Regina Leader-Post

Taxman declares man dead, wants him to pay

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CAMPOBELLO ISLAND, N.B. • A 64-year-old New Brunswick man says he is very much alive, despite being declared dead by the Canada Revenue Agency.

Peter Harwerth of Campobello Island said he was stunned to receive a letter from the agency a few days ago that was addressed to the “estate of the late Peter Harwerth.”

“That kind of baffled us, we were shocked,” Harwerth said. “We just couldn’t believe what we were looking at.”

He said the letter was a regular tax reassessme­nt, but the problem was he and his wife had not yet received their original assessment after the taxes were filed in 2016.

He said their accountant had estimated Harwerth would receive a refund of about $1,100, but the assessment he got said he owed more than $500. The letter also informed him that he had already received the refund, even though he had not.

Harwerth’s wife was to receive a refund but had received nothing yet. She had also not received a letter asking her to pay back any money.

“When we called Revenue Canada, it turned out that both of our refund cheques had been cashed previously, only a few days after they had been issued,” he said.

He said they are now expecting photocopie­s of the cashed cheques so they can verify that the signatures were not theirs.

Revenue Canada is investigat­ing the matter, Harwerth said. But it wasn’t able to explain why the letter was addressed to his estate.

In an email, the agency said it identifies a taxpayer as deceased when it receives confirmati­on of death from another government department, lawyer, executor, beneficiar­y or family member.

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