Docket: T-1726-14
Citation:
2015 FC 153
Vancouver, British Columbia, February 5, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice S. Noël
BETWEEN:
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THOMAS R. JARROLD
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Applicant
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and
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CANADA REVENUE AGENCY
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is application for judicial review of a
decision of Rick Stewart, Assistant Commissioner of the Legislative Policy and
Regulatory Affairs Branch of the Canada Revenue Agency [CRA], to deny remission
of the goods and services tax [GST], directors liabilities, plus related
penalties and interest, and costs awarded by the Federal Court of Appeal [FCA],
in respect of two corporate accounts of Thomas R. Jarrold [the Applicant], T.
Jarrold & Associates Ltd. [Associates Ltd.] and T. Jarrold Management
Systems Ltd. [Management Systems Ltd.].
II.
Facts
[2]
The Applicant is a certified management
accountant.
[3]
He was the sole director of Associates Ltd. and
Management Systems Ltd.
[4]
The Applicant requested a remission order in the
amount of $14,746.25 GST, plus $72,936.22 related penalties and interest, in
respect of two corporate accounts, Associates Ltd. and Management Systems Ltd.,
which he no longer operates. The Applicant also requested remission of
$3,252.27 in costs awarded by the FCA that have been allocated to his T1
account.
[5]
The Applicant was assessed director’s liability
for Associates Ltd. in December 2006 for the 1991 to 1993 period in the
amount of $35,645.42, comprised of $8,027.21 net GST, $16,823.12 in penalties
and $10,795.09 interest. Without the Applicant knowing, his bookkeeper was
collecting but not remitting the GST in order to satisfy Associates Ltd.’s
financial obligations. When the Applicant discovered this situation, he filed
outstanding quarterly returns in January 1994 for the various periods between
April 1, 1991, and June 30, 1993. He did not however remit any of the net GST
owing on those returns. Although the Applicant filed a GST return in 1999 for
the period ending September 30, 1997, he did not remit the $3,267.60 net tax
owing on that return.
[6]
The Applicant appealed the director’s liability
assessment of Associates Ltd. to the Tax Court of Canada [TCC] in 2009 (Jarrold
v Canada, 2009 TCC 164), where the TCC upheld the CRA assessment. The
Applicant then appealed the TCC decision to the FCA in 2010 (Jarrold v Canada, 2010 FCA 278). The FCA ruled in the CRA’s favour. Both courts found that the
Applicant had not met the defence for due diligence, that CRA officials had
satisfied the assessing provisions of section 323 of the Excise Tax Act,
RSC 1985, c E-15, and that there was a very high standard of care required of
the Applicant as the sole director of Associates Ltd. and an accounting
professional to ensure the remittance of trust funds. The FCA also stated that
the Applicant never stopped being a director of Associates Ltd., that the
two-year statutory limit to assess director’s liability had not been
contravened, and lastly, that the CRA was within its right to assess the
Applicant personally.
[7]
The Applicant began operating Management Systems
Ltd. on January 1, 1994, and was assessed director’s liability on January 28,
2009, in respect of GST returns filed without payment for various reporting
periods between April 1, 1995, and June 30, 1996. The assessment was for $16,471.99,
consisting of $4,826.08 net tax and $11,645.91 in related penalties and
interest. The Applicant was also assessed director’s liability for the
payroll account on the same date for the 1996 and 1997 taxation years for
$33,091.62, consisting of $12,206.03 net tax and $20,885.59 in related
penalties and interest. The payroll debt was acquitted on January 19, 2011, via
a CRA judgment registered against a property the Applicant sold. A further
$1,271.08 from that judgment was allocated to reduce the Applicant’s GST
liability on the account.
III.
Contested Decision
[8]
The Assistant Commissioner assessed the
Applicant’s circumstances against the four main criteria for recommending
remission before denying the Applicant’s remission. The four main criteria are
financial setback coupled with extenuating factors, incorrect action or advice
on the part of CRA officials, extreme hardship, or unintended results of
the legislation.
[9]
The Assistant Commissioner states that the
Applicant’s request seems to mainly be based on the financial hardship he
is experiencing in acquitting the GST liabilities at issue. The Assistant
Commissioner is of the opinion that there are no circumstances beyond the
Applicant’s control that have caused a tax debt to exist or prevented him from
addressing that debt.
[10]
The Assistant Commissioner also states that CRA
adequately assessed the director’s liability under section 323 of the Excise
Tax Act, as the TCC and FCA confirmed.
[11]
The Statistics Canada low income cut-off [LICO]
for Canadian localities analysis, used to determine whether extreme
hardship exist, demonstrated that the Applicant’s T1 returns since 2006 shows a
total income between $29,000 and $45,000, which places him above LICO for a one-person
household in Surrey, British Columbia. The Assistant Commissioner also adds
that the CRA records show that the Applicant has equity in two properties he
co-owns with his son Stephen and Ms. Della Foster. Extreme hardship does not
exist.
[12]
Finally, the Assistant Commissioner concludes
that no unintended results of the legislation are involved in the Applicant’s
case and that his history of non-compliance with respect to Associates Ltd. and
Management Systems Ltd. were taken into consideration in denying the remission
request.
IV.
Parties’ Submissions
[13]
The Applicant submits that Ms. Stirling, of the
Business Integration and Program Operations Division Excise and GST/HST Rulings
Directorate, prepared a report 28 months after his request of November 10,
2011. The Applicant states that if she would have contacted him, perhaps
natural justice could have prevailed. The Applicant further argues that it took
the CRA 13 years to pursue director’s liability, that he did not request
remission of the taxes due and that extenuating circumstances apply to his
situation.
[14]
The Respondent, on the other hand, responds that
the Assistant Commissioner’s decision is reasonable because the financial
setback remission guideline criteria did not apply to the Applicant nor did the
remission guideline criteria of extreme hardship. The Respondent also adds that
the Assistant Commissioner assessed the Applicant based on a two-person
household and not only a one-person household. In both analyses, the Applicant
earned income in excess of LICO. The Respondent further argues that the
Applicant did not dispute that the CRA maintained regular contact with him with
regard to his tax liabilities. Moreover, the Assistant Commissioner properly
considered the director’s liability assessments issued to the Applicant “under section 323 of the Excise Tax Act that held him
liable for the GST debt of Associates Ltd. for GST collected between 1991 and
1993 that was upheld by the Tax Court of Canada and the Federal Court of Appeal”.
V.
Issue
[15]
The Applicant submits the following three
issues:
•
CRA failed to observe principles of natural
justice or procedure laid out in their own manual;
- The long delays
in this process are a violation of natural justice;
- CRA based its
decision on incorrect assumptions.
[16]
The Respondent states that the issue is whether
or not the Assistant Commissioner’s decision is reasonable. I agree, and it is
this reasonableness issue that is dealt with in the following paragraphs.
VI.
Standard of Review
[17]
The issue stated above is a question of mixed
fact and law. Also, subsection 23(2) of the Financial Administration
Act, RSC 1985, c F-11 confers a very broad discretion to the Governor
in Council to recommend remission. The reasonableness standard thus applies (Germain
v Canada (Attorney General), 2012 FC 768 at paras 27 to 29 [Germain];
Waycobah First Nation v Canada (Attorney General), 2001 FCA 191 at paras
12 and 13 [Waycobah]). The Court shall only intervene if it
concludes that the decision is unreasonable, and falls outside the “range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible
in respect of the facts and law” (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick,
2008 SCC 9, [2008] SCJ No 9 at para 47).
VII.
Analysis
[18]
Subsection 23(2) of the Financial
Administration Act states:
(2) The Governor in Council may, on the recommendation of the
appropriate Minister, remit any tax or penalty, including any interest paid
or payable thereon, where the Governor in Council considers that the
collection of the tax or the enforcement of the penalty is unreasonable or
unjust or that it is otherwise in the public interest to the remit tax or
penalty.
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(2) Sur recommandation du ministre compétent, le gouverneur en
conseil peut faire remise de toutes taxes ou pénalités, ainsi que des
intérêts afférents, s’il estime que leur perception ou leur exécution forcée
est déraisonnable ou injuste ou que, d’une façon générale, l’intérêt public
justifie la remise.
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[19]
The Minister of Revenue is the “appropriate”
Minister for purposes of recommending remission and has delegated this
authority to the Commissioner of Revenue, the head of the CRA. The Commissioner
of Revenue has in turn delegated this authority to the Assistant Commissioner (Respondent’s
Application Record [RAR], pages 114, at para 8; Affidavit of Rick Stewart
pages 2-3 at paras 2-5). The Assistant Commissioner may thus recommend to the Governor
in Council to remit any tax or penalty, including any interest paid or payable
thereon (Germain supra at para 51). The decision of the Assistant Commissioner
is based on the Remission Committee’s recommendation. The Remission
Committee reviews the recommendation of whether or not to deny remission by the
officials in the Business Integration and Program Operations Division of the
Excise and GST/HST Rulings Directorate (Affidavit of Rick Stewart, page 3 at
paras 10-11), in this case Ms. Stirling’s April 10, 2014 report and
recommendations. Before making a final decision, the Assistant Commissioner reviews
each letter and all other documentation provided to him (Affidavit of Rick
Stewart, page 3 at paras 12-13).
[20]
In the case at bar, the decision to deny
remission to the Applicant is essentially based on the remission guidelines.
The Applicant’s history of non-compliance with respect to Associates Ltd. and
Management Systems Ltd., his personal circumstances, and the CRA’s Headquarters
Remission Committee evaluation were also taken into consideration ([RAR], Tab G,
pages 2-3). Although the guidelines do not have force of law and should not be
used to confine the exercise of discretion of the decision-maker to the
guidelines (Waycobah supra at para 28), they:
May be quite
helpful in ensuring consistency and enabling those governed by statutory
provisions to know which factors may affect their claims. It will
therefore be perfectly legitimate for an administrative authority to rely
on a policy or a guideline in making a decision, so long as that policy or
guideline does not remove the decision from the decision-maker or predetermine
a matter without an opportunity to address the merits (Ibid at para 43).
[21]
The Remission Guidelines state the following:
Section III – Remission Guidelines
Each remission request is considered on its
own merits to determine whether collection of the tax or enforcement of the
penalty is unreasonable or unjust, or if remission is in the public interest,
in accordance with the broad terms set out in section 23 of the Financial
Administration Act. To assist CRA officials in that assessment,
guidelines have been developed, based upon characteristics common to past
cases. These are:
▪ Extreme
hardship;
▪ Incorrect
action or advice on the part of CRA officials;
▪ Financial
setback coupled with exhausting factors; and
▪ Unintended
results of the legislation.
These guidelines provide a framework within
which a remission might be supported. However, it must be kept in mind that
they do not cover every circumstance; there may be other valid reasons that
would justify consideration of a remission order. Good judgement must be
exercised at all times and all relevant factors should be taken into
consideration, e.g.: a person’s compliance history, credibility, age and health
(RAR page 25).
[22]
I have reviewed the parties’ records and their
respective submissions, Ms. Stirling’s April 10, 2014 report, and the
Remission Committee’s deliberations, and I find that the Assistant
Commissioner’s decision is reasonable. I also agree with the Respondent’s
analysis.
[23]
The Applicant submits that he is a single parent
with a disabled son who is dependent on him, that he is a single-person
household, that he has failing health and that his disposable income is
shrinking. The Assistant Commissioner’s evaluation and conclusion that the
financial setback remission guideline criteria do not apply to the Applicant is
reasonable. Indeed, in his affidavit of the judicial review, the Applicant did
not adduce any evidence that identifies factors that the Assistant Commissioner
failed to consider in his analysis. Indeed, there were no circumstances beyond
the Applicant’s control that caused the tax debt to exist or that prevented him
from addressing that debt. The Assistant Commissioner, in coming to this
conclusion, properly considered the TCC and FCA decisions which concluded that
the Applicant acted without due diligence in the management of his corporate
affairs to ensure the remittance of trust funds. Moreover, the Assistant
Commissioner properly determined that the remission guideline criteria of
extreme financial hardship did not apply to the Applicant’s case, because based
on the facts, the Applicant’s income places him above the LICO for both
the one-person and two-person household. The Assistant Commissioner also
considered the Applicant’s equity in the two properties he co-owns as well
as rental income in coming to this determination. Moreover, the fact that Ms.
Foster is the Applicant’s girlfriend and not his partner, as alleged by the
Applicant, has no bearing on the reasonableness of the Assistant Commissioner’s
Decision.
[24]
The Applicant also submitted that it “only took thirteen years to pursue director’s liability”
and that he has no record or does not recall receiving such an assessment (Applicant’s
Memorandum of Facts and Law [AM] at point no 2). Ms. Stirling’s report however
demonstrates constant communication between the Applicant and CRA starting in
1994 (RAR page 74-75). Ms Stirling’s report also states that:
Mr. Jarrold subsequently appealed the
Associates Ltd. director’s liability assessment to the TCC. On January 28,
2009, prior to the scheduled hearing date, he was further assessed director’s
liability in respect of both the GST and payroll debts on the Management
Systems Ltd. account in the amount of $16,471.99 and $33,091.62, respectively.
He requested a TCC adjournment to have the appeal heard once Management Systems
Ltd. had resolved an objection he intended to file, the CRA opposed the adjournment
on the basis that the assessment periods were different and therefore the cases
were not sufficiently related. ACSES indicates that Mr. Jarrold objected to the
GST assessment for Management Systems Ltd. on April 16, 2009, which was
finalized but not mailed until November 16, 2011 owing to a mail strike. Mr.
Jarrold did not appeal the director’s liability assessment in respect of
Management Systems Ltd payroll account (RAR page 75).
[25]
The Applicant did not demonstrate any
inaccuracies in Ms. Stirling’s report or any evidence that would contradict it.
Moreover, the TCC and FCA both confirmed that the Applicant never ceased to be a
director of the corporations under a director’s liability assessments as per
section 323 of the Excise Tax Act. The Assistant Commissioner’s
conclusion that the Applicant had knowledge of the director’s liability of
both Associates Ltd. and Management Systems Ltd. is thus reasonable.
[26]
As for the Applicant’s submission that CRA
misapplied funds received from him to the wrong corporate account, there is
evidence in the Respondent’s Application Record that the funds were applied in
accordance with the instructions of the Applicant’s authorized representative
at the time (RAR, Affidavit of Rick Stewart, Tab A, pages 10-11 at paras 33-34;
RAR, Ms. Stirling report, Tab C, page 71; RAR, Tab L, page 105; RAR, Tab M, page
108).
[27]
The Applicant also raised the issue that it took
“a full twenty eight months after my request of
November 10, 2011 without contact to the local CRA office or myself to
determine if there were circumstances she (Ms. Stirling) might be aware of”
(AM at para 1). This procedural argument cannot stand. The Financial
Administration Act does not prescribe any procedures for handling requests
for tax debt reduction. It is left to the discretion of the Minister. There was
thus no need for the local CRA office to conduct an initial review and Ms.
Stirling was not obliged to contact the Applicant. Moreover, the Applicant was
given an opportunity to include the information he wished the Assistant
Commissioner to consider in his remission request. The Assistant
Commissioner thus had the opportunity to evaluate all the information provided
by the Applicant in making his decision.
[28]
The Assistant Commissioner’s decision is thus
reasonable. He properly assessed the remission guidelines and took into
considerations other relevant factors such as the Applicant’s history of
non-compliance with respect to the T2, T4 and GST filing and remittance requirements
of Associates Ltd. and Management Systems Ltd. The Assistant Commissioner did not
err in the exercise of his discretion. The intervention of this Court is not warranted.
VIII. Conclusion
[29]
The Assistant Commissioner’s decision is
reasonable and no intervention from this Court is warranted. The application
for judicial review is dismissed with costs to the Respondent.