Date: 20090812
Docket: T-1158-08
Citation: 2009 FC 826
Ottawa, Ontario, August 12, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
ANDREW
UGRO
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER
OF NATIONAL REVENUE
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision made by the Minister of
National Revenue (Minister) in a letter dated June 23, 2008 (Decision) with
respect to the Applicant’s request for refunds beyond the normal 3-year period
and the waiver of penalties and interest.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant began a home-based business offering professional services in graphic
design which were billed at an hourly rate. Other services included the
purchasing and reselling of finished goods relating to graphic design. From
1995 to 2001, the Applicant operated the business as a sole proprietorship and
from 2002 to 2004 he operated the business in partnership with his wife, Kelly
Urgo.
[3]
The
Applicant hired Clyde Morrison, a chartered accountant, to prepare financial
statements for income tax purposes and to advise the Applicant on setting up
accounts. In the spring of 1996, the Applicant met with Clyde Morrison to
discuss the first set of prepared financial statements for tax purposes for the
1995 reporting period. The Applicant filed the statements of income prepared by
Mr. Morrison for the 1995 reporting period. The Applicant’s wife filed her
income taxes separately, as she did not generate any income from the business.
[4]
Mr.
Morrison prepared the 1996 and 1997 financial statements for the business which
were filed for income tax purposes. In the spring of 1998, the Applicant ceased
to do business with Mr. Morrison because the Applicant alleges he “never
addressed [the Applicant’s] repeated attempts to make him show [the Applicant]
the true profitability of [the Applicant’s business].”
[5]
For
the business’s 1998 income tax reporting period, the Applicant used financial
statements prepared by another chartered accountant, Mr. Chris Cowland, who was
given the Applicant’s previous years financial statements and other records.
[6]
The
Applicant had the 1999 financial statements prepared by Mr. Cowland in the spring
of 2000. The Applicant says he “realized that nothing had been changed about
the way in which [the Applicant’s] financial statements were being prepared for
tax purposes.” He alleges that he communicated to Mr. Cowland that his first
three years of business were “deliberately prepared to show positive
profitability, and that the true profitability of the company had not as of yet
been properly determined.” The Applicant alleges that he was “still ignorant
about accounting fundamentals” and had failed to convince Mr. Cowland that “he
had incorrectly prepared [the Applicant’s] accounting for income tax purposes.”
[7]
The
Applicant’s 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 tax returns were all filed on time.
He filed his 1996 tax return late and was assessed a late filing penalty of
$32.97. The Minister accepted as filed the amounts of income reported by the
Applicant for his 1995 to 2000 taxations years. The Applicant filed his 2001 to
2005 income tax returns after the statutory deadlines and was issued
assessments for those years and levied late filing penalties. The Applicant
filed his 2001 to 2004 tax returns late on or about November 20, 2006, and also
filed his 2005 tax return late on or about March 8, 2007.
[8]
In
2001, Mr. Cowland filed the Applicant’s 2000 financial statement for income
purposes, allegedly without the Applicant’s approval. During 2001-2002, the
Applicant says he began to acquire a basic understanding of accounting
fundamentals as they pertained to the computation of income. He alleges that he
used Canada Revenue Agency’s (CRA) informational guides and other textbook
accounting resources.
[9]
In
2002, the Applicant re-filed his 2000 income statement himself using CRA’s
T2124. Specifically, he requested that his 2000 tax return be reassessed to
reduce his net business income from $43,147.00 to $7, 453.00 on the basis that
the accountant who prepared his original tax return had improperly stated his
business income.
[10]
The
Applicant was reassessed on the 2000 income statement he filed himself. He met
with a CRA auditor to discuss the reduced business net income. The request to
reduce his 2000 net business income was denied and the auditor concluded that
the income had been properly reported.
[11]
The
Applicant filed a notice of objection in respect of the request to reduce his
2000 net business income. The objection was reviewed by a CRA Appeals Officer.
The Applicant met with the Appeals Officer on two occasions to discuss his
request but it was denied on July 23, 2002. The Appeals Officer concluded that
the business income had been properly reported in 2000 by his accountant. The
Applicant’s 2000 objection was allowed only with respect to the deduction of
additional business expenses. The Applicant did not appeal this reassessment to
the Tax Court of Canada.
First Level
Fairness Request
[12]
By
a letter dated November 20, 2006 and received by the Minister on December 7,
2006, the Applicant requested that the Minister:
1)
Accept
amended income tax returns for his statute-barred taxation years of 1995 to
2000 in which he claimed to be entitled to refunds based on an accounting
method that he had invented;
2)
Accept
late filed tax returns for his 2001 to 2004 taxations years; and
3)
Cancel
and waive penalties and interest.
[13]
By
a letter dated December 29, 2006, the CRA agreed to review the years to which
penalties and interest applied. In a letter dated January 3, 2007, the CRA
acknowledged the Applicant’s late-filed returns for processing but requested
that he re-supply the returns using CRA’s T2124 form. The CRA stated that the
failure to do so could constitute the disallowance of the Applicant’s business
expenses.
[14]
On
January 6, 2007, the Applicant called the CRA officer who had sent the request
to use the T2124 forms and mentioned that there was no requirement to use
specific forms. The Applicant also informed the CRA that they have, and will
accept, other types of financial statements. The Applicant was told he was
incorrect and that his financial statements would not be processed in their
current form.
[15]
In
January 2007, the Applicant re-filed all the returns as requested by the CRA
using the T2124 form. On March 8, 2007, the Applicant’s 2001 to 2004 tax
returns were accepted by the Minister and assessed as filed. The 2001 to 2004
tax returns were not reviewed by audit prior to being assessed as filed.
[16]
The
Applicant’s fairness request was denied by a letter dated May 29, 2007 from the
fairness officer who found that the business income had been properly reported
for those years.
Second Level
Fairness Request
[17]
By
letter dated July 1, 2007, the Applicant made a second level fairness request.
Additional submissions were received by the Minister in support of this
request. In a letter dated October 9, 2007, the CRA advised that they would
review the Applicant’s 1996-2000 returns in a second level fairness review. In
late September 2007, the Applicant was contacted by an auditor at CRA to review
his accounting for income tax purposes.
[18]
As
part of the second level review, the CRA auditor reviewed the previous fairness
request. The auditor also met with the Applicant and had several telephone
conversations with him to discuss his request to reduce the business net income
for his 1995 to 2000 taxation years. The officer concluded that the Applicant’s
1995 loss claim was not supportable in fact, and was also not consistent with
the provisions of the Act, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), tax
law or general business practices. The officer concluded that the accounting
method created by the Applicant in support of his 1995 to 2000 loss claims did
not provide accurate net income for tax purposes, so that his loss claims for
1995 to 2000 were not correct in law and the business income had been properly
reported in those years.
[19]
The
officer also reviewed the Applicant’s 2001 and 2004 taxation years. On April 8,
2008, the Minister issued reassessments in respect of the Applicant’s 2001 to
2004 taxation years in accordance with the officer’s audit report.
[20]
An
additional CRA Taxpayer Relief Coordinator reviewed the Applicant’s fairness
request and considered the Applicant’s additional request to cancel interest
and penalties for his 2005 taxation year. The Taxpayer Relief Coordinator
prepared a report with a recommendation to deny the Applicant’s request. The
Manager of the Revenue Collections division of the Vancouver Island Tax
Services Office concurred with the Taxpayer Relief Coordinator’s recommendation
to deny the Applicant’s request and advised the Applicant of the Minister’s
Decision to deny his second level fairness request by a letter dated June 23,
2008.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[21]
The
Minister undertook a second review of the taxpayer relief decision rendered
July 1, 2007. The Minister considered the Applicant’s comments and considered
the circumstances of the case, including the initial request for relief under
the taxpayer relief provisions. The Minister noted that the taxpayer relief
provisions give the Minister the discretion to cancel or waive all or part of
any penalty or interest payable and accept returns beyond the normal three-year
period.
[22]
The
Minister noted that the Applicant’s second review request was based on the
grounds that the first request was not handled in a fair or reasonable way. The
second review was also based on the information the Applicant provided and the
documentation on CRA’s file.
[23]
The
Minister commented that the CRA had completed a detailed review of the
Applicant’s 1995 to 2005 tax returns and provided a conclusion on April 3, 2008,
which determined if the amendments might be accepted. The Minister stated that
the Applicant’s accounting method is not acceptable for taxation purposes and
the figures originally submitted by the Applicant’s accountant would constitute
the Applicant’s assessment for the 1995 to 2000 tax return years.
[24]
The
Applicant’s 2001 to 2005 tax returns were reassessed and the reassessments were
issued on April 21, 2008. The Applicant was notified of the changes and that he
had the right to appeal. The Minister noted that the Applicant had not provided
any evidence that he had been given incorrect information by CRA and the
Applicant was “quite emphatic that the information and procedures [used] were
created by [the Applicant] with the help of an accounting textbook.”
[25]
The
Minister notes that the Applicant’s request expressed a concern that the
situation had not been under the Applicant’s control. Information Circular
07-01 gives a number of examples to illustrate situations beyond a taxpayer’s
control. The Minister notes that, in the Applicant’s case, he had control in
the choices he made.
[26]
The
Minister concluded that the first fairness decision should stand. A review of
all of the circumstances of the case, including recent submissions, failed to
substantiate that the Applicant was prevented from complying with CRA’s filing
and remitting requirements due to factors beyond the Applicant’s control. The
Applicant had not demonstrated that he was entitled to the adjustments requested.
[27]
The
Minister felt that cancellation of the interest and penalty was not warranted
because:
1)
The
Applicant had failed to demonstrate that, due to factors beyond his control, he
had been prevented from filing his 2001 to 2005 tax returns and from remitting
the amounts owing by the statutory deadlines;
2)
The
Applicant had failed to provide details of why the business continued to file
its GST returns annually for 2001 to 2005 but the Applicant did not file his
2001 to 2005 tax returns in a timely manner;
3)
The
Applicant had had adequate time to acquire another accountant’s services, or to
prepare his 2001 to 2005 tax returns himself, and to file these returns on time
because, before they were due in or about March 2002, the Applicant had already
determined that his previous accountant had allegedly incorrectly prepared his
financial statements and tax returns;
4)
Dissatisfaction
with a previous accountant or incorrect financial statements prepared by the
Applicant’s accountant were not extraordinary circumstances beyond the
Applicant’s control that prevented him from filing his 2001 to 2005 tax returns
and remitting the amounts owing by the statutory deadlines; and
5)
A
taxpayer’s choice of which accountant to consult (if any), how he keeps his
accounting records, the timeliness with which he files his returns and the
timeliness with which he pays the amounts owing are all factors within the
taxpayer’s control.
ISSUES
[28]
The
Applicant submits the following issues on this application:
1)
That
the CRA and the Minister failed to observe the principles of natural justice,
procedural fairness and other procedures in not allowing the Applicant to use a
computation of income formula that is not inconsistent with the Act and the GAAP;
2)
The
first level fairness officer produced a decision that did not consider all of
the relevant facts and was based upon irrelevant facts. The officer also failed
to consider the unique circumstances and merits of the Applicant’s case and
acted in bad faith in not following procedural fairness and erred in law;
3)
The
first level fairness officer failed to recognize relevant legislation that was
fundamental to the CRA’s statutory duty with respect to procedural fairness;
4)
The
auditor assigned to the second level fairness review failed to consider
relevant facts, observed irrelevant facts, and erred in law for tax purposes
and GAAP. The review failed to consider procedural fairness by not conducting
the second level review independently of the first level review;
5)
Both
the first and second level fairness officers failed to observe procedural
fairness when addressing all the reasons that the Applicant submitted in his
request;
6)
The
second level fairness officer failed to follow procedural fairness guidelines
and acted in bad faith by not fully considering all the relevant facts and by observing
irrelevant facts.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
[29]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable to these proceedings:
3.
The income of a taxpayer for a taxation year for the purposes of this
Part is the taxpayer’s income for the year determined by the following rules:
(a) determine the total of all amounts each of which is
the taxpayer’s income for the year (other than a taxable capital gain from
the disposition of a property) from a source inside or outside Canada,
including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, the taxpayer’s
income for the year from each office, employment, business and property,
…
9. (1) Subject to this Part, a taxpayer’s
income for a taxation year from a business or property is the taxpayer’s
profit from that business or property for the year.
(2) Subject to section 31, a taxpayer’s
loss for a taxation year from a business or property is the amount of the
taxpayer’s loss, if any, for the taxation year from that source computed by
applying the provisions of this Act respecting computation of income from
that source with such modifications as the circumstances require.
(3) In this Act, “income from a property”
does not include any capital gain from the disposition of that property and
“loss from a property” does not include any capital loss from the disposition
of that property.
…
10(1.01) For the purpose of computing a taxpayer’s
income from a business that is an adventure or concern in the nature of
trade, property described in an inventory shall be valued at the cost at
which the taxpayer acquired the property.
…
12. (1)
There shall be included in computing the income of a taxpayer for a taxation
year as income from a business or property such of the following amounts as
are applicable
Services,
etc., to be rendered
(a) any amount received by the taxpayer in the year in
the course of a business
(i) that is on
account of services not rendered or goods not delivered before the end of the
year or that, for any other reason, may be regarded as not having been earned
in the year or a previous year, or
(ii) under an
arrangement or understanding that it is repayable in whole or in part on the
return or resale to the taxpayer of articles in or by means of which goods
were delivered to a customer;
(b) any amount receivable by the taxpayer in respect of property
sold or services rendered in the course of a business in the year,
notwithstanding that the amount or any part thereof is not due until a
subsequent year, unless the method adopted by the taxpayer for computing
income from the business and accepted for the purpose of this Part does not
require the taxpayer to include any amount receivable in computing the
taxpayer’s income for a taxation year unless it has been received in the
year, and for the purposes of this paragraph, an amount shall be deemed to
have become receivable in respect of services rendered in the course of a
business on the day that is the earlier of
(i) the day on which the account in respect of the services was
rendered, and
(ii) the day on which the account in respect of those services would
have been rendered had there been no undue delay in rendering the account in
respect of the services;
…
152(4) The Minister may at any time make an assessment,
reassessment or additional assessment of tax for a taxation year, interest or
penalties, if any, payable under this Part by a taxpayer or notify in writing
any person by whom a return of income for a taxation year has been filed that
no tax is payable for the year, except that an assessment, reassessment or
additional assessment may be made after the taxpayer’s normal reassessment
period in respect of the year only if
(a) the taxpayer or person filing the return
(i) has made any misrepresentation that is attributable to neglect,
carelessness or wilful default or has committed any fraud in filing the
return or in supplying any information under this Act, or
(ii) has filed with the Minister a waiver in prescribed form within the
normal reassessment period for the taxpayer in respect of the year; or
(b) the assessment, reassessment or additional assessment is made
before the day that is 3 years after the end of the normal reassessment
period for the taxpayer in respect of the year and
(i) is required pursuant to subsection 152(6) or would be so required if
the taxpayer had claimed an amount by filing the prescribed form referred to
in that subsection on or before the day referred to therein,
(ii) is made as a consequence of the assessment or reassessment pursuant
to this paragraph or subsection 152(6) of tax payable by another taxpayer,
(iii) is made as a consequence of a transaction involving the taxpayer
and a non-resident person with whom the taxpayer was not dealing at arm’s
length,
(iii.1) is made, if the taxpayer is non-resident and carries on a
business in Canada, as a consequence of
(A) an allocation by the taxpayer of revenues or expenses as amounts in
respect of the Canadian business (other than revenues and expenses that
relate solely to the Canadian business, that are recorded in the books of
account of the Canadian business, and the documentation in support of which
is kept in Canada), or
(B) a notional transaction between the taxpayer and its Canadian
business, where the transaction is recognized for the purposes of the
computation of an amount under this Act or an applicable tax treaty.
(iv) is made as a consequence of a payment or reimbursement of any
income or profits tax to or by the government of a country other than Canada
or a government of a state, province or other political subdivision of any
such country,
(v) is made as a consequence of a reduction under subsection 66(12.73)
of an amount purported to be renounced under section 66, or
(vi) is made in order to give effect to the application of subsection
118.1(15) or 118.1(16).
…
163.2 (1) The definitions in this subsection apply
in this section.
"subordinate"
, in respect of a particular person, includes any other person over whose
activities the particular person has direction, supervision or control
whether or not the other person is an employee of the particular person or of
another person, except that, if the particular person is a member of a
partnership, the other person is not a subordinate of the particular person
solely because the particular person is a member of the partnership.
163(2) Every person who makes or furnishes,
participates in the making of or causes another person to make or furnish a statement
that the person knows, or would reasonably be expected to know but for
circumstances amounting to culpable conduct, is a false statement that could
be used by another person (in subsections (6) and (15) referred to as the
“other person”) for a purpose of this Act is liable to a penalty in respect
of the false statement.
…
(8) For the purpose of applying this section (other than subsections (4)
and (5)),
(a) where a person makes or furnishes, participates in the making
of or causes another person to make or furnish two or more false statements,
the false statements are deemed to be one false statement if the statements
are made or furnished in the course of
(i) one or more planning activities that are in respect of a particular
arrangement, entity, plan, property or scheme, or
(ii) a valuation activity that is in respect of a particular property or
service; and
(b) for greater certainty, a particular arrangement, entity,
plan, property or scheme includes an arrangement, an entity, a plan, a property
or a scheme in respect of which
(i) an interest is required to have, or has, an identification number
issued under section 237.1 that is the same number as the number that applies
to each other interest in the property,
(ii) a selling instrument in respect of flow-through shares is required
to be filed with the Minister because of subsection 66(12.68), or
(iii) one of the main purposes for a person’s participation in the
arrangement, entity, plan or scheme, or a person’s acquisition of the property,
is to obtain a tax benefit.
…
220. (1) The Minister shall administer and
enforce this Act and the Commissioner of Revenue may exercise all the powers
and perform the duties of the Minister under this Act.
(2) Such officers, clerks and employees as
are necessary to administer and enforce this Act shall be appointed or
employed in the manner authorized by law.
|
3. Pour
déterminer le revenu d’un contribuable pour une année d’imposition, pour
l’application de la présente partie, les calculs suivants sont à effectuer :
a) le calcul du
total des sommes qui constituent chacune le revenu du contribuable pour
l’année (autre qu’un gain en capital imposable résultant de la disposition
d’un bien) dont la source se situe au Canada ou à l’étranger, y compris, sans
que soit limitée la portée générale de ce qui précède, le revenu tiré de
chaque charge, emploi, entreprise et bien;
…
9. (1) Sous réserve des autres
dispositions de la présente partie, le revenu qu’un contribuable tire d’une
entreprise ou d’un bien pour une année d’imposition est le bénéfice qu’il en
tire pour cette année.
(2) Sous réserve de l’article 31, la perte
subie par un contribuable au cours d’une année d’imposition relativement à
une entreprise ou à un bien est le montant de sa perte subie au cours de
l’année relativement à cette entreprise ou à ce bien, calculée par
l’application, avec les adaptations nécessaires, des dispositions de la
présente loi afférentes au calcul du revenu tiré de cette entreprise ou de ce
bien.
(3) Dans la présente loi, le revenu tiré
d’un bien exclut le gain en capital réalisé à la disposition de ce bien, et
la perte résultant d’un bien exclut la perte en capital résultant de la
disposition de ce bien.
…
10(1.01) Pour le calcul du revenu d’un
contribuable tiré d’une entreprise qui est un projet comportant un risque ou
une affaire de caractère commercial, les biens figurant à l’inventaire sont
évalués à leur coût d’acquisition pour le contribuable
…
12. (1)
Sont à inclure dans le calcul du revenu tiré par un contribuable d’une
entreprise ou d’un bien, au cours d’une année d’imposition, celles des sommes
suivantes qui sont applicables :
Services
à rendre
a) les sommes
reçues au cours de l’année par le contribuable dans le cours des activités
d’une entreprise :
(i) soit qui sont au titre de services non rendus ou de
marchandises non livrées avant la fin de l’année ou qui, pour toute autre
raison, peuvent être considérées comme n’ayant pas été gagnées durant cette
année ou une année antérieure,
(ii) soit qui sont, en vertu d’un arrangement ou d’une entente,
remboursables en totalité ou en partie lors du retour ou de la revente au contribuable
d’articles dans lesquels ou au moyen desquels des marchandises ont été
livrées à un client;
b) les sommes à
recevoir par le contribuable au titre de la vente de biens ou de la
fourniture de services au cours de l’année, dans le cours des activités d’une
entreprise, même si les sommes, en tout ou en partie, ne sont dues qu’au
cours d’une année postérieure, sauf dans le cas où la méthode adoptée par le
contribuable pour le calcul du revenu tiré de son entreprise et acceptée pour
l’application de la présente partie ne l’oblige pas à inclure dans le calcul
de son revenu pour une année d’imposition les sommes à recevoir qui n’ont pas
été effectivement reçues au cours de l’année; pour l’application du présent
alinéa, une somme est réputée à recevoir pour services rendus dans le cours
des activités de l’entreprise à compter du premier en date des jours suivants
:
(i) le jour où a été remis le compte à l’égard des services,
(ii) le jour où aurait été remis ce compte si la remise n’avait
pas subi un retard indu;
…
152(4) Le ministre peut établir une cotisation, une
nouvelle cotisation ou une cotisation supplémentaire concernant l’impôt pour
une année d’imposition, ainsi que les intérêts ou les pénalités, qui sont
payables par un contribuable en vertu de la présente partie ou donner avis
par écrit qu’aucun impôt n’est payable pour l’année à toute personne qui a
produit une déclaration de revenu pour une année d’imposition. Pareille
cotisation ne peut être établie après l’expiration de la période normale de
nouvelle cotisation applicable au contribuable pour l’année que dans les cas
suivants :
a) le contribuable ou la personne produisant la
déclaration :
(i) soit a fait une présentation erronée des faits, par
négligence, inattention ou omission volontaire, ou a commis quelque fraude en
produisant la déclaration ou en fournissant quelque renseignement sous le
régime de la présente loi,
(ii) soit a présenté au ministre une renonciation, selon
le formulaire prescrit, au cours de la période normale de nouvelle cotisation
applicable au contribuable pour l’année;
b) la cotisation est établie avant le jour qui suit de
trois ans la fin de la période normale de nouvelle cotisation applicable au
contribuable pour l’année et, selon le cas :
(i) est à établir en conformité au paragraphe (6) ou le
serait si le contribuable avait déduit un montant en présentant le formulaire
prescrit visé à ce paragraphe au plus tard le jour qui y est mentionné,
(ii) est établie par suite de l’établissement, en
application du présent paragraphe ou du paragraphe (6), d’une cotisation ou
d’une nouvelle cotisation concernant l’impôt payable par un autre
contribuable,
(iii) est établie par suite de la conclusion d’une
opération entre le contribuable et une personne non résidente avec laquelle
il avait un lien de dépendance,
(iii.1) si le contribuable est un non-résident exploitant
une entreprise au Canada, est établie par suite :
(A) soit d’une attribution, par le contribuable, de
recettes ou de dépenses au titre de montants relatifs à l’entreprise
canadienne (sauf des recettes et des dépenses se rapportant uniquement à
l’entreprise canadienne qui sont inscrits dans les documents comptables de
celle-ci et étayés de documents conservés au Canada),
(B) soit d’une opération théorique entre le contribuable
et son entreprise canadienne, qui est reconnue aux fins du calcul d’un
montant en vertu de la présente loi ou d’un traité fiscal applicable,
(iv) est établie par suite d’un paiement supplémentaire
ou d’un remboursement d’impôt sur le revenu ou sur les bénéfices effectué au
gouvernement d’un pays étranger, ou d’un état, d’une province ou autre
subdivision politique d’un tel pays, ou par ce gouvernement,
(v) est établie par suite d’une réduction, opérée en
application du paragraphe 66(12.73), d’un montant auquel il a été censément
renoncé en vertu de l’article 66,
(vi) est établie en vue de l’application
des paragraphes 118.1(15) ou (16).
…
163.2 (1)
Les définitions qui suivent s’appliquent au présent article.
«activité
de planification »
«subalterne » Quant à une personne donnée, s’entend notamment
d’une autre personne dont les activités sont dirigées, surveillées ou
contrôlées par la personne donnée, indépendamment du fait que l’autre
personne soit l’employé de la personne donnée ou d’un tiers. Toutefois,
l’autre personne n’est pas le subalterne de la personne donnée du seul fait
que celle-ci soit l’associé d’une société de personnes.
163(2) La
personne qui fait ou présente, ou qui fait faire ou présenter par une autre
personne, un énoncé dont elle sait ou aurait vraisemblablement su, n’eût été
de circonstances équivalant à une conduite coupable, qu’il constitue un faux
énoncé qu’un tiers (appelé « autre personne » aux paragraphes (6) et (15))
pourrait utiliser à une fin quelconque de la présente loi, ou qui participe à
un tel énoncé, est passible d’une pénalité relativement au faux énoncé.
…
(8) Les règles suivantes
s’appliquent dans le cadre du présent article, sauf les paragraphes (4) et
(5):
a) lorsqu’une
personne fait ou présente, ou fait faire ou présenter par une autre personne,
plusieurs faux énoncés, ou y participe, ceux-ci sont réputés être un seul
faux énoncé s’ils ont été faits ou présentés dans le cadre des activités
suivantes :
(i) une ou plusieurs activités de planification qui se rapportent
à une entité donnée ou à un arrangement, bien, mécanisme, plan ou régime
donné,
(ii) une activité d’évaluation qui se rapporte à un bien ou
service donné;
b) il est
entendu qu’une entité donnée ou un arrangement, bien, mécanisme, plan ou
régime donné comprend une entité, un arrangement, un bien, un mécanisme, un
plan ou un régime relativement auquel, selon le cas :
(i) un droit a ou doit avoir un numéro d’inscription attribué en
vertu de l’article 237.1 qui est le même numéro que celui qui s’applique à
chacun des autres droits dans le bien,
(ii) un avis d’émission visant des actions accréditives doit être
présenté au ministre par l’effet du paragraphe 66(12.68),
(iii) l’un des principaux objets de la participation d’une
personne à l’entité, à l’arrangement, au mécanisme, au plan ou au régime, ou
de l’acquisition du bien par une personne, est l’obtention d’un avantage
fiscal.
…
220. (1) Le ministre assure
l’application et l’exécution de la présente loi. Le commissaire du revenu
peut exercer les pouvoirs et fonctions conférés au ministre en vertu de la
présente loi.
(2) Sont nommés ou employés de la manière
autorisée par la loi les fonctionnaires, commis et préposés nécessaires à
l’application et à l’exécution de la présente loi.
|
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[30]
Generally
speaking, the standard review for fairness decisions is reasonableness: Lanno
v. Canada Customs and Revenue Agency 2005
FCA 153 and Nail Centre and Esthetics Salon v. Canada (Customs and Revenue
Agency) 2005 FCA 166 at paragraph 5.
[31]
In Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick 2008 SCC 9 (Dunsmuir), the Supreme
Court of Canada recognized that, although the reasonableness simpliciter and patent unreasonableness standards are
theoretically different, "the analytical problems that arise in trying to
apply the different standards undercut any conceptual usefulness created by the
inherently greater flexibility of having multiple standards of review": Dunsmuir at paragraph 44. Consequently, the Supreme Court
of Canada held that the two reasonableness standards should be collapsed into a
single form of "reasonableness" review.
[32]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir also held that
the standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every instance.
Instead, where the standard of review applicable to the particular question
before the court is well-settled by past jurisprudence, the reviewing court may
adopt that standard of review. Only where this search proves fruitless must the
reviewing court undertake a consideration of the four factors comprising the
standard of review analysis.
[33]
Thus,
in light of the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Dunsmuir
and the previous jurisprudence of this Court, I find the standard of review
applicable to the issues, with the exception of procedural fairness, bad faith
and errors of law, to be reasonableness. When reviewing a decision on the
standard of reasonableness, the analysis will be concerned with "the
existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the
decision-making process [and also with] whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law": Dunsmuir at paragraph 47. Put
another way, the Court should only intervene if the Decision was unreasonable
in the sense that it falls outside the “range of possible, acceptable outcomes
which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.”
[34]
The
Applicant has also raised issues of procedural fairness, natural justice, and
error of law issues.
[35]
The
standard of review for procedural fairness issues is correctness: Suresh v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) 2002 SCC 1. The standard of review for errors of
law is correctness. See Uluk v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2009] F.C.J. No. 149 (F.C.).
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
Profit 1 Computation of
Profit
[36]
The
Applicant points out that expenses are not in dispute in this application. The
issue is the characterization of income as a whole and the concept of “the
deductibility of expense[s]” from that income as a whole. The Applicant cites and
relies upon Canderel Ltd. v. Canada, [1998]
S.C.J. No. 13 (Canderel) at paragraphs 30-31:
30 What,
then, is the true nature of "profit" for tax purposes? While the
concept has been variously expressed, perhaps the clearest and most concise
articulation of the term is to be found in the oft-quoted decision of this
Court in M.N.R. v. Irwin, [1964] S.C.R. 662, at p. 664, where profit in
a year was taken to consist of "the difference between the receipts from
the trade or business during such year ... and the expenditure laid out to earn
those receipts" (emphasis in original). This definition was echoed by
Jackett P. in Associated Investors of Canada Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1967] 2
Ex. C.R. 96, where he stated at p. 102:
Ordinary
commercial principles dictate, according to the decisions, that the annual
profit from a business must be ascertained by setting against the revenues from
the business for the year, the expenses incurred in earning such revenues.
31 Accepting this
fundamental definition, in Symes, supra, at pp. 722-23, the majority made the
following observations about the computation of profit:
. . . the "profit" concept in s. 9(1)
is inherently a net concept which presupposes business expense deductions. It
is now generally accepted that it is s. 9(1) which authorizes the deduction of
business expenses; the provisions of s. 18(1) are limiting provisions only. . .
.
[37]
The
Applicant says that receipts and revenues are synonyms with profits and that
they all have the same meaning. He says that the language in Canderel
“confers a separation between ‘receipts’ and ‘expense’ and the terms
‘difference between’ and ‘setting against’ implies a distinct separation or
independent characterization.”
[38]
The
Applicant also says that the meaning and intent of subsection 18(1) of the Act
is to restrict a deduction, expense or outlay to only the purpose of gaining
income. The inclusion of the term “gaining” is significant as it provides
meaning to the word “income” within the Act. He says the meaning of a “gain” or
“profit” cannot include a cost incurred or the sum of an expense. Therefore,
the concept of computing income and expense separately is also incurred for the
purpose of a gain.
[39]
The
Applicant claims that subsection 9(1) of the Act does not provide a conclusive
meaning to the computation of income for tax purposes. He argues that if profit
in section 9 of the Act is net profits then it could be construed that sales
(or revenue or receipts), minus expenses, equal profits. However, the
offsetting or difference between the concepts in Canderel would have no
effect, nor would any of the terms parallel to income have that meaning
assigned to them or be grammatically correct, as they would include their opposite
meaning. Therefore, if section 9 of the Act is net profits, and that section
confirms deductions because it presupposes them, then gross profit would still
have the same general meaning of a profit or gain. If Canderel is
applied, it would take the form of gross profit set against expense. The
Applicant concludes in relation to sections 18 and 9 of the Act that, by using
the Canderel formula, all of the terms have the same meaning as profits
and gains. Income and expenses are computed separately before offsetting.
Computation of Profit
[40]
The
Applicant also discusses the computation of profit and relies on Wallace
Realty Co. Ltd. v. Ottawa (City), [1930] S.C.R. 387 (Wallace) at
paragraphs 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 13 and 14:
In our opinion, the determination of this
question rests entirely on the proper view to be taken of the definition of the
word “income” in s. 1 of the Assessment Act, which reads as follows:
(e) “Income”
shall mean the profit or gain
…
Mersey Docks v. Lucas, in the House of Lords [(1883) 8 App. Cas. 891.],
is authority for the general principle that in ascertaining the "profits
and gains" of any trade, manufacture, adventure or concern for the purpose
of the Income Tax Acts, the taxpayer is entitled to deduct from the gross profits
of his trade or business the expenses necessary to earn them.
…
In the Gresham case (ubi supra) [[1892] A.c. 309.] the
company was held entitled to deduct the amount paid out by it for annuities in
ascertaining its profits or gains for income tax purposes. Lord Herschell said,
at p. 323,
Whether
there be such a thing as profit or gain can only be ascertained by setting
against the receipts the expenditure or obligations to which they have given
rise.
…
The Privy Council, in Lawless v. Sullivan
[[(1881) 6 App. Cas., 373.], dealing with a taxing Act of the Province
of New Brunswick (31 V, c. 36), held that
The tax imposed by s. 4 (of the statute) upon
"income" is leviable in respect of the balance of gain over loss made
in the fiscal year, and where no such balance of gain has been made there is no
income or fund which is capable of being assessed. There is nothing in the said
section or in the context which should induce a construction of the word
"income," when applied to the income of a commercial business for a
year, otherwise than its natural and commonly-accepted sense, as the balance of
gain over loss.
…
…So, a trader who keeps a general store may
gain on some of the articles in which he deals and incur losses on others. In
these cases, though the losses balanced or exceeded the gains, and consequently
no income was or could be received from the business of the year, it would
follow from the construction contended for by the Respondents that the gain on
the particular sales which yielded a profit would still be subject to taxation.
Such a construction implies, as already observed, that the tax would attach on
each sale producing profit, which is not the ordinary or fair meaning of a tax
upon the income of the fiscal year (p. 380).
…
At p. 970 of the report of Scottish North
American Trust, Ltd. v. Inland Revenue [1909-10 Sess. Cas., 966.], Lord
Salvesen, presiding at the Court of Session, said,
If the question had arisen for the first time
for decision it would appear to me to present no difficulty whatever. From an
ordinary business point of view it seems preposterous to suggest that the money
which a trader pays to a bank upon overdraft or on a secured loan forms part of
the profits or gains of his business. Money which he receives by way of
interest will no doubt, in the ordinary case, go to swell his profits; but how
payments which in fact diminished his receipts should be regarded as in any
sense part of his income it is at first sight very difficult to understand. ...
The interest which a trader pays to a bank with which he deals for financial
accommodation is not in any sense payable out of profits. It is an ordinary
claim of debt with which the whole assets of the company or trader are
chargeable.
At p. 971, His Lordship quotes from the
decision of the Lord President of the Court of Sessions in Inland Revenue v.
Stewart & Lloyds [(1906) 8F. 1129.], as follows:
...it all depended on whether this expenditure
was really an outlay to earn profit or was an application of profit earned.
Lord Salvesen goes on to say that
Assuming
that to be the test, it would certainly be a strange abuse of language to say
that interest which a trader has had to pay on money borrowed for the purposes
of his business is an application of the profits earned, when it may be that
the interest exceeds the total amount of the profits.
[41]
The
Applicant states that the main points in Wallace depend on whether or
not it was an application of profit earned or an application of expenditure. He
says they are clearly separate. Therefore, including the sum of payables, an
ordinary claim of debt, within the sum of receipts or revenue, amounts to an
unsubstantiated accounting for taxation purposes and ignores relevant facts.
The Applicant says that the fairness officers erred in law in their computation
of income.
The First Review Under
Fairness
Income for
Tax Purposes
[42]
Under
the first fairness request, the Applicant submits that the officer did not
consider all the relevant facts and based his decision on irrelevant facts. The
Applicant relies on section 12 of the Interpretation Act, R.S., 1985, c.
I-21
which
states that “Every enactment is deemed remedial, and shall be given such fair,
large and liberal construction and interpretation as best ensures the
attainment of its objects.”
[43]
The
Applicant cites and relies upon Canada v. Johns Manville Corp., [1985]
2 S.C.R. 46 at paragraph 33:
33 The
characterization in taxation law of an expenditure is, in the final analysis
(unless the statute is explicit which this one is not), one of policy. In the
mining industry, where the undertaking is underground mining with its
associated assets such as vertical shafts and horizontal transportation
elements not created directly by the removal of commercial ore, the tax
treatment of capitalization is invoked. On the other hand, open pit or strip
mining requiring none of these fixed facilities leads to the attribution of the
associated expenditures to the revenue account. Strip mining or open pit mining
with conical access (as we have here) and its associated expenditures falls in
between these two rough categories of mining undertakings. The assessment of
the evidence and the conclusions to be derived therefrom, and the application
of the common sense approach to the business of the taxpayer in relation to the
tax provisions, leads, in my respectful view, to the conclusion that the mining
operations here approximate the circumstances encountered in the traditional
open pit mining more than underground mining and so conclude, with all respect
to those who have otherwise concluded, that the appropriate taxation treatment
is to allocate these expenditures to the revenue account and not to capital.
Such a determination is, furthermore, consistent with another basic concept in
tax law that where the taxing statute is not explicit, reasonable uncertainty
or factual ambiguity resulting from lack of explicitness in the statute should
be resolved in favour of the taxpayer.
[44]
The
Applicant also relies on Canderel at paragraph 29:
…Significantly, "profit" is not defined in s. 9(1) or
anywhere else in the Act. It seems to me that this approach was a deliberate
legislative choice, particularly given that the Act contains exhaustive
definitions of numerous other concepts and terms with which it deals. This
choice reflects the reality that no single definition can adequately apply to
the millions of different taxpayers bound by the Act…
[45]
The
Applicant cites Mueller v. Canada (Attorney General), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1510 at paragraph 39:
39 In
the Estate of the Late Henry H. Floyd v. The Minister of National Revenue
[1993] F.C.J. No 986,
Dubé J. considered the scope of the duty to act fairly in the context of
subsection 220(3.1) and stated at paragraph 9:
A duty to act fairly, in general, means a duty to observe
the rudiments of natural justice in the exercise of administrative functions.
(See Martineau v. Matsqui Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602
at 630)
At common law, a duty to exercise procedural fairness lies
on every public authority making an administrative decision which is not of a
legislative nature and which affects the rights, privileges or interests of an
individual. (See Cardinal v. Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 43
at 653 and R. v. Miller, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 613
at 623-24.)
[46]
The
Applicant also cites Singh v. Canada (Attorney General) 2005 FC 1457 at
paragraph 22:
22 I
have been satisfied that the decision was based on observations that were
improprely submitted by audit at CCRA, that as a result of these submissions
the forgiveness officer clearly ignored relevant facts or took into
consideration irrelevant facts and the decision is contrary to law.
[47]
The
Applicant submits that he explained his accounting formula to the fairness
officer and that numerous sample statements were included as “objective demonstrations
to confirm that [the Applicant’s] accounting formula works from strictly a
mathematical perspective, with the focus pointing to the accuracy of the Gross
Profit and the relevance of opening balances of equity.” The Applicant alleges
that the officer ignored the objectivity of the sample statements, the accuracy
of the accounting formula, and the GAPP that the samples presented. In the
Applicant’s view, the Officer acted in bad faith by not giving any credence to
his sample statements and what they projected.
Extraordinary
Circumstances Beyond a Tax Payers Control/Misrepretentation of a Tax Matter by
a Third Party
[48]
The
Applicant also says that the language and definition of “subordinate” in
section 163.2 of the Act was central to his fairness request because it
interplays with section 25 of Information circular IC07-1 which says “Penalties
and interest may be waived where they result from circumstances beyond the taxpayer’s
control.”
[49]
The
Applicant insists that the officer ignored the fact that the Applicant was a subordinate
under section 163.2 and the officer acted in bad faith in not considering the
legislation and denying his fairness request. The Applicant says he acted with
due diligence in attempting to correct what had been communicated to him in
relation to his 1995 income tax filing. The series of events that had led to
the misrepresentations in his tax statements were explained, as well as his
efforts to correct those misrepresentations, by hand written letter, which was
submitted for the CRA appeal in 2002 and submitted again with the fairness
request in 2006.
[50]
The
Applicant submits that he is under the control of the original misrepresentations
prepared by Mr. Morrison for the 1995, 1996 and 1997 taxation years.
[51]
The
Applicant cites and relies upon 897366 Ontario Ltd. v. Canada, [2000] T.C.J. No. 117 at paragraph 20:
20
In Farm Business Consultants Inc. v. The Queen, 95 D.T.C.
200 (aff'd F.C.A., 96 D.T.C. 6085) at pages 205-206, the following discussion
of the civil onus of proof required in the case of penalties appears:
…
and at page 6026:
I take it
to be a clear rule of construction that in the imposition of a tax or a duty,
and still more of a penalty if there be any fair and reasonable doubt the
statute is to be construed so as to give the party sought to be charged the
benefit of the doubt.
[52]
The
Applicant also relies upon Robinson v. Canada (Minister of National Revenue
– M.N.R.), [2000] F.C.J. No. 262 at paragraphs 17 and 21:
17 In
summary, on the evidence before me, I find the defendant could not have known,
when he signed his 1986 income tax return, that the amount of $64,022 had been
erroneously credited to his shareholder loan account, instead of having been
included in the company's income for 1986. Similarly, I find the evidence does
not establish on the balance of probabilities that the defendant knew or ought
to have known of the misclassification when he signed the 1986 corporate tax
return.
…
21 The position of the plaintiff, expressed in terms of the
defendant's constructive knowledge, comes fairly close to imposing vicarious
liability on the taxpayer for the errors of the accountant, a road upon which I
am not prepared to embark on the basis of these facts and the legislative
provisions in force in 1986. I simply cannot conclude in this case that the
accountant's error constitutes an appropriation or benefit to the shareholder
from the corporation about which the defendant ought to have known and for
which he must be held responsible.
Application
of section 63.2 in Respect of a “Subordinate”
[53]
The
Applicant further submits that the inclusion of “subordinate” in section 163.2
of the Act infers the intent of Parliament to recognize that there may be
extraordinary circumstances where a taxpayer is under the control of, and reliant
upon, the knowledge of a third party who is acting on their behalf. It is not
reasonable to conclude that the section would have no fair or equitable effects
for the taxation of an individual in such circumstances. The Applicant alleges
that he was a subordinate within 163.2(8) and made a request for fairness with
respect to the three years of false statements in 1995, 1996 and 1997, which
should have been considered as one false statement for the purpose of the
fairness provisions.
[54]
The
Applicant says the first fairness officer was unreasonable in restricting his
fairness request and by not including the 1995 year; it was within the
officer’s statutory duty to exercise her powers and perform the duties of the
Minister under the Act. The Applicant is self-represented and alleges that he
was unable to find the specific legislation to support the wording in IC07-1. However,
for the purposes of the fairness review, he should have been entitled to the
plain meaning and wording in IC07-1. By not reviewing the 1995 year, he says the
first fairness officer erred in law.
Second Review Under
Fairness
The Audit
Decision
[55]
The
Applicant submits that the second fairness review officer erred in law by not
properly applying the principles outlined in Canderel and by preparing a
report that was not supported or required by law. The Applicant also submits
that it was unfair for the officer to consider the material filed on his first
fairness application and that she should have considered the material filed for
his second fairness review exclusively.
Relevance of Property of
a Business to Taxation
[56]
The
Applicant notes that it is incorrect to say that inventory, as defined as “property
held for sale,” is the only type of property relevant to the computation of
income for tax purposes. This is inconsistent with the plain wording of the Act
and accounting principles. The Applicant submits that “[i]nventory as defined
in the Act means a description of property the cost or value of which is
‘relevant to the computation of income’. Property means property of any kind.”
[57]
The
Applicant cites and relies upon Friesen v. Canada, [1995] S.C.J. No. 71 at paragraphs 20, 44 and 45:
20 In
order to take advantage of the valuation method in s. 10(1), a taxpayer must
also establish that the property in question is inventory. A definition of
"inventory" is contained in s. 248(1) of the Act:
"inventory" means a description of
property the cost or value of which is relevant in computing a taxpayer's
income from a business for a taxation year;
The first point to note about this definition
of inventory is that property is not required to contribute directly to income
in a taxation year in order to qualify as inventory. Provided that the cost or
value of an item of property is relevant in computing business income in a year
that property will qualify as inventory. Generally the cost or value of an item
of property will appear as an expense (and the sale price as revenue) in the
computation of income.
…
44 Thus,
under well-accepted principles of commercial and accounting practice the value
of unsold inventory is relevant to the computation of business income. This is
based on the accounting presumption that holding onto unsold inventory
represents a cost to a business. This is a principle generally applicable to
the calculation of business income from businesses of any size and with
inventories of any size although the popular formula was originally created as
a convenient shortcut for the computation of business income for companies with
large inventories.
45 Section 10(1) of the Income
Tax Act recognizes the well accepted commercial and accounting principle of
requiring a business to value its inventory at the lower of cost or market
value. This principle is an exception to the general principle that neither
profits nor losses are recognized until realized. As well, it represents a
departure from the general principle that assets are valued at their historical
cost. The underlying rationale for this specific exception to the general principles
is usually explained as originating in the principle of conservatism. The
generally accepted accounting principle applicable in this situation is
explained by D. E. Kieso et al., Intermediate Accounting (2nd Canadian ed.
1986), at pp. 421-22, as follows:
A major
departure from adherence to the historical cost principle is made in the area
of inventory valuation. Applying the constraint of conservatism in accounting
means recognizing known losses in the period of occurrence. In contrast, known
gains are not recognized until realized. If the inventory declines in value
below its original cost for whatever reason ..., the inventory should be
written down to reflect this loss. The general rule is that the historical cost
principle is abandoned when the future utility (revenue-producing ability) of
the asset is no longer as great as its original cost. A departure from cost is
justified on the basis that a loss of utility should be reflected as a charge
against the revenues in the period in which the loss occurs. Inventories are
valued, therefore, on the basis of the lower of cost and market instead of on
an original cost basis. [Emphasis added.]
[58]
The
Applicant argues as follows:
Where
it states ‘(revenue producing ability) of the asset is no longer as great as
its original cost’. A capital ‘asset’ that depreciates, is an asset, with the
prescribed method of depreciation reflecting its reduced value at the end of
that year (as recorded on the balance sheet). That loss of the utility is
reflected as a charge against revenues in the period the loss occurs through
the depreciation expense allowable for that year. So a capital asset, which is
depreciable property, which would be valued at the end of the year at its lower
cost, fits well within the meaning of inventory in s.10(1), and represents a
cost to a business within the well-accepted principles of commercial and
accounting practice. The cost is not realized in a tax year where the cost was
not incurred in that year, it is an application of GAAP with respect to the
accrual method of accounting.
[59]
The
Applicant contends that section 12(1) of the Act confirms that receivables are
relevant for income tax purposes; however, the specific wording is “shall be
included in computing the income.” The Applicant notes that for the realization
principles to have any effect within the intent of section 12(1) of the Act receivables
would “have to have their common and more appropriate place in the computation
of income, which by GAAP standards would be a current asset in the balance
sheet, as the Applicant has done with every year of accounting.”
[60]
The
Applicant further submits that GAAP dictate that a balance sheet is a required
statement in the computation of income. It includes accruals that reflect a
cost or value that significantly balance against each other, along with the net
income for the year and the equity accounts. The Applicant suggests that the
officer erred in the computation of his income tax by adding the receivables to
the income statement. He says the Officer did not consider any other value on
cost in an accrual context including payables relating to receivables the
Applicant had been taxed on.
[61]
The
Applicant insists that the accounting implemented in his tax returns involves
GAAP, with the inclusion of a complete balance sheet (which recognizes the
opening balancing equity of the previous year), which is entered as a credit
and carried forward into the current year as a valuation of capital and, as a
whole, is one figure, that reflects or accounts for all the relevant accrued
opening balances, to be computed as a part of, and with all the transactions of,
the year. The Applicant says that the officer should have acknowledged that the
principles of GAAP were evidenced in his accounting method.
[62]
The
Applicant contends that the officer acted in bad faith by not including in her
report any reference to the Applicant’s explanation of his accounting. He
alleges that the officer was biased in the way she prepared her report because
she was provided with correspondence from the first level fairness review and
had also mentioned to the Applicant her dissatisfaction with the way in which the
Applicant had conducted his correspondence at the first level fairness review.
Mental Distress
[63]
The
Applicant submits that both fairness reviews failed to address mental distress.
The Applicant acknowledges that, after the first fairness review, he wrote a
letter to the director requesting a second level of fairness review and
“attacked” the officer in his letter. The Applicant acknowledges that the
letter was irrational and was born out of exasperation and anger from his
dealings with the CRA. The Applicant alleges that he has been dealing with the
distress of this situation for approximately seven years and requested relief
for it under the fairness provisions.
[64]
The
Applicant cites and relies upon Dort Estate v. Canada (Minister of National
Revenue – M.N.R.)
2005 FC 1201 at paragraphs 22 and 23:
22 On this point, Mr. Gibson's
decision was in review of J.F. Lee's decision. He found that there was no
evidence that Mrs. Dort's natural distress upon the death of her husband
prevented her from dealing with the Estate's financial matters. She had
demonstrated an ability to attend to complex financial matters. Mr. Gibson's
decision is not reviewable.
23 There
must be at least some causal connection between the mental distress and an
inability to act.
[65]
The
Applicant submits that he was operating a business through the years he
requested relief for penalties and interest. There was no ambiguity or
uncertainty with respect to both his GST and PST tax matters and it was clear
to him and his wife that these were obligations with no grey areas. They were
able to deal with and accept these matters. However, the Applicant’s personal
income tax liability was entirely different and made both him and his wife feel
hopeless, which ultimately caused stress, anxiety, depression, confusion, and
even separation from the matter entirely in some situations.
[66]
The
Applicant submits that he has suffered mental distress and has told the truth.
He says that no one would accept what he said as true. He communicated this
truth in many different ways and to the best of his ability. He says there were
and are significant financial liabilities with respect to the same truth that
no one would accept. The Applicant also notes that there is a casual connection
between the mental distress endured by him and his wife and their financial affairs:
Dort.
The Second Review Under
Fairness
[67]
The
Applicant relies on IC 92-3, IC 92-2 and IC 07-1 to support his position in
relation to why he developed his new concept of accounting. He also relies upon
the doctrine of legitimate expectations and cites Edison v. Canada 2001
FCT 734 at paragraphs 21, 22, 37 and 38:
21
However, before
analysing the process that led to the decisions, this Court must analyse if the
review process created any legitimate expectations for the applicants…
22 This view was reaffirmed by Madam
Justice L'Heureux-Dubé in Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817
at paragraph 26, where she stated:
As applied in Canada, if a legitimate expectation is found
to exist, this will affect the content of the duty of fairness owed to the
individual or individuals affected by the decision. If the claimant has a
legitimate expectation that a certain procedure will be followed, this
procedure will be required by the duty of fairness: (...) Similarly, if a
claimant has a legitimate expectation that a certain result will be reached in
his or her case, fairness may require more extensive procedural rights than
would otherwise be accorded: (...). Nevertheless, the doctrine of legitimate
expectations cannot lead to substantive rights outside the procedural domain.
This doctrine, as applied in Canada, is based on the principle that the
"circumstances" affecting procedural fairness take into account the
promises or regular practices of administrative decision-makers, and that it
will generally be unfair for them to act in contravention of representations as
to procedure, or to backtrack on substantive promises without according
significant procedural rights.
…
37 …the public interest that is
sought to be protected by the doctrine of legitimate expectation, namely, the
protection of the individual from an abuse of power through the breach of an
undertaking. The implied undertaking in the case at bar is the
non-discriminatory application of procedural norms set out by published
guidelines in the application of the fairness legislation.
38 …It is in the failure of the
respondent to follow his own published procedural guidelines that I find a
breach of the duty of fairness owed to the applicants under the rules of
natural justice and procedural fairness.
[68]
The
Applicant submits that he provided CRA with the accounting balancing formula
that he had developed for himself. It was a new expression or mathematical
formula. Under IC 92-2 and IC 92-3, he was required to ensure that he could
adequately communicate his new concept and the details surrounding why he had
developed his own accounting. He says that there was a legitimate expectation
that a certain result would be reached if that procedure was followed.
[69]
The
Applicant says that, under the circumstances, the officers who dealt with him did
not review the material in the manner that the Applicant requested. He asked
that they review his accounting model. The Applicant cites Simmonds v. Canada (Minister of National
Revenue) 2006
FC 130 where a taxpayer’s request was granted by the CRA office.
[70]
The
Applicant also says he had a legitimate expectation that the second fairness
review would be independent of the first and would involve a “fresh look at the
original material” that he had submitted. He also requested that the second
level fairness review specifically address each point in the original material
he had filed and say why it was incorrect or untrue.
[71]
The
Applicant alleges that the fairness review officer made erroneous findings of
fact and that the 2000 tax return and appeal should not have been used as a
reason to revisit a decision under fairness. He says that “it is clear from the
records, that same appeals decisions [were] given consideration by the officers
assigned to this Fairness review as a reason to deny the Fairness request.” The
Applicant states that he never signed his 2000 tax return and that it was filed
by his previous accountant.
Conclusion
[72]
The
Applicant concludes by stating that his affidavit should have been given more
credence in both of the fairness reviews and that the description of his
accounting methods was not addressed in the second level of fairness review.
The records demonstrate that “neither those documents, were given the
interpretation owed to [the Applicant] as part of procedural fairness.” Therefore,
on a balance of probabilities, the Applicant says he should not have been
denied his request for fairness.
The Respondent
The Minister
Considered All Relevant Factors
[73]
The
Respondent submits that the Minister considered all of the relevant factors and
addressed all of the reasons and submissions submitted by the Applicant in
respect of his second fairness request, which is the Decision under review in
this application.
[74]
The
credit adjustments requested by the Applicant were not supportable based on the
evidence before the Minister and the Minister’s Decision to deny the requested
adjustments was reasonable. See: Gagné v. Canada (Attorney General) 2006 FC 1523 at
paragraphs 24-26. The Minister considered the following factors in respect of
the Applicant’s request for credit adjustments:
1)
The
Minister properly denied the Applicant’s request for an adjustment of his 1995
taxation year because the Applicant did not submit his adjustment request for
that year before the ten-year deadline required by the Act;
2)
The
Minister completed a detailed review of the Applicant’s adjustment requests for
his 1995 to 2000 taxation years and of the documents and submissions the
Applicant provided in support of his fairness request;
3)
The
Applicant was provided with several opportunities to substantiate his request both
in writing and during several face to face interviews with the CRA officers;
4)
The
accounting method created by the Applicant in support of his credit adjustment
claims did not provide accurate net income for tax purpose;
5)
The
CRA employees working on the second fairness review reviewed the previous
decisions made on the Applicant’s requests, but CRA employees still undertook
their own independent and detailed reviews to arrive at their decisions that
the Applicant’s requested adjustments were not supportable in fact or in law;
6)
The
Applicant’s fairness request for an adjustment to his 2000 year is contrary to
the IC 07-01 guidelines because he requested an adjustment to his business
income for a year that the CRA Appeals officer had reviewed and denied; and
7)
The
Applicant was provided with a detailed explanation of why his accounting
method, submitted in support of his adjustment requests for the 1995 to 2000
taxation years, was not acceptable for taxation purpose.
[75]
The
Respondent also says that the Minister’s Decision to deny interest and penalty
relief was reasonable because the Applicant failed to demonstrate that, due to
factors beyond his control, he was prevented from filing his 2001 to 2005 tax
returns and from remitting the amounts owed by the statutory deadlines. In
denying the Applicant’s request for interest and penalty relief for 2001 to
2005, the Minister properly considered the following factors:
1)
During
the 2001 to 2005 taxation years the Applicant continued to operate his business
and the business continued to file its GST returns annually. However, the
Applicant failed to explain why he did not file his tax returns in a timely
manner in those years;
2)
The
Applicant had adequate time to acquire another accountant’s services or to
prepare his 2001 to 2005 tax returns himself and to file these returns on time
because, before these returns were due, in or about March 2002, the Applicant
had already determined that his previous accountant had allegedly incorrectly prepared
his financial statements and tax returns;
3)
The
Minister did consider the Applicant’s submissions that he filed his 2001 to
2005 returns late because he was trying to correct the alleged fraudulent
errors made by his tax preparers. However, the Minister determined this was not
something that prevented the Applicant from filing his returns on time;
4)
Dissatisfaction
with a previous accountant or incorrect financial statements prepared by the
Applicant’s accountant were not extraordinary circumstances beyond the
Applicant’s control that prevented him from filing his 2001 to 2005 tax returns
and remitting the amounts owing by the statutory deadlines;
5)
A
taxpayer’s choice of which accountant to consult (if any), how he keeps his
accounting records, the timeliness by which he files his returns and the
timeliness by which he pays the amounts owing are all factors within the
taxpayer’s control; and
6)
The
Minister did consider the Applicant’s submission that he allegedly suffered
from emotional and mental distress resulting from his attempts to explain the
accounting method he had created to several CRA officers. However, the Minister
still determined that this did not prevent the Applicant from filing his 2001
to 2005 tax returns on time.
[76]
The
Respondent says that it was reasonable for the Minister to conclude that the
Applicant’s alleged emotional distress did not prevent him from complying with
the Act because he continued to operate his business in 2001 to 2005.
[77]
Where
a taxpayer has health problems but is still able to operate a business, it is
reasonable for the Minister to conclude that those health problems do not
prevent a taxpayer from dealing with his tax obligations: Young v. Canada,
[1997] F.C.J. No. 1680 (F.C.T.D.) at paragraphs 13, 19, 20
and 24-26.
[78]
The Respondent also says that it was
reasonable for the Minster to deny the Applicant’s request, even though he
allegedly suffered from emotional distress, because he allowed an extraordinary
period of time to elapse before rectifying his tax situation. The Applicant’s
2001 to 2004 returns were due on June 17, 2002, June 16, 2003, June 15, 2004
and June 15, 2005, but were not filed until on or about November 20, 2006. The
Applicant’s 2005 return was due on June 15, 2006, but it was not filed until on
or about March 8, 2007.
[79]
The Respondent notes that when a taxpayer
suffers from health problems, but allows an extraordinary period of time to
elapse before taking steps to rectify their tax situation, it is reasonable for
the Minister to deny the taxpayer’s fairness request: Sutherland v. Canada (Customs
and Revenue Agency) 2006 FC 154 (F.C.T.D.) at paragraph 21.
The Minister Observed
the Principles of Natural Justice and Procedural Fairness
[80]
The
Respondent submits that the Applicant’s record provides no evidence of a
failure by the Minister to observe the principles of natural justice,
procedural fairness or any other procedure. The Applicant’s record also, in the
Respondent’s view, provides no evidence of bad faith or evidence that the
Minister based his decision on irrelevant facts or erred in law or that the
Minister failed to follow the CRA’s procedural guidelines.
[81]
The
IC 07-01 Guidelines advise taxpayers that they are entitled to a second
fairness review, but they do not provide that the taxpayer’s second level
review will be conducted by the tax services officer’s director.
[82]
The
Applicant first submitted his 2001 to 2004 tax returns with his first level
fairness request and the normal procedure required that his fairness request be
held in abeyance. This procedure was employed because the Minister first needed
to determine whether there would be any change to the penalties and interest
assessed in those years which could affect the amount of fairness relief
requested.
[83]
The
Respondent concludes on this issue by stating that the Applicant’s record
provides no evidence of the Minister making a Decision that would give an
informed person a reasonable apprehension of bias. See: Superior Filter
Recycling Inc. v. Canada 2006 FCA 248 at paragraph 4.
The Minister Did Not
Consider Himself Bound by His Own Guidelines and Policy
[84]
The
Respondent submits that the Minister did not fetter his discretion by
considering himself bound by his own guidelines and policy. The Minister
reviewed and considered all of the information and submissions available to
him, and applied the Guidelines in the exercise of his discretion. The Minister
did not treat the Guidelines as binding.
[85]
The
Respondent contends that there is no evidence that the Minister made the
Decision in bad faith, ignored relevant facts or considered irrelevant facts.
The Minister acted fairly and reasonably, considering all of the submissions
made by the Applicant and all the relevant factors before him. The Minister did
not consider himself bound by the Guidelines. The Decision to not reassess the
Applicant’s taxation years beyond the normal reassessment period and not to waive
or cancel penalties and interest was reasonable and was supported by lines of
analysis on each of the points raised by the Applicant.
[86]
The
Minister’s reasons, taken as a whole, withstand a probing examination and
support the Decision made. There are multiple lines of analysis within the
Minister’s reasons that could reasonably lead the Minister from the evidence
before him to the conclusions that he reached. Therefore, a reviewing court
should not interfere with the Minister’s Decision. The Respondent requests that
the application be dismissed with costs.
ANALYSIS
[87]
At
the hearing of this mater on June 11, 2009 in Victoria, the Applicant presented his case (as well
as that of his wife in T-1470-08) with considerable ability and knowledge. I am
satisfied that, as a self-represented litigant, he has been able to make his
case before the Court with clarity and conviction, even when dealing with
complex concepts in the areas of tax law and judicial review.
[88]
At
the heart of this application lies a disagreement between the Applicant and CRA
regarding a new system of accounting that the Applicant claims to have
developed himself because his former accountant filed fraudulent returns on his
behalf, or so he alleges. This is not a dispute over the figures used by CRA.
The Applicant says that his accounting system provides a more accurate picture
of this net business income for tax purposes and he takes issue with the way
that CRA has calculated gross revenue, gross profit, and net business income.
CRA’s concern with the Applicant’s accounting system is focused on the method
he uses to calculate his revenue and gross profit.
[89]
CRA’s
concerns over the Applicant’s system have been explained to him in numerous
discussions and decisions. In the end, he just disagrees with CRA’s
explanations and the results yielded by the more traditional accounting methods
that CRA has used to compute his net business income for the years in question.
[90]
As a
result of this disagreement, the Applicant alleges bad faith, lack of
procedural fairness, bias, errors of law, errors of fact and unreasonableness
on the part of CRA, all of which have culminated in the second fairness
Decision currently under review.
[91]
I
have reviewed the written record carefully. I can see that this protracted
dispute has given rise to considerable frustration on both sides. In the end,
however, at least as far as the Applicant’s requests for credit adjustments are
concerned, there is simply a disagreement over whether the Applicant’s
self-invented accounting system yields an accurate result.
[92]
CRA’s
objections and concerns with the Applicant’s system have been explained to him
on numerous occasions and he has been given every opportunity to demonstrate
why his methodology, and the results it yields, should be accepted by CRA.
[93]
I
can find no evidence of bad faith, bias, or lack of procedural fairness on the
part of CRA and the officers and officials who have been involved with the
Applicant and his accounting and tax problems.
[94]
As
regards the accuracy of his accounting methodology, and the alleged inaccuracy
of the methods employed by CRA to determine net business income for the years
in question, the Applicant offers his own assertions and his reading of certain
statutory provisions and case law. However, on the central issue of how net
business income is most accurately calculated for the Applicant, he has not
demonstrated that CRA has been wrong in law, has overlooked any material fact,
or has been unreasonable in its calculations and conclusions.
[95]
The
Applicant’s disagreement with the Minister’s Decision does not render it wrong
in law or unreasonable. I am not in a position to substitute my own views of
the matter in question for those of the Minister, unless the evidence shows
that the Minister has not exercised his discretion in good faith or in
accordance with the principles of natural justice, or where reliance has been
placed upon considerations that are irrelevant or extraneous to the statutory
purpose. See: Maple Lodge Farms Ltd. v. Government of Canada, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 2 at
paragraphs 7-8.
[96]
Similarly
with the Applicant’s request for the cancellation of penalties and interest,
there is nothing in the record, in my view, to support the Applicant’s
allegations of bad faith, bias, error of fact, error of law or
unreasonableness. The Minister was asked to exercise his discretion and has
given a full account to the Applicant as to why he has chosen to exercise it in
a particular way. It is always possible to disagree and to claim that the
Minister should have decided otherwise, but there is nothing in the record I
can find that suggests that the Minister has acted in error or has rendered an
unreasonable Decision within the meaning of Dunsmuir.
[97]
I
have reviewed the Applicant’s arguments and evidence on all points raised. I
believe that the Minister has provided accurate and jurisprudentially sound
responses that the Court must accept.
Request for Credit
Adjustments
[98]
After
reviewing the record, I agree with the Respondent that, in respect of the
Applicant’s request for credit adjustments the Minister considered the
following factors:
a)
The
Minister properly denied the Applicant’s request for an adjustment of his 1995
taxation year because the Applicant did not submit his adjustment request for
that year before the ten year deadline required by the Act;
b)
The
Minister completed a detailed review of the Applicant’s adjustment requests for
his 1995 to 2000 taxation years and of the documents and submissions the
Applicant provided in support of his fairness request;
c)
The
Applicant was provided with several opportunities to substantiate his request
both in writing and during several face to face interviews with Officers Green
and Norminton;
d)
The Applicant
has not demonstrated that the accounting method he created in support of his
credit adjustment claims provided accurate net income for tax purposes;
e)
Officers
Green and Norminton did review the previous decisions made by Officers Bain and
Nasato in respect of the Applicant’s 2002 request to have his 2000 taxation
year reassessed; however, both Officers Green and Norminton undertook their own
independent and detailed reviews to arrive at their conclusions that the
Applicant’s requested adjustments were not supportable in fact or in law;
f)
Officers
Norminton and Jacks did review the first level fairness decision materials and Officer
Green’s conclusions; however, both Officer Norminton and Officer Jacks
undertook their own independent and detailed reviews to arrive at their
decisions that the Applicant’s requested adjustments were not supportable in
fact or in law;
g)
The
Applicant’s fairness request for an adjustment to his 2000 year is contrary to
the IC 07-01 Guidelines because he requested an adjustment to his business
income for that year which CRA Appeals had reviewed and denied; and
h)
The
Applicant was provided with a detailed explanation of why his accounting
method, submitted in support of his adjustment requests for the 1995 to 2000
taxation years, was not acceptable for taxation purposes in Officer Norminton’s
letter of April 3, 2008 and in Officer Norminton’s audit reports.
[99]
In
my view, then, the adjustments requested by the Applicant were not supported by
the evidence before the Minister and the Minister’s Decision was reasonable.
The Decision was not made in bad faith or in breach of procedural fairness and
is not based upon an error of fact or law.
Request for Interest and Penalty
Relief
[100] Likewise, after
reviewing the record, I am satisfied that the Minister’s Decision to deny
interest and penalty relief was reasonable because the Applicant failed to
demonstrate that, due to factors beyond his control, he was prevented from
filing his 2001 to 2005 tax returns and from remitting the amounts owed by the
statutory deadlines.
[101] The record demonstrates
to me that the Respondent is correct that , in denying the Applicant’s request
for interest and penalty relief for 2001 to 2005, the Minister properly
considered the following factors:
a)
During
the 2001 to 2005 taxation years the Applicant continued to operate his business
and the business continued to file its GST returns annually; however, the
Applicant failed to explain why he did not file his tax returns in a timely
manner in those years;
b)
The
Applicant had adequate time to acquire another accountant’s services or to
prepare his 2001 to 2005 tax returns himself and to file these returns on time
because, before these returns were due, in or about March 2002, the Applicant
had already determined that his previous accountant had allegedly incorrectly
prepared his financial statements and tax returns;
c)
The
Minister did consider the Applicant’s submission that he filed his 2001 to 2005
returns late because he was trying to correct the alleged fraudulent errors
made by his tax preparers; however, the Minister determined this was not
something that prevented the Applicant from filing his returns on time;
d)
Dissatisfaction
with a previous accountant or incorrect financial statements prepared by the
Applicant’s accountant were not extraordinary circumstances beyond the
Applicant’s control that prevented him from filing his 2001 to 2005 tax returns
and remitting the amounts owing by the statutory deadlines;
e)
A
taxpayer’s choice of which accountant to consult (if any), how he keeps his
accounting records, the timeliness by which he files his returns and the
timeliness by which he pays the amounts owing are all factors within the
taxpayer’s control; and
f)
The
Minister did consider the Applicant’s submission that he allegedly suffered
from emotional and mental distress resulting from his attempts to explain the
accounting method he had created to several CRA officers; however, the Minister
still determined that this did not prevent the Applicant from filing his 2001
to 2005 tax returns on time.
[102] It was reasonable,
within the meaning of Dunsmuir, for the Minister to conclude that
the Applicant’s alleged emotional distress did not prevent him from complying
with the Act because he continued to operate his business in 2001 to 2005 and
that his health problems did not prevent him from dealing with his tax
obligations.
[103] In my view, it was not
unreasonable for the Minister to deny the Applicant’s request even though he
allegedly suffered from emotional distress. The Applicant allowed an
extraordinary period of time to elapse before rectifying his tax situation. The
Applicant’s 2001 to 2004 returns were due on June 17, 2002, June 16, 2003, June
15, 2004 and June 15, 2005, respectively, but were not filed until on or about
November 20, 2006. The Applicant’s 2005 return was due on June 15, 2006, but it
was not filed until on or about March 8, 2007.
Natural Justice and
Procedural Fairness
[104] I agree with the
Respondent that the Applicant’s Record provides no evidence of a failure by the
Minister to observe principles of natural justice, procedural fairness or any
other procedure. Nor does it reveal bad faith, any reasonable apprehension of
bias, or any breach of legitimate expectations.
[105] The Applicant’s Record
provides no evidence that the Minister based his decision on irrelevant facts
or erred in law.
[106] Nor can I find any
evidence that the Minister failed to follow CRA’s procedural guidelines.
[107] The IC 07-1 Guidelines
advise the taxpayer that he is entitled to a second level fairness review, but
these Guidelines do not provide that the taxpayer’s second level review will be
conducted by the tax services office’s director.
Fettering of Discretion
[108] After reviewing the
record, I must also agree with the Respondent that the Minister did not fetter
his discretion by considering himself bound by his own Guidelines and Policy.
The Minister reviewed and considered all of the information and submissions
available to him and applied the Guidelines in the exercise of his discretion.
The Minister did not treat the Guidelines as binding.