Richard
A.C.J.:
Procedure
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
dated
September
28,
1995
and
filed
in
this
Court
on
September
7,
1995
by
statement
of
claim.
Facts
Four
witnesses
were
heard
at
the
hearing.
It
appeared
from
the
said
testimony
that
on
or
about
December
18,
1986,
the
plaintiff
subscribed
to
the
capital
stock
of
a
newly
incorporated
business
specializing
in
the
manufacture
of
ladies’
clothing,
known
as
“Créations
Tony
T.”
The
plaintiff
became
a
director
along
with
Tony
Tavarozzi,
another
majority
shareholder
in
the
said
business
and
its
president.
Joseph
Elbaz,
the
plaintiffs
accountant,
was
also
a
minority
shareholder
in
the
said
business.
It
appeared
from
the
evidence
that
Créations
Tony
T.
served
as
a
clothing
supplier
to
a
business
held
by
the
plaintiff
which
was
already
working
in
the
export
and
import
of
clothing.
The
plaintiff,
or
in
his
absence
his
accountant
Joseph
Elbaz,
proceeded
to
co-sign
cheques
with
Tony
Tavarozzi
in
order
to
pay
money
owed
by
the
business
to
its
employees
and
to
various
suppliers
and/or
creditors.
According
to
the
testimony
of
Joseph
Elbaz
in
May
1987
the
said
business
was
already
experiencing
certain
financial
difficulties,
resulting
in
its
failure
to
pay
certain
financial
obligations
on
time.
At
that
time
an
arrangement
was
made
with
the
duly
authorized
representatives
of
Revenue
Canada
for
the
payment
of
unpaid
source
deductions.
It
appeared
from
the
testimony
that
a
series
of
postdated
cheques
was
signed
to
correct
the
nonpayment
of
the
said
deductions.
However,
Tony
Tavarozzi,
who
was
to
have
been
responsible
for
sending
the
said
cheques,
did
not
do
so,
on
the
ground
that
he
was
waiting
till
he
had
sufficient
capital.
Following
these
various
events
the
plaintiff
was
obliged
to
negotiate
a
further
credit
line
of
$20,000
with
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
which
he
had
to
guarantee
personally
for
and
on
behalf
of
the
business,
so
that
the
latter
would
be
able
to
make
the
said
payments
owed
to
the
defendant.
As
a
result
of
the
storm
which
hit
downtown
Montréal
in
July
1987
it
appeared
from
the
evidence
as
a
whole
that
the
business
suffered
damage
valued
at
nearly
$110,000.
On
account
of
this
situation
the
business
had
to
extend
the
suspension
of
its
operations
and
delay
the
return
of
employees
who
were
on
vacation
at
the
time.
The
plaintiff
stated
that
he
had
to
negotiate
with
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
to
obtain
an
extension
of
the
credit
line;
he
also
stated
that
negotiations
went
ahead
in
July
and
September
1987
to
obtain
the
necessary
financing
to
restart
the
business.
A
new
agreement
was
made
with
a
duly
authorized
representative
of
the
defendant
for
payment
of
the
said
charges
owed
for
source
deductions.
The
agreement
in
question
involved
the
issuing
of
ten
postdated
cheques
in
the
amount
of
$1,739,
payable
every
week
beginning
on
October
2,
1987.
However,
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
refused
to
advance
the
funds
needed
by
the
business
and
consequently
to
honour
the
first
seven
cheques
issued
to
the
defendant.
Créations
Tony
T.
made
an
assignment
of
its
property
on
December
11,
1987.
On
April
7,
1988
the
defendant
filed
proof
of
claim
of
property
under
the
Bankruptcy
Act
for
an
amount
of
$17,774.40.
On
September
8,
1989
the
defendant
assessed
the
plaintiff
for
an
amount
of
$25,469.69,
that
is,
the
amount
owed
by
the
business
Créations
Tony
T.
as
source
deductions
for
the
period
from
June
I
to
September
28,
1987,
to
which
the
plaintiff
objected
by
a
notice
of
objection
dated
September
8,
1989.
On
January
25
the
defendant
proceeded
to
issue
a
reassessment
reducing
the
amount
claimed
to
$17,774.40,
to
which
the
plaintiff
again
objected
by
the
filing
of
a
new
notice
of
objection
on
April
5,
1990.
Following
the
said
notice
of
objection
the
defendant
issued
a
notice
of
confirmation
on
August
16,
1990.
On
September
8,
1990
the
plaintiff
filed
a
Notice
of
Appeal
with
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
in
respect
of
Notice
of
Assessment
No.
5289,
dated
Janu-
ary
25,
1990,
issued
pursuant
to
ss.
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
68.1
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1971,
as
a
result
of
the
failure
by
Créations
Tony
T.
to
pay
source
deductions
made
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
unemployment
insurance
premiums
owed
by
the
employer
and
employees
for
the
period
from
June
to
September
1987.
The
said
appeal
was
dismissed
by
Judge
Pierre
Archambault
on
September
28,
1995.
Issues
Three
questions
were
raised
at
the
hearing:
1.
Did
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
err
in
fact
and
in
law
by
dismissing
the
appeal
filed
from
the
assessment
having
No.
5289
and
dated
January
25,
1990,
on
the
ground
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
establish
that
he
had
acted
as
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
done
in
such
circumstances
in
accordance
with
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act?
2.
Did
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
err
in
fact
and
in
law
by
dismissing
the
appeal
filed
from
the
assessment
having
No.
5289
and
dated
January
25,
1990
by
finding
that
the
defendant
observed
the
six-month
deadline
required
by
paragraph
227.1
(2)
(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act?
3,
Did
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
err
in
fact
and
in
law
by
dismissing
the
appeal
filed
from
the
assessment
having
No.
5289
and
dated
January
25,
1990
by
finding
that
the
recovery
proceedings
were
brought
within
the
two
years
in
which
the
plaintiff
ceased
to
be
a
director
in
accordance
with
subsection
227.1(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act?
Analysis
When
the
proceedings
were
filed
four
questions
were
raised:
nevertheless,
as
the
question
of
this
Court’s
jurisdiction
was
not
raised
at
the
hearing
I
will
only
deal
with
the
questions
mentioned
above.
I.
Defence
of
due
diligence
Subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
reads
as
follows:
(3)
Idem.
A
director
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.
(3)
Idem.
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.
In
Soper
v.
R.
(1997),
[1998]
1
F.C.
124
(Fed.
C.A.),
at
155,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
indicated
what
the
standard
of
care
applicable
under
the
wording
of
subsection
227.1(3)
1s:
This
is
a
convenient
place
to
summarize
my
findings
in
respect
of
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
standard
of
care
laid
down
in
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act
is
inherently
flexible.
Rather
than
treating
directors
as
a
homogeneous
group
of
professionals
whose
conduct
is
governed
by
a
single,
unchanging
standard,
that
provision
embraces
a
subjective
element
which
takes
into
account
the
personal
knowledge
and
background
of
the
director,
as
well
as
his
or
her
corporate
circumstances
in
the
form
of,
inter
alia,
the
company’s
organization,
resources,
customs
and
conduct.
Thus,
for
example,
more
is
expected
of
individuals
with
superior
qualifications
(e.g.
experienced
businesspersons).
The
standard
of
care
set
out
in
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act
is,
therefore,
not
purely
objective.
Nor
is
it
purely
subjective.
It
is
not
enough
for
a
director
to
say
he
or
she
did
his
or
her
best,
for
that
is
an
invocation
of
the
purely
subjective
standard.
Equally
clear
is
that
honesty
is
not
enough.
However,
the
standard
is
not
a
professional
one.
Nor
is
it
the
negligence
law
standard
that
governs
these
cases.
Rather,
the
Act
contains
both
objective
elements
—
embodied
in
the
reasonable
person
language
—
and
subjective
elements
—
inherent
in
individual
considerations
like
“skill”
and
the
idea
of
“comparable
circumstances”.
Accordingly,
the
standard
can
be
properly
described
as
“objective
subjective”.
At
156,
the
Court
made
distinctions
between
a
company’s
inside
and
outside
directors:
At
the
same
time,
however,
it
is
difficult
to
deny
that
inside
directors,
meaning
those
involved
in
the
day-to-day
management
of
the
company
and
who
influence
the
conduct
of
its
business
affairs,
will
have
the
most
difficulty
in
establishing
the
due
diligence
defence.
On
an
outside
director’s
duty
to
act,
it
indicated
at
160:
In
my
view,
the
positive
duty
to
act
arises
where
a
director
obtains
information,
or
becomes
aware
of
facts,
which
might
lead
one
to
conclude
that
there
is,
or
could
reasonably
be,
a
potential
problem
with
remittances.
Put
differently,
it
is
indeed
incumbent
upon
an
outside
director
to
take
positive
steps
if
he
or
she
knew,
or
ought
to
have
known,
that
the
corporation
could
be
experiencing
a
remittance
problem.
The
typical
situation
in
which
a
director
is,
or
ought
to
have
been,
apprised
of
the
possibility
of
such
a
problem
is
where
the
company
is
having
financial
difficulties.
The
plaintiff
argued
that
in
accordance
with
the
rule
laid
down
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
he
was
only
an
outside
director,
as
he
alleged
that
he
had
not
actively
participated
in
managing
the
business
except
in
signing
cheques
used
to
pay
employees
and
other
creditors
of
the
business,
since
he
had
owned
his
own
clothing
importation
business
for
twenty
years
and
worked
actively
in
it.
The
plaintiff
further
argued
that
from
June
1987
onwards
he
was
no
longer
involved
in
the
management
of
the
business
with
the
other
director,
and
it
was
actually
his
accountant
Joseph
Elbaz
who
performed
the
various
duties
relating
to
the
said
management
and
thus
who
signed
the
cheques
for
payment
of
employees
and
other
creditors.
The
plaintiff
further
submitted
that
the
main
reason
Créations
Tony
T.
was
unable
to
make
the
payments
owed
to
the
defendant
as
source
deductions
arose
essentially
out
of
a
fortuitous
event,
the
storm
which
hit
downtown
Montréal
on
July
14,
1987
and
caused
damage
estimated
at
$110,000
to
the
said
business.
The
company’s
assets
had
been
undervalued
by
it,
with
the
result
that
only
25
%
of
the
value
of
the
damage
caused
by
the
storm
was
covered
by
the
insurance.
Nonetheless,
it
appeared
that
the
financial
difficulties
of
the
business
appeared
in
May
1987,
before
the
said
fortuitous
event
occurred.
Further,
in
his
testimony
Joseph
Elbaz
noted
that
he
had
told
the
plaintiff
about
the
said
problems.
It
appeared
from
the
evidence
as
a
whole
that
the
plaintiff
was
actively
involved
as
a
director
of
the
business
and
was
kept
well
informed
of
the
problems
the
business
had
paying
amounts
owed
as
source
deductions,
since
he
alleged
he
had
had
to
negotiate
an
additional
line
of
credit
of
$20,000
on
or
about
June
1987,
which
he
had
had
to
personally
guarantee
with
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank,
in
order
to
make
the
said
payments
owed
to
the
defendant.
The
plaintiff
further
stated
that
he
had
again
negotiated
an
additional
line
of
credit,
also
with
the
Toronto
Dominion
Bank,
in
order
to
get
the
business
going
again
after
the
damage
suffered,
and
the
said
negotiations
had
taken
place
between
July
and
September
1987.
The
plaintiff
also
maintained
that
he
had
actively
sought
to
prevent
the
failure
by
the
business
to
remit
the
money
owed
to
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
for
source
deductions.
In
his
testimony
the
plaintiff
stated
that
he
continued
to
rely
on
Tony
Tavarozzi’s
management
methods
in
July,
August
and
September
1987,
despite
the
events
which
had
occurred
earlier
and
the
increased
financial
problems
following
the
storm.
In
view
of
the
fact
that
the
plaintiff
has
extensive
experience
in
managing
a
clothing
manufacturing
business,
as
he
has
himself
owned
a
similar
business
for
twenty
years,
and
that
he
had
been
given
sufficient
information
to
be
alerted
to
the
financial
irregularities
in
the
business,
I
cannot
subscribe
to
the
conclusion
that
he
acted
with
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
The
plaintiff
was
not
simply
an
investor
or
silent
partner.
The
business
Créations
Tony
T.
in
which
he
held
a
major
investment
was
founded
to
supply
clothing
to
his
other
business,
in
which
he
was
the
majority
shareholder.
He
was
an
experienced
director
who,
in
addition
to
acting
as
cosignatory
for
the
cheques
issued
by
the
business,
regularly
visited
the
production
plant.
In
May
and
at
latest
in
June
1987
he
was
told
of
the
financial
problems
of
the
business,
including
the
failure
to
make
remittances.
He
still
continued
to
rely
on
Tony
Tavarozzi
and
nothing
changed
in
the
management,
although
the
business
was
in
financial
difficulty.
I
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
was
an
inside
director.
Even
if
I
had
come
to
the
conclusion
that
he
was
an
outside
director,
he
knew
or
should
have
known
that
the
business
might
have
a
problem
with
remittances.
Joseph
Elbaz
noted
that
he
had
learned
of
the
irregularities
in
May
1987
when
the
suppliers
were
not
paid
on
time.
Consequently,
he
concluded
that
the
company
was
no
longer
able
to
pay
certain
obligations
on
time.
The
plaintiff
continued
to
rely
on
Tony
Tavarozzi
even
after
the
events
in
June
and
the
increased
financial
problems
resulting
from
the
storm.
He
changed
nothing
in
the
operations
of
the
business.
Although
the
insurer
refused
to
give
the
business
the
compensation
it
claimed,
the
plaintiff
decided
to
resume
operations
after
the
storm.
It
appeared
from
the
evidence
that
the
employees
of
the
said
business
were
paid
during
that
period
and
that
the
source
deductions
were
withheld
but
not
remitted
to
the
defendant.
In
accordance
with
the
reasons
of
Robertson
J.A.
in
Soper,
since
the
standard
of
care
is
both
objective
and
subjective
it
is
not
enough
for
a
director
to
say
that
he
did
his
best:
[this]
cannot
relieve
him
of
his
liability
as
a
director
of
the
business,
since
the
objective
facts
clearly
allowed
him
to
see
that
the
company
was
having
financial
difficulties
and
was
having
a
problem
with
remittances.
In
these
circumstances,
I
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
meet
the
standard
of
care
laid
down
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Soper.
2.
Deadlines
I
can
conclude
on
the
evidence
submitted
to
this
Court
that
a
claim
was
in
fact
proven
within
the
deadline
specified
by
paragraph
227.1(2)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
in
these
circumstances
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
judge,
who
ruled
on
the
evidence
before
him,
did
not
err
in
fact
or
in
law.
I
am
also
satisfied
with
the
evidence
submitted
in
this
Court
indicating
that
the
recovery
action
or
proceedings
brought
by
the
defendant
were
brought
within
the
two-year
deadline
specified
in
subsection
227.1(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
that
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
consequently
did
not
err
in
fact
and
in
law
in
answering
this
question
in
the
affirmative
either.
Conclusion
This
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.