REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Bocock J.
I. Introduction
(a) Net Worth Assessment
[1]
The Appellant, Ms. Truong, contests reassessed
unreported income under the Income Tax Act, RSC 1985, c.1, as amended
(the “ITA”) and related unremitted goods and service tax under the Excise
Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15, as amended (the “ETA”) (“GST appeal”). The Minister of National Revenue’s (the “Minister’s”)
underlying ITA reassessment for each of the 2005 through 2009 taxation
years was based upon an alternative net worth assessment. The net worth
assessment analyzed various sources of information for such determination:
Ms. Truong’s bank accounts, acquisitions of real property, acquisition of
motor vehicles, her gambling losses less loans from her boyfriend, her gambling
winnings, her business expenses/losses and her declared income. This net worth
calculation resulted in an assessment of unreported income and GST in the
following amounts for the following taxation years and reporting periods (being
the lesser amount of undeclared income as between the net worth statement or
notice of reassessment all to the Appellant’s benefit):
Appeal
Years
|
Unreported
Income
|
Unreported
Taxable Supplies for Reporting
Period
Ending December 31st
|
Unreported
GST Collectible
|
2005
|
$112,685.00
|
$127,529.80
|
$8,343.07
|
2006
|
$38,909.00
|
$47,935.53
|
$2,925.64
|
2007
|
$524,852.00
|
$628,874.97
|
$31,838.21
|
2008
|
$417,636.00
|
$455,912.88
|
$20,935.85
|
2009
|
$588,427.00
|
$617,849.23
|
$29,421.39
|
Totals
|
$1,682,509.00
|
$1,878,102.41
|
$92,184.99
|
[2]
As well, the Minister also assessed gross
negligence penalties under the ITA and ETA for each of the
reassessed years.
(b) Basis
of Appeal
[3]
The appeal is brought on two broad grounds.
Firstly, Ms. Truong’s counsel asserts that the net worth assessment is flawed
because certain assets or personal expenditures allocated to Ms. Truong were not
hers, but others. Secondly, the allegedly taxable income, which increased
Ms. Truong net worth assessment, arose from non-taxable sources of funds.
[4]
With respect to the errors in the assets and
expenditures contained within the net worth assessment, Ms. Truong’s
counsel asserts that:
(i) the
records of her gambling activities are not reliable and accurate as to the sums
she expended and lost at the casinos (“inaccurate
gambling records”);
(ii) certain assets allocated to her by the Minister were not
beneficially owned by her (the “trust assets”); and
(iii) the Minister allocated business income and
business assets to Ms. Truong personally which were owned by a business, in
turn not “controlled” by her but by others (the “misallocated business assets”).
[5]
With respect to
the non-taxable sources of funds erroneously counted as taxable, it is asserted
that:
(i) the gifts from her boyfriend exceeded the amounts otherwise credited
by the Minister (“enhanced loans”);
(ii) Ms. Truong borrowed money from her family and friends (“family loans”); and
(iii) she had additional gambling winnings which
were non-taxable sources of funds (“gambling gains”).
II. Facts
[6]
The following constitutes a summary of the
witnesses at the three day trial. The facts are gleaned from their testimony
concerning Ms. Truong’s activities, her financial affairs and the net worth
assessment from the evidence and documents relevant to the ITA appeal
and the GST appeal.
(a) Witnesses at Trial
[7]
Appellant’s counsel called six witnesses to
provide evidence. Ms. Truong’s boyfriend, George Chiu was queried and
testified about the trust assets, the misallocated business assets, the
enhanced loans and the gambling gains. Ms. Truong’s sister testified
regarding the inaccurate gambling records, trust assets, enhanced loans, family
loans and gambling gains. Ms. Truong’s nephew was asked questions and
testified to the enhanced loans, inaccurate gambling records misallocated
business assets and gambling gains. Two of Ms. Truong’s friends provided testimony
primarily concerning the family loans and gambling gains.
[8]
The Respondent called one witness. Ms. Davis was
the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”) auditor who
conducted the audit, collected financial and asset information from third
parties and prepared the original net worth assessment.
(b) Evidence Regarding Ms.
Truong’s Income, Assets, Losses and Business during the Appeal Years
[9]
Through the evidence and related documents,
Ms. Truong’s activities for the appeal years were established. A summary of
those activities follow.
[10]
No books or records of Ms. Truong’s business
activities were produced by her during the hearing. Therefore, the activities
of Ms. Truong during the relevant periods were extracted, imputed and
circumscribed from the viva voce evidence, the Respondent’s documentary
evidence and third party official and business records. Specifically, the
following source documents were adduced distinctly into evidence and formed the
underlying information for the net worth assessment and these reasons:
(i) T1 General Tax Returns for each taxation
year, save 2008 for which an initial assessment from the Minister was produced;
(ii) various real property parcel registers,
utility bills, land registry document, cheques to solicitors trust accounts,
and municipal tax assessment query responses concerning the real properties
described within Ms. Truong’s net worth statement of assets;
(iii) motor vehicle search reports and
valuation reports concerning motor vehicles described within Ms. Truong’s net
worth assessment;
(iv) casino win/loss statements, covering
letters, cheques payable to Ms. Truong and trip/transaction analyses from
casinos frequented by Ms. Truong;
(v) bank account statements, transaction
report print outs, credit cards statements and term deposit certificates,
signature cards for all credit cards, personal credit applications, bank
accounts and investments allocated to Ms. Truong in the net worth statement of
assets.
Gambling activity
[11]
Ms. Truong was a regular attendee at various
casinos commencing in 2005. Casinos throughout Ontario and also Quebec and the
state of New York were frequently visited. Based upon attendances recorded in
the win/loss statements and trip/transaction analyses, Ms. Truong attended
several times a week and a dozen or more times a month. Generally for gamblers,
in such endeavours, “the odds favour the house”. Based upon the win/loss
statements produced by the various casinos, Ms. Truong neither beat the odds
nor disapprove the saying.
[12]
Ms. Truong, her sister, friend and nephew
testified that her boyfriend would, at least after he and Ms. Truong became
involved in late 2006, fund these expeditions with “Ziploc bags of cash”. Ms.
Truong’s sister testified she would use Ms. Truong’s player’s card to obscure
the sister’s visit to the casinos “from my husband”. Ms. Truong’s nephew
testified he attended the casinos, but did not participate. Ms. Truong’s friend
testified the win/loss statements and player’s cards (described below) were not
accurate of a person’s gambling because persons other than Ms. Truong could use
the player’s card which would cause the usage data recorded on the card to be
unreliable. Ms. Truong’s boyfriend indicated he only gave Ms. Truong money by
cheque and, at that, only to buy assets such as real properties.
Business activities of Ms. Truong
[13]
Over the course of the periods under appeal, Ms.
Truong owned and operated several businesses. During 2007, Ms. Truong operated
a Vietnamese restaurant in Kitchener called Saigon by Night. She was assisted
in this endeavour by her nephew. Her boyfriend provided advice concerning
advertising, promotion, supplies and pricing. Ultimately, this business closed.
In 2008, a new similar business, Angel’s Kitchen, was started in Milton,
Ontario. Unlike the first business, this business was more successful, but it
too ultimately closed in or around 2011. Although not relevant to the years
under appeal, a nail salon business was subsequently opened by Ms. Truong.
Assets grew during appeal years
[14]
Ms. Truong confirmed she was a bankrupt in 2002.
She further testified she had no material savings, assets or sources of income
between 2002 and 2005. After that period, Ms. Truong assets, cash and
investments grew and multiplied. The details are described under various
headings below. Although Ms. Truong was unable, in examination-in-chief or
cross-examination, to specifically address dates, purchase prices or value of
assets contained in the net worth assessment, she did confirm that the net
worth assessment’s statement of assets was an accurate representation of her assets
during each period relevant to the ITA appeal and the GST appeal.
Although Ms. Truong suggested in cross-examination that the liabilities were
generically incorrect, during that cross-examination and in reply, no details or
amounts of additional liabilities were furnished.
[15]
In summary, the continuity schedule of asset and
net worth growth from 2005 through 2009 may be summarized as follows:
Year
|
Cumulative Total Personal Assets
|
Total Business
Assets
|
Total Liabilities
|
Annual Increase in Net Worth
|
Increased Cumulative Net Worth (rounded)
|
2005
|
$21,926.00
|
---------
|
---------
|
$20,459.59
|
$22,000.00
|
2006
|
$44,707.21
|
---------
|
$437.17
|
$22,343.14
|
$44,000.00
|
2007
|
$685,829.08
|
$16,415.89
|
$367,111.00
|
$290,863.93
|
$367,000.00
|
2008
|
$1,604,551.09
|
$152,180.52
|
$365,271.85
|
$1,056,325.79
|
$1,391,000.00
|
2009
|
$2,015,488.53
|
---------
|
$299,801.42
|
$324,227.35
|
$1,715,000.00
|
In late 2006,
a developing relationship
[16]
In November of 2006, Ms. Truong met and
became intimate with Mr. Chiu, her new boyfriend. From evidence, it was
clear Mr. Chiu was and is a very successful businessman. Commencing in early
2007, Ms. Truong would travel frequently with her boyfriend to casinos. It is undisputed
that he gave Ms. Truong the sum of $1,722,000.00 by way of various cheques,
automatic fund transfers and bank drafts in 2007, 2008 and 2009. These gifts
were deducted by CRA from the net worth assessment. These sums represented a
sizeable proportion of the Mr. Chiu’s income during those years, with
three-quarters of his income, $1,200,000.00, alone being given to Ms. Truong in
2008. The common testimony was that these gifts were used to acquire property
and personal and business assets.
Real property acquisitions
[17]
Ms. Truong acquired real property commencing in 2007.
She acquired a house in Kitchener in July of 2007 for $490,000.00. There was a
mortgage of $367,000.00 on the property. In October of 2008, Ms. Truong bought
a farm property near Dundalk, Ontario for $540,000.00, granted no mortgage and
carried no debt for it. In 2008, she sold her Kitchener property and acquired
two properties in Milton and made a deposit on a third for a total of
$173,000.00 in down payments for these 3 properties.
Bank account and activity
[18]
Ms. Truong had a number of
bank accounts with a high volume of activity. Over the 5 years of the net worth
continuity assessment, she withdrew cash of almost $655,000.00 in increments in
excess of $1,000.00. She also accumulated personally almost $200,000.00 in term
deposits and by the end of December, 2009 cash of $58,000.00. Her business
accounts at the end of 2007 and 2008, respectively, had cash balances of
$16,400.00 and $152,000.00.
Automobiles
[19]
Ms. Truong also acquired several
automobiles during the appeal years. Ms. Truong began 2005 with one automobile.
In 2007, she acquired a 2002 BMW sport utility worth $23,250.00. In 2008, she
acquired another vehicle worth $28,000.00 and in 2009, a 2009 Acura MDX was
purchased worth $52,451.00. There were no liens or debt against the vehicles.
(c) The Need and Methodology of
the Net Worth Assessment
Unreported
Income
[20]
The CRA auditor pointed to the absence of books
and records as the fundamental necessity for completing the alternative
assessment of Ms. Truong. In its net worth assessment, the CRA calculated
the increase in the net worth of Ms. Truong’s assets over her liabilities utilizing
2004 as the baseline year and continuing the analysis through to the final ITA
appeal year, 2009.
[21]
To fill this alleged information vacuum,
the CRA issued requirements for information (“RFIs”) to
Ms. Truong’s banks, mortgagees, favoured casinos and sellers of various
personal property. The CRA also searched public registries, Government of
Canada and provincial government data bases, using RFIs where needed.
[22]
As a result, a
statement of assets for the ITA appeal years was constructed. It
included relevant sources of asset increases: bank account deposits, purchased investment
certificates, personal property acquisitions, cash withdrawals in increments of
$1,000.00 or more, motor vehicles acquired and sold, real properties (both acquisitions
and down payments) and transfers to solicitors’ trust accounts for property
purchases. Similarly, offsetting liabilities were subtracted: credit card debt,
other debt and mortgages payable.
[23]
Further
adjustments were required specific to this appeal. In terms of additions,
personal expenditures of approximately $124,000.00, $126,000.00, $359,000.00,
$551,500.00 and $607,700.00 tracked through credit cards expenditures and
gambling losses etc. were added to net worth for each of the appeal years 2005
through 2009, respectively.
[24]
On the other hand, the
gifts from Ms. Truong’s boyfriend (to the extent evidence of the amounts
existed or were credibly acknowledged by the boyfriend) and Ms. Truong’s
casino winnings were deducted from net worth increases since they represented
non-taxable sources of funds. These gifts from her boyfriend amounted to
$1,722,000.00, undisputedly given during the final 3 appeal years. The
casino winnings were approximately $16,800.00, $100,500.00 and $14,500.00 in each of 2005, 2006 and 2007. These winnings were lifted from the
casino win/loss statements received from the four casino corporations acting
for the six casinos visited by Ms. Truong in Ontario, Quebec and New York
State. There were only net losses at the casinos in 2008 and 2009.
Imputed Unreported GST Collectible
[25]
By applying the unreported income figure,
comprised of a normalized increase over the appeal years, a calculation was
utilized to derive gross revenues and extrapolate this figure to achieve a
value for supplies and related tax exigible under the ETA.
These unreported taxable supplies related
to the businesses carried on by Ms. Truong. A concordant adjustment to
taxable supplies was made for sums relating to personal expenditures and for deductions
relating to non‑taxable sources of funds. This yielded total
consideration received for taxable supplies for each appeal year (translated
into a GST reporting period) and a percentage of tax otherwise exigible for unreported
GST collectable. This comprised the GST assessment for the related reporting
periods corresponding to the ITA appeal years.
(d) Net
Worth Assessment “Flawed”
[26]
As described, the Appellant marshalled no
suggestion that the net worth assessment was unnecessary. However, counsel for
the Appellant pleaded in the Notice of Appeal or submitted in argument that
certain evidence was provided to question the validity and methodology of the
net worth assessment. These errors included: the inaccurate gambling records,
the trust assets and the misallocated business assets. Moreover, non-taxable
sources of funds were received by Ms. Truong which were not reflected in
the net worth assessment: the enhanced loans, family loans and gambling gains.
Inaccurate gambling records and gambling
gains
[27]
Ms. Truong, her sister, nephew and two
friends testified that casino player cards which tracked casino chip purchases,
redemptions and “cash outs” were susceptible to inaccuracy. Firstly, not all
transactions of a specific person were tracked. Purchases or redemptions of
casino chips could also be conducted with cash without using the card. Secondly,
transactions not involving the specific card holder would be tracked when made
by another person. For instance, others could use the card when buying or
redeeming their own chips. Thirdly, the casino player cards could be
manipulated without any transactions. Casino dealers and supervisors frequently
enhanced the value of purchases and sales to heighten complimentary favours;
drinks, food and hotel rooms.
[28]
Moreover, casinos could not warrant the accuracy
of the cards. On the face of the win/loss statements, Ms. Truong’s counsel
submitted that each casino gave no warranty as to the accuracy of the win/loss
statements. In this specific case, Ms. Truong’s sister testified that she
frequently used Ms. Truong’s player card to avoid her own husband’s
detection of frequent trips made by her to the casino. If Ms. Truong’s
sister won, she may have taken cash and may not have credited the winnings to
the player card. However, the placed bets would nonetheless be reflected on the
card. This would artificially reflect a loss.
Misallocated business assets and trust
assets
[29]
Ms. Truong testified that her boyfriend
controlled the businesses (proprietorships and corporations) for which,
although she was the owner or shareholder, she was allocated the increased net
asset value in the net worth assessment. As to undisclosed business income, the
unexpressed suggestion was that the boyfriend had received these funds and the
value of the assets, not Ms. Truong. No evidence at the hearing was
adduced concerning trust assets otherwise identified in the Amended Notice of
Appeal as trust assets legally registered to Ms. Truong, but otherwise
beneficially owned by others.
Enhanced Loans
[30]
Ms. Truong’s boyfriend testified that he
gave her no more gifts than the amounts reflected in bank transfers and cheques,
save perhaps, the occasional birthday gift card containing cash in more
customary amounts. In contradiction of that testimony. Ms. Truong, her
sister and nephew testified that “ziploc bags” of cash
would be given to Ms. Truong by her boyfriend. These sums were in addition
to and exceeded the $1,722,000.00 already reflected as non-taxable sources of
funds by the Minister. Although no precise value of cash was provided, Ms. Truong’s
nephew estimated that he had become “quite good” at guessing the value within
the bags based upon the thickness of the 50 and 100 dollar bank notes within
them. He claimed he often transferred the “ziploc bags” from boyfriend to
girlfriend in order to keep the businesses operating. During the audit, Ms. Truong’s
nephew also prepared and had the boyfriend sign two general acknowledgments of
additional gifts to Ms. Truong. One letter was undated and specified no amounts
or years. The other reflected gifts in 2007 of $109,000.00, $73,000.00 of which
was reflected by cheques or bank drafts. At trial, the boyfriend, Mr. Chiu,
denied any material gifts were made in cash and that the letters were not, to
that extent, accurate.
Family loans
[31]
Ms. Truong’s
friend testified that she would frequently loan Ms. Truong individual
tranches of $5,000.00, $7,000.00 or $10,000.00 to support Ms. Truong’s “problem
with going to the casino.” These loans were short term and were normally
extended for a period between 2 to 3 weeks. Ms. Truong always repaid them.
In December of 2005 (near the end of the first ITA tax year), a specific
loan for $10,000.00 was made. Ms. Truong’s friend could not recall when
exactly that particular loan was repaid. Documentation for the loans was not
kept. The friend was asked to justify on cross-examination the reason for no
records having been kept. The friend testified that keeping such documentation
would have complicated Ms. Truong’s friend’s ability to transfer money to
her own parents overseas.
(e) Ms. Truong’s knowledge of her affairs
[32]
Ms. Truong
testified she knew little or nothing of the income or expenditures flowing in
or out of her bank accounts. While she confirmed, either directly or
deductively, the accuracy of the statement of assets and liabilities in the net
worth statement, she remained resolute that she was uninvolved in the
transactions giving rise to the reflected amounts or beneficially entitled to
the related assets. Her boyfriend controlled the businesses and told her how to
operate them. Her accountant, also chosen by her boyfriend, prepared all income
tax and GST returns. Her nephew assisted with the cash count and bank deposits
for at least one and possibly both of the businesses.
[33]
Ms. Truong’s
boyfriend indicated Ms. Truong ran her businesses and he ran his own nationally
based restaurant chain. The accountant did not testify. Ms. Truong’s
nephew helped out with first restaurant business “in his spare time”, but was a
full time student at the relevant time. With the second restaurant, her nephew
was present occasionally as well.
[34]
The CRA auditor
testified she received no meaningful documents or records from Ms. Truong,
save the late filed tax returns and information received through RFIs from
third party entities.
[35]
Ms. Truong’s
completion of a CRA questionnaire left a great deal of information blank and
failed to provide plausible explanations contributing to any sense of reality
to the financial information. Ms. Truong testified she did not complete that
document. Ms. Truong had reported net business income (losses in parentheses)
of $6,500.00, $6,100.00, ($29,896.00), ($34,329.00) and nil in each of the
appeal years 2005 through 2009. The net worth statement allocates income to Ms.
Truong in each of these years of more than $112,000.00, $38,000.00,
$524,000.00, $417,000.00 and $588,000.00. Ms. Truong contested her signature on
one tax return relevant to the ITA appeal. However, Ms. Truong
testified that otherwise she did execute the initial tax returns and GST
returns, although she did not read them before signing.
III. The Law
A. Net Worth Assessments
[36]
The Minister has the right to alternatively assess a taxpayer under subsection
152(7) of the ITA and similar provisions under subsection 299(1) of the ETA.
Where such an assessment is raised a challenge to the assessment may be mounted
by the taxpayer in three ways:
(i) challenge its necessity or method chosen in
the first instance;
(ii) challenge specific aspects of the quantum,
methodology or inclusions, and/or
(iii) submit evidence concerning non-taxable
sources of income received by the taxpayer.
[37]
This is enunciated in a number of cases, and
recently in Golden v. The Queen, 2009 TCC 396, 2009 DTC 1273, at
paragraphs 11 and 12 where Justice Boyle of this Court states:
[11] In the case
of a net worth assessment, it is open to the taxpayer to attack whether the net
worth assessment is needed or the most appropriate method of computing the
taxpayer’s income from any source. In this case the taxpayer is not doing that.
If the taxpayer does attack whether a net worth assessment is needed or the
most appropriate, a taxpayer would need to prove to the satisfaction of the
Court with what evidence there is, what records there are and other credible
evidence, what the income of the taxpayer is from the source or sources in
question. The taxpayer has not done that nor laid the groundwork in the
evidence for that.
[12] The
alternative is for the taxpayer to challenge specific aspects of the net worth
assessment calculations.
B. Penalties
[38]
Section 163(2) of the ITA provides as
follows:
(2) False
statements or omissions - Every person who, knowingly, or under
circumstances amounting to gross negligence, has made or has participated in,
assented to or acquiesced in the making of, a false statement or omission in a
return, form, certificate, statement or answer (in this section referred to as
a “return”) filed or made in respect of a taxation year for the purposes of
this Act, is liable to a penalty…
[39]
Subsection 298(4) of the ETA provides for
similar penalties for such knowledge or in circumstances amounting to gross
negligence.
[40]
With respect the application of penalties to a
knowing failure to disclose, the Court must determine, on balance, that Ms.
Truong was knowledgeable of her receipt of unreported income or her collection
of GST and failed to report either.
[41]
With respect to gross negligence, the test is
slightly more nuanced. In Venne v. R., [1984] 84 DTC 6247 (FCTD)
CTC 223, “gross negligence” was determined by Justice Strayer, as he then was,
to mean:
“Gross
negligence” must be taken to involve greater neglect than simply a failure to
use reasonable care. It must involve a high degree of negligence tantamount to
intentional acting, an indifference as to whether the law is complied with or
not.
[42]
Any determination to apply such penalties is
directly linked to the evidence before the Court in any case, entirely based
upon the circumstances, facts and issues in each case. The onus of proof to
show knowledge or gross negligence remains the Minister’s to the standard or
threshold of a balance of probabilities. Gross negligence as stated above,
includes wilful blindness to legal compliance.
IV.
Submissions, Analysis and Findings
(a) Submissions
Ms. Truong
[43]
To reiterate, Ms. Truong’s counsel submits that
the net worth assessment is flawed because evidence was adduced to show that:
(i) it failed to reflect non-taxable sources of funds comprised of the trust
assets, enhanced loans, family loans and gambling gains; and (ii) it failed to
account for inaccurate gambling records; and (iii) it included misallocated
business assets to Ms. Truong which really were under the control of Ms.
Truong’s boyfriend.
[44]
No submissions were made separately by Ms.
Truong’s counsel on the issue of penalties, presumably on the basis that the
appeals would be granted and there would be no unreported income or unreported
GST collectible.
Respondent
[45]
Respondent’s counsel submitted that, while the
facts were dense covering five taxation years, the appeal was not legally
complex. In short, Respondent’s counsel submitted that the net worth assessment
was necessary and appropriate because there were no business or other records
or information furnished by Ms. Truong. Secondly, aside from a $2,400.00
adjustment which became apparent during the CRA auditor’s testimony, no factual
evidence was adduced by Ms. Truong to constitute evidence of the enhanced
loan amounts, gambling gain amounts, amounts or description of trust assets,
amounts of misallocated business assets or family loan amounts. In short, to
challenge the alternative assessment of the Minister, Ms. Truong bears the
obligation to provide specific rebuttal evidence. In the Respondent’s view, there
simply was none.
(b) Analysis
Alternative
assessment
[46]
Alternative assessments, whether by deposit
analysis, net worth assessments or other means are not scientific experiments
and, as such, are inherently inaccurate.
They are necessitated where a taxpayer has failed to file income tax returns,
filed patently deficient ones and/or fails to provide books and records which
substantiate requests to file or substantiate filed returns. Ms. Truong in
certain cases filed returns late or filed clearly deficient ones. She
maintained no books or records, produced none during audit and adduced none at
trial. She operated several businesses, owned five properties and maintained
various bank accounts over the relevant period. An alternative assessment was
both necessary and appropriate. The dearth of records, information and books
created the vacuum which yearned for an alternative assessment by the Minister.
The Appellant has not challenged the necessity or suggested an alternative
method.
[47]
Having authored the void which demanded the
alternative assessment, Ms. Truong had her next opportunity to answer the ITA
and GST reassessments at the hearing; to marshall an attack rendering
unreliable or inaccurate the Minister’s allocated alternative income earned and
corresponding GST collectible. To do so, explanatory evidence was required. It
was required to explain the clear increases in wealth and alternatively
assessed income by the Minister which was disproportionate by a wide margin
with reported income and collected GST.
Ms. Truong admitted the asset values were correct. Moreover, such an attributed
increase already excluded approximately $1.7 million in loans and other
gambling gains of some $131,000.00. For 2005 and 2006, Ms. Truong did not
receive those amounts because she had yet to seriously engage with her
boyfriend or undertake heavy gambling. Still, no evidence was adduced to
challenge the alternative assessment during these first two appeal years.
[48]
Aside from the patent mathematical error of
$2,400.00, in 2009 Ms. Truong failed to show that the Minister’s
assessment, in any specific way, was flawed or suspect. The Minister’s evidence
of the alternative assessment in the form of a net worth assessment was the
only evidence before the Court concerning the income of Ms. Truong for the
material periods. Vague assertions, inconsistent challenges of actual evidence from
interested and related parties and no documentary evidence cannot defeat the
cogent third party documentation, disinterested testimony and logical
conclusions embedded within the Minister’s alternative assessment, based upon
third party records and buttressed by clear testimony at trial. There was no
evidence adduced by Ms. Truong of trust assets, offsetting family loans or
misallocated business assets.
Enhanced Gifts
[49]
Certain examples of this contrast stand starkly
before the Court. As to the enhanced gifts, Ms. Truong or her nephew never indicated
how much money she additionally received from her boyfriend, aside from
indeterminable “ziploc bags” of cash. Ms. Truong’s boyfriend, already having
admitted to gifts or loans of $1.7 million, confirmed repeatedly that money was
transferred by automatic funds transfers or cheques and not by cash. Given his
previous admissions of the large gifts, his testimony concerning the extent of
the gifts struck the Court as unmotivated by self-interest.
Inaccurate Gambling Records and
Gambling Gains
[50]
Similarly, Ms. Truong’s counsel challenged the
source documents obtained from the casinos on the basis they would both
understate and overstate the amount played, won and/or lost. With respect to
this inaccurate gambling records argument, no alternative evidence was provided.
No alternative amounts won were suggested (which would increase non-taxable sources
of funds), lost (which would tend to indicate higher levels of funds at play)
or played (tending to reflect a possible variance in net worth). However, Ms.
Truong’s counsel suggested contrarily that, on one hand, Ms. Truong had greater
winnings than revealed by the records, but, on the other, also played less than
revealed by the records. And again, aside from no evidence to suggest either,
the standard of proof is the balance of probabilities. On balance, while
perhaps not perfect,
the present evidence just as easily understates the magnitude of net asset
growth as that of asset reduction. The CRA audit in this area of gambling, like
the others, met the standard of probability. That reliability was not
challenged by countervailing evidence.
[51]
Lastly, there is little consistency between the version
of Ms. Truong as an uneducated, unemployed, bankrupt and the financial picture
revealed by her admitted financial affairs. Ms. Truong admitted that she owned,
at all material times, a portfolio of real estate, automobiles, investment
certificates, businesses and undertook gambling trips worth hundreds of
thousands of dollars each year. There was no explanation offered as to the
non-taxable sources of funds she received or gained beyond the almost $2,000,000.00
of non-taxable funds credited to her by the Minister.
[52]
For these reasons the appeals are dismissed. The
sole, reliable evidence before the Court of Ms. Truong’s income and GST
liability for the appealed years is that of the Minister’s alternative
assessment. As stated, that picture emerged from the hearing, unassailed and
unmaligned.
Penalties
[53]
No direct submissions were made by Ms. Truong’s
counsel regarding penalties. Notwithstanding, the Minister bears the onus to
show that Ms. Truong knowingly or in circumstances amounting to gross
negligence made a false statement or omission in her relevant tax and GST returns.
[54]
Ms. Truong testified that she has no formal
education beyond elementary school in Vietnam. She immigrated to Canada in
2000. During the hearing, she testified and monitored the trial through an
interpreter. These factors have frequently been taken into account in penalty
appeals where a prevalent and over-sized consideration is the lack of
sophistication and insularity of the taxpayer from the Canadian business and
legal milieu.
[55]
From the evidence, Ms. Truong is not a confused
newcomer, unaware of how the “system” works. Ms. Truong received over $1.7
million dollars in gifts from a boyfriend. She gambled large sums several times
weekly at various casinos throughout Ontario, Quebec and New York State. In
terms of assets, she acquired several houses and an agricultural property. In
business, she commenced, owned and/or operated several businesses, acquired
several luxury automobiles, operated multiple and variable purpose bank
accounts and invested excess savings into guaranteed investment certificates.
Based upon this admitted evidence, unsophisticated or insular she was not.
[56]
With respect to her knowledge of such
activities, she suggested alternatively that her boyfriend, her nephew or the provided
accountant were alternatively and/or interchangeably responsible, as the case
may be, for the concepts, operation, preparation and completion of the
businesses, assets, activities and documentation giving rise to the
reassessments and penalties. Her boyfriend, and her nephew, denied such degree
of involvement, at least to the extent of diverting, determining or managing the
bulk of Ms. Truong’s undertakings, assets, activities, and filings. Further,
the accountant did not testify. Ms. Truong indicated she did not review her tax
returns or GST returns before signing.
[57]
In testimony, Ms. Truong confirmed that her
increase in net worth, as described in the CRA prepared net-worth statement,
was accurate. She indicated further that each year was accurate. She merely
disputed the statement of liabilities generally. She provided no documentary or
specific vive voce evidence to substantiate a variance from underlying
documentary evidence reflecting her assets, investments and businesses. She
owned the assets and businesses. She testified she wanted to be wealthy. To
vacate the assessments and challenge this presented demonstrable evidence of
her false returns and/or indifference, her rebuttal explanations must be
presented and credible. They were neither.
[58]
Demonstrating further Ms. Truong’s business
knowledge was Ms. Truong’s evidence in re-direct on the issue of the gambling
records. It was also instructive and informative for the Court on the issue of
her comprehension level in commercial matters which is relevant to the
penalties. She was able to explain, with relative ease, concepts which the
Court, the interpreter and likely others, heard for the first time: “Player
Card”, “Rated Play” and “win/loss statements”, among other terms. This testimony
stood in contrast to denials of comprehension surrounding answers given at
examinations for discovery and their variance with testimony given at trial.
These discrepancies involved accuracy of win/loss records, contents within
various tax returns and inconsistent statements regarding enhanced loans. Ms.
Truong’s credibility evaporated with such contradictions.
[59]
These overarching credibility gaps are at the
heart of knowledge or, at least, of wilful blindness and its sub-category: indifference
regarding compliance with the law.
[60]
Quite apart from Ms. Truong’s inconsistency on her
lack of knowledge or appreciation of her affairs, the Minister’s evidence concerning
knowledge or gross negligence was detailed, source-based and informed. That
documentary consistency was established through third party records and
underlying title documents. In vive voce evidence, it was established
through the CRA auditor. This jointly source evidence of the Respondent
established that Ms. Truong was insouciant to compliance with her legal
obligations, grossly negligent in the keeping of books and records and in
filing her returns. Ms. Truong admitted and she failed to review or read her income
tax and GST returns before same were filed.
[61]
Once this record was established by the Minister,
Ms. Truong’s testimony did not refute the facts surrounding actual knowledge or
wilful blindness. Rather, she buttressed the foundations of both initially
established by the Minister. The admission of the factual accuracy of the
statement of net worth, statement of assets and the underlying source documents
reflecting same provides the Court with the initial basis to find, given the
magnitude of the difference between reported income, on one hand, and the admitted
net worth and business activity, on the other, that Ms. Truong knowingly
failed to declare income and GST collected. Once established, in reply, Ms.
Truong provided no plausible or credible explanation for the degree,
consistency and duration of this disparity. This leaves the finding of filing
false tax returns, or filing under circumstances amounting to gross negligence
unavoidable.
As such, the penalties are justified and shall remain.
V. Summary and Costs
(a) Limited
basis of granting the appeal
[62]
With respect to the ITA appeals, as
admitted and identified by Respondent’s counsel at the hearing, the assessment
in respect of taxation year 2009 shall be reduced by $4,800.00. This represents
the double entry effect of a $2,400.00 win at a casino having been recorded as
a loss. This loss was added to income, increasing it by $2,400.00. In a
consistent methodological approach otherwise followed by the CRA, it should
have been deducted from income for the year 2009. This may also have a
correlative effect on the GST appeal for the period ending December 31, 2009.
[63]
Aside from this adjustment, in accordance with
the preceding reasons, the appeals are dismissed and the penalties are upheld.
(b) Costs
[64]
Costs are awarded in favour of the Respondent in
accordance with the tariff subject to either party’s right to make further
submissions in writing within 30 days of the date of this judgment.
Signed at Ottawa,
Canada, this 8th day of February 2017.
“R.S. Bocock”