Docket: A-123-15
Citation:
2016 FCA 47
CORAM:
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RYER J.A.
WEBB J.A.
RENNIE J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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M. BERNARD
LOATES
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Appellant
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
(Delivered from the Bench at Toronto, Ontario, on
February 9, 2016).
RYER J.A.
[1]
This is an appeal from an amended decision of
Justice Randall Bocock of the Tax Court of Canada (the “Judge”), dated February
12, 2015 and cited as 2015 TCC 30, dismissing an appeal by Mr. M. Bernard
Loates (the “Taxpayer”) from an assessment, dated September 30, 2010 (the
“Assessment”), issued by the Minister of National Revenue, pursuant to section
160 of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.) (the “Act”), in
the amount of $158,058.27. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references
in these reasons are to the corresponding provisions of the Act that apply to
the Assessment.
[2]
In this appeal, the relevant provision is
paragraph 160(1)(e), which reads as follows:
160(1) Where a person has, on or after
May 1, 1951, transferred property, either directly or indirectly, by means of
a trust or by any other means whatever, to
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160(1) Lorsqu’une personne a, depuis le 1er
mai 1951, transféré des biens, directement ou indirectement, au moyen d’une
fiducie ou de toute autre façon à l’une des personnes suivantes :
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(a) the
person’s spouse or common-law partner or a person who has since become the
person’s spouse or common- law partner,
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a) son
époux ou conjoint de fait ou une personne devenue depuis son époux ou
conjoint de fait;
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(b) a
person who was under 18 years of age, or
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b) une
personne qui était âgée de moins de 18 ans;
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(c) a
person with whom the person was not dealing at arm’s length,
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c) une
personne avec laquelle elle avait un lien de dépendance,
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the following
rules apply:
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les règles
suivantes s’appliquent :
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…
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[…]
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(e) the
transferee and transferor are jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable to
pay under this Act an amount equal to the lesser of
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e) le
bénéficiaire et l’auteur du transfert sont solidairement responsables du
paiement en vertu de la présente loi d’un montant égal au moins élevé des
montants suivants :
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(i) the
amount, if any, by which the fair market value of the property at the time it
was transferred exceeds the fair market value at that time of the
consideration given for the property, and
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(i)
l’excédent éventuel de la juste valeur marchande des biens au moment du
transfert sur la juste valeur marchande à ce moment de la contrepartie donnée
pour le bien,
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(ii) the
total of all amounts each of which is an amount that the transferor is liable
to pay under this Act (including, for greater certainty, an amount that the
transferor is liable to pay under this section, regardless of whether the
Minister has made an assessment under subsection (2) for that amount) in or
in respect of the taxation year in which the property was transferred or any
preceding taxation year,
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(ii) le
total des montants représentant chacun un montant que l’auteur du transfert
doit payer en vertu de la présente loi (notamment un montant ayant ou non
fait l’objet d’une cotisation en application du paragraphe (2) qu’il doit
payer en vertu du présent article) au cours de l’année d’imposition où les
biens ont été transférés ou d’une année d’imposition antérieure ou pour une
de ces années.
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but
nothing in this subsection limits the liability of the transferor under any
other provision of this Act or of the transferee for the interest that the
transferee is liable to pay under this Act on an assessment in respect of the
amount that the transferee is liable to pay because of this subsection.
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Toutefois, le
présent paragraphe n’a pas pour effet de limiter la responsabilité de
l’auteur du transfert en vertu de quelque autre disposition de la présente
loi ni celle du bénéficiaire du transfert quant aux intérêts dont il est
redevable en vertu de la présente loi sur une cotisation établie à l’égard du
montant qu’il doit payer par l’effet du présent paragraphe.
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[3]
The Judge determined that the criteria to be
applied in considering the applicability of subsection 160(1) are those set
forth in paragraph 17 of this Court’s decision in Canada v. Livingstone,
2008 FCA 89, 375 N.R. 309, which reads as follows:
[17] In light of the clear meaning of the
words of subsection 160(1), the criteria to apply when considering subsection
160(1) are self-evident:
1) The transferor
must be liable to pay tax under the Act at the time of transfer;
2) There must be
a transfer of property, either directly or indirectly, by means of a trust or
by any other means whatever;
3) The transferee
must either be:
i. The
transferor’s spouse or common-law partner at the time of transfer or a person
who has since become the person’s spouse or common-law partner;
ii. A person who
was under 18 years of age at the time of transfer; or
iii. A person
with whom the transferor was not dealing at arm’s length.
4) The fair
market value of the property transferred must exceed the fair market value of the
consideration given by the transferee.
[4]
The Judge concluded that only the last of these
criteria was in issue. In upholding the Assessment, the Judge found that the
Taxpayer’s spouse, Ms. Karen Laraine Somerville, transferred a residential
property (the “Howe Island Property”) to the Taxpayer for an amount that was
less than its fair market value at the time of the transfer on March 15, 2005
(the “Transfer Time”) by at least $158,058.27, the amount that Ms. Somerville
was liable to pay under the Act at the Transfer Time on account of tax,
interest and penalties in respect of her 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001 taxation
years (the “Tax Debt”).
[5]
In an appeal from a decision of the Tax Court of
Canada, questions of law are reviewed on the standard of correctness, while
questions of fact and questions of mixed fact and law in respect of which there
is no readily extricable question of law are reviewed on the standard of
palpable and overriding error (see Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33 at
paragraphs 8, 10, 36, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235).
[6]
In this appeal, the Taxpayer raises five issues.
First, he asserts that the Judge erred by not determining that paragraph
160(1)(e) was inapplicable, by virtue of subsection 160(4), on the basis
that the transfer of the Howe Island Property occurred pursuant to a written
separation agreement at a time when the Taxpayer and Ms. Somerville were living
separate and apart as a result of a breakdown of their marriage. This assertion
cannot be accepted.
[7]
While the record contains a short written agreement
(the “Property Division Agreement”), made in March of 2005, between the
Taxpayer and Ms. Somerville that provides for the transfer of the Howe Island
Property, the Property Division Agreement contains no indication that the
Taxpayer and Ms. Somerville were living separate and apart. In addition, the
assertion that they were separated was not raised by the Taxpayer in his notice
of appeal against the Assessment and is contradicted by the Taxpayer’s evidence
on cross-examination (Appeal Book at pages 80 and 81). Finally, the order of
Justice Gauthier, dated June 2, 2015, denied the Taxpayer’s motion to introduce
new evidence in this appeal that the Taxpayer intended to use to establish his
separation from Ms. Somerville.
[8]
Second, the Taxpayer asserts that the Judge
erred in concluding that the Taxpayer had not provided consideration to Ms.
Somerville for the Howe Island Property. In Yates v. Canada, 2009 FCA
50, [2010] 1 F.C.R. 436 [Yates], this Court determined that a surrender
of matrimonial property rights does not constitute consideration for a transfer
of property pursuant to subsection 160(1). The Taxpayer asserts that Yates
does not apply because he and Ms. Somerville were living separate and apart at
the Transfer Time. This assertion must be rejected because, as discussed above,
the Taxpayer has failed to establish that he was separated from Ms. Somerville
at the Transfer Time.
[9]
Third, the Taxpayer asserts that the Judge erred
in concluding that the fair market value of the equity in the Howe Island
Property was an amount in excess of the Tax Debt at the Transfer Time. On March
3, 2005, Ms. Somerville borrowed $315,000 (the “Somerville Indebtedness”) from
1159872 Ontario Limited for the purpose of making an investment in a company
that she owned. As primary security for the Somerville Indebtedness, she
granted a second mortgage (the “Cochrane Second Mortgage”) on what was then the
matrimonial home (the “Cochrane Property”). She also granted a second mortgage
(the “Collateral Mortgage”) on the Howe Island Property as collateral security
for approximately $311,850 of the Somerville Indebtedness. The Judge determined
that the Collateral Mortgage did not reduce the value of the equity in the Howe
Island Property at the Transfer Time because the value of the equity in the
Cochrane Property at that time, after taking into account the first mortgage on
that property, was at least equal to the amount of the Somerville Indebtedness
that was secured by the Cochrane Second Mortgage. In that regard, the Taxpayer’s
own evidence was that the fair market value of the Cochrane Property was at
least $1 million at the Transfer Time and that it sold for $800,000
approximately ten months thereafter. Even using the lower of these two values,
the Cochrane Property had sufficient equity to discharge the Cochrane Second
Mortgage at the Transfer Time. Having regard to this evidence, it was open to
the Judge to make the factual finding that the equity in the Howe Island
Property at the Transfer Time was not reduced by the Collateral Mortgage and,
in so finding, the Judge committed no palpable and overriding error.
[10]
Fourth, the Taxpayer asserts that the Judge
erred in concluding that the Taxpayer failed to establish that the transfer of
the Howe Island Property by Ms. Somerville constituted a repayment of a number
of loans that the Taxpayer had made to her (the “Offset Loans”). In declining
to accept the Taxpayer’s uncorroborated evidence as to the existence of the
Offset Loans, the Judge observed that no loans were referred to in the Property
Division Agreement and that the Taxpayer’s assertions were not supported by
loan agreements, bank records or cheques, or evidence from the person who had
allegedly made loans to the Taxpayer so that he could make the Offset Loans.
The Judge made no palpable and overriding error in concluding that the Taxpayer
had failed to establish the existence of the Offset Loans.
[11]
Fifth, the Taxpayer asserts that the Judge erred
by not finding that the amount of the Tax Debt at the time of the Assessment
was made up wholly or principally of unpaid interest. Even if the Judge was
empowered to make such a determination, he was not required to do so because
that determination had no bearing on the validity of the Assessment. On the
plain wording of subparagraph 160(1)(e)(ii), the amount for which a
transferee of property can be assessed is the amount for which the transferor
is liable under the Act, regardless of the composition of that amount.
[12]
In conclusion, we have not been persuaded that
in upholding the Assessment, the Judge made any error that warrants our
intervention. Accordingly the appeal will be dismissed with costs.
"C. Michael Ryer"