Docket: 2012-2853(GST)I
BETWEEN:
SANDRA WONG,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
____________________________________________________________________
Appeal
heard on December 5, 2012,
at Vancouver, British Columbia
Before: The Honourable
Justice B. Paris
Appearances:
For the Appellant:
|
The
Appellant herself
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Amandeep K. Sandhu
|
____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
The appeal from the reassessment made under
the Excise Tax Act, notice of which bears number GB120531013141 and
dated February 3, 2012, is dismissed in accordance with the attached reasons for judgment.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 18th day of January 2013.
“B.Paris”
Citation: 2013TCC23
Date: 20130118
Docket: 2012-2853(GST)I
BETWEEN:
SANDRA WONG,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Paris J.
[1]
Ms. Wong is appealing
the disallowance of her claim for a GST/HST new housing rebate of $22,982.71
relating to the purchase by her and her spouse of unit 501-2550 Spruce Street
in Vancouver (the “Property”).
[2]
The Minister of
National Revenue (the “Minister”) disallowed the rebate on the basis that Ms. and
Mr. Wong did not acquire the Property for use as their primary place of
residence or as the primary place of residence of a relation.
[3]
Paragraph 254(2)(b)
of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. E-15 sets out that the new housing rebate is
available where, at the time the purchaser becomes liable or assumes liability
under an agreement for purchase and sale of the unit, the purchaser intends to
use the unit as a primary residence for him or herself or for a relative.
[4]
The relevant parts of
paragraph 254(2)(b) read
(2) New
housing rebate – Where
…
(b) at
the time the particular individual becomes liable or assumes liability under an
agreement of purchase and sale of the complex or unit entered into between the
builder and the particular individual, the particular individual is acquiring
the complex or unit for use as the primary place of residence of the particular
individual or a relation of the particular individual,
...
the Minister shall, ... pay a rebate ... .
[5]
In this case, it is not
disputed that Ms. and Mr. Wong entered into the contract to purchase the Property
on December 9, 2009, prior to the construction of the building in which the Property
is located. Therefore, it is their intention at that time regarding the use of
the Property which is determinative.
[6]
Ms. and Mr. Wong both
testified that, when they signed the contract, their intention in acquiring the
Property was for their son, who was studying at university in the United States, to reside in it when he returned to Vancouver on school breaks. Mr. Wong also
testified that they intended to allow their son to live in the Property after
he finished his studies, if he returned to Vancouver to work at that time.
[7]
On December 9, 2009,
Ms. and Mr. Wong were living in a house at 3268 West 15th
Avenue in Vancouver, which they had purchased in 1997. On December 9, 2009,
they intended to continue to occupy the house as their primary place of residence
after they obtained possession of the Property.
[8]
In August 2011, the
Wongs took possession of the Property. Their son moved into the Property and
lived there until he returned to the U.S. in late August or early September
2011.
[9]
Ms. Wong applied for
the new housing rebate sometime in August 2011. In September 2011 she and her
spouse went on trip. When they returned, she had two letters from the CRA
waiting for her. The first asked her to send in a copy of her driver’s licence
as proof that she was living in the Property. The second stated that her new
housing rebate application had been refused because she did not respond to the
first letter in time. Ms. Wong then changed her address on her driver’s licence
and sent a copy to the CRA. It seems that the CRA officer handling the application
ultimately refused it on the basis that neither the Wongs nor their son were
using the Property as their primary place of residence. Ms. and Mr. Wong
testified that, at that point, they filed an objection and, in order to get the
rebate, they decided to use the property as their primary residence.
[10]
As I have noted
already, however, it is their intention at the time they entered into the
contract to purchase the Property that is determinative. Unfortunately, this
does not seem to have been communicated to them by any of the CRA officers who
dealt with the matter. As a result, Ms. Wong has been under the mistaken
impression that if she can show that she and her spouse, in fact, moved into
the Property and were using it as their primary place of residence, she would
be entitled to the new housing rebate. This was the position she took at the
hearing.
[11]
At the hearing before
me, Ms. Wong presented a number of household bills to show that she and her
spouse had moved into the Property and were continuing to reside there and, at one
point, she went so far as to say that she and her spouse moved into the
Property in August 2011. I find it extremely unlikely that they did, because it
was admitted that when they took possession in August 2011, their son moved in
and stayed until the end of his summer break from university. It is implausible
that Ms. and Mr. Wong and their son would all stay in the Property and leave
the house on West 15th Avenue unoccupied. Furthermore, the floor
area of the Property was just 631 square feet. The house had a floor area of
2200 square feet and contained an office that Mr. Wong used in the evening.
[12]
Mr. Wong testified that
they moved into the Property in February 2012. This is consistent with Ms.
Wong’s evidence that they moved in after the rebate claim had been denied. I
accept that they did, in fact, begin using the Property a great deal of the
time from February 2012 on, despite the fact that the Property was much smaller
than their house. However, the actual use of the Property by the Wongs is not
relevant, in light of their own testimony that they did not intend to use the
Property as their primary place of residence when they entered into the
contract to purchase it.
[13]
I also find that Ms.
and Mr. Wong did not purchase the Property with the intention that their son
would occupy it as his primary place of residence. In December 2009, the Wongs
expected that their son would continue with his post-graduate studies in the United States until 2013 and that he would only return to Vancouver during school breaks before then.
There was also some suggestion that his return in the summer was dependent on his
obtaining employment in Vancouver. His plans after graduation also appeared to
depend on where he was able to find work. Mr. Wong stated that, if his son
returned to Vancouver after graduation, he would be allowed to live in the
Property.
[14]
Given that the Wongs’
son was expected to spend the majority of his time away from Vancouver in 2011,
2012 and at least the early part of 2013, and that his subsequent plans were
uncertain, I find that, in December 2009, the Wongs did not expect or intend
that the Property would be his primary residence.
[15]
For these reasons, I
find that Ms. Wong is not entitled to the GST/HST rebate, and her appeal is
dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 18th day of January 2013.
“B.Paris”