Date: 20000515
Docket: 98-1087-IT-G
BETWEEN:
GEORGE R.H. HSU,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Hamlyn, T.C.C.J.
[1] These are appeals concerning the Appellant's 1993 and
1994 taxation years. The Appellant declared total income
consisting of T5 bank interest in the following amounts:
Taxation Year Total Income Reported
1993 $1,207.00
1994 $ 636.00
[2] In reassessing the Appellant for the 1993 and 1994
taxation years, the Minister of National Revenue (the
"Minister") increased the Appellant's total income
by the following amounts:
Taxation Year Increased to Total Income
1993 $298,792.17
1994 $300,000.00
Facts
[3] The following facts are admitted from the Appellant's
pleadings by the Respondent:
- the appellant is an individual residing at
3707 West 26th Avenue, Vancouver,
British Columbia, V6S 1P2;
- the Appellant, together with his wife and his two children,
immigrated to Canada on April 25, 1992 from Taiwan;
- the Appellant became a Canadian resident from and after
April 25, 1992;
- by Notice of Reassessment dated March 24, 1997, the
Minister reassessed the Appellant by including in his income an
additional $298,792.17 for the 1993 taxation year and an
additional $300,000.00 for the 1994 taxation year as stated
above;
- the Minister based the reassessment of the income inclusions
upon an estimated appreciation of the following assets (the
"Assets"):
(a) property at 259 Sung Chiang Road
(b) property at 167 Min Sheng Road
(c) shares of Chien Ming Hsen Yeh Co. Ltd.
(d) shares of Hotel New Asia Co. Ltd.
(e) shares of Chang June College
(f) shares of San Ho Security Co. Ltd.
(g) shares of China Gypsum Co. Ltd.
- in determining the additional amounts that were included in
the Appellant's income for the 1993 and 1994 taxation years
by the reassessments, the Minister relied upon estimates of the
Appellant's net worth (the "Net Worth
Statements");
- the Net Worth Statements assumed the Appellant's
business assets increased in value an average of 10% per annum
from 1991 to 1994;
- the Appellant duly filed Notices of Objection to the
reassessments;
- by Notice of Confirmation dated January 21, 1998 the
Minister confirmed the reassessments.
[4] In reassessing the Appellant, the Minister relied,
inter alia, on the following assumptions:
a) in reporting income for the 1993, 1994 taxation years the
Appellant did not include all of the income received in these
years;
b) the incomes of the Appellant during the 1993, 1994 taxation
years were understated by the amounts of $298,792.17 and
$300,000.00 respectively;
c) the Appellant invested $150,000.00 in Upton Resources Inc.
when he emigrated to Canada and has received this money back;[1]
d) the Appellant brought $200,000.00 with him when he
emigrated to Canada on April 25, 1992;
e) the Appellant bought a house,
3707 West 26th Avenue, Vancouver for $470,000.00
cash on July 29, 1992;1
f) the Appellant, who has filed Canadian T1 tax returns for
the years 1992 to 1995, also has bank accounts in
Canada;1
g) the Appellant has Canadian medical coverage for he and his
family;1
h) the Appellant and his spouse have three children who attend
public school in Vancouver, British Columbia;1
i) the Appellant and his wife are deemed residents of Canada
for taxation purposes in the 1992 to 1996 taxation years;[2]
j) the Appellant's wife reported Family Allowance income
of $837.00 in 1992 and no income for 1993 and 1994;
k) the understated amounts were determined by the net worth
method [a copy of the Net Worth Statement [is] attached as
Schedule “A”];[3]
l) during the 1993 and 1994 taxation years, notwithstanding
declaring a total income of $1,843.83 the Appellant paid
$39,617.28 in mortgage payments to the Toronto Dominion Bank of
Canada and supported his family;1
m) on May 15, 1997 the Appellant was listed as the owner
of 7th floor, 259 Sung Chiang Road, Taiwan and this property
remained in his name until May 30, 1997;
n) the Taiwanese District Court issued a summons to the
Appellant for 838,536.00 N.T. dollars for the taxes owing for the
1995 year;
o) the Appellant listed his assets on a "Personal Worth
Statement" submitted to the Commission For Canada on
March 4, 1991;
p) the Appellant had invested of $1,739,130.00 in the Chang
June College in Taiwan and was liable for $1,304,348.00 of the
debt of that College;
q) the Appellant did not declare bankruptcy in the 1992 to
1996 taxation years;
r) the Appellant did not dispose of his assets in Taiwan
between when he submitted his "Personal Worth
Statement" on March 4, 1991 and the end of the 1994
taxation year;1
s) the Appellant's businesses in Taiwan did not go
bankrupt during the 1992 to 1994 taxation years;
t) the Appellant did not work in Canada in the years 1992 to
1995 and stated that he travelled across Canada visiting friends
in those years;
u) the Appellant was absent from Canada frequently and was
conducting business activities elsewhere; and
v) the Appellant did not provide any documentation relating to
the 1993 and 1994 taxation years to support the sale of any of
his assets as listed on the "Personal Worth Statement"
of March 4, 1991 or to support his income being as
filed.
Issue
[5] The issue is whether the Appellant's income for the
1993 and 1994 taxation years as reported was understated.
The Evidence at Trial
[6] The Appellant did not call viva voce evidence at
trial. Aside from the admissions from the pleadings, counsel for
the Appellant, in terms of other evidence, read in selected
questions and answers from the Examination for Discovery of
Mr. Walter Ko, the Revenue Canada Medium Business Auditor
who reassessed the Appellant, Mr. George R.H. Hsu.
[7] From the read in questions and answers, Mr. Ko stated
the audit was restricted because Mr. Hsu did not provide any
documentation. Mr. Ko in an interview with Mr. Hsu and
a Mr. Gim Huey and a friend, Mr. George Ho, outlined
the questions and the documentation that Mr. Ko on behalf of
Revenue Canada wanted answered or produced. Mr. Ko was
advised that Mr. Huey was to be the Appellant's contact
person during the inquiry period. Mr. Ko also sent a letter
requesting the same information. No responses were received from
Mr. Hsu or Mr Huey.
[8] Mr. Ko also referred to other sources of information
in the hands of Revenue Canada including T-5 slips,
Mr. Hsu's tax return, real estate search documentation
and immigration documentation.
[9] The reassessment followed. On the reassessment under the
heading of adjustments the following is set forth:
The reassessment will be based on the rough discrepancy per
net worth statement and basically match the amounts as estimated
as per our letter dated October 4th, 1996, directed to the
taxpayer.[4]
[10] Thereafter, Mr. Ko explained the methodology of his
net worth calculation as follows:
And it was a very rough net worth in the sense that I only had
the opening figure in 1991, and all I did was make an assumption
that the capital increased by ten per cent each year, that's
all that is.[5]
[11] The Appellant's counsel then put the following
excerpt from a Revenue Canada document, The Taxpayers Operations
Manual (TOM), in relation to a Net Worth Assessment to
Mr. Ko[6]:
84 Q ..."1421.2 Principles of the Net Worth Method".
And I'll
just read that into the record. It says:
The use of a net worth approach to measure income is based on
the premise that a client's income for a period is the
increase in the client's net worth (financial position)
between the beginning and end of a particular period. A
client's net worth is the excess of his total assets
(business and personal) over his total liabilities (business and
personal) at a specific date.
So would you agree that this is the approach that you took in
preparing this audit and reassessment of Mr. Hsu?
A No, I did not take this approach.
85 Q You did not?
A No.
86 Q What approach did you take?
A The approach I took first was his capital and I took ten per
cent of return on capital, okay.
87 Q Okay.
A All right. An then to verify this figure, it was just
– the net worth was prepared after I did this one,
okay.
88 Q Sorry, I don't quite understand what you're
talking about.
A Okay. The proposal letter is based on his personal net worth
of $3 million and return of capital of ten per cent. That's
how I came up with $300,000 for each year. And that rough –
that personal net worth of $3 million is based on his immigration
paper, roughly $2.8 million or something like that, okay, in
1991. And I'm looking at 93, '94, so I figure his net
worth must have gone up $2-, $3 million. So these figures were
arrived at first, okay.
...
92 Q So in 1993, you estimated his personal net worth at
$3 million, estimated return on capital of ten per cent
equals $300,000?
A That's right.
93 Q And then you deduct the reported interest income
–-
A That's right.
94 Q -- to come up with the difference of $298,791.17?
A That's right.
95 Q And then 1994, estimated return on capital, $300,000?
A That's right.
96 Q Less reported of nil, adjustment is $300,000$
A That's right. That was the proposal letter I sent out to
him and that's the amount of the reassessment. Now, that
schedule in the back is basically the net worth schedule that I
prepared that I indicated to you was very rough in the sense that
I cannot prepare it based on this method here because I do not
have – he did not provide me with any information as to his
net worth in '93 or '94.
...
114 Q Explain again to me where you got the $300,000
number
from?
A It's ten per cent of $3 million.
115 Q And why did you choose ten per cent?
A It was a nice figure. But anyway –
116 Q A round figure?
A No, it wasn't that. The prime rate at that time was
about eight per cent or something like that here in
Vancouver.
117 Q Yes.
A Yeah, '91, '92, '93, '94, around ten per
cent. So prime plus two.
118 Q And you thought that was his return, prime plus two?
A Well, the mortgage rate was about that amount too, so ten
per cent was not unreasonable.
119 Q What sort of return is subsumed within this figure?
You
state that it's a return on capital or ten per cent.
A That's right.
120 Q What type of return?
A Well, for the stocks and bonds that he has, there will be
dividends, interest.
121 Q Yes.
A Passive income anyway.
122 Q Property income?
A Property income.
123 Q Okay. And on the real estate?
A Rental income.
[12] Mr. Ko reaffirmed this methodology as his method of
reassessment by stating he had an evaluation-opening figure from
the immigration papers at the beginning of 1993 but did not have
a closing figure at the end of 1994.
[13] The Respondent called one witness, the same
Mr. Ko.
[14] Mr. Ko reviewed the previously referred to interview
meeting with Messrs. Hsu, Ho and Huey and stated he did not
receive any of the requested information or documentation.
[15] He said Mr. Hsu confirmed he was still a shareholder
in an offshore company but no other details were forthcoming.
[16] After a further period of non responses a reassessment
proposal letter by Mr. Ko was hand delivered by
Mr. Ko.
[17] Thereafter, Mr Ho sent a letter to Mr. Ko that
he wanted to discuss the matter on behalf of Mr. Hsu.
Mr. Ko asked for authorization from Mr. Hsu to allow
Mr. Ho to discuss the matter – no authorization was
forthcoming.
[18] After the examination for discovery and prior to this
trial certain Toronto Dominion Bank documents pertaining to the
Appellant were provided to the Respondent. Mr. Ko reviewed
the documents the day before this hearing. In summary he found
for the years in question that over $200,000.00 was deposited to
Mr. Hsu's bank account.
The Appellant's Submission[7]
[19] Mr. Walter Ko was the auditor. His evidence shows that he
assumed in making the reassessments to tax for the
Appellant's 1993 and 1994 taxation years that each asset had
generated, in the form of income from property whether as
dividends, rent or interest, a 10% annual return to the
Appellant.
[20] The Respondent pleaded its case using the assumption that
the Appellant's assets in Taiwan appreciated in value over
the years in question instead of relying upon the actual
assumptions made by the auditor. Leaving aside the question of
whether the appreciation in value of a capital asset, without a
disposition, gives rise to any tax liability, this is not the
same assumption that was made by the auditor in issuing the
reassessments.
[21] The Appellant challenged the assumption that the assets
in Taiwan appreciated as the evidence of Mr. Ko confirmed
the assessment was made on an unpleaded assumption. Therefore the
Appellant has met the initial onus.
[22] The Minister seeking to support the assessment by
pleading facts that were not assumed at the time the assessments
were issued to support the reassessments, or, alternatively, by
relying upon unpleaded assumptions to support the reassessments.
In either case, the Minister must now bear the onus of proof.
[23] In the Appellant's submission, the Minister has not
met this onus. The evidence adduced by the Minister did not
prove, on a balance of probabilities, that the Appellant's
net worth had increased during the years under appeal, much less
through transactions that would have given rise to tax
liability.
[24] The audit work done in this case was nothing if not
incomplete and superficial. The Minister does not discharge his
audit duty or duty of disclosure by simply plucking a number out
of the air without any factual basis, and then asking the
taxpayer to disprove it because the onus rests on the
taxpayer.
[25] If the Minister now wishes to rely upon the
"property income" assumption in support of the
assessments, he must adduce evidence and prove it on a balance of
probabilities. The Minister has not introduced any such
evidence.
[26] The Appellant also submitted in relation to the bank
account deposits reviewed by Mr. Ko's viva voce
evidence there was no evidence to show they come from a taxable
source.
[27] The Reply to the Notice of Appeal does not, quite simply,
disclose any basis for taxation and further evidence of
Mr. Ko does not disclose deposits form a taxable source.
The Respondent's Position
[28] Mr. Hsu has not produced evidence to show the assets
did not produce income.
[29] The Reply to Notice of Appeal assumptions set forth the
Crown's position:
5.a) in reporting income for the 1993, 1994 taxation years the
Appellant did not include all of the income received in these
years;
b) the incomes of the Appellant during the 1993, 1994 taxation
years were understated by the amounts of $298,792.17 and
$300,000.00 respectively.
[30] Taxpayers of Canada are governed by a self-assessing
system and are required to self-report accurately.
[31] The evidence showed that Mr. Hsu had assets, did
conduct some economic activity including operate a bank account,
made over $200,000 in deposits, purchased a home, paid mortgage
payments, was a shareholder in an offshore company and apparently
did not have employment income.
[32] The Respondent's base position from what little
information the Respondent had, was to prepare a form of net
worth assessment. The Respondent submits upon review of the
pleadings and evidence before the Court. There is no onus for the
Crown to discharge and the Appellant has not discharged the onus
incumbent upon him.
Analysis
[33] The combination of subsection 2(1) and
section 3 of the Act make it clear that a Canadian
resident is liable to pay income tax on his or her
'world' income. Subsection 2(1) states that an
income tax shall be paid by a person resident in Canada at any
time in the year and section 3 specifies that the taxpayer
is liable on his or her income from sources inside and outside
Canada. Since Mr. Hsu was a Canadian resident for the 1993
and 1994 taxation years, he is liable to pay income tax on his
'world' income.
[34] In determining the 'world' income of the
Appellant, the Minister adopted a variation of the net worth
method of assessment. The legal basis for the Minister to use the
net worth method is found in subsection 152(7) of the
Act which provides:
The Minister is not bound by a return or information supplied
by or on behalf of a taxpayer and, in making an assessment, may,
notwithstanding a return or information so supplied or if no
return has been filed, assess the tax payable under this
Part.
[35] Assessments made under this subsection have a presumption
of validity in their favour.[8] Judge Bowman summarized the principles
applicable in cases dealing with net worth in Bigayan v.
R., 1999 CarswellNat 2288, wherein he stated:
The net worth method, as observed in Ramey v. R.
(1993), 93 D.T.C. 791 (T.C.C.), is a last resort to be used
when all else fails. Frequently it is used when a taxpayer has
failed to file income tax returns or has kept no records. It is a
blunt instrument, accurate within a range of indeterminate
magnitude. It is based on an assumption that if one subtracts a
taxpayer's net worth at the beginning of a year from that at
the end, adds the taxpayer's expenditures in the year,
deletes non-taxable receipts and accretions to value of existing
assets, the net result, less any amount declared by the taxpayer,
must be attributable to unreported income earned in the year,
unless the taxpayer can demonstrate otherwise. It is at best an
unsatisfactory method, arbitrary and inaccurate but sometimes it
is the only means of approximating the income of a taxpayer.
The best method of challenging a net worth assessment is to
put forth evidence of what the taxpayer's income actually is.
A less satisfactory, but nonetheless acceptable method is
described by Cameron J. in Chernenkoff v. Minister of
National Revenue (1949), 4 D.T.C. 680 (Can. Ex. Ct.) at
683:
In the absence of records, the alternative course open to the
appellant was to prove that even on a proper and complete
"net worth" basis the assessments were wrong.
This method of challenging a net worth assessment is accepted,
but even after the adjustments have been completed one is left
with the uneasy feeling that the truth has not been fully
uncovered. Tinkering with an inherently flawed and imperfect
vehicle is not likely to perfect it.
and:
It is not necessary for me to repeat what has been said about
net worth assessments in other cases. The statutory basis is
found in subsections 152(4) and 152(7) of the Income Tax
Act. The effect of subsection 152(7) has been articulated in
Dezura v. Minister of National Revenue (1947), [1948] Ex.
C.R. 10 (Can Ex.Ct.); Morrow v. Minister of National
Revenue (1992), 92 D.T.C. 6380 (Fed. C.A.); Kerr v. R.
(1989), 89 D.T.C. 5348 (Fed. T.D.); Chernenkoff v.Minister of
National Revenue(1949), 49 D.T.C. 680 (Can. Ex.Ct.) and
Ramey v. R. (1993), 93 D.T.C. 791 (T.C.C.). The means of
determining a taxpayer's income by the net worth method is
necessarily somewhat arbitrary and imprecise and it is
used only as a last resort.[9]
(emphasis added)
[36] The Minister purported to reassess on a net worth basis
by assuming in the 1993 and 1994 taxation years the Appellant did
not include all of the income received in those years. The
Minister assumed the incomes were understated by $298,792.17 for
the 1993 taxation year and by $300,000.00 for the 1994 taxation
year.
[37] The Minister's auditor in evidence stated the defined
net worth method as set forth in the Minister of National
Revenue’s Taxpayer's Operations Manual under the
heading of principles of Net Worth could not be followed because
the Minister did not have a closing net worth value. In the
discovery process the auditor explained and clarified how he
reassessed on the basis that the asset value found in the
beginning net worth generated a 10% return (estimated 8% prime
rate plus 2%) payable as dividends, rent or interest. The
auditor's evidence was that several attempts to obtain better
information, answers and documents from the Appellant were
unsuccessful.
[38] In support of the reassessment the Minister relied on the
findings that the Appellant for the taxation years in question
had operated a bank account, was a shareholder in an offshore
company, paid in 1993 and 1994 $39,617.28 respectively in
mortgage payments to the Toronto Dominion Bank, supported his
family, and did not dispose of his assets in Taiwan between when
he submitted his "Personal Worth Statement" on
March 4, 1991 and the end of the 1994 taxation year.
[39] The Appellant states the audit was incomplete and
superficial. I conclude the Appellant did nothing during the
audit stage to ensure a full, complete and correct audit although
information and documents were asked for repeatedly by the
auditor.
[40] As hereinbefore identified, the Appellant has challenged
one assumption underlying the reassessment. In response to that,
the Minister has provided clarifying evidence of what was the
actual basis underlying the reassessment and has provided further
evidence to support the primary assumption of understated income.
The Appellant has offered no evidence to rebut any assumptions
including the understated income. Indeed the Appellant himself
did not give any evidence of any kind.
[41] Mr. Ko's evidence of how he arrived at an
estimated generated income stream from the assets given the
limited ascertainable facts is a reasonable and logical
conclusion.
Decision
[42] I find the Appellant was in receipt of income that was
not declared and with no other evidence from the Appellant
leading to contrary conclusion the reassessment is sustained and
the appeals are dismissed.
The Respondent is entitled to her costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 15th day of May 2000.
"D. Hamlyn"
T.C.C.J.