THE INTENDED FOCUS OF THIS POST IS THE ALLIANCE FOR THE DEFENCE OF CANADIAN SOVEREIGNTY (ADCS) FATCA IGA LEGISLATION TRIAL IN CANADA HELD ON JANUARY 28, 2019.
The Government of Canada (who we are suing), together with some commenters on this site, strongly emphasize that Canadians should thank their lucky stars because they can easily get out of any FATCA-related “problems” (e.g., Canada won’t collect on behalf of the IRS at the present time, IRS at present time is not prosecuting all those turned over by FATCA, American interference is only hypothetical, “US citizens in Canada don’t seem to have much to fear from America or Canada, apart from the pointless automatic reporting. Canada may in fact be the last remaining country in the world where dual citizen status isn’t risky.” etc.). Why then did our Plaintiffs put themselves personally at financial risk with this lawsuit?
One reason for this trial is that Plaintiffs Gwen and Kazia want Canada’s FATCA IGA legislation, infringing on their privacy (Charter section 8) and equality (section 15) rights, declared unconstitutional by Canada’s Federal Court — and that a lawsuit is the way to achieve this specific objective.
Do privacy and equality rights matter? Should we care?
Plaintiffs also say in their court submission: “Canada effectively maintains that it enacted the Impugned Provisions under duress from a foreign state. The Court should be very slow to accept this as a justification for infringements of the Charter. Canada is expected to defend the constitutional rights and freedoms of its citizens and not bargain them away or capitulate to threats from a foreign bully state.”
Is it important that Canada be a sovereign nation and not bargain away Charter rights because of a threat from a foreign bully? Does standing up to a foreign bully matter?
The CBC tells us that information on 600,000 accounts/year has been turned over to the US IRS during the past years. Even those who do not support Plaintiffs’ lawsuit would likely admit that at least “some” of the accountholders did not give consent for the turnover — meaning that the loss of Charter rights is not hypothetical.
Gwen and Kazia believe, and shouldn’t this really be obvious to all Canadians?, that the loss of our Charter rights, the loss of Canada’s sovereignty, and the loss of dignity of a subgroup of Canadian citizens, are more than, as some commenters argue, just “a relatively abstract sort of harm”.
Canada argues no harm caused by the FATCA IGA, but does acknowledge that if Charter rights are infringed, it had plenty of justification to do so — Canada had no choice but to comply with United States FATCA demands and could not have said “no”.
The lawsuit began during the time of the Harper Conservative government. We had hoped that when the Liberals came to power, there would be no need to continue the lawsuit, because of statements made on June 25, 2015 by Justin Trudeau to ADCS (“The Government of Canada has a responsibility to stand up for its citizens when foreign governments are encroaching on their rights. We believe that the [FATCA] deal reached between Canada and the U.S. is insufficient to protect Canadians.”) — but this was not to be, and the lawsuit continues even with the change in government.
When reading the diverse comments below on a variety of topics please try to consider what Plaintiffs’ Gwen and Kazia want to achieve, on behalf of all Canadians, with their lawsuit.
More discussion of the lawsuit below:
THANKS TO our brave Plaintiffs Gwen, Kazia, and Ginny, witnesses, supporters who never stopped giving, and lawyers Joe Arvay and Arden Beddoes— and thanks to the Federal Court for selecting this trial for the very first live webcast
Our Alliance for the Defence of Canadian Sovereignty’s FATCA IGA legislation lawsuit finally (almost five years after ADCS incorporation as a non-profit) came to a Charter-Constitutional trial in Canadian Federal Court. It was held in Vancouver British Columbia from January 28 – February 1, 2019. We expect a decision in June or so of this year.
See our ADCS legal counsel John Richardson interviewed by CBC on the FATCA trial. In 2016 and 2017 private information on a total of 600,000 private accounts were turned over by Canada to the U.S. IRS each year. Read the Court submissions.
SOME OF THE TRIAL EVENTS:
DAY FIVE: Canada argues that our Plaintiffs have no standing. Arvay responds that the fact that Plaintiffs are designated US persons and have banking accounts at risk should be enough. Also mentions the public interest in this case and that Plaintiffs are carrying the torch for all those designated as US persons in Canada.
Discussion of remedy: (Section 24 vs. 52 vs. Declaration). Arvay asks that primary remedy sought be section 52. Canadian Charter section 52 says: “The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect“.
If Plaintiffs Gwen and Kazia win, Arvay wants the remedy applied in six months, argues that Canada never keeps to one year remedy. Canada wants one year.
A lot of discussion on CRS (which came after the IGA) vs. the IGA. Arvay says that we are not in court to defend or challenge the CRS.
Canada says that banks put data into a T5 for millions of Canadians, so what’s the big deal with the IGA? Arvay responds by saying that if Canada tried to impose a requirement for IGA data in, for example, the massive cash-independent contractor economy, would that not require a warrant? Absolutely he says. Where is the warrant for the IGA?
Arvay: The IGA is a HUGE fishing expedition just because of a hunch. WE WOULD NOT ALLOW THIS FISHING EXPEDITION IN CANADA. IGA allows IRS to pursue those people under the rubric of the tax system.
Canada justifies the legality of the IGA on the basis that our Tax Treaty with US says each will assist the other in tax compliance. But Arvay responds that just because we have a treaty with a country — that does not make it charter-proof: A TREATY DOES NOT MAKE A CHARTER-FREE ZONE as Canada appears to suggest.
There was a discussion on whether the merits of US tax law impact on this case.
Arvay pointed out that the only reason the IGA is relevant to the US tax scheme is because the US has citizenship-based taxation (CBT). But it has also been argued that the Court cannot rule on the merits of a foreign tax. Yet Arvay says that isn’t Canada obliged to explain why it is important for CANADA to give effect to the US CBT law? No evidence, he says, that this purpose is important to Canada.
He gives an example: So what if the US amended its tax law so that there would be a special tax on all US persons whose parents were born in China (because the US is angry at China).
Would we then uphold a Canadian IGA law that helped in this human rights-violating US tax compliance? Canada would say Yes? Because we are not allowed to consider the merits of any sacrosanct US tax law — and we said in the treaty that we would help in US tax compliance? Canada can’t be asked to do this just because it is in the treaty, Canada has to justify that the law has a valid purpose says Arvay.Canada asserts that the IGA is better for Canadians than FATCA. Arvay counters in part by saying that with FATCA you get a choice to disclose or not disclose — puts the choice in the hands of the citizens, not the banks.
Canada asserts that it provides oversight when providing our banking info to the IRS. Arvay responds that CRA placing a stamp on the documents could not be oversight that provides any protection.
Arvay disagrees with Canada’s assertion that a section 1 onus to justify for Canada only applies to criminal case. Disagrees also with Canada’s narrow view on a section 15 criterion that the category of persons affected (US citizens plus others) is too broad.
Canada says that Parliament already provides protection to Canadians because Canada cannot collect on behalf of the US per the Tax treaty. Arvay responds that the IGA exposes a group of Canadians to enforcement and has denied this group the protection of Canadian sovereignty.
Arvay points out that Canada did not respond to his assertion on whether the IGA is arbitrary re: “accidental” “Americans”.
Canada argues that there is no problem using IGA obtained data for domestic purposes. Arvay argues that that is not a purpose of the IGA and that the type of data collected could not be used in Canada without a warrant.
Arvay mentions that yes it is true that Canada will not help collect FBAR penalties, but Canada has provided no evidence that IRS will not use IGA data for FBAR purposes.
Trial ends. Justice says that this is a complicated case.
DAY FOUR: Just so no one has any doubt whatsoever as to Canada’s number one reason for the IGA, Canada confirmed that, yes, as we all had expected, the primary objective of the IGA was to avoid those nasty complications of non-compliance. [If a really powerful country points a gun to your head, just comply.] Canada says that this primary important objective weighed against the low privacy concerns of the data seizure and the minimally intrusive way the info is collected make the IGA provisions reasonable.
Canada points out that some of our witnesses received a Chapter 3 and not a FATCA letter, but the point is that Canada does admit that accountholder information has in fact been turned over to IRS and that is not in dispute. [600,000 in 2016 and in 2017 per CBC]
Canada feels that IGA is not overly broad because you can’t check what you don’t know. The IGA is ok because everybody does it (e.g., CRS).
Regarding privacy Canada says that once account info has been turned over to CRA an expectation of privacy is lost and it’s ok for Canada to use the info for domestic purposes (not a purpose in the IGA).Even if there is an expectation of privacy that expectation is very low.
Regarding section 15 equality Canada says that the distinction between the Plaintiffs and other Canadians is not an acceptable enumerated factor — we say it is and the Justice said that she will think about it. For those who feel that we might re-negotiate a better deal with the bully, Canada helpfully told us that FATCA is what it is and that we can’t change that system.
Canada says that it does careful monitoring of the info sent to IRS because an officer puts a stamp on the document telling IRS to keep the contents secret.
The Charter should not protect those who flaunt US law says Canada. Canada ended today’s presentation with this: Plaintiffs are asking the Court to put the country at risk just so that someone can travel there — this is outrageous and NOT a privilege that the Charter can protect. In other words, we and the Plaintiffs are in it only for the travel.
DAY THREE: Canada explained in its scholarly economic assessment that there can only be MUCH DOOM AND GLOOM FOR CANADA if Plaintiffs Gwen and Kazia win the lawsuit. Canada says that if Gwen and Kazia win on behalf of all Canadians, and the Court rules that the FATCA IGA legislation violates our Charter rights, the U.S. would never re-negotiate FATCA because Canada brings NOTHING to the table.
DAY TWO: Our side explained why Canada’s FATCA IGA violates Charter sections 8 and 15 and why a section 1 override is not justified. Mr. Arvay read the powerful words of our witnesses who felt that they were abandoned by their country, treated as a second class citizen, betrayed by Canada — statements relevant to the section 15 violation.
DAY ONE: The Justice asked our lawyers generally: So what SHOULD Canada have done [instead of the IGA legislation?] Our lawyers answered in part: We expect Canada to stand up to the bully when our Constitutional rights are at stake…We don’t negotiate our Constitutional rights away for economic reasons…
[DISCLAIMER: The official record of the trial events is only the official transcript provided by the Court — and not the recollections made in the Post or in any comments below.]
“The Government lawyers suggested that because of the non-assistance clause that the US tax law in Canada is not an issue.”
Confirming that it’s officially ok for Canadian citizens not to comply.
That has always been my understanding.
I thought it was pretty funny when the government lawyer essentially said “You don’t have to pay if you don’t want to, so where’s the harm in all this reporting?”
I can’t actually disagree with any of that.
I think it’s a pretty disgusting way to run a tax system, and absolutely typical of America.
It’s good that expat duals are free to ignore it, but not good that their private information is being transferred around the world by the bucketload to no purpose and in violation of the rights enjoyed by those born elsewhere. And not good that some experience interference with their access to banking services. And above all, not good that it’s so hard for USCs to actually find out that they’re just being lied to and there’s really no need to file US tax returns. Those who file, thinking it’s necessary, may indeed suffer harm.
Good reasons to renounce, if possible.
That is one of many myths surrounding the tax treaty. That is not enough to thwart compliance condors.
Both of you would probably agree treaty exemptions would be more reinforced if there were explicit exemptions in the tax treaty for RRSP/RESP/RDSP/TFSA, whatever taxes the US has but not Canada, etc.
How the tax treaty works is any tax that does not get prevented with credits from Canadian tax paid flow through. It all works fine for US residents but not for Canadian residents who are US persons. That is the law of Canada, as the tax treaty is Canadian law. IMO, the Canadian Government has done a massive disservice by not pursuing treaty language providing utmost clarity in regards to it all.
I understand both of your positions to simply ignore it all and fudge on bank questions, yet those comments are not helping with this case and are not helping our plaintiffs Gwen, Kazia, and Ginny. Such positions line up more with the Government argument that the double taxation claim is trivial.
No, the information being sent hither and yon is not great, though I do not share the deep paranoia of some.
For Canadians in Canada, life remains easy if you haven’t been scared into compliance. Lie to the bank and there is no FATCA reporting (and no restrictions even if the truth is told). Don’t file US returns and the IRS won’t know that you exist. Stuck with a bill from Uncle Sam? Tear it up, they can’t collect.
Life in other countries is not always as easy, and renunciation may be the only way forward for some.
“Both of you would probably agree treaty exemptions would be more reinforced if there were explicit exemptions in the tax treaty for RRSP/RESP/RDSP/TFSA, whatever taxes the US has but not Canada, etc.”
Not I. I think USCs can use US investments and the US tax code very effectively to make money, if they choose to go down that route. If they prefer to invest in the residence country, or are already committed to residence country investments, best to renounce or ignore.
Other central questions for politicians:
Should Canadian Law be Obeyed? Yes or No!
Point of Information: The Tax Treaty is Canadian Law.
Point of Information: By not refuting by way of explicit statements or exemptions in the tax treaty, Canada has agreed to the US claim of tax jurisdiction over Canadian residents who the US claims as US Persons.
The Canadian Government Lawyer suggests that there is no need for Canadian residents to obey Canadian law – as represented by the tax treaty in regards to the US claim of double tax jurisdiction – because there is a non-assistance clause. IMO, it is wrong for a Canadian Government lawyer to suggest that if Canadian US persons don’t like the Canadian double tax law that they should just ignore it.
Does the non-assistance clause in and of itself relieve those in Canada of obligation to obey Canadian law? Not!
The non-assistance clause is a contradiction to Canadian Law abetting US double tax claims at the detriment of those impacted, and in contradiction of the Canadian Government obligation – under its claim of tax jurisdiction over Canadians – to protect and assist Canadians !
“: The Tax Treaty is Canadian Law.”
Tax treaties are elective. A taxpayer can invoke the treaty to claim a benefit to which s/he is entitled. If the taxpayer has no reason to claim any treaty
benefits, s/he needn’t even know of the treaty’s existence.
A USC dual who doesn’t file US tax returns is not breaking the law of the residence country.
Point of Information: By not refuting by way of explicit statements or exemptions in the tax treaty, Canada has agreed to the US claim of tax jurisdiction over Canadian residents who the US claims as US Persons.
But, if you are a US citizen then if you do not comply and it comes time to renew your passport then the US government will deny it and the US government will order the Canadian government to arrest you and extradite you back to the US. The only way out is to have a Canadian citizenship unless the Canadian government will extradite one of their own which in any case I believe they will because the Canadian government is the US empires lap dog.
“By not refuting by way of explicit statements or exemptions in the tax treaty, Canada has agreed to the US claim of tax jurisdiction over Canadian residents who the US claims as US Persons.”
Canada has explicitly agreed (in the saving clause) that the US can tax US citizens as if the tax treaty had never come into force. That’s not the same as the US having jurisdiction over US citizens in Canada. The US doesn’t have jurisdiction in Canada.
The assistance in collection / information articles are wrong, in my view. Canada shouldn’t collect US taxes, and none of the IGA1 countries should be automatically handing over their citizens’ private information. It’s those articles that need to be renegotiated, IMO.
State Department and IRS are different departments. The situation you describe is only if you have a $50K US tax debt. You have to be on radar first for that. I have not heard of that situation happening, yet, of passport denial.
plaxy that is a definition of jurisdiction. Certainly not for gun laws, for example. Yet the US does not claim gun laws for US persons anywhere in the world (unless with the army, CIA, drone bombings, etc). The US claims Tax Jurisdiction, that US persons are to pay on their worldwide income no matter where in the world they live.
“that is a definition of jurisdiction”
The US doesn’t have jurisdiction in Canada. Fortunately.
Outside the US, CBT is not the law of the land, it’s just a citizenship obligation. Like being required to register for US military service.
“Canada has explicitly agreed (in the saving clause) that the US can tax US citizens as if the tax treaty had never come into force. That’s not the same as the US having jurisdiction over US citizens in Canada. The US doesn’t have jurisdiction in Canada.”
A distinction of no difference.
“State Department and IRS are different departments. The situation you describe is only if you have a $50K US tax debt. You have to be on radar first for that. I have not heard of that situation happening, yet, of passport denial.”
$50,000 owed, including fines and fees. Need not have any tax debt, just $50,000 owed.
The first letters threatening passport revocation went out a little less than a year ago. Too early for it to actually happen. The partial shutdown of the US gov. probably gives us some more time, but the law is in the books.“State Department and IRS are different departments. The situation you describe is only if you have a $50K US tax debt. You have to be on radar first for that. I have not heard of that situation happening, yet, of passport denial.”
$50,000 owed, including fines and fees. Need not have any tax debt, just $50,000 owed.
The first letters threatening passport revocation went out a little less than a year ago. Too early for it to actually happen. The partial shutdown of the US gov. probably gives us some more time, but the law is in the books.
“Outside the US, CBT is not the law of the land, it’s just a citizenship obligation. Like being required to register for US military service.”
Being enforced to increasing degrees by our local institutions.
Citizenship Based Double Taxation = US claim of double tax jurisdiction over US persons in Canada.
The Canadian government has set Canadian law, the tax treaty, in which it had opportunity to exempt US citizenship double taxation on Canadian source for Canadian tax residents. It did not. Also as is pointed out by JapanT, they let the Savings Clause stay in there. That is not refutation, that is more agreeing to it all.
The Tax Treaty does recognise Canada first right to tax on Canadian source for Canadian residents. Then any tax that the US has but not Canada, tax by a different name, tax at a higher rate (then US rate – Canadian rate), these all flow on top by Canada not refuting and exempting. Then this tax treaty is the law of Canada, & back to the question does the Canadian Government support obeying Canadian law for Canadian residents.
It is not all clear as the Government lawyers suggest.
“The US doesn’t have jurisdiction in Canada. Fortunately.” Except were Canada in the tax treaty – Canadian Law – has allowed US to have tax jurisdiction.
The US doesn’t have tax jurisdiction in Canada IS NOT a reciprocal statement with Canada does not have tax jurisdiction in the US.
The US claims jurisdiction over US/Canadian duals in Canada and now with the IGA bank information they could even try to assess some tax. So what? The fact is, its still true that the only way they can actually collect that tax is if the individual agrees to pay it.
Its the compliance condors that have done the real damage, convincing people they must declare this, they are required to file that, and they must pay, pay, pay (plus hefty fees, of course). Its the job of us all here at Brock to continually refute those falsehoods.
@maz57
Fine and well for duals but not for US only citizens.
“Being enforced to increasing degrees by our local institutions.”
Not in Canada. Between the IGA guidance on self-certification and the lawyer’s point about collections, I’d say the government’s de facto position is that US tax compliance is a matter of personal choice, full stop.
“Not in Canada. Between the IGA guidance on self-certification and the lawyer’s point about collections, I’d say the government’s de facto position is that US tax compliance is a matter of personal choice, full stop.”
Again, if it ain’t money you don’t care about. Reporting is a BIG part of this. For me, as I have not been earning enough to owe taxes to the US, reporting is THE issue.
And Canada IS reporting.
There’s no reporting if you don’t self-certify as US person. That’s one half of my point: the IGA guidance is written such that FIs are only under obligation to ask, not to verify. Some banks (on their online application forms) quite literally phrase the question as “Do you have tax residency in another country?” with no reference to citizenship, US or otherwise.
The more people we help figure this out, the more we’ll protect. Once you get past the headline about 600k accounts/year and factor in multiple accounts per person, those already compliant and those actually living in the US, it’s probably relatively few who are being reported.
I too would prefer that the reporting end, for all kinds of different reasons. But to suggest that Canadian institutions are actively enforcing US tax law is a bit of a stretch. The compliance industry certainly is, but that’s a different problem.
Likely leading them to future nightmares. FBAR was able to be ignored for over 40 years and then huge fines for ignoring it without much in the way of informing anyone of any changes.
I suspect that fires and floods will get us all first. Ice sheets have blown past the tipping point.