Delmer
E
Taylor
[TRANSLATION]:—This
appeal,
which
was
heard
in
Montreal,
Quebec
on
February
8,
1979,
was
brought
as
a
result
of
assessments
in
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
added
certain
amounts
to
the
income
reported
by
the
appellant
for
the
1972,
1973
and
1974
taxation
years.
In
addition
the
Minister
imposed
penalties.
In
his
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
the
respondent
relied,
inter
alia,
on
sections
3,
9,
paragraph
78(1)(a)
and
subsection
163(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended.
Facts
The
appellant
operated
a
scrap
iron
business
in
the
vicinity
of
Montreal.
He
reported
no
income
from
hisoperations
for
1972,
but
for
1973
and
1974
he
reported
net
amounts
of
$3,317.02
and
$3,687.27
respectively.
In
1972
the
major
part
of
his
income
came
from
unemployment
insurance
benefits.
Arguments
In
his
notice
of
appeal
the
appellant
stated
the
following:
1972—
In
the
audit
by
Mr
Yves
Laforest
I
found
that
the
total
of
the
revised
amounts
for
the
sale
of
scrap
iron,
$24,533.65,
was
listed
under
the
names
of
Roy
Batteries
and
J
Roy.
I
hereby
state
that
I
have
never
operated
as
Roy
Batteries,
always
operating
under
my
own
name
of
J
Roy.
Furthermore,
the
receipts
amount
comes
in
large
part
from
W
I
Sandys
Inc,
10370
Armand
Lavergne.
During
the
year
I
sold
$1,000
at
most
to
this
company.
At
the
same
time
I
sold
about
$4,000
to
Consumers
Metal
Corp,
4000
St
Patrick.
As
it
was
the
first
year
I
operated
this
business,
I
did
not
report
this
total
receipt
($5,000),
as
I
felt
certain
I
had
made
no
profit
for
the
short
operating
period
from
October
to
December
1972.
I
am
prepared
to
accept
an
assessment
on
$5,000
income
less
60%
expenses,
that
is,
net
income
of
$2,000.
1973—
As
for
1972,
the
amount
of
additional
assessed
income
of
$12,746.51
comes
from
the
same
source,
that
is,
W
I
Sandys
Inc.
Once
again,
I
hereby
state
that
I
had
no
dealing
with
this
company.
My
only
customer
was
Consumers
Metal
Corporation,
and
the
income
from
that
operation
was
reported
in
total,
namely
$28,353.69.
1974—
My
only
customer
was
Consumers
Metal
Corp
(still
the
same),
making
a
gross
income
of
$61,529.73.
I
object
to
the
new
additional
amount
of
$16,192.14.
In
summary,
for
the
foregoing
reasons,
I
ask
that
the
assessments
be
increased
and
returned
to
their
original
state,
apart
from
1972,
in
which
I
accept
additional
income
of
$2,000.
If
the
Department
is
convinced
of
the
merits
of
its
claim,
I
would
like
to
see
invoices
or
copies
of
invoices
from
W
I
Sandys
Inc
on
which
my
signature
appears,
indicating
that
I
received
the
sums
of
money
mentioned.
I
am
prepared
to
swear
to
any
statement
to
the
effect
that
I
did
not
receive
in
any
manner
the
additional
amounts
for
which
I
am
being
assessed.
In
his
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
the
respondent
maintained
the
following:
the
appellant
operated
a
scrap
iron
business
from
1972
onwards;
in
his
1972
taxation
year,
the
appellant
realized
unreported
sales
amounting
to
$24,533.65;
the
respondent
allowed
60%
of
the
amount
of
these
sales
as
deductible
expenses,
namely
$14,720.19;
in
his
1973
taxation
year,
the
appellant
realized
unreported
sales
amounting
to
$12,757.51;
the
respondent
allowed
60%
of
the
amount
of
these
sales
as
deductible
expenses,
namely
$7,654.51;
in
his
1974
taxation
year,
the
appellant
realized
unreported
sales
amounting
to
$16,192.14;
the
respondent
allowed
60%
of
the
amount
of
these
sales
as
deductible
expenses,
namely
$9,715.28;
the
respondent
accordingly
duly
added
to
the
appellant’s
income
the
following
amounts:
|
1972
|
1973
|
1974
|
|
$9,813.46
|
$5,103
|
$6,476.86
|
the
appellant
wilfully
or
in
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
omitted
to
report
the
said
income.
Depositions
The
following
persons
testified
for
the
respondent
regarding
certain
information
relating
to
purchases
in
the
books
of
W
I
Sandys
Inc
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Sandys”):
Mr
Raymond
Tremlay—auditor,
Revenue
Canada;
Mr
Ernest
Lutterman—secretary-treasurer
of
“Sandys”;
Mr
Michel
Nichols—special
investigator,
Revenue
Canada;
Mrs
Juliette
Lessard—employee
in
the
Sandys
office.
Audits
of
the
books
of
“Sandys”
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
established
that
there
were
purchase
receipts
in
the
names
of
“Roy
Battery”,
“Roy”,
“Roy
Scrap”,
“J
Roy”,
“J
A
Roy”
and
so
on
from
1972
onwards,
and
that
these
were
much
higher
than
what
the
appellant
stated
that
he
had
sold
to
“Sandys”.
Mr
Lutterman
and
Miss
Lessard
stated
that
they
knew
the
appellant
very
well
and
that
the
latter
sometimes
came
to
their
place
of
business
more
than
once
a
day.
He
followed
the
same
routine
as
the
other
suppliers,
namely,
that
he
was
given
cash
from
the
till
kept
by
Miss
Lassard,
on
presentation
of
a
slip
indicating
the
weight
of
material
supplied,
for
scrap
iron
as
well
as
for
batteries.
It
was
not
the
custom
of
“Sandys”
to
require
receipts
or
signatures
for
payments
made
in
cash.
The
appellant,
on
the
other
hand,
stated
that
he
was
not
in
the
“Sandys”
office
as
often
during
the
day
or
during
a
month
as
the
invoices
seemed
to
indicate.
He
could
make
only
one
trip
a
day
with
the
old
truck
which
he
had,
sometimes
going
to
“Sandys”,
and
sometimes
to
Consumers
Metal
Corporation,
which
was
located
at
the
other
end
of
town.
Moreover,
he
did
not
usually
sell
scrap
iron
to
“Sandys”,
as
he
ordinarily
sold
them
batteries.
His
Statement
was:
“The
fellow
on
the
scale,
I
don’t
know
what
his
name
is
.
..
he
did
not
give
me
any
invoice”.
The
appellant
always
operated
as
“J
Roy”,
and
never
under
any
other
name.
Pleading
The
following
extracts
from
the
pleading
serve
to
clarify
the
point
at
issue:
By
counsel
for
the
appellant
All
these
invoices
prove
nothing,
your
Lordship;
everything
that
is
stated
there
is
in
documents
originating
with
employees
of
Sandys,
namely
Mr
Lutterman
or
Mrs
Lessard,
and
it
states
below
Mr
Roy
sold
to
us
for
so
much—so,
it
states
below
“Mr
Roy
sold
to
us
for
so
much”,
and
then
it
states
“paid”,
or
there
is
a
sign
that
you
can
see
there,
signed
most
of
the
time
by
Mrs
Lessard.
On
none
of
the
invoices
there
does
the
signature
of
Mr
Roy
appear,
indicating
that
he
received
the
money
or
that
he
sold
this
material.
Cash
was
always
paid,
so
that
there
was
no
paper
which
can
show
us
that
Mr
Roy
really
sold
these
items,
to
the
Sandys
company,
or
for
these
amounts.
It
seems
to
me
that
if
someone
had
wanted
to
show
that
Mr
Roy
in
fact
received
income
of
$60,000
and
over
for
three
years—perhaps
not
income
but
sales
of
$60,00
and
over—much
more
detailed
evidence
than
that
could
have
been
presented.
What
it
comes
down
to
is
a
question
of
credibility:
who
should
you
believe?
By
counsel
for
the
respondent
If
I
have
correctly
understood
the
argument
of
my
learned
colleague,
the
matter
should
be
approached
in
two
ways,
and
I
am
quite
in
agreement
with
him
on
this
point,
except
that
I
think
his
approach
is
wrong.
Now,
Mr
Chairman,
in
a
tax
matter,
it
is
now
well-established
law
that
the
appellant
has
the
burden
of
showing
that
the
assessment
which
he
disputes
is
incorrect,
and
to
do
this
he
must
present
or
justify
before
you,
must
bring
before
the
Board
sufficient
facts
to
rebut
the
facts
on
which
the
Minister
relied,
and
what
these
facts
are.
Finally,
for
the
appellant
This
will
not
be
a
long
reply
.
.
.
I
just
want
to
say
that
it
is
quite
clear
that,
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
is
for
us
to
shift
the
burden
of
proof,
but
there
must
nonetheless
be
something
to
shift,
I
say
that
there
is
nothing
to
be
shifted
becaue
there
is
absolutely
nothing
to
justify
the
additional
income
which
Mr
Roy
is
alleged
to
have
made.
So,
we
may
have
been
prepared
to
shift
something,
but
there
was
nothing
to
be
shifted.
Conclusions
When
a
penalty
is
added
to
an
income
tax
assessment,
the
justification
for
such
a
penalty
may
be
closely
related
to
the
reasons
for
the
income
tax
assessment
itself.
In
the
case
at
bar,
however,
the
imposition
of
the
penalty
and
the
income
tax
assessment
are
not
only
totally
in
correlation,
they
are
based
on
the
same
contention
by
the
Minister:
that
the
appellant
did
not
report
certain
amounts
of
his
income.
The
Minister
submitted
that
the
following
two
points
in
support
of
his
contention:
the
existence
in
the
‘‘San-
dys”
files
of
invoices
for
purchases
paid
for
in
cash
and
claimed
in
expenses;
statements
by
two
of
the
“Sandys”
employees
(Lutterman
and
Lessard)
to
the
effect
that
Mr
Roy
had
received
money.
The
appellant’s
testimony
contradicts
that
of
Lutterman
and
Lessard,
and
I
cannot
find
valid
grounds
for
accepting
the
testimony
and
rejecting
that
of
Roy.
He
denied
receiving
these
amounts
and
in
my
opinion,
in
the
present
circumstances
it
is
then
for
the
Minister
to
shift
the
burden
of
proof,
since
the
latter
cannot
justify
the
penalty
without
justifying
the
tax.
Thus,
the
income
tax
assessment
by
the
Minister
is
based
on
invoices
from
“Sandys”,
and
in
my
view
the
company’s
decision
not
to
require
receipts
or
signatures
for
payments
in
cash
should
not
operate
to
the
detriment
of
the
alleged
recipient.
One
taxpayer
cannot
be
required
to
disapprove
the
documents
of
another
taxpayer
in
order
to
release
himself
from
the
burden
of
proof
in
his
own
notice
of
appeal.
The
offer
made
by
the
appellant
in
his
notice
of
appeal
that
he
was
willing
to
be
assessed
on
an
additional
amount
of
$2,000
for
1972
was
not
accepted
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
However,
in
my
opinion
his
financial
statements
for
the
other
taxation
years
support
his
claim
that
he
made
no
profit
in
1972.
Decision
The
appeal
is
allowed
for
the
three
years
on
appeal,
with
regard
to
the
in-
come
tax
assessments
as
well
as
to
the
imposition
of
penalties.
The
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
accordingly.
Appeal
allowed.