Bowman
T.C.J.:
These
appeals,
which
were
heard
together
involved
essentially
the
same
issue
—
the
amount
that
Mr.
Skold
should
have
remitted
to
the
Receiver
General
in
respect
of
employees’
obligations
to
pay
income
tax,
employment
insurance
premiums
and
Canada
Pension
Plan
premiums.
The
issue
is,
fortunately,
not
one
that
comes
before
this
court
very
often.
If
this
case
illustrates
anything,
it
is
the
kind
of
problem
that
employers
create
for
themselves
when
they
undertake
to
pay
an
employee
a
net
amount
and
to
ensure
that
amounts
that
are
normally
withheld
from
the
employee’s
salary
are
paid.
The
problem
is
exacerbated
where,
as
here,
the
arrangement
is
a
loose
and
badly
defined
oral
one.
Mr.
Skold
in
1996
and
part
of
1997
carried
on
business
as
a
sole
proprietorship
under
the
name
of
Grand
Forks
Recycling
&
Metals.
He
had
a
number
of
employees
but
the
only
ones
with
which
these
appeals
are
concerned
were
Ian
Taylor,
Ronald
Hokum
and
Dennis
McLellan.
I
propose
to
say
nothing
more
about
Ronald
Hokum
and
Dennis
McLellan.
The
difference
between
the
appellant’s
figures
and
the
respondent’s
is
minimal
—
$62.13
in
the
case
of
Mr.
Hokum
and
$23.69
in
the
case
of
Mr.
McLellan.
No
evidence
was
adduced
to
cast
any
doubt
on
the
respondent’s
computation
of
the
amounts
of
EI
and
CPP
premiums
that
should
have
been
remitted
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
these
two
employees.
The
matter
of
Mr.
Ian
Taylor
is
somewhat
more
complex.
Mr.
Skold
hired
Mr.
Taylor
to
manage
the
business.
He
agreed
to
pay
him
$800
every
two
weeks,
“before
taxes”
by
which
he
meant,
apparently,
that
Mr.
Taylor
would
take
home
$800
every
two
weeks
and
he
(Mr.
Skold)
would
send
the
tax
department
the
appropriate
income
tax,
El
and
CPP
premiums.
This
involves
an
operation
known
as
“grossing
up”
1.e.,
determining,
either
by
a
mechanical
series
of
mathematical
computations
or
by
the
use
of
a
formula
the
gross
amount
necessary
to
ensure
that
the
employee
takes
home
the
net
amount
agreed
to
(in
this
case,
$800)
and
the
appropriate
amount
of
tax
and
El
and
CPP
premiums
are
remitted
to
the
Receiver
General.
The
calculations
were
evidently
made
by
the
bookkeeper,
who
suffered
a
heart
attack
some
time
in
1996,
at
which
time
Mr.
Taylor
took
over
the
bookkeeping
but
was
apparently
unable
to
do
so
and
it
was
taken
over
by
Mr.
Skold.
Mr.
Skold
stated
that
the
grossed
up
amounts
for
each
two
week
period
that
should
have
been
calculated
was
$883.73
($800
+
$37.00
income
tax,
$26.07
El
and
$20.66
CPP).
From
November
16
to
December
31,
1996
the
net
amount
of
salary
for
Mr.
Taylor
was
reduced
to
$750
and
according
to
Mr.
Skold
the
grossed
up
amount
for
that
period
should
have
been
$811.63
($750
+
$19.05
income
tax,
$23.94
EI
and
$18.64
CPP).
For
the
first
three
months
of
1997
the
figures
according
to
Mr.
Skold
were
virtually
the
same
($811.77).
Mr.
Edward
Kandulski,
a
trust
examiner
with
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
concluded
that
the
grossed
up
amount
for
each
two
week
period
should
have
been
$1,006.44
($800
+
$152.65
income
tax,
$29.69
El
and
$24.10
CPP)
(he
subsequently
adjusted
this
to
take
into
account
the
reduction
to
$750
in
November
of
1996).
In
fact,
it
appears
that
the
remittances
made
were
substantially
the
same
as
those
that
Mr.
Kandulski
had
calculated.
Mr.
Skold
decided
that
they
were
too
high
and
claimed
a
refund
of
$3,004.83.
The
assessments
in
issue
deny
him
that
refund.
The
T-4
slip
that
he
prepared
in
respect
of
Mr.
Taylor’s
remuneration
appears
to
be
consistent
with
the
figures
that
I
have
set
out
above,
as
follows:
|
Employment
income
before
deductions:
|
$20,960.91
|
|
Employee’s
CPP
contributions:
|
$
|
488.94
|
|
Employee’s
EI
premiums:
|
$
|
605.32
|
|
Income
tax
deducted
|
$
|
803.63
|
|
Mr.
Kandulski’s
figures
are:
|
|
|
Employment
income
|
$24,054.90
|
|
Income
tax
deductions
|
$
3,719.67
|
|
EI
premiums
|
$
|
709.62
|
|
CPP
contributions
|
$
|
575.61
|
The
difference
between
the
two
computations,
$3,093.99
is
within
$89.16
of
the
refund
claimed
by
Mr.
Skold
—
virtually
the
difference
between
the
Department
and
Mr.
Skold
in
respect
of
Mr.
Holtum
and
Mr.
McLellan.
The
difference
is
directly
attributable
to
the
fact
that
Mr.
Kandulski
calculated
the
amount
of
the
income
tax,
CPP
and
EI
remittances
on
the
basis
that
Mr.
Taylor
was
a
single
person
with
no
dependents.
He
did
so
on
the
basis
of
subsections
227(2)
and
(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Subsection
153(1)
reads
in
part:
(1)
Every
person
paying
at
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
(a)
salary
or
wages
or
other
remuneration,
shall
deduct
or
withhold
therefrom
such
amount
as
is
determined
in
accordance
with
prescribed
rules
and
shall,
at
such
time
as
is
prescribed,
remit
that
amount
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
the
payee’s
tax
for
the
year
under
this
Part
or
Part
XI.3,
as
the
case
may
be,
Subsections
227(2)
and
(3)
read:
(2)
Return
filed
with
person
withholding.
Where
a
person
(in
this
subsection
referred
to
as
the
“payer”)
is
required
by
regulations
made
under
subsection
153(1)
to
deduct
or
withhold
from
a
payment
to
another
person
an
amount
on
account
of
that
other
person’s
tax
for
the
year,
that
other
person
shall,
from
time
to
time
as
prescribed,
file
a
return
with
the
payer
in
prescribed
from.
Related
Sections:
S.
227(3);
s.
235.
Regulation:
107(1).
Prescribed
Form:
TDI.
(3)
Failure
to
file
return.
Every
person
who
fails
to
file
a
return
as
required
by
subsection
(2)
is
liable
to
have
the
deduction
or
withholding
under
section
153
on
account
of
the
person’s
tax
made
as
though
the
person
were
an
unmarried
person
without
dependants.
The
“return”
referred
to
in
subsections
227(2)
and
(3)
is
a
form
TD]
which
sets
out
the
employee’s
credits,
deductions,
exemptions,
dependents
and
so
forth.
No
TDI
form
was
filed
and
accordingly
Mr.
Kandulski
was
right
in
calculating
the
grossed
up
amount
as
he
did.
Mr.
Skold’s
subsequent
revision
of
the
figures
and
his
claim
for
a
refund
was
based
upon
the
view
that
Mr.
Taylor
was
married
with
a
wife
with
a
medical
disability
and
one
child.
Even
if
this
is
true,
and
I
see
no
reason
to
doubt
it,
no
form
TDI
was
filed
and
subsection
227(3)
is
quite
explicit.
The
conclusion
to
be
drawn
from
this
is
that
employers
who
agree
to
pay
employees
a
net
amount,
and
to
take
care
of
the
tax,
El
and
CPP
remittances
(i.e.,
to
start
from
a
net
amount
and
work
up
to
a
gross
amount,
rather
than
the
more
usual
method
of
starting
from
a
gross
wage
and
making
deductions)
should
have
the
arrangement
with
the
employee
spelled
out
specifically
and
in
detail
and
the
proper
TDI
form
filed.
The
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
concerned
with
private
contractual
arrangements
of
the
type
involved
here.
It
is
concerned
with
the
collection
of
the
appropriate
amount
of
tax
from
the
employee’s
salary
or
wages.
If
the
employer
remitted
too
much
on
behalf
of
the
employee’s
tax,
and
the
Minister
were
to
refund
the
excess
to
the
employee
as
an
overpayment
of
tax,
I
should
think
the
employer’s
recourse,
if
any,
would
be
against
the
employee
and
not
against
the
Minister.
The
appeals
are
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.