Docket : 2010-1808(IT)I
BETWEEN :
GIOVANNI TOZZI,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
____________________________________________________________________
Motion heard on
August 18, 2010 at Montreal, Quebec.
Before: The Honourable Gerald J. Rip, Chief Justice
Appearances:
|
Agent
for the Appellant:
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Vincent Biello
|
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
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Me Marie-Claude Landry
Sara Jahanbakhsh
(Student-at-Law)
|
____________________________________________________________________
ORDER
Upon
motion by the Respondent for an order dismissing the appeal from the assessment
made under Income Tax Act for the 2008 taxation year on the ground that
the assessment is a nil assessment;
And
upon hearing what was alleged by the parties;
The
motion is granted and the appeal is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 26th
day of October, 2010.
"Gerald J. Rip"
Citation : 2010 TCC 545
Date : 20101026
Docket : 2010-1808(IT)I
BETWEEN :
GIOVANNI TOZZI,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR ORDER
Rip,
C.J.
[1]
This is a motion by the
respondent that the appeal of Giovanni Tozzi from an income tax assessment
for 2008 be dismissed on the grounds the appeal is from an assessment that no
tax is payable ("nil assessment"). Recent case law is to the effect that
there is no appeal from a nil assessment.
However, Mr. Tozzi's defence of this motion underlines the limited
jurisdiction of this Court in hearing matters under the Income Tax Act
("Act") and the resulting difficulty taxpayers have in
attempting to efficiently resolve issues they have with the Canada Revenue
Agency ("CRA").
[2]
The Tax Court of Canada
is a superior court. In matters where a taxpayer is dissatisfied with an
assessment of income tax, the taxpayer may appeal the assessment to the Tax
Court. Subsection 171(1) of the Act determines how the Court may deal with
the appeal:
|
The Tax Court of Canada
may dispose of an appeal by
(a) dismissing it; or
(b) allowing it and
(i) vacating the
assessment,
(ii) varying the
assessment, or
(iii) referring the assessment back to
the Minister for reconsideration and reassessment.
|
La Cour
canadienne de l'impôt peut statuer sur un appel :
a) en le
rejetant;
b) en
l'admettant et en :
(i)
annulant la cotisation,
(ii)
modifiant la cotisation,
(iii) déférant la cotisation au
ministre pour nouvel examen et nouvelle cotisation.
|
[3]
None of the manners in
which the Court may dispose of an appeal would cure Mr. Tozzi's problem; the
amount assessed would still be no amount owing.
[4]
Mr. Tozzi does not
disagree with the nil assessment as such. The problem is that in February 2009,
Mr. Tozzi had a medical doctor complete a Disability Tax Credit
Certificate for 2008 and he forwarded the completed certificate to the CRA. The
CRA denied him the disability tax credit.
[5]
As stated in the
previous paragraph, in appealing the assessment for 2008, Mr. Tozzi is not
contesting any assessment of tax. There would be no useful tax credit on a nil
assessment. However, as a result of the nil assessment he says he is unable to
contest the refusal by the CRA to allow him a disability tax credit and thus he
cannot be a beneficiary of a registered disability savings plan
("RDSP") described in section 146.4 of the Act.
[6]
Mr. Tozzi wishes
to qualify in respect of 2008 as a "DTC‑eligible individual" as
defined by subsection 146.4(1) of the Act:
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… an individual in respect of whom an amount is
deductible, or would if this Act were read without reference to paragraph
118.3(1)(c) be deductible, under section 118.3 in computing a
taxpayer's tax payable under this Part for the taxation year.
|
Est un particulier
admissible au CIPH pour une année d'imposition le particulier à l'égard
duquel une somme est déductible en application de l'article 118.3, ou le
serait en l'absence de l'alinéa 118.3(1)c), dans le calcul de l'impôt
à payer par un contribuable en vertu de la présente partie pour l'année.
|
[7]
Subparagraph 146.4(f)(i)
of the Act prohibits contributions being made to a RDSP "if the
beneficiary is not a DTC‑eligible individual in respect of the taxation
year".
[8]
When the Minister
denies the disability tax credit and there is a nil assessment for the relevant
taxation year, appellant's agent argued, the Minister prohibits the taxpayer
from challenging the Minister's denial and is therefore denied qualifying as a
beneficiary under a RDSP. The taxpayer is prejudiced in not being permitted to
contest the denial of his status by the Minister.
[9]
Mr. Tozzi's agent,
Mr. Biello, who very well represented Mr. Tozzi, also argued that the
inability to appeal from a nil assessment ought not to apply to appeals from
assessments for 2008 and later where the issue relates to eligibility for
RDSPs. A taxpayer must have a right to contest the Minister's decisions even
when the tax assessment is nil.
[10]
The Act does not
grant this Court jurisdiction to consider questions such as those raised by
Mr. Tozzi in an appeal from an assessment or pursuant to another provision
of the Act. Section 146.4 regulating RDSPs contains no provision
similar to subsection 172(3), for example, which permits appeals to the
Federal Court of Appeal from refusal of the Minister to register a Canadian
amateur athletic association, a retirement savings plan, a profit sharing plan,
an education savings plan and pension plan.
[11]
All the appellant wishes
in appealing his assessment is to fight for his right to be recognized as
having a disability in 2008 and be entitled to benefit from a registered disability
savings plan. However, because of a nil assessment his right to do so is
compromised. If I dismiss the motion of the respondent and this appeal
continues to trial, even if the Court would accept his claim for disability,
the assessment would not change. The assessment would still be nil, the
assessment would not be vacated, varied nor required to be reassessed. This
Court unfortunately has no lawful jurisdiction to order the Minister to recognize
Mr. Tozzi's disability, if the Court should find he is disabled, for
purposes of the disability savings plan.
[12]
It is simply not right
for the Crown to act behind a nil assessment to prevent Mr. Tozzi from applying
for a disability savings plan. It may well be that Mr. Tozzi has gone to
the wrong court of law to seek a review of his claim. What he appears to want
is for the Tax Court to review the administrative actions by officials of the
CRA in not recognizing that he has a disability. This, as I have already
indicated, is beyond this Court's jurisdiction. He may have redress in an
application under section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act, although
Mr. Tozzi's agent complained that this is not practical because of his
fear of substantial legal costs in the Federal Court. But his choice for
financial reasons or otherwise to go to this Court, as opposed to another court
does not grant this Court jurisdiction to hear his complaint. The simplest
thing for Mr. Tozzi would be to do as he did: to appeal in the Informal
Procedure to the Tax Court to resolve the issue. But the law does not permit
this simple and reasonable step. Unfortunately, this Court can only consider
the assessment of tax for 2008 and has no power to rule on the issue of Mr. Tozzi's
eligibility as a beneficiary under a disability savings plan without at the
same time adjusting the amount of tax assessed.
[13]
Ideally, this Court
should be a "one stop" Court for persons who have claims under the Act.
However, it is not. Low income taxpayers see this Court as the court for all
tax matters and attempt to seek satisfaction here. Low income taxpayers usually
do not have the benefit of legal advice and go to the Tax Court because they
believe that is the forum where they may seek redress. Unfortunately, the Tax
Court does not have jurisdiction to hear all matters related to income tax. It
may well be that Parliament and the draftsman of section 146.4 did not
recognize the problem Mr. Tozzi has suffered and potentially other low
income taxpayers may experience in the future because of the limited
jurisdiction of the Tax Court.
[14]
For these reasons, I must
allow the respondent's application and dismiss the appellant's appeal.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada,
this 26th day of October, 2010.
"Gerald J. Rip"
CITATION: 2010
TCC 545
COURT FILE NO.: 2010-1808(IT)I
STYLE OF CAUSE: GIOVANNI
TOZZI v.
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN
PLACE OF HEARING: Montréal,
Québec
DATE OF HEARING: August
18, 2010
REASONS FOR ORDER
BY: The Honourable Gerald J. Rip, Chief Justice
DATE OF ORDER: October
26, 2010
APPEARANCES:
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Agent for the
Appellant:
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Vincent Biello
|
|
Counsel for the
Respondent:
|
Marie-Claude Landry
Sara Jahanbakhsh (Student-at-Law)
|
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For the Appellant:
Name:
Firm:
For the
Respondent: Myles J. Kirvan
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa, Canada