Robinson,
J.:—This
application
requires
resolution
of
an
issue
between
Revenue
Canada
and
the
respondent,
Parker
Pacific
Equipment
Sales
(”
Parker
Pacific"),
each
of
whom
assert
a
prior
proprietary
right
to
an
amount
of
$9,776
paid
by
way
of
interpleader
into
court
by
the
petitioners,
Berg
and
Hazell.
Parker
Pacific
is
named
as
assignee
of
"an
assignment
of
wages”
dated
August
30,
1990
from
Madden
Logging
Ltd.
This
assignment
makes
specific
reference
to
the
said
sum
of
$9,776.
The
assignment
is
directed
to
Slocan
Forest
Products,
who,
in
compliance
with
such
assignment,
paid
to
the
petitioner,
Dan
J.
Hazell,
the
sum
of
$9,776.
Hazell,
in
turn,
paid
this
amount
to
the
petitioner,
Donald
Berg,
who
designates
himself
as
the
corporate
solicitor
on
behalf
of
Madden
Logging
Ltd.
The
payment
from
Slocan
Forest
Products
was
made
in
early
October
1990
and
the
petitionér,
Berg,
received
same
on
October
12,
1990.
On
October
22,
1990,
a
third
party
demand
was
made
by
Revenue
Canada
on
Berg
and
Madden
Logging
Ltd.
That
third
party
demand
recites,
in
part:
You
are
hereby
required
to
pay
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
the
above-
named
tax
debtor's
liability
(Madden
Logging
Ltd.)
under
subsection
227(10.1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
similar
provision,
or
under
corresponding
provisions
of
Canada
Pension
Plan
or
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
(1)
forthwith,
the
moneys
otherwise
and
immediately
payable
to
the
tax
debtor,
his
legal
representative,
or
a
secured
creditor
who
has
a
right
to
receive
the
moneys
that,
but
for
a
security
interest
in
favour
of
the
secured
creditor,
would
be
payable
to
the
tax
debtor
or
his
legal
representative,
and
(2)
all
other
moneys
otherwise
payable
to
the
tax
debtor,
his
legal
representative,
or
a
secured
creditor
described
in
(1)
which
you
will
be,
within
90
days,
liable
to
pay,
as
and
when
the
moneys
become
payable,
but
do
not
pay
hereunder
more
than
$50,013.82
(the
maximum
payable).
Although
not
particularly
relevant,
one
might
assume
that
the
last-
mentioned
amount
is
the
indebtedness
of
Madden
Logging
Ltd.
to
Revenue
Canada,
some
part
of
which
may
well
be
employee
deductions
which
Madden
Logging
Ltd.
failed
to
remit
to
Revenue
Canada.
The
affidavit
of
the
collection
enforcement
officer,
representing
Revenue
Canada,
however,
indicates
an
outstanding
balance
at
January
1,
1991
of
only
$10,175.77.
The
reduction
to
this
amount
apparently
comes
about
by
a
decrease
in
the
assessment
against
Madden
Logging
and
an
accompanying
penalty,
in
the
total
sum
of
$28,800.
The
Revenue
Canada
demand
document
includes
the
following:
"The
words
'similar
provision’,
'secured
creditor’
and
'security
interest'
have
the
meaning
assigned
to
them
in
subsection
224(1.3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.”
These
words,
that
is
"similar
provision",
"secured
creditor"
and
"security
interest”,
are
derived
from
subsection
224(1.2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
it
is
on
this
particular
subsection
and
in
greater
particular,
the
concluding
words
of
same
that
Revenue
Canada
bases
its
claim
for
priority.
The
subsection
reads:
224.
(1.2)
Notwithstanding
any
other
provision
of
this
Act,
the
Bankruptcy
Act,
any
other
enactment
of
Canada,
any
enactment
of
a
province
or
any
law,
where
the
Minister
has
knowledge
or
suspects
that
a
particular
person
is
or
will
become,
within
90
days,
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,
by
registered
letter
or
by
a
letter
served
personally,
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
a
similar
provision,
and
on
receipt
of
that
letter
by
the
particular
person,
the
amount
of
those
moneys
that
is
required
by
that
letter
to
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
shall,
notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
those
moneys,
become
the
property
of
Her
Majesty
and
shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
in
priority
to
any
such
security
interest.
Counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
contends
that
this
subsection,
as
now
worded,
came
into
existence
in
response
to
a
generally-determined
judicial
interpretation
adverse
to
Revenue
Canada
in
an
issue
of
this
kind,
namely,
Revenue
Canada's
third
party
demand
against
a
specific
or
general
assignment
of
funds
made
by
the
tax
debtor
to
a
third
party.
The
legislation
has
been
described
as
"draconian,"
and,
in
my
view,
the
description
is
apt.
A
British
Columbia
Court
of
Appeal
decision,
Concorde
International
Travel
Inc.
v.
T.I.
Travel
Services
(B.C.)
Inc.,
No.
CA011251,
June
26,
1990,
Taggart,
Hinkson,
Toy,
JJ.A.
(orally),
unreported,
the
provisions
of
subsection
224(1.2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
do
not
include
the
final
words
of
224(1.2)
commencing".
.
.
and
on
receipt
of
the
letter.
.
.
security
interest.'"
The
B.C.
Court
of
Appeal
made
reference
to
the
leading
decision
on
this
point
of
Lloyds
Bank
of
Canada
v.
International
Warranty
Co.,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
360;
60
D.L.R.
(4th)
272.
In
that
decision,
the
Alberta
Court
of
Appeal
reversed
the
trial
judge,
saying
in
part
at
page
362
(D.L.R.
275-76):
In
particular
we
do
not
agree
that
the
section
has
"the
plain
meaning
that
is
unambiguous"
attributed
to
it
by
the
learned
chambers
judge.
For
Revenue
Canada
to
succeed,
the
plain
and
unambiguous
meaning
of
the
section
must
be
that
it
deprives
the
properly
secured
creditor,
in
this
case
Lloyds,
of
all
or
part
of
its
security
without
compensation
for
the
purpose
of
paying
another
debt
entirely
unrelated
to
the
security.
It
is
surely
equivalent
to
the
transfer
of
proprietary
rights
without
compensation.
Reference
is
also
made
in
that
decision
by
Stratton,
J.A.
of
the
Alberta
Court
of
Appeal
to
Homeplan
Realty
Ltd.
v.
Avco
Financial
Services
Realty
Ltd.
(1977),
5
B.C.L.R.
289;
81
D.L.R.
(3d)
289,
a
decision
of
the
British
Columbia
Court
of
Appeal
where
Robertson,
J.A.
said
at
D.L.R.
292
of
the
Industrial
Relations
Board
legislation
under
consideration:
“If
the
Legislative
Assembly
intends
to
produce
by
statute
results
that
are
so
brutal
and
piratical,
it
has
the
power
to
do
so,
but
the
Courts
will
hold
that
that
was
its
intention
only
if
the
language
of
the
statute
compels
that
interpretation.”
That
decision,
adverse
to
the
I.L.R.,
was
upheld
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
An
exception
to
the
general
judicial
trend,
where
this
issue
arises
is
found
in
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
v.
Canada,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
285;
90
D.T.C.
6330,
a
decision
of
Wright,
J.
of
the
Saskatchewan
Queen's
Bench,
where
he
expressly
refused
to
follow
Lloyds
Bank,
supra,
at
the
appellate
level,
preferring
the
reasoning
of
the
trial
judge,
who
had
found
in
favour
of
Revenue
Canada.
In
the
view
of
Wright,
J.,
the
relevant
legislation
was
clearly
worded,
and
permitted
no
other
interpretation
than
the
conclusion
contended
for
by
Revenue
Canada.
There
is
no
indication
before
me
that
the
decision
of
Wright,
J.
was
the
subject
of
further
appeal.
Nonetheless,
notwithstanding
the
positivity
with
which
Wright
expresses
himself,
he
does
not
deal
with
the
findings
in
previous
cases,
in
which
a
different
result
obtained
that
the
legislation
“
falls
short
of
effecting
a
transfer
of
property
in
the
funds
or
establishing
priority
of
Revenue
Canada's
claim.”
On
May
18,
1990
the
current
provisions
of
section
224
came
into
force.
I
repeat
the
provisions
of
paragraph
224(1.2)(b):
.
.
.
the
Minister
may,
by
registered
letter
or
by
a
letter
served
personally,
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
a
similar
provision,
and
on
receipt
of
that
letter
by
the
particular
person
the
amount
of
those
moneys
that
is
required
by
that
letter
to
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
shall,
notwithstanding
any
security
interest
in
those
moneys
become
the
property
of
Her
Majesty
and
shall
be
paid
to
the
Receiver
General
in
priority
to
any
such
security
interest.
Despite
the
sympathy
with
which
one
must
feel
for
an
entity
believing
itself
to
have
carefully
effected
a
security
interest,
there
is,
in
my
view,
no
interpretation
of
this
section
which
can
now
favour
the
secured
creditor
in
priority
to
the
claim
of
Revenue
Canada.
It
should
further
be
noted
that
any
expression
of
sympathy
for
the
secured
creditor
is,
at
least
to
some
extent,
countered
by
the
position
taken
by
counsel
for
Revenue
Canada
that
the
funds
over
which
it
claims
priority
is
for
the
exclusive
benefit
of
employees
of
the
tax
debtor,
who
has
failed
to
remit
to
Revenue
Canada,
moneys
deducted
from
its
employees
for
tax
purposes.
If
my
reasoning
is
valid,
it
is
apparent
that
in
situations
similar
to
this,
where
a
tax
debtor
or
potential
tax
debtor
gives
the
security
interest
to
a
secured
creditor,
such
a
creditor
must
be
aware
of
the
possibility
of
the
defeat
of
his
claim
by
Revenue
Canada
at
some
stage
between
the
giving
of
the
security,
and
the
actual
receipt
of
payment
by
the
secured
creditor.
It
is
perhaps
necessary
to
add
my
view
that
in
this
instance,
the
interception
by
Revenue
Canada
was
timely,
in
the
sense
that
the
funds
in
question
had
not
reached
the
hands
of
the
secured
creditor.
In
the
end
result,
I
must,
and
do
find
in
favour
of
Revenue
Canada,
and
I
direct
that
the
funds
of
$9,776,
less
the
party-party
costs
of
the
petitioners,
Berg
and
Hazell,
be
paid
to
Revenue
Canada.
Because
this
appears
to
be
an
interpretation
of
legislation
in
the
first
instance,
I
think
it
appropriate
that
there
be
no
costs
for
or
against
the
respondents
or
either
of
them.
Judgment
accordingly.