Date: 20061010
Docket: A-551-05
Citation: 2006 FCA 325
CORAM: RICHARD
C.J.
SHARLOW
J.A.
PELLETIER
J.A.
BETWEEN:
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL
REVENUE
Appellant
Respondent by Cross-Appeal
(Respondent)
and
REDEEMER FOUNDATION
Respondent
Appellant by Cross-Appeal
(Applicant)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
PELLETIER J.A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The
issue in this appeal is the extent to which the Minister (or the Canada Revenue
Agency (CRA) acting on his behalf) must resort to the procedure set out in
subsection 231.2(2) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th
Supp) (the Act) when seeking information about unnamed persons from a taxpayer
in the course of an audit. In this case, a CRA auditor asked an official of the
Redeemer Foundation (the Foundation), for a list of donors. The Foundation
complied with the request but subsequently brought an application in the
Federal Court for judicial review of the auditor's decision to request the
information on the ground that, since the information sought was with respect
to unnamed persons, the Minister was bound to obtain prior judicial
authorization pursuant to subsection 231.2(2) of the Act before making the
request.
[2]
The
application for judicial review was allowed in a decision reported at 2005 FC
1361 (Reasons for Order). The application judge declared that the acquisition
of the information by the CRA was unlawful and ordered the CRA to return the
material obtained to the Foundation except to the extent that it was required for
the purposes of the Minister's audit of the Foundation. In addition, the judge
ordered the Minister to vacate any reassessments of the tax liability of any of
the Foundation's donors resulting from the use of the unlawfully obtained
information.
[3]
The
Minister appeals with respect to the lawfulness of the demand and the order to
vacate the reassessments while the Foundation cross-appeals from the order
permitting the Minister to retain what it considers to be unlawfully acquired
information for purposes of conducting an audit of the Foundation.
[4]
I
have concluded that the application judge erred in his assessment of the scope
of subsection 231.2(2) of the Act. For the reasons set out below, his order
should be set aside and the respondent's application for judicial review should
be dismissed. My conclusion with respect to the appeal effectively disposes of
the cross-appeal. It too should be dismissed.
FACTS
[5]
The
Foundation, a registered charity, is affiliated with Redeemer University College (the
College). Since 1987, the Foundation has operated the Forgivable Loan Program (FLP)
for students at the College. It is not necessary for the purposes of this
appeal to adjudicate on the exact method of operation of the FLP, a question
which may very well be the subject of future litigation in the Tax Court of
Canada. For present purposes, all that need be said is that the Minister
believes that, in many cases, donations to the Foundation do not qualify as "gifts"
because they are made in the expectation that they will be used to fund a
forgivable loan to a person related to the donor. If the Minister is right,
such donations would not be eligible for a donation receipt nor for a deduction
in the hands of the donor.
[6]
In
October 1998, the College and the Foundation were audited with respect to the
1997 taxation year. At the conclusion of that audit, CRA raised a number of
concerns with the Foundation, one of which was the Foundation's
practice of apparently providing donation receipts for donations which
benefited the donor's children. The audit also raised concerns about the
Foundation's inability to produce the transmittal forms which recorded the
identity of the donor and the name of the student who was to receive "acknowledgement"
for the donation, which I take to mean, to receive credit for the donation. In
its post-audit report to the College and to the Foundation, the CRA warned that
it would consider disallowing parents' charitable deductions if these practices
did not cease. (Appeal Book, Tab 11-C at p. 172)
[7]
The
Foundation was audited again in 2001, this time in respect of the 1998, 1999
and 2000 taxation years. In the course of that audit, the CRA was advised that
the transmittal forms for those years had not been preserved. As a result, in
August 2001, the CRA served the Foundation with a requirement under subsection 220(3)
of the Act requiring it to maintain proper records, including the transmittal
forms. However, in the absence of the transmittal forms, the CRA was unable to
pursue its investigation into the links between donors and students for those
taxation years.
[8]
A
further audit followed in 2003 in relation to the 2001 and 2002 taxation years.
In the course of that audit, in May 2003, the CRA's representative made an oral
request of the Foundation's Executive Director for certain information
including a list of donors. The information was provided as requested one week
later.
[9]
At
the conclusion of the audit, the CRA advised the Foundation of its findings:
In our review of the
Transmittal Forms, a list of donors and the list of students receiving the
forgivable loans, we found that in the majority of cases the students solicited
funds for the FLP from their own parents. The students then received 90% of the
parents' gifts under the FLP to pay for their tuition and related costs. The
parents receive a charitable donation receipt for income tax purposes for 100%
of the gift amount and their child-student receives a tuition receipt for the
applicable portion of their loan….
For the reasons listed
above, there may be grounds to revoke the organization's status as a registered
charity.
[Appeal Book, Tab 12-A
at p. 8-9]
[10]
At
a meeting held in June 2004 with officials of the Foundation to discuss the
audit results, a CRA representative requested donor lists for the 2002 and 2003
taxation years. This time, the Foundation refused to provide the information,
alleging that it had been advised that it would be inappropriate for it to
release that information without a court order requiring it to do so.
[11]
In
November 2004, CRA began advising certain donors of its intention to disallow
their deduction in respect of their donation to the Foundation. Discussions
between representatives of the donors and the CRA followed but when the donors'
representative advised that the donors would not waive the normal reassessment
period, the Minister issued notices of
reassessment to donors within the normal reassessment period for the taxation
years in question.
[12]
On September 28, 2005, the Foundation made an
application for judicial review of the decision "to request third party
donor information and documentation from the applicant… purportedly pursuant to
subsections 231.1(1) and 231.2(1) of the Income Tax Act…". (Reasons
for Order at para. 1)
[13]
Subsections
231.2(1) and (2) provide as follows:
231.2(1)
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the Minister may, subject to
subsection (2), for any purpose related to the administration or enforcement
of this Act, including the collection of any amount payable under this Act by
any person, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require
that any person provide, within such reasonable time as is stipulated in the
notice,
(a)
any information or additional information, including a return of income or a
supplementary return; or
(b)
any document.
(2)
The Minister shall not impose on any person (in this section referred to as a
"third party") a requirement under subsection 231.2(1) to provide
information or any document relating to one or more unnamed persons unless
the Minister first obtains the authorization of a judge under subsection
231.2(3).
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231.2(1)
Malgré les autres dispositions de la présente loi, le ministre peut, sous
réserve du paragraphe (2) et, pour l'application et l'exécution de la
présente loi, y compris la perception d'un montant payable par une personne
en vertu de la présente loi, par avis signifié à personne ou envoyé par
courrier recommandé ou certifié, exiger d'une personne, dans le délai
raisonnable que précise l'avis:
a) qu'elle fournisse tout renseignement ou tout
renseignement supplémentaire, y compris une déclaration de revenu ou une
déclaration supplémentaire;
b) qu'elle produise des documents.
(2)
Le ministre ne peut exiger de quiconque -- appelé "tiers" au
présent article -- la fourniture de renseignements ou production de documents
prévue au paragraphe (1) concernant une ou plusieurs personnes non désignées
nommément, sans y être au préalable autorisé par un juge en vertu du
paragraphe (3).
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THE DECISION UNDER
APPEAL
[14]
After
setting out the facts, the relevant legislation and the parties' submissions,
the application judge referred to the decision of this Court in Artistic
Ideas Inc. v. Canada (Customs and Revenue Agency), 2005 FCA 68, (2005), 330
N.R. 378. In that case, the CCRA (as it then was) invoked subsection 231.2(1) when
serving an art brokerage with a requirement to produce a list of its customers.
The CCRA was investigating a scheme in which the brokerage's clients purchased
art from artists represented by the brokerage and donated it to public
institutions in return for a donation receipt. The brokerage provided the
institutions with an appraisal of the value of the art for purposes of the
donation receipt in which the paintings were valued at an amount far in excess
of the price paid to the artist. The CCRA did not obtain the prior judicial
authorization required by subsection 231.2(2) before serving the requirement on
the art brokerage. This Court decided that since the brokerage's customers were
the subject of the investigation, the CCRA was required to obtain prior
judicial authorization before serving the requirement.
[15]
The
application judge noted that the CRA used the information provided by the
Foundation to contact and to reassess donors with respect to their claim for a
deduction. The relevance of this observation is in its implicit conclusion that
the donors were themselves the subject of an investigation and that prior
judicial authorization was required, as though a demand had been made in
writing pursuant to subsection 231.2(1).
[16]
The
application judge then asked himself whether the result should be different
because the request for information was made orally rather than in writing. He
answered his rhetorical question by referring to M.N.R. v. Sand Exploration
Ltd. (T.D.)., [1995] 3 F.C. 44 (Sand Exploration Ltd.) at paragraph
18 where it was observed that "intrusion into the privacy of individuals
is always a sensitive matter, especially when the third parties, who themselves
may have valid reasons for not wanting to disclose, are required to provide the
information."
[17]
The
application judge concluded that while section 231.2 of the Act provides that
the Minister may require a third party to provide information about unnamed
persons by serving a requirement on the third party, the need for prior
authorization cannot be limited to the case of written requirements: "…To
[hold] otherwise would encourage the Minister's officials and agents to attempt
by other means to secure the information whether by friendly means, subterfuge
or guile and prey upon the innocence, inadvertence or mistake of one taxpayer
in order to secure otherwise unavailable information about another..." (Reasons
for Order at para. 14)
[18]
The
application judge concluded that it was wrong for the CRA to use information
obtained from the audit of one taxpayer for the purpose of reassessing other
taxpayers.
[19]
The
application judge then rejected the appellant's argument that the Foundation
lacked standing to bring its application for judicial review. It is clear that
the Foundation, as the entity which was required to provide the information,
has an interest in, and is affected by, the decision or act under review. Nothing
further need be said about this issue.
[20]
The
last matter considered by the application judge was the question of remedies, specifically
whether the Federal Court had the jurisdiction to set aside an assessment or
reassessment as to the tax liability of a taxpayer under the Income Tax Act,
a power which appears to be reserved to the Tax Court of Canada. The
application judge concluded that the power to set aside an unlawful act
or decision, which is conferred upon the Federal Court by subsection 18.1(3) of
the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 7, includes the power to set
aside acts consequent upon the unlawful act. Having found that the request for
the information as to the donors was itself unlawful, the application judge
held that the Federal Court had the power to set aside assessments founded upon
that unlawful act.
[21]
As
a result, the application judge allowed the application for judicial review,
declared that the request for information as to donors other than for purposes
of auditing the Foundation was unlawful and ordered the Minister to return (or
to destroy) all documents and other information provided as a result of the unlawful
request. The judge made an order restraining the Minister from using the
information obtained pursuant to the unlawful request for any purpose relating
to parties other than the Foundation. Finally, the judge ordered the Minister
to vacate all reassessments and proposals to reassess in respect of any donor
whose identity became known to the Minister as a result of the unlawful
request.
ARGUMENTS AND ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
[22]
The
Foundation argues that the standard of review to be applied to the decision of
the application judge is that applicable to a question of mixed fact and law.
Relying on the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Housen v.
Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 (Housen), the
Foundation says that this Court is not entitled to intervene except in the case
of a palpable and overriding error, unless it is dealing with an extricable
error of law.
[23]
This
is an appeal from a judicial review of an executive action. The posture which
this Court is to adopt is set out in Dr. Q v. College of Physicians and
Surgeons of British Columbia, 2003 SCC 19, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 226, in which
the Supreme Court held that the role of a court of appeal in these
circumstances is to ensure that the application judge identified the right
standard and applied it correctly. In this case, the application judge briefly
touched upon the question of standard of review and effectively concluded that
the appropriate standard was correctness.
[24]
I
agree that the standard of review is correctness. The question in issue here is
one of statutory interpretation, a matter in which the CRA has no relative
expertise vis-à-vis the courts.
The scheme of
the Act
[25]
The
Foundation's argument is based upon its view of the intent of subsection 231.2(2)
of the Act. The difficulty is that section 231.2 is but one of several provisions
which authorize the Minister to demand and to obtain information "for any
purpose related to the administration or enforcement of this Act." The
Foundation, as did the application judge, assumes that subsection 231.2 is the
appropriate disposition because of its reference to unnamed persons. It must be
said, in fairness to the application judge, that the respondent did not put
before him all of the relevant provisions. In any event, the Foundation has not
explored whether other provisions of the Act could justify the CRA's request
for information.
[26]
There
are a series of provisions which touch upon the Minister's power to ensure
compliance with the terms of the Act. As was noted by the Supreme Court of
Canada in R. v. McKinlay Transport Ltd., [1990] 1 S.C.R. 627 at para. 35
(McKinlay Transport Ltd.), a self-reporting system of taxation requires
a system of verification, including the possibility of random verification.
[27]
In
reading the various provisions which follow, it must be kept in mind that the
Foundation, while not liable to pay tax, is nonetheless a taxpayer as per section
248(1) of the Act:
"taxpayer"
includes any person whether or not liable to pay tax;
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« contribuables »
Sont comprises parmi les contribuables toutes les personnes, même si elles ne
sont pas tenues de payer l'impôt.
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[28]
The
foundation of the Minister's power to verify compliance is the obligation to
maintain adequate books and records:
230.
(1) Every person carrying on business and every person who is required, by or
pursuant to this Act, to pay or collect taxes or other amounts shall keep
records and books of account (including an annual inventory kept in
prescribed manner) at the person's place of business or residence in Canada
or at such other place as may be designated by the Minister, in such 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.
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230. (1)
Quiconque exploite une entreprise et quiconque est obligé, par ou selon la
présente loi, de payer ou de percevoir des impôts ou autres montants doit
tenir des registres et des livres de comptes (y compris un inventaire annuel,
selon les modalités réglementaires) à son lieu d'affaires ou de résidence au
Canada ou à tout autre lieu que le ministre peut désigner, dans la forme et
renfermant les renseignements qui permettent d'établir le montant des impôts
payables en vertu de la présente loi, ou des impôts ou autres sommes qui
auraient dû être déduites, retenues ou perçues.
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[29]
In
the case of registered charities, there are specific requirements which flow
directly from their status as receipt issuing agencies:
230.2
(2) Every registered charity and registered Canadian amateur athletic
association shall keep records and books of account at an address in Canada recorded
with the Minister or designated by the Minister containing
(a)
information in such form as will enable the Minister to determine whether
there are any grounds for the revocation of its registration under this Act;
(b)
a duplicate of each receipt containing prescribed information for a donation
received by it; and
(c)
other information in such form as will enable the Minister to verify the
donations to it for which a deduction or tax credit is available under this
Act.
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230.2(2)
Chaque organisme de bienfaisance enregistré et chaque association canadienne
enregistrée de sport amateur doit tenir des registres et des livres de
comptes à une adresse au Canada, enregistrée auprès du ministre ou désignée
par lui, qui contiennent ce qui suit:
a) des renseignements sous une forme qui permet
au ministre de déterminer s'il existe des motifs d'annulation de
l'enregistrement de l'organisme ou de l'association en vertu de la présente
loi;
b) un double de chaque reçu, renfermant les
renseignements prescrits, visant les dons reçus par l'organisme ou
l'association;
c) d'autres renseignements sous une forme qui
permet au ministre de vérifier les dons faits à l'organisme ou à
l'association et qui donnent droit à une déduction ou à un crédit d'impôt aux
termes de la présente loi.
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[30]
If
a person does not maintain the books and records which the Act requires it to
maintain, the Minister may issue a written requirement to maintain those
records, as was done in this case:
230.
(3) Where a person has failed to keep adequate records and books of account
for the purposes of this Act, the Minister may require the person to keep
such records and books of account as the Minister may specify and that person
shall thereafter keep records and books of account as so required.
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230.
(3) Le ministre peut enjoindre à une personne qui n'a pas tenu les
registres et livres de comptes voulus pour l'application de la présente loi
de tenir ceux qu'il spécifie et cette personne doit, dès lors, les registres
et livres de comptes qui sont ainsi exigés d'elle.
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[31]
The
maintenance of books and records would not assist in monitoring compliance with
the Act if the Minister was not able to consult those books and records.
As one would expect, there are provisions which authorize the Minister to
inspect the books and records maintained by the taxpayer.
[32]
The
Minister's general power to audit and conduct inspections is found in section 231.1
which provides as follows:
231.1(1)
An
authorized person may, at all reasonable times, for any purpose related to
the administration or enforcement of this Act,
(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
(b)
examine property in an inventory of a taxpayer and any property or process
of, or matter relating to, the taxpayer or any other person, an examination
of which may assist the authorized person in determining the accuracy of the
inventory of the taxpayer or in ascertaining the information that is or
should be in the books or records of the taxpayer or any amount payable by
the taxpayer under this Act,
and
for those purposes the authorized person may
(c)
subject to subsection 231.1(2), enter into any premises or place where any
business is carried on, any property is kept, anything is done in connection
with any business or any books or records are or should be kept, and
(d)
require the owner or manager of the property or business and any other person
on the premises or place to give the authorized person all reasonable
assistance and to answer all proper questions relating to the administration
or enforcement of this Act and, for that purpose, require the owner or
manager to attend at the premises or place with the authorized person.
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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) 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 renseignements
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;
b) examiner les biens à porter à l'inventaire
d'un contribuable, ainsi que tout bien ou tout procédé du contribuable ou
d'une autre personne ou toute matière concernant l'un ou l'autre dont
l'examen peut aider la personne autorisée à établir l'exactitude de
l'inventaire du contribuable ou à contrôler soit les renseignements qui figurent
dans les livres ou registres du contribuable ou qui devraient y figurer, soit
tout montant payable par le contribuable en vertu de la présente loi;
à
ces fins, la personne autorisée peut:
c) sous réserve du paragraphe (2), pénétrer
dans un lieu où est exploitée une entreprise, est gardé un bien, est faite
une chose en rapport avec une entreprise ou sont tenus ou devraient l'être
des livres ou registres;
d) requérir le propriétaire, ou la personne
ayant la gestion, du bien ou de l'entreprise ainsi que toute autre personne
présente sur les lieux de lui fournir toute l'aide raisonnable et de répondre
à toutes les questions pertinentes à l'application et l'exécution de la
présente loi et, à cette fin, requérir le propriétaire, ou la personne ayant
la gestion, de l'accompagner sur les lieux.
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[33]
Where
the taxpayer does not provide the access or the documents which section 231.1
requires it to provide, the Minister may obtain a compliance order from a judge
pursuant to section 231.7 of the Act:
231.7
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
(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
(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)).
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231.7
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) 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) 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.
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[34]
A
failure to comply with such an order may be the subject of contempt of court
proceedings (subsection 231.7(4)) or of a summary conviction prosecution (subsection
238(1)).
[35]
In
my view, these provisions were sufficient to authorize the CRA auditor to make
the request which he did, and imposed on the Foundation the obligation to
comply. No recourse to section 231.2 was required.
[36]
Section
231(2) requires the Foundation to maintain certain records to enable the
Minister to ascertain if there are grounds for revoking the Foundation's
registration as a charity, and to verify that the donations which are made to
it are eligible for deduction. The Foundation is specifically required to
maintain duplicates of all receipts which it issues to donors, including the
name and address of the donor. (See Income Tax Regulations, C.R.C., c. 945 at para. 3501(1)(g)). In
short, the Foundation was required by law to maintain the information which the
CRA auditor asked it to produce. As for whether the information was maintained
in the form in which it was requested, i.e., a list, the demand was not
resisted on that basis, perhaps because it is inconceivable that a charity
would not maintain a list of its donors for various purposes related to
fundraising.
[37]
It
is not contested that, in the exercise of the audit power set out in section
231.1, the CRA auditor was entitled to examine all the books and records of the
Foundation, including the duplicate receipts, and on the basis of that
inspection, to prepare a list of the names and addresses of the donors to the
Foundation in various taxation years. If the auditor is entitled to obtain
information by means of his own examination of the Foundation's books and
records, I can think of no principle which would require him to obtain a court
order before asking for the Foundation's assistance in obtaining the very same
information.
[38]
Does
the fact that subsection 231.2(2) makes specific reference to unnamed persons
take the request which was made here outside the operation of sections 231 and
231.1? No convincing argument has been offered as to why it should. The
argument advanced by the Foundation, that its privacy interest and that of its
donors is infringed by such a demand, is simply not credible. The Foundation
relies upon the dicta of Rothstein J. in Sand Exploration Ltd. at
paragraph 18:
Intrusion into the
privacy of individuals is always a sensitive matter, especially when third
parties, who themselves may have valid reasons for not wanting to disclose, are
required to provide the information. Undoubtedly this is the reason Parliament
saw fit to require the Minister to obtain court authorization for such intrusion
upon satisfying the court of the matters specified in subsection 231.2(3).
[39]
The
Foundation's argument lacks a sound footing. As was noted in McKinlay
Transport Ltd., at paragraph 34, a taxpayer has "little expectation of
privacy in relation to his business records relevant to the determination of
his tax liability." When a charity issues a tax receipt, it loses the
right to exclude the Minister from inquiring into the circumstances of the gift
to determine if it is eligible for deduction. Likewise, when a taxpayer claims
a deduction on the basis of a donation receipt, he or she loses the right to
exclude an inquiry by the Minister into the circumstances of the donation for
the purpose of verifying whether the donation qualifies for the deduction claimed.
While I do not disagree with the sentiments expressed in Sand Exploration
Ltd., I do not believe that they apply to the facts of this case.
[40]
Does
it matter that the Minister used the donor list supplied by the Foundation to
reassess some of the donors on that list? The application judge was of the
opinion that it was wrong for the Minister to use information given to him by
one taxpayer to reassess another taxpayer without prior judicial authorization
(see para. 14 and 15 of the Reasons for Order).
[41]
With
respect, this is not a sound statement of principle. There is reciprocity in
the tax treatment of most commercial transactions. Simply put, one person's
business deduction is another person's revenue. The Minister has every interest
in confirming that the amount claimed as a business expense by the buyer is the
amount recorded as revenue by the seller. In the case of registered charities,
the same reciprocity applies. If the Minister determines that donations
received are not eligible for deduction, then he has an interest in reviewing
the returns of those to whom a receipt has been issued in respect of those
donations. This ability to subject both parties to a transaction to equivalent
tax treatment is a fundamental aspect of the verification process.
[42]
I
am therefore of the view that the application judge erred when he concluded
that the CRA auditor was required to obtain prior judicial authorization
pursuant to subsection 231.2(2) before asking the Foundation to provide him
with a list of the Foundation's donors. The auditor's request for the list of
donors was lawful as was the Minister's subsequent use of it to reassess donors
whose contributions to the Foundation were not eligible for donation receipts.
[43]
In
the end result, I would allow the appeal, set aside the decision of the
application judge and dismiss the Foundation's application for judicial review.
The Minister is entitled to his costs both here and below.
[44]
For the same reasons,
I would dismiss the cross-appeal with costs to the Minister.
"J.D.
Denis Pelletier"
"
I agree
J. Richard C.J."
"I
agree
K. Sharlow J.A."