Citation: 2014 TCC 73
Date: 20140306
Docket: 2012-4694(IT)I
BETWEEN:
ADNAN ARIF,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Woods J.
[1]
Adnan Arif appeals from a
reassessment made under the Income Tax Act which assumed that Mr. Arif
earned gross business income in the amount of $48,500 in the 2007 taxation
year. Mr. Arif submits that $35,000 of this amount was sourced from casino winnings
and not from his business.
[2]
As a preliminary matter, the
respondent informed the Court that the reassessment contained an arithmetic
error and that the income should be reduced by $500. A correction for this
amount will be reflected in the judgment attached to these reasons.
Background
[3]
Mr. Arif testified that in the 2007
taxation year he operated a sole proprietorship in which he negotiated benefits
with insurance companies on behalf of clients for a fee. He said that he was in
this business for about a year, and after that the business was discontinued
due to new regulations governing paralegals.
[4]
Mr. Arif was delinquent in filing
an income tax return for this year. Accordingly, on December 1, 2008 the
Minister issued an assessment for that year without reviewing a return. The
assessment assumed that Mr. Arif earned gross and net business income in the
amount of $53,260.
[5]
Subsequently, on July 30, 2009 Mr.
Arif filed an income tax return. In it, Mr. Arif reported gross business income
in the amount of $12,500 and net commission income in the amount of $7,155.
[6]
During the subsequent review of
the return, on February 2, 2011 Mr. Arif provided the Canada Revenue Agency
(CRA) with copies of statements of his business bank account for 2007. He also
provided information as to the source of the deposits in the account as well as
a reconciliation of the bank deposits and his reported income in the amount of
$12,500.
[7]
Mr. Arif’s explanation to the CRA
was contained in a chart which provided the information below.
(a) Each bank deposit
was categorized as being sourced from either business or non-business
transactions. Mr. Arif categorized eight deposits totaling $11,660 as having a
business source. He also categorized ten deposits totaling $35,000 as being sourced
from casino winnings.
(b) The eight
deposits that were categorized as having a business source were $840 short of
the business income that was reported on the income tax return. The chart provided
to the CRA identified the $840 as business income paid in cash and not
represented by a bank deposit.
[8]
On July 8, 2011, the Minister
reassessed the 2007 taxation year to reduce gross business income to $48,500
and net business income to $44,820.
[9]
The only issue in this appeal is
whether the Minister properly determined that the deposits of purported casino
wins in the amount of $35,000 were actually sourced from a business.
Discussion
[10]
The question to be decided is
whether the ten deposits totaling $35,000 are from casino winnings, as Mr. Arif
suggests, or from business income, as the Minister suggests.
[11]
Mr. Arif has the burden to
establish at least a prima facie case that the deposits did not have a
business source. For the reasons below, I have concluded that this burden has
not been satisfied.
[12]
I would first comment that Mr.
Arif’s case depends to a great extent on his own self-interested testimony. He
did not introduce any other witnesses or provide any documents that supported
his position.
[13]
The lack of supporting evidence is
a problem for Mr. Arif because he is required by the Act to keep records
to support his business income. Mr. Arif acknowledged that he kept no business
records, and he justified this by saying that the business was too small. This
is not an acceptable explanation for failing to comply with a legislative
requirement that has the important objective of assisting in the verification
of income reported by a taxpayer.
[14]
Second, Mr. Arif did not provide a
persuasive explanation for how he determined which deposits were sourced from
casino winnings. Mr. Arif provided this information to the CRA in 2011 which
was long after the taxation year at issue.
[15]
Mr. Arif attempted to explain this
by giving vague testimony that he kept contemporaneous handwritten notes of his
casino results. These notes were not introduced at the hearing and I did not
find this testimony to be reliable.
[16]
Third, Mr. Arif submitted records
kept by the casino as to his daily wins and losses in 2007 (Exhibit A-1). These
records show an aggregate net betting loss for the year in the amount of
$12,995. The records do not correspond at all with the bank deposits which Mr.
Arif suggests are from casino wins.
[17]
Mr. Arif testified that when he
won money at the casino he promptly deposited it in the bank account. He attempted
to explain the lack of correspondence between the casino records and the bank
deposits by suggesting that the casino records were not accurate.
[18]
The records of daily wins and
losses that are kept by the casino are based on bets that are recorded through
the use of Mr. Arif’s casino rewards card. Mr. Arif testified that he did not
use the rewards card for 60 to 70 percent of his bets. His explanation for not
using the card was that it was commonly believed by casino patrons that if they
used the rewards card they tended to lose money. This
self-interested testimony is not reliable.
[19]
In addition, there is a further
problem in relation to the casino records.
[20]
Mr. Arif testified that he routinely
deposited casino wins into the bank account either on the same day or the next
day. If this were the case, I would have thought that the wins recorded by the
casino would be reflected in bank deposits. However, this is not the case.
[21]
According to the casino records,
Mr. Arif won over $2,000 on five occasions in the period from May to November
of 2007. Only one of these wins appears to coincide in time with a bank deposit
(win on July 22 of $2,700 and a deposit on July 25 of $2,200).
[22]
The conclusion that I have reached
based on the evidence as a whole is that the business income reported on Mr.
Arif’s income tax return ($12,500) is an arbitrary figure. I am not satisfied
that it bears any relation to reality.
[23]
I am also not satisfied that any
of the bank deposits were sourced from casino wins. Even though there is a bank
deposit of $2,200 that could possibly be sourced from a casino win, it is not
appropriate to give Mr. Arif the benefit of the doubt with respect to this deposit
given the weakness of Mr. Arif’s evidence overall.
[24]
The appeal will be allowed only
with respect to the $500 error mentioned above.
Signed at Ottawa, Ontario this 6th day of March
2014.
“J.M. Woods”