Citation: 2003TCC277
|
Date: 20030516
|
Docket: 2000-592(GST)G
|
BETWEEN:
|
2868-2656 QUÉBEC INC.,
|
Appellant,
|
and
|
|
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
|
Respondent.
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Tardif, J.T.C.C.
[1] This
is an appeal from a March 13, 1998, Notice of Assessment concerning the
Goods and Services Tax ("the GST") for the period from July 1, 1993, to
April 30, 1997.
[2] In
its Notice of Appeal, the appellant corporation sets out the following facts:
[TRANSLATION]
1. The appellant
is a corporation that operated a restaurant in the city of Charlesbourg, province of Quebec, during the
period at issue;
2. During the
period covered by the assessment, Lucie Pelletier held all the issued and outstanding
shares in the appellant corporation and was employed by it;
3. On
March 13, 1998, the respondent issued a reassessment to the appellant
corporation for the period from July 1, 1993, to April 30, 1997, in which the respondent made
adjustments to the Goods and Services Tax ("the GST") for the period
at issue: additional tax in the amount of $24,900.11, penalties in the amount
of $4,942.17, and interest in the amount of $3,919.43;
4. That
reassessment was made following an audit of the appellant corporation by the
Department concerning income and other taxes;
5. During that
audit by the Department, the Department considered that deposits made to Lucie
Pelletier's personal bank accounts during the 1994, 1995 and 1996 taxation
years came from the appellant corporation's income that was not reported for
the purposes of income tax, the Quebec sales tax (QST) or the GST;
6. The
Department therefore considered that the appellant corporation earned
additional income in the amount of $41,907, $10,880, $88,018 and $61,289 for the fiscal years
ending respectively on April 30, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997;
7. On
May 14, 1998, the appellant corporation filed Notices of Objection to the
March 13, 1998, assessment;
[3] In
making her assessment, the respondent relied on the following assumptions of
fact:
[TRANSLATION]
(a) The appellant
corporation is a GST registrant;
(b) During the period
from July 1, 1993, to April 30, 1997, the appellant corporation
operated a restaurant in Charlesbourg known as Restaurant La Véranda;
(c) The only
shareholder in the appellant corporation was Lucie Pelletier ("the
shareholder");
(d) During the above-noted
period, the appellant corporation failed to collect and remit the GST on
taxable supplies totalling $347,415.36, calculated as follows:
|
From July 1, 1993 to April 30,
1994
|
April 30,
1995
|
April 30,
1996
|
April 30,
1997
|
(1) Amounts from shareholder's bank accounts
|
$73,049.52
|
$89,129.71
|
$64,708.10
|
$79,774.82
|
(2) Supplies made through video poker machines
|
$22,393.33
|
$15,064.42
|
|
|
(3) Unreported "other supplies"
|
|
|
$1,543.11
|
|
(4) Reported but not taxed "other
supplies"
|
|
$349.85
|
|
$2,141.04
|
Total unadjusted net taxable amounts
|
$95,443.45
|
$104,543.98
|
$66,251.21
|
$81,915.86
|
Adjustment of variance between recorded taxable
sales and tax actually remitted
|
$17.86
|
$5.29
|
$175.71
|
-$4.57
|
Adjustment to correct typographical error in formula
on April 1995 meal and hotel services worksheet
|
|
$-933.43
|
|
|
Total adjusted net taxable amounts
|
$95,461.31
|
$103,615.84
|
$66,426.92
|
$81,911.29
|
(e) The amounts
deposited into the shareholder's bank accounts came from supplies made by the
appellant corporation, which reported no profit for the 1994, 1995, 1996 and
1997 taxation years;
(f) The taxable
supplies in the amount of $347,415.36 represent GST in the amount of
$24,319.07;
(g) During the same
period, the appellant corporation claimed excess Input Tax Credits
("ITCs") in the amount of $581.09;
(h) For the entire
period, the appellant corporation failed to report and remit to the Minister
GST in the total amount of $24,900.11;
[4] At
issue is whether the appellant corporation acted properly as an agent of the
Minister of National Revenue ("the Minister") regarding the GST for
the period from July 1, 1993, to April 30, 1997, and specifically
whether the deposits made into the shareholder's bank accounts came from
supplies made by the appellant corporation in operating its restaurant.
[5] Starting
on November 1, 1991, the appellant corporation, in which the shareholders
were Lucie Pelletier and the spouse of the former owner of the business,
operated a restaurant and bar known as Restaurant La Véranda located in a shopping
mall in Charlesbourg.
[6] The
appellant corporation purchased the business from the trustee in the bankruptcy
of Gestion A. Bouchard Inc., a company that had operated the restaurant and
bar. At the time of the acquisition, the capital stock was divided equally
between Lucie Pelletier and Marielle Deschênes, both of whom had been employees
of the company dissolved by the bankruptcy.
[7] For
the periods at issue, the appellant corporation's income came mainly from the
operation of the restaurant and bar and from commissions on the income
generated by the use of video poker machines installed on the premises.
[8] The
respondent assessed the appellant corporation on the basis of the assumption
that all the deposits over and above those from the appellant corporation's
business operations were taxable supplies.
[9] Lucie
Pelletier vigorously contested and denied the respondent's interpretations of
the nature of the deposits at issue. She argued that the deposits were made up
as follows: many winnings at bingo; a loan in the amount of $50,000 from the
personal savings of one of her nieces; an inheritance in the amount of $6,500;
and income from her son for board in the amount of $13,000.
[10] The total deposits for the period at issue were substantial, amounting
to approximately $300,000.
[11] Lucie Pelletier explained that she made the deposits at issue from
personal financial resources that she had accumulated in cash over the years.
She kept these amounts at home or in safety deposit boxes at the bank. According
to Lucie Pelletier, these savings had been accumulated specifically as follows:
Savings from wages
|
|
·
Work at Quebec's Commission des transports, 1975 to 1981
|
$42,000
|
·
Work at Lucie
Pizzéria, 1981 to 1984
|
$16,000
|
·
Work at Lebourgneuf
bowling alley and at Restaurant La Véranda, 1985 to 1991
|
$30,000
|
Inheritance from father, 1984
|
$6,500
|
Repayments from mother, 1984 to 1990
|
$25,000
|
Winnings at bingo
|
|
·
1980 to 1990
|
$53,000
|
·
1991 to 1993
|
$45,000
|
·
1994
|
$13,872
|
·
1995
|
$17,419
|
·
1996
|
$18,962
|
Loan from Linda Bélanger, 1991
|
$50,000
|
Board income from son Patrick, 1990 to 1996
|
$13,000
|
[12] Essentially, the evidence of this substantial amount of available cash
consisted of the testimony of Lucie Pelletier and her spouse, makeshift bookkeeping
of Lucie Pelletier's winnings at bingo, and a note payable to Linda Bélanger in
the amount of $50,000.
[13] Lucie Pelletier's financial resources were thus made up of four
components:
Savings from wages, 1975 to 1991
|
$88,000
|
Winnings at bingo, 1980 to 1996
|
$148,253
|
Cash loan
|
$50,000
|
Inheritance, income from board, repayment
|
$44,500
|
[14] Lucie Pelletier described herself as a very detail-conscious person
who was particularly concerned about maintaining highly detailed records. She used
this explanation to justify her very explicit bookkeeping of her phenomenal
winnings at bingo. Apparently this detail-consciousness was not as marked regarding
the operations of the restaurant and bar, where nonetheless essential documents
were quite simply missing or destroyed.
[15] I refer in particular to the daily cash register tapes. The deficient
accounting records of the operations of the restaurant and bar is all the more
surprising since Lucie Pelletier stated that, as an employee, she had seen many
serious problems of the former owner of the business.
[16] Lucie Pelletier also stated that the restaurant and bar was a very
good business; she had even considered purchasing it during the months
preceding the bankruptcy for approximately $200,000, which she had in cash in
various safety deposit boxes and at her home.
[17] After the bankruptcy, Lucie Pelletier and the spouse of the former
owner of the business purchased all the shares in the business, through the
appellant corporation, for a fraction of the amount she had been prepared to
pay a few months before.
[18] Somewhat later, Lucie Pelletier purchased all the shares held by the
joint shareholder, Marielle Deschênes, at a time when the appellant corporation
was in deficit. The corporation that Lucie Pelletier directs and controls as
sole shareholder loses money year after year.
[19] Although Lucie Pelletier described herself as an orderly, disciplined,
particularly frugal and extremely responsible person in managing her personal
affairs, the evidence did not make it possible to explain the logic or the
rationale that may have motivated her. She stated that initially she was
prepared to purchase the business for approximately $200,000. Somewhat later,
she purchased half of the business for a fraction of that amount, in a very ambiguous
manner. Some months later, she purchased all the shares in the appellant
corporation, which has been losing money and will continue doing so.
[20] During that entire period, Lucie Pelletier, seemingly unconcerned by
the appellant corporation's precarious position, apparently contributed to the
appellant corporation's finances from her savings and her winnings at bingo.
While this scenario is possible, it is rather dubious.
[21] Lucie Pelletier alleged that she accumulated considerable savings, whereas
her income was marginal when she had low-paying jobs. Concerning her
substantial winnings at bingo, it is possible that she was and is passionate about
bingo, but in my view such fabulous winnings are highly unlikely; rather, I
believe that they are pure fabrication allowing her to explain deposits that
cannot otherwise be justified.
[22] Lucie Pelletier's allegation that she had net winnings of nearly
$150,000 over a 15-year period of playing parish bingo is quite simply
implausible. I need not reiterate that the only evidence available is the
testimony of the lucky winner herself; furthermore, according to that same
testimony, those winnings were made up of mainly small amounts since large
jackpots were uncommon.
[23] Lucie Pelletier argued that by far most of her winnings were paid to
her in cash. When the jackpots were large, they were paid by cheque. At that
level she was apparently not as lucky since substantial winnings leave a paper
trail.
[24] Concerning the loan from her niece in the amount of $50,000, here
again, Lucie Pelletier was given the amount of the loan in cash. Apparently her
niece lent her the money interest-free, claiming that she did not need it.
Lucie Pelletier did not use the loan and kept it in cash in a safety deposit
box. The conditions of repayment were vague. It would have been worthwhile, and
indeed very important, to have that generous person testify.
[25] Another rather surprising aspect of this matter of the $50,000 loan is
that apparently no mention of it was made during the audit or at the stage of
the objection. At one point, it was alleged that this $50,000 loan was used for
making the purchase; later, it was alleged that the purchase was financed by
means of a bank loan. As well, the way this loan was apparently repaid was very
vague.
[26] On this matter of the $50,000 loan and on other equally important
points, Lucie Pelletier, who described herself as an orderly, methodical
person, gave contradictory versions of the facts.
[27] Concerning the savings accumulated from Lucie Pelletier's modest
wages, here again, the explanations provided are not very plausible. As well,
the inheritance, the repayment of the consideration paid for the purchase of
her home and, lastly, the board paid by her son are components for which the
explanations provided did not have the minimum transparency or consistency to
be retained as probable.
[28] The burden of proof was on the appellant corporation. The explanations
forming the basis of the objection to the assessment were rather suspect on
their face and were certainly very peculiar.
[29] The obvious difficulty of changing something that appeared dubious at
first glance into convincing evidence called for explanations that were
plausible, consistent and, most importantly, confirmed by objective evidence
and third-party testimony.
[30] Lucie Pelletier could have improved her evidence by calling certain
persons as witnesses, thus somewhat more plausibly establishing her phenomenal
good fortune at bingo, and, most importantly, by calling as a witness the
person who lent her $50,000 in cash, interest-free.
[31] The only person who testified in support of the appellant
corporation's allegations was Lucie Pelletier's spouse. Essentially, his
testimony confirmed that Lucie Pelletier had a passion for bingo and was
usually very lucky. He also explained in detail and emphasized her mania for
noting, keeping and recording everything.
[32] Why would Lucie Pelletier, who had already witnessed a serious problem
resulting from lack of documentary information relating to the administration
of the same business and whose spouse had said that she was in the habit of
keeping and recording everything, deliberately choose not to keep all the
vouchers that were elementary for the audit?
[33] The evidence has not made it possible to answer that question. This
lack of an answer, the numerous inconsistencies and contradictions, the
absolutely remarkable details of the arguments supporting Lucie Pelletier's
allegations, and the losses of memory about certain adverse points mean,
overall, that I have no hesitation in dismissing outright Lucie Pelletier's
testimony, which forms the appellant corporation's main evidence.
[34] As well, in my view this harsh criticism of the quality of the
evidence is confirmed by the accounting information available concerning the
appellant corporation's operations. Indeed, Lucie Pelletier stated that she was
an extremely frugal person who, during her first years in the work force, saved
substantial amounts out of very modest wages.
[35] Lucie Pelletier was employed by a restaurant she considered so
interesting that she said that a few months before the bankruptcy she was
prepared to invest approximately $200,000 to purchase it. Following the
bankruptcy, with the spouse of the former owner of the business, she created
the appellant corporation, which purchased the business's assets for a fraction
of that amount. Some time later, she purchased the shares held by the joint
shareholder and became the sole shareholder.
[36] The appellant corporation loses money year after year; Lucie Pelletier
continues to operate it even, as she said, after noting a significant decline
in the number of customers. During the entire period at issue, she frequently attended
bingo games on a regular basis while the appellant company posted loss after
loss. Another really very surprising fact is that Lucie Pelletier receives
annual wages of approximately $10,000 from the appellant corporation and still
manages to own two vehicles worth approximately $30,000 each in her own name.
Apparently her winnings at bingo, allegedly used for the appellant
corporation's operations, were also used for Lucie Pelletier's personal
consumer spending.
[37] There is quite a surprising contradiction here that should certainly
have been explained; nevertheless, there was never any question of a recovery
strategy or plans to sell or shut down the business.
[38] The assessment was indeed made in a somewhat arbitrary manner, but the
respondent had no choice, given the lack of transparency and the absence of
vouchers.
[39] During the period at issue, the documents available providing
accounting information on the appellant corporation were unaudited financial
statements and daily reports covering the period from May 1 to the end of
November 1997—the other daily reports and related meal vouchers were
promptly destroyed in violation of the legal requirement to keep records, as
set out in subsection 286(1) of the Excise Tax Act and
subsection 34(1) of Quebec's Act respecting the Ministère du revenu.
[40] Sylvain Gingras, the auditor responsible for the case, explained that
the daily reports refer to the daily sales of the restaurant and bar. On the
basis of the little information available, he made various calculations in
order to check the plausibility of the figures. Following various accounting
exercises, he concluded that the average meal cost was apparently between $1.50
and $2.50, which even on its face is completely implausible, particularly since
the price of a coffee was $1.00. He therefore concluded that the many deposits
came, not from Lucie Pelletier's personal savings, but from the appellant
corporation' operations.
[41] Acting as an agent for the collection of taxes calls for impeccable
transparency that is untainted by any doubt and, most importantly, for the
availability of all supporting documents so that impeccable, flawless
management may be proven at all times.
[42] While any error or omission can lead to troublesome disadvantages and
consequences, the persons whose behaviour caused the omissions are solely
responsible for the situation.
[43] In this case, the appellant corporation
deliberately destroyed the vouchers that were indispensable to elementary
accounting. The vouchers and documents available amply justified a strong
presumption that the accounting records did not reflect a large portion of the
income.
[44] The appellant corporation benefited from many
substantial deposits; the appeal specifically involves the source of those
deposits.
[45] The balance of the evidence has confirmed the respondent's arguments
that those deposits came from the appellant
corporation's operations, not from the sole shareholder's savings. The many
vague statements and contradictions completely undermined the quality of Lucie
Pelletier's testimony and also discredited the explanations of the appellant
corporation's operations.
[46] In these
circumstances and for these reasons, the appeal is dismissed, with costs in
favour of the respondent.
Signed
at Ottawa, Canada, this 16th day
of May 2003.
J.T.C.C.
Translation certified true
on this 12th day of July 2004.
Sophie Debbané, Revisor