Date: 20000201
Docket: 91-2196-IT-G
BETWEEN:
RICHARD MERCILLE,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for judgment
(delivered orally from the bench on December 7, 1999 at
Montréal, Quebec)
Archambault, J.T.C.C.
[1] Richard Mercille is instituting an appeal from
notices of assessment made by the Minister of National Revenue
(Minister) for the 1986, 1988 and 1989 taxation years. The
appeals raise a number of issues. According to the parties'
pleadings, the first of those issues is whether Mr. Mercille
incurred legal fees of $1,500 in 1986, $17,231 in 1988 and $8,832
in 1989 for the purpose of earning income from a business or
employment and whether he is entitled to deduct them in computing
his income from either of those sources. The second issue is
whether Mr. Mercille received business income of $67,561.75
through a nominee, André Wong. This income was
apparently realized through the resale of mining securities of
Ressources minières Aabarock Inc. (Aabarock). The
third issue concerns the application of section 10 of the
Income Tax Act (Act) to business income which
Mr. Mercille earned from the purchase and sale of his
securities. Lastly, in computing his income from the sale of his
Aabarock securities, Mr. Mercille claims as a deduction the
cost of flow-through shares purchased in 1984.
[2] At the start of the hearing, Mr. Mercille stated that
he was dropping the last two issues, but he raised three new
ones. First of all, he claimed that, in 1984, he did not deduct
Canadian exploration expenses (CEE) of $50,000 which he had
incurred in purchasing the Aabarock flow-through shares. Since he
had failed to deduct them in 1984, he claimed a deduction in
respect of them in computing his income for 1986.
Mr. Mercille also claimed a deduction for a loss of $13,635
arising from the non-repayment of a portion of loans totalling
$38,760 which he made to Mr. Wong in 1986 to enable the
latter to purchase Aabarock securities. Mr. Mercille claims
that he received only a sum of $25,525 from Mr. Wong. To the
extent that Mr. Wong acted as a nominee for
Mr. Mercille, this loss could be applied to reduce business
income rather than be reported as a capital loss.
[3] The last issue which Mr. Mercille raised at the start
of the hearing was the application of the penalty provided for in
subsection 163(2) of the Act which the Minister assessed in
respect of an amount of $156,405.39 which Mr. Mercille
allegedly did not report for the 1986 taxation year. Of that
amount, $148,583.89 represented gains which Mr. Mercille
realized in 1986: $81,022.14 from the sale of securities held in
his portfolio and $67,561.75 which he realized through
Mr. Wong. The balance of $7,821.50 represents unreported
interest income from the disposition of Treasury bills.
[4] To summarize, the remaining points at issue are as
follows: (1) the deduction of legal fees, (2) the
deductibility of the CEEs of $50,000, (3) the inclusion in
business income of $67,561.75 realized by Mr. Wong as a
nominee for Mr. Mercille, (4) the right to deduct a
loss from loans totalling $38,760 and (5) the penalty
assessed under subsection 163(2) of the Act. The first point
concerns the 1986, 1988 and 1989 taxation years, while all the
others concern only 1986.
FACTS AND ANALYSIS
[5] From 1983 to September 29, 1986, Mr. Mercille
was a stockbroker with Bell Gouinlock. On September 29,
1986, he was dismissed because he planned to open his own office
and was encouraging some of his colleagues to go with him.
Mr. Mercille subsequently joined the brokerage firm
Lévesque Beaubien.
[6] However, the worst was yet to come. Following an
investigation by the Commission des valeurs mobilières du
Québec commencing on March 23, 1987,
Mr. Mercille's registration as an investment advisor on
the Exchange was suspended by the Disciplinary Committee of the
Montreal Exchange for two years on March 31, 1988. He
had violated Regulation 4221 of the Montreal Exchange. The
Disciplinary Committee found him guilty on the following
seven charges:
[TRANSLATION]
1. From March 1 to October 10, 1986,
Richard Mercille knowingly took part in an arrangement which
limited free trading in the shares and stock purchase warrants of
Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc., that is to say, an
arrangement inducing the said company's principal
shareholders to deposit their share certificates and stock
purchase warrants with him and to undertake not to sell their
shares for less than an agreed-upon minimum price.
2. He placed himself in a position of conflict of interest
with his clients through an arrangement whereby his clients were
invited to deposit their share certificates and stock purchase
warrants with him as a mandatary and depositary for the alleged
purpose of protecting the said clients from the effects of a
massive sell-off of Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc.
securities, whereas Mr. Mercille himself held shares and
stock purchase warrants in the said company, which securities he
sold while he held his clients' certificates on deposit.
3. He continued to act as the depositary of his clients'
share certificates and stock purchase warrants which had been
handed over to him together with the mandate agreement signed
individually by the clients, the whole despite a verbal warning
by the Exchange around April 18 and a written warning on
April 24, 1986 that this agreement was unacceptable, and he
retained the said certificates and waited until October 7,
1986 before advising the shareholders concerned by the said
agreement that it was "deemed never to have
existed".
4. He recommended in a letter dated August 11, 1986 that
his clients enter into an arrangement whose effect was to
restrict free trading in the shares and stock purchase warrants
of Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc., despite written
warnings from the Montreal Exchange and the Commission des
valeurs mobilières du Québec dated respectively
April 24 and July 16, 1986.
5. On or around August 11, 1986, Richard Mercille
placed himself in a position of conflict of interest by
recommending that his clients enter into an "option
contract" respecting Ressources Minières Aabarock
Inc.'s shares and stock purchase warrants, while assuring
them that he alone was in a position to help them with respect to
the said securities and that this was an advantageous offer
"guaranteed" by a businessman, and not revealing that
the said individual was acting as a nominee for him
(R. Mercille), this despite the written warning dated
July 16, 1986 which he had received from the Commission des
valeurs mobilières du Québec enjoining him to
exercise very great care in performing his duties as an
investment advisor in matters pertaining to corporate securities
which he himself held.
6. From March 1 to October 10, 1986,
Richard Mercille used one of his clients as an nominee for
the purposes of an account with a member firm other than the firm
which employed Mr. Mercille and did so without the written
consent of the latter firm.
7. Around October 28, 1986, in response to a request
dated October 23, 1986 by the Exchange that he provide it
with a full report on the situation respecting the arrangements
concerning Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc.'s shares,
Richard Mercille attempted to mislead the Exchange by
informing it:
(a) that the shareholder agreement of April 1986 had never
come into effect, whereas it was not until October 7, 1986
that he wrote to the persons who had submitted to him signed
copies of the said agreement to inform them that the agreement
was deemed never to have existed;
(b) that the purpose of the alleged option contract which he
had recommended to his clients was not to replace a previous
arrangement disapproved by the Exchange;
(c) that the "option contract" had been prepared by
a "speculator" without saying that this person was in
fact himself acting through a nominee.
It is important to note that, in reaching its decision, the
Disciplinary Committee heard the testimony of a number of
witnesses, including Mr. Mercille and Mr. Wong, a
childhood friend of Mr. Mercille.
[7] Mr. Mercille appealed from this decision by the
Montreal Exchange's Disciplinary Committee to the
Exchange's Governing Committee. On June 22, 1988, the
Governing Committee replaced the two-year suspension with a
permanent revocation of Mr. Mercille's registration as
an investment advisor.
[8] On March 31, 1989, the Commission des valeurs
mobilières du Québec rendered its decision on the
application for review of the decisions by the Disciplinary
Committee and Governing Committee. According to the Commission,
the burden of proof which the Exchange's committees should
have applied in assessing the evidence was that of the balance of
evidence and, in view of the seriousness of the charges, that
evidence had to be reliable, clear, cogent and sufficient. Having
reviewed the exhibits and transcript from the Disciplinary
Committee's hearing which were submitted by the parties, the
Commission des valeurs mobilières du Québec upheld
the Disciplinary Committee's decision respecting
Mr. Mercille's guilt and that of the Montreal
Exchange's Governing Committee respecting revocation of his
right to practise.
[9] On May 10, 1989, Mr. Mercille appealed the
decision of the Commission des valeurs mobilières du
Québec to the Court of Quebec. A few weeks later, in July
1989, the Crown instituted a criminal proceeding against
Mr. Mercille. On July 26, 1996,
Mr. Justice Louis Legault of the Court of Quebec
found Mr. Mercille guilty on the following two counts:
[TRANSLATION]
between February 26, 1986 and October 23, 1986, in
Montréal, in the District of Montréal, by deceit,
falsehood or other fraudulent means, with intent to defraud, did
unlawfully affect the public market price of the stocks or shares
of Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc. offered for sale to
the public, thereby committing the indictable offence provided
for in subsection 380(2) of the Criminal Code;
between March 1, 1986 and October 23, 1986, in
Montréal, in the District of Montréal, did
unlawfully conspire with Pascal D'Onofrio,
Clément Gagnon, Bernard-Marie Gagnier and
Sylvain Tremblay to commit an indictable offence, to wit to
affect the public market price of the stocks or shares of
Ressources Minières Aabarock Inc. offered for sale to the
public, thereby committing the indictable offence provided for in
paragraph 465(1)(c) of the Criminal Code of Canada.
[10] In 1997, Mr. Mercille was sentenced to a prison term
of two years less a day and he did not appeal from that
decision. He served only five months. Mr. Mercille does
not intend to continue his appeal before the Court of Quebec from
the decision rendered by the Commission des valeurs
mobilières on March 31, 1989. One of his main reasons
is that, having been convicted of a criminal offence,
Mr. Mercille no longer believes that he will be able to work
again as an investment advisor.
[11] At the hearing of these appeals, Mr. Mercille, who
represented himself, objected to the filing of both the reasons
for Legault J.'s judgment and the reasons for the
decision by the Commission des valeurs mobilières du
Québec. This objection raised the issue of the
admissibility of both the decisions and their reasons and the
issue of the effect of a criminal conviction in a tax appeal.
After analyzing certain court decisions, I have come to the
conclusion that the items in question were relevant and
admissible as evidence.
[12] First of all, it is clear that Mr. Mercille's
criminal conviction is not res judicata since the issue
before the Court of Quebec and that before the Commission des
valeurs mobilières are not identical to that in the
instant appeals. It is therefore not surprising that the
respondent did not raise this issue in her pleadings, in
particular her reply to the notice of appeal.
[13] There is a difference at common law between res
judicata and "issue estoppel", that is to say, a
defence which prevents a party to an action from raising again an
issue previously decided by a tribunal or agency exercising
quasi-judicial functions. In Angle v. M.N.R., [1975]
2 S.C.R. 248, at page 254, Dickson J., writing for
the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada, makes the following
comments on this distinction and states the conditions in which
issue estoppel may be pleaded.
The second species of estoppel per rem judicatam is
known as "issue estoppel", a phrase coined by
Higgins J. of the High Court of Australia in Hoysted v.
Federal Commissioner of Taxation3, at
p. 561:
I fully recognize the distinction between the doctrine of
res judicata where another action is brought for the same
cause of action as has been the subject of previous adjudication,
and the doctrine of estoppel where, the cause of action being
different, some point or issue of fact has already been decided
(I may call it "issue-estoppel").
Lord Guest in Carl Zeiss Stiftung v. Rayner & Keeler
Ltd. (No. 2)4, at p. 935, defined the
requirements of issue estoppel as:
. . . (1) that the same question has been decided;
(2) that the judicial decision which is said to create the
estoppel was final; and (3) that the parties to the judicial
decision or their privies were the same persons as the parties to
the proceedings in which the estoppel is raised or their
privies . . .
Dickson J. adds the following remarks at p. 255:
. . . It will not suffice if the question arose collaterally
or incidentally in the earlier proceedings or is one which must
be inferred by argument from the judgment. [. . .] The
question out of which the estoppel is said to arise must have
been "fundamental to the decision arrived at" in the
earlier proceedings: per Lord Shaw in Hoystead v.
Commissioner of Taxation8. The authors of
Spencer Bower and Turner, Doctrine of Res Judicata,
2nd ed. pp. 181, 182, quoted by Megarry J. in Spens
v. I.R.C.9, at p. 301, set forth in these
words the nature of the enquiry which must be made:
. . . whether the determination on which it is sought to found
the estoppel is "so fundamental" to the substantive
decision that the latter cannot stand without the former.
Nothing less than this will do.
[14] In Van Rooy v. M.N.R., [1989] 1 F.C. 489, at
page 505, the Federal Court of Appeal recognized that issue
estoppel could be pleaded in an appeal from an income tax
assessment before the Tax Court of Canada.
On the basis of all of the foregoing, I am of the opinion that
the Associate Chief Judge erred in concluding that issue estoppel
could not apply in a civil proceeding where the estoppel is based
upon a conviction in a criminal case. It therefore, becomes
necessary to determine whether or not on the facts of this case,
it does apply.
At pages 508 and 509, the Court of Appeal found it
appropriate to look at the reasons of the criminal court
judge:
I turn now to the question of the propriety of looking behind
the certificate at the Judge's reasons. In a case in the
Trial Division, in which the facts were altogether different,
Sheridon Warehousing Limited v. The Queen (1983),
83 DTC 5095 (F.C.T.D.), my brother Mahoney J. examined
the reasons of the convicting Provincial Court Judge in that case
to ascertain whether that Judge, in convicting the plaintiff of
tax evasion had made a V-Day fair market valuation of
certain real property. Mahoney J. found that he had not and
he was not called upon, therefore, to make a finding on whether
issue estoppel lay in that case. The importance of the decision
for purposes of the case at bar is that he did look at reasons
for judgment of the criminal court in deciding a question raised
in a tax appeal.
I, too, have no difficulty in concluding that it is not
improper to examine the reasons for judgment to ascertain whether
in fact issue estoppel is properly pleaded. It matters not,
in the circumstances as I see them here, whether examining the
reasons is viewed as a matter of rebuttal of the prima
facie proof arising from production of the certificate of
conviction or is the exercise of judicial discretion dependent on
the particular facts of each case, which is the approach taken in
some United States authorities. Determining the identity of
issues is the object of the examination and since that is a
crucial element in the applicability of the issue estoppel,
regard should be had to the facts which led the Trial Judge to
convict. [My emphasis.]
[15] It was therefore clearly appropriate to permit filing of
the Court of Quebec's reasons for judgment and of the
Commission des valeurs mobilières's decision in
determining whether the issue estoppel rule could apply. The
remaining question is whether this rule applies in this case. I
do not believe it does. Although Legault J. found as a fact
that Mr. Wong had acted as a nominee for Mr. Mercille,
I do not think this determination was "so fundamental"
to Legault J.'s finding that Mr. Mercille was
guilty. I believe he could have come to this conclusion for other
reasons.
[16] It must also be borne in mind that the criminal offence
in Van Rooy, supra, was evading tax on certain
income; what was involved was thus a question of law and fact
much more closely related to the appeal before the Tax Court of
Canada. In his judgment, however, Legault J. held that
Mr. Mercille had unlawfully affected the securities market,
whereas the issue here is whether certain profits realized by
Mr. Wong belonged to Mr. Mercille.
[17] With respect to the decision by the Commission des
valeurs mobilières du Québec, in addition to the
fact that the point at issue was also not similar to the issue in
the instant case, Her Majesty the Queen was not one of the
parties. Thus one of the conditions stated by the Supreme Court
of Canada in Angle, supra, namely that the parties
be the same, was not met.
[18] Although the issue estoppel rule does not apply, this
does not mean that the decisions of the Court of Quebec and the
Commission des valeurs mobilières are irrelevant to this
case. As confirmed by the Quebec Court of Appeal's recent
decision in Ali c. Cie d'assurance Guardian du
Canada,[1999] J.Q. No. 2526 (QL), a criminal judgment is
a material juridical fact which may have compelling probative
value. Thibault J.A. wrote as follows in that case, at
paragraph 45:
[TRANSLATION]
A criminal judgment is a juridical fact which cannot be
disregarded, is relevant and may have compelling probative value.
Thus, without attributing to a criminal conviction the authority
of res judicata in law or in fact, a civil judge is
nevertheless free, depending on the circumstances, to make the
appropriate findings and presumptions of fact.
She writes as follows in paragraph 43:
[TRANSLATION]
Depending on the circumstances, entering a guilty verdict into
evidence may enable a civil judge to draw inescapable conclusions
respecting the fact that the act in question was indeed
committed. Where, as is here the case, there is a reasoned
criminal judgment establishing that the Alis wilfully set fire to
their building in order to receive insurance money, I find it
hard to see how, in the absence of new evidence, a civil judge,
completely disregarding this fact, could reassess absolutely
identical evidence and come to an utterly contradictory
determination. I find it hard to see how a civil judge, before
whom fraud must be proven merely on the balance of evidence,
could conclude that two persons convicted of arson in a trial in
which their guilt had to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,
could, as it were, "retry" the case on identical
evidence and come to a second, contradictory decision. The Alis
are criminals who wilfully set a fire because they wanted to
defraud their insurance company, but ultimately they did not
wilfully set the fire to receive the insurance money. This is the
result.
[19] It is therefore appropriate to cite Legault J.'s
reasons for judgment. The fraudulent acts which that judge found
Mr. Mercille committed, and which formed the basis of his
finding that Mr. Mercille was guilty of unlawfully affecting
the securities market, included the fact that Mr. Mercille
used Mr. Wong as a nominee to buy and sell Aabarock
securities. Legault J. in fact devotes 16 and a half of the
55 pages of his judgment to this question and finds, at
pages 39 and 40, that it was proven beyond a reasonable
doubt that Mr. Wong had acted as a nominee for
Mr. Mercille:
[TRANSLATION]
Could this set of seemingly contradictory facts involving
Mr. Wong in the case before this Court, including an
objective examination of those facts, ultimately raise a
reasonable doubt as to whether Mr. Wong was the
accused's nominee?
There is no doubt as to the accused's tight control over
and his interest in the whole of the dealings attributed to
Mr. Wong. The seemingly contradictory facts cast no doubt on
the fact that the accused used Mr. Wong and his name to
achieve his own ends, which were to make the shares scarce and to
withdraw a considerable number of shares from the market.
Nor does the Court have any doubt as to the truth of
Mr. Wong's statements that he was the accused's
messenger and that he knew nothing about the securities market,
and that he never personally executed the stock market
transactions done in his name. It is also clear that
Mr. Wong lent his name to the accused to enable the accused
to deal through him and that the accused used Mr. Wong's
name to propose the August 1986 agreement and that he used the
shares to force downward or moderate the stock market in
September 1986.
The only remaining question concerns the ultimate nature of
Mr. Wong's role. Apart from the fact that the accused
used Mr. Wong and that Mr. Wong was not at all involved
in the decisions concerning the offers and transactions, except
as a messenger, was Mr. Wong's role as a nominee for the
accused established?
Mr. Wong stated that the accused, who undertook to pay
his lawyers' fees, changed his mind along the way, that
Mr. Wong thereupon changed lawyers, that his new lawyer
advised him to tell the truth and that he decided to do so to
avoid punishment and that, although he had protected the accused
at all stages prior to this criminal proceeding, he was telling
the truth. Mr. Wong's credibility is confirmed in many
ways by the evidence gathered establishing, beyond the fact that
the accused controlled Mr. Wong, that Mr. Wong was the
accused's nominee. The whole of the circumstances and facts
strongly indicates that this individual, who is not very
credible, could only have been telling the truth. The external
facts confirm that Mr. Wong was generally excluded from the
accused's dealings. The accused's statements are to such
a degree qualitatively corroborated by a large number of factors
external to Mr. Wong that they leave no doubt that he was,
in this case, merely Mr. Mercille's instrument and thus
his nominee.
[20] Legault J. also found in his judgment that the
account which Mr. Wong opened at Disnat was opened for the
benefit of Mr. Mercille. He writes at page 32 of his
reasons:
[TRANSLATION]
The Court has no doubt as to Mr. Wong's ignorance of
and lack of experience with securities. It is therefore highly
unlikely that Mr. Wong opened an account at Investissements
Disnat Inc. with respect to which he dispensed that brokerage
firm from giving him any advice on transactions or on the nature,
quality or potential of any securities. This was definitely not
an agreement for neophytes such as Mr. Wong. Another
individual necessarily had to bear this responsibility or have
broader rights over this account. That individual could only be
the accused. It was therefore for the accused that Mr. Wong
opened this account at Investissements Disnat Inc.
[21] It is important to bear in mind that Legault J.
reached these conclusions even though, in that criminal
proceeding, Mr. Mercille had pleaded Mr. Wong's
lack of credibility by drawing the court's attention to his
perjury and contradictory, reluctant and vague testimony.
Legault J. writes at page 26:
[TRANSLATION]
The witness the Court heard was truly very tainted and
although the version he gave before the Court was relatively
coherent and plausible, it would be unreasonable to accept that
version unless it were solidly corroborated and confirmed by
independent factors external to the accused.
In view of his uncertain credibility, to accept the substance
of Mr. Wong's testimony to the effect that he acted as
the accused's nominee, the Court will have to find that
Mr. Wong is confirmed and corroborated by external evidence
which is not ambiguous, which is specific and significant and
which, taken together, admits of no other reasonable and logical
interpretation.
[22] At page 35 of his judgment, Legault J.
writes:
[TRANSLATION]
If Mr. Wong had had an interest in the proceeds of the
large sales made in his accounts, might he not have been expected
to have deposited them in his bank account? Instead, he states
that he cashed the cheques in order to hand the proceeds over to
the accused, and, on this matter, Mr. Wong provided a host
of details and testified in a credible manner.
[23] Legault J. adds further on:
[TRANSLATION]
Another convincing factor concerning Mr. Wong's role
as a nominee is the large number of share certificates deposited
in the personal stock account at Bell Gouinlock. This confirms
Mr. Wong's role as a nominee. And this confirmation is
important since all of the 64,000 shares purchased by
Mr. Wong on April 24, 1986 appeared in the
accused's personal account at the start of May 1986. The
evidence shows that these were clearly share certificates in
Mr. Wong's name which the accused deposited to his
personal account at Bell Gouinlock.
[24] In the following passage, which appears at page 39,
Legault J. states that he does not believe that
Mr. Mercille lent sums of money to Mr. Wong to purchase
the Aabarock shares and that he believes Mr. Wong when he
says he handed over the proceeds of the sale to
Mr. Mercille:
[TRANSLATION]
As regards the cheque for more than $50,000 which he cashed,
Mr. Wong stated that he proceeded in two stages as the bank
did not have 50 $1,000 bills: first, 25 $1,000 bills, with the
balance deposited to his account, and second, 25 $1,000 bills one
month later, with the accused's presence and his actions
being noted in detail. The inscriptions on the reverse of the
cheque attest to the fact that the cheque was cashed. And what
interest would an owner have in cashing a $50,000 cheque and
taking it in $1,000 bills and not depositing it? This once again
lends credence to Mr. Wong's version.
And in fact Mr. Wong signed over to the accused a cheque
for $25,000 dated June 26, 1986. Was this in repayment of an
additional $19,000 loan mentioned on the reverse of
Mr. Wong's cheque dated March 10, 1986? The Court
believes this was simply a transaction by the accused to conceal
the actual situation. Mr. Wong gave details and was
convincing as regards the fact that he had acted as though the
bank account belonged to the accused.
[25] Mr. Mercille contends that Legault J.'s
findings of fact should be set aside because the judge only had
Mr. Wong's version of things, as Mr. Mercille had
decided on his lawyer's recommendation not to testify at the
criminal trial. First, it is important to note that, although
Mr. Mercille did not testify at the trial, a portion of his
version of events was adduced in evidence. It may be noted in
particular that Mr. Mercille allegedly lent the sum of
$38,760: the words "personal loan" appear on the
reverse of two of the three cheques totalling this amount. I have
also cited Legault J.'s comments on this claim
above.
[26] It also becomes relevant and important to cite certain
passages from the decision of the Commission des valeurs
mobilières du Québec, which rendered its decision
based not only on Mr. Wong's testimony, but also on that
of Mr. Mercille. The Commission's three commissioners
found that Mr. Wong had acted as a nominee, that the actual
holder of the Disnat account was Mr. Mercille and, lastly,
that, when Mr. Wong made the offer of an option to certain
shareholders in August 1986, he did so as a nominee for
Mr. Mercille. Relevant passages from the Commission's
reasons are cited below:
[TRANSLATION]
The provisions of Article 7409 of the rules of the
Montreal Exchange prohibit an investment advisor from
"holding, either in his own or another person's name, a
securities account . . . with respect to which he
directly or indirectly has authority to control or trade, in a
member firm or related corporation other than the member or
related company that employs him . . ., without
the written consent of his
employer . . . ." The purpose of this
article is to facilitate the employer's exercise of auditing
powers over the investment advisor's personal accounts. This
right of examination is aimed at ensuring that investment
advisors comply with their obligations toward their clients.
On January 29, 1986, an account signed by
Richard Mercille was opened in the name of
André Wong at Bell Gouinlock Ltée
(Exhibit P-11). The information on the account
application form states that the investment advisor,
Richard Mercille, had no direct or indirect interest in the
account. It also indicates that the client's net assets were
at least $50,000. An account application form
(Exhibit P-5) was also completed in the name of
André Wong for an account at Investissements Disnat
Inc. on May 2, 1986. The facts and circumstances
establishing the relationship between Richard Mercille and
these two accounts in André Wong's name are set
out as follows in the brief by counsel for the Montreal
Exchange:
(a) on the day before settlement, that is, on March 11,
1986, of the debit balance of $18,950 in Wong's account at
Bell Gouinlock, Mercille made out a certified cheque to him for
$19,000 (Exhibit P-24);
(b) on June 26, 1986, the cheque from Disnat for
$25,125.12 (Exhibit P-7) in payment of the credit
balance in the Wong account was endorsed by Wong and then by
Mercille;
(c) on May 15, 1986, Mercille deposited to his Bell
Gouinlock account 58,300 shares, virtually all of which were
represented by the same certificates as those issued to Wong for
Bell Gouinlock on April 16, 1986. The delivery receipts
(Exhibits P-10 and P-13) and the comparative
table (Exhibit P-14) establish this link beyond
dispute.
When questioned as to his certified cheque for $19,000
mentioned above, Richard Mercille answered that this amount
represented a loan which he had made to André Wong to
help him buy a cake and pastry business for himself. We find it
curious that Richard Mercille negotiated such an agreement
without any guarantee whatever, whereas, in 1985, he had deemed
it essential that the conditions of a loan to the same person for
a smaller amount be drafted before a lawyer in the form of an
agreement including guarantees. We find his claims all the more
implausible in view of undisputed documentary evidence that, on
May 15, 1986, Richard Mercille deposited to his account
at Bell Gouinlock Ltée 58,000 shares of the
corporation, virtually all of which corresponded with the same
share certificates as those issued to André Wong by
the same brokerage house on April 16, 1986
(Exhibits P-10, P-13 and P-14; testimony
of David Archibald, January 13, 1988, Vol. 1,
pp. 60 to 62). We are convinced on the whole of the evidence
that Richard Mercille used his childhood friend
André Wong as a nominee in order to use an account at
a brokerage firm other than his employer and that he did so
without his employer's consent. In our view, the evidence is
sufficient in this regard and we maintain his guilt on the sixth
count.
[27] Mr. Mercille first testified to provide me with his
version of the facts. He then called as a witness
Mr. Robert, a lawyer who had advised him on procedural
matters relating to his appeals from the decision rendered by the
Montreal Exchange's Disciplinary Committee and who had also
assisted Mr. Wong when he was the subject of an
investigation conducted by the Commission des valeurs
mobilières du Québec. Mr. Robert indicated at
the start of his testimony that he had destroyed his files and
that he had to rely on the transcript of his testimony before the
Court of Quebec in testifying before me.
[28] Lastly, Mr. Mercille asked Mr. Wong to testify.
His objective was clearly to discredit the version of events that
Mr. Wong had given before the Montreal Exchange's
Disciplinary Committee and before the Court of Quebec at the
criminal trial. His tactic was to establish all the possible
contradictions between Mr. Wong's testimony in the
instant case and the testimony he gave in the disciplinary and
criminal proceedings.
[29] First of all, I do not intend to comment on all the
contradictions, whether with or without foundation, which I
observed at the hearing of these appeals, which was originally to
last only two days but stretched out over more than
seven days. Furthermore, before I comment on some of the
statements made by each of the protagonists, it would be useful
to describe each man's personality. In presenting his
evidence and in his testimony to the Court, Mr. Mercille
appeared to me to be a methodical and meticulous, although often
punctilious person. He had clearly prepared his appeals very
well. He always demonstrated considerable self-control and
displayed no emotion. He was moreover very respectful toward the
witness Wong, counsel for the respondent and me.
[30] Mr. Wong, on the other hand, is a very talkative
person (who constantly had to be reminded to limit his answers to
the questions put to him), often emotional and impetuous, with
little concern for detail. I was not surprised to learn that he
had not carefully and prudently administered his financial
affairs and that he spent all the money he earned, which at the
time was a military cook's salary of approximately $26,000.
He even spent more than he earned, which should explain in large
part why he declared bankruptcy at least twice, once in 1989 and
another time a few years later.
[31] There was clearly a great deal of animosity between
Mr. Wong and Mr. Mercille. Accusations flew in all
directions. Mr. Mercille accused Mr. Wong of blackmail,
while Mr. Wong accused Mr. Mercille of intimidating him
and sexually assaulting his sister. He even accused him of having
killed her. This woman apparently committed suicide shortly
before the hearing of the criminal proceeding brought against
Mr. Mercille for sexual assault. Mr. Mercille was found
not guilty for lack of evidence.
[32] Messrs. Wong and Mercille testified with a great
deal of conviction. Each appeared to believe firmly in his
version, but both gave me incorrect descriptions of certain
facts. However, Mr. Wong consistently stated that he did not
have sufficient knowledge of securities, and of stock market
transactions in particular, that he did not have the necessary
money to invest in the stock market and that he had agreed to do
a childhood friend a favour by acting as a nominee for the
purchase and sale of Aabarock securities. It was as a nominee
that he had opened an account at the savings bank in Longueuil to
allow the purchase of the Aabarock securities and it was because
he was a nominee that the money necessary to purchase them was
provided to him by Mr. Mercille. In addition, Mr. Wong
signed blank cheques to enable Mr. Mercille to pay for the
shares.
[33] It was also as a nominee that he opened the Disnat
account through which he sold the Aabarock securities for
Mr. Mercille. Mr. Wong also contended that he had
turned over to Mr. Mercille all the amounts he had cashed
following the sales of Aabarock securities in 1986, with the
exception of certain small amounts, including, in particular, an
amount of $125 and $1,000 to cover possible legal fees.
[34] The investigation by the Commission des valeurs
mobilières du Québec provided most of the exhibits
which the respondent filed with this Court. They included
three cheques totalling $38,760 payable by Mr. Mercille
to Mr. Wong: one for $12,860 dated January 21, 1986
bearing the words "personal loan" on the reverse, one
for $6,900 dated February 11, 1986 with no inscription on
the reverse and, lastly, one for $19,000 dated March 10,
1986 bearing the inscription "additional personal
loan". The cheques were handed over to Mr. Wong to
enable him to purchase a total of 120,750 Aabarock shares at
a total cost of $36,985. The balance of $1,760 was paid to
Mr. Wong, who did not remember the purpose for which this
amount was used.
[35] The exhibits filed by the respondent also include three
cheques totalling $106,321, which amount was paid by Disnat to
Mr. Wong. These included a cheque dated May 20, 1986
for $6,000, a second dated June 26, 1986 for $25,125.12 and
a third dated October 31, 1986 for $75,196.63. Mr. Wong
did not remember the first cheque. Examination of the second
reveals that it was endorsed by Mr. Wong and by
Mr. Mercille. Mr. Wong moreover confirmed that he had
received it and deposited it to his bank account. When I
questioned Mr. Wong as to the delivery of the third cheque,
he gave me two contradictory versions in the space of five
minutes.
[36] First of all, he said that he and Mr. Mercille went
to the National Bank on Lagauchetière Street in
Montréal, Disnat's bank branch, to cash the cheque.
The bank paid him $50,000 and the balance was transferred to his
bank account in Loretteville. He then turned over the $50,000 to
Mr. Mercille that same day or the day after. He then
returned to Québec and, when back in Montréal
one month later, gave Mr. Mercille the balance, less
the aforementioned $1,000. Intrigued by the fact that he had not
been able to hand the money over to Mr. Mercille until the
next day, I asked Mr. Wong for details on the circumstances
in which the cheque for $75,196.63 was cashed. He then told me
that he had received the full amount of $75,196.63 and that he
turned it over to Mr. Mercille the next day because, for a
reason of which Mr. Wong was unaware, Mr. Mercille had not
followed him outside the National Bank. As it was approximately
2:00 p.m.—this being the time inscribed on the reverse
of the cheque—Mr. Wong thought that Mr. Mercille
had returned to his office. This was a rather intriguing
situation for someone who, as Mr. Wong claimed, had
accompanied his nominee to cash his cheque.
[37] When counsel for the respondent asked him in
cross-examination to explain this contradiction in his testimony,
and after counsel showed him the transcript of the testimony he
had given at previous hearings, Mr. Wong confirmed that the
bank had not had enough $1,000 bills to enable him to cash the
total amount of the cheque for $75,196.63. Only 50 bills
were available. The balance was transferred to his bank account
in Québec.
[38] Mr. Wong then filed a copy of this cheque as well as
the stub and a National Bank slip confirming the deposit of
$25,097.33 to his Loretteville account on October 31, 1986.
On the back of the cheque, it can be seen that the National Bank
teller called Disnat to confirm that the cheque had been issued
and to identify the beneficiary. The teller also communicated
with a National Bank representative in Québec. Also
appearing on the reverse of the cheque are Mr. Wong's
social insurance number, a credit card number, an inscription
concerning the existence of a Department of National Defence
photo I.D. providing Mr. Wong's date of birth and
height. All these actions were thus consistent with the care that
a bank teller would take before handing over a large amount of
cash.
[39] This contradiction in Mr. Wong's testimony may
be explained by the fact that it is not easy to remember minor
events that occurred more than 13 years prior to the hearing
of these appeals. It should also be borne in mind that
Mr. Wong did not appear to have taken the same care in
preparing for his testimony as Mr. Mercille had done, which
was only natural.
[40] Although Mr. Mercille took a great deal more care in
preparing for his testimony, this did not prevent him from also
providing an incorrect version of certain facts. He stated under
oath that, in computing his income for 1984, he had not deducted
an amount of $50,000 as CEEs after purchasing $50,000 worth of
flow-through shares in Aabarock. Although these flow-through
shares were subscribed on November 26, 1984,
Mr. Mercille contended that his income for December 1984 was
less than he had expected—as the December income was
realized instead in January 1985—and that he did not have
enough income to deduct the CEEs of $50,000 from his subscription
of Aabarock shares.
[41] It is important to note that Mr. Mercille, like the
Minister, had destroyed his 1984 income tax return. All that was
filed in evidence was a computerized statement providing a
summary of the 1984 return. Under the heading "Other
Deductions" appeared an amount of $89,629. When I asked
Mr. Mercille how I could satisfy myself that his CEEs of
$50,000 were not part of this amount of $89,629, he answered that
the $50,000 was not deducted because he wanted to keep it as the
ACB of his shares.
[42] When I asked him to indicate which expenses might have
been included in the $89,629, he answered that this amount
included CEEs from Golden Knight. He added, however, that he
could not tell me how many shares of that corporation he had
purchased. After observing that Mr. Mercille had deducted
resource expenditures of $159,733 in 1986, I suggested that he
must certainly have used the deductions from 1984 and 1985. Even
though he was a broker specializing in flow-through shares, he
then said he did not know he could carry over these deductions to
another year.
[43] Mr. Mercille gave this testimony during the first
two hearing days, on August 30 and 31, 1999. When the
hearing resumed on November 22, 1999, counsel for the
respondent showed Mr. Mercille a copy of the 1984 income tax
return that he had filed with the Quebec Department of Revenue.
Mr. Mercille first objected to the fact that this document
had been filed, but I overruled his objection.
[44] In the income tax return in question, it could be seen
that Mr. Mercille had deducted the sum of $95,470 as
deductions in respect of resources arising from the purchase of
flow-through shares or from similar investments. Included in this
amount were not only CEEs from Golden Knight, representing the
small amount of $1,878, and an amount of $7,500 in CEEs from a
geologist named Jacques Grenier, but also CEEs of $50,028
from Aabarock providing entitlement to an amount of $83,380, that
is, 166% of the CEEs which Aabarock had waived in
Mr. Mercille's favour. So Mr. Mercille remembered
in August 1999 that he had deducted CEEs from Golden Knight
(amounting to only $1,878) in 1984, but could not remember
deducting the CEEs from Aabarock (which amounted to $50,028), and
this is quite surprising.
[45] A calculation of the corresponding deductions allowed
under the federal legislation resulted in a total of $89,629,
exactly the amount that appears on the computerized statement for
1984. Mr. Mercille then admitted that he had in all
likelihood deducted the $50,028 of CEEs which Aabarock had waived
in his favour. He therefore withdrew this ground of appeal.
[46] It should also be added that a document written in
Mr. Mercille's hand provides a breakdown of the $95,470
which he claimed as a deduction in his provincial return of
income and shows a balance on hand as a "reserve (CEQ) for
future years". Counsel for the respondent thus confronted
Mr. Mercille over the testimony he gave at the hearing held
in August 1999 in which he stated that he did not know he could
carry over CEE deductions to subsequent years. Mr. Mercille
tried to explain that he was aware that carry-overs were possible
for provincial purposes, but did not know that they were also
possible for federal purposes. And yet a tax information slip
prepared by Aabarock for 1984 and attached to
Mr. Mercille's provincial income tax return clearly
states that amounts not deducted in a given year may be deducted
in any subsequent year for both provincial and federal
purposes.
[47] At the very least, this part of Mr. Mercille's
testimony relating to his claim for a $50,000 deduction in
respect of CEEs reveals that it is easy to make a mistake in
testimony, even for Mr. Mercille. It is also quite
surprising that a stock broker specializing in flow-through share
sales and the financing of mining companies can claim to be
unaware that a CEE deduction not claimed in a given year can be
carried over to subsequent years.
[48] Two interpretations come to mind to explain the
inaccuracies in Mr. Mercille's testimony. Either he
honestly believed he had not deducted the $50,000 in CEEs in 1984
and erred in good faith on this point, or he knew that he had
previously deducted them and lied under oath, thus perjuring
himself. I cannot decide this question here and it is not
essential that I do so. However, it must be acknowledged that, as
Legault J. stated with regard to Mr. Wong,
Mr. Mercille is a tainted witness. In addition to being
found guilty by Legault J. of having by fraudulent means
unlawfully affected the securities market, Mr. Mercille was
also found guilty of using a false name and of having defrauded
the welfare system and legal aid by concealing his income. It is
therefore not inconceivable that Mr. Mercille lied.
[49] However, returning to the issue of the nominee and of the
alleged loans totalling $38,760, in his testimony,
Mr. Mercille gave a version that was quite different from
that of Mr. Wong. According to Mr. Mercille,
Mr. Wong acted for himself, not as a mandatary or nominee
for Mr. Mercille. Mr. Mercille would have liked to help
Mr. Wong get started in business. The latter had in fact
been considering leaving the army for some time. Mr. Wong
admitted that he had considered buying a cake and pastry business
worth $16,000 with one of his co-workers at the Valcartier
military base. According to Mr. Mercille, Mr. Wong had
to take all the steps required to buy the business and secure
financing, including subsidies. Again according to
Mr. Mercille, in order to obtain a subsidy, Mr. Wong
had to show that he had a certain amount of capital.
[50] While waiting for this acquisition to materialize,
Mr. Mercille apparently suggested to Mr. Wong in
January 1986[1]
that he speculate in junior mining stocks. He suggested that
Mr. Wong make an offer to Aabarock's shareholders to
purchase their holdings for $0.20 a share. Some of these shares
had been issued a few months previously, in September 1985, at
$0.40. Why offer Mr. Wong such an opportunity?
Mr. Mercille said that he wanted to compensate Mr. Wong
for the loss he had incurred in certain stock market transactions
in 1984. And yet, as will be seen, this loss was not a heavy one.
In 1984, Mr. Wong had decided to open a self-directed RRSP
account which, on Mr. Mercille's recommendation, he used
to purchase shares in a junior mining company at a total cost of
$2,167.73. A few weeks later, Mr. Wong resold them for
$1,332, thus incurring a loss of $835.
[51] When Mr. Wong made the Aabarock share purchase offer
in January 1985, that company was a privately held corporation
whose shares would not be listed on the stock exchange until
February 26, 1986. Thirteen shareholders responded to
Mr. Wong's offer and he purchased 58,700 shares for
$12,650. On February 14, 1986, he purchased 17,500 more
shares for $5,330.85. Once the shares were listed on the
Exchange, Mr. Wong purchased 45,500 more shares for $18,950.
This gave him a portfolio of 122,550 shares for a total of
$36,985.
[52] In explaining the fact that, as of February 11,
1986, the investment loans that he had made to Mr. Wong
totalled $19,760 and that this amount was increased by another
$19,000 on March 19, 1986, Mr. Mercille mentioned
another investment project that Mr. Wong was considering,
namely the purchase of a manor house for approximately $200,000.
The manor was to contain seven businesses. Mr. Mercille
testified that Mr. Wong was to take the steps to obtain the
financing needed for the purchase, including obtaining
subsidies.
[53] Apart from the inscription "loan" on the back
of two cheques, there is no written contract confirming these two
loans or their terms and conditions. Mr. Mercille said that
there was a verbal agreement between Mr. Wong and him
whereby Mr. Mercille would receive a 10% interest in the
projects in exchange for his help with financing.
[54] And yet when he lent Mr. Wong $11,471—a far
smaller amount than the loans totalling $38,760—in February
1985, Mr. Mercille took care to have a written contract
stipulating an interest rate of 14.4% per year with an
undertaking not to borrow from anyone else signed before his
lawyer, Mr. Robert. The purpose of this undertaking was to
limit Mr. Wong's borrowing and to provide
Mr. Mercille with some form of guarantee. The $11,471 loan
was to serve to consolidate Mr. Wong's personal debts,
including some owed to credit card companies. As the three
commissioners of the Commission des valeurs mobilières
noted at page 23 of their reasons, this was a curious
situation. Why require a written contract written by a lawyer for
an $11,471 loan, when no loan contract was prepared for three
loans totalling $38,760?
[55] Mr. Wong denied that he was to take the necessary
steps to obtain financing and subsidies. He said he had no
competence in such matters; Mr. Mercille was the expert in
this area. It should also be mentioned that, according to
Mr. Wong, the projects were not sufficiently advanced for
them to have discussed the interest that Mr. Mercille would
receive in exchange for his financial assistance. Need it be
added that these projects were never carried out?
[56] The link that Mr. Mercille tried to establish
between the loans totalling $38,760 and the purchase of a cake
and pastry business or the manor house, it seems to me, would
deceive no one. Mr. Mercille is apparently indulging in
wishful thinking. Furthermore, I find the idea that
Mr. Mercille lent $38,760 to enable Mr. Wong to
speculate in the shares of a junior mining company as surprising
as it is implausible. This meant taking a great financial risk so
that Mr. Wong could make up an $835 loss incurred in
1984.
[57] It should be kept in mind that Mr. Wong was earning
a salary of only approximately $26,000 as a cook on the military
base and that he had considerable trouble managing his finances
and living within his means. It should also be added that
Mr. Wong had no knowledge of securities and even less of
mineral resources. Lastly, it should be recalled that
Mr. Wong's first experience in these fields had been a
disappointment for him.
[58] Mr. Mercille claims that Mr. Wong transferred
his portfolio from Bell Gouinlock to Disnat in May 1986 because
relations had cooled between Mr. Wong and him. However,
according to his own testimony, Mr. Mercille continued to
provide Mr. Wong with financial information and to advise
him. Mr. Wong claims that the account was transferred
because Mr. Mercille was planning to leave Bell Gouinlock
and his relations with his employers had deteriorated.
Mr. Mercille argues that this makes no sense because he
still had his own personal account at Bell Gouinlock in
September 1986 when he was dismissed. On this point, I believe
Mr. Mercille is right.
[59] However, Mr. Wong contends that he opened the
account at Disnat at Mr. Mercille's request and the fact
that he was mistaken as to the reason for the account's
transfer from Bell Gouinlock to Disnat does not necessarily
mean that he was mistaken when he said he held the account for
Mr. Mercille's benefit and that the account belonged to
Mr. Mercille.
[60] When the account was opened at Disnat on May 2,
1986, the address given by Mr. Wong was that of the Valcartier
base. However, starting in June 1986, Mr. Wong's address
on the statements of account was P.O. Box 623, Exchange
Tower. Mr. Wong stated that this post office box at the
Exchange Tower had been rented at Mr. Mercille's
request. Mr. Wong also claimed that he gave the key to the post
office box to Mr. Mercille shortly thereafter.
Mr. Mercille vehemently denies that he had control of the
post office box.
[61] I find Mr. Wong's version the more likely. Why
would Mr. Wong have rented a post office box at the Exchange
Tower when he was living on the military base at Québec.
If he had to use a post office box, it would certainly have been
more efficient to have had it in the Québec area near the
military base. It is therefore more likely that the post office
box was obtained to enable Mr. Mercille to control more
effectively, and secretly, the account at Disnat and the monthly
statements that were sent to that post office box.
[62] Mr. Mercille also explained that the reason some of
Mr. Wong's securities found their way into his account,
as Legault J. noted in his reasons, was that
Mr. Mercille had acquired them in exchange for stock
purchase warrants which he held. If Legault J. had
understood this, he might have come to different conclusions on
the nominee issue.
[63] First of all, I find it quite surprising that
Mr. Wong, who knows nothing about securities transactions,
would have agreed to exchange shares for stock purchase warrants.
Mr. Mercille said that he did so in order to speculate more
freely. I do not believe that Mr. Wong was enough of a
speculator to embark on this kind of venture. The purchase
warrants were about to expire and might thus disappear, which is
what in fact occurred. This exchange is not inconsistent with
Legault J.'s finding that Mr. Wong was
Mr. Mercille's puppet and that he was following his
mandator's instructions.
[64] Mr. Mercille claims that the cheque for $25,125.12
which he received from Mr. Wong represents partial repayment
of the loans totalling $38,760 which he made to Mr. Wong. As
for the sums represented by the cheques from Disnat for $6,000
and $75,196.63 which were given to Mr. Wong,
Mr. Mercille claims that he did not receive them. Once
again, it is Mr. Wong's word against that of
Mr. Mercille.
[65] Which version should be accepted depends in large part on
the answers to the following questions: did Mr. Wong act as
a nominee for Mr. Mercille, did the Disnat account belong to
Mr. Mercille and did Mr. Mercille exercise control over that
account? If the answer to all these questions is yes, it will be
easier to believe that Mr. Mercille took the necessary steps
to ensure that the sums paid by Disnat were remitted to him.
[66] If Mr. Mercille decided when to sell the Aabarock
shares and if he received the cheques and statements from Disnat
at the Exchange Tower post office box, there is also reason to
believe that he received the proceeds from the sale of the
Aabarock shares. Furthermore, if Mr. Mercille was lying or
at the very least was mistaken in stating that Mr. Wong did
not act as his nominee, that he (Mr. Mercille) was not the
actual holder of the Disnat account and that he did not exercise
control over the post office box, it can easily be believed that
he was also lying or mistaken in claiming that he never received
the amounts withdrawn from Disnat.
[67] Let us now review each of these elements. It should be
noted first of all that the Minister assumed in making the
assessment that there was a nominee relationship between
Mr. Mercille and Mr. Wong at the time of the purchase
and sale of the Aabarock shares and that Mr. Wong had handed over
the three cheques totalling $106,321.75 to
Mr. Mercille. The burden was on Mr. Mercille to refute
the facts on which the Minister relied in making his assessment.
Mr. Mercille had to show on the balance of probabilities that
Mr. Wong had acted for himself and not for Mr. Mercille
and that he had made genuine loans to Mr. Wong totalling
$38,760. I believe for a number of reasons that Mr. Mercille
failed to discharge this burden.
[68] First of all, the decisions of the Court of Quebec and
the Commission des valeurs mobilières showed, in the case
of the former beyond a reasonable doubt and in the case of the
latter on the balance of evidence—even after considering
Mr. Mercille's version, just as was done by the
Exchange's Disciplinary Committee and Governing
Committee—that Mr. Mercille used Mr. Wong as a
nominee. In addition, the Court of Quebec and the Commission des
valeurs mobilières established that the Disnat account
belonged to Mr. Mercille. These decisions by the Court of
Quebec and the Commission des valeurs mobilières cannot be
considered as having the authority of an irrebuttable
presumption; rather they have the authority of a presumption of
fact which Mr. Mercille also had to rebut by adducing, in
particular, new facts.
[69] Before me, Mr. Mercille had the opportunity to
present again his version of the facts and, contrary to what had
happened before the Court of Quebec, to testify himself. His
testimony and explanations did not satisfy me that the Minister
had incorrectly assumed that Mr. Wong was a nominee for
Mr. Mercille. Nor did he convince me that the Court of
Quebec and the Commission des valeurs mobilières were
mistaken in their findings of fact on these issues.
[70] Furthermore, I do not believe Mr. Mercille when he says
that he lent Mr. Wong $38,760, that he was not exercising
control over the post office box at the Exchange Tower and that
neither the Disnat account nor the Bell Gouinlock account
belonged to him. I have already spoken of the weakness of
Mr. Mercille's version with respect to these
matters.
[71] Instead I believe Mr. Wong when he says that he
acted as a nominee for Mr. Mercille, that he opened the bank
account on Mr. Mercille's instructions, that he signed
blank cheques to enable Mr. Mercille to purchase Aabarock
shares and that he held the accounts at Bell Gouinlock and Disnat
for Mr. Mercille's benefit. Lastly, I believe
Mr. Wong's assertion that he handed the
three cheques from Disnat over to Mr. Mercille, less an
amount of $1,000.
[72] In conclusion, the revenue from Mr. Wong's share
purchases and sales on behalf of Mr. Mercille amounted to
$67,561.75. As Mr. Wong admits having received $125 for his
services and having withheld $1,000 to help him pay his future
legal fees, I believe it is appropriate to allow $1,125 as an
expense for fees paid to Mr. Wong for his services as a
nominee. The net income earned from these activities thus amounts
to $66,436.75.
Penalty
[73] The Minister assessed a penalty under
subsection 163(2) of the Act in respect of an amount of
$156,405.39, consisting of unreported business income of
$148,583.89 and unreported interest income of $7,821.50 from the
disposition of Treasury bills. The amount of $148,583.89 consists
of two parts: the profit of $81,022.14 realized by
Mr. Mercille on securities sales which he made himself and
profits of $67,561.75 realized on the sale of Aabarock securities
by Mr. Wong.
[74] The burden is on the Minister to show that
Mr. Mercille knowingly, or under circumstances amounting to
gross negligence, made a false statement or omission in his
return of income.
[75] Mr. Mercille explained that he did not report the
amount of $81,022.14 because he considered these gains to be
capital gains and believed he would be entitled to the capital
gains exemption announced in the 1985 budget. Mr. Mercille
said he was not familiar with the statutory requirement that the
capital gain be reported in his income tax return.
Subsection 110.6(6) of the Act provides that a taxpayer is
not entitled to a capital gains deduction if he knowingly or
under circumstances amounting to gross negligence fails to report
the capital gain in his return of income. As for the amount of
$67,561.75, Mr. Mercille's position is obviously that
this income belonged to Mr. Wong.
[76] I am prepared to admit that Mr. Mercille may have
believed that the gains he realized and the losses he incurred in
his securities portfolio might constitute capital gains or
capital losses and that he might have believed he was entitled to
the capital gains exemption. It must be borne in mind that the
legislation establishing this exemption was not passed until
February 13, 1986. Furthermore, the 1986 guide which
Mr. Mercille may have used for help in preparing his return
of income, was not produced. I do not know to what extent
taxpayers were informed of the importance of reporting capital
gains in order to take advantage of the "capital gains
deduction", which has often wrongly been described in public
as a "capital gains exemption", which might have misled
certain taxpayers. The respondent failed to discharge her burden
respecting this part of the assessment.
[77] However, different considerations apply to the other
amounts subject to the penalty provided for in
subsection 163(2) of the Act. In logical terms, the same
reasoning could have applied in respect of the $67,561.75 gain
realized through Mr. Wong. Although it might be concluded
that Mr. Mercille attempted to conceal this income, he may
have believed it was a capital gain which could also have been
eligible for the capital gains exemption.
[78] However, for various reasons, it was in
Mr. Mercille's interest to conceal the gains realized
through Mr. Wong, first in order to maximize his capital
gains deduction, which could not exceed $500,000. It is important
to note that Mr. Mercille purchased a large number of
flow-through shares. He bought approximately $59,000 worth of
these securities in 1984 alone, and his resource investments
amounted to approximately $107,000 in 1985. It should be kept in
mind that the ACB of flow-through shares is nil and that the
entire proceeds of disposition of those shares when they are
eventually disposed of is therefore treated as a capital gain.
The context in which the transactions in question were conducted
should also be noted. Those transactions enabled
Mr. Mercille unlawfully to affect the securities market and
were to remain secret.
[79] In my view, on the balance of probabilities,
Mr. Mercille knowingly, or under circumstances amounting to
gross negligence, made a false statement or omission in his
return of income, that is to say an omission respecting the
shares purchased and sold through Mr. Wong, which
Mr. Mercille did not include in his income.
[80] Mr. Mercille claimed to believe that the interest
income of $7,821.50 he failed to report had to appear in the T5s
prepared by Bell Gouinlock, the brokerage firm where he held his
Treasury bills along with his bonds and other similar
investments. However, in 1987 it was a well-known fact among
stockbrokers and investors who purchased Treasury bills that
brokerages were not required to prepare information slips such as
T5s for transactions involving these bills.
[81] This was in fact so well known that the Minister of
Finance had to announce new measures to encourage taxpayers to
report this type of interest. In his white paper on tax reform
made public in June 1987, the Minister of Finance announced new
measures to require brokerages to prepare information slips for
this type of transaction. Section 230 of the Income Tax
Regulations, which deals with security transactions was added
by P.C. 1989-2156, SOR/89-519, dated October 26,
1989 and applicable after December 31, 1990. Brokers are now
required to issue T5008 slips to clients purchasing Treasury
bills.
[82] I therefore cannot believe Mr. Mercille's
assertion that he did not know that interest on Treasury bills
was not included in T5 slips. Lastly, it is important to add that
this amount of $7,821 represents more than one third of the
interest income he should have reported in his return of
income.
Legal Fees
[83] Mr. Mercille testified that the amount of $1,500
claimed as a deduction for 1986 was for legal fees which he
incurred for the purpose of starting a new business.
Mr. Mercille, it will be remembered, hoped to be able to
open his own securities business and Rimco Capital Inc. was
moreover incorporated as a result of his efforts to open such a
business. However, as a result of Mr. Mercille's
problems with the Montreal Exchange and the Commission des
valeurs mobilières, the corporation was never really
operated actively. Mr. Mercille contends that the said
corporation never repaid the $1,500 in fees and that these
represent an expense incurred for the purpose of earning
income.
[84] In my view, even if it is admitted that this expense was
incurred for the purpose of earning income, it was a capital
expenditure the deduction of which is prohibited under
paragraph 18(1)(b) of the Act. Mr. Mercille may
have considered this $1,500 expense as being part of the cost of
the shares of Rimco Capital Inc. which he acquired. However, I do
not have to decide this question.
[85] The evidence showed that the legal fees disallowed by the
Minister for the 1988 and 1989 taxation years were paid for
professional services rendered by lawyers who represented
Mr. Mercille before the Montreal Exchange's Disciplinary
Committee and Governing Committee, before the Commission des
valeurs mobilières du Québec and in the criminal
proceeding before the Court of Quebec.
[86] Mr. Mercille testified that it was important to
defend himself against the charges before each of these bodies
since, if he failed, he would temporarily or permanently lose his
right to carry on his profession as an investment advisor
registered with the Exchange. The fees were thus an expense
incurred for the purpose of maintaining his right to receive
employment income. Mr. Mercille even contends that he would
have negotiated a settlement with the prosecution if he had not
feared that pleading guilty would have resulted in the loss of
his right to carry on his profession.
[87] The only ground given by counsel for the respondent for
disallowing these legal fees as an expense was that, in his view,
they were not incurred for the purpose of earning income. In
support of his argument, he cited the decision in No. 666
v. M.N.R. (1959), 23 Tax A.B.C. 208, in which Board
member Fordham held that a taxpayer was not entitled to deduct
legal fees incurred to defend in a proceeding under the
Securities Act of Ontario.
[88] In my view, this decision is not consistent with the
current state of the law. A number of court decisions have
recognized that such legal fees can be deducted in circumstances
similar to those of Mr. Mercille. I note in particular the
following decisions: Lavoie v. M.N.R., 82 DTC 1291
and M.N.R. v. Eldridge, 64 DTC 5338. In the
latter, the Exchequer Court recognized that the legal fees
incurred to carry on illegal activities could constitute
deductible expenses. There are other decisions, such as
St-Germain v. M.N.R., 83 DTC 36, in which the
Tax Review Board allowed the deduction of expenses incurred by a
physician to defend in a proceeding for criminal negligence. In
Vango (T.) v. Canada, [1995] 2 C.T.C. 2757, my
colleague Judge Bowman came to the same conclusion
respecting the expenses incurred by a broker employed by a
brokerage firm to defend himself against a charge laid by the
Toronto Stock Exchange. See also M.N.R. v. L.D. Caulk Co.
Ltd., 54 DTC 1011 (S.C.C.) and Rolland Paper Co. Ltd.
v. M.N.R., 60 DTC 1095. In this last decision, the
Exchequer Court held that legal fees incurred to defend against a
charge under the Criminal Code were deductible, even
though the company charged was in fact found guilty.
[89] In my opinion, the legal fees incurred by
Mr. Mercille were incurred for the purpose of earning income
from employment and are deductible under
paragraph 8(1)(f) of the Act. It should be noted that
counsel for the respondent raised no issue with respect to the
other conditions set out in this paragraph of the Act.
[90] Having decided that Mr. Mercille did not grant
Mr. Wong loans of $38,760, it follows that Mr. Mercille
may not claim the deduction of a loss for the non-repayment of a
portion of those alleged loans. In any case, as I believe
Mr. Mercille received a sum of $105,196 from Mr. Wong,
it follows that Mr. Mercille did not incur a loss. In view
of this conclusion, it is not necessary to add anything
further.
[91] For these reasons, Mr. Mercille's appeals are
allowed and the assessments for the 1986, 1988 and 1989 taxation
years are referred back to the Minister of National Revenue for
reconsideration and reassessment on the basis of the following
facts: (1) an amount of $66,436.75 represents business
income for Mr. Mercille for the 1986 taxation year;
(2) the penalties assessed under subsection 163(2)
apply only to this amount of $66,436.75 and to the Treasury bill
interest of $7,821.50 for the 1986 taxation year;
(3) Mr. Mercille is entitled to deduct legal fees of
$17,231 for the 1988 taxation year and $8,832 for the 1989
taxation year.
[92] Costs are awarded to the Minister. Although
Mr. Mercille was partly successful, by far most of the
proceedings concerned the nominee issue and Mr. Mercille
lost on this question. He also lost on the application of the
penalty to the amount of $74,258.25 and on his claim for a
deduction in respect of a loss of $13,635 on his alleged loans.
He also admitted, after the respondent proved it, that the
Minister, in his assessment, correctly disallowed the deduction
for the CEEs of $50,000. I am satisfied that, if the proceedings
had been limited to the issues of legal fees and the penalty on
the income of $81,022.14, they would have lasted less than one
hearing day, instead of over seven. I also believe that the
respondent deserves her costs all the more when one considers
that Mr. Mercille insisted on needlessly arguing the entire
nominee issue, which had been decided by two committees of the
Montreal Exchange, the Commission des valeurs mobilières
du Québec and the Court of Quebec.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 1st day of February 2000.
"Pierre Archambault"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Traduction certifiée conforme ce 23e jour de
février 2000.
Erich Klein, réviseur