Docket: T-345-17
Citation:
2017 FC 952
Ottawa, Ontario, October 26, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Southcott
BETWEEN:
|
POMEROY’S
MASONRY LIMITED
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Applicant
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and
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ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision made by the Minister of National Revenue or her delegate [the
Minister] dated February 9, 2017, confirming the denial of a request for the
re-appropriation of statute-barred credits from the Applicant’s corporate
income tax account to the debt in its harmonized sales tax [HST] account
pursuant to section 221.2(2) of the Income Tax Act, RSC 1985, c 1 (5th
Supp) [the Act].
[2]
As explained in greater details below, this
application is allowed, because the Minister’s decision failed to take into
account relevant circumstances raised by the Applicant in its re-appropriation
request, surrounding the prospect of bankruptcy if the request was refused and
the resulting possibility that the HST liability would not be paid.
II.
Background
[3]
The Applicant, Pomeroy’s Masonry Limited, is a
corporation which provides masonry services in the northeast Avalon Peninsula
in Newfoundland and Labrador. It has five employees, including Mr. Michael
Pomeroy, who is the corporation’s sole director and shareholder.
[4]
For the taxation years 2006 to 2010, the
Applicant did not file corporate tax returns within the time frames required by
the Act. As a result, the Canada Revenue Agency [CRA] assessed the Applicant as
having taxable income in the 2006 to 2008 taxation years pursuant to s 152(7)
of the Act, which resulted in it owing federal and provincial income tax, statutory
penalties, and interest, totaling $97,727.56. In 2011 and 2012, CRA collected a
total of $100,142.00 from the Applicant through a combination of payments made by
the Applicant and the garnishment of third party payments. It applied this
amount to the assessments.
[5]
In 2011, the Applicant hired an accountant to
remedy its noncompliance with the Act, and it subsequently filed the missing
corporate tax returns in 2012. CRA then re-assessed the Applicant, issuing
Notices of Reassessment on March 28, 2014, which resulted in credits to the
Applicant applicable to the 2006 to 2008 taxation years totaling $83,960.92. However,
under s 164(1) of the Act, the Minister cannot issue a refund unless a return
is filed within three years of the applicable tax year-end. As the Applicant’s
returns for the 2006 to 2008 tax years were filed outside these periods, no
refund of the credit balance was available to the Applicant.
[6]
In the meantime, CRA also audited the Applicant
for compliance with the HST provisions of the Excise Tax Act, RSC 1985,
c E-15 [the Excise Tax Act]. On July 31, 2013, the Minister advised the
Applicant that it was approximately $112,941.00 in arrears in its HST account.
[7]
In January 2014, the Applicant retained a new
accountant who issued to CRA written requests dated January 21, 2014, and April
4, 2014, that the Minister exercise her discretion under s 221.2(2) of the Act
to re-appropriate the credit balance from the Applicant’s corporate income tax
account to its HST arrears. Section 221.2(2) permits re-appropriation of an
amount, originally appropriated to a debt under the Act, to another debt that
is or may become payable under certain other taxation statutes including the
Excise Tax Act:
Re-appropriation of amounts
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Réaffectation de montants
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221.2 […]
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221.2
[…]
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Re-appropriation
of amounts
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Réaffectation de montants
|
(2) Where a particular amount was
appropriated to an amount (in this section referred to as the “debt”) that is
or may become payable by a person under this Act, the Excise Tax Act,
the Air Travellers Security Charge Act or the Excise Act, 2001,
the Minister may, on application by the person, appropriate the particular
amount, or a part of it, to another amount that is or may become payable
under any of those Acts and, for the purposes of any of those Acts,
|
(2)
Lorsqu’un montant est affecté à une somme (appelée « dette » au présent
article) qui est ou peut devenir payable par une personne en application de
la présente loi, de la Loi sur la taxe d’accise, de la Loi sur le
droit pour la sécurité des passagers du transport aérien ou de la Loi
de 2001 sur l’accise, le ministre peut, à la demande de la personne,
affecter tout ou partie du montant à une autre somme qui est ou peut devenir
ainsi payable. Pour l’application de ces lois:
|
(a) the later appropriation is deemed
to have been made at the time of the earlier appropriation;
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a) la seconde affectation est réputée effectuée
au même moment que la première;
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(b) the earlier appropriation is
deemed not to have been made to the extent of the later appropriation; and
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b) la
première affectation est réputée ne pas avoir été effectuée jusqu’à
concurrence de la seconde;
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(c) the
particular amount is deemed not to have been paid on account of the debt to
the extent of the later appropriation.
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c) le montant est réputé ne pas avoir été
payé au titre de la dette jusqu’à concurrence de la seconde affectation.
|
[8]
On April 16, 2014, CRA re-allocated $55,000 from
the corporate income tax account to the Applicant’s payroll source deductions
account. The record before the Court indicates that CRA made this re-allocation
because the $55,000 figure represented monies paid with the express intention
that they be allocated to the payroll source deductions account, but which CRA
had applied to the corporate income tax account in error. The remaining credit
balance in the corporate income tax account then totalled $45,830.31. In a
letter dated April 24, 2015, CRA conveyed to the Applicant the Minister’s
decision refusing to re-appropriate the remainder of the credit balance in the
corporate income tax account to the HST account as the Applicant had requested.
[9]
On September 10, 2015, the Applicant’s accountant
made a second request for re-appropriation of the credit balance to its HST
account. By letter dated November 15, 2016, CRA advised the Applicant that
$2951.20 of the statute-barred credits in the corporate income tax account had resulted
from amounts previously offset from another program account and therefore were
being returned to the HST account. This resulted in a remaining statute-barred
credit of $42,879.11 in the corporate income tax account. On February 9, 2007, CRA
issued a letter conveying the decision which is the subject of this application
for judicial review, denying the request for re-appropriation of these
remaining credits.
III.
Issue and Standard of Review
[10]
The Applicant challenges the lawfulness of the
Minister’s decision to deny the request for re-appropriation of the statute-barred
credits. The parties agree that this is a discretionary decision. The
Respondent argues that the standard of review applicable to such decisions by
the Minister under s 221.2(2) of the Act is reasonableness (see Cybernius
Medical Ltd v Canada (Attorney General), 2017 FC 226 [Cybernius] at
paras 35-36). While the Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law had expressed
the same position on standard of review as the Respondent, the Applicant revised
this position during oral submissions. The Applicant still raises arguments
challenging the reasonableness of the Minister’s decision; however, relying on Clover
International Properties (L) Ltd v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 676 [Clover]
at paras 15-18, it also argues that the Minister’s decision involved an extricable
question of law which should be reviewed on the correctness standard.
[11]
In Clover, the Court was considering a
decision by the Minister to the effect that s 221.2 of the Act cannot be
applied to effect a re-appropriation which results in a refund that is
statute-barred under s 164(1). Justice Strickland concluded that this decision
represented an extricable question of law reviewable on a correctness standard.
The arguments raised by the Applicant in the present case surround the extent
to which the decision to deny the re-appropriation request turned on the fact
that the $42,879.11 in credits were statute-barred and the absence of what the
Minister considered to be extraordinary circumstances preventing the timely
filing of the Applicant’s tax returns. The Applicant submits in part that the
Minister inappropriately relied on s 164(1) in determining the scope of the
discretion available under s 221.2(2), representing an extricable question of
law to which the correctness standard applies.
[12]
I disagree that the Minister’s decision can be
characterized in this manner. I will canvass the Minister’s decision in more
detail below in the Analysis portion of these Reasons. However, for purposes
of identifying the applicable standard of review, it is sufficient to note that
the decision turned on consideration of the circumstances surrounding the
timeliness of the Applicant’s tax filings. These are factual matters. The
decision evidences no explicit exercise in statutory interpretation and
certainly no interpretation of s 221.2(2) which can be characterized as
extricable from the factual matters considered in the decision.
[13]
It is therefore my conclusion, consistent with
that of Justice McVeigh in considering a decision involving factual matters in Cybernius,
that the standard of review applicable to the Minister’s decision is
reasonableness.
[14]
I would characterize the sole issue for the
Court’s consideration to be whether the Minister’s decision is unreasonable.
IV.
Analysis
[15]
To understand the reasons for the decision under
review, it is necessary to consider both the documentation leading to that
decision and the documentation leading to the earlier decision of April 24,
2015. This can all be found in the Certified Tribunal Record. The Respondent’s
Record also includes an affidavit by Dennis Lim, an Accounts Officer with CRA,
who explains that it was he who authored the April 24, 2015 letter which
advised the Applicant that the request to re-appropriate the statute-barred credits
was denied because there were no extraordinary circumstances which had
prevented the timely filing of its returns. Consistent with that reasoning, the
record also includes a document prepared by Mr. Lim, entitled Request for
Re-appropriation of T2 Statute Barred Credits – Recommended Resolution, in
which the recommended resolution is set out as follows:
· From
the review and all the entries from the SUDS and ACS, it doesn’t really show
that there were any extraordinary circumstances as to why owner didn’t file on
time. He was just always behind doing his tax returns.
· He
gave his information for the 2008 TYE to his accountants 6 months prior to it
being statute barred. Being that he was probably not the accountant’s only
client and that he also had to work on previous tax years for the owner, the
owner wasn’t able to file that return within 3 years.
Due to these reasons, re-appropriation is
not recommended and a letter (Ministerial review not exercised) should be sent.
[16]
That document also includes a section entitled “Headquarters review”, which contains the entry “Request is denied.” While it appears that Mr. Lim was
not the ultimate decision-maker, the record does not demonstrate any further
substantive analysis by whoever at CRA headquarters ultimately made the first decision
on behalf of the Minister. As such, I regard Mr. Lim’s recommendation document
and his subsequent letter as capturing the reasons for the first decision
refusing the Applicant’s re-appropriation request.
[17]
Mr. Lim’s affidavit explains that the
Applicant’s second request was reviewed by David Nuytten, an account officer
with CRA. Mr. Nuytten also prepared a recommendation document, entitled 2nd
Request for Re-appropriation of T2 Statute Barred Credits – Recommended
Resolution. This document records Mr. Nuytten’s observation that nothing had
changed on the account, or in the applicable guidelines, since the first
review. It also records that Mr. Nuytten agreed with the original
recommendation, followed by a note that the additional documentation provided
with the second request did not provide any new information which would
overturn the initial decision. The section entitled “Headquarters
review” then states as follows:
If the taxpayer did not supply information
that supported extraordinary circumstances that prevented him from filing his
return(s) on time; then, we agree with your determination to deny this request.
[18]
Again, the record before the Court does not
identify who at CRA headquarters made the ultimate decision on behalf of the Minister
or who authored the subsequent letter dated February 9, 2017, conveying to the
Applicant the decision to deny its second re-appropriation request. However, I
regard Mr. Nuytten’s recommendation document and the corresponding letter to
capture the reasons for the decision. The substantive paragraphs of the letter
read as follows:
We will uphold the original determination,
as the taxpayer did not supply additional information that supported any
extraordinary circumstances that prevented him from filing the return within 3
years.
The subsection 150(1)(a) of the Income Tax
Act requires that a corporation files income tax returns. The Canada Revenue
Agency is committed to making information available to assist taxpayers
understand their tax obligations. Corporation’s filing and payment
requirements, as well as the limitation on receiving refunds if returns are not
filed on time, are explained in the T2 Corporation Income Tax Guide, within our
website www.cra-arc.gc.ca. This information can also be obtained through our
toll–free enquiry line (800) 959-5525.
Moreover, our records indicate that this
corporation has a history of not filing corporation returns on time and that
multiple requests were sent to the corporation by the Canada Revenue Agency to
file outstanding returns. The Requests to File and Demands to File clearly
state that a corporation must file a T2 Corporation Income Tax Return (unless
they are a registered charity) for every taxation year, even if they are
inactive or there is no tax payable. This also clarifies the requirement for a
corporation to file returns. Although the corporation was made aware of its tax
obligations, it failed to comply with these requests. This indicates that the
corporation knowingly had not taken measures to correct the noncompliance
within a reasonable timeframe.
In conclusion, we will not re-appropriate
the T2 statute-barred credits because we do not agree that the circumstances
provided to explain why the corporation did not file its return within three
years from the tax year-end was outside of the taxpayer’s control and because
the corporation did not take measures to correct the non-compliance within a
reasonable timeframe.
[19]
The Applicant submits that this documentation
demonstrates that the first refusal decision, and the decision under review
which upheld that decision, turned on the Applicant’s failure to convince CRA
that there were extraordinary circumstances which had prevented it from filing
its returns within the three-year period which would have avoided refunds being
statute-barred. The Applicant argues that the decision is unreasonable because
the Minister failed to take into account other factors relevant to the exercise
of her discretion and fettered her discretion by relying on guidelines
promulgated by CRA in connection with decisions under s 221.2.
[20]
The guidelines to which the Applicant refers are
dated December 2016 and entitled User Guide – Re-appropriation of T2 Statute-barred
Credits [the Guidelines]. An Appendix to the Guidelines states that it provides
guidance on the circumstances that should be considered when determining if
ministerial discretion will be applied to allow the re-appropriation of
statute-barred credits. That Appendix includes a section entitled “Extraordinary circumstances” which provides examples
of various types of extraordinary circumstances beyond a taxpayer’s control
that may have prevented the filing of a return within three years of the tax
year end. These include natural or human-made disasters, civil disturbances or
disruptions in services, serious illness or accident, and serious emotional or
mental distress.
[21]
The Applicant argues that it was the Guidelines’
focus upon the timeliness of the taxpayer’s filings, and whether there were
extraordinary circumstances explaining the lack of timeliness, which animated
the Minister’s decision to refuse the re-appropriation request. It challenges
both the reasonableness of the policy itself and its application in the
decision that is under review. The Applicant points out that the language of s
221.2(2) does not prescribe the reasons for the taxpayer’s delinquency in its
filing obligations as a factor, and particularly not an exclusive factor,
governing the exercise of the Minister’s discretion. The Applicant also argues
that a requirement to show extraordinary circumstances for the late filing is
inconsistent with the remedial purpose of s 221.2(2).
[22]
In support of its submissions as to the purpose
of s 221.2(2), the Applicant relies on language in a background section at the
beginning of the Guidelines, which states the following:
These revised guidelines have been developed
with limited parameters to facilitate administration, ensure that
statute-barred credits are not refunded to a taxpayer in the form of a cash
disbursement; while at the same time, enabling corporate taxpayer’s the ability
to be selective in the use of their written-off statute-barred credits.
[23]
The Applicant submits that a similar statutory
purpose can be derived, at least implicitly, from Cybernius, a case
which involved a fact pattern similar to the one at hand. At paragraphs 53 to
55, Justice McVeigh explained as follows her conclusion that it was
unreasonable for the Minister not to exercise the discretion to permit
re-appropriate of statute-barred credits:
[53] Given that Cybernius is fully
compliant, it is unreasonable for the Minister not to exercise their discretion
to ensure the collection of the payroll source debt by using an existing tax
credit. It would be counter to the purpose of the ITA for the Minister to do
so, especially given the importance of source deductions in a number of Acts of
Parliament.
[54] The strongest
support for the unreasonableness of the Minister’s discretionary refusal is
Justice Urie writing for the Federal Court of Appeal in Optical Recording at
paragraph 27. Although in a slightly different context the proposition still
stands:
The power which he is so given is to
ensure that payment of the indebtedness by the debtor is ultimately secure.
Normally the security provided would be monetary in nature. But the Minister's
power is not limited to the statutory power to take security of that nature. He
is empowered by virtue of his office, to manage his department, not exclusively
from an administrative point of view but also from the point of view of what
has in England been described as "management of taxes" which I
take it means that as a creditor he has the right to arrange payment for a tax
indebtedness in such a manner that best ensures that the whole will ultimately
be paid. For example, if insistence on payment in full when due might
jeopardize the solvency of the taxpayer, with consequent loss of potential for
payment in full, and if the taxpayer can continue in business by giving him
time to pay, in his discretion the Minister might arrange for payment in
instalments with such security, if any, as he deems necessary. Effectively,
such a course protects the Revenue and, as well, the taxpayer's solvency and
continued ability to pay taxes. It applies too to the taxpayer satisfying the
Minister in Part VIII tax situations that the taxpayer will eliminate its
liability by year end. Such a course of conduct ought to be encouraged, not
discouraged.
[Emphasis added]
[55] Having the tax debt
paid is of utmost importance and the Minister has the discretion to make an
arrangement to get it paid that may assist the taxpayer. In the end what
matters is that the tax is paid.
[24]
The Applicant takes the position that the
purpose of s 221.2(2) is to provide a taxpayer with flexibility in the
allocation of tax payments, where those payments have resulted in credits in a
tax account that are statute-barred from being refunded, and to provide the
Minister a means of facilitating payment of tax debts by re-allocating amounts
from one tax account to another. The Applicant acknowledges that s 221.2(2)
affords a discretion to the Minister, not an entitlement to the taxpayer. However,
it argues that discretion should be exercised such that a taxpayer with
statute-barred credits is permitted to have those credits re-appropriated
absent factors that militate against such a result.
[25]
I am not prepared to find that the Minister’s
discretion must be exercised in the manner that the Applicant advocates. To
reach such a conclusion would impose constraints on the exercise of that
discretion that cannot be derived from the statutory language. However, I do accept,
as explained by Justice McVeigh, the importance of having tax debts paid. I
agree that it is consistent with the overall purpose of the Act that s 221.2(2)
be interpreted such that the retirement of outstanding tax debts is a factor,
and indeed an important one, to be taken into account in the exercise of the
Minister’s discretion.
[26]
Given this conclusion, having canvassed above
the reasons for the decision impugned in the present case, I find the decision
to be unreasonable. I agree with the Applicant that the decision was animated
entirely, or almost entirely, by consideration of the Applicant’s history of
delinquency in its tax filings and whether there were extraordinary
circumstances which explained or excused such delinquency. I am not prepared to
conclude, as advocated by the Applicant, that these were not relevant
considerations; however, they are certainly not the only considerations that
should have been taken into account.
[27]
The Applicant’s written submissions in support
of its re-appropriation requests explained that the Applicant is a small
business employing five individuals and that, if CRA did not agree to allow the
re-appropriation of the statute-barred credits to the company’s HST liability,
Mr. Pomeroy would not be able to pay CRA and would face the possibility of
declaring bankruptcy. The submissions stated that Mr. Pomeroy had liens put on
his current jobs and was struggling to keep his business going with this
balance owing to CRA, making every effort to get his books and records up to
date and his corporate tax filings current. As such, the written submissions
identified not only hardship that would be sustained by the Applicant or its
principal if the re-appropriation request was refused but also the resulting possibility
that the HST liability would not be paid.
[28]
The record before the Court does not demonstrate
that these factors were taken into account in the exercise of the Minister’s
discretion. The Respondent correctly argues that, in making discretionary
decisions, the Minister has the freedom to find some factors more persuasive
and afford them more weight than others, and that the decision to rely more
heavily on CRA policies does not necessarily indicate that guidelines were
raised to the level of law resulting in a fettering of discretion (see Lambert
v Canada (Attorney General), 2015 FC 1236 at para 30). However, my decision
does not turn on the manner in which the Minister weighed relevant factors. Rather,
it results from the fact that the record demonstrates no consideration or
weighing at all of the Applicant’s submissions as to the effect upon it, and
its ability to pay its HST liability, that would result from its request being refused.
[29]
The failure to consider these factors may be
attributable to the Guidelines’ emphasis on consideration of whether there were
extraordinary circumstances which prevented the filing of returns within three
years from the applicable tax year end. However, the Guidelines’ section on
extraordinary circumstances, and a subsequent section referring to CRA error or
delay, are followed by a third, albeit brief, section entitled “Other circumstances”. This section states that the
CRA may also apply ministerial discretion if a taxpayer’s circumstances do not
fall within the situations described above and that each case must be reviewed
based on its own circumstances. In my view, it is the Minister’s failure to
consider the other circumstances raised by the Applicant, particularly when
viewed through the jurisprudential lens provided by Cybernius, which
makes the decision unreasonable.
[30]
It is therefore my decision to allow this
application for judicial review and order that the matter be returned to the
Minister for redetermination.
V.
Costs
[31]
In their written submissions, each of the
parties took the position that, if it was successful in this matter, costs
should be awarded to it based on Column III of Tariff B of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106. However, at the hearing, the Applicant revised
its position. It submitted that, if it was successful, it should be awarded
costs on a solicitor-client basis. It took this position because, in its
submission, the Respondent had failed to advance any compelling arguments in
realtion to Cybernius and, having neither appealed nor distinguished
that authority, had acted unreasonably in requiring the Applicant to proceed
with this application for judicial review to obtain relief from the impugned
decision. The Applicant requested an opportunity to make further written
submissions in support of its position on costs, following receipt of the
Court’s decision on the merits of the application.
[32]
At the hearing, the Respondent maintained the
position that an award of party and party costs was appropriate and did not
agree that there was a requirement for further written submissions, unless the
Court was disposed towards the Applicant’s request for an award on a
solicitor-client basis.
[33]
I advised the parties at the hearing that, once
I had made my decision on the merits of the application, I would consider
whether that decision and the reasons therefor warranted further submissions on
costs. My conclusion is that no further submissions are required. While the
Applicant has prevailed in this application and is entitled to costs, I find no
basis to award those costs on a solicitor-client measure. As argued by the
Respondent, every application for judicial review turns on its individual
merits, particularly where a discretionary decision is at issue. While Cybernius
was relevant to the outcome of this application, the outcome also turned on
analysis of the circumstances of the present case, and in particular which
factors were and were not taken into account by the Minister in arriving at the
impugned decision.
[34]
I therefore award the Applicant costs based on
Column III of Tariff B of the Federal Courts Rules. While I encouraged
the parties at the hearing to give consideration to an appropriate lump sum
amount in the event party and party costs were awarded, the Respondent in
particular was reluctant to depart from quantification based on the Tariff. My
Order will therefore afford the parties an opportunity to agree on the quantification
of costs based on the Tariff, failing which they will proceed to assessment.