JUDSON,
J.:—The
Industrial
Development
Bank
is
the
holder
of
a
chattel
mortgage
from
the
defendant
company.
The
chattel
mortgage
also
contains
a
floating
charge
on
all
the
assets
and
undertaking
of
the
company,
both
present
and
future.
The
floating
charge
is
in
such
the
usual
form
and
contains
express
power
enabling
the
company,
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business,
to
deal
with
its
property
until
the
security
becomes
enforceable.
On
December
28
and
30,
1949,
certain
execution
creditors
obtained
garnishee
orders
nisi
against
debtors
of
the
defendant
company.
On
January
7,
1950,
the
plaintiff
issued
a
writ
to
enforce
its
security.
The
writ
was
served
on
January
9th.
On
January
11th
and
12th
the
execution
creditors
had
their
garnishee
orders
made
absolute.
On
January
14th
the
sheriff
of
the
County
of
Carleton
was
appointed
receiver
to
get
in
and
administer
the
assets
of
the
defendant
company.
The
sheriff
has
in
his
hands
three
sums
of
money,
(1)
$548.19,
the
proceeds
of
a
seizure
made
under
a
writ
of
execution
issued
by
one
James
Henry;
(2)
$1,518.01
as
a
result
of
the
garnishee
orders;
(3)
$375.70
collected
by
him
in
his
capacity
as
receiver.
The
plaintiff
claims
the
proceeds
of
these
garnishee
orders
as
property
to
which
the
floating
charge
attaches.
The
two
Government
Departments
claim
statutory
charges
ahead
of
everybody.
The
execution
creditors
resist
both
these
claims.
The
claim
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
is
for
withholding
tax
under
Section
112
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
subsection
(4)
the
amounts
withheld
are
in
trust
for
the
Crown.
By
subsection
(5)
these
amounts
must
be
kept
separate
and
apart
from
the
employer’s
own
moneys
and
do
not
form
part
of
his
estate
in
a
liquidation,
assignment
or
bankruptcy.
Subsection
(6)
imposes
a
personal
liability
upon
an
employer
who
fails
to
remit
the
withholding
tax
and
also
imposes
a
first
charge
on
his
assets
in
these
words
:
“(6)
Every
person
who
deducts
or
withholds
an
amount
under
this
Act
is
liable
to
pay
His
Majesty
on
the
day
fixed
by
or
pursuant
to
this
Act
an
amount
equal
to
the
amount
so
deducted
or
withheld
and
this
liability
constitutes
a
first
charge
on
his
assets
and,
notwithstanding
the
Bank
Act,
the
Bankruptcy
Act
or
any
other
statute
or
law,
ranks
for
payment
in
priority
to
all
other
claims
including
claims
of
His
Majesty
in
right
of
a
province
or
in
any
other
right
of
whatsoever
kind
arising
before
or
after
the
commencement
of
this
Act,
except
only
the
judicial
costs,
fees
and
lawful
expenses
of
an
assignee
or
other
public
officer
charged
with
the
administration
or
distribution
of
such
assets.”
This
subsection
is
not
the
present
subsection
(6),
but
it
is
the
one
in
force
when
the
Department’s
claim
arose.
The
present
subsection
(6)
was
enacted
by
1949,
2nd
Sess.,
ec.
25,
Section
44(1),
and
did
not
come
into
force
until
July
1,
1950.
The
old
subsection
made
the
withholding
tax
a
first
charge
on
the
assets
of
the
person
under
a
duty
to
remit
the
withholding
tax.
The
new
subsection
makes
it
a
first
charge
on
his
property.
The
old
subsection
and
the
phrase
‘first
charge
on
his
assets”
were
considered
in
Sandberg
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1949]
1
W.W.R.
117;
[1949]
C.T.C.
35.
Here
the
Department
sought
a
charge
on
moneys
which
an
owner
is
required
to
withhold
from
a
contractor
for
the
purpose
of
discharging
mechanics’
liens.
These
moneys
were
held
not
to
be
assets
of
the
contractor
except
to
the
extent
of
the
surplus,
if
any,
after
the
satisfaction
of
the
mechanics’
liens.
The
money
on
which
the
Department
claimed
its
charge
was
subject
to
a
prior
charge
in
favour
of
lienholders.
Except
to
the
extent
of
the
surplus
it
was
not
an
asset
of
the
taxpayer
and
in
my
opinion
it
was
not
his
property.
My
decision
in
this
case
is
the
same,
whether
the
subsection
reads
‘‘property’’
or
‘‘assets’’.
At
the
time
when
the
statutory
lien
imposed
by
subsection
(6)
attached
there
was
no
prior
lien,
charge
or
encumbrance
on
the
property
of
the
taxpayer.
I
am
holding
that
the
Department
has
priority
over
the
Industrial
Development
Bank
because
the
Bank’s
floating
charge
had
not
become
crystallized
at
the
time
when
the
statutory
lien
attached.
If
the
floating
charge
had
first
become
crystallized,
I
would
have
held
that
it
had
priority
on
the
ground
that
“property”
or
“assets”
means
what
is
left
to
the
taxpayer
after
satisfaction
of
prior
charges.
The
charge
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
is
similar
in
character
to
that
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
Section
35
of
the
Corporations
Tax
Act
makes
the
tax
“a
first
lien
and
charge
upon
the
property
in
Ontario
of
the
company
liable
to
pay
the
tax”.
The
validity
of
this
charge
was
established
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
Jn
re
General
Fireproofing
Company
of
Canada
Ltd.,
[1936]
O.R.
510,
520.
The
point
was
not
argued
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada:
[1936]
S.C.R.
150,
161.
Subsection
(6)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
gives
the
charge
created
by
that
subsection
priority
over
claims
of
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
a
Province.
This
abrogates
the
principle
laid
down
in
ke
Silver
Brothers,
[1932]
A.C.
514,
where
it
was
held
that
the
charge
of
the
Crown
in
right
of
Canada
for
sales
tax
under
the
old
Section
17
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
and
the
charge
of
the
Crown
under
the
Quebec
Corporations
Tax
Act
ranked
pari
passu.
The
result
is
that
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
ranks
first
and
the
Treasurer
of
Ontario
ranks
second
against
all
three
funds
in
the
hands
of
the
sheriff.
The
next
question
that
I
have
to
decide
is
when
the
floating
charge
crystallized.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
appointment
of
a
receiver
crystallizes
a
floating
charge:
Re
Florence
Land
Co.,
10
Ch.
D.
541;
Evans
v.
Rival
Granite
Quarries,
[1910]
2
K.B.
979,
1001.
There
is
doubt
whether
the
issue
of
a
writ
in
a
debenture-holders’
action
will
have
the
same
effect.
In
one
case
it
was
held
that
the
issue
of
a
writ
did
not
crystallize
the
floating
charge
so
as
to
prevent
the
company
from
issuing
further
debentures
of
the
same
series:
Re
Hubbard
&
Co.
(1898),
68
L.J.
Ch.
54.
However,
Vaughan
William,
L.J.,
in
Evans
v.
Rival
Granite
Quarries,
supra,
at
p.
986,
thought
that
the
bringing
of
an
action
was
sufficient.
This
is
a
leading
case
on
the
nature
of
a
floating
charge.
It
was
followed
in
Great
Lakes
Petroleum
Co.
Ltd.
v.
The
Border
Cities
Oil
Co.
Ltd.,
[1934]
O.R.
244.
The
opinion
of
Vaughan
William,
L.J.,
was
part
of
the
ratio
decidendi
and
I
follow
it
and
hold
that
the
floating
charge
in
question
here
crystallized
on
January
7,
1950,
the
date
of
the
issue
of
the
writ.
Therefore
as
to
the
second
fund
of
$1,518.01
held
by
the
sheriff
by
reason
of
the
garnishee
orders,
the
Bank
has
priority
over
the
execution
creditors,
for
at
the
time
when
the
floating
charge
crystallized
the
garnishee
orders
had
not
been
made
absolute.
An
execution
creditor
who
completes
his
execution
by
obtaining
a
garnishee
order
absolute
while
a
charge
remains
a
floating
one,
obtains
priority
over
the
charge.
A
garnishee
order
nisi
will
not
give
him
this
priority:
Norton
v.
Yates,
[1906]
1
K.B.
112;
Evans
v.
Rival
Granite
Quarries,
supra.
The
Bank
has
no
claim
against
the
first
fund
of
$548.19,
this
execution
having
been
completed
before
the
issue
of
the
writ.
This
fund
is,
however,
subject
to
the
two
statutory
charges.
They
were
in
existence
at
the
time
of
the
seizure.
This
leaves
only
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Commission
and
the
execution
creditors.
There
is
nothing
for
any
of
them.
The
Commission’s
claim
is
under
Section
23
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1940,
c.
44.
The
section
does
not
give
the
Commission
any
statutory
charge
for
deductions
made
by
an
employer
and
not
remitted
to
the
Commission.
Its
position
in
a
bankruptcy
has
already
been
considered
in
Re
Rosenberg,
[1948]
O.W.N.
637.
As
to
costs,
one
counsel,
appointed
by
the
Court,
appeared
on
behalf
of
all
the
execution
creditors.
He
should
have
his
costs
out
of
the
funds
in
the
hands
of
the
sheriff.
I
think
that
this
is
a
case
where
I
should
make
the
same
order
for
all
parties
represented
on
the
motion.
Judgment
accordingly.