Translation certified true
on this 31st day of July 2015.
Erich Klein, Revisor
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[These amended
reasons for judgment replace those signed on December 16, 2014. They correct an
error in footnote 18. The earlier reasons for judgment remain unchanged in all other
respects.]
Jorré J.
Introduction
[1]
The story behind these assessments is very unfortunate.
Marcel Demers and Fernand
Grondin were employees of Canadian National. They were persuaded by promises of very high returns to make
certain investments. Those promises were made by the
investment promoters, Claude Lavigne and his sister, Jocelyne Lavigne.
[2]
To make the investment, they transferred all of
their CN pension fund entitlements to a registered retirement savings plan. According to the Minister of National Revenue, in
2002 they withdrew a portion of the funds transferred to the RRSPs: $80,000 in
Mr. Demers’ case and $148,000 in Mr. Grondin’s case. They lost most of the money withdrawn from the pension fund.
[3]
The Minister added the amounts of $80,000 and
$148,000 to Mr. Demers’ and Mr. Grondin’s respective incomes
for 2002. According to the Minister,
those amounts came from an RRSP.
[4]
The assessments for those amounts were made out
of time in 2009.
[5]
In Talbot v. Lavigne, the appellants and six other people obtained a judgment on
September 16, 2008, against the two investment promoters who are behind the
problems in this case: Claude Lavigne and Jocelyne Lavigne. The order issued by the
Superior Court of Québec reads in
part as follows:
[Translation]
FOR THESE
REASONS, THE COURT:
101 ANNULS all of the investment contracts entered into
between the plaintiffs and the defendants Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and
Sarkis Sarkissian;
102 ORDERS the defendants to pay the plaintiffs on a solidary
liability basis the amount of $2,182,175.50, as follows:
. . .
•
To Mr. Marcel Demers.......................................... $293,981.52
. . .
•
To Ms. Jocelyne Dion Grondin.............................. $288,769.74
103 ORDERS the defendants to pay the plaintiffs on a solidary
liability basis the amount of $200,000 as moral damages, that is, an amount of $25,000
for each plaintiff;
104 ORDERS the defendants to pay the plaintiffs on a solidary
liability basis the amount of $160,000 as punitive damages, that is, an amount
of $20,000 to each plaintiff;
105 WITH COSTS from the date of the summons plus the additional
indemnity provided for in the Civil Code of Québec.
[6]
There are two questions at issue.
[7]
First, was the Minister justified in assessing
out of time?
[8]
The second question is whether the Superior
Court judgment has the effect of rendering the amounts in question non-taxable.
[9]
There are many facts. They were presented in
part through the testimony
of three witnesses, in part through two partial agreements on the facts, and in
part through three large volumes of documents filed on consent. The agreement
pertaining to Mr. Demers is
reproduced in Appendix A, and that pertaining to Mr. Grondin is reproduced
in Appendix B.
[10]
I thank counsel for the work they have done.
[11]
It is not disputed that
(a)
in December 2002 Mr. Demers received the $80,000
amount in question;
(b)
this amount came from the monies accumulated in
his pension fund that he had transferred to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant;
(c)
in December 2002 Mr. Grondin received the $148,000
amount in question;
(d)
that amount came from the monies accumulated in
his pension fund that he had transferred to an RRSP of which he was the
annuitant.
[12]
Absent any other considerations, it is obvious
that those amounts must be included in Mr. Demers’ and Mr. Grondin’s income, because
any amount received from an RRSP must be included in income.
[13]
However, according to the appellants, it is
necessary to take into account the annulment of the contracts between the appellants
and Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian by the
Superior Court judgment of September 16, 2008.
[14]
Before considering that argument, I would like
to add a few facts.
[15]
In September 2002, Mr. Demers
(a)
resigned from CN,
(b)
requested that his pension fund be transferred
to an RRSP,
(c)
applied to open a self-directed locked-in
retirement account (self‑directed LIRA) with Services financiers Penson
Canada inc. (Penson),
(d)
asked to have Laurentian Trust of Canada register
the self-directed LIRA, and
(e)
opened a brokerage account with Services
financiers IForum inc. for his self-directed LIRA.
[16]
Mr. Demers’ self-directed LIRA was an RRSP of
which he was the annuitant.
[17]
An amount of $404,970 from the funds accumulated
in his pension fund was deposited in the self-directed LIRA.
[18]
The funds were then invested. The investment decisions were dictated by
Claude Lavigne, one of the promoters, and carried out by Sylvain Lauzon. Mr. Lauzon had been given a power of attorney by Mr. Demers.
[19]
In January 2002, Mr. Grondin requested that his
pension fund be transferred to an RRSP and that an RRSP account be opened with B2B
Trust, the RRSP trustee.
[20]
In March 2002, the CN pension fund issued a
cheque in the amount of $477,585.74 to the order of “B2B
Trust RRSP a/c Fernand Grondin”.
[21]
In June 2002, B2B Trust rejected an initial
proposed transaction.
[22]
In December 2002, Mr. Grondin
(a)
applied to open a locked-in retirement account (LIRA)
with Penson,
(b)
asked to have Laurentian Trust of Canada register
the LIRA, and
(c)
applied to open a brokerage account with Services
financiers IForum inc. for his LIRA.
[23]
On December 12, 2002, an amount of $448,516, which
came from the funds Mr. Grondin had accumulated in his pension fund and which
were deposited in Mr. Grondin’s RRSP with B2B Trust, was deposited in Mr. Grondin’s
LIRA.
[24]
Mr. Grondin’s LIRA was an RRSP of which he was
the annuitant.
[25]
The funds were then invested. The investment decisions were dictated by Mr.
Lavigne, one of the promoters, and carried out by Mr. Lauzon. Mr. Lauzon had received a power of attorney from Mr.
Grondin.
[26]
There were no written investment contracts.
[27]
The appellants argue that the annulment of all
of the investment contracts between the appellants and Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude
Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian by the Superior Court in Talbot v. Lavigne
had the effect of setting aside all of the effects of the contracts, thus putting
the appellants back in the position they were in before the investment. They
therefore contend that the amounts are not taxable.
[28]
Article 1422 of the Civil Code of Québec
(Civil Code) reads as follows:
1422 A contract that is null is deemed never
to have existed.
In such a case, each party is bound to
restore to the other the prestations he has received.
[29]
It is also useful to note the following articles
pertaining to the restitution of prestations:
1699 Restitution of prestations takes place where a person is bound
by law to return to another person the property he has received, either
unlawfully or in error, or under a juridical act which is subsequently annulled
with retroactive effect or whose obligations become impossible to perform by
reason of superior force.
The court may, exceptionally, refuse restitution where it would have
the effect of according an undue advantage to one party, whether the debtor or
the creditor, unless it considers it sufficient, in that case, to modify the
scope or mode of the restitution instead.
1700 Restitution of prestations is made in kind, but, if this is
impossible or cannot be done without serious inconvenience, it may be made by
equivalence.
Equivalence is assessed as at the time when the debtor received what
he is liable to restore.
[30]
Baudouin and Jobin, in their book Les
obligations, write as follows:
[Translation]
388 . . . Nullity terminates the contract for
the future and also wipes out its effects with respect to the past. In both
instances, a judge must therefore restore the status quo ante (art. 1422 CCQ), that is, through the mechanism of
restitution, put the parties back in the position they were in before entering
into the defective agreement, in accordance with the rules now set out in the Code
at articles 1699 et seq. Any exceptions, such as perhaps the nemo auditur exception, as well as the
terms of restitution also apply to absolute nullity and relative nullity.
[31]
The appellants argue that tax law follows civil
law.
[32]
I agree that tax law must be applied in a way
that takes into account not only the facts, but also the legal relationships
created through general law. Obviously,
this general principle may be limited by, among other things, specific
provisions of tax law.
[33]
What is the scope of the Superior Court’s declaration
of nullity? It is clear that
the contract is deemed never to have existed. However, does
the nullity of the contract have the effect of not only setting aside the
juridical act that is the contract, but also of negating the accompanying facts?
Specifically, does the nullity of the contract as
declared by the Superior Court have the effect that, for income tax purposes, (i)
the appellants never received $80,000 and $148,000 respectively or (ii) those
two amounts were never withdrawn from Mr. Demers’ or Mr. Grondin’s RRSPs?
[34]
I am satisfied that, while they annul the juridical
act, namely, the contracts, neither the provisions of the Civil Code nor
the Superior Court judgment purport to efface history and change prior facts. This can be seen in the following way.
[35]
First, let us look at what it would mean if the
effect was to change history.
[36]
There were no written investment contracts and
therefore the precise scope of the contracts annulled by the Superior Court is
uncertain. I can only understand the investment contracts as follows: they
cover only the investment of the funds previously transferred to the RRSP by
either of the appellants. The Superior Court judgment does not apply to third
parties such as Penson.
[37]
The application of the provisions of the Civil
Code by the Superior Court does not rewrite history, and thus the amounts
of $80,000 and $148,000 are still in the two RRSPs with Penson. The appellants cannot order Penson to pay them the
$80,000 and the $148,000.
[38]
Second, when one considers the provisions of the
Civil Code relating to nullity and the restitution of prestations, in
particular articles 1422, 1699 and 1700, one sees that the legislator takes
into account the historic reality of the prior facts in specifying how the
parties will be put back in their previous positions. For example, although the
general rule is that property must be returned, if
this is impossible or if it entails serious inconvenience, the Civil Code
provides that restitution may be made by equivalence, that is, by the payment
of an equivalent amount of money.
[39]
It can be seen in Talbot v. Lavigne that the
Superior Court recognizes that the appellants received both amounts in question,
as they were deducted from the amount invested in the calculation of the amount
that the Superior Court ordered the defendants to pay to the appellants. There is therefore recognition of the fact that the appellants received the amounts.
[40]
Accordingly, the nullity declared by the
Superior Court does not alter the fact that the appellants received the amounts
of $80,000 and $148,000 in question and that those amounts were withdrawn from
the appellants respective RRSPs.
[41]
In light of those facts, the two amounts in
question are taxable.
[42]
It is not disputed that the assessments were
made after the normal reassessment period for the two taxpayers.
[43]
Such an assessment can be made only if the
conditions in subsection 152(4) of the Income Tax Act (Act) have been
met. The relevant portions of that subsection read as follows:
(4) The Minister may . . . make . . . [a] reassessment . . . after
the taxpayer’s normal reassessment period . . . only if:
(a) the
taxpayer or person filing the return
(i) has made any misrepresentation that is attributable to neglect,
carelessness or wilful default . . . in filing the return . . .
(ii) . . .
[44]
There are thus two necessary conditions: (i) there
must be a misrepresentation and (ii) the misrepresentation must be due to
neglect, carelessness or wilful default.
[45]
The burden of proving that the out-of-time
assessment is well-founded lies with the Minister. This
burden is lower than that which applies to the penalties provided for under subsection 163(2) of the Act, which states that a
person must act “knowingly, or under circumstances
amounting to gross negligence”.
[46]
It is clear that there was misrepresentation: the
omission of the amounts of $80,000 and $148,000.
[47]
The question that remains is whether that omission
was due to neglect, carelessness or wilful default.
[48]
How can neglect or carelessness be assessed? The jurisprudence establishes that it is
necessary to consider whether the taxpayer showed due diligence or, in other words, whether
he “met the requisite standard of care – that of a wise and prudent person who
has considered the matter thoughtfully, deliberately and carefully”.
[49]
Let us consider the facts in the light of those
principles.
[50]
The time at which diligence must be assessed is the
time of filing the tax return, which is normally on or before April 30 of the
year following the year in question. Here the question must be considered on
the basis of the facts as they were in early 2003.
[51]
It is useful to point out that the general features
associated with RRSPs and pension funds are well known. Those general features
are the deduction from taxable income of contributions to the fund, the fact that any income earned within a
fund is non-taxable, and the fact that any payments made to the beneficiary
from an RRSP or pension fund are taxable. As stated by Justice Tardif in Gougeon v. The Queen:
22 The features of an RRSP or any other pension plan that benefits
from a temporary tax exemption, which starts when the account is opened and
usually ends when the beneficiary withdraws all or part of the plan’s contents,
are known to the general public and undeniable.
23 Income tax, which
is neither paid nor withheld on the principal or on the return, is basically
deferred or carried forward; however, what is certain is that sooner or later
the tax burden must be taken on. Any plan, offer,
information or person who offers the possibility of avoiding the tax burden
inherent in a person’s retirement investments should set off alarm bells in
those who are being offered such a thing.
[52]
He further stated:
24 An informed and careful person should
conduct a thorough investigation with the help of qualified and competent
people when someone offers him or her a scenario with a different end result.
[53]
Moreover, it is well known that the tax form and
guide provided by the Canada Revenue Agency contain a general warning that all
income must be reported.
[54]
The amounts received by the appellants, namely, $80,000
and $148,000 respectively, are very significant amounts for those two
individuals.
[55]
The appellants and their co-workers obtained
information about various investment opportunities–with Fidelity, for example.
[56]
The evidence is clear that they chose the
investment in question because they had been promised that the return would be
much higher than what they had been offered elsewhere. Unfortunately, this did
not put them on their guard.
[57]
As I have previously stated, there was no
written contract.
[58]
Each of the two appellants received an initial
cheque in December 2002. They were
not able to cash those cheques because they were NSF. Later on in December 2002, they received replacement cheques of $80,000 and $138,000
respectively; they were able to cash those replacement cheques. Mr.
Demers received his second cheque at a rest stop where Mr. Lavigne was hosting the
investors for Christmas.
[59]
With regard to Mr. Demers:
(a)
He knew that it was the money from his pension
fund that had been transferred to his RRSP that would be invested.
(b)
He knew in a general way that if he were to receive
an amount from his pension fund or his RRSP that amount would be taxable.
(c)
His primary source of information regarding the
investment and its tax consequences was the promoters and his co-workers.
(d)
He did not consult a lawyer or a tax professional.
(e)
He consulted a caisse populaire employee who
worked in the back and not at the counter, but we do not know her title or how
knowledgeable she was; she apparently said that if she was going to invest she
would choose the investment that Mr. Demers was being offered. The appellant did not indicate
whether the caisse populaire employee had spoken about the tax aspect. We also
do not know how the investment was described to that employee; given that there
was no written contract, I do not see how she could have been given an accurate
description of the investment.
(f)
In the application for the LIRA with Penson that
the appellant signed, there is a line in the second half of the page, which is
numbered “1” and which states that any annuities or other payments received
through the account would be taxable.
(g)
He did not review his tax return that had been
prepared for him by an accountant at the “Club des
Présidents”.
[60]
In Mr. Grondin’s case:
(a)
Ms. Dion Grondin did not know exactly how her
husband had found out about the investment, but she knew he had made it with
two of his co-workers.
(b)
She knew that her husband had met the Lavignes
more than once, and she herself had attended a large meeting at which the Lavignes
had explained everything, but she did not understand their explanation.
(c)
She made an effort on her own to find out about
the investment. She brought in a tax professional who had invested some
money for her sister. Her husband gave the tax professional some information, but
the tax professional could not tell them whether it was good or bad. He said
that it was not impossible. It is not clear from
the testimony whether the comments were about the investment or the tax treatment.
(d)
Ms. Dion Grondin also knew that her husband had
gone to see Fidelity and that the Fidelity employee was unable to tell her
husband whether it was all right or not.
(e)
She also testified that Réjean Brousseau had
brought the cheque in December 2002 and had told them that the amount was not
taxable; at the time, what Mr. Brousseau said seemed plausible.
(f)
In the application for the LIRA with Penson that
the appellant signed, there is a line in the second half of the page, which is
numbered “1” and which states that any annuities or other payments received
through the account would be taxable.
[61]
As regards Mr. Grondin, he was subpoenaed and
questioned under oath by the Commission des valeurs mobilières du Québec on March 12, 2002. From the transcript of that
examination, it is clear that it had to do with the Lavignes and the investment at issue here.
[62]
To rely mainly on the promoters and their agents
and on co-workers who are not experts does not constitute prudent behaviour in
the circumstances. The third parties that were consulted were unable to comment
on the investment in question; moreover, on the evidence before me I do not see
how Mr. Demers or
Mr. Grondin could have provided any third parties with sufficient
information for them to be able to comment.
[63]
There were many red flags that should have made
the appellants wary of the advice they received that the amounts were not
taxable.
[64]
The fact that the initial cheques issued in
December 2002 were NSF seems to me to be another fairly clear red flag, coming
not long before the season when the 2002 tax return had to be prepared. That
red flag should have made a prudent person suspicious of the information
received from the promoters and their agents.
[65]
In Mr. Grondin’s case, the fact that the Commission
des valeurs mobilières questioned him in March 2002 about the promoters and
about the investment in question is also a very obvious red flag.
[66]
I further note that Mr. Demers did not review
his tax return.
[67]
In the circumstances, I do not see how I could
conclude that Mr. Demers and Mr. Grondin exercised the required degree of
diligence.
Conclusion
[68]
Accordingly, the amounts in question are taxable
and the Minister’s out‑of‑time assessment was valid.
[69]
Although I am satisfied that this is the correct
result in fact and in law, I find the practical result highly regrettable
because I doubt that the appellants, having lost most of their pension funds, are
able to pay the tax and interest that are owing.
[70]
Although this is not a matter within this court’s
jurisdiction, there are measures that the Minister could take to lessen the
impact. I hope that, if an application for interest relief is made under
subsection 220(3.1) of the
Act, the Minister will seriously consider such application. Furthermore,
although jurisdiction in this regard lies with the Governor in Council and not with this court, if an application for a
remission order under subsection 23(2) of the Financial Administration Act is
made, I hope that it will also be considered seriously.
Signed at Ottawa, Ontario, this 18th
day of December 2014.
“Gaston Jorré”
Translation certified true
on this 31st day of July 2015.
Erich Klein, Revisor
APPENDIX
A
[2011-191(IT)G Marcel Demers]
The parties, through their respective counsel, agree on and admit
the following facts:
1. Marcel Demers accumulated funds in a registered pension
plan (“RPP”) while he was employed by Canadian National (“pension fund”).
2. In 2002, Marcel Demers attended information sessions
during which Jocelyne Lavigne and Claude Lavigne offered him an investment that
would enable him to withdraw the funds he had accumulated in his pension fund
and transfer them to an RRSP (“the proposed investment”).
3. The proposed return
of 40% was payable to Marcel Demers once the funds accumulated in his pension
fund had been transferred for the purpose of the proposed investment.
4. Marcel Demers
participated in the proposed investment and, to that end, signed blank copies
of the documents authorizing the withdrawal of the monies accumulated in his
pension fund and their transfer to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant.
5. To effect the proposed investment, Marcel Demers withdrew an
amount of $404,970 from his pension fund, which he transferred to an RRSP of
which he was the annuitant.
6. On September 13, 2002, Marcel Demers signed a resignation
notice whereby he voluntarily resigned from Canadian National effective
September 13, 2002.
7. On September 23, 2002, Marcel Demers signed a request to have
his pension fund transferred to an RRSP, which request was addressed to CN’s
pension and benefits administration department.
8. On September 26, 2002, Marcel Demers signed the following:
(i) an application for a self-directed locked-in retirement
account (“self‑directed LIRA”) with Services financiers Penson Canada
inc. (“Penson”), requesting that Laurentian Trust of Canada apply for
registration of the self-directed LIRA, and
(ii) an application to open a brokerage account (“brokerage
account”) with Services financiers IForum inc. (“IForum”) for his self-directed
LIRA.
9. Marcel Demers’ self-directed LIRA was an RRSP of which he was
the annuitant.
10. An amount of $404,970 from the funds that Marcel Demers had accumulated
in his pension fund was deposited in Marcel Demers’ self-directed LIRA.
11. On October 30, 2002, Lucky 1 Enterprises Inc. (“Lucky 1”) issued
in the name of Marcel Demers a share certificate numbered 00013 for 400,000 of its
shares.
12. Lucky 1 was a publicly traded company based in Vancouver whose
shares constituted an eligible investment for RRSP purposes at that time.
13. On November 1, 2002, Marcel Demers signed a power of attorney naming
and appointing lawyer Sylvain Lauzon for the purposes of
(i) representing him with IForum to deposit the Lucky 1 share
certificate numbered 00013 in his self-directed LIRA, and
(ii) authorizing IForum to pay to Sylvain Lauzon in
trust any monies arising from the said share certificate.
14. On November 1, 2002, Marcel Demers signed a power of attorney
naming and appointing lawyer Sylvain Lauzon for the purpose of authorizing Sylvain
Lauzon to pay to Inter Franchise Marketing and/or according to his instructions
the proceeds of the disbursement arising from the share certificate that Marcel
Demers held in Lucky 1.
15. On November 26, 2002, 400,000 shares of Lucky 1 were
deposited in Marcel Demers’ self-directed LIRA.
16. On November 26, 2002, an amount of $377,894.40 was debited to
Marcel Demers’ self-directed LIRA.
17. On November 27, 2002, IForum issued a cheque in the amount of $377,894.40
to the order of Sylvain Lauzon in trust for “Marcel Demers”.
18. On November 29, 2002, Sylvain Lauzon confirmed to Marcel
Demers that, in accordance with his power of attorney, he had paid the amount
of $377,894.40 to Inter Franchise.
19. Amounts totalling $1,489,190 were deposited by IForum in
Sylvain Lauzon’s trust account on behalf of five investors, including Marcel
Demers, who had participated in the investment proposed by Claude Lavigne and
Jocelyne Lavigne, as follows:
(i) $377,894.40 on behalf of Marcel Demers;
(ii) $372,072 on behalf of Fernand Grondin;
(iii) $325,563 on behalf of Robert Talbot;
(iv) $313,530 on behalf of Jocelyn Roberge; and
(v) $100,131 on behalf of Jean-Noël Talbot.
20. S.P.H.T. was a private company controlled by Claude Lavigne,
which also operated as 9095-8448 Québec inc.
21. Decisions relating to payment of the monies that Sylvain Lauzon
held in trust for the investors, including Marcel Demers, were dictated to him
by Claude Lavigne.
22. The instructions given to Sylvain Lauzon by Claude Lavigne with
respect to payment of the monies that Sylvain Lauzon held in trust for the
investors were based on total amounts and not on amounts to be paid on behalf
of each one of the investors.
23. For that reason, it is impossible to determine the precise
amounts paid by Sylvain Lauzon for each one of the investors, including Marcel
Demers.
24. Marcel Demers reported total income of $177,854 for the 2002 taxation
year.
25. According to Marcel Demers’ representations to the CRA, he
received the $80,000 cheque from Claude Lavigne at a rest stop on Highway 40, after
Mr. Lavigne had given him an initial cheque that turned out to be NSF.
26. On April 24, 2006, seven individuals who had participated in the
proposed investment, including Marcel Demers, commenced a proceeding before the
Superior Court of Québec in case number 200-11-014643-061.
27. On September 16, 2008, the Superior Court of Québec rendered a
judgment in case number 200-11-014643-061, cited as Talbot c. Lavigne,
2008 QCCS 4317.
28. The Superior Court of Québec judgment of September 16, 2008, was
rendered only against defendants Claude Lavigne and Jocelyne Lavigne.
29. In its judgment of September 16, 2008, the Superior Court of
Québec annulled all of the investment contracts entered into between Marcel
Demers and Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
30. Neither Penson, nor IForum, nor Lucky 1, nor CN, nor the
administrator of Marcel Demers’ pension fund was at any time or on any basis a party
to the proceedings before the Superior Court of Québec in case number 200‑11-014643-061.
31. The plaintiffs in the proceedings before the Superior Court of
Québec in case number 200-11-014643-061 withdrew their claims against Sylvain
Lauzon and Sarkis Sarkissian before the hearing.
The respondent, through her counsel, asked the appellant to admit
the following facts:
32(a) The investment proposed to Marcel Demers offered a rate of
return of 40% on the funds accumulated in his pension fund, up to $500,000, as
long as the amounts transferred remained invested for a period of 36 months.
33(a) On December 12, 2002, Marcel Demers received in connection
with the proposed investment an amount of $80,000.
34(a) The amount of $80,000 received by Marcel Demers on December
12, 2002, was paid to him as partial payment of the 40% return that was payable
on the proposed investment.
35(a) In fact, the amount of $80,000 received by Marcel Demers on
December 12, 2002, came from the monies accumulated in his pension fund that
he had transferred to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant.
36(a) Marcel Demers did not report the amount of $80,000 that he received
on December 12, 2002, in connection with the proposed investment.
37(a) Sylvain Lauzon made the following disbursements from the
monies he held in trust for the five investors:
(i) $650,000 paid to Lucky 1;
(ii) $605,875 paid to Service Professionnel
Haute Technologie S.P.H.T. inc. (“S.P.H.T.”);
(iii) $138,000 paid to Fernand Grondin;
(iv) $120,000 paid to Robert Talbot;
(v) $3,000 paid to Sylvain Lauzon as professional fees.
38(a) On December 12, 2002, 9095-8448 Québec inc. (S.P.H.T.) issued
a cheque in the amount of $80,000 to the order of Marcel Demers.
39(a) Marcel Demers cashed the $80,000 cheque issued to him by 9095-8448 Québec inc.
(S.P.H.T.) on December 12, 2002.
40(a) The amount of $80,000 that 9095-8448 Québec inc. (S.P.H.T.) paid
to Marcel Demers on December 12, 2002, came from the monies accumulated in his
pension fund that he had transferred to his self-directed LIRA.
41(a) Marcel Demers did not report in his tax return for the 2002 taxation
year the amount of $80,000 that 9095-8448 Québec inc. (S.P.H.T.) paid to him on
December 12, 2002.
42(a) According to Marcel Demers’ representations to the CRA, he was
waiting to receive an information slip before reporting the amount of $80,000 that
he received on December 12, 2002.
43(a) The only finding of nullity sought by the plaintiffs in case
number 200‑11-014643-061 was the following:
[TRANSLATION]
ANNUL all of
the investment contracts entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants
Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
The appellant, through
his counsel, admits facts 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42 and 43, when
reformulated as follows:
32(b) The investment proposed to Marcel Demers offered a 40%
interest rate over 36 months on the amounts invested, with no tax payable on
an amount of up to $500,000.
33(b) In December 2002, Marcel Demers received an amount of $80,000
in connection with the proposed investment.
34(b) The amount of $80,000 received by Marcel Demers in December
2002 was paid to him as partial payment of the 40% return that was payable on the
proposed investment.
35(b) In fact, the amount of $80,000 received by Marcel Demers in
December 2002 came from the monies accumulated in his pension fund that he had
transferred to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant.
36(b) Marcel Demers did not report the amount of $80,000 that he received
in December 2002 in connection with the proposed investment.
37(b) Sylvain Lauzon made the following disbursements from the
monies he held in trust for the five investors:
(i) $450,000 paid to Lucky 1;
(ii) $505,835 paid to Service Professionnel
Haute Technologie S.P.H.T. inc. (“S.P.H.T.”);
(iii) $138,000 paid to Fernand Grondin;
(iv) $120,000 paid to Robert Talbot.
38-39(b)
In December 2002, Marcel Demers received an amount of $80,000 in connection
with the proposed investment.
40(b) The amount of $80,000 received in December 2002 came from the monies
accumulated in his pension fund that he had transferred to his self-directed
LIRA.
41(b) Marcel Demers did not report in his tax return for the 2002
taxation year the amount of $80,000 received in December 2002.
42(b) According to the instructions of Claude Lavigne, the amount of
$80,000 that Marcel Demers received in December 2002 was to be reported in
2005, the year in which he would receive an information slip in respect of that
amount.
43(b) The relief sought by the plaintiffs in case number
200-11-014643-061 includes the following:
[TRANSLATION]
ANNUL all of
the investment contracts entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants
Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
The parties, through
their respective counsel, agree to the filing by consent of documents 1 to 59 of
the respondent’s book of documents.
APPENDIX B
[2011-192(IT)G Jocelyne
Dion Grondin]
The parties, through their respective counsel, agree on and admit
the following facts:
1. Fernand Grondin accumulated funds in a registered pension plan
(“RPP”) while he was employed by Canadian National (“pension fund”).
2. In 2002, Fernand Grondin attended information sessions during
which Jocelyne Lavigne and Claude Lavigne offered him an investment that would
enable him to withdraw the funds he had accumulated in his pension fund and
transfer them to an RRSP (“the proposed investment”).
3. The proposed return of 40% was payable to Fernand Grondin once
the funds accumulated in his pension fund had been transferred for the purpose
of the proposed investment.
4. Fernand Grondin participated in the proposed investment and,
to that end, signed blank copies of the documents authorizing the withdrawal of
the monies accumulated in his pension fund and their transfer to an RRSP of
which he was the annuitant.
5. To effect the proposed investment, an amount of $448,516 from Fernand
Grondin’s pension fund was transferred to an RRSP of which Fernand Grondin was
the annuitant.
6. On December 12, 2002, in connection with the proposed
investment, Fernand Grondin received an amount of $10,000.
7. On December 27, 2002, in connection with the proposed
investment, Fernand Grondin received an amount of $138,000.
8. Fernand Grondin did not report the amount of $10,000 that he received
on December 12, 2002, in connection with the proposed investment.
9. Fernand Grondin did not report the amount of $138,000 that he received
on December 27, 2002, in connection with the proposed investment.
10. On January 18, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed a request to
have his pension fund transferred to an RRSP with B2B Trust, which request was addressed
to CN’s pension and benefits administration department.
11. On January 21, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed an application to
open an RRSP account with B2B Trust, the RRSP trustee.
12. On March 15, 2002, the CN Pension Trust Fund issued a cheque in
the amount of $477,585.74 to the order of B2B Trust RRSP on behalf of
Fernand Grondin.
13. On April 15, 2002, 3983919 Canada inc. (Inter-Franchise inc.) issued
in the name of B2B Trust on behalf of Fernand Grondin a share certificate numbered
C-2 for
447,000 of its Class C shares.
14. On June 17, 2002, B2B Trust returned Fernand Grondin’s share
certificate to Inter-Franchise inc. because the transactions had been rejected
by B2B Trust.
15. On December 5, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed the following:
(i) an application for a locked-in retirement account (“LIRA”) with
Services financiers Penson Canada inc. (“Penson”), requesting that
Laurentian Trust of Canada apply for registration of the LIRA, and
(ii) an application to
open a brokerage account (“brokerage account”) with Services financiers IForum
inc. (“IForum”) for his LIRA.
16. Fernand Grondin’s LIRA was an RRSP of which he was the
annuitant.
17. On December 12, 2002, an amount of $448,516 from the funds accumulated
by Fernand Grondin in his pension fund, which funds had been deposited in Fernand
Grondin’s RRSP with B2B Trust, was deposited in Fernand Grondin’s LIRA.
18. On November 1, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed a power of
attorney naming and appointing lawyer Sylvain Lauzon for the purpose of
authorizing Sylvain Lauzon to pay to Inter-Franchise inc. the proceeds of the disbursement
arising from the share certificate that Fernand Grondin held in Lucky 1.
19. On November 22, 2002, Lucky 1 Enterprises Inc. (“Lucky 1”)
issued in the name of Fernand Grondin a share certificate numbered 00020 for 400,000
of its shares.
20. Lucky 1 was a publicly traded company based in Vancouver whose
shares constituted an eligible investment for RRSP purposes at that time.
21. On December 12, Lucky 1 Enterprises Inc. (“Lucky 1”) issued in
the name of Penson Canada inc. Fernand Grondin a share certificate numbered
00022 for 400,000 of its shares.
22. On December 13, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed a power of
attorney naming and appointing lawyer Sylvain Lauzon for the purposes of:
(i) representing him with IForum to deposit the Lucky 1 share
certificate numbered 00020 in his LIRA, and
(ii) authorizing IForum to pay to Sylvain Lauzon in trust any monies
arising from the said share certificate.
23. On December 19, 2002, 400,000 shares of Lucky 1 were deposited
in Fernand Grondin’s LIRA.
24. On December 19, 2002, an amount of $372,072 was debited to
Fernand Grondin’s LIRA.
25. On December 20, 2002, Fernand Grondin signed a power of
attorney naming and appointing lawyer Sylvain Lauzon for the purposes of:
(i) representing him with IForum to deposit the Lucky 1 share
certificate numbered 00022 in his LIRA, and
(ii) authorizing IForum to pay to Sylvain Lauzon in
trust any monies arising from the said share certificate.
26. On December 20, 2002, IForum issued a cheque in the
amount of $372,072 to the order of Sylvain Lauzon in trust (Fernand Grondin).
27. On April 7, 2003, Sylvain Lauzon confirmed to Fernand Grondin that,
in accordance with his power of attorney, he had paid the amount of $372,072 to
Inter-Franchise and/or according to his instructions.
28. Amounts totalling $1,489,190 were deposited by IForum in
Sylvain Lauzon’s trust account on behalf of five investors, including Fernand
Grondin, who had participated in the investment proposed by Claude Lavigne and
Jocelyne Lavigne, as follows
(i) $377,894.40 on behalf of Marcel Demers;
(ii) $372,072 on behalf of Fernand Grondin;
(iii) $325,563 on behalf of Robert Talbot;
(iv) $313,530 on behalf of Jocelyn Roberge; and
(v) $100,131 on behalf of Jean-Noël Talbot.
29. On December 23, 2002, Sylvain Lauzon issued a cheque in
the amount of $138,000 to the order of Fernand Grondin drawn on his trust
account.
30. Fernand Grondin endorsed and cashed, on December 27, 2002, the
$138,000 cheque that Sylvain Lauzon had issued to him on December 23, 2002.
31. The amount of $138,000 that Sylvain Lauzon paid to Fernand
Grondin on December 23, 2002, came from the monies accumulated in his
pension fund that he had transferred to his LIRA.
32. Fernand Grondin did not report in his tax return for the 2002
taxation year the amount of $138,000 that Sylvain Lauzon had paid to him on
December 23, 2002.
33. S.P.H.T. was a private company controlled by Claude Lavigne, which
also operated as 9095-8448 Québec inc.
34. Decisions relating to payment of the monies that Sylvain
Lauzon held in trust for the investors, including Fernand Grondin, were
dictated to him by Claude Lavigne.
35. The instructions given to Sylvain Lauzon by Claude Lavigne with
respect to payment of the monies that Sylvain Lauzon held in trust for the
investors were based on total amounts and not on amounts to be paid on behalf
of each one of the investors.
36. For that reason, it is impossible to determine the precise
amounts paid by Sylvain Lauzon for each one of the investors, including
Fernand Grondin.
37. On December 12, 2002, 9095-8448 Québec inc. (S.P.H.T.) issued
a cheque in the amount of $10,000 to the order of Fernand Grondin.
38. Fernand Grondin cashed the $10,000 cheque that 9095-8448 Québec inc.
(S.P.H.T.) had issued to him on December 12, 2002.
39. Fernand Grondin did not report in his tax return for the 2002
taxation year the amount of $10,000 that 9095-8448 Québec inc. (S.P.H.T.) had
paid to him on December 12, 2002.
40. Fernand Grondin reported total income of $93,908 for the 2002 taxation
year.
41. On April 24, 2006, seven individuals who had participated in the
proposed investment, including Fernand Grondin, commenced a proceeding
before the Superior Court of Québec in case number 200‑11‑014643-061.
42. On September 16, 2008, the Superior Court of Québec rendered a
judgment in case number 200-11-014643-061, cited as Talbot c. Lavigne,
2008 QCCS 4317.
43. The Superior Court of Québec judgment of September 16, 2008, was
rendered only against defendants Claude Lavigne and Jocelyne Lavigne.
44. In its judgment of September 16, 2008, the Superior Court of
Québec annulled all of the investment contracts entered into between
Fernand Grondin and Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
45. Neither Penson, nor IForum, nor Lucky 1, nor CN, nor the
administrator of Fernand Grondin’s pension fund was at any time or on any basis
a party to the proceedings before the Superior Court of Québec in case number
200‑11-014643-061.
46. The plaintiffs in the proceedings before the Superior Court of
Québec in case number 200-11-014643-061 withdrew their claims against Sylvain
Lauzon and Sarkis Sarkissian before the hearing.
The respondent, through her counsel, asked the appellant to admit
the following facts:
47(a) The investment proposed to Fernand Grondin offered a rate of
return of 40% on the funds accumulated in his pension fund, up to $500,000, as
long as the amounts transferred remained invested for a period of 36 months.
48(a) The amount of $10,000 received by Fernand Grondin on December
12, 2002, and the amount of $138,000 he received on December 27, 2002, were paid
to him as partial payment of the 40% return that was payable on the
proposed investment.
49(a) In fact, the amount of $10,000 received by Fernand Grondin on
December 12, 2002, and the amount of $138,000 he received on December 27,
2002, came from the monies accumulated in his pension fund that he had
transferred to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant.
50(a) Sylvain Lauzon made the following disbursements from the
monies he held in trust for the five investors:
(i) $650,000 paid to Lucky 1;
(ii) $605,875 paid to Service Professionnel
Haute Technologie S.P.H.T. inc. (“S.P.H.T.”);
(iii) $138,000 paid to Fernand Grondin;
(iv) $120,000 paid to Robert Talbot;
(v) $3,000 paid to Sylvain Lauzon as professional fees.
51(a) The only finding of nullity sought by the plaintiffs in case
number 200‑11-014643-061 was the following:
[TRANSLATION]
ANNUL all of
the investment contracts entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants
Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
The appellant, through his counsel, admits facts 47, 48, 49, 50 and 51,
when reformulated as follows:
47(b) The investment proposed to Fernand Grondin offered a 40%
interest rate over 36 months on the amounts invested, with no tax payable on an
amount of up to $500,000.
48(b) The amount of $138,000 received by Fernand Grondin on December
27, 2002, was paid to him as partial payment of the 40% return that was payable
on the proposed investment.
49(b) In fact, the amount of $138,000 received by Fernand Grondin on
December 27, 2002, came from the monies accumulated in his pension fund that he
had transferred to an RRSP of which he was the annuitant.
50(b) Sylvain Lauzon made the following disbursements from the
monies he held in trust for the five investors:
(i) $450,000 paid to Lucky 1;
(ii) $505,835 paid to Service Professionnel
Haute Technologie S.P.H.T. inc. (“S.P.H.T.”);
(iii) $138,000 paid to Fernand Grondin;
(iv) $120,000 paid to Robert Talbot.
51(b) The relief sought by the plaintiffs in case number
200-11-014643-061 included the following:
[TRANSLATION]
ANNUL all of
the investment contracts entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants
Jocelyne Lavigne, Claude Lavigne and Sarkis Sarkissian.
The parties, through their respective counsel, agree to the filing
by consent of documents 1 to 90 of the respondent’s book of documents.
1707 Acts of alienation by onerous title performed by a person who is
bound to make restitution, if made in favour of a third person in good faith,
may be set up against the person to whom restitution is owed. Acts of
alienation by gratuitous title may not be set up, subject to the rules on
prescription.
Any other acts performed in favour of a
third person in good faith may be set up against the person to whom restitution
is owed.
55 The Crown argues that in respect of
2002, the judge erred in failing to consider whether Ms. Johnson met the
requisite standard of care – that of a wise and prudent person who has
considered the matter thoughtfully, deliberately and carefully. That legal test
is based on the following passage from the decision of Justice Addy in Regina
Shoppers Mall Ltd. v. Canada (1990), 90 D.T.C. 6427 (F.C.T.D.), adopted by
Justice MacGuigan, writing for this Court in Regina Shoppers Mall Ltd. v.
Canada (1991), 91 D.T.C. 5101, at page 5013:
Where a taxpayer thoughtfully, deliberately and
carefully assesses the situation and files on what he believes bona fide
to be the proper method there can be no misrepresentation as contemplated by
section 152 [1056 Enterprises Ltd v. The Queen, [1989] 2 C.T.C. 1]. In Joseph
Levy v. The Queen, [1989] C.T.C. 151 at 176, Teitelbaum J. quotes with
approval the following statement by Muldoon J. in the above case:
Subsection 152(4) protects such conduct, and perhaps only such conduct,
where the taxpayer thoughtfully, deliberately and carefully assesses the
situation as being one in which the law does not exact the reporting of that
which the taxpayer bona fide believes does not exist.
It has also been
established that the care exercised must be that of a wise and prudent person
and that the report must be made in a manner that the taxpayer truly believes
to be correct. In another decision by Mr. Justice Muldoon, namely Iris M.
Reilly, Executrix and Trustee of the Estate of Cleo E. Reilly, [1984]
C.T.C. 21, in which he dealt again with the subject, we find the following statement
at p. 38:
In order to
make any determination of making “any misrepresentation that is attributable to
neglect, carelessness or wilful default … in filing the return or in supplying
any information under the Act” it is necessary to have direct evidence of the
state of mind and intention of “the taxpayer or person filing the return” or
other evidence upon which reasonable inferences can be drawn in regard to the
taxpayer’s or other person’s state of mind and intention.
And at p. 40:
The issue is not whether Mr. Tetz, in forming his opinion at the
material time was wrong, but whether his not reporting the disposition was
attributable to neglect, carelessness or wilful default.
Finally, at page 42 :
So, when it is now said that the standard of care is that of a wise and
prudent person, it must be understood that wisdom is not infallibility and
prudence is not perfection.
When one reads on in the decision, it is clear that the Court of Appeal
agrees with the passages quoted.