Court File No. 2015-4051(IT)I
TAX COURT OF CANADA
BETWEEN:
RUBEN MENDOZA
Appellant
- and -
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
EDITED ORAL REASONS WITH FOOTNOTES ADDED
Delivered by THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE HERSHFIELD
at the hearing held at the Unified
Family Court,
55 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario,
on Wednesday, April 6, 2016 at 12:17 p.m.
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Ruben
Mendoza Self-Represented
Mr. Gregory
B. King for the Respondent
Also
Present:
Mr. Colin
Nethercut Court Registrar
Ms. Lisa
Nguyen Court Reporter
A.S.A.P.
Reporting Services Inc. © 2016
200 Elgin Street, Suite 1105 333
Bay Street, Suite 900
Ottawa, Ontario K2P 1L5 Toronto,
Ontario M5H 2T4
(613) 564-2727 (416)
861-8720
Hamilton,
Ontario
--- Upon commencing the excerpt on Wednesday, April 6th,
2016 at 12:17 p.m.
JUSTICE
HERSHFIELD: The Appellant appeals an assessment of his 2013 year. His
appeal is in respect of two parts of the assessment. Firstly, the assessment
assessed a penalty in the amount of $148.80 for the 2013 taxation year pursuant
to subsection 163(1) of the Income Tax Act for repeated failures to
report income. Admissions by the Appellant require a finding that the facts
relied on by the Respondent in assessing this penalty were correct.
Accordingly, the appeal on that point must be dismissed. The dismissal is
required notwithstanding that I accept that the Appellant's failure to report
certain taxable amounts relating to his employment income was inadvertent.
The second
issue relates to the denial of a non‑refundable tax credit in respect of
a transit pass credit for the subject year. The requirement for the credit to
apply is detailed in certain definitions as set out in paragraph 118.02(1) of
the Act. This issue will turn on the nature of the pass in question and
acquired and used by the Appellant in the subject year to commute to and from
his place of employment.
Turning to the
Minister's assumptions and the Appellant's testimony, I make the following
findings:
Throughout the
2013 taxation year, the Appellant used a PRESTO card for his commute from his
residence in Oakville, Ontario to his work in downtown Toronto, the card being
issued by the TTC.
I am satisfied
that the card acquired by the Appellant was for payment of his transit to and
from work for some 200 or more one‑way trips made exclusively for this
commute. Indeed, considering that usage of the card is in two directions, I am
satisfied that the Appellant would have used the card some 400 times or more in
the subject year.
The Appellant
gave uncontested and credible evidence that he acquired the subject commuter
transit services using his Presto card. He acquired such services from TTC
outlets using his credit card for payment. He produced an exhibit showing transit
purchases
throughout the year sufficient to take him to work and back each
working day of the year. I accept his testimony that the pass (the acquired
commuter transit services) entitled him to go only between the two stations
that were the start and end of his daily commute to and from work.
The exhibit
showed the credit card transaction number for all the purchases.
While he did not have the credit card monthly statements in court, I accept his
un-contradicted and uncontested testimony that he provided the CRA with copies
of these statements for the entire year to evidence that he was the person who
acquired and paid for the subject transit services.
The Appellant
further testified that he relied on the CRA General Income Tax and Benefit Guide
to see what was required of him to claim the subject tax credit. He also
testified that he was not asked to support his claim for the public transit
credit until 2015 in a letter dated June 26, 2015.
The Appellant
tried to get the TTC records as set out in this letter as being required to
obtain the credit. The records sought would identify the Appellant as the
person who paid for and used the card. The Appellant testified that the TTC
could not produce the required records. He said the TTC said it could only
produce such records on a going‑forward basis.
The Respondent
does not deny any of the facts asserted by the Appellant but relies on the
wording of the legislation. Firstly, the Respondent pointed to two types of
transportation cards defined in the Act. To get the credit, the
Appellant must have acquired one of these two types of cards as well as meeting
the usage and documentation requirements set out in each such definition.
I am satisfied
that the PRESTO card acquired and used by the Appellant fit the definition of
an “eligible electronic payment card”. As such, the requirement for the credit
as set out in the legislation ‑‑ and I am reading from that
portion of subsection 118.02(2) of the Act that defines that particular
card. It is a card that is:
"a) used by an individual for at least 32 one‑way trips,
between the place of origin of the trip and its termination, during an
uninterrupted period not exceeding 31 days; and
"b) issued by or on behalf of a qualified Canadian transit
organization, which organization records and receipts the cost and usage of the
electronic payment card and identifies the right, of the individual who is the
holder or owner of such a card, to use public commuter transit services of that
qualified Canadian transit organization."
I do not
believe the requirement as set out in paragraph (a) is in dispute. As to
paragraph (b), I have no doubt that the TTC is a qualified Canadian transit
organization (as defined in ss 118.02(1)) and is an organization which records
and receipts the cost and usage of the electronic payment card and identifies
the right of the individual who is the holder or owner of such card to use
public commuter transit services.
Literally
speaking, the requirements of that section are thereby met but for the issuance
requirement which is a TTC obligation. However, there is no specific
requirement in the Act for the taxpayer to obtain and produce the record.
One might almost suggest that is the end of the matter (as described in
footnote 2). Of course it is going to be said that that definition which
includes the issuance of the record necessarily implies that the records referred
to as being required must be produced and given to the taxpayer so that the
taxpayer can produce the record to the CRA. Admittedly, this seems to be a
necessary inference, but I do underline that that is not literally what the definition
says which could invite a more purposive approach to the CRA administrative
practices.
The problem we
have here is that the TTC would not or could not release the required
information unless it had been requested in advance of the record date requested.
The Appellant, as I said, testified that based on the guidelines that he had
read, he had no idea as to the requirements that would be imposed by the CRA
administratively until more than a year later when he received the June letter
in 2015. By that time, of course, according to the systemic issues within the
TTC, he could not produce the required records.
It strikes me
that if the TTC, a third party beyond the control of the taxpayer, will not
release the necessary records, it is necessary to impose a duty on the
Appellant to produce other evidence that amounts to what I would call
substantial compliance with the requirements of the Act.
To deny TTC users the credit because of a systemic issue within this qualifying
Canadian transit organization is an unreasonable extension of the issuance requirement
to find that there is, by necessary implication, an implied requirement in the Act,
that the transit organization produce the required records on the taxpayer’s request
and actually give them to the taxpayer, failing which the taxpayer loses the
credit.
A transit user
cannot be taken to understand or have control over these systemic problems.
Even if the CRA were, with knowledge of the systemic problem, to still insist
on the taxpayer’s production of the records maintained by the transit
organization, there would be an obligation on the CRA to make its position
known to the public. The guide that we have referred to does not set anything
like that out and the unwary taxpayer has fallen into a denial of access of an
intended legislative benefit by virtue of a systemic problem within an outside organization
referred to in the legislation. The CRA has some obligation to direct taxpayers
of its compliance requirements positions well in advance of a filing
requirement.
Turning to the CRA’s
compliance requirements or administrative position, it strikes me as somewhat
odd that the letter of June 26th, in referring to different types of
cards, does not use the technical terms used in the Act. It just refers
to what it calls a “transit pass” and a “cost‑per‑trip electronic
payment card” or “smart card”. There is no reference to the pass defined in the
Act as an ”eligible public transit pass”. I am willing to concede that,
by the sound of it at least, a cost‑per‑trip electronic payment card
would be what the Appellant in this case acquired, namely a Presto card. As I
said earlier, it also sounds to me like an eligible public transit pass.
And here, the
CRA's letter in attempting to apply the legislation says, in the case of a
cost-per-trip electronic payment card, that the qualified Canadian transit
organization must give a usage report giving the rider's name and the cost and usage
of the card. On the other hand, interestingly, in the case of the other pass
(the transit pass) the letter says if the required documentation setting out
listed information (such as the period that the pass is valid for, the
organization that is issuing it, the cost of the trip and the rider's name or a
unique identifier) is not available then the evidence required to establish
these requirements could be your credit card statement.
So depending on
the type of card, we have two different methods where taxpayers can
establish their right to this legislated, intended, credit.
As I have said,
I think substantial compliance in a case where a third party qualifying transit
organization, over which the taxpayer has no control, has the ability to provide
that which legislation requires it to provide and otherwise meets the
requirements of the legislation, then there has to be some guideline by the CRA
on an administrative basis that allows for substantial compliance using other
evidentiary means where that organization fails to issue the required
documentation. I am referring to there being substantial compliance where the
taxpayer provides the relevant information which the legislation requires
(albeit in a different form).
I think these
remarks are sufficient to give the parties the reasons for my decision to allow
the appeal in respect of this second issue.
As I said, (speaking
to the Appellant) the judgment that I will sign will just simply say the only
thing that you're allowed is the credit. It will not likely mention anything
to do with the penalty because it is not allowed. So the judgment speaks only
to that which is allowed. If it is not mentioned, it is not allowed. I say
this so you will understand that.