Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-1153-83
Minister of National Revenue, Canada, Girard LeBlond, Director, Special Investigations Division of the Department of National Revenue, Taxation and Raymond Galimi, Special Investigator under the Income Tax Act (Appellants)
v.
Kruger Inc., Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II (Respondents)
and
Attorney General for Canada, Kol Inc., Ledair Inc., Coopers & Lybrand, Chartered Accountants, Villor Consultants Inc., Victor Gold and Co., Clarkson, Tetrault, Lawyers, Lavery, O'Brien, Lawyers and Phillips, Vineberg, Lawyers (Mis -
en-cause)
Court of Appeal, Pratte, Ryan and Marceau JJ.— Montreal, May 30 and 31; Ottawa, August 30,
1984.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Search or sei zure — Trial Judge quashing authorization to search and seize under s. 231(4) of Income Tax Act on ground authoriza tion violated s. 8 of Charter — Authorization permitting search for and seizure of evidence as to violation of any provision of Act — S. 8 guarantee of right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure more than prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures — S. 8 offended by power of search and seizure so wide — Individual without protection against unreasonable searches and seizures — Statute autho rizing searches without warrants offending s. 8 — S. 231(4) violating s. 8 of Charter in giving general power of search and seizure simply because offence committed under Act — American precedents on Fourth Amendment to United States Constitution not reliable, since second clause in Fourth Amendment having no counterpart in s. 8 — S. 1 of Charter not limiting s. 8 guarantee so as to validate s. 231(4) because Minister's power not "demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society" — Canadian Charter of Rights and Free doms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), ss. 1, 8 — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 231(4),(5).
Income tax — Seizures — Minister's authorization permit ting search for and seizure of evidence as to violation of any provision of the Act not exceeding power under s. 231(4) of Act — In re Collavino Brothers Construction Company Limited
wherein s. 231(4) held to authorize search for evidence of violation of provisions reasonably believed to have been con travened, not followed — Proper interpretation of s. 231(4) being that Minister may authorize search for and seizure of evidence relating to any violation of Act once having reason able grounds to believe violation of Act committed — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 231(4),(5), 239 — Income Tax Regulations, C.R.C., c. 945, s. 900(5) (as am. by SOR/80- 837, s. 1).
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Certiorari — Minis ter's authorization under s. 231(4) of Income Tax Act subject to challenge by certiorari — Exercise of Minister's power under s. 231(4) purely administrative act — Authorization cannot be challenged for violation of principles of natural justice or for lack of procedural fairness — Certiorari may issue on other grounds such as lack of jurisdiction and error of law on face of record irrespective of judicial or administrative character of decision — Authorization subject to certiorari notwithstanding not effective until approved by judge — Attack on Minister's authorization not constituting collateral or indirect attack on Judge's approval — Challenge to Minis ter's authorization in spite of Judge's approval — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 231(4),(5) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18, 28.
This is an appeal from a Trial judgment quashing an "authorization" to search and seize given pursuant to subsec tion 231(4) of the Income Tax Act on the ground that the authorization violated section 8 of the Charter. The search and seizure were found to be unreasonable because they were not limited to evidence relating to the particular offences allegedly committed by the respondents. Subsection 231(4) provides that where the Minister has reasonable and probable grounds to believe that a violation of the Act has been committed, he may with the approval of a judge of a superior court, authorize a search for and seizure of evidence as to the violation of any provision of the Act. The authorization was couched in the very terms of subsection 231(4). The appellants say that the authori zation could not be challenged by certiorari and that the authorization was validly made pursuant to a valid statutory provision. The appellants argue that the issuance of certiorari was precluded because the exercise of the Minister's power under subsection 231(4) is a purely administrative act which is not subject to the rules of natural justice nor to those of procedural fairness. Secondly, a minister's authorization under subsection 231(4) cannot be attacked by certiorari because it is devoid of any legal effect as long as it had not been approved by a judge and does not "determine questions affecting the rights of subjects". Finally, the appellants submit that an attack on the authorization was an indirect attack on the Judge's approv al which could not be challenged directly by certiorari. On the second ground of appeal, the appellants argue that the authori zation did not exceed the Minister's powers and that subsection 231(4) does not contravene section 8 of the Charter.
Held (Marceau J. dissenting): the appeal should be dismissed.
Per Pratte J. (Ryan J. concurring): There is no merit in the appellants' first contention that the authorization could not be challenged by certiorari. The power of the Minister under subsection 231(4) is purely administrative and the exercise of that power is not subject to rules of procedural fairness. The authorization cannot be challenged for violation of the princi ples of natural justice or for lack of procedural fairness. It does not follow that certiorari may never issue in respect of the exercise of that power. It may issue on other grounds irrespec tive of the judicial or administrative character of the decision, namely lack of jurisdiction and error of law on the face of the record.
Many precedents support the proposition that an order made by an authority may be subject to certiorari in spite of the fact that such an order does not take effect until confirmed or approved by another authority.
The answer to the argument that a decision which cannot be challenged directly by certiorari cannot be challenged indirect ly is that the attack on the Minister's authorization does not constitute a collateral or indirect attack on the Superior Court Judge's approval. The respondents challenge the validity of the authorization to search and seize. The authorization was approved by a Superior Court Judge, not given by him. In challenging the authorization given by the Minister on jurisdic tional grounds, the respondents merely assert that in spite of the approval and independent of it, the authorization is a nullity because the Minister did not have the power to give it.
The authorization did not exceed the powers conferred on the Minister by subsection 231(4). The respondents rely on In re Collavino Brothers Construction Company Limited to support the contention that subsection 231(4) does not empower the Minister to authorize such a wide search, but merely to autho rize a search for and seizure of evidence as to the violation of those provisions which, according to the reasonable opinion of the Minister, were contravened by the taxpayer. Both the Ontario and Alberta Courts of Appeal have refused to follow the Federal Court of Appeal decision in Collavino for good reasons. The natural and only possible meaning of subsection 231(4) is that once the Minister has reasonable grounds to believe that a violation of the Act has been committed, he may authorize a search for and seizure of evidence relating not only to that violation but also to the violation of Ray provision of the Act. The decision in Collavino should not be followed.
Subsection 231(4) contravenes section 8 of the Charter in so far as it confers on the Minister the power to authorize a general search and seizure relating to violation of any of the provisions of the Act where he has reasonable grounds to
believe that one offence has been committed. Although there is a similarity between the language of section 8 and the first clause of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Consti tution, it would be dangerous to rely on American precedents since the second clause of the Fourth Amendment, which has no counterpart in the Charter, has greatly influenced American decisions. Section 8 goes further than merely prohibiting unrea sonable searches and seizures and guarantees the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure. Section 8 will be offended by a statute conferring on an authority so wide a power of search and seizure that it leaves the individual without any protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. A statute authorizing searches without warrants offends section 8 because it deprives the individual of the protection that normal ly results from the warrant requirement. Subsection 231(4) does not contravene the Charter in so far as it gives the Minister when he has valid grounds for believing that an offence has been committed, the power to authorize a search and seizure in respect of that offence. However, the fact that a taxpayer has committed an offence under the Act does not afford sufficient justification for the general power of search and seizure conferred by subsection 231(4).
Section 1 of the Charter does not limit the right guaranteed by section 8 so as to validate subsection 231(4) because the power conferred on the Minister is not "demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society".
Per Marceau J. (dissenting): The authorization did not vio late section 8 of the Charter. Section 8 dictates a standard of reasonableness which requires a balancing of the right of the individual to privacy as opposed to the need that the laws of the land be properly enforced.
"The right to be secure against" unreasonable searches and seizures gives an individual the possibility of complaining not only of the actual carrying out of an unreasonable search or seizure but also of the mere fact that he is in danger of being the subject of such an illegal invasion of his privacy. To conform with the constitutional requirement, any statute authorizing searches and seizures in certain circumstances must provide for adequate protection against unreasonable ones; it must subject the exercise of the power conferred to limitations and conditions sufficient to constitute adequate safeguards. It means that the possibilities of failures must not be so great and fraught with consequences so deplorable as to outweigh the social advantages that may be derived from the existence of the power. A balancing involving many factors particular to each statute will have to be made.
Section 1 does not affect the interpretation of section 8. An "unreasonable" search or seizure cannot become `reasonable" under section 1. It cannot be "justified in a free and democratic society" to let the individual be subject to an unreasonable search or seizure without giving him redress.
Although the authorization may give rise to one, it is not a search and seizure. The assertion is that an authorization to search and seize, issued in conformity with and in the terms of subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, contravenes the right of the taxpayer to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure, because the search and seizure so authorized may extend to incriminating documents not related to the violations known to have been committed by the taxpayer. The validity of this general proposition must be verified by balancing the two competing interests involved. All factors being considered, the interest that may be served by the existence of the power, ultimately the very integrity of the tax system, outweighs the value the community as a whole may attach to the safeguard of the privacy that an individual suspected of dishonesty may expect in respect of his books, records and documents. The very partial invasion of privacy is justified in the context in which it is imposed. The remote possibilities of abuse, given the require ment that a judge give his approval, are not so consequential and socially unacceptable, so susceptible of causing irreparable injury, that to avoid them the Minister should be deprived of a tool that may be the only one available to enforce the law.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311; Mar- tineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602; In Re M.N.R. v. Paroian, Courey, Cohen & Houston (1980), 80 DTC 6077 (Ont. C.A.); Royal Craft Products Ltd. et al. v. The Queen (1979), 80 DTC 6143; [1980] CTC 97 (Alta. C.A.).
NOT FOLLOWED:
In re Collavino Brothers Construction Company Limited, [1978] 2 F.C. 642; 78 DTC 6050 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Goodman v. Rompkey et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 589; The Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495; 92 D.L.R. (3d) 1; Rex v. Electricity Commissioners, [1924] 1 K.B. 171 (C.A.); Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 594; [1984] 1 W.W.R. 481; R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. (2d) 80; 40 C.R. (3d) 1 (C.A.); Equipements Rocbec Inc. et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 605; 82 DTC 6174; Kelly Douglas and Company Limited v. The Queen et al. (1981), DTC 6036 (B.C.S.C.); Burnac Corporation Lim ited, et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1978] 2 F.C. 269; [1977] CTC 593 (T.D.); Bathville Corp. Ltd. et al. v. Atkinson et al. (1964), 64 DTC 5330 (Ont. C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Wilfred Lefebvre, Q.C., Jacques Côté and Carole Bonhomme for appellants.
Bruno J. Paieras, Q.C. and Yves Bériault for respondent Kruger Inc.
Philip F. Vineberg, Q.C. for respondents Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellants.
Paieras & Iezzoni, Montreal, for respondent Kruger Inc.
Phillips & Vineberg, Montreal, for respond ents Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
PRATTE J.: This is an appeal from a judgment of Mr. Justice Dubé of the Trial Division [[1984] 1 F.C. 120] quashing an "authorization" to search and seize given pursuant to subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act [R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 (as am. by S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 1)].'
The respondent Kruger Inc. is a Canadian cor poration carrying on business as a paper manufac turer; the respondent Gene H. Kruger is a director and the Chairman of the Board of that corporation
' The text of subsections 231(4) and (5) reads as follows: 231... .
(4) Where the Minister has reasonable and probable grounds to believe that a violation of this Act or a regulation has been committed or is likely to be committed, he may, with the approval of a judge of a superior or county court, which approval the judge is hereby empowered to give on ex parte application, authorize in writing any officer of the Department of National Revenue, together with such mem bers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or other peace officers as he calls on to assist him and such other persons as may be named therein, to enter and search, if necessary by force, any building, receptacle or place for documents, books, records, papers or things that may afford evidence as to the violation of any provision of this Act or a regulation and to seize and take away any such documents, books, records, papers or things and retain them until they are produced in any court proceedings.
(5) An application to a judge under subsection (4) shall be supported by evidence on oath establishing the facts upon which the application is based.
while the respondent Joseph Kruger II is one of its directors.
On June 22, 1983, following a long audit of the books of Kruger Inc., the appellant Raymond Galimi, an officer of the Department of National Revenue, swore an affidavit alleging facts on which he based his belief that
(a) Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II had evaded the payment of income tax by falsely declaring themselves to be residents of Panama between January 1, 1980, and December 31, 1981, contrary to section 239 of the Income Tax Act; and
(b) Kruger Inc. had contravened section 239 of the Income Tax Act by making false and decep tive statements in its income tax return for the year 1981, thereby permitting Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II to evade income tax.
On July 8, 1983, on the basis of the facts alleged in that affidavit, the appellant Gérard LeBlond, Director of the Special Investigations Division of the Department of National Revenue, Taxation, acting pursuant to subsection 231(4) of the Act and subsection 900(5) of the Income Tax Regula tions [C.R.C., c. 945 (as am. by SOR/80-837)], 2 signed the "authorization" which was quashed by the order of the Trial Division. That document authorized named officers of the Department of National Revenue, Taxation, to enter and search
(a) the business premises of Kruger Inc. and the private residences of Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II "for documents, books, records, papers or things that may afford evi dence as to the violation of any provision of the Income Tax Act or a regulation and to seize and
2 Under that provision of the Regulations:
900... .
(5) The Director General, Compliance, the Director, Spe cial Investigations Division, or the Chief of either the Judi cial Processes Section or the Investigations Section of the Special Investigations Division, of the Department of Na tional Revenue, Taxation, may exercise the powers and perform the duties of the Minister under subsections 150(2), 231(2), (3) and (4) and 244(4) of the Act.
take away any such documents, books, records, papers or things and retain them until they are produced in any court proceedings"; and
(b) the business premises of other named per sons "for documents, books, records, papers or things pertaining or relating to Kruger Inc., Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II, that may afford evidence as to the violation of any provi sion of the Income Tax Act or a regulation and to seize and take away any such documents, books, records, papers or things and retain them until they are produced in any court proceed ings."
On July 11, 1983, pursuant to an application made by Mr. LeBlond and supported by Mr. Galimi's affidavit, the Honourable Mr. Justice Ducros of the Superior Court of the Province of Quebec approved the authorization in the follow ing terms:
After having considered the application made by the Direc tor, Special Investigations Division, based on the affidavit of Raymond Galimi, I hereby approve of the above authorization, pursuant to subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, which approval is also indicated on the preceding page by my initials.
On July 14, 1983, officers of the Department of National Revenue, acting pursuant to the authori zation, seized and took away a great number of documents. Following that seizure, the respondents Kruger Inc., Gene H. Kruger and Joseph Kruger II applied to the Trial Division for an order in the nature of certiorari quashing the authorization that the appellant LeBlond had signed pursuant to subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act. That application was granted by the Trial Judge on the ground that the authorization in question violated section 8 of the [Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the] Constitution Act, 1982 [Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)] and authorized a search and a seizure which were unreasonable in that they were not limited to documents and things relating to the particular offences allegedly committed by the respondents.
The appellants attack that decision on two main grounds: they say, first, that the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond could not be challenged by certiorari and, second, that the authorization was validly made pursuant to a valid section of the Income Tax Act.
I. Certiorari.
After having pointed out, quite correctly, that the respondents' application was not directed against the approval given by Mr. Justice Ducros 3 but, rather, against the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond, counsel for the appellants advanced three arguments in support of his contention that the authorization was not subject to certiorari.
Counsel's first argument was that the exercise of the Minister's power to give an authorization under subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act is a purely administrative act which is subject neither to the rules of natural justice nor to those of procedural fairness. For that reason, said counsel, certiorari could not issue in respect of the exercise of that power.
Counsel for the respondents, in answer to that argument, asserted that the Minister was obliged to act fairly in exercising his power under subsec tion 231(4). On the basis of that assertion, he invoked the authority of the decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada in Nicholson 4 and Martineau 5 to support his conclusion that certio- rari could issue in respect of an authorization granted under subsection 231(4).
This first argument of the appellants must, in my view, be rejected for reasons other than those advanced on behalf of the respondents. The power of the Minister, under subsection 231(4), as both parties agree, is clearly purely administrative;
3 That approval could neither be appealed (Goodman v. Rompkey et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 589) nor attacked under section 28 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10], The Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495) or by certiorari.
4 Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Com missioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311.
5 Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602.
moreover, the exercise of that power, in my opin ion, is not subject to the rules of procedural fair ness. It follows that an authorization given by the Minister pursuant to subsection 231(4) cannot be challenged either for violation of the principles of natural justice or for lack of procedural fairness. It does not follow, however, that certiorari may never issue in respect of the exercise of that power. Violation of natural justice (in the case of judicial or quasi-judicial decisions) and lack of procedural fairness (in the case of administrative decisions) are merely grounds on which certiorari may issue; but it may also issue on other grounds, irrespective of the judicial or administrative character of the decision under attack, namely, lack of jurisdiction and error of law on the face of the record. Once it is accepted, as it must be since the decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada in Nicholson (supra) and Martineau (supra), that purely administrative decisions are no longer immune from certiorari, it follows, in my view, that those decisions may be quashed by certiorari not only, in appropriate cases, for lack of procedural fairness but also for lack of jurisdiction and error of law on the face of the record. 6
I therefore conclude that, contrary to what was argued on behalf of the appellants, the fact that the authorization of the Minister was a purely administrative act which was not subject to the rules of procedural fairness did not preclude the issuance of certiorari.
Counsel for the appellants' second argument in support of his contention that an authorization given pursuant to subsection 231(4) could not be challenged by certiorari was that a minister's authorization under that subsection is devoid of any legal effect as long as it has not been approved by a judge. Counsel says that the authorization of the Minister does not "determine questions affect
6 See on the subject: de Smith's Judicial Review of Adminis trative Action, Fourth Edition, (1980), p. 392.
ing the rights of subjects"' and cannot, for that reason, be attacked by certiorari. This argument, however, is not conclusive. Many precedents' sup port the proposition that an order made by an authority may be subject to certiorari in spite of the fact that such an order does not take effect until confirmed or approved by another authority.'
Counsel for the appellants also contended that the Minister's authorization could not be chal lenged by certiorari because such a challenge was, in effect, a collateral attack on the decision of Mr. Justice Ducros approving the authorization. As Mr. Justice Ducros' decision could not be chal lenged directly by certiorari, it could not, said counsel, be challenged indirectly. Moreover, coun sel referred to the rule that a decision of a Supe rior Court which has not been set aside or varied on appeal may not be collaterally attacked. '° The answer to that argument is that the respondents' attack on the Minister's authorization does not constitute a collateral or indirect attack on Mr. Justice Ducros' approval. The respondents chal lenge the validity of the authorization to search and seize. That authorization, while it was approved by Mr. Justice Ducros, was not given by him. Indeed, subsection 231(4) confers on the Minister, not on the judge, the power to authorize a search and a seizure. In challenging the authori zation given by the Minister on jurisdictional grounds, the respondents do not ask the Court to ignore the approval given by Mr. Justice Ducros; they merely assert that, in spite of that approval, and for reasons that are entirely foreign to that approval, the authorization is a nullity because the Minister did not have the power to give it.
' Per Lord Atkin in Rex v. Electricity Commissioners, [1924] 1 K.B. 171 (C.A.), at p. 205.
8 And, amongst them, Rex v. Electricity Commissioners (supra).
9 See: de Smith's Judicial Review of Administrative Action, Fourth Edition, (1980), pp. 387-388.
' 0 See: Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 594; [1984] 1 W.W.R. 481.
For those reasons, I see no merit in the appel lants' first contention that the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond could not be challenged by certiorari.
I must now turn to the appellants' second main ground of appeal, namely, that the authorization against which these proceedings are directed was validly given pursuant to a valid statutory provision.
II. The validity of the authorization and of subsec tion 231(4) of the Income Tax Act.
There are two questions to be resolved on this branch of the case:
(a) Assuming the constitutional validity of sub section 231(4), did the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond exceed the powers of the Minister under that subsection?
(b) Does subsection 231(4) contravene section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982?
A. Do the terms of subsection 231(4) authorize the Minister to give an authorization such as the one signed by Mr. LeBlond?
Counsel for the respondents argued that the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond exceeded the power conferred on the Minister by subsection 231(4). Mr. LeBlond authorized officers of the Department to search "for documents, books, records, papers or things that may afford evidence as to the violation of any provision of the Income Tax Act or a regulation and to seize and take away any such documents, books, records, papers or things". Subsection 231(4), said counsel, does not empower the Minister to authorize such a wide search but merely to authorize a search for and seizure of "documents, books, records, papers or things" that may afford evidence as to the viola tion of those provisions of the Act and Regulations which, according to the reasonable opinion of the Minister, were contravened by the taxpayer. In support of that interpretation of subsection 231(4), counsel invoked the decision of this Court in In re Collavino Brothers Construction Company Limited" a decision which was reversed on other
11 [1978] 2 F.C. 642; 78 DTC 6050 (C.A.).
grounds by the Supreme Court of Canada. 12
Both the Ontario Court of Appeal' 3 and , the Alberta Court of Appeal" have refused to follow the decision of this Court in Collavino (supra), and, in my view, for good reasons. A careful reading of subsection 231(4) shows, in my respect ful opinion, that the natural and only possible meaning of that provision is that, once the Minis ter has reasonable grounds to believe that a viola tion of the Act or Regulations has been commit ted, he may authorize a search for and a seizure of documents or things relating not only to that violation but also to the violation of any provision of the Act or Regulations. I am, therefore, of the view that the decision in the Collavino case should not be followed and that the words used in subsec tion 231(4) should be given their natural meaning.
Counsel for the appellants suggested that both this interpretation and the one adopted by the Court in Collavino should be rejected. He said that subsection 231(4), in his opinion, empowered the Minister to authorize a limited search for things related to the offence suspected by the Minister and the unlimited seizure of anything that may afford evidence of a violation of any- provision of the Act. While his interpretation cer tainly finds support in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice MacKay in the Collavino case, I am unable to reconcile it with the words of the section.
It is therefore my opinion that the authorization signed by Mr. LeBlond in this case did not exceed the powers conferred on the Minister by subsection 231(4). The remaining question is whether that subsection contravenes section 8 of the Constitu tion Act, 1982.
B. Subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act and section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
12 The Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495; 92 D.L.R. (3d) 1.
13 In Re M.N.R. v. Paroian, Courey, Cohen & Houston (1980), 80 DTC 6077 (Ont. C.A.).
'" Royal Craft Products Ltd. et al. v. The Queen (1979), 80 DTC 6143; [1980] CTC 97 (Alta. C.A.).
Section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982 guaran tees that:
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure.
There is a striking similarity between the lan guage of that provision and the first clause of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitu tion. However, it would be dangerous, in my view, to rely on American precedents in interpreting section 8 since the second clause of the Fourth Amendment, which has no counterpart in the Charter, has greatly influenced the American deci sions on this subject (see the remarks by Martin J.A. on this subject in R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. (2d) 80; 40 C.R. (3d) 1 (C.A.)). The drafters of our Constitution wanted, like their American counterparts, the individual to be protected against unreasonable searches and seizures; unlike the Americans, they did not wish to subject the inter pretation of the word "unreasonable" to any of the constraints flowing from the second clause of the Fourth Amendment.
Searches and seizures are intrusions into the private domain of the individual. They cannot be tolerated unless circumstances justify them. A search or seizure is unreasonable if it is unjustified in the circumstances. Section 8 does not merely prohibit unreasonable searches and seizures. It goes further and guarantees the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure. That is to say that section 8 of the Charter will be offended, not only by an unreasonable search or seizure or by a statute authorizing expressly a search or seizure without justification, but also by a statute conferring on an authority so wide a power of search and seizure that it leaves the individual without any protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. It is for that reason, in my view, that a statute authorizing searches without warrants may, as was decided in R. v. Rao (supra), contravene section 8. A search without warrant may or may not be justified irrespective of the fact that it was made without warrant; how ever, save in exceptional cases, a statute authoriz ing searches without warrants may be considered as offending section 8 because it deprives the individual of the protection that normally results from the warrant requirement.
It is not necessary, in this case, to lay down the various conditions that must be met in order for a search or seizure to be reasonable. It is common ground that subsection 231(4) does not contravene the Charter in so far as it gives the Minister, when he has valid grounds for believing that an offence has been committed by a taxpayer, the power to authorize a search and seizure in respect of that offence. What is challenged is the constitutionality of that subsection in so far as it confers on the Minister, when he has grounds to believe that one particular offence has been committed, the power to authorize a general search and seizure relating to the violation of any of the provisions of the Income Tax Act or the Regulations.
I would be ready to concede that, in certain circumstances, the fact that a taxpayer has com mitted a serious offence under the Income Tax Act may justify the inference that he probably also committed other offences under the Act. However, I cannot accept the general proposition that the mere fact that a taxpayer has, at a particular time, committed an offence under the Income Tax Act or the Regulations, however trifling that offence, affords sufficient justification for the general power of search and seizure conferred by subsec tion 231(4). In my view, that subsection violates section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982 in that it contravenes the right of the taxpayer "to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure."
Counsel for the appellants finally invoked sec tion 1 of the Charter and argued that, in any event, the right guaranteed by section 8 of the Charter must be limited so as to validate subsec tion 231(4) of the Income Tax Act because the power conferred on the Minister by that subsection is "demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society." However, he failed to convince me. True, once a person is, for serious reasons, suspected of resorting to fraudulent means in order to evade the payment of income tax, that power may be neces sary; but the mere fact that a person has commit-
ted an offence under the Income Tax Act or the Regulations does not always warrant such a suspicion.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
RYAN J.: I agree.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MARCEAU J. (dissenting): Unfortunately, I do not share the views of my brothers Pratte and Ryan JJ. as to the disposition of this appeal and, with respect, I will endeavour to explain my own thinking and expose the reasons for my disagree ment.
The facts that gave rise to these proceedings are set out in detail in the reasons for judgment pre pared by Mr. Justice Pratte. They need not be recited again. A quick reminder of the general factual background and a fresh look at what took place in the Court below could nevertheless be useful as an introduction.
On July 8, 1983, an authorization to enter cer tain specified premises and to search for and seize documents belonging to the respondents was issued on behalf of the Minister of National Revenue on the authority of subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, as amended, the text of which I reproduce here again for convenience:
231... .
(4) Where the Minister has reasonable and probable grounds to believe that a violation of this Act or a regulation has been committed or is likely to be committed, he may, with the approval of a judge of a superior or county court, which approval the judge is hereby empowered to give on ex parte application, authorize in writing any officer of the Department of National Revenue, together with such members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or other peace officers as he calls on to assist him and such other persons as may be named therein, to enter and search, if necessary by force, any building, recep tacle or place for documents, books, records, papers or things that may afford evidence as to the violation of any provision of this Act or a regulation and to seize and take away any such documents, books, records, papers or things and retain them until they are produced in any court proceedings.
The authorization was, as required, submitted for approval to a Judge of the Superior Court of the Province of Quebec and was approved. A few days thereafter, a contingent of officers of the Depart ment of National Revenue simultaneously entered the different premises described in the authoriza tion where they seized and then took away a great number of records and documents.
The respondents decided to take their case to court. They brought an application before the Trial Division for an order in the nature of certio- rari quashing the authorization pursuant to which the search and seizure had taken place and, as a consequence, enjoining the return of all the docu ments seized. The allegations made in support of the application did not pertain to the conditions in which the authorization had been signed and approved: it was indeed unquestionable that the Minister had substantial grounds to believe that serious violations of the Income Tax Act had been committed by the respondents; nor did those alle gations have anything special to do with the manner in which the operation had been executed. The authorization was to be quashed, according to the applicants, because it contemplated a search and seizure of "... documents, books, records, papers or things that may afford evidence as to the violation of any provision of the Income Tax Act or a regulation . .." and was, for that reason, illegal, null and void on the grounds (as stated in the notice of motion) that:
i) Section 231(4) of the Income Tax Act is inconsistent with Section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982 and of no force or effect;
ii) The said authorization is inconsistent with Section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982 and of no force or effect;
iii) The said authorization is illegal, irregular, null and void; and
iv) The search, seizure, removal and possession of the seized effects as executed by the Respondents and/or their repre sentatives is unreasonable, illegal, irregular, null and void.
The Motion Judge agreed: he quashed the authorization and ordered the release of all docu ments seized. His position is explained in one basic paragraph of his reasons [at pages 123-124]:
In my view, the authorization under attack violates section 8 of the Constitution Act, in that it constitutes unreasonable search and seizure. I find it unreasonable because it is not limited to
the particular violations allegedly committed. It is a blanket order covering the violation of any provision of the Act. In my view, such a fishing expedition is not necessary and ought not to be allowed. It constitutes unreasonable search and seizure ....
The appeal we are now dealing with is an attack against the decision of the Trial Division made on the basis of three alternative legal propositions, one raising a preliminary question of jurisdiction, the others directly challenging the validity of the Judge's reasoning. While my colleagues disagree with all three propositions, I, with respect, accept the third one. It is therefore this third proposition which I really need to deal with, and I intend to come to it very quickly, but I think I should first say a few words about the first two.
The appellants contend in an opening argument that the Trial Division did not have jurisdiction to entertain a challenge to the Minister's authoriza tion, since it was an authorization that had been approved by a Superior Court Judge and the Fed eral Court has no authority to dispute the validity of a Superior Court Judge's decision and no right whatever to disregard it, not even indirectly. In any event, they say, if this Court had jurisdiction, its Trial Division could certainly not derive it from section 18 of the Federal Court Act, because the authorization, being a purely administrative act not subject to the rules of procedural fairness, was not amenable to certiorari. And in support of their jurisdictional argument, the appellants refer to the two well-known decisions of the Supreme Court in The Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495, and Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 594; [1984] 1 W.W.R. 481.
My reaction to this preliminary contention is similar to that of Mr. Justice Pratte. I do not see the challenge to the Minister's authorization as amounting to an attack, even merely collateral, against the Judge's approval, the reasons alleged in support thereof being entirely foreign to that approval. The Court is not being asked to review and find fault with the opinion and conclusion of
the Judge; it is being asked to determine that the giving of the authorization was beyond the powers of the Minister, a point the approving Judge was in no way called upon to consider and decide. On the other hand, it seems to me quite appropriate that certiorari, a prerogative writ created to counter jurisdictional error, be used to attack, for want or excess of jurisdiction, what is unquestionably a decision of a public authority affecting private rights, (although I doubt that on a mere motion, as is the case here, any relief other than the quashing of the authorization can be sought).
The second submission advanced in support of the appeal, one addressed to the substance of the decision, is that the learned Trial Judge erred in interpreting the authorization as permitting a search and seizure of any documents that could afford evidence as to the violation of all and any provisions of the Income Tax Act. The authoriza tion was meant to give rise, it is said, essentially to a search and seizure of documents relating solely to the provisions of the Act that, in the belief of the Minister, had been breached, and only inciden- tally—by some application of our Canadian ver sion of the "plain view doctrine",—to a seizure of pieces of evidence of incriminating character which the officers may inadvertently come across. The authorization was not meant to allow an unlimited search and in fact, the evidence is clear ly to the effect that the operation that actually took place was conducted in such a way that only those documents which could afford evidence as to the alleged violations were looked for and seized. The complaint of the respondents and, in turn, the critique of the Trial Judge were thus simply due to a misinterpretation of the document, a misinter pretation that becomes apparent when it is real ized that the authorization is couched in the very terms of subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, and this Court, in the case of In re Collavino Brothers Construction Company Limited, [1978] 2 F.C. 642 (C.A.), has held (per Heald J. at page 645) that:
... "the violation" referred to in the latter portion of subsection (4) has reference to "a violation" specified in the opening words of the subsection ...
This attempt by counsel for the appellants to limit the controversy to a question of construction of the document signed on behalf of the Minister (and thereby avoid the Charter issue raised by the third proposition) must fail, in my opinion. First, I am not convinced that the authorization must necessarily be given the same interpretation as subsection 231(4) simply because it adopted words identical to those found in the enactment, since the context in which these words were to be read was different. But, in any event, as pointed out by Mr. Justice Pratte, both the Ontario Court of Appeal in In Re M.N.R. v. Paroian, Courey, Cohen & Houston (1980), 80 DTC 6077 and the Alberta Court of Appeal in Royal Craft Products Ltd. et al. v. The Queen (1979), 80 DTC 6143; [1980] CTC 97 have refused, in unanimous decisions, to follow the finding of this Court in Collavino and I too, with respect, think that their refusal was justified. The words used in the provision are so simple and clear that they leave no room for interpretation; they contain no ambiguity through which a "reading down" of their scope could be made acceptable and they can only be given their plain meaning which is that once the Minister has reasonable grounds to believe that a violation of the Income Tax Act has been committed, he may authorize a search and seizure of documents relat ing to the violation of any provision of the Act.
And that brings up the third and main proposi tion on the basis of which the appeal is founded, a proposition that directly contradicts the position taken by the respondents and accepted by the Trial Judge, namely that the authorization, however broadly it is interpreted, did not violate section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982. It is about this proposition that I respectfully dissent from my colleagues since I subscribe to it, and I will try to explain why I do so.
The mere reading of section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights. and Freedoms now enshrined in the Constitution of Canada suggests some general comments with which I would like to start. It says:
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.
Such a declaration is obviously a solemn confir mation that the privacy each of us in this country feels he needs for his security, the development of his personality and the fulfilment of his potentiali ties is totally legitimate. The citizen is entitled to expect that invasion of his privacy and of his possessions will not, as a rule, be tolerated from anyone. But the declaration is also a confirmation that the interest of society at large in exposing wrongdoers and repressing crime may bring excep tions to the rule. Searches and seizures by repre sentatives of the State responsible for the imple mentation of the laws of the land will be authorized in certain circumstances. What is guar anteed constitutionally is that those searches and seizures will not be "unreasonable".
So a standard is set, the standard of reasonable ness. Any limitation placed on or interference with the individual's right to privacy and property must henceforth be reasonably justifiable. A balancing of the right of the individual to privacy as opposed to the need that the laws of the land be properly enforced is obviously implied by such a standard which requires that a proper choice be made, in any specific context, between the interest the com munity as a whole may attach to the safeguard of privacy and the interest it may have in uncovering a possible breach of the law. To determine, in a particular instance, whether a search or seizure remains within the constitutional barriers, one will have to take into account all its practical aspects, for instance: the circumstances in which the search or seizure is resorted to, the manner in which it is carried out, the nature of the things searched and seized, the extent to which the privacy of the individual is affected, the importance that the enforcement of the law involved may have in gen eral and in the particular situation involved. There is not much room there for broad and easily applicable propositions.
However, section 8 of the Charter does not merely condemn unreasonable searches or sei zures, it gives the individual "the right to be secure against" them (in French "le droit d'être protégé contre"). So formulated, the right gives an individual the possibility of complaining not only of the actual carrying out of an unreasonable search or seizure but also of the mere fact that he is in danger of being the subject of such an illegal invasion of his privacy. It follows that section 8 may be offended by a legislative enactment which would leaye the individual unshielded against unreasonable searches or seizures. So, to conform with the constitutional requirement, any statute authorizing searches and seizures in certain cir cumstances must provide for adequate protection against unreasonable ones; it must subject the exercise of the power conferred to limitations and conditions sufficient to constitute adequate safe guards. Does it mean that the safeguards must be such that no failures could be possible? In human behaviour, safeguards of such absolute effective ness do not exist. It means, in my view, that the possibilities of failures must not be so great and so fraught with consequences, so deplorable, as to outweigh the social advantages that may be derived from the existence of the power. And here again, it seems to me, a balancing involving many factors particular to each statute will have to be made.
A last general remark. Whatever purpose and meaning are finally attributed to section 1 of the Constitution Act, 1982, that of a principle of general application referring to the characteristics of a free and democratic society or of a basic provision requiring justification in the particular context involved of any limitation to the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter, I do not see how it can have any particular role to play in the interpretation or application of section 8. An "unreasonable" search or seizure within the mean ing of section 8 cannot become "reasonable" under section 1 and it is hard to imagine that it could be "justified in a free and democratic society" to let the individual be subject to an unreasonable search or seizure without giving him redress. If the phrase "to be secure" were to be taken in the sense of a
total protection and absolute immunity in practice, then section 1 could perhaps be invoked to bring in some limitations, but as I have just said, I do not think it can be so.
I now come back to the particulars of the case at bar.
I think it ought to be noted first that, although the sole purpose of the respondents' proceedings was the setting aside of the seizure of their docu ments and things, the essential relief sought by their motion is the quashing of the authorization on the authority of which the operation had been carried out. It is incorrect to say, as it is said in the reasons of the Trial Judge [at page 124], that the "[authorization] constitutes unreasonable search and seizure"; it is even crucial in my view to avoid the confusion of language and to keep always present in mind that the authorization may give rise to but is not the search and seizure. The respondents did not contend seriously that the search and seizure to which they had actually been subjected had been unreasonable and apparently they were wise in refraining from doing so since, as mentioned previously, there is uncontradicted evi dence that the search was conducted in such a way that only those documents which could afford evidence as to the violations which had been alleged were looked for and seized. What was behind the respondents' contention was, of course, that if the authorization was declared "illegal, irregular, null and void", it would follow that the search and the seizure had themselves been illegal for having been conducted without authority and their effects had to be eliminated. (I said previous ly that I entertain serious doubts as to whether, in a motion for an order in the nature of certiorari directed against the Minister's authorization, an order providing for the return of all seized effects could be sought, but I see no necessity to deal with this procedural problem here.) So, the attack is against the authorization and the allegation prop erly put is that the authorization was illegal because it was given on the authority of a provision of law inconsistent with section 8 of the Constitu-
tion Act, 1982, and was itself inconsistent with section 8 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
It should also be noted that although the attack is against a particular authorization, the circum stances in which this authorization was given are not in issue. The assertion made in support of the attack is one of principle and its validity is present ed as absolute: it is, in effect, that an authorization to search and seize, issued in conformity with and in the terms of subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, contravenes the right of the taxpayer concerned to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure, because the search and seizure so authorized may extend to incriminating docu ments not related to the violations known to have been committed by the taxpayer.
It is the validity of this general proposition which must be verified and to do so, as said above, a balancing of the two competing interests involved must be made, i.e. on one side, the inter est that may be served by the power given to the Minister and on the other, the value to be attribut ed to the expectation of privacy capable of being affected by the exercise of that power.
The scheme of the Income Tax Act is founded upon a self-assessment system, each taxpayer being asked to disclose his income and estimate the amount of tax payable by him. Under the scheme, the Minister is given the duty to assure a certain control of the honesty of the taxpayers and to help him fulfill his duty, some powers to secure infor mation are granted to him. Section 231 of the Act provides for some of these powers. They include: the right of entry into a place where a business is carried on or books or records relating to that business are or should be kept; the right to audit or examine those books and records; the right to require from the owner or manager of the business all reasonable assistance; the right to request from any person information or the production of docu ments; the right to seize if during the course of an audit there appears to have been a violation of the Act. And the last and most important of these
investigative powers is the one provided by subsec tion 4, the right to enter, search and seize. It is no doubt, in a sense, a frightening power, but it is far from being an unlimited one: it can only be exer cised by the Minister or his senior authorized departmental officials; it is confined to documents, papers, books, records and things of that sort, and, in so far as the seizure is concerned, to documents, books, papers and records that could afford evi dence of the violation of a provision of the Act; it arises in very narrowly defined circumstances and it requires a reasonable conviction that the taxpay er involved is dishonest and trying to cheat the system. This is the power we are concerned with and the aspect thereof which is put in question is that it may give rise to a search and seizure of any documents, papers, etc. that may afford evidence of any violation of the Act. The Minister's authori zation may be broader than the search warrant issued under the Criminal Code, it is true, but it will obviously remain quite different from the general warrant so despised by the American revo lutionaries and, in spite of what may sometimes be said, it can hardly lead to a wholesale seizure or a general exploratory rummaging in a person's belongings.
Now, going to the other side of the equation, to properly assess the value to be attributed to the other interest involved, one must examine how seriously and to what extent the expectation of privacy of the individual may be affected by a subsection 231(4) operation. The examination need not be elaborated upon. Is involved whether a taxpayer, seriously suspected of dishonesty, may still expect to preserve the privacy of his books, records and documents, even after the time when those same books, records and documents can validly be searched and possibly seized, since no one objects to a search and seizure limited to the violations already identified?
It is clear to me that, all factors being con sidered, the interest that may be served by the existence of the power, ultimately the very integri ty of the tax system, outweighs the value our community as a whole may attach to the safeguard of the privacy that an individual suspected of dishonesty may expect in respect of his books, records and documents. The very partial invasion of his privacy to which the taxpayer is then being subjected is, it seems to me, perfectly justifiable in the particular context in which it is imposed.
It is said that the power may be wrongly used since any offence, however trifling, could theoreti cally justify its exercise. Possibilities of abuse exist, I agree, but I would believe that they are made quite remote by the requirement that a judge give his approval, a judge whose duty is to ".. . scrutinize [with utmost care] the intended exercise of ministerial discretion...." (Per Dickson J. (as he then was) in The Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand (supra), at page 506.) And, in any case, these remote possibilites of abuse—which will always be subject to judicial recourse precisely on the basis of section 8 of the Charter—are not so consequential and socially unacceptable, so susceptible of causing irreparable injury, that, to avoid them, the Minister should be deprived altogether of a tool that, in some instances, may be the only one available to enforce the law.
As a closing remark, I will say that I find support for my view of the matter in the fact that the power to search and seize of subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act is a long-standing power created by Parliament a long time ago and held in a number of judicial decisions as being both neces sary and appropriate. (See among others: In Re M.N.R. v. Paroian, Courey, Cohen & Houston (1980), 80 DTC 6077 (Ont. C.A.); Royal Craft Products Ltd. et al. v. The Queen (1979), 80 DTC 6143; [1980] CTC 97 (Alta. C.A.); Goodman v. Rompkey et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 589; Equipe- ments Rocbec Inc. et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 605; 82 DTC 6174; Kelly Douglas and Company Limited v. The
Queen et al. (1981), 82 DTC 6036 (B.C.S.C.); Burnac Corporation Limited, et al. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1978] 2 F.C. 269 [1977] CTC 593 (T.D.); Bathville Corp. Ltd. et al. v. Atkinson et al. (1964), 64 DTC 5330 (Ont. C.A.).) Of course, the coming into force of the Charter may have rendered inoperative provisions of law with long standing in our law books, but the notion here in question is that of "reasonableness" and I do not consider that the Charter could have abruptly changed our notion of what is or is not reasonable.
So, those are the reasons why I object, with respect, to the view that the Minister's authoriza tion in question in these proceedings, an authoriza tion regularly issued pursuant to subsection 231(4) of the Income Tax Act, could be seen as offending the Constitution.
I would grant the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Trial Division and dismiss the respondents' motion with costs throughout.
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