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Docket: 2003-1312(IT)I
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BETWEEN:
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ARNOLD BEN WAINBERG,
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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 August 21, 2003, at Montreal,
Quebec,
By: The Honourable Justice E.A. Bowie
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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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Annick Provencher
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____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The
appeal from the assessment of tax made under the Income Tax
Act for the 1998 taxation year is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 2nd day of September, 2003.
Bowie J.
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Citation: 2003TCC610
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Date: 20030902
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Docket: 2003-1312(IT)I
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BETWEEN:
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ARNOLD BEN WAINBERG,
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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
Bowie J.
[1] Mr. Wainberg appeals from a
reassessment for income tax for the 1998 taxation year by which
the Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) added to his
income interest of $15,207 that was paid to him by a bank in the
United States of America. Mr. Wainberg says that this interest
belongs to "his corporation", 158961 Canada Inc. (158),
and not to him. The appeal was heard at Montreal, under the
Court's informal procedure.
[2] The Appellant was the owner of a
50% interest in a slaughterhouse known as Reliable Poultry
Packers. In 1987 he and his partner sold that business. The
Appellant's share of the proceeds was $513,000. He testified
that he consulted a tax lawyer who told him that he was free to
invest these funds in the United States, where interest rates
were higher than in Canada, if he wished, and that he could have
the funds held by a corporation. He said that 158 was then
incorporated, and the funds were transferred to it. He was
unable, however, to say by what type of transaction this took
place. He went on to say that when he sought to deposit the
funds in a bank in Plattsburgh, New York, the bank manager there
told him that he would not accept a deposit from a corporation
resident in Canada, but that he would accept a deposit from an
individual resident in Canada. He therefore deposited the funds
belonging to 158 in the U.S. bank in his own name. Each year, he
said, when the interest on the deposit was paid to him he turned
it over to 158. The Appellant filed the income tax return each
year for 158, as well as his personal return, and he included the
interest in the income of 158. The Appellant also testified that
158 paid a substantial amount of capital tax to the province of
Quebec each year. I have no doubt that this is true, but it does
not prove, or tend to prove, that the source of the capital of
158 was the proceeds of the sale of Reliable Poultry Packers.
[3] Counsel for the Respondent
referred me to the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in
Njenga v. The Queen.[1] That case held that a taxpayer who ignores the
requirement under the Act to maintain and have available
detailed information and documentation to support the claims that
they make should expect to have considerable difficulty
discharging the burden of proving those claims. The need to
support oral testimony with documents is certainly not absolute,
however. If the taxpayer is a credible witness, the case may be
made simply on oral evidence, if it is sufficiently convincing.
In the present case, the Appellant did not produce at the trial
the kind of documentary evidence tending to establish that 158
was the true owner of the funds on deposit that one would expect
should exist. Nor did he give a satisfactory explanation for its
absence. In fact, two of the documents that he produced tend to
prove quite the opposite.
[4] Much of the Appellant's
documentary evidence is correspondence passing between himself
and the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, and has little or no
probative value. He also tendered unaudited financial statements
of 158 for 1998, and earnings statements for 1994, 1995 and 1997.
However, these are not helpful to his case either. The balance
sheet as at December 31, 1998 shows the shareholder's equity
to be made up of $11 paid-up capital and retained earnings of
$467,611; the corresponding numbers as at December 31, 1997 are
$11 and $473,140. There is no documentary evidence that
corroborates the Appellant's evidence that he somehow put the
proceeds of the sale of his business into 158 some ten years
earlier. Nor was he able to say in his oral evidence what form
that transaction took. In these circumstances, it would be
reasonable to expect that the accountant for the company would
testify, and would bring the necessary journal extracts to show
the transaction by which 158 became the beneficial owner of the
$513,000 proceeds of the sale of Reliable Poultry Packers. I
note, however, that Schedule 7 to the T2 return of 158 for the
1998 taxation year shows in the line for income from property
that it had no foreign investment income, and that it had
aggregate investment income of $21,264. It is noteworthy too that
the company had a loss from operations of almost $27,000 in 1998,
more than sufficient to offset the declared interest income.
[5] The other significant document
entered into evidence by the Appellant is a letter from the HSBC
Bank USA to the Appellant and his wife. This letter was
apparently written at their request to show the amounts of
interest paid by the bank on their deposits in 1998. In total
they had twelve accounts. According to the Notification of
Confirmation that is part of Exhibit A-1, the amounts of interest
that were included in the Appellant's income by the
reassessment were US$5,965, US$3,143 and US$1,146, a total of
US$10,254. This was converted at the rate of $1.4831 to a total
of CAN$ 15,207. The second and third of those amounts were
interest paid by the U.S. bank on accounts in the Appellant's
name alone. The first of them was paid on an account held in the
name of "Ben Wainberg ITF Michael Wainberg". This, the
Appellant said, meant that the account was in his name, but in
trust for his son Michael. The Appellant's explanation of
this was that he had no will, and that if he were to die
intestate then he wanted the funds in that account to go to his
son. This, of course, is totally inconsistent with his stated
position that the funds were beneficially owned by 158, and that
he was simply acting as its agent to circumvent the U.S.
bank's refusal to accept deposits from a Canadian resident
corporation.
[6] With no evidence to establish the
transfer of the funds from the Appellant to 158, no evidence to
establish that the interest was paid over by the Appellant to 158
after he received it from the bank, and with evidence tending to
show that 158 declared in its T2 return that it had no foreign
source income from property, and evidence showing that the
Appellant was apparently treating at least one of the three
accounts that are relevant to this appeal as his own, I find that
the Appellant has failed to discharge the onus on him to show
that those accounts, and the interest that they earned, belonged
to 158 and not to him. The appeal is therefore dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 2nd day of September, 2003.
Bowie J.