Date:
20110421
Dockets: A-224-10
A-225-10
Citation: 2011 FCA 142
CORAM: NADON
J.A.
PELLETIER
J.A.
MAINVILLE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
Docket:
A-224-10
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Appellant
and
KEVIN
RICHARD BUCKINGHAM
Respondent
Docket:
A-225-10
KEVIN
RICHARD BUCKINGHAM
Appellant
and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
MAINVILLE
J.A.
[1]
In
reasons cited as 2010 TCC 247 (“Reasons”), Webb J. of the Tax Court of Canada
found that the respondent was not liable as a director of various corporations
for the amounts the corporations failed to remit as source deductions under the
Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.), the Canada
Pension Plan, R.S.C 1985, c. C-8 and the Employment Insurance Act, S.C.
1996, c. 23, but was so liable after February 2003 for the failure to make GST/HST
remittances under the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15.
[2]
The
Crown appeals the judgment concerning the employee source deductions remittances
in file A-224-10, while the respondent appeals the judgment concerning the GST/HST
remittances in file A-225-10. Both appeals have been consolidated.
[3]
These
consolidated appeals raise the issue of the appropriate standard of care,
diligence and skill required of a director under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income
Tax Act (and related provisions of the Canada
Pension Plan and of the Employment Insurance Act) and under subsection
323(3) of the Excise Tax Act.
Context
[4]
The
respondent and his family acquired control of Mosaic Technologies Corporation
(“Mosaic”) around 1997 in order to carry on an education services business. Shortly
thereafter, Mosaic secured educational facilities in various locations across Canada. Mosaic also had a division that prepared online courses for large corporations and
governments.
[5]
The
shares of Mosaic started to trade on the TSX Venture Exchange in 1998 or 1999.
The company incurred an operating loss of $970,866 in 1999, made a profit of
$253,110 in 2000 and then incurred losses of $451,161 in 2001 and $1,446,396 in
2002. After various unsuccessful efforts in 2002 and in early 2003 to secure
additional capital and financing, the corporation unsuccessfully attempted to
sell its assets and part of its business in order to pay its creditors. Mosaic
ceased all operations in or shortly after September of 2003.
[6]
The
respondent was the chairman of the board of Mosaic and its largest shareholder.
The trial judge found that he was involved in its day-to-day operations and
played a significant role in these operations.
[7]
The
respondent was assessed pursuant to section 323 of the Excise Tax Act
for GST/HST remittances which Mosaic had failed to make in March and June of
2003, as well as for associated penalties and interest. He was also assessed
pursuant to section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act, section 21.1 of
the Canada Pension Plan and section 83 of the Employment Insurance
Act for Mosaic’s failure to remit employee source deductions for the period
of October 2002 to August 2003, as well as for associated penalties and
interest. Similar assessments were made against the respondent for the failures
to remit employee source deductions by the various subsidiaries of Mosaic,
namely Multimedia Ventures (Alberta) Inc., Multimedia Ventures Inc., and 6678
British Columbia Ltd.
[8]
The
respondent appealed all of these assessments to the Tax Court of Canada solely
on the basis that he was not liable for these amounts as a result of the
provisions of subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and subsection
323(3) of the Excise Tax Act which exonerate a director of liability
where he “exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the
failure that a reasonably prudent person would have exercised in comparable
circumstances.”
The Reasons of
the trial judge
[9]
Relying
on his decision in Higgins v. Canada, 2007 TCC 469, the trial judge concluded,
at paragraphs 16 to 18 of his Reasons, that the “objective subjective” test set
out in Soper v. Canada, [1998] 1 F.C. 124 (C.A.) (“Soper”), regarding
the standard of care, diligence and skill required under subsection 227.1(3) of
the Income Tax Act had been modified by the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision
in Peoples Department Stores Inc.(Trustee of) v. Wise, 2004 SCC 68,
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 461 (“Peoples Department Stores”). The trial judge found
that an objective standard should thus be used for the purposes of applying both
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and subsection 323(3) of the Excise
Tax Act, and that this standard incorporated the reasonable business
decision test laid out in Peoples Department Stores.
[10]
The
question for the trial judge was therefore whether the respondent had acted
prudently on a reasonably informed basis and whether his business decisions
were reasonable in light of the circumstances about which he knew or ought to
have known in order to prevent the failures to remit (Reasons at paras. 31, 56
and 82).
[11]
The
trial judge was however of the view that the analysis required in relation to
remittances of employee source deductions should be dealt with separately from
the analysis related to remittances of GST/HST. The need for a distinct
analysis flowed, in the trial judge’s view, from the fact that the “amounts for
payroll deductions are not funded from a third party but are paid from whatever
resources the company might have available to it” (Reasons at para. 33). For
the trial judge, the remittance obligations related to source deductions are
part of employee costs and are funded through the general revenues of the
corporation which may be insufficient to fund these remittances. On the other
hand, remittances of the GST/HST are funded by third parties from whom the GST/HST
is collected. This distinction lead the trial judge to conclude that two
separate analyses of the standard of care, diligence and skill were required,
one for the remittances of source deductions, and one for the remittances of GST/HST
(Reasons at paras. 33 and 74-75).
[12]
Turning
his attention to the employee source deductions remittances, the trial judge
accepted the respondent’s evidence that reasonable business measures were taken
in 2002 and in January and February of 2003 to address the financial
difficulties of Mosaic and to avoid failures to remit taxes, including work on
a proposed equity issue, attempts to secure a line of credit, reductions in
expenditures, and attempts to merge with another company.
[13]
The
trial judge found, at paragraphs 58 to 65 of his Reasons, that the facts before
him were similar to those in Canada v. McKinnon, [2001] 2 F.C. 203 (C.A)
2000 D.T.C. 6593 (sub nom. Worrell v. Canada) [2001] 1 C.T.C. 79 (“Worrell”),
where emphasis was placed on the continued effort to find new investors.
The trial judge also referred to this Court’s decision in Smith v. Canada,
2001 FCA 84, 198 D.L.R. (4th) 257, for the principle that a director
is only required to act reasonably. He concluded, at paragraphs 66 to 73 of his
Reasons, that the respondent had done all that he could in the circumstances to
secure additional funding for Mosaic through various means, and that
consequently he had met the standard of care required of him under subsection
227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act.
[14]
The
trial judge further noted that following the failure to secure new funding, as
of February 2003 the efforts of Mosaic turned towards the sale of its assets in
order to pay creditors, including the arrears in employee source deductions
remittances. Mosaic notably entered into a $1.6 million arrangement in May of
2003 for the sale of its online course development division. An amount of
$600,000 was received from this sale in June of 2003 and used to pay various
creditors, of which $100,000 was sent to the Receiver General as a partial
payment of the outstanding remittances. However, the $1 million balance of the
sale price was never subsequently received.
[15]
The
trial judge further recognized, at paragraphs 69 to 72 of his Reasons, that
even if the focus of the respondent’s efforts after February of 2003 was
directed towards selling assets in order to pay arrears or to correct failures
in remittances, rather than towards preventing failures to occur, and even if
the employee source deductions remittances had been diverted, a defence under
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act could nevertheless be
successful:
[69]
It also seems reasonable that while the Appellant is trying to arrange for a
capital injection or a merger or the sale of a division or assets, that the
company should continue to operate as long as there is a reasonable expectation
that such events would occur. It does not seem to me that this reasonable
expectation would have ended before the deal with GITI collapsed. After the
deal with GITI collapsed in February 2003, the steps changed from seeking
capital injections to liquidating assets. It seems to me that the liquidation
of assets was more directed towards paying arrears (or correcting defaults)
than it would be in preventing defaults from occurring. [Emphasis added]
[70]
There would be a time delay from the time when the GITI deal collapsed and the
employment of employees could be terminated. Reasonable notice is required to
terminate employment without cause. As Justice Major noted in The Queen in
right of the Province of British Columbia v. Ossie Sylvester, [1997]
2 S.C.R. 315:
1
Employment involves, among other things, a contract between
the employer and employee. An employee who is wrongfully dismissed without
reasonable notice of termination is entitled to damages for breach of
contract. These damages represent the salary the employee would have earned
had the employee worked during the notice period, less any amounts
credited to mitigation.
[71]
Employees simply cannot be dismissed without proper notice. This would mean
that the obligation to pay salaries (or compensation for proper notice) will
continue after any decision is made to dismiss employees and such costs (which
will give rise to requirements to remit amounts under the applicable
legislation) will be incurred regardless of whether the company has sufficient
revenue to cover such costs. No third party is necessarily providing the funds
to the company to cover such costs.
[72]
As well since Maxim was acquiring a division it seems reasonable that the
employees of that division would be retained until the sale was completed and
it seems to me that the Appellant would have had a reasonable expectation that
the deal with Maxim would close.
[16]
The
trial judge nevertheless reached a different conclusion concerning the failure
to remit GST/HST. He rejected the defence of the respondent, which had been
essentially the same as that submitted for the failure to remit employee source
deductions, and explained his decision to do so in the following terms (Reasons
at para. 82):
The liquidation of
assets was not undertaken to prevent failures to remit GST/HST. As noted by the
Appellant, the decision to sell assets was made to realize cash so that the
company could pay its bills. This would be done to cure defaults in
remittances, not prevent failures to remit. As a result, it does not seem to me
that the Appellant has satisfied the standard of care imposed on him pursuant
to subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act to
prevent the failure to remit the net tax that was payable on April 30, 2003 and
July 30, 2003.
The position of the Crown
[17]
The
Crown argues that the trial judge committed an error in law by incorporating a
cash-flow analysis into the duty of care, diligence and skill defence under
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act. This, in the Crown’s view,
significantly expands the defence available under that subsection and, if
accepted, would pass to the Crown part of the risk associated with continuing a
business which is facing financial difficulties. This is particularly offensive
for the Crown in light of the trial judge’s finding at paragraph 33 of his Reasons
that the respondent “had admitted that the amounts that had been deducted from the
payroll payments were being used to pay other bills.”
[18]
By
using amounts withheld on employee source deductions to pay third party
creditors, the respondent tried to refinance his business in an effort to save
it. Preferential payments were made to creditors other than the Crown purely
for the purpose of continuing and preserving the continued operation of the
business in order to attempt to salvage the respondent’s investment. For the
Crown, this is exactly the mischief which section 227.1 of the Income Tax
Act was intended to avoid.
[19]
The
Crown asserts that the trial judge failed to draw the distinction made in Worrell
between actions which might be reasonable from a business point of view, and
actions which would have prevented the failure to remit employee source
deductions, and he thus erred in equating a general business intent with the
more specific requirements of section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act which
are directed to preventing the failure to remit.
The position of
the respondent
[20]
In
the respondent’s view, Worrell stands for the proposition that insofar
as the directors can demonstrate that they have made serious and reasonable
efforts to resolve the financial difficulties faced by their corporation, they
have met the standard of care, diligence and skill required to sustain a
defence under either subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act or
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act.
[21]
In
this case, the trial judge recognized that the respondent had made serious and
reasonable efforts to resolve the financial difficulties of Mosaic and of its
subsidiaries, and applied the principles set out in Worrell to find that
the respondent had successfully established a defence under subsection 227.1(3)
of the Income Tax Act.
[22]
The
respondent adds that the trial judge erred in law by failing to follow Worrell
with respect to the GST/HST remittances. Rather, the trial judge carried
out a separate and distinct analysis of these remittances based on his concern
that GST/HST funds are received from third parties, while source deductions are
funded from the general revenues of the business. For the respondent, the trial
judge erred in drawing this sharp contrast between GST/HST and source deduction
remittances. Treating the GST/HST remittances separately from the source
deduction remittances also resulted in the trial judge reaching contradictory
findings of fact.
The issues
[23]
These
consolidated appeals raise three principal issues:
a. Is the
applicable standard of care, diligence and skill under subsection 227.1(3) of
the Income Tax Act and subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act an
objective standard?
b. Does
the standard under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act apply differently
than under subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act?
c. Can a
successful defence under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act or
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act be sustained where the efforts
of the directors are focussed on curing failures to remit rather than towards
preventing such failures?
Standard of
review
[24]
The
decision of Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235, sets
out the applicable standard of appellate review in an appeal from a judgment of
the Tax Court of Canada. The standard of review on a question of law is
correctness, while findings of fact are not to be disturbed unless it can be
established that the trial judge made a palpable and overriding error. The
application of a legal standard to a set of facts is a question of mixed fact
and law which is also subject to deference unless an extricable question of law
can be identified.
[25]
Whether
a defence under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act or subsection
323(3) of the Excise Tax Act has been established requires the
application of a legal standard to a set of facts. Accordingly, these
determinations generally constitute questions of mixed fact and law that are
reviewable on a standard of palpable and overriding error: Hartrell v. Canada, 2008 FCA 59, 2008 D.T.C. 6173 at para. 3. However, the three issues raised by
these consolidated appeals also raise extricable questions of law to which a
standard of correctness applies.
The pertinent
legislative provisions
[26]
Paragraph
153(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act provides for income tax
withholdings from employee wages, and for the remittance of these withholdings
to the Receiver General. Subsection 227.1(1) of the Income Tax Act sets
out that the directors of a corporation which has failed to so withhold and
remit are jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable together with the
corporation to pay the concerned amount and any related interest or penalties.
Subsections 227.1(2) and (3) of the Income Tax Act provide for certain
limitations on this liability of directors, notably by allowing a defence of
care, diligence and skill:
153. (1) Every person paying at any time in a taxation year
(a) salary, wages or other
remuneration, other than amounts described in subsection 115(2.3) or
212(5.1),
…
shall deduct or withhold from the payment the
amount determined in accordance with prescribed rules and shall, at the
prescribed time, remit that amount to the Receiver General on account of the
payee’s tax for the year under this Part or Part XI.3, as the case may be,
and, where at that prescribed time the person is a prescribed person, the
remittance shall be made to the account of the Receiver General at a
designated financial institution.
227.1 (1) Where a corporation has failed to deduct or withhold an amount
as required by subsection 135(3) or 135.1(7) or section 153 or 215, has
failed to remit such an amount or has failed to pay an amount of tax for a
taxation year as required under Part VII or VIII, the directors of the
corporation at the time the corporation was required to deduct, withhold,
remit or pay the amount are jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable,
together with the corporation, to pay that amount and any interest or
penalties relating to it.
(2) A
director is not liable under subsection 227.1(1), unless
(a) a
certificate for the amount of the corporation’s liability referred to in that
subsection has been registered in the Federal Court under section 223 and
execution for that amount has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part;
(b) the
corporation has commenced liquidation or dissolution proceedings or has been
dissolved and a claim for the amount of the corporation’s liability referred
to in that subsection has been proved within six months after the earlier of
the date of commencement of the proceedings and the date of dissolution; or
(c) the
corporation has made an assignment or a bankruptcy order has been made
against it under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and a claim for the
amount of the corporation’s liability referred to in that subsection has been
proved within six months after the date of the assignment or bankruptcy
order.
(3) A director
is not liable for a failure under subsection 227.1(1) where the director
exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the failure that
a reasonably prudent person would have exercised in comparable circumstances
|
153. (1) Toute personne qui
verse au cours d’une année d’imposition l’un des montants suivants :
a) un traitement,
un salaire ou autre rémunération, à l’exception des sommes visées aux
paragraphes 115(2.3) ou 212(5.1);
[…]
doit en déduire ou en retenir la somme fixée selon
les modalités réglementaires et doit, au moment fixé par règlement, remettre
cette somme au receveur général au titre de l’impôt du bénéficiaire ou du
dépositaire pour l’année en vertu de la présente partie ou de la partie XI.3.
Toutefois, lorsque la personne est visée par règlement à ce moment, la somme
est versée au compte du receveur général dans une institution financière
désignée.
227.1 (1) Lorsqu’une société a omis de déduire ou de retenir une
somme, tel que prévu aux paragraphes 135(3) ou 135.1(7) ou aux articles 153
ou 215, ou a omis de verser cette somme ou a omis de payer un montant d’impôt
en vertu de la partie VII ou VIII pour une année d’imposition, les
administrateurs de la société, au moment où celle-ci était tenue de déduire,
de retenir, de verser ou de payer la somme, sont solidairement responsables,
avec la société, du paiement de cette somme, y compris les intérêts et les pénalités
s’y rapportant.
(2) Un
administrateur n’encourt la responsabilité prévue au paragraphe (1) que dans
l’un ou l’autre des cas suivants :
a) un certificat précisant la somme pour laquelle la société est
responsable selon ce paragraphe a été enregistré à la Cour fédérale en
application de l’article 223 et il y a eu défaut d’exécution totale ou
partielle à l’égard de cette somme;
b) la société a engagé des procédures de liquidation ou de
dissolution ou elle a fait l’objet d’une dissolution et l’existence de la
créance à l’égard de laquelle elle encourt la responsabilité en vertu de ce
paragraphe a été établie dans les six mois suivant le premier en date du jour
où les procédures ont été engagées et du jour de la dissolution;
c) la
société a fait une cession ou une ordonnance de faillite a été rendue contre
elle en vertu de la Loi sur la faillite et l’insolvabilité et
l’existence de la créance à l’égard de laquelle elle encourt la
responsabilité en vertu de ce paragraphe a été établie dans les six mois suivant
la date de la cession ou de l’ordonnance de faillite.
(3) Un
administrateur n’est pas responsable de l’omission visée au paragraphe (1)
lorsqu’il a agi avec le degré de soin, de diligence et d’habileté pour
prévenir le manquement qu’une personne raisonnablement prudente aurait exercé
dans des circonstances comparables.
|
[27]
Subsections
21(1)
and 21.1(1) and (2) of the Canada Pension Plan set out similar
withholding and remittance obligations in relation to contributions to the
Canada Pension Plan:
21. (1) Every
employer paying remuneration to an employee employed by the employer at any
time in pensionable employment shall deduct from that remuneration as or on
account of the employee’s contribution for the year in which the remuneration
for the pensionable employment is paid to the employee such amount as is
determined in accordance with prescribed rules and shall remit that amount,
together with such amount as is prescribed with respect to the contribution
required to be made by the employer under this Act, to the Receiver General
at such time as is prescribed and, where at that prescribed time the employer
is a prescribed person, the remittance shall be made to the account of the
Receiver General at a financial institution (within the meaning that would be
assigned by the definition “financial institution” in subsection 190(1) of
the Income Tax Act if that definition were read without reference to
paragraphs (d) and (e) thereof).
21.1 (1) If an
employer who fails to deduct or remit an amount as and when required under
subsection 21(1) is a corporation, the persons who were the directors of the
corporation at the time when the failure occurred are jointly and severally
or solidarily liable, together with the corporation, to pay to Her Majesty
that amount and any interest or penalties relating to it.
(2) Subsections 227.1(2) to (7) of the Income Tax Act apply,
with such modifications as the circumstances require, in respect of a
director of a corporation referred to in subsection (1).
|
21. (1)
Tout employeur payant une rémunération à un employé à son service, à une date
quelconque, dans un emploi ouvrant droit à pension est tenu d’en déduire, à
titre de cotisation de l’employé ou au titre de la cotisation pour l’année au
cours de laquelle la rémunération au titre de l’emploi ouvrant droit à
pension est payée à cet employé, le montant déterminé conformément à des
règles prescrites; l’employeur remet au receveur général, à la date
prescrite, ce montant ainsi que le montant qui est prescrit à l’égard de la
cotisation qu’il est tenu de verser selon la présente loi. De plus, lorsque
l’employeur est une personne prescrite à la date prescrite, le montant est
versé au compte du receveur général dans une institution financière (au sens
du paragraphe 190(1) de la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu, compte non
tenu des alinéas d) et e) de la définition de cette
expression).
21.1 (1)
En cas d’omission par un employeur personne morale de verser ou de déduire un
montant de la manière et au moment prévus au paragraphe 21(1), les personnes
qui en étaient les administrateurs à la date de l’omission sont solidairement
responsables envers Sa Majesté du paiement de ce montant ainsi que des
intérêts et pénalités qui s’y rapportent.
(2) Les
paragraphes 227.1(2) à (7) de la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu s’appliquent,
compte tenu des adaptations de circonstance, à l’administrateur d’une
personne morale visée au paragraphe (1).
|
[28]
Similar
provisions are also found in subsections 82(1) and 83(1) and (2) of the Employment
Insurance Act:
82. (1) Every
employer paying remuneration to a person they employ in insurable employment
shall
(a) deduct the prescribed amount from the
remuneration as or on account of the employee’s premium payable by that
insured person under section 67 for any period for which the remuneration is
paid; and
(b) remit the amount, together with the employer’s
premium payable by the employer under section 68 for that period, to the
Receiver General at the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner.
83. (1) If an
employer who fails to deduct or remit an amount as and when required under
subsection 82(1) is a corporation, the persons who were the directors of the
corporation at the time when the failure occurred are jointly and severally,
or solidarily, liable, together with the corporation, to pay Her Majesty that
amount and any related interest or penalties.
(2) Subsections 227.1(2) to (7) of the Income Tax Act apply,
with such modifications as the circumstances require, to a director of the
corporation.
|
82. (1)
L’employeur qui paie une rétribution à une personne exerçant à son service un
emploi assurable est tenu de retenir sur cette rétribution, au titre de la
cotisation ouvrière payable par cet assuré en vertu de l’article 67 pour
toute période à l’égard de laquelle cette rétribution est payée, un montant
déterminé conformément à une mesure d’ordre réglementaire et de le verser au
receveur général avec la cotisation patronale correspondante payable en vertu
de l’article 68, au moment et de la manière prévus par règlement.
83. (1)
Dans les cas où un employeur qui est une personne morale omet de verser ou de
déduire un montant de la manière et au moment prévus au paragraphe 82(1), les
administrateurs de la personne morale au moment de l’omission et la personne
morale sont solidairement responsables envers Sa Majesté de ce montant ainsi
que des intérêts et pénalités qui s’y rapportent.
(2) Les
paragraphes 227.1(2) à (7) de la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu s’appliquent,
avec les adaptations nécessaires, à l’administrateur de la personne morale.
|
[29]
Paragraphs 228(1) and (2) of the Excise Tax Act require the filing of
returns and the payment of remittances for the net tax owed in relation to
goods and services, while subsection 323(1) provides that the directors of a
corporation which has failed to so remit are jointly and severally, or
solidarily, liable together with the corporation to pay the concerned amounts
and any related interest or penalties. Subsections 323(2) and (3) provide for
certain limitations on the liability of directors which are similar to those
set out in the Income Tax Act for employee source deductions:
228. (1) Every
person who is required to file a return under this Division shall, in the
return, calculate the net tax of the person for the reporting period for
which the return is required to be filed, except where subsection (2.1) or
(2.3) applies in respect of the reporting period.
(2) Where the net tax for a reporting period of a person
is a positive amount, the person
shall, except where subsection (2.1) or (2.3) applies in
respect of the reporting period, remit that amount to the Receiver General,
(a) where the person is an individual to whom
subparagraph 238(1)(a)(ii) applies in respect of the reporting period,
on or before April 30 of the year following the end of the reporting period;
and
(b) in any other case, on or before the day on or
before which the return for that period is required to be filed.
323. (1) If a
corporation fails to remit an amount of net tax as required under subsection
228(2) or (2.3) or to pay an amount as required under section 230.1 that was
paid to, or was applied to the liability of, the corporation as a net tax
refund, the directors of the corporation at the time the corporation was
required to remit or pay, as the case may be, the amount are jointly and
severally, or solidarily, liable, together with the corporation, to pay the
amount and any interest on, or penalties relating to, the amount.
(2) A director of a corporation is not liable under
subsection (1) unless
(a) a certificate for the amount of the
corporation’s liability referred to in that subsection has been registered in
the Federal Court under section 316 and execution for that amount has been
returned unsatisfied in whole or in part;
(b) the corporation has commenced liquidation or
dissolution proceedings or has been dissolved and a claim for the amount of
the corporation’s liability referred to in subsection (1) has been proved
within six months after the earlier of the date of commencement of the proceedings
and the date of dissolution; or
(c) the corporation has made an assignment or a
bankruptcy order has been made against it under the Bankruptcy and
Insolvency Act and a claim for the amount of the corporation’s liability
referred to in subsection (1) has been proved within six months after the
date of the assignment or bankruptcy order.
(3) A director
of a corporation is not liable for a failure under subsection (1) where the
director exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the failure
that a reasonably prudent person would have exercised in comparable
circumstances.
|
228. (1)
La personne tenue de produire une déclaration en application de la présente
section doit y calculer sa taxe nette pour la période de déclaration qui y
est visée, sauf si les paragraphes (2.1) ou (2.3) s’appliquent à la période
de déclaration.
(2) La
personne est tenue de verser au receveur général le montant positif de sa
taxe nette pour une période de déclaration dans le délai suivant, sauf les
paragraphes (2.1) ou (2.3) s’appliquent à la période de déclaration :
a)
si elle est un particulier auquel le sous alinéa 238(1)a)(ii)
s’applique pour la période, au plus tard le 30 avril de l’année suivant la
fin de la période;
b)
dans les autres cas, au plus tard le jour où la déclaration visant la période
est à produire.
323. (1)
Les administrateurs d’une personne morale au moment où elle était tenue de
verser, comme l’exigent les paragraphes 228(2) ou (2.3), un montant de taxe
nette ou, comme l’exige l’article 230.1, un montant au titre d’un
remboursement de taxe nette qui lui a été payé ou qui a été déduit d’une
somme dont elle est redevable, sont, en cas de défaut par la personne morale,
solidairement tenus, avec cette dernière, de payer le montant ainsi que les
intérêts et pénalités afférents.
(2)
L’administrateur n’encourt de responsabilité selon le paragraphe (1) que si :
a)
un certificat précisant la somme pour laquelle la personne morale est
responsable a été enregistré à la Cour fédérale en application de l’article
316 et il y a eu défaut d’exécution totale ou partielle à l’égard de cette
somme;
b)
la personne morale a entrepris des procédures de liquidation ou de
dissolution, ou elle a fait l’objet d’une dissolution, et une réclamation de
la somme pour laquelle elle est responsable a été établie dans les six mois
suivant le premier en date du début des procédures et de la dissolution;
c)
la personne morale a fait une cession, ou une ordonnance de faillite a été
rendue contre elle en application de la Loi sur la faillite et
l’insolvabilité, et une réclamation de la somme pour laquelle elle est
responsable a été établie dans les six mois suivant la cession ou
l’ordonnance.
(3)
L’administrateur n’encourt pas de responsabilité s’il a agi avec autant de
soin, de diligence et de compétence pour prévenir le manquement visé au
paragraphe (1) que ne l’aurait fait une personne raisonnablement prudente
dans les mêmes circonstances.
|
Analysis
The standard of
care, diligence and skill
[30]
There
has been some debate in recent years as to whether the objective standard of
care, diligence and skill developed by the Supreme Court of Canada
in Peoples Department Stores in relation to paragraph
122(1)(b) of the Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. C-44 (“CBCA”) can extend to subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act
and to subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act which use almost
identical language in their English versions and similar language in their
French versions: Hartrell v. Canada, above at para.12; compare Higgins
v. Canada, above at paras. 6 to 11, with Liddle v. Canada, 2009 TCC
451, 2009 D.T.C. 1296 at paras. 33 to 35. Paragraph 122(1)(b) of the CBCA
reads as follows:
122. (1) Every
director and officer of a corporation in exercising their powers and discharging
their duties shall
(b) exercise the care, diligence and skill that a
reasonably prudent person would exercise in comparable circumstances.
|
122. (1)
Les administrateurs et les dirigeants doivent, dans l’exercice de leurs
fonctions, agir :
b)
avec le soin, la diligence et la compétence dont ferait preuve, en pareilles
circonstances, une personne prudente.
|
[31]
Though
similar, the provisions of paragraph 122(1)(b) of the CBCA and of
subsections 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and 323(3) of the Excise
Tax Act have fundamentally different purposes. The different
purposes to which these various provisions relate must inform the application
of the standard of care, diligence and skill in each case.
[32]
The
duty of care in paragraph 122(1)(b) of the CBCA does not refer to an
identifiable party as the beneficiary of the duty: Peoples Department Stores
at para. 57. Thus, the identity of the beneficiaries of the duty of care
under paragraph 122(1)(b) of the CBCA is open-ended and includes all
creditors. This provision sets out a standard of behaviour that should
reasonably be expected, though it does not provide an independent foundation
for claims: BCE Inc. v. 1976 Debentureholders, 2008 SCC 69,
[2008] 3 S.C.R. 560 at para. 44.
[33]
On
the other hand, subsection 227.1(1) of the Income Tax Act and subsection
323(1) of the Excise Tax Act specifically provide that the directors “are
jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable, together with the corporation, to
pay the amount and any interest or penalties relating to” the remittances the
corporation is required to make. Subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act do
not set out a general duty of care, but rather provide for a defence to the
specific liability set out in subsections 227.1(1) and 323(1) of these
respective Acts, and the burden is on the directors to prove that the
conditions required to successfully plead such a defence have been met. The duty of
care in subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act also specifically targets
the prevention of the failure by the corporation to remit identified tax
withholdings, including notably employee source deductions. Subsection 323(3)
of the Excise Tax Act has a similarly focus. The directors must
thus establish that they exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill
required “to prevent the failure”. The focus of these provisions is clearly on
the prevention of failures to remit.
[34]
This
caveat being stated, I agree with the trial judge that the “objective
subjective” standard set out in Soper has been
replaced by the objective standard laid down by the Supreme Court of Canada in Peoples
Department Stores. I come to this conclusion in light of the language used
in subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and in subsection 323(3) of
the Excise Tax Act, and also by applying the principle of the
presumption of coherence between statutes.
[35]
The
words of legislation are to be read in their entire context and in their
grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the legislation,
the purpose of the legislation, and the intention of Parliament: Bell
ExpressVu Limited Partnership v. Rex, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 559 at para. 26. Both
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and subsection 323(3) of the Excise
Tax Act refer to the degree of care, diligence and skill “that a reasonably
prudent person would have exercised in comparable circumstances.” The reference
to a reasonably prudent person is a clear indication that the test is objective
rather than subjective.
[36]
Moreover,
the language used in paragraph 122(1)(b) of the CBCA is similar to that
used in both subsections 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and 323(3) of
the Excise Tax Act. This is not a mere coincidence, but rather a further
indication that the standard of care, diligence and skill required by all these
provisions is similar. Similar legislative language dealing with similar
matters should be given a similar interpretation unless the legislative context
indicates otherwise: Pointe-Claire (City) v Quebec (Labour Court), [1997]
1 S.C.R. 1015 at para. 61; R. v. Ulybel Enterprises Ltd., [2001] 2
S.C.R. 867, 2001 SCC 56 at para. 52; Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v. Rex,
above at para. 27; Ruth Sullivan, Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes,
5th ed. (Markham, Ontario: LexisNexis Canada 2008) at pp. 223 to 225.
[37]
Consequently,
I conclude that the standard of care, skill and diligence required under
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and subsection 323(3) of the Excise
Tax Act is an objective standard as set out by the Supreme Court of Canada
in Peoples Department Stores.
[38]
This
objective standard has set aside the common law principle that a director’s
management of a corporation is to be judged according to his own personal
skills, knowledge, abilities and capacities: Peoples Department Stores
at paras. 59 to 62. To say that the standard is objective makes it clear that
the factual aspects of the circumstances surrounding the actions of the
director are important as opposed to the subjective motivations of the
director: Peoples Department Stores at para. 63. The emergence of
stricter standards puts pressure on corporations to improve the quality of
board decisions through the establishment of good corporate governance rules: Peoples
Department Stores at para. 64. Stricter standards also discourage the
appointment of inactive directors chosen for show or who fail to discharge
their duties as director by leaving decisions to the active directors. Consequently,
a person who is appointed as a director must carry out the duties of that
function on an active basis and will not be allowed to defend a claim for
malfeasance in the discharge of his or her duties by relying on his or her own
inaction: Kevin P. McGuinness, Canadian Business Corporations Law, 2nd
ed. (Markham, Ontario: LexisNexis Canada, 2007) at 11.9.
[39]
An
objective standard does not however entail that the particular circumstances of
a director are to be ignored. These circumstances must be taken into account,
but must be considered against an objective “reasonably prudent
person” standard. As noted in Peoples Department Stores at paragraph 62:
The statutory duty of care in s.
122(1)(b) of the CBCA emulates but does not replicate the language
proposed by the Dickerson Report. The main difference is that the enacted
version includes the words “in comparable circumstances”, which modifies the
statutory standard by requiring the context in which a given decision was made
to be taken into account. This is not the introduction of a subjective
element relating to the competence of the director, but rather the introduction
of a contextual element into the statutory standard of care. It is clear
that s. 122(1)(b) requires more of directors and officers than the
traditional common law duty of care outlined in, for example, Re City
Equitable Fire Insurance, supra [[1925] 1 Ch. 407].
[40]
The
focus of the inquiry under subsections 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and 323(3)
of the Excise Tax Act will however be different than that
under 122(1)(b) of the CBCA, since the former require that the
director’s duty of care, diligence and skill be exercised to prevent failures
to remit. In order
to rely on these defences, a director must thus establish that he turned his
attention to the required remittances and that he exercised his duty of care,
diligence and skill with a view to preventing a failure by the corporation to
remit the concerned amounts.
Does the standard under
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act apply differently than under
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act?
[41]
Since
GST/HST is paid by third parties, while employee source deductions are funded
by general business revenues which may be insufficient to allow their payment, the trial judge was
of the view that an analysis under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act
must be carried out separately from an analysis under subsection 323(3) of the Excise
Tax Act. This distinction resulted in two different applications of the
standard of care, diligence and skill defence.
[42]
However,
employee
source deductions are also paid by third parties, the employees, and there is therefore
no fundamental conceptual difference between employee source deductions
remittances and GST/HST remittances which justify a separate analysis of the
duty of care, diligence and skill defence on the sole
basis of the origin of the funds. This notably flows from subsection 153(3) of
the Income Tax Act which states that any amount withheld from employee
remuneration “shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to have been
received at that time by the person to whom the remuneration, benefit, payment,
fees, commissions or other amounts were paid.” Similar provisions are found in
subsection 21(5) of the Canada Pension Plan and in subsection 82(7) of
the Employment Insurance Act.
[43]
Consequently,
the amounts withheld from employee remuneration for income tax, Canada Pension
Plan and Employment Insurance purposes are deemed to have been paid by the
employee for all purposes associated with these Acts, including for the
purposes of assessing the liability of directors for the failure of their
corporation to remit the amounts so withheld.
[44]
In
addition, subsection 227(4) of the Income Tax Act provides that those
who deduct or withhold an amount under this Act are deemed to hold the amount
separate and apart in trust for Her Majesty and for payment in the manner and
at the time provided under the Act.
[45]
The
cash-flow analysis proposed by the trial judge is thus incompatible with the
applicable provisions of the Income Tax Act. The liability of the
directors under subsection 227.1(1) is not conditional on the existence of
sufficient cash in the corporation to pay the remittances of employee source deductions,
quite the contrary.
[46]
The
cash-flow analysis proposed by the trial judge also assumes that the time frame
in which to assess the director’s conduct begins when the corporation runs out
of cash. The assessment of the director’s conduct rather begins when it
becomes apparent to the director, acting reasonably and with due care,
diligence and skill, that the corporation is entering a period of financial
difficulties: Soper at para. 50.
[47]
The
distinction proposed by the trial judge would also convert the liability of
directors under section 323 of the Excise Tax Act into an absolute
liability, which is clearly not the intention of Parliament in light of
subsection 323(3) of that Act. The distinction would also result in directors
having a lesser responsibility in relation to employee source deductions
remittances than in relation to GST/HST remittances, a distinction which is not
supported by the words of either section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act or
section 323 of the Excise Tax Act. Since both these legislative
provisions are drafted in similar terms, they should consequently be applied in
a similar fashion. The introduction of a distinction which is not set out in
the legislation should be avoided.
Can a defence under subsection 227.1(3)
of the Income
Tax Act or under subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act be sustained
where the efforts of the directors are focussed on curing failures to remit
rather than preventing such failures?
[48]
An
important question
arising from this appeal is whether a successful defence under subsection
227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act or subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax
Act can be sustained where the directors continue to operate the business
of the corporation knowing that this could lead to and has in fact resulted in
failures to remit in circumstances where they have a reasonable expectation
that the failures could be cured, notably through asset sales or through the
sale of part or all of the business. The trial judge took two apparently contradictory
positions in this matter, accepting such a defence in regard to the employee
source deductions remittances (Reasons at paras. 69 to 72) but rejecting it in
regard to the GST/HST remittances (Reasons at para. 82).
[49]
The
traditional approach has been that a director’s duty is to prevent the failure
to remit, not to condone it in the hope that matters can be rectified
subsequently: Canada v. Corsano, [1999] 3 F.C. 173 (C.A.) at para. 35, Ruffo
v. Canada, 2000 D.T.C. 6317, [2000] 4 C.T.C. 39 (F.C.A.). Contrary to the
suppliers of a corporation who may limit their financial exposure by requiring
cash-in-advance payments, the Crown is an involuntary creditor. The level of
the Crown’s exposure to the corporation can thus increase if the corporation
continues its operations by paying the net salaries of the employees without
effecting employee source deductions remittances, or if the corporation decides
to collect GST/HST from customers without reporting and remitting these amounts
in a timely fashion. In circumstances where a corporation is facing financial
difficulties, it may be tempting to divert these Crown remittances in order to
pay other creditors and thus ensure the continuation of the operations of the
corporation. It is precisely such a situation which both section 227.1 of the Income
Tax Act and section 323 of the Excise Tax Act seek to avoid. The
defence under subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act and under
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act should not be used to encourage
such failures by allowing a due diligence defence for directors who finance the
activities of their corporation with Crown monies on the expectation that the
failures to remit could eventually be cured.
[50]
The
respondent however relies on Worrell for the proposition that this
traditional approach has been modified. Worrell concerned the
application of the defence of care, diligence and skill in circumstances where
the corporation’s ability to make remittance payments was at the discretion of
its bank and where it was reasonable for the directors to believe that, by
continuing the business of the corporation, they could restore its fortunes.
While recognizing that it will normally not be sufficient for directors to
simply carry on a business knowing that a failure to remit was likely but
hoping that the company’s future would revive with an upturn in the economy or
in its market position, the Court also recognized in Worrell that where
a reasonable expectation supported this belief in order to avoid future
failures to remit, the defence of due diligence could be established in certain
exceptional circumstances. Worrell must however be read in light of the
particular facts of that case, including notably “the limitations placed on
[the directors] by the bank’s de facto control of the company’s
finances” (Worrell at para. 79), and it should therefore not be
understood as providing for a new approach to the due diligence defence.
[51]
It
is thus important to note that Worrell did not modify the focus of the
defence of care, diligence and skill, which is to prevent the failure to remit,
not to cure failures to do so. As noted in Worrell at paragraph 34:
However, whether the directors
did enough to exempt themselves from liability for the unremitted source
deductions and G.S.T. will depend, in part at least, on the fourth principle to
be found in the case law: the due diligence required of company directors by
subsection 227.1(3) is to prevent the failure to remit. This has been held to
mean that, if directors become liable prima facie for a company’s
failure to remit, they normally cannot claim the benefit of subsection
227.1(3) if their efforts were capable only of enabling them to remedy defaults
after they have occurred. Accordingly, of the measures taken in an attempt
to rescue [their corporation], the most relevant to this inquiry are limited to
the ones that were logically capable of preventing failures to remit the source
deductions and G.S.T. when they became due. [Emphasis added]
[52]
Parliament
did not require that directors be subject to an absolute liability for the
remittances of their corporations. Consequently, Parliament has accepted that a
corporation may, in certain circumstances, fail to effect remittances without
its directors incurring liability. What is required is that the directors
establish that they were specifically concerned with the tax remittances and
that they exercised their duty of care, diligence and skill with a view to preventing
a failure by the corporation to remit the concerned amounts.
[53]
In
this case, the trial judge found that until February 2003, the respondent had a
reasonable expectation that the efforts being made would succeed in avoiding the
failures to remit taxes, but that subsequent to that time, the efforts were
rather aimed at curing defaults in remittances (Reasons at para. 69, reproduced
above). This finding of fact has not been challenged before us. Thus, by the end
of February 2003 the respondent no longer had any reasonable expectation of preventing
the failures of employee source deductions remittances and of GST/HST
remittances.
[54]
However,
the trial judge further found that it was reasonable for the respondent to
believe that the sale of the online course development division for $1.6
million could provide funds for the payment of arrears on remittances. Was this
sufficient to dispel the respondent’s liability for the remittances for the
period after February 2003? The trial judge found that it was in
relation to the employee source deduction remittances, but not in relation to GST/HST
remittances.
[55]
The
trial judge justified his approach based on the reasoning that even if all the
employees had been laid-off shortly after February 2003, reasonable notice
would have been required giving rise to related source deductions remittances
regardless of whether the company had sufficient revenues to cover such costs.
He further found that in light of the contemplated sale of the online course
development division for $1.6 million, it was reasonable that the employees of
that division be retained until the sale was completed. I find neither of these
arguments persuasive.
[56]
A
director of a corporation cannot justify a defence under the terms of subsection
227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act where he condones the continued operation
of the corporation by diverting employee source deductions to other purposes.
The entire scheme of section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act, read as a
whole, is precisely designed to avoid such situations. In this case, though the
respondent had a reasonable (but erroneous) expectation that the sale of the
online course development division could result in a large payment which could
be used to satisfy creditors, he consciously transferred part of the risks
associated with this transaction to the Crown by continuing operations knowing
that employee source deductions would not be remitted. This is precisely the
mischief which subsection 227.1 of the Income Tax Act seeks to avoid.
[57]
Once
the trial judge found as a matter of fact that the respondent’s efforts after
February 2003 were no longer directed towards the avoidance of failures to
remit, no successful defence under either subsection 227.1(3)
of the Income Tax Act or subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act
could be sustained.
[58]
The
trial judge was consequently correct in concluding that a defence under
subsection 323(3) of the Excise Tax Act was not available after February
2003 in light of his finding that the respondent’s focus had shifted away from
avoiding failures to remit the taxes owed. The trial judge however erred in not
applying the same reasoning to the defence under
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act concerning the failures to
remit employee source deductions after February 2003.
Conclusion
[59]
I
would grant the appeal in file A-224-10, set aside the judgment of the Tax
Court of Canada in Docket 2008-2817(IT)G and, giving the judgment which should
have been rendered, refer the matter back to the Minister of National Revenue
for reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the respondent is liable
under section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act, section 21.1 of the Canada
Pension Plan and section 83 of the Employment Insurance Act as a
director of Mosaic Technologies Corporation, Multimedia Ventures (Alberta)
Inc., Multimedia Ventures Inc. and 6678 British Columbia Ltd. for the amounts
these corporations failed to remit under these Acts for the period subsequent
to February 2003 as well as for any interest or penalties relating to these
amounts.
[60]
I
would also dismiss the appeal in file A-225-10. I would order only one set of
costs in favour of the Crown in file A-224-10.
“Robert
M. Mainville”
“I
agree
M. Nadon J.A.”
“I
agree
J.D. Denis Pelletier J.A.”