Jerome,
A.C.J.:—This
is
an
application
for
a
writ
of
certiorari
setting
aside
a
requirement
to
pay
issued
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
the
applicant's
bank;
a
declaratory
order
directing
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
repay
to
the
applicant
the
moneys
collected
by
means
of
the
requirement
to
pay;
and,
a
writ
of
prohibition
prohibiting
the
Crown
from
conducting
further
audits
of
the
applicant's
employee
source
deductions
account
for
the
1988,
1989
and
1990
taxation
years.
The
applicant
employs
domestic
help
and
as
an
employer
maintains
an
employee
source
deduction
account
with
Revenue
Canada.
She
is
required
to
prepare,
for
each
taxation
year,
a
T4/T
4A
summary
statement
of
the
amounts
she
has
deducted
from
her
employee's
annual
remuneration
and
to
enter
that
information
on
a
Revenue
T4
or
T4A
form.
Ms.
McCaffrey
is
then
to
deliver
one
copy
of
each
such
form
to
her
employee
for
inclusion
in
the
latter’s
annual
tax
return,
forward
a
copy
of
each
form
to
Revenue
Canada,
and
retain
a
copy
for
her
own
business
records.
Although
the
applicant
was
only
required
to
maintain
one
employee
source
deduction
account
with
Revenue
Canada,
at
some
time
prior
to
the
1988
taxation
year,
two
employer
remittance
accounts
were
opened.
During
1988,
1989
and
1990,
Ms.
McCaffrey
remitted
periodically
to
the
Minister,
moneys
she
had
withheld
from
her
employee's
remuneration
and
also
moneys
she
herself
owed
to
the
Minister
by
way
of
employer's
contributions.
The
applicant
made
these
remittances
and
payments
to
the
credit
of
either
one
or
the
other
of
the
two
employer
account
numbers
she
then
held.
In
August
1988,
January
1991
and
July
1991,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
detected
reporting
irregularities
in
the
applicant's
T4/T4A
returns,
including
discrepancies
between
reported
source
deductions
and
actual
remittances
of
source
deductions.
The
Minister
responded
to
these
irregularities
by
auditing
or
attempting
to
audit
the
applicant's
payroll
accounts
on
four
occasions:
at
the
applicant's
home
on
August
26,
1988;
a
further
audit
at
the
applicant's
home
on
January
30,
1991;
a
desk
audit
on
February
25,
1991;
and
on
July
17,
1991
an
unsuccessful
attempt
to
arrange
another
audit
at
the
applicant's
home.
As
a
result
of
these
audits,
the
Minister
concluded
that
the
applicant
had
made
reporting
errors
and
omissions
in
her
T4/T4A
returns
pertaining
to
the
calculation
of
contributions
to
the
Canada
Pension
Plan
and
premiums
for
unemployment
insurance.
On
February
12,
1991,
the
Crown
assessed
the
applicant's
liability
for
unremitted
amounts
deducted
at
source
during
the
1988
and
1989
taxation
years
at
$962.75.
On
February
13,
1991,
the
applicant
forwarded
a
letter
to
Revenue
Canada
wherein
she
complained
about
its
auditing
activities:
In
December
of
1990,
you
telephoned
me
and
advised
me
that
there
were
deficiencies
in
my
account
and
that
you
wished
to
undertake
an
audit.
I
advised
you
that
there
were
always
deficiencies
because
Revenue
Canada
kept
two
accounts
and
different
payments
were
credited
randomly.
I
noted
that
this
had
gone
on
for
about
ten
years
and
that
I
considered
the
audits
and
demands
for
payment
of
moneys
not
owing,
constituted
harassment.
I
advised
you
to
invoke
your
statutory
authority
if
you
wished
to
do
an
audit,
as
I
would
not
consent
to
further
harassment
proceedings
from
your
maintenance
of
two
accounts.
In
January,
you
telephoned
to
tell
me
that
you
had
a
letter
invoking
your
statutory
authority.
When
I
indicated
that
I
would
not
respond
to
a
letter
that
I
hadn't
got,
you
personally
delivered
it
to
my
residence.
You
then
phoned
and
when
I
took
the
position
that
statutory
power
does
not
validate
harassment,
you
became
conciliatory
and
told
me
that
you
only
wanted
to
do
an
audit
to
close
out
the
spurious
account.
I
agreed
to
bring
my
records
to
your
office
on
January
30,
1991.
I
produced
my
stamped
payment
receipts
for
1989
and
1990.
You
examined
the
1990
receipts,
found
a
deficiency
of
$0.10
per
month
and
did
not
demand
payment.
You
did
not
examine
the
1989
receipts
stating
that
the
amounts
in
the
two
accounts
come
to
less
than
the
amount
shown
on
the
T4.
I
can’t
tell.
You
had
no
T4
at
the
meeting
and
my
own
copy
is
illegible.
I
brought
no
records
for
1988
as
there
was
an
audit
that
year.
.
.
.
Unless
there
was
an
error
in
my
calculation
of
the
amounts
owing
after
the
audit
(September
to
December),
there
was
no
deficiency.
You
did
not
attempt
to
determine
whether
the
monthly
remittance
was
correct
and
once
again
took
the
position
that
any
error
in
records
entitled
you
to
the
amount
of
the
deficiency,
whether
it
was
owing
or
not.
You
did
not
have
this
T4
in
your
file
either.
On
February
19,
1991,
Ms.
McCaffrey
filed
notices
of
objection
to
the
assessments
of
February
12,
on
the
grounds
that
no
amounts
were
owing
for
unremitted
source
deductions
for
the
1988
and
1989
taxation
years.
After
conducting
one
of
the
above-noted
audits
of
the
applicant's
accounts,
it
was
determined
by
Revenue
Canada
on
February
25,
1991,
that
an
additional
$121.15
was
owing
for
the
1988
taxation
year.
The
applicant
remitted
this
sum
on
March
25,
1991
on
account
of
1988
source
deduction
liabilities
and
confirmed
in
writing
that
no
further
amounts
were
owing
in
respect
of
the
1988,
1989
and
1990
taxation
years.
On
March
27,
1991,
the
Minister
applied
this
amount,
not
towards
the
amount
owing
for
the
applicant's
1988
taxation
year,
but
rather
toward
remittances
for
the
1991
taxation
year.
In
late
April
1991,
Revenue
Canada
officials
commenced
a
review
of
the
applicant's
objections
to
the
1988
and
1989
assessments.
At
that
time,
the
Crown
further
assessed
the
applicant
for
the
additional
$121.15
owing
for
the
1988
taxation
year,
which
although
remitted
by
Ms.
McCaffrey,
had
been
applied
towards
her
1991
taxation
year,
and
accordingly,
was
still
considered
to
be
outstanding.
With
interest
accruals
on
the
balance
owing
to
May
8,
1991,
the
applicant's
debt
to
the
Crown
was
assessed
at
$1,135.58.
The
applicant
was
advised
by
letter
dated
May
10,
1991
that
she
should
contact
the
appeals
officer
undertaking
the
review
in
order
to
discuss
her
notices
of
objection.
She
responded
to
this
request
by
way
of
a
handwritten
note
stating
that
the
matter
had
already
been
settled
and
asking
Revenue
Canada
to
adjust
its
computer
records
in
order
to
reflect
this.
On
May
30,
1991,
the
Crown
confirmed
the
assessments
to
which
the
applicant
had
objected
and
forwarded
a
notice
of
confirmation
to
the
applicant's
home
by
way
of
registered
mail.
Thereafter,
on
July
10,
1991,
Revenue
Canada
delivered
a
requirement
to
pay
to
the
applicant's
bank,
the
Bank
of
Montreal,
wherein
it
directed
the
banker
to
pay
the
sum
of
$1,143.85
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
Ms.
McCaffrey's
liability.
Another
official
from
Revenue
Canada
attended
at
Ms.
McCaffrey's
home
on
July
17,
1991,
for
the
purpose
of
conducting
an
audit
for
the
1990
taxation
year.
However,
the
applicant
was
not
there
and
a
letter
was
left
with
her
housekeeper
instructing
Ms.
McCaffrey
to
contact
Revenue
Canada
for
the
purpose
of
arranging
an
audit,
and
to
have
payroll
journals
and
her
1990
T4/T
4A
summary
return
available
for
inspection.
The
applicant
then
filed
a
notice
of
motion
in
this
Court
on
July
22,
1991
wherein
she
claimed
the
following
relief:
1.
a
writ
of
certiorari
setting
aside
the
requirement
to
pay
$1,143.85
issued
by
Revenue
Canada
to
the
Bank
of
Montreal
on
July
10,
1991;
2.
a
declaration
that
the
moneys
received
as
a
result
of
the
requirement
to
pay
be
repaid
to
Linda
McCaffrey
immediately
with
interest
from
July
10,
1991;
3.
a
writ
of
prohibition,
prohibiting
Revenue
Canada,
or
any
of
its
agents
or
employees
from
conducting
any
further
audits
for
the
years
1988,
1989
or
1990;
4.
a
writ
of
prohibition,
prohibiting
Revenue
Canada
from
conducting
any
further
audits
or
issuing
further
notices
of
assessment
without
an
order
of
this
Court
authorizing
this
action;
5.
a
writ
of
prohibition,
prohibiting
Revenue
Canada
from
sending
to
Linda
McCaffrey,
remittance
forms
for
more
than
one
account.
At
the
hearing
of
this
matter
on
July
14,
1992,
counsel
for
the
respondent
raised
two
preliminary
objections
first,
to
the
naming
of
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
as
a
party
respondent
in
an
application
brought
pursuant
to
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
R.S.C.
1985,
c.
F-7,
and
second,
to
the
Court's
jurisdiction
to
grant
declaratory
relief
sought
by
way
of
a
notice
of
motion.
The
respondent
seeks
to
have
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
struck
as
a
party
from
the
proceedings,
since
a
section
18
application
for
judicial
review
only
applies
to
decisions
or
actions
of
any
federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal.
The
respondent
also
submits
that
Rule
603
of
the
Federal
Court
Rules
prohibits
the
granting
of
declaratory
relief
unless
that
relief
is
sought
by
way
of
statement
of
claim.
Accordingly,
the
applicant
cannot
obtain
the
declaratory
relief
set
out
in
paragraph
2
of
her
notice
of
motion
and
the
respondent
seeks
to
have
that
paragraph
struck.
Finally,
it
is
argued
that
because
an
appeal
against
an
assessment
issued
by
the
Minister
is
expressly
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act"),
section
18.5
[formerly
section
29]
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
prohibits
that
assessment
from
being
reviewed
or
restrained,
prohibited,
removed,
set
aside
or
otherwise
dealt
with,
except
to
the
extent
and
in
the
manner
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Since
an
appeal
from
the
assessments
being
challenged
is
provided
for
in
the
legislation,
section
18.5
deprives
this
Court
of
jurisdiction
to
entertain
section
18
proceedings
to
challenge
such
assessments
and
the
collection
proceedings
or
action
taken
in
respect
of
those
assessments.
In
the
present
case,
the
Crown
maintains
that
Ms.
McCaffrey,
in
bringing
this
application,
is
making
collateral
challenges
to
the
merits
of
the
assessment
and
has
elected
to
circumvent
the
statutory
appeal
routes
available
to
her.
The
applicant
submits
there
is
no
evidence
before
the
Court
to
support
a
finding
that
she
was
aware
of
the
notice
of
confirmation,
such
as
would
allow
her
to
exercise
her
right
of
appeal
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
addition,
it
is
Ms.
McCaffrey's
position
that
part
of
the
relief
she
seeks,
namely
the
order
of
prohibition
against
any
further
audits
and
against
sending
her
two
notices
with
respect
to
two
employee
source
deductions
accounts,
are
not
available
to
her
through
the
appeal
process
set
out
in
the
Act.
She
argues
that
these
issues,
namely
the
allegedly
harassing
conduct
of
Revenue
Canada
through
audit
and
reaudit
for
the
same
taxation
years,
as
well
as
the
continued
practice
of
maintaining
two
employee
source
deduction
accounts,
are
unrelated
to
the
question
of
the
veracity
or
legitimacy
of
the
assessments.
Even
if
she
had
received
the
notices
of
confirmation,
she
would
still
be
required
to
come
to
this
Court
in
order
to
obtain
the
relief
sought
in
paragraphs
3,
4
and
5
of
her
notice
of
motion.
Accordingly,
the
applicant
maintains
she
is
properly
before
this
Court
by
way
of
a
section
18
application.
I
am
satisfied
Ms.
McCaffrey
cannot
obtain
the
writ
of
certiorari
which
she
seeks
in
paragraph
1
of
her
notice
of
motion
nor
can
she
obtain
the
declaratory
relief
sought
in
paragraph
2.
Section
18.5
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
provides
as
follows:
Notwithstanding
sections
18
and
18.1,
where
provision
is
expressly
made
by
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Court,
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
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,
commission
or
other
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
in
accordance
with
that
Act.
The
effect
of
this
provision,
quite
simply,
is
that
the
appeal
procedure
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
from
a
notice
of
assessment
or
notice
of
reassessment
issued
by
the
Minister,
cannot
be
supplanted
by
a
section
18
application
to
this
Court.
The
fact
situation
in
the
present
case
is
strikingly
similar
to
that
which
was
before
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
M.N.R.
v.
Parsons,
[1984]
2
F.C.
331,
[1984]
C.T.C.
352,
84
D.T.C.
6345.
Pratte,
J.A.
speaking
for
the
Court,
made
the
following
statements
at
pages
332-33
(C.T.C.
352,
D.T.C.
6346):
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
([1984]
1
F.C.
804,
[1983]
C.T.C.
321,
83
D.T.C.
5329"),
quashing
assessments
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
pursuant
to
subsection
159(2)
and
(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
special
feature
of
this
case
is
that
the
judgment
under
attack
was
not
rendered
on
an
appeal
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Indeed,
the
respondents
did
not
bring
such
an
appeal;
instead,
they
chose
to
apply
to
the
Trial
Division
under
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
for
an
order
quashing
the
assessments
made
against
them
and
restraining
the
Minister
and
his
servants
from
taking
further
action
pursuant
to
those
assessments.
That
application
was
granted
by
the
judgment
appealed
from.
We
are
all
of
the
opinion
that
the
appeal
must
succeed
on
the
narrow
ground
that
the
only
way
in
which
the
assessments
made
against
the
respondents
could
be
challenged
was
that
provided
for
in
sections
169
and
following
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This,
in
our
view,
clearly
results
from
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
The
learned
judge
of
first
instance
held
that,
in
this
case,
section
29
[now
section
18.5]
did
not
deprive
the
Trial
Division
of
the
jurisdiction
to
grant
the
application
made
by
the
respondents
under
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
because,
in
his
view,
the
appeal
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
restricted
to
questions
of”
quantum
and
liability”
while
the
respondent's
application
raised
the
more
fundamental
question
of
the
Minister's
legal
authority
to
make
the
assessments.
We
cannot
agree
with
that
distinction.
The
right
of
appeal
given
by
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
subject
to
any
such
limitations.
In
our
view,
the
Income
Tax
Act
expressly
provides
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Federal
Court
from
assessments
made
by
the
Minister;
it
follows,
according
to
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
that
those
assessments
may
not
be
reviewed,
restrained
or
set
aside
by
the
Court
in
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
under
section
18
and
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
[Emphasis
added.]
This
principle
was
later
confirmed
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Optical
Recording
Corp.
v.
Canada,
[1991]
1
F.C.
309,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
524,90
D.T.C.
6647.
Accordingly,
the
only
manner
in
which
a
taxpayer
can
challenge
an
assessment
or
reassessment
issued
by
the
Minister
is
to
implement
the
appeal
procedures
set
out
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
By
seeking
a
writ
of
certiorari
setting
aside
the
requirement
to
pay
and
a
declaration
that
the
moneys
be
repaid
to
her
by
Revenue
Canada,
the
applicant
is,
in
fact,
challenging
the
assessments
which
generated
that
requirement
to
pay.
Granting
the
relief
which
Ms.
McCaffrey
seeks
in
paragraphs
1
and
2
of
her
notice
of
motion
would
be
tantamount
to
setting
aside
the
assessments
issued
by
the
Minister;
something
which
this
Court
clearly
does
not
have
jurisdiction
to
do
by
way
of
a
section
18
application.
This
leads
directly
to
the
applicant's
contention
that
she
was
unable
to
instigate
those
appeal
procedures
because,
having
never
been
personally
served
with
the
notice
of
confirmation
issued
by
the
Minister,
she
was
never
aware
of
the
document's
existence.
I
cannot
accept
this
argument.
The
issuance
of
notices
of
assessment
and
reassessment
and
subsequent
notices
of
confirmation
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
with
respect
to
a
taxpayer's
liability
are
not
uncommon;
indeed,
they
emanate
on
a
fairly
regular
basis.
The
burden
created
by
requiring
personal
service
is
addressed
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
requires
the
Minister
only
to
deliver
the
document
to
a
taxpayer
by
registered
mail.
Pro-
vided
the
Minister
has
complied
with
those
requirements,
a
taxpayer
is
deemed
to
have
received
a
notice
of
assessment
or
reassessment
or
confirmation.
In
Bowen
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
266,
91
D.T.C.
5594
(F.C.A.),
the
taxpayer
filed
a
notice
of
objection
on
September
14,
1987.
On
August
14,
1988
the
Minister
dispatched
a
notice
of
confirmation
by
registered
mail
confirming
the
underlying
reassessments.
The
taxpayer
did
not
receive
the
confirmation
and
did
not
discover
its
existence
until
he
returned
to
Canada
from
abroad.
On
the
issue
of
whether
the
Minister
had
an
obligation
to
personally
serve
the
taxpayer
with
the
notice
of
confirmation,
Stone,
J.A.
speaking
for
the
Court
made
the
following
comments
at
pages
268-69
(D.T.C.
5596):
In
our
opinion,
the
duty
resting
upon
the
Minister
under
subsection
165(3)
was
to
do
precisely
what
he
did,
viz,
notify
the
respondent
of
the
confirmation
by
registered
mail.
Nothing
in
that
subsection
or
in
section
169
required
the
notification
to
be”
served"
personally
or
to
be
received
by
the
taxpayer.
In
dispatching
the
notification
by
registered
mail
the
Minister
was
entitled
to
avail
himself
of
the
address
or
addresses
which
the
respondent
himself
had
already
furnished.
There
was
no
obligation
on
him
to
look
beyond
that
information.
Moreover,
a
requirement
for
the
receipt
of
the
notification
would
be
difficult
if
not
totally
unworkable
from
an
administrative
standpoint.
Parliament
has
not
required
it;
it
has
required
merely
that
the
notification
be
dispatched
by
registered
mail.
It
is
apparent
that
the
reason
why
the
respondent
did
not
receive
the
notification
was
not
because
the
Minister
failed
to
do
all
that
was
required
of
him
but
because
the
respondent
did
not
keep
his
mailing
address
current.
Such
arrangements
as
he
did
make
for
the
receipt
of
mail
during
his
absence
from
Canada
between
March
1988
and
December
1989
broke
down
—
but
that,
surely,
cannot
be
laid
at
the
feet
of
the
Minister
who
acted
throughout
in
the
manner
required
by
the
Act.
Assuming
the
applicant
did
not
see
the
notice
of
confirmation
as
she
maintains,
it
remains
beyond
question
that
the
Minister
complied
with
the
requirements
of
the
Act.
The
applicant
admits
that
it
was
sent
to
her
residence
by
registered
mail
and
signed
for
by
her
housekeeper.
She
is
therefore
deemed
to
have
received
it.
An
appeal
under
the
Act
was
open
to
her,
but
having
failed
to
do
so
within
the
prescribed
time
limits
Ms.
McCaffrey
now
has
no
other
method
of
challenging
the
assessments
except
to
request
an
extension
of
time
in
which
to
appeal
them.
The
result
should
be
different,
however,
for
paragraphs
3,
4
and
5
of
the
notice
of
motion
seeking
to
prohibit
further
audits
for
the
taxation
years
in
question
or
continuing
the
practice
of
issuing
two
employer
remittance
forms.
I
am
satisfied
that
this
Court
does
have
jurisdiction
to
entertain
the
application
and
consider
it
on
the
merits.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
directed
my
attention
to
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
grant
to
the
Minister
and
his
officials
the
authority
to
conduct
audits,
which
is
clear.
However,
the
applicant
makes
serious
allegations
concerning
the
Minister's
exercise
of
that
right,
and
is
entitled
to
bring
such
complaints
before
this
Court.
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
is
not
a
proper
party
to
a
section
18
application,
which
applies
only
to
actions
or
decisions
of
federal
boards,
commissions
or
other
tribunals.
For
these
reasons,
an
order
will
go
striking
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
as
a
party
and
striking
paragraphs
1
and
2
of
the
notice
of
motion.
The
remainder
of
the
application
is
adjourned
sine
die,
to
be
brought
on
a
date
fixed
by
the
Court
in
consultation
with
the
parties.
Order
accordingly.