[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Date: 19980911
Docket: 97-146(GST)I
BETWEEN:
GESTION 69691 INC.,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Tardif, J.T.C.C.
[1] The appellant has appealed by
means of a Notice of Appeal reading as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
NOTICE OF APPEAL
The appellant is appealing the respondent's decision dated
October 24, 1996, confirming the assessment made on
September 25, 1995, for the period from
January 1, 1991, to August 31, 1994.
1. On
September 25, 1995, the respondent issued a notice of
assessment numbered 22213 under the Excise Tax Act for the
period from January 1, 1991, to October
31, 1994;
2. The
appellant filed a notice of objection to the assessment referred
to in the preceding paragraph;
3. In a
decision made on October 24, 1996, the respondent
confirmed notice of assessment number 22213 issued under the
Excise Tax Act;
4. The
appellant is appealing the decision of the Minister of Revenue
confirming assessment number 22213;
5. Following
an audit, the respondent made the following adjustments:
GOODS AND SERVICES
TAX
$52,329.87
INPUT TAX
CREDIT
($34,407.30)
6. The
respondent claims, inter alia, that the appellant
failed to apply the self-supply rule when it rented a
condominium located at 991 Terrasse des Promenades;
7. The
assessment made by the respondent concerning the condominium
located at 991 Terrasse des Promenades is incorrect because
possession of the condominium was not given under a lease-only
temporary lodging was provided;
8. The
respondent also claims that the appellant failed to remit the
goods and services tax on income generated by the operation of
laundry rooms; moreover, the auditor adjusted the commercial rent
by wrongly taking into account the percentage increase referred
to in the leases;
9. The
assessments made by the respondent under the Excise Tax
Act are incorrect because the Department's auditor
overestimated the income earned from the operation of the washers
without taking account of industry standards concerning the ratio
between washer and dryer income or the fact that the users of the
machines are from a disadvantaged environment;
10. The appellant provided
the respondent with all the invoices for which it claimed input
tax rebates, and all of those invoices result from the
registrant's commercial activities;
11. At all relevant times,
the appellant complied with the provisions of the Excise Tax
Act as regards the documentary requirements provided for by
law;
12. This appeal is well
founded in fact and in law;
FOR THESE REASONS, MAY IT PLEASE THE COURT:
TO ALLOW this appeal;
TO SET ASIDE notice of assessment number 22213 issued
under the Excise Tax Act on
September 25, 1995;
TO REFER the entire matter back to the respondent in
order that she issue a notice of reassessment in accordance with
the judgment to be made in this case;
THE WHOLE with costs.
MONTRÉAL, January 20, 1997
NORMAND BÉRUBÉ
10422 Rue de Martigny
Montréal, Quebec H2B 2M6
Tel.: (514) 389-6339
Counsel for the Appellant
[2] The respondent defended the
soundness of the assessment by means of the Reply to the Notice
of Appeal, which reads as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
REPLY TO THE NOTICE OF APPEAL
In reply to the Notice of Appeal sent to the respondent on
January 29, 1997, concerning the notice of assessment
numbered 22213 and dated September 25, 1995, which was
issued for the period from January 1, 1991, to
October 31, 1994, the Deputy Attorney General of Canada
states as follows on behalf of the respondent, Her Majesty the
Queen:
A.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
1. He admits
the facts alleged in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the Notice of
Appeal without, however, admitting anything regarding the content
of the notice of objection;
2. He takes
note of paragraph 4 of the Notice of Appeal;
3. He admits
the facts alleged in paragraphs 5 and 6 of the Notice of
Appeal;
4. He denies
the facts alleged in paragraph 7 of the Notice of
Appeal;
5. With regard
to paragraph 8 of the Notice of Appeal, he admits that he
assessed the goods and services tax that the appellant failed to
remit on taxable supplies made in laundry rooms operated by the
appellant, and he denies the rest of the said
paragraph 8;
6. He denies
the facts alleged in paragraphs 9, 10, 11 and 12 of the
Notice of Appeal;
7. On
September 25, 1995, by notice of assessment number 22213,
the appellant was assessed for $23,736.67, which represented a
penalty, interest and the net tax that it had failed to collect
or remit on taxable supplies made during the period from
January 1, 1991, to October 31, 1994:
GST:
$52,329.87
Additional
ITCs:
($34,407.30)
Penalty:
$2,892.12
Interest:
$2,921.98
TOTAL
$23,736.67
a breakdown of the assessed amounts by reporting period being
appended to Schedule A of this Reply;
8. The
appellant objected to notice of assessment number 22213 by a
notice of objection dated November 16, 1995;
9. On
October 24, 1996, the Minister notified the appellant of his
decision to confirm notice of assessment number 22213;
10 On
January 21, 1997, the appellant filed a Notice of Appeal
from assessment number 22213 with the Registry of this Court;
11. In making the said
assessment, the Minister relied on the following facts discovered
during the audit carried out in 1994 and 1995:
(a) the appellant is
a goods and services tax registrant;
(b) during the
period at issue, the appellant carried on the following
activities:
-
operation of a laundry room at 476 St-Jean in
Drummondville as of June 30, 1994, the date on which the
immovable property was purchased and the laundry rooms operated
by the appellant;
-
rental of business premises in the immovable properties located
at 466-480 St-Jean;
-
construction and sale of residential condominiums;
-
rental of a condominium for residential purposes;
(c) all of those
activities were managed by Marcel Thiffault, Claudette
Ruest's spouse who is the appellant's president and
shareholder;
(d) during the same
period, Marcel Thiffault also managed two other
corporations-Club Immobilier International Inc. and Gestion 69692
Inc.-of which he is the president and shareholder, and he handled
the many commercial activities carried on by
Claudette Ruest, who owned rental buildings and
businesses;
(e) during the
period at issue, Marcel Thiffault used just one bank account
for all the activities of the four registrants (the appellant,
the two companies referred to in subparagraph (d) and
Claudette Ruest), an account that was also used to pay
Mr. Thiffault's personal expenses;
(f) the
accountant prepared the appellant's quarterly returns on the
basis of cheques but without having the purchase and sales
invoices in his possession;
(g) moreover, since
the accountant did not have the sales contracts, the rental
agreements, or the invoices in his possession, income was
reported on the basis of deposits and adjusted at the end of the
year when those documents were provided to him;
(h) the income also
had to be adjusted at the end of the year to take account of
income that had not been deposited in the account, and it then
had to be broken down for each activity and each of the four
registrants on the basis of the information provided by
Marcel Thiffault;
(i) thus, the
amounts collected as residential rents could not be traced in the
deposits, and the respondent was unable to confirm that the
income reported for such residential rentals was indeed from
those rentals or from the laundry rooms made available to
tenants;
(j) it results
from the foregoing that the appellant's accounting was
deficient, since the books of account were inadequate or
non-existent, that the income was not all reported, that
the ITCs were claimed without taking account of which registrant
the invoices had been issued to, and that ITCs were claimed for
non-taxable activities or were claimed twice;
(k) the entries made
in the appellant's general ledger were therefore not
consistent with the purchase and sales invoices;
(l) the
respondent estimated the annual income from the laundry room
operated at 476 St-Jean as follows:
-
first the electricity and natural gas consumption for the laundry
room was established, taking account of the fact that, according
to the findings made on site, the main light was switched off
when the laundry room was not open, with only a few fluorescent
lights switched on, the fan did not operate 24 hours a day but
rather 4 hours a day for 182 days of the year, and the
heating system also operated 182 days a year;
-
based on that consumption and the number of kilowatts needed to
operate the washers and dryers, the respondent calculated the
amount of time a washer and a dryer were used in hours per
day;
-
then the income from the laundry rooms was estimated by taking
account of the number of washers and dryers in the room and the
price set by the appellant for users;
-
finally, the annual income from the laundry room was established
on the basis of 1.5424 hours a day of washer use and.4046 hours a
day of dryer use;
-
the income from the laundry rooms was thus determined to be as
follows:
1994
Reported
income:
$0.00
Adjusted
income:
$6,631.43
Difference:
$6,631.43
(m) the disputed notice of
assessment was therefore issued concerning the amount of GST that
the applicant failed to remit on those taxable supplies of
$6,965.69, that is, $279.47;
(n) the respondent
established the income from the commercial dwellings
located within the properties at 466-480 St-Jean
on the basis of the leases provided by the appellant, aside from
the rent for the tavern, which was determined using the amounts
reported by the appellant during the reconciliation of its rental
income;
(o) the appellant
failed to collect and remit all of the GST payable on that rent,
and the respondent therefore assessed it for $682.67 in 1994;
(p) the appellant
also rented a condominium-a residential rental that included an
option to purchase-located at 991 Terrasse des Promenades in
Drummondville, which it had built;
(q) the fair market
value of that condominium was $40,000.00, taxes included;
(r) the amount of
GST that the appellant failed to remit on that supply, which is
deemed to have been made to itself, is therefore $2,457.11;
(s) under the Act,
the appellant is deemed to have made a self-supply;
(t) finally, after
reviewing all the invoices submitted by the appellant, a
total of $3,958.93 in ITCs were denied for the following
reasons:
- some purchase
invoices were missing;
- some amounts were
claimed twice, that is, by both the appellant and one of the
other three registrants whose activities were also managed by
Marcel Thiffault;
- some purchases
were not eligible, inter alia, because they were personal
in nature or they concerned property that had not been acquired
in the course of commercial activities, and therefore did not
entitle the appellant to ITCs;
however, the respondent allowed a net total of $34,407.30 in
additional ITCs;
B.
ISSUE TO BE DECIDED
12. The issue is whether
the appellant owes the $17,922.57 that was assessed as unremitted
net tax (not including penalty and interest);
[3] As in the other cases, the
appellant did not adduce any valid evidence to show that its
arguments were soundly based. It basically criticized, blamed and
reproached the respondent for the arbitrary method used to make
the assessment.
[4] It is true that the respondent had
to use certain procedures that could have led to one or more
conclusions lacking the absolute rigour that results from an
audit in which all of the appropriate documentation is available.
The appellant could not reproach the respondent for failing to
consider the real figures and the real information since the
respondent simply did not have them; if they were available, this
has not been proved.
[5] How can this Court determine the
exact amount of an assessment in the absence of thorough evidence
from which intelligent conclusions may be drawn?
[6] At the outset of the hearings and
a number of times thereafter, I said that it was absolutely
necessary for the appellant to prove the soundness of its
arguments and that it could not discharge the burden of proof it
had by making vague criticisms that were often directed against
the auditors personally.
[7] How could I decide that the
assessment is unjustified in whole or in part without a modicum
of evidence showing that the audit was marred by gross negligence
or bad faith?
[8] The evidence clearly showed that
the appellant was not very co-operative or was even
aggressive toward those responsible for the audit. Moreover, the
appellant did not have the appropriate documentary information
or, if it did, did not use that information to support the
validity of its arguments.
[9] In such circumstances, as I said
during the hearings, I have no choice but to accept the
respondent's conclusions. For me to do otherwise, the
appellant would have been required to show on a balance of
evidence that the procedure the respondent used to make the
assessment was biased but, also and above all, to show that it
had in its possession all the information and documentation
needed to make an assessment other than the one in dispute.
[10] Not only did the evidence fail to show
that the respondent acted in bad faith, but the weight of the
evidence clearly established that the respondent used reasonable
and credible procedures the results of which were reliable.
[11] I acknowledge that the best method
would have been the one that adhered to good accounting
practices. However, in order to have applied that method, the
appellant would have had to keep and provide adequate accounts
supplemented by the relevant documentary evidence.
[12] The many warnings this Court gave the
appellant that it change its approach and address its real duty
of discharging its burden of proof had absolutely no effect;
since it obviously could not reconstruct the facts through
adequate, meaningful documentary evidence, the appellant, through
Charles Thiffault, chose instead to express its anger and
resentment toward the respondent.
[13] This Court is bound by the evidence
adduced; in this case, that evidence was totally
unsatisfactory.
[14] On the other hand, despite the
constraints and the problems reconstructing the facts, the
respondent clearly showed that she acted judiciously and
credibly. If this Court intervened, it would be ruling in a
totally arbitrary and unjustified manner having regard to the
available evidence.
[15] For these reasons, the appeal is
dismissed and the assessment is confirmed, the whole with costs
if applicable.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 11th day of September 1998.
J.T.C.C.
Translation certified true
on this 20th day of June 2003.
Sophie Debbané, Revisor