Calgary Herald

Finally, a judgment against CRA for a negligent audit

Quebec businessme­n awarded $5M after 12-year legal saga, Julius Melnitzer writes.

-

A Quebec Superior Court judgment awarding two Montreal businessme­n nearly $5 million in damages against the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) means taxpayers may have an easier time holding the tax collector accountabl­e for its actions.

“This is probably the first case where CRA was found liable for having taken a position that they ultimately abandoned,” said Doug Mitchell of IMK LLP, the Montreal lawyer who successful­ly represente­d the plaintiffs Irvin Ludmer and the estate of the late Arnold Steinberg. “Normally, people are quite content if the Agency just walks away and leaves them alone.”

The 12-year-old saga began in 2006 with an audit of the businessme­n’s offshore investment vehicle in the British Virgin Islands. The audit continued for six years, resulting in a $26 million reassessme­nt in 2012.

Steinberg and Ludmer alleged that CRA had acted abusively, leading to the demise of their company. They sought $117 million in damages.

The case turned on “equitylink­ed notes,” which were attractive to investors because interest that accrued on them was not taxable until the notes matured.

“The problem for CRA was that the government was perfectly happy for institutio­ns not to pay tax on these notes until they were realized, but were so motivated to go after my clients that they tried to make a specific rule for them,” Mitchell said. “It’s shocking and disturbing for tax authoritie­s to single out a group of taxpayers for different treatment in a society governed by the rule of law.”

In the course of its audit, the CRA also wrongly suggested to Bermudian authoritie­s that Ludmer and Steinberg were subject to criminal proceeding­s. As well, the Agency delayed in disclosing relevant documents to them.

“The court found that the CRA took certain positions for strategic reasons rather than good faith legal reasons,” says Martin Sorensen, a lawyer with Bennett Jones LLP in Toronto.

Still, Justice Stephen Hamilton, in his 148-page judgment issued on July 31, found that CRA had not acted maliciousl­y. The Agency’s conduct, he ruled, was negligent and unreasonab­le but not intentiona­l.

Hamilton concluded, however, that the absence of malice or intentiona­l abuse did not absolve CRA from liability. He relied on provisions in Quebec’s Civil Code that requires parties to act reasonably and in good faith at all times.

“The common law courts in other provinces seem to have a more difficult time holding CRA liable because they don’t have similar statutory provisions on which they can rely,” Sorensen said.

But the Quebec ruling is in line with decisions from the Federal Court of Appeal and the British Columbia Court of Appeal, both released in 2016, which concluded that the CRA does have a duty of care to taxpayers.

A few months later, the Quebec Court of Appeal upheld a $2.4 million award, including $1 million in punitive damages, to a company destroyed by Revenue Québec’s abuse of power. Unlike that case, however, Hamilton’s decision is founded on CRA’s negligence, a much wider basis of liability than abusive or malicious conduct.

“Hamilton’s judgment represents a significan­t victory for taxpayers,” Sorensen said. “What’s really telling is the extent to which the court went into the details of the positions taken by CRA in order to determine whether these positions were unreasonab­le.”

For his part, Mitchell maintains that the court’s approach was too conservati­ve.

“The one thing that made my jaw drop when we won was that we didn’t get punitive damages even though the judge found that CRA had subverted the tax system,” he said. “With the millions that were at stake for my clients as a result of CRA’s wrongful behaviour, the award of less than $5 million is too parsimonio­us.”

Both the taxpayers and the CRA are considerin­g an appeal. They have until the August to make up their minds.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/SEAN KILPATRICK ?? A Quebec court ruling against the Canada Revenue Agency is in line with decisions from the Federal Court of Appeal and the British Columbia Court of Appeal, both released in 2016, which concluded that the CRA does have a duty of care to taxpayers.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/SEAN KILPATRICK A Quebec court ruling against the Canada Revenue Agency is in line with decisions from the Federal Court of Appeal and the British Columbia Court of Appeal, both released in 2016, which concluded that the CRA does have a duty of care to taxpayers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada