Date: 19980226
Docket: 96-2272-UI
BETWEEN:
TONI GRIEVES,
Appellant,
and
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Porter, D.J.T.C.C.
[1] This appeal was heard at Toronto, Ontario on January 19,
1998. The Appellant appeals the determination of the Minister of
National Revenue (the "Minister"), dated September 17,
1996, that her employment with 1033563 Ontario Inc.,
operating as Paws & Claws ( the Company), from September 6,
1994 to April 14, 1995, was not insurable employment under the
Unemployment Insurance Act (hereinafter referred to as the
"Act"). The reason given for the determination
was that:
"...You were not dealing at arm’s length nor were
you deemed to be dealing at arm’s length with 1033563
Ontario Inc. o/a Paws & Claws."
[2] The established facts reveal that the Appellant is the
wife of Richard Grieves who, at the material times, owned all of
the outstanding shares of the Company. Thus, pursuant to section
3 of the Act and subsection 251(1) of the Income Tax
Act, as related persons they are in law deemed not to deal
with each other at arm’s length. It follows that, subject
to the exception contained in
subparagraph 3(2)(c)(ii) of the Act, the
employment in question is categorized as "excepted
employment", that is to say it is not employment which
triggers the payment of unemployment insurance benefits upon its
termination. The Minister has determined that the employment does
not fall within the exception and the Appellant has challenged
that decision.
[3] The Appellant did not appear in person, for health
reasons, and was represented at the hearing of the appeal by her
husband.
The Law
[4] In the scheme established under the Act, Parliament
has made provision for certain employment to be insurable,
leading to the payment of benefits upon termination, and other
employment to be "excepted" and thus carrying no
benefits upon termination. Employment arrangements made between
persons, who are not dealing with each other at arm’s
length, are categorized as "excepted employment".
Spouses are deemed not to be dealing with each other at
arm’s length pursuant to subsection 251(1) of the Income
Tax Act, which governs the situation. Quite clearly the
purpose of this legislation is to safeguard the system from
having to pay out a multitude of benefits based on artificial or
fictitious employment arrangements.
[5]The harshness of this situation has however been tempered
by subparagraph 3(2)(c)(ii) of the Act, which
provides for such employment between related persons to be deemed
to be at arm’s length and thus in turn to be treated as
insurable employment, as long as it meets all the other
requirements, where the Minister is satisfied having regard
to all the circumstances (including those items that are
set out) that it is reasonable to conclude that they would
have entered into a substantially similar contract if they
had (in fact) been dealing with each other at
arm’s length. It may be helpful to reframe my
understanding of this section. For people related to each other
the gate is closed by the Act to any claim for insurance
benefits unless the Minister can be satisfied that in effect the
employment arrangement is the same as that which unrelated
persons, that is persons who are clearly at arm’s length,
would have made. If it is a substantially similar contract of
employment, Parliament has deemed it to be only fair that it
should be included in the scheme. However the Minister is the
gatekeeper. Unless he is so satisfied the gate remains closed,
the employment remains excepted and the employee is not eligible
for benefits.
[6]Section 61 of the Act deals with appeals to and
determination of questions by the Minister. Subsection 61(6)
requires that:
“The Minister shall with all due despatch determine the
question raised in the application....”
[7]Thus the Minister has no discretion whether or not to
decide the question. He is required by law to do so. If he is not
satisfied, the gate remains closed and the employee is not
eligible. If however he is satisfied, without more ado or any
action on the part of the Minister (other than notification of
the decision) the employee becomes eligible for benefits,
provided he is otherwise qualified. It is not a discretionary
power in the sense that if the Minister is satisfied he
may then deem the employment to be insurable. He must
"determine the question" and depending on that
determination the law deems the employment to be either at
arm’s length or not at arm’s length. In this sense
the Minister has no discretion to exercise in the true sense of
the word, for in making his decision, he must act
quasi-judicially and is not free to chose as he pleases. The
various decisions of the Federal Court of Appeal on this issue
reveal that the same test applies to a myriad of other officials
making quasi-judicial decisions in many different fields. See
Tignish Auto Parts Inc. v. M.N.R., 185 N.R. 73, Ferme
Émile Richard et Fils Inc. v. M.N.R., 178 N.R.
361, Attorney General of Canada and Jencan Ltd., (1997)
215 N.R. 352 and Her Majesty the Queen and Bayside Drive-in
Ltd., (1997) 218 N.R. 150.
[8]The function of this Court then, upon appeal, is to review
the decision of the Minister and decide whether it was arrived at
lawfully, that is in accordance with the Act and with the
principles of natural justice. In the case Her Majesty the
Queen v Bayside et al., supra, the Federal Court of
Appeal laid out certain matters which should be considered by
this Court when hearing these appeals. These were: (i) whether
the Minister acted in bad faith or for an improper purpose or
motive, (ii) whether the Minister failed to take into account all
of the relevant circumstances as especially required by
subparagraph 3(2)(c)(ii) or (iii) whether the
Minister took into account an irrelevant factor.
[9]The Court went on to say:
"It is only if the Minister made one or more of these
reviewable errors that it can be said that his discretion was
exercised in a manner contrary to law, and ... the Tax Court
Judge would be justified in conducting his own assessment of the
balance of probabilities as to whether the respondents would have
entered into substantially similar contracts of service, if they
had been at arm’s length.”
[10]It has been submitted by the Appellant that the decision
of the Minister in the case before me, was based upon erroneously
stated facts. Again I remind myself, when reviewing these
submissions, that it is not for this Court to substitute its
opinion of the evidence for that of the Minister. However, if his
or her manner of arriving at the decision was unlawful in the
context of the judgments set out above, those affected parts of
the stated facts may be disregarded and I must then consider
whether that which is left affords justifiable grounds for the
decision. If those grounds, standing alone, are sufficient for
the Minister to form a decision, albeit that the Court may not
agree with it, the decision must stand. If on the other hand
there is no basis left upon which the Minister might lawfully
make such a decision, from an objective and reasonable point of
view, then such decision may be struck down and the Court can
consider the evidence before it on appeal and make its own
decision. In summary then, if there are sufficient facts before
the Minister for his decision, it is his or her determination to
make and if he or she is "not
satisfied" it is not for this Court to
substitute its view of those facts and say he or she should have
been satisfied. Similarly, if he or she was satisfied it is not
for this Court to substitute its view that he or she should not
have been satisfied (an unlikely scenario in any event). Only if
the decision is reached in an improper manner and it is
unreasonable, from an objective point of view, on the basis of
the facts which were properly before the Minister, may the Court
interfere.
[11] I am fortified in this approach by a number of decisions
of various Courts of Appeal across the country and the Supreme
Court of Canada in related decisions concerning the issue of
various processes under the Criminal Code, which subsequently
came to be reviewed by the Courts and are in my view analogous to
the present situation. The standard of review of the validity of
a search warrant was set out by Cory, J.A. (as he then was) in
Times Square Book Store, Re (1985) 21 C.C.C. (3d) 503
(C.A.), where he said that it was not the role of the reviewing
judge to look at or consider the authorization of a search
warrant de novo and it was not open to the reviewing judge
to substitute his or her own opinion for that of the issuing
judge. Rather, on review, the first issue to be decided was
whether or not there was evidence upon which a justice of the
peace, acting judicially, could determine that a search warrant
should be issued.
[12]The Ontario Court of Appeal reiterated and expanded upon
this point of view in R. v. Church of Scientology of Toronto
and Zaharia (1987) 31 C.C.C. (3d) 449 C.A. leave to appeal
refused. In suggesting that the reviewing Court look at the
"totality of the circumstances" the Court said at
492:
"Obviously if there is not such evidence to provide a
basis for such a belief (that a criminal offence had been
committed) it cannot be said that in those circumstances the
justice should be satisfied. There will, however, be cases where
such evidence (showing reasonable grounds) does exist and the
justice could be satisfied but where he or she is not satisfied
and does not exercise his or her discretion in favor of issuing a
search warrant. In these circumstances, the reviewing judge must
not say that the justice should have been satisfied and should
have issued the warrant. Similarly, if the justice in such
circumstances says that he or she is satisfied and issues the
warrant, the reviewing judge must not say that the justice should
not have been so satisfied.”
[13]The Supreme Court of Canada endorsed this approach in
R. v. Garofoli (1990) 2 S.C.R. 1421. The late Mr. Justice
Sopinka, when dealing with the review of the issue of an
authorization to wiretap, then said:
“While a judge exercising this relatively new power need
not comply with the Wilson criteria, he should not review
the authorization de novo. The correct approach is set out
in the reasons of Martin J.A. in this appeal. He states:
If the trial judge concludes that, on the material
before the authorizing judge, there was no basis upon which he
could be satisfied that the pre-conditions for the granting
of the authorisation exist, then, it seems to me that the trial
judge is required to find that the search or seizure contravened
s. 8 of the Charter".
The reviewing judge does not substitute his or her view for
that of the authorizing judge. If, based on the record which was
before the authorizing judge as amplified on the review, the
reviewing judge concludes that the authorizing judge could have
granted the authorization, then he or she should not interfere.
In this process, the existence of fraud, non-disclosure,
misleading evidence and new evidence are all relevant, but,
rather than being a prerequisite to review, their sole impact is
to determine whether there continues to be any basis for the
decision of the authorizing judge".
[14] This approach appears to have been adopted by almost
every appellate court in the country. It seems to me most
relevant to a review of the Minister’s determination, which
is itself a quasi-judicial decision. (See R. v. Jackson
(1983) 9 C.C.C. (3d) 125 (B.C. C.A.); R. v. Conrad et
al. (1989) 99 A.R. 197; 79 Alta. L.R.; (2d) 307; 51 C.C.C.
(3d) 311 (C.A.); Hudon v. R. (1989) 74 Sask. R. 204
(C.A.); and R. v. Turcotte (1988) 60 Sask. R. 289; 39
C.C.C. (3d) 193 (C.A.); R. v. Borowski (1990) 66 Man.
R. (2d) 49; 57 C.C.C. (3d) 87 (C.A.); Bâtiments Fafard
Inc. et autres c. Canada et autres (1991) 41 Q.A.C. 254
(C.A.); Société Radio-Canada v.
Nouveau-Brunswick (Procureur général) et autres
(1991) 104 N.B.R. (2d) 1; 261 A.P.R. 1; 55 C.C.C. (3d) 133
(C.A.); R. v. Carroll and Barker (1989) 88 N.S.R. (2d)
165; 225 A.P.R. 165; 47 C.C.C. (3d) 263 (C.A.); R. v.
MacFarlane (K.R.) (1993) 100 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 302; 318
A.P.R. 302; 76 C.C.C. (3d) 54 (P.E.I. C.A.).
Stage 1 - Analysis of the Minister’s
decision
[15] I turn now to consider in detail how the Appellant
through her husband and agent challenges the decision of the
Minister. It was apparent from the evidence that the facts upon
which the Minister relied to form his determination, were
assembled from a short telephone conversation between the
Appellant and an unnamed government official. Neither the
Appellant nor her husband saw fit to complete the standard
questionnaire sent out to them by the Appeals Division at Revenue
Canada despite repeated requests to do so. The contents of the
telephone conversation were not put before the Court.
[16] The stated facts upon which the Minister relied are set
out in the Reply to the Notice of Appeal. They are as
follows:
"(a) the facts admitted and hereinbefore stated;
(b) the Payor was incorporated on June 14, 1993, and carried
on business as a pet food store;
(c) during the period in question, the sole shareholder of the
Payor/Corporation was Richard T. Grieves, the Appellant's
spouse;
(d) at all material times, the sole shareholder of the
Payor/Corporation had a permanent full-time job with Pet Science
Ltd.;
(e) all business decisions, financial or administrative,
including the determination of the terms and conditions of the
Appellant's engagement with the Payor, were made by the
Appellant and her husband together;
(f) the Appellant and her husband together controlled the
day-to-day operation of the Payor's business;
(g) during the period in question, the Payor's business
was in fact operated as a partnership or joint venture of the
Appellant and her husband;
(h) during the period in question, the Appellant's
responsibilities were to run and manage the business and her
duties included, but not limited to, the following:
(i) scheduling of employees and all work to be done,
(ii) ordering all goods and wares sold by the Payor,
(iii) hiring and firing the Payor's employees,
(iv) supervising and directing the Payor's other
employees,
(v) dealing with the Payor's clients,
(vi) advertising and promotion,
(vii) making bank deposits;
(i) during the period under review, there were three unrelated
individuals reported to have worked for the Payor;
(j) any arrangements between the Payor and the Appellant were
verbal and the Payor did not have a written contract with the
Appellant;
(k) during the 34 weeks that the Appellant's services were
engaged by the Payor, she received a weekly salary of $416 for
the first 21 weeks and a weekly salary of $815 for the last
13 weeks;
(l) there was no material difference between the duties of the
Appellant during her first 34 [sic] weeks of work and the
last 13 weeks as there was no probation period and,
therefore, the ensuing pay increase was excessive;
(m) the Appellant's salary during her last 13 weeks of
work corresponds exactly with the weekly maximum insurable
earnings for the period in question;
(n) during the period in question, the other unrelated workers
received hourly wages which ranged between $7 and $8;
(o) unlike the Payor's unrelated workers who had work
schedules set by the Payor, the Appellant had variable hours of
work which she was free to determine herself;
(p) unlike the Payor's unrelated workers, the Appellant
was not remunerated for any overtime hours she may have put
in;
(q) unlike the Payor's unrelated workers, the Appellant
was neither supervised by the Payor with respect to the
day-to-day performance of her duties nor was she controlled by
the Payor with respect to the manner in which she worked;
(r) during the period in question, the Appellant was not
required to report to the Payor;
(s) the Appellant had full control with respect to the terms
and conditions of her employment with the Payor;
(t) the Appellant, even when she was not on the Payor's
payroll and was not paid to do so, performed her services for the
Payor before and after the period in question;
(u) the Appellant worked a total of 34 weeks for the Payor and
was let go on April 14, 1995 as she was expecting a child who was
born April 20, 1995;
(v) the Appellant is related to the Payor/Corporation's
sole shareholder and is accordingly related to the Payor within
the meaning of the Income Tax Act;
(w) the Appellant is not dealing with the Payor at arm's
length;
(x) having regard to all the circumstances of the employment,
including the remuneration paid, the terms and conditions, the
duration and the nature and importance of the work performed, it
is not reasonable to conclude that the Payor and the Appellant
would have entered into a substantially similar contract of
employment if they had been dealing with each other at arm's
length."
[17] The Appellant’s husband gave evidence on her
behalf.
[18] The Appellant takes no issue with items 10a) to d), f),
h), j), k), m), n), p), u) or v). She does take issue with items
10e), g), i), l), o), n), q) to t), w) and x).
[19] I do make the general comment that the manner in which
the stated facts were assembled and put before the Minister is
somewhat strange. The Appellant was given no opportunity to
challenge them before the decision was made and indeed the first
time that she became aware of them was after she filed her appeal
and received a reply to that appeal from the Deputy Attorney
General of Canada. Who assembled the original set of facts and
the form in which they were put before the Minister remains a
mystery. What is clear is that the Appellant had no opportunity
to challenge or comment upon them before the decision of the
Minister was taken. Even though the Appellant failed to respond
to the questionnaire this would hardly seem to accord with the
rules of natural justice. In any event that is how it was done.
As it turns out, however, the evidence before me clearly revealed
that most but not all of the stated facts are correct. They, on
the whole, accord with the evidence. I will deal with those that
do not, each in turn:
- Item e): The husband says she was given directions to follow
and had to check with him if she wanted to do anything
different.
- Item g): The husband says this is incorrect. He was the sole
operator of the company and she had no stake in it.
- Item i): There were only two unrelated employees.
- Item l): The husband says that during the last 13 weeks of
employment she had finished her probationary period and took on
more responsibility. Thus he maintained that the pay raise was
not excessive.
- Item o): The husband says that her hours were only flexible
to the extent that she had to put in a minimum of forty hours per
week. As a manager she had some flexibility how she put those
in.
- Item q): The husband says that this is false as she had a
number of set duties to perform each and every day.
- Item r): The husband says that she was required to report
verbally.
- Item s): The husband says that this is not true.
- Item t): The husband says that this is not true.
- Items w) and x) are opinions of the assembler of facts and
not facts per se.
[20] What then is the effect of all this. Certainly the
evidence of the husband revealed that he started this pet store
business and hired his wife to run it. There was clearly a
contract of employment and she was chosen as the best of a number
of candidates after a formal interview process in which the
husband’s sponsor participated. Equally clearly the
business did not do very well and by September 1995 it was closed
out by action of the landlord. This was in part due to the
location on a street which became closed. It is not clear how
much of all this, if any, was before the Minister, or at least
before the assembler of facts, as the Appellant did not complete
the questionnaire sent to her.
[21] More troubling is the submission of counsel for the
Minister. She submitted that the theory of the Minister was that
the couple knew the wife was pregnant at the outset of the
employment and planned together that she manage the store to
enable her to obtain unemployment insurance benefits. This aspect
makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, and is not a conclusion
that the Minister could reasonably or objectively have arrived
at. It was of course denied vociferously by the husband who said
they had no idea she was pregnant at the time she started to
manage the business. Indeed had she known it would only have made
sense for her to have continued in her existing employment where
her benefits would have been assured. This submission by counsel
is not laid out in the statement of facts and it is hard to know
from whence it came. The Minister however is obviously bound by
it as it is said by counsel to be his theory. That theory is
erroneous and completely unsupportable. I am led to the
unequivocal opinion that the Minister has incorrectly taken into
account a factor that has no basis and that has improperly
distorted his view of the statement of facts. The facts are
somewhat equivocal. The Appellant did not help her case by
failing to respond to the questionnaire. Nonetheless there is not
a significant difference between the facts as stated and as they
were presented in evidence. Without this substantial error I
would feel compelled to leave the Minister’s decision
stand. However clearly he has taken into account something which
is completely wrong and laid it at the heart of his decision. The
decision in such circumstances is not sustainable in law and I
must now advance to the second stage of the appeal process
and decide whether on all of the evidence the parties had they
been at arm’s length, would have entered into a
substantially similar contract of employment taking into account
all of the circumstances including those specifically set out in
paragraph 3(2)(c) of the Act.
Stage 2 - Review of the
evidence.
[22] After listening to the sworn evidence of the husband of
the Appellant I was well satisfied on the balance of
probabilities that the contract of employment, when it was
initially established, was genuine. Steps were taken to interview
a number of applicants for the job of manager of this new pet
food store. The interviews were conducted not just by the husband
but also by Corey Samuel who was the franchiser, supplier and
some sort of sponsor of the new business. He was certainly an
advisor and in his letter which was placed before the Court as
exhibit A-5 he maintained that the contract was fair and
reasonable. The Appellant underwent her training with the same
person. Throughout the first 21 weeks there is no doubt in my
mind that the contract of employment between the Company and the
Appellant was substantially the same as if they had been at
arm’s length. The remuneration paid throughout this period
was consistent with the norm in the trade. That is supported by
the various letters filed as exhibits and the evidence of the
husband. She took a cut in salary but no doubt felt that if the
business was successful she would be able to increase that as
time went along. That would surely be the normal expectation of
any employee in a management position. I am completely satisfied
that when she was engaged there was no knowledge that she was
pregnant and that she anticipated this being a long-term
position. Otherwise she would not have left her established
employment. She had the responsibility for the daily running of
the store, subject to directions given to her by her husband and
Corey Samuel. In all of these circumstances I can only and
do come to the conclusion that throughout this first period of
time, the Company and the Appellant would have entered into a
substantially similar contract of employment if they had been
dealing with each other at arm’s length. However all that
seems to have changed at the end of the 21 weeks. By this
time the business was not doing very well, due in substantial
part to a road closure, the husband and wife clearly knew that
she was pregnant with the baby due in April and that maternity
benefits would be sought at that time. I am not of the view that
if they had been dealing with each other at arm’s length
the Company would have doubled her salary in those circumstances.
In short order the Company was unable to pay its rent. The new
salary was considerably above the norm in the trade. The pay
increase was excessive and took the employment out of the
arm’s length category.
[23] I have to be a little careful here because as counsel for
the Minister points out in her able written submission it is not
for this Court to determine the way in which the qualifying
period for benefits is calculated. I do not seek to do that. In
my view having regard to all the circumstances of the employment,
including the remuneration paid, the terms and conditions, the
duration and the nature and importance of the work performed, it
is more than reasonable to conclude the contract of employment
during the first 21 weeks was substantially similar to one into
which they would have entered if they had been at arm’s
length. That changed at the end of 21 weeks and the new contract
was not one into which they would have entered if they had been
at arm’s length.
[24] The appeal is accordingly allowed and the decision by the
Minister is varied to the extent that it applies to the first 21
weeks of the employment. The effect of this decision on the
calculation of any benefits is entirely a matter for the
Minister.
Signed at Toronto, Ontario, this 26th day of February
1998.
"Michael H. Porter"
D.J.T.C.C.