Date: 20001128
Docket: 1999-4891-IT-I
BETWEEN:
CDD-REM PROCESS, VACUUM TECHNOLOGY CORP.,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
__________________________________________________________________
Agent for the Appellant: James A. Deacur
Counsel for the Appellant: Howard Morton
Counsel for the Respondent: Sointula Kirkpatrick
___________________________________________________________________
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the Bench at Toronto, Ontario on
October 24, 2000)
Margeson, J.T.C.C.
[1] I thank counsel for their close attention to this matter.
I thank the witnesses who testified, as far as the Court is
concerned, in a very straightforward and forthright manner.
[2] There are some weaknesses in the Appellant’s case,
there is no doubt about that.
[3] It would have been a wiser business practice, especially
for a company that was advised by experts and accountants to have
invoiced regularly for the work done. The Court only has the
evidence of the chief shareholder of one of the companies that
was providing the service. His explanation was that they did not
invoice because they had a practice in place of making draws and
they did not believe they needed to.
[4] That may very well be so but it would have been a much
better practice if they had invoiced in the proper manner. The
company, on the advice of its accountants would have to decide
what was the best manner but the best way would be to bill for
the work as they provided it or shortly thereafter with
specificity as to what work was provided and the appropriate
charges for such work. Then there would be the paper trail that
the auditor for the Respondent was looking for.
[5] The Court does not fault him for looking for a paper
trail. It could see right away, when he started to testify, what
was in his mind when he looked at this file. He was looking at it
from the point of view of an auditor, which he is supposed to do.
Where is the evidence that this amount of money that is being
claimed was for Research and Development expenditures
(“R & D”)? He had a right to do that. Whether he
came up with the correct methodology or not, is a question which
the Court will answer in a minute.
[6] He was within his rights, as a good auditor, to raise the
flag as to whether or not the amount that was being claimed was
evidenced by documents, information and evidence to such a degree
that it substantiated the claim that was being made.
[7] If the only evidence before this Court was an agent of the
taxpayer saying, “Oh, yes, we paid the money. That’s
what it was for. That was for R & D”, without more, the
Appellant would have difficulty in succeeding here. If the
evidence given was something that could not be accepted, or
believed or if there was no credibility to be attached to the
witnesses, there would be great difficulty for the Appellant
here. But that was not the case.
[8] There was a glaring error, however. The paper trail was
weak. The auditor for the Respondent seized upon that. That is
not to say that a mere invoicing would necessarily have been
sufficient without more, but it would have helped. The auditor
indicated in his evidence that this may not have substantiated
the R & D claim satisfactorily, but he did say that it would
have helped.
[9] Let the Court observe, as it is entitled to do, on the
credibility that it attaches to the evidence given by those who
testified. This Court, like the auditor himself, was favourably
impressed by the nature of the evidence given by all those who
testified. Although his belief of the witnesses is not conclusive
of this case it was interesting that he said that he could fairly
well believe what the people in the company told him. Those were
some of the witnesses who testified before the Court here
today.
[10] The Court was impressed by the nature of the evidence
given by the witnesses. That goes a long way in assisting the
Court in deciding as to whether or not the claims made were
indeed valid ones. That is not to say that the Minister was not
within his rights to look for more evidence than he had before
him to substantiate the claim made.
[11] The Court was impressed by the witnesses. It believed
what they had to say.
[12] The accountant who gave testimony was very knowledgeable,
had a great deal of experience and was up-to-date on this type of
claim. He had worked for Revenue Canada himself before and the
nature of his evidence was very helpful to the Court. The Court
accepts what he had to say without accepting necessarily his
interpretation of the law.
[13] Counsel for the Appellant argued that the Court should
allow the appeal and find that in the year 1993, disputed wages
in the amount of $22,782 and in the year 1994, disputed wages in
the amount of $37,155 should be amounts which the Appellant is
entitled to claim in calculating the R & D credit.
[14] He said that the witnesses who testified on behalf of the
Appellant, including Mr. Gordon and Mr. Deligiannis
could be believed, that their evidence was credible and
straightforward. They produced financial statements and records
of the company for the years 1993 and 1994 which confirmed the
amount of money that was paid out by the Appellant to the two
companies which were controlled by the two shareholders who have
been referred to here.
[15] The witnesses testified that the amounts that were
claimed were paid in the years in question, were paid currently
in those years and that cheques were issued to the recipient
companies for those amounts. There did not seem to be any issue
that the amounts in question were actually paid out as
alleged.
[16] Counsel further argued that section 67 is not applicable
because the evidence indicated that the Appellant could have
charged substantially more money for the services that were
provided by these two shareholders than it actually did.
[17] In 1993 it claimed only 25% of the amount that was
expended for their wages. In 1994 it claimed 30%. This amount was
reasonable, according to counsel for the Appellant, and should be
allowed.
[18] He further argued that there is nothing which would
entitle the auditor to look at the T4 information of the two
recipients of the wages to try and determine what amount should
have been allowed for R & D.
[19] This case has nothing to do with the internal operations
of the other companies which were operating at arm's length
one from the other. This information is not relevant and it does
not give the Minister the methodology which he can rely upon to
determine what was the amount expended for R & D. Corporate law
allows the companies to be set up independently.
[20] Each of the two shareholders made their own decision as
to what they were to do in their companies. These were not
holding companies. That term has been used but the Court should
conclude that they were not holding companies. They were
companies which were controlled by the individuals themselves who
were the shareholders of those companies, they obviously decided
what the companies were to do, but they were not holding
companies.
[21] The argument was also made that the Appellant itself was
operated independently of these two persons, it made its own
decisions and consequently these companies could not be deemed to
have been operating at non-arm’s length under the Income
Tax Act (“Act”). Secondly, they were not
acting at non-arm’s length factually.
[22] The appeals should be allowed with costs.
[23] Counsel for the Respondent said that the issue to be
decided is whether or not the Appellant was entitled to claim
amounts in excess of those amounts allowed by the Minister, in
making its R & D claim in the years in issue.
[24] Secondly, has the income tax credit been properly
calculated by the Minister? She referred to subsection 37(1) of
the Act.
[25] The Appellant has not shown that it was entitled to the
amounts that it was claiming. It has not shown that the
Minister's assessment is incorrect. It has not shown that it
was entitled to any more credits for R & D than the Minister
has allowed.
[26] She referred to subsection 127(9) and argued that the
workers, the two shareholders, were not paid for R & D. There
was no evidence that the amounts claimed were related to the
services which they provided for the Appellant. They were not
operating at arm's length from the Payor. There was no
evidence of the liability of the company, the Appellant, to pay
the amounts which are sought to be deducted here, to the two
alleged recipients.
[27] She argued that the Minister was correct in using the
methodology that he did, in using the information on the T4s.
That was the most accurate method to be used. It is only
reasonable that the Court should look to the amount of money that
was paid out according to the T4s to the two individuals when
trying to calculate what amount should be allotted for R & D.
The basis for the calculation should be the amount shown on the
T4s of Mr. MacPherson and Mr. Deligiannis.
[28] This was a non-arm’s length situation under
paragraph 251.1(b) of the Act.
[29] Further, since it is a non-arm’s length transaction
or situation, the Court should be entitled to look beyond the
legal operation of the company, to see who the shareholders were.
It should look beyond the legalities and look to the way in which
the shareholders interacted with the Appellant company. When you
do this, one must conclude that the amount of money that was
being claimed for R & D was an unreasonable amount of money to
be claimed by them in the years in question. One must look beyond
the corporate structure.
[30] The appeals should be dismissed.
[31] In reply, counsel for the Appellant said that Revenue
Canada cannot dictate to companies how they are to arrange their
affairs.
[32] It was contended that at the end of the day, even though
the shareholders were paid by cheque from the Appellant for their
services for R & D, that was not necessarily all that they
received from the Appellant. There may have been other benefits
besides that. Nonetheless, that is the company's business.
What the Appellant did with the money it received, even if it be
three-and-one-half times what it paid out to
the service providers, is irrelevant to the issue to be decided
here.
[33] Counsel repeated his argument about non-arm’s
length in fact and under the Act.
Analysis and Decision
[34] The Court has already said that it accepts the evidence
of the witnesses called on behalf of the Appellant. It finds
their evidence to be very credible.
[35] The Court makes a finding that the methodology used by
the auditor in this particular case was probably dictated by the
fact that he was unable to find the paper trail that he was
looking for. Indeed in some situations that might have been fatal
to the Appellant's case. A paper trail including the use of
invoices, which are accurate and issued at proper times showing
that the work was done, what the charges were for, how much work
was done and how much was paid, is a better way of doing it.
[36] However, the Court is satisfied, on the basis of the
evidence heard, that that is not a fatal omission in this
particular case to the Appellant's position.
[37] After hearing all of the evidence of the witnesses,
referring to the documents that have been placed into evidence,
the letters, the financial statements, the evidence of the
chartered accountant, the evidence of the shareholders who came
before the Court, and attaching great credibility to their
evidence, the Court is satisfied that it can accept what they had
to say.
[38] The Court is satisfied that the Appellant has
established, on a balance of probabilities, that it paid out to
these two companies the amount of money in question. The amount
does not seem to be in issue in any event.
[39] The main issue is, did it pay it out on account of
R & D? The Court is satisfied, on the basis of all of the
evidence, that it did. When the Court takes into account the
credibility of the witnesses, considers the content of the
documents that are before it and applies the appropriate sections
of the Act to the evidence, it is satisfied that in the
taxation years 1993 and 1994, the disputed wages in the amounts
of $22,782 and $37,155 respectively, were also paid out by the
Appellant company on account of R & D.
[40] Without the viva voce evidence of the persons who
testified, in the absence of the proper paper trail, this result
could not have been reached. If the Court did not believe what
these witnesses had to say, this result could not be reached.
[41] Insofar as the T4s are concerned, the Court is satisfied
that, looking to the T4 information as to what the two
shareholders received at the end of the year, and reported for
income tax purposes, does not give a proper methodology for
calculating the proper amounts expended for R & D.
[42] The Court is satisfied that the auditor for the
Respondent had no improper motives in doing what he was doing. He
was searching for some method of determining the proper amounts
which he thought this company was entitled to claim. He used what
was available to him. He looked at the T4s to see what the
workers were paid from the Appellant, and that is the figure that
he used.
[43] The Court is satisfied that that was not the proper
methodology to be used in this case and that the amounts of money
that were set out in those T4s do not afford the proper basis for
calculating the amount of the R & D payments that were expended
in this particular case.
[44] Again, the Court is satisfied that at the end of the day
these companies were operating at arm's length from each
other. They were not operating at non-arm's length
under the Act nor were they operating at non-arm’s
length in fact. It can make no unfavourable inference against
them under those circumstances. The Court is satisfied that the
Minister made the wrong calculations.
[45] The Court is satisfied that the appeals should be allowed
with costs and the matter referred back to the Minister for
reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the Appellant
company, in the year 1993, should have been able to claim the
disputed amount of wages in the amount of $22,782 in calculating
its R & D credit, and in the year 1994, the amount of $37,155
in making its calculation, in addition to any amounts already
allowed by the Minister for those years. The Appellant is
entitled to its costs, to be taxed.
Signed at Vancouver, British Columbia, this 28th
day of November 2000.
"T.E. Margeson"
J.T.C.C.