
Date: 19991130
Docket: A-638-97
CORAM: STONE, J.A.
ISAAC,
J.A. SEXTON, J.A.
BETWEEN:
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
-and-
THE MARITIME
LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY
Appellant
Respondent
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Delivered from the bench at Halifax,
Nova Scotia
on Tuesday,
November 30, 1999)
STONE. J.A.
[1] The issue in
this appeal is whether the Tax Court Judge 1 erred in deciding that the
"cash value" of two Registered Retirement Savings Plan administered by the respondent were not amenable to seizure by the Minister
of National Revenue
pursuant to a "requirement" issued
under subsection 224(1) of the Income Tax Act.
1 The Judgment
is reported as The Maritime
Life Assurance Company v. Her Majesty the
Queen,
97 DTC 1321; [1997] 3 C.T.C. 2561
[2] The Registered Retirement Savings Plans included insurance policies to each of which were attached an endorsement to the effect
that the right to surrender the "registered
contract"
for
its "cash value may not be exercised". The policies themselves each contained a clause
permitting the debtor taxpayer
to
be paid the "cash value" upon either a written or simple request sent to the respondent.
[3] We are of the view that the Tax Court Judge did not err in deciding
as
he did. At the
time the subsection 224(1) requirements were served on the respondent, the two plans were
fully in existence and no request
had
been received by the respondent to pay to the two taxpayers the cash value of their respective policies. If, apart from the prohibition against payment out of the "cash value" contained in the endorsements attached to the policies, such request had been made of the respondent
or
the respondent had been otherwise instructed by the debtor taxpayers
to
pay out the cash value,
then the respondent would have become
"liable to make a payment" to each of the taxpayers. This, it seems to us, is the clear effect of
this Court's decision
in the leading case of lvational Trust Co. v. Canada 2 •
[4] In that case the monies that were the subject of the subsection 224(1) requirement were on deposit in the financial institution after a GIC in a self-administered Registered Retirement Savings
Plan
had matured and the debtor
taxpayer had requested that the plan be
collapsed and the monies paid over to him directly. In these circumstances, the Court
determined that the financial institution was a person "liable
to make a payment". As Isaac,
C.J. put it in paragraphs 56 and 57 of the reported decision:
56.
The tax
debtor's instructions were clear. After the GIC had matured, he wished to have the net proceeds of the RRSP for his owi:t use and enjoyment. With deference
to the Tax Court Judge,
I am unable to discern any ambiguity or contradiction in those instructions.
57. The tax debtor had a contractual right, enforceable in law, to have the net
proceeds paid to him.
The
respondent had. a corresponding contractual obligation to make the payment requested. In my respectful view, this legal obligation was sufficient to bring the respondent within the scope of the phrase
"a person liable to make a payment" to the tax debtor within the meaning of
subsection 224(1).
·
[5] We are unable to agree that the present case is governed
by the decision of the Court
of Appeal for Alberta in Hutterian Brethren Church of Smoky Lake et al. v. Provincial Treasurer of Alberta et al.,3 in which it was decided that the subsection
224(1) requirement, in and of itself,
effected a "request" such as rendered
the financial institution "liable to make a payment" to the debtor taxpayer of the monies held by it under certificates of deposit.
In that case the terms of the deposit agreements were such that the depositor
was entitled to withdraw the monies "at
any time" subject
to a short period of delay in payment in the case of
terms exceeding one year.
That case, unlike the present one, was not concerned with a
prohibition such as that contained
in the endorsements attached to the policies,
viz:
At the request of the Owner and in order
that this contract
may be registered as a Retirement Savings Plan under the Income Tax Act the contract
is hereby modified in the following
respects:
1. The right to surrender
the registered contract
for its cash value may not
be exercised.
[6] For the foregoing reasons
the appeal will be dismissed
with costs.
"A.J. Stone"
J.A.
(
FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: A-638-97
STYLE OF CAUSE:
Her Majesty the Queen v.
The Maritime Life Assurance Company
PLACE OF HEARING: Halifax,
N.S.
DATE OF HEARING: November 30, 1999
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
OF
THE COURT BY: Stone,
J.A. DATED: November 30, 1999
APPEARANCES:
Bruce Russell
for the Appellant
E. Harris for the Respondent
SOLICITORS OF RECORD: Morris Rosenberg
Deputy Attorney General
of
Canada
Ottawa, ON for
the
Appellant
Daley, Black &
Moreira
Halifax,
NS
for
the
Respondent