Date: 20081002
Docket: T-705-08
Citation: 2008 FC 1105
[UNREVISED CERTIFIED
TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, October 2, 2008
PRESENT:
The Honourable Mr. Justice Martineau
IN THE MATTER OF the Income
Tax Act
AND IN THE MATTER OF assessments
by the Minister
of National Revenue under one
or more of the Income Tax Act,
the Canada Pension Plan and the Employment
Insurance Act
AGAINST:
CLAUDE HERNANDEZ
1160 St. Andrews Street
Mascouche, Quebec J7L 4G9
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The respondent, Claude Hernandez, is asking the Court today to set
aside the ex parte order issued on May 6, 2008, that authorized the
Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) to take forthwith any or all of the
actions described in paragraphs (a) to (g) of subsection 225.1(1)
of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985 (5th Supp.), c. 1 (the Act) to
collect and/or guarantee payment of the amounts assessed by the Minister on
April 25, 2008, against the respondent (the impugned order).
[2]
On May 6, 2008, the Court issued another ex parte jeopardy
collection order in docket T‑706-08 to collect and/or guarantee payment
of the amounts assessed by the Minister on April 25, 2008, against Sylvie Lépine,
the respondent’s spouse. The Court is concurrently reviewing the legality of this
second jeopardy collection order.
[3]
In principle, the Minister must, pursuant to subsection 225.1(1) of
the Act, wait 90 days after the notice of assessment is mailed before
collecting the amounts owed by a taxpayer to Her Majesty the Queen in
right of Canada (the Crown). However, a judge may authorize the
Minister to take action forthwith if the judge is satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the collection of all or any part of the
amount assessed would be jeopardized by a delay in the collection of that
amount.
[4]
Subsection 225.2(2) of the Act provides as follows:
(2) Notwithstanding section 225.1, where, on ex parte
application by the Minister, a judge is satisfied that there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the collection of all or any part of an amount
assessed in respect of a taxpayer would be jeopardized by a delay in the
collection of that amount, the judge shall, on such terms as the judge
considers reasonable in the circumstances, authorize the Minister to take
forthwith any of the actions described in paragraphs 225.1(1)(a) to
225.1(1)(g) with respect to the amount.
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(2) Malgré l'article 225.1, sur requête ex parte du
ministre, le juge saisi autorise le ministre à prendre immédiatement des
mesures visées aux alinéas 225.1(1)a) à g) à l'égard du montant
d'une cotisation établie relativement à un contribuable, aux conditions qu'il
estime raisonnables dans les circonstances, s'il est convaincu qu'il existe
des motifs raisonnables de croire que l'octroi à ce contribuable d'un délai
pour payer le montant compromettrait le recouvrement de tout ou partie de ce
montant.
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[5]
On the return of the ex parte appplication in this docket on
May 6, 2008, the Court relied on the respective affidavits of Scynthia Plante
and Daniel Goyette, both sworn on May 1, 2008, in issuing the impugned
order. In docket T-706-08, the Court also relied on other affidavits of
Scynthia Plante and Daniel Goyette dated May 1, 2008, in issuing
the other collection order. Accordingly, the Court is satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the collection of all or any part of the
total amounts in the assessments dated April 26, 2008, in respect of the
respondent would be jeopardized by a delay in the collection of the amounts. I
adopt the following from the totality of the evidence adduced by the Crown.
[6]
On or about April 3, 2006, the respondent’s file was assigned to Daniel Goyette,
an auditor with the Special Enforcement Program (SEP), Enforcement Division, at
the Montréal Tax Services Office of the Canada Revenue Agency (the Agency), for
an audit regarding the respondent’s compliance with the Act for the 2000 to
2004 taxation years initially, to which the 2005 year inclusive was added. A simultaneous
audit for the same taxation period was also conducted of the respondent’s
spouse, Sylvie Lépine, and the respondent’s father, Antoine Hernandez.
Last, a limited audit was also carried out of Her-Comm Inc., whose sole
shareholders were the respondent and his father, Antoine Hernandez. The
audit of the respondent’s file used the so-called “net worth” method, the purpose
of which is to determine the increase in the taxpayer’s assets and personal
expenses during the years in question.
[7]
We note here that the respondent is a 50% shareholder of Her-Comm
Inc., a company specializing in the sale and rental of cellular telephones and pagers.
On March 30, 2007, following an amending declaration filed with the enterprise
registrar, Sylvie Lépine was designated co‑shareholder of the
company, replacing the respondent’s father, Antoine Hernandez. Although the
respondent stated that he was an employee of Her-Comm Inc., employment income only
appears in his income tax returns for the 2000 to 2002 taxation years. The
income reported for the subsequent years is only interest income.
[8]
On May 17, 2006, a meeting took place between Daniel Goyette
and the respondent’s accountant, Normand Ducharme, in the absence of the respondent,
who had begun serving a prison sentence in November 2005. In the course of
the audit, Jacques Gagnon replaced Normand Ducharme as the
respondent’s authorized representative. As part of his audit, Daniel Goyette
stated that he had to speak to third parties to obtain additional information
and documents in order to acquire the most complete information possible.
[9]
The following information did not appear on the Agency’s initial
interview questionnaire, which the respondent completed on June 28, 2006:
- On or about
September 6, 2002, the respondent acquired two vacant parcels of land
located in the La Plainte sector in Terrebonne. It is clear from the
deed of purchase of this land dated September 6, 2002, that the
purchase price for each parcel was $12,500 and that they were unencumbered;
- On January 17,
2003, the respondent acquired a third parcel of vacant land in the same
sector. As stated in the deed of purchase for this land dated January 17,
2003, the respondent bought the parcel for $8,000; and
- Two cheques signed
by the respondent dated July 24, 2002, in the amount of $10,000, one
payable to Pierre Giroux and the other to Giroux et Giroux Inc.,
are listed in the respondent’s banking transactions. It appears from the
information provided by Pierre Giroux that those amounts were recorded
as a deposit for the purchase on April 7, 2008, by the respondent’s
father, Antoine Hernandez, of farmland on Laliberté Road in
Mansonville in the municipality of Canton de Potton.
[10]
Last, in support of his solemn affirmation, Daniel Goyette cited
the decision of Judge Toupin, of the Court of Québec, dated November 28,
2000, R. v. Hernandez, [2000] J.Q. No. 5638, J.E. 2001-296 (C.Q.), in
which Judge Toupin noted the respondent’s lengthy criminal record,
including charges of possession of stolen property and theft.
[11]
According to the affidavit of Scynthia Plante, Resource and Complex
Case Officer, Revenue Collections, at the Agency’s Tax Services Office:
·
The respondent did not file his income tax returns for the years
1996 to 1999;
·
The respondent filed his income tax returns late for the years 2000
to 2002, 2004 and 2006;
·
Between 2002 and 2005, the respondent received a total amount of
approximately $129,120 as income replacement indemnities from the Société
d’assurance automobile du Québec;
·
Income replacement indemnities from the Société d’assurance
automobile du Québec are not taxable and thus did not need to be reported to
the Agency;
·
As of February 26, 2008, Her-Comm Inc. was the owner and
lessee of a number of vehicles and trailers;
·
On March 20, 2008, three exemptions from seizure were registered
in the register of personal and movable real rights in the respondent’s name.
These exemptions from seizure related to monies or assets that could be remitted
to a beneficiary from the income or capital of a trust;
·
The respondent is the sole shareholder and director of Le Groupe
Centruss Inc., which was incorporated on December 16, 2004. The respondent
should have declared this information in the Agency’s initial interview questionnaire,
which was completed on June 28, 2006, and should also have disclosed it
during the audit conducted by Daniel Goyette. The Agency never received a
tax return for Le Groupe Centruss Inc. It was not until November 2007 that
the remittances were made by cheque;
·
On or about June 15, 2007, Le Groupe Centruss Inc. acquired
a commercial immovable located at 1725-1755 Gascon Road
in Terrebonne. It appears from the deed of sale dated June 14, 2007, that
the immovable was purchased for $1,000,000 following a promise to purchase that
was accepted on December 26, 2006;
·
On June 15, 2007, the Caisse populaire Desjardins registered
a hypothec in the amount of $650,000 on the commercial immovable located at 1725-1755
Gascon Road in Terrebonne. The deed of hypothecary security
dated June 14, 2007, discloses that on June 14, 2007, Le Groupe
Centruss Inc. obtained a $650,000 term loan from the Caisse populaire de
Terrebonne. The loan bears interest at 15% per year. The respondent and Sylvie
Lépine stood surety for the loan. As of April 28, 2008, the balance
of the loan was $613,888.90; and
·
Her-Comm Inc.’s place of business is located in the commercial
immovable that Le Groupe Centruss Inc. acquired.
[12]
As of April 25, 2008, the respondent owed the Agency $92,556.30 plus
interest.
[13]
In issuing the impugned order on May 6, 2008, the Court
·
authorized the Crown to apply paragraphs 225.1(1)(a) to (g)
of the Act against the respondent with respect to the amounts assessed on April 25, 2008;
·
exempted the Crown from complying with rules 301, 304 and
following of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 (Rules),
with respect to the notice of application and service thereof;
·
exempted the Crown from complying with rules 359 and following of
the Rules regarding the notice of motion and service thereof;
·
extended the 72-hour time limit in subsection 225.2(5) of the Act
to ten clear days from May 6, 2008;
·
ordered the Crown to serve the notice on the respondent within the
same ten-day period, in the manner set out in subsection 225.2(5) of the Act;
·
exempted the Registry from serving the impugned order on the
respondent under rule 395.
[14]
After the impugned order was issued, the Agency conducted an
administrative seizure at the National Bank of Canada.
Following the seizure, the Agency registered legal hypothecs on each of the
respondent’s three vacant parcels of vacant land in Terrebonne; on the farmland
located on Laliberté Road in Mansonville in the municipality of Canton de Potton;
and on the immovable situated at 1725-1755 Gascon Road in Terrebonne in
the name of Groupe Centruss Inc. in Terrebonne. On September 9, 2008, as a
result of the seizure at the National Bank of Canada,
the Agency collected the sum of $18,029. In addition, on or about May 14,
2008, the Agency was informed that the respondent had sold two of the three
parcels of land located in Terrebonne, namely, those with the cadastre numbers 1889 332
and 1889 331, for $17,000 each. The sale of these immovables took place on
May 12, 2008.
[15]
Subsection 225.2(8) of the Act permits a taxpayer to bring an
application to the Court to review the ex parte authorization granted
under subsection 225.2(2) of the Act. The principles applicable in this case
are well established. See, in particular, Canada (Minister of National
Revenue – M.N.R.) v. Services M.L. Marengère Inc., [2000] 1 C.T.C. 229,
[1999] F.C.J. No. 1840 (QL) (Marengère) and Canada v. Satellite Earth
Station Technology Inc., [1989] 2 C.T.C. 291, [1989] F.C.J. No. 912 (QL); Danielson
v. Canada (Deputy Attorney General of Canada et al.), [1986] F.C.J.
No. 312 (QL).
[16]
In Marengère, Mr. Justice Lemieux explained as
follows at paragraph 63:
. . .
(1) The perspective of
the jeopardy collection provision goes to the matter of collection jeopardy by
reason of delay normally attributable to the appeal process. The wording of the
provision indicates that it is necessary to show that because of the passage of
time involved in an appeal, the taxpayer would become less able to pay the
amount assessed. In other words, the issue is not whether the collection per se
is in jeopardy but rather whether the actual jeopardy arises from the likely
delay in the collection.
(2) In terms of
burden, an applicant under subsection 225.2(8) has the initial burden to show
that there are reasonable grounds to doubt that the test required by subsection
225.2(2) has been met, that is, the collection of all or any part of the
amounts assessed would be jeopardized by the delay in the collection. However,
the ultimate burden is on the Crown to justify the jeopardy collection order
granted on an ex parte basis.
(3) The evidence must show, on a balance of probability, that it is more
likely than not that collection would be jeopardized by delay. The test is not
whether the evidence shows beyond all reasonable doubt that the time allowed to
the taxpayer would jeopardize the Minister's debt.
(4) The Minister may certainly act not only in cases of fraud or situations
amounting to fraud, but also in cases where the taxpayer may waste, liquidate
or otherwise transfer his property to escape the tax authorities: in short, to
meet any situation in which the taxpayer's assets may vanish in thin air
because of the passage of time. However, the mere suspicion or concern that
delay may jeopardize collection is not sufficient per se. As Rouleau J. put it
in 1853-9049 Quebec Inc., supra, the question is whether the
Minister had reasonable grounds for believing that the taxpayer would waste,
liquidate or otherwise transfer its assets, so jeopardizing the Minister's
debt. What the Minister has to show is whether the taxpayer's assets can be
liquidated in the meantime or be seized by other creditors and so not available
to him.
(5) An ex parte
collection order is an extraordinary remedy. Revenue Canada must exercise
utmost good faith and insure full and frank disclosure . . .
[17]
The respondent submits today that there are no reasonable grounds
for believing that the collection of all or any part of the amounts set out in
the assessments for the 2000 to 2005 taxation years would be jeopardized by a
delay in the collection of the amounts. He also alleges that the Minister breached
his duty to disclose all the relevant facts to this Court on the return of the ex
parte application. Therefore, the affidavits submitted by the Crown in
support of the ex parte application contain inadequate, inaccurate or decontextualized
allegations or gratuitous opinions. (At the hearing, counsel for the respondent
attempted to discredit the allegations in paragraphs 5, 14, 20, 24, 30 to 32,
39 and following, 45 to 50, 52 and 56 of Daniel Goyette’s affidavit.) The
respondent also contends that the Agency’s collection actions were carried out
in an unreasonable manner (because, inter alia, there were sufficient
income and assets to cover the amount claimed of $92,556, which has since
become the subject of a notice of objection).
[18]
The respondent also takes issue with the fact that reference was
made to his previous charges and convictions because he served his sentence in
2005 for an offence dating back to 1995. At the hearing before this Court,
learned counsel for the respondent argued, inter alia, that the
respondent has always co-operated with the Agency. Of course, the fact that the
respondent was in prison in 2005 could have delayed the audit. Moreover, the
respondent disputes the conclusion that Ms. Plante and Mr. Goyette reached
in their respective affidavits that the respondent tried to avoid payment of
his taxes and that, therefore, an authorization for immediate enforcement was necessary
based on the respondent’s alleged bad faith.
[19]
The respondent takes issue with the Crown, in particular, for
alleging that the respondent intended to dissipate his assets through trusts. The
respondent is completely entitled to create independent and distinct patrimonies
by appropriation through trust deeds. With respect to employment income after
2002, the respondent submits that, because of an automobile accident, he
received non‑taxable income replacement indemnities from the Société
d’assurance automobile du Québec that are exempt from seizure, which explains
why he stopped reporting employment income as a salaried employee of Her-Comm
Inc. for the period from 2002 to 2006. In addition, with respect to Le Groupe
Centruss Inc., the respondent submits that the company was completely inoperative
and inactive until June 2007, while the Agency’s initial interview questionnaire
dealt with the period from January 1, 2000, to December 31, 2004. Thus,
the respondent says, beginning in July 2007, monthly GST remittances were
made and have been made every month since then.
[20]
Accordingly, the respondent concludes that the Minister’s
representatives presented the facts subjectively, not honestly and completely, after
an inadequate investigation that, had it been exhaustive, would have discovered
all the pertinent facts. The respondent also relies on the fact that he
enriched his patrimony during the period covered by the Agency’s audit.
[21]
In his written representations, the respondent referred to the
decision in Her Majesty the Queen v. Robert Duncan, [1992] 1 F.C. 713,
[1991] F.C.J. No. 1113 (QL), in which Associate Chief Justice Jerome
wrote at paragraph 21:
. . .
In Satellite Earth,
MacKay J. reviewed the factors to be considered by a court on a subsection
225.2(8) review of a jeopardy collection order. After considering the case law
dealing with the former version of section 225.2 he concluded (at page 296)
that in a subsection 225.2(8) application the Minister has the ultimate burden
of justifying the decision despite the fact that section 225.2 as amended no
longer includes the former paragraph (5) that specifically stated that “[O]n
the hearing of an application under paragraph (2)(c) the burden of justifying
the direction is on the Minister.” However, the initial burden is on the
taxpayer to show that there are reasonable grounds to doubt that the test has
been met . . .
The
respondent also referred to Justice Gibson’s remarks in Canada (Minister of
National Revenue - M.N.R.) v. 159890 Canada Inc., [1997] F.C.J. No. 1027
(QL) at paragraph 10, [1997] 3 C.T.C. 284:
. . .
Full and frank disclosure does, I conclude, require the
Minister to disclose what might reasonably be regarded as weaknesses in the
case for a jeopardy order that are known to the Minister.
[11] I am satisfied that the
Minister should only proceed by way of application for a jeopardy order under
subsection 225.2(2), ex parte, where she or he is able to demonstrate to
a judge that a jeopardy order is necessary to protect the Minister’s position
and that no alternative procedure that is more fair to the taxpayer than an ex
parte procedure, is reasonably available. Neither of those conditions were met
here. On the record, no evidence was placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau to
demonstrate that subsection 129(2) of the Act was insufficient authority for
the Minister’s purposes. Further, no evidence was placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau
to demonstrate that the more open procedure provided by subsection 164(1.2)
could not reasonably and in accordance with law have been invoked. Finally, the
evidence placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau that the opportunity to
apply the “dividend refund” against the taxpayer's indebtedness would in fact
be in jeopardy through delay, was marginal.
[12] I conclude that, before me, the taxpayer discharged
the initial burden on it to show that there are reasonable grounds to doubt
that the Minister met the burden on her or him on the application before Mr. Justice
Rouleau. I also conclude that the Minister has failed to discharge the ultimate
burden of justifying the decision of Mr. Justice Rouleau simply because the
Minister failed to satisfy me that he or she made full and frank disclosure
before Mr. Justice Rouleau of all of the information in the Minister's
possession that was relevant to the decision Mr. Justice Rouleau was
called upon to make. The fact that Mr. Justice Rouleau’s decision
might have been the same if full and frank disclosure had been made is of no
consequence. Equally, the fact that another judge might issue a fresh jeopardy
order on another application on which full and frank disclosure is made is of
no consequence. I will not speculate on that possibility on the evidence that
was before me and the argument made before me.
[22]
After analyzing the evidence adduced by the parties and considering
the representations of counsel, I find that the respondent has not met the
initial burden of showing that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the
test required by subsection 225.2(2) of the Act has not been met. The
allegations in the Crown’s affidavits are verifiable. The facts set out therein
are difficult to dispute. The Agency’s fears are founded and based on objective
facts.
[23]
The evidence must establish, on a balance of probabilities, that
it is more likely that the collection would be jeopardized by the delay. The
Crown submits that the balance of probabilities lies in its favour. I concur
with the Crown. When the order for immediate enforcement was granted, the facts
showed that, although the respondent owned certain assets, most of them had not
been disclosed during Daniel Goyette’s audit and, more importantly, others
had been put in the names of third parties. Accordingly, the assets in the
respondent’s name could easily be dissipated, transferred or disappear. After
reviewing the respondent’s record, it is clear that the respondent did not
raise any determinative factual component that the Minister failed to declare
or take into consideration. In this case, I conclude that the Crown satisfied
its duty to adequately disclose. I am also of the view that the conditions for
a jeopardy collection order were satisfied in this case.
[24]
For example, as it appears from Daniel Goyette’s
affidavits dated May 1, 2008, and September 9, 2008, he had to
speak to third parties on a number of occasions to obtain information and documentation
that had not been provided to him by the respondent, Sylvie Lépine or his
accountant, Mr. Ducharme. The fact of the matter is that Daniel Goyette
and Scynthia Plante discovered a number of assets as a result of their
communications with third parties because the respondent had not disclosed those
assets.
[25]
Thus, the following assets had not been disclosed by the
respondent or his representative:
·
the three vacant lots located in Terrebonne on which the
Agency had hypothecs registered;
·
the deposit of $20,000 that Claude Hernandez paid to
purchase farmland in the municipality of Canton de Potton as well as
the vacant land on Maurice Côté Road.
[26]
In this case, the affidavit of Scynthia Plante dated
September 9, 2008, clearly shows that the fears the Agency might have had
about collecting its debt were founded: two deeds of purchase dated May 12,
2008, were published on May 15, 2008, regarding the sale of two
vacant parcels of land in Terrebonne, which the respondent had not disclosed to
Daniel Goyette. These sales occurred only three days after the respondent
was served with the order for immediate enforcement that the Agency obtained on
May 6, 2008.
[27]
I point out here that the respondent’s criticisms,
including those specifically raised in the respondent’s written
representations, deal primarily with the hypothetical, inadequate or decontextualized
nature of certain allegations made by Mr. Goyette and Ms. Plante in
their respective affidavits. I do not believe that these criticisms, even taken
together, enable this Court to now conclude that the Crown breached its duty to
make frank and full disclosure. Frank and full disclosure of information does
not require the disclosure of material that is simply irrelevant to the test for
issuance of a jeopardy collection order (Canada (Minister of National Revenue
- M.N.R.) v. Rouleau, [1995] F.C.J. No. 1209 (QL)). Therefore, I find that
it is more likely than not that the collection of the debt owing to Her Majesty
would be jeopardized by a delay.
[28]
Consequently, I have no basis for setting aside the
impugned order. In passing, I note that if, in the respondent’s view, the
seizures were unreasonable in themselves (because the guarantees the respondent
had already given were sufficient) or the registrations in the register of
immovables were illegal (because certain assets actually belonged to third
parties), it is incumbent on the respondent or any affected third party to request
a discharge or to object in the manner prescribed in the Act.
[29]
For the above-noted reasons, the Court dismisses this application
by the respondent, with costs. Concurrent reasons for dismissing the other application
to set aside the second jeopardy collection order are issued in docket T-706-08
(2008 FC 1106).
Certified true translation
Mary Jo Egan, LLB