Date: 19980824
Docket: 97-100-IT-G
BETWEEN:
RICHARD D. GRIGG,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Rip, J.T.C.C.
[1] The issue in this appeal is whether Richard D. Grigg, the
appellant exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill as
director of Eastern Abrasive and Coatings Limited
("Company") that a reasonably prudent person would
exercised in comparable circumstances to prevent the failure of
the Company to remit payroll source deductions during the period
December 22, 1992 to November 4, 1993
("period").[1]
[2] According to section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act
("Act"), section 22.1 of the Canada Pension
Plan Act ("CPP") and section 68.1 of the
Unemployment Insurance Act ("UI Act"), at
the time, where a corporation has failed to remit to the Receiver
General for Canada the amounts of statutory deductions withheld
from employees' remuneration, the directors of the
corporation at the time the corporation was required to deduct,
withhold or remit the amount are jointly and severally liable,
together with the corporation, to pay that amount and any
interest or penalties relating thereto. However, a director is
not liable if he or she exercised the degree of care, diligence
and skill to prevent the failure that a reasonable prudent person
would have exercised in comparable circumstances: subsection
227.1(3) of the Act, for example.
[3] During the period the Company failed to remit to the
Receiver General the source deductions withheld from its
employees and was assessed for the amount of source deductions,
interest and penalties. Revenue Canada assessed Mr. Grigg on
May 8, 1996 pursuant to the subsection 227.1(1) of the
Act, section 22.1 of the CPP and section 68.1 of
the UI Act (as well as section 38 of the Income Tax Act
of Ontario) on the basis he did nothing to prevent the
Company's failure to remit.
[4] The facts leading to the assessment of Mr. Grigg tell a
story of a person who entered into a transaction with a Bank for
the purchase of a business and, from the first day the business
started, was in over his head, although he did not realize it at
the time.
[5] Mr. Grigg has a grade eleven education. He also studied
computer and systems analysis at a community college and taught
computer. Before incorporating the Company on December 8, 1992
Mr. Grigg had no management experience.
[6] During the summer of 1992 Mr. Grigg worked for Quick-Blast
Inc. ("Quick"), a corporation that carried on the
business of sandblasting and painting structured steel. Quick
employed three people in its shop as well as one person who
worked as secretary and bookkeeper. Mr. Grigg was asked by
Quick's owners to develop new business, to develop a system
of estimating jobs and to manage Quick's day-to-day
operations. It appears Mr. Grigg was a minor shareholder of Quick
and guaranteed Quick's debts to its Banker. Mr. Grigg
worked at Quick for six months, until the second or third week of
November 1992, when its principal shareholders declared personal
bankruptcy and Quick's banker, The Toronto-Dominion Bank
("Bank"), purported to take over its assets.
[7] Mr. Grigg said he saw a potential for Quick's business
since it had contracts in place. Even before the owners of Quick
abandoned the business Mr. Grigg discussed the possibility
of acquiring the business assets directly from Quick. However,
his lawyer cautioned him that this may result in legal problems
since, as new owner, he may be liable for the existing debts of
the business.
[8] Mr. Grigg attended at the Bank to negotiate the
acquisition of Quick's business directly from the Bank. Mr.
Grigg's initial discussions were with the manager of the
Bank's branch at "Pickering Town Centre", Mr.
Murray Yule. The Bank and Mr. Grigg agreed that the Company would
acquire Quick's assets from the Bank, the Bank would grant
the Company an opening operating line of credit of $20,000 and
permit it to borrow an additional $20,000 to purchase
equipment.[2] In
return the Company would guarantee existing loans to Quick in the
amount of $45,000. Mr. Grigg agreed to personally guarantee the
Company's debt to the Bank. This arrangement, Mr. Grigg
asserted, was made with Mr. Yule and another employee of the
branch, later identified in Mr. Yule's evidence as Freda
Gauweiler, the branch's Assistant Manager, Credit. The
transaction between the Company and the Bank was completed but,
insisted Mr. Grigg, not in the manner originally
contemplated.
[9] One of the problems was that although the Bank may have
had a security interest in Quick's assets, the Bank appears
not to have had a record of all the equipment securing
Quick's loan.
[10] In any event the Company took over the business of Quick
from the Bank in December 1992. The employees of Quick became the
employees of the Company. The employee of Quick who was its
secretary and bookkeeper, Ms. Donna Cunningham, was also the
Company's secretary and bookkeeper. The business initially
was carried on at the same premises.
[11] Mr. Grigg testified that he executed an agreement of
purchase and sale with the Bank for the purchase of the business
as well as a bill of sale. He has not received any copy of this
documentation from the Bank. He stated that Ms. Gauweiler
promised him a copy of "everything signed". In the
meantime, the Bank moved the "commercial accounts" from
its Pickering branch to its branch in Oshawa and in the course of
moving documents, Mr. Grigg said, he was told the Bank lost the
closing documents. An employee from the Oshawa branch,
Mr. Niall MacPhearson, took over the supervision of the
Company's account.
[12] Mr. Grigg believed that he had at least three discussions
with officials of the Bank in order to obtain the necessary
documentation. He said he instructed the Company's
bookkeeper, Donna Cunningham, to attend at the Bank to get the
documents and she also was unable to do so.
[13] Although she frequently attempted to do so, Ms.
Cunningham testified, she confirmed she was unable to get any
closing documents from the Bank. First, the Bank told her it
would take a "couple of days to draw up" the documents
and they could be "picked up" from the Bank soon
thereafter. When she went to the Bank, she was told the documents
were not ready. Later on, she was told the documents had been
shipped to Oshawa, and finally she was told the Bank could not
find the documents.
[14] In any event on or about December 17, 1992, the Company
and Mr. Grigg executed the usual documentation required by the
Bank when a corporation opens an account. Mr. Grigg executed a
guarantee in favour of the Bank with respect to the indebtedness
of the Company and the Company executed a general security
agreement in favour of the Bank. These documents were produced as
Exhibits.
[15] Mr. Grigg declared that the Company never received the
operating line of credit it was promised. The operating line of
credit was to be the Company's working capital. However, the
line of credit was "maxed out" immediately,
Mr. Grigg stated and Mr. Yule agreed. Indeed both witnesses
used the expression "maxed out" to indicate the
operating line of credit was used to the maximum amount approved
by the Bank. Mr. Yule had "no idea" how or why the
Company had used its complete line of credit. The account was
managed by Ms. Gauweiler and when the account was transferred to
Oshawa in January 1993, Mr. Yule was no longer responsible.
[16] A copy of the Company's General Ledger was produced
in Tab 9 of Exhibit A-1, a book of the Appellant's documents.
The opening entry in the General Ledger, dated December 22, 1992,
is an amount of $21,735.94 "to open account". Opposite
the amount of $21,735.94 is the notation "OD". Mr.
Grigg stated the initials "OD" indicate an overdraft.
At all times when the Company operated its business, the Company
was in an overdraft position. Mr. Grigg discussed the problem
with Mr. Yule, Ms. Gauweiler and Mr. MacPhearson and "anyone
who would listen". Mr. Grigg repeated that the
"deal" between him and the Bank was that the Company
would have a $20,000 operating line of credit with a zero balance
in its account. Instead, the account had a negative balance. Mr.
MacPhearson told him, Mr. Grigg recalled, that there was "no
way" the Bank could have accommodated a $20,000 line of
credit with a zero balance.
[17] As a result, Mr. Grigg recalled, the Company could not
purchase product and had to turn down work because the Company
could not operate under normal conditions. The Company had no
working capital.
[18] Mr. Grigg acknowledged that in December 1992 he knew that
the Bank was transferring money from the line of credit to cover
previous loans transactions the Bank had with Quick. In the first
few months of operation, Mr. Grigg knew of Eastern's
financial problems and potential difficulties in carrying on
business.
[19] Because the Company was in an overdraft position, the
Bank insisted on approving all cheques issued by the Company,
according to Mr. Grigg. He explained that the Bank required a
list of cheques or photocopies of cheques so it could determine
what cheques would be honoured. Mr. MacPhearson approved or
disapproved the cheques. Mr. Grigg also stated that Mr.
MacPhearson's permission was necessary to bid on jobs. He
complained to Mr. MacPhearson personally and by telephone.
[20] Mr. Grigg testified that he did not retain a lawyer to
assist him when he negotiated the transaction for the acquisition
of Quick's business or on closing.
[21] Whether the Bank had good title to the assets it
purported to sell to the Company is in question. On December 18,
1992, lawyers for PPG Canada Inc. ("PPG") wrote Quick
and the Company. PPG's solicitors ignored the position of the
Bank. In their view, based on conversation their client had
earlier with Mr. Grigg, Quick sold its business to the
Company and, if so, that conveyance constituted a transfer of all
or substantially all of Quick's assets out of the ordinary
course of business. The sale was therefore in contravention of
Bulk Sales Act and the Conveyances Act of Ontario.
PPG's position was that both Quick and Mr. Grigg were liable
to PPG for the value of the assets purported to have been
conveyed to the extent of Quick's liability.
[22] Mr. Grigg stated that when he advised Mr. Niall
MacPhearson of PPG's reaction to the sale, Mr. MacPhearson
told him that "it would blow over because The
Toronto-Dominion Bank is a secured creditor".
[23] On March 17, 1993 PPG issued a statement of claim against
Mr. Grigg personally and the Company. A statement of defence
was filed on behalf of the defendants.
[24] On August 18, 1993, Mr. Grigg wrote to Mr. MacPhearson
reviewing a meeting held on August 11 with Mr. Grigg,
Mr. MacPhearson and Mr. Grigg's solicitor, Mr. Stewart.
In Mr. Grigg's view, once Mr. MacPhearson took charge of the
Company's account "all arrangements went bad". In
the letter, Mr. Grigg charged that the Bank had "disabled
our Company"; the Bank had full control of the Company's
direction and daily business needs and obligations.
[25] According to the letter of August 18, Mr. Grigg stated
that in his solicitor's view the Bank had failed in its
responsibility to notify creditors of Quick when the assets had
been seized by the Bank and sold to the Company. This, concluded
the solicitor, was a violation of the Bulk Sales Act of
Ontario as well as an infringement of the Fraudulent
Conveyances Act.
[26] In the letter, Mr. Grigg also referred to lost
opportunities by the Company as a result of the Bank's
failure to support the Company as originally agreed.
Mr. Grigg declared the Company had developed business
contacts and had arranged a $3,500,000 contract with Canada Post
and a $800,000 contract with Chrysler Corporation in Detroit. In
short, Mr. Grigg blamed the Company's inability to secure
additional contracts on the Bank's refusal to finance the
Company.
[27] At trial, Mr. Grigg insisted that he had discussions with
Bank officials to convince them to honour cheques he intended to
make in favour of the Receiver General for Canada. However, these
officials agreed only to honour those cheques necessary "to
keep the Company going". He said he "made every attempt
with the Bank to get approval for source deductions". He
said he thought that it was important to keep in contact with
Revenue Canada.
[28] Mr. Grigg agreed that in fact the Company issued only one
cheque to Revenue Canada, a post-dated cheque dated October 19,
1993 in the amount of $2,088 that was not honoured. Mr. Grigg
stated that since Mr. MacPhearson had to approve any cheque
made by the Company and since Mr. MacPhearson was not
interested in having the Company make any payment, he
"felt" that there would be no use in preparing cheques
for Revenue Canada. The Bank "took upon itself what cheques
would be processed".
[29] Mr. Grigg stated that the Bank "basically ran the
Company ... I was a telephone reporter to the Bank". When he
brought the Canada Post contract to the Bank, he believed that
the Bank would have "jumped" to support the Company.
Instead, the Bank told him it was not interested in financing the
contract.
[30] In order to reduce the Company's expenses, Mr. Grigg
acquired new premises for the Company in August 1993. He obtained
increased space for the Company at a rent that was 50 per cent of
the previous rent.
[31] Mr. Grigg had thought of changing banks and had
discussions with the Bank of Montreal. The Bank of Montreal, he
said, was prepared to support him but wanted the Company to sue
the Bank immediately on the grounds the Bank did not properly
transfer assets. He also approached private investors who were
initially interested in the Company but were fearful of investing
once they learned the bona fides of the purchase of the
business was in question.
[32] Mr. Grigg signed all Company's cheques once they were
prepared by Ms. Cunningham. However, he stated, it was
"the Bank's call what cheques would be
approved".
[33] Mr. Grigg agreed that he was aware of the Company's
obligations under the various statutes to remit source deductions
to the Receiver General for Canada. He stated that
"initially" he was not aware the source deductions had
not been remitted. He was concerned with the difficulties he was
having with the Bank and the difficulty in getting supplies from
suppliers. Creditors were threatening to sue and, he said,
"probably Diane was trying to protect me at first ...".
He believed he first became aware of the Company's failure to
remit source deductions in February or March 1993 when
Ms. Cunnigham first informed him of the default. He insisted
he immediately telephoned Revenue Canada and explained the reason
the Company had failed to remit the source deductions. Revenue
Canada officials informed him that another employee of Revenue
Canada would contact him later.
[34] Eventually, in June 1993, a Ms. Sabrina James of Revenue
Canada telephoned Mr. Grigg to arrange a meeting at her office in
Scarborough, Ontario. Ms. James asked Mr. Grigg several
questions on the telephone and asked him to bring the
Company's books to the meeting, which was scheduled in July
1993.
[35] At the meeting with Revenue Canada, Mr. Grigg recalled,
he explained the problems the Company was experiencing, including
the PPG lawsuit and the Bank problems and gave Revenue Canada all
the information it required. He added that besides PPG, at least
six other suppliers were threatening to sue. He described this as
a "daily battle".
[36] Mr. Grigg told Ms. James that employees' pay cheques
were paid out of the operating line of credit. The Company did
not have a separate payroll account or a separate account for
source deductions.
[37] Mr. Grigg conceded that Company payroll cheques to him
were honoured by the Bank. However, he stated, the majority of
the cheques paid to him were for reimbursement for supplies. For
the eleven months he worked for the Company he was paid
$10,000.
[38] During their meeting, Ms. James asked Mr. Grigg for
monthly post-dated cheques of $4,000 each to satisfy the
outstanding debt and a commitment by the Company that it stay
current. Mr. Grigg said that he offered Revenue Canada $2,000
monthly "because we did not have sufficient funds".
Revenue Canada refused the counter offer. Mr. Grigg stated that
he intended to discuss the matter with Mr. MacPhearson but
Mr. MacPhearson "was not too concerned". He said
Mr. MacPhearson did not offer to honour any cheques payable to
Revenue Canada.
[39] A second meeting was held with Revenue Canada. Mr. Grigg
hired a "consultant" to advise him at this meeting.
However the consultant told Revenue Canada that if the government
did not want to accept Mr. Grigg's offer of monthly
post-dated cheques of $2,000, Mr. Grigg would file for
bankruptcy. Mr. Grigg said it was never his intention to
file for bankruptcy and immediately dismissed the consultant.
[40] Mr. Grigg did deliver to Revenue Canada post-dated
cheques for $2,000 but Revenue Canada refused to accept the
payments. Apparently, according to Mr. Grigg, Ms. James told him
that if the Company did not pay as required, Revenue Canada would
garnish all the Company's receivables. Mr. Grigg discussed
Ms. James' reaction with Mr. MacPhearson who told him
"to tell him what Revenue Canada wanted and he would let it
clear".
[41] Ms. James attended at the Company's offices in
mid-September 1993 to review the books and review contracts and
the lawsuit with PPG. She asked for a cheque in the amount of
approximately $2,088 and Mr. Grigg accommodated her. Since the
Company did not have funds to "cover" the cheques,
Mr. Grigg telephoned the Bank for approval and the Bank
agreed to honour the cheque. The cheque was post-dated to October
19, 1993. However, when the cheque was submitted for payment the
Bank "bounced the cheque". Mr. Grigg said he learned
that the cheque was not honoured by the Bank on or about October
28, 1993 when Mr. MacPhearson faxed Ms. Cunningham with the
information. When Mr. Grigg telephoned Mr. MacPhearson to
learn the reason the cheque had not been honoured,
Mr. MacPhearson told him "he was tied up or busy that
day and could not approve the cheque".
[42] At that point Mr. Grigg began to "examine our
options, including not challenging Revenue Canada's right to
garnish the Company's receivables and to pay PPG". The
Company could not get any money from the Bank. Since there was no
viable alternative, Mr. Grigg decided in November to do what the
Bank had recommended on several occasions: close down the
business. He gave the keys to the business to Mr.
MacPhearson.
[43] The Bank informed Mr. Grigg that if he did not return to
the premises of the Company or take anything with him they would
not pursue any action against him on his guarantee to the Bank.
The Bank did not pursue action against Mr. Grigg. Several
months before the appeal at bar was heard, Mr. Grigg settled the
action with PPG.
[44] Ms. Cunningham testified she had worked for Quick for two
years before joining the Company. She had previously taken a
bookkeeper course. At Quick, she answered the telephone, prepared
correspondence, accepted the mail, acted as bookkeeper and dealt
with the Bank. She continued performing the same duties with the
Company.
[45] Ms. Cunningham declared that Mr. Grigg had numerous
meetings with Bank officials and that she attended most of the
meetings. She confirmed Mr. Grigg's understanding that
one of the agreements with the Bank was that on the day the
Company opened for business the Company would have a $20,000 line
of credit and not an overdraft.
[46] As a result of the operating line of credit never being
put in place, Ms. Cunningham testified, the Company had many
problems, two of which were that the Company could not collect
its receivables because the Bank seized them and Revenue Canada
could not be paid. She confirmed that Mr. MacPhearson determined
which of the Company's creditors would be paid. Ms.
Cunningham recalled that she would send him a list of payable and
receivables and he would determine what cheques would go through.
Originally she sent the list to Mr. MacPhearson on a monthly
basis and then on a weekly basis.
[47] Ms. Cunningham said if she was not sure when she advised
Mr. Grigg that no amounts of source deductions had been paid to
Revenue Canada; it was either in January or February 1993. She
said she spoke to Mr. MacPhearson and he told her "Revenue
Canada could wait". Ms. Cunningham said that any meeting she
attended at the Bank with Mr. MacPhearson was
"useless". She described him as "arrogant".
She conceded that the first time she requested a cheque payable
to Revenue Canada for source deductions was in March 1993 and the
Bank refused to approve the request. Before March she "only
asked [Mr. MacPhearson] what cheques they could write and what he
would allow".
[48] Ms. Cunningham recalled that when PPG sued Mr. Grigg and
the Company, the Bank itself said it was not sure who owned the
assets at the time of the purchase and sale of the assets to the
Company and "things started going down the drain".
[49] Mr. Yule agreed that the arrangements with Mr. Grigg were
that when the Company took over Quick's business it would
have an operating line of credit of $20,000 and it also receive a
term loan. The Company would also enter into a general security
agreement with he Bank for all of its receivables, assets and
undertakings.
[50] Mr. Yule recalled that although Mr. MacPhearson was
employed by the Oshawa branch, he maintained an office in Mr.
Yule's branch in Pickering. Mr. MacPhearson did not
report to Mr. Yule but to the Oshawa branch.
[51] Mr. Yule agreed he was involved in the negotiations for
the sale of Quick's assets of Quick to the Company but only
to a "small degree". Mr. Yule's evidence did not
enlighten me or clarify the terms of the agreement between the
Bank and Mr. Grigg. He did reveal that Mr. MacPhearson is now
working for the Bank in Thunder Bay.
[52] Based on the above facts, I must determine whether Mr.
Grigg exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill as a
director of the Company to prevent the failures of the Company to
remit source deductions to the Receive General during the
relevant period. There have been many reported cases dealing with
this matter and the latest pronunciation on this issue from the
Federal Court of Appeal is set forth in the reasons of Robertson
J.A. in Soper v. R.[3]:
... The standard of care laid down in subsection 227.1(3) of
the Act is inherently flexible. Rather than treating directors as
a homogenous 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 business-persons).
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”.
[53] Robertson J.A. categorized the reported cases into two
categories: those that deal with "inside directors" and
those that deal with "outside directors" At page 263
(5416-17), he states:
[...] 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. For
such individuals, it will be a challenge to argue convincingly
that, despite their daily role in corporate management, they
lacked business acumen to the extent that that factor should
overtake the assumption that they did know, or ought to have
known, of both remittance requirements and any problem in this
regard. In short, inside directors will face a significant hurdle
when arguing that the subjective element of the standard of care
should predominate over its objective aspect.[4]
[54] There is no question that Mr. Grigg was an inside
director of the Company. Indeed, he was the only director of that
Company.
[55] Each case has to be decided on its own facts. As outlined
by Bowman T.C.J. in Cloutier v. M.N.R.[5] the analysis of the due
diligence defence is a question of fact:
The question therefore becomes one of fact and the court must
to the extent possible attempt to determine what a reasonably
prudent person ought to have done and could have done at the time
in comparable circumstances. Attempts by courts to conjure up the
hypothetical reasonable person have not always been an
unqualified success. Tests have been developed, refined and
repeated in order to give the process the appearance of
rationality and objectivity but ultimately the judge deciding the
matter must apply his own concepts of common sense and
fairness.
[56] There is no question in my mind that a person more
sophisticated in business practices than Mr. Grigg would not have
entered into transaction with the Bank in the manner Mr. Grigg
did. From the first day the Company commenced to carry on the
business it believed it had acquired from the Bank, the Company
was in an intolerable financial position. However, Mr. Grigg was
not a sophisticated businessman. This appears to have been his
first venture in the commercial world as an investor/manager. I
am not surprised that he spent most of his time during the
Company's operations struggling to keep the Company
afloat.
[57] According to Mr. Grigg and Ms. Cunningham, from the
outset of the Company's operations, the Bank dictated which
of its creditors would be paid. Mr. Grigg was concerned with
trying to ameliorate the Company's situation with the Bank
and to ensure its suppliers would continue to supply the Company.
Although Mr. Grigg was aware that the Company had a statutory
obligation to remit source deductions, he did not address his
mind to this issue until sometime in February or March when Ms.
Cunningham informed him that the Company had failed to remit the
sources deductions to the Receiver General. It was only when Mr.
Grigg learned of the failures to remit that he immediately
contacted Revenue Canada with an attempt to resolve the matter of
delinquent payments and to put the Company on a firm basis with
Revenue Canada. It was also in March 1993 that Ms. Cunningham
first formerly asked Mr. MacPhearson to issue cheques in favour
of he Receiver General and was refused. There had been no system
to excuse the Company's timely payroll remittances to the
Receiver General in which Mr. Grigg may have some semblance of
confidence.
[58] Up to and including the end of February 1993 Mr. Grigg
did nothing to prevent the Company's failures to remit. That
the Company was in an intolerable relationship with its banker is
not by itself a valid due diligence defence. It is only when Mr.
Grigg learned of the failures and got in touch with Revenue
Canada in an attempt to right the failures and Ms. Cunningham
requested the Bank's approval of cheques to Revenue Canada
did Mr. Grigg start to exercise a degree of care, diligence and
skill to prevent future failures. It is obvious that due to the
Bank's overwhelming presence in the affairs of the Company,
no cheques payable to Revenue Canada would be approved or
honoured by the Bank.[6]
[59] Therefore, in my view, up to and including the time Mr.
Grigg got in touch with Revenue Canada and Ms. Cunningham
requested the Bank to honour a cheque to the Receiver General,
which appears to have been sometime in March 1993, nothing was
done by anyone employed by the Company, including Mr. Grigg, to
prevent the failures to remit. Once the Bank rejected the request
for the approval of the cheque to the Receiver General Mr. Grigg
knew with certainty that the Bank would refuse all future
requests. No matter what he did from that point on he could not
compel the Company to issue cheques to the Receiver General
without the approval of the Bank. Before he was advised of the
Company's failures to remit, Mr. Grigg was ignorant of the
failures. Hence, he could not have prevented what he did not know
was occurring.
[60] Mr. Grigg is liable, therefore, as director for the
amounts the Company has failed to remit to the Receiver General
for Canada up to and including March 15, 1993, but not
subsequently.
[61] The appeal will be allowed with costs and the assessment
will be referred back to the Minister of National Revenue for
reconsideration and reassessment on the basis that the appellant
exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the
Company's failures to remit source deductions after March 15,
1993 that a reasonable prudent person would have exercised in
comparable circumstances.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 24th day of August 1998.
"Gerald J. Rip"
J.T.C.C.