Docket: 2013-2296(GST)I
BETWEEN:
THE CHILDREN'S CLEAN AIR NETWORK SOCIETY,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
____________________________________________________________________
Appeal
heard on October 24, 2013, at Halifax, Nova Scotia
By: The Honourable
Justice Campbell J. Miller
Appearances:
Agent for the Appellant:
|
Norman
Collins
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Melanie Petrunia
|
____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The Appeals from the assessments made under the Excise
Tax Act for the periods April
25, 2009 to April 30, 2009 and May 1, 2009 to April 30, 2010, are allowed and the assessments are referred back to
the Minister of National Revenue for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis
that the Appellant, during these
periods, is entitled to claim Input Tax Credits of 30% of the tax paid by the
Appellant for goods and services acquired by the Appellant in its sponsorship
programs.
The Appeals from the assessments made under the Excise Tax Act for the periods May 1,
2010 to April 30, 2011 and May 1, 2011 to April 30, 2012 are dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of November 2013.
"Campbell J. Miller"
Citation: 2013 TCC 352
Date: 20131101
Docket: 2013-2296(GST)I
BETWEEN:
THE CHILDREN'S CLEAN AIR NETWORK SOCIETY,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
C. Miller J.
[1]
The Children’s Clean
Air Network Society ("CCAN") appeals assessments under Part IX of the
Excise Tax Act (the "Act") for four periods covering
April 25, 2009 to April 30, 2009, May 1, 2009 to April 30, 2010, May 1, 2010 to
April 30, 2011, and May 1, 2011 to April 30, 2012. For the first two periods
CCAN operated as a Not-For-Profit Organization ("NPO"), while for the
last two periods it operated as a registered charity, having registered as such
effective July 31, 2010. CCAN filed its Goods and Service Tax ("GST")
returns on the basis it collected and remitted Harmonized Sales Tax
("HST") on funding it received from sponsors: it also claimed Input
Tax Credits ("ITC"). The Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") assessed on the basis that CCAN collected HST in error,
was not entitled to ITC’s as it carried on no commercial activity, but the
Canada Revenue Agency ("CRA") did allow the public service body rebate for the periods that CCAN was a charity.
FACTS
[2]
CCAN commenced its
activity in 2009 as a NPO and operated as such until obtaining registered
charity status in July 2010. The following is taken from its website:
The
Children’s Clean Air Network is a network of like-minded partners promoting
"IDLE-FREE for our kids". Their goal is to help "North America
turn off its tailpipe" – reducing needless vehicle emissions, ultimately
saving billions of dollars in fuel and cutting millions of tons of greenhouse
gas.
…
Partner
organizations include schools, businesses, media outlets, and health and
environment organizations.
Needless
vehicle emissions impact the health and future of children and are a significant
waste of resources. The Children’s Clean Air Network seeks to inspire the
public and empower children to be heard on this issue.
…
Mission
To reduce greenhouse gas and improve air quality by reducing vehicle
emissions.
Vision
Excess vehicle emissions will become as socially unacceptable as
second hand smoke.
Purpose
To empower kids to transform driver behavior. Kids need a voice on
climate change and poor air quality.
Strategy
To partner with business, schools and media to inspire through simple
and consistent messaging.
[3]
Mr. Collins, the former
secretary-treasurer, testified on behalf of the Appellant and described in more
detail its operations. According to Mr. Collins, CCAN obtained funds from
donations or sponsorships. Donations were just that, monies received from
donors for the general benefit and good purposes of the organization, used at
CCAN’s sole discretion. Sponsorships involved funds received from a business
with a specific project identified for the funds, the project providing some
degree of advertising for the sponsor as part of the project. So, for example,
MicMac Mall would agree to sponsor a school event where CCAN would use the sponsors’
monies to acquire signage, posters, tailgate magnetic stickers etc., and make a
presentation at the school regarding IDLE-FREE. Mr. Collins produced one of the
tailgate magnets (approximately 8¨ x 4¨) which displayed in large letters:
"IDLE-FREE For our kids." and in smaller letters CCAN and MICMAC
MALL.
[4]
Using the MicMac Mall
example, CCAN would account for the $4,000 received from this sponsor as $3,478
funding and $522 GST. CCAN would purchase goods (for example the magnets,
signs, banners etc.) for $3,642 including $420 HST and would realize a margin,
as Mr. Collins called it, of $358.00. CCAN would then claim an ITC of the $420
and would remit $122 to the CRA. It filed on this basis for three periods and
this filing was accepted.
[5]
In March 2012, CCAN
realized the charity was not living up to expectations and took appropriate
steps to wind up, including donating most of the balance of its funds, which it
anticipated by way of receiving a GST refund (based on the previous acceptance
of three years worth of HST filings). However, CRA commenced a review in August
2012 and ultimately determined that CCAN had been incorrectly filing and
assessed prior periods denying the ITC’s, though for the latter two periods
allowed the public service body rebate to CCAN as a charity.
POSITIONS
[6]
The Respondent’s
position is that CCAN collected and remitted the tax in error as the supply was
not a taxable supply, as it was not made in the course of commercial activity
as required by the definition of commercial activity in section 123 of the
Act, and is not eligible for ITC’s. Further, if found to be engaged in a
commercial activity, section 135 of the Act would have applied to CCAN,
again rendering the collection of tax incorrect as no supply would have been
made. The fact is tax was collected and remitted on sponsorship monies both
while a NPO and a charity. The issue is whether CCAN is entitled to any ITC’s
either as a NPO or as a charity.
[7]
The Appellant argues
that it was engaged in a commercial activity and therefore appropriately
collected tax and should consequently be allowed ITC’s. It also made a fairness
argument that by assessing CCAN denying the ITC’s, the charity is being more
harshly treated than a for-profit business and the CRA is getting an unfair
windfall.
ANALYSIS
[8]
I will look at the
situation at the two different stages of the CCAN, both as a NPO and as a
charity. I have set out the pertinent provisions of the Act in Appendix
A.
[9]
The first issue to
determine is whether the tax collected and remitted by CCAN was done so in
error. The CRA claims so because the CCAN did not make a taxable supply, as it
was not made in the course of a commercial activity as required by the
definition of taxable supply. I am going to sidestep this issue for the moment
as I find section 135 of the Act applies to the sponsorship arrangement
entered into between CCAN and its sponsors. The effect of this is to deem CCAN
not to have made any supply.
[10]
CCAN supplied to its
sponsors the service of advertising as part of a campaign to meet its objective
of the reduction of car idling: the advertising was in the form of the sponsor’s
name on CCAN campaign materials. I find that the sponsor’s sole use was to
publicize its business. The situation therefore falls squarely within section
135 of the Act. No supply was made and therefore no tax should have been
collected either as a NPO or a charity.
[11]
The fact is tax was
collected. Is CCAN entitled, either initially as a NPO, or subsequently as a
charity to claim ITC’s?
[12]
Firstly, dealing with
the NPO, this is where the concept of commercial activity becomes important, as
to a claim for ITC’s. To claim ITC’s the goods acquired by CCAN while a NPO
must have been acquired for "consumption, use or supply in the course of
commercial activities" and then only to the extent (percentage wise) of
such use. Using the tailgate magnets as an example, they were bought to hand
out at CCAN’s IDLE FREE campaign at a school. These magnets have the sponsor’s
name on them. Were they used or consumed in the course of CCAN’s commercial
activity? This begs the question as to what was CCAN’s commercial activity.
[13]
The CRA argues CCAN had
no commercial activity, yet CCAN charged a sponsor not just the cost of
supplies for the IDLE FREE campaign but built in something extra, which Mr.
Collins called margin. If its commercial activity was selling advertising, then
buying the tailgate magnets with a sponsor’s name on them can be readily viewed
as being consumed as part of that commercial activity.
[14]
The Respondent relies
on the case of Saskatchewan Pesticide Container Management Assn. v R., where
Justice Margeson, in denying there was any commercial activity, appeared to
emphasize:
1. As
a Not for Profit Organization it was not out to make money.
2. There
was no business plan.
3. No
fees were ever charged.
4. Steps
to sell goods were preparatory only.
5. The result of the appellant’s actions was to meet their
stated objective of a clean environment.
[15]
It appears Justice
Margeson concludes that as a NPO, by its very objects and purpose, it is not
out to make money and therefore cannot be engaged in commercial activity. I
disagree. There is no reasonable expectation of profit test in the definition
of commercial activity that would preclude a NPO from carrying on a commercial
activity. Justice Margeson’s reliance on the other factors mentioned above hold
more sway, but they are not reflective of the situation before me.
[16]
Mr. Collins advised
that CCAN did have a business plan, it did charge the sponsors a fee beyond
simply recuperating costs, and, while it was all to further their NPO noble
cause, this is not of itself sufficient to deny a commercial activity. CCAN had
something of value a sponsor was prepared to buy – publicity. This is
commercial in nature.
[17]
The trickier question
is to what extent (percentage wise) was the product on which CCAN paid GST used
by CCAN in the commercial activity. Staying with the example of the tailgate
magnet with the sponsor’s name on it, was the purpose of the activity of
handing out these tailgate magnets to give the sponsor advertising or to
promote the good cause of IDLE FREE? Clearly it was both.
[18]
How does one put a
percentage on the commercial use versus what I will call the charitable use?
From a common sense perspective, CCAN’s mission, its purpose was a charitable
cause, and the commercial sponsor arrangement was a way to accommodate this
purpose. I find the majority of the use, therefore, of the supplies was
non-commercial. This is an Informal Procedure case and I see no need, on
balance, to recall the Parties to attempt to justify what a minority percentage
of commercial use should be. I simply find a reasonable percentage to be 30%.
[19]
I turn now to the
period during which CCAN operated as a charity. As such, it would have been
required to account for the sales tax under the mandatory regime of section
225.1 of the Act. Pursuant to subparagraph 225.1(A)(b.1) of the Act, net
tax includes all tax collected by mistake. There is no ability to claim ITC’s
to offset that tax under the mandatory regime. The silver lining is that CCAN,
as a charity, is eligible for a rebate pursuant to section 259 of the Act,
which the CRA has provided.
[20]
CCAN argued that
fairness should preclude the CRA from assessing as it has. Firstly, because the
CRA accepted returns as filed for three years, leading CCAN to believe it was
filing correctly. CCAN argues that it is now unfair to go back and say they
were collecting tax incorrectly. Pursuant to section 298 of the Act, the
Minister has four years to assess. Further, section 299 of the Act reads
as follows:
(1) The Minister is
not bound by any return, application or information provided by or on behalf of
any person and may make an assessment, notwithstanding any return, application
or information so provided or that no return, application or information has
been provided.
(2) Liability under
this Part to pay or remit any tax, penalty, interest or other amount is not
affected by an incorrect or incomplete assessment or by the fact that no
assessment has been made.
(3) An assessment,
subject to being vacated on an objection or appeal under this Part and subject
to a reassessment, shall be deemed to be valid and binding.
(3.1) Where a person
(referred to in this subsection as the “body”) that is not an individual or a
corporation is assessed in respect of any matter,
(a) the assessment is
not invalid only because one or more other persons (each of which is referred
to in this subsection as a “representative”) who are liable for obligations of
the body did not receive a notice of the assessment;
(b) the assessment is
binding on each representative of the body, subject to a reassessment of the
body and the rights of the body to object to or appeal from the assessment
under this Part; and
(c) an assessment of a
representative in respect of the same matter is binding on the representative
subject only to a reassessment of the representative and the rights of the
representative to object to or appeal from the assessment of the representative
under this Part on the grounds that the representative is not a person who is
liable to pay or remit an amount to which the assessment of the body relates,
the body has been reassessed in respect of that matter or the assessment of the
body in respect of that matter has been vacated.
(4) An assessment
shall, subject to being reassessed or vacated as a result of an objection or
appeal under this Part, be deemed to be valid and binding, notwithstanding any
error, defect or omission therein or in any proceeding under this Part relating
thereto.
(5) An appeal from an
assessment shall not be allowed by reasons only of an irregularity,
informality, omission or error on the part of any person in the observation of
any directory provision of this Part.
[21]
The Minister has acted
within the constraints set out in the Act. The Minister is not subject
to any estoppel argument.
[22]
Secondly, CCAN
maintains that the treatment, as assessed, puts the charity in a worse position
than had it been a for profit enterprise, as well as providing the CRA with a
windfall. With respect, I disagree. What Mr. Collins appears to ignore in his
analysis is the fact that a business serves as a conduit of the tax; it is not
the end user. The charity as neither fish nor fowl, not wholly conduit nor end
user, is given something of a compromise approach under the regime set out in
section 225.1 of the Act. It is not appropriate in any fairness
argument to compare the charity and the commercial business.
[23]
In summary, the Appeal
is allowed for the two periods during which CCAN operated as a NPO and the
matter is referred back to the Minister for reconsideration and reassessment on
the basis that during these periods CCAN is entitled to claim ITC’s of 30% of
the tax paid by CCAN for goods and services acquired by it for use in its
sponsorship programs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of November 2013.
"Campbell J. Miller"
APPENDIX A
Section 123:
“supply” means, subject to sections 133 and 134, the provision of
property or a service in any manner, including sale, transfer, barter,
exchange, licence, rental, lease, gift or disposition;
…
“taxable supply” means a supply that is made in the course of a commercial
activity;
…
“commercial activity” of a person
means
(a) a
business carried on by the person (other than a business carried on without a
reasonable expectation of profit by an individual, a personal trust or a
partnership, all of the members of which are individuals), except to the extent
to which the business involves the making of exempt supplies by the person,
(b) an
adventure or concern of the person in the nature of trade (other than an
adventure or concern engaged in without a reasonable expectation of profit by
an individual, a personal trust or a partnership, all of the members of which
are individuals), except to the extent to which the adventure or concern
involves the making of exempt supplies by the person, and
(c) the
making of a supply (other than an exempt supply) by the person of real property
of the person, including anything done by the person in the course of or in
connection with the making of the supply;
135. For the purposes
of this Part, where a public sector body makes
(a) a supply of a service, or
(b) a supply by way of licence of the use of a copyright,
trade-mark, trade-name or other similar property of the body,
to a person who is the
sponsor of an activity of the body for use by the person exclusively in
publicizing the person’s business, the supply by the body of the service or the use of the property shall be deemed not to be a supply, except where it may
reasonably be regarded that the consideration for the supply is primarily for a
service of advertising by means of radio or television or in a newspaper,
magazine or other publication published periodically or for a prescribed service.
…
165. (1) Subject to this Part, every recipient of a taxable
supply made in Canada shall pay to Her Majesty in right of Canada tax in
respect of the supply calculated at the rate of 5% on the value of the
consideration for the supply.
(2) Subject
to this Part, every recipient of a taxable supply made in a participating province
shall pay to Her Majesty in right of Canada, in addition to the tax imposed by
subsection (1), tax in respect of the supply calculated at the tax rate for
that province on the value of the consideration for the supply.
(3) The
tax rate in respect of a taxable supply that is a zero‑rated supply is
0%.
(4) Subsection
(2) does not apply to a supply of property or a service made in the Nova Scotia
offshore area or the Newfoundland offshore area unless the supplier makes the
supply in the course of an offshore activity or the recipient of the supply
acquires the property or service for consumption, use or supply in the course
of an offshore activity.
…
169. (1) Subject to this Part, where a person acquires or
imports property or a service or brings it into a participating province and,
during a reporting period of the person during which the person is a
registrant, tax in respect of the supply, importation or bringing in becomes
payable by the person or is paid by the person without having become payable,
the amount determined by the following formula is an input tax credit of the
person in respect of the property or service for the period:
A × B
where
A
is the tax
in respect of the supply, importation or bringing in, as the case may be, that
becomes payable by the person during the reporting period or that is paid by
the person during the period without having become payable; and
B
is
(a) where the tax is
deemed under subsection 202(4) to have been paid in respect of the property on
the last day of a taxation year of the person, the extent (expressed as a
percentage of the total use of the property in the course of commercial
activities and businesses of the person during that taxation year) to which the
person used the property in the course of commercial activities of the person
during that taxation year,
(b) where the property or
service is acquired, imported or brought into the province, as the case may
be, by the person for use in improving capital property of the person, the
extent (expressed as a percentage) to which the person was using the capital
property in the course of commercial activities of the person immediately after
the capital property or a portion thereof was last acquired or imported by the
person, and
(c) in any other case, the
extent (expressed as a percentage) to which the person acquired or imported the
property or service or brought it into the participating province, as the case
may be, for consumption, use or supply in the course of commercial activities
of the person.
…
221. (1) Every person who makes a taxable supply shall, as
agent of Her Majesty in right of Canada, collect the tax under Division II
payable by the recipient in respect of the supply.
…
(4) In
subsection (3), “continuous outbound
freight movement” and “shipper” have
the same meanings as in Part VII of Schedule VI.
…
225.1 (1) In this section, “specified supply” means a taxable supply other than
(a) a
supply by way of sale of real property or capital property;
(b) a
supply deemed under section 175.1 or 181.1 or subsection 183(5) or (6) to have
been made;
(c) a
supply to which subsection 172(2) or 173(1) applies; and
(d) a
supply deemed under subsection 177(1) or (1.2) to have been made by an agent.
(2) Subject
to subsection (7), the net tax for a particular reporting period of a charity
that is a registrant is equal to the positive or negative amount determined by
the formula
A - B
where
A
is the total of
(a) 60%
of the total of all amounts, each of which is an amount collectible by the charity
that, in the particular reporting period, became collectible or was collected
before having become collectible, by the charity as or on account of tax in
respect of specified supplies made by the charity,
(b) the
total of all amounts that became collectible and all other amounts collected by
the charity in the particular reporting period as or on account of tax in
respect of
(i) supplies by way of sale of capital
property or real property made by the charity,
(ii) supplies by the charity to which subsection 172(2)
or 173(1) applies, and
(iii) supplies made on behalf of another
person for whom the charity acts as agent and
(A) that are deemed under subsection 177(1)
or (1.2) to have been made by the charity and not by the other person, or
(B) in respect of which the charity has made
an election under subsection 177(1.1),
(b.1) the
total of all amounts each of which is an amount not included in paragraph (b) that was collected from a
person by the charity in the particular reporting period as or on account of
tax in circumstances in which the amount was not payable by the person, whether
the amount was paid by the person by mistake or otherwise,
(c) the
total of all amounts each of which is an amount in respect of supplies of real
property or capital property made by way of sale by or to the charity that is
required under subsection 231(3) or 232(3) to be added in determining the net
tax for the particular reporting period, and
(d) the
amount required under subsection 238.1(4) to be added in determining the net
tax for the particular reporting period; and
B
is the total of
(a) all
input tax credits of the charity for the particular reporting period and
preceding reporting periods in respect of
(i) real property acquired by the charity
by way of purchase,
(ii) personal property acquired, imported
or brought into a participating province by the charity for use as capital
property of the charity,
(iii) improvements to real property or
capital property of the charity,
(iv) tangible personal property (other than
property referred to in subparagraph (ii) or (iii)) that is acquired, imported
or brought into a participating province by the charity for the purpose of
supply by way of sale and is
(A) supplied by a person acting as agent for
the charity in circumstances in which subsection 177(1.1) applies, or
(B) deemed by subsection 177(1.2) to have
been supplied by an auctioneer acting as agent for the charity, and
(v) tangible personal property (other than
property referred to in subparagraph (ii) or (iii)) deemed under paragraph 180(e) to have been acquired by
the charity and under subsection 177(1) or (1.2) to have been supplied by the
charity
that are claimed in the return under this Division filed for the
particular reporting period,
(b) 60%
of the total of all amounts in respect of specified supplies that may be
deducted under subsection 232(3) in respect of adjustments, refunds or credits
given by the charity under subsection 232(2), or that may be deducted under
subsection 234(2) or (3), in determining the net tax for the particular
reporting period and that are claimed in the return under this Division filed
for that reporting period,
(b.1) [Repealed, 2007, c. 18, s. 26]
(b.2) the
total of all amounts that may, in determining the net tax for the particular
reporting period, be deducted under subsection 232(3) in respect of
adjustments, refunds or credits given by the charity under subsection 232(1) in
respect of specified supplies and that are claimed in the return under this
Division filed for that reporting period,
(c) the
total of all amounts in respect of supplies of real property or capital
property made by way of sale by the charity that may be deducted by the charity
under subsection 231(1) or 232(3) or section 234 in determining the net tax for
the particular reporting period and are claimed in the return under this
Division filed for that reporting period, and
(d) the
total of all amounts each of which is an input tax credit (other than an input
tax credit referred to in paragraph (a))
of the charity, for a preceding reporting period in respect of which this
subsection did not apply for the purpose of determining the net tax of the
charity, that the charity was entitled to include in determining its net tax
for that preceding reporting period and that is claimed in the return under
this Division filed for the particular reporting period.
…
(6) Where
a charity that makes supplies outside Canada, or zero-rated supplies, in the
ordinary course of a business or all or substantially all of whose supplies are
taxable supplies elects not to determine its net tax in accordance with
subsection (2), that subsection does not apply in respect of any reporting
period of the charity during which the election is in effect.
(7) An election under subsection (6) by a charity shall
(a) be
filed in prescribed manner with the Minister in prescribed form containing
prescribed information;
(b) set
out the day the election is to become effective, which day shall be the first
day of a reporting period of the charity;
(c) remain
in effect until a revocation of the election becomes effective; and
(d) be
filed
(i) where the first reporting period of the charity in which
the election is in effect is a fiscal year of the charity, on or before the
first day of the second fiscal quarter of that year or such later day as the
Minister may determine on application of the charity, and
(ii) in any other case, on or before the day on or before
which the return of the charity is required to be filed under this Division for
the first reporting period of the charity in which the election is in effect or
on such later day as the Minister may determine on application of the charity.
(8) An
election under subsection (6) by a charity may be revoked, effective on the
first day of a reporting period of the charity, provided that that day is not
earlier than one year after the election became effective and a notice of
revocation of the election in prescribed form containing prescribed information
is filed in prescribed manner with the Minister on or before the day on or
before which the return under this Division is required to be filed for the
last reporting period of the charity in which the election is in effect.
CITATION: 2013 TCC 352
COURT FILE NO.: 2013-2296(GST)I
STYLE OF CAUSE: THE CHILDREN'S CLEAN AIR NETWORK SOCIETY AND HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
PLACE OF HEARING: Halifax, Nova Scotia
DATE OF HEARING: October 24, 2013
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY: The
Honourable Justice Campbell J. Miller
DATE OF JUDGMENT: November 1, 2013
APPEARANCES:
Agent for the
Appellant:
|
Norman Collins
|
Counsel for the
Respondent:
|
Melanie Petrunia
|
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the Appellant: n/a
Name:
Firm:
For the
Respondent: William F. Pentney
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa,
Canada