Date: 20101101
Docket: T-1302-09
Unrevised certified
translation Citation: 2010 FC 1070
Ottawa, Ontario, November 1,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Harrington
BETWEEN:
AMOUR INTERNATIONAL
MINES D’OR LTÉE
Applicant
and
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
Voluntary
reporting by taxpayers and payment of income tax by every individual are the very
basis of Canada’s taxation
system. The law can be very severe for taxpayers who fail to report income or for
those who do not pay amounts owed within the prescribed time limits. High
interest rates are imposed and recalcitrant taxpayers can be subject to severe
penalties. That said, subsection 220(3.1) of the Income Tax Act (ITA)
provides that the Minister may waive all or any portion of any penalty or
interest otherwise payable. In this regard, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA)
publishes a number of income tax information circulars that describe in detail
the circumstances under which the Minister, through one of his delegates, may
exercise this discretion. For example, one of these programs, the “fairness
package”, allows the Minister to waive interest and penalties on humanitarian
grounds.
[2]
This
case involves Information Circular IC00-1R2, entitled Voluntary Disclosures
Program, which, to use its own terms, describes the circumstances under
which “[t]axpayers can make disclosures to correct inaccurate or incomplete
information, or to disclose information not previously reported”. In so doing,
taxpayers would not avoid paying interest on late payments, but would not be
subject to a penalty. However, if enforcement action has already been
undertaken to investigate the activities of the taxpayer or a third party, the
penalty will not be waived.
[3]
Amour
International Mines d’Or Ltée (AIMO) paid dividends to two foreign shareholders.
The company was to withhold part of that amount and, within 15 days, remit the
amounts withheld to the Receiver General for Canada. The company
did withhold the amount but did not make the remittance, as it was required to
do. When alerted to this omission by one of their accountants, the company
undertook the voluntary disclosure process with the CRA and paid the amounts
that were owing, as well as the interest that had accrued. However, the CRA
refused to allow the voluntary disclosure or waive the penalty, arguing that
this disclosure was not voluntary and that it had been made too late, because
an enforcement action was already in place. The initial decision was upheld by
the Acting Assistant Director, Enforcement Division at the Montréal Tax
Services Office, who was authorized to review the first instance decision. That
decision is the subject of this judicial review.
CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
[4]
The
following dates are important and should be kept in mind in the analysis of
this case.
[5]
In
December 2006, AIMO paid a dividend of C$245,000 to one of its shareholders who
was domiciled in the Bahamas. Pursuant to subsection
212(2) of the ITA and due to the lack of a tax treaty between Canada and the
Bahamas, AIMO made a source deduction of 25 percent, namely, C$61,250, an
amount which should have been remitted to the Receiver General for Canada within 15
days, as provided in the Income Tax Regulations.
[6]
On
or about October 15, 2007, an audit screen was created for Greymount Associates
Limited in the CRA’s electronic registry. It is indicated in the registry that
the CRA would look into the matter of whether payments of [translation] “winding-up dividend[s]
[were made] in 2006 and 2007 to [non-residents]” by AIMO.
[7]
On
October 29, 2007, the CRA sent a letter to an accountant at Greymount regarding
the disposition of shares in Orex Gold Mines Limited by two companies and one
individual. Greymount is a shareholder in Orex, which itself is a shareholder
in AIMO, holding 44 percent of shares.
[8]
The
following is an excerpt from the letter of October 29, 2007:
[translation]
In order to complete the review of the
matter at hand, we ask that you submit the following documents to us:
Orex Gold Mines Ltd:
The share ledger from the time
shares were acquired until they were disposed of.
All the classes of shares
issued by the company and those the company bought back (i.e. the number and
amount).
Vendors:
The original purchase agreement
(supporting documentation of purchase price)
The sales agreement (shares
and amount)
[9]
In
November 2007, AIMO paid a previously declared dividend of C$1,172,153.30 to
another shareholder, a company whose head office was located in the Netherlands. Pursuant to
Article 10 of the Canada-Netherlands Tax Treaty, AIMO made a source
deduction of 15 percent, namely, C$175,822.99, an amount which, as in the
previous case, should have been remitted to the Receiver General for Canada within 15
days.
[10]
In
February and March 2008, due to discoveries made by accountants assisting in
its voluntary legal winding-up, AIMO disclosed to the CRA its failure to remit
the amounts withheld from the dividend payments.
[11]
On
November 4, 2008, after AIMO was warned that the voluntary disclosure might not
be accepted, the request was rejected by the Team Leader of the Voluntary
Disclosures Program at the Montréal Tax Services Office. The following are the
reasons for his decision:
[translation]
Unfortunately, your request cannot be
considered to be voluntary as it follows enforcement actions taken by the Canada
Revenue Agency with regard to the taxpayer’s shareholders.
[12]
On
July 10, 2009, the initial decision was upheld at the second level by the
Acting Assistant Director, Enforcement Division, who stated that:
[translation]
The review of the facts and evidence in
the record does not allow me to accept your voluntary disclosure. In fact, in
order to be considered voluntary, a disclosure cannot be linked to an audit or
enforcement action taken by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Your disclosure
will not be considered as voluntary since enforcement action relating to the disclosure
were taken by the CRA with regard to persons associated with AIMO. This
enforcement action was likely to have uncovered the information disclosed.
As was previously stated, that decision is
the subject of this judicial review.
VOLUNTARY DISCLOSURES PROGRAM
[13]
As
Justice Phelan confirmed in Livaditis v. Canada Revenue Agency, 2010 FC
950, at paragraphs 3 and 4, Information Circular IC00-1R2, which is not a
statute, sets out four conditions to be met for a disclosure to be valid:
1)
that
the disclosure be voluntary,
2)
that
the disclosure be complete,
3)
that
the disclosure involve the application, or potential application, of a penalty;
and
4)
that
the disclosure include information that is at least one year past due.
[14]
In
the case at bar, only the first condition needs to be taken into consideration.
In fact, the CRA clearly indicated that it refused the voluntary disclosure by AIMO
because it was of the view that the disclosure was not voluntary within the
meaning of paragraphs 32 to 34 of the Information Circular.
[15]
Paragraph
32, as well as pertinent excerpts from paragraphs 33 and 34, state that:
32. A disclosure
will not qualify as a valid disclosure,
subject to the
exceptions in paragraph 34, under the
“voluntary”
condition if the CRA determines:
• the
taxpayer was aware of, or had knowledge of an audit, investigation or other
enforcement action set to be
conducted
by the CRA or any other authority or
administration,
with respect to the information being
disclosed
to the CRA, or
•
enforcement action relating to the disclosure was initiated by the CRA or any
other authority or administration on the taxpayer, or on a person associated
with, or related to the taxpayer (this includes, but is not restricted to,
corporations, shareholders, spouses and partners), or on a third party, where
the purpose and impact of the enforcement action against the third party is
sufficiently
related
to the present disclosure, and
• the enforcement
action is likely to have uncovered the information being disclosed.
33. For purposes of
the VDP, an “enforcement action” may
include, but is not
limited to:
•
requests, demands or requirements issued by the CRA, relating to unfiled
returns, unremitted taxes/ instalments, deductions required at source or
non-registrants; (although the aforementioned actions may only pertain to one
specific year or reporting period, the procedure will be considered to be an
enforcement action, for purposes of the VDP, for all taxation years or
reporting periods).
34. Not all CRA
initiated enforcement action may be cause for a disclosure to be denied by
the CRA. Examples of this include:
• a
recent audit of a taxpayer was related to a source deductions (payroll)
issue. The same taxpayer is submitting a disclosure for an amount of GST/HST,
which
was collected but
not remitted to the CRA as required. There may be no correlation between
these two taxation issues and as such, the enforcement action on the payroll
account may not be cause to deny the GST/HST disclosure.
|
32. Une
divulgation ne sera pas considérée comme une
divulgation
valide, sous réserve des exceptions du
paragraphe
34, en vertu de la condition « volontaire » si
l’ARC
détermine ce qui suit :
• le contribuable était au courant d’une vérification, d’une enquête ou
d’autres mesures d’exécution que devait entreprendre l’ARC ou toute autre
autorité ou administration, en ce qui concerne les renseignements
divulgués à l’ARC; ou
• les mesures d’exécution relatives à la divulgation ont été prises par
l’ARC ou toute autre autorité ou administration, à l’égard du contribuable ou
d’une personne associée ou apparentée avec le contribuable (y compris, sans
toutefois s’y limiter, des sociétés, des actionnaires, des conjoints et des
associés) ou contre n’importe quel autre tiers où le but et l’impact de
l’action applicable contre le tiers est suffisamment lié à la divulgation
actuelle; et
• les mesures d’exécution sont susceptibles d’avoir révélé les
renseignements divulgués.
33. Dans le cadre du
PDV, une « mesure d’exécution » peut
comprendre, sans
toutefois s’y limiter, ce qui suit :
• les
demandes, les mises en demeure ou les demandes
péremptoires,
envoyées par l’ARC, concernant des
déclarations
non produites, des impôts ou des acomptes
provisionnels
non remis, des retenues à la source requises
ou des
non-inscrits (bien que ces mesures puissent
seulement
se rapporter à une année ou à une période de
déclaration
particulière, la procédure sera considérée
comme une
mesure d’exécution dans le cadre du PDV pour toutes les années d’imposition
ou les périodes de déclaration);
[…]
¶ 34. Ce ne sont pas
toutes les mesures d’exécution que l’ARC prend qui peuvent entraîner le refus
d’une divulgation par cette dernière. En voici des exemples :
• une vérification
récente auprès d’un contribuable était liée à une question relative aux
retenues à la source (paie). Le même contribuable soumet une divulgation relative
à un montant de TPS/TVH qui a été perçu, mais qui n’a pas été remis à l’ARC
tel que cela est exigé. Il peut n’y avoir aucune corrélation entre ces deux
questions fiscales et, ainsi, la mesure d’exécution prise à l’égard du compte
de paie peut ne pas constituer une raison pour refuser la divulgation de
TPS/TVH.
|
ISSUES
[16]
AIMO
is raising three main issues. First, AIMO argues that the principles of
procedural fairness were not observed, given that they were unaware of the
enforcement action initiated before their voluntary disclosure. Second, AIMO maintains
that the letter of October 29, 2007, which will be analyzed in greater
detail in these reasons, was in no way an enforcement action, but rather a
simple request for information. Lastly, even if the letter was an enforcement
action, there is no link between this letter and the voluntary disclosure.
ANALYSIS
[17]
I
cannot accept the argument that there was a breach of the principles of
procedural fairness. Between the first and second decision, the CRA informed Jean‑Pierre Desmarais
that their investigations centred on Greymount. In a letter to the CRA, dated
December 5, 2008, Mr. Desmarais himself refers to Greymount as being the
subject of these investigations.
[18]
Mr.
Desmarais is the sole director and secretary of AIMO’s Canadian corporation,
the sole director of Orex and, through a holding company, is also a shareholder
in that company. Although he has no formal ties to Greymount, he has acted on
its behalf in the past and helped the accountants respond to the letter of
October 29, 2007.
[19]
It
is useful to return to basic principles from time to time, even if such
principles were raised in an altogether different context. In Lennard’s Carrying Company, Limited v. Asiatic
Petroleum Company, Limited, [1915] A.C. 705, Viscount Haldane
stated, on page 713, that:
[A] corporation is an
abstraction. It has no mind of its own any more than it has a body of its own;
its active and directing will must consequently be sought in the person of
somebody who for some purposes may be called an agent, but who is really the
directing mind and will of the corporation, the very ego and centre of the
personality of the corporation.
Given that Mr. Desmarais is the executive
officer of AIMO, his knowledge therefore represents that of the company itself.
Consequently, even if it was necessary that AIMO be informed about the situation,
that condition is met.
[20]
Let
us now address the other two questions in issue. It is clear that the first
criterion of paragraph 32 does not apply here. AIMO was audited, but only after
it had undertaken the voluntary disclosure process. Accordingly, in my mind the
issue is not whether AIMO, through Mr. Desmarais, had been informed that
Greymount was being investigated, but whether the letter of October 29, 2007,
and ensuing correspondence before AIMO’s voluntary disclosure were enforcement
actions and, if that was in fact the case, if the information collected from
Greymount was sufficiently linked to the information in the disclosure. If an
enforcement action against a person associated with or related to the taxpayer or
any third party uncovers the omission, the penalty cannot be waived, regardless
of whether the omission was voluntary or not.
[21]
As
mentioned above, the letter of October 29, 2007, addressed to the accountants
acting on behalf of the three vendors of Orex shares, is in regard to the
disposition of shares in Orex, a Canadian company, by Greymount, a company not
resident in Canada. In this
regard, section 116 of the ITA stipulates that a non-resident person who
proposes to dispose of any taxable Canadian property must send a notice to the
Minister who, after receiving the amounts owed or an acceptable security, will
then issue a certificate to that person.
[22]
It
appears that the communication between the CRA and Greymount centred on the
issuing of certificates of compliance in relation to payments made by Greymount
for the purchase of Orex shares. AIMO argues that the letter of October 29,
2007, cannot be considered as an enforcement action, either against AIMO, or
against Greymount, given that it was a simple request for information. AIMO
also maintains that, to quote from paragraph 33 of the Information Circular, the
CRA’s request does not fall under “requests, demands or requirements issued by
the CRA, relating to unfiled returns, unremitted taxes/instalments, deductions
required at source or non-registrants” or other request of this nature.
[23]
There
is no need for me to consider this question. However, if we were to assume, for
the sake of argument, that the letter of October 29, 2007, constituted an
enforcement action against Greymount and that Greymount was associated with or at
least had links to AIMO, paragraph 32 provides that “the enforcement action is
likely to have uncovered the information being disclosed”.
AIMO asserts that the letter of October 29, 2007, and the subsequent
communications would not have led the CRA to uncover the information the
company had disclosed voluntarily.
[24]
During the oral arguments, I asked the Minister’s counsel to
explain to me how it was possible that information regarding the sale of Orex
shares by Greymount revealed that AIMO had failed to remit to the Receiver General
for Canada the amounts withheld at the time dividends were paid to the two
foreign corporations. She responded that we mere mortals would find it
difficult to understand the thought process of a tax collector. In the present
case, internal reports indicate that well before the letter of October 29,
2007, the CRA had intended to audit AIMO’s payments of dividends to foreign
shareholders. While this may well have been the case, I fail to see any link
between the CRA’s intention to audit AIMO’s dividend payments to foreign
shareholders and the information collected from Greymount. In fact, Greymount’s
letter in response to the CRA contains no information about AIMO’s failure to
remit the amounts withheld from the dividends to the Receiver General for Canada.
[25]
It
is clear that the standard of review in the case at bar is reasonableness. In Dunsmuir
v. New
Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, Justices Bastarache and Lebel state the
following at paragraph 47:
Reasonableness is a
deferential standard animated by the principle that underlies the development
of the two previous standards of reasonableness: certain questions that come
before administrative tribunals do not lend themselves to one specific,
particular result. Instead, they may give rise to a number of possible,
reasonable conclusions. Tribunals have a margin of appreciation within the
range of acceptable and rational solutions. A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[Emphasis added.]
[26]
In
the case at bar, I am invited to speculate on the simple fact that an entry was
made in the CRA’s electronic registry prior to the letter of October 29, 2007, which,
according to the Minister, would indicate that an enforcement action had
already been undertaken. In Minister of Employment and Immigration v.
Satiacum (1989), 99 N.R. 171 (F.C.A.), at paragraphs 34 and 35, Justice
MacGuigan wrote:
The common law has long recognized the
difference between reasonable inference and pure conjecture. Lord Macmillan put
the distinction this way in Jones v. Great Western Railway Co. (1930), 47
T.L.R. 39, at 45, 144 L.T. 194, at 202 (H.L.):
The dividing line between conjecture and
inference is often a very difficult one to draw. A conjecture may be plausible but
it is of no legal value, for its essence is that it is a mere guess. An
inference in the legal sense, on the other hand, is a deduction from the
evidence, and if it is a reasonable deduction it may have the validity of legal
proof. The attribution of an occurrence to a cause is, I take it, always a
matter of inference.
In R. v. Fuller (1971), 1 N.R. 112, at
114, Hall J.A. held for the Manitoba Court of Appeal that, “[t]he
tribunal of fact cannot resort to speculative and conjectural conclusions.”
Subsequently a unanimous Supreme Court of Canada expressed itself as in
complete agreement with his reasons: [1975] 2 S.C.R. 121 at 123; 1 N.R. 110, at
112.
There is no evidence in this case to
support the proposition that the actions taken against Greymount, even if they
were enforcement actions, would have led to the discovery that AIMO had failed
to remit the amounts withheld from the dividends paid to foreign shareholders.
[27]
The decision of the Acting Assistant Director, Enforcement
Division at the Montréal Tax Services Office, is based on pure conjecture.
Therefore I cannot find that it was reasonable. In fact, while the Information
Circular is not a statute, the Minister refused to exercise his discretion only
because he concluded, by way of his delegates, that the disclosure
was not voluntary. Consequently, particular attention must be paid to the
wording in the Information Circular, which is written for taxpayers. In my
opinion, an internal accounting memo entry the CRA’s intention to audit AIMO’s
activities does not represent an enforcement action in and of itself. The only
possible enforcement action is the one against Greymount. In this
regard, the conclusion that the CRA would nonetheless still have uncovered
the information disclosed by AIMO while it was investigating Greymount is
unfounded.
[28]
In conclusion, this application for judicial review is allowed.
However, the remedies sought by AIMO exceed the jurisdiction given to the Court
under section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act. It is not for this Court
to accept [translation] “the
disclosure as being voluntary and to order the Minister to pay back the amount
of C$25,209 collected in penalties.” I will, however, state that the decision was based on
an erroneous finding of fact, made in a perverse or capricious manner or without
regard for the material before the decision-maker.
ORDER
FOR THE
FOREGOING REASONS,
THE
COURT ORDERS that:
1. The
application for judicial review is allowed.
2. It is
declared that the decision was based on a finding of fact that was unreasonable.
3. The matter is
referred back to a different delegate authorized by the Minister for
redetermination in accordance with these reasons.
4. With costs.
“Sean
Harrington”
Certified
true translation
Sebastian
Desbarats, Translator