Date: 19980904
Docket: 96-2451-UI
BETWEEN:
RENÉ HURTUBISE,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Prévost, D.J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal was heard at La Malbaie, Quebec, on August 6,
1998.
[2] It is an appeal from a determination by the Minister of
National Revenue (“the Minister”) dated October
10, 1996, that the appellant’s employment with Bruno
Dufresne Taxi, the payer, from September 25 to November 10, 1995,
was insurable as an employer-employee relationship existed
between the payer and the appellant, but that the insurable
earnings for the period in question were only $1,270.
[3] Paragraph 5 of the Reply to the Notice of Appeal reads as
follows:
[TRANSLATION]
5. In arriving at his decision the respondent Minister of
National Revenue relied inter alia on the following
facts:
(a) Bruno Dufresne is the sole owner of the payer, which
operates 2 or 3 cars; (A)
(b) in September 1995 the appellant was without work and the
payer offered him a position as a taxi driver; (A)
(c) the appellant’s work was to be temporary, replacing
Bruno Dufresne who was ill; (A)
(d) there was an agreement between the payer and the appellant
pursuant to which the latter would drive the taxicab generally
driven by Mr. Dufresne, and the payer would continue to pay the
taxes and all expenses relating to the car; (A)
(e) the appellant drove Mr. Dufresne’s car and at the
end of each week the payer gave him 35 % of the profits from
the car; (DAW)
(f) the appellant paid none of the costs of the use of the
payer’s car; (A)
(g) at the end of seven weeks of work Mr. Dufresne took back
his car and issued a record of employment in the
appellant’s name, as if he had leased the car during that
period; (D)
(h) the appellant’s record of employment, dated November
14, 1995, is incorrect as it does not reflect the actual
situation regarding the agreement between the parties; (D)
(i) the appellant actually worked for seven weeks and received
insurable earnings totalling $1,270 during that period; (D)
(j) the payer issued an amended record of employment dated
March 22, 1996 showing the true situation and indicating that the
appellant received insurable earnings of $1,270 during the period
at issue. (A)
[4] In the preceding passage from the Reply to the Notice of
Appeal the Court has indicated in parentheses after each
subparagraph the comments made by the appellant at the start of
the hearing, as follows:
(A) admitted
(D) denied
(DAW) denied as written
Appellant’s evidence
According to his testimony
Regarding subparagraph (e) above
[5] The percentage is not 35 %, but actually 40 %,
as his employer absorbed the GST and QST, as mentioned in his
statutory declaration (Exhibit I-1).
Regarding subparagraph (g)
[6] The appellant had checked with the local unemployment
insurance office and learned that for taxi drivers there was a
basis for making the calculations required for unemployment
insurance purposes, but he could no longer really recall what it
was.
Regarding subparagraph (h)
[7] His record of employment of November 14, 1995 (Exhibit
I-2) indicated that he was earning $520 a week, but that was not
what he in fact received.
[8] He submitted it to the unemployment insurance authorities
nonetheless and received benefits accordingly.
[9] Subsequently, on March 22, 1996, the payer issued him
another record of employment (Exhibit I-3) indicating that he had
earned only $1,270 during his seven weeks of work, and this was
quite true.
[10] The unemployment insurance authorities then claimed from
the appellant the repayment of an “overpayment”.
Argument
According to the appellant
[11] The unemployment insurance office misled him and he did
not want to suffer the consequences of that.
[12] He had not committed any fraud, but had simply been
misinformed.
[13] However, he did not take the name of the employee at the
unemployment insurance office who gave him this information.
According to counsel for the respondent
[14] The appellant’s insurable earnings are those
appearing in the second record of employment (Exhibit I-3).
[15] Section 12 of the Unemployment Insurance
Regulations reads as follows:
Employment in any of the following employments, unless it is
excepted employment under subsection 3(2) of the Act or excepted
from insurable employment by any other provision of these
Regulations, is included in insurable employment: . . .
(e) employment of a person as a driver of any taxi . .
. where that person is not the owner of the
vehicle . . . .
[16] Subsection 17(3) of the Unemployment Insurance
(Collection of Premiums) Regulations reads in part as
follows:
(3) Where the owner, proprietor or operator of a business or
public authority described in subsection (1) is unable to
determine the earnings of a person whose employment in connection
with the business or authority is included in insurable
employment by virtue of paragraph 12(e) of the
Unemployment Insurance Regulations, the insurable earnings
of the person for each week during that employment shall be
deemed to be an amount (taken to the nearest dollar) equal to 2/3
of the maximum weekly insurable earnings, unless . . . .
[17] The first record of employment (Exhibit I-2) was prepared
on this basis, but the appellant’s earnings were known and
they are what appear in the second record of employment (Exhibit
I-3).
[18] The basis set forth in that regulatory provision was thus
not applicable.
Analysis
[19] The appellant probably did call the unemployment
insurance office, but he no doubt did not say that the payer knew
full well what his earnings were.
[20] It is certain that the first record of employment
(Exhibit I-2) was wrong: indeed, that is why the payer issued
another one clearly indicating that the appellant had earned only
$1,270 in the period at issue.
[21] The above-cited regulation is clear and does not need to
be interpreted: it is only when a taxi driver’s earnings
cannot be determined that the basis indicated therein can be
applicable, and such is not the case here.
[22] The difference between the 35 % and the 40 %
was explained well by the appellant, but that does not alter
matters in any way.
[23] It is most unfortunate that the appellant should find
himself in this situation, but the Minister is not bound by
information supplied by unemployment insurance officials, even if
the appellant had explained his situation properly at the outset,
which is doubtful since in court he no longer even remembered
what basis was used.
[24] The appellant was not accused of fraud in the instant
case, and there is no need to pursue that point any further.
[25] The Court must arrive at its decision within the
framework of the Act and Regulations and in so doing herein
cannot but dismiss the appeal and affirm the decision appealed
from.
Signed at Laval, Quebec, this 4th day of September 1998.
"A. Prévost"
D.J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 20th day of April
1999.
Erich Klein, Revisor