Date: 19991022
Dockets: 97-239-UI; 97-240-UI
BETWEEN:
VILLE DE BEAUPORT,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Dussault, J.T.C.C.
[1] Appeal No. 97-239(UI) is from an assessment
respecting employer's unemployment insurance premiums for
six employees who received a travel allowance paid by the
appellant during the 1995 taxation year. In making this
assessment, the Minister of National Revenue considered that the
allowance received by each employee constituted a taxable benefit
and that the appellant consequently had to pay employer's
unemployment insurance premiums in respect thereof.
[2] Appeal No. 97-240(UI) raises the same question in
relation to another employee of the appellant.
[3] Paragraph 3(1)(d) of the Unemployment
Insurance (Collection of Premiums) Regulations reads
as follows:
3.(1) For the purposes of this Part, a
person's earnings from insurable employment means any
remuneration, whether wholly or partly pecuniary, received or
enjoyed by him, paid to him by his employer in respect of
insurable employment except
. . .
any amount excluded as income pursuant to
paragraph 6(1)(a) or (b) or
subsection 6(6) or (16) of the Income Tax Act.
[4] Paragraph 6(1)(b) of the Income Tax Act
requires all amounts received by a taxpayer in the year as an
allowance for personal or living expenses or as an allowance for
any other purpose to be included in computing the taxpayer's
income from an office or employment, except for the allowances
referred to in subparagraphs 6(1)(b)(i) to (ix).
[5] Subparagraph 6(1)(b)(vii.1) states one of the
exceptions and reads as follows:
reasonable allowances for the use of a motor vehicle received
by an employee (other than an employee employed in connection
with the selling of property or the negotiating of contracts for
the employer) from the employer for travelling in the performance
of the duties of the office or employment.
[6] The provisions of the Act which follows
clause 6(1)(b)(ix)(B) read follows:
and, for the purposes of subparagraphs (v), (vi) and
(vii.1), an allowance received in a taxation year by a taxpayer
for the use of a motor vehicle in connection with or in the
course of the taxpayer's office or employment shall be deemed
not to be a reasonable allowance
where the measurement of the use of the vehicle for the
purpose of the allowance is not based solely on the number of
kilometres for which the vehicle is used in connection with or in
the course of the office or employment, or
(not applicable).
[7] First, the Act does not specify what constitutes a
reasonable allowance for the purposes of
subparagraph 6(1)(b)(vii.1). Second, and subject to
the presumption applying to the situations provided for in
subparagraphs 6(1)(b)(x) and (xi), no test is given for
determining what constitutes a reasonable allowance or what
factors should be considered in establishing such an allowance or
to what extent they should be taken into account. For example,
one might think it possible to determine a number of rates, a
schedule or a scale or rates per kilometre based on the number of
kilometres travelled.
[8] One might also think that the allowance should be based on
both fixed and variable costs and on the fact that those costs
can differ from one city to another, from one region to the next
or from province to province. This is true in particular of
insurance and gasoline prices. Of course the type or class of
vehicle could also be a relevant factor, as well as the type of
travel required in the performance of one's duties. One does
not travel in northern or remote regions as one would do in
Beauport, Québec or Montréal. I do not pretend to
be exhaustive here. I simply want to emphasize that setting a
rate or rather an amount per kilometre may depend on many factors
and it will have to be determined whether the amount established
per kilometre is reasonable in the circumstances. Nor is there
any prohibition against estimating costs based on those
established for a representative vehicle. I believe there is a
certain amount of flexibility in the relevant factors to be
considered and in establishing or estimating costs in order to
arrive at a rate or an amount per kilometre that is
"reasonable". Subsequently, however, each allowance
must be fixed on the basis of the use of a specific vehicle and
can only be so fixed with reference to use based on the number of
kilometres travelled by a given employee in the performance of
his duties. This is where the presumption introduced in the
passage following clause 6(1)(b)(ix)(B) and in
subparagraph 6(1)(b)(x) of the Act comes into play.
[9] First, I would point out that the use of the terms
"shall be deemed not to be" creates an absolute,
irrebuttable presumption. It has been held a number of times that
the use of similar terms in paragraph 251(1)(a) of
the Income Tax Act creates this type of irrebuttable
presumption. Reference might be made in this regard to my
decision in Mona Al-Mosawer v. The Minister of National
Revenue,[1998] T.C.J. No. 549 (QL) and the decisions
therein referred to on this point.
[10] Counsel for the parties had the opportunity to present
argument on the interpretation of this presumption and on the
reasonableness of the allowance in the instant cases.
[11] In my opinion, the matter can be summarized as follows:
in reality, for an allowance not to be subject to the
presumption, the stated condition must be met, that is to say
that the measurement of the use of the vehicle for the
purpose of the allowance must be based solely on the number of
kilometres for which the vehicle is used in connection with
or in the course of the office or employment.
[12] It is therefore clear at the outset that only the use of
the vehicle is important for the purposes of the presumption. It
will be readily understood that the fact that an employee makes a
vehicle belonging to him available for the purposes of performing
the duties of his office or employment for a certain number of
days, for example, is not a factor related to the use of the
vehicle. Since the measurement of the use of the vehicle must be
based solely on the number of kilometres for which the vehicle
is used in connection with or in the course of the office or
employment, it will just as readily be understood here that the
use of the vehicle cannot be measured based on the number of days
for which it was used in connection with or in the course of the
office or employment. But what is more, the condition as stated
appears to be very clear: what counts is the number of kilometres
for which the vehicle is used in the performance of
duties. This means kilometres actually travelled. Approximations
or estimates have no place here. One must be rigorously accurate
and keep appropriate records.
[13] In fact, the expression "based solely on the number
of kilometres for which the vehicle is used" leaves very
little room for interpretation. It must be presumed that
Parliament used the words "solely" and
"kilometres for which the vehicle is used" for a
reason. Thus, extrapolating the number of kilometres for which a
vehicle is used by an employee in connection with or in the
course of an office or employment during an entire year based on
the number of kilometres for which the vehicle is actually used
during a reference period of a week, a month or even
three months may or may not be a valid method for making a
realistic estimate, depending on the specific circumstances such
as the number of regular or overtime hours worked, travel
required given the nature of the work, seasonal work,
emergencies, and so on. In any case, the result is still an
estimate which may or may not be realistic on account of numerous
factors that may affect both the reference period and the period
for which the extrapolation is made. If everyone could simply
make an estimate based on a reference period of his own choosing,
one wonders how it would be possible to check with any precision
at all the accuracy of such an estimate.
[14] I do not believe that this is what Parliament intended.
On the contrary, the wording is clear. It requires that the
measurement of the use of the vehicle be based on the number of
kilometres for which the vehicle is used, nothing else. An annual
estimate, even one based on the number of kilometres for which
the vehicle is used in a three-month reference period, does not
meet this condition.
[15] In the instant cases, the evidence adduced concerning the
appellant's motor vehicle allowance scheme shows that that
scheme fails in two respects to meet the condition stated in
subparagraph 6(1)(b)(x) of the Income Tax Act. Those
failings were moreover noted by counsel for the respondent.
[16] For a description of the scheme adopted by the appellant,
I refer to the testimony of
Louis-Philippe Hébert, assistant general
manager and director of personnel and communications with the
Ville de Beauport, and to the documents filed in evidence, more
particularly the town's general motor vehicle allowance
policy No. PG-45j, which came into effect on
December 31, 1987 and bears the date of March 16, 1992
(Exhibit I-1).
[17] In the early 1980s, the Ville de Beauport decided to
dispose of its fleet of some 40 vehicles which were
considered too costly and to introduce a policy under which
employees concerned would be asked to provide, in exchange for an
allowance, their own motor vehicles for the purpose of performing
their duties. The general motor vehicle allowance policy referred
to above apparently dates from that period and has since
undergone only minor amendments. The allowances paid to the
appellant's employees in 1995, which are the subject of the
instant cases, were so paid in accordance with the provisions set
out in that general policy.
[18] It should be noted first that article 1 of the
policy concerns employees who only occasionally use their own
motor vehicles in the performance of their duties. These are
employees who use their vehicles to travel 1,600 kilometres
or less per year. Such employees receive an allowance of $0.30
per kilometre travelled with a minimum of $2.75 for each day the
vehicle is used. The allowance paid to these employees is not the
subject of the instant cases.
[19] These appeals concern certain employees who are
considered as usually using their vehicles, that is to say, as
stated in article 2.02, those whose employment requires them
to travel more than 1,600 kilometres a year.
[20] Article 2.03 states that [TRANSLATION]
"employees whose work, in the employer's estimation,
requires them to use their vehicles regularly receive the
allowances set out in Schedule A for one of the
12 existing classes."
[21] For 1995, Schedule A provided for an annual
allowance of a predetermined amount for each of the
12 classes. The classes are established on the basis of
ranges of kilometrage, as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
SCHEDULE A
Amount of
allowance
from 95-01-01 Monthly
Class Annual kilometrage to 95-12-31
amount
1 from 1,600 to 2,140 $1,438.94 $119.91
2 from 2,141 to 2,680 $1,926.27 $160.52
3 from 2,681 to 3,220 $2,474.50 $206.21
4 from 3,221 to 4,800 $3,216.30 $268.03
5 from 4,801 to 6,400 $3,717.16 $309.76
6 from 6,401 to 8,000 $4,224.78 $352.06
7 from 8,001 to 9,600 $4,732.41 $394.37
8 from 9,601 to 11,200 $5,240.03 $436.67
9 from 11,201 to 12,800 $5,750.36 $479.20
10 from 12,801 to 14,400 $6,253.91 $521.16
11 from 14,401 to 16,000 $6,761.55 $563.46
12 16,001 or more $7,269.17 $605.76
Personnel Department
95-02-06
[22] As may be seen, employees using their vehicles to travel
different numbers of kilometres receive the same allowance if the
number of kilometres travelled is within the same range or
class.
[23] The number of kilometres "for which the vehicle is
used" by each employee is in fact the result of an estimate
of the number of kilometres travelled based on kilometres
actually travelled during a three-month reference period for
which actual kilometrage is determined for the working days
involved, then projected over the number of working days in the
year, less vacation. The annual allowance provided for a given
class based on annual kilometrage thus estimated is then paid to
the employee monthly. According to article 2.13, employees
may continue to receive the allowance for an additional one-month
period if they are absent because of illness.
[24] In addition, article 2.08 provides that an employee
may request a change of class on conditions which are set out in
the following terms:
[TRANSLATION]
Based on actual or presumed changes in the use of an
employee's motor vehicle in the performance of his duties,
the employer or any beneficiary employee may request a
reclassification for purposes of payment of the allowance for one
of the 12 existing classes.
In that case, the employee in question shall complete a weekly
kilometrage report for a three-month period in order to justify
reclassification. Similarly, for audit purposes, the departmental
director may ask an employee to complete the weekly kilometrage
report for a specific period.
Where reclassification becomes necessary based on the
kilometrage report referred to above, such reclassification shall
take effect retroactively to the starting date of the kilometrage
report.
[25] The base amount of the allowance was determined on the
basis of a study by the CAA-Québec on the operating costs
of a new mid-size car travelling 20,000 kilometres a year,
for which the annual fixed costs were $6,650 in 1995. According
to Mr. Hébert, a percentage of this amount, varying
between 20 percent and approximately 80 percent,
constitutes the base amount for each of the 12 classes, and
an amount of approximately $0.087 per kilometre is then added to
reflect such variable costs as gasoline, maintenance, and so on.
For the purposes of calculating these variable costs, the number
of kilometres at the mid-point in each of the classes is
simply taken. The annual allowance applicable to each class is
the total of the amounts established for fixed costs and variable
costs. According to Mr. Hébert, it is appropriate to
use the average figures of the CAA-Québec for a mid-size
car since that is the type of vehicle that the employees in
question of the appellant must generally put at the
appellant's disposal for the performance of their duties, as
a number of them must transport material or equipment in
connection therewith.
[26] Mr. Hébert testified that the determination
of the percentage of the base amount represented by fixed costs
for each of the classes was the subject of negotiations with the
various unions.
[27] Those, in essence, are the characteristics of the motor
vehicle allowance scheme used by the appellant to pay the
allowances at issue in the instant cases.
[28] As indicated above, the Court notes that the requirement
set out in subparagraph 6(1)(b)(x) of the Income
Tax Act was not met in at least two respects.
[29] First, the measurement of the use of the vehicle was not
based solely on the number of kilometres for which it was used
since, for the purpose of the allowance, the appellant takes into
account only an estimate of the number of kilometres travelled
each year that is based on an extrapolation of the number of
kilometres actually travelled during a three-month reference
period.
[30] Second, the annual number of kilometres thus estimated
for the vehicle used by each employee is placed in one of the
12 classes, so that, for the purpose of fixing the
allowance, the use of each of the vehicles is made to correspond
with the use determined for an entire class based on the range
indicated for that class.
[31] Thus, the use of a vehicle is not measured solely on the
basis of the number of kilometres travelled by the individual
employee receiving the allowance, but rather on a collective
basis through use of the 12 classes created.
[32] There is no greater merit in establishing 12 classes
rather than two or three. A scheme under which all employees who
have used their vehicles in connection with their employment and
have travelled 5,000 kilometres or less will receive a
$2,000 allowance while those travelling more than
5,000 kilometres will receive $4,000 is no more in
compliance with the requirement of the Act than is the system
established by the appellant. In both cases, the use of the
vehicle is not measured on an individual basis solely according
to the number of kilometres travelled by a given employee in
connection with his employment. Such a system is very different
from another which would provide for an amount of $0.40 per
kilometre for the first 5,000 kilometres and $0.35 per
kilometre for kilometres in excess of that number. Under such a
scheme one would have to determine the allowance of each employee
based on the number of kilometres actually travelled by that
employee in connection with his employment. Such a system would
likely meet the requirements of the Act and could even be refined
further, as indicated above. Payments would be made as an
allowance whose characteristics would be respected and which
would have to be distinguished from either a mere reimbursement
of actual expenses incurred or an advance paid for that
purpose.
[33] In my view, the two irregularities noted are sufficient
for me to find that the allowance paid by the appellant during
the 1995 taxation year to each of the employees concerned by the
instant appeals does not meet the requirement of
subparagraph 6(1)(b)(x) of the Income Tax Act,
and there is no need to extend the analysis to the other
characteristics of this allowance. Accordingly, the presumption
established in the passage following
clause 6(1)(b)(ix)(B) is applicable and as a
consequence the allowance is deemed not to be reasonable for the
purposes of subparagraph 6(1)(b)(vii.1). This being
the case, the allowance here was not excluded from the
taxpayer's income under paragraph 6(1)(b) of the
Income Tax Act. The appellant thus was required to pay
employer's contributions in respect of the allowance for each
of the employees concerned as provided for in section 3 of
the Unemployment Insurance (Collection of Premiums)
Regulations.
[34] As a consequence of the above, the appeals are dismissed
and the respondent's assessments are confirmed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 22nd day of October 1999.
"P.R. Dussault"
J.T.C.C.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
Translation certified true on this 31st day of July
2000.
Erich Klein, Revisor