Docket: T-1018-15
Citation:
2015 FC 1234
Ottawa, Ontario, October 30, 2015
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
|
MINISTER OF
NATIONAL REVENUE
|
Applicant
|
and
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AMDOCS CANADIAN
MANAGED SERVICES INC.
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Respondent
|
ORDER AND REASONS
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application made pursuant to s 231.7
of the Income Tax Act, RSC 1985, c 1 [ITA] for an order requiring
the Respondent, Amdocs Canadian Managed Services Inc [ACMS], to provide the
Applicant, or her officers, any access, assistance, information and documents
sought pursuant to s 231.1 of the ITA.
II.
BACKGROUND
[2]
ACMS is incorporated under the Canada Business
Corporations Act, RSC, 1985, c C-44, and is a member of the Amdocs Group of companies, which provides
software and related services to over 250 communication, media and
entertainment services providers in over 80 countries. ACMS provides IT
services to telecommunication companies, which include recording revenue,
billing and tracking, the integration of software platforms and the updating of
software.
[3]
ACMS is under audit for its 2011 and 2012
taxation years. The audit commenced in November 2013, and is being conducted by
the Canada Revenue Agency [CRA] in order to determine if ACMS has complied with
its duties and obligations under the ITA, and has properly reported its
income from all sources and properly claimed amounts as deductions.
[4]
The CRA is attempting to carry out three audits:
a transfer pricing audit [TPA]; a domestic audit [Domestic Audit]; and a
foreign accrual property income [FAPI] audit.
A.
Transfer Pricing Audit
[5]
The period for issuing a notice of reassessment
to ACMS for the 2011 taxation year, with respect to the TPA audit, expires in
March 2016. The period for issuing a notice of reassessment for the 2012
taxation year expires in March 2017.
[6]
The TPA is being conducted in order to determine
if ACMS carried out its cross-border transactions, involving non-resident
corporations, in accordance with the arm’s length principle. In the event that
the transactions did not occur at an arm’s length price, ACMS may be subject to
certain penalties, a transfer pricing adjustment, as well as a corresponding
assessment of tax.
[7]
In March 2014, the CRA issued sixteen queries to
obtain documents with respect to the TPA. As of the date of this application, ACMS
has not provided a satisfactory response to three of the queries (IM1-2, IM1-10
and IM1-12), offering several explanations, including that the information is
not available, the CRA is not entitled to it, or that ACMS will not be providing
it.
[8]
Query IM1-2 requested a detailed functional
chart for each of the Amdocs Group entities involved in intercompany
transactions with ACMS.
[9]
Query IM1-10 asked for financial statements and
detailed working papers containing the details of cost pools and all entities
the cost was allocated to, from Amdocs Management Limited.
[10]
Query IM1-12 required detailed financial
statements for Amdocs Inc and detailed working papers to support back office
charges.
B.
Domestic Audit
[11]
Six queries related to the Domestic Audit were
issued on January 26, 2015, March 4, 2015 and April 16, 2015. These have been
fulfilled by ACMS to the satisfaction of the Applicant and are no longer at
issue in this matter.
C.
FAPI Audit
[12]
Three queries related to the FAPI audit were issued
by the CRA on July 18, 2014. These have been fulfilled by ACMS to the
satisfaction of the Applicant and are no longer at issue in this matter.
III.
ISSUE
[13]
The Applicant has raised only one issue in this proceeding:
whether the Minister is entitled, under s 231.7 of the ITA, to compel ACMS
to provide responses to the outstanding queries – IM1-2, IM1-10 and IM1-12 – and
provide the books, records and documents sought.
IV.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[14]
The following provisions of the ITA are
applicable in this proceeding:
Inspections
|
Enquêtes
|
231.1 (1) An
authorized person may, at all reasonable times, for any purpose related to
the administration or enforcement of this Act,
|
231.1 (1) Une
personne autorisée peut, à tout moment raisonnable, pour l’application et
l’exécution de la présente loi, à la fois :
|
(a) inspect, audit or examine the
books and records of a taxpayer and any document of the taxpayer or of any
other person that relates or may relate to the information that is or should
be in the books or records of the taxpayer or to any amount payable by the
taxpayer under this Act, and
|
(a) inspecter, vérifier ou examiner
les livres et registres d’un contribuable ainsi que tous documents du
contribuable ou d’une autre personne qui se rapportent ou peuvent se
rapporter soit aux enseignements qui figurent dans les livres ou registres du
contribuable ou qui devraient y figurer, soit à tout montant payable par le
contribuable en vertu de la présente loi;
|
[…]
|
[…]
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Compliance
order
|
Ordonnance
|
231.7 (1) On
summary application by the Minister, a judge may, notwithstanding subsection
238(2), order a person to provide any access, assistance, information or
document sought by the Minister under section 231.1 or 231.2 if the judge is
satisfied that
|
231.7 (1) Sur
demande sommaire du ministre, un juge peut, malgré le paragraphe 238(2),
ordonner à une personne de fournir l’accès, l’aide, les renseignements ou les
documents que le ministre cherche à obtenir en vertu des articles 231.1 ou
231.2 s’il est convaincu de ce qui suit :
|
(a) the person was required under
section 231.1 or 231.2 to provide the access, assistance, information or
document and did not do so; and
|
(a) la personne n’a pas fourni
l’accès, l’aide, les renseignements ou les documents bien qu’elle en soit
tenue par les articles 231.1 ou 231.2;
|
(b) in the case of information or a
document, the information or document is not protected from disclosure by
solicitor-client privilege (within the meaning of subsection 232(1)).
|
(b) s’agissant de renseignements ou
de documents, le privilège des communications entre client et avocat, au sens
du paragraphe 232(1), ne peut être invoqué à leur égard.
|
V.
ARGUMENTS
A.
Applicant
(1)
Subsection 231.7(1) Requirements
[15]
The Applicant submits that the three conditions under
s 231.7(1) of the ITA have been satisfied, and it is therefore
appropriate for the Court to order ACMS to provide responses to the outstanding
queries by providing the requested books, records and documents.
[16]
First, ACMS is a person required under s
231.1(1) of the ITA to provide access, assistance, information or
documents. The queries were issued to ACMS during 2014 and 2015 by the CRA for the
purposes of s 231.1(1), in connection with an audit of ACMS’ 2011 and 2012
taxation years (more specifically, with respect to the TPA).
[17]
Second, ACMS has failed to comply with the
Minister’s request for books, records and documents. ACMS has had from March
2014 to comply and respond to the queries, which is a reasonable period of time.
It is not up to ACMS to determine whether an audit is needed; that discretion
lies with the Minister.
[18]
Third, the information and documents are not
protected by solicitor-client privilege.
[19]
As a result, the Applicant requests relief by
way of an order pursuant to s 231.7 of the ITA that ACMS provide Mr.
Morris Zambon, or another authorized CRA officer, with the books, records and
documents requested under s 231.1(1)(a) within fourteen days of the Court’s
order; an order that the Minister is authorized to effect service of the order
on ACMS by personal service as per Rule 130 of the Federal Courts Rules,
SOR/98-106; costs of the application and any further relief that the Court
deems appropriate.
(2)
Outstanding Matters of Compliance
[20]
ACMS provided responses to the outstanding
queries on two separate occasions in July and August, 2015. The Applicant has
conceded that these replies provided sufficient compliance with the queries
issues as part of the Domestic Audit and the FAPI audit.
[21]
The Applicant continues to contend, however,
that there has not been sufficient compliance with respect to the queries
issued as part of the TPA.
[22]
CRA Officer Morris Zambon has indicated by
affidavit that the following queries remain outstanding as of August 27, 2015,
and continue to be pursued in this application:
-
IM1-2, which requests a functional organization
chart for the Amdocs Group and to which ACMS has not provided the requested
documents;
-
IM1-10, which requests Amdocs Management Ltd’s
working papers, to which ACMS has provided incomplete and only summary
information, without the detailed working papers and back-up documents;
-
IM1-12, which requests Amdocs Inc’s working
papers and to which ACMS has not provided the requested documents.
[23]
IM1-2 requests a functional organization chart
for each relevant organization within the Amdocs Group, which should include
the names and titles of senior employees, their departments and a description
of their duties. The chart provided by ACMS to date does not provide the
required information. ACMS has been informed of this deficiency by way of
letter dated August 27, 2015.
[24]
As regards IM1-10, ACMS has provided only
summary information and not the requested detailed working papers, back-up
documents and other supporting information. The response remains, therefore,
incomplete.
[25]
In regards to IM1-12, ACMS has not provided the
detailed working papers to support the back office charges that were allocated
to ACMS which are required by the Applicant.
[26]
The CRA has indicated that it plans to reassess ACMS
for its 2011 and 2012 taxation years, based on the information available to it,
on or before the relevant statute-barred dates. This is not the CRA’s ideal
course of action, as it prefers to reassess taxpayers on the basis of complete
information and documents, but it will do so in order to protect its assessing
positions.
B.
ACMS
[27]
ACMS says that it has exerted significant effort
and complied with all requests for information that are the subject of this application.
While the documents requested were not within ACMS’ possession, power or
control, it nevertheless took all reasonable steps to obtain the information
and provide it to the CRA.
(1)
Subsection 231.7(1) Requirements
[28]
ACMS submits that in regards to the conditions
that must be met before the Court can order ACMS to provide the requested
books, records and documents under s 231.1, the test set out at s 231.7(1)(b)
is relevant. ACMS says it has provided the information sought by the Minister.
As a result, the test, which the jurisprudence indicates must be “clearly met,” has not been fulfilled for the issuance
of an order under s 237.1: Canada (Minister of National Revenue) v Chamandy,
2014 FC 354 at paras 35 and 41 [Chamandy]; Canada (Minister of
National Revenue) v Lee, 2015 FC 634 at para 25 [Lee].
[29]
ACMS says that the documents provided to the CRA
are sufficiently detailed and fully compliant with the arm’s length standard. Specifically,
as identified in the affidavits of Michael Buchheit, the information that has
been submitted to the CRA relating to the queries that the Applicant considers
to be outstanding includes the following:
IM1-2
−
A functional organization chart of the Amdocs
Group involved in transactions with ACMS, prepared by Amdocs Management Ltd
that provides the names and positions of senior management in the Amdocs Group
of entities relevant to ACMS, and the functions of each department, sent by
email on August 5, 2015;
−
A revised functional organization chart,
prepared by Amdocs Management Ltd in response to the CRA’s request for a more
specific chart, identifying the names and titles of all principal employees of
the legal entities in the Amdocs Group, involved in intercompany transactions
with ACMS, sent on August 26, 2015. Also included was an explanation that two
of the requested entities were not included as one is not a separate legal
entity (Amdocs Development, Guernsey) and one has had very minor dealings with ACMS
(Amdocs UK Ltd);
IM1-10
−
Documents, requested from Amdocs Management Ltd,
which contained a detailed analysis of the management fees charged by Amdocs
Management Ltd and the method of inter-corporate allocations of these expenses
among the entities of the Amdocs Group, sent by email on July 17, 2015;
−
An explanation of the content of these documents
was provided during a telephone conference on July 31, 2015;
IM1-12
−
Documents, provided upon request by Amdocs Inc.,
including detailed working papers to support back office charges made to ACMS,
sent by email on July 24, 2015;
−
Financial statements for Amdocs Inc.’s September
30, 2012 taxation year, sent by email August 27, 2015. Financial statements have
therefore been provided for taxation years ended September 30, 2010, September
30, 2011 and September 30, 2012.
[30]
ACMS submits that the Applicant has not met its
burden to prove that ACMS has not already provided the requested documents.
[31]
In the alternative, ACMS submits that what has
been provided to the CRA to date is sufficient for it to complete its
assessment and that the Court ought not to exercise its discretion to issue the
compliance order.
[32]
ACMS says that if the CRA requires clarification
of the above documents, it may make further inquiries, but argues that no basis
exists for this Court to make a s 231.7 order requiring the production of
further documents. ACMS argues that it is not reasonable for the Applicant to
seek a compliance order against ACMS when it has not provided ACMS with
information that the CRA has acknowledged is required in order for ACMS to
comply with the queries.
(2)
ACMS ought not to be ordered to comply when it
cannot possibly do so
[33]
ACMS submits that it is unable to provide any
additional documents and information in response to queries IM1-2, IM1-10 and
IM1-12. These queries seek documents that, if they exist, are located outside
Canada. ACMS states that neither s 231.1 nor s 231.7 impose on a taxpayer the
obligation to obtain documents that are not in a taxpayer’s possession, power
or control, and does not require a Canadian resident taxpayer to obtain
documents from a non-resident corporation or foreign entity that it does not
control.
[34]
Subsection 231.1 (1)(d) requires a taxpayer to
provide “all reasonable assistance” in relation
to the enforcement of s 231.1. However, s 231.5(2) provides that, in part,
every person shall, unless unable, do everything the person is required to do
under s 231. An exception is explicitly provided for what a taxpayer is unable
to do.
[35]
ACMS submits that the situation at hand is not
unlike that addressed by the Federal Court in Canada (National Revenue) v
Dropsy, 2009 FC 820 [Dropsy], wherein Mr. Dropsy was found not
guilty of contempt of court for failing to produce materials requested by the
CRA as they were not in his possession or control, but he had done everything
possible to obtain them. While Dropsy addressed a show cause hearing
after the issuance of a compliance order, it is submitted that it is
appropriate in this application to not make the order requested as the effect
will place ACMS in the same position as Mr. Dropsy. Like Mr. Dropsy, ACMS
argues that it is “faced involuntarily with the
impossibility to comply with an order issued by this Court”: Dropsy, above,
at para 29.
[36]
In the event that the Court is satisfied that
the Applicant has “clearly met” its burden to prove that ACMS was required
under s 231.1 to provide the documents sought by the Applicant, then ACMS
submits that the Court ought to exercise its discretion not to issue the order.
[37]
ACMS says that it has made diligent efforts to
obtain the information requested by the CRA, and has produced what has been
provided by affiliated non-resident entities. It cannot be made to produce that
which is not under its possession, power or control, as per s 231.1 of the ITA.
Furthermore, it cannot be compelled to create new documents that are not
already in existence.
(3)
Costs
[38]
ACMS submits that Mr. Buchheit received an email
on July 31, 2015 from Julia Huang of the CRA, who indicated that the CRA was to
confer with Mr. Buchheit on August 4, 2015 with respect to transfer pricing.
Ms. Huang indicated that she was unable to talk on August 4th, but
would be working toward issuing a detailed query in the coming week to enable ACMS
to comply with the CRA’s request. ACMS submits that it has not received any
such further query.
[39]
ACMS submits that the application should be
dismissed. In terms of costs, ACMS requests an order awarding it fixed costs of
$5,000.00. ACMS’ counsel advised that ACMS was awaiting a clarification query
from the CRA that the CRA had indicated was required to enable ACMS to respond
to the queries. Counsel for ACMS proposed that this hearing be deferred until
ACMS had been given fair opportunity to consider and respond to the forthcoming
clarification query. Prematurely proceeding with this application has caused ACMS
to incur unnecessary costs, and it is argued that the Applicant ought to suffer
consequences in the nature of costs as a result.
(4)
Additional Production
[40]
In the event that the Court allows the
application, ACMS submits that it should be provided thirty days to comply with
the order to provide any outstanding documents or information.
VI.
ANALYSIS
A.
General Situation
[41]
As of the date of hearing this application the
outstanding queries of concern between the parties are as follows:
a) Query IM1-2 issued March 24, 2014 – Functional Organization Chart;
b) Query IM1-12 issued March 24, 2014 – Amdocs Inc’s Financial
Statements and Working Papers; and
c) Query IM1-10 issued March 24, 2014 - Amdocs Management Ltd’s
Financial Statements and Working Papers.
[42]
All three outstanding queries are related to the
TPA whose purpose is to determine whether ACMS has carried out its trans-border
transactions involving related non-resident corporations in accordance with the
arm’s length principle during 2011 and 2012.
B.
The Impasse
[43]
Since the queries were issued, considerable
discussion has taken place between the parties and ACMS has (sometime slowly
and sometimes reluctantly) made attempts to comply, but there remain
outstanding areas that need to be dealt with under this application.
C.
IM1-2
[44]
The CRA is still seeking a detailed functional
organization chart for each of the Amdocs Group corporations that are involved in
intercompany transactions with ACMS.
[45]
ACMS has taken the position that it does not
have ownership, possession or control of a functional organization chart of the
Amdocs Group of corporations that are involved in intercompany transactions
with ACMS. However, ACMS requested of Amdocs Ltd that it provide such a chart
and, on August 5, 2015, ACMS provided the chart it has been able to obtain to
the relevant officers at the CRA. ACMS says that this chart, of which a revised
version was sent on August 26, 2015, is sufficient to allow the CRA to begin
its TPA because it includes the names and positions of senior managers in the
Amdocs Group of those entities that are relevant to ACMS, as well as the
functions of the departments involved.
[46]
The CRA says that the chart provided by ACMS is
not properly responsive because the CRA requires a chart for each relevant
company within the Amdocs Group which will show, for each company, the
President, CEO, each of the departments and what they do, and the names of
senior employees. Bearing in mind the purpose of the TPA – to discover whether
amounts charged to ACMS are reasonable and at arm’s length – the Applicant says
that the chart provided by ACMS does not allow the CRA to undertake the
relevant inquiries and begin its analysis.
[47]
In his Supplemental Affidavit of August 28,
2015, Mr. Buchheit (the Tax Director of Amdocs Inc) explains the situation from
the perspective of ACMS:
IM1-2
10. With respect to Query IM1-2, by
letter dated August 7, 2015 from Frank Chan/Julia Huang, the CRA requested a
complete functional organizational chart for each company in the Amdocs Group
involved in intercompany transactions with ACMS.
11. The Chan/Huang Letter identified
the following eight entities (collectively, the “Amdocs Group”) as having
cross-border transactions with ACMS:
Amdocs Software
Systems Ltd., of Ireland
Amdocs
Development Limited, of Cyprus
Amdocs Inc., of
USA
Amdocs UK Ltd.,
of UK
Canadian
Directory Technology Ltd., of USA
Amdocs (Brazil)
LTDA, of Brazil
Amdocs Champaign
Inc., of USA
Amdocs
Development, Guernsey
12. I am advised by Amdocs Inc. that a
functional organization chart of the type required by the CRA does not exist.
13. ACMS also does not have such a
chart in its power, possession, or control.
14. However, in an effort to satisfy
the request by the CRA, Amdocs Management Ltd. created the functional
organization attached hereto as Exhibit “A”.
15. I understand and believe that the
CRA is requesting a functional organization chart for the purposes of
conducting interviews with Amdocs Group employees in the course of its audit. I
believe that the information provided in Exhibit “A” provides the information
required by the CRA to commence a meaningful interview process with the Amdocs
Group as the functional organization chart contains the names and titles of all
the principal employees of the legal entities within the Amdocs Group who were
involved in intercompany transactions with ACMS during the relevant taxation
years. In particular, Exhibit “A” identifies the names and titles of the
principal employees of each of the entities described above except Amdocs
Development, Guernsey and Amdocs UK Ltd.
16. On Wednesday, August 26, 2015, at
11:26 am, I emailed to Mr. Zambon the functional organization chart attached
hereto as Exhibit “A”.
17. On August 27, 2015, Frank Chan and
Julia Huang at the CRA sent me a letter indicating that the functional
organization chart that I sent to Mr. Zambon was deficient. The letter
requested a chart that included all departments by function within the entity,
the name and title of the person in charge of each department, the name and
title of key employees with the department, the number of employees in the
department, a description of the functions of the department and a description
of the roles and responsibility of the key employees in the department. A copy
of the letter sent to me is attached hereto as Exhibit “B”.
18. I am advised by Amdocs Limited
that a functional organization chart of this description does not exist and, as
such, is not in the power, possession or control of ACMS.
19. In addition, it would be virtually
impossible to prepare a chart of the description requested. Amdocs Group has an
organizational structure that does not always follow a corporate legal
structure. Amdocs Group is a matrix organization in which reporting lines can
be across entities, depending upon the particular business function. There are
no departments such as in a pyramid-like structure in each legal entity. Therefore,
any organizational chart would not necessarily follow legal entities.
20. The chart prepared at Exhibit “A”
was prepared in recognition of the Amdocs Group structure described above. The
organizational chart identifies division presidents, vice presidents, directors
and heads of business units in the different entities that have executive
decision making authority relating to Amdocs Group Canadian customers. It also
identifies the specific individuals involved with specific Canadian accounts
(for example, Bell Canada and Rogers). None of the individuals identified in
the organization chart are based in Canada. I believe that this organization
chart will assist the CRA in identifying the people with information that may
be relevant to the taxable years under audit.
21. On Friday, August 28, 2015 at
11:38 am, I sent an email explaining the corporate structure of the Amdocs
Group to Mr. Zambon. A copy of the email is attached hereto as Exhibit “C”.
22. In addition to the above, two
matters require noting. First, as I have explained to Mr. Zambon, Amdocs
Development, Guernsey is not a legal entity but part of Amdocs Development Limited,
of Cyprus. Second, I understand that information was not provided in respect of
Amdocs UK Ltd because it had a charge of only $1,669 to ACMS in 2011 and $2,355
in 2012.
[48]
The CRA’s response to this is that Mr. Buchheit
is suggesting that some type of chart is available, even if it is not what the
CRA requires, and that it just does not make sense that a large international
group of companies can function without an organizational chart that informs everyone
of what everyone else is doing and who reports to whom.
[49]
There is no reason to question the good faith of
Mr. Buchheit in this affidavit. He has not been cross-examined on it. The
Applicant is asking the Court to infer from paras 12-13 and paras 17-18 that
ACMS can access and provide an existing organizational chart. However, the
Applicant has not requested any chart that may exist; the Applicant has
requested a chart that contains the information set out in the letter of August
27, 2015 by Mr. Frank Chan and Ms. Julia Huang. ACMS has made reasonable
efforts to locate such a chart but it does not exist. If the Applicant wants any
organizational chart that exists, then it should simply ask for it.
[50]
What the Applicant is looking for is outlined in
detail in the letter of Mr. Chan and Ms. Huang of the CRA, dated August 27,
2015:
This letter concerns the Canada Revenue
Agency’s request IM1-2 for “a detailed functional organization chart for
EACH of the Amdocs group corporations involved in the intercompany transactions
with ACMS” and further described in our correspondence dated August 7, 2015 as
follow:
ACMS to provide a complete functional
organization chart for each company in the Amdocs Group involved in
intercompany transactions with ACMS. Note, per the T106s filed, the following
companies (number 1 to 7) in the Amdocs Group had cross-border transactions
with ACMS. Per the trial balance, the company in number 8 below had
transactions with ACMS:
1. Amdocs Software Systems Ltd, of Ireland
2. Amdocs Development Limited, of Cyprus
3. Amdocs Inc., of USA
4. Amdocs UK Ltd. Of UK
5. Canadian Directory Technology Ltd., of USA
6. Amdocs (Brazil) LTDA, of Brazil
7. Amdocs Champaign Inc. of USA
8. Amdocs Development Guernsey
Submitted
to-date
We have reviewed the Organization chart
submitted on August 26, 2015 which, in a nutshell, is a global organization
chart for the Amdocs group of companies, inserted with a description about the
operation of the respective entity and the name of a staff in each entity.
CRA comment on the submission:
The above document is deficient in that did
not contain information that forms a proper functional organization chart.
CRA’s request outstanding
Investopedia defines an Organizational Chart
as follow:
A diagram that outlines the internal
structure of a company. An organizational chart is the most common visual
depiction of how an organization is structured. It outlines the roles,
responsibilities and relationships between individuals within an organization.
As such, a detailed functional
organization chart of each entity should, at the minimum, display all
departments by function/s within the entity, the name and title of the person
in charge of each department, name and title of key employees within the
department, the number of employees in the department, a description of the
function/s of the department and a description of the roles and responsibility
of the key employees in the department.
[emphasis in original]
[51]
Mr. Buchheit tells us that “a functional organization chart of this description does not
exist and, as such, is not in the power, possession or control of ACMS.”
[52]
It would seem from the evidence before me that the
CRA has requested something quite specific that ACMS cannot provide. The CRA
says that the Amdocs Group must have some kind of organization chart, otherwise
it would not be able to function. However, as I understand the request as
outlined in the letter of Mr. Chan and Ms. Huang cited above, the CRA is not
requesting any organization chart that might be available; it has
requested an organization chart compiled in a particular way and containing
specific information. This is what ACMS says cannot be provided because it
doesn’t exist.
[53]
It is not clear whether the CRA is also requesting
that ACMS create a chart in the required form if one does not already
exist. However, if the CRA is requesting the creation of such a chart, it has
not made that clear in this application or provided the grounds or authority
that would allow the Court to order that such a chart be created. As noted
above, I have no reasons to doubt Mr. Buchheit when he says that such a chart
does not exist. He was not cross-examined on his affidavit to find out why it does
not exist and whether there is any other organizational chart in existence that
could be provided.
D.
IM1-12
[54]
A similar issue arises with regard to Query
IM1-12, although the scope is much narrower. It appears from the record that
ACMS has now provided the financial statements for Amdocs Inc’s taxation years
ending September 30, 2010, September 30, 2011 and September 30, 2012, as well
as some information relating to back office costs. This leaves the request for additional
working papers to support the back office charges that were allocated to ACMS.
[55]
In his Supplemental Affidavit of August 28,
2015, Mr. Buchheit addresses this issue as follows:
33. ACMS does not have working papers
relating to the back office charges allocated to ACMS in its possession, power
or control. However, the working papers that have been provided to the CRA
identify the services being provided by Amdocs Inc, and the percentage of the
staff’s time being spent on ACMS activities. The percentage of time was then
multiplied by the payroll, benefits, and facility cost.
[56]
The information that has been provided comes
from Amdocs Inc and it reads as follows:
You have requested that we provide details
as to fees which we had charged you for back office services during the period
between April 2010 to March 2012. Accordingly, we would like to clarify as
follows:
1. The undersigned, Amdocs Inc, a US based
company, provided back office administrative services for Amdocs Canadian
Managed services Inc. (“ACMS”) to support the activities of ACMS (“Services”).
2. The Services were required and essential
for the ongoing business activities of ACMS. The Services were provided by
Amdocs Inc directly.
3. As detailed in the Agreement, since ACMS
does not employ back office personnel, the services provided consist of back
office and administrative services including accounting, accounts payable,
payroll, treasury, tax, travel, immigration, purchasing, real estates,
facilities, IT, and HR services. These services represent the basic services
required for ACMS to function administratively. These services do not include
the type of management and higher level services provided by Amdocs Management
Ltd. Amdocs Inc, and the rest of the US group companies also consume the higher
value services of Amdocs Management Ltd.
4. As consideration for the performance of
the Services, we have charged ACMS the cost being incurred to perform the
services.
5. The apportionment of the cost was based
on allocating the amount of time the various administrative personnel spend on
ACMS activities. The percentages were determined by asking managers to complete
a time allocation of their employees regular activities. The result was then
used to allocate the appropriate cost. See the attached Annex A for the
resulting time allocation.
The charge is then calculated by
accumulating the individuals annual compensation amounts with the benefits and
facilities cost for the various employees. This step is performed by the
payroll group, which then provides the totals for charge. See Annex B.
[errors in original]
[57]
The CRA complains that this information is
deficient in that it explains the allocation of back office costs, but not how
they are calculated. Annex A and Annex B to the July 22, 2015 letter show that
the total cost for back office charges before allocation is $7,565,619.87 of which
$1,583,686.34 is allocated to ACMS for a monthly charge of $130,000.00.
However, there is nothing in this information to show what the actual services
are and how much is allocated for each service. As a consequence, it is not
possible to review the back office charges for arm’s length purposes.
[58]
Mr. Buchheit is clear, and I have no reason to
doubt him, that “ACMS does not have working papers
relating to back office charges in its possession, power or control.” It also
seems to me that ACMS has made reasonable efforts to obtain what it can to
address this aspect of IM1-12.
E.
IM1-10
[59]
A similar problem arises in relation to Query IM1-10.
In this case, we are dealing with the management fees charged by Amdocs
Management Ltd to ACMS. The approach used is set out in a letter of July 10,
2015 from Amdocs Management Ltd:
Re: Details as per Charges for
Services Pursuant to an Agreement dated July 2. 2003 (the “Agreement”)
You have requested that we provide details
as to fees which we had charged you for various services rendered during the
period between April 2010 and March 2012 (the “Term”). Accordingly, we
would like to clarify as follows:
1. The undersigned, Amdocs Management
Limited (“AML”) is a UK based company which operates through its UK
headquarters as well as through a branch located in Israel.
2. During the Term, AML provided various
professional services to Amdocs Canadian Managed Services Inc. (“ACMS”),
to support the activities of ACMS (“Services”).
3. The Services were required and essential
for the ongoing business activities of ACMS. The Services were provided by AML
directly and/or through contractors engaged by AML as required for the
provision of the Services. Furthermore, AML maintained senior management, sales
and marketing leadership, corporate finance, business development, legal and
administrative staff in the U.K. and Israel throughout the Term, to provide the
Services to various Amdocs Group affiliates, including ACMS.
4. As detailed in the Agreement, the
Services consist mainly of the following:
a. Finance
services - Assistance with complex accounting and finance issues including
revenue recognition, financial policies, and financial reporting issues.
b. Human
resources services - Assistance with the formation of HR policies,
compensation benchmarks, employee recruitment and employee benefit assistance.
c. Marketing
and Business Development services- development of group-level, as well as
localized, business strategies and preparation of marketing plans and materials
for use in the local market.
d. Legal
services - Assistance with various legal issues including preparation and
negotiation of customer and vendor contracts.
e. Mergers
& Acquisitions related services - overall assistance with respect to
mergers, acquisitions and restructuring.
f. Tax
Support services - Planning and consulting services with respect to
taxation.
5. As consideration for the performance of
the Services we have charged ACMS, as well as all other relevant Amdocs group
companies utilizing the Services a fee generally calculated as reimbursement of
AML’s operating expenses plus a mark-up of 7.5% (cost + 7.5%). It should be
noted that third party services charged to us have been on-charged to group
companies at cost, i.e. with no mark-up, therefore, the actual mark-up on our
noted costs is effectively less than 7.5%. Furthermore, our charges
have not covered all of our operating expenses (for example, expenses relating
to equity based compensation have not been included in the cost base).
[emphasis in original]
6. Considering that AML provides similar services
to other affiliates in the Amdocs Group of companies, AML allocates its costs
to the various group companies as detailed hereunder, such that each group
company acquiring services is only apportioned its pro-rata portion of the
costs.
7. Apportionment of the costs has been
effected based on the application of a separate and appropriate allocation key
to each group, or “pool” of costs, depending upon the nature of the cost.
8. During the Term, the respective
allocation keys are calculated annually based on the Amdocs Group (year-end
September 30th) results and the respective financial factors affecting the
specific pool of costs. Once the relevant financial factors are identified, the
pro-rata portion attributed to ACMS (and each of the other group companies) is
calculated by dividing the financial factors at the ACMS stand-alone level by
the overall financial factors of the Amdocs Group as a whole.
Attached as Annex A is an
explanation of the mechanism of allocation.
Please note that there are several factors
used in the calculations which should be taken into account when reconciling
the charges with amounts recorded on ACMS’s statutory financial statements, notably:
a. The fiscal
year end of Amdocs Limited (the group parent company) as well as that of AML,
is September 30, whereas the fiscal year end of ACMS is March 31.
b. Amdocs
Limited prepares its financial statements is accordance with US GAAP. In order
to place all group companies on equal grounds (so as to compare “apples to
apples”), the allocation keys are applied on the basis of the separate entity’s
financial statements as adjusted for US GAAP, i.e. the “reporting packages”
used for consolidation purposes, rather than the local statutory financial
statements.
c. The
functional currency of Amdocs Limited, as well as of that of AML, is the US
Dollar. Such currency is used for consolidation purposes and is also the
billing currency for the charges made by AML to ACMS and other group affiliates.
On the other hand, ACMS’s local statutory reporting is based on its local
currency (CAD).
9. At your request, we have summarized in Annex
B the respective charges made to ACMS and the total charges made by AML
to all other Amdocs Group entities during the Term.
Please note that invoices are issued on a
monthly basis based on true up for prior months. Accordingly, there are timing
differences when looking at a specific invoiced period.
[60]
Mr. Buchheit’s final word on this situation in
his Supplemental Affidavit of August 28, 2015 is as follows:
23. With respect to Query IM1-10, as set out
in paragraphs 15-17 to the First Affidavit, by email dated July 17, 2015, I
provided Mr. Zambon with the documents attached as Exhibit “D” to my First
Affidavit in response to this Query.
24. As described in paragraph 17 of my First
Affidavit, on July 31, 2015, I participated in a telephone conference with Mr.
Zambon in which I explained that Exhibit “D” contained a detailed analysis of
the management fees charged by Amdocs Management Limited and the method of
allocation of these expenses among the members of the Amdocs Group.
25. ACMS does not have in its possession,
power or control any other working papers, back-up documents or other
information related to the management fees charged by Amdocs Management
Limited.
26. I am advised by Amdocs Management
Limited that, other than the working papers already provided, and working
papers that provide only the breakdown of management fees between other Amdocs
group entities acquiring services from Amdocs Management Limited, no other
working papers exist relating to the management fees charged to it by Amdocs Management
Limited to the Amdocs Group.
27. I am advised that Amdocs Management
Limited’s management fees are based on a “cost-plus” arrangement in which its
expenses as shown on its financial statements (less that cost of equity-based
compensation) are allocated to the other members of the Amdocs Group.
28. I believe that the complete basis of the
allocation has been provided in Exhibit “D” to my First Affidavit.
29. Finally, I believe that the documents
provided by ACMS to the CRA are sufficiently detailed and fully support
compliance with the arm’s length standard.
[61]
The CRA’s complaint is that the information
provided, including the data from the spreadsheets that are attached to the
Amdocs Management Ltd letter of July 10, 2015, does not reveal what goes into
the sums that ACMS is paying. All that we have is summary documentation without
the working papers, back-up documents and any other information required to
ascertain whether the amounts being charged and paid are proper expenses, or
whether ACMS is just paying what it is told to pay without any verification.
[62]
In any event, we know from Mr. Buchheit that
ACMS does not have in its possession, power or control any further
documentation in the form of other working papers, back-up documents or other
information related to management fees charged by Amdocs Management Ltd to
ACMS, and that Amdocs Management Ltd has also advised that it has nothing else
to produce beyond what has already been provided to deal with this issue. There
is no reason to doubt Mr. Buchheit and no reason to believe that ACMS has not
made reasonable efforts to obtain the information requested in IM1-10.
F.
The Law
[63]
This is a summary application pursuant to s
231.7 of the ITA requesting an order that ACMS provide the documentation
requested by the Minister pursuant to s 231.1 of the ITA.
[64]
As Justice MacTavish recently pointed out in Chamandy,
above, there are three (3) conditions that need to be satisfied by the Minister
before this Court will exercise its discretion to grant a compliance order
under s 231.7 of the ITA:
[27] First, the Court must be satisfied
that the person against whom the order is sought “was required under section 231.1
or 231.2 to provide the access, assistance, information or document” sought by
the Minister: paragraph 231.7(1)(a).
[28] Second, the Court must be
satisfied that although the person was required to provide the information or
documents sought by the Minister, he or she did not do so: paragraph
231.7(1)(a).
[29] Finally, the Court must be
satisfied that the information or document sought “is not protected from
disclosure by solicitor-client privilege” (as defined in the Act): paragraph
231.7(1)(b).
…
[35] There are potentially serious
consequences that can flow from the failure to obey a compliance order,
including fines and/or imprisonment. In light of this, the Court indicated in
SML Operations that it would not exercise its discretion to order the production
of the documents sought by the Minister unless it was satisfied that the
statutory conditions of section 231.7 of the ITA had been “clearly met”:
at para. 15.
See also Lee, above at paras 24-25.
[65]
It is clear on the record before me that the
documentation requested is not protected by privilege.
G.
Did ACMS Provide the Documentation Sought By the
Minister?
[66]
ACMS argues that the Minister has failed to
“clearly meet” her burden to show that ACMS has not already provided the
documents requested by the Minister or, in the alternative, that the documents
provided to date are sufficient to allow the CRA to complete the TPA.
[67]
In effect, ACMS is asking the Court to decide
that the Minister already has what is required to complete the TPA. However, as
the Minister indicates, and as Justice Campbell recently pointed out in Canada
(National Revenue) v BP Canada Energy Company, 2015 FC 714 at para 23, it
is for the Minister to determine both the scope of the audit and the
documentation required to complete the audit. It is not for ACMS to determine
what the Minister needs to conduct an audit.
[68]
In Saipem Luxembourg SA v Canada
(Customs and Revenue Agency), 2005 FCA 218, at paras 33-36, the Federal
Court of Appeal makes the following clear:
[33] The Agency justifies the breadth
of the notice of requirement on the basis that it requires production of all of
Saipem’s documents in order to conduct an audit for the purpose of verifying
information submitted by Saipem. This position is well summarized at paragraph
29 of the Agency’s Memorandum of Fact and Law:
In the present case the Minister
seeks information in order to carry out a general audit of the Appellant’s
affairs for 1999 and 2000 with a view to determining its Canadian tax
liability, if any. As stated in McKinlay, one of the purposes of an
audit is to verify information. The fact that information has been provided by
the taxpayer or is possibly available from another source is irrelevant. It is
the CCRA’s interest in verifying the Appellant’s tax liability that compels the
production of the Appellant’s books and records. All of the Appellant’s books
and records are relevant to an audit even if some of them only serve to verify,
after being examined, that they have no impact on its Canadian tax liability.
[34] The issue before the reviewing
Court is not the reasonableness of the Agency’s intention to conduct an audit,
but the reasonableness of the notice of requirement in light of the Agency’s
determination that an audit is required. Saipem’s argument that the Agency could
have obtained the documents it seeks by issuing a notice of requirement with
respect to specific classes of documents seeks to question the reasonableness
of conducting an audit. In the absence of some evidence of bad faith or other
improper motive, the appropriateness of an audit is outside the mandate of the
Court under subsection 231.6(5).
[35] The question therefore is whether
the Agency’s intention to conduct an audit of Saipem supports the need for a
notice of requirement in respect of the whole of Saipem’s corporate records. A
“somewhat probing examination” leads to an inquiry as to whether one can truly
conduct an audit solely on the basis of material provided by the person being
audited, without the possibility of verification that no further records exist.
In practice, the issue seldom arises as I have no doubt that most businesses
confronted with a notice of requirement of the sort in issue here, accept the
Agency’s offer to treat their consent to an on-site audit as sufficient
compliance with the notice of requirement. But the reasonableness of the notice
of requirement is to be assessed according to its terms, not according to some
alternate method of compliance.
[36] It is the Agency’s prerogative as
to whether it will conduct an audit, and what form that audit will take. Given
that the records in question are, by definition, maintained outside Canada, the
Agency can do little more to gain access to the records than issue the notice
of requirement which it issued here. If the result is an audit which does not
meet the Agency’s usual standards, it is nonetheless the best audit the Agency
can conduct in the circumstances. As a result, I conclude that the Agency’s
determination to conduct an audit supports the scope of the notice of
requirement served upon Saipem by the Minister.
[69]
Further, the Supreme Court of Canada makes
clear, by affirming two Exchequer Court decisions, Provincial Paper, Limited
v Minister of National Revenue, [1955] Ex CR 33, [1954] CTC 367 and Western
Leaseholds Limited v Minister of National Revenue, [1958] Ex CR 277, [1958]
CTC 257, in Western Minerals Ltd v Minister of National Revenue, [1962]
SCR 592 at p 596 that:
The conclusions reached in the first of
those two cases and applied in the second are accurately stated in the head-note
as follows:
Held: That it is not for the Court or
anyone else to prescribe what the intensity of the examination of a taxpayer's
return in any given case should be. That is exclusively a matter for the
Minister, acting through his appropriate officers, to decide.
2. That there is no standard in the
Act or elsewhere, either express or implied, fixing the essential requirements
of an assessment. It is exclusively for the Minister to decide how he should,
in any given case, ascertain and fix the liability of a taxpayer. The extent of
the investigation he should make, if any, is for him to decide.
3. That the Minister may properly
decide to accept a taxpayer's income tax return as a correct statement of his
taxable income and merely check the computations of tax in it and without any
further examination or investigation fix his tax liability accordingly. If he
does so it cannot be said that he has not made an assessment.
I am in agreement with these propositions.
[70]
On the record before me, the Minister may have
asked for additional details as the discussions and exchanges with ACMS
progressed, but this is entirely within the Minister’s prerogative and is consistent
with the case law cited above. Any audit remains a work in progress until it is
completed and the Minister is entitled to request further documentation from
time to time. In addition, as already discussed above and as set out in the
affidavits of CRA Officer Morris Zambon, the Large File Case Manager with the
Income Tax Audit Division involved in this case, the information provided does
not allow the CRA to satisfy itself on the arm’s length issues that are the
focus of the TPA. Consequently, I am of the view that the Minister has
established that ACMS has not provided the documentation sought by the Minister
and has not fully complied with IM1-2, IM1-10 or IM1-12.
H.
Is ACMS Required Under s 231.1 to Provide the
Documents Sought by the Minister?
[71]
In my view, this is the only real issue before
me in this case. As I discussed above, the parties have been working towards
full production but have reached an impasse because ACMS does not have the documents
requested and has been unable to secure them from other entities within the
Amdocs Group. The documentation in question may exist, but there is no evidence
that it does. Hence, this case raises the issue of what ACMS is legally obliged
to do in this situation.
[72]
First of all, I have no reason to doubt Mr.
Buchheit’s evidence that:
a) As regards IM1-2 and the functional organization chart that “ACMS does not have such a chart in its power, possession and
control” and that he has been “advised by Amdocs
Inc. that such a functional organization chart of the type required by the CRA
does not exist”;
b) As regards IM1-10 that “ACMS does not have
in its possession, power or control any other papers, back-up documents or
other information related to the management fees charged by Amdocs Management
Ltd” and that the has been advised by
Amdocs Management Limited that, other
than the working papers already provided, and working papers that provide only
the breakdown of management fees between other Amdocs group entities acquiring
services from Amdocs Management Limited, no other working papers exist relating
to the management fees charged to it by Amdocs Management to the Amdocs Group;
c) As regards IM1-12 that “ACMS does not have
working papers relating to the back office charges allocated to ACMS in its
possession, power or control.”
[73]
If the CRA is interested in seeing any
functional organization chart that may exist for the Amdocs Group, then this
should be requested. IM1-2 was a request for a chart that contained particular
information, and it would appear that a chart in that specified form, on the
evidence before me, does not exist. It would also appear on the evidence before
me that the documentation requested under IM1-10 and IM1-12 does not exist
and/or is not available to ACMS. It may be that under s 230(1) of the ITA
this is documentation that should exist and for which ACMS should have kept
adequate records
In such a form and containing such
information as will enable the taxes payable under this Act or the taxes or
other amounts that should have been deducted, withheld or collected to be
determined.
However, this application has been made in
accordance with ss 231.7 and 231.1 of the ITA. So the issue for the
Court is whether it should exercise its discretion under s 231.7 to order
production of documents that are not in the possession, power or control of
ACMS and which may not even exist. The Minister has not raised s 231.6 in this
application. If the documents sought by the Minister in this case do exist,
then they must, on the evidence before me, exist outside of Canada. However, it
has not been established that they exist at all, at least in the form sought by
the Minister. Should the Minister conclude that the documents could exist
outside of Canada, then the Minister is at liberty to invoke s 231.6 of the ITA.
[74]
Nor has the Minister asked the Court to order
ACMS to create documentation that does not exist, even if this were a possible
remedy available under s 231.7. The Minister has the power under s 230(3) of
the ITA to specify what books and records ACMS should keep in order to
fulfil its obligations under s 230(1) of the ITA, but that is not an
issue before me. The Minister is at liberty to exercise this power hereafter.
[75]
So the Court is left with a situation where,
under s 231.7(1)(d), ACMS was required to provide access to the information
sought under s 231.1, but, on the record before me, that information is not in
the possession of ACMS and ACMS has no power to acquire it, even if such
information exists elsewhere. The ITA does not contemplate the creation
of records where they do not exist. That which does not exist cannot be
produced. The exception carved out in s 231.5(2) applies here as ACMS is simply
unable to do everything required of it under s 231.
[76]
Subsection 231.5(2) of the ITA compels
ACMS to do everything that the person is required to do “under subsection (1) or sections 231.1 to 231.4,” “unless [ACMS] is unable to do so.” I conclude on the
evidence before me that ACMS has made reasonable efforts to acquire the
documentation at issue, but is unable to provide the balance of the
documentation and information requested by the Minister under IM1-2, IM1-10 and
IM1-12. For this reason, there is no point in ordering ACMS to do something it
cannot do and I decline to exercise my discretion under s 231.7(1) to grant the
Minister the relief sought in this application.