Date: 19990715
Docket: 98-1039-UI
BETWEEN:
THÉRÈSE LEVAC,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Tardif, J.T.C.C.
[1] This is an appeal from a determination dated
September 3, 1998 by which the respondent concluded that the
work performed by the appellant,
Thérèse Levac, with Xébec Inc. from
February 19, 1992 to March 31, 1998 was not insurable
employment on the ground that she and the person who controlled
the company that paid the remuneration were not dealing with each
other at arm's length.
[2] In support of his conclusion, the respondent made the
assumptions of fact set out in paragraph 5 of the Reply to
the Notice of Appeal as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
(a) The payer, which was incorporated in 1967, operates a
business manufacturing air dryers for air compressors used in
large factories.
(b) The payer's shareholders were:
Claus Brand with 66 2/3% of the shares
Krista Brand, Mr. Brand's former spouse, with 33 1/3%
of the shares.
(c) The payer's shares were sold to third parties and Mr.
and Mrs. Brand are no longer shareholders of the
company.
(d) The payer was operated year-round with 40 employees
in the following professions: there were welders, electricians,
plumbers, engineers, draftsmen, a secretary, a salesman and an
accountant.
(e) The appellant, Claus Brand's de facto spouse, has
worked for the payer, and essentially for Mr. Brand, since
1992.
(f) Mr. Brand was an inventor specializing in the
payer's field of activity and generally worked at his home
(which was also that of the appellant).
(g) The appellant worked at the couple's home at the
following duties: she filed "blues" (plans prepared by
Mr. Brand), made photocopies, cleaned and tidied the office
and residence and occasionally chauffeured Mr. Brand, who no
longer had a driver's licence.
(h) The appellant had no work schedule to meet, her hours were
not recorded by the payer and she could engage in other household
activities.
(i) The appellant mainly used tools and equipment belonging to
Mr. Brand himself.
(j) The appellant received fixed weekly remuneration paid by
cheque.
(k) The appellant claims that she received gross weekly
remuneration of $323 for 35 hours of work, whereas the
payer's pay records indicate that she was paid $413 gross per
week.
(l) The work performed by the appellant for the payer is hard
to quantify; she performed certain duties for the payer while at
the same time carrying out personal tasks.
[3] In her testimony, the appellant admitted the great
majority of the alleged facts. Using binders containing tables
and grids, she explained the activities in which she was mainly
involved on the job. She also stated that she had worked during
the period at issue as a chauffeur for her spouse, who had to
travel across North America for his business. She indicated that
she worked more intensely and actively as a chauffeur during the
year in which her spouse lost his driver's licence. She also
explained and described the manual work in which she was involved
for the construction of certain prototypes.
[4] The appellant's spouse, Claus Brand, supplemented
the appellant's evidence by testifying that his spouse had
helped him considerably and that the work she had performed was
essential and fundamentally important for the business. He also
stated that the company reimbursed the vehicle expenses. He
explained that the appellant's salary was fixed on the basis
of comparisons, advice from the company's accountant and the
situation as a whole. He also noted that Ms. Levac's
participation had been beneficial, particularly when business got
very difficult during the recession. Lastly, he explained that
the appellant's lay-off was forced by the sale of his
business.
[5] The respondent analyzed the circumstances and terms and
conditions of the performance of the appellant's work and
concluded that, had there been an arm's-length
relationship, the appellant and the company, which was controlled
by her spouse, would not have entered into a substantially
similar contract of employment.
[6] The period at issue, or the duration of the employment,
was six years. The appellant received a salary of
approximately $400 a week for her work.
[7] According to the respondent, following an analysis of the
case, a description of the appellant's duties was set out in
subparagraph (g), which reads as follows:
(g) The appellant worked at the couple's home at the
following duties: she filed "blues" (plans prepared by
Mr. Brand), made photocopies, cleaned and tidied the office
and residence and occasionally chauffeured Mr. Brand, who no
longer had a driver's licence.
[8] The respondent drew the following conclusions on the basis
of the uninterrupted duration of the employment, which was
remunerated at a reasonable salary of approximately $400:
(h) The appellant had no work schedule to meet, her hours were
not recorded by the payer and she could engage in other household
activities.
(l) The work performed by the appellant for the payer is hard
to quantify; she performed certain duties for the payer while at
the same time carrying out personal tasks.
[9] While the legislator has conferred significant power on
the respondent by granting him broad discretion under
paragraph (3)(2)(c) of the Unemployment Insurance
Act, this alone is insufficient to allow him to draw quick,
unjustified and essentially intuitive conclusions.
[10] Where there is a non-arms-length relationship between the
payer and an employee, the salary is often observed to be higher
than that paid for similar employment where the parties are
dealing with each other at arm's length. The work performed
frequently does not coincide with the needs of the business or is
performed during periods when the payer business has little or no
need of labour. Although the argument of chance is often made,
the start and end of employment periods are sometimes based on
eligibility for, and the duration of, unemployment insurance
benefits.
[11] These are factors which raise doubts as to the existence
of genuine employment and which considerably facilitate decisions
as to whether employment is insurable.
[12] However, there are cases where the salary is more than
reasonable, actual work is performed, the business can afford to
pay the salary agreed upon, the employment is continuous over a
period of a number of years and, lastly, the lay-off is
justified on reasonable grounds which cannot be doubted or even
be open to discussion.
[13] These are facts which, without necessarily creating a
presumption, should at least induce those who hold discretionary
power to analyze the situation more carefully.
[14] In this type of situation, a case should be analyzed
somewhat more rigorously and conclusions should not be drawn
essentially on the basis of unfounded perceptions or pure
intuition.
[15] In an age when society has evolved to the point where it
rightly permits work to be done at home—I am thinking in
particular of those who work in their homes on a computer—I
often get the impression, and this case is a good example, that
the respondent would like employment insurability to be subject
to proof beyond any doubt that the work completely occupied a
specific number of hours; that he would like hours to be clearly
defined and recorded, work to be very rigorously controlled and
monitored at all times and, lastly, the start and end times of
daily work periods to be confirmed by time cards, which, however,
are increasingly absent from the workplace.
[16] In the computer era, when work is being done from the
home and employees participate or are partners in the management
of their businesses, I believe this conservative notion is
passé or at the very least debatable. It is now an
accepted fact that harmony, trust and cooperation are more
effective concepts for ensuring quality and productivity.
Absolute authority, often expressed through close supervision,
where the payer must constantly be at his employee's heels,
is disappearing. The description of duties, the very specific
time required to perform these duties and available free time are
definitely relevant factors, but their relative importance must
be assessed in an overall context. They must not constitute the
sole basis of a determination.
[17] In the instant case, the balance of evidence shows that
the respondent failed in his obligation to make a reasonable,
objective and serious assessment of the facts and of the terms
and conditions of the performance of the appellant's
work.
[18] It is also clear on the balance of evidence that the work
performed met the requirements of insurable employment as it was
comparable and similar to employment which a third party could
have held in similar circumstances. Furthermore, the work in
question was done pursuant to a genuine contract of service in
that it was subject to the payer's power of control. The
appellant had no chance of profit or risk of loss and, for the
purposes of her work, used the material and equipment provided by
the company, which reimbursed any expenses she incurred.
[19] In addition, I think it material to refer to the recent
judgment in Francine Légaré v. Minister of
National Revenue, A-392-98, in which
Marceau J.A. of the Federal Court of Appeal wrote:
The Act requires the Minister to make a determination based on
his own conviction drawn from a review of the file. The wording
used introduces a form of subjective element, and while this has
been called a discretionary power of the Minister, this
characterization should not obscure the fact that the exercise of
this power must clearly be completely and exclusively based on an
objective appreciation of known or inferred facts. And the
Minister's determination is subject to review. In fact, the
Act confers the power of review on the Tax Court of Canada on the
basis of what is discovered in an inquiry carried out in the
presence of all interested parties. The Court is not mandated to
make the same kind of determination as the Minister and thus
cannot purely and simply substitute its assessment for that of
the Minister: that falls under the Minister's so-called
discretionary power. However, the Court must verify whether the
facts inferred or relied on by the Minister are real and were
correctly assessed having regard to the context in which they
occurred, and after doing so, it must decide whether the
conclusion with which the Minister was "satisfied"
still seems reasonable.
[20] For the above reasons, the appeal is allowed on the basis
that the work performed by the appellant during the period at
issue was done pursuant to a genuine contract of service.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 15th day of July 1999.
"Alain Tardif"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 30th day of May
2000.
Erich Klein, Revisor