Docket: 2010-3326(IT)I
BETWEEN:
LAURIANNE GAUCHER,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
____________________________________________________________________
Appeal heard December 1, 2011, at Montréal, Quebec.
Before: The Honourable
Justice Robert J. Hogan
Appearances:
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For the appellant:
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The appellant herself
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Agent for the respondent :
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Amin Njonkou-Kouandou, student-at-law
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____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The appeal from the redeterminations made under
the Income Tax Act with respect to the Canada Child Tax Benefit for the 2005,
2006 and 2007 base years, and with respect to the Goods and Services Tax Credit
for the 2007 taxation year is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of February 2012.
"Robert J. Hogan"
Translation
certified true
on this 13th day
of February 2012.
Elizabeth Tan,
Translator
Citation: 2012 TCC 43
Date: 20120201
Docket: 2010-3326(IT)I
BETWEEN:
LAURIANNE GAUCHER,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Hogan J.
I. Introduction
[1]
According to the
notices of determination by the Minister of National Revenue (the Minister),
the appellant is liable for overpayments of Canada Child Tax Benefits (CCTB)
and Goods and Services Tax Credit (GSTC) she received for her two children for
the period of December 2007 to May 2009. The appellant admits that she was not
eligible for these payments because the children lived with their father during
that period, but she claims she is not liable for the amount claimed because it
was the children's father who received the payments in question. She wonders
why the Minister paid the amounts a second time to the children's father, leading
the Minister to ask her to repay the overpayments.
II. Summary of the facts
[2]
The appellant and Jonathan
Gagné lived in a common-law relationship. The couple had two children during
their relationship.
[3]
The appellant separated
from her common-law spouse in November 2007, when the children were 2 and 3
years old. Since the separation, the father has had custody of the children.
[4]
In 2004, the appellant
filed an application for Child Tax Benefits after her first child was born. She
did the same in 2005 after her second child was born. The CCTB and GSTC
payments were deposited directly into the appellant and Mr. Gagné's joint bank
account at the Caisse Desjardins Les Salines in Saint-Hyacinthe.
[5]
The evidence shows that
the appellant gave her Interac bank card to Mr. Gagné when they separated
in November 2007. The appellant no longer had access to the bank account from
that time on.
[6]
After the separation,
the appellant moved to Drummondville and she opened a new bank account at the
local Caisse Populaire to make her bank transactions easier.
[7]
Finally, in May 2008, the
appellant signed a waiver of her rights regarding the joint bank account.
[8]
The evidence shows that
from November 2007 to May 2009, the appellant did not have any control over the
joint bank account. Mr. Gagné used all the CCTB and GSTC payments
deposited to the account to pay for the children's expenses, since he had
custody.
[9]
In May or June 2009, Mr.
Gagné filed an application for the Child Tax Benefit indicating he had sole custody
of his two children, who had been living with him since November 2007. He asked
the Minister to deposit all CCTB payments to the same joint bank account to
which previous payments to the appellant were deposited. After verifying this
application, the Minister found Mr. Gagné was the eligible individual to
receive the CCTB and GSTC as of November 2007.
[10]
Further to this
determination, the Minister proceeded with the adjustment that is the subject
of this case. He determined that the appellant was not the eligible individual
for her two children, and she was liable for the amounts that were overpaid
from December 2007 to May 2009.
III. The issue
[11]
The respondent
correctly summarized the issues in the Reply to the Notice of appeal as
follows:
[translation]
(a)
Is the appellant liable
for the amount of $3,682 for the 2006 base year (for the period of December
2007 to June 2008), and the amount of $5,894.90 for the 2007 base year
(for the period of July 2008 to May 2009) that the Minister determined was an
overpayment of CCTB?
(b)
Is the appellant liable
for the amount of $496 that the Minister determined was an overpayment of Goods
and Services Tax/Harmonized Sales Tax (GST/HST) for the 2007 taxation year (for
the period of July 2008 to May 2009)?
IV. Analysis
[12]
In his closing
arguments, counsel for the respondent asked me to dismiss the appeal because
the appellant's only reason was that she had not received the overpayments the
Minister claimed. According to counsel for the respondent, the Court does not
have jurisdiction to hear this argument because it is an issue of collecting
the respondent's debt, over which the Federal Court has sole jurisdiction. I do
not share this opinion.
[13]
The notice of
determination regarding the appellant included two determinations by the
Minister, first that she was not the eligible individual for the CCTB and GSTC
as of November 2007, and second that she was liable for the amounts claimed by
the Minister, as indicated in the issues formulated by the respondent.
[14]
In Surikov v. Canada, my colleague
Bowie J. summarized the provisions of the Income Tax Act (the Act) that
apply to this case as follows, at paragraph 6:
(i) Paragraph 152(1)(b) requires the
Minister to make a determination of the GSTC entitlement of the taxpayer;
(ii) Subsection 152(1.2) makes the provisions
of Divisions I and J of Part I, of the Act that relate to assessments,
reassessments, objections, confirmations and appeals to this Court applicable
to both determinations and redeterminations of GSTC entitlement made under
paragraph 152(1)(b) and determinations and redeterminations of CCTB
entitlement;
(iii) Subsection 160.1(1) has the effect of
making a taxpayer liable to repay any amount that the Minister has determined
to be an overpayment of a refund, including an overpayment of GSTC or CCTB;
(iv)
Subsection 160.1(3) authorizes the Minister to
assess the taxpayer for any such overpayment, and it makes the provisions of
Division I of Part I relating to objections to assessments applicable to any
such assessment;
...
Although subsection 160.1(3) does not specifically make the
provisions of Division J, which include the right to appeal to this Court
following confirmation of an assessment that has been objected to, applicable
to an assessment under that subsection, there can be no doubt that an appeal
will lie under subsection 169(1). The wording of subsection 160.1(3) is not
materially different from that of subsection 160(2), and it has never been
doubted that a subsection 160(2) assessment may be appealed to this Court.
[15]
The wording of the
various notices of determination the appellant received and the respondent's
wording of the issues show that the Minister made both a redetermination for
the appellant and an assessment pursuant to section 160.1 of the Act. As a result,
I must determine whether the appellant received the payments for which the
respondent is claiming repayment.
[16]
The appellant's
testimony leads me to find that Mr. Gagné took possession of the benefits that,
at the appellant's request, were deposited directly in what used to be their
joint account. The fact Mr. Gagné asked that retroactive CCTB payments be
deposited in the same account corroborates the appellant's testimony that he
had control of this account as of November 2007. However, the Minister deposited
the payments in the joint account per the appellant's instructions. The
appellant must accept that in the Minister's eyes, she received the benefits in
question in accordance with the instructions she gave the Canada Revenue Agency
(CRA). Moreover, under subsection 122.62(4) of the Act, an individual who
ceases to be eligible must advise the Minister.
[17]
For these reasons, I
must dismiss the appeal.
[18]
However, I cannot
ignore the fact that dismissing the appeal appears to result in an unfair
situation for the appellant. Mr. Gagné, by his actions, seems to have received
the CCTB twice. This situation could have been avoided if the CRA had given the
appellant the opportunity to object to the notice of determination requiring
the repayment before authorizing the payment to Mr. Gagné. Indeed, the amounts
were paid to Mr. Gagné in July 2009 and the notice of redetermination for the
appellant was established in June 2009, which gave her almost no chance to
object before the payment was made to Mr. Gagné. Additionally, as I mentioned
above, Mr. Gagné asked for the retroactive payments to be deposited to the
same account in which the overpayments to the appellant had been deposited.
This should have been enough to alert the CRA. By showing some caution, the CRA
could avoid such cases and reduce the costs of the resulting recovery
proceedings.
[19]
As a result, I feel the
CRA is able to rectify the situation, according to its powers under the Act.
Section 160.1 of the Act allows the Minister to claim the repayment of any
overpayment a taxpayer receives. Nothing is stopping the Minister from assessing
Mr. Gagné based on this section on the ground that he did, in fact,
receive the Child Tax Benefits twice. I imagine the appellant would be ready to
help the Minister in this regard. Obviously, if the Minister is successful
against Mr. Gagné, I think it would be fair in the circumstances that he
forgive the appellant's obligation to repay the overpayments.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this
1st day of February 2012.
"Robert J. Hogan"
Translation
certified true
on this 13th day
of February 2012.
Elizabeth Tan,
Translator