Date: 20120201
Docket:
T-1852-10
Citation:
2012 FC 124
[UNREVISED
ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario,
February 1, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable
Madam Justice Bédard
BETWEEN:
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SOCIÉTÉ ANGELO COLATOSTI
INC.
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applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review filed by the applicant under section 18.1
of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, of a decision by the Canada
Revenue Agency (CRA) denying the request for relief from penalties and interest
that it filed under subsection 220(3.1) of the Income Tax Act, RSC,
1985, c 1 (5th Supp) (ITA).
I. Background
and impugned decision
[2]
The
applicant and Société Buffet Lazio (1985) Inc. (Buffet Lazio) are related
companies of which Angelo Colastosti was the sole shareholder. The
applicant owned a commercial immovable in the city of Laval that it rented to
Buffet Lazio, where it operated a banquet hall business. The two companies signed a lease in 1988.
[3]
The
immovable required major work and the companies agreed that Buffet Lazio would
pay the cost of repairs and that the payment of rent would be suspended during
that period; it was agreed that the companies would offset the amounts due for
the work and the rent upon completion of the work.
[4]
In 1996, the
applicant and Buffet Lazio did their accounting and decided that the amount for
the work and the amount owed for rent were equal and, on their accountant’s recommendation,
they both erased their respective receivables and debts. The applicant
submitted that its accountant had informed it that such a transaction could be
done without any tax effects since the two companies were related. Financial
statements for the year 1996, reflecting these transactions, were prepared for
each company.
[5]
On August 17,
1998, the applicant’s accountant sent Revenu Québec a letter including the corrected
T2S(8) forms regarding the undepreciated capital costs for the years 1996 and 1997.
Revenu Québec then asked the applicant’s accountant, first in a telephone conversation
and second in a letter dated September 2, 1998, to correct form T2S(8) or C175S.
The accountant sent a letter to Revenu Québec explaining the offset between the
applicant and Buffet Lazio for the work and rent amounts owing, but he failed
to send a corrected T2S(8) form.
[6]
On April 8,
1999, because the requested form had not been received, the deputy minister of
Revenu du Québec assessed the applicant, adding $616,960 to its income for the
taxation year ending March 31, 1996 as gains from the settlement of a debt.
On July 2, 1999, the applicant filed a notice of objection
against this assessment on the grounds that it had offset this amount with
Buffet Lazio.
[7]
On October 1,
1999, the CRA also added the amount of $616,960 to the applicant’s income for
the year 1996 and issued notices of assessment for the taxation year
ending on March 31, 1996, and that ending on March 31, 1997. The applicant
challenged these notices of assessment by filing a notice of objection on October 18, 1999.
[8]
On June 14,
2000, Revenu Québec dismissed the applicant’s objection.
On July 28, 2000, the applicant filed a motion to appeal this decision
before the Court of Québec.
[9]
In the
meantime, the applicant and the CRA agreed to suspend the matter at the federal
level while they waited for the applicant’s appeals from the assessment by Revenu
Québec to be exhausted and to apply at the federal level the outcome of the
provincial level objections.
[10]
The appeal
hearing before the Court of Québec took place on December 13 and 14, 2006.
The applicant submitted that it was during this hearing that it learned that in
1998 Revenu Québec had asked its accountant to send a corrected T2S(8) form and
that he had failed to send it. It submitted that it was at this time that it
also learned about the tax effects of this error. The applicant submitted that its
accountant made two errors: he did not inform it of the content of the letter
sent by Revenu Québec and did not make the requested correction. The applicant
submitted that if its accountant had sent the corrected form, Revenu Québec and
the CRA would not have issued the notices of assessment. The applicant also
criticized Revenu Québec for not having informed it of its requirements and for
communicating only with its accountant.
[11]
The Court
of Québec dismissed the applicant’s appeal on October 23, 2008. It found
that the transaction between the applicant and Buffet Lazio was not an offset
but a debt write-off that should be included in the calculation of income. The
Court of Appeal upheld this judgment on October 23, 2008, and found that
the applicant did not discharge its burden of proving that it had offset the
amount with Buffet Lazio.
[12]
On
February 15, 2010, the applicant submitted a request for relief to the CRA
to cancel the interest and penalties related to the amounts assessed on October 1,
1999.
[13]
Subsection 220(3.1)
of the ITA grants the Minister the authority to relieve the tax burden of a
taxpayer by waiving the penalties and interest owing:
Waiver
of penalty or interest
(3.1)
The Minister may, on or before the day that is ten calendar years after the
end of a taxation year of a taxpayer (or in the case of a partnership, a
fiscal period of the partnership) or on application by the taxpayer or
partnership on or before that day, waive or cancel all or any portion of any
penalty or interest otherwise payable under this Act by the taxpayer or
partnership in respect of that taxation year or fiscal period, and
notwithstanding subsections 152(4) to (5), any assessment of the
interest and penalties payable by the taxpayer or partnership shall be made
that is necessary to take into account the cancellation of the penalty or
interest.
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Renonciation
aux pénalités et aux intérêts
(3.1)
Le ministre peut, au plus tard le jour qui suit de dix années civiles la fin
de l’année d’imposition d’un contribuable ou de l’exercice d’une société de
personnes ou sur demande du contribuable ou de la société de personnes faite
au plus tard ce jour-là, renoncer à tout ou partie d’un montant de pénalité
ou d’intérêts payable par ailleurs par le contribuable ou la société de
personnes en application de la présente loi pour cette année d’imposition ou
cet exercice, ou l’annuler en tout ou en partie. Malgré les paragraphes 152(4)
à (5), le ministre établit les cotisations voulues concernant les intérêts et
pénalités payables par le contribuable ou la société de personnes pour tenir
compte de pareille annulation.
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[14]
Furthermore,
the CRA adopted Information Circular IC07-1 (Information Circular) regarding
requests for relief.
The Information Circular sets out the circumstances
where relief from penalties and interest may be warranted, in particular when
the interest or penalties in question result from extraordinary circumstances
beyond the taxpayer’s control, actions of the CRA or when the taxpayer is
unable to pay or is experiencing financial hardship (paragraphs 23 to 28).
Section 35 of the Information Circular deals with third-party errors as
follows:
Third-Party
Actions
¶35. Taxpayers are
generally considered to be responsible for errors made by third parties acting
on their behalf for income tax matters. A third party
who receives a fee and gives incorrect advice, or makes arithmetic or accounting
errors, is usually regarded as being responsible to their client for any
penalty and interest charges that the client has because of the party’s action.
However, there may be exceptional situations, where it may be appropriate to
provide relief to taxpayers because of third-party errors or delays.
[Emphasis added]
[15]
In
support of its request for relief, the applicant relied on the following
evidence: (1) that its accountant had told it that both companies could offset the
amounts without tax effect because they were related companies; (2) that the
failure to submit a corrected T2S(8) form was due to its accountant; (3) that its
accountant never informed it of the request from Revenu Québec and that Revenu
Québec dealt only with its accountant; (4) that if its accountant had not made
an error, Revenu Québec and the CRA would not have issued the notices of
assessment; (5) that it learned about the request from Revenu Québec and the
error made by its accountant in December 2006 during the hearing before
the Court of Quebec.
[16]
On
May 11, 2010, Robert Croteau, Audit Division, CRA, denied the applicant’s
request for relief on the ground that it was time-barred.
[17]
The
applicant requested a review of this decision. In support of its request, it
argued, among other things, that the limitation period should not be used
against it since the periods were not supposed to begin until the time when it
learned the facts, i.e. in 2006.
[18]
The
applicant’s record was analyzed by Julie Duval, who recommended that the request
be denied because it was time-barred and was without merit.
[19]
On
October 7, 2010, John Lyssikatos, Assistant Director, Audit Division, Tax
Services Office, Laval (Assistant Director), denied the applicant’s request for
review.
II. Issue
[20]
The
only issue relates to the reasonableness of the Assistant Director’s decision.
[21]
The
challenge was made against two aspects of the Assistant Director’s decision:
the denial of the request based on the limitation period and the denial of the request
on its merits.
[22]
In
Bozzer v Canada (Minister of National Revenue - MNR), 2011 FCA 186;
333 DLR (4th) 385 (Bozzer), the Federal Court of Appeal deemed that the
10-year period set out in subsection 220(3.1) of the ITA was to be
interpreted as authorizing the Minister to cancel the penalties and interest
accumulated during the entire taxation year ending within the 10 years
prior to the taxpayer’s request for relief, separate from the time when the tax
debt began. The respondent admitted that in light of this recent decision,
the Minister could not deny the applicant’s request for relief based solely on
the limitation period.
[23]
Thus, the
only real argument relates to the denial of the request for relief on merit.
III. Standard of review
[24]
Both
parties submitted—and I share their view—that the decision of the Assistant
Director should be reviewed on reasonableness (Canada Revenue Agency v
Telfer, 2009 FCA 23, at paras 24-28 (available on CanLII), Stemijon
Investments Ltd v Canada (Attorney General), 2011 FCA 299 at para 20
(available on CanLII) (Stemijon Investments).
IV. Analysis
[25]
The
applicant submits that, having based his decision mainly on the limitation
period, the Assistant Director had not conducted an exhaustive analysis of its
request for relief and the grounds it raised in support of its request. It
submitted that, in his decision, the Assistant Director merely mentioned the
general principle in the Information Circular that taxpayers are generally
considered to be responsible for errors made by third parties acting on their
behalf, without stating whether he analyzed the grounds it had relied on or, if
such was the case, without explaining why these grounds could not be considered
extraordinary circumstances.
[26]
The
respondent submitted that it appeared from the Assistant Director’s decision
and Ms. Duval’s recommendation on which the Assistant Director relied,
that an analysis of the circumstances relied on by the applicant was conducted
and that these circumstances did not warrant a request for relief.
[27]
The
Assistant Director’s decision reads as follows:
[Translation]
…
We have read the observations
related to the request and we have carefully considered the facts of your case
in light of the applicable provisions. We may waive interest and/or penalties
in accordance with the guidelines of Information Circular IC07-1 in the
following circumstances:
a.
extraordinary
circumstances
b.
actions
of the CRA
c.
inability
to pay or financial hardship
We have carefully considered
the facts in your record.
Unfortunately, as noted in our response to your first
request dated May 11, 2010, it is only possible to grant relief of
interest or penalties for the taxation years ending 10 years before the
calendar year during which the request or tax return was filed and not
based on the year where the taxpayer becomes aware of the facts.
In these circumstances, we
cannot accommodate your request to cancel the penalties and interest for the
returns of 1996 and 1997 since the period of 10 years during which the Minister
may exercise his discretion has expired. It was not
possible to review this period or its starting point despite the circumstances
you related.
Furthermore, it is important
to point out that taxpayers are generally considered to be responsible for
errors made by third parties acting on their behalf in their tax matters. Third
parties who provide incorrect advice or who make errors are generally
considered to be responsible to their client. Therefore,
these situations are not considered extraordinary circumstances allowing us to grant
your request under relief provisions.
…
[The underlined passages are
from the original]
[28]
I
find that this decision is unreasonable for the following reasons.
[29]
First,
the decision is rather terse and it is not easy to determine whether the
Assistant Director truly analyzed the merit of the applicant’s request for
relief. It is true that, after indicating that the period during
which the Minister may exercise his discretion had expired, the Assistant
Director added a paragraph in which he stated the principle that generally
applies to requests for relief based on errors by third parties, citing part of
paragraph 35 of the Information Circular. He
then stated that the circumstances—third parties who provide inaccurate advice
or who make errors—are not extraordinary circumstances allowing them to grant the
request for relief. However, it is not
possible to know whether the Assistant Director determined that the third-party
error could never be used as a ground for a request for relief or if he instead
reviewed the specific circumstances in which the applicant raised its
accountant’s error and deemed that they were not extraordinary circumstances
warranting relief.
[30]
Subsection 220(3.1)
of the ITA gives the Minister discretion. Although the
Minister’s delegate may rely on principles set out in an information circular
or in guidelines, such policy statements cannot and should not limit the
Minister’s discretion. In this case, the
Assistant Director’s decision said nothing about subsection 220(3.1) of
the ITA and simply stated the three circumstances provided in the Information
Circular. Thus, he seems to have limited his
review to the circumstances provided in the Information Circular. However, even paragraph 35 of the Information Circular
states that the Minister has residual discretion to grant relief when the
request is based on a third party’s error in “extraordinary situations”.
In this case, the applicant not only relied on a
third party’s error; it relied on an entire set of circumstances that would
explain and warrant its request for relief and the Assistant Director did not
address these circumstances in his decision. Therefore,
in the decision, nothing was indicated that allowed us to see whether the
Assistant Director reviewed the circumstances relied on by the applicant in
support of its request. If, however, this
analysis was done, I find that the Assistant Director’s decision did not
provide sufficient reasons to understand its basis; we know absolutely nothing
about why he found that the circumstances relied on were not extraordinary.
[31]
The
respondent asked me to review Ms. Duval’s recommendation report that the
Assistant Director apparently relied on, which is more detailed than the
Assistant Director’s decision.
I recognize that it is sometimes useful to review the
record to understand the reasons and assess the reasonableness of the decision
(Stemijon Investments Ltd, above, at para 37). The Supreme Court recently held in Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62 (available on CanLII), that the reasons for a decision must be
analyzed together with the outcome and that it was possible to review the
record to assess the qualities that make a decision reasonable. Justice Abella stated the following:
14 Read as a whole, I do not see Dunsmuir
as standing for the proposition that the “adequacy” of reasons is a
stand-alone basis for quashing a decision, or as advocating that a reviewing
court undertake two discrete analyses — one for the reasons and a separate one
for the result (Donald J. M.
Brown and John M. Evans, Judicial Review of Administrative Action in Canada
(loose-leaf), at § 12:5330 and 12:5510). It is a more organic exercise — the
reasons must be read together with the outcome and serve the purpose of showing
whether the result falls within a range of possible outcomes. This, it seems to
me, is what the Court was saying in Dunsmuir when it told reviewing
courts to look at “the qualities that make a decision reasonable, referring
both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes” (para 47).
15 In assessing whether the decision is
reasonable in light of the outcome and the reasons, courts must show “respect
for the decision-making process of adjudicative bodies with regard to both the
facts and the law” (Dunsmuir, at para 48). This means that courts
should not substitute their own reasons, but they may, if they find it
necessary, look to the record for the purpose of assessing the reasonableness
of the outcome.
[32]
Therefore,
I will review Ms. Duval’s recommendation report, which is part of the
record, to see whether it helps shed more light on the assessment of the merit
of the applicant’s request for relief.
[33]
The
relevant portions of her report read as follows:
[Translation]
The taxpayer relies on an error or
negligence by its accountant in filling out a form at the request of Revenu
Québec. However, the actions of a third party, such
as an accountant acting on behalf of the taxpayer, cannot be relied on as an
extraordinary situation under the relief provisions as written in circular
IC07-1 at para 35.
The taxpayer also argues that
the 10-year period enabling the Minister to exercise his discretion should not
be considered to be expired as noted in our response to the first request for
relief. It alleges that the limitation period should run from 2006
when it became aware of the facts and not from the calendar year during which
the return was filed, i.e. 1996 and 1997. Paras 13
and 14 of circular IC07-1 are very clear that the limitation period is of 10 years
from the calendar year when the return, for which the request for relief was
made, was filed. In this case, it is not
possible to request a cancellation of penalties and interest under the relief
provisions. Neither is it in our power to
review the starting point for the 10-year limitation period.
In conclusion, the taxpayer’s
request was dismissed on appeal to Revenue Québec and by the Court of Quebec. In
our view, the request appeared to have no merit at any level that the taxpayer brought
its appeal to.
[34]
In
terms of the recommendation, Ms. Duval stated that the 10-year period had
expired for the taxation years in question (1996-1997). She also reported
that the reason given by the applicant—an error made by its accountant that it
was not aware of—was not valid. She added: [Translation] “Further, paragraph 35
of Information Circular IC07-1 clearly states that third-party actions, such as
those of an accountant acting on behalf of the taxpayer are not covered by the
relief provisions”. She then recommended that
the request for relief be denied because it was not consistent with the
circular’s guidelines and that no extraordinary circumstances warranted the use
of the Minster’s discretion.
[35]
In
my opinion, it appears from Ms. Duval’s report that she had indeed
reviewed the merits of the applicant’s request for relief and that she did not raise
only the limitation period argument. Her recommendation nevertheless
suggests that she felt that the actions of a third party, in this case the applicant’s
accountant, simply could not be relied on as an extraordinary circumstance,
regardless of the circumstances surrounding this action. I understand from her report that she objected to a fin
de non-recevoir on the grounds raised by the applicant—its accountant’s
error—without it being necessary to review the circumstances surrounding this
error. Therefore, she seems to not have
reviewed whether the circumstances relied on by the applicant could have been
extraordinary circumstances warranting a request for relief.
[36]
The
respondent argued that Ms. Duval’s report indicated that she analyzed the
entire record and that she properly relied on the findings of Court of Quebec
and Court of Appeal judgments determining no error by the accountant. With
respect, in my view, this is reading much more into the report than it is
actually saying. Ms. Duval stated that [Translation] “the taxpayer’s request
was dismissed on appeal…” and that it appeared to her that [Translation] “request appeared to have
no merit at any level that the taxpayer brought its appeal to.” First, it is impossible for me to understand the inferences
that Ms. Duval drew from the outcome of the applicant’s appeals. The applicant’s appeal related to the objection it made
regarding the notices of assessment. Thus, it
was the appropriateness of the notices of assessment that was at issue, not a
request for relief. The “request” that Ms. Duval
referred to was therefore completely different from a request for relief.
Second, I do not understand the link that she made between the fact that the applicant’s
[Translation] “request appeared
to have no merit at any level” and the request for relief. Had the applicant been successful in its appeal, a request
for relief would have been futile because the notices of assessment would have
been cancelled. This is exactly why the
request for relief was made, because the appeal was dismissed and the
assessments upheld. Third, I do not see any
reference in Ms. Duval’s report to the findings made by the Court of
Quebec as to the alleged error made by the applicant’s accountant.
[37]
I
therefore find that the recommendation report does not add anything new to the matter
and, as previous indicated, I find that the Assistant Director’s decision was
unreasonable because it is impossible to know the extent of his review of the
circumstances relied on by the applicant.
[38]
The
respondent requested that, if I found the Assistant Director’s decision
unreasonable, the matter not be referred back for reconsideration of the request
for relief and that I use my discretion to deny the request for relief because
the grounds relied on by the applicant were not valid. He based his
request on Stemijon Investments Ltd, above, at paras 44-46. The applicant asked me to refer the matter with instructions.
[39]
I
do not intend to grant either request. I feel that it is not for this
Court to assess whether the circumstances raised in support of the applicant’s
request for relief warrant granting relief and, contrary to the circumstances
that existed in Stemijon Investments Ltd, I am not prepared to make a
finding that the circumstances and grounds relied on by the applicant were not
valid and that it would be futile to refer the matter to the Minister for
reconsideration. I also do not see the use in
issuing instructions.
[40]
The
matter will therefore be returned to the Minister for reconsideration of the applicant’s
request for relief.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES
that the
application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is referred back to
the CRA for reconsideration of the applicant’s request for relief, with costs.
“Marie-Josée
Bédard”
Certified true
translation
Catherine Jones,
Translator