Docket: T-1916-14
Citation:
2016 FC 620
Ottawa, Ontario, June 3, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
|
MAX REALTY
SOLUTIONS LTD.
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE DIRECTOR
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS AND REPORTS
ANALYSIS CENTRE
OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This is an appeal brought under section 73.21 of
the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, SC
2000, c 17, [the Act] by Max Realty Solutions Ltd. [Max Realty] challenging a
decision by the Director of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis
Centre of Canada [the Director] by which Max Realty was found to have violated
the Act. Specifically, Max Realty was found to have failed to appoint a
compliance officer, failed to develop and apply up-to-date written compliance
policies and procedures, failed to assess and document risks and failed to
develop and maintain a written, ongoing compliance training program for its
employees. On the strength of these findings, the Director imposed penalties totalling
$27,000.
[2]
Max Realty appealed the above-noted decision to
this Court on November 13, 2009. After a thorough review of the evidence Justice
Cecily Strickland found the Director’s findings of culpability to be
reasonable: see Max Realty Solutions Ltd. v Canada, 2014 FC 656 at para
66, (2014) 458 FTR 160 [Max Realty #1]. However, she quashed the Director’s
finding on the quantum of the penalty for the following reasons:
[76] Here, while the Director found
that the facts did not support a finding that the fifth violation had been
committed and, therefore, withdrew that violation and accordingly imposed a
lesser penalty of $27,000, rather than the $37,500 stated in the Notice of
Violation, there is no evidence that the Director considered Max Realty’s
request that the penalty be revisited. There is also no explanation as to why
this penalty was chosen, what factors were considered in sentencing, whether
the use of a compliance agreement was considered, nor whether the exercise of
the discretion afforded to the Director to impose the penalty proposed, a
lesser penalty or no penalty was considered (subsection 73.15(2)).
[77] The Attorney General acknowledges
that this is the first appeal of this kind and that the Penalties Regulations
did not come into force until December 30, 2008. Further, that subsequent
notices of violations issued in other matters have provided a more fulsome fine
analysis. Also, that there is an internal fine policy which was not provided
to Max Realty, but which has subsequently been distributed to other violators.
The policy apparently contains guidance for fines imposed based on the amount
of harm caused, compliance history, as well as the size of the entity and its
ability to pay.
[78] In Lemire v Canadian Human Rights
Commission, 2014 FCA 18, the Federal Court of Appeal stated at paragraph 102
that, “In truth, the considerations relevant to sentencing may overlap with
those governing the imposition of an administrative penalty since both are
designed to prevent statutorily prohibited conduct.” The difficulty here is
that Max Realty in part, and although not explicitly, is contesting the amount
of the fine. Without any reasons, or even reference to fines imposed in
comparable circumstances, the Court cannot determine if the fine imposed on the
Appellant is reasonable or not.
[79] For that reason, while the
decision as to the commission of the violations is confirmed, the fine is set
aside, and the question of the amount of the fine is remitted back to the
Director and reasons for the amount of any fine subsequently imposed are to be
provided to Max Realty.
[3]
In accordance with Justice Strickland’s
decision, the Director reconsidered the quantum of the penalty and imposed a
revised penalty of $9,000. It is from this decision that the present appeal is
brought.
I.
Analysis
[4]
The Director’s assessment of penalties is
fact-based, discretionary and governed by the Act. The applicable standard of
review is reasonableness: see Canada v Kabul Farms Inc., 2016 FCA 143 at
para 7, [2016] FCJ No 480 (WL) [Kabul Farms] and the standard of review
analysis carried out in Max Realty #1, at para 31 by Justice Strickland.
[5]
Max Realty’s primary argument challenges, once
again, the merits of the Director’s findings of culpability. The reasonableness
of those findings was determined by Justice Strickland when this matter was
last before this Court on appeal and cannot be reargued on this appeal. The principle
of finality in litigation applies and was described by the Supreme Court of
Canada in Danyluk v Ainsworth Technologies Inc., 2001 SCC 44, at
para 18, [2001] 2 SC 460:
18 The law rightly seeks a finality
to litigation. To advance that objective, it requires litigants to put
their best foot forward to establish the truth of their allegations when first
called upon to do so. A litigant, to use the vernacular, is only entitled
to one bite at the cherry. The appellant chose the ESA as her
forum. She lost. An issue, once decided, should not generally be
re-litigated to the benefit of the losing party and the harassment of the
winner. A person should only be vexed once in the same cause.
Duplicative litigation, potential inconsistent results, undue costs, and
inconclusive proceedings are to be avoided.
[6]
In the result, the only issue that this Court
can consider on this second appeal is the reasonableness of the Director’s revised
penalty assessment. Although this issue is raised in the Notice of Appeal, no
corresponding argument has been advanced in Max Realty’s Memorandum of Fact and
Law. The only point advanced in oral argument was that Max Realty cannot
afford to pay a $9,000 penalty. The Court is, thus, largely left to guess
about the substance of Max Realty’s concerns.
[7]
Subsequent to the hearing of this matter, the
Federal Court of Appeal released its decision in Kabul Farms, above.
The deficiencies in the Director’s penalty assessment identified by Justice
David Stratas in that decision appear to me precisely mirrored in the penalty
decision in this case. In upholding the decision of Justice Simon
Fothergill (2015 FC 628), Justice Stratas was critical of the Director’s
failure to justify her penalty calculations. Some of his concerns, given below,
are applicable to this case:
[28] The first step for the Director
was to choose a base amount within the $1 to $100,000 range to reflect the
harm, potential or actual, caused by the particular violation. He chose the
figures of $50,000, $75,000 and $25,000 for the three violations. There is
nothing in his summary of calculation or any of the letters he wrote to tell us
why those figures reflect the actual or potential harm. We may presume that the
Director considered the actual or potential harm to be at the mid-range,
upper-end and lower-end of the range, respectively. But we simply do not know
what evidence or analysis of harm he relied upon. For all we know, the Director
might have selected these numbers in order to raise revenue, an improper
purpose under this legislation. Or he might have plucked the numbers from the
air, equally improper.
[29] Let’s now examine the 20% and the
95% reductions the Director applied to the base amounts. He chose those
percentages to reflect the legislative criteria of compliance history and need
to encourage compliance and not to punish. But we must go further and ask about
the precise percentages—20% and 95%—he chose. Are those acceptable and
defensible percentages based on the evidence before the Director? Was there
evidence capable of underpinning or justifying those numbers?
[30] First, the 20% reduction. Like the
Director’s selection of the base amounts, the Director provided no
justification for the 20% figure. The record before the Director and now before
us on judicial review shows that the respondent reported the issues involved in
this matter to this regulator, suggesting a good degree of commitment to
compliance. This supports a lenient approach to the respondent. But the record
also shows that while the respondent worked with the Director to remedy the
problems identified, it did not do so, showing itself in need of behavioural
modification. This supports a less lenient approach to the respondent. The
evidence goes both ways. So why was 20% chosen, as opposed to 5% or 60%? We
have no idea.
[31] Next, the 95% reduction. Here
again, the Director supplied no justification for it. The record shows that in
determining what was needed to encourage the respondent to comply and not to
punish, the Director took into account that the respondent operated a
relatively small business, not a large, profitable financial institution.
However, again, the respondent’s inability to remedy the problems identified
suggests a need to adjust the respondent’s attitude to compliance. So like the
20% reduction, the evidence goes both ways. So why was 95% chosen? Why not 30%
or 65%? We have no idea.
[32] For all we know, the 20% and 95%
percentages might have been plucked out of the air or adopted for reasons
extraneous to the legislation. Maybe the Director did not investigate the case
enough to gather the evidence necessary to support a decision. We simply cannot
tell. We are left in the dark. In this case, we are a reviewing court that
cannot review.
[8]
Justice Stratas also expressed misgivings about
the Director’s apparent use of a strict and undisclosed guideline containing
formulae for the assessment of the statutory penalties: see paras 40 and 41.
During the hearing of this case, I expressed a similar concern based, in part,
on Justice Fothergill’s discussion in Kabul Farms, above, about the
potential for fettering.
[9]
The Director must be careful not to apply
guidelines as though they have the force of law. The Director’s discretion
cannot be fettered by excluding from consideration evidence bearing on her
statutory mandate. It is worth noting, for example, that the number of full
time employees cannot be used as an unyielding proxy for assessing an ability
to pay. Other relevant factors may be worthy of consideration. The fact that
the Regulations contemplate penalties as low as $1 also implies that the
Director has a wide discretion to take account of a range of relevant
information and cannot apply a formula that would never allow for such a
result.
[10]
Section 73.11 of the Act is also broadly worded.
It emphasises a non-punitive approach that encourages compliance. This, too,
allows for a degree of flexibility in the assessment of penalties and requires
the Director to be mindful of all relevant mitigating and aggravating circumstances.
[11]
Notwithstanding the above observations, I have
nothing before me from Max Realty suggesting that the Director refused to
consider relevant evidence bearing on the calculation of the imposed penalties.
It may be that Max Realty was unaware of the guidelines.
[12]
Despite the lack of submissions from the
Appellant, the Director’s penalty decision must be set aside for the same
reasons given by the Federal Court of Appeal in Kabul Farms, above. That
is, I simply cannot tell how the Director calculated the base figures and
reductions which were applied in this case.
[13]
Notwithstanding the Appellant’s partial success in
this appeal, I am not disposed to award any costs in its favour. The Company
did not retain counsel and its submissions to the Court, although well-meaning,
were unhelpful. I note, as well, that the Respondent was not seeking costs
from the Appellant.