Bowman
T
.
C.J.:
The
appellant’s
motion
and
the
respondent’s
motion
were
heard
consecutively.
The
appellant
seeks
the
following
relief:
(a)
an
order
striking
out
or
expunging
the
Respondent’s
Reply
without
leave
to
amend
on
the
ground
that
it
and
the
assessment
under
appeal,
are
an
abuse
of
the
process
of
the
court;
(b)
directing
the
hearing
of,
and
hearing
the
following
issue
on
the
evidence
filed
by
the
parties
on
this
motion
namely:
(i)
is
it
appropriate
and
just
in
the
circumstances
for
the
assessments
in
question
on
the
appeal
to
be
vacated
because
the
assessments
were
based
upon
documents
obtained
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
(“Revenue
Canada”)
in
contravention
of
a
confidentiality
order
dated
August
23,
1989
in
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
Court
File
No.
26744/88,
section
137
of
the
Courts
of
Justice
Act,
R.S.O.
1990,
c.
C.43,
as
amended,
an
implied
undertaking
not
to
make
use
of
the
documents
for
any
purpose
other
than
in
the
action
in
which
they
were
produced,
solicitor
and
client
privilege,
due
process
and
sections
8
and
24
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms;
or
in
the
alternative;
(ii)
is
it
appropriate
and
just
in
the
circumstances
that
all
of
the
documents
obtained
by
Revenue
Canada
in
contravention
of
the
confidentiality
order,
section
137
of
the
Courts
of
Justice
Act,
R.S.O.
1990,
c.
C.43,
as
amended,
the
implied
undertaking
not
to
make
use
of
the
documents
for
any
purpose
other
than
in
the
action
in
which
they
were
produced,
solicitor
and
client
privilege,
due
process
and
sections
8
and
24
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
be
inadmissible
on
the
appeal,
and
that
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
(“Her
Majesty”)
be
excluded
from
using
or
relying
upon
the
documents,
and
upon
any
evidence
or
information
obtained
as
a
result
of
obtaining
the
documents;
(c)
restraining
the
Respondent
from
using
or
relying
upon
the
documents
more
particularly
set
forth
in
Schedule
“A”
attached
hereto
and
upon
any
evidence
or
information
obtained
as
a
result
of
obtaining
the
documents;
(d)
excluding
the
said
documents
and
any
evidence
or
information
obtained
as
a
result
of
obtaining
the
documents
from
the
evidence
to
be
adduced
at
the
hearing
of
the
Appeal;
(e)
vacating
the
assessments
which
are
the
subject
of
the
Appeal
by
the
Appellant;
(f)
allowing
the
Appeal
with
costs;
or
(g)
such
further
and
other
order
as
counsel
may
advise
and
this
Honourable
Court
permit.
The
respondent’s
motion
is
for
an
order
that
the
appellant
serve
and
file
a
“better
and
complete”
list
of
documents
under
section
82
of
the
General
Procedure
Rules.
I
shall
deal
with
the
appellant’s
motion
first.
The
various
forms
of
relief
sought,
which
include
the
striking
out
of
the
reply,
the
vacating
of
the
assessments,
or
the
exclusion
of
evidence
obtained
from
the
registry
of
the
Ontario
Court,
are
all
premised
essentially
upon
the
Minister
having
obtained
and
used
information
and
documents
to
which,
according
to
the
appellant,
he
was
not
entitled.
The
evidence
on
the
motion
consisted
of
an
affidavit
by
Steven
Klein,
corporate
counsel
for
the
appellant
as
well
as
a
number
of
exhibits
to
that
affidavit,
a
number
of
documents
from
the
file
in
the
registry
of
the
Ontario
Court,
portions
of
the
examination
for
discovery
of
Michael
Vantil,
an
assessor
with
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
together
with
a
number
of
reports
and
other
documents
produced
on
Mr.
Vantil’s
discovery
and
an
affidavit
of
Margaret
J.
Nott
together
with
the
reasons
for
decision
of
Master
Peppiatt
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario.
No
viva
voce
evidence
was
adduced
by
either
party.
I
shall
endeavour
to
summarize
the
evidence
briefly.
In
March
of
1988
one
Israel
Katz,
a
former
employee
of
one
or
more
of
the
corporate
defendants,
sued
Promex
(the
appellant),
a
number
of
other
corporate
defendants
and
Joshua
and
Arie
Lapsker.
Mr.
Katz
claimed
damages,
an
appointment
of
an
interim
receiver
and
an
intern
injunction
and
other
relief
as
the
result
of
the
termination
of
his
relationship
and
the
breach
of
a
contract
in
the
Hebrew
language.
Evidently
he
made
a
number
of
serious
allegations
against
the
defendants
that
Mr.
Klein
says
sought
to
damage,
impugn
and
defame
the
reputation
of
the
defendants.
The
pleadings
were
not
put
in
evidence.
Katz’
solicitors
examined
the
defendant’s
solicitor
William
C.
De
Lucia
in
the
action.
He
refused
to
answer
certain
questions
and
a
motion
was
brought
before
Master
Peppiatt,
who
ordered
his
files
relating
to
a
transaction
to
sell
shares
or
assets
of
one
of
the
defendant’s
to
IMS
Communications
Inc.
to
be
produced
to
Katz’s
solicitors.
It
is
alleged
that
these
documents
were
protected
by
solicitor
client
privilege,
or
work
product
privilege.
Nonetheless
Master
Peppiatt,
rightly
or
wrongly,
ordered
their
production
and
I
assume
they
were
produced.
The
defendants
concluded
that
an
anonymous
caller
was
divulging
to
third
parties
the
contents
of
the
documents
produced,
as
well
as
the
allegedly
defamatory
statements
made
by
Mr.
Katz
and
directing
them
to
the
court
house
to
review
the
documents
filed.
A
motion
was
therefore
brought
under
section
137
of
the
Courts
of
Justice
Act
for
an
order
that
the
documents
filed
in
the
action
be
sealed
up
and
treated
as
confidential.
Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
of
section
137
of
that
act
read:
(1)
On
payment
of
the
prescribed
fee,
a
person
is
entitled
to
see
any
document
filed
in
a
civil
proceeding
in
a
court,
unless
an
Act
or
an
order
of
the
court
provides
otherwise.
(2)
A
court
may
order
that
any
document
filed
in
a
civil
proceeding
before
it
be
treated
as
confidential,
sealed
and
not
form
part
of
the
public
record.
Mr.
Katz,
in
two
affidavits
filed
in
the
action
agreed
to
such
an
order
that
the
documents
be
sealed
and
treated
as
confidential
to
prevent
such
information
being
disclosed
to
non-parties
and
agreed
to
give
an
undertaking
to
that
effect.
Mr.
Justice
Isaac
(as
he
then
was)
and
Mr.
Justice
Sutherland
both
made
orders
that
the
documents
filed
in
the
action
be
sealed
and
treated
as
confidential.
Mr.
Katz
and
the
defendants
entered
into
interim
Minutes
of
Settlement
and
Mr.
Katz
agreed
that
he
would
not
continue
to
make
any
assertions
in
the
action
or
any
other
action
or
at
trial
of
improper
or
illegal
conduct
or
fraud
on
the
part
of
the
defendants.
Mr.
Katz
was
petitioned
into
bankruptcy.
On
March
13,
1992
his
action
was
dismissed
without
costs.
He
died
in
December
of
1997.
The
confidentiality
orders
have
not
been
vacated
or
varied.
I
come
now
to
the
tax
assessments
in
question
in
these
appeals.
One
of
the
issues
is
the
deductibility
of
interest
on
loans
made
to
the
appellant
by
Rie-Comm
International
Inc.,
a
non-resident
corporation,
and
the
imposition
of
withholding
tax
thereon.
Essentially
the
question
is
whether
the
appellant
Promex
and
Rie-Comm
were
are
arm’s
length.
This
has
a
bearing
on
the
application
of
the
so-called
“thin
capitalization
rule”
in
subsection
18(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
restricts
the
deduction
of
interest
under
some
circumstances,
and
also
on
the
application
of
the
exemption
from
withholding
tax
under
subparagraph
212(1
)(Z?)(vii).
This
is
a
largely
factual
issue
upon
which
the
appellant
would
have
the
onus.
The
first
audit
for
1987
and
1988
was
done
by
a
Mr.
Henry,
an
assessor
with
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
He
evidently
accepted
that
Promex
and
Rie-Comm
were
at
arm’s
length,
because
he
did
not
disallow
any
portion
of
the
interest
paid,
and
he
did
not
conclude
that
the
payments
were
subject
to
non-resident
withholding
tax.
Subsequently
Mr.
Michael
Vantil
conducted
an
audit
for
1989
and
1990
and
he
came
to
a
different
conclusion.
He
assessed
tax
for
1989
and
1990
disallowing
the
interest
expense
under
subsection
18(4)
and
imposing
withholding
tax
under
section
212
in
respect
of
interest
paid
in
1988,
1989
and
1990.
Confirmation
of
the
assessment
followed
the
filing
of
objections,
and
these
appeals
ensued.
It
seems
clear
that
Mr.
Vantil
carried
out
his
audit
as
the
result
of
information
provided
by
an
unnamed
informant,
the
identity
of
whom
he
refused
to
disclose.
That
refusal
was
the
subject
of
a
previous
motion
in
which
I
refused
to
order
the
respondent
to
reveal
the
informant’s
name,
on
the
basis
of
informant’s
privilege.
Attached
to
Mr.
Klein’s
affidavit
was
an
affidavit
of
Ms.
Nott.
The
portions
of
her
affidavit
relevant
to
the
commencement
of
the
audit
based
on
the
information
provided
by
the
informant
are
set
out
in
my
reasons
in
the
prior
motion
and
need
not
be
reproduced
here.
Mr.
Vantil
referred
the
matter
to
the
Special
Investigations
Branch,
but
no
criminal
proceedings
were
instituted.
In
the
course
of
his
audit
Mr.
Vantil
attended
on
a
number
of
occasions
at
the
registry
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario.
Notwithstanding
the
interim
confidentiality
order
made
by
Mr.
Justice
Isaac
or
the
confidentiality
order
made
by
Mr.
Justice
Sutherland,
Mr.
Vantil
was
given
access
to
the
files
in
Mr.
Katz’s
action
and
was
permitted
not
only
to
read
the
documents
in
it
but
also
to
make
copies.
There
is
an
issue
between
the
parties
whether
Mr.
Vantil
was
aware
of
the
order
or
whether
he
fully
appreciated
its
significance.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
does
not
admit
that
he
knew
of
it
or
that
he
was
aware
of
what
its
effect
on
him
might
be.
Both
parties
relied
on
portions
of
Mr.
Vantil’s
examination
for
discovery
to
establish
what
he
did
or
did
not
know,
or
might
or
might
not
have
known.
There
is
obviously
a
question
of
credibility
here.
To
attempt
to
determine
Mr.
Vantil’s
state
of
mind
with
respect
to
the
confidentiality
order
on
the
basis
of
the
material
filed
on
this
motion
is
an
impossible
task.
It
seems
probable
that
he
saw
the
order,
but
how
closely
he
read
it,
what
significance
he
attached
to
it,
and
what
he
considered
to
be
its
legal
effect
are
all
matters
of
conjecture.
If
his
state
of
mind
is
relevant
it
can
only
be
determined
if
he
appears
as
a
witness
in
open
court
and
his
evidence
is
tested
by
cross-examination.
Any
one
of
a
number
of
hypotheses
suggest
themselves:
(a)
he
did
not
know
of
the
order;
(b)
he
knew
of
the
order
but
was
unaware
of
its
full
legal
significance;
(c)
he
knew
of
it
but
decided
that
it
did
not
bind
him
and
could
not
prevent
him
from
carrying
out
his
duties
to
obtain
information
relevant
to
the
determination
of
the
appellant’s
tax
liability.
Whatever
may
have
been
Mr.
Vantil’s
state
of
mind,
three
irrefutable
facts
remain:
(a)
there
was
a
valid
confidentiality
order
in
respect
of
the
material
on
the
Katz
file;
(b)
Mr.
Vantil
was
given
access
to
the
file
and
obtained
information
from
it;
(c)
some
of
the
material
and
information
that
he
obtained
was
useful
to
him
in
making
the
assessments
in
question.
It
appears
from
the
evidence
that
Mr.
Vantil
had
access
to
other
information
and
material.
He
seems
to
have
been
given
information
by
the
unnamed
informant.
Moreover,
Schedule
A
to
Mr.
Klein’s
affidavit
sets
out
the
respondent’s
lists
of
documents
and
the
source
of
the
documents.
Some
of
the
documents
are
alleged
to
have
come
from
Mr.
De
Lucia’s
files
that
Master
Peppiatt
ordered
produced.
Whether
these
documents
were
also
in
the
court
file
and
therefore
subject
to
the
confidentiality
order,
or
were
obtained
from
Mr.
De
Lucia
directly
is
not
clear.
The
appellant’s
solicitors
sought
dates
from
this
court
for
an
order
restraining
the
Crown
from
using
the
material
so
obtained
by
Mr.
Vantil.
The
respondent
then
moved
in
the
Ontario
Court
for
an
order
“regularizing”
its
possession
of
the
documents
obtained
from
the
court
file
and
for
directions
as
to
what
the
Crown
should
do
with
the
documents
in
its
possession.
I
am
not
sure
what
is
meant
by
“regularize”
or
what
direction
a
judge
of
the
Ontario
Court
can
give
that
would
affect
the
proceedings
in
this
court.
In
any
event,
the
motion
in
the
Ontario
Court
is
scheduled
to
be
heard
on
the
same
day
as
the
trial
of
the
appeal
in
this
court,
May
11,
1998.
To
the
extent
possible,
I
shall
endeavour
to
deal
with
the
matters
raised
by
the
appellant
although
as
will
be
apparent
from
the
reasons
that
follow
some
of
the
relief
that
it
seeks
is
more
appropriately
dealt
with
by
the
trial
judge.
In
essence,
the
issue
on
this
motion
boils
down
to
what
relief,
if
any,
on
a
motion
before
trial
in
an
appeal
in
this
court,
is
available
to
an
appellant
where
an
assessment
is
based
upon
documents
that
have
been
ordered
sealed
and
treated
as
confidential
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario.
Any
analysis
of
this
question
must
be
based
upon
a
recognition
of
a
number
of
considerations,
as
follows:
(a)
it
is
entirely
within
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario
to
make
such
an
order
under
section
137
of
The
Courts
of
Justice
Act:
(b)
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
and
persons
acting
under
his
authority,
are
not
parties
to
the
action
in
the
Ontario
Court;
(c)
the
officer
who
obtained
the
documents
and
the
information
contained
therein
was
freely
given
access
to
them
by
the
officials
in
the
Ontario
Court;
(d)
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
a
statutory
obligation
to
assess
tax
in
accordance
with
the
facts
and
the
law;
(e)
this
court
has
an
obligation
to
hear
appeals
from
such
assessments
and
to
determine
their
correctness
in
accordance
with
the
facts
and
the
law;
(f)
it
is
not
in
the
interests
of
justice
that
relevant
information
be
kept
from
the
court,
unless
there
are
compelling
reasons
for
doing
so;
and
(g)
we
are
concerned
here
with
a
balancing
of
interests.
On
the
one
hand
there
is
the
interest
that
the
courts
and
the
public
have
in
ensuring
that
all
relevant
information
be
available
to
the
court
in
tax
litigation
that
affects
the
fisc.
On
the
other
hand,
there
is
the
importance
that
orders
of
the
courts
in
civil
disputes
—
such
for
example
as
confidentiality
orders
of
the
type
made
by
Mr.
Justice
Sutherland
—
be
respected,
as
well
as
the
legitimate
reliance
that
litigants
have
that
such
orders
will
be
obeyed
and
that
their
affairs
will
be
kept
confidential,
when
they
are
not
only
covered
by
such
orders,
but
also
subject
to
an
implied
undertaking
that
they
will
not
be
used
for
purposes
other
than
those
for
which
they
were
produced.
It
is
with
these
conflicting
interests
in
mind
that
the
problem
in
this
case
must
be
approached.
The
confidentiality
order
It
is
contended
that
Mr.
Vantil
had
knowledge
of
the
confidentiality
order
and
that
in
continuing
to
look
at
the
material
in
the
Katz
file,
and
in
photocopying
parts
of
it
and
in
using
the
information
so
obtained
in
making
the
assessments
in
question
he
was
in
breach
of
and
in
contempt
of
the
order.
As
noted
above,
the
evidence
of
his
knowledge
of
the
order,
or
his
appreciation
of
its
effect,
is
less
than
satisfactory.
Even
if
I
were
prepared,
however,
to
draw
the
inference
that
he
knew
about
the
order,
it
is
inappropriate
for
me
to
conclude
that
his
actions
were
in
contempt
of
the
Ontario
Court.
That
is
a
matter
for
that
Court
to
determine.
The
Tax
Court
of
Canada
can
hardly
be
expected
to
hold
a
person
in
absentia
to
be
in
contempt
of
another
court’s
order.
Abuse
of
process
It
is
further
contended
that
to
use
this
material
in
making
the
assessment
is
an
abuse
of
the
process
of
the
court
(this
court,
I
assume).
I
have
difficulty
in
seeing
how
the
performance
of
the
administrative
act
of
assessing
can
ever
be
an
abuse
of
the
process
of
this
court.
At
the
time
the
assessment
is
made,
this
court
simply
is
not
in
the
picture.
Does
the
reliance
upon
the
material
in
an
appeal
constitute
an
abuse
of
process?
That
is
a
more
difficult
question
and
it
involves
a
consideration
of
the
nature
of
an
appeal
from
an
assessment.
It
is
a
proceeding
in
which
the
taxpayer
has
the
onus
of
showing
that
the
assessment
is
wrong.
In
practice
it
involves
the
Minister’s
pleading
of
“assumptions”
which
the
taxpayer
must
attempt
to
demolish.
The
Minister
has
an
obligation
to
disclose
the
basis
of
the
assessment
and,
in
this
case,
it
is
set
out
in
paragraphs
(c)
to
(p)
of
section
23
of
the
reply.
These
are
facts
that,
if
unchallenged,
must
be
taken
as
true.
Moreover,
the
notice
of
appeal
contains,
in
paragraphs
8
through
26
allegations
which,
if
established,
would
raise
a
prima
facie
case
that
the
assessments
were
wrong.
Paragraphs
19
and
20
allege
that
the
appellant
and
its
principal
shareholder
Lapsker
dealt
with
Rie-Comm
on
an
arm’s
length
basis.
Although
an
arm’s
length
relationship
is
required
for
subparagraph
212(l)(Z?)(vii),
subsections
18(4)
(the
thin
capitalization
rule)
and
18(5)
require
that
for
the
rule
not
to
apply
the
non-resident
have
less
than
25%
of
the
shares
of
the
Canadian
company.
Even
if
the
Minister
had
simply
denied
the
allegations
in
the
notice
of
appeal,
the
appellant
would
still
have
had
the
onus
of
establishing
the
facts
alleged
by
it
to
bring
it
outside
of
subsection
18(4)
and
within
subparagraph
212(1
)(£>)(vii).
One
of
the
heads
of
relief
sought
by
the
appellant
is
that
paragraphs
(c)
and
(m),
which
it
appears
are
based
on
information
from
the
file
in
the
Ontario
Court,
be
stricken
on
the
ground,
inter
alia,
that
to
plead
them
constitutes
an
abuse
of
process.
It
is
not
in
my
view
an
abuse
of
this
court’s
process
to
disclose
fully
the
basis
of
the
assessment,
regardless
of
the
source
of
the
information
on
which
it
is
based.
Whatever
other
remedies
may
be
available
to
the
appellant
its
remedy
does
not
lie
in
the
concept
of
abuse
of
process.
On
the
contrary,
it
could
well
be
an
abuse
of
process
for
the
Minister
to
withhold
facts
central
to
the
making
of
the
assessment,
or
to
conjure
up
assumptions
that
were
not
in
fact
made.
Indeed,
we
have
the
authority
of
Johnston
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1948]
S.C.R.
486
(S.C.C.)
that
the
Minister
has
an
affirmative
obligation
to
disclose
the
findings
of
fact
and
law
on
which
he
founded
the
assessment.
Implied
undertaking
I
turn
now
to
the
concept
of
implied
undertaking.
It
is
well
entrenched
in
our
law.
When
documents
are
produced
in
an
action
there
is
an
implied
undertaking
that
they
will
not
be
used
for
collateral
purposes.
The
undertaking
is
one
that
is
impliedly
given
by
one
party
and
his
or
her
counsel
to
the
other
party.
Here
we
have
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
through
his
officer
Mr.
Van
til,
not
a
party
to
the
Katz
action
or
the
implied
undertaking,
obtaining
information
from
the
court
file.
Whether
the
court
officials
who,
rightly
or
wrongly,
gave
Mr.
Vantil
access
to
the
files
ought
to
have
done
so,
there
is
certainly
no
breach
of
any
undertaking
by
the
Minister
or
his
officials.
Schedule
A
to
Mr.
Klein’s
affidavit
sets
out
portions
of
the
respondent’s
list
of
documents,
as
well
as
their
source.
Items
33,
35,
36,
37,
50,
51,
58,
59,
60,
61,
62
and
64
in
the
respondent’s
list
of
June
27,
1997,
as
well
as
items
38,
45,
51
to
62
in
the
respondent’s
list
of
November
14,
1997!,
as
well
as
Exhibit
17
to
Mr.
Vantil’s
discovery
are
all
said
to
have
come
from
Mr.
De
Lucia’s
file
on
the
IMS
purchase
which
Master
Peppiatt
ordered
produced.
It
is
not
clear
from
the
evidence
whether
these
documents
were
found
on
the
court
file
or
Mr.
De
Lucia
handed
them
over
to
Mr.
Vantil
voluntarily,
or
whether
the
unnamed
informant
(who
the
appellant
believes
may
have
been
the
late
Mr.
Katz)
gave
them
to
Mr.
Vantil.
It
is
entirely
possible
that
if
either
of
the
latter
two
hypotheses
is
true
either
the
informant,
if
it
was
Mr.
Katz,
or
someone
else
was
in
breach
of
the
implied
undertaking.
That
is,
however,
a
matter
between
the
parties
to
the
Katz
action,
which
has
since
been
dismissed.
I
do
not
think
that
the
implied
undertaking
to
which
some
of
these
documents
may
be
subject
binds
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
who
obtains
the
information,
whether
from
one
of
the
parties
or
a
third
party.
The
cases
referred
to
by
the
appellant
(Carbone
v.
De
La
Rocha
(1993),
13
O.R.
(3d)
355
(Ont.
Gen.
Div.);
755568
Ontario
Ltd.
v.
Linchris
Homes
Ltd.
(1990),
1
O.R.
(3d)
649
(Ont.
Gen.
Div.);
Orfus
Realty
v.
D.G.
Jewellery
of
Canada
Ltd.
(1995),
24
O.R.
(3d)
379
(Ont.
C.A.)),
involved
an
attempted
use
by
one
of
the
parties
of
documents
produced
by
the
other
party
either
to
found
an
action
or
to
give
to
third
parties.
This
was
held
to
constitute
a
breach
of
an
implied
undertaking
not
to
use
the
documents
for
a
collateral
or
ulterior
purpose.
In
Merck
&
Co.
v.
Apotex
Inc.,
[1996]
2
F.C.
223
(Fed.
T.D.)
was
a
contempt
proceeding
in
which
MacKay
J.
recognized
the
existence
of
an
implied
undertaking.
In
none
of
these
cases
however,
was
there
a
use
by
a
third
party,
a
stranger
to
the
proceedings
in
which
the
implied
undertaking
arose,
called
into
question.
In
Riddick
v.
Thames
Board
Mills
Ltd.,
[1977]
1
Q.B.
881
(Eng.
C.A.)
an
employee,
in
an
action
for
damages
for
wrongful
arrest
and
false
imprisonment,
obtained
production
from
the
company
of
a
memorandum.
The
action
was
settled.
Subsequently,
the
plaintiff
sued
the
company
for
damages
for
defamation
based
on
the
memorandum.
The
English
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
the
action
should
be
dismissed.
Lord
Denning
M.R.
said
at
page
896:
I
proceed
to
hold
the
balance
in
the
present
case.
On
the
one
hand
discovery
has
been
had
in
the
first
action.
It
enabled
that
action
to
be
disposed
of.
The
public
interest
there
has
served
its
purpose.
Should
it
go
further
so
as
to
enable
the
memorandum
of
April
16,
1969,
to
be
used
for
this
libel
action?
I
think
not.
The
memorandum
was
obtained
by
compulsion.
Compulsion
is
an
invasion
of
a
private
right
to
keep
one’s
documents
to
oneself.
The
public
interest
in
privacy
and
confidence
demands
that
this
compulsion
should
not
be
pressed
further
than
the
course
of
justice
requires.
The
courts
should,
therefore,
not
allow
the
other
party
—
or
anyone
else
—
to
use
the
documents
for
any
ulterior
or
alien
purpose.
The
addition
of
the
observation
in
“
—
or
anyone
else
—
”
by
Lord
Denning
was
not
necessary
to
the
decision
and
of
course
was
obiter
dictum.
It
does
not
appear
to
have
been
adopted
by
the
other
two
judges
on
the
panel.
In
Distillers
Co.
(Biochemicals)
Ltd.
v.
Times
Newspapers
Ltd.
(1974),
[1975]
1
All
E.R.
41
(Eng.
Q.B.)
a
number
of
claimants
sued
the
plaintiff
for
damages
arising
out
of
the
use
of
the
drug
thalidomide.
On
discovery,
they
obtained
from
the
plaintiff
a
large
number
ofdocuments
which
they
handed
over
to
a
Dr
Phillips
whom
they
had
retained
to
advise
them.
He
sold
the
documents
to
the
Times
Newspapers
Ltd.
Talbot
J.
issued
an
injunction
against
the
Times,
restraining
its
publication
of
the
documents.
At
page
48
he
said:
These
submissions
can
therefore
be
summarised
as
follows.
(I)
The.
plaintiffs
claim
an
overriding
protection
from
publication
and
use
of
their
documents
which
they
were
compelled
to
disclose
in
the
action
against
them.
They
claim
this
protection
involves
those
in
whose
hands
the
documents
come,
particularly
where
the
possession
was
unlawfully
obtained.
I
do
not
doubt
the
correctness
of
this
proposition;
I
do
not
think
that
on
the
authorities
and
for
the
proper
administration
of
justice
it
can
be
argued
to
the
contrary.
Those
who
disclose
documents
on
discovery
are
entitled
to
the
protection
of
the
court
against
any
use
of
the
documents
otherwise
than
in
the
action
in
which
they
are
disclosed.
I
also
consider
that
this
protection
can
be
extended
to
prevent
the
use
of
the
documents
by
any
person
in
whose
hands
they
come
unless
it
be
directly
connected
with
the
action
in
which
they
are
produced.
I
am
further
of
the
opinion
that
it
is
a
matter
of
importance
to
the
public,
and
therefore
of
public
interest,
that
documents
disclosed
on
discovery
should
not
be
permitted
to
be
put
to
improper
use
and
that
the
court
should
give
its
protection
in
the
right
case.
A
number
of
observations
about
this
statement
should
be
made.
One
can
readily
see
the
merit
in
preventing
a
person
into
whose
hands
documents
come
that
are
obtained
in
breach
of
an
implied
undertaking
of
the
type
involved
here
from
publishing
them.
Here,
however,
the
Minister
has
no
intention
of
publishing
them.
He
has
used
them
as
the
basis
of
an
assessment
and
may
well
intend
to
use
them
in
defending
the
assessment.
There
may
well
be
public
policy
considerations
in
preventing
a
newspaper
from
publishing
material
obtained
by
purchase
from
one
who
had
an
obligation
to
keep
it
confidential.
Here,
however,
we
are
dealing
with
a
Minister
of
the
Crown
who
has
a
statutory
duty
to
assess
in
accordance
with
the
facts
and
the
law
and
with
a
taxpayer
who
is
challenging
its
own
income
tax
assessment
before
this
court
contending
that
relevant
documentation
cannot
be
disclosed
by
the
Minister
and
need
not
be
disclosed
by
it
in
the
very
proceedings
in
which
it
seeks
to
challenge
the
assessment.
In
Crestbrook
Forest
Industries
Ltd.
v.
R.,
[1992]
1
C.T.C.
100
(Fed.
C.A.)
it
was
held
that
the
Crown
could
not
use
information
obtained
in
confidence
from
taxpayers
to
assess
other
taxpayers.
The
holding
is
succinctly
stated
by
Hugessen
J.A.
at
page
101:
In
our
view,
where
the
Crown
has
obtained
information
in
confidence
from
taxpayers
on
a
voluntary
basis
and
for
a
specific
and
defined
purpose,
it
may
not
subsequently
make
use
of
that
information
for
a
different
purpose,
namely
the
reassessment
of
other
taxpayers,
in
circumstances
where
such
use
will
almost
inevitably
result
in
a
breach
of
the
Crown’s
undertaking
of
confidence.
Given
the
uncontradicted
evidence
before
us,
it
is
clear
that
the
information
which
the
appellant
now
seeks
was
obtained
from
others
by
the
Crown
in
confidence
and
for
purposes
which
had
nothing
to
do
with
the
appellant’s
income
tax
liability.
That
being
so,
the
Crown
cannot
rely
on
it,
and
its
production
for
discovery,
or
at
trial,
should
not
be
permitted.
Whether
or
not
the
Crown
can
continue
to
rely
on
the
assumptions
which
it
has
pleaded
as
underlying
its
reassessment
is
a
question
which
is
not
before
us.
That
case,
in
my
respectful
view,
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
issue
here.
The
Minister
did
not
obtain
the
information
in
confidence.
He
obtained
it,
it
seems,
simply
by
asking
for
it.
I
am
not
prepared
to
extend
the
implied
undertaking
concept
to
this
case,
so
as
to
prevent
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
from
using
such
information
in
making
the
assessments
or
relying
on
it.
Solicitor
client
privilege
It
was
also
contended
that
the
information
obtained
from
Mr.
De
Lucia’s
files
under
compulsion
of
an
order
by
Master
Peppiatt
was
subject
to
the
solicitor
client
privilege
and
the
work
product
privilege.
Master
Peppiatt
does
not
appear
to
have
thought
so
and
I
do
not
propose
to
second-guess
his
judgement
on
the
matter.
The
documents
have
been
produced
in
the
Katz
action
and
whatever
privilege
may
have
been
attached
to
them
has
disappeared
(Descôteaux
c.
Mierzwinski,
[1982]
1
S.C.R.
860
(S.C.C.),
at
871;
The
Law
of
Evidence
in
Canada,
Sopinka,
Lederman
and
Bryant
at
pages
672
to
677).
The
authors
state
that,
based
on
English
authority,
it
may
be
possible
in
equity
to
enjoin
the
use
of
privileged
information
that
has
illegally
or
inadvertently
come
into
a
parties
possession.
That
is
not
within
my
jurisdiction,
but
it
may
be
open
to
the
appellant
to
raise
the
matter
before
the
trial
judge
if
any
of
the
material
from
Mr.
De
Lucia’s
file
is
sought
to
be
introduced.
The
Charter
It
is
contended
that
when
Mr.
Vantil
attended
at
the
Ontario
Court,
examined
the
documents
and
took
copies
this
constituted
an
“unreasonable
search
or
seizure”,
contrary
to
section
8
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
Had
there
been
no
confidentiality
order
I
doubt
that
merely
attending
at
the
court,
examining
the
file
and
making
copies
could
be
regarded
as
a
search
or
seizure
at
all,
much
less
an
unreasonable
one.
I
do
not
think
that
either
R.
v.
McKinlay
Transport
Ltd.
(1990),
68
D.L.R.
(4th)
568
(S.C.C.)
or
Comité
paritaire
de
l’industrie
de
la
chemise
c.
Sélection
Milton
(1994),
115
D.L.R.
(4th)
702
(S.C.C.),
cited
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
supports
the
proposition
that
the
examination
of
a
public
file
constitutes
a
search
or
seizure.
The
argument
must
therefore
be
that
the
existence
of
the
confidentiality
order
and
the
fact
that
Mr.
Vantil
was
permitted
access
to
the
file
notwithstanding
that
order,
not
only
turns
his
inspection
and
copying
of
the
file
into
a
search
or
seizure,
but
makes
it
unreasonable
as
well.
Assuming
the
examination
and
copying
of
a
court
file
in
the
custody
of
the
court
and
in
a
public
court
registry
is
a
search
or
seizure
—
a
proposition
that
I
find
doubtful
—
and
assuming
further
that
the
confidentiality
order
renders
it
illegal,
does
it
follow
that
the
appellant’s
Charter
rights
under
section
8
have
been
violated?
Illegality
and
unreasonableness
are
not
necessarily
conterminous.
Every
time
a
court
order
is
breached
it
does
not
follow
that
someone’s
Charter
rights
are
violated.
Nonetheless,
the
appellant’s
argument
is
not
without
merit.
The
appellant
had
a
reasonable
expectation
that
the
documents
that
were
ordered
sealed
and
kept
confidential
would
remain
so.
The
case
is
somewhat
similar
to
that
decided
in
the
Alberta
Provincial
Court
in
R.
v.
Corail
(1993),
146
A.R.
202
(Alta.
Prov.
Ct.).
There
a
police
constable
took
a
copy
of
the
accused’s
fingerprints
from
the
Young
Offenders
Section
of
the
Identification
Branch
without
complying
with
section
44.1(1)
of
the
Young
Offenders
Act,
Fradsham
Prov.
Ct.
J.
said:
[para23]
Likewise
here,
Mr.
Corail
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
privacy
with
respect
to
his
Young
Offender
records
kept
by
the
police
and
reasonably
expected
that
his
privacy
would
not
be
invaded
except
as
provided
for
under
the
Young
Offenders
Act.
[para24]
I
am
satisfied
that
Constable
Lee,
in
obtaining
and
copying
Mr.
Corall’s
young
offender
records
(including
fingerprints),
in
respect
of
which
Mr.
Corail
had
a
reasonable
expectation
of
privacy,
conducted
a
search
and
seizure
as
those
terms
are
used
in
the
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
(C)
Was
The
Search
and
Seizure
Unreasonable?
[para25]
As
noted
above,
Constable
Lee
violated
the
accused’s
reasonable
expectation
of
privacy
when
she
obtained
his
young
offender
records
and
thereby
conducted
a
search
and
seizure.
[para26]
Was
the
search
and
seizure
“reasonable”?
Mr.
Justice
Lamer
(as
he
then
was)
said
in
R.
v.
Collins
(1987)
74
N.R.
276
(S.C.C.),
at
p.
290:
A
search
will
be
reasonable
if
it
is
authorized
by
law,
if
the
law
itself
is
reasonable
and
if
the
manner
in
which
the
search
was
carried
out
is
reasonable.
[para27]
On
behalf
of
the
majority
in
R.
v.
Debot
(1990)
102
N.R.
161
(S.C.C.),
at
p.
165,
he
again
confirmed
that
position.
[para28]
In
the
case
at
Bar,
the
matters
of
the
reasonableness
of
the
law
and
the
manner
of
the
search
are
not
in
question.
Rather,
the
issue
is
whether
the
search
and
seizure
conducted
was
authorized
by
law.
I
have
already
determined
that
section
44.1(1)
of
the
Young
Offenders
Act
requires
that
a
request
be
made
and
granted
before
an
inspection
of
young
offender
records
takes
place.
That
did
not
occur
in
this
case.
Both
Constable
Lee’s
search
and
seizure
of
Mr.
Corall’s
young
offender
records
were
unreasonable
and
accordingly
section
8
of
the
Charter
was
violated.
The
court
then
considered
whether
the
appropriate
remedy
would
be
to
exclude
the
evidence.
After
a
careful
review
of
the
authorities,
and
in
particular,
R.
v.
Simmons
(1988),
89
N.R.
1
(S.C.C.),
he
concluded
that
to
exclude
the
evidence
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
I
agree
that
there
has
been
a
violation
of
the
appellant’s
reasonable
expectation
of
privacy
and
therefore
a
possible
breach
of
its
section
8
Charter
rights.
I
do
not
however
propose
on
this
motion
to
determine
what
remedy,
if
any,
is
appropriate
under
section
24
of
the
Charter.
It
is
not
the
role
of
a
motions
judge
to
rule
on
whether
evidence
should
be
excluded.
That
is
the
province
of
the
trial
judge.
Another
remedy
suggested
by
the
appellant
is
that
the
portions
of
the
reply
containing
information
obtained
from
the
court
files
or
Mr.
De
Lucia’s
files
be
struck
out,
or
that
the
assessments
be
vacated.
I
regard
this
remedy
as
overkill.
The
appellant
bases
its
case
for
vacating
of
the
assessments
on
my
decision
in
O'Neill
Motors
Ltd.
v.
R.
(1995),
96
D.T.C.
1486
(T.C.C.).
Since
that
case
is
under
appeal
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
I
shall
not
comment
on
it
beyond
observing
that
it
was
a
very
different
case
from
this
one.
All
of
the
facts
were
agreed
to,
including
the
fact
that
there
was
a
violation
of
the
appellant’s
Charter
rights.
It
involved
a
massive,
intrusive
and
illegal
seizure
of
the
appellant’s
documents,
and
an
attempted
re-seizure
based
on
an
attempt
to
mislead
a
Justice
of
the
Peace.
Since
the
Charter
gave
the
court
a
discretion
in
determining
the
remedy
to
be
granted,
I
believed
that
the
most
appropriate
remedy
was
to
vacate
the
assessments.
There
was
the
added
element
that
the
Crown
had
the
onus
of
establishing
that
the
statute-barred
years
could
be
reopened.
I
continue
to
be
of
the
view
that
the
vacating
of
the
assessments
which
I
ordered
in
O'Neill
was
the
most
appropriate
remedy
in
the
circumstances
of
that
case.
That
is
not
the
case
here.
In
O'Neill
at
page
1496
I
said:
I
would
not
want
my
conclusion
in
this
case
to
be
taken
as
a
wholesale
sanctioning
of
the
vacating
of
all
assessments
where
some
component
of
the
Minister’s
basis
of
assessment
was
unconstitutionally
obtained
information.
Other
cases
may
arise
in
which
a
simple
exclusion
of
evidence
is
sufficient,
others
in
which
the
evidence
is
of
little
or
no
significance
in
the
making
of
the
assessments
or
where
its
introduction
would
not
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute,
or
still
others
in
which
Suarez
solution
will
commend
itself.
In
the
exercise
of
the
discretion
vested
in
the
court
under
section
24
of
the
Charter
one
must
be
vigilant
in
balancing,
on
the
one
hand,
the
rights
of
the
subject
that
are
protected
under
the
Charter,
and
on
the
other,
the
importance
of
maintaining
the
integrity
of
the
self-assessing
system.
As
each
case
arises
these
and,
no
doubt,
other
factors
will
play
a
role
and
all
factors
must
be
assigned
their
relative
weight.
In
the
circumstances
of
this
case
I
have
concluded
that
the
most
appropriate
exercise
of
my
discretion
is
to
vacate
the
assessments.
The
question
of
solicitor
client
privilege,
as
well
as
the
remedy,
if
any,
that
is
available
as
the
result
of
the
violation
of
the
appellant’s
reasonable
expectation
of
privacy,
are
matters
that
can
be
raised
before
the
trial
judge
where
it
is
assumed
a
proper
evidentiary
foundation
will
be
laid.
The
appellant’s
motion
is
therefore
dismissed.
The
costs
of
this
motion
should
be
left
to
the
discretion
of
the
trial
judge.
I
turn
now
to
the
respondent’s
motion
for
a
further
and
complete
list
of
documents
verified
by
affidavit
under
section
82
of
the
Rules.
The
appellant
contends
that
the
respondent
is
not
entitled
to
bring
this
motion
because
it
is
in
contempt
of
the
confidentiality
order
of
the
Ontario
Court.
This
begs
the
question.
I
have
made
no
finding
that
the
respondent
is
in
contempt
of
the
Ontario
Court,
nor
could
I
do
so.
In
Paul
Magder
Furs
Ltd.
v.
Ontario
(Attorney
General)
(1991),
6
O.R.
(3d)
188
(Ont.
C.A.)
it
was
held
that
it
was
an
abuse
of
process
to
assert
a
right
to
be
heard
by
the
court
and
at
the
same
time
refuse
to
undertake
to
obey
an
order
of
the
court.
The
case
has
no
application
here.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
not
been
found
in
contempt
of
the
Ontario
Court
and
in
any
event
it
is
a
different
court
from
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
The
respondent
is
therefore
entitled
to
bring
the
motion.
On
the
merits
of
the
motion,
I
think
the
respondent
is
entitled
to
the
order
it
seeks.
The
appellant
sought
full
production
under
section
82
of
the
Rules
and
this
was
agreed
to.
It
has
not
in
its
affidavit
of
documents
under
section
82
claimed
solicitor
client
privilege
on
the
documents
in
the
file
of
the
solicitor,
Mr.
De
Lucia.
If
it
has
copies
of
the
documents
that
are
covered
by
the
confidentiality
order,
as
seems
virtually
certain,
it
must
produce
them
if
they
are
relevant.
If
it
does
not
have
them
it
should
say
so.
In
this
regard
I
am
in
respectful
agreement
with
the
decision
of
the
Alberta
Court
of
Appeal
in
Ed
Miller
Sales
&
Rentals
Ltd.
v.
Caterpillar
Tractor
Co.
(1988),
90
A.R.
323
(Alta.
C.A.)
where
Laycraft
C.J.A.
ordered
the
production
of
documents
that
were
the
subject
of
a
confidentiality
order
in
the
United
States.
I
find
it
somewhat
absurd
that
a
party
to
a
proceeding
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
can
refuse
to
produce
relevant
documents
because
it
has,
as
the
result
of
its
own
motion
and
on
consent
in
another
court,
caused
those
documents
to
be
covered
by
a
confidentiality
order
—
particularly
long
after
the
action
in
which
the
order
was
made
has
been
dismissed.
There
will
be
an
order
that
the
appellant
serve
on
the
respondent
and
file
with
the
court
a
further
affidavit
under
section
82
in
which
it
lists
all
relevant
documents
in
its
possession
or
control,
including
the
originals
or
copies
of
any
documents
in
its
possession
that
were
the
subject
of
the
confidentiality
order
in
Katz
v.
Lapsker
(November
29,
1988),
Doc.
26744/88
(Ont.
Master),
as
well
as
the
originals
or
copies
of
all
documents
in
its
possession
from
the
file
of
Mr.
De
Lucia
ordered
by
Master
Peppiatt
to
be
produced
in
that
action.
Costs
will
be
in
the
discretion
of
the
trial
judge.
Motion
dismissed;
Cross-Motion
granted.