Citation: 2012 TCC 346
Date: 20121002
Docket: 2009-3904(GST)G
BETWEEN:
SURREY CITY CENTRE MALL LTD.,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Hershfield J.
Background
[1] The Appellant (Mall
Co) has appealed an assessment for GST (the “Appeal”) made under subsection
182(1) of the Excise Tax Act (the “Act”).
[2] At all relevant times, Mall Co was a wholly owned
subsidiary of ICBC Properties Ltd. (“IPL”) which, at all relevant times, was a
wholly owned subsidiary of The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia
(“ICBC”)
which is a provincial Crown Corporation operating a mandatory scheme of motor
vehicle insurance in British Columbia. IPL, or its subsidiaries, managed all of
ICBC’s real estate investments.
[3] At all relevant times, Mall Co and ICBC were both
registrants for the purposes of Part IX of the Act.
[4] A series of transactions led to Mall Co acquiring
lands in Surrey, British Columbia in 1999
and 2000. These lands were intended to be used for the development of a mall
and university space for the Technical University of British Columbia (“Tech
BC”) created by an enactment of the legislature of the Province of British
Columbia (the “Province”) to own and operate a new university in Surrey.
[5] To document the respective undertakings of the
parties, a series of agreements were entered into amongst them. Each of these
agreements will be discussed under the next heading. They include a Development
Agreement which was entered into among Mall Co, ICBC, Tech BC and the Province
as represented by the Minister of Advanced Education Training and Technology (the
“Authorized Ministry”) in 2000 whereby, in general terms, the Appellant agreed
to develop and construct a mall and the university space. Under that agreement,
Mall Co agreed to lease the university space to Tech BC and Tech BC agreed to lease the space from Mall Co. ICBC agreed to fund Mall Co’s obligations
under the agreement to complete the university space.
[6] The development proceeded. ICBC advanced funds to IPL which in turn advanced such
funds to Mall Co in respect of the project. However, in 2002, the Province closed
Tech BC and announced that it would not fulfill its obligations to lease the
university space.
[7] After negotiations between ICBC and the Province, a
Settlement Agreement was entered into among ICBC, Mall Co, IPL, Tech BC and the Province, as represented by the Authorized Ministry. Under the Settlement Agreement,
Tech BC agreed on behalf of itself
and the Province to pay to ICBC or its nominee $41.1MM (the “Payment”) in
exchange for ICBC, IPL and Mall Co releasing Tech BC and the Province from all
obligations under the Development Agreement and related agreements.
[8] The Payment was made but there is no agreement between
the parties to the Appeal as to whom the Payment was intended to be made or
benefit or on whose behalf it was received although it is not in dispute that
the Payment was directed to and received in the bank account of ICBC. It is
also not in dispute that after ICBC received the Payment, Mall Co’s books
showed a reduction in its liability to IPL in the amount of $41.1MM.
[9] In December 2005, the Minister of National Revenue
(the “Minister”) assessed ICBC for GST in respect of the Payment under
subsection 182(1) of the Act. That provision would be applicable if ICBC
received the Payment for the termination of an agreement to make a taxable
supply. The taxable supply said to have been agreed to was a lease. ICBC was
asserted to be the supplier of the lease right. Subsection 225(1) of the Act
calculated the net tax payable based on the amount received by ICBC. In the
alternative, the Minister pleaded that Mall Co was the party that made the
taxable supply but that ICBC was still liable for the net tax under subsection
225(1) as the recipient of the payment on behalf of Mall Co. ICBC appealed,
pleading, inter alia, that Mall Co was the party under the Development Agreement
that made the supply and that ICBC incurred no liability under subsection
182(1).
[10] The Minister consented to judgment in favour of ICBC and
proceeded with the assessment now under appeal on the basis that Mall Co was
the party that made the taxable supply and received the Payment. The assessment
against Mall Co relates to the period
from July 1, 2002 to July 31, 2002 and is for $2,405,055.67 plus penalties and
interest.
[11] The Appeal launched by Mall Co now denies liability under subsection 182(1).
Further Background and Particulars of the Agreements
and Related Documents
[12] Background documentation establishes that in 1998 ICBC,
in an effort to diversify its
investments, decided to invest in real estate. It became aware of an
opportunity to become the lead developer in a major project integrating Tech BC with office and retail space in Surrey, British Columbia. ICBC made all the
preparatory plans to purchase the requisite lands and develop and finance the
project with fixed targets for its development profit and return on funds
invested. Research and analysis was undertaken by planners and financial
advisors retained by ICBC. There is no doubt that from the outset Tech BC, as the promised anchor tenant, was a critical player in this entire project. However,
as noted throughout these Reasons, while that “promise” was made by both the
Province and Tech BC, the promise ultimately relied
on was that of the Province.
[13] In September of 1999, ICBC, Tech BC and the Province, as
represented by the Authorized Ministry, executed a Memorandum of Understanding (“MOU”)
that underlined the significant contributions of ICBC and Tech BC and the Province including ICBC’s proposed significant financial investment in the
project. While the MOU anticipated the
chain of subsidiary corporations that unfolded to carry out the ownership,
development and operation of the project, the financing responsibility imposed
on ICBC and the mutual reliance that all the parties to the MOU placed on each
other is very evident.
[14] Although the pleadings suggest that the MOU is not a
legally binding agreement,
it sets the project out in considerable detail. The entire project to be developed by ICBC had several components and
more than one phase. In the first phase Tech BC was to lease 425,000 square
feet of space designed and built for it and ICBC was to develop up to 250,000
square feet for its own use. As I understand it, the first phase also included the
redevelopment of the existing adjacent Surrey Place Mall that ICBC had acquired
(the “Surrey Mall”). The redevelopment of the Surrey Mall was to include the
development of neighboring parcels that were to be assigned by Tech BC to the project on a partnership basis. The redevelopment of the Surrey Mall was
conditional on agreements being reached with three major retailers whose
tenancies were critical to the success of that part of the project.
[15] It is also evident from the MOU, that the base rent Tech
BC was required to pay to the corporation in the chain of ICBC subsidiaries that
was to become the legal owner of the subject property (which turned out to be
Mall Co), was fixed by a formula. That formula depended on two numbers: the “base
building budget” and the “lease rate”. The lease rate itself was set out in the
MOU as an effective annual interest rate of 7%. The base building budget was said
to be set out in an appendix. Although the appendix was not in evidence, I
accept the Appellant’s witness’s testimony that the base building budget was “basically”
frozen at $82.9MM at the time of entering into the MOU. The MOU formulates the
base rent at $7MM payable at the commencement of the lease plus: the base
building budget amount less $21MM
amortized at the lease rate over the 25 year term of the lease payable monthly on
the first of each month from commencement of the lease.
[16] The base building budget was essentially a turnkey
development cost amount requiring ICBC to be responsible for cost overruns
subject to very limited exceptions where adjustments specified in the MOU were
to be allowed. For example, the base building budget could change by adjusting
for final construction financing costs and for cost increases resulting from delays,
or change orders, caused by or required by Tech BC.
[17] In March 2000, three agreements were entered into, all
effective on the same day in March of that year. The first agreement, the Mutual
Objectives and Endowment Agreement (the “MOEA”) was entered into by Mall Co,
the Province, as represented by the Authorized Ministry, and Tech BC. It committed the Province and Tech BC to assign to Mall Co certain of the requisite
lands that Tech BC had a right to acquire from the City of Surrey to Mall Co. These
endowment lands were referred to as the Surrey Lands and would earn Tech BC an endowment payment of $1.625MM (being 50%
of the stipulated phase one development profit) plus a 50% interest in the profit earned
from the development of additional endowment parcels.
The MOEA also confirms Tech BC making a further substantial contribution to the
project by becoming a major tenant.
[18] The MOEA sets out in some detail future development
plans for the Surrey Lands. In very general terms these plans provide for the
development of contiguous parcels for the benefit of the parties and include Tech BC having a right to acquire back a parcel of land for $1 for the construction of
further university space.
[19] The MOEA clearly commits Mall Co to the development of the
initial space for Tech BC and has a binding arbitration provision.
[20] Mall Co’s commitment to the development of initial space
for Tech BC as provided for in the MOEA is said to be pursuant to the Tech BC
Lease as contemplated in the Development
Agreement. The Development Agreement is the second of the three agreements
signed in March, 2000.
[21] The parties to the Development Agreement were Mall Co,
ICBC, Tech BC and the Province as represented by the Authorized Ministry. The
Development Agreement details the construction terms for the initial Tech BC space and confirms the turnkey base building budget with limiting adjustments not
dissimilar from those set out in the MOU. Details of completion, turn over and
the lease commencement date of the Tech BC space are set out. The base rent is
set out by the same formula set out in the MOU. There is provision for a lease
inducement payment
of $700,000 payable on delivery of certain completion certificates. The
Development Agreement has a binding arbitration clause. As a party to this
agreement, ICBC has the right to seek arbitration on any dispute under the
agreement. That would appear to include a dispute relating to the lease which
would not be extraordinary since as the party financing the project it has an
interest in the lease.
[22] As well, the Development Agreement has specific
provisions pertaining to ICBC’s covenants:
Agreements
related to Current Project
4.1 ICBC Mall Co. and ICBC agree that they
will not directly or indirectly sell a majority position in, or relinquish
control of management of, the Current Project until such time as it is
substantially complete but, subject to the foregoing, ICBC Mall Co. and ICBC
shall not be precluded from:
(a) obtaining financing on the Current Project, so
long as the other terms of this Agreement and the Surrey Lands Agreement are
complied with; or
(b) entering into joint ventures or other similar
agreements with another party or parties in respect of all or parts of the
Current Project provided that ICBC Mall Co. and ICBC shall each remain fully
responsible for its respective obligations under this Agreement.
Agreements of ICBC
4.2 ICBC agrees, whether or not
any of the matters referred to in §4.1 have occurred, to fund:
(a) to completion ICBC Mall Co.’s obligations to
complete the Initial University Space;
(b) any payments required pursuant to the Surrey
Lands Agreement in respect of the completion of Development Goal #1 and
Development Goal #2; and
(c) any repayment or return of the Security
Deposit required under the TechBC Leases(s), including the drawdown of the
Security Deposit commencing in the twentieth year of the Term.
[23] Further, as a party to the Development Agreement, there
are many other provisions of that agreement that impose obligations on ICBC.
For example, paragraph 3.6 which sets out the base rent calculations (the full
text of which is appended to these Reasons as Appendix A) includes a sentence
that the parties have contemplated the gross buildable area for Tech
BC’s rental space would be approximately 425,000 square feet and under one of
the provisions dealing with design change orders, namely paragraph 2.7, ICBC,
not Mall Co, is included in the obligation to meet and identify promptly
changes in design plans. As well, paragraph 3.8 provides:
Lease Delivery Agreement
3.8 The parties agree that they will enter
into the Lease Delivery Agreement attaching the settled form of the TechBC
Lease and providing:
(a) instructions to complete certain blanks
in the form with information as it becomes available;
(b) providing how certain information or
amounts will be obtained or calculated;
(c) providing for how any dispute as to the
completion of the blanks or the calculation of any amount will be resolved.
[24] The form of lease referred to in the Development
Agreement is attached to that agreement and consists of 56 pages of lease
terms. However, the basic terms set out in the first 4 pages are replete with
blank spaces that are required to be filled in. The Lease Delivery Agreement
provides details for determining various essential terms of the lease and
filling in the blank spaces in the form of a lease attached to the Development
Agreement.
[25] The Lease Delivery Agreement, in addition to being an
attachment to the Development Agreement, exists as a stand alone document and
is the third agreement executed in March 2000. The parties to that agreement
were Mall Co and Tech BC. The Lease Delivery Agreement has a binding arbitration
provision which provides as follows:
(a) If there is any dispute as to the
completion of any part of the Lease pursuant to this Agreement, the dispute
shall be resolved by arbitration as contemplated in the Development Agreement
but the terms of the Lease shall continue to apply. If the dispute involves a
monetary matter, the Tenant will pay the amount specified. [Emphasis added.]
(b) Pending resolution of any dispute in
respect of the Lease Form, the Tenant will occupy the Leased Premises on the
terms and conditions (including the payment of Rent) specified by the Landlord
and, upon receipt of a final decision of any arbitration or agreement by the
parties, the parties will make such adjustments as may be required including,
if applicable, the payment of interest at the Default Interest Rate on adjusted
amounts.
(c) In completing the Lease Form, all square
bracketed provisions or instructions will be deleted.
(d) The parties agree to act reasonable,
diligently and in good faith to resolve, at the appropriate time, all
documentation called for herein or to agree upon or settle any dispute or
difference with regard to completion of the Lease Form.
[26] This was the state of the agreements when the
construction of the project commenced. According to the Appellant’s witness,
the construction of the building, designed to accommodate Tech BC’s specific
needs, was about half complete in February of 2002 when the Province announced that Tech BC would no longer operate a
university and would not fulfill its obligation to enter into the subject lease.
Correspondence from
ICBC, signed by the President and CEO, in May 2002 to the Deputy Minister of
Finance of the Province of British Columbia confirms that in February of 2002
the Government decided that Tech BC would not occupy the subject space. The
correspondence refers to ICBC’s proposed settlement where the Government would
pay ICBC $41.1MM for ICBC to release Tech BC and the Crown from their
obligations. Reference is made to the lease between Tech BC and ICBC’s
subsidiary as well as to incurred or committed costs in respect of which there
was no commensurate value or opportunity for mitigation. In spite of a noted
likely write down of the property, the letter reflects an agreement for ICBC to
refund monies if it later recovers its costs on a present value basis after
expenses, and further, after a full refund, ICBC would split any further amount
on a 50/50 basis. A commitment letter from the Government accepting these terms
was said to have been furnished to ICBC.
[27] On July 16, 2002,
ICBC, Mall Co, Tech BC, IPL and the Province, as represented by the Authorized
Ministry entered into a Settlement Agreement under which Tech BC agreed to pay
$41.1MM, on behalf of itself and the Province, to ICBC. The endowment payment made to Tech BC in the amount of $1.625MM was not required to be repaid. In exchange, ICBC, IPL and Mall Co released Tech BC and the Province from all of their obligations under the March 2000 agreements and
all related agreements (i.e. indemnification from lawsuits from other tenants
of Surrey Mall).
[28] The Settlement
Agreement recital acknowledges that all the parties to the agreement had
participated in a series of agreements relating to the acquisition and
development of lands in the City of Surrey. The agreement is clearly a
definitive settlement of all agreements, entitlements and obligations of all
parties under these various agreements. Tech BC and the Province gave up all of
their interest in all phases of the project excepting reserving some leased
space to be assigned to Simon Fraser University. ICBC undertakes to take financial
responsibility for the obligations of both the ICBC subsidiaries.
[29] The Settlement Agreement consists of 5 Parts. Reproduced
below are Parts 2, 3, 4 and two paragraphs of Part 5.
PART 2
PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS
2.1 Tech BC does hereby, for itself, and for
and on behalf of the Province, agree to pay ICBC, or to its nominee, the
Settlement Monies, on the execution of this Agreement.
2.2. The parties acknowledge and agree that the
respective agreements and obligations of the parties described in the Agreement
are conditional upon the payment by Tech BC to ICBC of the Settlement Monies
and that the respective entitlements and obligations described herein will not
be effected or effective until that payment is made.
PART 3
SURRENDERED
ENTITLEMENTS
3.1 Tech BC and the Province do
hereby quit claim and surrender unto the ICBC Companies all of their
respective, right, title and interest in and to participation in any manner in
the development and utilization of any part of the Central City Development;
3.2 Despite the generality of the foregoing, Tech BC does hereby surrender and release to ICBC Mall Co. all of its right, title and
interest under the Mutual Objectives and Endowment Agreement;
3.3 Despite the generality of § 3.1, the Province and Tech BC do hereby surrender and
release to the ICBC Companies all of the entitlements and benefits respectively
accruing to them or either of them under or pursuant to the Tech BC Agreements;
3.4 Notwithstanding any of the other terms of this
Agreement, nothing in this Agreement affects in any way the leases identified
in Schedule “A” made between Tech BC and ICBC Mall Co. for space in the Central
City Development, which leases are being assigned by Tech BC to Simon Fraser University.
PART 4
RELEASES AND INDEMNIFICATIONS
4.1 The ICBC Companies accept the surrender by
the Province and by Tech BC of all of their respective participation interests
in and to the Tech BC Agreements and in and to the Central City Development and
the ICBC Companies acknowledge that the participation of the Province and of
Tech BC in the Central City Development is cancelled and that all of the
respective obligations imposed upon the Province and upon Tech BC by the Tech
BC Agreements are at an end and of no further force or effect;
4.2 By their execution of this Agreement, the
ICBC Companies fully release and discharge the Province and Tech BC from all
liability for the losses, damages, costs and expenses suffered by the ICBC
Companies as a result of the cancellation of the participation of the Province
and of Tech BC in the Central City Development;
4.3 The ICBC Companies further release the
Province and Tech BC, and each of the them, from any requirements for further
participation in the Tech BC Agreements and from any of the obligations imposed
upon the Province and Tech BC therein;
4.4 The ICBC Companies do hereby agree to
indemnify and save harmless the Province and Tech BC from and against all
claims and causes of action that may arise against the Province and Tech BC as
a result of the cancellation by the Province and Tech BC of their respective
participations in the Central City Development, brought by:
a)
the City of Surrey,
b)
tenants or prospective tenants
at the Central City Development, or
c)
any other parties who have
suffered damages as a result of the determination that the Central City
Development will not be occupied by either Tech BC or by the ICBC Companies to
the extent that those parties had originally intended to occupy the development;
provided however that the ICBC Companies will not
indemnify the Province and Tech BC with respect to any claims or causes of
action arising out of:
d) agreements or commitments made by the
Province or Tech BC with parties other than the City of Surrey, including,
without limitation, agreements with suppliers or construction contractors
regarding construction, fit-up, servicing, or furnishing of the Tech BC
premises at the Central City Development, or
e) the operations or proposed operations of
Tech BC as an educational institution, including claims brought by employees,
unions, professional organizations, students or prospective students.
4.5 Despite the generality of the foregoing
sub-paragraphs, the ICBC Companies acknowledge that neither the Province nor Tech BC has any obligation or responsibility to repay to the ICBC Companies any part of the
Initial Endowment Payment;
4.6 ICBC does hereby specifically undertake
financial responsibility for the obligations of the ICBC Companies described
herein, and agrees that if any one of the ICBC Companies is called upon to pay
pursuant to the indemnity agreement provided herein, and is for any reason
unable to do so, then ICBC will make such payments as would have been paid by
such other of the ICBC Companies but for such inability.
4.7 The Province and Tech BC acknowledge and
agree that all of the respective obligations to the Province and Tech BC imposed upon the ICBC Companies by the Tech BC Agreements are at an end and of no
further force or effect.
4.8 The Province and Tech BC release the ICBC
Companies, and each of them, from any requirements for further participation in
the Tech BC Agreements and from any of the obligations to the Province and Tech BC imposed upon the ICBC Companies therein.
PART 5
GENERAL PROVISIONS
5.1 It is the intention of this Agreement to
provide a full and complete mutual release of the parties respective
obligations under the Tech BC Agreements;
5.2 The payment by the Province of the
Settlement Monies is intended to fully release and discharge the Province and
Tech BC from all further participation in and liability for the Tech BC
Agreements and the Central City Development;
[30] The Settlement
Agreement did not refer to GST.
[31] As noted above, initially,
ICBC was assessed for the deemed GST portion of the Payment pursuant to
subsection 182(1) of the Act. A Consent Judgment was issued in favour of ICBC and a corresponding assessment was issued
against the Appellant.
Appellant’s Submissions
[32] The Appellant submits that the Development Agreement was an invalid “agreement
to agree”. The basis for this submission is that at its core is an appended
form of lease which never came into existence – that is, there was never an
actual lease in force. The Appellant argues that the Development Agreement did
not set out the rent to be paid. The formulistic stipulations to calculate the
rent were subject to future specified, but unknown, adjustments and “such other
amount as may be agreed to between Tech BC and Mall Co.” Many authorities are cited
for the rule that the amount of rent is an essential term of a valid lease
agreement. The Minister never assumed that the rent was agreed upon.
[33] As a separate but
related argument, the Appellant submits that if the Development Agreement is a
valid agreement, there is still no “supply”. The assumed supply is the lease.
However, it is a future lease and a future lease is not a supply. That section
133 provides that entering into any agreement to supply property is an
immediate supply of property, does not include an as yet unfinalized appended
form of lease.
[34] The Appellant further
submits that if the Court finds that the Development Agreement was a valid agreement,
then subsection 182(1) still does not apply as the party that breached the
agreement, Tech BC, was the relevant supplier and not the recipient. The
Appellant claims that Tech BC supplied Mall Co with the right to force Mall Co
to enter into the lease and be the anchor tenant for the proposed mall. Thus,
the Payment was made by the intended supplier under the Development Agreement.
The charging provision does not apply if the payment is made by the supplier.
[35] As well, the Appellant
submits that the Payment was not “paid” to Mall Co but was paid to ICBC and that
the word “paid” must mean “actually paid”. Subsection 182(1) is not concerned
with the reasoning behind the registrant getting paid, only who is getting
paid. The Appellant points to overwhelming evidence that the Payment was
actually paid to ICBC not Mall Co. The Appellant relies on an asserted Crown
concession that ICBC did not receive the Payment as agent or trustee for Mall
Co and asserts that the legal obligation here was solely to pay the Payment to
ICBC not Mall Co. Any money that later flowed down to Mall Co from ICBC for the
construction of the mall were separate transactions.
[36] The Appellant also
submits that section 17 of the Technical University of British Columbia Act (“Tech BC Act”) provides that: “The university is not liable to taxation
except to the extent the government is liable.” It is argued that this
provision means that if the Province of British Columbia would not be liable
for tax under section 165 of the Act as the recipient of the supply,
then Tech BC is similarly not liable. The Appellant points out that, pursuant
to paragraph 122(b) of the Act and section 125 of the Constitution
Act, the Province would not have to pay taxes as a recipient of a supply.
[37] Lastly, in response to the Respondent’s reliance on Mall
Co having had its debt to IPL reduced “as a consequence” of the Payment, the
Appellant relies on Dieni v. The Queen.
The Appellant asserts that the causal connection between the debt reduction and
the Payment is not strong enough to meet the requirement imposed by subsection
182(1).
Respondent’s Submissions
[38] The Respondent
submits that the conditions for subsection 182(1) to apply are all present in
this case.
[39] The Respondent
submits that while Tech BC might have made the Payment to ICBC, as a result of
doing so, Mall Co owed $41.1MM less to IPL. Beyond the suggestion that there
was a constructive receipt of the Payment by Mall Co given Mall Co’s
entitlement, indirect benefit received and acquiescence as where the Payment
would go, a broad construction of the language of the subject provision is
advocated to catch all payments made, and all reductions in the debts of the
registrant occasioned, as a consequence of the termination of an agreement for
the making of a taxable supply. The language of the provision does not require
that the recipient of the supply be the person making the payment to the
registrant supplier. Similarly, the language of the provision does not require
that debt reduced be a debt owed to the intended recipient of the supply. Such
a wide scope for the application of the subject provision should thereby import
an intention to include a payment to a third party where that payment reduces a
debt of the registered supplier. Further, it is noted that where the intended recipient
of the supply is not the person making the payment to the registrant supplier, the
intended recipient of the supply gets the input tax credit (“ITC”). Similarly,
where the debt reduced is not a debt owed to the intended recipient of the
supply, the intended recipient of the supply gets the ITC. The integrity of the
system requires that the party who gets the ITC should be seen as the payor and
that the payee be seen as the registered supplier. Otherwise, there would be no
tax to offset the ITC. Further, the purpose of subsection 182(1) would be
defeated if a registrant could avoid it by allowing a termination payment to be
directed to a related party or creditor while, nonetheless, getting its financial
benefit.
[40] The Payment was an
economic substitute for the rent that should have been paid. A common sense
appreciation of all the surrounding circumstances in this case point to the
Payment having been intended to replace a rent obligation, an obligation that
all relevant agreements imposed on Tech BC to pay to the lessor, Mall Co. As evidenced by settlement
correspondence, all parties recognized and acknowledged that Payment was to
compensate for Tech BC’s failure to enter into the lease and meet its
obligations to Mall Co. As such the Payment must be taxed accordingly. That is
the clear intent of the subject provision and that intention must be given effect.
In support of this contention, the Respondent submits that Mall Co was
incorporated to own and operate the mall on its own account and that the
fundamental obligations under the agreements were between Tech BC and Mall Co. That obligation was to pay rent. The other parties’ obligations were merely
ancillary. Putting a slightly different slant on this argument, it is submitted
that on acceptance of Tech BC’s repudiation of the lease, Mall Co had a claim
for compensatory damages relating to costs incurred for the special tenancy
needs of Tech BC, the resultant costs of refitting the building and lost
profit. The Payment extinguished Mall Co’s right to compensatory damages and benefited
Mall Co by reducing its upstream debt obligations.
[41] Furthermore, the
Respondent posits that ICBC had no legal claim to the Payment and, therefore,
suffered no direct loss. Any loss suffered was predicated on the lost value in
the mall or of its assets. ICBC acted on Mall Co’s behalf in respect of its
involvement in the settlement. It received no net benefit from the Payment.
Where it directed the Payment to be made cannot be determinative of the issue.
Paying ICBC discharged its obligation to Mall Co and that is sufficient to satisfy
the “paid” requirement in subsection 182(1). In interpreting “paid” in this way
is consistent with the Parliament’s intention.
[42] The Respondent submits that Mall Co’s supply of a right
to a lease was a taxable supply. A right to a lease is “property”. The lease
itself is not property but is the manner of providing property. The right to a
lease is admitted to arise only where its essential material terms have been
agreed upon. However, it is argued that all such terms were sufficiently
certain to bind the parties and where there could be a difference of opinion on
a few points, recourse to arbitration would resolve them. Mall Co and Tech BC intended to enter into a binding lease agreement and conducted themselves
accordingly.
[43] While acknowledging that the Payment was made as a
consequence of terminating the various agreements, it is maintained that the
parties negotiated it to compensate for Tech BC terminating its obligation to
lease the subject space from Mall Co. On the other hand, it is also submitted
that the Payment was made as compensation for the termination of Tech BC’s
right to use the subject space.
[44] In response to the
Appellant’s submission that Tech BC was the supplier, the Respondent submits
that this argument is irrelevant. In response to the Appellant’s submission
that the Payment is clothed by a Crown immunity, the Respondent submits that
Tech BC made the Payment on its own account and that the Government of British
Columbia owed no compensation to ICBC or Mall Co in respect of the termination
of the lease obligation. The Crown immunity from taxation does not protect Tech BC unless it made the Payment on behalf of the Province as its agent. Tech BC was neither a Crown agency nor any other type of agent of the Province. Any agency
argument would have to be supported by express language in its empowering
statute and/or clear evidence of the Province’s control over the agent’s
mandate and operations. Neither have been established in the case at bar.
[45] The Respondent
submits, overall, that Mall Co is responsible to remit the taxes deemed to have
been collected on the Payment as per the formula in subsection 182(1). The
Respondent requests that the appeal be dismissed, with costs.
Evidentiary Issue
[46] In its pleadings the Appellant admitted that under the
Development Agreement Tech BC agreed to pay it a monthly rent of $426,630. The
Respondent admitted that statement in its pleadings.
The Respondent objected at the hearing to the Appellant’s attempt at arguing, on
the basis of evidence presented at the hearing, that there was no fixed monthly
rent agreed to at the time the Development Agreement and the Lease Delivery
Agreement were signed with the appended form of lease. The admission is said to
be binding and that it dispenses the need for proof of it. Allowing a
withdrawal of that admission would result in a radical change in the nature of
the issue in controversy and not only be contrary to the Rules of the Court
and common law but would be an abuse of process as well.
[47] No notice was given of the Appellant’s intention to make
an issue of whether the rent had been fixed and it did not seek an order to
withdraw its admission or amend its pleading. The Respondent submits that the
lateness of the change in the factual admissions and the prejudice it causes
demand a finding that the admission must stand. The prejudice is irreparable
having lost the chance to more fully explore the matter in discoveries and bring
contextual evidence of the understandings of the various parties.
[48] The Appellant asserts that there has been no admission
of the rent actually being fixed but rather there was only a reiteration of the
references to the monthly rent amount in the subject agreements that was
subject to change and not fixed and that, in any event, whether the rent was
sufficiently fixed to constitute a binding term of an agreement, versus
warranting a finding that there was only an agreement to agree, is a question
of law in respect of which no admission can be made. The Respondent answers
that even if the rent is a question of law, the pleadings did not make an issue
of it.
[49] The Appellant further submits that prior proceedings
made the Respondent alive to the issue and that it was canvassed by the
Respondent on cross examination of the Appellant’s witness at the hearing of
the instant appeal. The Respondent answers that the prior proceedings
demonstrate, by contrast in the pleadings, that what was at issue there was not
an issue here and that the cross examination of the Appellant’s witness neither
opened the issue nor afforded a sufficient opportunity to address the issue
raised only in argument.
[50] The various authorities relied on the by the Appellant
were distinguished by the Respondent.
Statutory Provisions
[51] Subsection 182(1)
of the Act provides:
Forfeiture, extinguished debt, etc.
182. (1) For the
purposes of this Part, where at any time, as a consequence of the breach,
modification or termination after 1990 of an agreement for the making of a
taxable supply (other than a zero-rated supply) of property or a service in
Canada by a registrant to a person, an amount is paid or forfeited to the
registrant otherwise than as consideration for the supply, or a debt or other
obligation of the registrant is reduced or extinguished without payment on
account of the debt or obligation,
(a) the person is
deemed to have paid, at that time, an amount of consideration for the supply
equal to the amount determined by the formula
(A/B) × C
where
A is 100%,
B is
(i) if tax under
subsection 165(2) was payable in respect of the supply, the total of 100%, the
rate set out in subsection 165(1) and the tax rate for the participating
province in which the supply was made, and
(ii) in any other case, the total
of 100% and the rate set out in subsection 165(1), and
C is the
amount paid, forfeited or extinguished, or by which the debt or obligation was
reduced, as the case may be; and
(b) the registrant
is deemed to have collected, and the person is deemed to have paid, at that
time, all tax in respect of the supply that is calculated on that
consideration, which is deemed to be equal to
(i) where tax under
subsection 165(2) was payable in respect of the supply, the total of the tax
under that subsection and under subsection 165(1) calculated on that
consideration, and
(ii) in any other
case, tax under subsection 165(1) calculated on that consideration.
[52] In short then, when a registrant agrees to make a taxable supply to a person and as a consequence of the
breach, modification or cancellation of that agreement an amount is paid to the
registrant other than as consideration for the supply, the person is deemed to
have paid consideration for the supply that includes GST and the registrant is
deemed to have collected such tax amount in respect of the supply and must
remit it. The assessment seeks to uphold that remittance obligation on Mall Co
on the basis that it agreed to make a taxable supply to Tech BC and as a consequence
of Tech BC reneging on its commitment under that agreement, a GST included
payment is deemed to have been made to Mall Co.
Analysis
Refining the Issues
[53] While I have organized my
analysis of the several issues in this Appeal under the separate headings set
out below, it will be helpful to put two issues in this Appeal in context,
namely the existence of an enforceable lease and the recipient of the Payment.
[54] It is clear that the parties agree that the taxable
supply at issue is the lease. While my analysis will respect that consensus, it
will also reveal that the Payment may be seen as having been made in respect of
a different service that ICBC provided to the Province. In the context of this Appeal,
the Act defines “service” as anything other than property or money. Given
that broad definition, my analysis suggests that ICBC and the Province
exchanged mutual covenants that ICBC honoured but the Province did not. If that
is the case and the Payment to ICBC was made by the Province in respect of a
service ICBC provided the Province, then subsection 182(1) cannot apply to
invoke a tax liability on Mall Co. That said, while my analysis will elaborate
on this approach, as demanded by my findings of fact, it is also consistent
with a finding that ICBC also had a right to receive the Payment from the
Province in respect of the breach of the taxable supply at issue, namely the
lease.
[55] With respect to a finding that ICBC received the Payment
for its own account, I note that while the Appellant separates its argument in
respect of the lease issue and the Payment issue, they are clearly complimentary
arguments. That is, the argument that the Payment was to ICBC for its own
account is bolstered if there is no lease.
[56] For example, the Appellant’s suggestion at the hearing, that
the computation of the Payment amount had nothing to do with lost rent, would not
only illustrate that the Payment was not tied to an enforceable lease but would
underline ICBC’s entitlement to the Payment. I agree that it appears clear that
the Payment was calculated simply as 50% of $82.2MM being the base building
budget of $82.9MM less $700,000 on account of the lease inducement obligation. However,
how the damage amount is calculated is of no significance if it is payable to the
Appellant as a result of the failure to pay rent. Subsection 182(1) simply
requires that the Payment be made as a consequence of the termination of a
taxable supply that a registrant has agreed to make. The inference suggested by
the Appellant then is that what must be drawn from the method of computing the
quantum of the damage payment is that it was based on ICBC’s investment
requirements. That requirement was not a mere guarantee, it was an actual contractually
committed financing outlay on a building under construction.
There was no going back. The agreements were sufficient to give ICBC a standing
to claim and receive damages independent of any rights of Mall Co. That ICBC
might be indirectly compensated had the Payment been made to Mall Co should not
distract from ICBC’s entitlement and receipt for its own account.
[57] On the other hand, a finding that there was an
enforceable lease at the time the Lease Delivery Agreement was entered into is
not fatal to the Appellant’s position that ICBC was entitled to receive the
Payment for its own account. That the Appellant had an entitlement arising from
the termination of an existent lease does not preclude a finding that ICBC
enjoyed a similar right based on its investment commitment. While there are a
bundle of rights and obligations here amongst various players, the Appellant
essentially is asserting that even if there is an existent lease, the express
terms of the settlement, requiring payment to ICBC, must be accepted as
accurately reflecting its entitlement.
[58] With those comments in mind my analysis will proceed
under 7 headings:
A.
The Evidentiary
Issue
B.
The Lease
C.
The Payment
D.
Debt Reduction
E.
Tech BC as Supplier of a Taxable
Supply
F.
The Province’s
Constitutional Protection from Liability under the Act.
G.
Conclusions
A. The Evidentiary Issue
[59] As noted above, the Respondent objected to the Appellant
raising what is asserted to be a new issue: namely, whether the Appellant can
argue that there was no valid lease on the basis that the lease rate or monthly
rent amount was not fixed. The Respondent asserted that the pleadings confirmed
the lease rate had been fixed and was not an issue.
[60] In short, I agree with the Appellant on this point. The
Notice of Appeal read as a whole clearly puts at issue whether there was a
binding lease agreement in place in respect of which subsection 182(1) of the Act can apply. The case for
finding that there was only an agreement to agree inherently puts at issue
whether a stipulated rent amount or formula had been fixed. If not, then an essential
term of a lease is missing and there is no binding lease agreement. Rather, there
is only an agreement to agree on a lease agreement which is the basis for the Appellant’s
argument that there has been no taxable supply made by it.
[61] On the other hand, it is open to the Respondent to argue that the rent calculation is
sufficiently formulated to satisfy the requirement that, as an essential term
of a lease, the rent amount had been agreed upon. Indeed, the Respondent had
sufficient documentary evidence to make that argument and it did. I see little
prejudice caused by this asserted late emergence of a new issue. The Respondent
can also rely on the assumption in the Reply that the Appellant agreed to lease
the initial Tech BC space to Tech BC.
That assumption inherently assumes that all the terms essential to creating a
binding lease were present. Short of the Appellant proving otherwise, I should
find that there was a lease and that section 133 of the Act, as cited in
the Respondent’s submissions, can then be relied on even if there is only an
agreement to enter into that lease. Section 133 provides that an agreement to
make a supply is deemed to be a supply made at the time the agreement is
entered into.
[62] That said, I find this issue to be academic. I am
satisfied that the Appellant has not met its burden to undermine the assumption
that an enforceable lease agreement existed at the time of entering into the
Lease Delivery Agreement.
[63] Indeed, to the contrary, I am satisfied on the evidence
that there was a binding, enforceable agreement to enter into the lease at the
time of entering into the Lease Delivery Agreement. There was then, as required
by section 133, an agreement to enter into a taxable supply when the Lease
Delivery Agreement was signed. I will expound on this finding under the next heading.
B. The Lease
[64] In my view, all the information required to fill the
blanks in the appended form of lease were readily determinable and if any
issues arose, it was clear, reading all the agreements together, particularly
the Development Agreement and the Lease Delivery Agreement, that those issues
were, by formula or other stipulated parameters, sufficiently detailed to be
resolvable without suggestion that a court would have to write-in essential but
missing terms.
The essential elements of the lease were all provided for: the parties, the
premises, the commencement date, the term and the rent.
The comfort level of the parties that there was a binding lease or agreement to
lease on determinable and enforceable terms is reflected by the binding
arbitration provisions in every agreement
and by the conduct of the parties which in turn reflects their intention to be
bound.
The execution of the Lease Delivery Agreement followed by the performance of
the parties of various undertakings imposed under the various agreements and
ultimately as well, by the Settlement Agreement itself, all demonstrate an
intention to be bound under the lease.
[65] To be more specific, and focusing on what was
essentially the only contractual element of the lease that the parties put at
issue, namely the lease rate or rent amount, I find, as noted earlier, that
there was in place a rent formulation understanding established in 2009 even
before the various agreements were signed. Such formulations for fixing the
rent were then locked-in in March of 2010. The only notable or possible material
variations were those caused by actual construction financing costs and price
changes caused by Tech BC’s change orders. If there was no agreement on
the adjustment costs, there appears to be no requirement that changes had to be
made as requested. Alternatively, if there was no agreement on the adjustment
costs, which would re-determine the rent, binding arbitration was in place to
resolve the issue.
[66] Indeed, the Lease Delivery Agreement itself speaks
loudly of the existence of an intention to create legally binding rights and
obligations. The existence of that agreement and, for that matter, the
existence of the Development Agreement, which relies on the lease, is
incompatible with a finding that there was here an unenforceable agreement to
agree. Reference to all the authorities on the subject of when a lease becomes
a binding agreement and when it does not, as cited by the parties,
have not persuaded me otherwise on the facts of this case. The cases only
demonstrate that the exercise is fact specific.
[67] The facts of this case, as I find them, are that Tech BC
was obligated at law to occupy sufficiently defined premises on a readily determinable
commencement date at an agreed ascertainable rent for a specified duration.
That is, the terms of the appended form of lease read together, as and if
necessary, with the Development Agreement and the Lease Delivery Agreement, do
not lack the necessary certainty required to form a binding agreement. As I
said, the formula for calculating the rent, being the focus of the dispute
between the parties, cannot be found to lead to uncertainties that could not be
resolved according to clearly defined objectives and principles. These
documents would guide, if not direct, an arbitrator, if arbitration became
necessary, with a road map for the determination of all the rights and obligations
of the parties according to the clear principles agreed to in these documents. As
I said, all the parties to the various agreements intended and understood there
to be an enforceable lease agreement. They all relied on there being a binding
rental commitment on terms sufficiently set out to ensure that result.
Suggesting otherwise, as Appellant’s counsel has done, is simply argumentative.
[68] The more difficult questions in this case are: who can
enforce the lease and who is damaged by the breach of it?
[69] While the Appellant has not argued, except indirectly or
by inference, that ICBC had the right to enforce the lease, that in fact is at the
heart of the issue in this case. It is possible that the Appellant making that
argument directly, would fly in the face of prior proceedings that dealt with
an assessment of ICBC’s liability under subsection 182(1). However, be that as
it may, there is nothing in the prior proceedings that necessarily imposes a
particular view of the rights and remedies of the parties in this case.
[70] In my view, ICBC did have a right to enforce the lease
and clearly suffered damage by the breach of it as discussed under the next
heading.
C. The Payment
[71] Subsection 182(1) speaks
clearly of the making of a supply by a registrant to a person and deems a
payment to be consideration for the supply where the payment is made, as a
consequence of the breach or termination of an agreement for the making of a
taxable supply, to the registrant who agreed to make the supply. The
registrant asserted to have agreed to make the supply in this case is Mall Co.
The Payment, however, was made to ICBC.
[72] After numerous reviews of the evidence, I do not accept
the Respondent’s view that ICBC’s entitlements were ancillary to or derived
from Mall Co’s entitlements or were derived from its relationship with Mall Co.
ICBC had genuine pursuable entitlements that arose from the Province’s decision
to terminate Tech BC’s existence.
[73] There are three main reasons for my coming to this
conclusion. First, the separate existence of Mall Co did not diminish, undo or
vitiate the essential and binding mutual assurances between ICBC and the
Province. Second, ICBC had an entitlement to be compensated for the decline in
the value of a very significant investment made in reliance on promises made by
the Province. Third, the Settlement Agreement recognizes that the Payment was
made to ICBC for its own account.
[74] As to the first of these reasons, that the separate
existence of Mall Co did not diminish, undo or vitiate the essential and
binding mutual assurances between ICBC and the Province, the following factors
support that finding:
·
ICBC generated
the entire project from its initial feasibility studies to the formulation of
the participation of the Province. Its presence as a party to the Development
Agreement and its covenants under that agreement confirm that ICBC’s commitment
goes beyond a typical financing arrangement. It is an open-ended commitment
without any evidence of a security interest. It has an uncapped funding
obligation on the initial and further development phases and pursuant to
paragraph 3.8 of the Development Agreement it was responsible for the
performance of many of the obligations of Mall Co under the Lease Delivery
Agreement. For all intents and purposes the Province and Tech BC have kept ICBC
as a principal player in this entire project.
·
Mall Co was
created after the terms of the project had been substantially agreed upon and
after the essential mutual assurances between ICBC and the Province were given.
I am satisfied that these assurances survived the formation of Mall Co.
·
Mall Co’s
existence as a separate entity cannot in anyway be seen as having any impact on
the ongoing mutual assurances between ICBC and the Province. The entire project
was dependant on ICBC’s financing commitment and the Province’s implied, if not
express, commitment to ICBC to ensure Tech BC’s participation in the project.
·
ICBC, kept its
governing hand on the project irrespective of the rights of Mall Co. It could
initiate mandatory arbitration that would bind Mall Co, the Province and Tech BC on any matter in dispute including any dispute pertaining to the lease. As a party
to the Development Agreement it agreed to the terms of the lease and the Lease
Delivery Agreement and even had an obligation to meet where there were building
design changes.
[75] As to the second of these reasons, that ICBC had an
entitlement to be compensated for its reliance on promises made by the Province
to it, the following factors support that finding:
·
ICBC, in making
the investment it made in Mall Co relied on the Province’s commitment to ICBC
to ensure Tech BC’s participation in the entire project. This commitment was
breached and is the fundamental breach at the heart of ICBC’s entitlement that
is quite distinct from a claim by Mall Co for lost rent.
·
On the breach
of this commitment, ICBC would have invested in Mall Co, as loans or otherwise,
directly or indirectly, a significant part of the budgeted cost of the project
and was facing the uncertainty of the costs and risks of continuing to finance,
or not, Mall Co’s completion of a project designed largely for Tech BC’s use. That is, the potential loss in the value of ICBC’s investment in Mall Co
occasioned by the breach of the Province’s and Tech BC’s covenants to ICBC was
significant. The Province’s admission of its liability to ICBC by funding the
Payment to ICBC does not strike me as evidence that ICBC’s entitlement derived
from Mall Co’s entitlement or was the result of Mall Co’s direction that the
Payment be made to ICBC. To the contrary, the Payment was funded by the Province
to secure its release from liability for its breach of covenants made to ICBC.
·
The Province’s
admission of its liability and its commitment to fund the Payment is recognized in settlement correspondence. In a
letter dated May 2, 2002, the Province agreed to the lump sum payment of
$41.1MM. In that letter the payment was said to be made for IPL’s release of Tech BC and the Province for their obligations under the Development Agreement. No mention
is made of Mall Co.
·
On the same
date, ICBC responded to the Province’s May 2nd letter as follows:
ICBC
proposed a settlement where the Government will pay ICBC $41.1 million
as a lump sum payment for ICBC to release TechBC and the Crown from its
obligation … The final agreement has not been finalized, however, a commitment
letter accepting these arrangements has been furnished to ICBC from the
Government on May 2, 2002. [Emphasis added.]
This letter also commits ICBC to reimburse the
Province if ultimately revenues from the premises to have been occupied by Tech BC exceeded the settlement amount.
·
Further, the Province was made
aware in the ICBC May 2nd letter that the payment was being recorded
by ICBC as income in its first quarter. The letter distinguished between
“ICBC” and “ICBC’s subsidiary” but speaks only of the impairment in value of
its, ICBC’s, investment, offering its release of the Province and Tech
BC in consideration of the Province paying it $41.1MM.
·
The understanding of the parties
that the payment would be made by the Province as the party liable for a breach
of an undertaking it made to ICBC is also reflected in a letter dated May 3rd
from ICBC to Tech BC which was initialed and acknowledged by the Province on
May 6th “indicating concurrence with the terms outlined”. This May 3rd
letter, acknowledged on May 6th and referred to as the “May 6th
Agreement” by the Appellant’s counsel, stated that ICBC had:
reached an
agreement with the Province on behalf of ICBC and its wholly
owned subsidiary, ICBC Properties Ltd. with respect to the termination of the
Tech BC lease. [Emphasis added.]
This letter makes no reference to Mall Co and was
incorporated by reference into the Settlement Agreement where it was referred
to as the May 3rd letter in section 5.8. It is the only outside
communication, representation or understanding that is said not to be
superseded by the Settlement Agreement.
[76] Based on the foregoing, it is hard to accept that ICBC
was acting solely for Mall Co in reaching a settlement. That Mall Co
necessarily got swept into the releases does not dissuade me from the view that
ICBC negotiated this settlement on its own behalf notwithstanding repeated
references to IPL.
[77] As to the third of these reasons, that the Settlement
Agreement recognizes that the Payment was made to ICBC for its own account, provisions
in that agreement that support that finding include:
·
Paragraph 2.1
clearly states that the Payment is to be made to ICBC or its nominee by Tech BC for itself and for and on behalf of the Province. This is totally consistent with
my view that the overarching covenants here are between ICBC and the Province.
ICBC had the right to redirect the Payment to, say, Mall Co or not. The
Respondent’s assertion that it was Mall Co that redirected the Payment is not
supported by the express language of the Settlement Agreement. The express
language of that agreement is consistent with how the parties understood their
rights and obligations. That ICBC’s potential loss might have been similarly
accommodated by an agreement to make the Payment to Mall Co does not change the
reality that ICBC had a right to be compensated for the subject breach.
·
Under Parts 3
and 4, under the headings “Surrendered Entitlements” and “Releases and
Indemnifications”, references to the ICBC Companies, which include ICBC,
confirm ICBC’s rights and obligations under the various agreements. As well,
Part 5, under the heading “General Provisions” references to releases of the
Province confirm, vis-à-vis the ICBC Companies, that the Province is a
principal in respect of the agreements entered into by Tech BC. The entire
venture ends the way it started, the real players, the Province and ICBC, deal head
to head. I have no reason to believe that the separate entities created by the
Province and ICBC were intended to exculpate either of them from their
obligations to each other.
D. Debt Reduction
[78] The Respondent relies on Mall Co
having its debt obligation to IPL reduced
or extinguished without a payment by it on account of the debt. That is, “as a consequence of” the Payment to
ICBC, Mall Co’s obligation to IPL was reduced by like amount. As well, the
Respondent relies on Mall Co being the constructive
recipient of the Payment. Mall Co was the party legally entitled to the Payment
and was the economic beneficiary of it. That Mall Co directed that the Payment
be made to ICBC or acquiesced to the Payment going there should be necessarily
inferred from its entitlement, not ICBC’s entitlement, to the Payment.
[79] The debt
reduction or debt extinguishment argument is based on the express language of
subsection 182(1):
For the purposes of
this Part, where at any time, as a consequence of the breach, … of
an agreement for the making of a taxable supply … by a registrant to a person,
an amount is paid or forfeited to the registrant otherwise than as
consideration for the supply, or a debt or other obligation of the
registrant is reduced or extinguished without payment on account of the debt or
obligation, … [Emphasis added.]
[80] That language clearly requires that Mall Co have a debt
reduced or extinguished as a consequence of the breach of the supply agreement.
Arguably, it is implicit that the debt reduced or extinguished would be a debt
owed by Mall Co to Tech BC. That is, arguably, the debt reduction language in
the subject provision is there to eliminate any doubt that an amount “paid”
would include the amount by which a prior debt owed to the payor is set-off.
[81] Alternatively, as is essentially argued by the
Respondent, the section must be given a broader construction. There is no
mention in the subject provision that the debt reduction be a debt between the
maker and recipient of the supply. That is, from the Respondent’s perspective, where
the party making the supply (Mall Co) has a debt to any third party (IPL) reduced
as a consequence of the breach by the recipient of the supply agreement (Tech BC) and a payment is made to any other party (ICBC), the provision is operative. The
Respondent, relying on section 12 of the Federal
Interpretation Act and an historical analysis of the changes to subsection
182(1), argues that Parliament intended subsection 182(1) to be interpreted
broadly to apply in cases such as this. The Respondent asserts that the
provision is worded broadly enough to capture both payments made by third
parties and payments made to third parties where a debt of the maker
of a supply has been reduced as a result of such a payment.
[82] I accept the Respondent’s construction of the subject
provision that the reduction or extinguishment of a debt, in the context of
subsection 182(1), does not require the reduction or extinguishment be of a
debt owed to a party to a supply agreement. A plain reading of the provision does
not warrant such a restrictive construction.
I am more cautious, however, about accepting the Respondent’s position that the
provision is worded broadly enough to capture both payments made by third
parties and payments made to third parties where a debt of the maker
of a supply has been reduced as a result of such a payment. This could easily
lead to cases of imposing a liability under subsection 182(1) on two suppliers
for the same amount in respect of a single jointly made supply or to cases
where both suppliers avoid liability by each of them pointing a finger at the
other – which seems to be the case we have here.
[83] In any event, in accepting that the reduction or
extinguishment of a debt, in the context of subsection 182(1), does not require
the reduction or extinguishment be of a debt owed to a party to a supply
agreement, I have acknowledged my view that the subject provision goes further
than a mere application of a constructive receipt doctrine. That doctrine would
typically require that Mall Co direct the payor (Tech BC) as to where the
Payment (the $41.1MM) should go and that the recipient of the Payment (ICBC)
did not receive it as compensation to which it was entitled for its own
account.
[84] That is, subsection 182(1) applies even though ICBC did
not need Mall Co’s direction or acquiescence to receive the Payment.
[85] That takes me then to the Appellant’s argument that even
if Mall Co benefited from the Payment, the benefit, a reduction of its debt to
IPL, did not arise “as a consequence of” Tech BC’s breach of the supply
agreement.
[86] The Respondent points to ledger entries in the records
of Mall Co that show Mall Co’s liability to IPL was reduced by $41.1MM on
account of the Payment by the Province. The Respondent asserts that that was a
benefit derived as a consequence of the settlement and the Payment under the
settlement.
[87] The Appellant argues
that the Payment was made by Tech BC and the Province as a result of the breach
of the three agreements. Any subsequent accounting entries by ICBC, IPL and
Mall Co were purely internal to the ICBC companies. The Appellant referred to evidence
given at the hearing by Mr. Stonnell who was the Chief Financial Officer of
Mall Co and IPL in 2002. He testified that Mall Co’s journal entries were made
only because ICBC had reduced its inter-company account with IPL and ICBC had
told him to match that reduction.
[88] It is the
Appellant’s position that the breach of the agreements is five steps removed
from Mall Co making a journal entry to reduce its inter-company account with
IPL. Specifically, there had to be an agreement to pay ICBC; ICBC had to reduce
its account with IPL in its books; ICBC had to instruct IPL to reduce its
account with ICBC in its books; IPL had to reduce its account with Mall Co in
its books; and finally, IPL had to instruct Mall Co to reduce its account with
IPL in its books. The Appellant argues that this is not a sufficiently strong
causal connection to support a finding that Mall Co’s journal entry reducing
its inter-company account was “as a consequence of” the breach of the supply agreement.
ICBC received the Payment for its own account pursuant to an entitlement and
the journal entries were the result of its actions as to how to account
internally amongst the chain of subsidiary corporations in which it had
invested.
[89] The issue then is simply whether or not the benefit to
Mall Co arises as a consequence of the breach of the supply agreement and that
in turn rests on the determination of whether the phrase “as a consequence of”
should be given a construction that requires a direct causal link or whether an
indirect link would be sufficient.
[90] The Respondent
agrees that the words “as a consequence of” require a causal connection.
However, the Respondent argues that a sufficient causal connection exists here
as the Payment inevitably had to benefit to Mall Co as reflected in the chain
of book entries identified and acknowledged at the hearing. The domino effect
giving Mall Co the benefit of the Payment was a result of the Payment to ICBC.
[91] Having considered these able arguments, I am of the view
that the debt reductions that Mall Co enjoyed were as a consequence of the
failure of Tech BC to fulfill its obligations under the supply agreement. That
Tech BC’s failure to fulfill its obligations was a consequence of the
Province’s failure to honor its commitment to ICBC would not disentitle Mall Co
from having an actionable right against Tech BC. Even if that right did not
extend to the Province, which I believe it would have, as a separate entity Mall
Co would have required some quid pro quo from ICBC to forgo its
entitlement against Tech BC if not against the Province. While that is not the
same as acquiescing to its damage entitlement going to ICBC, it is, nonetheless,
a benefit to which it was entitled and which it did receive as a consequence of
the breach of the supply agreement. The causal link is sufficient in my view.
E.
Tech BC as Supplier of a Taxable Supply
[92] It is
the Appellant’s position that even though Mall Co was going to lease the
property to Tech BC, Tech BC was supplying something to Mall Co in return. Tech BC’s agreement to become the anchor tenant in the mall was a supply of a service from
Tech BC to Mall Co. The Appellant cited a GST/HST Memorandum as authority to support
the view that a tenant can be supplying a service to a landlord in entering
into a lease.
More specifically, the Memorandum provides that:
If the landlord
makes a cash payment to the lessee as an inducement to enter into the lease,
the lessee is considered to have made a taxable supply to the landlord. The
taxable supply is the service of entering into the lease. The lessee, if a
GST/HST registrant, must collect and account for the GST/HST on this supply.
[93] While I might well agree with the position
taken by the Canada Revenue Agency as reflected in this memorandum, I do not
see how that advances the Appellant’s position if there is also a taxable
supply of a lease by Mall Co to Tech BC. That the consideration for that supply
includes a taxable supply by Tech BC as tenant, does not alter the fact that
there was a taxable supply of a lease to Tech BC. For the Appellant to argue
that the Payment was made by a supplier (Tech BC) and that subsection 182(1)
does not apply to payments made by a supplier simply distracts from the reality
that there was a taxable supply of a lease to Tech BC.
[94] Other than the identifiable inducement
payment of $700,000 noted earlier in these Reasons, there is little reason to
find that the lease itself, by its terms, did not reflect the full
consideration payable for the anchor tenant supply made by Tech BC. In this sense, there is a barter transaction being subsumed into the lease agreement. That
is, the terms of the lease reflect and incorporate the consideration payable
for an anchor tenancy. The penalty paid for failing to honour the tenancy
obligation, both as rent payor and as anchor tenant, is inextricably tied to Tech BC’s obligations under the lease.
[95] That there are two suppliers, supplying
each other, does not mitigate the obligation of each recipient of a taxable
supply to pay GST in respect of the supply acquired. Tech BC was the recipient
of a taxable supply fully embodied in the lease supplied by Mall Co. That is a
complete answer to the Appellant’s argument.
F. The Province’s Constitutional Protection from
Liability under the Act.
[96] As much as I am
satisfied that ICBC had a right to receive the Payment as a consequence of the
failure of Tech BC to honour the lease, which in itself defeats the assessment
against Mall Co but for the debt reduction provision within subsection 182(1), I
am satisfied that the Province had an obligation to make the Payment being the
party responsible for such failure.
[97] That is, consistent
with my finding that
ICBC received the Payment for its own account, I am of the view that the Province had a contractual liability to
ICBC and that its obligations were not derived solely from its relationship
with Tech BC. The Province’s obligations to ICBC arose from its decision to
terminate Tech BC’s existence and have it pull out of the project. That was a
fundamental breach of its commitment to ICBC. Neither ICBC nor the Province
intended to avoid their respective obligations to each other in respect to this
jointly sponsored project. As I have said, the separate existence of Tech BC did not diminish, undo or vitiate the essential and binding obligations of the
Province in this transaction.
[98] We know the Province caused the termination of the lease. We know it
funded the Payment. Section 2.1 of the Settlement Agreement acknowledges that
the Payment was on behalf of the Province. The May 3rd letter, which
was acknowledged by the Province and incorporated into the Settlement Agreement,
confirms that the negotiation of the Payment took place between ICBC and the
Province. In that letter ICBC wrote:
… this letter is to confirm that we have reached agreement with the Province
on behalf of ICBC …
[99] The letter further confirmed that if the value of a subsequent lease
exceeds costs and the Payment to ICBC, then ICBC will reimburse the Province
up to an amount of $41.1MM. Any further recovery enjoyed by ICBC would be shared
equally between ICBC and the Province. This reimbursement and profit
sharing arrangement demonstrates that the Province, not Tech BC, was the
principal with which ICBC was dealing. It does not evidence that the Province
was making the payment on behalf of Tech BC.
[100] References throughout the Settlement Agreement acknowledge the Province
as having standing as a party with rights and obligations that were being
released by the Payment to ICBC.
[101] The Province’s obligations were outlined in the MOEA. Section 2.4 of
the MOEA states:
The objectives and principles will be applied in good faith by the
parties in the interpretation and carrying out of the intentions of this
Agreement and TechBC, the Crown and ICBC Mall Co. will act reasonably
from time to time in balancing the rights and obligations of each other under
this Agreement recognizing such objectives and contributions. [Emphasis added.]
[102] The entire series of documents and the premises from which they evolved
illustrate very clearly that there was a breach by the Province of a commitment
to ICBC that the lease would be honored. That commitment remained regardless
that Tech BC assumed obligations and notwithstanding that ICBC was allowed to nominate
Mall Co to own the subject property and enter into the lease. The Province’s
commitment could not have been understood by ICBC as only to ensure that Tech
BC signed the lease. The Province’s commitment, recognized by its funding the
Payment, was to ensure a viable tenant for the project. That commitment was
made principally to ICBC not Mall Co.
[103] The question then is whether Mall Co, who might also be seen as the
recipient of a supply, namely the lease, is liable to pay the subject tax
notwithstanding that the Payment was made by the Province to ICBC. It did have
a debt reduced as a consequence of the Payment. Aside from concerns over a
construction of subsection 182(1) that permits more than one party to be liable
for tax in respect of the same payment, I am of the view that Mall Co enjoys
the same immunity from taxation as the Province.
[104] The Respondent in its argument
acknowledged this as well in asserting that the Crown immunity would only apply
if the Province was the recipient of the lease. I have concluded that this is
the case. That Tech BC had a liability as recipient of a supply that was
released by virtue of the Payment was incidental to the Province’s need to be
released from its liability. In my view, that finding should suffice as reason
not to hold Mall Co liable as a result of the application of subsection 182(1).
As well, I agree with the Appellant that section 17 of the Tech BC Act
should be interpreted to support this result. That is, even if I were to find
that Tech BC was also a recipient of the supply, it should stand in the shoes
of the Province and enjoy the benefit of provincial immunity from taxation,
thereby eliminating Mall Co’s remittance obligation.
[105] Before concluding these Reasons,
more needs to be said about the Province’s,
immunity from taxation. The Appellant raised two arguments: section 122 of the Act
and the Constitution Act.
[106] Section 122 of the Act deals with the application of Part IX of
that Act, which includes subsection 182(1), to a provincial
government. According to paragraph 122(b), subsection 182 is binding:
(b) on Her Majesty in right of a province in respect of obligations
as a supplier to collect and to remit tax in respect of taxable supplies
made by Her Majesty in right of the province.”[Emphasis added.]
[107] This, in my view, says more than the Province as recipient of a supply
is not subject to tax under paragraph 122(b). It says: unless the
Province acts as a supplier, it is not subject to tax under paragraph 122(b).
Although the Respondent has not suggested that the Province has made a taxable supply,
I agree with the Appellant that indeed the Province did, in fact, make a
supply: namely the supply of an anchor tenant. That being the case, I can only find
that subsection 182(1) applies notwithstanding that it was also a recipient of
a supply, namely, the
lease and ICBC’s financing commitment. It is the supplier side of the transaction
that takes the Province out of the protection of section 122(b).
[108] That takes me finally
to the Appellant’s argument that provinces are protected constitutionally from
taxation. That assertion must surely be correct. In Reference re: Goods and
Services Tax (GST),
the Supreme Court of Canada reviewed the constitutional validity of the federal
GST in Part IX of the Act and relying on Reference re: Exported
Natural Gas Tax
concluded that provincial governments are not liable to pay tax on their
purchases. Section 125 of the Constitution Act, 1867, states that:
No Lands or Property
belonging to Canada or any Province shall be liable to Taxation.
[109] Quoting from Reference
re: Exported Natural Gas Tax the
majority of the Court in Reference re: Goods and Services Tax (GST) stated:
Section 125
provides, in broad term, that no lands or property of the federal or provincial
Crown shall be “liable to taxation”. The purpose of this immunity, as we have
seen, is to prevent one level of government from appropriating to its own use
the property of the other, or the fruits of that property. This immunity would
be illusory if it applied only to taxes “on property” but not to a tax on the
Crown in respect of a transaction affecting its property or on the transaction
itself. The immunity would be illusory since, by the simple devise of framing a
tax as “in personam” rather than “in rem” one level of government could with
impunity tax away the fruits of the property owned by the other. The
fundamental constitutional protection framed by s.125 cannot depend on subtle
nuances of form.
[110] It is well settled by these high
court decisions then that the Province is
not liable to pay tax under the Act.
[111] Still, it has been suggested that
provincial immunity is subject to provincial/federal agreements and that
certain requirements under those agreements have not been met in this case. Assuming that the Province of British Columbia would intend to respect such agreements, it seems necessary then
to consider the agreement that it had with the federal government. At the relevant time, the federal government and
certain provinces, including the Province of British Columbia, had entered into
an arrangement by which provincial government departments would not pay GST on
purchases if the Province certified that the property or services were
purchased by the provincial government.
[112] Short of using certificates it would appear that other
documentary evidence of purchases by a provincial government would suffice. For
example, Memoranda 400-4 states that
“suppliers are not required to charge the GST/HST on their taxable supplies of
property and services made to “listed entities” if the suppliers maintain
sufficient documentary evidence that a listed entity was the recipient of the
supplier.” This documentary evidence includes “any document validly issued or
signed by the GST/HST registered provincial government entity concerning the
purchase”. “Listed entity” is defined as a provincial government department
that is entitled to make purchases without paying the GST/HST, which includes
the Province of British Columbia and its departments for transactions that took
place before July 1, 2010.
[113] Clearly, in this case there is no documentary evidence of
the type contemplated by this administrative regime. However, it is equally
clear to me that such evidentiary regime only facilitates the administration of
the constitutional right of a province not to be subject to tax. Any failure to
comply with such evidentiary requirements cannot deny a province that right
where in fact it, a province, has been found by this Court to be the recipient of
the supply in respect of which it made a payment. That is the case here,
although it may be of concern in this case that the immunity claim is made by
counsel for the Appellant, acting for the Appellant, not the Province. Still, I
find that the Appellant’s reliance on section 17 of the Tech BC Act is a
sufficient response to that concern. That provision is, in my view, the voice
of the Province claiming immunity for Tech BC.
G. Conclusions
[114] Accordingly, it is my view that the
appeal must be allowed, with costs, for the reasons set out above. Costs awarded hereunder are
exclusive of costs relating to the hearing of the Appellant’s application to
bring a motion under section 58 of the Tax Court of Canada Rules (General
Procedure), heard at Vancouver, British Columbia on September 3, 2010. Each party shall bear
their own costs in respect of that hearing.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 2nd day of October 2012.
"J.E. Hershfield"