Date: 20110106
Docket: T-1150-09
Citation: 2011 FC 11
Ottawa, Ontario, January 6, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
DOUGLAS
CAINE
Applicant
and
CANADA
REVENUE AGENCY
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
APPLICATION
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision of Canada Revenue Agency
(CRA/Minister) dated June 15, 2009 (Decision) that was a response to the
Applicant’s request for a discretionary review by CRA of the Applicant’s 1997,
1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation years.
[2]
In
the Decision, CRA decreased professional revenues by $27,156 for 1997, by
$12,565 for 1999, and by $34,041 for 2000. The CRA increased professional
revenues by $28,168 for 1998. The CRA disallowed the Applicant’s adjustment
requests to increase repair and maintenance expenses by $9,600 in 1998 and by
$15,000 in 2000. The CRA allowed the deduction of professional fees in 1998 in
the amount of $1,203 but disallowed any further deductions for professional fees
in 1999 and 2000.
BACKGROUND
[3]
On
October 2, 2007, the Applicant filed a T1 Adjustment Request along with
supporting documentation for his 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation years
(First Request).
[4]
The
CRA communicated to the Applicant by letter dated September 18, 2008, that his
adjustment requests for his 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation years had been
denied with the exception of the allowance of an increase in legal expenses in
the amount of $6,706 for the 1999 taxation year.
[5]
By
letter dated January 6, 2009 (Second Request), the Applicant, by his counsel,
asked the CRA for an independent review of the decision of the CRA. In this
letter the Applicant amended his T1 Adjustment Request for the taxation years
1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 to increase the requested reduction to his
professional income for those years.
[6]
A
Taxpayer Relief Request Report, dated June 8, 2009, was prepared by Mr. Shafik
Popat, Auditor, and approved by Mr. Jim Powell, Team Leader, both of the CRA.
[7]
In
making the decision with respect to the Applicant’s Second Request, the
following documentation was reviewed and considered by the Minister’s delegate,
Don Scarcello, Director of the London Tax Services Office:
a.
The
Applicant’s Second Request, dated January 6, 2009, and attachments;
b.
The
Taxpayer Relief Request Report, dated June 8, 2009;
c.
The
CRA working papers of Shafik Popat, Auditor, dated March 18, 2009, with
attachments; and
d.
CRA
Information Circular IC-07-1 “Taxpayer Relief Provisions”.
[8]
After
reviewing the documents set out above and considering the guidelines and
factors set out in Information Circular IC-07-1 and the relevant sections of
the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th
Supp.) (Act), the CRA made the decision to allow the Applicant’s Second Request
in part and allow the following adjustments to his income as follows:
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
2000
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
2000
|
Business
Revenue
|
$-53,632
|
-$7112
|
+$7294
|
+$11,971
|
-$27,156
|
+$28,168
|
-$12,565
|
-$34,041
|
Maintenance
And
Repairs
|
|
+$9600
|
|
+$15,000
|
|
Nil
|
|
Nil
|
Legal
and
Accounting
Fees
|
|
+$1203
|
+$51,811
|
+$25,203
|
|
+$1203
|
Nil
|
Nil
|
[9]
The
Applicant was advised of the CRA’s decision to allow, in part, his Second
Request and the reasons for that decision by letter dated June 15, 2009.
[10]
By
Notice of Application dated July 15, 2009, the Applicant brought an application
in the Federal Court for judicial review of the Decision of the Minister dated
June 15, 2009.
[11]
Shafik
Popat of the CRA was the auditor responsible for processing the adjustments to
the Applicant’s 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation years provided for in the
June 15, 2009 Decision of the Minister. Mr. Popat learned on March 26, 2010
that the adjustments to the Applicant’s 1997 and 1998 taxation years could not
be processed, as the request for the adjustments was made on January 6, 2009, more
than ten calendar years after the end of the 1997 and 1998 taxation years.
[12]
Mr.
Popat informed the Applicant by letter dated May 18, 2010, that no adjustments
to his 1997 and 1998 taxation year could be made because of the operation of
the ten-year limitation in subsection 152(4.2) of the Act.
[13]
The
Applicant practised dentistry with Dr. Sears at premises known as 175 Albert
Street, London, Ontario, from
February 2, 1987.
[14]
The
building at 175
Albert Street
was purchased in December 1986 by Dr. Sears and the Applicant but subsequently,
in 1991, title to 175 Albert Street was transferred to Seca Management Inc.,
the shares of which were owned 50/50 by the Applicant’s spouse and Dr. Sears’s
spouse.
[15]
Problems
developed in the relationship between the Applicant and Dr. Sears with the
resulting departure of Dr. Sears from 175 Albert Street on November 19, 1999.
[16]
Following
the departure of Dr. Sears from 175 Albert Street, Dr. and Mrs. Sears
commenced legal proceedings against Seca Management Inc., the Applicant and the
Applicant’s spouse, Mrs. Caine.
[17]
The
Applicant incurred significant legal and accounting expenses due to the legal
proceedings brought by Dr. and Mrs. Sears.
[18]
In
addition, the Applicant incurred expenses for repairs and maintenance to the
property at 175
Albert Street,
which he says were necessary to allow him to operate his dental practice from
those premises, and which expenses he says he had to incur personally due to
Dr. Sears’s refusal to contribute to them.
[19]
These
legal and accounting expenses and repairs and maintenance expenses have been
disallowed by CRA as confirmed by the Decision, which is the subject matter of
this Application for judicial review.
THE DECISION
[20]
The
Decision of June 15, 2009 notes that its review of the Applicant’s tax returns
for 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 was undertaken independent of the prior reviews.
All matters requested in the Applicant’s submissions were reviewed and
considered, and the Decision was based on the findings arising from the review
and on paragraphs 18(1)(a) and 18(1)(h) of the Act.
[21]
The
CRA made adjustments to the Applicant’s professional revenue for the period in
question.
[22]
The
CRA then considered the requested increase for repairs and maintenance for 1998
and 2000 under paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Act. It acknowledged the
Applicant’s evidence that:
1. the expenses
were paid by the Applicant;
2. he incurred
these expenses to keep the property safe for business operations;
3. the expenses
of the building were to be shared by the Applicant and Dr. Sears; and
4. Dr. Sears was
unwilling to contribute to the expenses in question.
[23]
The
CRA stated that, as part of its review, it must determine whether a reasonable
person at arm’s length would have undertaken the same repairs to continue the
business or whether that person would have looked to the landlord to effect the
repairs. To that end, it considered, among others, the following facts:
1. In 1998 the
property was owned by Seca Management Inc.;
2. The
shareholders of Seca Management Inc. were the Applicant’s spouse (50%) and the
spouse of Dr. Sears (50%);
3. Under
the Act, the relationship between the Applicant and his spouse is considered to
be at non-arms length;
4. There
was no leasing agreement between the Applicant, Dr. Sears and Seca Management
Inc., which makes it impossible to review the responsibilities of each party in
the matter of such repairs;
5. The
repairs were related to interior and exterior beautification or to overall
repairs of the building;
6. There
are other apartments in the building;
7. The
repairs undertaken were material in amount.
[24]
The
CRA found that the nature of the total repairs was not related to the
Applicant’s business operations, and that the Applicant paid for the repairs
due to his relationship with the shareholder of Seca Management Inc. (his
spouse). Absent a relationship with the shareholder, a reasonable person would
not have undertaken the material amount of repairs as noted and would in most
circumstances have looked to the landlord to undertake these repairs.
Therefore, the CRA concluded that the amount was not directly related to the
Applicant’s business and therefore not incurred to earn income as required
under paragraph 18(l)(a) of the Act.
[25]
Finally,
the CRA turned its attention to the requested increase for professional fees
for 1998, 1999 and 2000. Some amounts claimed were allowed under paragraph
18(1)(a) of the Act, and others were not. The CRA noted that the claimed
amounts mostly related to legal and accounting services provided regarding
litigation between Dr. Sears and Seca Management Inc. It also acknowledged the
Applicant’s arguments that failure to obtain these legal or accounting services
would have resulted in a negative impact upon his business.
[26]
The
CRA stated that the deductibility of any expenses under paragraph 18(l)(a)
is determined by the activity that results in a claim made and the connection
of this activity to the business activity. In the Applicant’s case, the legal
proceedings were related to matters with Seca Management Inc. and not because
of any matter related to the operation of the Applicant’s business. Even if he
had not been engaged in his professional activities he would nonetheless have
paid legal fees to defend himself against the charges made by Dr. Sears and
therefore the expenses would not have been deductible under the Act.
[27]
Moreover,
the fees do not constitute expenses normally incurred by other dentists. The
eventual impact on his dental practice in the event of a loss in the legal
dispute or of no defence to the claim in the future is too remote to justify
the requested deduction. There was no material risk directly related to the
Applicant’s business, as it appears that the fees incurred by the Applicant
were on behalf the Seca Management Inc. and his spouse.
ISSUES RAISED
[28]
The
Applicant has raised the following issues on this application:
a.
What
is the standard of review?
b.
Should
the Decision be set aside because it is unreasonable?
RELEVANT STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[29]
The
following provisions of the Income Tax Act are applicable in these
proceedings:
18. (1)
In computing the income of a taxpayer from a business or property no
deduction shall be made in respect of
(a) an outlay or
expense except to the extent that it was made or incurred by the taxpayer for
the purpose of gaining or producing income from the business or property;
(b) an outlay, loss
or replacement of capital, a payment on account of capital or an allowance in
respect of depreciation, obsolescence or depletion except as expressly
permitted by this Part;
…
(h) personal or living expenses of the taxpayer,
other than travel expenses incurred by the taxpayer while away from home in
the course of carrying on the taxpayer’s business;
…
152. (4.2)
Notwithstanding subsections (4), (4.1) and (5), for the purpose of determining,
at any time after the end of the normal reassessment period of a taxpayer who
is an individual (other than a trust) or a testamentary trust in respect of a
taxation year, the amount of any refund to which the taxpayer is entitled at
that time for the year, or a reduction of an amount payable under this Part
by the taxpayer for the year, the Minister may, if the taxpayer makes an
application for that determination on or before the day that is ten calendar
years after the end of that taxation year,
(a) reassess tax,
interest or penalties payable under this Part by the taxpayer in respect of
that year; and
(b) redetermine the
amount, if any, deemed by subsection 120(2) or (2.2), 122.5(3), 122.51(2),
122.7(2) or (3), 127.1(1), 127.41(3) or 210.2(3) or (4) to be paid on account
of the taxpayer’s tax payable under this Part for the year or deemed by
subsection 122.61(1) to be an overpayment on account of the taxpayer’s
liability under this Part for the year.
|
18.
(1) Dans le calcul du revenu du contribuable tiré d’une
entreprise ou d’un bien, les éléments suivants ne sont pas déductibles :
a)
les dépenses, sauf dans la mesure où elles ont été engagées ou effectuées par
le contribuable en vue de tirer un revenu de l’entreprise ou du bien;
b)
une dépense en capital, une perte en capital ou un remplacement de capital,
un paiement à titre de capital ou une provision pour amortissement, désuétude
ou épuisement, sauf ce qui est expressément permis par la présente partie;
…
h)
le montant des frais personnels ou de subsistance du contribuable — à
l’exception des frais de déplacement engagés par celui-ci dans le cadre de
l’exploitation de son entreprise pendant qu’il était absent de chez lui;
…
152. (4.2)
Malgré les paragraphes (4), (4.1) et (5), pour déterminer, à un moment donné
après la fin de la période normale de nouvelle cotisation applicable à un
contribuable — particulier, autre qu’une fiducie, ou fiducie testamentaire —
pour une année d’imposition le remboursement auquel le contribuable a droit à
ce moment pour l’année ou la réduction d’un montant payable par le
contribuable pour l’année en vertu de la présente partie, le ministre peut,
si le contribuable demande pareille détermination au plus tard le jour qui
suit de dix années civiles la fin de cette année d’imposition, à la
fois :
a)
établir de nouvelles cotisations concernant l’impôt, les intérêts ou les
pénalités payables par le contribuable pour l’année en vertu de la présente
partie;
b)
déterminer de nouveau l’impôt qui est réputé, par les paragraphes 120(2) ou
(2.2), 122.5(3), 122.51(2), 122.7(2) ou (3), 127.1(1), 127.41(3) ou 210.2(3)
ou (4), avoir été payé au titre de l’impôt payable par le contribuable en
vertu de la présente partie pour l’année ou qui est réputé, par le paragraphe
122.61(1), être un paiement en trop au titre des sommes dont le contribuable
est redevable en vertu de la présente partie pour l’année.
|
[30]
The
following provisions of the Federal Courts Act are applicable to these
proceedings:
18.1(4) The Federal Court
may grant relief under subsection (3) if it is satisfied that the federal
board, commission or other tribunal
(a) acted without jurisdiction, acted
beyond its jurisdiction or refused to exercise its jurisdiction;
(b) failed to observe a principle of
natural justice, procedural fairness or other procedure that it was required
by law to observe;
(c) erred in law in making a decision
or an order, whether or not the error appears on the face of the record;
(d) based its decision or order on an
erroneous finding of fact that it made in a perverse or capricious manner or
without regard for the material before it;
(e) acted, or failed to act, by reason
of fraud or perjured evidence; or
(f) acted in any other way that was
contrary to law.
|
18.1(4) Les mesures prévues
au paragraphe (3) sont prises si la Cour fédérale est convaincue que l’office
fédéral, selon le cas :
a) a agi sans compétence,
outrepassé celle-ci ou refusé de l’exercer;
b) n’a pas observé un
principe de justice naturelle ou d’équité procédurale ou toute autre
procédure qu’il était légalement tenu de respecter;
c) a rendu une décision ou
une ordonnance entachée d’une erreur de droit, que celle-ci soit manifeste ou
non au vu du dossier;
d) a rendu une décision ou
une ordonnance fondée sur une conclusion de fait erronée, tirée de façon
abusive ou arbitraire ou sans tenir compte des éléments dont il dispose;
e) a agi ou omis d’agir en
raison d’une fraude ou de faux témoignages;
f) a agi de toute autre
façon contraire à la loi.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[31]
Both
sides agree that the standard of review applicable in this case is
reasonableness. I concur.
[32]
Subsection
152(4.2) of the Act gives the Minister discretion to reassess tax, interest or
penalties beyond the normal three-year reassessment period if a taxpayer
requests the Minister make such a determination within ten years after the end
of the taxation year in question.
[33]
Subsection
152(4.2) of the Act forms part of the taxpayer relief provisions, formerly
referred to as the fairness provisions. The Minister’s discretion is broad
under the relief provisions. The Act and its regulations are silent as to what
criteria are to be used by the Minister in exercising his discretion. In these
circumstances, the Minister may use any criteria he chooses, as long as he abides
by a general duty to act fairly in accordance with the rules of procedural
fairness as developed in administrative law.
The Fairness Guidelines
[34]
The
Minister has created guidelines to facilitate the exercise of his discretion
under subsection 152(4.2) of the Act. These guidelines are entitled IC-07-1 “Taxpayer
Relief Provisions”. Although the Minister can formulate these general policy
guidelines, he cannot fetter his discretion by treating the guidelines as
binding and excluding all other relevant reasons for exercising his discretion.
Each fairness request is considered on its merits.
[35]
Part
IV of IC-07-1 is entitled “Guidelines for Refunds or Reduction in Amounts
Payable Beyond the Normal Three-Year Period” and sets out some of the factors
that are considered by the CRA in deciding whether to reassess a taxation year
beyond the three-year limitation period.
[36]
The
Guidelines provide that the CRA will reassess to issue a refund or reduce the
amount owing under subsection 152(4.2) of the Act if it is satisfied that:
a.
The
refund or reduction would have been made if the return or request had been
filed or made on time;
b.
The
requested assessment is correct in law; and
c.
The
refund or reduction has not been previously allowed.
The Grounds of Review
[37]
The
grounds for judicial review are set out in subsection 18.1(4) of the Federal
Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7.
[38]
A
reviewing court should consider whether the discretion was “… exercised in good
faith and, where required, in accordance with the principles of natural justice,
and where reliance has not been placed upon considerations irrelevant or
extraneous to the statutory purpose, the courts should not interfere.” See Maple
Lodge Farms Ltd. v. Canada, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 2 at pages 7-8.
[39]
The
Court’s review in this case is limited to the manner in which the CRA exercised
its discretion. The reviewing Court is not called upon to exercise the
discretion conferred upon the Minister or to substitute its own decision for
that of the Minister. The Court should not say that the Minister is wrong
merely because the Court would have exercised the discretion differently.
The Standard of Review
[40]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, held that a standard
of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance. Instead, where the
standard of review applicable to the particular question before the court is
well-settled by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that standard
of review. Only where this search proves fruitless must the reviewing court
undertake a consideration of the four factors comprising the standard of review
analysis.
[41]
The
Federal Court of Appeal has previously determined that the applicable standard
of review for a discretionary decision of the Minister under the taxpayer relief
provisions is reasonableness. See Lanno v. Canada (Customs and revenue
Agency),
2005 FCA 153 at paragraphs 6-7.
[42]
In
light of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Dunsmuir, above, and
the previous jurisprudence of this Court, I find the standard of review
applicable to the issues raised by the Applicant to be reasonableness. When
reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be
concerned with “the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also with] whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law. See Dunsmuir, above, at
paragraph 47. Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the Decision
was unreasonable in the sense that it falls outside the “range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
ARGUMENTS
[43]
The
Applicant incurred significant legal and accounting expenses due to the legal
proceedings brought by Dr. and Mrs. Sears.
[44]
In
addition, the Applicant incurred expenses for repairs and maintenance to 175 Albert
Street,
which expenses were necessary to allow him to operate his dental practice from
those premises and which expenses the Applicant says he had to incur personally
due to Dr. Sears’s refusal to contribute to them.
[45]
These
legal and accounting expenses and repairs and maintenance expenses have been
disallowed by CRA as confirmed by the Decision, which is the subject matter of
this application for judicial review.
[46]
The
Applicant says that, in rendering its Decision to deny the deductibility of the
professional fees and repair and maintenance expenses, CRA has failed to
consider or to give sufficient weight to relevant facts, including the
significance of maintaining the Applicant’s practice and the detrimental impact
that moving the practice at 175 Albert Street would have had upon the
Applicant’s income.
[47]
The
Applicant says that the CRA’s failure to consider, or to give sufficient weight
to, relevant evidence is plainly seen and therefore unreasonable, leaving no
doubt that the Decision is defective. Specifically, the CRA in considering
whether to allow the professional fee expenses and repairs and maintenance
expenses failed to consider relevant criteria, including: the importance of
staying at 175 Albert Street in order to avoid incurring the significant costs
of moving and jeopardizing the established dental business that the Applicant
created; the excellent location with free parking for patients; the Applicant’s
significant leasehold improvements; the naming of the Applicant in the Notice
of Application brought by Gerald and Jocelyn Sears against Seca Management
Inc., the Applicant and Mrs. Caine; and the Applicant’s need to defend himself
in this Application, given that his dental business was firmly established at
its present location and that part of the relief requested included the sale of
the building at 175 Albert Street, which would have significantly impacted on
the Applicant’s dental business.
The
Respondent
The
Decision Is Reasonable
[48]
The
Respondent says that the Decision was entirely reasonable and the Applicant’s record
discloses no evidence that would suggest otherwise.
[49]
In
reaching its Decision, the CRA completed a detailed review of the Applicant’s
request for T1 adjustments to his 1997 to 2000 taxation years and of the
documents and submissions that the Applicant provided in support of his fairness
request.
[50]
The
CRA can grant an adjustment to a taxpayer’s tax return and tax payable if the
requested assessment is correct in law. After a thorough review of all materials
and submissions made by the Applicant, and a review of the relevant sections of
the Act, the CRA determined that the expenses the Applicant wished to deduct
were not expenses of the business but were personal expenses and therefore
would not have been deductible under the Act.
[51]
The
CRA’s Decision, as contained in the letter dated June 15, 2009, provided a
detailed explanation as to why only partial adjustments to the Applicant’s 1997
to 2000 taxation years would be allowed.
[52]
The
Respondent says that it was entirely reasonable for the CRA to deny the
Applicant’s request, given that the expenses that the Applicant requested to
deduct from business income were not expenses of his business and would not
have been allowed by the CRA had the Applicant made the deductions in his
original T1 returns for the years 1997 to 2000.
The Minister
Observed the Principles of Natural Justice and Procedural Fairness
[53]
The
Applicant’s record provides no evidence of a failure by the Minister to observe
principles of natural justice, procedural fairness or any other procedure.
[54]
The
Applicant’s record provides no evidence of bad faith nor evidence that the Minister
based his decision on irrelevant facts or erred in law.
[55]
In
addition, the Applicant’s record provides no evidence that the Minister failed
to follow CRA’s procedural guidelines.
[56]
The
Minister did not fetter his discretion by considering himself bound by his own
guidelines and policy. He reviewed and considered all of the information and
submissions available to him and applied the guidelines in the exercise of his
discretion. The Minister did not treat the guidelines as binding.
Adjustment Requested for 1997 and 1998
Taxation Years Made After the Ten-Year Deadline
[57]
Pursuant
to subsection 152(4.2) of the Act, the CRA is not permitted to reassess
taxation years where the request to do so is made on or before the day that is
ten calendar years after the end of that taxation year. The Applicant’s request
for the adjustments to his 1997 and 1998 taxation years was made on January 6,
2009, more than ten calendar years after the end of the 1997 and 1998 taxation
years. Therefore, the CRA’s amendment to his Decision contained in the May 18,
2010 letter to the Applicant was reasonable and correct in law.
Conclusion
[58]
The
Respondent contends that there is no evidence that the CRA made the Decision in
bad faith, ignored relevant facts or considered irrelevant facts. The CRA acted
fairly and reasonably, considering all of the submissions made by the Applicant
and all of the relevant factors before him. The CRA acted reasonably in only
partially reassessing the Applicant’s taxation years beyond the normal
reassessment period.
[59]
The
Applicant has failed to demonstrate that the Decision of the CRA meets any of
the grounds set out in subsection 18.1(4) of the Federal Courts Act that
would justify intervention by this Court, and therefore the application should
be dismissed.
ANALYSIS
[60]
The
Applicant argues that, in denying the deductibility of professional fees and
repair and maintenance expenses, the CRA “has failed to consider, or to give
sufficient weight to relevant facts … .”.
[61]
The
facts which the Applicant says the CRA either overlooked or failed to weigh
appropriately are as follows:
Specifically, the Minister in considering
whether to allow the professional fee expenses and repairs and maintenance
expenses failed to consider relevant criteria, including the importance of
staying at 175 Albert Street in order to avoid significant costs of moving and
jeopardizing the established dental business that [the Applicant] created; that
the location is an excellent location with free parking for patients; that [the
Applicant] made significant leasehold improvements; that [the Applicant] had
been named in the Notice of Application brought by Gerald and Jocelyn Sears
against Seca Management Inc., [the Applicant] and Mrs. Caine; and that [the
Applicant] needed to defend himself in this Application given that his dental
business was firmly established there and part of the relief requested included
that the building at 175 Albert Street be sold which would have significantly
impacted on [the Applicant’s] dental business.
[62]
There
is nothing in the Decision to suggest that the CRA overlooked the factors
specified by the Applicant in the application before me. The CRA completed a
detailed review of the Applicant’s request for T1 adjustments for the 1997,
1998, 1999 and 2000 taxation years as well as the documentation and submissions
provided by the Applicant in support of his fairness application. The Decision
itself also makes clear that the CRA understood the Applicant’s situation and
had sympathy for the predicament in which he had found himself with regard to
Dr. Sears.
[63]
At
the heart of the dispute between the parties is the CRA’s contention that, as
regards the repairs and maintenance expenses to 175 Albert Street, what the
Applicant did was incur expenses on behalf of the landlord. The argument is that
a taxpayer cannot obtain tax deductions in a situation where a reasonable
person, dealing at arms length with a landlord, would not have incurred those
expenses. If the landlord fails to make the repairs, the taxpayer should not
seek a tax deduction instead of seeking to recover expenses against the
landlord. Expenses incurred on behalf of a landlord are not allowable as
deductions under the Act. In other words, the CRA says that the Applicant was
simply asking the CRA, and is now asking the Court, to ignore the existence of
the management company that was set up by the Applicant and Dr. Sears as a way
of structuring their business.
[64]
The
Applicant, on the other hand, says that the CRA overlooked the reality of what
he faced when his relationship with Dr. Sears broke down and he had to take
action to repair and maintain the building at 175 Albert Street.
[65]
Neither
party has provided the Court with any guiding authority on this point.
[66]
The
CRA states that it was the obligation of the corporation, as landlord, to pay
for these repairs. Whatever Dr. Caine’s reasons for paying for the repairs –
whether because they needed to be effected in a timely manner and, due to the
ongoing Seca Management litigation, a speedily resolution of the matter was
unlikely; or because, as the CRA found, the Applicant is married to a 50
percent shareholder of the corporate landlord – he chose to take on that
expense despite the fact that it rightly belonged to someone else.
[67]
My own
review of the case law suggests that the CRA’s Decision embodies the right
approach. There is a long line of cases that warn courts against drawing aside,
or “lifting,” the corporate veil. Steven G. Meredith v. Her Majesty the
Queen, 2002 DTC 7190 at paragraphs 11 and 12, Justice Robert Décary of the
Federal Court of Appeal found that the lower court had erred in looking “beyond
the corporate entity itself to assess the applicant’s actions.” He observed:
[12]
Lifting the corporate veil is contrary to long-established principles of
corporate law. Absent an allegation that the corporation constitutes a 'sham'
or a vehicle for wrongdoing on the part of putative shareholders, or statutory
authorisation to do so, a court must respect the legal relationships created
by a taxpayer (see Salomon v. Salomon & Co., [1897] A.C. 22; Kosmopoulos
v. Constitution Insurance Co. of Canada, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 2). A court cannot
re-characterize the bona fide relationships on the basis of what it deems to be
the economic realities underlying those relationships (see Continental Bank
Leasing Corp. v. The Queen [98 DTC 6505] , [1998] 2 S.C.R. 298; Shell
Canada Ltd. v. The Queen [99 DTC 5669], [1999] 3 S.C.R. 622; Ludco
Enterprises Limited v. the Queen [2001 DTC 5505] , 2001 SCC 62 at para.
51). It follows, therefore, that the Judge erred in law by inquiring into
the economic realities of the relationship as between Stem and Meredith, when
he was not authorised by statute or common law to do so. [my emphasis]
[68]
The
CRA found that the relationship between the Applicant and one of the shareholders
of Seca Management was not arms length since the Applicant’s spouse holds 50
percent of the shares in the corporation. As Justice Arthur Stone observed in
the Federal Court of Appeal decision in Wishing Star Fishing Co. v. B.C.
Baron, [1988] 2 F.C. 325, [1987] F.C.J. No. 1149 (QL) at paragraph 14,
where relationships are close:
[It
is] tempting … to disregard separate corporate existence and to analyze an act
in terms of the individual. In the day-to-day business affairs of a
corporation, that way of proceeding may create no difficulty. The same cannot
be said, however, as a matter of strict law. The individual and the corporation
are separate and distinct legal persons (Salomon v. Salomon & Co.,
[1897] A.C. 22 (H.L.)), and any failure to appreciate that distinction can only
lead to confusion and to unforeseen legal consequences.”
[69]
In
my view, this quotation describes quite well the somewhat fluid business
arrangement between Drs. Caine and Sears and their relationship with Seca
Management with respect to sharing expenses and day-to-day business affairs.
That is perhaps because the parties did not fully realize and respect the
corporation as a separate legal person.
[70]
In
the instant case, the Applicant established a corporation for the benefits it
would provide him. Later, when the burdens outweighed the benefits, he chose to
disregard the corporate structure, believing that, given the economic realities
of his dilemma, his actions were justified. He asks this Court to recognize
these economic realities and find in his favour. However, as the Federal Court
of Appeal has said, “a court cannot re-characterize the bona fide relationships
on the basis of what it deems to be the economic realities underlying those
relationships.” The Applicant has provided no authority for doing so. He must
take the burdens with the benefits. Based on my review of the jurisprudence,
the CRA Decision falls within the acceptable range as defined by Dunsmuir.
[71]
What
the Applicant is really asking the Court to do in this application is to
re-weigh the evidence and reach a conclusion that favours the Applicant. The
Court cannot do this.
[72]
The
Court cannot exercise its own discretion and substitute its opinion for that of
the CRA, even if the Court would have exercised its discretion differently. See
Maple Lodge Farms, above, at paragraphs 5-7.
[73]
The
Decision provides the “justification, transparency and intelligibility”
demanded by Dunsmuir, above, and it “falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
[74]
The
CRA decided that the repair and maintenance expenses which the Applicant wished
to deduct for 1998 were not expenses of his dental business but were personal
expenses that were not deductible under the Act. They were, in fact, expenses
incurred on behalf of the landlord.
[75]
This
may seem counter-intuitive to the Applicant, but the reasons clearly provide
the justification. As regards the repairs and maintenance to the building at
175 Albert Street, the CRA concluded that “the repairs were related to the
interior and exterior beautification or to overall repairs of the building
including the loft and the attic,” there were “other apartments in the
building,” the Applicant “paid for the repairs due to [his] relationship with
the shareholder ([his] spouse) of SECA Management Inc.,” and a “reasonable
person would not have undertaken the material amount of repairs as noted and
would in most circumstances have looked to the landlord to undertake these
repairs.” In other words, looking at the documentation and findings, it was
reasonable to conclude that “the amount was not directly related to your
business and therefore not incurred to earn income as required under S 18(1)(a)
of the I.T.A.”
[76]
As
regards the year 2000, a similar justification supports the CRA’s conclusions
that “the amount of repairs undertaken is material in nature and they are not
only confined to the operations of the business under your control.” In
addition, the CRA found it “reasonable to conclude that an arm’s length person
would not undertake repairs of such a nature and would have looked to the
landlord for repairs of this nature.”
[77]
As
regards the professional fees, the evidence showed that the amounts claimed by
the Applicant “mostly relate to legal and accounting services provided
regarding litigation between Dr. Sears and Seca Management Inc.”
[78]
These
expenses were disallowed because the Applicant was
mentioned in the claim due to [his]
spousal relationship with the shareholder of Seca Management Inc. or because of
arrangements between [the Applicant] and Dr. Sears in matters related to the
operations of Seca Management Inc. and not because of any matter related to the
operation of your business. It therefore appears that the focus of the dispute
in the claim is on Seca Management Inc.
[79]
The
expenses would not have been deductible pursuant to paragraph 18(1)(b)
of the Act because, even if the Applicant had not been engaged in running his
dental business, he would have had to pay the legal and accounting fees to defend
himself against the charges made by Dr. Sears. As regards paragraph 18(1)(a)
of the Act, the fees were not of a nature to constitute expenses normally
incurred by others involved in a similar profession and the “eventual impact on
your dental practice in the event of a loss in the dispute or of no defence to
the claim in the future is too remote to justify deduction under S 18(1)(a) of
the I.T.A..”
[80]
While
it is possible to argue and disagree with these conclusions, as the Applicant
has, I do not think that they fall outside of the “range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.” See Dunsmuir,
above.
[81]
Once
again, the Applicant says that, notwithstanding the nature of the claim made by
Dr. Sears, he was named as a party to the application and he had to pay
professional fees to defend himself in a situation where one of the remedies
requested was the winding up of the management company and the distribution of
the property on the building at 175 Albert Street. He says that the CRA
overlooked the fact that it was crucial to the Applicant’s business that he
retain his dental practice in the building. However, I do not think this fact
was overlooked. I think the Applicant is asking the Court to re-weigh evidence
and the factors that were examined.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that
1. The application is dismissed
with costs to the Respondent.
“James Russell”