Addy,
J.:—The
present
application
is
for
certiorari
pursuant
to
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
to
quash
an
assessment
of
the
applicant
for
income
tax
purposes
made
by
notice
of
assessment
dated
the
March
26,1985
and
also
to
quash
a
subsequent
decision
by
the
respondent
to
effect
a
garnishment
by
means
of
a
"Requirement
to
Pay”
pursuant
to
section
224
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
addressed
to
the
Canada
Trust
Company.
The
facts,
which
are
undisputed,
are
as
follows.
The
applicant
was,
at
all
relevant
times,
and
is
presently
carrying
on
the
business
of
scientific
research
and
development
in
Canada.
On
January
17,
1985
pursuant
to
subsection
194(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
regarding
scientific
research
tax
credits,
it
designated
amounts
totalling
$30
million,
being
the
consideration
received
by
it
on
the
issuance
of
certain
of
its
securities
on
that
date.
The
designation
was
made
on
Revenue
Canada
Form
21113
and
showed
$15
million
as
Part
VIII
tax
payable
at
50
per
cent
of
the
total
amount
designated.
The
Canada
Trust
Company
was
constituted
the
Trustee
of
an
excrow
account
held
pursuant
to
an
agreement
of
the
same
date.
An
assessment
of
the
applicant
was
subsequently
issued
by
the
respondent
on
March
26,
1985
indicating
a
corresponding
amount
of
$15
million
as
Part
VIII
tax
being
unpaid
and
due
and
requesting
payment
of
same.
No
payment
was
made
and
on
July
16,
1985,
a
requirement
to
pay
was
addressed
to
the
Canada
Trust
Company
claiming
an
amount
of
$15,592,602,
which
represented
the
$15
million
plus,
presumably,
the
accumulated
interest
thereon
from
the
date
when
the
payment
was
claimed
by
the
respondent
to
have
been
due
and
payable.
A
further
requirement
to
pay
was
delivered
in
September
and
a
third
one
on
December
15,
1985,
purporting
to
attach
the
sum
of
$16,225,479,
representing
the
principal
and
total
accumulated
interest
to
that
date.
The
fiscal
year
of
the
company
will
only
end
on
January
22,
1986.
The
notice
of
assessment
issued
in
March
was
therefore
given
two
months
after
the
commencement
of
the
current
fiscal
year.
The
ordinary
tax
returns
would
not
be
due
to
be
filed
in
respect
of
the
company’s
current
year
until
July
22,
1986.
Since,
at
the
time
the
assessment
was
made,
the
fiscal
year
of
the
applicant
had
not
ended
it
was
argued
that
the
respondent
had
no
authority
nor
jurisdiction
to
issue
an
assessment
for
taxes
due
and
that,
as
a
result,
the
assessment
was
a
complete
nullity
and
the
requirement
to
pay
addressed
to
the
trust
company
which
was
based
on
the
assessment
was
also
a
nullity
and
subject
to
being
quashed.
The
fundamental
question
of
whether
certiorari
is
available
in
the
present
case
pursuant
to
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
depends
on
the
interpretation
of
section
29
of
the
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
29.
Notwithstanding
sections
18
and
28,
where
provision
is
expressly
made
by
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Court,
to
the
Supreme
Court,
to
the
Governor
in
Council
or
to
the
Treasury
Board
from
a
decision
or
order
of
a
federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal
made
by
or
in
the
course
of
proceedings
before
that
board,
commission
or
tribunal,
that
decision
or
order
is
not,
to
the
extent
that
it
may
be
so
appealed,
subject
to
review
or
to
be
restrained,
prohibited,
removed,
set
aside
or
otherwise
dealt
with,
except
to
the
extent
and
in
the
manner
provided
for
in
that
Act.
[Emphasis
added.]
The
applicant
relies
on
a
recent
and
as
yet
unreported
decision
of
the
Trial
Division
of
this
Court
dated
December
18,
1985,
namely,
W.T.C.
Western
Technologies
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.
—
File
No.
T-2626-85
[since
reported
at
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
110;
86
D.T.C.
6027],
where
it
was
held
that
certiorari
was
available
to
the
applicant,
and
the
assessment
and
requirement
to
pay
were
quashed.
Counsel
for
both
parties
agreed
that
no
logical
distinction
on
the
facts
could
be
drawn
between
the
W.
T.
C.
Western
case
and
the
case
at
bar.
The
issue,
however,
has
not
been
finally
determined
as
the
case
is
presently
being
appealed.
I
am
also
informed
that
at
least
four
relevant
cases
on
which
the
respondent
presently
relies
were
not
brought
to
the
attention
of
the
judge
at
the
hearing.
My
colleague,
Mr.
Justice
Collier,
in
the
W.
T.
C.
Western
case
stated
at
pages
3
and
4
of
his
reasons
1
C.T.C.
111
(D.T.C.
6028):
I
make
this
comment.
The
Notice
of
Assessment
is,
purportedly
based
on
subsection
195(2).
That
subsection
does
not
impose
a
tax,
or
a
tax
liability.
It
merely
imposes
a
duty
on
the
taxpayer
to
make
interim
payments
of
“amounts”
on
account
of
tax
payable.
The
applicant’s
position
is
that
while
there
may
be
an
ultimate
liability
to
pay
tax
of
$12,437,500,
or
less,
the
Minister
cannot
assess
the
taxes
owing
until
the
return,
earlier
referred
to,
is
filed:
Applying
subsection
152(1),
the
Minister
is
required
to
examine
a
return
and
then
assess
the
tax
for
the
year.
The
applicant
says
the
Minister
here,
in
his
decision
to
assess
before
the
end
of
the
taxpayer’s
fiscal
period,
and
before
any
return
was
required
to
be
filed,
was
made
without
statutory
authority;
the
Minister
therefore
exceeded
his
jurisdiction;
certiorari
is
the
appropriate
remedy.
I
agree
with
this
contention.
He
then
went
on
to
distinguish
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
M.N.R.
v.
Parsons
et
al.,
[1984]
C.T.C.
352;
84
D.T.C.
6345,
which
reversed
a
decision
of
the
honourable
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
reported
in
[1983]
C.T.C.
321;
83
D.T.C.
5330,
on
the
grounds
that
a
question
of
jurisdiction
was
not
involved
in
the
Parsons
case
but
rather
the
simple
question
of
whether
the
assessment
was
a
proper
one
at
law.
With
all
due
respect,
I
am
not
at
all
satisfied
that
the
distinctin
can
be
drawn.
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach
in
the
Parsons
case
stated
at
323
(D.T.C.
5331)
of
the
above-mentioned
report:
The
basic
contention
advanced
by
counsel
on
behalf
of
the
applicants
is
that
the
assessments
called
into
question
are
not
authorized
by
law
and
as
such
are
illegal
and
void.
[Emphasis
added.]
and
further
at
325
(D.T.C.
5332-33):
An
error
in
law
which
goes
to
jurisdiction
is
alleged
in
which
event
certiorari
is
the
appropriate
remedy
and,
in
my
view,
that
remedy
is
available
despite
the
appeal
process
provided
against
quantum
and
liability
therefor
which
is
the
purpose
of
the
assessment
process.
That
is
an
appeal
provided
from
a
matter
far
different
from
the
lack
of
authority
in
law
to
make
the
assessment.
For
that
reason
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
in
my
view,
does
not
constitute
a
bar
to
the
certiorari
and
injunctive
proceedings
taken
by
the
applicant.
[Emphasis
added.]
Mr.
Justice
Pratte,
in
delivering
judgment
on
behalf
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
Parsons
case,
when
it
reversed
the
above-mentioned
decision
of
the
Trial
Division
stated:
The
learned
judge
of
first
instance
held
that,
in
this
case,
section
29
did
not
deprive
the
Trial
Division
of
the
jurisdiction
to
grant
the
application
made
by
the
respondents
under
section
18
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
because,
in
his
view,
the
appeal
provided
for
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
restricted
to
questions
of
“quantum
and
liability”
while
the
respondents'
application
raised
the
more
fundamental
question
of
the
Minister's
legal
authority
to
make
the
assessments.
We
cannot
agree
with
that
distinction.
The
right
of
appeal
given
by
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
subject
to
any
such
limitations.
In
our
view,
the
Income
Tax
Act
expressly
provides
for
an
appeal
as
such
to
the
Federal
Court
from
assessments
made
by
the
Minister;
it
follows,
according
to
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
that
those
assessments
may
not
be
reviewed,
restrained
or
set
aside
by
the
Court
in
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
under
sections
18
and
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
[Emphasis
added.]
It
seems
to
me
that
where
there
is
no
legal
authority
to
perform
either
an
administrative
or
judicial
act,
then
there
is
no
jurisdiction
to
do
so.
A
lack
of
authority
to
make
an
assessment
necessarily
involves
a
lack
of
jurisdiction
to
do
so.
Yet
the
Court
of
Appeal,
based
on
the
premise
that
the
Minister
had
no
legal
authority
to
make
assessment
held
that,
because
of
section
29
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
the
assessments
in
the
Parsons
case
could
not
be
reviewed,
restrained
or
set
aside
by
the
Court
under
either
section
18
or
28
of
the
Act.
Based
on
the
law
as
stated
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
the
Parsons
case,
I
would
therefore
be
prepared
to
find
that
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
can
only
be
reviewed
and
set
aside
by
way
of
a
regular
appeal,
either
to
this
Court
or
to
the
Tax
Court
following
confirmation
of
the
assessment
after
the
filing
of
a
notice
of
objection
or,
with
the
consent
of
the
Minister,
directly
to
this
Court
by
way
of
appeal
without
the
formality
of
a
notice
of
objection.
However,
since
the
validity
of
the
assessment
and
of
the
garnishment
by
means
of
a
notice
entitled
requirement
to
pay
issued
to
the
Canada
Trust
was
extensively
argued
by
both
parties
on
the
merits,
some
useful
purpose
might
well
be
served
by
dealing
with
the
arguments
raised.
Counsel
for
the
applicant
submits
that,
until
a
tax
return
has
been
filed
in
a
regular
manner
after
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year
of
the
applicant,
that
is,
sometime
before
July
22,
1986,
no
taxes
can
be
determined
as
due
and
payable
and
any
assessment
for
same
is
premature
and
without
jurisdiction.
He
argues
further
that
there
is
nothing
in
Part
VIII
of
the
Act
which
requires
interest
to
be
paid
other
than
on
tax
payable
and
determined
at
the
end
of
the
fiscal
period.
For
reasons
which
will
be
apparent
later,
I
shall
leave
aside
for
the
moment
the
question
of
the
validity
of
the
assessment
to
deal
with
the
question
of
the
liability
to
pay
tax
and
the
validity
of
the
requirement
to
pay.
Part
VIII
is
obviously
a
special
part
of
the
Act,
passed
with
the
very
laudable
object
of
providing
for
a
refundable
tax
on
corporations
in
respect
of
scientific
research
tax
credits.
Subsection
194(1)
provides
for
tax
at
50
per
cent
of
all
designated
amounts.
It
reads:
194(1)
Every
corporation
shall
pay
a
tax
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
equal
to
50%
of
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
designated
under
subsection
(4)
in
respect
of
a
share
or
debt
obligation
issued
by
it
in
the
year
or
a
right
granted
by
it
in
the
year.
Subsection
194(2)
defines
the
nature
of
a
refund
provided
for
in
the
section
and,
in
my
view,
can
only
relate
to
a
refund
of
tax
paid.
Subsection
194(3)
defines
the
expression
“refundable
Part
VIII
tax
on
hand.”
Subsection
194(4)
deals
with
the
designated
amounts
mentioned
in
subsection
194(1).
It
reads
as
follows:
194(4)
Every
taxable
Canadian
corporation
may,
by
filing
a
prescribed
form
with
the
Minister
at
any
time
on
or
before
the
last
day
of
the
month
immediately
following
a
month
in
which
it
issued
a
share
or
debt
obligation
or
granted
a
right
under
a
scientific
research
financing
contract
(other
than
a
share
or
debt
obligation
issued
or
a
right
granted
before
October
1983,
or
a
share
in
respect
of
which
the
corporation
has,
on
or
before
that
day,
designated
an
amount
under
subsection
192(4)
designate,
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
and
Part
I,
an
amount
In
respect
of
that
share,
debt
obligation
or
right
not
exceeding
the
amount
by
which
(a)
the
amount
of
the
consideration
for
which
it
was
issued
or
granted,
as
the
case
may
be,
exceeds
(b)
in
the
case
of
a
share,
the
amount
of
any
assistance
(other
than
an
amount
included
in
computing
the
scientific
research
tax
credit
of
a
taxpayer
in
respect
of
that
share)
provided,
or
to
be
provided
by
a
government,
municipality
or
any
other
public
authority
in
respect
of,
or
for
the
acquisition
of,
that
share.
Subsection
195(2)
obliges
any
qualified
corporation
issuing
any
share
or
debt
obligation
to
pay
before
the
last
day
of
the
following
month
an
amount
equal
to
50
per
cent
of
the
designated
amounts.
That
subsection
reads:
195(2)
Where,
in
a
particular
month
in
a
taxation
year,
a
corporation
issues
a
share
or
debt
obligation,
or
grants
a
right,
in
respect
of
which
it
designates
an
amount
under
section
194,
the
corporation
shall,
on
or
before
the
last
day
of
the
month
following
the
particular
month,
pay
to
the
Receiver
General
on
account
of
its
tax
payable
under
this
part
for
the
year
an
amount
equal
to
50%
of
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
so
designated.
The
words
“shall
.
.
.
pay"
obviously
create
a
strict
obligation
to
pay.
An
amount
"on
account
of
its
tax"
must
mean
a
part
of
the
tax.
In
other
words
it
must
relate
to
a
payment
on
account
of
the
total
tax
ultimately
determined
to
be
payable.
Subsection
195(3)
provides
for
payment
of
interest.
It
stipulates:
195(3)
Where
a
corporation
is
liable
to
pay
tax
under
this
Part
and
has
failed
to
pay
all
or
any
part
or
instalment
thereof
on
or
before
the
day
on
or
before
which
it
was
required
to
pay
the
tax,
it
shall,
on
payment
of
the
amount
in
default,
pay
interest
thereon
at
the
prescribed
rate
for
the
period
beginning
on
the
day
following
the
day
on
or
before
which
it
was
required
to
make
the
payment
and
ending
on
the
day
of
payment.
[Emphasis
added.]
The
interest
mentioned
in
the
above
subsection,
in
my
view,
pertains
not
only
to
the
tax
ultimately
calculated
at
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year
but
to
the
amounts
of
tax
payable
pursuant
to
subsection
195(2).
In
other
words,
195(2)
and
195(3)
must
be
read
together.
This
becomes
clear
in
reading
the
following
subsection
195(4):
195(4)
For
the
purposes
of
computing
interest
payable
by
a
corporation
under
subsection
(3)
for
any
month
or
months
in
the
14
month
period
ending
2
months
after
the
end
of
a
taxation
year
in
which
period
the
corporation
has
designated
an
amount
under
section
194
in
respect
of
a
share
or
debt
obligation
issued,
or
right
granted,
by
it
in
a
particular
month
in
the
year,
the
corporation
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
liable
to
pay,
on
or
before
the
last
day
of
the
month
immediately
following
the
particular
month,
a
part
or
an
instalment
of
tax
for
the
year
equal
to
that
proportion
of
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
its
tax
payable
under
this
Part
for
the
year
exceeds
its
Part
VIII
refund
for
the
year
that
.
.
.
Liability
to
pay
tax
or
to
pay
any
amount
on
account
of
tax
does
not
depend
on
any
notice
of
assessment.
It
has
long
been
firmly
established
that
liability
is
created
by
statute
and
exists
regardless
of
whether
there
has
been
an
assessment
by
the
Minister.
The
leading
and
oft
quoted
decision
on
that
issue
is
that
of
former
Associate
Chief
Justice
Noël
in
the
case
of
The
Queen
v.
Simard
Beaudry
et
al.,
71
D.T.C.
5511,
wherein
he
states
at
5515:
As
to
his
second
argument,
namely
that
the
debt
arising
from
re-assessment
of
the
taxpayer
dates
only
from
the
time
that
the
taxpayer
is
assessed,
and
that
it
did
not,
accordingly,
exist
at
the
time
the
agreement
was
made,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
answer
to
this
is
that
the
general
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
indicates
that
the
taxpayer's
debt
is
created
by
his
taxable
income,
not
by
an
assessment
or
re-assessment.
In
fact,
the
taxpayer’s
liability
results
from
the
Act
and
not
from
the
assessment.
In
principle,
the
debt
comes
into
existence
the
moment
the
income
is
earned,
and
even
if
the
assessment
is
made
one
or
more
years
after
the
taxable
income
is
earned,
the
debt
is
supposed
to
originate
at
that
point.
The
principle
was
upheld
by
our
Court
of
Appeal
in
Oneil
Lambert
v.
The
Queen,
[1976]
C.T.C.
611;
76
D.T.C.
6373
(F.C.A.).
It
was
also
stated,
at
least
incidentally,
by
Collier,
J.
in
the
case
of
The
Queen
v.
Cyrus
J.
Moulton
Limited,
[1976]
C.T.C.
416;
76
D.T.C.
6239
(F.C.T.D.)
wherein
he
stated
at
424
(D.T.C.
6244):
A
judgment
against
a
defaulting
taxpayer
can
be
entered
in
the
Federal
Court
before
assessment,
appeal,
and
hearing.
[Emphasis
added.]
The
same
reasoning
must
be
taken
to
have
governed
the
earlier
Exchequer
Court
decision
of
Jackett,
P.,
as
he
then
was,
in
the
case
of
Coleman
C.
Abrahams
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
C.T.C.
690;
66
D.T.C.
5453
(Ex.
Ct.).
Finally,
subsection
152(3),
which
is
incorporated
into
Part
VIII
by
subsection
195(8),
states
that
liability
is
not
affected
by
the
fact
that
no
assessment
has
been
made.
Since
an
indebtedness
of
$15
million
arose
on
January
17,
1985
when
the
designation
was
signed
and
delivered
by
the
applicant
and
since
payment
of
that
sum
was
required
to
be
made
pursuant
to
subsection
195(2)
on
February
28,
1985,
the
respondent
was
fully
entitled,
following
that
last
mentioned
date,
to
take
whatever
legal
steps
were
available
to
ensure
payment.
Section
222
of
the
Act
provides
as
follows:
222.
All
taxes,
interest,
penalties,
costs
and
other
amounts
payable
under
this
Act
are
debts
due
to
Her
Majesty
and
recoverable
as
such
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
or
any
other
court
of
competent
jurisdiction
or
in
any
other
manner
provided
by
this
Act.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
not
only
taxes
but
"other
amounts
payable
under
the
Act
are
debts
due
Her
Majesty?"
It
therefore
is
not
really
important
whether
the
$15
million
is
to
be
considered
as
taxes
or
not,
although
I
would
find
that
it
was.
Authority
for
garnishment
is
found
in
subsection
224(1):
224
(1)
Where
the
Minister
has
knowledge
or
suspects
that
person
is
or
will
be,
within
90
days,
liable
to
make
a
payment
to
another
person
who
is
liable
to
make
payment
under
this
Act
(in
this
section
referred
to
as
the
“tax
debtor”)
he
may,
by
registered
letter
or
by
a
letter
served
personally,
require
that
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
Acct.
The
amount
is
clearly
recoverable
under
that
subsection
since
the
applicant
was
a
person
liable
to
make
a
payment
of
$15
million
under
the
Act
and
since
the
liability
includes
interest,
I
would
find
that
the
three
requirements
to
pay
addressed
to
the
trust
company
were
authorized
by
law.
Turning
now
to
the
notice
of
assessment
itself,
subsection
195(8)
provides:
195
(8)
Sections
151,
152,
158,
159
and
162
to
167
and
Division
J
of
Part
I
are
applicable
to
this
Part,
with
such
modifications
as
the
circumstances
require.
Subsections
4
and
7
of
section
152
allow
the
Minister
to
assess
at
any
time.
It
is
true
that
such
an
assessment
is
to
be
made
normally
after
an
income
tax
return
has
been
filed
or
should
have
been
filed.
However,
subsection
7
does
mention
"information
supplied
by
taxpayer""
and
subsection
195(8)
does
specifically
provide
that
section
152
is
to
be
applied
to
Part
VIII
with
such
modifications
as
the
circumstances
require.
By
its
designation
of
$30
million,
showing
$15
million
as
tax
payable
under
Part
VIII,
the
applicant
admitted
liability
for
that
amount
and
the
Minister
might
well
have
been
entitled
to
assess
the
applicant
as
it
did
following
receipt
of
the
designation
As
indicated
in
the
style
of
cause,
the
applicant
originally
intended
to
rely
on
certain
sections
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982.
At
the
opening
of
the
hearing
before
me,
however,
he
indicated
that
the
provisions
of
that
Act
would
neither
be
invoked
nor
argued.
The
application
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Application
dismissed.