Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-1446-83
A. W. C. Parsons, Hugh J. Flemming Jr. for themselves and as Executors of the Estate of Hugh John Flemming Sr. (Applicants)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Ottawa, June 28 and August 12, 1983.
Income tax — Penalties — Application for order quashing assessments and injunction restraining further action thereon — Applicant directors assessed under s. 159 in amount equal to dividend declared without s. 159(2) certificate after nil assessment of company — Subsequent reassessments of com pany indicating taxes owing — Applicants alleging want of legal authority for assessments — Assessment being calcula tion of tax payable, fixing both quantum and liability — Assessment administrative — S. 159(2) and (3) penal so must be strictly construed — Interpretation Bulletin having no legal effect and misreading provision — Certificate required and liability therefore attaching only if taxes previously assessed — Definite article "the" in s. 159(3) implying specific unpaid taxes, hence obligation to pay, hence assessment — No assessed taxes when dividend declared so no certificate required — Doubtful that declaration of dividend is "distribu- tion of property" — Whether director controls any property — Board conceivably controlling all corporate assets but subject to shareholders' control — Assessed taxes not "chargeable against or payable out of corporate assets as per s. 159(2) "Director" term of art included in other provisions but not s. 159(2) — "And other like person" unusual draftsmanship — Director not ejusdem generis — Director not required to file return by s. 150 so not referred to in s. 159(1) — Application granted — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 150, 152(1) (rep. and sub. S.C. 1978, c. 5, s. 5), 159(1),(2),(3), 173(1), 222, 248(1) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18, 28 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 319, 603.
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Certiorari — Income tax — Application for order quashing assessments and injunc tion restraining further action thereon — Applicant directors assessed under Income Tax Act ("Act") s. 159 in amount equal to dividend declared without s. 159(2) certificate after nil
assessment of company — Subsequent reassessments of com pany indicating taxes owing — Applicants alleging want of legal authority for assessments — Assessment reviewable under Federal Court Act s. 18 since administrative — Minister being s. 18 "board" when purporting to exercise powers under Act — Methods provided by Act for challenging assessment not activating private provision being s. 29 of Federal Court Act — Applicability of s. 29 dependant upon nature of appeal — S. 18 jurisdiction including several appealable matters — Taxpayer's objection and Minister's reconsideration under Act s. 165 part of assessment process not true appeal — Appeals to Tax Review Board and Federal Court addressing substance of assessment (quantum and liability) not existence of author ity to assess — Whether to refuse application because alterna tive remedy available or more appropriate — Option of refer ence to Court under Act s. 173(1) rejected by Minister — Failure to exhaust appeal option traditionally prompting refusal to grant discretionary remedy — Courts reluctant to insist upon appeal when error of law results in improper assumption of authority — Facts herein not disputable so trial unnecessary — Objection and appeal not yielding more ade quate remedy, costing extra, and being unnecessarily circui tous way of resolving issue — Time particularly important to applicant in profession since large debt to Crown especially detrimental — Application granted — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, ss. 159(1),(2),(3), 165(/),(3)(b), 169, 172(2), 173(1) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18, 28, 29 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 319, 603.
In June 1979, the Minister assessed at nil the taxes owed by North Carleton Land Company Limited ("the Company") in respect of the year 1978. In October 1979, the Company's board of directors met, and declared a dividend in the amount of approximately $454,000. The meeting was attended by the applicants Parsons and Flemming Jr., and by Flemming Sr., but not by the Company's two other directors. In May 1981, the Minister issued reassessments of the Company's taxes for both 1978 and 1979, showing that a total of about $718,000 was owed by the Company in respect of the two years. The Company served a notice of objection. The Minister disallowed the objection and confirmed the reassessments. In September 1982, the Company appealed both reassessments to the Tax Review Board.
In February 1983, the Minister issued a notice of assessment to each of Parsons, Flemming Jr. and the estate of Flemming Sr. Each assessment was in the amount of the aforementioned dividend. The theory behind these assessments was that, by declaring a dividend without first obtaining a ministerial cer tificate under subsection 159(2) of the Income Tax Act—i.e., a certificate attesting to the payment of the Company's taxes— the three directors had incurred personal liability for those taxes by virtue of subsection 159(3). (The amount of the assessments was consistent with the departmental position stated in Bulletin IT-368: namely, that personal liability under subsection 159(3) was limited to the value of the property distributed.)
The applicants took the view that these latter three assess ments were made without legal authorization, and so void. They proposed that the resolution of the dispute thus estab lished be expedited, by referring a question to the Federal Court under subsection 173(1); however, this suggestion was rejected by the Minister. The applicants then applied for an order quashing the three assessments, and for an injunction restraining the Minister from taking further action upon them.
Held, the application is granted.
The act of assessing is the act of calculating the tax payable by the taxpayer. It fixes both the quantum of tax payable, and the taxpayer's liability therefor. It is an administrative act, and as such, it is outside the ambit of section 28 of the Federal Court Act, and is reviewable under section 18 instead. Further more, in exercising or purporting to exercise powers conferred by the Income Tax Act, the Minister constitutes a federal "board" within the meaning of section 18. Also, the particular kinds of relief sought by the applicants herein—certiorari and an injunction—are ones which the Trial Division is empowered by section 18 to grant.
Nonetheless, in light of the procedures for questioning an assessment afforded by the Income Tax Act, the Minister maintains that the present application is barred by section 29 of the Federal Court Act. Section 29 consists in a privative provision, which proscribes judicial review of a board's decision to the extent that the particular decision is subject to appeal under the express terms of a federal statute. Now, in any given case, the applicability of the section is dependant upon the nature of the appeal provided by the particular Act involved. Moreover, there are many instances in which the Court's section 18 jurisdiction extends to matters that are subject to appeal. Thus, the question to be decided is whether the methods of challenging an assessment available under the Income Tax Act are so constituted as to call the section 29 proscription into play against an application of the kind presently before the Court.
One of those methods is the section 165 procedure, according to which the taxpayer serves a notice of objection and the Minister is required thereupon to reconsider the assessment. This procedure, though, is not an appeal at all. It is simply part and parcel of the assessment process itself. Elsewhere, the Act does make provision for true appeals: to the Tax Review Board, under section 169; and to the Federal Court, under subsection 172(2). However, the appeals thus permitted are addressed
only to the substance of an assessment—that is, to the issues of quantum and liability. Those are issues very different from that of the existence of legal authority for making the assessment; and since it is the latter issue which the applicants wish to raise, their application is not blocked by the presence of the Income Tax Act's appeal provisions or by any activation of section 29 resulting therefrom.
Should the Court nonetheless reject the application without considering its merits, either on the ground that another remedy is available, or because an available alternative is more appropriate? In the first instance, the applicants herein did have open to them two routes other than the one for which they have opted. One of these, however, was to agree with the Minister to submit a question of law to the Court—a course which the applicants did indeed attempt to pursue, but which was foreclosed by the Minister's refusal to participate. The applicants had the further option of lodging a notice of objec tion and, if necessary, following that step with an appeal to the Board or the Federal Court (or both in turn); and it is true that an applicant's failure to exhaust an alternative remedy of appeal, where available, is traditionally a reason for the Court's declining to grant discretionary remedies. However, the ques tion which these applicants want resolved is whether the Minis ter committed an error of law and accordingly engaged in a wrongful assumption of authority; and when an error of law has resulted in an improper assumption of authority, the courts have shown a marked reluctance to compel resort to statutory appeal procedures, treating as irrelevant an applicant's failure to resort to that option. In the case at bar, none of the facts underlying the three assessments is susceptible of dispute, so there is no need for a full trial, which is what an appeal to the Federal Court would entail. Furthermore, proceeding by way of objection and appeal would not secure for the applicants a remedy more adequate than the relief currently sought. To adopt that alternative procedure would be to take an unneces sarily circuitous route to the resolution of the key issue, which would arise only incidentally. In contrast, the present procedure goes directly to the heart of the matter. It is also less costly and more expeditious than the alternative. Time is of particular significance to the one applicant who is a professional: in an occupation of a professional nature, it is especially detrimental to be indebted to the Crown in an amount as substantial as that stated in these assessments. With regard to this circumstance, the Court may properly take account of the fact that justice delayed is justice denied. Thus, on several grounds, the Court should proceed to consider whether section 159 did give the Minister authority to make the impugned assessments.
Subsections 159(2) and (3) are essentially penal in nature. They must therefore be construed strictly, and the person whom the Minister seeks to penalize must be brought within their precise terms. It is stated in the Department's Bulletin that under subsection 159(3), an individual may be held liable for taxes "whether or not assessed prior to the distribution of property". An Interpretation Bulletin, though, has no legal
effect whatsoever. Moreover, the Department's reading does violence to the clear language of subsection 159(2): the individual incurs liability (under subsection (3)) only if he has failed to obtain a certificate where required, and according to subsection (2), a certificate is required only in respect of taxes "that have been assessed". Subsection (3) itself implicitly affirms that the existence of such taxes is a precondition of liability, inasmuch as it speaks of liability "for the unpaid taxes" (emphasis added). Here, the definite article implies the existence of specific unpaid taxes, but these cannot exist unless an obligation to pay has arisen, and for such an obligation to arise there must be an assessment. In the instant case, it follows from the assessment of June 1979 that there were no assessed taxes at the time when the dividend was declared; consequently, no obligation to obtain a certificate flowed from the existence of such taxes.
There are further obstacles to the invocation of section 159 against these applicants. For one thing, subsection 159(2) is concerned only with the situation wherein one of the persons named in the subsection is "distributing any property under his control". It is doubtful that the declaration of a dividend constitutes a "distribution of property", but that point aside, one may ask what property a director has under his control. It might be argued—though again it is doubtful—that all of a company's assets are controlled by the directors as a board, yet even the board's power is subject to the ultimate control which resides with the shareholders.
Secondly, subsection (2) refers to taxes which not only have been assessed but also "are chargeable against or payable out of' the property distributed. In the absence of collection pro ceedings and a charge resulting therefrom, assessed taxes would not seem to be chargeable against or payable out of the assets of a company.
Another difficulty is that, while the Minister sought to fix the applicants (and the Flemming estate) with liability on the basis of their status as company directors, directors are not a category of persons to which subsection 159(2) applies. "Direc- tor" is a term of art, and although it was included elsewhere in the Income Tax Act, it is absent from the opening words of this provision. Therefore, if a director were to be brought within the embrace of subsection 159(2), this would have to be done by means of the general words "and other like person", interpreted according to the doctrine of ejusdem generis. The use of the word "and" (rather than "or"), and of the singular word "person", constitutes unusual draftsmanship; and it is conceiv able that the general words are intended to be linked with, and referrable to, the word "executor" alone. In any event, though, the duties and rights of a director are much different from those of each of the persons specifically named. A director is not "like" any of those persons and is thus beyond the grasp even of the general words of subsection (2). Furthermore, he is not one of the persons alluded to in subsection (1), since he is not required by section 150 to file a return.
For these reasons as well, the applicants were under no obligation to obtain a certificate pursuant to subsection 159(2). The three assessments, premised as they were upon such an obligation, were illegal.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Pure Spring Company Limited v. Minister of National Revenue, [1946] Ex.C.R. 471; [1946] C.T.C. 169; Mar- tineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602.
REFERRED TO:
Harelkin v. The University of Regina, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 561.
COUNSEL:
E. J. Mockler, Q.C. and B.A. Crane, Q.C. for
applicants.
D. G. Gibson for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Mockler, Allen & Dixon, Fredericton, for applicants.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANAcx J.: By notice of motion pursuant to Rule 603 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] the applicants move for an order that:
(a) three assessments made by the Deputy Minister of National Revenue and dated February 8, 1983 against each of the applicants herein in the like amount of $454,425.27 made under subsection 159(3) of the Income Tax Act [R.S.C. 1952, c. 148 (as am. by S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63)] consequent upon a purported failure by them to comply with subsection 159(2) of that Act "being the amount of unpaid tax is payable by or in respect of North Carleton Land Company Limited (hereafter referred to as "North Carle- ton") for the taxation years 1978 and 1979" should be removed into this Court and quashed.
(The statement common to the notices of assessment that $454,425.27 is the amount of unpaid tax payable by North Carleton is wrong. The taxes ultimately assessed against North Carleton were $681,321.67 for its 1978 taxation year and $36,758.72 for its 1979 taxation year, a total for the two years of $718,080.39 not $454,425.27 or $1,363,275.81.)
(b) an injunction restraining the Minister, his agents, ser vants and employees from taking any further action pursuant to the said assessments or otherwise attempting to enforce or realize the same.
North Carleton is a company incorporated pur suant to the law of New Brunswick of which the applicants, A. W. C. Parsons and Hugh J. Flem- ming Jr., as was the late Hugh John Flemming Sr. who died on October 16, 1982, were the directors.
On June 14, 1979, the 1978 tax return of North Carleton was assessed by the Minister as "NIL".
Some four months later the board of directors consisting of A. W. C. Parsons, Hugh John Flem- ming Sr., Hugh John Flemming Jr., William L. Hoyt, Q.C. (now Mr. Justice Hoyt) and F. G. Flemming convened in meeting on October 16, 1979 and declared a dividend in respect of the common shares in the capital stock of North Carleton of $908.85 per share for a total of $454,425.27, the entire amount being paid to Flemming Industries Limited, the sole shareholder except for directors' qualifying shares held in trust.
Mr. Justice Hoyt and F. G. Flemming were not present. Hoyt J. waived notice and consented to the transaction of such business as came before the meeting.
Subsequent to the filing of North Carleton's return for the 1979 taxation year, on May 27, 1981, by notice of that date, the Minister reas sessed the taxpayer in the amount of $681,321.67, inclusive of interest in the amount of $138,489.19, for its 1978 taxation year which had been previ ously assessed on June 14, 1979 with no tax being payable, and on the same date also reassessed North Carleton for its 1979 taxation to an amount of $36,758.72—a total for the two years of $718,080.39.
On August 20, 1981, North Carleton filed a notice of objection.
On July 6, 1982, the Minister disallowed the objection and confirmed the assessments.
On September 27, 1982, a notice of appeal to the Tax Review Board was filed by North Carle- ton with respect to the assessments for its 1978 and 1979 taxation years dated May 27, 1981.
On October 16, 1982, Hugh John Flemming Sr. died. By his last will and testament he appointed Hugh John Flemming Jr., A. W. C. Parsons, the Honourable Mr. Justice William L. Hoyt and the Royal Trust Corporation of Canada to be his executors and trustees.
On January 27, 1983, the Royal Trust renounced its right and title to participate in the administration of the estate as executor and trustee.
As at February 1, 1983, the matter had been before the Department of National Revenue for two years.
On February 8, 1983, the Minister issued notices of assessment pursuant to subsection 159(3) of the Income Tax Act against A. W. C. Parsons and Hugh John Flemming Jr. in their personal capacities as directors of North Carleton, each in the amount of $454,425.27, being the amount of the dividend declared on October 16, 1979 by the board of directors of North Carleton of which they were members participating in the declaration, and against the estate of the late Hugh John Flemming Sr. in the same amount.
These are the assessments presently sought to be removed into this Court and quashed.
Like assessments were not issued against Mr. Justice Hoyt and F. G. Flemming, perhaps because the Minister considered it expedient not to do so as they were not present at the meeting of the board at which the dividend was declared.
The basic contention advanced by counsel on behalf of the applicants is that the assessments called into question are not authorized by law and as such are illegal and void.
There seems little likelihood that the facts upon which the assessments are based are susceptible of dispute between the parties or variation on trial.
In the light of these circumstances the sugges tion was made by counsel for the applicants to expedite the matter by resort to section 173 of the Income Tax Act, subsection (1) of which reads:
173. (1) Where the Minister and a taxpayer agree in writing that a question of law, fact, or mixed law and fact arising under this Act should be determined by the Federal Court, that
question shall be determined by the Court pursuant to subsec tion 17(3) of the Federal Court Act.
The Minister spurned that suggestion as it is his right to do, but which refusal inspired the appli cants to seek the expeditious remedy of certiorari by the present motion.
The matter turns upon the proper interpretation of section 159 of the Income Tax Act—particular- ly subsections (2) and (3) thereof.
The purpose of the section is clear. Persons who are obliged by section 150 to file a return of income on behalf of another person or persons acting within the fiduciary capacity contemplated by subsection 159(2) may be held personally liable for unpaid taxes, interest and penalties if that person has not first obtained a clearance certificate from the Minister before the distribution of any property under his control.
Whether a director is such a person is a question of the interpretation of the statute. A determina tion based upon an erroneous interpretation of a statute is an error of law patent on the face of the record and as such is subject to relief by way of certiorari almost ex debito justitiae (an unfortu nate expression for the reasons outlined by Beetz J. in Harelkin v. The University of Regina, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 561, at pages 575-576).
The contention by counsel for the respondent is that a privative provision exists in section 29 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10], which reads:
29. Notwithstanding sections 18 and 28, where provision is expressly made by an Act of the Parliament of Canada for an appeal as such to the Court, to the Supreme Court, to the Governor in Council or to the Treasury Board from a decision or order of a federal board, commission or other tribunal made by or in the course of proceedings before that board, commis sion or tribunal, that decision or order is not, to the extent that it may be so appealed, subject to review or to be restrained, prohibited, removed, set aside or otherwise dealt with, except to the extent and in the manner provided for in that Act.
The moot question is whether section 29 of the Federal Court Act is applicable to the appeals from an assessment provided for in the Income Tax Act.
The applicability of section 29 in a particular circumstance is dependent on the nature of the appeal provided by the statute in question.
In many instances the jurisdiction of the Court under section 18 of the Federal Court Act extends to matters which are subject to appeal and as well to those which are not.
By section 18 of the Federal Court Act the Trial Division has exclusive original jurisdiction to issue an injunction and a writ of certiorari, which is the relief sought by the applicants herein, against any federal board, commission or other tribunal. The Minister, in exercising or purporting to exercise powers conferred by the Income Tax Act, is such a board.
The act of assessing has been held by Thorson P. (confirmed by the Privy Council) in Pure Spring Company Limited v. Minister of National Reve nue, [1946] Ex.C.R. 471; [1946] C.T.C. 169, to be an administrative act and not one of a judicial nature. It is the assessment which fixes the quan tum of the tax and liability therefor by a taxpayer. It is the act of calculation of the tax.
Since the act is administrative it is not within section 28 of the Federal Court Act but it is within section 18. That has been resolved in Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602.
Section 18 differs from section 28 in that the grant of the equitable and prerogative relief there in provided is from its very nature inherently discretionary.
The fact that an appeal may be provided is but one circumstance to be considered in the exercise of that discretion and is not of itself conclusive.
Section 165 of the Income Tax Act provides that a taxpayer who objects to an assessment (as all taxpayers do) may file a notice of objection setting forth the reasons therefor and all relevant facts.
Upon receipt of a notice of objection it is the duty of the Minister with all due dispatch to reconsider the amount.
This has been referred to by counsel for the respondent as an "in-house" appeal.
In my opinion it is not an appeal. It continues to be part and parcel of the assessment process.
If vacated that would no doubt satisfy a taxpay er and end the matter.
However, if the assessment is confirmed or varied somewhat, provision is made in section 169 for an appeal by the taxpayer to the Tax Review Board, or to the Federal Court of Canada pursu ant to subsection 172(2).
But the filing of a notice of objection to the assessment is a condition precedent to an appeal either to the Tax Review Board or the Federal Court and it remains a condition precedent even if the taxpayer wishes to circumvent reconsideration by the Minister and appeal directly to the Board or the Court in accordance with paragraph 165(3)(b) of the Act.
The assessment by the Minister, which fixes the quantum and tax liability, is that which is the subject of the appeal.
The quantum is not the basis of the attack by the applicants in this instance.
The basis of the attack upon the assessments is that the Minister did not have the power by law in the circumstances to make the assessments and accordingly they are void as well as illegally made.
An error in law which goes to jurisdiction is alleged in which event certiorari is the appropriate remedy and, in my view, that remedy is available despite the appeal process provided against quan tum and liability therefor which is the purpose of the assessment process. That is an appeal provided from a matter far different from the lack of au thority in law to make the assessment.
For that reason section 29 of the Federal Court Act, in my view, does not constitute a bar to the
certiorari and injunctive proceedings taken by the applicants.
Having concluded that this Court is vested with jurisdiction the question arises as to whether the Court ought to exercise that jurisdiction or decline to do so.
The prerogative and equitable relief sought by the applicants is discretionary and being discre tionary the discretion must be exercised upon sound judicial principles.
A ground traditionally relied upon to warrant the refusal to grant discretionary remedies is the applicants' failure to exhaust an alternate remedy of appeal if provided.
However where there has been a wrongful assumption of authority, as a result of an error of law, as is alleged to be the case here, the courts have exhibited a marked reluctance to compel resort to statutory appeal procedures. In such cir cumstances the fact that the applicant has not taken advantage of a statutory right of appeal is not normally regarded as relevant in the consider ation of the exercise of judicial discretion.
An error in jurisdiction or an error of law in the record almost invariably and automatically results in the grant of certiorari.
The power of the Minister to make assessments must be based upon the legal authority to do so and can be set aside by reason of the wrongful interpretation and application of the provision of the statute upon which the Minister relies.
As I have concluded and as I view the matter, the applicants have three avenues of recourse available to them.
The first avenue would be to lodge notices of objection, pursue that step in the assessment pro cess to its end, and in the event that this end resulted in confirmation of the assessments, to appeal to the Tax Review Board and possibly thence to the Federal Court or directly to the Federal Court. The appeal to the Federal Court is
a trial de novo with all the rights applicable in and procedures incident to the trial of an action.
I do not overlook that the continuation of the assessment process within the Department of Na tional Revenue can be circumvented and the notice of objection serve as an appeal directly to the Tax Review Board or to the Federal Court, with the notice of objection serving as the originating pleading.
The second recourse, which was initiated by the applicants, is for the taxpayer and the Minister to agree that a question of law should be determined by the Federal Court. For reasons best known to the Minister he did not agree to the initiative of the taxpayers which was accordingly aborted.
The third remaining avenue of recourse avail able to the taxpayers was that presently invoked by them—that is, by notice of motion pursuant to Rules 603 and 319 for relief by way of certiorari and injunction against the Minister provided for by section 18 of the Federal Court Act.
The question which is posed for answer is which of the two methods available is more appropriate to resolve the issue to be decided, which is whether it was within the power of the Minister to assess the applicants as he purported to do pursuant to subsections 159(2) and (3) of the Income Tax Act or, put another way: Was the Minister wrong in law in assessing the applicants as he did?
To ascertain which is the more appropriate, regard must be had to all the circumstances of the case, paramount amongst which is the relief sought by the remedy invoked and the adequacy of the alternate remedy.
Certiorari is the prerogative writ adopted to quash a decision based upon an error of law which is apparent from the record. The question there fore resolves itself into one of law. None of the facts antecedent to the assessment are susceptible of dispute. Those facts have been set forth at the outset. A full-dress trial is not necessary to estab lish those salient facts.
I am convinced that the statutory appeal pro vided in the Income Tax Act, predicated as it is by a condition precedent involving time and expense to the applicants, does not afford the applicants a more adequate remedy than the present remedy elected by them.
There can be no question that it is more conven ient in terms of cost and expedition.
Time is of particular significance to one of the applicants who is engaged in a professional occupation.
Upon assessment by the Minister, liability for the quantum thereof is immediate upon the mail ing of notice thereof and payment is likewise immediate regardless of an objection lodged or an appeal outstanding. The amount of the assessment is a debt due the Crown and is recoverable as such with interest running thereon. There is no equity in a taxing statute nor in the administration thereof. Thus to be a debtor to the Crown in such a substantial amount is detrimental to this particular applicant in his professional capacity. This is a consideration to which no weight can be attached other than the principle expressed in the maxim that justice delayed is justice denied.
The remedy presently adopted by the applicants is available to them subject only to this remedy being barred by the provision of a more adequate remedy.
The more adequate remedy advanced by the Minister is the filing of a notice of objection. It is not my function to decide the efficacy thereof, which was the subject of comment by counsel for the rival parties. As I have said before, it is not an appeal but merely a prolongation of the process of assessment by the Minister, but it is, without exception, a condition precedent to an appeal.
In the event of confirmation in this objection process there remains an appeal to either the Tax Review Board and/or to the Federal Court.
That objection and ultimate appeal is to and from the assessment, the,validity of which would arise only incidentally.
Rather than adopt this circuitous route, the applicants elected the more direct route of going directly to the heart of the matter which is, as repeatedly stated before, whether the Minister erred in law in assessing the applicants as he did.
I am not satisfied that the alternate route pro pounded by the Minister is the more appropriate.
On the other hand it appears more appropriate that the circuity consequent upon prosecuting an appeal in the manner prescribed in the Income Tax Act is not necessary or convenient, expedi tious and beneficial to the applicants' clear ulti mate end, that is to demonstrate an error in law on the part of the Minister, and is available by the more direct course to which the applicants have had resort.
For the cumulative effect of these circum stances, I entertain the application for prerogative and injunctive relief.
This then brings me to the consideration of the crux of the matter, which is the straightforward question of law in the circumstances outlined, which is: Did the Minister err in law in assessing the applicants?
By virtue of subsection 152(1) of the Income Tax Act [rep. and sub. S.C. 1978, c. 5, s. 5], it is the duty of the Minister to forthwith examine a taxpayer's income tax return for a taxation year and assess the tax for the year, the interest and penalties, if any, payable and determine the amount of refund or tax. That tax becomes a debt due the Crown immediately payable by virtue of section 222. The nature of debts due the Crown and their collection is a matter of royal prerogative which stems, not from the Income Tax Act, but from the common law. Where the sovereign's and the subject's title concur the sovereign's shall pre vail. Here the respondent's title is disputed.
Within the all-encompassing net cast by the Income Tax Act since The Income War Tax Act, 1917 [S.C. 1917, c. 28; subsequently c. 97 of R.S.C. 1927] were provisions like those now
included in subsections 159(1), (2) and (3), which are reproduced:
159. (1) Every person required by section 150 to file a return of the income of any other person for a taxation year shall, within 30 days from the day of mailing of the notice of assessment, pay all taxes, penalties and interest payable by or in respect of that person to the extent that he has or had, at any time since the taxation year, in his possession or control prop erty belonging to that person or his estate and shall thereupon be deemed to have made that payment on behalf of the taxpayer.
(2) Every assignee, liquidator, administrator, executor and other like person, other than a trustee in bankruptcy, before distributing any property under his control, shall obtain a certificate from the Minister certifying that taxes, interest or penalties that have been assessed under this Act and are chargeable against or payable out of the property have been paid or that security for the payment thereof has, in accordance with subsection 220(4), been accepted by the Minister.
(3) Distribution of property without a certificate required by subsection (2) renders the person required to obtain the certifi cate personally liable for the unpaid taxes, interest and penalties.
Subsections 159(2) and (3), under which the Minister has assessed the applicants herein, are essentially penal in nature.
If the persons who are in control of assets which do not belong to them distribute those assets with out first paying any taxes owing by the beneficial owner or first ascertaining that no taxes are pay able and obtaining a certificate by the Minister to that effect in accordance with subsection 159(2) renders the person who distributes any property under his control personally liable for the unpaid taxes.
Being essentially penal in nature, the section must be strictly construed and the person sought to be penalized must be brought precisely within the terms of the subsections.
It will be recalled that North Carleton filed its income tax return for its 1978 taxation year.
On June 14, 1979, the Minister by his notice of assessment affirmed that no tax was payable by North Carleton.
On October 16, 1979, four months later, the board of directors declared a dividend payable to the common shareholders of North Carleton.
The board did so after the receipt of an assess ment by the Minister dated June 14, 1979 that no taxes were assessed and accordingly no taxes were payable.
Long later, on May 27, 1981, upon the filing of the tax return by North Carleton for its 1979 taxation year, the Minister assessed North Carle- ton for its 1979 taxation year in an amount of $36,758.72 and at the same time reassessed North Carleton for its 1978 taxation year in an amount of $681,321.67.
Naturally these assessments to income tax have been appealed by North Carleton.
But because the board of directors of North Carleton, after having received a nil assessment, declared a dividend of $454,425.27 to the common shareholders, three members of that board, the applicants herein, were each personally assessed for taxes in that amount under subsection 159(3) because they had not obtained certificates that no taxes were payable under subsection 159(2).
By Interpretation Bulletin IT-368 dated March 28, 1977 and entitled "Corporate Distributions— Clearance Certificates", a wide application is given to subsections 159(2) and (3) by the Minister.
Paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of that Bulletin are those relevant in this matter.
Paragraph 1 reads:
1. By virtue of subsection 159(2) every assignee, liquidator, administrator, and other like person (except a trustee in bank ruptcy) must request and obtain a clearance certificate before distributing any property under his control if he wishes to avoid being personally liable for the unpaid taxes, interest, and penalties of a corporation pursuant to subsection 159(3). A clearance certificate is issued on form TX21.
This paragraph reproduces the substance of sub section 159(2).
Paragraph 2 reads:
2. The term "and other like person" includes any person acting in the capacity of liquidator, whether or not a formal appoint ment was made. In a voluntary dissolution, there may be no formally appointed liquidator and responsibility may have been
assumed by an auditor, director, or other person. Whether or not a person falls within the scope of subsection 159(2) will be determined in accordance with the facts of the particular case.
The Minister's interpretation is not relevant in the circumstances of this matter. North Carleton has not been placed in liquidation nor has it gone into voluntary liquidation. It is a subsisting corpo ration. Accordingly no director has assumed any responsibility in connection with a voluntary liqui dation to infect him with the capacity of a liquida tor, nor have any acts been done by the directors which are susceptible of that interpretation.
What the board of directors has done was to declare a dividend. It is an established principle of common law, implemented in the applicable corpo rate legislation in Canada and the provinces, that a declaration of a dividend which would impair the capital of the company is void.
Here the dividend was declared at a duly con stituted meeting of the board of directors on Octo- ber 16, 1979.
The maxim Omnia praesumuntur legitime facta donec probetur in contrarium is applicable.
The presumption that the dividend had been properly declared has not been contradicted as was the privilege of the respondent to do if circum stances so warranted but which the respondent did not choose to exercise.
Paragraph 3 of the Bulletin reads:
3. According to subsection 159(3), where no clearance certifi cate is obtained, a person described in subsection 159(2) could be held liable to [sic] all taxes, interest, and penalties, whether or not assessed prior to the distribution of property. However, the liability of the person under subsection 159(3) is limited to the value of the property he distributed.
It states that according to subsection 159(3), where no clearance certificate is obtained, a person described in subsection 159(2) could be held liable to all taxes, interest and penalties, whether or not assessed prior to the distribution of property.
The crucial words in this paraphrase of subsec tion 159(3) are, "all taxes, interest, and penalties, whether or not assessed prior to the distribution of property."
The language of subsection 159(3) is to the effect that distribution of property without the Minister's certificate renders the person required to obtain the certificate "personally liable for the unpaid taxes, interest and penalties." [Emphasis added.] The definite article "the" precedes the words "unpaid taxes". How there can be specific taxes unpaid without an obligation to pay first arising—which is, under the Income Tax Act, by assessment by the Minister—cannot in logic follow.
An Interpretation Bulletin is precisely what it is stated to be. It is nothing more than some depart mental officer's interpretation of subsections 159(2) and (3) of the Act and has no legal effect whatsoever, other than it is directed to employees of the Department responsible for assessing tax payers who will follow it without question. The limit of their discretion is to do what they are told.
That interpretation does violence to the clear language of subsection 159(2).
Subsection 159(3) imposes liability if distribu tion of property is made "without a certificate required by subsection (2)".
Thus to render a person liable for all the unpaid taxes, interest and penalties, that person must have failed to obtain a certificate contemplated by sub section 159(2).
A person within the categories mentioned in subsection (2), before distributing any property under his control, shall obtain a certificate from the Minister that taxes, interest and penalties "that have been assessed under this Act" have been paid or secured.
That language on its face creates a liability only when distribution of property has been made after an assessment has been made. The language is clear and is susceptible of no other meaning. Cer tainly taxes do not become payable before assessment.
In this instance an assessment of North Carle- ton was made on June 14, 1979. As at that date no "taxes, interest or penalties" had been assessed
under the Income Tax Act, from which it follows that there was no necessity to obtain the Minister's certificate and no impediment to the distribution of property by way of declaration of dividends by the board of directors of North Carleton if the creation of a right is susceptible of meaning a distribution of property within the definition of the word "property" in subsection 248(1), which is dubious.
Further, subsection 159(2) provides that the "taxes, interest or penalties" that have been assessed must be "chargeable against or payable out of the property". The "property" must be that "under the control" of the person who distributes it.
Naturally the question arises as to what "prop- erty" a director has under his control.
The directors of a company form a board to which the duty is delegated by the shareholders of managing the general affairs of the company. They have the power of management and the conduct of the business of the company. Put at its very broadest it is conceivable that all assets of the company are under the control of the board of directors, but subject to the control of the board by the shareholders. Ultimate control reposes in the shareholders.
Accepting the dubious assumption that it is all assets of the company that are under the control of the directors as a board, how then are taxes which have been assessed chargeable against or payable out of the assets of the company? The Income Tax Act does not impose a lien on property for the payment of taxes unless one of the collection procedures was taken with a resultant charge.
Further, the question arises as to whether a "director", as each of the applicants is, falls within the initial language of subsection 159(2) reading, "Every assignee, liquidator, administrator, execu tor and other like person, other than a trustee in bankruptcy", who are obligated to obtain a certifi cate of the Minister before distributing property under their control.
A trustee in bankruptcy is excepted, being else where covered.
The word "director" is a term of art and accord ingly has a technical meaning in respect of corpo rations. Use is made of the word "director" in other provisions of the Income Tax Act but the word is not included in the initial words of subsec tion 159(2).
Prima facie if it is not included it is excluded unless included in the words "and other like per son" on the doctrine of ejusdem generis.
General words following specific words are ordi narily construed as limited to things ejusdem gen- eris with those before enumerated.
The general words in subsection 159(2) are "and other like person". The use of the word "and" and the word "person" in the singular is unusual draftsmanship. The more frequent use would be the word "or" and the word "persons" in the plural. It is conceivable that the word "and" should join only the word "executor" as well as the word "person" being in the singular.
However a "director" is not "like" any of the preceding persons, let alone an "executor" exclusively.
The specific words which are to govern the general words "and other like person" are "assignee, liquidator, administrator, executor", all of which are terms of art having a specific mean ing in their legal context and are so used in subsection 159(2).
An assignee is a person to whom an assignment is made and assignment means that property is transferred to another. The assignee is the recipi ent of that property.
A liquidator is a person appointed to carry out the winding-up of a company whose duty is to get
in and realize the property of the company, to pay its debts and to distribute the surplus (if any) among the shareholders.
An executor is the person to whom the execution of a will is entrusted by a testator. Strictly speak ing an executor is bound to satisfy all claims on the estate before distributing it among the legatees and other beneficiaries.
An administrator is the person to whom the property of a person dying intestate is committed for administration and whose duties with respect thereto correspond with those of an executor.
Basically the directors of a company are those persons acting collectively to whom the duty of managing the general affairs of the company is delegated by the shareholders. Their duty is to conduct the business of the company for the great est benefit of the shareholders.
Directors have been described as "agents", "trustees", and "managing partners", but each such description has been judicially negated.
They have been held not to be exactly agents, not exactly trustees, not exactly managing part ners. They are not the masters of the shareholders; neither are they servants of the shareholders. Their relationship is one requiring an exercise of fidelity having in view the purposes for which they are appointed and the statutory provisions under which their appointment is made.
The position of a director is very different from that of an agent or an ordinary trustee. The prop erty of the company may not be legally vested in the directors.
Likewise the duties, rights and obligations of a director and the position of a director generally is also far different from those of an assignee, a liquidator, an administrator or an executor—so different in fact as to be unlike those of such persons, from which it follows that a director is not "another like person" to those specific persons preceding these general words as used in subsec tion 159(2).
A director is not a person obligated to file an income tax return under section 150 of the Income Tax Act, to which reference is made in subsection 159(1).
The obligation of the applicants here to obtain a certificate of the Minister certifying that taxes that have been assessed have been paid is governed by subsection 159(2).
For the reasons expressed, in the circumstances which have also been described no such obligation was incumbent upon the applicants.
Accordingly, the assessments made by the Min ister on February 8, 1983 against the applicants herein are quashed and the Minister, his agents, servants and employees are restrained from taking any further action or steps pursuant to the said assessments or to otherwise attempt to enforce or realize upon the said assessments.
The applicants shall be entitled to their costs.
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