Burnyeat
J.:
Both
applicants
apply
for
the
same
order
that,
pursuant
to
s.
47(2)
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act
and
the
inherent
jurisdiction
of
the
court,
certain
funds
held
in
trust
be
paid
out
of
trust.
Ms.
Charles
seeks
the
funds
as
a
secured
creditor
of
Tuxedo
Transport
Ltd.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Customs,
Excise
and
Taxation
seeks
the
funds
as
a
result
of
the
statutory
trust
created
by
s.
227
(4.1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
appears
that
this
is
the
first
time
that
the
court
has
been
required
to
review
the
effect
of
s.
227
(4.1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
came
into
effect
on
June
18,
1998.
The
Applicant,
Christina
Wales
Charles
The
applicant,
Ms.
Charles,
loaned
Tuxedo
$250,000.
The
repayment
of
the
loan
was
secured
by
a
General
Security
Agreement
dated
August
14,
1996.
The
General
Security
Agreement
created
a
“Security
Interest”
as
follows:
In
all
debts,
accounts,
claims,
moneys,
and
chooses
in
action
which
now
are,
or
which
may
at
any
time
hereafter
be,
due
or
owing
to
or
owned
by
the
Debtor
[Tuxedo]...
This
security
was
registered
on
August
15,
1996
in
the
Personal
Property
Registry.
On
April
8,
1997,
Ms.
Charles
demanded
the
payment
from
Tuxedo
of
the
sum
of
$252,242.83
and
also
provided
a
Notice
of
Intention
to
Enforce
Security
pursuant
to
s.244
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act
to
Tuxedo.
The
Role
of
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
Security
was
subsequently
granted
by
Tuxedo
to
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
by
way
of
a
General
Security
Agreement
dated
November
18,
1996.
The
General
Security
Agreement
provided
the
following
“Security
Interest”:
...all
of
the
Debtor’s
[Tuxedo’s]
right,
title
and
interest,
both
present
and
future,
in
and
to
all
of
its
presently
owned
or
held
and
after
acquired
or
held
personal
property,
of
whatsoever
nature
or
kind
and
wheresoever
situate,
and
in
all
and
to
all
Proceeds
and
renewals
thereof
and
therefrom,
accretions
thereto
and
substitutions
therefore,
including
without
limitation,
all
of
the
following
now
owned
or
hereafter
owned
or
acquired
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
Debtor...
Included
within
what
was
then
particularized
were:
...all
accounts,
debts,
debts,
dues,
claims,
chooses
in
action
and
demands
of
every
nature
and
kind
howsoever
arising
or
secured
including
letters
of
credit
and
advices
of
credit,
which
are
now
due,
owing
or
accruing
or
growing
due
to
or
owned
by
or
which
may
hereafter
become
due,
owing
or
accruing
or
growing
due
to
or
owned
by
the
Debtor
[Tuxedo]...
That
security
was
registered
in
the
Personal
Property
Registry
on
October
2,
1996.
On
March
12,
1997,
the
Bank
made
demand
for
payment
of
its
outstanding
loans
and
also
served
Notice
of
Intention
to
Enforce
Security
pursuant
to
s.
244
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act.
The
balance
due
and
owing
to
the
Bank
at
that
time
was
approximately
$420,000.
Appointment
of
an
Interim
Receiver
At
the
request
of
the
Bank
and
by
order
made
March
14,
1997
in
these
proceedings,
D.
Manning
&
Associates
Inc.
was
appointed
the
interim
receiver
of
the
property,
business
and
undertaking
of
Tuxedo
with
the
appointment
to
continue
until
the
earlier
of
5:00
p.m.
on
March
24,
1997,
further
order
of
the
court,
or
the
appointment
of
Manning
as
the
receiver
and/or
receiver-manager
pursuant
to
the
security
of
the
Bank.
The
appointment
of
Manning
as
interim
receiver
was
made
pursuant
to
s.
47(1)
and
s.
47
(2)
(a)
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act.
Because
there
was
neither
a
further
appointment
nor
a
further
order,
the
appointment
of
Manning
as
interim
receiver
continued
only
until
March
24,
1997
at
5:00
p.m.
The
order
appointing
the
interim
receiver
provided
Manning
with
these
powers
and
with
this
priority
for
fees:
D.
Manning
&
Associates
Inc.
shall
take
possession
of
all
of
the
property,
business
and
undertaking
of
Tuxedo
Transport
Ltd.
charged
by
the
Petitioner’s
[Royal
Bank
of
Canada]
security
and
shall
exercise
control
over
such
property
and
over
the
business
of
Tuxedo
Transport
Ltd.,
and
shall,
in
particular,
take
steps
to
collect
in
all
accounts
receivable
and
other
debts
owing
to
Tuxedo
Transport
Ltd.
and
take
control
of
all
bank
accounts.
D.
Manning
&
Associates
Inc.
shall
have
the
authority
to
compromise
accounts
receivable
and
debts
in
order
to
facilitate
the
collection
of
accounts
receivable.
The
fees
and
disbursements
of
the
interim
receiver
shall
be
secured
by
a
charge
on
the
assets
of
Tuxedo
Transport
Ltd.
which
charge
shall
rank
ahead
of
all
other
secured
creditors.
During
the
period
of
appointment,
Manning
received
funds
in
excess
of
those
which
were
claimed
by
the
Bank
pursuant
to
its
security.
The
excess
funds
after
payment
of
the
fees
and
disbursements
of
the
interim
receiver
amounted
to
$41,367.88.
By
a
consent
order
dated
April
24,
1997,
that
sum
was
placed
into
an
interest
bearing
trust
account
with
the
law
firm
representing
Tuxedo
and
it
is
in
that
account
that
the
funds
plus
accumulated
interest
remain
today.
The
fees
and
disbursements
of
Manning
were
paid
and,
under
the
consent
order,
neither
Tuxedo
nor
the
creditors
of
Tuxedo
retained
any
claim
against
Manning
for
the
activities
of
Manning
during
the
short
appointment
as
interim
receiver.
The
Applicant,
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
Revenue
Canada
assessed
Tuxedo
in
March,
1997
for
unremitted
source
deductions
for
the
period
beginning
August,
1996
and
ending
November,
1996.
The
assessment
was
made
after
a
payroll
audit.
A
Notice
of
Assessment
dated
April
8,
1997
in
the
amount
of
$132,933.83
was
issued.
On
April
8,
1997,
which
was
the
same
day
that
Ms.
Charles
made
demand
and
provided
Tuxedo
with
a
Notice
of
Intention
to
Enforce
Security
pursuant
to
s.244
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act,
Revenue
Canada
issued
an
Enhanced
Requirement
to
Pay
Notice
to
Manning
pursuant
to
s.
224
(1.2)
and
s.
227
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Revenue
Canada
did
not
serve
similar
Requirements
to
Pay
on
the
Bank
or
on
Ms.
Charles.
However,
other
Requirements
to
Pay
were
subsequently
issued
and,
as
a
result
of
those
Require-
ments,
approximately
$9,000
has
been
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
the
Notice
of
Assessment
dated
April
8,
1997.
Statutory
Provisions
Section
153(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
requires
an
employer
to
withhold
and
remit
tax.
The
amount
deducted
is
deemed
to
have
been
received
at
the
date
of
deduction
by
the
employee
and
the
amount
deducted
is
to
be
held
in
trust
for
Revenue
Canada.
The
legislation
which
was
in
effect
until
June
18,
1998
was:
227(4)
Every
person
who
deducts
or
withholds
an
amount
under
this
Act
shall
be
deemed
to
hold
the
amount
so
deducted
or
withheld
in
trust,
separate
and
apart
from
the
person’s
own
moneys,
for
Her
Majesty
and
for
payment
to
Her
Majesty
in
the
manner
and
at
the
time
provided
under
this
Act,
and
Her
Majesty
has
a
lien
and
charge
on
the
property
and
assets
of
the
person
whether
or
not
the
person
has
kept
the
amount
separate
and
apart
or
is
in
receivership,
bankruptcy
or
liquidation
or
has
made
an
assignment.
The
following
substitution
for
s.227
(4)
was
given
Royal
Assent
on
June
18,
1998:
227(4)
Every
person
who
deducts
or
withholds
an
amount
under
this
Act
is
deemed,
notwithstanding
any
security
interest
(as
defined
in
subsection
224
(1.3))
in
the
amount
so
deducted
or
withheld,
to
hold
the
amount
separate
and
apart
from
the
property
of
the
person
and
from
property
held
by
any
secured
creditor
(as
defined
in
subsection
224
(1.3))
of
that
person
that
but
for
the
security
interest
would
be
property
of
the
person,
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
and
for
payment
to
Her
Majesty
in
the
manner
and
at
the
time
provided
under
this
Act.
At
the
same
time,
the
following
provision
was
enacted:
227(4.1)
Notwithstanding
any
other
provision
of
this
Act,
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act,
any
other
enactment
of
Canada,
any
enactment
of
a
province
or
any
law,
where
at
any
time
an
amount
deemed
by
subsection
(4)
to
be
held
by
a
person
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
is
not
paid
to
Her
Majesty
in
the
manner
and
at
the
time
provided
under
this
Act,
property
of
the
person
and
property
held
by
any
secured
creditor
(as
defined
in
subsection
224
(1.3))
of
that
person
that
but
for
a
security
interest
(as
defined
in
subsection
224
(1.3))
would
be
property
of
the
person,
equal
in
value
to
the
amount
so
deemed
to
be
held
in
trust
is
deemed
(a)
to
be
held,
from
the
time
the
amount
was
deducted
or
withheld
by
the
person,
separate
and
apart
from
the
property
of
the
person
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
whether
or
not
the
property
is
subject
to
such
a
security
interest,
and
(b)
to
form
no
part
of
the
estate
or
property
of
the
person
from
the
time
the
amount
was
so
deducted
or
withheld,
whether
or
not
the
property
has
in
fact
been
kept
separate
and
apart
from
the
estate
or
property
of
the
person
and
whether
or
not
the
property
is
subject
to
such
a
security
interest
and
is
property
beneficially
owned
by
Her
Majesty
notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
such
property
or
in
the
proceeds
thereof,
and
the
proceeds
of
such
property
shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
in
priority
to
all
such
security
interests.
Definitions
of
“person”
and
“property”
are
set
out
under
s.248
(1
)
of
the
Act:
“person”,
or
any
word
or
expression
descriptive
of
a
person,
includes
any
corporation,
...
and
the
heirs,
executors,
administrators
or
other
legal
representatives
of
such
a
person,
according
to
the
law
of
that
part
of
Canada
which
the
context
extends;
“property”
means
property
of
any
kind
whatever
whether
real
or
personal
or
corporeal
or
incorporeal
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
(a)
a
right
of
any
kind
whatever,
a
share
or
a
chose
in
action,
(b)
unless
a
contrary
intention
is
evident,
money
(c)
a
timber
resource
property,
and
(d)
work
in
progress
of
a
business
that
is
a
profession.
The
definitions
of
“secured
creditor”
and
“security
interest”
are
set
out
under
s.
224
(1.3)
of
the
Act:
“secured
creditor”
means
a
person
who
has
a
security
interest
in
the
property
of
another
person
or
who
acts
for
or
on
behalf
of
that
person
with
respect
to
the
security
interest
and
includes
a
trustee
appointed
under
a
trust
deed
relating
to
a
security
interest,
a
receiver
or
receiver-manager
appointed
by
a
secured
creditor
or
by
a
court
on
the
application
of
a
secured
creditor,
a
sequestrator,
or
any
other
person
performing
a
similar
function;
“security
interest”
means
any
interest
in
property
that
secures
payment
or
performance
of
an
obligation
and
includes
an
interest
created
by
or
arising
out
of
a
debenture,
mortgage,
lien,
pledge,
charge,
deemed
or
actual
trust,
assignment
or
encumbrance
of
any
kind
whatever,
however
or
whenever
arising,
created,
deemed
to
arise
or
otherwise
provided
for;
The
provisions
dealing
with
garnishment
proceedings
are
set
out
in
s.
224(1)
and
s.
224(1.2)
of
the
Act:
224.
(1)
Where
the
Minister
has
knowledge
or
suspects
that
a
person
is,
or
will
be
within
one
year,
liable
to
make
a
payment
to
another
person
who
is
liable
to
make
a
payment
under
this
Act
(in
this
subsection
and
subsections
(1.1)
and
(3)
referred
to
as
the
“tax
debtor”),
the
Minister
may
in
writing
require
the
person
to
pay
forthwith,
where
the
moneys
are
immediately
payable,
and
in
any
other
case
as
and
when
the
moneys
become
payable,
the
moneys
otherwise
payable
to
the
tax
debtor
in
whole
or
in
part
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
the
tax
debtor’s
liability
under
this
Act.
224.
(1.2)
Notwithstanding
any
other
provision
of
this
Act,
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act,
any
other
enactment
of
Canada,
any
enactment
of
a
province
or
any
law,
but
subject
to
subsections
69(1)
and
69.1(1)
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act
and
section
11.4
of
the
Companies’
Creditors
Arrangement
Act,
where
the
Minister
has
knowledge
or
suspects
that
a
particular
person
is,
or
will
become
within
one
year,
liable
to
make
a
payment
(a)
to
another
person
(in
this
subsection
referred
to
as
the
“tax
debtor”)
who
is
liable
to
pay
an
amount
assessed
under
subsection
227(10.1)
or
a
similar
provision,
or
(b)
to
a
secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
payment
that,
but
for
a
security
interest
in
favour
of
the
secured
creditor,
would
be
payable
to
the
tax
debtor,
the
Minister
may
in
writing
require
the
particular
person
to
pay
forthwith,
where
the
moneys
are
immediately
payable,
and
in
any
other
case
as
and
when
the
moneys
become
payable,
the
moneys
otherwise
payable
to
the
tax
debtor
or
the
secured
creditor
in
whole
or
in
part
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
the
tax
debtor’s
liability
under
subsection
227(10.1)
or
the
similar
provision,
and
on
receipt
of
that
requirement
by
the
particular
person,
the
amount
of
those
moneys
that
is
so
required
to
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
shall,
notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
those
moneys,
become
the
property
of
Her
Majesty
to
the
extent
of
that
liability
as
assessed
by
the
Minister
and
shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
in
priority
to
any
such
security
interest.
The
new
s.227(4)
and
s.
227(4.1)
of
the
Act
were
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
on
June
15,
1994.
In
anticipation
of
Royal
Assent,
the
Department
of
Finance
issued
a
press
release
on
April
7,
1997
which
provided
in
part:
Finance
Minister
Paul
Martin
today
announced
proposed
amendments
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Canada
Pension
Plan,
the
Employment
Insurance
Act
and
the
Excise
Tax
Act
to
clarify
that
the
Crown’s
claims
for
unremitted
source
deductions
and
unpaid
GST
take
priority
over
all
other
claims.
The
proposed
amendments
respond
to
the
recent
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
v.
The
Royal
Bank
of
Canada,
which
held
that
the
current
rules
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
creating
a
deemed
trust
do
not
give
priority
to
the
Crown
over
certain
assignments
of
inventory
and
that
clearer
language
is
required
to
assign
absolute
priority
to
the
Crown.
The
amendments
will
apply
from
June
1994.
Background
Leading
up
to
the
Decision
in
Royal
Bank
v.
Sparrow
Electric
Corp.
(1997),
143
D.L.R.
(4th)
385
(S.C.C.)
Earlier
decisions
have
consistently
held
that
the
court
should
not
interpret
legislation
so
as
to
deprive
third
parties
of
pre-existing
property
rights
unless
Parliament
makes
its
intention
clear
and
unambiguous
in
the
wording
of
the
statute.
The
decisions
dealing
with
s.
227(4)
of
the
Act
culminated
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
decision
in
Sparrow
Electric
Corp.
which
was
released
on
February
27,
1997
and
which
is
referred
to
in
the
Department
of
Finance
press
release
noted
above.
Speaking
on
behalf
of
the
majority,
Iacobucci
J.
concluded
that
the
lien
and
charge
created
by
the
former
s.
227
(4)
did
not
give
priority
to
the
Crown
over
pre-existing
creditor
charges:
the
inventory
was
not
an
unencumbered
asset
at
the
moment
the
taxes
came
due.
It
was
subject
to
the
respondent’s
security
interest
and
therefore
was
legally
the
respondent’s
and
not
attachable
by
the
deemed
trust.
As
Gonthier
J.
himself
Says:
[subsection
227(4)]
does
not
permit
Her
Majesty
to
attach
Her
beneficial
interest
to
property
which,
at
the
time
of
liquidation,
assignment,
receivership
or
bankruptcy,
in
law
belongs
to
a
party
other
than
the
tax
debtor.
The
deeming
is
thus
not
a
mechanism
for
undoing
an
existing
security
interest,
but
rather
a
device
for
going
back
in
time
and
seeking
out
an
asset
that
was
not,
at
the
moment
the
income
taxes
came
due,
subject
to
any
competing
security
interest.
In
short,
the
deemed
trust
provision
cannot
be
effective
unless
it
is
first
determined
that
there
is
some
unencumbered
asset
out
of
which
the
trust
may
be
deemed.
The
deeming
follows
the
answering
of
the
chattel
security
question:
it
does
not
determine
the
answer.
(at
p.
428)
However,
lacobucci
J.
then
refers
to
the
powers
available
to
Parliament
and
suggests
that
it
would
be
available
to
Parliament
to
enact
legislation
such
as
s.
224(1.2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
This
is
not
to
say,
however,
that
Parliament
could
not
legislate
otherwise.
Parliament
has
shown
that
it
knows
how
to
assert
priority
over
rival
security
interests.
See
Alberta
(Treasury
Branches)
v.
M.N.R.,
[1996]
1
S.C.R.
963,
at
p.
975.
All
that
is
needed
to
overtake
a
fixed
and
specific
charge
is
clear
language
to
that
effect.
(at
p.
431)
Finally,
I
wish
to
emphasize
that
it
is
open
to
Parliament
to
step
in
and
assign
absolute
priority
to
the
deemed
trust.
A
clear
illustration
of
how
this
might
be
done
is
afforded
by
s.
224(1.2)
of
the
ITA,
which
vests
certain
moneys
in
the
Crown
“notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
those
moneys”
and
provides
that
they
“shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
in
priority
to
any
such
security
interest”.
All
that
is
needed
to
effect
the
desired
result
is
clear
language
of
that
kind.
(at
p.
432)
The
first
question
which
arises
in
the
case
at
bar
is
whether
Parliament
has
indicated
an
intention
in
clear
and
unambiguous
language
that
book
debts
not
as
yet
in
existence
will
be
subject
to
the
deemed
trust
created
by
ss.
227
(4)
and
227
(4.1).
Are
Future
Book
Debts
Subject
to
Sections
227
(4)
and
227
(4.1)
This
question
is
of
critical
importance
in
determining
the
issues
between
Ms.
Charles
and
Her
Majesty.
The
unremitted
deductions
accrued
between
August,
1996
and
November,
1996.
However,
the
receivables
collected
by
Manning
were
aged
as
follows
as
at
February
15,
1997:
Current
|
$254,493.18
|
(48.03%)
|
Over
30
|
289,396.45
|
(39.52%)
|
Over
60
|
44,759.05
|
(
8.45%)
|
Over
90
|
12,039.16
|
(
2.27%)
|
Over
120
|
9,177.87
|
(
1.73%)
|
From
that,
it
is
clear
that
less
than
13%
of
the
receivables
could
have
been
in
existence
during
the
period
August,
1996
through
November,
1996.
There
is
also
nothing
before
the
court
which
would
indicate
whether
the
receivables
not
collected
by
Manning
relate
to
the
August,
1996
through
November,
1996
period
or
whether
the
receivables
which
were
collected
by
Manning
and
remitted
to
the
Bank
related
to
that
period
or
to
receivables
created
after
November,
1996.
On
a
clear
reading
of
the
words
used,
it
is
possible
to
conclude
that
Parliament
only
intended
that
property
existing
at
the
time
the
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty
was
created
would
be
subject
to
the
trust
and
that
property
of
the
taxpayer
which
came
into
existence
afterwards
would
not
be
subject
to
the
trust.
The
word
“property”
as
used
in
ss.
227
(4)
and
227(4.1)
is
defined
under
s.
248
(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
That
definition
does
not
include
similar
references
to
future
debts
and
monies
owing
as
can
be
found
in
documents
such
as
the
General
Security
Agreements
of
Ms.
Charles
and
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada.
The
failure
to
include
words
in
the
definition
of
“property”
to
make
it
clear
that
after
acquired
property
would
be
included
in
the
trust
created
by
ss.
227(4)
and
227(4.1)
evidences
a
clear
intention
of
Parliament
that
such
after
acquired
property
will
not
be
subject
to
such
a
trust.
Alternatively,
the
drafting
leaves
it
unclear
as
to
whether
it
was
intended
that
such
after
acquired
property
would
be
included
so
that,
in
the
absence
of
a
clear
intention
expressed
in
the
drafting,
it
cannot
be
assumed
that
Parliament
intended
to
have
such
property
included
within
the
trust.
The
inclusion
of
the
phrase
“a
chose
in
action”
in
the
definition
of
“property”
in
s.248
(1)
of
the
Act
is
of
no
assistance
to
Her
Majesty
in
Her
submissions.
While
a
chose
in
action
can
be
either
a
personal
right
recoverable
by
action
or
a
right
to
personal
things
not
in
the
possession
of
the
owner
but
subject
to
a
right
of
action
for
possession,
it
is
clearly
the
case
that
no
chose
in
action
arises
until
there
is
a
right
available.
There
can
be
no
present
right
of
action
relating
to
property
not
as
yet
created
or
book
debts
which
will
only
be
created
in
the
future.
If
Parliament
had
wished
to
expand
the
definition
of
“chose
in
action”,
it
could
have
done
so
by
indicating
that
“after
acquired”
choses
in
action
were
also
included
in
the
definition
of
“property”.
The
absence
of
words
similar
to
those
used
in
the
General
Security
Agreement
granted
in
favour
of
Ms.
Charles
indicates
that
Parliament
did
not
intend
for
after
acquired
choses
in
action
to
be
included
within
the
definition
of
“property”
contained
under
s.248(
1
)
of
the
Act.
The
clear
intention
of
the
previous
s.
227(4)
was
that
it
was
“...a
device
for
going
back
in
time
and
seeking
out
an
asset
that
was
not,
at
the
moment
the
income
taxes
came
due,
subject
to
any
competing
security
interest.”
and
to
“seek
out
and
attach
Her
Majesty’s
beneficial
interest
to
property
of
the
debtor
which
at
that
time
is
in
existence.”
(Per
Iacobucci
J.
at
pp.
428-9
and
per
Gonthier
J.
at
p.
402
in
Sparrow
Electric
Corp.,
supra.)
Similarly,
the
intent
of
the
new
s.224
(4)
is
also
to
“seek
out”
assets
which
will
be
subject
to
the
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty.
The
only
change
that
Parliament
has
made
is
that
the
assets
sought
out
will
be
subject
to
the
trust
whether
or
not
those
assets
had
been
previously
charged
by
the
taxpayer
to
a
creditor.
However,
there
is
no
change
to
the
proposition
stated
by
Iacobucci
J.
that
the
property
must
be
“in
existence”
at
the
time
of
the
attachment
of
Her
Majesty’s
beneficial
interest.
As
well,
the
words
used
in
drafting
ss.
227
(4)
and
227
(4.1)
support
the
proposition
that
it
is
the
only
assets
in
existence
which
the
trust
can
“seek
out.”
The
wording
of
ss.
227
(4.1)
(a)
and
227
(4.1)
(b)
makes
it
clear
that
property
of
the
debtor
and
property
held
by
any
secured
creditor
is
to
be
held
in
trust
“from
the
time
the
amount
was
deducted
or
withheld.”
It
would
not
be
possible
for
the
debtor
or
a
secured
creditor
to
hold
that
which
does
not
exist
“from
the
time
the
amount
was
deducted
or
withheld”.
The
clear
intent
of
those
provisions
is
that
it
is
only
property
in
existence
which
is
subject
to
the
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty.
Stated
the
other
way,
it
is
not
clear
that
it
was
intended
that
property
which
was
not
in
existence
at
the
time
the
amount
was
deducted
or
withheld
would
also
be
subject
to
the
trust
if
and
when
such
property
was
created.
Her
Majesty
relies
on
the
decision
of
Kirby,
J.
in
Morrison
v.
University
of
Calgary
(1977),
75
D.L.R.
(3d)
638
(Alta.
T.D.)
to
support
the
proposition
that
future
income
is
“property”.
A
review
of
that
decision
does
not
allow
that
conclusion
to
be
drawn.
Dr.
Lamarre
was
a
Professor
in
the
Faculty
of
Medicine
at
the
University
of
Calgary.
A
third
party
demand
pursuant
to
the
former
s.
224(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
served
on
the
University
but,
before
the
salary
to
Dr.
Lamarre
was
payable,
Dr.
Lamarre
executed
an
assignment
in
bankruptcy.
The
issue
which
arose
in
that
case
was
whether
or
not
the
funds
formed
part
of
the
estate
of
the
bankrupt
or
whether
the
Receiver
General
was
a
secured
creditor
within
the
definition
of
s.
2
of
the
Bankruptcy
Act
so
that
the
funds
paid
to
it
were
funds
received
by
a
secured
creditor.
Justice
Kirby
held
that
the
Receiver
General
was
a
secured
creditor
and
that
future
income
was
“property”.
At
p.639,
Kirby,
J.
stated:
An
included
definition
of
the
word
“property”
in
the
Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary
is
“the
right
to
possession,
use
or
disposal
of
anything”.
I
consider
that
future
income
comes
within
this
definition.
The
decision
of
Kirby,
J.
was
subsequently
overturned
by
the
Alberta
Court
of
Appeal
in
Morrison
v.
University
of
Calgary
(1978),
85
D.L.R.
(3d)
392
(Alta.
C.A.)
on
the
basis
that
the
Minister
was
not
a
secured
creditor
within
the
meaning
of
s.2
of
the
Bankruptcy
Act.
Rather,
the
Minister
was
like
any
other
garnishing
creditor
whose
rights
were
affected
by
s.
15(1)
of
the
Bankruptcy
Act
which
provided
that
any
assignment
took
precedence
over
“...
all
judicial
or
other
attachments,
garnishments,
certificates
having
the
effect
of
judgments,
judgments,
certificates
of
judgments
...
executions
or
other
process
against
the
property
of
the
bankrupt....”
However,
it
is
also
clear
that
the
decision
of
Kirby,
J.
did
not
deal
with
“future
income”.
Rather,
Kirby,
J.
dealt
with
income
earned
but
not
as
yet
payable.
If,
having
worked
through
the
pay
period,
Dr.
Lamarre
had
not
been
paid,
it
is
clear
that
Dr.
Lamarre
would
have
had
a
cause
of
action
accruing
from
the
first
day
that
he
worked.
Accordingly,
the
“property”
interest
that
Dr.
Lamarre
had
at
the
time
was
a
chose
in
action,
not
for
future
income,
but
for
moneys
owing
as
a
result
of
employment
services
provided
to
the
University.
In
the
absence
of
a
change
to
the
definition
of
“property”
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
so
as
to
bring
that
definition
into
accord
with
the
definitions
commonly
contained
under
General
Security
Agreements
such
as
were
granted
to
Ms.
Charles
and
the
Bank,
it
is
not
possible
to
conclude
that
either
it
was
the
intention
of
Parliament
to
have
after
acquired
property
subject
to
the
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty
or
that
Parliament
has
expressed
a
clear
intention
that
after
acquired
property
would
be
subject
to
the
trust.
In
the
absence
of
that
clarity,
I
can
only
conclude
that
the
trust
claimed
by
Her
Majesty
in
the
case
at
bar
related
only
to
property
already
in
existence
prior
to
or
which
was
created
during
the
period
August,
1996
through
November,
1996.
It
is
also
clear
that
Manning
is
not
a
“secured
creditor”
within
the
meaning
of
s.
227(4.1)
of
the
Act
so
that
property
held
by
Manning
equal
in
value
to
the
amount
deemed
to
be
held
in
trust
is
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty.
At
the
time
the
trust
was
created.
Manning
was
not
interim
receiver.
Accordingly,
it
cannot
be
said
that
there
was
any
property
“held
by
any
secured
creditor”
[Manning]
at
the
time
the
trust
was
created.
Even
if
I
am
incorrect
in
finding
that
the
trust
was
only
applicable
to
property
in
existence
prior
to
November,
1996,
it
is
clear
that
that
which
was
held
by
Manning
was
not
“property
held
by
any
secured
creditor
(as
defined
in
subsection
224(1.3))
...”.
While
the
definition
of
“secured
creditor”
contained
under
s.
224(1.3)
of
the
Act
includes
a
person
“who
acts
for
or
on
behalf
of”
a
secured
creditor,
an
interim
receiver
is
not
such
a
person.
An
interim
receiver
is
not
specifically
defined
within
the
definition
of
“secured
creditor”
under
s.
224(1.3)
of
the
Act.
This
failure
can
be
contrasted
with
s.
227(5.1)
of
the
Act
which
specifically
includes
an
interim
receiver
as
a
“specified
person”
for
the
purposes
of
s.227(5)
of
the
Act.
The
failure
to
specifically
include
an
interim
receiver
indicates
that
Parliament
was
satisfied
that
an
interim
receiver
was
not
included
within
the
definition
of
those
who
were
acting
for
or
on
behalf
of
a
secured
creditor.
It
is
clear
that
Manning
derives
his
powers
from
the
court
subject
to
the
limitations
set
out
under
s.47
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act
so
that
Manning
is
not
a
“person
...
who
acts
for
or
on
behalf
of...
[a
person
who
has
a
security
interest]”
as
that
phrase
is
used
in
s.224
(1.3).
In
dealing
with
the
definition
of
“person”
as
set
out
under
s.2(
1
)(c)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
in
dealing
with
whether
an
interim
receiver
and
manager
was
liable
to
pay
excise
tax,
Aylesworth
J.A.
in
Royal
Trust
Co.
v.
Montex
Apparel
Industries
Ltd.
(1972),
17
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
45
(Ont.
C.A.)
concluded
on
behalf
of
the
court:
...
Moreover
the
receiver
derives
his
powers
and
authority
wholly
from
the
order
of
this
Court
appointing
him.
He
is
not
subject
to
the
control
or
direction
of
the
appellant
or
of
anyone,
for
that
matter,
except
the
Court
which
appointed
him...
If
he
can
be
said
to
be
the
legal
representative
of
anyone,
it
would
appear
to
us
that
that
person
would
be
the
debtor,
Montex,
and
not
the
appellant-trustee.
(at
p.49)
As
well,
it
cannot
be
said
that,
under
the
definition
of
a
“secured
creditor”
as
set
out
under
s.224
(1.3)
of
the
Act,
an
interim
receiver
is
a
person
“performing
a
similar
function”
to
a
trustee
under
a
trust
deed,
a
receiver
or
receiver-manager
appointed
by
a
secured
creditor
or
by
court
order
or
a
sequestrator.
The
duty
of
the
interim
receiver
is
to
preserve
the
debtor’s
assets:
Stuart
&
Sutterby,
Re
(1929)
11
C.B.R.
1
(Ont.
Reg.
in
Bktcy.).
The
function
of
the
interim
receiver
is
to
act
as
a
watchdog
or
monitor
of
the
debtor’s
estate
until
the
petition
is
heard:
Big
Eddy
Shops
Ltd.,
Re
(1977),
24
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
90
(Ont.
S.C.);
Austroguip
Manufacturing,
Ltd.
Re
(1988),
68
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
161
(Ont.
S.C.).
The
property
of
the
debtor
does
not
vest
in
the
interim
receiver:
Price
Waterhouse
Ltd.
v.
Marathon
Realty
Co.
(1979),
32
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
71
(Man.
Q.B.).
Those
functions
and
the
role
of
an
interim
receiver
are
not
consistent
with
the
interim
receiver
“performing
a
similar
function”
to
those
who
were
in
a
position
to
manage
and
to
liquidate
the
assets
of
a
taxpayer.
The
definition
of
“trustee”
under
s.153
(1.4)
of
the
Act
which
defines
“trustee”
for
the
purposes
of
s.
153(1.3)
of
the
Act
is
almost
identical
to
the
definition
of
“secured
creditor”
set
out
under
s.224(
1.3)
of
the
Act.
In
considering
the
question
of
the
liability
of
an
interim
receiver
for
the
failure
of
a
company
to
remit
employee
deductions
after
an
assessment
of
a
taxpayer
under
s.
153(1)
of
the
Act,
Sobier
T.C.J.
in
Plaskett
&
Associates
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
2162
(T.C.C.),
considered
the
question
of
whether
an
interim
receiver
was
a
“trustee”
for
the
purposes
of
that
section
of
that
Act.
Sobier,
T.C.J.
held
that
the
interim
receiver
was
not
a
“trustee”
as
defined
under
s.
153(1.4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Sobier,
T.C.J.
concluded:
In
all
of
the
above
cases,
the
Courts
have
clearly
stated
that
the
property
of
the
debtor
does
not
vest
in
an
interim
receiver;
that
he
is
a
“watchman”,
“caretaker",
“policeman"
or
“sheriff".
His
function
is
to
preserve
the
assets
and
not
to
interfere
with
the
rights
of
the
debtor.
Although
it
is
recognized
that
it
is
essential
that
he
control
receipts,
he
should
not
interfere
with
the
debtor
carrying
on
business
in
the
usual
course.
Unlike
those
enumerated
persons
or
persons
performing
a
similar
function,
an
interim
receiver,
and
in
this
case
the
Appellant,
was
not
entitled
to
carry
on
any
of
such
functions.
He
was
directed
and
ordered
by
the
Court
to
be
a
“watchman";
to
see
that
the
assets
of
the
Corporation
and
were
not
dissipated
pending
the
hearing
of
the
petition
for
a
receiving
order.
He
was
specifically
instructed
not
to
interfere
with
the
carrying
on
of
the
Corporation’s
business.
Even
though
it
could
be
argued
that
the
interim
receiver
performed
some
of
the
functions
set
forth
in
subsection
153(1.3)
such
as
controlling
the
property
and
income
of
the
Corporation,
it
did
not
do
so
in
the
capacity
of
a
trustee
as
defined
in
subsection
153(1.4)
and
accordingly,
the
charging
provisions
of
subsection
153(1.3)
are
not
applicable
in
these
circumstances.
The
reasoning
set
out
is
applicable
to
the
question
of
whether
an
interim
receiver
is
a
“person
...
who
acts
for
or
on
behalf
of”
a
“secured
creditor.”
The
powers
contained
under
the
March
14,
1997
order
appointing
Manning
and
the
powers
available
to
an
interim
receiver
as
set
out
under
s.47
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act
clearly
set
out
a
caretaker
or
a
monitoring
role
which
is
inconsistent
with
the
management
and
liquidation
role
contemplated
by
the
definition
of
“secured
creditor”
contained
under
s.224(1.3)
of
the
Act
and
incorporated
into
s.227(4.1
)
of
the
Act.
Accordingly,
it
is
not
possible
to
conclude
that
Manning
was
a
“secured
creditor”
as
it
is
clear
that
he
was
not
a
“person
performing
a
similar
function”
to
those
persons
who
were
specifically
listed
in
the
definition
of
“secured
creditor”
set
out
under
s.224(1.3)
of
the
Act.
Even
if
it
could
be
said
that
Manning
was
a
“secured
creditor”
as
that
term
is
used
under
s.227(4.1
)
of
the
Act,
it
is
clear
that
Parliament
has
changed
the
former
s.227(4)
dramatically.
While
the
old
section
creates
a
“lien
and
charge
on
the
property
and
assets
of
the
person”,
the
new
section
creates
only
a
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty
on
property
of
the
taxpayer
or
on
property
that
the
taxpayer
has
charged
with
a
security
interest
to
a
secured
creditor.
Accordingly,
it
can
no
longer
be
said
that
Her
Majesty
has
a
lien
and
charge
against
property
as
a
result
of
s.227(4)
of
the
Act.
Rather,
the
intent
of
the
new
s.227(4)
and
227(4.1)
is
that
amounts
deducted
or
withheld
are
deemed
to
be
held
as
property
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
and
an
equal
amount
of
other
property
of
the
taxpayer
and
of
taxpayer
property
charged
to
a
secured
creditor
is
deemed
to
be
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty.
By
deleting
the
reference
to
“lien
and
charge”
in
s.227(4),
it
is
clear
that
Parliament
was
abandoning
its
claim
for
a
lien
and
charge
against
the
property
of
the
taxpayer
and
was
substituting
a
trust
claim
to
property.
The
use
of
the
words
“in
priority
to
all
such
security
interests”
as
are
contained
at
the
end
of
s.227(4.1
)
do
not
maintain
the
“lien
and
charge”
formerly
contained
under
s.227(4)
of
the
Act.
That
phrase
refers
to
the
fact
that
proceeds
from
the
sale
of
property
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
cannot
be
charged
by
any
security
interest
and
shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
“notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
such
property
or
in
the
proceeds
thereof.”
The
imposition
of
the
trust
means
that
certain
property
is
no
longer
owned
by
either
the
taxpayer
or
a
secured
creditor
and
is
no
longer
charged
by
any
security
interest
granted
by
the
taxpayer
to
the
secured
creditor.
What
is
granted
to
Her
Majesty
is
the
beneficial
ownership
of
the
property
itself
and
not
a
“lien
and
charge”
against
the
property
which
must
compete
with
other
liens
and
charges
for
priority.
The
onus
is
on
Her
Majesty
to
satisfy
the
Court
as
to
the
property
which
will
be
subject
to
the
trust
claimed.
Her
Majesty
has
not
met
the
onus
of
showing
that
the
funds
presently
held
relate
to
book
debts
generated
during
the
period
August,
1996
through
November,
1996
or
relate
to
book
debts
from
goods
sold
or
services
rendered
during
the
period
August,
1996
through
November,
1996.
Therefore,
Her
Majesty
has
failed
to
meet
the
onus
of
proving
that,
pursuant
to
s.227(4)
and
s.227(4.1),
the
funds
presently
held
relate
either
to
amounts
deducted
and
deemed
to
have
been
held
separate
and
apart
or
other
property
of
Tuxedo
or
Ms.
Charles
equal
in
value
to
the
amounts
so
deemed
to
be
held
in
trust.
The
failure
to
meet
the
onus
which
is
on
Her
Majesty
is
fatal
to
the
claim
advanced
by
Her
Majesty
that
certain
property
is
held
in
trust.
As
there
is
no
clear
intention
of
Parliament
to
include
after
acquired
property
within
the
provisions
of
ss.227(4)
and
227(4.1)
of
the
Act,
as
it
is
clear,
in
any
event,
that
Manning
was
not
a
“secured
creditor”,
a
person
“who
acts
for
or
on
behalf
of”
a
“secured
creditor”,
or
a
person
“performing
a
similar
function”
and
as
Her
Majesty
has
not
met
the
onus
of
showing
that
the
monies
presently
held
are
property
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
sum
of
$41,367.88
held
is
not
subject
to
the
trust
created
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty
by
either
s.227(4)
or
by
s.227(4.1
)
of
the
Act.
Did
the
Funds
Held
by
Manning
become
Property
of
Revenue
Canada
upon
Service
on
Manning
of
the
Enhanced
Requirement
to
Pay
Notice?
Her
Majesty
then
argues
in
the
alternative
that
the
funds
held
by
Manning
became
the
property
of
Her
Majesty
upon
service
on
Manning
on
April
8,
1997
of
the
notice
issued
pursuant
to
s.224(
1
)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
When
dealing
with
these
sections,
it
is
also
clear
that
the
provisions
must
be
clear
and
unambiguous
in
order
that
funds
in
the
hands
of
a
third
party
will
be
attached
by
such
Notices:
Canada
Trustco
Mortgage
Corp.
v.
Port
O’Call
Hotel
Inc.
(1996),
133
D.L.R.
(4th)
609
(S.C.C.);
Royal
Bank
v.
À.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
573
(Fed.
T.D.)
(affirmed)
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
211
(Fed.
C.A.);
Lloyds
Bank
Canada
v.
International
Warranty
Co.
(1989),
60
D.L.R.
(4th)
272
(Alta.
C.A.);
Concorde
International
Travel
Inc.
v.
T.].
Travel
Services
(British
Columbia)
Inc.
(1990),
72
D.L.R.
(4th)
405
(B.C.
C.A.);
and
the
comments
of
Iacobucci
J.
in
Sparrow
Electric
Corp.,
supra,
as
quoted
above.
As
the
Notice
was
served
on
Manning
and
not
on
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
or
Ms.
Charles,
the
issue
which
arises
is
whether
Manning
is
a
“person”
who
is
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
either
to
Tuxedo
or
to
“a
secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
payment”
that
would
ordinarily
be
payable
to
Tuxedo.
It
is
also
necessary
to
ascertain
if
Ms.
Charles
is
a
“secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive”
payment
from
Manning.
The
nature
of
what
is
granted
to
the
federal
government
pursuant
to
ss.224(l)
and
224(1.2)
must
be
kept
in
mind.
Cory
J.
in
Canada
Trustco
Mortgage
Corp.
v.
Port
O’Call
Hotel
Inc.,
supra,
described
the
essence
of
the
section
as
follows:
“...
s.224(1.2)
provides
a
form
of
garnishment
enabling
the
federal
government
to
intercept
monies
owed
to
tax
debtors.”
(at
p.
612)
At
p.618
in
the
same
decision,
Cory
J.
commented
that
the
following
statements
made
by
Lyon
J.A.
in
Pembina
on
the
Red
Development
Corp.
v.
Triman
Industries
Ltd.
(1991),
85
D.L.R.
(4th)
29
(Man.
C.A.)
apply
“even
more
forcefully”
after
the
1990
amendments
made
by
Parliament
to
s.224(1.2):
In
my
opinion
it
was
intended
by
Parliament
that
anyone
who,
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business,
made
credit
arrangements
with
a
tax
debtor
involving
assignments
of
accounts
receivable,
did
so
subject
to
the
overriding
right
of
the
Crown
to
satisfy
the
primary
obligations
of
the
tax
debtor
to
collect
and
remit
taxes
withheld
from
its
employees.
The
words
of
the
statute
can
mean
nothing
less.
The
section
is
cast
in
the
broadest
of
possible
terms
precisely
because
it
was
meant
to
interfere
with
and
interrupt
payments
under
such
assignments
and
divert
them
to
meet
this
statutory
obligation.
(at
p.52
in
the
Lyon
J.A.
judgment
in
Pembina
on
the
Red
Development
Corp.
decision)
While
it
was
the
clear
intent
of
Parliament
to
attach
funds
and
have
those
funds
become
the
property
of
Her
Majesty
under
s.224(1.2),
it
was
also
the
clear
intent
of
Parliament
that
a
creditor
debtor
relationship
must
exist
as
between
the
“person...liable
to
make
a
payment”
and
either
the
taxpayer
or
the
secured
creditor
of
the
taxpayer.
There
is
no
separate
definition
of
“person”
as
that
word
is
used
in
s.224(1.2)
of
the
Act.
Accordingly,
while
Manning
is
clearly
a
“person”
for
the
purposes
of
s.248(
1
)
of
the
Act,
there
is
no
expansive
definition
of
“person”
such
as
are
found
under
the
definitions
of
“secured
creditor”
in
s.224(1.3),
“specified
person”
under
s.227(5.1)
or
“trustee”
under
s.
153(1.4)
of
the
Act.
If
no
expanded
definition
of
the
term
“person”
is
available
for
the
“person”
referred
to
in
ss.224(
1
)
and
224(1.2)
is
available,
then
it
is
not
clear
that
it
was
intended
by
Parliament
that
the
term
“person”
as
used
in
those
sections
would
include
an
interim
receiver.
In
the
absence
of
such
an
expanded
definition,
it
is
necessary
to
find
that
Manning
was
not
only
a
“person”
but
also
a
person
“liable
to
make
a
payment.”
The
use
of
the
word
“liable”
in
the
context
of
the
section
indicates
that
there
must
be
a
finding
that
Manning
is
bound
or
obliged
by
law
or
by
equity
to
make
a
payment.
“Liable”
cannot
mean
that
he
is
merely
“likely”
to
make
payment.
When
the
notice
pursuant
to
s.224(
1
)
arrived,
Manning
was
not
a
person
“liable”
to
make
payment
to
anyone.
As
the
appointment
of
Manning
came
to
an
end
on
March
24,
1997
at
5:00
p.m.,
the
obligation
of
Manning
after
that
date
was
to
turn
over
any
property
of
Tuxedo
to
Tuxedo.
That
does
not
make
Manning
“liable
to
make
a
payment.”
Rather,
it
makes
Manning
liable
to
return
property
to
Tuxedo
either
because
Manning
was
a
trustee
or
because
Manning
was
a
fiduciary.
Alternatively,
Manning
was
required
to
hold
the
property
until
a
court
order
was
made
directing
the
Interim
Receiver
as
to
the
disposition
of
property
held.
Because
no
such
order
was
made,
Manning
was
not
a
person
liable
to
make
payment
either
to
Tuxedo
or
to
Ms.
Charles
within
one
year
of
the
receipt
of
the
notice.
Manning
was
not
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
until
the
court
ordered
him
to
do
so.
In
the
interim,
Manning
was
an
officer
of
the
court
who
was
separate
and
distinct
from
Tuxedo,
who
was
acting
in
accordance
with
the
powers
provided
to
the
interim
receiver
by
the
court
and
was
exercising
those
powers
in
accordance
with
the
directions
of
the
court.
In
these
regards,
see
British
Columbia
Central
Credit
Union
v.
Metro
Co-operative
Services
(1982),
43
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
97
(B.C.
C.A.);
Johnston
v.
Courtney
(1919),
[1920]
2
W.W.R.
459
(B.C.
C.A.);
and
Parsons
v.
Sovereign
Bank
of
Canada,
[1913]
A.C.
160
(Ontario
P.C.).
Until
ordered
by
the
court
to
make
payment,
the
position
of
Manning
was
like
a
party
holding
funds
in
interpleader
proceedings
or
as
a
stakeholder
or
as
a
fiduciary.
In
Royal
Credit
Union
Ltd.
v.
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia,
[1992]
2
C.T.C.
343
(N.B.Q.B.),
Creaghan
J.
dealt
with
the
question
of
the
respective
priorities
between
the
claim
of
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
under
its
June
17,
1991
general
assignment
of
book
debts
and
a
requirement
to
pay
issued
pursuant
to
s.224(1.2)
of
the
Act.
The
funds
at
issue
were
held
by
Collins
Barrow
Inc.
appointed
as
the
agent
for
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
on
June
18,
1991
to
collect
the
book
accounts.
By
a
consent
order
dated
September
19,
1991,
the
funds
had
been
paid
to
a
law
firm
in
trust
to
be
held
in
an
interest
bearing
trust
account
until
further
order
of
the
court.
It
was
conceded
that,
if
Collins
Barrow
was
obligated
to
make
payment
to
the
bank
as
a
secured
creditor
of
the
tax
debtor
when
it
received
the
requirement
to
pay,
the
claim
of
the
Minister
to
those
funds
had
priority
over
the
claim
of
the
bank:
Royal
Bank
v.
Saskatchewan
Power
Corp.
(1990),
73
D.L.R.
(4th)
257
(Sask.
C.A.).
Creaghan
J.
noted
that:
Here
the
Minister
made
the
Requirement
to
Pay
upon
a
law
firm
delegated
by
the
Court
to
hold
the
funds
in
trust
pending
a
declaration
by
the
Court
as
to
the
disposition
of
the
funds
after
interpleader
relief
had
been
granted.
At
p.4
of
the
judgment,
Creaghan
J.
concluded:
For
the
reasons
stated,
1
am
unable
to
find
that
the
law
firm
upon
whom
the
Requirement
to
Pay
was
made
and
that
held
the
interpled
funds
in
trust
pending
directions
from
the
Court
as
to
disposition
falls
within
the
definition
of
a
person
liable
to
make
a
payment
pursuant
to
section
224(1.2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
that
therefore
the
claim
of
the
Bank
has
priority
over
the
claim
of
the
Minister
with
respect
to
the
interpled
funds.
Like
the
law
firm
that
held
funds
in
trust
subject
to
further
order
of
the
court,
so
Manning
held
funds
until
further
order
of
the
court.
In
Giguere,
Re
(1998),
2
C.B.R.
(4th)
292
(Que.
S.C.),
Halperin
J.
dealt
with
the
effect
of
a
s.224(l
.2)
notice
served
on
a
bank
who
was
the
trustee
of
the
debtor’s
R.R.S.P.
account
in
a
situation
where
the
debtor
subsequently
made
an
assignment
in
bankruptcy.
Halperin
J.
cited
with
approval
the
comment
of
Cory
J.
as
to
the
nature
of
the
garnishment
available
to
the
federal
government
under
s.224(
1.2)
as
set
out
in
the
quote
above
and
then
cited
the
following
decisions
establishing
the
proposition
that
the
recipient
of
a
notice
under
s.224(1)
and
s.224(1.2)
does
not
have
to
pay
unless
a
debtor/creditor
relationship
can
be
established:
Bélair,
cie
d'assurances
c.
R.
(1994),
37
C.B.R.
(3d)
102
(T.C.C.)
and
Caisse
populaire
St-Bernard
de
Beauce
c.
Que
(Sous-ministre
du
Revenu),
[1997]
R.D.F.Q.
129
(Que.
C.A.).
He
also
cites
the
decisions
in
Guttman
v.
Toronto
Dominion
Bank
(1984),
51
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
221
(Man.
Q.B.)
and
McMahon
v.
Canada
Permanent
Trust
Co.
(1979),
32
C.B.R.
(N.S.)
258
(B.C.
C.A.),
for
the
proposition
that
a
trustee
under
a
R.R.S.P.
and
the
owner
of
the
plan
do
not
stand
in
a
creditor/debtor
relationship
but
rather
stand
in
a
fiduciary
relationship.
Similarly,
the
position
of
Manning
can
be
described
as
a
fiduciary
relationship
with
Tuxedo
and/or
its
creditors
and
not
one
which
is
a
debtor/creditor
relationship.
Although
I
have
found
that
the
property
in
the
hands
of
Manning
was
not
subject
to
a
trust
in
favour
of
Her
Majesty,
it
is
clear
that
s.224(l
.2)
does
not
apply
to
property
which
is
subject
to
the
trust
created
by
either
s.227(4)
or
s.227(4.1)
of
the
Act.
There
would
clearly
be
no
necessity
for
monies
which
were
already
the
“property
of
Her
Majesty”
to
again
become
“the
property
of
Her
Majesty”
once
the
notice
contemplated
by
s.224(
I
)
was
received.
As
well,
if
property
is
already
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
pursuant
to
those
sections,
then
the
“person”
is
not
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
to
the
taxpayer
or
to
a
secured
creditor
of
the
taxpayer.
The
person
holding
the
property
is
only
liable
to
account
to
Her
Majesty
as
any
trustee
would
account
to
a
beneficiary
pursuant
to
a
trust.
The
person
holding
the
property
is
clearly
not
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
to
the
taxpayer
or
to
a
secured
creditor
having
security
registered
against
the
property
of
a
taxpayer.
Accordingly,
even
if
it
can
be
said
that
Manning
held
property
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty,
it
could
not
also
be
said
that
Manning
could
be
affected
by
a
s.224(l)
notice
or
by
s.224(1.2).
If
the
intent
of
s.224(1.2)
was
to
require
either
the
taxpayer
or
the
secured
creditor
of
the
taxpayer
to
deliver
up
to
Her
Majesty
any
property
and/or
funds
which
were
held
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
pursuant
to
ss.227(4)
and
227(4.1)
then
Parliament
should
have
made
that
intention
clear
when
drafting
s.224(1.2).
The
lack
of
clarity
and
the
lack
of
inclusion
allows
the
conclusion
to
be
drawn
that
Parliament
did
not
intend
for
persons
holding
property
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
to
deliver
up
the
property
if
they
received
a
notice
pursuant
to
s.224(l)
of
the
Act.
Regarding
any
obligation
that
Manning
had
to
Ms.
Charles,
it
is
clear
that
Ms.
Charles
was
not
“a
secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
payment”
as
those
words
are
used
under
s.224(1.2)(b).
In
this
regard,
Major
J.
in
Canada
Trustco
Mortgage
Corp.
v.
Port
O’Call
Hotel
Inc.,
supra,
states
in
his
judgment
on
behalf
of
the
minority
in
the
decision:
If
Parliament
had
intended
that
s.224(
1.2)
should
cover
all
persons
who
hold
a
security
interest,
it
could
have
defined
secured
creditor
as
any
person
who
holds
a
security
interest
without
the
deliberately
limiting
words
“in
the
property
of
another
person”.
Alternatively,
it
could
have
expressly
provided
“property
that
but
for
a
security
interest
in
favour
of
the
secured
creditor
would
be
the
property
of
another
person”,
thus
echoing
the
phrasing
found
in
the
rest
of
the
section.
(at
p.641)
Ms.
Charles
would
not
be
a
secured
creditor
“who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
payment”
until
the
court
granted
her
that
“right”.
By
ordering
Manning
to
pay
the
funds
held
to
Ms.
Charles,
there
is
nothing
owing
to
Ms.
Charles
and
there
is
no
right
to
receive
payment
until
court
order.
If
parliament
had
intended
otherwise,
then
the
suggested
wording
set
out
by
Major
J.
as
noted
above
would
have
been
substituted
for
the
wording
contained
under
s.224(
1.2)
(b)
of
the
Act.
The
“right”
of
Ms.
Charles
to
receive
a
payment
was
not
established
at
the
time
the
notice
was
received
by
Manning
or
within
one
year
of
the
notice
being
received.
It
is
similarly
the
case
that
Manning
was
not
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
to
Tuxedo
either.
Because
I
cannot
find
that
Manning
was
a
“person”
as
that
term
is
used
in
ss.224(l)
and
224(1.2)
of
the
Act,
that
Manning
was
a
person
who
is
“liable
to
make
a
payment”
either
to
Tuxedo
or
to
Ms.
Charles,
that
Manning
was
in
a
debtor/creditor
relationship
with
either
Tuxedo
or
with
Ms.
Charles,
that
Ms.
Charles
was
“a
secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
payment”,
or
that
ss.224(
1
)
and
224(1.2)
of
the
Act
applies
to
parties
holding
the
property
in
trust
for
Her
Majesty
by
virtue
of
ss.227(4)
and
227(4.1)
of
the
Act,
I
am
satisfied
that
the
provisions
of
ss.224(
1
)
and
224(
1.2)
did
not
apply
to
attach
the
funds
being
held
by
Manning
when
the
notice
was
received
by
Manning
on
April
8,
1997.
Accordingly,
the
alternate
submission
of
Her
Majesty
must
also
fail.
Conclusion
The
sum
of
$41,367.88
plus
all
accrued
interest
held
by
the
solicitors
for
Tuxedo
is
payable
forthwith
to
the
law
firm
representing
Ms.
Charles.
At
the
same
time,
Ms.
Charles
will
have
her
costs
against
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
represented
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Customs,
Excise
and
Taxation
on
a
party
and
Party
(Scale
3)
basis.
Order
accordingly.