Lamarre
Proulx,
T.C.C.J.:—These
are
appeals
from
reassessments
for
1980,
1981,
1982
and
1983.
These
reassessments
were
made
by
the
respondent
using
the
net
worth
method.
This
method
is
used
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
"Minister")
where
bad
bookkeeping
or
an
absence
of
bookkeeping
by
the
taxpayer
requires
it.
The
facts
on
which
the
Minister
relied
in
assessing
the
appellant
are
described
in
paragraph
6
of
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
as
follows:
In
making
the
reassessments
for
the
appellant's
1980,
1981,
1982
and
1983
taxation
years,
the
respondent
took
for
granted,
inter
alia,
the
following
facts:
(a)
during
the
years
in
issue,
the
appellant
was
a
self-employed
advertising
representative;
(b)
the
appellant
kept
no
books
concerning
his
business;
(c)
in
his
income
tax
returns
for
1980,
1981,
1982
and
1983,
the
appellant
did
not
report
all
his
income
for
the
said
years;
(d)
to
determine
the
income
earned
by
the
appellant
for
those
years,
the
respondent
had
to
proceed
by
the
so-called“
net
worth”
method,
the
results
of
which
appear
in
schedules
I
to
V
to
the
present
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
and
form
an
integral
part
thereof;
(e)
for
his
1980,
1981,
1982
and
1983
taxation
years,
the
appellant
knowingly
or
in
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
made
a
false
statement
or
omis-
sion
in
not
declaring
all
his
income
for
the
said
years,
thus
rendering
himself
liable
to
the
penalty
provided
in
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act;
.
.
.
[Translation.]
I
reproduce
the
table
concerning
income
appearing
at
page
2
of
the
reply.
|
TOTAL
INCOME
|
|
|
Taxation
Year
|
Declared
|
Additional
|
Revised
|
|
1980
|
$9,121
|
$25,950.35
|
$35,071.35
|
|
1981
|
$3,743
|
$15,841.01
|
$19,584.01
|
|
1982
|
$4,323
|
$
7,054.82
|
$11,377.82
|
|
1983
|
$4,778
|
$
6,748.25
|
$11,526.25
|
|
[Translation.]
|
The
penalties
provided
in
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
"Act")
were
assessed
in
the
following
amounts:
|
Taxation
Year
|
Penalty
|
|
1980
|
$1,361.98
|
|
1981
|
$
300.53
|
|
1982
|
$
76.18
|
|
1983
|
$
21.48
|
|
[Translation.]
|
The
appellant
admitted
paragraphs
6(a)
and
(b)
of
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal.
The
only
item
in
the
statement
of
assets
and
liabilities
[sic]
that
was
disputed
in
any
substantial
way
by
the
taxpayer
was
the"
Investments"
part.
He
filed
his
own
balance
sheet
as
at
December
31,
1983,
as
Exhibit
A-1
I
reproduce
here
the
statement
of
investments
as
prepared
by
the
Minister,
as
it
appears
in
schedule
2
to
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
and
that
prepared
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
year
ended
December
31,
1983
(Exhibit
A-1).
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
Investments
Quebec
Bonds
$10,000
$10,000
$10,000
$10,000
$10,000
Quebec
Bonds
—
$
3,000
$
3,000
$
3,000
$
3,000
Quebec
Bonds
—
$
2,800
$
2,800
$
2,800
—
Quebec
Bonds
$10,000
—
—
Quebec
Bonds
—
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
Canadian
Bonds
$
100
$
100
$
100
$
100
Canadian
Bonds
$5,000
$
5,000
$
5,000
$
5,000
$
5,000
Canadian
Bonds
$12,000
—
—
Crédit
foncier
$10,000
—
—
—
Shares
C.A.I.
Inc.
—
—
$
2,000
$
2,000
$
2,000
Total
$47,000
$33,100
$37,900
$37,900
$37,900
[Translation.]
That
of
the
taxpayer
in
Exhibit
A-1
:
A
comparative
study
of
the
taxpayer's
balance
sheet
and
that
prepared
by
the
Minister’s
auditor
led
the
latter
to
say
at
the
hearing,
following
a
review
of
his
records,
that
the
investment
total
for
1980
could
be
reduced
by
$20,000.
There
was
an
amount
of
$5,000
in
bonds
which
should
not
have
been
included
from
the
outset.
The
auditor
had
included
in
the
investments
the
amount,
debited
from
the
taxpayer
by
the
bank,
of
$15,000,
the
fate
of
which
the
taxpayer
was
unable
to
explain.
It
appears,
however,
that
it
was
not
used
to
purchase
bonds.
Part
of
this
amount
of
$15,000
could
have
been
used
to
pay
that
part
of
the
personal
expenses
that
was
estimated
in
the
amount
$4,362,
the
other
part
of
the
personal
expenses
having
been
computed
on
the
basis
of
cheques.
The
taxpayer
said
that
the
sum
was
used
to
pay
income
taxes
which,
at
$37,300.16,
were
exceptionally
high
in
1980
as
a
result
of
assessments
for
previous
years.
The
auditor
said,
however,
that
he
had
taken
the
source
of
the
income
tax
payment
into
account.
|
Investment
[sic]
(at
cost)
|
|
|
Canadian
Bonds
CS-35
maturing
November
1988
|
$
|
100
|
|
Quebec
series
E-81
bond
maturing
June
1,
1996
|
$
2,800
|
|
Quebec
series
E-11
bond
maturing
June
1,
1988
|
$10,000
|
|
Quebec
series
E-80
bond
maturing
June
1,
1995
|
$
3,000
|
|
Total
|
$15,900
|
|
[Translation.]
|
Based
on
a
document
signed
by
a
person
who
was
not
present
to
testify,
the
appellant
tried
to
show
the
Court
that
he
spent
no
money
on
his
personal
expenses.
In
the
absence
of
the
witness,
this
evidence
cannot
be
allowed.
In
any
case,
the
Minister's
estimate
was
very
conservative,
as
is
shown
by
Exhibit
I-6,
a
document
prepared
by
the
Minister's
auditor
concerning
the
taxpayer's
personal
expenses.
I
believe
that
the
penalties
were
rightly
assessed.
The
appellant's
testimony
was
evasive.
The
appellant
said
that
it
was
up
to
the
Minister's
representative
to
determine
the
facts
and
that
he
could
not
remember
them
after
that
many
years.
However,
the
taxpayer
had
already
been
assessed
on
a
net
worth
basis
for
previous
years
and
assessed
penalties.
He
should
have
known
that,
as
a
person
in
business,
he
had
to
keep
adequate,
even
if
summary,
accounts
of
his
revenue
and
expense.
I
believe
that
the
taxpayer
had
the
ability
to
do
so,
if
I
can
rely
on
Exhibit
A-1,
his
balance
sheet
as
at
December
31,
1983,
a
document
which
he
himself
prepared
and
prepared
well.
In
the
absence
of
any
bookkeeping
on
the
taxpayer's
part
and
in
light
of
a
very
conservative
net
worth
assessment
by
the
Minister
which
proved
income
was
greater
than
that
declared,
the
Court
can
only
find
that
there
was
gross
negligence
on
the
taxpayer's
part
giving
rise
to
assessment
of
the
penalties
provided
by
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Act.
Concerning
the
four-year
limitation
period
for
reassessment
provided
in
subsection
152(4)
of
the
Act
which
would
apply
to
1980,
I
cite
the
remarks
of
Reed,
J.
in
Patricio
v.
The
Queen,
[1984]
C.T.C.
360,
84
D.T.C.
6413
(F.C.T.D.)
at
page
365
(D.T.C.
6418):
The
plaintiff
was
obviously
annoyed
by
the
fact
that
the
discrepancies
assessed
by
the
Minister
were
not
large
amounts.
I
notice
in
the
jurisprudence
that
when
the
discrepancies
are
large
there
is
a
tendency
by
the
courts
to
more
easily
find
gross
negligence.
When
the
discrepancies
are
large
it
becomes
difficult
to
believe
that
a
taxpayer
could
have
inadvertently
failed
to
notice
the
discrepancy
(even
when
relying
more
or
less
completely
on
an
accountant
to
make
out
the
return).
Thus,
large
discrepancies
may
often
be
a
compelling
feature
leading
to
a
finding
of
gross
negligence.
However,
the
discrepancies
assessed
do
not
have
to
be
large
to
constitute
gross
negligence.
A
determination
of
gross
negligence
is
one
that
is
to
be
made
in
the
light
of
all
the
circumstances
of
the
case.
.
.
..
Having
found
that
the
defendant
appropriately
assessed
the
plaintiff
on
the
basis
of
gross
negligence,
it
is
automatically
open
to
the
defendant,
under
section
152(4)(a)(i)
to
reassess
the
plaintiff
beyond
the
four-year
limitation
period
otherwise
applicable.
All
that
is
required
under
that
section
is
neglect
or
carelessness.
This
Court
is
therefore
of
the
view
that,
in
light
of
the
appellant's
negligence
in
reporting
his
income
correctly,
this
four-year
limitation
period
does
not
apply
to
1980.
The
Court
is
also
of
the
view
that
the
investment
total
for
1980
must
be
reduced
by
$20,000,
that
is
the
amount
of
$5,000
which
should
not
have
been
included
for
any
of
the
years
and
the
amount
of
$15,000
which
should
not
have
been
included
for
the
years
1980
to
1983
inclusive.
This
$15,000
amount
could
be
added
to
personal
expenses
and
the
estimated
amount
of
expenses
subtracted.
However,
since
the
tax
paid
that
year
was
very
high,
this
seems
to
create
a
distortion
of
the
taxpayer's
usual
income,
and
since
the
situation
regarding
the
$15,000
amount
is
unclear,
I
think
it
is
better
to
believe
that
it
might
have
been
used
to
pay
taxes.
The
Minister
shall
therefore
reassess
the
taxpayer
on
this
basis
for
1980.
As
regards
1981,
1982
and
1983,
the
Court
asked
the
respondent
to
inform
it
by
letter
of
the
effect
which
the
$20,000
reduction
in
the
investment
total
for
1980
had
on
the
assessments
for
those
years,
and,
the
respondent
and
appellant
having
made
their
comments
on
this
point,
the
Court
is
satisfied
that
the
difference
determined
under
the
net
worth
method
would
remain
unchanged
for
1981,
1982
and
1983.
The
appeals
for
1981,
1982
and
1983
are
therefore
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed
in
the
most
part.