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Citation: 2005TCC34
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Date: 20050107
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Docket: 2003-4429(GST)I
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BETWEEN:
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BRAMPTON VEE WORLD MOTORS LIMITED,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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____________________________________________________________________
Agent for the Appellant: Khalil Hasan
Counsel for the Respondent: LorraineEdinboro
___________________________________________________________________
REASONS FOR ORDER
(Delivered orally from the Bench at
Toronto, Ontario, on November 5,
2004)
McArthur J.
[1] This is a motion by the Respondent
for an Order to prohibit the Appellant's representative, Mr.
Khalil Hasan, from acting as an expert witness, excluding the
purported expert report completed by Mr. Hasan as evidence at
trial and to prohibit him from acting as a witness at the
trial.
[2] The Respondent states that it is
improper for Mr. Hasan to act as a representative and as a
witness, he is not objective as he became an advocate for the
Appellant when he filed the Notice of Objection on its behalf in
April 2003, and continues to act as the Appellant's
representative in this appeal. Further, the purported expert
report is in itself inappropriate as it contains more opinions
with respect to law than matters of expert accounting evidence.
The issue in this case is with respect to a determination of fact
and, therefore, the trial judge is equipped to determine the
outcome of the appeal.
[3] The Appellant has appealed from an
assessment of the Minister of National Revenue whereby the net
worth method was implemented to assess the Appellant for
unremitted goods and services tax of $17,317 and $14,715 in
interest and penalties for the period January 1, 1994 to December
31, 1998. Mr. Hasan, who has represented the Appellant, I believe
for several years with regard to this assessment under appeal,
completed a report with attachments containing over ten pages.
His opening paragraph to the Appellant reads as follows:
In accordance with instructions I have prepared an Expert
Report in respect of the Notice of (Re)Assessment No.
05DP0015671, dated January 23, 2003, issued by Revenue Canada to
the subject corporation for an amount of $32,033.53 which covers
the Goods and Services Tax (the GST) for the period January 1,
1994 to December 31, 1998. I have also agreed to appear as an
Expert Witness in the Tax Court of Canada, the Federal Court of
Appeal, and the Supreme Court of Canada for the report. Copies of
the report will be served to the Respondent and filed with the
Tax Court of Canada shortly.
Mr. Hasan's letterhead states that he has a Bachelor of
Commerce and is a Chartered Accountant with his practice
restricted to taxation. Having read his curriculum vitae and
having heard him in open court, he appears highly qualified in
his accounting field.
[4] The Respondent's motion arises
from a direction of Margeson J. issued after a pre-hearing
conference which reads in part:
The Respondent is directed to bring a motion for an order that
Khalil Hasan, the Appellant's agent, may not represent the
Appellant at the hearing of this appeal and give evidence as an
expert or otherwise testify in the proceeding or file an
expert's report completed by him."
I will first deal with the motion to prohibit the
Appellant's representative to act as an expert witness. I
agree with the Respondent's position and there is an
abundance of case law in support. I need not look further than
Squamish Indian Band v. Canada, [1998] F.C.J. No. 330
(T.D.) where Simpson J. stated:
7. As well, a
prohibition against argument being presented through an expert
witness is well established. In Yewdale v. Insurance
Corp. of British Columbia ... Newbury J ... expressed the law
in the following terms:
Given the special privilege accorded to experts to testify as
to their opinions they must not become advocates. They
must express their opinions as opinions and must leave for the
court the required conclusions of law. In theory at least,
the court 'knows the law' -- in practice it has the
responsibility of finding and applying it. Thus the expert
should express his or her opinion in an objective and impartial
manner, and must not present argument in the guise of expert
evidence."
She goes on to quote McColl J. in SurreyCredit Union
v. Willson, 45 B.C.L.R. (2d) 310 (B.C.S.C.) where it is
stated:
Expert opinions will be rendered inadmissible when they are
nothing more than the reworking of the argument of counsel
participating in the case. Where an argument clothed in the
guise of an expert's opinion is tendered it will be rejected
for what it is.
I find that both of these quotes apply to the present
situation. It is common sense that Mr. Hasan's serious
involvement in obtaining success for the Appellant disqualifies
him from providing expert evidence. He does not have the
objectivity required. His expert evidence can be offered in no
way as evidence but I see no problem in it or parts of it being
included in his closing argument if he chooses to do so, but
dependent of course on the trial judge's decision.
[5] The Respondent's counsel
requested an Order restricting the evidence of Mr. Hasan to
exclude accounting and legal opinions. This is the prerogative of
the trial judge and it would make little sense for me to become
involved. The trial judge is in a much better position to sort
out the relevant from the irrelevant. It would be, of course,
preferable for the Appellant to be represented by counsel who
would examine Mr. Hasan in chief and in re-direct examination
after the cross-examination. I believe the Appellant cannot
afford this luxury and Mr. Hasan wishes to assume both roles.
[6] Generally, it is the custom of
this Court to permit the Appellant's representative to give
evidence in Informal Procedure appeals and I find no
extraordinary circumstances to interfere with that procedure.
Therefore, an Order shall be issued prohibiting Mr. Hasan from
acting as an expert witness in this action. The report prepared
by Mr. Hasan and dated September 15, 2004 is to be excluded from
evidence at the hearing of this appeal. However, Mr. Hasan is not
prohibited from acting as a witness during the hearing and I make
no order as to costs given the divided success in this
motion.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 7th day of January, 2005.
McArthur J.