Desjardins
J.A.
(Chevalier
D.J.
concurring):-The
respondent
(the
"Bank”)
sued
the
appellant
(the
"Crown”)
under
article
1140
of
the
Civil
Code
of
Lower
Canada,
(the
"C.C.L.C.")
for
recovery
of
an
amount
of
$293,869.58
paid
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
("Revenue
Canada”)
following
a
permanent
mandatory
injunction
issued
against
the
bank
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
on
June
30,
1987.
Judgment
in
the
Trial
Division
of
this
Court
was
rendered
in
favour
of
the
bank
(Bank
of
Montreal
v.
M.N.R.,
[1994]
1
C.T.C.
377,
94
D.T.C.
6309).
The
Crown
has
appealed.
The
circumstances
of
this
case
are
rather
unusual.
The
Facts
From
1978
until
he
was
fired
in
October
1984,
an
employee
of
the
bank,
Philippe
Leong,
Chief
Foreign
Currency
Trader
for
its
eastern
region,
made
large
personal
profits
by
using
funds
of
the
bank
to
speculate
in
foreign
currency.
He
operated
in
two
ways:
he
made
transactions
for
the
account
of
a
client
without
the
client’s
knowledge,
and
made
in
fact
for
his
Own
account
using
the
bank’s
funds;
he
also
made
transactions
for
two
of
the
bank’s
clients
on
the
secret
condition
that
he
receive
one
half
of
any
trading
profits.
Shortly
after
firing
him,
the
bank
instituted
an
action
against
Mr.
Leong
in
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
claiming,
among
other
things,
the
payment
to
it
of
$777,650
plus
interest
and
a
declaration
that
a
certificate
of
deposit
in
the
amount
of
$230,210.98
was
its
property.
Mr.
Leong
was
assessed
by
Revenue
Canada
in
December
1984
for
the
taxation
years
1980,
1981,
1982
and
1983
for
income
tax
in
the
amount
of
$340,059.90
with
interest
on
the
sum
of
$215,829.07
from
December
13,
1984.
Two
houses,
a
Porsche
and
an
Oldsmobile
Cutlass
belonging
to
Mr.
Leong
were
immediately
seized
under
orders
issued
at
the
request
of
Revenue
Canada.
Revenue
Canada
also
obtained
an
interim
garnishment
order
to
permit
the
attachment
of
funds
owing
to
Mr.
Leong
from
Investors
Group
Trust
G.
Ltd.
which
administered
an
employee
share
ownership
program
for
the
bank.
In
addition,
it
obtained
an
interim
garnishment
order
to
attach
the
funds
in
a
bank
account
and
the
moneys
allegedly
due
by
the
bank
to
Mr.
Leong
in
a
certificate
of
deposit
in
U.S.
funds
held
by
the
bank.
The
bank
claimed
it
owed
nothing
to
Mr.
Leong.
The
hearing
to
obtain
a
final
order
of
garnishment
was
adjourned
sine
die.
The
action
instituted
by
the
bank
against
Mr.
Leong
was
rejected
both
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
and
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
Quebec.
Shortly
thereafter,
Mr.
Leong
brought
an
application
in
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec.
for
an
injunction
to
compel
the
bank
to
pay
to
Revenue
Canada
the
moneys
represented
by
the
certificate
of
deposit
in
U.S.
funds
held
by
the
bank
and
to
his
lawyers.
On
or
about
June
23,
1987,
the
bank
served
Revenue
Canada
with
an
affidavit
in
the
garnishment
proceedings
informing
it
of
its
intention
to
seek
leave
to
appeal
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
Quebec
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
within
the
appropriate
time
period.
On
or
about
June
26,
1987,
the
bank
filed
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
an
application
for
leave
to
appeal.
The
application
by
Revenue
Canada
for
a
garnishment
order
was
adjourned
on
June
26,
1987.
On
June
30,
1987,
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec,
presided
by
Trudeau
J.,
issued
a
permanent
injunction
ordering
the
bank
to
convert
the
certificate
of
deposit
which
was
in
the
name
of
Mr.
Leong
into
Canadian
funds,
and
to
pay
the
moneys
to
Revenue
Canada
in
satisfaction
of
the
income
tax
debt
of
Mr.
Leong.
The
order
was
made
subject
to
the
proviso
that
Mr.
Leong
be
given
in
return
a
discharge
of
the
order
of
seizure
held
by
Revenue
Canada
on
the
certificate
of
deposit.
In
its
reasons
for
granting
the
injunction,
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
indicated
that
the
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
as
between
Mr.
Leong
and
the
bank,
had
now
become
final
and
executory
and
that
the
Court
of
Appeal
had
confirmed
the
decision
of
the
Superior
Court
which
had
found
that
no
evidence
had
established
that
the
funds
used
to
buy
the
certificates
belonged
to
the
bank.
It
noted,
moreover,
that
the
filing
of
the
leave
application
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
had
been
done
after
the
expiry
of
sixty
days
from
the
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Appeal.
The
bank
did
not
appeal
the
order
of
Trudeau
J.
nor
did
it
seek,
in
any
way,
a
stay
of
execution
of
that
order.
In
a
telephone
conversation
on
July
3,
1987,
counsel
for
the
bank
and
Revenue
Canada
discussed
the
possibility
of
the
bank
paying
under
protest
the
moneys
represented
by
the
certificate
of
deposit
to
Revenue
Canada
on
account
of
the
income
tax
debt
of
Mr.
Leong.
They
further
discussed
the
possibility
of
Revenue
Canada
granting
conditional
discharges
of
its
orders
of
seizure.
Counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
made
no
commitment
to
give
conditional
discharges
in
the
event
the
bank
would
pay
the
moneys
under
protest.
What
then
happened
is
the
following.
During
the
course
of
a
meeting
in
the
morning
of
July
8,
1987,
a
peremptory
demand
for
payment
in
the
amount
of
$352,985.28
was
given
to
the
bank
by
Revenue
Canada.
This
sum
represented
taxes,
penalties
and
interest
owed
by
Mr.
Leong
to
Revenue
Canada
as
of
that
date.
Counsel
for
the
bank
gave
the
representative
of
Revenue
Canada
a
cheque
in
the
amount
of
$353,898.52
which
included
legal
fees
and
disbursements
payable
by
Mr.
Leong
to
Revenue
Canada.
Except
for
the
amount
of
$59,728.94,
the
money
paid
by
the
bank
came
entirely
from
the
profits
made
by
Mr.
Leong
by
speculating
in
foreign
currencies
in
the
course
of
his
employment.
Counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
provided
counsel
for
the
bank
with
an
abandonment
of
the
interim
garnishment
order
in
relation
to
the
certificate
and
advised
counsel
for
Mr.
Leong
that
he
could
dispose
of
the
sum
of
$20,000
in
his
trust
which
represented
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
the
Porsche.
On
his
return
to
his
office
that
morning,
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
signed
and
filed
with
the
Registry
of
this
Court
a
discharge
of
the
order
of
seizure
of
the
house
which
Mr.
Leong
had
previously
sold
to
his
wife.
On
account
of
a
clerical
error,
an
amended
discharge
was
filed
the
next
day.
At
approximately
1:24
p.m.
that
afternoon
on
July
8.
1987,
a
bailiff
served
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
with
a
letter
from
counsel
for
the
bank.
The
letter
had
been
given
to
the
bailiff
for
service
on
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
prior
to
the
meeting
held
that
morning.
The
letter
delivered
in
the
afternoon
stated
in
part:
Pursuant
to
the
judgment
of
June
30,
1987
of
The
Honourable
Mr.
Justice
Paul
Trudeau
of
the
Quebec
Superior
Court
we
have
today
provided
you
with
a
Bank
of
Montreal
official
cheque
dated
July,
8,
1987
and
payable
to
Ministere
du
revenu
official
in
the
amount
of
$353,598.52.
Please
be
advised
that
while
the
bank
is
respecting
the
judgment
it
makes
this
payment
to
the
Department
under
protest.
It
was
further
indicated
that
the
bank
would
seek
reimbursement
of
the
moneys
paid
in
the
event
the
bank
would
be
successful
in
its
appeal
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
Revenue
Canada
wrote
back
the
following
answer
which
was
sent
by
ordinary
mail
and
was
received
by
the
bank
on
July
10,
1987:
In
the
afternoon
of
July
8,
1987,
we
were
served
with
your
letter
to
my
attention,
in
which
the
bank
claims
that
it
paid
the
above-
mentioned
amounts
of
$353,598.52
under
protest,
even
though
it
did
not
appeal
Mr.
Justice
Trudeau’s
judgment
of
June
30,
1987,
and
that
it
will
claim
reimbursement
from
Her
Majesty
in
the
event
that
the
Supreme
Court
declares
that
the
bank
was
the
owner
of
a
certain
certificate
of
deposit.
Be
informed
that
any
claim
by
the
bank
will
be
vigorously
contested.
Even
if
the
Supreme
Court
eventually
grants
the
appeal
of
the
bank,
we
deny
that
there
is
any
basis
for
any
claim
to
be
reimbursed.
Not
only
your
letter
of
protest
has
been
served
after
payment,
but
also,
in
deciding
not
to
appeal
Mr.
Trudeau’s
judgment,
it
is
absolutely
clear
that
the
bank
has
waived
and
renounced
to
any
claim
for
reimbursement
that
it
could
possibly
have
against
the
Federal
Crown.
Counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
then
proceeded
to
give
release
without
informing
the
bank
of
all
of
the
securities
it
held
on
Mr.
Leong’s
assets.
On
September
28,
1989,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
allowed
the
appeal
by
the
bank.
(See
Bank
of
Montreal
v.
Kuet
Leong,
[1989)
2
S.C.R.
429,
at
page
435ff.)
It
held
that,
with
respect
to
the
first
group
of
transactions,
namely
those
made
by
Mr.
Leong
for
the
account
of
a
client
without
the
client’s
knowledge
and
made
in
fact
for
his
own
account
us
the
bank’s
money,
Mr.
Leong
was
in
the
position
of
a
possessor
in
bad
faith
(art.
411
of
the
C.C.L.C.)
and
was
obligated
to
remit
to
the
bank
not
on],
the
capital
of
the
funds
which
he
used,
but
also
any
increase
in
value
and
fruits
thereof.
Mr.
Leong,
it
said.
appropriated
to
himself
funds
of
the
appellant
fraudulently
and
without
colour
of
right
and
had
no
legal
title
to
the
benefits
of
his
fraud.
With
respect
to
the
second
type
of
transactions
namely
those
made
under
private
arrangements
with
two
of
the
bank’s
clients,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held
that
Mr.
Leong
had
acted
in
a
representative
capacity
for
the
bank
carrying
on
its
business.
It
applied
the
principle
set
forth
in
article
1713
of
the
C.C.L.C.
whereby
the
mandatory
is
bound
to
render
an
account
of
his
administration
and
to
deliver
and
pay
over
all
that
he
has
received
under
the
authority
of
the
mandate,
even
if
it
were
not
due.
This
obligation,
it
added,
gave
effect
to
a
much
broader
policy
of
the
civil
law
aiming
at
the
protection
of
honesty
and
good
faith
in
the
execution
of
contracts.
The
bank
then
kept
to
its
word.
As
stated
in
its
letter
of
July
8,
1987,
it
sued
Revenue
Canada
for
recovery
of
the
moneys
it
paid
pursuant
to
the
permanent
mandatory
injunction
pronounced
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
at
the
request
of
Mr.
Leong
whose
assets
had
been
completely
frozen
by
Revenue
Canada.
The
judgment
under
appeal
The
trial
judge
found
as
a
fact
that
the
bank
had
paid
under
protest
the
moneys
resulting
from
the
certificate
of
deposit
so
as
to
pay
the
income
tax
debt
of
Mr.
Leong
and
that
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
knew
or
ought
to
have
known
this
prior
to
the
meeting
of
July
8,
1987.
"In
any
event",
she
said,
"it
is
clear
beyond
any
question
that
counsel
for
the
Department
knew
at
1:24
p.m.
on
July
8,
1987,
the
date
and
time
of
the
service
of
the
letter
from
counsel
for
the
bank,
that
the
payment
was
made
under
protest
and
nevertheless
chose
to
release
the
security
held
by
the
Department.
(See
Bank
of
Montreal
v.
M.N.R.,
supra,
page
381
(D.T.C.
6312).)
She
applied
principles
enunciated
in
The
Queen
v.
Premier
Mouton
Products
Inc.,
[1961]
S.C.R.
361,
[1961]
C.T.C.
160,
61
D.T.C.
1105,
and
concluded
that
the
bank
had
intended
to
keep
alive
its
right
to
recover
the
sum
paid
to
Revenue
Canada.
Since
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
Kuet
Leong
NG
case
had
determined
that
the
bank
was
the
owner
of
the
funds
gained
illegally
by
Mr.
Leong,
the
bank
was
entitled
to
recovery
of
the
moneys.
She
held
alternatively
that
the
bank
never
paid
the
moneys
voluntarily
or
with
a
view
to
relinquishing
its
right
to
dispute
its
ownership
of
the
funds
before
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
and
was,
for
these
reasons
also,
entitled
to
recovery.
She
concluded
that
no
error
of
fact
or
law
had
been
committed
by
the
bank
in
making
the
payment
to
Revenue
Canada.
Hence,
under
the
reasoning
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Premier
Mouton
Products
Inc.,
articles
1047
and
1048
of
the
C.C.L.C.
did
not
apply.
Analysis
The
trial
judge
manifestly
erred
on
the
facts
when
she
made
the
finding
"that
the
income
taxes
owed
to
the
Department
by
Mr.
Leong
were
paid
by
the
bank
under
protest
and
that
counsel
for
the
Department
knew
or
ought
to
have
known
this
prior
to
the
meeting
on
July
8,
1987".
(See
Bank
of
Montreal
v.
M.N.R.,
supra,
at
page
381
(D.T.C.
6311-12).)
Counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
was
aware,
on
or
about
June
23,
1987,
of
the
bank’s
intention
to
appeal
the
Court
of
Appeal
for
Quebec’s
decision
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
Also,
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
had
been
informed
in
a
telephone
conversation
on
July
3,
1987
of
the
"possibility"
of
the
bank
paying
under
protest.
However,
during
the
course
of
the
meeting
on
the
morning
of
July
8,
1987,
no
protest
was
made
by
the
bank
when
it
handed
the
cheque
of
$353,898.52
to
Revenue
Canada.
The
payment
was
made
unconditionally.
The
letter
of
protest
of
the
bank
was
served
on
Revenue
Canada
after
the
meeting
of
July
8
and
referred
in
the
past
tense
to
the
bank
having
provided
Revenue
Canada
that
day
with
a
cheque
of
$353,598.52.
When
the
bank,
in
that
letter,
stated
it
"makes
this
payment...under
protest",
it
was
around
1:24
p.m.
that
afternoon
of
July
8.
To
be
timely,
a
protest.
should
have
been
made
either
prior
to
or
at
the
time
of
payment.
The
respondent
argues
that
since
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
has
finally
determined
that
it
is
the
owner
of
the
funds
represented
by
the
certificate
of
deposit,
it
is
entitled
to
recovery
under
article
1140
of
the
C.C.L.C.
and
that
Revenue
Canada
incorrectly
granted
unconditional
discharges
of
the
properties
owned
by
Mr.
Leong
after
July
8,
1987.
It
submits
that
any
appeal
from
the
order
of
Trudeau
J.
would
have
been
futile
considering
the
two
judgments
of
the
Superior
Court
and
the
Court
of
Appeal
on
the
merits
and
the
severe
criticism
of
Trudeau
J.
vis-à-vis
the
bank.
An
appeal
to
the
Court
of
Appeal,
it
says,
would
not
have
suspended
the
effect
of
an
injunction.
Suspension
of
an
injunction
pending
appeal
be
ordered
by
a
judge
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
but
this
is
a
discretionary
remedy.
Considering
the
recent
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
the
prospect
that
a
judge
of
that
Court
would
have
overturned
the
finding
that
the
money
was
the
property
of
Mr.
Leong
was,
in
the
bank’s
estimates,
unlikely.
The
bank
says
it
had
no
duty
to
launch
a
futile
appeal.
It
chose
to
follow
the
course
of
pursuing
the
appeal
on
the
merits
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
Having
won,
Revenue
Canada
is
under
an
obligation
to
return
the
moneys
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
said
belonged
to
the
bank.
In
a
recent
decision,
that
of
Willmor
Discount
Corp.
v.
Vaudreuil
(City),
[1994]
2
S.C.R.
210,
167
N.R.
381,
at
page
389
(D.T.C.
218),
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
refers
to
French
and
Quebec
writers
who
agree
that
the
recovery
of
a
thing
not
due
must
meet
two
conditions
in
addition
to
payment.
The
first
is
that
no
debtor-creditor
relations
in
contract
or
by
law
should
exist
between
the
solvens
and
the
accipiens
with
respect
to
the
payment
made.
The
second
is
that
payment
must
have
been
made
in
error.
Article
1140,
on
which
this
action
is
based,
establishes
a
presumption
and
a
principle.
It
must
now
be
read
in
conjunction
with
articles
1047
and
1048
of
the
C.C.L.C.
which
set
out
the
rules
governing
recovery.
The
mandatory
injunction
issued
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
was
clearly
based
on
the
proposition
that
the
moneys
represented
by
the
certificate
of
deposit
belonged
to
Mr.
Leong
and
that
the
bank
had
no
right
over
it.
Since
the
bank
made
no
effort
to
obtain
the
provisional
suspension
of
the
injunction
pronounced
against
it,
pending
the
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
of
its
own
action
as
against
Mr.
Leong,
the
order
of
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
became
res
judicata
as
between
the
bank
and
Revenue
Canada.
In
those
particular
circumstances,
the
bank
cannot
claim
that
at
law
it
was
not
debtor
of
the
amount
it
paid
to
Revenue
Canada
when
the
payment
was
made.
The
protest
came
after
the
unconditional
payment
made
by
the
bank
and
it
is
more
than
doubtful
that
a
payment
made
by
virtue
of
a
court
order,
which
was
not
appealed
and
provisionally
suspended,
could
have
been
made
conditional.
At
this
point,
Revenue
Canada
had
no
choice
but
to
release
all
the
frozen
assets
of
Mr.
Leong.
Had
it
not
done
so
it
would
have
risked
an
action
in
damages
by
Mr.
Leong
in
whose
favour
the
final
injunction
had
been
pronounced.
The
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
redressed
the
matter
as
between
Mr.
Leong
and
the
bank.
But
it
had
no
effect
on
the
order
given
to
the
bank
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec,
since
the
bank
did
not
protect
its
interests
vis-à-vis
that
order.
This
is
not
a
case
of
an
appearance
of
a
debt
overturned
by
a
successful
appeal
to
a
higher
court.
The
bank’s
recourse
against
Revenue
Canada
must,
therefore,
fail.
I
would
allow
this
appeal,
I
would
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
and
I
would
dismiss
the
action
of
the
respondent
the
whole
with
costs
on
appeal
and
at
trial.
Marceau
J.A.:-I
have
had
the
advantage
of
reading
in
draft
the
reasons
for
judgment
prepared
by
Madame
Justice
Desjardins.
My
conclusion
is
the
same
as
hers,
but
I
arrived
at
it
in
a
somewhat
different
and
shortened
route.
It
may
be
convenient
if
I
add
some
brief
comments.
With
respect,
it
does
not
appear
to
me
that
anything
in
this
litigation
turns
on
the
facts
surrounding
the
service
of
the
respondent’s
protest.
I
simply
do
not
see
what
legal
effect
may
be
attached
to
a
’’protest"
accompanying
a
payment
when
the
legal
right
of
the
creditor
to
receive
it
flows
from
a
court
order
which
has
not
been
challenged.
A
protest
may
be
relevant
when
a
payer
disputes
the
validity
of
the
payee’s
claim,
but
is,
for
some
valid
reason,
unable
to
make
good
his
objection
immediately
and
feels
he
has
no
choice
but
to
comply
with
the
demand
for
payment.
The
protest
will
obviously
dispel
any
inference
that
the
payment
constitutes
an
acknowledgement
of
liability
and
it
might
also,
in
special
circumstances
I
suppose,
serve
to
establish
bad
faith
on
the
part
of
the
payee
and
reinforce
an
eventual
action
in
recovery
based
on
the
civil
law
quasi-contract
"resulting
from
the
reception
of
a
thing
not
due"
(art.
1047
and
following,
Civil
Code
of
Lower
Canada),
itself
a
particular
application
of
the
principles
of
unjust
enrichment.
This
was,
to
a
certain
extent
the
situation
in
the
case
of
Premier
Mouton,
supra,
relied
on
by
the
learned
trial
judge.
There,
the
protest
was
seen
as
having
clearly
established
that
the
payer
contested
its
liability
to
pay
excise
tax
and
its
submission
to
the
claim
had
not
been
motivated
by
the
desire
to
discharge
a
legal
obligation
with
the
result
that
an
essential
requisite
to
the
existence
of
a
payment
was
lacking
so
there
had
been
no
legal
payment.
The
present
case
does
not
lend
itself
to
a
similar
approach
since
the
respondent
never
challenged
the
appellant’s
right
to
be
paid
pursuant
to
the
injunction.
The
respondent’s
protest
which
was
only
reiterating
its
defence
to
the
action
in
injunction,
even
if
it
had
been
open,
unconditional
and
contemporaneous
with
the
payment,
could
have
had,
in
my
view,
no
legal
significance.
It
is
clear,
in
my
respectful
opinion,
that
protest
or
not
the
respondent’s
action
in
recovery
could
not
find
support
in
article
1140
of
the
Civil
Code
of
Lower
Canada.
The
principle
confirmed
by
this
article,
that
every
payment
presupposes
a
debt
and
that
which
has
been
paid
in
the
absence
of
a
debt
may
be
recovered,
had
no
application
whatsoever.
The
injunction
ordered
the
respondent
to
pay
to
the
appellant
the
amount
represented
by
the
certificate,
an
order
made
at
the
request
of
the
certificate’s
named
beneficiary,
Mr.
Leong:
that
there
was
an
obligation
to
pay
in
satisfaction
of
which
the
payment
was
made
is
indisputable.
The
payment
was
not
made
by
"mistake
of
law
or
fact",
since
it
was
required
by
an
unequivocal
Court
order;
nor
was
it
made
under
illegal
compulsion
since
the
well
foundedness
of
the
Court
order
was
not
challenged.
I
may
add
that
in
my
view,
even
if
the
Supreme
Court,
in
disposing
of
the
litigation
between
the
respondent
and
Mr.
Leong,
had
directly
or
incidentally
agreed
with
the
respondent’s
contention
that
it
was
the
owner
of
the
certificate,
the
action
in
recovery
against
the
appellant
would
not
have
had
any
more
basis.
The
proceedings
in
the
Supreme
Court
were
not
directed
against
the
injunction
and
they
could
have
no
effect
whatsoever
on
its
validity;
furthermore,
the
appellant
was
not
a
party
to
those
proceedings.
But
in
any
event,
the
Supreme
Court
never
even
implied
that
the
respondent
could
have
had
ownership
of
the
certificate,
it
simply
established
the
existence
of
a
debt
owing
to
the
bank
by
Mr.
Leong
for
the
amount
of
money
realized
by
the
latter’s
unethical
activities.
One
may,
at
first,
be
somewhat
disturbed
by
the
result:
the
applicant
benefits
from
a
tax-assessment
levied
on
profits
that
are
offset
by
a
debt
of
an
equivalent
amount,
while
the
respondent
has
a
right
to
be
paid
moneys
that
it
will
most
probably
never
recover.
It
remains,
however,
that,
even
if
it
is
unethically,
Mr.
Leong
actually
earned
money
on
his
own
behalf
that
was
taxable,
and
even
if
it
was
the
victim
of
its
employee’s
unethical
conduct,
the
respondent
did
not
suffer
any
financial
loss.
I
would
dispose
of
the
matter
as
suggested
by
my
colleague.
Appeal
allowed.