REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Favreau J.
[1]
This is an appeal under the informal procedure
from the assessment dated September 25, 2014, made by the Minister of
National Revenue (the “Minister”) under the Income
Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985 c. 1 (5th Supp.), as amended (the “Act”)
with respect to the appellant’s 2013 taxation year.
[2]
Based on the assessment dated September 25,
2014, the Minister disallowed the $10,000 charitable donation deduction
for the purposes of calculating the non-refundable tax credits.
[3]
In order to issue and uphold the assessment for
the appellant’s 2013 taxation year, the Minister relied on the following
facts:
a) the appellant is retired;
b) the appellant resides at
527-815 rue de Villers in Québec, in housing owned by Manoir Laure-Gaudreault
(hereinafter the “Manoir”);
c) when filing his income tax return for the taxation year
at issue, the appellant claimed an amount of $10,000 as a charitable donation
made to the Manoir;
d) The Manoir has been a registered charity since January 1, 1978;
e) The Manoir offers low-income housing and a seniors’
residence;
f) during the taxation year at issue, the appellant
purchased construction materials totalling $20,153;
g) these construction materials were used exclusively for
renovations to the appellant’s apartment;
h) on November 18, 2013, the Manoir issued
two cheques (#2030 and #2031), each in the amount of $10,000, to the
appellant as reimbursement for the construction materials;
i) that same day, the appellant endorsed cheque #2030
in the amount of $10,000 and returned it to the Manoir; the Manoir deposited it
into its bank account on November 26, 2013;
j) on November 18, 2013, the Manoir issued a
charitable donation receipt to the appellant in the amount of $10,000;
k) the Minister calculated the eligible amount in respect of
a gift as follows:
|
The appellant’s monetary contribution (cheque #2030)
|
$10,000
|
|
Less the value of the advantage received by the appellant (repairs)
|
($10,000)
|
|
Eligible amount in respect of a gift
|
$0
|
l) the
donation receipt issued to the appellant by the Manoir for the
2013 taxation year does not include the following information:
i) the donor’s address;
[4]
At the outset of the hearing, counsel for the
respondent informed the Court that the Reply to Notice of Appeal had to be
amended because the receipt issued by the Manoir to the appellant was in
compliance with the requirements under the Act and sections 3500
and 3501 of the Income Tax Regulations. Consequently,
paragraph (l) of the assumptions of fact made by the Minister must be
removed.
[5]
The facts in this case are not in dispute. More
specifically, the respondent is not contesting that the materials purchased by
the appellant in the amount of $20,153 were used exclusively to renovate his
Manoir apartment. Moreover, the parties acknowledged that on November 18,
2013, the Manoir issued two cheques, each in the amount of $10,000, made out to
the appellant to reimburse him for the construction materials and that, that
same day, the appellant endorsed one of the two $10,000 cheques and
returned it to the Manoir to be deposited, for which the Manoir issued the
appellant a charitable donation receipt in the amount of $10,000.
[6]
The appellant testified at the hearing and
explained that he had entered into an agreement with the former Manoir
administration, under which the Manoir would reimburse the appellant for 50% of
the cost of the work and issue him a charitable receipt for the remaining 50%
of the cost of the work, to take into account the value of the materials that
the appellant would have to leave behind should he vacate the premises.
[7]
A copy of the 14-month lease signed by the
appellant and his spouse on July 24, 2013, beginning on May 1, 2013,
and ending on June 30, 2014, was entered into evidence. One of the lease
provisions authorized the appellant to renovate the dwelling at his expense.
The monthly rent payable by the appellant was $765, whereas the lowest rent
paid for the dwelling during the 12 months before the lease began was $810
per month.
[8]
Solange Castonguay, the current general manager
of the Manoir, testified at the hearing and explained that the Manoir was a
non-profit organization that offered affordable housing to low-income
individuals. The Manoir has 135 units, half of which have never been renovated
since 1979. The Manoir’s current policy is to cover all renovation costs,
which are around $10,000 per unit. The renovations consist primarily in
removing the carpeting and replacing it with floating floors.
[9]
Ms. Castonguay also mentioned that she had
been informed that there had been past cases in which charitable receipts were
issued for renovations but that this practice had been abandoned following a
notice from the Régie du logement.
[10]
Ms. Castonguay did not understand how the
appellant could have qualified to live at the Manoir when his net income for
the 2013 taxation year was $52,248.
Analysis
[11]
After the hearing, the parties prepared notes to
respond to the Court regarding the issue of whether the notion of a gift in
civil law is different from that held in common law. This is a relevant
question because the Act does not define the word “gift.”
[12]
At the hearing, the respondent specifically
referred to the following passage in Maréchaux v. The Queen,
2009 TCC 587.
[31] Some of the relevant judicial decisions
have a tendency to describe what a gift is in slightly different ways. It is
not necessary for purposes of this appeal to discuss these nuances. It is
sufficient to refer to the description of “gift” that was stated by
Linden J.A. in The Queen v. Friedberg, 92 DTC 6031 (FCA),
at 6032:
The Income Tax Act does not
define the word “gift”, so that the general principles of law with regard to
gifts are utilized by the Courts in these cases. As Mr. Justice Stone
explained in The Queen v. McBurney, 85 DTC 5433, at
p. 5435:
The word
gift is not defined in the statute. I can find nothing in the context to
suggest that it is used in a technical rather than its ordinary sense.
Thus, a gift is a voluntary
transfer of property owned by a donor to a donee, in return for which no
benefit or consideration flows to the donor (see
Heald, J. in The Queen v. Zandstra [74 DTC 6416] [1974]
2 F.C. 254, at p. 261.) The tax advantage which is received from
gifts is not normally considered a “benefit” within this definition, for to do
so would render the charitable donations deductions unavailable to many donors.
[32] In applying the above definition to
the facts of this appeal, it is clear that the appellant did not make a gift to
the Foundation because a significant benefit flowed to the appellant in return
for the Donation.
[33] The benefit is the financing
arrangement. The $80,000 interest-free loan that was received by the appellant,
coupled with the expectation of the Put Option, was a significant benefit that
was given in return for the Donation. The financing was not provided in
isolation to the Donation. The two were inextricably tied together by the
relevant agreements.
[My
emphasis.]
[13]
It was certainly helpful that the respondent
reproduced the relevant provision of the Civil Code of Québec (CCQ),
namely article 1806, which stipulates the following:
Gift is a contract by which a person, the
donor, transfers ownership of the property by gratuitous title to
another person, the donee; a dismemberment of the right of ownership, or any
other right held by a person, may also be transferred by gift.
Gifts may be inter vivos or mortis causa.
[My emphasis.]
[14]
However, as Justice Archambault of this
Court stated in Gonthier v. La Reine, 2003 CANLII 1659, at
paragraph 9, the definition of the word “gift”
provided in the CCQ corresponds to that used in common law.
[translation]
As can be seen, this definition corresponds to that used in common law. Whether
reference is made to the CCQ or to definitions taken from common law, the very
essence of a gift is a transfer of property by gratuitous title, without
consideration.
[15]
In both civil law and common law, the notion of
donative intent must clearly exist for a legal act to qualify as a donation. In
Martin v. Dupont, 2016 QCCA 475, the Court of Appeal of Quebec
described the notion of donative intent as follows:
[27] [translation]
Note also that the onus is on the individual who claims that a legal act is a
donation to show evidence thereof; otherwise, the act is presumed to be
non-gratuitous,7 as
Professor Brière points out:
[translation]
From a broader view, donative intent implies knowing that one will not receive
consideration and the deliberate intent of receiving nothing in exchange, i.e.
the conscious willingness to grow poorer.... It will be necessary for the
donee to prove that this donative intent is unequivocal.8
[Court’s emphasis.]
[28] Thus, the donation requires that
two elements be present: the material element and the mental element.
... there is no liberality in the
absence of the intellectual or mental element, the animus donandi, and
in the absence of the material element, the transfer of value without an
equivalent consideration.9
[29] The mental element, or animus donandi,
has been defined as a “real desire to alienate property for the benefit of a
third person, without deriving any advantage.”
[30] The donation thus implies the
intent to grow poorer without receiving anything in return, apart from
expecting gratitude from the donee.11 It
is also imperative that the donor derives no material benefit.
[31] Both elements are
mandatory; the absence of one of them is sufficient to conclude that the act is
not a donation.
[16]
As we have already seen, the Act does not define
a gift. However, the Act does contain provisions aimed at reducing the amount
of a gift by the amount of the advantage received by the donor. These
provisions were adopted in June 2013, retroactive to December 21,
2002 (see Technical Tax Amendments Act, 2012, S.C. 2013,
c. 34, at subsections 358(30) and (54).
[17]
The provisions in question define the eligible
amount of a gift and the amount of the advantage in respect of a gift.
Subsections 248(31) and 248(32) of the Act are worded as follows:
Eligible amount of gift or monetary
contribution
(31) The eligible amount of a gift or
monetary contribution is the amount by which the fair market value of the
property that is the subject of the gift or monetary contribution exceeds the
amount of the advantage, if any, in respect of the gift or monetary
contribution.
Amount of advantage
(32) The amount of the advantage in
respect of a gift or monetary contribution by a taxpayer is the total of
(a) the total of all amounts,
other than an amount referred to in paragraph (b), each of which is the
value, at the time the gift or monetary contribution is made, of any property,
service, compensation, use or other benefit that the taxpayer, or a person or
partnership who does not deal at arm’s length with the taxpayer, has received,
obtained or enjoyed, or is entitled, either immediately or in the future and
either absolutely or contingently, to receive, obtain, or enjoy
(i) that
is consideration for the gift or monetary contribution,
(ii) that
is in gratitude for the gift or monetary contribution, or
(iii)
that is in any other way related to the gift or monetary contribution, and
(b) the limited-recourse debt,
determined under subsection 143.2(6.1), in respect of the gift or monetary
contribution at the time the gift or monetary contribution is made.
[18]
The amount of the advantage in respect of a gift
includes the total of the amounts, each of which is the value, at the time the
gift was made, of any property that the taxpayer enjoyed, or is entitled,
either immediately or in the future and either absolutely or contingently, to
enjoy, and which is consideration for the gift or monetary contribution, in
gratitude for the gift or monetary contribution, or in any other way related to
the gift or monetary contribution.
[19]
In this case, at the time of the gift, the
appellant was entitled to immediately enjoy the renovations made to his
apartment, and that advantage was granted to him in relation to the gift made
to the Manoir. Occupancy of the renovated apartment was not granted in
isolation to the gift. The occupancy of the renovated apartment and the gift
were inextricably linked through a prior verbal agreement with the Manoir made
before the renovation work began.
[20]
It should also be noted that the appellant
acknowledged at the hearing that the rent he paid to occupy his apartment was
lower than the market value of rent required to live in that type of unit.
Moreover, there was evidence that the rent paid by the appellant was even lower
than the rent paid by the apartment’s previous tenant before the renovations
were carried out.
[21]
Furthermore, contrary to what the appellant
suggests, the concept of the advantage received in consideration of the gift
must be analyzed based on the donor’s perspective, and not that of the donee.
Therefore, it is not relevant to question whether the Manoir benefitted or will
benefit from the gift in the future when the appellant vacates his apartment.
[22]
At the hearing, the respondent commented on the
opportunity to divide the gift into an eligible part and a part ineligible for
the charitable donation credit. Given that this point was not raised by the
appellant and that no method was suggested to divide the alleged
$10,000 charitable donation, under the circumstances of this case, there
is no reason to share the gift or contribution for one part to qualify as a charitable
donation.
[23]
For all of these reasons, the appeal is
dismissed.
Signed at Montréal, Canada, this 8th day of July 2016.
“Réal Favreau”