There’s the Canada Revenue Agency and the folks who help prepare your taxes. Do they work for you or for the CRA? You decide.
How to choose your tax help in Canada
January 20th, 2011Ebay “PowerSellers” Not Beyond The Taxman’s Reach
April 30th, 2008In an article on April 29, 2008, the Globe & Mail reported that the Federal Court of Appeal has upheld a previous ruling forcing online-auction giant eBay to provide the names, addresses, phone numbers, e-mail addresses and, most important, gross sales figures for all Canadian PowerSellers. An eBay PowerSeller is someone who sells at least $1,000 (U.S.) a month through the site and as such has access to special features and promotions.
The legal battle to withhold the names and protect the privacy of eBay buyers and sellers has been ongoing since 2006, when the CRA launched an investigation to see if PowerSellers were reporting revenue earned through eBay on their 2004 and 2005 income tax returns.
Unfortunately for some taxpayers who may now be exposed to the scrutiny of the CRA as a result of the ruling, this initial sweep could be the tip of the iceberg:
“…[eBay]… had about 10,000 PowerSellers in 2004 and 2005. There are five levels of PowerSeller status and qualifiers are eligible for prioritized support services and special promotions. There are likely far more PowerSellers today and it is not clear whether the CRA will audit them as well.”
While eBay may try to continue the legal fight to not disclose customer contact information, it is worth noting that the CRA has won virtually every legal battle thus far. That means that the chances are very good that all PowerSellers’ full identities will become known to the CRA.
This is one of a number of initiatives that demonstrates the CRA’s hard-line stance on those who are earning income through new media endeavours and businesses.
It’s a challenging situation on a number of levels. It’s quite possible that sellers don’t expect to achieve such high-volume sales at the outset of their internet campaign. As profits grow and order-fulfillment becomes more time-consuming, record keeping can suffer. The unfamiliarity that people have with new media ventures as opposed to traditional employment and income-generating endeavours could further lead to confusion about what and when income is taxable.
But the CRA is making it clear that it will entertain no grey areas. They are starting to look very closely not only at eBay’s PowerSellers, but at any number of online ventures.
Powersellers need to remember that every year the CRA automatically cross-references all T-4 employee returns with taxpayer SIN numbers. If the same SIN number comes up in more than one instance, the CRA will review the taxpayer’s return to see if the taxpayer reported all their T-4’d sources of income. Cross-referencing PowerSeller data into this same matching system would instantly disclose if the taxpayer is including eBay-generated income in his or her tax return.
The best advice? If you have been profiting from any online activity without reporting that income to the CRA, you are at risk.
Our free on-line assessment can help identify what action you may need to take to clean up your unreported income before the CRA comes after you.
Get It In Writing
April 18th, 2006A simple way to test anyone who says you don’t need a tax lawyer to clean up your failure to file and/or tax evasion.
“It’s all talk…” This common expression refers to the fact that oral representations disappear, but the written word stays. In a court of law, the difference between “talk” and a written statement as evidence is enormous—for obvious reasons. When it comes to interpreting the Income Tax Act, taxpayers need to remember the difference between talk and a written statement. If a financial or other trusted advisor tells you that there is no criminality involved in your tax transgressions, don’t take their word for it. Get their opinion in writing. BEFORE you follow their advice. Here’s why:
Today there seems to be an incredibly widespread allowance for the interpretation of the Income Tax Act by non-lawyers. Although not licensed or insured to interpret tax law, many financial practitioners and advisors are bold enough to cross the line completely and advise their clients on the criminal provisions of the Income Tax Act. Sections 238 and 239 of the Act deal with failure to file and income tax evasion, clearly defining both actions as criminal offences. Meanwhile, many advisors assure their clients that they are qualified by the Voluntary Disclosure Policy of the CRA to deal with the resolution of tax offences. Others claim that the CRA will not likely prosecute, or that these sections are not really criminal offences. What these advisors all have in common is a lack of credibility and – more important – liability for their claims. Because it’s all talk.
Why should the opinion of a financial or other trusted advisor on a criminal (meaning legal) matter be trusted if the advisor won’t put in writing?
When someone represents something as fact, then his/her credibility and the likelihood of it being true is enhanced with a written warranty. This applies to merchants in the sale of goods, and so should it apply to non-lawyers. The lawyer, when retained, will provide you with a written legal opinion on the facts regarding the law. The credibility of the lawyer’s opinion is enhanced by the fact of his/her training and license to practice law, and supported by the fact that opinion is provided to you as a written statement of opinion.
Failure to file and/or tax evasion are clearly offences under the Income Tax Act – even if you are not under investigation by the CRA. To state otherwise is negligent and playing roulette with the client’s personal freedom and wealth. Should your accountant or other trusted advisor say tax violations are not real offences, or that it is unlikely the CRA will prosecute, ask for the opinion in writing. Here’s an opinion letter — drafted by a lawyer — that you can ask them to sign to support their opinion and involve them more personally in your situation by assuming a share of your risk.
Remember, the “talk” will disappear, but the writing stays.
Tax Amnesty, Voluntary Disclosure, You Think?
April 3rd, 2006Over the past year, there have been a few professionals equating outright a tax amnesty with the Government voluntary disclosure program. The reasons for this vary but they all have something in common. They all deal with tax evasion on an administrative rather than legal basis. Simply put, they are all sounding boards and promoters of Government policy and lack any legal analysis or content in what they say and represent to the public. They forget, particularly those of combined accounting and legal training, what matters above all for a lawyer, is their client’s rights under law. They forget the differences between a voluntary disclosure POLICY and the protection of the client’s rights in the legal sense. Most importantly, they forget that they are dealing with criminal activity.
The voluntary disclosure program/policy is essentially a system of procedures and protocols adopted by Government. It is easily cancelled by the administrators who put it in place. It is a policy to entice the surrender of tax evaders and/or individuals who have failed to file. It is an administrative device with little regard paid to legal questions such as the individual’s right against self-incrimination or the privilege between a client and his lawyer. It is left to the individual’s lawyer to position his client so that the information provided during the process with the Agency is subject to legal rights. Those lawyers that do not regularly deal with such legal questions will find this an arduous task.
Many professionals dealing with voluntary disclosure as POLICY forget that tax evasion and failure to file are criminal offences under the Income Tax Act. An individual can be imprisoned for either offence. Everything an individual or his representative say or deliver to the CRA can be used against a taxpayer should it decide to prosecute. Unquestionably, the lawyer is best equipped to deal with tax evasion and failure to file at any stage. However, should there be little or no legal content to the process employed by the “lawyer” and it simply mirrors CRA’s administrative policy, it can be argued that the client has waived all legal rights and privilege, among other things. Succinctly, the client’s only recourse in Court would be the “stupidity” of the “lawyer”. Not much of a defense in any case!
The individual and “lawyer” need to remember that the CRA has a mandate to collect as much money as possible and/or prosecute. Obviously, there is a need to understand policy at the Government level to fully represent the client. However, there is a more important need for “lawyers” to act as such and fully appreciate the client’s rights under law. Those who equate a tax amnesty with a voluntary disclosure POLICY act at their client’s peril. They are dealing with a criminal matter in administrative fashion and risk their client’s personal liberty and wealth.