Desjardins
J.A.:
This
appeal
deals
with
the
validity
and
enforceability
of
three
notices
of
requirements
issued
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
“Minister”)
to
the
appellant
AGT
Limited
(AGT)
pursuant
to
subsection
231.2(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
These
notices
of
requirements
read
in
their
substantive
parts:
For
the
purposes
related
to
the
administration
or
enforcement
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
231.2(1)
thereof,
I
hereby
require
from
you
within
30
days
from
the
date
of
delivery
of
this
notice,
file
copies
of
correspondence,
agreements,
reports,
memoranda,
schedules,
working
papers,
minutes
of
meetings,
notes
to
files,
telexes,
facsimile
transmissions
and
other
documents
in
your
possession
or
under
your
control,
and
in
the
manner
originally
kept
relating
directly
or
indirectly
to
the
following:
(i)
documents
and
information
filed
with
the
Canadian
Radio
and
Telecommunication
Commission
and
not
previously
provided
for
the
years
1990
to
July
1995
The
aforementioned
enumeration
of
classes
of
documents
or
information
is
not
to
be
presumed
to
be
exhaustive
of
the
material
which
the
officer
or
officers
of
this
Department
will
wish
to
review
and
subsequent
reference
may
be
made
to
classes
or
specific
documents
or
information
which
must
be
provided
pursuant
to
this
agreement.
If
this
requirement
is
not
complied
with
you
may
be
liable
to
prosecution
without
further
notice
under
subsection
238(1).
The
documents
and
information
sought
by
the
Minister
under
the
notices
of
requirements
are
materials
the
appellant
filed
with
the
Canadian
Radiotelevision
and
Telecommunications
Commission
(the
“CRTC”)
for
the
years
1990
to
July
1995,
which
now
enjoy
the
status
of
confidential
material
by
virtue
of
a
decision
of
the
CRTC
made
pursuant
to
sections
350
and
358
of
the
Railway
Act,
and
sections
18
and
19
of
the
CRTC
Telecommunications
Rules
of
Procedure.*
The
facts
The
appellant
is
a
telephone
company
whose
activities
have
been
regulated
by
the
CRTC
since
October
4,
1990.
Prior
to
October
4,
1990,
telephone
service
in
the
province
of
Alberta
was
provided
by
the
Alberta
Government
Telephones
Commission.
Being
a
Crown
corporation
exempt
from
federal
and
provincial
income
tax,
it
never
claimed
capital
cost
allowance.
For
accounting
purposes,
however,
it
did
calculate
an
annual
depreciation
expense
which
it
included
in
the
calculation
of
its
revenue
requirement.
Pursuant
to
the
Alberta
Government
Telephones
Reorganization
Act,
the
Commission
was
restructured
as
of
October
4,
1990,
for
purposes
of
privatization.
Telus
Corporation
was
formed
to
act
as
a
holding
corporation
to
facilitate
the
privatization
of
the
provincial
Crown
agent.
Most
telephone
operations
and
assets
were
transferred
to
the
appellant,
a
subsidiary
of
Telus
which
became
a
regulated
business
under
the
jurisdiction
of
the
CRTC.
AGT
became,
at
the
same
time,
a
taxable
entity.
In
preparation
for
the
organization
and
privatization
of
the
Alberta
Government
Telephones
Commission,
the
Minister
was
asked
for
an
advanced
tax
ruling
as
to
whether
depreciable
assets
for
tax
purposes
should
be
valued
at
original
cost,
approximately
$
4
billion,
or
a
net
book
value,
i.e.
original
cost
less
depreciation
of
about
$
2.2
billion.
The
tax
ruling
allowed
the
original
cost
as
undepreciated
capital
cost.
In
October
1991,
the
appellant
filed
an
application
to
the
CRTC
for
a
Revenue
Requirement
proceeding,
initially
for
1992.
The
revenue
requirement
is
intended
to
cover
AGT’s
expenses,
costs
of
capital
and
other
items;
but
of
relevance
here,
is
the
fact
that
the
allowed
revenue
is
also
intended
to
cover
AGT’s
income
tax
liability.
During
the
course
of
its
application
to
the
CRTC,
AGT
took
a
more
conservative
approach
on
its
income
tax
liability
than
in
its
income
tax
re-
turns
to
the
Minister.
Before
the
CRTC,
the
corporate
taxpayer
furnished
the
CRTC
with
certain
documents
on
which
it
claimed
and
obtained
confidentiality
pursuant
to
sections
18
and
19
of
the
CRTC
Telecommunications
Rules
of
Procedure.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
who
had
been
conducting
a
general
audit
of
AGT
involving
the
review
and
verification
of
the
financial
statements
and
tax
returns
filed
by
the
appellant
in
1990
and
1991,
became
aware
of
the
confidential
material
the
appellant
had
filed
with
the
CRTC.
As
a
result
of
an
internal
memo,
three
representatives
of
the
Minister
visited
the
CRTC
on
22
June
1995,
so
as
to
have
access
to
the
material.
The
CRTC,
however,
refused
to
release
the
confidential
documents.
In
July
1995,
after
attempting
unsuccessfully
to
obtain
the
confidential
documents
in
issue
directly
from
the
CRTC,
the
Minister
issued
the
notices
of
requirements
under
subsection
231.2(1)
of
the
Act
requiring
AGT
to
produce
the
documents
in
question.
The
taxpayer
applied
for
judicial
review
to
the
Trial
Division
of
this
Court
challenging
the
validity
and
enforceability
of
the
notices
of
requirements.
The
application
was
dismissed
in
a
decision
which
is
now
reported.
The
parties’
contentions
The
appellant
has
pressed
upon
us
two
key
arguments.
Firstly,
that
the
notices
of
requirements
were
not
authorized
under
subsection
231.2(1).
Secondly,
that
the
documents
sought
to
be
seized
were
privileged
under
the
“Wigmore
Rules”
as
outlined
in
cases
such
as
R.
v.
Gruenke.
We
chose
not
to
hear
the
respondent
on
this
second
issue,
since
we
are
satisfied
that
the
motions
judge
did
not
err
in
his
disposition
of
that
argument.
With
regard
to
the
first
issue,
the
appellant
contends
that
the
notices
of
requirements
are
invalid
because
they
do
not
meet
the
conditions
set
out
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
R.
v.
McKinlay
Transport
Ltd.?
namely
that
the
documents
“be
relevant
to
the
filing
of
the
income
tax
return”,
and
that
the
seizure
be
“reasonable”
within
the
meaning
of
section
8
of
the
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms?®
With
regard
to
the
threshold
test
for
relevance,
the
appellant
submits
that
although
McKinlay
stands
for
the
proposition
that
seizures
under
subsection
231.2(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
have
a
lower
threshold
test
than
the
“reasonable
grounds”
test
for
seizure
in
a
criminal
law
context,
it
is
still
incumbent
upon
the
Minister
to
demonstrate
to
the
court,
by
affidavit
or
otherwise,
that
the
notices
of
requirements
are
designed
to
seek
production
of
only
those
documents
that
may
be
relevant
to
his
compliance
verification
function.
To
issue
a
notice
of
requirement
which
deliberately
disregards
the
potential
relevance
of
a
document
is
clearly
outside
the
scope
of
the
section.
In
the
case
at
bar,
there
are
issues
as
between
the
Minister
and
AGT
with
regard
to
the
classification
of
certain
assets
for
tax
purposes.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
Minister
has
admitted
that
the
notices
of
requirements
seek
the
production
of
information
which
is
irrelevant
to
these
issues.
During
cross-examination,
Ms.
Sharon
Marlene
White,
a
representative
of
the
respondent,
conceded
that
AGT
could
not
be
forced
to
give
its
opinion
on
the
risk
assessment
of
those
assets.
She
made
clear,
however,
that
the
Minister
is
interested
in
the
facts
underlying
the
risk
assessment.
The
following
exchange
then
occurred:
Q
You
just
issued
the
requirement
knowing
that
a
consequence
may
be
that
you
would
end
up
with
information
that
you
are
not
entitled
to?
A
I
issued
a
requirement
asking
for
all
documents
filed
with
the
CRTC,
whatever
they
may
be.
[Emphasis
added]
Such
an
admission,
claims
the
appellant,
indicates
that
the
Minister
is
operating
an
impermissible
fishing
expedition.
The
Minister,
it
says,
is
entitled
to
business
records
a
taxpayer
is
obligated
to
keep,
but
not
to
opinion
documents
and
business
strategies.
The
appellant
further
argues
that
the
seizure
is
unreasonable
because
the
appellant’s
privacy
interest
in
the
documents
sought
to
be
seized
outweighs
the
state’s
interest
in
those
documents.
The
appellant
submits
that
it
has
a
compelling
privacy
interest
in
the
documents
because,
at
the
time
the
notices
of
requirements
were
issued,
the
sought
for
documents
enjoyed
confidentiality
by
virtue
of
the
CRTC’s
decision
which
had
determined
that
it
is
in
the
public
interest
that
the
documents
remain
confidential.
The
fact
that
the
appellant
is
not
required
by
the
Act
to
maintain
the
type
of
documents
in
issue
is
further
evidence
that
the
state’s
interest
in
obtaining
the
documents
does
not
outweigh
the
appellant’s
privacy
interest.
The
motions
judge
should
have
considered
that
the
documents
at
issue
came
into
existence
by
compulsion
of
law
for
a
very
specific
purpose
since
the
information
was
prepared
and
provided
to
the
CRTC
so
as
to
allow
the
CRTC
to
discharge
its
statutory
duty.
The
diversion
which
the
Minister
is
seeking
is,
therefore,
unreasonable.
The
appellant
finally
argues
that
the
Minister’s
extra-legal
conduct
in
seeking
access
to
the
information
is
clearly
at
odds
with
the
rule
of
law
and
the
values
embodied
by
section
8
of
the
Charter.
The
attempt
to
obtain
the
documents
through
the
CRTC
is
an
intricate
part
of
the
seizure
in
issue
and
goes
to
the
determination
of
whether
the
seizure
was
reasonable.
The
respondent
maintains
that
the
notices
of
requirements
meet
the
legal
requirements
of
McKinlay.
The
Minister
is
entitled
to
obtain
documents
which
might
contain
not
only
facts,
but
which
might
reveal
the
roadmap
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
his
assessment.
The
Minister
is
entitled
to
have
access
to
documents
which
might
flag
situations
likely
to
assist
him
in
the
enforcement
of
the
Act.
Analysis
The
seminal
case
is
McKinlay
where
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
found
that
subsection
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
now
231.2(1),
constitutes
a
valid
seizure
within
the
meaning
of
section
8
of
the
Charter.
The
Court
upheld
the
Minister’s
warrantless
demand
for
a
taxpayer’s
private
documents
and
information,
in
the
context
of
the
administration
or
enforcement
of
the
Act,
on
the
basis
that
there
was
a
lower
standard
of
reasonableness
for
the
production
of
those
documents.
Wilson
J.,
speaking
for
herself
and
Lamer
C.J.,
noted
that
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act
was
a
regulatory
statute,
and
that
the
meaning
to
be
given
to
the
word
“unreasonable”,
as
found
in
section
8
of
the
Charter,
would
be
less
strict
in
an
administrative
and
regulatory
context:
It
is
consistent
with
this
approach,
I
believe,
to
draw
a
distinction
between
seizures
in
the
criminal
or
quasi-criminal
context
to
which
the
full
rigours
of
the
Hunter
criteria
will
apply,
and
seizures
in
the
administrative
or
regulatory
context
to
which
a
lesser
standard
may
apply
depending
upon
the
legislative
scheme
under
review.
I
do
not
believe
that
when
the
Chief
Justice
said
in
Simmons
at
p.
527
that
departures
from
the
Hunter
criteria
would
be
rare
he
was
applying
his
mind
to
searches
or
seizures
in
the
context
of
regulatory
legislation.
I
think
he
was
addressing
as
in
the
cases
of
Hunter
and
Simmons
themselves
searches
or
seizures
in
a
criminal
or
quasi-criminal
context.
It
is
with
these
considerations
in
mind
that
I
examine
the
reasonableness
of
s.
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
She
then
continued:
At
the
beginning
of
my
analysis
I
noted
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
based
on
the
principle
of
self-reporting
and
self-assessment.
The
Act
could
have
provided
that
each
taxpayer
submit
all
his
or
her
records
to
the
Minister
and
his
officials
so
that
they
might
make
the
calculations
necessary
for
determining
each
person’s
taxable
income.
The
legislation
does
not
so
provide,
no
doubt
because
it
would
be
extremely
expensive
and
cumbersome
to
operate
such
a
system.
However,
a
self-reporting
system
has
its
drawbacks.
Chief
among
these
is
that
it
depends
for
its
success
upon
the
taxpayers’
honesty
and
integrity
in
preparing
their
returns.
While
most
taxpayers
undoubtedly
respect
and
comply
with
the
system,
the
facts
of
life
are
that
certain
persons
will
attempt
to
take
advantage
of
the
system
and
avoid
their
full
tax
liability.
Accordingly,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
must
be
given
broad
powers
in
supervising
this
regulatory
scheme
to
audit
taxpayers’
returns
and
inspect
all
records
which
may
be
relevant
to
the
preparation
of
these
returns.
The
Minister
must
be
capable
of
exercising
these
powers
whether
or
not
he
has
reasonable
grounds
for
believing
that
a
particular
taxpayer
has
breached
the
Act.
Often
it
will
be
impossible
to
determine
from
the
face
of
the
return
whether
any
impropriety
has
occurred
in
its
preparation.
A
spot
check
or
a
system
of
random
monitoring
may
be
the
only
way
in
which
the
integrity
of
the
tax
system
can
be
maintained.
If
this
is
the
case,
and
I
believe
that
it
is,
then
it
is
evident
that
the
Hunter
criteria
are
ill-suited
to
determine
whether
a
seizure
under
s.
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
reasonable.
The
regulatory
nature
of
the
legislation
and
the
scheme
enacted
require
otherwise.
The
need
for
random
monitoring
is
incompatible
with
the
requirement
in
Hunter
that
the
person
seeking
authorization
for
a
search
or
seizure
have
reasonable
and
probable
grounds,
established
under
oath,
to
believe
that
an
offence
has
been
committed.
If
this
Hunter
criterion
is
inapplicable,
then
so
too
must
the
remaining
Hunter
criteria
since
they
all
depend
for
their
vitality
upon
the
need
to
establish
reasonable
and
probable
grounds.
For
example,
there
is
no
need
for
an
impartial
arbiter
capable
of
acting
judicially
since
his
central
role
under
Hunter
is
to
ensure
that
the
person
seeking
the
authorization
has
reasonable
and
probable
grounds
to
believe
that
a
particular
offence
has
been
committed,
that
there
are
reasonable
and
probable
grounds
to
believe
that
the
authorization
will
turn
up
something
relating
to
that
particular
offence,
and
that
the
authorization
only
goes
so
far
as
to
allow
the
seizure
of
documents
relevant
to
that
particular
offence.
This
is
not
to
say
that
any
and
all
forms
of
search
and
seizure
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
are
valid.
The
state
interest
in
monitoring
compliance
with
the
legislation
must
be
weighed
against
an
individual’s
privacy
interest.
The
greater
the
intrusion
into
the
privacy
interests
of
an
individual,
the
more
likely
it
will
be
that
safeguards
akin
to
those
in
Hunter
will
be
required.
Thus,
when
the
tax
officials
seek
entry
onto
the
private
property
of
an
individual
to
conduct
a
search
or
seizure,
the
intrusion
is
much
greater
than
a
mere
demand
for
production
of
documents.
The
reason
for
this
is
that,
while
a
taxpayer
may
have
little
expectation
of
privacy
in
relation
to
his
business
records
relevant
to
the
determination
of
his
tax
liability,
he
has
a
significant
privacy
interest
in
the
inviolability
of
his
home.
In
my
opinion,
s.
231(3)
provides
the
least
intrusive
means
by
which
effective
monitoring
of
compliance
with
the
Income
Tax
Act
can
be
effected.
It
involves
no
invasion
of
a
taxpayer’s
home
or
business
premises.
It
simply
calls
for
the
production
of
records
which
may
be
relevant
to
the
filing
of
an
income
tax
return.
A
taxpayer’s
privacy
interest
with
regard
to
these
documents
vis-à-vis
the
Minister
is
relatively
low.
The
Minister
has
no
way
of
knowing
whether
certain
records
are
relevant
until
he
has
had
an
opportunity
to
examine
them.
At
the
same
time,
the
taxpayer’s
privacy
interest
is
protected
as
much
as
possible
since
s.
241
of
the
Act
protects
the
taxpayer
from
disclosure
of
his
records
or
the
information
contained
therein
to
other
persons
or
agencies.
The
appellant
claims
in
essence
that
although
subsection
231.2(1)
of
the
Act
has
been
declared
constitutionally
valid,
each
notice
of
requirement
issued
under
that
provision
must
meet
the
test
of
relevancy
and
reasonableness.
The
short
answer
to
this
contention
is
that
once
a
statutory
provision
is
declared
valid,
as
was
done
with
respect
to
subsection
231.2(1)
of
the
Act
in
McKinlay,
the
constitutional
analysis
ends.
Only
a
statutory
analysis
is
then
required.
It
is
under
this
analysis
that
I
now
consider
the
appellant’s
arguments
about
relevancy
and
reasonableness.
Under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Minister
is
concerned
with
verifying
the
tax
liability
of
the
taxpayer
which
is
first
revealed
in
the
taxpayer’s
return.
It
will
often
be
“impossible
to
determine
from
the
face
of
the
return
whether
any
impropriety
has
occurred
in
its
preparation”.
Because
of
the
nature
of
the
conduct
regulated
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
there
are,
in
many
cases,
no
ways
of
determining
whether
proscribed
conduct
has
been
engaged
in,
short
of
studying
the
process
by
which
a
suspected
corporation
or
business
has
made
and
implemented
its
decision.
Investigatory
mechanisms
which
force
corporations
and
other
businesses
to
divulge
what
they
and
only
they
can
know
about
their
internal
affairs
are
part
of
the
state’s
interest
in
the
enforcement
of
the
Act.
While
an
individual
or
a
corporation’s
interest
in
having
business
strategies
kept
in
confidence
is
recognized,
the
balancing
no
doubt
favours
the
state.
Wilson
J.
in
McKinlay
recognizes
that
the
“Minister
has
no
way
of
knowing
whether
certain
records
are
relevant
until
he
has
had
an
opportunity
to
examine
them”.
There
is
an
ultimate
safeguard.
Not
all
of
those
documents
are
necessarily
admissible
against
the
taxpayer
in
a
court
of
law
or
in
another
proceeding.
Only
those
in
accord
with
the
rules
of
evidence
shall
be
admissible.
The
fact
that
the
documents
in
issue
were
prepared
for
another
forum,
namely
for
providing
the
CRTC
with
information
required
under
a
rate
setting
process,
does
not
prevent
the
Minister
from
having
access
to
them
since
they
are
relevant
to
the
potential
tax
liability
of
the
taxpayer.
Moreover,
the
fact
that
they
were
sealed
by
order
of
the
CRTC
from
public
access
does
not
prevent
the
Minister
from
having
access
to
them
when
he
is
engaged
in
enforcing
the
Act.
These
propositions
follow
from
McKinlay.
The
notices
of
requirements
constitute
the
least
intrusive
means
by
which
effective
monitoring
of
compliance
with
the
Act
can
be
effected.
The
fact
that
the
Minister
used
extra-legal
means
to
try
to
obtain
the
documents
is
an
irrelevant
consideration
with
respect
to
the
validity
of
the
notices
of
requirements.
The
fact
of
the
matter
is
that
those
documents
were
not
obtained
from
the
CRTC.
Subsection
231.2(1)
is
drafted
in
broad
language,
but
its
scope
has
been
reduced
through
the
rules
of
interpretation
to
situations
where
the
information
sought
by
the
Minister
is
relevant
to
the
tax
liability
of
some
specific
person
or
persons,
and
when
the
tax
liability
of
such
person
or
persons
is
the
subject
of
a
genuine
and
serious
inquiry.
Given
these
criteria,
I
find
that
no
error
was
committed
by
the
motions
judge.
I
would
dismiss
this
appeal
with
costs.
The
appellant
asked,
in
the
event
the
appeal
is
dismissed,
that
the
judgment
of
this
Court
be
stayed
for
a
period
of
ninety
days
so
as
to
allow
the
appellant
to
submit
an
application
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
for
leave
to
appeal
to
that
Court.
The
respondent
agreed.
On
consent,
I
would
stay
this
judgment
for
a
period
of
ninety
days.
If
an
application
for
leave
to
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
is
filed
before
the
expiry
of
that
period,
the
stay
would
stand
until
the
application
is
disposed
of
by
that
Court.
Appeal
dismissed.