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Docket: 2003-2969(IT)APP
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BETWEEN:
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BONNIE VAN DOORN,
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Applicant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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____________________________________________________________________
Application heard on April 28, 2004, at Kitchener,
Ontario,
By: The Honourable Justice E.A. Bowie
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Appearances:
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Counsel for the
Applicant:
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David J.
Thrasher
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Counsel for the
Respondent:
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Ronald MacPhee
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____________________________________________________________________
ORDER
Upon
application for an Order extending the time within which appeals from
assessments of tax made under the Income Tax Act for the 1999, 2000 and
2001 taxation years may be instituted;
And
upon hearing the Applicant and the agent for the Respondent;
It is ordered that the application is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa,
Canada, this 7th day of May, 2004.
Bowie
J.
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Citation: 2004TCC351
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Date: 20040507
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Docket: 2003-2969(IT)APP
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BETWEEN:
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BONNIE VAN DOORN,
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Applicant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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REASONS FOR ORDER
Bowie J.
[1] Before
me is an application under section 167 of the Income Tax Act (the ITA)
for an extension of the time within which Ms. Van Doorn may begin appeals from
assessments for income tax for the years 1999, 2000 and 2001. That section
specifies, in subsection (5), certain criteria that must be met before I can
grant the Order she seeks. The Respondent opposes the application only on the
basis that she says subparagraph 167(5)(b)(i) has not been met. That
paragraph requires the Applicant to show one of two things; either that within
the time limited by section 169 for bringing the appeals she was unable to act,
or to instruct another to act for her, or that she had a bona fide intention
to appeal.
[2] On
the evidence, it is clear that the Applicant was able to do what was necessary
to launch an appeal. However, she says that she had a bona fide intention
to appeal throughout, and that she is therefore entitled to succeed in this
application.
[3] Ms.
Van Doorn's proposed appeal to this Court is from assessments that included in
her income for the years in question amounts paid to her pursuant to a
non-competition clause contained in an agreement whereby she sold her 50%
shareholding in a certain corporation. The owner of the other 50% of the shares,
who was well known to her, was also assessed for amounts paid to him under the
non‑competition clause. They both objected to these assessments and their
assessments were confirmed. In the Applicant's case, the notification of
confirmation was mailed on February 12, 2003. She therefore had until May 11,
2003 to appeal; unfortunately she did not do so. On August 19, 2003 she filed
this application to extend the time to appeal.
[4] The
only evidence on the application was that of the Applicant. In her evidence she
said that from the beginning, which I take to mean since the assessments were
issued in 2001 and 2002, she had the intention to appeal them. She explained
that she was taking advice with respect to tax matters from a lawyer and an
accountant in Toronto, and that on the accountant's advice she had retained the
services of a local bookkeeper in western Ontario, where she lives. When she
received the notification of confirmation of the assessments, she consulted
these people. Her lawyer advised her not to appeal. The notice of application
that she signed on August 11, 2003 reads:
It has been brought to
my attention by my accountant that I may appeal confirmation of Notices of
Objection for the tax years 1999, 2000 and 2001 regarding non-competition
payments which were included as taxable income. A recent Federal Court of
Appeal decision in the T. Manrell v. The Queen case has recently been
favourably made for the taxpayer and my situation is the same. My accountant
and the appeals officer at Canada Customs and Revenue Agency have just informed
me that I should start the procedure. When I received my Notice of Confirmation
By the Minister I spoke to my Lawyer and he advised me not to appeal at that
time as it would not change anything and would be very costly. The T.
Manrell case had already been decided in favour of CCRA at that time in the
Tax court of Canada.
Now that everything has
changed I am appealing and would like to apply for an extension of time.
[5] In
her evidence before me, the Applicant said that she first learned of the Court
of Appeal's decision in Manrell v. The Queen
from the other shareholder, and that he told her of it within the 90-day appeal
period; she also said that she brought her application to this Court right away
after learning of that decision. Quite obviously, both of these statements
cannot be correct. If she had learned of Manrell before May 11, she
would have taken positive action long before August 11. I infer that while
it was her co-shareholder who first told her of Manrell, that
conversation took place after May 11, and probably much closer to August 11. It
was only later that she spoke again with her lawyer and was advised that an
appeal would succeed. She then applied for the extension of time.
[6] My
conclusion as to this sequence of events is supported by the absence of a clear
statement by the Applicant that she formed the intention to appeal at some
specific point in time after she received the notification of confirmation
dated February 12, 2003. Her counsel did not ask her when she formed the
intention to appeal following that notification. Instead, he relied solely on
her statement that she had always intended to appeal since the assessments were
issued, and asked her whether she had ever instructed her advisors not
to appeal, to which she answered "no". This together with the absence
of any evidence from the lawyer, the accountant or the bookkeeper, lead me to
infer that when the time ran out in May 2003, she had no intention of
appealing. Sometime thereafter her co‑shareholder told her about the Manrell
decision that had been pronounced on March 11, and she quickly wrote the letter
of application dated August 11, 2003 that served as her Notice of Application
in this Court.
[7] If
the Appellant had formed the intention to appeal the assessments at any time
after they were issued, she had certainly abandoned the intention by
May 11, after being advised not to appeal. She cannot therefore claim to
come within subclause 167(5)(b)(i)(B) of the Act. See Wilson
v. The Queen.
[8] This
is an unfortunate case. There is a considerable amount of tax involved, and the
appeals would certainly succeed if only they had been launched in time. On the
Applicant's evidence it appears that she was given poor advice; her advisors
must not have known that the decision of this Court that the Minister had
relied on in assessing her, and in confirming those assessments, had been
appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, although that fact was easily
ascertainable. Nevertheless, Parliament has established very specific and
unambiguous factual criteria that I must apply in considering an application
such as this, and they have not been met.
[9] The
application to extend the time in which appeals may be commenced is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 7th day of
May, 2004.
J.T.C.C.