Date: 20080417
Docket: A-105-08
Citation: 2008 FCA 141
Present: SHARLOW
J.A.
BETWEEN:
eBAY CANADA
LIMITED AND eBAY CS VANCOUVER INC.
Appellants
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL
REVENUE
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER
SHARLOW J.A.
[1]
The
appellants eBay Canada Limited and eBay Cs Vancouver Inc. (collectively, “eBay Canada”) have appealed
the judgment of Justice Hughes dated February 13, 2008 (2008 FC 180). That
judgment authorizes the Minister of National Revenue to require eBay Canada,
under subsection 231.2(3) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th
Supp.), to provide information to the Minister about PowerSellers whose eBay
registration indicates a Canadian address. The required information includes
the names of the PowerSellers, their contact information, and the amount of
their gross annual eBay sales. Before me is a motion by eBay Canada to stay the
execution of the judgment until the disposition of the appeal. For the reasons
that follow, the motion will be dismissed.
Statutory framework
[2]
The
Canadian income tax system is a self-reporting and self-assessing system. It
depends largely upon the honesty and integrity of taxpayers, who are required
to file annual returns in which they estimate their income tax liability (R.
v. McKinlay Transport Ltd., [1990] 1 S.C.R. 627). At the same time the Minister,
who is responsible for the administration and enforcement of the Income Tax
Act, is given significant statutory powers to enable him to identify
incidents of non-compliance and to take corrective action.
[3]
The
powers of the Minister include a number of tools that permit the Minister to compel
the production of information the Minister considers necessary to fulfil his
mandate. One of those tools is found in subsection 231.2(1) of the Income
Tax Act. It reads in relevant part as follows:
231.2 (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Act, the Minister may, subject to subsection (2), for any purpose related to
the administration or enforcement of this Act (including the collection of
any amount payable under this Act by any person), […] by notice served
personally or by registered or certified mail, require that any person
provide, within such reasonable time as is stipulated in the notice,
|
231.2 (1) Malgré les autres dispositions de
la présente loi, le ministre peut, sous réserve du paragraphe (2) et pour
l’application ou l’exécution de la présente loi (y compris la perception d’un
montant payable par une personne en vertu de la présente loi), […] par avis
signifié à personne ou envoyé par courrier recommandé ou certifié, exiger
d’une personne, dans le délai raisonnable que précise l’avis :
|
(a) any information or additional
information, including a return of income or a supplementary return; or
|
a) qu’elle fournisse tout renseignement ou tout renseignement
supplémentaire, y compris une déclaration de revenu ou une déclaration
supplémentaire;
|
(b) any document.
|
b) qu’elle
produise des documents.
|
[4]
The statutory
predecessor to subsection 231.2(1), former subsection 231(3) of the Income
Tax Act, 1970‑71‑72, c. 63, was considered in James Richardson
& Sons Limited v. M.N.R., [1984] 1 S.C.R. 614.
In that case Justice Wilson, writing for the Court, held that former subsection
231(3), properly interpreted, did not permit the Minister to require a broker
to identify its clients so that the Minister could determine whether further
examination of the clients’ tax affairs was warranted.
[5]
A
number of changes were made to the Income Tax Act in response to the James
Richardson case. One of
those changes was the enactment of subsection 231.2(2). It permits the
Minister, in certain circumstances, to compel the production of information
about unnamed persons if the Minister first obtains the approval of a judge
(defined in section 231 to mean a judge of the Federal Court or a judge of the
superior court of the relevant province or territory).
[6]
Typically,
the Minister has recourse to subsection 231.2(2) when he wishes to verify
whether an ascertainable class of persons has complied with the Income Tax
Act, and information relevant to that question is accessible by someone who
has no statutory obligation to provide it to the Minister in the form of an
information return or in the course of the Minister’s examination of the
person’s own tax affairs. Subsection 231.2(2) reads as
follows:
231.2 (2) The Minister shall not impose on
any person (in this section referred to as a “third party”) a requirement
under subsection 231.2(1) to provide information or any document relating to
one or more unnamed persons unless the Minister first obtains the
authorization of a judge under subsection 231.2(3).
|
231.2 (2)
Le ministre ne peut exiger de quiconque — appelé « tiers » au présent article
— la fourniture de renseignements ou production de documents prévue au
paragraphe (1) concernant une ou plusieurs personnes non désignées nommément,
sans y être au préalable autorisé par un juge en vertu du paragraphe (3).
|
[7]
Under
subsection 231.2(2), the target of the ex parte application – the person
who will have a legal obligation to comply with the requirement if judicial
authorization is granted – is referred to as the “third party”. The “unnamed
persons” are those whose tax affairs may be examined by the Minister if and when
the unnamed persons are identified.
[8]
The
procedure to be followed where the Minister wishes to seek judicial
authorization to compel the production of information about unnamed persons is
set out in subsections 231.2(3) to (6). If the application is successful and the
Minister acts on the authorization, the third party has an opportunity to apply
to the same judge, or a judge of the same court, for a review of the authorization.
That review may result in the authorization being cancelled, confirmed or varied.
Subsections 231.2(3) to (6) read as follows:
231.2 (3) On ex parte
application by the Minister, a judge may, subject to such conditions as the
judge considers appropriate, authorize the Minister to impose on a third
party a requirement under subsection 231.2(1) relating to an unnamed person
or more than one unnamed person (in this section referred to as the “group”)
where the judge is satisfied by information on oath that
|
231.2 (3)
Sur requête ex parte du ministre, un juge peut,
aux conditions qu’il estime indiquées, autoriser le ministre à exiger d’un
tiers la fourniture de renseignements ou production de documents prévue au
paragraphe (1) concernant une personne non désignée nommément ou plus d’une
personne non désignée nommément — appelée « groupe » au présent article —,
s’il est convaincu, sur dénonciation sous serment, de ce qui suit :
|
(a) the person or group is ascertainable; and
|
a) cette
personne ou ce groupe est identifiable;
|
(b) the requirement is made to verify compliance
by the person or persons in the group with any duty or obligation under this
Act.
|
b) la
fourniture ou la production est exigée pour vérifier si cette personne ou les
personnes de ce groupe ont respecté quelque devoir ou obligation prévu par la
présente loi.
|
(4) Where an authorization is granted under
subsection 231.2(3), it shall be served together with the notice referred to
in subsection 231.2(1).
|
(4)
L’autorisation accordée en vertu du paragraphe (3) doit être jointe à l’avis
visé au paragraphe (1).
|
(5) Where an authorization
is granted under subsection 231.2(3), a third party on whom a notice is
served under subsection 231.2(1) may, within 15 days after the service of the
notice, apply to the judge who granted the authorization or, where the judge
is unable to act, to another judge of the same court for a review of the
authorization.
|
(5) Le
tiers à qui un avis est signifié ou envoyé conformément au paragraphe (1)
peut, dans les 15 jours suivant la date de signification ou d’envoi, demander
au juge qui a accordé l’autorisation prévue au paragraphe (3) ou, en cas
d’incapacité de ce juge, à un autre juge du même tribunal de réviser
l’autorisation.
|
(6) On hearing an application under
subsection 231.2(5), a judge may cancel the authorization previously granted
if the judge is not then satisfied that the conditions in paragraphs
231.2(3)(a) and 231.2(3)(b) have been met and the judge may
confirm or vary the authorization if the judge is satisfied that those
conditions have been met.
|
(6) À
l’audition de la requête prévue au paragraphe (5), le juge peut annuler
l’autorisation accordée antérieurement s’il n’est pas convaincu de
l’existence des conditions prévues aux alinéas (3)a) et b). Il
peut la confirmer ou la modifier s’il est convaincu de leur existence.
|
[9]
Where
an ex parte application under subsection 231.2(3) is made to a judge of
the Federal Court and granted, the judicial authorization takes the form of a
judgment. If the third party seeks a review of the authorization, there will be
a further judgment that either cancels, confirms or varies the authorization. A
judgment cancelling, confirming or varying the authorization may be appealed to
this Court pursuant to section 27 of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. F-7.
[10]
Pursuant
to subsection 238(1) of the Income Tax Act, it is an offence to fail to
comply with a section 231.2 requirement. A conviction for that offence may
result in a fine or imprisonment or both. Also, section 231.7 provides that if
a person fails to comply with a section 231.2 requirement, the Minister may
seek a compliance order. Failure to obey a compliance order may result in a
penalty for contempt of court.
Facts
[11]
The
appellant eBay Canada Limited is a Canadian corporation based in Toronto, Ontario. It is wholly
owned by a Swiss corporation, eBay International AG, which is a wholly owned
subsidiary of eBay Inc., a United States corporation with a head office in San Jose, California.
[12]
The
appellant eBay CS Vancouver Inc. is a Canadian corporation based in Burnaby, British Columbia. It is a wholly
owned subsidiary of eBay Inc.
[13]
The
eBay group of corporations operates an online platform that enables persons to
buy and sell items via the internet. It also operates a system known as
“PayPal” which facilities payments from buyers to sellers. None of the eBay
corporations are parties to sales made through eBay. They merely provide the
marketplace, the means by which buyers and sellers can get together and
complete sales transactions.
[14]
The
eBay marketplace operates internationally. The operation of the eBay
marketplace outside the United States is run through eBay International AG. Certain aspects of the operation
of the eBay marketplace in Canada are run through eBay Canada. It is not
necessary at this point to describe how the work involved in operating the eBay
marketplace is divided between eBay Inc., eBay International AG, eBay Canada
Limited, and eBay CS Vancouver Inc. It is sufficient to say that the
information the Minister wishes to obtain from eBay Canada can be found in
electronic form in servers located in the United States, in the offices
of eBay Inc. It is also undisputed that the information in question is
accessible by eBay Canada.
[15]
A
person who makes a certain volume of monthly sales through eBay, and who meets
certain other conditions, may qualify as a “PowerSeller”. A PowerSeller is
entitled to receive certain advantages from eBay, such as prioritized support
services and access to special promotions. There are five levels of PowerSeller
status, ranging from monthly sales of US $1,000 to monthly sales of US $150,000.
[16]
On
October 25, 2006, the Minister made an ex parte application to the
Federal Court (T-1868-06) under subsection 231.2(3) of the Income Tax Act,
seeking an order authorizing the Minister to require eBay Canada to provide:
. . . the following information and documents for any person
(including individual, corporation and joint venture) who qualified for the
PowerSeller status under eBay’s PowerSeller program in Canada at any time
during the two calendar years 2004 and 2005:
(a)
account information – full name,
userid, mailing address, billing address, telephone number, fax number and
email address, and
(b)
merchandise sales information –
gross annual sales.
|
Using the terminology of subsection 231.2(3),
eBay Canada is the “third party” and the persons who qualified for PowerSeller
status under the PowerSeller program in Canada in 2004 and 2005
are the “unnamed persons”.
[17]
The
Minister’s ex parte application was supported by the affidavit of a tax
official stating that the information was being sought in order to enable the
Minister to determine whether the specified PowerSellers had complied with
their obligations under the Income Tax Act. On November 6, 2006, Justice
Hughes granted the order requested by the Minister except that he added the
words “having a Canadian address according to your records”. Thus, the Minister
was authorized to require eBay Canada to provide:
. . . the following information and documents for any person having
a Canadian address according to your records (including individual,
corporation and joint venture) who qualified for the PowerSeller status under
eBay’s PowerSeller program in Canada at any time during the two calendar
years 2004 and 2005:
(c)
account information – full name,
userid, mailing address, billing address, telephone number, fax number and
email address, and
(d)
merchandise sales information –
gross annual sales.
|
[18]
On
November 15, 2006, the Minister served eBay Canada with the
requirements and, pursuant to subsection 231.2(4), a copy of the authorization
granted by Justice Hughes. That gave eBay Canada the right to
apply to Justice Hughes under subsection 231.2(5) for a review of the
authorization.
[19]
On
November 30, 2006, eBay Canada exercised that right by filing an originating application
(T-2124-06). Justice Hughes heard oral evidence on that application on
September 13, 2007. On September 18, 2007, he issued reasons and a partial
judgment in which he amended his November 6, 2006 judgment to replace the words
“having a Canadian address according to your records” with the words
“registered as having a Canadian address”. That change was based on the
evidence of eBay that the information sought by the Minister was not contained
in records belonging to eBay Canada, but in records belonging to eBay Inc.
[20]
The
September 18, 2007 partial judgment also required the parties to make further
submissions on a point of law that was then under consideration in this Court
in Le Ministre du Revenu National c. Chambre Immobilière du Grand Montréal,
(A-435-06). Judgment was rendered in that case on November 2, 2007 (2007 FCA
346). Leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada has been sought (Supreme Court of Canada
File
32404).
[21]
In
due course the parties made their submissions to Justice Hughes on the Chambre
Immobilière du Grand Montréal case. On February 13, 2008, Justice Hughes
determined that nothing in that decision required any change to his previous
judgment. Therefore, he confirmed his November 6, 2006 authorization, subject
to the change ordered on September 18, 2007. Thus, by virtue of the judgment
of Justice Hughes dated February 13, 2008, the Minister is authorized to
require eBay Canada to provide:
. . . the following information and documents for any person registered
as having a Canadian address (including individual, corporation and joint
venture) who qualified for the PowerSeller status under eBay’s PowerSeller
program in Canada at any time during the two calendar years 2004 and 2005:
(e)
account information – full name,
userid, mailing address, billing address, telephone number, fax number and
email address, and
(f)
merchandise sales information –
gross annual sales.
|
[22]
On
February 22, 2008, the Minister served eBay Canada with a letter stating that
eBay Canada was required,
within 45 days, to provide the information referred to in the judgment.
[23]
On
March 7, 2008, eBay Canada appealed the February 13, 2008 judgment. Before me is a motion by
eBay Canada for an order
staying the execution of that judgment pending the disposition of the appeal.
[24]
The
judgment under appeal was executed on February 22, 2008 when the Minister
served eBay Canada with the requirement. It follows that it is now too late to make
an order staying the execution of the judgment. What eBay Canada is actually
seeking is an order staying the judgment itself. That would suspend the legal
obligation of eBay Canada to comply with the Minister’s requirement. As a consequence, the
Minister would be precluded from relying on the judgment as a basis for taking
enforcement action against eBay Canada in relation to the section 231.2 requirement
until the disposition of the appeal. I have dealt with the motion on that
basis.
[25]
The
requirement letter states that eBay Canada was to provide the required information within
45 days (that is, within 45 days of February 22, 2008). Although both parties
took reasonable steps to have this motion dealt with quickly, the 45 day period
had expired by the time eBay Canada’s motion was heard. However, I was informed at the hearing that
the Minister had consented to a postponement of the deadline pending the disposition
of this motion.
Discussion
[26]
The parties agree that a motion to stay a judgment
pending appeal should be determined on the basis of the principles in RJR –
MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General),
[1994] 1 S.C.R. 311. Therefore, it is necessary to consider whether eBay Canada has
an arguable case on appeal, whether eBay Canada would suffer irreparable harm
if the stay is not granted and its appeal succeeds, and whether the balance of
convenience lies with eBay Canada or the
Minister.
Arguable case
[27]
The Minister concedes that eBay Canada has
an arguable case on appeal. In my view, that concession is appropriate given
the low bar for the first branch of the RJR – MacDonald test.
Irreparable Harm
[28]
The
motion of eBay Canada for a stay of the judgment pending appeal rests primarily on the
irreparable harm branch of the RJR – MacDonald test. According to RJR
– MacDonald, irreparable harm is harm that cannot be quantified in monetary
terms or that cannot be cured.
[29]
It
is argued for eBay Canada that the disclosure of the information in issue would necessarily
result in irreparable harm to eBay Canada because the disclosure would render eBay
Canada’s appeal moot or futile.
In support of its argument, eBay Canada cites Bisaillon v. Canada, (1999) 251
N.R. 225, [2000] 1 C.T.C. 179, 99 D.T.C. 5517 (F.C.A.), Bining v. Canada, 2003 FCA 286,
and Rousseau v. Wyndowe, 2006 FCA 422.
[30]
I
summarize the Bisaillon case as follows. A corporation, Hypnat Ltée,
owed taxes of $230,000. Another corporation, Hypnat Ltée, Courtier, owed Hypnat
Ltée a debt of approximately $1.6 million, which the Minister had attached to
secure the tax debt of Hypnat Ltée. The Minister wished to determine whether Hypnat
Ltée, Courtier had paid its debt to Hypnat Ltée in contravention of the
attachment. Hypnat Ltée was a customer of Laurentian Bank. The Minister served
Laurentian Bank with a requirement under subsection 231.2(1) to provide
information about Hypnat Ltée, Courtier. Mr. Bisaillon, Hypnat Ltée, and Hypnat
Ltée, Courtier (not Laurentian Bank) commenced an application in the Federal
Court challenging the validity of the requirement, and sought an interlocutory
order staying the requirement pending the determination of its application for
judicial review. That motion was dismissed. The applicants appealed to this
Court, and moved for an order staying the requirement pending the determination
of the appeal. On the question of irreparable harm, the Court concluded that if
the stay were not granted and the information was disclosed, the appeal would
be rendered moot or futile, causing irreparable harm to the applicants.
However, the irreparable harm to the applicants was the result of the
disclosure of information relating to their own affairs. The Court did not decide,
and was not required to consider, whether the target of the requirement,
Laurentian Bank, would suffer irreparable harm by being compelled to produce
information about the applicants.
[31]
In
Bining, the Minister had served Mr. Bining with a requirement under subsection
232.2 (1) to provide information about his own tax affairs. Mr. Bining
commenced an application in the Federal Court for judicial review of that
requirement, and moved for a staying pending the determination of that
application. The Federal Court dismissed his motion for a stay. Mr. Bining
appealed that decision to this Court, and moved for a stay of the requirement
pending appeal. Again, irreparable harm was found because the disclosure of the
information would render the appeal moot, but in the context of information
related to Mr. Bining’s own affairs, not the affairs of some other person.
[32]
Rousseau v. Wyndowe involves an analogous situation. Dr. Wyndowe
had been ordered by the Federal Court to disclose to Mr. Rousseau certain notes
he made while conducting a medical examination of Mr. Rousseau for insurance
purposes. Dr. Wyndowe’s application for a stay of the judgment pending appeal
was granted because the disclosure of his notes would render his appeal moot.
However, that conclusion was made in the context of a situation where, if Dr.
Wyndowe’s appeal were well founded, his own legal rights would be irreparably
infringed by the disclosure.
[33]
It
is argued for eBay Canada that these cases stand for the principle that a person who is
required by a court order to disclose information about another person, and
seeks a stay of that judgment pending appeal, will always suffer irreparable
harm if the stay is not granted. I do not accept that argument. I read these
cases as examples of situations in which persons may suffer irreparable harm if
they are denied a stay pending appeal of a judgment requiring them to disclose
or submit to the disclosure of information about their own affairs to someone
whose interest in the information is adverse to their own. In this case, the
relevant question is whether eBay Canada would suffer irreparable harm if it is
now compelled to provide the Minister with the information the Minister seeks about
PowerSellers, and it is later determined that the Minister was not entitled to require
eBay Canada to provide that information.
[34]
It
is argued for eBay Canada that once information about PowerSellers is disclosed to the
Minister, it cannot be undisclosed. I agree that the disclosure of information is
an act that cannot be reversed. In response to that point, the Minister argues that
it is open to eBay Canada to seek, as one of the remedies on appeal, an order that would
prevent the Minister from using the disclosed information. The difficulty with
that submission is that it is not certain that such an order would be granted if
the appeal is successful. And even if such an order is granted, it would be ineffective
to the extent that the Minister uses the disclosed information before the
disposition of the appeal.
[35]
However,
the relevant question is whether eBay Canada would suffer irreparable harm from the disclosure,
which first requires a determination that there will be some harm. The answer
to that question depends on what the Minister is likely to do with the
information if it is disclosed. It would appear that the Minister intends to
use the information to retrieve and review the 2004 and 2005 income tax returns
of the PowerSellers whose identities are disclosed. I anticipate that the
Minister would then make whatever enquiries may be required to determine
whether the PowerSellers have unreported income from their eBay sales, and if
so he would reassess them accordingly (putting aside for the moment the
question that some of the tax returns might be statute barred by the time the
Minister is in a position to reassess).
[36]
The
record contains no evidence that any steps the Minister may take to verify the
PowerSellers’ compliance with the Income Tax Act , or to assess any
PowerSellers who may not have complied, will cause any harm to eBay Canada,
much less harm that is irreparable.
[37]
The
record contains some material from which it could be inferred that eBay Canada has contractual
obligations to eBay Inc. not to disclose certain confidential information
without the consent of eBay Inc. It is not clear that the information sought by
the Minister about PowerSellers is confidential information as contemplated in
those contracts. Even if the information about PowerSellers is confidential
information under those contracts, it is not clear that eBay Canada’s obligation not
to disclose confidential information would or could be breached by the
disclosure of information pursuant to a court order (even a court order that is
under appeal). And, even if such a breach would or could result from such a
disclosure, there is no evidence that any harm would come to eBay Canada as a result.
[38]
I
conclude that the eBay Canada has not established that it will suffer any harm from being
compelled to disclose the information the Minister is seeking about
PowerSellers. That is a sufficient basis for dismissing the motion of eBay Canada for a stay.
Balance of Convenience
[39]
On
the question of the third branch of the RJR – MacDonald test, the
Minister argues that the balance of convenience favours the Minister because
some of the information sought relates to the 2004 taxation year, and it may be
assumed that most tax returns for that year will become statute barred in 2008
under s. 152(4) of the Income Tax Act.. Some of those returns may
already be statute barred, and with each day there is a risk that others will
become statute barred. I agree with the Minister that this is a relevant
consideration in cases such as this. I would also note that the Minister’s
interest in fulfilling his mandate to determine whether PowerSellers have met
their statutory obligations coincides with the public interest in the integrity
of the Canadian income tax system. In the circumstances of this case, that is
a consideration that outweighs any interest eBay Canada may have in not
disclosing information about PowerSellers.
Indemnity if the stay is
granted
[40]
The
Minister has submitted that if the stay is granted, it should be subject to the
condition that eBay Canada indemnify the Minister for any tax revenue lost to the Crown
because of the delay in disclosing the information in issue. I am aware of no
case in which such a condition has been imposed in the context of a dispute as
to the scope of the Minister’s statutory authority to compel a third party to
produce information about unnamed persons. I find it difficult to imagine a
situation in which it would be reasonable to impose that burden on a third
party. In this case, if I had decided to grant the stay, I would not have
imposed such a condition on eBay Canada.
Conclusion
[41]
The
motion will be dismissed. Costs of the motion will be costs in the cause.
“K. Sharlow”