Cardin,
TCJ
[TRANSLATION]:—By
a
notice
of
assessment
dated
May
11,
1971,
the
respondent
added
to
the
income
reported
by
André
Perrault
for
the
1969,
1971
and
1972
taxation
years
the
amounts
of
$8,295,
$5,049.91
and
$6,000
respectively,
as
income.
For
1973
the
respondent
added
the
amounts
of
$11,600
and
$1,525.
The
respondent
further
imposed
penalties
of
$309.05
for
1969
and
penalties
of
$151.59,
$201.91
and
$526.43
for
each
of
the
1971,
1972
and
1973
taxation
years
respectively.
On
June
14,
1982
André
Perrault
appealed
from
these
assessments.
The
parties
through
their
counsel
agreed
that
judgment
should
be
rendered
in
the
instant
case
allowing
the
appeal
of
the
appellant
for
the
1969,
1971
and
1973
taxation
years,
dismissing
the
appeal
for
the
1972
taxation
year
and
referring
the
whole
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
re-examination
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
indicated
in
the
minute
of
settlement,
attached
to
the
reasons
for
judgment.
The
consent
to
judgment
was
signed
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
on
November
22,
1982
and
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
on
December
2,
1982.
As
appears
in
the
minute,
the
parties
were
able
to
agree
on
all
the
disputed
amounts
except
for
the
sum
of
$1,525
for
the
1973
taxation
year,
which
is
now
the
only
amount
at
issue
in
this
appeal.
At
the
hearing
held
in
Rouyn,
Quebec
on
December
2,
1982,
it
was
agreed
that
the
appeals
of
Messrs
Jean-Paul
Bérubé
and
Raymond
Plante
in
respect
of
the
1973
taxation
year
would
be
heard
concurrently
and
on
the
evidence
presented
in
the
appeal
of
Mr
Perrault.
As
in
the
Perrault
case,
the
respondent
added
to
the
latter’s
income
the
sum
of
$1,525.
Similarly,
the
respondent
by
a
notice
of
assessment
added
the
amounts
of
$1,880
and
$2,805
to
the
income
of
Jean-Paul
Bérubé
and
Raymond
Plante
as
income
received
by
each
of
them
from
the
Fonds
Immobiliers
Nord-Ouest
Québécois
Inc
(FINOQ)
during
the
1973
taxation
year.
Facts
FINOQ
was
formed
around
1966
as
an
investment
club.
The
Commission
des
valeurs
mobilières
[Quebec
securities
commission]
terminated
its
operations.
In
the
years
that
followed,
the
idea
was
put
forward
of
selling
members
of
the
club
fictitious
parcels
of
land
in
order
to
get
around
the
regulations
of
the
Commission
and
allow
members
to
continue
making
investments
through
FINOQ.
FINOQ
was
incorporated
in
1971
and
the
company
purchased
two
adjacent
parcels
of
land
at
La
Sarre,
Quebec.
Each
member
of
the
investment
club
signed
a
promise
to
purchase
a
parcel
of
land
for
$1,500,
at
the
rate
of
$25
a
month
plus
$1
for
one
share
in
FINOQ.
The
parcels
of
land
were
purchased
for
between
$200
and
$300
each;
FINOQ
realized
a
profit
on
sale
of
the
land
which
was
to
be
distributed
to
the
shareholders
in
the
form
of
annual
rebates.
The
amount
of
rebate
was
based
on
a
percentage
of
the
amounts
paid
by
each
shareholder
on
his
parcel
of
land.
Theoretically,
after
a
number
of
years
the
shareholders
would
receive
rebates
amounting
to
the
purchase
price
of
their
land.
However,
the
parcels
of
land
were
never
subdivided,
no
contract
of
sale
was
signed
by
the
shareholders
and
none
of
them
became
owners
of
the
said
land.
Moreover,
the
great
majority
of
FINOQ
shareholders
stated
that
they
regarded
this
as
an
ingenious
investment
plan
and
had
no
expectation
of
becoming
owners
of
land.
The
idea
of
FINOQ
was
conceived
by
André
Perrault,
a
real
estate
broker
who
in
1973
was
the
secretary
and
prime
mover
in
FINOQ.
The
directors
of
FINOQ
included
André
Perrault,
Jean-Paul
Bérubé,
Raymond
Plante
and
Mr
Limoges.
The
shareholders
were
distributed
in
four
regions
of
northwestern
Quebec,
under
the
supervision
of
one
of
the
FINOQ
directors.
Mr
Perrault
had
the
Val
d’Or
region,
Mr
Bérubé
looked
after
shareholders
in
Chibougamau,
Mr
Plante
had
shareholders
in
Chapais
and
Mr
Limoges
(who
is
not
involved
in
these
appeals)
was
at
La
Sarre.
In
1971
and
1972
the
rebates
were
paid
to
shareholders
by
cheque.
Following
meetings
of
shareholders
of
the
four
regions,
at
which
Mr
Perrault
was
present,
it
was
decided
that
beginning
in
1973
rebates
would
be
paid
to
shareholders
in
the
form
of
bank
drafts
rather
than
cheques.
No
reason
was
given
to
explain
why
it
was
thought
necessary
to
change
the
method
of
paying
rebates
to
shareholders.
In
the
1973
taxation
year
cheques
in
the
amounts
of
$1,525,
$1,880
and
$2,805
were
issued
by
FINOQ
in
the
names
of
André
Perrault,
Jean-Paul
Bérubé
and
Raymond
Plante
respectively
(Exhibit
I-1).
The
amounts
of
these
cheques
were
received
by
the
appellants,
but
were
not
included
in
the
calculation
of
their
income
for
1973,
and
this
is
the
basis
of
the
assessments
of
the
three
appellants.
In
their
notice
of
appeal
the
appellants
argued
that
all
the
amounts
received
by
them
in
1973
were
passed
on
to
the
shareholders
as
rebates.
This
is
a
question
of
fact.
The
appellants
have
the
burden
of
showing
that
the
amounts
received
by
them
from
FINOQ
on
June
4,
1973
were
in
fact
completely
distributed
to
shareholders
in
their
respective
regions.
The
assessment
of
the
appellants
for
1973
resulted
from
a
special
investigation
conducted
by
Claude
Engelhart,
an
employee
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
A
hearing
was
first
held
regarding
a
company
known
as
“Immarco”
and
also
concerning
André
Perrault,
one
of
the
appellants
in
the
instant
case.
This
hearing
led
to
the
examination
of
FINOQ’s
books,
and
during
the
investigation
it
was
found
that
the
amounts
mentioned
in
Exhibit
1-1
were
supposed
to
have
been
paid
to
third
parties
by
the
appellants.
However,
no
T-5
was
issued
by
FINOQ
for
these
amounts
and
none
of
these
amounts
or
rebates,
taxable
under
subsection
135(7)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
was
included
in
calculating
the
income
either
of
the
appellants
or
of
the
recipient
shareholders
for
the
1973
taxation
year.
A
seizure
made
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
in
the
offices
of
FINOQ,
Habitations
Noël
and
Immarco
made
available
to
the
investigator
the
FINOQ
books
and
cheques
issued
to
the
three
appellants
and
Mr
Limoges
(Exhibit
1-1).
The
investigator
also
had
the
FINOQ
ledger,
which
indicated
the
amounts
to
be
paid
by
FINOQ
to
its
shareholders,
and
a
photocopy
of
one
page
of
this
ledger
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1.
Before
proceeding
with
the
assessments
of
the
appellants
for
1973,
the
investigator
visited
a
number
of
FINOQ
shareholders,
whose
names
appeared
on
the
list
(Exhibit
A-l),
and
to
whom
the
appellants
said
the
amounts
at
issue
were
paid
in
1973.
From
the
twenty-five
shareholders
(out
of
some
100)
who
were
visited,
the
investigator
or
one
of
his
colleagues
obtained
seventeen
sworn
statements
that
they
never
received
rebates
in
1973
(Exhibit
I-5).
Eight
other
shareholders,
at
a
criminal
proceeding
against
André
Perrault,
also
stated
that
they
received
no
amounts
or
rebates
from
FINOQ
in
1973.
The
investigation
showed
that
FINOQ
was
in
fact
the
owner
of
the
two
parcels
of
land
at
La
Sarre.
However,
the
land
was
never
subdivided
and
no
land
was
sold
to
the
shareholders.
The
testimony
of
all
the
shareholders
questioned
in
the
investigation
was
the
same.
No
shareholder
expected
to
become
the
owner
of
a
parcel
of
land,
and
all
stated
that
the
amounts
paid
by
them
were
investments
which
they
were
making
through
FINOQ.
Moreover,
after
the
special
investigation
and
before
undertaking
criminal
proceedings
against
André
Perrault,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
also
held
a
commission
of
inquiry
into
this
matter.
For
tax
purposes,
the
Minister
concluded
that
the
amounts
of
$1,525,
$2,805
and
$1,880
received
in
1973
by
Perrault,
Plante
and
Bérubé
respectively
were
not
passed
on
to
the
shareholders
of
FINOQ,
but
were
appropriated
by
them,
without
being
included
in
their
respective
incomes
for
the
1973
taxation
year.
The
investigator
asked
the
appellants
several
times
before
the
assessments
were
made
for
explanations
regarding
the
amounts
of
the
cheques
which
they
received
on
June
4,
1973
from
FINOQ.
Bérubé
and
Plante
stated
that
the
whole
matter
was
left
in
the
hands
of
Perrault,
and
this
was
not
denied.
Additionally,
it
was
Perrault
who
during
this
period
was
responsible
for
Bérubé
and
Plante’s
tax
returns,
and
said
he
was
their
representative.
Although
Perrault
said
several
times
that
all
the
amounts
at
issue
were
paid
to
the
shareholders,
the
investigator
was
not
given
any
evidence
of
this
during
the
investigation.
At
the
hearing
of
the
case
the
appellant
filed
as
Exhibit
A-6
seventeen
bank
drafts
in
the
names
of
certain
shareholders,
listed
on
Exhibit
A-l.
However,
all
these
drafts
are
for
amounts
less
than
the
rebate
which
each
shareholder
was
entitled
to
receive
in
1973.
Additionally,
the
draft
gives
no
explanation
of
exactly
what
the
amounts
represented.
Exhibit
A-3
was
also
filed
by
the
appellant,
and
properly
objected
to
by
the
respondent,
as
the
bank
draft
was
not
signed
and
the
amounts
in
question
were
not
at
issue
in
the
instant
appeal.
The
Court
cannot
place
any
evidentiary
value
on
this
document.
In
argument,
counsel
for
the
appellant
admitted
that
he
had
not
been
able
to
fully
support
the
allegations
contained
in
the
notice
of
appeal.
Counsel
appeared
to
think
that
the
seventeen
bank
drafts
(Exhibit
A-6),
the
testimony
of
Perrault,
Bérubé
and
Plante
that
the
amounts
of
the
cheque
(Exhibit
I-1)
were
paid
by
the
shareholders,
and
the
testimony
of
Mrs
Corriveau
and
Mr
Gamache,
who
said
that
they
had
received
certain
amounts
from
FINOQ
in
1973,
was
sufficient
evidence
to
enable
the
Court
to
conclude
that
all
the
amounts
at
issue
were
paid
to
the
shareholders,
and
that
the
appellants
had
made
out
their
case.
Such
a
decision
is
not
in
any
way
justified
by
the
evidence
presented
by
the
appellants.
It
seems
clear
that
the
assessments
of
the
appellants
were
not
made
lightly
or
arbitrarily
by
the
respondent.
Though
it
was
not
incumbent
on
the
respondent
to
present
evidence
of
the
facts
on
which
he
based
his
assessments,
he
showed
the
Court
that
the
facts
or
presumptions
of
fact
alleged
justified
a
conclusion
that
the
cheques
received
by
the
appellants
in
1973
had
not
been
paid
to
the
shareholders
either
by
the
appellants
personally
or
by
FINOQ.
He
could
then
logically
conclude
that
quite
specific
amounts
had
been
appropriated
by
the
appellants
in
1973,
but
not
included
in
their
tax
returns.
As
the
appellants
were
assessed
accordingly,
they
not
only
had
to
show
that
the
respondent
had
based
his
assessments
on
false
premises,
they
also
had
to
present
concrete
evidence
that
all
the
amounts
at
issue
were
paid
to
FINOQ
shareholders
in
1973.
The
appellants
did
not
succeed
either
in
direct
or
rebuttal
evidence
in
convincing
the
Court
that
the
amounts
at
issue
were
paid
to
the
shareholders
in
1973.
Accordingly,
I
conclude
that
even
if
the
amounts
of
$1,525,
$1,880
and
$2,805,
received
by
André
Perrault,
Jean-Paul
Bérubé
and
Raymond
Plante
respectively,
were
to
be
paid
to
shareholders
in
the
1973
taxation
year,
there
is
no
acceptable
evidence
that
these
amounts
were
in
fact
paid
to
FINOQ
shareholders.
The
respondent
accordingly
did
not
err
in
adding
these
amounts
to
the
appellants’
income
for
the
1973
taxation
year.
The
penalties
imposed
must
also
be
affirmed.
The
appeals
are
therefore
dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.