PMC were given preferential
treatment and that the civil case was negotiated separately from
the criminal case. Moreover the investigator and the
Minister's representatives have no role to play in the
prosecution of a criminal charge; rather, it is the
representatives of the Department of Justice who conduct these
matters.
[35]As the final stage of his investigation, on March 17,
1995, the investigator sent each of the appellants a letter
informing them that he proposed to add unreported wage amounts to
their incomes.
[36]The investigator explained why he had allowed the wages
appearing on the weekly reports as expenses in computing
PMC's income and why he had reassessed PMC's employees,
in particular the four appellants. He stated that his
reassessment was based on those weekly reports, which constituted
reliable supporting documents, and he described the indicators
supporting that statement.
[37]First of all, he mentioned the existence of a large amount
of information appearing in the weekly reports which was not
necessary in order for PMC to prove the amounts of the wages it
had paid to its employees. In particular, he noted indications of
hours of work carried over to other periods (hours carried
over), indications of hours of work appearing in the weekly
report for periods after the date on which they were entered
(advanced hours), annotations concerning a strike at
certain customers of PMC, entries deducting the purchase price of
lottery tickets from employees' wages or showing payment of
wages in the form of a hunting trip, and annotations concerning
reimbursement for a trowel.
[38] In addition to this mass of superfluous information,
there is the fact that the figures appearing in the weekly
reports are consistent with those in other documents. For
example, the weekly reports are consistent with the time sheets
which some of PMC's employees admitted they had signed. In
addition, the billed disbursements appearing in the weekly
reports are consistent with those shown in the general ledger: in
particular the amounts paid for travel time and the kilometrage
allowances. As well, cheque numbers shown in the weekly reports
correspond to those in the general ledger. The hours of work paid
at the regular rate are consistent with those appearing in the
payroll. Furthermore, the work site names given in the weekly
reports correspond to those appearing in the statements of
account sent to PMC's customers.
[39] There is also the fact that Claudia Guenette's
handwriting does not appear on the weekly reports until
November 1, 1989, the date on which she began working for
PMC. The weekly reports prior to that date were apparently
prepared by Mr. Lafrance whose employment ended around
October 21, 1989.
[40]Other indicators also confirm the reliability of the
weekly reports. For example, certain regular hours were
remunerated at less than the regular rate provided for by the
Decree. Similarly, overtime is reported at a rate higher than the
regular rate, but lower than the overtime rate established by the
Decree. Mr. Candussi's explanation for this state of
affairs was that these amounts were paid under the table. The
investigator emphasized that if anyone had wanted to fabricate
the weekly reports in order to claim a deduction for false wage
expenses, he would not have used a rate of remuneration for
regular hours lower than that normally used for employees.
Furthermore, he would not have used a remuneration rate lower
than the overtime rate in computing overtime pay. Instead he
would have used the regular rate and the overtime rate to
maximize the wage amounts claimed as expenses by PMC.
[41]Another indicator, according to the investigator, was the
enormous effort that would have been required to make all the
information appearing in the weekly reports consistent with that
in the various documents to which I have referred. There was also
the risk that employees might still have copies of their time
sheets in their possession and thus be able to establish that the
weekly reports were false.
[42]The investigator pointed out that PMC had provided him
with between 10,000 and 12,000 documents. According to him, it
was around May 11, 1994 that PMC truly realized the scope of
the problem that confronted it. It will be remembered that the
figures for the wages which PMC claimed as expenses were provided
in the letter of June 17, 1994 and that the Minister took
possession of the weekly reports on August 26, 1994. Thus,
in the investigator's view, the approximately three-month
period between May and August 1994 was not long enough for
someone like Claudia Guenette to prepare all these documents
herself while performing all her other administrative duties at
PMC.
[43]The investigator mentioned other indicators found in the
physical examination of the weekly reports, in particular the
stains on them and the perforations resulting from multiple
staplings. He also noted that the documents he had received had
been stapled together by pay period, not on an individual basis
for each employee.
[44]Another indication that led him to conclude that these
documents were reliable is that, based on his experience in the
construction field, there was always overtime and particularly in
the field of cement floor construction where it is essential that
the laying of the cement be completed before the workers leave
the job.
[45]Lastly, the final factor which, in the investigator's
view, pointed to the reliability of the information provided by
the weekly reports is that some of the employees, as well as PMC
itself, admitted that PMC made payments under the table. Of the
40 employees who were reassessed, only seven had not settled
up to very recently. Furthermore, one of those seven discontinued
his appeal a few days prior to the hearing of these appeals and
only six are now before the Court.
[46]In his testimony, the investigator commented on the weekly
reports relating to the appellants. He noted in
Mr. Vommaro's case, for example, that time sheets, some
of which were signed by Mr. Vommaro and others probably by
members of his family, were found stapled to the weekly reports.
He also noted that some hours which Mr. Vommaro had worked
during a given period had been carried over to other periods.
[47] With respect to the weekly reports relating to
Mr. Bergamin, the investigator observed that
Mr. Bergamin had worked overtime and that hours had been
carried forward and carried back to other periods.
[48] In the cases of Messrs. Iafanti and Mungiovi, there
were weekly reports confirming that they had worked on Saturdays
and that hours had also been carried over to other periods.
[49] The investigatorassessed penalties based on the
reliability of the weekly reports, on the fact that the time
sheets, some of which were in the handwriting of the taxpayers
concerned, confirmed that those taxpayers had worked overtime,
and on the fact that the employer and certain employees—as
well as at least one representative of those employees—had
confirmed that payments had been made under the table. The
investigator testified that the employees knew that the T4 slips
did not include all the income they had received and he pointed
out again that 33 of the 40 employees who had been
reassessed had settled with the Minister.
[50] Following the investigator's testimony, five PMC
employees appeared at the respondent's request. All testified
hesitantly and reluctantly, particularly when it came to
discussing the appellants' conditions of employment. With the
exception of Francesco Pulciani, they were even reluctant to
answer questions that concerned themselves. The most frank of all
these witnesses was Mr. Pulciani, who described his
situation very clearly, without equivocation or hesitation. This
employee was on the first crew, which poured the cement. He had
worked for Mr. Candussi for 20 years and admitted that
the number of hours he worked each day varied with the length of
the job. He also admitted that it was important to stay until the
job had been completed or else he would run the risk of losing
his eight hours' wages. He stated that Mr. Candussi
was an honest person who paid all the hours worked by his
employees.
[51] The most important fact revealed by his testimony is that
he received part of his remuneration under the table,
particularly for the overtime that he worked: he admitted that
the amounts stated in his weekly reports corresponded to the
remuneration he had actually received. He also testified that he
had been reassessed by the Minister, that his accountant had
handled his case and that he had paid the tax he owed.
[52] Claudia Guenette testified to describe the work she
had performed for PMC. She admitted that she began her employment
with PMC on November 1, 1989 and that she left it in 1996.
She believed that the employee who had previously completed the
weekly reports was Serge Lafrance and confirmed that she had
only prepared the weekly reports for the periods starting after
October 30, 1989. However, some reports were occasionally
prepared by someone else, namely the business's
receptionist.
[53] Ms. Guenette testified that these weekly reports were
prepared each week. They were usually written on blue paper,
although the paper could also be white or green.
[54] Ms. Guenette declared that she did not know
Mr. Côté at all and that she hardly knew
Mr. Roy. She did not discuss anything with Mr. Roy
while the weekly reports and payroll were being audited. In
addition, no one had asked her at that time to prepare those
documents. The information appearing in the weekly reports was
provided to her by Mr. Candussi and, after completing the
reports, she handed them over to him and did not see them again
after that.
[55] She admitted that she had prepared the pay slips but said
she had not prepared the brown envelopes, which were rather
Mr. Candussi's responsibility. Ms. Guenette said it
was possible that employees had worked more or less than
eight hours a day, but she indicated that the time sheets
were handed over to Mr. Candussi. It was moreover with him
that the terms of payment at the regular rate and overtime rate
as well as Saturday work and the carrying over of hours could be
negotiated.
[56] Mr. Candussi also testified. He revealed that PMC
had gone bankrupt in 1998 and that he himself had as well. He
admitted that it was he who had prepared the brown envelopes in
which he placed the pay slips, the cash and, quite regularly, a
slip indicating the employees' hours of work. The amounts
were paid in cash because this left no trail. Overtime did not
appear on the T4s or in the pay records. The pay rate for
overtime had been negotiated with the employees and fixed at a
level lower than the overtime rate because these amounts were
paid cash and not reported to the tax authorities.
[57] He provided the same explanation for the fact that some
work done during regular hours had been remunerated at less than
the regular rate provided for by the Decree. He testified that
the money contained in the envelopes generally corresponded to
the amounts shown in the weekly reports.
[58] Mr. Candussi also provided explanations concerning the
hour banking system. Some weekly reports bore the inscription
"hold", often in the upper left-hand corner. This hour
banking system had been introduced at the employees' request.
When counsel for the respondent asked him to explain why that
request had been made, he was very reluctant to answer. He said
at first that it had been done as a favour to the employees and,
when she insisted, he answered that it was in order to keep his
employees happy. It was not until counsel for the appellants
cross-examined him that the truth finally emerged and he admitted
that it was in order to help the employees obtain unemployment
insurance benefits.
[59] He confirmed that the weekly reports were prepared by
Claudia Guenette based on the information he provided her,
that is to say information from the time sheets and that obtained
from telephone conversations with his employees or at meetings
with them. The weekly reports were prepared once a week, every
week. He also admitted that the colour of the weekly reports
could be blue, white or green.
[60] When I questioned him, Mr. Candussi revealed that he
had a little book (little black book) which he had not
shown to the investigator and in which he recorded certain
information concerning the hours of work carried over to
subsequent or previous periods. He also noted in this little
black book the amounts he might owe his employees because he did
not always have the necessary money to pay them.
[61] When he was asked directly whether the weekly reports
might have been fabricated, he answered: [TRANSLATION]
"Unfortunately, no." To confirm what he said,
Mr. Candussi relied on the fact that he believed that the
weekly reports had been seized by the Minister's investigator
early in the investigation. He also asserted that he had not been
informed by the Laurentian Bank that the Minister had discovered
his bank account. Lastly, he said it was impossible that
Mr. Côté could have prepared the weekly
reports. In general, the weekly reports were an adequate
representation of what had happened during the relevant taxation
years.
[62] Mr. Candussi was also questioned on the subject of
his employees' work. He had difficulty remembering the exact
number of his employees; he said there were between 24 and 34. He
admitted that these people worked variable hours which might
range from four to 15 hours a day, sometimes even on
Saturdays.
[63] He also admitted that employees could work three, four or
six days a week. Some employees might have paid the cost of
restaurant meals for some of their fellow crew members. He
occasionally worked as a replacement for some of his
employees.
[64] When counsel for the appellants examined him regarding
the terms of employment of each of the four appellants,
Mr. Candussi said that he could not remember them. When
pressed for an answer, he admitted Mr. Bergamin might have
refused to work more than eight hours a day, but he recalled
that he had worked more than eight hours a couple of times
at least. He did not remember knowing that Mr. Mungiovi had
health problems. He said Mr. Mungiovi had worked more than
eight hours on a few occasions.
[65] As to Mr. Vommaro, Mr. Candussi believed that
hours had been banked for that employee. Overtime might have been
exchanged for regular hours, but that was not a regular
occurrence. It was also possible that hours had been carried over
and that Mr. Vommaro might have worked more than
eight hours a day. It was likewise possible that
Mr. Iafanti had worked only 40 hours a week over three,
four or five days and that he had been paid for a minimum of
32 hours and a maximum of 40 hours. However,
Mr. Candussi stated that all of these men had received
everything owed them. Otherwise he would have been sued.
[66] Mr. Palumbo is another witness who appeared at the
respondent's request. He admitted that he found not only cash
and a pay slip in his envelope, but also a slip stating his
hours. However, he hastened to say that he did not recognize his
handwriting on some of the documents shown him at the hearing,
but failed to mention that he needed glasses to see clearly.
Later on, however, when asked to comment on a pay slip showing
paid hours, he said that he could not read it because he did not
have his glasses.
[67] Mr. Palumbo denied that he had told the investigator
a few weeks before the hearing that he had received unreported
income, that PMC's employees worked overtime and that there
was an hour banking system at PMC. When the investigator was
questioned again, he stated that Mr. Palumbo had indicated
to him that he had not reported all his income, that he had
received overtime pay and that hours had been banked for him and
other PMC employees.
[68] Mr. Gerbasi testified that he had been employed by
PMC from May 1990 until 1994 or 1995. His pay envelopes contained
only a pay slip and cash. He said he had used the hour banking
system but did not check the hours he had worked, relying instead
on his employer. He also indicated that he had suffered a
depression and believed that he may have left his job with PMC
without receiving all his pay. Surprisingly he asserted that he
had not been reassessed for unreported income, whereas the
investigator confirmed the contrary.
[69] Mr. Bergamin testified again after hearing the
respondent's evidence. He admitted that, while he may
sometimes have worked more than eight hours a day, he had
done so without pay. All the other appellants also testified
again essentially to reaffirm their evidence in chief and to
declare that they had never seen the weekly reports.
Appellants' Argument
[70] At the hearing, counsel for the appellants presented a
written brief stating the main points of his argument. He argued
first of all that PMC had fabricated the weekly reports after
learning that it was under investigation. According to him,
Ms. Guenette or PMC had had 10 months to fabricate the
weekly reports, not three. He asserted that PMC was aware that
the problem was looming on the horizon as early as October 1993,
not just in May 1994. During that 10-month period PMC would have
had all the time needed to fabricate the documents.
[71] Some of the facts on which counsel bases his assertions
are as follows. First of all there is the fact that, according to
him, the weekly reports were all written with the same pen. The
fact that other contemporary documents existed—in
particular the little black book—and that they were not
handed over to the Minister, raises the possibility of
falsification on PMC's part. He states the following in
paragraph 10 of his brief:
[TRANSLATION]
The witness Michel Candussi emphasized before the Court
that the amounts and/or sums of money entered in the "weekly
reports" did not necessarily mean that these amounts were
paid at the times entered since he pointed out in Court that
there was another notebook, of which the Department had no
knowledge, which reflected the non-payment of various sums
appearing in the "weekly reports". That is in our view
a very important factor suggesting that various pieces of
information were falsified, thus strengthening the
appellants' argument that Mr. Candussi prepared all the
documents in order to deceive the Department by creating a
diversion onto the employees in order to lighten his tax burden,
which he moreover succeeded in doing.
[72] He also reminded the Court that there were white sheets
and green sheets as well as the blue ones. He argued that this
confirmed the existence of other documents which might have
revealed different information from that gathered by the
investigator. Furthermore, the purpose of the extensive
superfluous information provided in the weekly reports was to
render those reports more plausible. As to the fact that the work
site names appearing in the weekly reports corresponded to those
on the invoices sent to PMC's customers, this does not
necessarily establish that the appellants were on those sites on
the dates indicated in the reports.
[73] Counsel for the appellants also thought it important that
the weekly reports were prepared unbeknownst to the appellants
and without being signed by them. The weekly reports thus cannot
be considered reliable documents, according to counsel.
[74] The fact that, in the investigator's experience, it
was common practice to work overtime in the field of cement floor
construction does not necessarily mean that this practice was
followed by PMC since it used several crews which relieved each
other and Mr. Candussi admitted that he had hired extra
personnel.
[75] Counsel for the appellants argued that, given the
presence of unreliable and contradictory documents, the burden
was on the respondent to prove that there were reliable documents
establishing that the appellants had received payments under the
table. He contended that the documents that PMC did not hand over
to the Minister might have revealed a situation completely
opposite to that which the Minister assumed to exist. He also
criticized the Minister for not comparing the total amount of
wages not claimed as expenses with the amounts of the unexplained
withdrawals from the account at the Laurentian Bank.
[76] Furthermore, no witness testified that the appellants
worked overtime and were paid under the table: the only exception
was Mr. Candussi who, according to counsel for the
appellants, was a tainted witness because he provided the
Commission with reports and the Minister with T4 slips which
revealed information different from that contained in the weekly
reports. To reduce his taxes and penalties as well as those of
PMC, it was in Mr. Candussi's interest to maximize
PMC's expenditure figures and increase the appellants'
wage figures.
[77] Counsel for the appellants contended that, on the
contrary, a number of witnesses corroborated the appellants'
version by stating that the money they found in the envelopes
corresponded to the amount indicated on the pay slip.
Respondent's Argument
[78] Counsel for the respondent argued that the respondent had
discharged the entire burden of proof that was on her,
particularly the burden of showing that, for the years from 1989
to 1991, the appellants had made a misrepresentation attributable
to neglect, carelessness or wilful default under
subsection 152(4) of the Act. She likewise discharged her
burden with respect to the penalty assessed under
subsection 163(2) of the Act, that burden being to
show that the appellants had made a false statement under
circumstances amounting to gross negligence with respect to the
years from 1989 to 1992.
[79] In support of her arguments, counsel for the respondent
noted the inconsistencies in the appellants' testimony. First
there was the fact that Mr. Bergamin called every Monday to
give his hours worked. Why would he have to call every Monday to
provide the number of hours if he always worked eight hours
a day, four or five days a week? Since it was PMC that
called Mr. Bergamin to tell him where and when to work, PMC
would have been in a position to know exactly the number of hours
to be indicated on the pay slip. Counsel thus suggested that
calling every Monday would have been more logical for a person
who was reporting irregular hours and overtime.
[80] Mr. Bergamin testified in evidence in chief that he
had never worked overtime because PMC refused to pay him at the
overtime rate, whereas he admitted in cross-examination that he
may have worked overtime on several occasions, [TRANSLATION] a
couple of times, to use his expression, but said that he did
so without pay. Mr. Bergamin's testimony that he himself
paid for his hunting trip with Mr. Candussi was contradicted
by the latter's testimony, which was corroborated by the
weekly report.
[81] All the appellants, even though they had worked together
for many years, said they did not know whether or not a given
co-appellant had worked overtime or worked on Saturdays. Counsel
contended that they were obviously trying to protect each
other.[2]
[82] According to counsel for the respondent,
Michel Candussi was credible when he stated that he had paid
his employees under the table for certain regular hours as well
as for overtime and when he said that he had set up an hour
banking system at his employees' request to help them become
eligible for unemployment insurance.
[83] Counsel asserted thatMr. Candussi was credible
because he had nothing to gain at the time of his testimony and
that it would have been more pleasant for him to protect his
former employees. Mr. Candussi and PMC were reassessed in
respect of the income they had not reported and they were
assessed civil penalties. The two were also charged with tax
fraud, to which they moreover pleaded guilty. Counsel also
pointed out that Mr. Candussi had been very reluctant to
come and testify and that certain facts that were harmful to his
former employees had to be extracted from him with great
difficulty.
[84] However, it was not enough to rely solely on
Mr. Candussi's testimony; the fact that his testimony
was corroborated by certain documents, in particular the weekly
reports, also had to be considered. I will not repeat here the
reliability indicators which counsel mentioned since they
correspond essentially to those previously mentioned by the
investigator in his testimony, which I have stated above.
[85] I will merely refer to the comments that counsel for the
respondent made respecting two of the points raised by counsel
for the appellants. She stated that, when Ms. Guenette and
Mr. Candussi spoke about the colour of the weekly reports,
they might have been referring to periods prior to the relevant
taxation years. I admit that this is possible in
Mr. Candussi's case, but not in that of
Ms. Guenette since she was not hired until November 1989.
However, as she continued to work after 1992, until 1996, the
statement may be valid in her case for the subsequent years.
[86] Contrary to counsel for the appellants, counsel for the
respondent asserts that the little black book raises no doubts.
In her opinion, the existence of the little black book poses no
problems. The weekly reports confirm the existence of a system by
which hours were carried back to previous periods or carried
forward to subsequent periods and it is not surprising that
Mr. Candussi might have kept the necessary information in
another record—the little black book—and that he
subsequently provided that information to Ms. Guenette.
Furthermore, as Mr. Candussi admitted that he did not always
have the money necessary to pay his employees, the little black
book enabled him to determine how much he owed them.
Analysis
[87] Those are the respective positions of each of the
parties. I have before me two totally contradictory versions of
what took place. In my opinion, the decision in these appeals
depends entirely on the credibility of Ms. Guenette's
and Mr. Candussi's testimony as well as on the
reliability of the weekly reports. If I were to believe this
testimony and the weekly reports, I could not consider the
appellants' testimony credible. And if I were to disbelieve
the appellants, then the respondent would have discharged her
entire burden of proof and the reassessments of all the
appellants would thus be affirmed.
[88] First of all, it should be noted that I essentially have
only the word of each of the appellants, who assert that they did
not receive the additional income determined by the Minister in
his reassessments. No one came to corroborate their version. None
of their fellow crew members, whether one of the other appellants
or any of PMC's other employees, came to testify under oath
that none of the appellants was in the habit of working overtime.
At first blush it is quite surprising that they would never have
done so, in view of the nature of PMC's operations. When you
are pouring concrete or working on finishing, it is essential to
complete the job before going home. Of course, it is not
impossible that these appellants might in fact have acted as they
claimed; however, no one came to corroborate these facts under
oath.
[89] I also find it utterly implausible that none of the
appellants was able to provide information on the other
appellants' work habits. I share counsel for the
respondent's view that this seems like the behaviour of
someone who wants to protect his co-workers or former
co-workers. It is truly a conspiracy of silence. However,
silence in these circumstances may be interpreted in a manner
unfavourable to those who remain silent. Certainly it may be
thought that, if they had been able to speak freely, they might
have revealed facts which would have undermined their interests.
Furthermore, there are also the inconsistencies which counsel for
the respondent previously noted and which undermine the
appellants' credibility.
[90] In support of the respondent's version, there is the
testimony of Mr. Candussi, corroborated in many important
points by the testimony of Mr. Pulciani and
Ms. Guenette, indicating that PMC made under-the-table
payments and that during the relevant periods the weekly reports
were prepared to enable Mr. Candussi to prepare the brown
pay envelopes each week.
[91] I also share the view expressed by the investigator and
by counsel for the respondent regarding the reliability of the
weekly reports. In my opinion, the indicators they mentioned give
the weekly reports very considerable probative value. I believe
on a balance of probabilities that the weekly reports were
drafted in the normal course of PMC's operations and
accurately reflect the actual situation, that is to say that the
appellants received remuneration under the table for overtime and
regular hours which were not reported either in the payroll, on
the T4 slips or in their returns of income.
[92] The defence presented by counsel for the appellants
essentially consisted in raising doubts as to the validity of the
weekly reports. In particular, he suggested that PMC might have
had 10 months rather than three months to fabricate the
weekly reports. There is also the fact that the handwriting on
the reports might suggest that they could all have been prepared
using the same pen, after the fact. Since all the weekly reports
filed at the hearing were photocopies, it is difficult if not
impossible to be convinced that this was the case.
[93] In my view, however, even though these factors may raise
doubts, this does not mean that, on a balance of probabilities,
these weekly reports were fabricated and that they contain
incorrect information on the wages paid to the appellants.
[94] I should add that I have attempted to determine whether
the total withdrawals from the account at the Laurentian Bank
might correspond to the total wages paid under the table during
the relevant taxation years. I have observed that some of the
information necessary to check this for 1989 is missing since the
bank statement (Exhibit I-5) only shows the
withdrawals starting from January 1, 1989. Since the 1989
fiscal year ended on April 30, 1989, the withdrawals for the
months from May to December 1988, needed in order to have a
complete picture for 1989, are missing. Furthermore, the amount
of unreported income and the amount of wages which the Minister
allowed as expenses for 1992 were not revealed at the hearing; it
merely came out that they were equivalent amounts.
[95] I have nevertheless been able to prepare a table using
the withdrawals corresponding to the relevant months of PMC's
fiscal year ending on April 30, 1990 and April 30,
1991. I have added to the table the amounts of income not
reported by PMC and the amounts of wages which the Minister
allowed as expenses as well as the amounts of PMC's net
income and the amounts of Mr. Candussi's additional
income which the Minister considered to be appropriations of
funds when making his reassessment. As an analysis of this table
shows, the amounts of wages allowed by the Minister for the 1990
and 1991 fiscal years are less than the corresponding withdrawal
amounts. For the 1990 fiscal year, the wages allowed were
$361,711, whereas the withdrawals amounted to $408,500. For 1991,
the Minister allowed $309,535 in wages, whereas the withdrawals
for the corresponding period amounted to $465,000.
WITHDRAWALS
|
APRIL 90
|
APRIL 91
|
May
|
34,000
|
51,000
|
June
|
74,000
|
43,000
|
July
|
31,000
|
26,000
|
August
|
26,000
|
49,000
|
September
|
20,000
|
43,000
|
October
|
50,000
|
27,500
|
November
|
44,000
|
42,000
|
December
|
23,000
|
25,500
|
January
|
12,000
|
36,000
|
February
|
29,500
|
60,000
|
March
|
37,000
|
27,000
|
April
|
28,000
|
35,000
|
TOTAL withdrawals
|
408,500
|
465,000
|
|
APRIL 90
|
APRIL 91
|
UNREP. INC.[3]
|
423,328
|
472,105
|
WAGES
|
- 361,711
|
- 309,535
|
NET INC. (PMC)
|
61,617
|
162,570
|
UNREP. INC.
|
128,919
|
54,190
|
[96]For 1990 and 1991, it may therefore be seen that the wage
expenses allowed by the Minister are entirely consistent with the
withdrawals made by PMC. What is more, on analyzing the intervals
at which the withdrawals were made from the bank account, I
observed that those withdrawals were single bimonthly or weekly
withdrawals, which is wholly consistent with PMC's claims
that these amounts were used to pay wages under the table.
[97] Thus, for all these reasons, the appeals of all the
appellants are dismissed with costs to the respondent.
Signed at Montréal, Quebec, this 8th day of March
2000.
"Pierre Archambault"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 13th day of February
2001.
Erich Klein, Revisor