Citation: 2003TCC60
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Date: 20030219
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Docket: 2002-599(IT)I
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BETWEEN:
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HORST IGNATZI,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Rip, J.
[1] Horst Ignatzi
appeals income tax assessments for 1997, 1998 and 1999 taxation
years on the basis that the Minister of National Revenue
("Minister") erred in imposing a penalty of ten per
cent of the amount he failed to include in reporting his income
for each of the years, pursuant to subsection 163(1) of the
Income Tax Act ("Act").[1] Mr. Ignatzi argues that such a
penalty is exigible if a taxpayer had not exercised due
diligence. He also claims that he made a voluntary disclosure of
his capital gains in the 1997 and 1999 taxation years and that
there was a genuine misunderstanding with respect to losses that
could have been claimed to offset the gains in question.
[2] Mr. Ignatzi
acknowledged that in filing his tax return for 1996 he failed to
report interest and income from a Registered Retirement Savings
Plan ("RRSP") aggregating $7,185. He said he did not
have the "pink slips", the statements of RRSP or
investment income, when he prepared his 1996 return. Apparently
the Minister reassessed the appellant on June 12, 1998 and
included this unreported income in Mr. Ignatzi's 1996 income
but did not levy any penalty.
[3] The appellant was
seriously injured in a work accident and has since been
"semi retired". He testified he bought and sold stock
as a hobby, for pleasure. It is "my favorite thing to
do". However, he stated, he never understood the meaning of
capital gains or losses and "so ignored it". He never
reported losses or gains in his tax returns except if the amounts
of the gains or losses were set out in boxes on statements of
trust income, "the pink slips" that were sent to
him.
[4] The following are
the capital gains Mr. Ignatzi failed to report for the years in
appeal:
Year
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Capital Gains
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Taxable Capital Gains
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1997
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$ 57,641.76
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$ 43,231.32
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1998
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$ 83,252.17
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$ 62,439.13
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1999
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$ 34,026.27
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$ 25,519.70
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$174,920.20
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[5] In his 1997 tax
return Mr. Ignatzi reported a capital loss of $407.05 with
respect to his interest in a mutual fund. In his 1998 tax return,
Mr. Ignatzi claimed a capital loss of $523.66 and capital gains
of $3,084.52 and $820.74 reported in statements of trust
income.
[6] On or about
November 8, 2000, the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency
("CCRA") wrote to Mr. Ignatzi requesting him to
complete a schedule of capital dispositions made in 1998, which
was attached to the letter. Ms. Marie Anatha Thelisma, an auditor
with the CCRA, explained that only dispositions for 1998 were
requested since that was the year that was subject to a project
by the CCRA. The CCRA had knowledge of the failures to report in
1997 and 1999 at the time, however.
[7] On November 15,
2000, Mr. Dan Griesbrecht, an accountant probably retained on
that day by Mr. Ignatzi, telephoned Ms. Thelisma requesting
information. Ms. Thelisma advised Mr. Griesbrecht of
dispositions in 1997, 1998 and 1999. She was prepared to provide
Mr. Griesbrecht with a list of dispositions for all three years
and he arranged to collect the material from the CCRA. The number
of dispositions, according to Ms. Thelisma, was not
insignificant. The list comprised several pages.
[8] Ms. Thelisma did
not hear from the appellant or Mr. Griesbrecht until June 11,
2001, after the CCRA sent Mr. Griesbrecht a second letter
informing him that if there was no reply, the CCRA would reassess
Mr. Ignatzi. [The first letter was the letter mailed in November
2000 and had requested a reply within 60 days.] Upon receipt of
the second letter Mr. Griesbrecht mailed a complete list of
dispositions and the amounts of the gains.
[9] Mr. Ignatzi was
"distraught" on receipt of the original letter from the
CCRA in November 2000, Mr. Griesbrecht recalled. Mr. Griesbrecht
said he explained to Mr. Ignatzi that he had to report his
capital gains. Mr. Griesbrecht said he would require a list of
all gains and would then file amended tax returns for 1997, 1998
and 1999. He would make submissions on behalf of Mr. Ignatzi for
the three years.
[10] Mr. Griesbrecht stated
he got in touch with the CCRA the very day he met Mr. Ignatzi and
spoke to the auditor about 1997 and 1998 and asked about the
possibility of a voluntary disclosure for those two years. The
auditor, who I assume was Ms. Thelisma, according to Mr.
Griesbrecht, said she was not sure if this were possible but she
would ask her supervisor. After checking with her supervisor, she
said the supervisor would consider a voluntary disclosure. In her
evidence, Ms. Thelisma denied the CCRA considered Mr.
Griesbrecht's actions to constitute a voluntary disclosure
for 1997 and 1999. She stated that she informed Mr. Griesbrecht
that Mr. Ignatzi had failed to report gains in 1997 and 1999. She
did acknowledge that the CCRA did consider the matter but it was
not for her or her supervisor to make the decision to accept any
representation as a voluntary disclosure, as contemplated by the
CCRA's Voluntary Disclosure Program described in Information
Bulletins dated September 30, 2002 (IC00-IR), June 12, 2000
(Customs N-332) and June 28, 1991 (GST-500-3-4).
[11] Mr. Griesbrecht
submitted a Comparative Tax Summary of Mr. Ignatzi's tax
returns for 2000 and 2001. In his 2001 tax return Mr. Ignatzi
claimed aggregate capital losses of $151,547.90, less than his
aggregate capital gains for the three years in appeal and, which
contrary to what he submitted, could not have fully offset the
gains.
[12] The Voluntary
Disclosure Program was devised and is administrated by the CCRA.
It has no statutory authority as such and this court cannot allow
an appeal only because there was a voluntary disclosure, which
the CCRA rejected. For what it is worth, according to the
literature published by the CCRA and its predecessor, Revenue
Canada, the appellant's representations do not constitute a
voluntary disclosure: the fisc was aware of the appellant's
deficiencies and had initiated enforcement of the appellant's
legal obligations under the Act before the appellant or
his representative contacted the CCRA.
[13] Now to deal with the
question of whether due diligence is a defense to a subsection
163(1) penalty and, if so, whether Mr. Ignatzi exercised due
diligence. A voluntary disclosure has nothing to do with due
diligence to prevent a failure to report an income item. A
voluntary disclosure, I gather, takes place after the failure;
one is disclosing the failure.
[14] The submissions of Mr.
Jones, appellant's counsel, were that there was a voluntary
disclosure by his client. He also states that a reasonable excuse
is acceptable to defeat the penalty. Mr. Jones described the
facts in these appeals as "unusual" and his client as
an "unusual person". If Mr. Ignatzi had proper advice,
Mr. Jones declared, there would be no problem. This, of course,
can be said of most appeals before this court.
[15] Mr. Jones relies on
the decision of this court in Khalilv. Canada.[2] My colleague Judge
Mogan concluded that it cannot be said a person "failed to
report an amount" within the meaning of subsection 163(1) of
the Act when that person knows (1) that an amount was
payable to her by a payor, (2) that the payor withheld a portion
of the payment to remit to the Receiver General for Canada on
account of income tax paid by the person, (3) the payor paid the
person the balance remaining after deducting the tax withheld,
and (4) the payor was required to report to Revenue Canada the
gross amount payable to the person and the portion withheld and
remitted. In other words, a payment to the fisc was made on
account of the payment and another person was liable to report
the payment. This is not the situation at bar. Nobody withheld
tax from any payment Mr. Ignatzi received on disposition of
shares in 1997, 1998 and 1999. He had no knowledge of anyone
being required to report his dispositions of capital property to
Revenue Canada; Ms. Khalil did have the knowledge.
[16] The failure to report
an amount in a tax return giving rise to the penalty under
subsection 163(1), as it applies to the years in appeal, is one
of strict liability. As Bowman, A.C.J. stated in
Maltaisv. The Queen,[3] if it were not, subsection 163(2)
would be superfluous. "It follows that where the Minister of
National Revenue is called upon under subsection 163(3) to
justify the imposition of a penalty under subsection 163(1) he
meets that onus by establishing that the taxpayer had failed to
report an amount of income in one year and that he or she had
failed to report an amount in a return for any of the three
preceding taxation years." In any event, I cannot find that
Mr. Ignatzi was duly diligent in his obligation to report all
amounts of income earned in the years in appeal.
[17] The appeals are
dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 19th day of
February 2003.
J.T.C.C.