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CHARITY LAW BULLETIN
No. 50
August 20, 2004
Editor: Terrance S. Carter
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FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL WEIGHS IN ON
DEFINITION OF ADVANCING RELIGION
By Terrance S. Carter, B.A., LL.B., Trade-mark Agent
Assisted by Nancy E. Claridge, B.A., M.A., LL.B. Candidate
A. INTRODUCTION
The Federal Court of Appeal recently dismissed
an appeal of Canada Revenue Agency's ("CRA") decision
not to register the Fuaran Foundation ("Appellant")
as a charity under the Income Tax Act (the "Act"),
finding the Appellant's resources were not devoted to charitable
activities.1 This decision may
make it more difficult for religious organizations to obtain
charitable status based upon the charitable grounds of advancing
religion, particularly those using secondary activities
not directly related to the narrow confines of doctrine
and practice of a religion. While a subsequent Supreme Court
of Canada decision discussed in the next Charity Law
Bulletin ("Bulletin") may limit the
effect of this decision, religious charities should be aware
of the possible implications of this Federal Court decision,
which are outlined in this Bulletin.
B. FACTS OF THE CASE
The main activity upon which the Appellant
relied to establish its rights to charitable status was
the support and operation of a Christian retreat centre
in Great Britain. The Appellant entered into an agreement
with a private limited company incorporated and registered
under the laws of England and Wales to act as agent for
the Appellant in operating the retreat, located on an estate
bought by the Appellant in the Lake Region of England. The
listed objects and purposes of the Appellant focused on
the advancement of the Christian religion and the advancement
of education through programs and projects in pursuit of
these purposes, including:
(a) providing financial assistance for the establishment
and continued support of individual Christians and Christian organizations
engaged worldwide in:
i) teaching the Word of God and preaching the Gospel
of Jesus Christ to all persons
(ii) assisting all persons through teaching and discipleship
to accept and develop a Christian and Biblical lifestyle which
discerns and applies the principles of Christian living as set
out in the Holy Bible and revealed by the Holy Spirit of God;
and
(iii) assisting the poor, the sick, and the needy by acts of
Christian charity.
The brochure advertising the Christian retreat
centre in Great Britain made reference to Christian life
and spirituality, as well as non-religious pursuits.
The CRA refused the registration for a number
of reasons, the primary reasons being:
(a) the language of the appellant's constitution
was so broad as to allow it to undertake non-charitable activities,
including provision of financial assistance to non-qualified
donees; and,
(b) attendees at the appellant's workshops have complete
discretion as to whether or not they will participate at all
in the religious activities. The appellant has not made it
clear whether the primary activity will involve conducting
religious retreats or merely the operation of a "resort"
like any quiet inn or lodge.
C. FINDINGS OF THE COURT
1. Standard of Review
Writing for the court, Justice Sexton applied
the standard of review suggested by Justice Iacobucci in Vancouver
Society of Immigrant and Visible Minority Women v. Minister
of National Revenue,2 namely
that when determining whether activities are charitable, the
appropriate standard of review is reasonableness.
2. Analysis re: provision of financial
assistance
Justice Sexton began his analysis with the finding that
the conclusions of the CRA were not unreasonable. Especially
fatal to the charitable application was the absence of a
provision requiring that donees be "qualified donees"
within the meaning of the Act. The court further concluded
that an undertaking of the Appellant to only donate to qualified
donees was insufficient and there was "no authority
to suggest that an undertaking [could] effectively narrow
the objects in its constitution."
3. Analysis re:definition of advancing
eligion
In concluding the activities of the Appellant
were not exclusively for the purpose of advancing the Christian
religion, the court adopted the definitions of what it means
to advance religion from the English courts in United
Grand Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of England
v. Holborn Borough Council3
and Keren Kayemeth Le Jisroel Ltd. v. The Commissioners
of Inland Revenue.4 In United
Grand Lodge, the court defined advancing religion as:
"to promote it, to spread its message ever wider among
mankind; to take some positive steps to sustain and increase
religious belief; and these things are done in a variety
of ways which may be comprehensively described as pastoral
and missionary." In Keren Kayemeth, it was defined
as: "the promotion of the spiritual teaching of the
religious body concerned and the maintenance of the spirit
of doctrines and observances upon which it rests."
These definitions were analogized to Iacobucci J.'s analysis
of the "advancement of education" in Vancouver
Society, wherein he stated:
To my mind, the threshold criterion for an educational
activity must be some legitimate, targeted attempt at educating
others, whether through formal or informal instruction, training,
plans of self-study or otherwise. Simply providing an opportunity
for people to educate themselves, such as by making available
materials with which this might be accomplished but need not
be, is not enough. 5
Applying Justice Iacobucci's definition to
the case at bar, the court found the Appellant's plan amounted
to making a place available where religious thought may
be pursued, with no targeted attempt to promote religion
or to take positive steps to sustain and increase religious
belief. Continuing, the court said there seemed to be no
structured program relating to advancement of religion and
the focus in the advertising was not solely religious but
also on personal enjoyment and quiet retreat. As such, the
court held that it could not be said all of the Appellant's
resources were devoted to charitable activities, and consequently
dismissed the appeal.
D. IMPLICATIONS OF THE CASE
The Federal Court of Appeal's decision in
Fuaran Foundation appears to be a narrowing of the
traditionally broad approach the courts have taken in the
interpretation of the advancement of religion. The analogy
to the advancement of education rejects previous findings
that the definition of advancing religion can encompass
certain activities that are not overtly spiritual in nature
by themselves; that the advancement of religion includes
the promotion and manifestation of the religious belief
in a believers' daily life.
Advancement of religion has historically been
recognized as one of the four principle classifications
of charitable activities.6 As
such, in order for a prospective charity to qualify under
advancement of religion, it has been recognized that the
court must be able to determine what religion is being advanced
by the organization and how it advances its religion.7
In Adelaide Company of Jehovah's Witnesses Inc. v. The
Commonwealth, the Chief Justice wrote: "it is not
an exaggeration to say that each person chooses the content
of his own religion. It is not for a court, upon some a
priori basis, to disqualify certain beliefs as incapable
of being religious in character."8
Similarly, the Ontario Law Reform Commission in its 1996
Report on the Law of Charities asserted that religious
purposes should be given a wide meaning in order to avoid
conflicts between the judicial and public view, given the
evolving nature of religion. Justice Gonthier, writing the
dissent in Vancouver Society, noted the Pemsel classification
provided a framework within which the courts may adapt the
law as social needs change. "In the absence of clearly
defined principles in this area, the courts
may become
too wedded to outdated conceptions of the existing categories
and lose sight of the underlying principles which motivate
the law of charity."9 U.S.
courts have gone so far as to indicate that a religious
organization will be determined to be organized for religious
purposes where it asserts that its purposes and activities
are religious and where such assertions are bona fide.10
It is also well recognized in the common law
that religion may be advanced indirectly. In Re Charlesworth,
a trust established to pay the expenses of dinners consumed
by a society of clergymen was upheld by the court, saying
the main purpose of such a trust was the advancement of
religion insofar as the provision of dinners furthered the
usefulness of the society through increased attendance at
meetings.11 The rationale behind
this decision was that the benefits given to these members
were for furthering charitable purposes, and not for personal
benefits.
Justice Iacobucci, in Vancouver Society,
stressed it is really the purpose in furtherance of which
an activity is carried out, and not the character of the
activity itself, which determines whether or not it is of
a charitable nature. This supports the findings of earlier
courts.12 As many commentators
have noted, however, there has been confusion on this point
due in part to judges using the phrase "charitable
activities" and "charitable purposes" interchangeably,
and the Income Tax Act's uneven reference to charitable
purposes and charitable activities.13
By the Federal Court of Appeal applying the standard that
exists for demonstrating the advancement of education, to
the determination of the advancement of religion, the court
is requiring that an organization's purposes and the character
of their activities be exclusively charitable, departing
from the principle developed in common law and confirmed
by the ruling in Vancouver Society.
The Federal Court of Appeal's decision in
Fuaran Foundation constricts the common law definition
of advancing religion to the detriment of all organizations
that do not have as their aim a focused purpose of either
proselytizing or worship. Using primarily secondary activities
that are not directly related to the narrow confines of
doctrine and practice of a religion may make it more difficult
for religious organizations to obtain charitable status
based upon the charitable grounds of advancing religion.
This will be particularly troublesome for churches and other
related religious charities that have assumed that they
automatically fall under the advancing religion categorization.
This assumption no longer appears to apply, at least in
the opinion of the Federal Court of Appeal.
The subsequent Supreme Court of Canada's decision
in Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem, [2004] S.CJ. No.
46, 2004 SCC 47 (the "Amselem decision"),
may mean the Fuaran Foundation decision will not
have a lasting effect. In the Amselem decision, the
Court held that a court enters a forbidden domain when it
analyzes religious doctrine to determine the truth or falsity
of a contentious matter of religious law, or when it attempts
to define the very concept of religious obligation. See
Charity Law Bulletin No. 51 for further discussion
of the Amselem decision.
Footnotes
1 Fuaran Foundation
v. Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, 2004 FCA 181 ("Fuaran
Foundation").
2 [1999] 1 S.C.R. 10 ("Vancouver
Society").
3 [1957] 1 W.L.R. 1080 ("United
Grand Lodge").
4 [1931] 2 K.B. 465 (C.A.) ("Keren
Kayemeth").
5 Vancouver Society,
supra note 2 at paragraph 171.
6 See Lord MacNaghten's decision
in Special Commissioners of Income Tax v. Pemsel,
[1891] A.C. 531 (H.L.) ("Pemsel"), wherein
he stated that there were four heads of charity at common
law: relief of poverty, advancement of education, advancement
of religion, and other purposes beneficial to the community
not falling under any of the preceding heads.
7 Don Bourgeois, The Law
of Charitable and Non-profit Organizations (Toronto:
Butterworths, 1995).
8 (1943), 67 C.L.R. 116 at 124
(Aust. H.C.).
9 Vancouver Society,
supra note 2 at paragraph 36.
10 See Holy Spirit Association
for the Unification of World Christianity v. Tax Commission
of the City of New York, 435 N.E. 2d 662 (1982).
11 (1910), 101 L.T. 908.
12 See Re Scowcroft,
[1898] 2 Ch. 638, wherein the furtherance of religious and
mental improvement was found to be the essential portion
of a gift, and the furtherance of Conservative principles
was only a subsidiary part, thereby upholding the gift as
being charitable at law. In Re Hood, the English Court of
Appeal held that where the purpose of an action is in and
of itself non-charitable, it will be found to be charitable
where it is done for the larger purpose of advancing religion.
In that case, a residual estate gift was given for the larger
purpose of spreading Christianity, but the activity was
to take steps to stop the drinking of alcohol. Such a gift
was determined to be a good charitable gift at law as its
purpose was intended to be secondary to the spreading of
Christian principles.
13 Deborah J. Lewis, "A
Principled Approach to the Law of Charities in the Face
of Analogies, Activities and the Advancement of Education"
(2000) 26 Queen's L.J. 679.
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