Docket: 2000-746(IT)G
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BETWEEN:
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SALVATORE NIGRO,
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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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____________________________________________________________________
Appeal heard on March 19, 2003 at Toronto,
Ontario
Before: The Honourable Judge Michael J. Bonner
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Appearances:
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For the Appellant:
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The Appellant himself
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Andrea Jackett
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____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The
appeal from the assessment made under the Income Tax Act
for the 1993 taxation year is dismissed with costs to the
Respondent.
Signed at Toronto, Ontario, this 25th day of April 2003.
T.C.J.
Citation: 2003TCC190
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Date: 20030425
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Docket: 2000-746(IT)G
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BETWEEN:
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SALVATORE NIGRO,
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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
Bonner, T.C.J.
[1] This is an appeal from an
assessment of tax and of penalty under s. 163(2) of the
Income Tax Act (the "Act") for the 1993
taxation year.
[2] During the year large amounts of
money flowed through three bank accounts controlled by the
appellant. Total deposits of approximately $2.7 million were
made. Of that total all but $150,349 was found to have been paid
out of the account to Guido Muto (Muto) or to persons selected by
him. The Minister of National Revenue (the "Minister")
found that the $150,349 was income of the appellant.
[3] The appellant filed a return of
income for 1993 in which he reported nil income. The Minister
assessed a penalty under s. 163(2) of the Act in respect
of the failure to disclose the income assessed.
[4] The appellant's position in
this appeal was that he did not receive the income assessed.
[5] The appellant's evidence was
that before 1993 he was in the travel business. He met Muto. The
two "respected" each other. Muto was carrying on a
travel business and an import export business. The appellant
wanted to work with him. Muto asked the appellant to permit him
to use the appellant's bank accounts and to assist in the
conduct of Muto's business by finding investors who were
prepared to lend Muto the money required to finance the
businesses. In return the appellant expected to be given shares
in the businesses.
[6] I note at this point that nowhere
in the evidence is there a clear and credible explanation of the
reason why Muto did not open his own bank accounts. The appellant
stated that he did not question Muto on the subject.
[7] The appellant had three bank
accounts. One was in his own name and was referred to in the
evidence as his personal account. The other two were in the name
of a proprietorship which had been registered by the appellant
under the name Virgo Marketing and Sales Consultants.
[8] The appellant testified that, in
furtherance of the arrangement between him and Muto, money was
deposited in the accounts and was paid out by means of blank
cheques signed by the appellant and delivered to Muto for his
use. As well, cash was withheld from the deposits.
[9] The appellant said that he
assisted Muto in borrowing money but that he had to stop when
repayments to lenders ceased. The appellant said that the cash
which was withheld from deposits and that obtained from cashing
cheques was used to repay lenders. According to the appellant
some lenders had advanced funds in cash and wanted to be repaid
in cash. The loans made in cash were, he said, substantial in
amount, $7,000 to $10,000. The appellant did not attempt to
explain the preference for using cash.
[10] The appellant testified that none of
the money deposited in the accounts was for his personal use. On
cross-examination he admitted that some funds were paid out of
the personal account to cover his personal outlays but he said
that the source of money so used was money loaned to him by his
mother. It is not clear when or how that borrowed money found its
way in the bank account.
[11] The persons who loaned money to Muto
did not receive promissory notes. None of the persons who were
said to have made loans was called to give evidence. The
appellant offered two explanations, first that he did not
remember who they were and, second, that he thought they would
not have come to testify.
[12] According to the appellant no record
was made to segregate deposits to his personal account between
his own money and that of Muto.
[13] Muto testified at the hearing of the
appeal. In answer to leading questions asked by the appellant he
confirmed that he had asked the appellant for permission to use
the appellant's bank accounts; that he had made deposits and
withdrawals from the accounts; that he had asked the appellant to
cash cheques to repay lenders; that he did not compensate the
appellant for the use of the accounts and that he promised the
appellant a share in his businesses when they were "up and
running". Although he was not shaken on cross-examinations
his manner was guarded and I was not persuaded that he was
entirely truthful.
[14] Anna Muto, Muto's daughter, was
called as a witness. She did recall that the appellant and Muto
met in Muto's office. That aside, she responded to all
questions by claiming that she could not recall.
[15] The onus is on the appellant to
establish on the balance of probabilities that the factual basis
upon which an assessment of tax rests is in error. That burden
might have been met in this case by calling credible evidence
showing that all the money which flowed through the
appellant's accounts was paid to or belonged to some person
other than the appellant. The onus was not discharged. I do not
accept the evidence of the appellant or of Muto. The story told
by them was highly improbable and was not supported by any
coherent written record. I formed the impression that the two
sought to conceal the essence of the transactions which required
the use by Muto of bank accounts held by the appellant. The
appellant's story is weakened by the failure to call any of
the supposed lenders to give evidence.
[16] It seems unlikely that Muto would have
used the appellant's bank accounts if he did not have
something to hide. It is hard to imagine that the appellant would
have collected and disbursed Muto's money without a more
immediate and tangible reward than the promise of a future share
in Muto's business. The appellant produced an unsigned
shareholder's agreement which apparently was prepared in
1992. The document does not support the appellant's assertion
that he served Mr. Muto in 1993 in the hope of earning a share in
Muto's business. The Minister's action in including
$150,349 on assessments was therefore not shown to be wrong.
[17] By virtue of s. 163(3) of the
Act, the burden of establishing facts justifying the
assessment of the penalty is on the Minister. Here the appellant
filed a return of income showing no income when in fact his
income was $150,349. The failure to declare such a significant
amount can hardly be attributed to ordinary negligence. In my
view the appellant knowingly omitted that income from his return.
The penalty is therefore warranted.
[18] For the foregoing reasons the appeal
will be dismissed with costs.
Signed at Toronto, Ontario, this 25th day of April 2003.
T.C.J.