Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

CRA Wins Appeal Against B.C. Couple Who Alleged 'Malicious' Tax Evasion Probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2019 07:02 PM

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Court of Appeal has set aside a $1.7-million damage award to a Vancouver Island couple who a lower court had said were ruined through the "malicious" actions of the Canada Revenue Agency.


    Tony and Helen Samaroo were operating a restaurant, night club and motel in Nanaimo in 2008 when they were charged with 21 counts of tax evasion for allegedly skimming $1.7 million from their businesses.


    They were acquitted of all charges in provincial court in 2010 in what the judge hearing the case agreed amounted to the Crown using "voodoo accounting" to support its case, and the couple then sued for malicious prosecution.


    A B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled last year that the Samaroos were the victims of an "egregious" prosecution based on an unfounded theory and suspicion about the alleged tax evasion.


    But in a decision released Tuesday on behalf of the three-judge panel, Justice David Harris says the trial judge was wrong to base his analysis on the idea that tax evasion can't be proven without also proving exactly how it was done.


    As a result, Harris says the judge dismissed some relevant evidence as "mere hypothesis," instead of recognizing there was a reasonable and probable cause to launch a case.


    Because the analysis was faulty, Harris says it's unnecessary to look at whether the trial judge erred in his conclusion that the Crown was motivated by malice or the investigator for the Canada Revenue Agency acted for an "improper purpose."


    "When the correct legal test is applied properly to the elements of the offence, with a correct onus of proof in a claim of malicious prosecution, and viewing the issue objectively, the Samaroos cannot succeed in showing that there was an absence of reasonable and probable cause to initiate and continue the prosecution," the decision says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules
    Ontario regulators have no right to block a company legally operating elsewhere in Canada from selling prescription eyewear to online customers in the province, an Appeal Court ruled on Thursday.

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC
    Canada's housing agency says new spending measures aimed at helping first-time buyers afford homes won't push prices up more than a few tenths of a percentage point.

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC

    Ex-Hostage Boyle Was Angry, Bossy After Release, Witnesses Tell Court

    OTTAWA — Witnesses appearing at Joshua Boyle's assault trial Thursday describe the former Afghanistan hostage as angry and domineering in the days following his release from captivity.

    Ex-Hostage Boyle Was Angry, Bossy After Release, Witnesses Tell Court

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says
    OTTAWA — The parliamentary spending watchdog says income supports for people who are too sick to work for up to a year would cost the federal government $1 billion more than its current program.

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says

    'I Want To Remember:' Survivors, Families Mark Broncos Tragedy Forever With Ink

    It's a day many want to forget. It's the people they want to remember.

    'I Want To Remember:' Survivors, Families Mark Broncos Tragedy Forever With Ink

    'To Keep His Name Alive:' Families Honour Those Who Died In Broncos Bus Crash

    Families of those who died in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash say scholarships, events and places named in their honour helps keep their memories alive.

    'To Keep His Name Alive:' Families Honour Those Who Died In Broncos Bus Crash