Date: 19981113
Docket: 94-1081-IT-G; 94-1084-IT-G
BETWEEN:
AMÉDÉE DUGUAY,
DIANE L. DUGUAY,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
GARON, J.T.C.C.
[1] These are appeals from income tax assessments for the
1988, 1989 and 1990 taxation years in the case of the appellant
Amédée Duguay and for the 1988 and 1989 taxation
years in the case of the appellant Diane L. Duguay. In assessing
the appellants for those years, the Minister of National Revenue
reduced to nil the deduction for charitable gifts both of them
had claimed in respect of certain works of art in each of the
three years at issue. The appellants are also contesting the
penalties imposed in those assessments for the same taxation
years.
[2] The appeals were heard on common evidence. There was also
a common hearing for part of the evidence and argument in these
appeals and the appeals from income tax assessments of
Alain Côté (92-2773(IT)G), Louise Marcoux
(93-3160(IT)G) and François Langlois (92-1124(IT)G
and 94-3007(IT)G). It should be noted at this point that the
appellants in the instant appeals and the three individuals
referred to in the preceding sentence are part of a group of
about 200 people who purchased various works of art and
other property in order to give them to registered charities.
[3] For the purposes of these appeals, I consider it important
to begin by presenting a fairly detailed account of the testimony
of both appellants, which will be followed by a detailed account
of the evidence of Marc Levert, a key player in the events
on which this case is based. The version of events given by
Julien Carignan, a senior manager of an organization that
received gifts, will be considered at some length. Finally, an
exhaustive account will be presented of the testimony of Jacques
Demers, a Revenue Canada appeals officer, because he played a key
role in the issuing of the assessments under appeal. The
investigation he conducted was supplemented by Réjean
Juneau, on one topic only.
[4] I will begin with the evidence of the appellant
Amédée Duguay. He was a member of the
Sûreté du Québec for 32 years. He worked in
criminal investigations and, in particular, was assigned to
economic crimes for 12 years. At the time of the hearing, he was
retired. He is not a collector of jewellery or paintings.
[5] Mr. Duguay testified that he made gifts in 1986 and 1987.
At a meeting with Aline Tremblay, a credit officer at the
Royal Bank of Canada, Ms. Tremblay told him
that gifts could be made to charities in exchange for tax
receipts. Mr. Duguay added that he knew Ms. Tremblay, as she had
presented a seminar on economic crime in 1985 and 1986. She told
him that she knew a Marc Levert, who acquired works of art at
auctions and resold them at a low price — about
25 percent of their value. According to Mr. Duguay, he
knew that gifts of works of art were made to museums, but he was
not aware of the sale of paintings. He learned from
Aline Tremblay that works of art were purchased in lots at
auctions (for example, when someone went bankrupt) for low prices
and could thus be resold at low prices. She told him that a gift
could be made to a charity and that the amount of the gift would
correspond to the appraised value of the work of art. At that
point, given his job in the economic crimes section of the
Sûreté du Québec, Mr. Duguay was not certain
that he wanted to get involved in this activity without first
making sure that it was perfectly lawful.
[6] At a subsequent meeting in October or early November 1986,
Aline Tremblay introduced Mr. Duguay to Marc Levert. It was
then that Mr. Duguay decided to get involved in the process
of making gifts of works of art. Mr. Levert said that he had an
art gallery where he sold works of art and that he looked after
purchasing and reselling. Mr. Levert had not brought to the
meeting the works of art that were to be given and did not show
them to Mr. Duguay. Mr. Duguay said that Ms. Tremblay
handled everything and sent him the receipts for 1986, and that
he paid her and she in turn gave the payment to Mr. Levert.
According to an appraisal report obtained from Michel Champagne,
the value of the works of art given in 1986 was between $12,000
and $14,000. Mr. Duguay said that he had met Mr. Champagne
in the course of his job in the economic crimes section and
considered him an expert on paintings. He said that he gave Ms.
Tremblay $4,000 in cash. A receipt for $12,000 was issued by the
Fondation du Musée Louis-Hémon. It was
dated December 19, 1986, and Mr. Duguay said that he paid
within a few days after that. He told the investigators that Mr.
Levert had the relevant documents.
[7] Mr. Duguay said that he made gifts worth $3,000 or $4,000
in 1987. He said that he dealt directly with Mr. Levert and paid
about 25 percent of the value of the gifts in cash. However,
that year he transported the paintings himself to the
Société protectrice des animaux and paid for them
when Mr. Levert gave him the receipts.
[8] Mr. Duguay also said that he was reassessed for the 1986
and 1987 taxation years. He appealed the reassessments, but the
amount of additional tax to be paid was low.
[9] Mr. Duguay met with investigators from the Department on
September 2, 1987; they were questioning the validity of the gift
and the value of the works. At the meeting, he told them that he
had paid $4,000 for the paintings in 1986. However, when he was
called to testify, he apparently told Mr. Gagnon, counsel for the
Minister of National Revenue in the criminal cases against Gilles
Bouchard and Marc Levert, that what he had told the Revenue
Canada officers was not true and that he had made the necessary
correction. Mr. Duguay did not want to sign a sworn statement,
though.
[10] In the 1988 taxation year, Mr. Duguay again met with Mr.
Levert, who asked him whether he wanted to make further gifts.
Mr. Duguay told Mr. Levert that he would do so but that he
wanted to check with the Minister of National Revenue and
[TRANSLATION] “to know exactly how it works”.
Mr. Duguay went to the Department’s offices in
Québec and asked whether, if he made a gift of a work of
art worth $4,000 for which he had paid $1,000, he could file a
receipt for $4,000. He said he was told that he could. He then
agreed with Mr. Levert to purchase a work of art having a market
value of $10,000. Mr. Levert offered him a work by Jean-Paul
Lemieux. Mr. Duguay explained that it was Mr. Levert who had the
work appraised and delivered the gift to Univers du Rail Inc. Mr.
Duguay was given the appraisal, the receipt and a photograph of
the painting all at the same time. He added that Mr. Levert
was the one who chose the charity in question and selected the
painting by Jean-Paul Lemieux. Mr. Duguay never had the
painting in his home and thinks he saw it at
Mr. Levert’s gallery. He also testified that he never
contacted the representatives of
Univers du Rail Inc. and did not check whether the
painting was there. Nor did he wonder about the nature and
activities of Univers du Rail Inc. Mr. Duguay paid Mr.
Levert for the painting by writing two cheques for $1,820 (March
2, 1989) and $1,800 (July 4, 1989) on his account at the
Royal Bank of Canada. He paid a total of $4,000 to acquire
the painting. The difference is the amount paid in cash.
[11] Mr. Duguay said that he made further gifts, specifically
a jewellery collection, in 1989. That was also when he was
transferred to surveillance, where he spent a great deal of time
with a Gilles Bouchard. Mr. Duguay said he learned that
Mr. Bouchard had also made gifts between 1986 and 1988.
Mr. Bouchard had a collection of works of art and was
prepared to sell part of it to Mr. Duguay. Mr. Bouchard was to
have the collection appraised, after which the sale price would
be set. Mr. Duguay also warned Mr. Bouchard that he
wanted there to be no doubts about the legality of the
transaction. The price was to be set by Mr. Bouchard at about 25
percent of the value of the gift and was to include the appraisal
costs. Mr. Duguay testified that he did not ask why the price was
set at 25 percent of the value. Photographs of the jewellery were
taken. The transaction then took place, and a few days later, Mr.
Bouchard gave him a receipt from the
Fondation Amérindienne Técumseh dated
November 13, 1989. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Duguay received a
letter dated November 15, 1989, thanking him for his gift.
The letter was accompanied by a descriptive card, which he said
may have been given to Revenue Canada. Mr. Bouchard
also sent a document attesting that Mr. Duguay had purchased
jewellery for $2,910. Mr. Duguay said that he obtained the
document to give it to Revenue Canada. He paid the $2,910 with
two cheques. That amount was the total owed for the appraisal and
for obtaining a receipt for the charitable gift. It should also
be noted that Mr. Bouchard was the one who chose the
charity. Neither the appellant Amédée Duguay
nor the appellant Diane L. Duguay contacted the
Fondation's representatives or went to its offices.
[12] Mr. Duguay said that Mr. Bouchard approached him again in
1990 to ask if he was interested in acquiring works of art. He
decided to purchase paintings that year, and Mr. Bouchard handled
the transaction as he had done the previous year. Mr. Bouchard
had the paintings appraised and went to Mr. Duguay’s
home with the appraisals and the paintings. According to
Mr. Duguay, the paintings were photographed in front of his
fireplace. The receipts were issued by the
Société protectrice des animaux and
given to Mr. Duguay by Mr. Bouchard. Mr. Duguay paid $2,440
for the paintings. He is the only one who made a gift in 1990.
The appellant Diane L. Duguay apparently did not make
any gifts in 1990 on the advice of André Dion, CA. The
appellant Amédée Duguay could not remember
whether he had told Mr. Dion that the purchase price
differed substantially from the value of the gift.
[13] On cross-examination, Mr. Duguay said that he would not
have entered into the transactions were it not possible to get
receipts from charities to obtain tax advantages.
[14] The appellant Diane L. Duguay has been a teacher for 28
years. She stated that she had made gifts of paintings and other
property in 1986 and 1987.
[15] Ms. Duguay was told by her husband, the appellant
Amédée Duguay, that it was possible to give works
of art to charities and claim a deduction for income tax
purposes. She said that she and her husband concluded from
reading certain unspecified documents that gifts could be made in
a perfectly lawful manner. She also testified that she did not
discuss the receipts or the gifts with Aline Tremblay.
[16] With regard to the gifts she made during the 1986 to 1989
taxation years, Ms. Duguay said that the transactions were
completed by the appellant Amédée Duguay. However,
she testified, without providing any details, that she paid her
share when the time came to pay for the works of art and
jewellery. She was told in due course that Revenue Canada had
changed its attitude toward the gifts. The fact that Revenue
Canada did not reply to her notice of objection worried her a
great deal.
[17] Ms. Duguay admitted that she did not have a say in
choosing the works of art, the jewellery or the charities. Mr.
Bouchard made those choices.
[18] I will now look at Mr. Levert’s evidence.
[19] Mr. Levert was unemployed at the time he gave his
evidence. He had worked as an inspector for the parity committee
“on automotive services” in the Québec area
from the 1970s until he quit that job in 1995. In 1987, he
established the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens Inc. and
La Tourelle, Maison d’encans Inc., both of which were
incorporated in March 1987. Starting in 1987, he ran those two
firms with his wife, Denise Boily.
[20] Mr. Levert said that he began to be interested in works
of art as a collector in the early 1970s. He was especially
interested in oil paintings and watercolours. He was also
interested in antiques such as items made of bronze or porcelain.
Mr. Levert added that he travelled a great deal to
galleries, mainly in Quebec, to learn about paintings. He also
read books on the subject. He then began purchasing paintings
from galleries, including the Galerie Charles Huot and the
Galerie de Michel Décardo. Using auction catalogues he
received from Fraser and Sotheby’s, he began going to
auction houses in Montréal, such as Pinney’s, Fraser
and Empire. He also went to auctions in Toronto and received
catalogues of works of art from New York.
[21] Mr. Levert said that he has been appraising paintings,
mainly for insurance purposes and for gifts, since beginning to
work in the art field. In 1983 and the following years, he
appraised paintings as a Québec representative of
Pinney’s of Montréal.
[22] Mr. Levert said that he was especially interested in the
periods that include the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, and the
early 20th century up to about 1930. He had to adapt to the
market, since people in the Québec area were more familiar
with artists from the contemporary period, which runs from 1920
to the present. He is still consulted today about the earlier
period, inter alia to determine whether it is really the
period involved, whether a painting can be restored or whether
there is a good market for an artist’s works. He often used
to be consulted by antique dealers.
[23] Based on his experience, Mr. Levert noted that there are
two markets, the gallery market and the auction market, which are
totally separate from each other. The gallery market involves far
more paintings by contemporary artists who are currently working
or have died fairly recently. For example, Jean-Paul Lemieux is a
contemporary artist even though he is dead. Fielding Downes
is also a contemporary artist, although he is [TRANSLATION]
“on the borderline”.
[24] The auction market for paintings includes international
auction houses like Sotheby’s in Toronto, which has offices
in London and New York; these auction houses use a very
sophisticated system. For such auctions, catalogues of colour
photographs provide an estimate of the auction price of the
paintings, not their market value. The second category of
auctions involves local auction houses, in Montréal or
Toronto for example, that are not in the same league as the big
auction houses. Their catalogues are not in colour; instead, they
publish a list of auctions. The third category is made up of
small auction houses that hold auctions occasionally.
[25] The difference between these auction houses is that the
larger the house, the more extensive the advertising done, the
greater the number of clients reached and the closer the price
will be to the gallery price for certain artists. Paintings by
local artists are not sold at major auctions.
[26] Mr. Levert said that in 1988, 1989 and 1990 his two
businesses, the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens and La
Tourelle, Maison d’encans, were operated out of the same
building. After the building was sold, the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens moved to another location. Mr.
Levert’s business objective was to operate an auction
house, contacting various people to ask them to bring him
paintings they wished to resell. The
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens also purchased
paintings from time to time, and they were sent to
La Tourelle, Maison d’encans, to be resold
at public auctions. The
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens also made
private sales.
[27] Mr. Levert’s explanation of why he sold paintings
for gift purposes was basically as follows:
1. he made gifts and sales directly to governments and various
other organizations before 1986;
2. when his employer, the parity committee, temporarily ceased
operations, his friends asked him to sell paintings for gift
purposes.
Mr. Levert and his wife therefore went to the office of a
Revenue Canada official in Ottawa in 1986 to find out whether the
process was lawful. A Mr. Boutet (apparently a lawyer for
the federal government) told them that [TRANSLATION]
“it’s perfectly legal”. It was then that Mr.
Levert, before opening his business, began selling paintings
openly to people he knew.
[28] Before Mr. Levert opened his gallery, he had already
dealt with the two appellants in 1986 and 1987 at Ms.
Tremblay’s request.
[29] In 1987, Mr. Levert opened La Tourelle, Maison
d’encans and the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens.
The sales for gift purposes that he was making at that time were
not the main aspect of his activities. He was convinced that
purchasing paintings to make gifts was perfectly legitimate. He
said that from 1987 to 1991 the portion of his sales associated
with charitable gifts was no more than 10 percent. Mr. Levert
also testified that he never did any advertising in relation to
gifts; although there is a document bearing the logo of the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens that does
contain such advertising, he said that his partners were
responsible for it.
[30] In general, the way Mr. Levert proceeded with clients to
whom he sold paintings for gift purposes was as follows: the
clients were referred to him, and he then contacted a charity or
museum and asked the person in charge whether he or she was
interested in a given type of painting. When he found a painting
that was acceptable to the museum or charity, he informed the
donor of the possibility of acquiring a few paintings that Mr.
Levert could resell. The amount was usually set in advance at 25
percent of the normal value of the painting in a gallery. Mr.
Levert included the professional fees charged to his clients in
the total amount on the invoices showing the sale price that had
been negotiated.
[31] Mr. Levert also told the donors what they should do and
encouraged them to check the legitimacy of the process with
Revenue Canada. He added that a number of people asked him
questions about the legitimacy of the process, specifically as
regards the difference between the amount at which a work of art
was appraised and its sale price. According to Mr. Levert’s
evidence, his appraisals were based on the main reference works,
in particular the Guide Vallée. When he was in doubt about
the value of a painting as shown in a particular guide, he called
the gallery that represented the artist or consulted other
galleries, for instance in Montréal. However, he
acknowledged that the prices of paintings vary significantly in
the guides, including the Guide Vallée. He also said
that the Guide Vallée is simply a “guide” that
suggests prices.
[32] Mr. Levert admitted that he generally gave his clients
the receipt, the appraisal and the invoice. He added that there
was no particular reason why he rather than the organization
concerned sent the donor the organization's receipt. He said
that in most cases he was the one who gave the donor the
receipt.
[33] Mr. Levert did not dispute the fact that the same
paintings ended up at various charities a number of times, since
the charities resold them at auctions or even privately. The
paintings could be given again to other charities.
[34] Mr. Levert stated that his business's main activity
was purchasing very large quantities of paintings at low prices
and selling them wholesale rather than selling them retail at
their full price through the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens. Auctions were
his business's main activity. He added that he also sold to
dealers, galleries and collectors, who in turn resold the
paintings at 20 to 40 times their purchase price. He explained
that he sold at a quarter of the gallery value or the value
stated in the Guide Vallée because he had set a rate of 25
percent in that regard for the sale price of paintings that would
be given as gifts. He added that he had steered clients to about
15 different charities over the years.
[35] Mr. Levert said that he met Ms. Tremblay, who was in
charge of the loans department at the Royal Bank of Canada,
several years ago. She referred clients to him who wanted to
purchase paintings to make gifts. He added that Ms. Tremblay
sent him clients in her private capacity and not as a
representative of the Royal Bank.
[36] In reviewing Mr. Levert’s tax returns in the early
1980s, Ms. Tremblay noticed the gifts he had made. She asked him
whether she and her friends could take advantage of this process.
In some cases, Mr. Levert gave the receipts, appraisals and
invoices to Ms. Tremblay and she sent them to the clients
concerned. There were also cases in which Ms. Tremblay gave him
the cheques written by clients to purchase paintings.
[37] In December 1988, Mr. Levert sent a letter to all those
who had purchased paintings from him for gift purposes with a
view to forming a group. It was at that time that Revenue Canada
had begun assessing people who claimed a deduction for gifts of
paintings. On June 5, 1989, Mr. Levert sent another letter to
those who had made gifts in the past to tell them that the
Income Tax Act had not been amended and to assure them
that he would not abandon them as clients. However, some clients
asked him to reimburse them because of the problems they were
having with the tax authorities. Mr. Levert agreed to either
reimburse them or give them paintings as compensation.
[38] Mr. Levert said that Gaston Lamy of Univers du Rail Inc.
approached him in 1989 to ask if he was interested in organizing
a fundraising campaign and holding an auction to benefit Univers
du Rail Inc. Mr. Lamy was a collector of paintings, and Univers
du Rail Inc. had already started accumulating paintings. Mr. Lamy
asked Mr. Levert if he would handle the appraisals and try to
find people who would make gifts to Univers du Rail Inc. Mr.
Levert subsequently reached an oral agreement to run auctions for
Univers du Rail Inc., as he had done for the
Société protectrice des animaux.
Mr. Levert guaranteed Univers du Rail Inc. a minimum price
of 10 percent at the auctions. Mr. Levert said that the condition
that Univers du Rail Inc. get a minimum price of 10 percent for
paintings at the auctions was not always met. At one point,
Univers du Rail Inc. asked Mr. Lamy to store paintings it
had been given in the basement of a facility owned by
Mr. Levert.
[39] Mr. Levert described the procedure by which gifts were
made to Univers du Rail Inc. as follows. He called
the charity's president and explained to him that he had
someone who wanted to give a certain painting and that the gift
would be for a certain amount. The president then issued a
receipt, and Mr. Levert forwarded it to the person
concerned. Mr. Levert added that he was the one who prepared the
appraisal for Univers du Rail Inc. A copy of the
appraisal was given to Univers du Rail Inc. along with a list
showing that a specified person had made a gift of a specified
painting for a specified price. Mr. Carignan of Univers du
Rail Inc. went to see the paintings in only some cases. A
requirement to provide documents was issued to Mr. Levert. He
admitted that he had destroyed the lists just referred to, which
he had kept for a while and given to Univers du Rail
Inc.
[40] As regards the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh,
Mr. Levert was approached by Jacques St-Laurent, who asked if he
could send him some clients. The same kind of process was
involved as with Univers du Rail Inc. However, Mr.
Levert said that in the days or weeks following the gift, either
a representative of the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh came to get the
paintings or Mr. Levert delivered them to the Fondation. The
paintings were not stored. Mr. St-Laurent, the president of
the Fondation, had his own appraiser, although Mr. Levert
acknowledged that he had certainly performed appraisals for the
Fondation.
[41] Mr. Levert said that an auction house’s market is
established at a specific point in time. Those who are interested
have one or two days to visit and see the paintings, and the sale
then takes place. The warranty is limited to 15 or 30 days to
confirm the painting's value. In the gallery market, there is
an exhibit and clients can visit the gallery at their leisure.
Clients are not required to pay for a painting in full when they
buy it but can work out arrangements regarding payment terms. The
warranty is also better than that provided by auction houses. The
auction market is one in which people buy for the purpose of
reselling.
[42] The auction price can be up to 25 times lower than the
normal gallery price for both famous artists and other artists.
The lower a painting's value, the greater the difference
between the auction price and the gallery price. The gallery
price is suggested by either the artist or the gallery. A
gallery’s clients are not necessarily the same people who
go to auctions.
[43] Mr. Levert said that the appellant Amédée
Duguay had problems with Revenue Canada in 1987. Mr. Duguay
nevertheless did business with Mr. Levert in 1988, but he
required Mr. Levert to go to Revenue Canada’s office
in Québec to make sure that the gifts were legal. Mr.
Duguay asked a government official if it was legal to purchase a
work of art for the purpose of giving it to a charity and to pay
a fraction of its price. The official said that it was perfectly
legal. That was why Mr. Duguay decided to purchase another
painting in 1988 to give as a gift.
[44] Mr. Levert purchased a painting by the artist Jean-Paul
Lemieux from Guy Gagnon for about $5,000 and resold it to
Mr. Duguay. This painting was given to Univers du Rail Inc. in
1988. Mr. Levert put the painting in the name of the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens rather than that of
Univers du Rail Inc. He said that he did so for
resale purposes. He added that he had been instructed by Univers
du Rail Inc. to sell its paintings privately or by auction.
[45] Mr. Levert said that in the spring of 1988, a search was
conducted at his home, the premises of his businesses, his
accountant’s office and the premises of other people in
Quebec, including appraisers and dealers. The search was part of
an investigation into what Revenue Canada considered a tax
scheme. Mr. Levert wrote to Ms. Boucher of Revenue Canada in
Ottawa on November 14, 1988. Before doing so, he had spoken with
Ms. Boucher by telephone after the Charities Division
referred him to her. He added that he later contacted Carl Juneau
of Revenue Canada, to whom he had been referred by the Charities
Division. He also contacted Laval Mailhot of Revenue
Canada’s Québec office to ask him what he considered
to be the fair market value of property. Mr. Mailhot told
him that, according to the law, the fair market value of property
is the highest price that would be negotiated by a willing seller
under no compulsion to sell and a willing buyer under no
compulsion to buy. Mr. Levert said that he continued to sell
paintings for gift purposes despite the Department’s
investigation because he was convinced that the whole process was
consistent with and even encouraged by the Act. He also
denied access to Revenue Canada’s investigators a number of
times, since he had asked them to put down in writing what they
wanted to obtain and Revenue Canada had not complied with
his requests. According to his evidence, he was harassed by
Revenue Canada.
[46] Before ending this summary of Mr. Levert’s
evidence, it is important to note that four separate charges were
laid against him. Pursuant to arrangements made with counsel for
the Government, it was agreed that there would be only one trial
on the following basis: if Mr. Levert were acquitted, that would
end the proceedings; if he were convicted, he would plead guilty
to the other charges. The Court of Quebec, Criminal Division,
found Mr. Levert guilty on the basis that he had not reported all
his income for 1986. On April 7, 1997, Mr. Levert was
sentenced to 10 months in prison and two years on probation. He
was prohibited from acting directly or indirectly as an
appraiser, promoter, broker or consultant in connection with
gifts of works of art to non-profit organizations, such as
charities, and in particular museums and fabriques. The
probation order was not to take effect until the expiry date of
Mr. Levert’s prison sentence, which he has not yet served
in full. Mr. Levert added that his guilty plea related more to
“backdating”, as he put it, than to the issue of
appraising paintings.
[47] Julien Carignan’s testimony is interesting because
his version of events is from the perspective of a senior manager
of an organization that benefited from the gift system at issue
in these appeals.
[48] Mr. Carignan became a member of Univers du Rail Inc. in
1986 and a member of the corporation's board of directors in
1987. Univers du Rail Inc. owned a kind of railway
museum, which had been established in Charny in 1978. Its members
were former railway company employees or railroad enthusiasts.
From 1978 to 1986, the main source of financing was the sale of
coins, which brought in about $4,000 or $5,000 a year. In 1987,
Univers du Rail Inc. acquired two railway cars
with money provided by five members.
[49] Univers du Rail Inc. became a registered charity in 1987
after Jacques Lamy, a director and a former engineer for
Canadian Pacific Limited, was told that the organization could
receive gifts and issue tax receipts. This would enable it to
operate on a larger scale. According to Mr. Carignan,
although he was a director at the time in question, it was
Alain St-Amand, the president of Univers du Rail Inc.,
who submitted the application for registration to the tax
authorities.
[50] Mr. Carignan met Mr. Levert in 1988 when Mr. Levert was
visiting Mr. St-Amand’s home. Mr. Levert told
them that he could obtain gifts for
Univers du Rail Inc. Mr. Carignan said that an
oral agreement was reached pursuant to which Mr. Levert would
solicit gifts for Univers du Rail Inc. and Univers du Rail Inc.
would receive 10 percent of the value of the paintings. It was
Jacques Lamy who took the initiative of contacting Mr. Levert.
Mr. Levert sold paintings to donors, not to Univers du Rail Inc.,
and it was he who appraised the paintings.
[51] Mr. Carignan testified that he trusted Mr. Levert
implicitly and relied on the Revenue Canada pamphlet, which
discussed the legality of charitable gifts. No one at Univers du
Rail Inc. had any reason to think that it was unlawful or
fraudulent to make gifts until Revenue Canada informed the
organization's management that it should, as a rule, be
receiving 90 percent of the proceeds from the sale of the
paintings. Mr. Carignan told Revenue Canada that Univers du
Rail Inc. was receiving only 10 percent of the proceeds. Since no
one at Univers du Rail Inc. was familiar with art, its senior
managers had left it up to Mr. Levert to handle the financial
aspect of the transactions relating to the acquisition of works
of art. Mr. Levert had told them that the Guide Vallée was
a catalogue that showed the fair market value of paintings.
Mr. Carignan said that he thought the amounts stated on the
receipts represented the fair market value of the paintings.
[52] Mr. Carignan testified that the senior managers of
Univers du Rail Inc. could have seen the paintings given to the
organization if they had wanted to. He went to the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens a number of times but was unable to
identify the paintings given to his organization. The paintings
in question were stored at the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens
because Univers du Rail Inc. did not have
appropriate storage facilities. Mr. Carignan added that the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens held auctions in the fall and
that a portion of the auction proceeds was sent to
Univers du Rail Inc. Five or six paintings were
given to Univers du Rail Inc. in 1987; that number rose to about
30 a few years later.
[53] In January 1992, Revenue Canada found fault with the
senior managers of Univers du Rail Inc. for having no control
over the gifts made to their organization. They therefore decided
to rent a heated warehouse where they would store all the
paintings before returning them to Mr. Levert in the fall to be
sold by auction. Univers du Rail Inc. never put that
plan into effect, since Revenue Canada took possession of the
paintings in February 1992 and stored them at the
Champlain Harbour Station. Mr. Carignan was no longer the
president of Univers du Rail Inc. at that time. The paintings
were eventually returned to Univers du Rail Inc. and sold at a
flea market for a ridiculously low price.
[54] Mr. Carignan said that during the years when he was one
of the senior managers of Univers du Rail Inc., a police officer
contacted him to inquire about the legality of the gifts. He told
the officer that he believed everything was legal. Univers du
Rail Inc. never issued fraudulent receipts. Mr. Carignan
admitted that he did some television advertising for Univers du
Rail Inc. in November 1991 and by this means successfully
solicited gifts of works of art for it. Univers du Rail
Inc.’s registration was revoked by Revenue Canada in
1992.
[55] Mr. Carignan also said that Mr. Levert told him what had
to be written on the receipts, to whom they were to be made out
and what works of art they concerned. For some time, the
appraisals were given to Univers du Rail Inc. together
with certain other documents relating to the transactions in
question. Univers du Rail Inc. later had to ask to be given the
appraisals.
[56] Mr. Carignan said that Univers du Rail Inc. trusted Mr.
Levert implicitly. For two or three years, it obtained 10 percent
of the proceeds from the sale of the paintings, as had been
agreed. The situation subsequently deteriorated.
[57] Based on Univers du Rail Inc.’s financial
statements for the years listed below, Mr. Carignan said that the
total amounts shown on the receipts were as follows:
Taxation year Receipts
1988 $100,000
1989 $250,000
1990 $500,000
1991 $1,000,000
Mr. Carignan also told the Court that the sale of the
paintings that Univers du Rail Inc. had received as
gifts brought in the following amounts in the years listed
below:
Taxation year Amount
1989 $10,020
1989 $5,000
1990 $23,500
1991 $15,400
The receipts issued by Univers du Rail Inc. were generally
given to Mr. Levert. Mr. Carignan added that he did not know the
two appellants.
[58] Mr. Carignan further explained that the initial receipts
issued by Univers du Rail Inc. did not state the name of the
charity or the name of the appraiser, Mr. Levert. The receipt
form was changed after Mr. Demers told the senior managers of
Univers du Rail Inc. that it did not meet the applicable
requirements.
[59] The evidence given by Jacques Demers sheds light on the
nature of Revenue Canada’s investigation and on the factual
and legal basis for the assessments made against the appellants
in respect of the years in question.
[60] Mr. Demers has been an appeals officer for Revenue Canada
since April 1994. His previous job was as an investigator
for that department’s Special Investigations Section.
Mr. Demers became familiar with the appellants’ files for
the 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 and 1990 taxation years.
[61] The investigation conducted by Mr. Demers had three
phases. Phase I related to the 1986 and 1987 taxation years,
Phase II to the 1988, 1989 and 1990 taxation years and Phase III
to the 1991 and 1992 taxation years.
[62] Phase I of the investigation concerned charities such as
the Société protectrice des animaux, the
Musée Louis-Hémon in Péribonka and the
Musée Pierre-Boucher in Trois-Rivières. The
Department decided to investigate after realizing that a tax
scheme had been set up by promoters to sell works of art whose
value had been inflated to museums for the purpose of making
gifts to charities. According to Revenue Canada, the scheme
specifically involved the sale of receipts at 20 or 25 percent of
the amounts shown on the receipts. The experts retained by
Revenue Canada determined that the appraisals of the works of art
were excessively high.
[63] In assessing the taxpayers who made gifts during the 1986
and 1987 taxation years and participated in the type of
arrangement described in the preceding paragraph, Revenue Canada
reduced the value of the gifts, although it acknowledged that the
gifts were genuine.
[64] As regards the assessments for the 1988, 1989 and 1990
taxation years, Revenue Canada took the position, based on
this Court’s decisions in Guy Dutil v. R. and
Réjean Gagnon v. R., both of which were
rendered on July 25, 1991, that there was no intent to give at
the time of the gifts.
[65] According to Mr. Demers, Mr. Levert was one of the
promoters under investigation. He said that Mr. Levert sold works
of art at prices that generally represented 20 percent of the
amounts stated on the receipts. Mr. Demers believed that the
charities involved were not aware of all the facts and were being
manipulated by Mr. Levert. The fact that Mr. Levert was both the
seller and the appraiser of the works of art strongly influenced
Mr. Demers.
[66] In Phase II of the investigation, Revenue Canada focused
on the charities and put together files on taxpayers in order to
set up a database recording charitable receipts, proof of
purchase documents, invoices, proof of payment documents and
cheques. These data were gathered to determine which taxpayers
were involved in the scheme to sell tax receipts and which of
them were genuine donors or, in other words, had owned the
donated works of art for a number of years. In the case of the
genuine donors, Revenue Canada would contest only the value of
the works of art, while in the case of the other taxpayers,
Revenue Canada would refuse to find that genuine gifts were
made.
[67] Mr. Demers said that, on the basis of Dutil and
Gagnon, supra, a distinction had to be drawn
between taxpayers who had owned works for some time and were thus
their real owners, and taxpayers who purchased works in order to
make gifts. He expressed the view that, to make a gift, ownership
and possession of the property and an intent to give are all
necessary. The assessments under appeal were based on two
factors: there was no intent to give and the organization did not
become the owner of the paintings so that it could dispose of
them as it liked. Revenue Canada challenged the process under
which Mr. Levert sold paintings and acted as mandatary for the
consignment of the paintings for resale, while the donors did not
choose the charities. Mr. Demers said that his investigation
from 1987 on found no cases in which a donor had paid the amount
indicated on the tax receipt for a work.
[68] According to Mr. Demers, the gifts made to the Fondation
Amérindienne Tecumseh, the Société
protectrice des animaux and Univers du Rail Inc. were
investigated.
[69] The investigation involving the Fondation
Amérindienne Tecumseh ended after the death of its
president, Alain St-Laurent. The investigation of
Univers du Rail Inc. ended with the revocation of its
registration as a charity. No criminal proceedings were brought
against any of the three charities. No charity was assessed under
Part V of the Act, which provides for the payment of tax
in certain circumstances by a charity whose registration has been
revoked.
[70] Mr. Demers testified that his investigation of the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh led him to conclude
that the prices of the works of art were based on unofficial,
numbered receipts (which could have been obtained at a stationery
store) indicating [TRANSLATION] “the file number, the type
of system sold and the sale price”. The appraisals on the
basis of which the tax receipts were issued were obtained
following a subsequent meeting between Mr. Demers and
Mr. St-Laurent.
[71] Mr. Demers said that after he asked for them, Mr.
St-Laurent of the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh provided
him with 50 receipts, the organization’s minute book and
the donors’ files, although these did not contain the
appraisals. The works of art were no longer at the Fondation at
the time of his audit. In August 1991, Mr. Demers reviewed the
Fondation’s books of account and noted that 50 receipts had
been issued in 1988 for a total of $373,984, that 108 receipts
had been issued in 1989 for $731,158 and that receipts had been
issued in 1990 for a total of $1,728,593.57.
[72] Mr. Demers obtained information from Guy Drolet of
Revenue Canada’s Special Investigations Section, who had
been instructed by his department to investigate the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens six months after the audit of
Univers du Rail Inc. Based on that information, Mr.
Demers found that there was a link between the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens and the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh, as he connected
some sales invoices from the former with receipts from the
latter. The sales invoices from the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens for 1988 related
to works of art that had been given to the Fondation
Amérindienne Tecumseh and sold for prices representing
25 percent of the amounts stated on the receipts. Mr. Demers
was unable to obtain invoices from the Galerie des Maîtres
Anciens for 1989 and 1990. He said that attempts to obtain
documentation from the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens on the sale of
works of art were in vain. Requirements to provide documents were
issued by Revenue Canada, but they too were unsuccessful. Charges
were subsequently laid against the entities that owned the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens and La Tourelle,
Maison d’encans, and against Mr. Levert as a director
of those entities. The court found them guilty of destroying
records.
[73] The investigation of Univers du Rail Inc. began in the
fall of 1989. For the purposes of that investigation, Mr. Demers
met with Alain St-Amand and Julien Carignan, who were
respectively the president and a manager of Univers du Rail Inc.
The organization’s income statement for the year ending
December 31, 1988, showed $10,000 in income from auctions.
Mr. St-Amand told Mr. Demers that there was an
oral agreement under which the works of art given to Univers du
Rail Inc. were to be sold at prices no lower than 10 percent of
the values stated on the receipts. That arrangement was a source
of funding for Univers du Rail Inc. It was Mr. Levert who found
the persons who gave works of art to Univers du Rail Inc., and
the senior managers of that corporation did not meet them. Mr.
Levert provided the receipts and appraisals in the name of the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens.
[74] Mr. Demers also said that a requirement letter was sent
to Univers du Rail Inc. and that other action was
taken in relation to that organization. Despite those
initiatives, he obtained little information from Univers du Rail
Inc. In particular, he was unable to see any of the paintings it
had been given when he visited its premises.
[75] Mr. Demers also made a connection between invoices from
the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens and Univers du
Rail Inc. Univers du Rail Inc. had issued 14 receipts on one day,
December 7, 1988. All the appraisals were dated December 7, 1988.
The amounts on all the invoices for the property acquired by the
appellants, like those relating to a number of other taxpayers,
represented the same proportion of 25 percent of the amounts
stated on the receipts.
[76] In August 1991, Mr. Demers again met with Julien
Carignan, who gave him Univers du Rail Inc.’s financial
statements for 1989, 1990 and 1991. Mr. Demers reviewed the
receipts issued by the organization in 1988. He concluded that 34
receipts had been issued in 1988 for a total of $207,200 and that
the consideration shown in Univers du Rail Inc.'s financial
statements at the time was $10,000, which represented four
percent of the amounts received. For 1989, he noted that 39
receipts had been issued for a total of $215,895 and that the
consideration shown in the financial statements was $10,020, or
four percent of the amounts shown on the receipts. Finally,
he noted that 59 receipts had been issued in 1990 for a total of
$621,394 and that the consideration received by the organization
was $23,500, which represented three percent of the amounts
shown on the receipts.
[77] The appellants Amédée Duguay and Diane L.
Duguay claimed a deduction for gifts for the 1986 and 1987
taxation years. The appraisals of the property given by the
appellants for the purposes of the deduction were prepared by
Michel Champagne.
[78] Following a search at the Musée Louis-Hémon
and the Musée Pierre-Boucher, Revenue Canada
had the property reappraised and reduced the amount of the
appraisals prepared by Mr. Champagne. Revenue Canada’s
investigation resulted in conspiracy charges being laid against
Michel Champagne and Marc Levert.
[79] Mr. Demers said that from Revenue Canada’s point of
view, the gifts had to be reappraised because the price at which
the works of art were sold at auctions was a better reflection of
their fair market value. He added that there had been an
advertising campaign for the auction of the
Société protectrice des animaux and
that the public had been aware of the auction. However, he said
that for 1986 there were appraisals by experts that were taken
into account.
[80] Mr. Demers noted that Revenue Canada’s position
changed as a result of the judgments in Dutil and
Gagnon, supra. At Univers du Rail Inc.,
Mr. Demers found an appraisal dated December 7, 1988, that
had been prepared by the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens for gifts made
by the appellants in the 1988 taxation year. The appraisal
did not contain a nota bene certifying that all the
information in it was true and represented the reasonable and
fair market value of the property in question.
[81] For 1988, the Department thus had documents showing that
all parts of the process (the sale invoice at 25 percent of the
appraised value, the appraisal itself and the issuance of the
receipt) took place at once. The Department found that the
appellants were dealing with a third party at arm’s length
and that the transaction was illogical, which led it to believe
that there was a prior agreement. Even after receiving the letter
stating that the Department intended to reduce the amounts
representing the value of the gifts, the two appellants entered
into a second transaction that differed in only one respect: the
appraiser and the promoter were the same person, Mr. Levert.
[82] To their tax returns for the 1989 taxation year, the two
appellants attached a receipt from the Fondation
Amérindienne Tecumseh that bore number 80 and was dated
November 13, 1989. No capital gain on either personal-use
property or listed personal property was reported in respect of
the jewellery.
[83] For the 1990 taxation year, two receipts from the
Société protectrice des animaux were
filed: receipt number 9423 for $6,750 dated October 15,
1990, and receipt number 9424 for $3,000 dated October 15, 1990.
The words [TRANSLATION] “appraised work of art”
appeared on both receipts. No gain was reported.
[84] On March 2, 1992, in response to a request for
information, the appellant Amédée Duguay sent an
invoice from the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens for the
purchase of a Jean-Paul Lemieux watercolour together
with that gallery's appraisal, both of which were dated
December 7, 1988. There was no nota bene on the invoice.
There was also a receipt dated February 24, 1992, certifying
that works of art worth $9,750 had been sold for $2,437.50 in the
fall of 1990. Another receipt dated February 24, 1992, which was
signed by Gilles Bouchard, indicated that he had sold a jewellery
collection worth $11,640 to the appellant Amédée
Duguay for $2,910 in 1989. There was no proof of payment with
that letter. There was also a list dated November 8, 1989
appraising 65 items. No vouchers were provided. Mr. Demers
explained that he concluded, based on the fact that Mr. Bouchard
had to sell due to financial problems relating to his divorce,
that this sale was not made on the open market. He also said that
in his opinion, when people who enter into a transaction are
dealing with each other at arm’s length, the price that is
set should as a rule represent the fair market value. However, he
added the following:
[TRANSLATION]
. . . But if the transaction is so simultaneous that the only
possible conclusion is that the invoice is a pretext, the
painting is a pretext for the charitable receipt to be issued,
then the only conclusion to be drawn is that there was a prior
agreement for the transaction to be profitable in tax terms.
[85] With regard to the gifts to the Société
protectrice des animaux for the 1990 taxation year, Mr. Demers
realized that in the case of the transactions with
Mr. Bouchard, the payments made by the appellants always
represented 25 percent of the amounts stated on the
receipts.
[86] The document at Tab 44 of Exhibit I-1 shows that given
the tax advantage and the purchase price of the property
involved, the appellant Amédée Duguay made the
following gains for the taxation years at issue referred to
below:
$2,130 1988
$1,583 1989
$2,700 1990
The appellant Diane L. Duguay’s gains, calculated on the
same basis for the taxation years referred to below, were as
follows:
$1,839 1988
$1,541 1989
[87] Gilles Bouchard’s testimony provides some relevant
information.
[88] Mr. Bouchard was a police officer of the
Sûreté du Québec for 31 years. He knew the
appellants, as they bought works of art and jewellery from him.
Mr. Bouchard and the appellant Amédée Duguay
met each other at work, as they were colleagues at the
Sûreté du Québec and worked together in 1988
and 1989 on the physical surveillance squad.
[89] Mr. Bouchard explained that he and his wife had collected
jewellery for a number of years. They purchased it at flea
markets and jewellery stores and from individuals. They obtained
antiques from individuals, collectors and antique dealers. When
Mr. Bouchard and his wife got divorced in 1989, Mr. Bouchard
sold his entire collection to Mr. Levert and then bought it all
back.
[90] Mr. Bouchard's co-workers knew that he collected
rarities and jewellery. Since he and Mr. Duguay spent a great
deal of time together on surveillance duty, they talked about
works of art and jewellery a few times. It was during those
discussions that the question of gifts to charities came up. Both
of them had made gifts in 1986 and 1987. Mr. Bouchard had met
Mr. Levert in 1986, and Mr. Levert had told him how he could
make gifts of his own property. Mr. Bouchard said that he
owned items of sufficient value to make gifts during the
following two years, 1987 and 1988, and that he would be able to
sell a few items to Mr. Duguay so that he could make gifts to
charities.
[91] With regard to the jewellery, Mr. Bouchard said that he
met with Daniel Rood of the Fondation Amérindienne
Tecumseh and the director of the Musée Coaticook. It
was Mr. Bouchard who approached the Fondation, since he wanted to
give it some items. He saw to it that the price of the sale of
the jewellery to Mr. Duguay represented a quarter of the
appraisal amount. After making arrangements for the sale with
Mr. Duguay, Mr. Bouchard contacted the Fortuna jewellery
store to ensure that the appraisal was prepared in
Mr. Duguay’s name. Mr. Bouchard testified that he
was the one who took the jewellery to the store and paid for the
appraisal.
[92] Mr. Bouchard explained that he sold the jewellery and
certain other items at 25 percent of the amount at which they
were appraised because he needed cash at the time to pay
lawyers’ fees relating to his divorce. He testified that he
could have gotten the full value of the jewellery if he had sold
each piece separately. Mr. Bouchard said that he was not
interested in travelling to another area to make the gifts, that
the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh was in the
Québec area and that it accepted that type of gift. He was
even the one who took the items to the Fondation, since the
appellants told him that they did not want to deliver them.
[93] At the request of Revenue Canada officers, Mr. Bouchard
certified that he had sold the jewellery to Mr. Duguay. He also
told them the sale price and value of the jewellery. The payment
was made by cheque.
[94] As regards the paintings, Mr. Bouchard explained that he
obtained them from Marc Levert. Since Mr. Levert purchased large
quantities of paintings, he could get better prices and could
then resell at a higher profit. He said that he sold the
paintings in 1989 so that they could be given as gifts.
[95] In 1990, Mr. Bouchard offered to sell paintings to Mr.
Duguay, who wanted to give them as gifts. Mr. Bouchard suggested
the Société protectrice des animaux, set the sale
price at 25 percent of the appraisal amount and had the
appraisal prepared. He chose the
Société protectrice des animaux out of a
number of charities. Mr. Bouchard also delivered the
paintings to the Société protectrice des
animaux. The paintings were appraised by Mr. Levert.
[96] Mr. Bouchard took part in the auction of the
Société protectrice des animaux, where he purchased
a number of paintings, including a Bernard for $100, a
Gisèle Leclerc appraised at $2,008 for $350 and another
appraised at $1,200 for $145. The auctioneer was none other than
Mr. Levert, who had also prepared the appraisals.
Mr. Bouchard added that he purchased some paintings he had
sold the previous year to a Mr. Bergeron and to the appellant
Amédée Duguay. He explained that he went to
auctions with the intention of purchasing lots. It was thus
possible for the same paintings that had been given to a charity
to end up in the lots of paintings he purchased.
[97] The testimony of Yvon Millard, a development curator at
the Musée du Québec, sheds some light on
Tab II of Exhibit I-1, which is dated December 7, 1988,
and was signed by Mr. Levert.
[98] The document in question relates to a watercolour by
Jean-Paul Lemieux that was apparently examined and certified by
Mr. Moreau from the gallery and by the
Musée du Québec. Mr. Millard testified
that he was unable to find an offer to give the work to the
Musée in the minutes, his personal notes or any of the
Musée’s records. He said that no formal offer was
made to the Musée by any seller or donor. He also
testified that Michel Champagne was employed by the Musée
du Québec as a curator until 1989 and was authorized to
perform appraisals. More specifically, Mr. Champagne was a
curator of modern art, which covers the period from 1880 to 1940.
The artist Jean-Paul Lemieux straddles the modern period and the
contemporary period. Mr. Millard testified that
Mr. Champagne would have been capable of identifying a
painting by Jean-Paul Lemieux. He said, however, that
Mr. Champagne was responsible for modern art paintings and
sculptures, while his colleague, Denis Martin, was the one
responsible for works on paper. The work in question was a
painting by Jean-Paul Lemieux on paper.
[99] The evidence of Jean Nadeau, the director of operations
at the Société protectrice des animaux,
provides some interesting information.
[100] Mr. Nadeau has held that position since the fall of
1985. He recognized certain documents relating to an auction held
as part of a fundraising campaign for the Société
protectrice des animaux. Mr. Levert was the one who appraised the
items put up for sale. He also served as auctioneer.
[101] Mr. Nadeau testified that the paintings numbered 133 and
134 sold for $400 and $425, respectively. He added that a
painting by Hilpert sold for $190 even though it had been
appraised at $1,200. Another painting by Hilpert that had been
appraised at $1,500 sold for $180.
[102] Mr. Nadeau also explained that the main sources of
income of the Société protectrice des animaux
during the years at issue were public donations, known as
[TRANSLATION] “shelter donations”, and agreements
with municipalities under which the Société acted
as a municipal pound. Public donations could account for 50
percent of the Société’s total income of
about $800,000 per year.
[103] The Court heard that 159 paintings were sold at the
yearly auction in October 1990. The reserve price was about 10 to
30 percent of the value of the paintings; it had been set in
accordance with the agreement between the Société
protectrice des animaux and Mr. Levert. The amount brought in by
the October 1990 auction was $42,770.
[104] The Court also had the benefit of hearing the evidence
of David Kelsey, an auctioneer at Pinney’s. According
to Mr. Kelsey, that auction house holds two catalogue sales per
year. The price list for these sales refers to auction prices.
For such items, the market is a resale market, whereas prices in
art galleries are retail prices. Gallery prices can be higher
than auction prices. The usual practice in the industry is to set
the reserve price 15 or 20 percent below the price at which it is
felt that the painting in question can be sold. Mr. Kelsey added
that the reserve price is not always known and that some works of
art do not even have one.
[105] Mr. Kelsey recognized a painting by Jean-Paul Lemieux
that was in the June 1989 catalogue. The consignor was the
Galerie des Maîtres Anciens. The reserve price set by the
seller was $2,800. The painting did not sell at a large auction
attended by an estimated 400 people, at which about 65 to 70
percent of the paintings were sold. The highest bid was below the
reserve price.
[106] Finally, Claire Lizotte, a professional gemmologist,
gave evidence as an expert witness. She has owned the Fortuna
jewellery store since 1983 and has an internationally recognized
diploma in gemmology (FCGmA).
[107] Ms. Lizotte appraised some jewellery at the request of
Jacques St-Laurent, a regular customer of the Fortuna jewellery
store who took jewellery there to be repaired. She appraised some
jewellery for the purpose of gifts to a charity, as stated in the
heading of her appraisal. The appraisal was performed following
the usual procedure (weight, identification of the metal, quality
of the product). Ms. Lizotte determined that some of the
pieces of jewellery were antiques and that others were not.
Antique jewellery that is not mass-produced must be given a
higher value.
[108] Ms. Lizotte explained that she appraised the jewellery
box at $500. She considered the appearance and weight of the box,
which was made of solid silver. It weighed 249 grams, and the
cost price of regular silver is $1.50 to $2.00 a gram.
[109] The second item was a silver ring containing smoky
quartz, a natural stone. The stone was a marquise-cut stone and
weighed 6.74 grams. The value of quartz is about $10.00 a gram.
She thus arrived at a value of $75.00 for the ring, including
both the silver and the stone. Ms. Lizotte also explained that
the jewellery was used but not damaged. The silver was tarnished
but not otherwise damaged.
[110] Ms. Lizotte and Mr. St-Laurent agreed on a price of $100
for her services for the appraisal. At Mr. St-Laurent’s
request, she prepared an invoice for those services in the
appellant Amédée Duguay’s name.
[111] Mr. Whetstone, an antique dealer since 1970 and a
professional appraiser, testified as an expert witness. He became
a jeweller after going to university. He also studied gemmology
(coloured stones and diamonds) at the Gemmological Institute of
America and is an accredited member of the International Society
of Appraisers.
[112] Mr. Whetstone has acquired extensive professional
experience in those fields. He has performed at least 400
appraisals since 1980.
[113] Since the watch, the silver box and the jewellery were
not available to be examined, Mr. Whetstone relied, inter
alia, on Claire Lizotte’s report of
June 13, 1997, and her testimony at the hearing.
[114] Mr. Whetstone expressed the view that the most relevant
markets for the property in question were flea markets and
antique stores. According to him, the most appropriate market for
second-hand jewellery is considered to be the market where the
most sales of jewellery similar to the items in question here
take place.
[115] In his expert report, Mr. Whetstone provided an
elaborate definition of “fair market value”. He
determined that the second-hand jewellery in question was near
the bottom of its class in value.
[116] Mr. Whetstone also felt that the report by Ms. Lizotte,
who is a gemmologist, was not complete and did not contain enough
information for a valid appraisal to be performed.
[117] Mr. Whetstone felt that the time needed to appraise the
entire jewellery collection in question would be two to three
days at the rate of six hours a day.
[118] Mr. Whetstone appraised the silver box at between $250
and $300 in the resale market. He appraised the watch at a
maximum of $50. He appraised the entire jewellery collection at
$3,500. He added that a dealer would probably sell the entire
collection for $2,000.
Appellants’ arguments
[119] In their pleadings, the appellants argued that they had
made gifts of works of art and jewellery during the taxation
years in question. They argued, inter alia, that tax
receipts for each of the gifts had been issued to them by
charities. The charities had official registration numbers and
were authorized to issue receipts for the purposes of the
Income Tax Act.
[120] The appellants also argued in their pleadings that
qualified experts had appraised the works of art and jewellery
given as gifts during the years at issue at the amounts shown on
the appraisal certificates and that those amounts corresponded to
the fair market value of the works of art and jewellery.
[121] The appellants objected, inter alia in their
pleadings, to the fact that penalties were assessed against them
under subsection 163(2) of the Income Tax Act. They argued
that in no way and on no occasion did they knowingly, or under
circumstances supporting a finding of gross negligence, make a
false statement or omission in their tax returns or in any other
document referred to in that subsection.
[122] In the appellants' oral argument, one of their
counsel noted that the market for works of art is different,
since it is possible to obtain such works in various ways, at
various places and at various prices. Counsel argued that the
appellants obtained a tax advantage because they dealt with
sellers of paintings who were prepared to give up a substantial
portion of their profit to build up a volume of transactions from
which they would benefit. Dealers in paintings like
Mr. Levert simply passed on their professional discount to
their clients. When the clients gave paintings to charities, they
therefore made a profit. Counsel added on the appellants'
behalf that they had purchased consumer goods at the wholesale
price, practically at cost price, and that they had used the
market price in making gifts.
[123] Counsel for the appellants further argued that the
paintings were first identified by Mr. Levert, who sold them to
the appellants. Ownership of property was then transferred for a
price in money. A gift agreement was then entered into. In the
case of the appellants, the agreement was between two parties:
the donor, that is, each appellant, and the donee, that is, the
charity in question. Ownership of property was transferred
between the parties, and no consideration was paid by the charity
that received the property.
[124] One of the appellants’ counsel referred in this
regard to The Queen v. Lagueux & Frères Inc.,
74 DTC 6569, in which it was held that to determine the tax
consequences of a transaction, the nature of the transaction must
be determined under the civil law. The fact that the donors were
able to incidentally derive a monetary benefit from the
transactions is of no consequence, since the donees paid no
consideration.
[125] Reference was also made to this Court’s decisions
in The Queen v. Construction Bérou, 96 DTC 6177,
and R. Francoeur v. Canada, [1993] 2 C.T.C. 2440. Counsel
for the appellants relied in particular on the following passage
from the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in The Queen
v. Friedberg, 92 DTC 6031, at page 6033:
It is clear that it is possible to make a
“profitable” gift in the case of certain cultural
property. Where the actual cost of acquiring the gift is low, and
the fair market value is high, it is possible that the tax
benefits of the gift will be greater than the cost of
acquisition. A substantial incentive for giving property of
cultural and national importance is thus created through these
benefits. But not every gift will be found to benefit from these
provisions.
[126] One of the appellants’ counsel noted that,
according to the Federal Court of Appeal, the system for making
gifts of cultural property was designed to produce a greater tax
advantage than the one that exists for ordinary gifts. However,
the circumstances are what produces the advantage.
[127] It was stated that, pursuant to section 69 of the
Act, property given is disposed of at its fair market
value. The appellants thus realized a capital gain on their
gifts, and that gain can be exempted.
[128] It was also stated that the art market, unlike other
markets, has a fairly stable source of supply of works of art at
prices below their fair market value and that the appellants
benefited from that fact.
[129] In the case of the appellants, Mr. Levert knew the
market well and knew how to obtain works of art. He bought them
at a low cost and sold them quickly at a low price, and the
purchasers made gifts. He profited from this even though he sold
at a price that included a lower profit margin.
[130] According to counsel for the appellants, the case at bar
is similar to Friedberg, supra, since the donors
were able to derive a monetary benefit from their gifts to
charities.
[131] According to the appellants, there was a dual intention
behind the gifts, but as regards each donor and donee, the
intention was pure and consistent with article 1806 of the
Civil Code of Québec.
[132] As for the factual aspect of the transactions, it was
pointed out to the Court that the appellants understood what they
were doing. They knew that they were buying, in particular,
paintings at a price below their fair market value, since
Mr. Levert, among others, had explained this to them. The
appellants had checked the prices in the Guide Vallée.
They knew where the paintings and jewellery came from and
realized that they were getting a bargain. They could not have
thought that it was illegal to participate in the transactions at
issue here.
[133] One of the appellants’ counsel referred to the
decision of Judge Mogan of this Court in Whent v. R.,
[1996] 3 C.T.C. 2542, which concerned lawyers who had purchased a
fairly large collection of paintings.
[134] As regards the fair market value of the paintings, the
appellants took the precaution of ensuring that the receipts
issued to them were not issued for an amount higher than the fair
market value of the works of art in question. They obtained
appraisals of the paintings that confirmed the basic principle of
the transactions they were entering into. As well, the issue of
the independence of the appraisals is quite simply a matter of
judgment. It was argued that the Act does not say that the
appraiser can have no interest whatsoever in the appraisal of the
property.
[135] The appellants argued that the respondent had adduced
little evidence on the issue of the fair market value of the
works of art. Some of the respondent’s witnesses felt that
auctions provide an indication of fair market value. On this
point, there was a basic difference of opinion between the
parties. The appellants argued that the gallery market is the
most usual market and the one that must be considered to
represent the fair market value of a work of art. The gallery
market is the largest market. It was added that very few people
have the assurance, time or interest to follow auctions, which
constitute a very minor market. All the witnesses agreed with
this. The Guide Vallée is above all a catalogue of
gallery prices. The gallery market is the one that best reflects
the definition of “fair market value”.
[136] The appellants argued that the Minister of National
Revenue’s conduct gave them every reason to believe that
they were justified in making gifts if they made sure that the
value of the property was accurate for the purposes of the
receipt. According to them, the basic issue of the case concerns
the appraisals.
[137] With regard to the issue of penalties, the appellants
argued that the Minister of National Revenue’s conduct was
unacceptable. Reference was made to Mr. Levert’s
correspondence, which established an indirect relationship
between Mr. Levert’s clients and the Minister of
National Revenue. The situation is no different from that of a
promoter of tax shelters who has obtained an advance ruling
before carrying out his or her transactions. The appellants do
not agree with the respondent’s position that the
transactions were part of a scheme involving the purchase of
receipts. That argument by the Minister of National Revenue
implies that the appellants did not purchase paintings or
jewellery. According to the appellants, it was shown beyond any
doubt that the property given was purchased and that gifts were
made of that property. No one purchased tax receipts, and the
appellants did not obtain any consideration or anything else from
the registered organizations.
[138] It should be noted that, for the 1988 and 1989 taxation
years, the property was purchased jointly by the two appellants.
Moreover, the appellant Amédée Duguay entered
into transactions not with Mr. Levert but with a co-worker,
Gilles Bouchard, to acquire a jewellery collection that Mr.
Bouchard was prepared to sell once it had been appraised. Ms.
Lizotte then appraised the jewellery according to generally
accepted practices. Mr. Bouchard reached an agreement with Mr.
Duguay under which he was to sell the jewellery to the appellants
for 25 percent of the amount at which it had been appraised. It
was the first time that Ms. Lizotte had appraised jewellery for
gift purposes. After being paid by the appellants,
Mr. Bouchard delivered the jewellery to the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh, which issued a
receipt corresponding to the fair market value of the jewellery
according to Ms. Lizotte’s appraisal.
[139] In conclusion, on the issue of penalties, the appellants
did not behave like someone who has been grossly negligent. Their
conduct was no different from that of thousands of other
taxpayers who make use of all kinds of tax shelters. One of the
appellants’ counsel referred to a passage from the
transcript of the appellant Amédée Duguay’s
testimony on May 20, 1997, in which he stated the following
at page 102:
[TRANSLATION]
Even though the Department was auditing my gifts for ’86
and ’87, I gave in ’88 and the following years
because I’d checked the legality of the transaction with
the Department and my only concern was the appraisal, the
value.
Respondent’s arguments
[140] Counsel for the respondent began by arguing that the
appellants had not made genuine gifts during the three taxation
years at issue.
[141] After referring to the elements essential to the
existence of a gift, one of the respondent’s counsel
argued, as can be seen from the notes submitted to the Court in
support of her oral argument, that the first essential element of
a gift, namely the donor’s intent to give, was not present
because the appellants in the case at bar acquired the property
and agreed to pay for it only on condition that it be immediately
or almost simultaneously given to a charity for an amount four
times higher than the price paid; this was done for the sole
purpose of obtaining a tax advantage. On this point, the
respondent relied on the decisions of Judge Dussault of this
Court in Guy Dutil v. R. and Réjean Gagnon v.
R., both of which were rendered on July 25, 1991, and the
Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in The Queen v.
Friedberg, 92 DTC 6031. The decisions of Judge Mogan of
this Court in Whent v. The Queen, [1996] 3 C.T.C. 2542,
and of Judge Archambault, also of this Court, in Paradis
v. R., [1997] 2 C.T.C. 2557, were also referred to.
[142] Based on a review of the evidence relating to the lack
of an intent to give, the respondent argued that the facts show
that the appellants’ only intention was to reduce their
taxes by means of receipts for charitable gifts and that there
was no philanthropic intention associated with their intention to
reduce their taxes. According to the respondent, the alleged gift
was conditional on a tax advantage being obtained. Counsel for
the respondent stressed the following factors extracted from the
evidence:
1. for the 1988 taxation year, the paintings in question were
chosen not by the appellants but by Mr. Levert;
2. the appellants did not choose the organizations that were
the alleged donees and did not approach them at all; and
3. the prices agreed on for the property in question
represented 25 percent of the amounts shown on the receipts for
the 1988, 1989 and 1990 taxation years.
[143] The respondent also argued that the delivery of movable
property, which is another essential element of a don
manuel when the gift is not attested by a notarial act, did
not take place because the property in this case was not
physically delivered to the donee, which must be given
unequivocal possession.
[144] With respect to the delivery and possession of the
paintings and the jewellery, the respondent relied, inter
alia, on the following evidence:
1. As regards 1988, the appellants did not deliver the
paintings to Univers du Rail Inc. and Univers du Rail
Inc. never had physical possession of them. Univers du Rail
Inc.’s representative, Mr. Carignan, never saw the
paintings. Possession is all the more ambiguous in the case at
bar given that Mr. Levert told Guy Gagnon he was the owner
of the painting in January 1989, while the Galerie des
Maîtres Anciens told Encans Pinney’s it was the owner
in April 1989.
2. As regards 1989, Mr. Demers testified that when the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh’s operations
were audited in 1989 and 1991, the property given by the
appellants was no longer on the premises. According to the
Fondation's president, Mr. St-Laurent, it had been
resold.
3. As regards 1990, the paintings in question by the artist
Fielding Downes do not appear in the catalogue for the auction
held by the
Société protectrice des animaux on
October 28, 1990. According to Jean Nadeau, the director of
operations of the Société protectrice des animaux,
the paintings may have been added later, at the time of the
auction. The said paintings by Fielding Downes were in fact sold
on October 28, 1990. However, the respondent went on to say that
although Joseph Hilpert’s paintings were supposed to be
sold at the auction held by the Société protectrice
des animaux on October 28, 1990, no trace of them can be found
either at the time of the auction or later, as stated by Mr.
Nadeau.
[145] Concerning the property allegedly given to the Fondation
Amérindienne Tecumseh, the respondent argued that the
evidence shows that Jacques Demers found only an empty room when
he went for a field audit in March 1989. The receipts were kept
at the accountant’s office, and no appraisal report was
available when Mr. Demers went to see the accountant in
March 1989. Mr. St-Laurent subsequently provided
only files that contained no information, and he claimed that all
the property had been resold. Mr. Demers said: [TRANSLATION]
“The only sales identified thus corresponded to just 11
percent of the amounts shown on the receipts.” The
purchasers were not identified either. The following was added in
the notes submitted in support of the oral argument of counsel
for the respondent:
[TRANSLATION]
Mr. Demers conducted another audit in August 1991. Very few
appraisals were available, and Mr. St-Laurent said that all the
property had been resold. The total sales shown in the financial
statements represented only two to three percent of the amount
shown on the receipts.
[146] Based on these facts, the respondent concluded that the
property in question was never delivered to the charities
concerned. In particular, if Mr. Levert did have possession
of the property on behalf of Univers du Rail Inc., it
was equivocal possession in the circumstances.
[147] Counsel for the respondent directed the Court’s
attention to subsection 118.1(2) of the Act, which
provides that no gift can be claimed unless the making of the
gift is proven by filing with the Minister of National Revenue a
receipt therefor that contains prescribed information. The
prescribed information is set out in subsection 3501(1) of the
Income Tax Regulations, while subsection 3501(6) of
the Regulations adds that every receipt on which the day
the gift was received, the year of the gift or the amount of the
gift is incorrect must be regarded as spoiled. The respondent
argued that the existence of a receipt does not entitle its
holder to the deduction for gifts if the content of the receipt
is incorrect or incomplete. In this regard, counsel for the
respondent made the following comments (footnotes omitted):
[TRANSLATION]
1. The receipt from Univers du Rail Inc. dated
December 7, 1988, does not provide the address of
either Univers du Rail Inc. or the appellants. Neither
the name nor the address of the appraiser is given even though
there was an appraiser: Mr. Levert. The receipt does not state
when the gift was received.
2. Receipt No. 80 from the Fondation Amérindienne
Tecumseh dated November 13, 1989, provides neither the name nor
the address of the appraiser, although it mentions that there was
an appraisal. The receipt does not state when the gift was
received.
3. Receipts No. 9423 and No. 9424 dated October 15, 1990, from
the Société protectrice des animaux state
respectively that $3,000 and $6,750 were received, when in fact
no amount was paid. The words “appraised work of art”
at the bottom of the receipt are not accompanied by either a
description, even a brief one, of the work of art in question or
a mention of the appraiser’s name and address. The date the
“works of art” were received is not given. The
address of the organization is not stated either.
[148] Based on the foregoing, the respondent concluded that,
assuming that genuine gifts were made, subsection 118.1(2) of the
Act means that they cannot be included in total gifts
because the receipts do not contain all the prescribed
information.
[149] Furthermore, one of the respondent's main arguments
was that the amounts stated on the receipts did not reflect the
value of the property involved.
[150] The respondent referred to the Federal Court of
Canada’s decision in Henderson Estate v. M.N.R., 73
DTC 5471, with regard to the definition of “fair market
value”. On the basis of that decision, particular reliance
was placed on the direct comparison approach. In determining the
value of property, reference was also made to the purchase price
paid by the owner of the property.
[151] With regard to the Guide Vallée, the respondent
stated the following in the notes submitted at the time of the
oral argument:
[TRANSLATION]
174. The prices shown in guides like the Guide Vallée
are not necessarily real sale prices.
175. The Guide Vallée is an advertising tool in which
anyone can buy a full page in colour for between $300 (according
to Guy Gagnon) and $400 to $500 (according to
Jules Harvey).
176. The guide does not take account of the period
during which the works were created, the artist’s
subject, the intrinsic quality of the works or
their conservation condition. The prices are based on a
calculation per square inch, which does not make the
necessary distinctions (testimony of Mr. Rinfret).
177. In addition, this type of guide is not reliable,
since the information in it is not controlled. Artists or their
agents sometimes overstate the prices shown for works in the hope
that the market will follow. The artist Lionel Fielding Downes
provides the best illustration of this. The facts proven about
him show the extent to which real sale prices do not correspond
to the prices set out in the Guide Vallée. It is therefore
necessary in each case to check whether the information is
accurate, as Mr. Rinfret stated several times.
[152] The oral argument of counsel for the respondent also
addressed the importance to be attached, for appraisal purposes,
to gallery sales and auction sales.
[153] With regard to gallery sales, the respondent argued the
following: [TRANSLATION] “if the market identified by the
expert for a given artist is the gallery market, then the expert
has to clearly identify the galleries in question and comparable
paintings in those galleries and to check whether the galleries
really sold the comparable paintings at the prices they listed.
Recent or new paintings by a living artist may sell for more in a
gallery if the artist is represented by that gallery.”
[154] The notes submitted by the respondent state the
following, inter alia, about auction sales:
[TRANSLATION]
179. If the market identified by the expert for a given artist
is the auction market (resale market), the indexes that list
sales (such as the Canadian Art Sales Index or the International
Art Price Annual from Bordas) and the sale invoices from the
sales rooms provide objective proof of such sales.
180. Assuming that the indexes contain fictional auction sales
to promote sales for an artist, as suggested by Mr. Levert, then
it must be proved that this was the case for the artists in
question. This seems doubtful, since auction prices would then be
much higher (testimony of Mr. Rinfret). In his testimony on May
22, 1997, Mr. Kelsey said that Encans Pinney’s does
not allow sellers to bid on their own paintings, which is
illegal.
[155] In making the assessments, the respondent assumed that
the value reported by the appellants for the works of art and
jewellery did not reflect their fair market value. The respondent
also assumed in making the assessments under appeal that Mr.
Levert was not an independent expert, since he appraised the
paintings in question. According to the respondent, that
conclusion was based on Mr. Levert's conduct in 1985, 1986
and 1987, [TRANSLATION] “when the amount paid by the
taxpayers was observed to be systematically 20 or 25 percent of
the amount of the appraisals on which the tax receipts were
based.” A systematic overvaluing of the property described
in the tax receipts was noted by the independent experts retained
by Revenue Canada.
[156] With regard to Mr. Levert, it was noted that following a
lengthy trial, he pleaded guilty to charges of wilfully evading
the payment of income tax in 1986 and 1987 by enabling a number
of taxpayers, including the appellants, to deduct gifts of
overvalued paintings in their tax returns. Mr. Levert was also
convicted of failing to report income from his transactions with
“donors” in 1985, 1986 and 1987. The respondent
further noted that Mr. Levert was not objective: [TRANSLATION]
“According to Mr. Levert, the amount to be paid by his
clients was fixed in advance at 25 percent of the property's
value as listed in the Guide Vallée or of its gallery
value.” Mr. Levert contrasted the gallery market with the
auction market. He assumed that any artist's paintings can be
sold in a gallery. He also considered that the prices suggested
in the Guide Vallée are real prices for gallery sales and
need not be checked. According to the respondent, [TRANSLATION]
“in doing so, he suggested completely artificial
values that bore no relationship to the real market”.
The respondent adopted the comment by Mr. Rinfret, an expert
witness for the respondent, that what must in fact be done is to
situate the market for a given artist and a given work: gallery,
auction, flea market or elsewhere. Within that market, it must be
determined whether there are comparable real sales, which Mr.
Levert did not do. Counsel for the respondent also noted that Mr.
Levert and the Galerie des Maîtres Anciens Inc. were
convicted of wilfully destroying records for the gallery’s
taxation years ending March 31, 1989, March 31, 1990, March 31,
1991, and March 31, 1992.
[157] The respondent argued that Mr. Levert was not an
independent expert because he had a personal interest in some of
the transactions to which the appellants were parties.
[158] The respondent made the following comment about Mr.
Levert’s statement that the auction price would only
occasionally be close to or higher than the fair market value:
[TRANSLATION] “this statement is based on a false premise,
namely that the auction price is never the fair market value.
This completely disregards the resale market for a purpose that
is all too evident: justifying appraisals that are systematically
inflated.”
[159] The appellant Amédée Duguay continued to
deal with Mr. Levert to obtain a receipt for 1988. He went to a
Revenue Canada office with Mr. Levert in 1988. However, he did
not explain to the Revenue Canada official, whose name he does
not remember, that Mr. Levert was not only his seller but also
the appraiser and the person who provided him with a receipt. He
did not explain all the circumstances of the case. He said that
he obtained the 1986 Department of National Revenue pamphlet
entitled “Gifts in Kind” at that meeting but admitted
that he did not really scrutinize it. The appellant
Diane L. Duguay did not read it carefully either.
[160] According to the respondent’s oral argument notes,
Mr. Duguay [TRANSLATION] “was guilty of gross negligence,
or even wilful blindness, in continuing year after year, for five
years, to enter into the same kind of simultaneous transaction
— paying 25 percent in exchange for a tax receipt, no
matter what organization and property were involved — and
in not wanting to see, in the case of Mr. Levert, that the
appraiser was not independent. Nor did he make a more serious
attempt to check the value of the property, although his
experience as a police officer in the economic crimes section
should have told him it was necessary to do so.”
[161] The respondent argued that the appellant Diane L.
Duguay, a teacher, was also grossly negligent in trying to obtain
tax receipts in the same circumstances four years in a row. Her
husband kept her informed of what he was doing and of the amounts
set out on the receipts and the amounts to be paid. She paid her
share of those amounts.
Analysis
[162] Based on the arguments made by the appellants and the
respondent, it is clear that there are three main issues in this
case:
1. whether the appellants made gifts of the property in
question or whether the gifts were a sham;
2. assuming that genuine gifts were made, whether the value
indicated by the appellants in their tax returns for each item of
property given represents the item's fair market value;
and
3. whether the Minister of National Revenue validly assessed
penalties against the appellants for the 1988, 1989 and 1990
taxation years under subsection 163(2) of the
Act.
[163] It is necessary to begin with the first issue, that is,
whether, in the circumstances, the appellants made gifts of the
property in question to Univers du Rail Inc., the
Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh and the
Société protectrice des animaux.
[164] As was clearly established in Lagueux &
Frères, the first thing that must be done is to
determine the nature of the transactions entered into by the
appellants and the organizations that benefited in light of the
Civil Code of Lower Canada. It is thus necessary to refer
to articles 755 and 776 of the former Civil Code,
which read as follows:
Art. 755. Gift inter vivos is an act by which
the donor divests himself, by gratuitous title, of the ownership
of a thing, in favor of the donee, whose acceptance is requisite
and renders the contract perfect. This acceptance makes it
irrevocable, saving the cases provided for by law, or a valid
resolutive condition.
. . .
Art. 776. Deeds containing gifts inter vivos
must under pain of nullity be executed in notarial form and the
original thereof be kept of record. The acceptance must be made
in the same form.
Gifts of moveable property, accompanied by delivery, may
however be made and accepted by private writings, or verbal
agreements.
Gifts validly made out of Québec need not be in
notarial form.
As this Court noted in Paradis v. R., supra,
three essential conditions must be met for a gift to exist:
intent to give, delivery of the property and acceptance by the
donor.
[165] With regard to the first condition, I am in complete
agreement with the view expressed by Judge Archambault in
Paradis that this question must be decided strictly in the
context of the legal relationship established between each of the
appellants and the organizations that were to receive the gifts
in question. In the case at bar, the evidence is clear that
neither of the appellants received any consideration whatsoever
from the organizations to which the property was given. In my
opinion, it does not matter that the principal motivation for
each of the appellants was to obtain a tax advantage. This
approach has been confirmed, at least to some extent, by the
Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in The Queen v.
Friedberg, 92 DTC 6031. The following passage from page 6032
of that judgment is particularly interesting:
Thus, a gift is a voluntary transfer of property owned by a
donor to a donee, in return for which no benefit or consideration
flows to the donor (see Heald, J. in The Queen v. Zandstra
[74 DTC 6416] [1974] 2 F.C. 254, at p. 261.) The tax advantage
which is received from gifts is not normally considered a
“benefit” within this definition, for to do so would
render the charitable donations deductions unavailable to many
donors.
A receipt obtained from the recipient organization cannot be
viewed as consideration even though the taxpayer must file the
receipt to be entitled to the deduction for gifts. In the
circumstances, the receipt simply attests a physical fact, namely
that the designated property has been received by the
organization in question. It is therefore my view that the
appellants had the necessary intent to give the works of art and
jewellery to the organizations in question. The appellants owned
the works of art and jewellery before making gifts of them. This
was not in dispute. The weight of the evidence shows that the
appellants left it up to Mr. Levert in some cases and Mr.
Bouchard in other cases to choose the charity that would receive
the gifts in question.
[166] After carefully reviewing the evidence, I have concluded
that the paintings and jewellery at issue in these appeals were
identified clearly enough and became the property of the
organizations in question. With regard to the property given in
1988, the organization involved obtained possession of it through
Mr. Levert. The weight of the evidence shows that Mr. Levert
played a dual role. During the 1988 taxation year, he worked both
for the appellants, who, as donors, agreed to transfer the
painting in question to the charity he had chosen, and for the
donee, which entrusted him with possession of that property. The
testimony of Mr. Carignan, an entirely credible witness, has
persuaded me that the painting in question was given to Univers
du Rail Inc.
[167] As regards the gift of jewellery made by the appellants
to the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh, I have
concluded after carefully reviewing the testimony of the
appellants, Ms. Lizotte and Mr. Demers that it is probable that
the appellants gave the jewellery to the Fondation. Mr. Bouchard
acted as a mandatary for the appellants and the Fondation. He
played a similar role in the 1990 taxation year in respect of the
paintings given to the
Société protectrice des animaux. Mr.
Levert was the one who appraised the paintings in question.
[168] Even though I believe, as I will explain later in these
reasons, that the appellants were seriously negligent as regards
their tax obligations, I do not consider the sham doctrine
applicable here. The appellants genuinely intended to make gifts
to charities and did in fact make those gifts, although in doing
so they may have been negligent in using receipts based on
inflated appraisals in order to obtain the deduction for
charitable gifts.
[169] I will turn now to the second issue, which concerns the
fair market value of the property given to Univers du Rail Inc.,
the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh and the
Société protectrice des animaux.
[170] The concept of fair market value has been considered by
the courts, inter alia in Henderson Estate and
Bank of New York v. M.N.R., 73 DTC 5471. The following
passage at page 5476 strikes me as highly relevant:
The statute does not define the expression “fair market
value” . . . . I do not think it
necessary to attempt an exact definition of the expression as
used in the statute other than to say that the words must be
construed in accordance with the common understanding of them.
That common understanding I take to mean the highest price an
asset might reasonably be expected to bring if sold by the owner
in the normal method applicable to the asset in question in the
ordinary course of business in a market not exposed to any undue
stresses and composed of willing buyers and sellers dealing at
arm’s length and under no compulsion to buy or sell. I
would add that the foregoing understanding as I have expressed it
in a general way includes what I conceive to be the essential
element which is an open and unrestricted market in which the
price is hammered out between willing and informed buyers and
sellers on the anvil of supply and demand.
[Emphasis added.]
[171] First of all, I attach little weight to Mr.
Levert’s appraisals. With regard to the gift made by the
appellants in 1988, he was a party to all the transactions. With
regard to the paintings given by the appellants to the
Société protectrice des animaux, it was Mr.
Levert who sold the paintings to Mr. Bouchard and appraised
them for him. The receipts given to the appellants were based on
those appraisals. Mr. Levert had an interest in the sales being
closed.
[172] In his tax return for the 1988 taxation year, the
appellant Amédée Duguay set the value of his
interest in the painting by Jean-Paul Lemieux purchased jointly
with the appellant Diane L. Duguay at $8,000 for the
purposes of the deduction for charitable gifts. Ms. Duguay set
the value of her interest in the painting at $7,000. The
appellants thus estimated the painting’s value as of the
time it was acquired at $15,000. Based on all the evidence
regarding the painting’s value, and after considering,
inter alia, the testimony of Mr. Levert and
Guy Gagnon, I have concluded that it was worth no more than
$3,000. The value of the appellant Amédée
Duguay’s interest in the painting was therefore 8/15 of
$3,000, while the value of the appellant Diane L. Duguay’s
interest was 7/15 of $3,000.
[173] In their tax returns for the 1989 taxation year, the
appellants estimated the value of their interest in the jewellery
given to the Fondation Amérindienne Tecumseh at
$5,820 each for the purposes of the deduction for gifts. I do not
agree with the opinion expressed by Ms. Lizotte, who is an expert
in gemmology, that is, in the identification of stones, as
regards the value of the jewellery, which included a watch and a
silver box in addition to the jewellery itself. I agree with the
respondent that Ms. Lizotte is not an expert in appraising
second-hand jewellery. She has neither the experience nor the
training that is necessary. She seems to have attributed a
replacement value to the jewellery. The respondent’s expert
has worked as an antique dealer, appraiser and jeweller.
Generally speaking, I accept his approach. All things considered,
I find that the jewellery, including the watch and the silver
box, was worth about $3,000 at the relevant time. The value of
the interest of each of the appellants was thus $1,500.
[174] In his tax return for the 1990 taxation year, the
appellant Amédée Duguay indicated a value of $9,750
for the gifts he made to the
Société protectrice des animaux in that year.
The gifts were two 16-inch by 20-inch oil paintings by
Fielding Downes. At Mr. Bouchard’s request, Mr. Levert
appraised each of the paintings at $3,000 for insurance purposes.
According to Mr. Rinfret, the respondent’s expert
witness, few of that artist’s works can be found in
galleries. The auction market is where most of his paintings can
be found. All things considered, I set the value of each of these
paintings at $400 at the relevant time.
[175] In her notes in support of her oral argument on the
second issue as worded by her, the respondent also brought up the
fact that the receipts did not comply with the Income Tax
Act and the Income Tax Regulations. However, this
argument was not made in Part B (which set out the issues to be
decided) of the amended replies to the notices of appeal in these
two appeals.
[176] I will make only a few comments.
[177] First of all, subsection 118.1(2) of the Act
provides that a gift cannot be included unless the making of the
gift is proven by filing with the Minister a receipt therefor
that contains prescribed information. Subsection 3501(1) of the
Income Tax Regulations sets out the information that must
appear on the receipt. It provides, inter alia, that
an official receipt must contain 10 separate items of
information. In addition, subsection 3501(4) of the
Regulations provides for situations where an official
receipt is issued to replace an official receipt previously
issued. Finally, subsection 3501(6) of the Regulations
provides that an official receipt form on which information,
limited to three specified items, is entered incorrectly or
illegibly must be regarded as spoiled.
[178] The above-mentioned provisions of the Income Tax
Regulations appear to make it possible, at least in some
cases, to replace a receipt that is incorrect, illegible or
perhaps even incomplete.
[179] In any event, I do not think that I am obliged to rule
on this question.
[180] I still have to consider the issue of the penalties
assessed against the two appellants by the Minister of National
Revenue in the assessments for the 1988 and 1989 taxation years,
and also for the 1990 taxation year in the case of the appellant
Amédée Duguay.
[181] Counsel for the appellants stressed, inter alia,
the following facts:
(a) The appellants were told by Aline Tremblay, a financial
advisor at their bank whom they trusted, that they could reduce
their taxes by giving art objects to registered charities. Ms.
Tremblay put the appellants in touch with Mr. Levert. They
were told that Mr. Levert could purchase paintings at auctions
from bankruptcy or private sale lots at very attractive prices.
Ms. Tremblay also told the appellants that the appraisals on
which the receipts were based had been prepared by competent
individuals in accordance with professional criteria and on the
basis of specialized books.
(b) The appellants made gifts in 1989 and 1990 despite the
fact that the value of the gifts they had made in 1986 and 1987
was reduced by the Minister of National Revenue’s
assessments. Mr. Levert reassured them that all the appraisals
were correct and Revenue Canada's representatives said that
only the value of the gifts was being challenged.
[182] Counsel for the respondent stressed, inter alia,
the following evidence:
(a) In investigating the Musée Louis-Hémon and
the Musée Pierre-Boucher, two Revenue Canada investigators
met the appellant Amédée Duguay at his office on
September 2, 1987. According to the interview report, Mr. Duguay
did not want to say how much he had paid. Following a discussion,
he said that he had paid $4,000 for himself and his wife between
April and September 1986. He said that he had withdrawn the money
from the bank, but he refused to show his bank accounts. He
refused to make a sworn statement, saying [TRANSLATION] “I
take statements, I don’t make them.” According to
Mr. Duguay, he met with the investigators not long after
Revenue Canada's search at the Musée
Louis-Hémon in Péribonka. Yet Mr. Demers said
that the seizure occurred in 1988.
(b) In spite of the assessments dated December 16, 1988, in
the case of the appellant Diane L. Duguay and January 13, 1989,
in the case of the appellant Amédée Duguay, Mr.
Duguay continued to do business with Mr. Levert to obtain a
receipt for 1988. He said that he went to a Revenue Canada office
with Mr. Levert in 1988. However, he did not explain to the
official, whose name he does not remember, that Mr. Levert was
not only his seller but also the appraiser and the person who
prepared the receipt. He did not explain all the circumstances of
the case.
(c) For 1989 and 1990, Mr. Duguay did business not with Mr.
Levert but with a co-worker, Gilles Bouchard, a police officer
assigned to surveillance. Mr. Duguay checked nothing. Mr.
Bouchard did everything: he chose the organizations and provided
Mr. Duguay with receipts and appraisals in return for the payment
of 25 percent of the amount indicated on the receipt. Mr.
Bouchard prepared no invoice for the property acquired by Mr.
Duguay, whatever Mr. Duguay may have claimed. No capital
gain was reported for either 1989 or 1990. It was the receipts
that interested the appellants Amédée Duguay and
Diane L. Duguay, and nothing else.
(d) The appellants Amédée Duguay and Diane L.
Duguay were not looking for a bargain, that is, purchasing
property at a low price, even though they seemed to believe that
the value of the property was higher than its cost. All they were
looking for was a tax advantage, and they knew nothing whatsoever
about the property in question and did no research whatsoever on
the subject.
[183] In light of all the evidence, I have been persuaded by
the appellants’ behaviour that they were extremely reckless
or at least grossly negligent in respect of their tax
obligations. It seems to me that, particularly after
Mr. Duguay’s meeting with Revenue Canada’s
investigators, the appellants should have reconsidered their
position in relation to the tax authorities. They should have
wondered about the true nature of the arrangements pursuant to
which they were obtaining tax receipts for amounts four times
higher than the prices of the works of art they had just
acquired. That fact alone — the fact that there was so
great a difference between the prices paid by the appellants for
the paintings and the amounts that appeared on the tax receipts,
which supposedly represented the fair market value of the
paintings at the same point in time — leads me to believe
that the appellants knew or ought to have known, if they had been
mindful of their tax obligations, that the amounts indicated on
the receipts were greatly inflated or excessive and did not
represent the fair market value of the paintings in question. Mr.
Levert’s role, particularly in the case of the gift made by
the appellants in 1988, in which he was involved at every stage
of the transaction, and Mr. Bouchard’s role with
regard to the gifts made in 1989 and 1990 should have raised
serious suspicions in the appellants’ minds. The facts that
the charities were for all practical purposes chosen by Mr.
Levert and Mr. Bouchard and that the appellants displayed a
total lack of interest, as donors, in the organizations that
received their gifts are also strange and unusual aspects of the
transactions in question. Generally speaking, the
appellants’ failure to co-operate with the tax
authorities when they were asked to provide proof of purchase and
payment documents regarding the works of art in question also
persuades me that they may have thought their conduct was not
beyond reproach.
[184] I therefore conclude that the Minister of National
Revenue was correct to assess penalties against the appellants.
The amounts of the penalties must be adjusted to take account of
the value of each of the gifts as established in these Reasons
for Judgment.
[185] For these reasons, the appeals from the assessments for
the 1988, 1989 and 1990 taxation years in the case of the
appellant Amédée Duguay and for the 1988 and 1989
taxation years in the case of the appellant Diane L. Duguay are
allowed and the assessments are referred back to the Minister of
National Revenue for reconsideration and reassessment on the
basis that the appellants are entitled to the deduction for gifts
provided for in section 118.1 of the Income Tax Act,
taking into account the value of the gifts as established in
these reasons.
[186] Costs will be awarded later following a common hearing
in these appeals and the appeals of Alain Côté
(92-2773(IT)G), Louise Marcoux (93-3160(IT)G) and
François Langlois (92-1124(IT)G and 94-3007(IT)G).
The procedure in and date of the common hearing on the issue of
costs will be determined in consultation with counsel for the
parties.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 13th day of November 1998.
“Alban Garon”
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 18th day of May
1999.
Stephen Balogh, Revisor