Date: 19980309
Dockets: 95-2841-IT-G; 95-2842-IT-G; 95-2846-IT-G;
95-2843-IT-G; 95-2844-IT-G; 95-2845-IT-G; 95-2847-IT-G
BETWEEN:
MARY MUSCILLO, ANGELO MUSCILLO, GINA MUSCILLO, LISA MUSCILLO,
PATRIZIA MUSCILLO, DAVID MUSCILLO,
Appellants,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bowman, J.T.C.C.
[1]These appeals were heard together on common evidence and
concern the 1988 and 1989 taxation years.
[2]The appellants are all beneficiaries of one of two family
trusts. The trusts sold property in 1987 and treated the gain as
capital. Preferred beneficiary elections were filed allocating
the capital gain to the beneficiaries. The Minister of National
Revenue disagreed with the treatment of the transaction as being
on capital account, and reassessed the trusts and the
beneficiaries on the basis that the gain was of an income nature.
As a result reserves were claimed under paragraph 20(1)(n)
of the Income Tax Act. Amended returns and preferred
beneficiary elections were filed for 1988 and 1989 under
subsection 104(14) to reflect the recharacterization of the gain.
The Minister reassessed the trusts and the beneficiary to give
effect to the amended returns and amended elections.
[3]The profit on the sale proved to be illusory. The purchaser
defaulted on the mortgage that was taken back in 1991 and a
doubtful debt reserve was claimed by the trusts and the resulting
loss was carried back to 1988 and 1989. The appellants filed
amended preferred beneficiary elections and amended returns to
reflect the reduced income in the trusts which was to be
allocated to them. The Minister did not give effect to the
amended returns and preferred beneficiary elections. He did
however reassess to make some minor technical adjustments and
this gave the appellants the opportunity to file notices of
objection and subsequently to appeal to this court.
[4]While the appeals are the result of the Minister’s
failure to act upon the second set of amended preferred
beneficiary elections, the legal basis upon which the appellants
base their challenge to the assessments is their contention that
the first amended preferred beneficiary elections were
invalid.
[5]The foregoing thumbnail sketch of the facts and issues is
an oversimplification. The facts are considerably more complex
and are set out in a Statement of Agreed Facts, which reads as
follows:
1. Certain of the Appellants, namely, Angelo Muscillo, Lisa
Muscillo, Mary Muscillo and David Muscillo were at all material
times all the income and capital beneficiary of an inter
vivos trust known as the Dario Muscillo Family Trust. The
remaining Appellants, namely, Angelo Muscillo, Gina Muscillo and
Patrizia Muscillo were at all material times the only income and
capital beneficiary of an inter vivos trust known as the
Pasquale Muscillo Family Trust.
2. The Pasquale Muscillo Family Trust and the Dario Muscillo
Family Trust (herein collectively called the
“Trusts”) were each 50% owners of a parcel of real
property known as Part of Lot 6, Concession 9, in the City of
Vaughan, Regional Municipality of York (the
“Property”).
3. On May 27, 1987, the Trusts sold the Property to Giovanni
Guizzetti Investments Inc. (the “Purchaser”).
4. The Trusts sold the property to the Purchaser (the
“Sale”) for a purchase price of $1,800,000 (the
“Purchase Price”) and the Trusts took back a
mortgage, the principal amount of which was $1,400,000 (the
“Mortgage”).
5. The Mortgage provided for interest to be paid on a monthly
basis and for payment of the full amount of the principal upon
the maturity date, being April 27, 1991.
6. The Trusts initially reported in the 1987 taxation year
their gains realized on the sale to the Purchaser as a capital
gain and each of the beneficiaries of the Trusts (collectively
called the “Beneficiaries”) filed Preferred
Beneficiary Elections so as to allocate the entire capital gain
realized on the Sale by the Trusts amongst the individual
Beneficiaries.
7. For the 1988 taxation year, the Trusts received interest
income earned on the Mortgage and each of the Beneficiaries filed
preferred beneficiary elections so as to allocate all such
interest income out to the Beneficiaries. The Notices of
Assessment with respect to the Beneficiaries of the Dario
Muscillo Family Trust, namely, Angelo, Lisa, Mary and David
Muscillo’s 1988 taxation year are dated July 20, 1989,
October 16, 1989, July 3, 1989 and October 11, 1989,
respectively. The Notices of Assessment with respect to the
Beneficiaries of the Pasquale Muscillo Family Trust, namely
Angelo, Gina and Patrizia Muscillo’s 1988 taxation year are
dated October 11, 1989, July 6, 1989 and September 29, 1989,
respectively.
8. As a result of an audit of the Trusts’ 1987 taxation
year, the Minister of National Revenue determined that the gain
realized on the Sale was income rather than capital gain (the
“Re-Characterization”). The Minister then issued a
Notice of Reassessment of the Trusts’ 1987 taxation year
dated May 30, 1990, the Beneficiaries’ 1987 taxation
year dated July 3, 1990 or July 4, 1990, and certain of the
Beneficiaries’ 1988 taxation years dated July 3, 1990 or
July 4, 1990.
9. To reflect the Re-Characterization, the Minister of
National Revenue, in respect of the 1987 taxation year, treated
the unallocated portion of the gain as income to the Trusts and
disallowed the capital gains deduction claimed by each
Beneficiary and, in respect of the 1988 taxation year, disallowed
a minimum tax carryover to the Beneficiaries reassessed in
respect of that year.
10. Notices of Assessment were issued in respect of the
Beneficiaries of the Dario Muscillo Family Trust, namely, Angelo,
Lisa, Mary and David Muscillo’s 1989 taxation year are
dated July 12, 1990, August 8, 1990, July 12, 1990 and August 8,
1990, respectively. Notices of Assessment with respect to the
Beneficiaries of the Pasquale Muscillo Family Trust, namely
Angelo, Gina and Patrizia Muscillo’s 1989 taxation year are
dated July 12, 1990, July 12, 1990 and January 4, 1991,
respectively.
11. Notices of Objection in respect of the Beneficiaries 1987
and 1988 taxation years were filed dated August 31, 1990. The
Beneficiaries objected to the Re-Characterization which resulted
in adjustments to their income through the rejection by the
Minister of their capital gain treatment of the Sale.
12. As a consequence of the Re-Characterization, the Trusts
filed amended T3 Trust tax returns in respect of the 1987 through
1990 taxation years (the “First Amended Returns”), in
order to reflect the Re-Characterization of the gain realized on
the sale as income and to claim a reserve with respect to the
profit from the Sale to apportion the income from the sale over
the maximum three year period permitted under subsection 20(8) of
the Income Tax Act (Canada).
13. In addition, as a consequence of the Re-Characterization,
the Beneficiaries filed with an officer of the Appeals Division,
Mississauga District Office, Revenue Canada (the “Appeals
Officer”) amended preferred beneficiary elections (the
“First Amended Elections”) to have their
proportionate share of the income from the Sale with respect to
the 1987 through 1990 taxation years taxed in the hands of the
Beneficiaries which period included the 1988 and 1989 taxation
years which are the subject matter of this appeal (hereinafter
referred to individually as the “1988 Income” and the
“1989 Income”).
14. These First Amended Returns and First Amended Elections
are dated the 27th day of February, 1992 and were sent in a
covering letter to the Appeals Officer by Ronald J. Farano,
solicitor for the Trusts and the Beneficiaries.
15. No acknowledgement of receipt of the sending of the First
Amended Returns and First Amended Elections was received by the
Trusts or any of the Beneficiaries or Ronald J. Farano from
Revenue Canada nor was any indication given to the Beneficiaries
or the Trusts or Ronald J. Farano that the First Amended Returns
and the First Amended Elections would be accepted or
rejected.
16. The Minister issued Notices of Reassessment to the
Beneficiaries of the Dario Muscillo Family Trust, namely, Angelo,
Lisa, Mary and David Muscillo dated May 26, 1992, October 22,
1992, May 14, 1992 and October 21, 1992, respectively and to the
Beneficiaries of the Pasquale Muscillo Family Trust, namely
Angelo, Gina and Patrizia Muscillo dated July 31, 1992, May 25,
1992 and May 25, 1992, respectively. These Notices of
Reassessment (the “1992 Reassessments”) were issued
in respect of the 1987 through 1990 taxation years of the Trusts
and the Beneficiaries which effected the Re-Characterization. The
Trusts were treated as having “Nil Taxable Income”
for the subject years.
17. On April 27, 1991, the Mortgage given back to the
Purchaser on the sale matured at which time the outstanding
principal amount of $1,400,000 became due and payable (the
“Maturity Date”).
18. In 1991, the Purchaser defaulted on numerous interest
payments and failed to pay the principal amount of the Mortgage
on the Maturity Date (the “Default”).
19. Subsequent to the Default, the Trustees of the Trusts
obtained a written appraisal of the Property which reflected the
fair market value in 1991 to be approximately $812,000.
20. Each of the Trusts claimed a reserve against doubtful
accounts in their 1991 taxation year in the amount of $277,500
representing the principal amount owed to each Trust under the
Mortgage less the fair market value of the Mortgage security held
by the Trusts.
21. The reserve against doubtful accounts claimed by the
Trusts in their 1991 tax returns gave rise to a loss in the
Trusts (the “Loss”).
22. The Trusts commenced foreclosure proceedings by way of
statement of claim issued against the Purchaser on August 2, 1992
and obtained a final order of foreclosure on November 23,
1992 (the “Foreclosure”).
23. The Trusts included in their 1992 taxable income the
reserve for doubtful accounts deducted in the 1991 taxation
years.
24. On the 10th day of March, 1993, the Trustees together with
the Beneficiaries, filed amended T3 Trust tax returns (the
“Second Amended Returns”) and amended Preferred
Beneficiary Elections (the “Second Amended
Elections”) with respect to the 1988 and 1989 taxation
years in order to elect to have the Loss applied to the 1988 and
1989 taxable income of the Trusts and also to allocate a reduced
net income to the Beneficiaries.
25. The Minister refused to consider the Second Amended
Returns and the Second Amended Elections by letter to the
taxpayers dated September 17, 1993 indicating that the basis for
the rejection was in accordance with the T3 Guide, specifically
Request for Loss Carry-backs and then concluded that “No
deduction in the amounts previously designated can be made if a
preferred beneficiary election has been made for the net taxable
capital gains.”
26. On November 3, 1993, November 16, 1993, November 22, 1993
and November 25, 1993 (the “November 1993
Reassessments”) the Minister issued notices of reassessment
in respect of the Beneficiaries’ 1998 and 1989 taxation
years which corrected a minor mathematical error in the 1992
Reassessments.
27. On February 3, 1994, the Beneficiaries filed Notices of
Objection for each of the 1988 and 1989 taxation years.
28. On May 26, 1995, the Minister confirmed the November 1993
Reassessments, by way of Notices of Confirmation.
[6]What emerges from this recital of the facts is this:
(a) The preferred beneficiary elections as well as the returns
that were initially filed were premised upon the taxpayers’
assumption that the gain was on capital account and that the
capital gain could all be allocated in 1987 to the
beneficiaries.
(b) In 1988, the interest income earned by the trusts on the
mortgage was allocated to the beneficiaries by way of preferred
beneficiary elections in respect of that year.
(c) The Minister’s decision that the profit on the sale
of the property was income rather than capital necessitated
reassessments of both the trusts and the beneficiaries. He
treated the unallocated portion of the capital gain as income in
the trusts’ hands, disallowed the capital gains deduction
claimed by the beneficiaries and disallowed a minimum tax
carryover to the beneficiaries.
(d) Notices of objection to these reassessments were
filed.
(e) As a result of the Minister’s assessing action
whereby he treated the profit as income rather than capital gain,
the trusts filed new returns for 1987, 1988, 1989 and 1990 to
claim a reserve under paragraph 20(1)(n) to apportion the
profit over the three years permitted by subsection 20(8).
This point is critical. When the trusts filed originally on
the basis that the gain was on capital account no reserve was
claimed under subsection 40(1), presumably on the basis that
if the taxable capital gain was taxed entirely in 1987 the rate
of inclusion would be 50% whereas if a reserve were taken and
included in later years, the rate would be 75%. As a result the
only income earned by the trusts in 1988 was the interest earned
on the mortgage and this was allocated to the beneficiaries.
Furthermore, the increased income in the trusts’ hands
in 1988 and 1989 resulting from the reserve claimed under
paragraph 20(1)(n) was allocated to the beneficiaries by
means of amended preferred beneficiary elections, so that the
trusts had no income for those years. It is of some importance to
note that these first amended returns and elections were filed at
the request of the officer of the Department of National
Revenue.
As a result the Minister in 1992 assessed the trusts and the
beneficiaries for the taxation years 1987 through 1990 to give
effect to the first amended returns and the first amended
preferred beneficiary elections.
(f) In 1991, however, the purchaser of the property defaulted
and failed to pay the interest payments under the mortgage or the
principal amount of $1,400,000, which fell due on April 27, 1991.
The only evidence before me of the value of the property in 1991
is the admission that the trustees obtained a written appraisal
which indicated the fair market value was about $812,000.
(g) The trusts claimed, for their 1991 taxation year, a
reserve under paragraph 20(1)(l) for doubtful debts
of $277,500, representing the principal amount owed to each trust
under the mortgage, less the fair market value of the mortgage
security. The trusts, as a result, had a loss in 1991 which could
have been carried back to 1988 and 1989 under section 111 to
be applied against their taxable incomes for those years, if they
had any. They did not, however, having allocated to the
beneficiaries under the preferred beneficiary elections all of
the income resulting from the reassessments and the claiming of
reserves in the amended returns.
[7] It is admitted in the Statement of Agreed Facts that by
claiming a reserve for doubtful debts in 1991 the trusts realized
a loss. I have therefore not considered whether this claim was
appropriate. I note in passing, however, that in 1992 the trusts
foreclosed on the mortgage and obtained a final order of
foreclosure on November 23, 1992. In computing their income for
1992, the trusts included the reserve claimed under paragraph
20(1)(l). Upon the foreclosure, the provisions of section
79 became applicable. I shall not review in detail the manner in
which that section applies here beyond noting that the general
effect of a foreclosure is that the loss if any on the mortgage
is not recognized until the property reacquired on the
foreclosure is disposed of. In Déom v. R., [1996] 3
C.T.C. 2190 aff’d 97 DTC 5037 (F.C.A.) I held that a
deduction for bad debts under paragraph 20(1)(p) cannot be
made where the debt continues to be secured by a mortgage. Here,
however, the claim in 1991 was for a reserve for doubtful debts
under paragraph 20(1)(l) and I can see no particular
reason in principle why such a claim cannot be made if it is
established that the debt is in fact doubtful and the value of
the security has decreased to an amount that is less than the
principal amount secured. The reserve must be brought into income
in the subsequent year, as indeed it was.
[8]Assuming, then, that there was a loss in the trusts in 1991
that was capable of being carried back to 1988 and 1989 under
section 111, the trusts and the beneficiaries filed new amended
returns and amended preferred beneficiary elections in an attempt
to allocate to the beneficiaries a reduced net income resulting
from the loss reduced taxable income of the trusts by reason of
the carry back of the loss to 1988 and 1989. These new amended
elections are the “Second Amended Elections”.
[9] It should be observed that a loss that is carried back
under paragraph 111(1)(a) to an earlier year reduces
taxable income, not income.
[10]Nonetheless, if it were possible to reverse the effect of
the first amended elections the trusts would then have income
(and taxable income) that could be absorbed by the loss.
[11]The Minister did not give effect to the second amended
elections. He might have rejected the application, but it did not
get that far since the request was withdrawn (see the quotation
from Mr. Dixon’s memorandum of November 25, 1995, set out
below). Subsequently the beneficiaries were reassessed for 1988
and 1989 to correct a minor mathematical error but otherwise the
assessments were left unchanged. This did however allow the
beneficiaries to file notices of objection and subsequently to
appeal to this court.
[12]The Minister’s power to allow amendments to
elections is found in subsection 220(3.2) of the Income Tax
Act, which reads:
Where
(a) an election by a taxpayer or a partnership under a
provision of this Act or a regulation that is a prescribed
provision was not made on or before the day on or before which
the election was otherwise required to be made, or
(b) a taxpayer or partnership has made an election under a
provision of this Act or a regulation that is a prescribed
provision,
the Minister may, on application by the taxpayer or the
partnership, extend the time for making the election referred to
in paragraph (a) or grant permission to amend or revoke the
election referred to in paragraph (b).
[13]The power to allow a taxpayer to amend or revoke an
election is plainly a discretionary power of the Minister. It is
not within this court’s jurisdiction to review the
Minister’s exercise of that discretion or his refusal to
exercise it. If there is such a power of review it lies with the
Federal Court of Canada.[1]
[14]The appellants acknowledge this. They do not ask me to
review the Minister’s failure to act upon the second
amended elections. Rather, they ask me to conclude that the first
amended elections were invalid and therefore the assessments
which were based upon the amended elections should be vacated.
Purely as a matter of jurisdiction I think that this would be
within this court’s power. Whether I am prepared to grant
the appellants the relief sought is another matter.
[15] I do not think that it is open to me, as a matter of law,
to conclude that the first amended elections are invalid, thereby
restoring matters to the status quo that existed before
those elections were made. The elections were made in prescribed
form and were acted upon. Counsel, in a very thorough and able
argument, contends that there was no “application”
within the meaning of subsection 220(3.2) and that in any event
the appeals officer did not have the authority under section 900
of the Regulations to accept or act upon the first amended
elections. He contends further that on February 27, 1992, the
Minister had no power to accept the first amended elections
because the Regulation empowering the Minister to accept an
amended election for the purposes of subsection 104(14) of the
Act had not yet been prescribed. The contention is that
section 600 of the Regulations which prescribed the provisions of
the Act under which the Minister’s power under
subsection 220(3.2) was applicable was added to the Regulations
by P.C. 1992-914 on May 7, 1992. Paragraph (b) of that
Regulation refers to subsection 104(14) as a prescribed provision
for the purposes of paragraphs 220(3.2)(a) and (b).
Section 600 of the Regulations is provided to be effective
commencing December 17, 1991.
[16]As much as I would like to be able to give effect to these
somewhat technical arguments, I am unable to do so. The filing of
the amended election in itself constitutes an application. The
fact that the procedures set out in Information Circular IC 92-1
may not have been followed does not appear to me to invalidate
the elections. The powers of the Minister under subsection
220(3.2) are, it is true, specifically delegated to certain
officials of the Department of National Revenue under subsections
(2), (6), (7), (10), (12), (16), (17) and (18) of Regulation 900.
However it is within an appeals officer’s power, in the
ordinary course, to act upon amended elections. See paragraph
24(2)(d) of the Interpretation Act, which appear to
codify Carltona, Ltd. v. Commissioners of Works, [1943] 2
All ER 560. Subsection 24(2) of the Interpretation Act
reads:
(2) Words directing or empowering a minister of the Crown to
do an act or thing, regardless of whether the act or thing is
administrative, legislative or judicial, or otherwise applying to
that minister as the holder of the office, include
(a) a minister acting for that minister or, if the
office is vacant, a minister designated to act in the office by
or under the authority of an order in council;
(b) the successors of that minister in the office;
(c) his or their deputy; and
(d) notwithstanding paragraph (c), a person
appointed to serve, in the department or ministry of state over
which the minister presides, in a capacity appropriate to the
doing of the act or thing, or to the words so applying.
[17]The French version of paragraph (d) reads:
d) indépendamment de l’alinéa
c), de toute personne ayant, dans le ministère ou
département d’État en cause, la
compétence voulue.
[18]It is an arguable question whether that provision
supersedes the very specific delegation of authority in section
900 of the Regulations made under paragraph 221(1)(f) of
the Income Tax Act. I do not propose to deal with this
question in the absence of argument beyond observing that the
Interpretation Act provides in section 3 that its
provisions apply unless a contrary intention appears. The power
to make Regulations authorizing designated officers of the
department under paragraph 221(1)(f) may well constitute
such a contrary intention. It is of course not the Regulations
themselves that provide a contrary intention in construing a
statute. It is clear beyond doubt that a Regulation cannot be
used to interpret a statute.[2] However a power to make Regulations contained in
a statute may provide such a contrary intention. I prefer rather
to put it on the basis that where a taxpayer submits an amended
election under subsection 220(3.2) and it is acted on, the
taxpayer can expect that it has been properly dealt with:
omnia praesumuntur solemniter et rite esse acta. It is not
subject to collateral attack at some later date. In any event
there is no evidence that the matter was not approved by an
appropriately designated official.
[19]So far as the date of enactment of the Regulation is
concerned I note that the assessments were made after that date.
The dates of the assessments giving effect to the first amended
elections may be taken as the relevant dates upon which those
elections were accepted. In any event, the Regulation is
specifically stated to be effective on December 17, 1991.
cf. Agnew Estate v. The Queen, 78 DTC 6237
(F.C.A.).
[20] I have therefore concluded that the first amended
elections were validly made and the officials of the Department,
on assessing, had the authority to give effect to them.
[21]That having been said there is an obvious injustice here.
The beneficiaries are being taxed on income they did not receive
and may never receive. The circumstances of this case are
precisely those in which the Minister should exercise his
discretion under subsection 220(3.2) where a subsequent event
beyond the control of the taxpayers, the incurring of a loss,
renders the prior filing of the elections erroneous. The only
basis suggested for the recommended refusal to accept the second
amended elections is that it constituted “retroactive tax
planning”. This is in no sense “retroactive tax
planning” and had the refusal been based upon the
repetition of a formula of words found in an information circular
would have been capricious. The unfairness of the position is all
the more striking when one considers that the accountant for the
trusts and the individuals, Mr. Pillo, testified — and I
accept his testimony — that it was at the request of the
revenue auditor Mr. Moos that the first amended returns and
elections were filed.
[22] I do not however, think that the application under
subsection 220(3.2) to accept the second amended elections has
ever been definitively rejected. In the report on the
“Fairness Package” application (tab 20), signed by
D.A. Dixon the following appears:
The income in question arose due to the sale of land by the
above noted Trusts. Each Trust was a 50% owner of the land. The
Trust had originally filed its returns to reflect the sale of the
land as Capital in Nature. Preferred Beneficiary Elections under
Subsection 104(14) were filed to tax the Capital Gains in the
hands of the Beneficiaries.
Audit Division reassessed the Trusts Returns to assess the
Land Disposition as Income in Nature. The T3 Supplementaries were
accordingly amended to reflect the revised Elected Amounts.
Subsequent to these amendments by Audit Division the Trust
found that the Mortgagor had defaulted on the Mortgage held on
the said property. As a result the Taxpayers Representative
submitted that the Trusts had incurred a Bad Debt with respect to
the default. Notices of Objection were filed for the
Beneficiaries disputing the Amended Preferred Beneficiary
Amounts. Subsequent to the Objections the Representatives made
requests under the Fairness Package on behalf of the Trusts and
their Beneficiaries to amend the Joint Preferred Beneficiary
Elections. Their reason for the request was to place the income
back in the hands of the Trusts so that the Bad Debt could be
absorbed. There are no provisions in the Act to allow the
Beneficiaries to absorb such a loss against the Elected upon
income.
The Subsection 104(14) Election falls within Paragraphs
220(3.2)(a) and (b) and Regulation 600(b) for Late, Amended or
Revoked Elections therefore there are provisions to allow such
amendments provided the request falls within Revenue
Canada’s Policy and Guidelines outlined in IC 92-1. Our
review indicated that the Fairness Request would be denied as the
request falls within paragraph 11a of IC 92-I which refers to
retroactive tax planning. The taxpayers do not appear to fall
within the accepted circumstances outlined in Paragraph 10 of IC
92-1.
Conclusion:
On May 16, 1995, the taxpayer’s representative, Ron
Farano, withdrew the Fairness Package Requests of March 8,
1995 for all of the above taxpayers. They have accepted our
position that there is no Bad Debt at this time as the loss on
the Mortgage falls within the Foreclosure Provisions of Section
79. As a result the loss is not recognized until the subsequent
disposition of the property. Due to the taxpayers acceptance of
this position there is no need to pursue the Preferred
Beneficiary Elections as the trust will now be able to reduce any
gains on the subsequent disposition by their shortfall and
therefore recognize their losses (See IT 505 for calculations on
subsequent Income Gains).
[23]The statement that the bad debt provisions do not apply in
the case of foreclosure (see Déom, supra) and that
the loss is recognized when the property that is reacquired on
the foreclosure is sold is no doubt correct as far as it goes.
Therefore there may be a loss in some year subsequent to 1991. It
does not, however, take into account the fact that it is admitted
that there was a loss in 1991 arising from the claiming of a
doubtful debt (not a bad debt). A loss, if any, that arises on
the sale of the property in 1992 or later can only be carried
back three years under section 111 and therefore cannot be
applied against the income resulting at least in 1988 and
possibly in 1989 from the recharacterization of the gain.
[24]As stated it is not within my power to force the Minister
to exercise his discretion to accept the second amended elections
and returns. That power, if it exists anywhere, lies within the
jurisdiction of the Federal Court.
[25] I propose therefore to withhold the signing of my
judgment for six months (or such further time as the appellants
may reasonably request) to permit the appellants to apply to the
Minister to accept the second amended elections. There appears to
be no time limit in which such an application may be made. If the
Minister agrees to accept the second amended elections it will
affect my disposition of the appeals. If the appellants choose
not to do so, or if the Minister refuses to accept the amended
elections (subject to such remedies as the appellants may choose
to pursue in the Federal Court of Canada) I will be obliged to
dismiss the appeals. I am taking this somewhat unusual step
because I am of the view that the obvious injustice, not of the
appellants’ making, and resulting from their acquiescing,
in good faith, in a request by the official of the Department of
National Revenue to file the first amended elections, an action
that they would not otherwise have taken, is susceptible of being
remedied and should be remedied. It is not however a remedy that
this court is empowered to give.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 9th day of March 1998.
"D.G.H. Bowman"
J.T.C.C.