Mogan,
T.CJ.:—The
appeals
of
Clark
Fitzgerald,
Gordon
Fitzgerald,
Terrence
Fitzgerald
and
Gertrude
Fitzgerald
were
heard
together
on
common
evidence.
The
three
male
appellants
are
brothers
and
they
are
also
the
sons
of
the
female
appellant,
Gertrude
Fitzgerald,
and
her
deceased
husband,
Eugene
Fitzgerald.
The
four
appellants
were
assessed
under
section
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
as
directors
of
Eugene
Fitzgerald
&
Sons
Ltd.
in
the
circumstances
described
below.
In
the
early
1950s,
the
late
Eugene
Fitzgerald
started
the
business
of
making
boxes,
crates
and
pallets
out
of
wood.
The
business
was
a
proprietorship
operated
in
Saint
John,
New
Brunswick
out
of
rented
premises.
By
1970,
the
only
significant
product
was
pallets.
In
1966,
Gordon
went
to
work
for
the
father
followed
by
Terrence
in
1970
and
Clark
in
1976.
From
1976
to
1985
those
actively
engaged
in
the
business
were
the
father
(Eugene),
the
three
sons
(Gordon,
Terrence
and
Clark)
and
three
non-family
persons.
In
1978,
the
business
moved
to
Spruce
Lake
Industrial
Park
and
was
incorporated
as
Eugene
Fitzgerald
&
Sons
Ltd.
(“the
Company").
Upon
incorporation,
the
Company
had
purchased
a
site
of
1.68
acres
in
the
industrial
park
and
had
constructed
a
new
building.
In
February
1985,
a
fire
destroyed
the
building
and
all
the
contents.
Before
the
fire,
the
insurance
on
the
building
and
contents
had
been
reduced
and
the
proceeds
from
the
fire
insurance
policy
were
not
adequate
to
cover
the
full
cost
of
replacing
the
building
and
its
contents.
After
the
fire,
the
Company
was
out
of
business
for
a
short
period
and
then
operated
at
about
one-third
the
former
pace
in
rented
premises.
In
June
1986,
the
business
was
able
to
move
back
to
a
new
plant
located
on
the
old
premises
in
the
Spruce
Lake
Industrial
Park.
In
the
new
plant,
the
business
was
never
able
to
operate
at
its
pre-fire
capacity
for
a
number
of
reasons.
Some
of
the
old
customers
had
drifted
away
after
the
fire
and
were
purchasing
pallets
from
other
suppliers.
Increased
competition
had
lowered
the
price
of
pallets.
And
there
had
been
a
slowdown
in
the
economy
around
Saint
John.
The
Company
was
short
of
cash
and
closed
down
the
business
permanently
in
October
1986.
The
land
and
building
at
Spruce
Lake
Park
were
put
up
for
sale
in
November
1986.
Eugene
Fitzgerald
was
born
in
1908
and
was
77
in
1985
when
he
decided
to
rebuild
after
the
fire.
He
was
in
poor
health
in
the
latter
part
of
1986
and
he
died
in
February
1987.
Notices
of
assessment
dated
February
5,
1988
were
sent
to
all
four
appellants
assessing
them
as
directors
of
the
Company
with
respect
to
payroll
source
deductions
not
remitted
by
the
Company.
Their
common
defense
is
that
they
were
directors
in
name
only.
The
father
was
a
strong
minded
individual
who
by
himself
ran
the
business
and
later
the
Company.
In
1978,
the
father
wanted
a
limited
corporation
but
nothing
else
changed.
All
four
appellants
testified
and
described
a
day
in
1978
when
they
went
to
a
lawyer's
office
in
Saint
John
to
sign
some
papers;
they
were
told
that
they
were
directors
of
the
Company
but
there
were
never
any
meetings
of
any
kind.
The
father
owned
all
the
shares.
They
were
never
shown
any
of
the
Company's
books,
records
or
financial
statements.
None
of
the
appellants
had
signing
authority
on
behalf
of
the
Company.
Gordon
stated
that
if
he
had
asked
to
see
the
books,
the
father
would
have
told
him
to
mind
his
own
business.
It
was
Gordon's
job
to
deliver
the
pallets;
and
he
did
this
in
an
old
truck
but
the
father
went
out
one
day
and
purchased
a
new
truck
without
telling
anyone.
It
was
not
until
August
1986
when
his
paycheque
bounced
that
Gordon
realized
the
Company
was
in
serious
financial
trouble,
and
the
Company
was
out
of
business
within
two
months.
Gordon
said
that
he
and
his
brothers
could
send
an
army
against
the
father
but
they
would
not
“get
by
him".
The
appellants
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
management
of
the
Company
and
the
three
brothers
were
involved
only
as
employees.
When
the
Company
went
out
of
business,
one
went
on
unemployment
insurance,
one
became
a
teacher
and
one
went
into
sales.
There
had
been
a
bookkeeper,
Mr.
Bradley,
but
he
moved
to
Sussex,
New
Brunswick
around
1983.
After
that,
Mrs.
Gertrude
Fitzgerald
started
to
do
some
of
the
banking
for
the
Company.
She
deposited
cheques
from
customers
and
sent
out
invoices.
She
also
made
out
payroll
cheques
and
cheques
to
the
Receiver
General
for
source
deductions.
She
was
not
a
bookkeeper,
however,
and
had
no
independent
information
concerning
any
invoice
or
cheque
she
would
issue.
Her
husband
would
tell
her
the
amount
of
each
invoice
and
the
payroll
cheque
(take-home
pay)
for
each
employee
and
the
amount
to
be
sent
to
the
Receiver
General
for
source
deductions.
She
could
not
make
up
a
financial
statement
and
had
no
idea
as
to
whether
the
Company
was
profitable
but
she
did
know
when
the
Company
was
overdrawn
at
the
bank.
It
must
be
remembered
that
Mrs.
Fitzgerald
was
born
in
1911
and
was
72
years
of
age
in
1983
when
she
took
on
some
of
Mr.
Bradley's
former
duties
and
began
to
make
up
invoices
and
cheques.
Mrs.
Fitzgerald
never
came
to
the
plant
but
made
out
the
cheques
and
invoices
at
home.
Although
the
Company
appeared
to
operate
as
a
family
business,
it
was
in
fact
a
feudal
arrangement
with
the
father
as
lord
of
the
manor
and
the
other
family
members
as
serfs.
The
fire
insurance
proceeds
were
approximately
$160,000.
This
was
probably
the
first
time
in
Eugene
Fitzgerald's
life
when
he
could
actually
lay
hand
on
that
kind
of
money
and
call
it
his
own
because
the
land
and
plant
at
Spruce
Lake
were
free
and
clear
at
the
time
of
the
fire.
There
was
some
doubt
in
the
minds
of
certain
family
members
in
1985
concerning
the
prudence
of
rebuilding
the
plant
and
trying
to
retain
and
continue
the
business
when
the
father
was
77
years
of
age
and
none
of
the
sons
had
been
involved
in
the
management
of
the
business.
The
father
was
stubborn,
however,
and
absolutely
determined
to
rebuild
the
plant
and
retain
the
business.
The
sons
said
that
the
father
would
have
persevered
in
this
determination
even
if
they
had
refused
to
cooperate
and
had
withdrawn
their
employment
from
the
business.
When
the
appellants
met
with
Eugene
Fitzgerald
and
his
lawyer
at
the
lawyer's
office
in
1978
to
sign
certain
documents
relating
to
the
incorporation
of
the
Company,
they
were
told
that
they
were
directors
but
there
was
no
indication
that
they
had
any
duties
or
responsibilities
as
directors;
there
were
no
meetings
of
any
kind;
the
father
kept
all
the
financial
information
to
himself;
the
father
purchased
all
the
supplies
and
each
Friday
he
would
collect
the
receivables.
None
of
the
sons
had
anything
to
do
with
the
paper
work
or
administration
of
the
business
and
they
had
no
idea
as
to
whether
it
was
profitable
even
though
they
were
all
mature
adults
at
the
time
of
the
fire.
After
the
business
was
closed
down
in
the
fall
of
1986,
one
of
the
major
suppliers
was
owed
$55,000
for
raw
materials.
The
father
had
been
told
that
the
land
and
building
should
sell
for
$140,000
and
so
he
thought
that
all
creditors
(including
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
for
payroll
source
deductions)
would
be
paid
from
the
proceeds.
When
the
building
did
not
sell
immediately,
this
supplier
came
to
the
Fitzgeralds'
home
with
a
lawyer
and,
on
January
20,
1987,
a
month
before
the
father
died,
Mrs.
Gertrude
Fitzgerald
(then
in
her
76th
year)
signed
a
collateral
mortgage
granting
the
supplier
a
form
of
security
for
its
claim.
She
knew
at
the
time
that
the
land
and
building
were
free
and
clear;
that
the
supplier
was
owed
$55,000;
and
that
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
was
owed
about
$14,000
for
source
deductions.
She
did
not
appear
to
recognize
the
significance
of
granting
a
collateral
mortgage
to
the
supplier
and
stated
that
the
supplier
would
not
wait
and
she
felt
pressured
into
signing.
She
did
not
consult
her
sons
and
she
did
not
know
that
the
supplier
would
come
out
ahead
of
other
creditors
but
she
did
know
that
the
collateral
mortgage
would
put
the
supplier
in
an
advantageous
position.
Mrs.
Gertrude
Fitzgerald
was
a
very
unsophisticated
woman
who
had
lived
in
the
same
house
in
Saint
John
for
45
years.
Similarly
the
sons
were
unsophisticated
in
commercial
matters.
The
land
and
building
were
offered
for
sale
in
September
1987
under
a
power
of
sale
clause
in
the
collateral
mortgages
and,
when
no
purchaser
came
forward,
the
property
was
taken
by
the
supplier
in
satisfaction
of
its
claim.
Other
creditors
including
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
were
left
empty-handed.
There
was
entered
in
evidence
a
copy
of
the
collateral
mortgage
signed
only
by
Gertrude
P.
Fitzgerald.
Any
creditor
with
a
substantial
claim
against
the
Company
should
have
at
least
considered
challenging
the
validity
of
the
collateral
mortgage
on
the
basis
of
whether
Mrs.
Gertrude
Fitzgerald
had
authority
to
sign
it
alone
on
behalf
of
the
Company.
It
appears
to
me
that
the
appellants
were
directors
in
law
(i.e.,
their
names
appear
in
the
Company's
minute
book
as
directors)
but
they
were
not
in
fact
directors.
They
never
met
as
directors.
They
never
acted
alone
or
in
concert
as
directors.
They
had
no
knowledge
of
the
management
or
administration
of
the
Company's
business.
They
had
no
equity
in
the
Company.
They
had
no
way
of
compelling
the
fifth
director
(Eugene
Fitzgerald,
the
sole
shareholder)
to
disclose
any
information
concerning
the
Company's
financial
affairs.
They
were
directors
in
law
only
because
of
their
family
connection
to
Eugene
Fitzgerald.
Although
any
one
of
them
could
have
resigned
as
a
director
if
he
or
she
had
thought
of
it,
such
resignation
would
have
been
a
source
of
family
friction
and,
from
the
viewpoint
of
the
male
appellants
(the
three
sons),
the
idea
of
resigning
as
a
director
would
not
have
occurred
to
them
before
the
idea
of
quitting
their
employment.
I
would
not
hold
as
a
general
rule
that
a
passive
or
inactive
director
is
free
from
liability
under
subsection
227.1(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
For
example,
a
person
who
consents
to
being
a
director
of
a
corporation
in
order
to
accommodate
a
friend
or
client
and
then
fails
to
participate
as
a
director
in
the
affairs
of
the
corporation
is
still
very
much
at
risk
under
subsection
227.1(1).
The
passive
or
inactive
director
is
not,
per
se,
free
from
liability
under
subsection
227.1(1).
But
when
the
passive
or
inactive
director
has
become
a
director
in
the
context
of
a
family
business
operated
by
a
corporation
which
is
dominated
by
an
uncompromising
patriarch,
the
domestic
responsibility
for
maintaining
harmony
within
the
family
becomes
interwoven
with
the
legal
responsibility
to
third
parties
and,
in
these
circumstances,
I
think
that
it
is
not
reasonable
to
impose
the
same
standard
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
on
the
passive
"family
director"
as
on
the
person
who
is
truly
free
to
become
a
director
and
does
so
outside
a
family
context.
Applying
the
above
proposition
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
I
hold
that
the
appellants
satisfy
the
test
in
subsection
227.1(3)
because
they
exercised
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
I
emphasize
"in
comparable
circumstances"
because
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would,
in
this
feudal
family,
maintain
family
harmony
by
serving
as
a
director
in
name
only
and
by
leaving
the
management
of
the
business
in
the
hands
of
the
strong-minded
patriarch
who
ha
managed
it
successfully
for
30
years.
If
Eugene
Fitzgerald
were
still
alive,
he
would
be
liable
under
subsection
227.1(1)
for
the
amount
of
$14,588.88
which
has
been
assessed
against
each
of
the
appellants
herein.
After
the
fire,
the
late
Eugene
Fitzgerald,
as
the
only
de
facto
director,
made
certain
imprudent
decisions
which
resulted
in
the
loss
of
the
family
business
and
any
equity
therein.
Without
considering
any
further
argument,
I
would
be
content
to
allow
the
appeals
for
the
reasons
set
out
above.
There
is,
however,
a
further
argument.
The
appellants
have
a
second
defence
which
was
not
pleaded
(they
acted
on
their
own
behalf
without
the
benefit
of
legal
counsel)
but
which
has
come
to
light
following
the
recent
decision
of
this
Court
in
Leung
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
2268;
91
D.T.C.
1020.
Each
appellant
received
a
notice
of
assessment
dated
February
5,
1988
showing
a
balance
of
$14,588.88
with
the
following
endorsement
typed
on
the
face
of
the
document:
Liability
under
Subsection
227.1(1)
of
the
Federal
Income
Tax
Act,
and
section
36.1
of
the
New
Brunswick
Income
Tax
Act,
Section
22.1
of
the
Canada
Pension
Plan,
and
Section
68.1
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1971,
for
$14,588.88
being
the
amount
of
the
unpaid
Payroll
Deductions
payable
by
Eugene
Fitzgerald
&
Sons
Ltd.
in
respect
of
Notices
of
Assessment
dated
July
28,
1986,
December
8,
1986,
and
December
12,
1986.
There
was
nothing
in
any
one
of
the
four
notices
of
asessment
under
appeal
which
indicated
what
particular
amount
was
assessed
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act,
the
New
Brunswick
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Canada
Pension
Plan
or
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act.
Also,
there
was
no
information
to
indicate
the
particular
payroll
periods
when
the
Company
had
failed
to
remit
all
or
part
of
the
source
deductions.
I
adopt
the
following
statements
by
Rip,
J.
at
page
2277
(D.T.C.
1027)
in
the
Leung
case:
An
assessment,
therefore,
is
not
complete
unless
the
notice
is
given
in
such
manner
that
the
taxpayer
knows
the
amount
of
tax
assessed
under
the
appropriate
statute.
Notification
of
the
aggregate
of
amounts
assessed
under
four
statutes,
in
my
view,
does
not
inform
a
taxpayer
of
a
particular
amount
assessed
under
one
of
the
statutes.
The
assessment
is
incomplete.
Applying
the
decision
in
Leung
to
the
appeals
herein,
I
conclude
that
each
purported
notice
of
assessment
dated
February
5,
1988
is
not
complete.
Relying
on
either
one
of
the
arguments
discussed
above,
I
would
allow
the
appeals
and
vacate
the
four
assessments
made
on
February
5,
1988.
Appeals
allowed.