Court File No. 2005-2022 (GST)G
TAX
COURT OF CANADA
IN
RE: Income Tax Act
BETWEEN:
B.E.S.T.
LINEN SUPPLY AND SERVICES LTD.
Appellant
-
and -
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Decision and Reasons given by Paris J.
Courts Administration Service,
200 Kent Street,
Ottawa, Ontario
Wednesday, April 4, 2007 at 4:00 p.m.
A.S.A.P.
Reporting Services Inc. 8 2007
200 Elgin Street, Suite 1004 130 King
Street West, Suite 1800
Ottawa, Ontario K2P 1L5 Toronto, Ontario M5X 1E3
(613) 564-2727 (416)
861-8720
Ottawa,
Ontario
--- The decision and reasons of Paris J. were
handed down on April 4, 2007 at 4:00 p.m.
PARIS J.: These are the reasons
in the matter of B.E.S.T. Linen Supply and Services Ltd. v. The Queen
2005-2022(GST)G.
This is an appeal from a
reassessment under Part IX of the Excise Tax Act by which the Minister
of National Revenue (the Minister) made adjustments to the amount payable by
the Appellant under the Act for the period from April 1, 2000, to October 31,
2003.
These adjustments included
$9,738.72 in GST that, according to the Minister’s calculations, the Appellant
had failed to collect and report in relation to sales of used linen between
July 13, 2001, and October 14, 2002. This is the amount at issue in this
matter.
Although the Appellant also
referred to a refused ITC amount in his amended Notice of Appeal, counsel for
the Appellant confirmed that this amount was no longer at issue. In any case,
no evidence was filed pertaining to refused ITC.
The Appellant claimed that the
used linen supplies in question were zero-rated supplies according to
subsection 165(3) of the Act because the purchasers of the property exported it
from Canada.
Schedule 6 of the Act deals with
zero-rated supplies and section 1 of Part V of Schedule 6 sets out that the
following are zero-rated:
1. A supply of tangible personal
property (other than an excisable good) made by a person to a recipient (other
than a consumer) who intends to export the property where
. . .
(e) the person maintains
evidence satisfactory to the Minister of the exportation of the property by the
recipient.
In this case, the evidence given
by the Appellant during the audit of used linen exportation was not found
satisfactory by the Minister. The presumptions of fact used by the Minister in
his assessment are found in paragraph 19 of the amended reply to the
amended Notice of Appeal.
In his assessment of the
Appellant, the Minister relied on, but not exclusively, the following findings
and presumptions of fact, as set out in paragraph 19 of the Reply to Notice of
Appeal:
[TRANSLATION]
(a)
the Appellant
is a registrant for the purposes of Part IX of the ETA;
(b)
the
Appellant’s fiscal year begins on April 1 and ends on March 30 of the following
year;
(c) the Appellant did not keep
accounting records in the adequate form and with the relevant information
necessary to determine its obligations under Part IX of the ETA during the
period in question;
(d)
the Appellant
operates, in Canada - in Quebec to be more specific – a service that cleans
and rents bed sheets, pillowcases, bath towels, tablecloths, uniforms etc.
(hereinafter referred to as the bedding) for hotels, restaurants, etc.;
(e)
when the
bedding is too worn or damaged and, therefore, no longer meets the
clients’(hotels and restaurants) quality standards, the Appellant supplies by
sale said worn or damaged bedding to third parties, such as clothing and linen
recycling companies;
(f)
during the
period in question, the Appellant supplied by sale, in Canada, worn or damaged
bedding for total consideration of $315,464.68, broken down as follows:
$194,868.32 during its fiscal year ending March 31, 2002, and $120,606.36 for
its fiscal year ending March 31, 2003;
(g)
not all of
said supplies made by the Appellant mentioned in the preceding sub-paragraph
are invoiced, and when they are, the identity of the purchasers is not
indicated in a way that makes it possible to adequately identify them;
(h)
the Appellant
also supplied by sale 510 used barrels during its fiscal year ending March 31,
2003, for consideration of $5,100.00 – 200 barrels on August 5, for
consideration of $2,000 to an unknown purchaser, according to the invoice
prepared by the Appellant, but who is alleged to be WETIPP (NIG.) LTD according
to paragraph 5 of the amended Notice of Appeal, and 300 barrels on October 14,
2002, for consideration of $3,100.00 to KRAZNIAC IMPORT;
(i)
the purchasers
of said worn or damaged bedding or said used barrels took delivery in Canada,
i.e. the Appellant did not itself ship the goods supplied to the purchasers
outside of Canada, nor did it hire a public carrier, to send the goods supplied
to the purchasers outside of Canada, inasmuch as said goods were apparently
exported from Canada after the Appellant had made the supply to said
purchasers;
(j)
the Appellant
did not collect the GST on its supplies by sale of the worn or damaged bedding
or the 510 used barrels acquired by the purchasers, and the purchasers did not
pay GST to the Appellant;
(k)
the Appellant
did not provide any evidence of exportation by the purchasers that was
satisfactory to the Minister, whether in reasonable time or not after having
taken delivery from the Appellant of all or part of the worn or damaged bedding
or the 510 barrels supplied by the Appellant by sale;
(l)
the amount of
GST not collected by the Appellant for supplies by sale of worn or damaged
bedding or the used barrels is $22,440.22, i.e. 7% of $320,574.68 ($315,474.68
+ $5,100.00), amount which the Appellant did not include in the calculation of
the net tax that it reported to the Minister for the period at issue; and
(m)
the Appellant
therefore owes the Minister the amount of $26,164.15 in adjustments (including
the previously mentioned amount of $22,440.22, this amount of $22,440.22
including the amount of $12,701.50 [7% of $181,450.00 ($24,750 + $46,600 +
$110,100)] which is contested) made to its net tax reported for the period in
question, plus the net interest and the penalty.
The evidence reveals that the
Appellant operates a business in Quebec
and Ontario as described in paragraph 19(1)
of the Reply to Notice of Appeal and that, in its operations, it sold
quantities of used linen that no longer met its clients’ requirements.
Mr. Raffoul, the Appellant’s
principal, testified that there was no market for the used linen in Canada, but
that the Appellant had started selling it to foreign companies in 2000. A
certain Mr. Ahmed had been introduced to him as a purchaser or agent for
foreign companies, to wit, Wetipp, a Nigerian company, and Krazniak, a Bosnian
company.
Over a period of about three
years, the Appellant sold a quantity of linen to Mr. Ahmed, who was acting on
behalf of Wetipp and Krazniak. The Appellant issued Mr. Ahmed a hand-written
receipt, prepared by Mr. Raffoul, for each sale. Copies of these receipts were
filed with the Court as Exhibits A-8.1, A-8.12, and A-9.1 through 9.10.
On these receipts, Mr. Raffoul
wrote the name "Ahmed" and "Cash Sale" or "Cash
Sale" or "Ahmed Nigéria" or "Cash sale offshore
company" or "Vezna Krazniak Bosnia cash sale for recycling in
Bosnia" or other variations on the same theme.
There was no receipt showing the
address of the purchaser or any other information to identify this purchaser.
Mr. Raffoul testified that
Mr. Ahmed paid in cash. He said that the goods were for export and that in
that case there was no GST exigible on the sales.
Mr. Raffoul said he telephoned
Revenu Québec and was given confirmation that he was not obliged to collect the
GST on these sales.
Mr. Ahmed picked up the
goods from the Appellant with a container that he filled himself or had filled
with the help of employees that he brought with him.
The evidence also reveals that
all of the sales to Mr. Ahmed were reported by the Appellant in its financial
statements and for income tax purposes.
During the GST/QST audit, the
auditor asked the Appellant for evidence that the used linen sold to Mr. Ahmed
between July 13, 2001, and October 31, 2002, had been exported. The auditor was
looking for written proof beyond the copies of invoices supplied to Mr. Ahmed.
The Appellant made efforts to
obtain additional evidence of the exports and submitted two letters from Wetipp
and Krazniak to the auditor. However, the auditor did not accept these letters
as adequate evidence of exportation.
The first letter, from Wetipp,
only referred to purchases made by Wetipp from the Appellant prior to the sales
under review.
The second letter, from Krazniak,
referred to purchases made from the Appellant between 2000 and 2001 in the
amount of $110,100 (according to the letter) "For the purpose to be resold
outside Canada." The dates of the sales and the amounts did not correspond
with the handwritten invoices presented to the auditor.
The Appellant did not submit any
other evidence of exportation of goods to the auditor prior to the issuance of
the Notice of Reassessment.
After the notice of reassessment
was issued, the Appellant received three bills of lading from Wetipp and
Krazniak showing the used linen exports. The three bills of lading are dated
November 19, 2001, August 30, 2002, and October 18, 2002.
The Appellant also received a
letter from Wetipp date June 1, 2006, which provided certain invoices
pertaining to the used linen sales that took place on August 12, 2000, October
13, 2000, February 10, 2001 and March 24, 2001.
Wetipp also said in its letter,
Following our telephone
conversation, these are the copies of your invoices and this is to confirm to
you that the merchandise bought from B.E.S.T. Linen Supply and Services was
received by us in the same shape and form, used, stained as when they were
delivered and were not modified.
These documents were given to
counsel for the Respondent during the litigation.
The Appellant claimed that all of
the evidence provided to the Minister is evidence of the exportation of the
goods sold to Wetipp and Krazniak and that these sales were therefore
zero-rated supplies. The Appellant claimed that the Minister, by refusing to
accept this evidence, failed to consider the relevant facts in exercising his
discretion under section 1 in Part V of Schedule 6 of the Act. Counsel for the
Appellant submitted that the auditor accepted that the goods had been exported
from Canada but was looking for documentary evidence of this fact.
He referred to this Court’s
decision in Rockwood Motor Products v. The Queen [2005] G.S.T.C.
84, in which Chief Justice Bowman allowed the appeal in similar circumstances.
Counsel for the Appellant also
claimed that the requests for evidence made by the auditor were satisfied and,
in light of the totality of the evidence, the Court should arrive at the
conclusion that the goods in question were exported.
Finally, and alternatively, the
Appellant was seeking cancellation of the penalties imposed under section 281
of the Act given the efforts made by the Appellant to comply with section 1 in
Part V of Schedule 6.
The general rule is set out in
subsection 142(1) of the Act:
For the purposes
of this Part, subject to sections 143, 144 and 179, a supply shall be deemed to
be made in Canada if
(a) in the case of a supply by
way of sale of tangible personal property, the property is, or is to be,
delivered or made available in Canada to the
recipient of the supply.
The GST is payable by the
purchaser of a supply made in Canada and collectible by the supplier pursuant
to subsections 165(1), 168(1) and 221(1) of the Act. In the case of a
zero-rated supply, the rate is set at 0% by subsection 165(3) of the Act. As
previously indicated, zero-rated supplies are listed in Schedule 6 of the Act
and the relevant provision for exports is Part V of the Schedule.
The Minister’s decision that the
evidence of exportation is not satisfactory is a discretionary decision. In Uranus
Auto Sales v. The Queen [2002]G.S.T.C. 39, this Court held that the
Minister is the only person who can decide whether or not the evidence of
exportation provided by a taxpayer is satisfactory. The Court cannot intervene
unless the evidence
demonstrated that, in reaching his decision, the Minister took into account
extraneous factors, failed to take into account relevant facts, violated a
legal principle or acted in bad faith.
The evidence does not prove, as
claimed by the Appellant, that the Minister ignored both of the letters from
Wetipp and Krazniak, and the bills of lading. It is clear that the Minister
considered them and analysed them, eventually rejecting them for the reasons
clearly detailed by counsel for the Respondent in his arguments. I accept his
arguments concerning the inconsistencies between these documents and the sales
at issue.
As concerns the invoices
themselves, the lack of details, such as the purchaser’s address, and often
even the name of the purchaser, justified the Minister’s refusal to accept them
as evidence of exportation.
There was also no evidence that
the Minister based his decision on irrelevant factors or that he acted in bad
faith, or that he violated a principle of law.
Given this conclusion, the Court
has no right to intervene in this case.
I also reject the hypothesis that the auditor
accepted that the goods had been exported. The evidence does not support this
argument and the Rockwood decision is not applicable.
Finally, the Appellant
cannot be successful with a due diligence defence against the application of
the penalty under section 281 of the Act. Even if Mr. Raffoul did contact
Revenu Québec to find out whether or not the Appellant had to collect the GST
and the QST on these sales, that in itself is not sufficient to establish a due
diligence defence.
In Stafford, Stafford and
Jakeman v. Canada [1995], G.S.T.C. 7, Bowman J. stated:
Due diligence involves more than
merely accepting, without more, some oral advice that an assessor with the
Department of National Revenue may have given them.
In Wong v. The Queen [1996]
G.S.T.C. 73, the Court said,
Due diligence is nothing more than
the degree care that a reasonable person would take to ensure compliance with
the Act. It does not require perfection or infallibility. It does, however,
require more than a casual inquiry of an official in the Tax Department.
In conclusion, the Appellant has
not successfully demonstrated that the Court could intervene in the Minister’s
decision that the evidence of exportation provided by the Appellant was not
satisfactory. Yet the Respondent consented to the assessment being referred
back to the Minister for reconsideration and reassessment, on the basis that
the sale of 280 barrels in October 2002, for $2,800 was a zero-rated supply.
This results in a GST reduction of $196. The appeal is allowed only for the
purpose of taking this concession into account.
Given the Appellant’s very
limited success in this matter, costs are awarded to the Respondent.
[oral decision and reasons concluded
at 4:15 p.m.]
Translation
certified true
On
this 9th day of January 2008
Monica
F. Chamberlain, Reviser