Date: 19980424
Docket: 96-1186-IT-G
BETWEEN:
ALGOA TRUST,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
(Rendered orally from the bench at Montréal, Quebec, on
February 10, 1998.)
P. R. DUSSAULT, J.T.C.C.
[1] The appellant is challenging an assessment in the amount
of $25,278.60 made pursuant to s. 160 of the Income Tax
Act ("the Act"), notice of which is dated
December 21, 1995.
[2] The appellant's liability as the transferee of
property through dividends in the amount of $78,000 was
recognized in respect of an earlier assessment in a decision by
Judge Rip of this Court on February 1, 1993.[1] However, the debt of
the transferor (Jaans Leasing Limited ["Jaans
Leasing"]) for the years prior to the transfer had to be
recalculated, in accordance with Judge Rip's directions
regarding the allocation of certain payments made by Jaans
Leasing to reduce its debt. The appellant challenged the
calculation done by Revenue Canada in arriving at the
reassessment of December 21, 1995 following that
decision.
[3] The rule stated in s. 160 of the Act does not have
the effect of creating a tax debt. The effect of the provision is
not to create a second debt: there is only one tax debt. The
wording of the Act is quite clear: the purpose of s. 160 is
essentially to add another debtor who is jointly and severally
liable with the transferor. This new debtor is called the
transferee. There is thus no new debt created under the Act and
the obligation arises not from the assessment but from the Act
itself. Fundamentally, therefore, there is only one debt and only
that debt can bear interest.
[4] First, subsection (1) of s. 160 in fact states that
the transferee is jointly and severally liable and that his or
her liability is limited to the lesser of the two amounts
mentioned in s. 160(1)(e)(i) and (ii), namely (i) the
value of the property transferred less the consideration, and
(ii) the total of all amounts which the transferor is liable to
pay in or in respect of the year of the transfer or any preceding
year, that is to say, for the year of the transfer and for any
preceding years.
[5] Secondly, s. 160(2) provides that the Minister of
National Revenue ("the Minister") may at any time make
an assessment. This is also quite clear. However, the limit
imposed in s. 160(1)(e) must be observed for each
assessment.
[6] Thirdly, I would say that there is no provision of the Act
regarding interest that may be applicable to an assessment issued
pursuant to s. 160 of the Act. This is logical, since there
is no new tax debt and an assessment under s. 160 already
incorporates the interest which the transferor owed in addition
to the tax. The assessment may also incorporate penalties and
interest thereon.
[7] I shall now set out the facts which I regard as the most
important in the instant case. First, there occurred in 1982 a
transfer from Jaans Leasing to Algoa Trust of $78,000 by way of
dividends, which was done in two payments, one of $40,000 and one
of $38,000.
[8] For 1982 and the preceding years Jaans Leasing owed
$88,327.54, as established at November 20, 1989. Reference
may be made here to Exhibit A-9, at page 233. There was
another amount, which differed slightly ($88,244.82), as
indicated on page 234 of the same document. In each case $20
in legal fees was added, which I believe was kept right to the
end. In my opinion, this amount of $20 was improperly assessed.
An assessment cannot include such an amount. An assessment may
include three things : tax, interest and penalty, and nothing
more.
[9] There was thus an assessment in 1989 and in 1992. In 1992
explanations were simply added to comply with the Tax Court of
Canada decision in Leung v. M.N.R.[2] Later, as we know, that decision
was reversed by the Federal Court Trial Division.[3]
[10] It is thus clear from Exhibit A-9 that Jaans
Leasing owed money for 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981 and 1982. The
assessment of the transferee is limited to the lesser of the
amounts indicated in s. 160(1)(e). Here this was
$78,000, that is, the value of the property transferred.
[11] There are two subsequent events that must be taken into
account. The decision of Judge Rip dated February 1,
1993 established that the assessment was valid, but that the
transferor's debt should be recalculated in relation to six
payments that should be allocated as indicated in that decision.
In two paragraphs Judge Rip indicated, first (in (a)), that
four payments should be allocated as indicated by the taxpayer,
regardless of the alterations in the documents. Secondly, two
other payments (in (b)), were to be allocated specifically to
1981. Counsel for the appellant disputed the allocation in
particular regarding one of the payments of $1,600, but submitted
no specific evidence that the allocation was contrary to the
decision. I think it follows from that decision – this is
clear to me – that if the Court took the trouble to say
specifically that two payments related to 1981, the calculation
should first be redone on that basis. Another payment was also
applied to 1981. Then, the others were applied to the following
years: two payments were for 1982 and remained applicable to that
year, and one payment was applied to 1983.
[12] Accordingly, no specific evidence was submitted to the
Court that the allocation was contrary to the decision of Judge
Rip. Mr. Gélinas of Revenue Canada explained in
detail how he proceeded and I agree with the method he used.
According to Mr. Gélinas, the overall effect was to
establish Jaans Leasing's tax debt in November 1989 at
$64,495.66, although earlier calculations done by someone else
had resulted in a debt of $60,585.68. The latter amount can be
found inter alia in what is described as
"Exhibit A" to the Reply to the Notice of Appeal.
According to Mr. Gélinas there were also other
errors, and in fact – why try to hide it? – several
documents received by the appellant and entered in evidence by
its counsel indicate that there was some confusion. The result of
Mr. Gélinas's calculations was that the
assessment of December 21, 1995 should have been $26,810.36,
not $25,278.60 as indicated in what is described as
"Exhibit C" to the Reply to the Notice of Appeal.
Whether the assessment amount is $25,000, or $26,000, or $27,000,
or even $200,000, is of no significance in view of the limit
imposed by s. 160(1)(e) of the Act.
[13] I now come to the second event, namely the payment of
$57,387.14 by Algoa Trust on February 14, 1991. The payment
was not acknowledged until 1993 and was applied to the reduction
of the debt retroactive to February 14, 1991. Incidentally,
Judge Rip's decision does not mention this at all.
Accordingly, this is a case in which the application of
s. 160(3)(a) is appropriate. The payment was applied
to reduce the transferee's joint and several liability, since
it reduced the transferor's tax debt for 1978 and 1979 and
for subsequent years, although when the initial assessment was
made on November 20, 1989, no reference was made to the 1978
debt and there was only a partial reference to that of 1979,
since the assessment had to be limited to $78,000, namely the
value of the property transferred, and not to $88,244.82, that
is, the amount of the transferor's tax debt as determined
earlier. This procedure is correct. The fact that the assessment
was limited to $78,000 does not mean that the balance of the debt
somehow miraculously disappeared. The 1978 debt and the 1979
total debt did not disappear simply because there was no need to
refer to them since the limit set by s. 160(1)(e) of
the Act had already been reached.
[14] Between November 20, 1989 (the date of the
assessment) and February 14, 1991 the total debt increased
because of interest, and subsequently the debt reduced by the
payment of $57,387.14 continued to increase, reaching $26,810.36
by December 21, 1995 according to
Mr. Gélinas's calculations. It is now perhaps
$32,000 or $33,000, but again this is not significant. If Algoa
Trust were assessed now for the first time and a payment of
$57,387.14 were received the same day, clearly Algoa Trust could
not be held liable for an amount greater than $20,612.86 pursuant
to s. 160(1)(e) and (3)(a), namely the
difference between the amount established under
s. 160(1)(e), that is, $78,000, and the amount
already paid, namely $57,387.14. Even if nothing were recovered
from Algoa Trust for 50 years, in my opinion no more than
$20,612.86 could ever be recovered.
[15] Accordingly, in conclusion, the appeal is allowed and the
assessment of December 21, 1995 is reduced to
$20,612.86.
[16] The respondent will be entitled to taxed costs, but in
the circumstances these may not exceed $1,000. If matters had
been clearer and handled correctly at the outset, there would
have been much less confusion and the parties would perhaps not
have been in the same position today.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 24th day of April 1998.
“P. R. Dussault”
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 29th day of July
1998.
Erich Klein, Revisor