Date: 20110421
Docket: T-1822-10
Citation: 2011 FC 481
[UNREVISED CERTIFIED
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, April 21, 2011
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Bédard
BETWEEN:
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JACQUES FERRON
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Applicant
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and
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CANADA REVENUE AGENCY
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review filed by Jacques Ferron (the applicant) under
subsection 18(1) of the Federal Courts Act, R.S., 1985, c. F-7,
of two decisions of the Canada Revenue Agency (the CRA) denying the request for
a waiver of the Part X.1 tax under subsection 204.1(4) of the Income Tax Act,
R.S., 1985, c. 1 (the ITA), in relation to the applicant’s excess
registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) contributions for the 2003 to 2007
taxation years, and the applicant’s request for tax relief under subsection 220
(3.1) of the ITA in relation to the same excess contributions. The applicant is
representing himself.
[2]
For the
following reasons and in spite of the sympathy I feel for the applicant’s
situation, I cannot allow the application for judicial review.
I. Factual background
[3]
The
applicant is a farmer. Starting in 1998, he acted on an initiative of Agropur
that allowed him to transfer reported dividends, which would paid seven or nine
years later, to his RRSP.
[4]
On March
5, 2007, the CRA sent the applicant a letter informing him that he had made
excess contributions to his RRSP for the 2003 to 2005 taxation years and that
these excess contributions were taxable. The letter set out the following
courses of action he could take in order to rectify the situation:
- He would need to file a T1-OVP
return if he decided not to withdraw his excess contributions no later
than 90 days after the end of the taxation year for each year his
contributions exceeded the allowable limit and pay tax on those
contributions;
- He could also withdraw his excess
contributions, in which case he would have to declare them as income on
his return, but would benefit from a deduction equal to the amount
withdrawn.
[5]
At the
hearing, the applicant submitted that he had either never received the letter
or did not recall having received it. This statement does not appear in the
applicant’s affidavit and the letter was sent to the correct address. I
therefore have no reason to believe that this letter was not sent to the
applicant.
[6]
The
applicant did not reply to this letter.
[7]
On
November 6, 2008, the CRA sent him another letter informing him that it was
granting him an additional 30 days to file his T1-OVP returns, failing which it
would establish its own tax assessments based on the information it had at its
disposal. At the hearing, the applicant indicated that he had in fact received
this letter and that he had forwarded it to his accountant. This information
did not appear in the applicant’s affidavit, but I will interpret this as an
admission that he did indeed receive this letter. Thus, even if the applicant
did not receive or was unaware of the letter dated March 5, 2007, informing
him of his excess contribution, the letter dated November 6, 2008, clearly
referred to the letter dated March 5, 2007. It would therefore have been easy
for the applicant or his accountant to contact the CRA and request a copy of
the letter dated March 5, 2007. However, the applicant never replied to this
second letter form the CRA nor does the evidence show that his accountant
replied on his behalf.
[8]
On March
9, 2009, the CRA issued the applicant Notices of Assessment of taxes payable on
excess RRSP contributions for the years 2003 to 2007 based on the information
it had at its disposal.
[9]
On June 2,
2009, the applicant’s accountant sent Notices of Objection for each Notice of
Assessment. On November 24, 2009, the CRA dismissed the objections for the years
2003 to 2006, but allowed the objection to the assessment for the 2007 taxation
year in order to take into account a withdrawal of $5,000. On January 11, 2010,
the CRA conducted a reassessment of the 2007 taxation year.
[10]
On or
about June 1, 2010, the applicant sent the CRA a letter explaining his
situation:
[translation]
Hello, I am writing you today about a
Notice of Assessment of RRSP contributions for 2007-2006-2005-2004-2003.
I transferred some reported dividends by
Agropur which will only be paid out 7 or 8 years from now into my RRSP.
I filled out the form in Dec. when the
financial statements had not been completed. Agropur asked us, if we wanted to
transfer these into our RRSPs, to indicate this with a check mark and return
the form by December 15 of each year.
In 2008 I received a Notice of Assessment
of RRSP over-contribution with penalties, taxes and interest in the amount of $8,957.17.
I made the contribution with no wrongful
intent. I gained no tax benefit through this RRSP contribution.
I made the transfer to set aside a little
money for my retirement.
I cannot de-register my remaining RRSPs
without paying taxes.
I cannot even withdraw my (shares/RRSPs)
because they have not been paid out by Agropur.
Thank you for your understanding.
[11]
While the
applicant’s letter did not include any specific request or rely on any
particular statutory provision, the CRA interpreted it as a request for a
waiver of tax under subsection 204.1(4) of the ITA and a request for relief
from payment of penalties and interest under subsection 220 (3.1) of the same Act.
[12]
Under
subsection 204.1 (4) of the ITA, the CRA may waive the tax on the excess RRSP
contribution if the excess amount on which the tax is based arose as a
consequence of reasonable error on the part of the taxpayer and reasonable
steps are being taken to eliminate the excess:
Waiver
of tax
204.1
(4) Where an individual would, but for this subsection, be required to pay a
tax under subsection 204.1(1) or 204.1(2.1) in respect of a month and the individual
establishes to the satisfaction of the Minister that
(a)
the excess amount or cumulative excess amount on which the tax is based arose
as a consequence of reasonable error, and
(b)
reasonable steps are being taken to eliminate the excess,
the
Minister may waive the tax.
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Renonciation
204.1
(4) Le ministre peut renoncer à l’impôt dont un particulier serait, compte
non tenu du présent paragraphe, redevable pour un mois selon le paragraphe
(1) ou (2.1), si celui-ci établit à la satisfaction du ministre que
l’excédent ou l’excédent cumulatif qui est frappé de l’impôt fait suite à une
erreur acceptable et que les mesures indiquées pour éliminer l’excédent ont
été prises.
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[13]
On
September 23, 2010, Luc Tremblay, the Minister’s delegate, denied the applicant’s
request for a waiver of tax on the following grounds:
- The CRA considers an error to be
acceptable when it is involuntary and exceptional and it considers a
reasonable amount of time to be that which allows the taxpayer to take the
necessary steps towards withdrawing the excess amount from his or her RRSP
following a notice from the CRA. The applicant did not allege any
circumstances that were exceptional or beyond his control to justify his
request.
- Each year the applicant received a
Notice of Assessment which included a “RRSP Deduction Limit Statement” for
the following year.
- The applicant did not file the required
T1-OVP returns for the years 2003 to 2007.
- Given that the applicant failed to
respond to the letters the CRA sent to him on March 5, 2007, and November
6, 2008, in which he was advised of his excess contributions and of the
fact that he was required to file T1-OVP returns, and that he failed to
file his T1-OVP returns on time, the CRA conducted an arbitrary assessment
on March 9, 2009, pursuant to subsection 152(7) of the ITA.
- The assessments were upheld by the
CRA’s appeals division, which dismissed the applicant’s objections.
- The applicant has not paid any of
the sums owed by him for his RRSP over-contributions.
[14]
The letter
of refusal specified that the applicant could request an impartial review of
the decision by contacting the taxation centre if he was of the view that
discretion had not been exercised in fair and reasonable manner. The applicant
did not avail himself of this procedure. The letter also indicated that the applicant
could choose to apply for a judicial review of the decision.
[15]
Under
subsection 220 (3.1) of the ITA, the CRA has the discretion to provide relief
to a taxpayer by waiving penalties and interest owed to it:
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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[16]
The
applicant’s request for tax relief was denied on September 23, 2010, by the
Minister’s delegate, Hélène Desgagné, on the following grounds:
- The CRA generally exercises its
discretion to waive or cancel all or any portion of any penalty or
interest assessed when failure to comply with the Act results from circumstances
beyond the taxpayer’s control (flood, fire, postal strike, serious illness
or accident, serious mental distress such as a death in the immediate
family, etc.).
- The applicant’s situation did not
correspond to the criteria with regard to extraordinary circumstances
provided in the legislation.
[17]
The letter
of refusal indicated that the applicant could have requested that a director of
a taxation centre or tax services office conduct an independent review of the
decision if he was of the view that discretion had not been exercised in a fair
and reasonable manner. The applicant did not avail himself of this procedure.
[18]
In support
of his application for judicial review, the applicant is claiming that the CRA
did not exercise its discretion in a fair and reasonable manner. He claims that
he withdrew the excess contributions as quickly as possible and that several
extraordinary circumstances befell him during the periods in question. These
circumstances prevented him from resolving the situation.
II. Issues
[19]
The
following issues are raised in this application for judicial review:
Preliminary issues:
a. Is the applicant’s application
admissible?
b. Should the new evidence
adduced by the applicant in support of his application for judicial review be
taken into consideration?
Main issues:
c. Is the CRA’s decision to deny
the request for a waiver of the Part X.1 tax under the ITA unreasonable?
d. Is the CRA’s decision to
refuse the request for tax relief unreasonable?
A. Preliminary issues
1) Is the applicant’s application admissible?
[20]
The
application for judicial review filed in the registry of the Court by the
applicant on January 28, 2011, contains a number of irregularities. His
memorandum of fact and law does not conform to Rule 70 of the Federal Courts
Rules SOR/98-106 (Rules) and the affidavit is not sworn as required.
[21]
The
application also challenges two decisions of the CRA and therefore does not
conform to Rule 302 of the Rules. It is worthwhile to note that is was the CRA
which decided to process the applicant’s request using two different statutory
provisions and that this is what led to the two decisions. In that context, I
find that the application for judicial review can address the two decisions
rendered by the CRA.
[22]
Under
paragraph 72(2)(b) of the Rules, the Court may accept the filing
of documents even if they are irregular. In the present case, the applicant is
representing himself and obviously has neither legal expertise nor much
knowledge of computers. He did not have access to the necessary information to
file a record in accordance with the Rules. Furthermore, in its record, the
respondent did not object to the filing of these documents. Given the
circumstances and in the interest of fairness, I will, in this case, exercise
my discretion to accept the applicant’s irregular documents and declare the
application to be admissible.
2) Should the new evidence adduced by the applicant be
taken into consideration?
[23]
The
respondent argues that the information in paragraphs 2 to 8, 14, 15 and 17 of
the applicant’s affidavit, which relates to circumstances that befell the
applicant as well as his correspondence with CRA representatives, and the
exhibits filed in support of this information, are inadmissible because they
were not before the CRA when it rendered its decisions. As a general rule, the
judicial review of an impugned decision must be based on an analysis of the
record that was before the administrative decision-maker.
[24]
This Court
has held that evidence that was not before the administrative decision-maker at
the time of rendering a decision cannot be used to review that decision. This
case law rule is well known in immigration matters (Zheng v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 103 A.C.W.S. (3d) 163 at para. 18, 13 Imm.
L.R. (3d) 226). This was also the approach that was taken in a tax law matter
in which there was a judicial review of a CRA decision regarding a request for
tax relief, as is the case here (McLean v.
Canada (Revenue Agency) 2007 FC 1072 at
para. 21, 164 ACWS (3d) 539 [McLean]:
The law is equally clear that I
cannot consider evidence that was not before the decisionmaker. By way of
example, Mr. McLean has included with his affidavit medical evidence and the
particulars of his family law litigation that were not shared with the
department. These I cannot consider. To the extent that they may
support Mr. McLean's claim, they could have been provided to the department
along with his request for relief.
[25]
Paragraphs
2 to 8 of the affidavit and the exhibits in support relate to personal and
family incidents experienced by the applicant. Paragraphs 14, 15, and 17 relate
to discussions and meetings between the applicant and CRA employees after the
decisions that are the subject of this review were rendered.
[26]
At the
hearing, the applicant submitted that he had informed Ms. Desgagné of the circumstances
that had befallen him, but without going into great detail. However, I cannot
help but note that the applicant’s letter to the CRA did not contain this
information and that in his affidavit he does not mention having told Ms.
Desgagné or Mr. Tremblay about these particular circumstances. Furthermore, in
her affidavit, Ms. Desgagné states that the circumstances alleged by the
applicant in his affidavit were not cited by him in support of his request on
June 1, 2010. I therefore find, on a balance of probabilities, that the CRA did
not, when it rendered its decisions, have before it the information relating to
the applicant’s personal circumstances on which he is now relying. Consequently,
this information will not be taken into consideration in determining the
reasonableness of the CRA’s decision in this judicial review.
III. Main Issues
B. Standard of review
[27]
The
decision of whether to waive taxes payable on RRSP over-contributions is a
matter within the discretion of the CRA and is also reviewable on a standard of
reasonableness. (Gagné v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 FC 778, at
paras. 10 to 15, 371 FTR 150 [Gagné]; Lepiarczyk v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2008 FC 1022, at paras. 16 and
17, 334 FTR 291).
[28]
The decision
of whether to grant general tax relief is also a matter within the discretion
of the CRA and is also reviewable on a standard of reasonableness (Slau Ltd
v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2009 FCA 270 at paras. 26 and
27, 3 Admin L.R. (5th) 251; Telfer v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2009 FCA
23 at paras 24 and 25 (available on CanLII)).
3) Did the CRA err by not granting the applicant’s
request for a waiver of tax?
[29]
According
to the case law, the two parts of the test imposed by subsection 204.1 (4) of
the ITA, namely, that the excess amount arose as a consequence of a reasonable
error and that steps were taken to eliminate the excess amount, must both be
successfully met because the test is conjunctive (Gagné, above, at para.
23).
[30]
A
reasonable error is similar to a due diligence defence (Kerr v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2008 FC 1073 at para. 37,
172 ACWS (3d) 243). The applicant must establish that he was mistaken and that
this mistake led him to over-contribute. He must then establish that the
mistake was reasonable in the circumstances (Corporation de l’École Polytechnique
v. Canada, 2004 FCA 127 at para. 30, 132 ACWS (3d) 689). As for the steps
taken to eliminate the overpayment, they too must have been reasonable. Reasonableness
is assessed on a case-by-case basis.
[31]
In this
case, it appears from the record that the applicant failed to respond to the
CRA’s letters informing him about his over-contributions to his RRSP and how to
rectify the situation. He also failed to take steps to withdraw the
over-contributions within a reasonable amount of time. The applicant has not
successfully met the test established by the case law.
[32]
In the
circumstances, the CRA’s decision to deny the request for a waiver of tax
payable on excess RRSP contributions was reasonable. It is also in accordance
with the legislation and applicable case law. The intervention of the Court is
not warranted.
4) Did the CRA err when it denied the applicant’s request
for tax relief?
[33]
The CRA exercises
its power by relying on, among other things, the Guidelines for the
Cancellation and Waiver of Interest and Penalties. These do not, however,
have the force of law and are not binding on the CRA. The case law
clearly establishes that the CRA’s power in this regard is discretionary and is
to be exercised only in exceptional circumstances (Jenkins v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2007 FC 295, at para. 13, 350
FTR 1):
In
reviewing the decision in this case, it is important to keep in mind that the
power of the Minister, as set out in subsection 220(3.1) of the Act, is a
discretionary power and as such, there is no obligation on the part of the
Minister to reach any given conclusion. Furthermore, the liability of a
taxpayer to pay penalties and interests for the late filing of income tax
returns results from the application of the Act itself, not from any
discretionary decision of the Minister to impose such penalties and interests.
Therefore, the discretionary power of the Minister is limited to providing
exceptional relief from the operation of the Act, where the Minister believes
such relief to be warranted.
[34]
The Court
shall only intervene only if the CRA overlooked important evidence, considered
evidence that was not relevant or made a decision that clearly cannot be rationally
supported (McLean, above, at para. 18):
The
Court cannot substitute its own view for that of the Minister or his delegates
simply because the Court might have reached a different conclusion on the same
facts. By way of example, I must be satisfied that the decisionmaker overlooked
important evidence, considered evidence that ought not to have been considered,
made material errors of fact, or made a decision that cannot be rationally
supported
by the reasons given for it.
[35]
In this
case, the CRA denied tax general relief on the ground that this type of relief
is normally justified by exceptional circumstances or events that were beyond
the taxpayer’s control and that the applicant had not demonstrated that either
of these situations existed in his request. In fact, it appears from the
evidence that the applicant in his request did not cite any exceptional circumstances
that would have led the CRA to grant him relief.
[36]
In his
letter sent on or about June 1, 2010, the applicant was content to argue that
he had not over-contributed with any wrongful intent, that he had only set
aside some money for his retirement, that he had gained no tax benefit from these
over-contributions, that he was unable to withdraw his dividends because they
had not yet been paid out by Agropur and that he could not withdraw these
contributions without having to pay taxes on them. The personal and family
circumstances he is now citing were not mentioned in this letter. This
information was therefore not before the CRA when it made its decision and it
cannot be faulted for not having considered this information.
[37]
Thus, the
CRA did not overlook or fail to consider important evidence when it made its decision.
Its decision not to grant general tax relief is completely reasonable. It falls
within the range of acceptable outcomes in respect of the facts and law.
[38]
For these
reasons, the Court’s intervention is therefore not warranted.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that the
application for judicial review is dismissed without costs.
“Marie-Josée
Bédard”
Certified
true translation
Sebastian
Desbarats, Translator