Taylor,
T.C.J.:—This
is
an
appeal
against
income
tax
assessments,
for
the
years
1978,
1979
and
1980,
heard
on
November
19,
December
2
and
3,
1986,
in
Montréal,
Québec,
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
included
the
following
amounts
as
income
of
the
appellant,
with
the
noted
explanation:
1978
Assessment
Notice:
|
Personal
expenses
paid
for
by
Irving
|
|
|
Samuel
Inc.
|
$
2,113.82
|
|
1979
Assessment
Notice:
|
|
|
Personal
expenses
paid
by
Irving
Sam
|
|
|
uel
Inc.
|
$
5,571.23
|
|
Benefit
re:
transfer
of
Corvette
|
3,634.00
|
|
Loan
from
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
|
22,170.80
|
|
$
31,376.03
|
|
1980
Assessment
Notice:
|
|
|
Personal
expenses
paid
for
by
Irving
|
|
|
Samuel
Inc.
|
$
82,110.40
|
|
Additional
re:
above
|
1,082.48
|
|
$
83,192.88
|
|
The
Notice
of
Appeal
read:
|
|
|
A.
Statement
of
Facts
|
|
|
1.
On
July
2nd,
1967,
the
Appellant
was
married
to
Wendi
Workman.
|
2.
The
marriage
contract
provided
that
the
said
spouses
would
be
separate
as
to
property.
3.
During
the
taxation
years
under
appeal,
Wendi
Workman
was
employed
by
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
4.
During
the
same
taxation
years,
Wendi
Workman
was
a
shareholder
of
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
5.
During
the
same
taxation
years,
Mr.
Samuel
Workman
was
the
majority
shareholder
of
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
and
was
also
the
president
of
this
company.
6.
Wendi
Workman
is
the
daughter
of
Samuel
Workman.
7.
The
Respondent
reassessed
the
Appellant
for
benefits
conferred
on
him
by
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
8.
Almost
all
said
benefits
were
conferred
not
on
the
taxpayer
but
on
the
daughter
of
the
president
of
the
company
which
conferred
the
said
benefits.
9.
Some
of
the
benefits
had
to
do
with
work
that
has
been
done
on
the
jointly
owned
principal
residence
of
Norman
Kaufman
and
Wendi
Workman.
B.
Reasons
The
Appellant
relies,
inter
alia,
on
the
provisions
of
paragraph
6(1)(a),
sub-section
15(1)
and
on
Section
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63
as
amended.
The
Appellant
should
not
be
taxed
for
benefits
which
were
not
conferred
on
him
but
on
another
person
who
was
an
employee
and
shareholder
of
a
company
of
which
her
father
held
80%
of
the
shares
of
such
company.
WHEREFORE,
THE
APPELLANT
PRAYS
THAT
THIS
COURT
ALLOWS
HIS
APPEAL
AND
REFER
THE
REASSESSMENTS
BACK
TO
THE
RESPONDENT
FOR
RECONSIDERATION
AND
REASSESSMENT.
For
the
Minister,
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
contended:
A.
Statement
of
Facts:
1.
In
respect
to
paragraph
1
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
he
admits
that
the
Appellant
is
married
to
one
Wendi
Workman
and
he
ignores
the
rest
of
the
paragraph;
2.
He
ignores
paragraph
2
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal;
3.
He
admits
paragraph
3,
4,
5,
6
and
7
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal;
4.
He
denies
paragraphs
8
and
9
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
and
all
the
reasons
invoked
in
part
B
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal;
5.
In
reassessing
Appellant
for
his
1978,
1979
and
1980
taxation
years,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
relies
on
the
following
facts:
(a)
During
the
taxation
years
under
appeal,
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
was
a
duly
incorporated
company
which
business
was
in
the
field
of
sales
of
women
garments;
(b)
During
the
taxation
years
under
appeal,
the
shareholders
of
Irving
Samuel
Inc.
were
as
follows:
|
Samuel
Workman
|
68%
of
the
voting
shares
|
|
Maytie
Workman
|
12%
of
the
voting
shares
|
|
Wendy
Workman
|
1%
of
the
voting
shares
|
|
Norman
Kaufman
|
9%
of
the
voting
shares
|
|
Martin
Bergman
|
10%
of
the
voting
shares
|
(c)
During
the
taxation
years
under
appeal,
Appellant
was
also
an
employee
of
the
above
mentioned
company;
(d)
During
Appellant’s
1978
taxation
year,
the
company
paid
on
his
behalf
the
following
personal
expenses:
|
Supplier
|
Amount
|
Amount
|
|
Lou
Goldberg
|
|
$
|
108.00
|
|
Laing
|
|
243.00
|
|
Florsheim
|
|
430.13
|
|
Sport
Expert
|
|
47.46
|
|
Blenheim
(Lake
George)
|
|
671.97
|
|
Dino
(Lake
George)
|
|
95.07
|
|
Holiday
(Placid)
|
|
83.03
|
|
Georgian
|
|
112.35
|
|
N.K.
Children
|
|
405.52
|
|
-
82.76
|
|
$
2,113.82
|
(e)
During
his
1979
taxation
year,
Company
paid
on
behalf
of
the
Appellant
the
following
personal
expenses:
|
Supplier
|
Amount
|
|
Kaufman
(Prom)
|
$
1,295.77
|
|
A.
Goldhaber
|
585.56
|
|
Ralphs
|
22.50
|
|
Victoria
Marenda
|
1,350.00
|
|
(house
maid)
|
|
|
Z.
R.
Petila
|
1,500.00
|
|
Murray
Sales
|
777.60
|
|
$
5,571.43
|
(f)
Further
during
his
1979
taxation
year,
the
company
transferred
to
Appellant
a
1974
Corvette
for
its
book
value
of
$1,366.00
which
resulted
in
an
additional
benefit
of
$3,634.00
for
Appellant
based
on
the
fact
that
the
fair
market
value
of
the
Corvette
when
transferred
was
$5,000.00;
(g)
Further
during
Appellant's
1979
taxation
year
he
received
a
$30,000.00
loan
from
the
company
without
any
agreement
as
to
the
repayment
of
the
said
loan
nor
does
the
said
loan
bear
any
interest;
the
said
loan
has
not
been
repaid
more
than
a
year
after
having
been
received
and
as
of
October
30,
1980
the
outstanding
balance
on
the
said
loan
was
$22,170.80;
(h)
In
respect
to
Appellant's
1980
taxation
year,
the
company
made
a
voluntary
disclosure
indicating
that
Appellant
had
received
the
following
benefits:
|
Supplier
|
Amount
|
Amount
|
|
Austrian
Ski
Shop
|
|
$
|
552.15
|
|
Supérieur
Propane
|
|
527.71
|
|
Ralph's
Men's
|
|
392.75
|
|
Atlantic
Pacific
Travel
|
|
2,353.67
|
|
Progress
Plumbing
|
|
3,500.00
|
|
BX
Electric
|
|
7,592.17
|
|
Ramca
Tiles
|
|
665.28
|
|
Ramca
Tiles
|
|
677.38
|
|
Ramca
Tiles
|
|
320.91
|
|
BX
Electric
|
|
44.62
|
|
Ramca
Tiles
|
|
76.84
|
|
Amex
|
|
352.39
|
|
Bart
Leather
|
|
1,045.50
|
|
Multiform
|
|
6,460.00
|
|
Ramca
Tiles
|
|
256.13
|
|
Marco
Pinter
|
|
6,000.00
|
|
Amex
|
|
315.65
|
|
Napoli
Construction
|
|
1,200.00
|
|
BX
Electric
|
|
4,275.00
|
|
Charles
English
|
|
4,950.00
|
|
Atlantic
Pacific
Travel
|
|
643.00
|
|
Langevin
&
Forest
|
|
204.45
|
|
Langevin
&
Forest
|
|
489.80
|
|
White
Mirro
|
|
3,962.80
|
|
Bonaventure
Metal
|
|
503.58
|
|
Langevin
&
Forest
|
|
503.58
|
|
International
Rug
Co.
|
|
10,188.32
|
|
B.
Baker
&
Son
|
|
1,577.00
|
|
Alwin's
|
|
538.92
|
|
Reed
Wall
Covering
|
|
930.02
|
|
Supérieur
Propane
|
|
606.34
|
|
Progress
Plumbing
|
|
3,500.00
|
|
Alwin's
|
|
247.32
|
|
White
Mirror
|
|
1,200.00
|
|
Lou
Goldberg
|
|
2,129.76
|
|
Imperial
Decorative
|
|
1,360.54
|
|
B.
Baker
&
Son
|
|
35.00
|
|
Multiform
|
|
1,140.00
|
|
BX
Electric
|
|
2,200.00
|
|
Langevin
&
Forest
|
|
151.68
|
|
Charles
English
|
|
6,148.40
|
|
Ruth
Moss
|
|
532.82
|
|
Cordovan
|
|
250.00
|
|
Réveillon
Inc.
|
|
222.11
|
|
$
80,610.40
|
|
Estimate:
Cleaners
|
|
1,500.00
|
|
B.
Baker
&
Son
|
|
82,110.40
|
|
$
83,192.88
|
(i)
There
was
a
normal
practice
within
the
company
that
the
person
authorizing
the
invoice
itself
was
normally
the
person
for
whose
benefit
it
had
been
made;
(j)
In
respect
to
the
1980
benefits
accrued
to
Appellant,
most
of
the
expenses
identified
above
were
for
major
renovation
to
a
residence
which
he
was
the
sole
proprietor;
(k)
In
submitting
his
1978
and
1979
income
tax
returns,
Appellant
acted
with
gross
negligence
of
under
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
by
ailing
to
report
the
benefits
he
had
received
from
the
company,
amounts
which
he
could
not
ignore
or
forget;
Statutory
Dispositions
upon
which
the
Respondent
Relies
and
the
Reasons
he
Intends
to
Submit
6.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Respondent,
relies,
inter
alia,
upon
Sections
6(1)(a),
15(1),
15(2),
56(2),
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1970-71-72,
ch.
63,
as
amended;
7.
Respondent
duly
added
to
Appellant's
initially
declared
income
the
amounts
of
benefits
identified
above;
8.
As
normal
practice,
the
Appellant
made
the
expenditures
above
mentioned,
and
upon
receipt
of
the
invoices
authorized
the
payment
of
the
amounts
by
the
company;
9.
He
has
not
established
that
he
was
not
the
sole
proprietor
of
the
residence
in
which
major
renovations
were
paid
for
by
the
company
during
the
1980
taxation
years;
10.
It
was
not
the
intention
of
the
company
of
its
principal
shareholder
to
benefit
his
daughter
Mrs.
Wendy
Workman,
the
wife
of
the
appellant,
in
respect
to
the
amounts
and
advantages
identified
above.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
had
subpoenaed
several
witnesses,
among
them
Mr.
Samuel
Workman,
who,
in
my
opinion
contributed
most
to
the
Court's
understanding
of
the
situation.
Simply
put,
following
an
audit
by
Revenue
Canada
of
the
business
affairs
of
Irving
Samuel
Inc.,
a
voluntary
disclosure
of
some
inaccuracies
in
the
accounting
and
financial
records
of
that
company
was
made
to
Revenue
Canada
by
Mr.
Samuel
Workman.
During
the
years
in
question,
the
various
amounts
noted
above
in
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
had
been
paid
by
the
company
and
charged
off
to
a
variety
of
expense
accounts
in
the
records
of
the
company.
The
details
of
that
situation,
as
disclosed
by
the
audit
of
Revenue
Canada,
and
to
Revenue
Canada
by
Mr.
Samuel
Workman
were
confirmed
to
the
Court
by
Mr.
Saul
Greenfield,
CA
external
auditor
of
the
company
during
the
years
under
review.
The
examination
of
the
income
involved
and/or
documentation
available
to
him
with
regard
to
the
corrections
noted
above,
including
the
cancelled
cheques,
did
not
lead
Mr.
Greenfield
to
the
conclusion
that
the
charges
originally
made
in
the
company
records
were
in
error,
when
he
made
his
original
audit.
He
did
agree
now
that
the
changes
reflected
in
the
reassessments
at
issue
were
in
order,
and
he
had
assisted
Revenue
Canada
in
its
examination
of
the
company
affairs.
Much
of
this
"source"
documentation
was
made
available
to
the
Court,
and
the
questioning
and
examination
of
this
information
by
both
parties,
with
the
assistance
of
both
Mr.
Workman
and
Mr.
Greenfield,
supported
the
view
that
taken
at
face
value,
at
the
time
of
the
various
transactions,
there
was
little
reason
for
Mr.
Greenfield
to
challenge
the
propriety
of
the
original
charges
and
recording
of
the
amounts
which
later
formed
part
of
the
voluntary
disclosures
noted
above.
The
official
transcript
of
the
proceedings
provides
the
following
comment
by
the
presiding
judge:
And
just
for
the
record
Mr.
Greenfield,
you
made
a
comment,
you
made
a
clarification
of
your
role
and
I
want
to
assure
you
there
is
no
criticism
or
comment
or
reflection
of
any
sort
from
these
proceedings
with
regard
to
your
work
on
the
matter.
The
sole
witness
for
the
respondent
was
Mr.
Jacques
Bouchard,
during
the
relevant
years
an
Investigator
with
"Revenue
Canada".
It
was
Mr.
Bouchard's
testimony
that
his
"mandate
was
to
establish
if
the
disclosure
was
complete,
and
conformed
to
the
books
and
records
of
the
company.",
”.
.
.I
made
an
audit
related
to
the
disclosure
to
find
out
that
all
the
amounts
that
were
there
had
to
be
there
by
the
books
and
records
of
the
company.
To
make
sure
that
all
expenses
and
all
amounts
there
were
personal,
belonging
to
Mr.
Norman
Kaufman
and
were
included
in
the
disclosure".
Mr.
Bouchard
agreed
however
that
his
examination
of
the
documentation
and
records
critical
to
this
appeal
was
largely
restricted
to
discussions
with
Mr.
Workman,
a
review
of
the
list
provided
by
Mr.
Workman
(representing
the
"voluntary
disclosures")
and
checking
the
invoices
also
provided
by
Mr.
Workman
to
see
that
they
were
on
the
list
(supra)
and
to
see
that
there
appeared
on
the
invoices,
some
initial
such
as
"N"
or
other
indications
that
it
should
be
attributable
to
Mr.
Norman
Kaufman.
Although
he
was
not
given
any
general
explanation
for
the
purpose
of
the
amounts
on
the
list,
Mr.
Bouchard
understood
from
Mr.
Workman
that
this
“initialling”
indicated
the
amount
had
some
personal
—
as
opposed
to
business
—
relationship
to
the
individual
involved.
Other
than
a
cursory
review
of
the
purchase
journal,
Mr.
Bouchard
did
not
pursue
this
avenue
to
any
great
extent.
There
was
no
indication
in
the
company
records
that
the
amounts
involved
had
been
treated
in
any
way
differently
than
proper
amounts
payable
—
for
purchases
or
expenses
attributable
to
the
company,
rather
than
any
individual.
Mr.
Bouchard
did
not
meet
with
Mr.
Kaufman.
In
my
view
Mr.
Bouchard's
“audit”
added
very
little
of
benefit
to
the
Court,
beyond
the
framework
of
the
situation
already
agreed
to
or
asserted
by
Mr.
Workman.
During
examination
of
the
witnesses,
efforts
were
made
by
counsel
for
both
parties,
to
assign
or
apportion
responsibility
or
blame
for
the
inaccurate
recording
and
reporting
of
the
payments
in
issue,
to
either
of
Mr.
Samuel
Workman,
or
to
the
appellant
Mr.
Kaufman.
In
effect,
the
efforts
of
the
lawyers
for
Mr.
Kaufman
were
directed
towards
establishing
that
Mr.
Workman
was
fully
aware
that
the
recording
of
some
or
all
of
the
amounts
in
issue
left
the
clear
impression
not
only
that
they
represented
proper
charges
against
the
operation
of
the
company,
but
that
they
were
not
to
be
regarded
as
"personal"
charges
against
Mr.
Kaufman
—
at
the
time
the
transactions
occurred.
At
least,
if
any
“benefit”
could
be
seen
in
the
transactions,
that
benefit
should
somehow
accrue
to
Wendi
Kaufman
or
to
Mr.
Workman
himself,
not
to
Mr.
Kaufman,
was
the
thrust
of
the
line
of
questioning
from
counsel
for
the
appellant.
Further,
some
attempt
was
made
to
assert
that
the
amounts
at
issue
could
have
been
part
of
a
"shareholder's
account"
in
the
name
of
Mr.
Kaufman,
or
might
have
figured
in
some
subsequent
"dividend"
declaration.
Conversely,
the
thrust
of
the
respondent's
questions
was
that
Mr.
Kaufman
had
at
least
some
involvement
with
the
various
invoices
or
source
documents
produced
—
either
in
the
form
of
an
“initial”
(often
"N"
allegedly
for
"Norman")
or
some
other
identification.
Because
of
the
animosity
evident
between
the
parties,
I
did
not
find
much
assistance
in
the
details
of
much
of
this
examination
and
cross-examination.
So
little
purpose
would
be
served
by
a
minute
repetition
of
it
in
this
decision.
However,
as
I
understand
the
situation,
certain
very
general
outlines
are
quite
apparent,
and
they
do
serve
the
Court
in
reaching
a
decision.
The
appellant
did
not
take
the
witness
stand,
and
Wendi
Kaufman
is
now
deceased.
Accordingly
the
decision
reached
will
be
without
benefit
to
the
Court
of
testimony
they
might
have
given.
First,
I
am
quite
satisfied
that
little,
if
anything,
of
major
consequence
went
on
in
the
company
without
the
specific,
or
at
least,
tacit
approval
of
Mr.
Workman.
His
knowledge
of
the
operations
—
even
in
detail,
and
his
control
of
the
company
were
very
clearly
presented.
He
is
a
competent
and
experienced
executive,
who
has
built
a
business
of
substantial
proportions
with
hard
work
and
acumen.
I
am
quite
satisfied
that
he
was
fully
aware
that
payments
were
being
made
from
company
funds
—
and
charged
as
costs
of
operating
the
company,
which
had
not
any
proper
relationship
to
that
operation.
Equally,
he
was
fully
aware
that
some
benefit
could
accrue
to
someone,
by
virtue
of
these
improper
deductions
—
at
least
some
part,
perhaps
a
major
part
of
the
"expense"
invoices
paid
had
a
direct
bearing
on
the
construction
of
the
house
Mr.
Kaufman
was
building
at
the
time.
I
do
not
accept
Mr.
Workman's
protestations
that
he
was
only
vaguely
familiar
with
the
acquisition
of
the
land
for
building
the
house,
or
with
the
progress
of
the
actual
construction
of
the
house.
In
addition,
at
least
some
of
the
"expense"
items
involved
were
so
blatantly
unrelated
to
the
business
of
the
company,
that
the
slightest
query
of
them
by
Mr.
Workman
would
have
resulted
in
a
different
recording
when
they
were
paid
out
of
company
funds.
Even
the
initial
"N",
or
some
other
identifications
cannot
be
held
out
to
mean
that
Mr.
Kaufman,
rather
than
Mr.
Workman,
was
finally
and
ultimately
responsible
for
the
payment.
There
was
no
indication
at
the
hearing
that
Mr.
Workman
left
to
Mr.
Kaufman
a
major
directing
role
in
the
operations
of
the
company,
and
certainly
not
in
the
use
or
control
of
company
funds.
With
regard
to
the
$30,000
loan
(supra)
the
testimony
of
Mr.
Workman
was
at
the
best
confusing
and
vague,
and
at
the
worst
contradictory
and
conflicting.
Just
as
with
the
other
payments
noted
above,
Mr.
Workman
either
directly
or
indirectly
permitted
the
alleged
“loan”
of
$30,000.
Incidentally
it
was
far
from
certain
whether
it
was
ever
actually
a
"loan"
at
all
—
but
that
in
the
end
is
not
a
critical
matter.
In
the
end
analysis,
Mr.
Workman
cannot
assert
shock,
or
surprise,
at
any
"revelations",
which
required
restructuring
the
accounts
of
the
company
to
properly
reflect
the
transactions
at
issue.
Nor
can
he
ascribe
to
Mr.
Kaufman
a
role
in
that
aspect
of
the
matter
any
larger
than
the
circumstances
and
facts
clearly
warrant.
On
the
other
hand,
I
do
not
assert
for
a
moment
that
Mr.
Kaufman
could
have
been
unaware,
naive
or
totally
innocent
of
the
inappropriate
funding
and
accounting
procedures
used
in
the
operations
of
the
company.
There
was
no
indication
that
he
ever
made
any
attempt
to
correct
or
reimburse
the
company
for
the
inaccurate
charges,
other
than
the
payments
on
the
"loan"
noted
above.
The
Minister’s
assessment
is.
based
on
an
assumption
that
Mr.
Kaufman
enjoyed
"benefits"
as
a
result
of
the
transactions
at
issue
and
that
these
"benefits"
are
taxable
to
him
as
a
result
of
the
provisions
of
either
subsections
15(1)
or
15(2)
of
the
Act.
In
contrast
thereto,
counsel
for
the
appellant
contends
that
if
benefits
can
be
seen
arising
out
of
the
transactions,
they
are
benefits
which
Mr.
Workman
wished
conveyed
on
his
daughter
Wendi,
not
on
this
appellant
at
all.
I
should
point
out
here,
that
I
have
reviewed
argument
and
written
submissions
by
both
parties
which
dealt
with
a
relationship
between
subsections
15(1)
and
15(2)
of
the
Act,
and
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act,
and
I
regret
that
I
am
unable
to
agree
—
as
the
Minister
asserted
—
that
somehow
subsection
56(2)
of
the
Act
can
encompass
the
transactions
at
issue
here
in
a
manner
that
would
permit
of
taxation
against
Mr.
Kaufman.
As
I
read
that
subsection
(56(2))
in
the
light
of
this
appeal,
—
even
if
—
it
can
be
said
that
the
payments
were
made
"pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of"
—
Mr.
Workman,
I
would
only
be
able
to
see
therein
the
prospect
of
taxation
under
that
section
against
Mr.
Workman
—
which
is
precisely
the
point
made
by
counsel
for
Mr.
Kaufman.
Turning
to
the
first
part
of
the
question
to
be
answered
—
was
there
a
benefit
which
arose
out
of
the
transactions
at
issue?
The
unequivocal
response
must
be
in
the
affirmative.
There
is
simply
no
evidence
to
the
contrary
—
Mr.
Kaufman
himself
did
not
even
deny
that
there
was
a
benefit
of
some
kind,
and
all
the
circumstantial
evidence
of
the
other
witnesses
points
to
a
benefit
arising
to
someone
out
of
the
transactions.
The
second
part
of
the
question
therefore
is
—
has
the
Minister
assessed
this
benefit
properly
against
Mr.
Kaufman?
The
only
viable
evidence
the
Court
has
to
deal
with
this
question
comes
from
Mr.
Workman
—
and
he
has
denied
that
it
was
his
intention
or
desire
to
benefit
his
daughter
Wendi.
But
equally
he
resisted
any
effort
to
establish
that
he
wished
to
or
did
in
fact,
provide
a
benefit
to
Mr.
Kaufman,
and
in
every
possible
way
left
the
impression
with
the
Court
that
he
had
not
intended
to
benefit
Mr.
Kaufman
either.
In
some
way
Mr.
Kaufman
had
benefited
himself,
or
appropriated
funds
to
himself,
as
Mr.
Workman
saw
the
situation.
The
action
which
initiated
this
was
the
"voluntary
disclosure”
by
Mr.
Workman,
on
behalf
of
the
company.
But,
all
that
could
accomplish
in
the
primary
instance,
would
have
been
the
prospect
of
reassessments
against
the
company.
We
are
not
aware
if
such
company
reassessments
were
struck,
and
as
noted
earlier,
that
has
no
bearing
on
this
appeal.
It
was
therefore,
the
Minister's
decision
to
take
the
second
step
—
and
reassess
Mr.
Kaufman.
And
so,
can
it
be
said,
that
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case
the
Minister's
assessment
against
Mr.
Kaufman
has
been
substantiated
.
In
my
view,
the
answer
to
that
question
must
be
"no",
to
the
degree
at
least,
that
Mr.
Kaufman
appears
no
more
likely
a
prospect
than
does
Mr.
Workman
himself,
or
perhaps
even
Wendi
Kaufman.
But
that
is
not
the
question
to
be
asked.
The
real
question
remains
—
has
Mr.
Kaufman
during
this
hearing
cast
sufficient
doubt
upon
the
Minister's
assessment
against
him,
that
the
onus
for
overturning
the
assessment
has
been
fulfilled
"on
the
balance
of
probabilities’,
when
the
provisions
of
section
15
of
the
Act,
as
it
relates
to
this
appeal
read?
Section
15
-
Appropriation
of
property
to
shareholder.
(1)
Where
in
a
taxation
year
(a)
a
payment
has
been
made
by
a
corporation
to
a
shareholder
otherwise
than
pursuant
to
a
bona
fide
business
transaction,
(b)
funds
or
property
of
a
corporation
have
been
appropriated
in
any
manner
whatever
to,
or
for
the
benefit
of,
a
shareholder,
or
(c)
a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
a
corporation,
The
amount
or
value
thereof
shall,
.
.
.
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
shareholder
for
the
year.
(2)
Shareholder
debt.
Where
a
person
.
.
.
is
a
shareholder
of
a
particular
corporation,
.
.
.
and
the
person
.
.
.
received
a
loan
.
.
.
the
amount
of
the
loan
or
indebtedness
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
for
the
year
of
the
person
.
.
.
unless
(a)
the
loan
was
made
or
the
indebtedness
arose
(ii)
in
respect
of
an
employee
of
the
lender
or
creditor
or
the
spouse
of
an
employee
of
the
lender
or
creditor
to
enable
or
assist
the
employee
or
his
spouse
to
acquire
a
dwelling
for
his
habitation,
and
bona
fide
arrangements
were
made,
at
the
time
the
loan
was
made
or
the
indebtedness
arose,
for
repayment
thereof
within
a
reasonable
time;
We
turn
to
the
Minister’s
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
again
to
determine
just
what
challenge
the
appellant
needed
to
meet:
(B)
Statutory
Dispositions
Upon
Which
the
Respondent
Relies
and
the
Reasons
he
Intends
to
Submit
6.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Respondent,
relies,
inter
alia,
upon
Sections
6(1)(a),
15(1),
15(2),
56(2),
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1970-71-72,
ch.
63,
as
amended;
7.
Respondent
duly
added
to
Appellant's
initially
declared
income
the
amounts
of
benefits
identified
above;
8.
As
normal
practice,
the
Appellant
made
the
expenditures
above
mentioned,
and
upon
receipt
of
the
invoices
authorized
the
payment
of
the
amounts
by
the
company;
9.
He
has
not
established
that
he
was
not
the
sole
proprietor
of
the
residence
in
which
major
renovations
were
paid
for
by
the
company
during
the
1980
taxation
years;
10.
It
was
not
the
intention
of
the
company
of
its
principal
shareholder
to
benefit
his
daughter
Mrs.
Wendy
Workman,
the
wife
of
the
appellant,
in
respect
to
the
amounts
and
advantages
identified
above.
Taking
then
in
the
reverse
order,
it
is
my
conclusion
that:
(1)
The
appellant
has
not
established
that
it
was
"the
intention
of
the
company,
or
its
principal
shareholder
to
benefit
his
daughter
Mrs.
Wendy
Workman,
the
wife
of
the
appellant
in
respect
to
the
amounts
and
advantages
identified
above”.
It
may
well
have
been
Mr.
Workman's
intention
to
do
so
—
but
equally
it
may
well
have
been
his
intention
to
benefit
Mr.
Kaufman
(Mr.
Workman's
protests
to
the
contrary),
if
indeed
Mr.
Workman
intended
to
benefit
anybody.
The
result
of
that,
is
simply
that
Mr.
Kaufman
has
not
succeeded
in
disproving
that
particular
assumption
of
the
Minister.
It
cannot
be
said
that
this
is
in
fabour
of
Mr.
Kaufman's
contention.
(2)
Certainly
Mr.
Kaufman
has
not
established
that
he
was
not
the
“sole
proprietor
of
the
residence".
It
is
quite
clear
however,
that
he
was
at
least
a
proprietor
—
together
with
his
wife.
I
fail
to
see
how
this
favours
the
appeal
of
Mr.
Kaufman.
(3)
There
is
certainly
some
evidence
—
that
from
the
testimony
of
Mr.
Workman
and
Mr.
Bouchard,
that
the
initial
("N")
to
be
seen
on
the
invoices
does
represent
some
recognition
and
acceptance
of
these
by
Mr.
Kaufman.
It
is
fair
to
assume,
I
believe,
that
after
having
so
initialled
them
and
left
them
with
the
financial
section
of
the
company,
that
Mr.
Kaufman
intended
that
they
be
paid
out
of
company
funds.
To
whatever
degree
that
can
be
described
as
"authorized
for
payment",
it
does
not
favour
Mr.
Kaufman's
case.
As
I
see
it
therefore
based
on
points
(1)
and
(2)
above
there
is
little
reason
to
question
the
validity
of
the
Minister's
assessment
against
Mr.
Kaufman,
simply
based
on
subsection
15(2)
of
the
Act
alone,
with
respect
to
the
$30,000
loan
—
the
outstanding
balance
of
which
was
$22,170.80
as
of
October
30,
1980.
Turning
to
the
"expense"
amounts
which
form
the
base
of
point
(3)
above,
and
are
also
reflected
to
some
degree
in
point
(2)
above,
I
fail
to
see
how
the
amounts
involved
can
properly
fall
under
either
paragraphs
15(1)(a)
or
15(1)(b)
of
the
Act.
No
"payment"
was
made
to
Mr.
Kaufman,
in
the
strictest
sense
of
the
word;
and
due
to
his
limited
responsibility
and
authority
in
the
company,
it
cannot
be
said
that
he
"appropriated"
the
amounts.
It
remains
then
to
see
if
the
provisions
of
paragraph
15(1)(c)
encompass
the
circum-
stances
of
the
assessment
and
the
appeal
—
"a
benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred
on
a
shareholder
by
a
corporation”.
There
can
be
little
question
that
a
"benefit
or
advantage
has
been
conferred"
on
Mr.
Kaufman
by
virtue
of
the
fact
that
personal
obligations
had
been
paid
out
of
corporate
funds.
Mr.
Kaufman's
argument
in
this
appeal
comes
down
to
challenging
the
portion
of
paragraph
15(1)(c)
which
reads:
”.
.
.
by
a
corporation".
He
says,
in
effect,
that
any
"benefit"
which
might
be
seen
for
him
in
the
transactions
at
issue
arose
out
of
"a
payment
or
transfer
of
property
made
pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of"
—
Mr.
Workman
(see
subsection
56(2)).
The
extension
of
that
argument
for
the
appellant,
if
I
properly
comprehend
it,
would
be
that
he
(Mr.
Kaufman)
would
escape
taxation
on
the
amounts
at
issue
if
the
court
could
find
that
a
payment
or
transfer
of
property
was
made
from
company
funds
pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of
Mr.
Workman.
I
am
quite
prepared
to
find
that
Mr.
Workman
was
involved,
but
I
fail
to
see
how
that
provides
relief
for
Mr.
Kaufman
since
the
provisions
of
section
15
of
the
Act
are
still
at
work
—
and
there
can
be
no
doubt
that
the
“benefit
or
advantage"
was
conferred
on
him
by
the
corporation.
Mr.
Workman,
in
my
view,
did
not
confer
on
Mr.
Kaufman
—
a
“benefit
or
advantage".
That
was
"conferred"
by
the
corporation,
and
it
seems
to
me
quite
irrelevant
to
the
determination
of
this
appeal,
whether
the
corporation
so
conferred
"pursuant
to
the
direction
of,
or
with
the
concurrence
of
.
.
.”
Mr.
Workman.
Whether
the
Minister
could
also
assess
Mr.
Workman,
based
on
the
application
of
subsection
56(2),
in
addition
to
the
assessment
at
issue
against
Mr.
Kaufman,
it
is
not
necessary
for
this
Court
to
decide
at
this
time.
But
whatever
involvement
may
be
perceived
by
Mr.
Workman
in
the
transaction
at
issue,
that
involvement
does
not
obviate
the
tax
liability
to
be
imposed
on
Mr.
Kaufman
under
section
15
of
the
Act.
I
turn
now
to
the
penalties
imposed.
While
no
specific
mention
was
made
of
it,
I
am
assuming
that
for
some
reason
—
possibly
the
"voluntary
disclosure"
penalty
was
not
imposed
for
1980.
In
my
view,
nothing
arose
during
the
course
of
the
trial
which
would
necessarily
restrict
the
Minister's
right
to
impose
the
penalties,
and
I
am
satisfied
that
Mr.
Kaufman
was
at
least
aware
that
some
benefit
was
accruing
to
him.
But
the
Minister’s
assumption
that
Mr.
Kaufman
had
been
"grossly
negligent"
in
not
reporting
as
"income"
the
benefits
he
enjoyed
during
the
years
1978
and
1979
has
not
been
substantiated.
The
“benefit”
to
Mr.
Kaufman
can
be
seen
in
a
review
of
all
the
facts
for
the
hearing,
and
there
can
be
no
doubt
that
Mr.
Kaufman
was
aware
he
could
be
the
recipient
of
some
such
benefit.
However
the
possibility
that
in
Mr.
Kaufman’s
mind
these
amounts
might
be
part
of
his
"shareholder's
account”,
or
that
they
would
be
covered
by
"dividends",
or
dealt
with
in
some
other
way
was
not
totally
eliminated
by
the
Minister
—
and
that
rests
with
the
Minister
in
order
to
firmly
establish
a
charge
of
"gross
negligence"
on
the
basis
that
Mr.
Kaufman
should
have
been
aware
these
amounts
were
income
in
1978
and
1979.
The
penalties
will
be
deleted.
The
appeal
is
allowed
in
part,
in
order
that
the
penalties
imposed
for
the
years
1978
and
1979
shall
be
deleted.
In
all
other
respects,
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
No
costs
are
to
be
awarded.
Appeal
allowed
in
part.