Date: 19990222
Dockets: 97-1958-IT-I; 97-1968-IT-G
BETWEEN:
STEPHEN TOBIAS,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for judgment
O'Connor, J.T.C.C.
[1] These appeals were heard together on common evidence at
Toronto, Ontario on February 3, 1999. Testimony was given by the
Appellant and by Gary Pollack ("Pollack") and
several exhibits were filed.
Issue
[2] The issue is whether the Appellant, as a director of
Country Pride Discount Stores Incorporated ("Discount")
and Country Pride Leasing Incorporated ("Leasing"), was
liable for unremitted employee source deductions of these
corporations ("Corporations") pursuant to subsection
227.1(1) of the Income Tax Act ("Act") or
is the defence of "due diligence" available to him as
contemplated in subsection 227.1(3) of the Act. As is well
known, these provisions make a director liable for a
corporation's failure to remit employee source deductions,
however the director escapes the liability if he exercised the
degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the failure that a
reasonably prudent person would have exercised in comparable
circumstances.
Facts
[3] The Appellant completed university, obtaining a Business
Administration degree. He was also involved in several businesses
since 1983. As such he was aware of the directors' liability
provisions of the Act.
[4] The Appellant was a director of the Corporations for those
periods in which there was a failure to remit source deductions.
This was June to July of 1992 in respect of Leasing and February,
May, June, July and August of 1992 in respect to Discount.
Discount was incorporated on March 30, 1990 and Leasing was
incorporated on January 22, 1991. The Appellant held
31 shares in each of the Corporations. A Mr. Bagri
("Bagri") held 31 shares in each of the Corporations
and Pollack held 38 shares in each of the Corporations. All three
were initial directors of the Corporations. Pollack was the
president, the Appellant was the secretary and Bagri was the
treasurer of both Corporations.
[5] The Appellant was also the manager and co-owner of another
corporation named Delta Graphics.
[6] Pollack was the driving force behind the Corporations. The
business carried on by the Corporations was the operation of
retail stores from various leased premises. Originally there were
six stores. Later two more were added.
[7] The head offices of the Corporations are located in the
same premises as Simone Imports Incorporated, another corporation
owned by Pollack. Further, Bagri had a business operation close
to the said premises.
[8] Pollack, Bagri and the Appellant got involved as
shareholders and directors of the Corporations for various
reasons and hoped that the retail stores would be profitable. In
addition, their own personal businesses supplied products to the
stores. Pollack's business was the largest supplier to the
stores. Combined, Pollack and Bagri supplied about 90% of the
products supplied by the three personal businesses. The Appellant
supplied only approximately 10%.
[9] Pollack, assisted by his bookkeeper, was the hands-on,
day-to-day, operator of the stores. He signed leases, hired
managers who in turn hired employees, ordered inventory, arranged
for deliveries. Payables were handled by him from the head office
with the assistance of his bookkeeper. Pollack and the bookkeeper
dealt with creditors, banks and arranged financing. There were no
regular directors' meetings and up until approximately April
of 1991 only informal meetings were held, usually at
Pollack's office. Sometimes there would only be meetings
between Pollack and Bagri. These meetings were essentially to
find out how the stores were doing. No financial statements were
reviewed but the Appellant was able to review statements of
payables, inventory and sales. Major decisions were taken by
Pollack and the Appellant was not involved in any major
decisions. Bagri was a little more involved in the stores'
business than the Appellant. In the early stages there was never
any problems with the payables. In the first year the stores were
doing well and all source deductions were being paid to Revenue
Canada and all creditors were being paid. There was no cause for
concern at least up until April or May of 1991.
[10] In April 1991 the Appellant, realizing he was not very
active in the operation of the stores and because of some
differences with Pollack over the high prices Pollack's other
business was charging to the stores, which made the stores less
profitable and competitive, decided that he wanted out of the
Corporations.
[11] As a result, the Corporations, Pollack, Bagri and the
Appellant entered into an Agreement executed May 21, 1991 wherein
the Appellant promised to sell and Pollack and Bagri promised to
buy the Appellant's shares in the Corporations. The sale of
the shares was to be completed on the date which was the earlier
of January 31, 1992 or that earlier date selected by Pollack and
Bagri upon the Appellant's receipt of 10 days prior written
notice. The Agreement also provided that the Corporations'
pay an amount of $159,027 to the Appellant's corporation
Delta Graphics. Also, Pollack and Bagri agreed to use their best
efforts to have the bank release the Appellant from his guarantee
on a loan of $200,000, failing which they would deliver to the
Appellant certain indemnity agreements. The same provisions were
also to be in effect with respect to any other debts and
obligations which had been guaranteed by the Appellant. Pollack
and Bagri also agreed to deliver on closing an indemnity saving
harmless the Appellant from all losses, expenses and damages
whatsoever which may have been incurred by any action or other
proceeding or claim in respect of any debt or obligation of the
Corporations. The Agreement further provided that the Appellant
on the closing of the transaction would resign as a director and
officer of the Corporations.
[12] The Agreement also covered the following points. The
Appellant had loaned $100,000 to Discount. To make the deal to
sell his shares and have Delta Graphics paid, the Appellant
agreed to reduce the $100,000 amount to $50,000. He took an
allowable business investment loss in 1991 in respect to the
$50,000 foregone. Schedules to the said Agreement provided for
instalment payments of both the $159,027 and the said $50,000.
The $159,027 was to be paid by six equal monthly instalments of
$26,504 commencing June 21, 1991 and ending November
21, 1991. The $50,000 was to be paid by instalments of $16,666.66
on October 31, 1991, November 30, 1991 and December 31, 1991.
[13] It was the testimony of the Appellant that the $50,000
was never paid and that of the $159,027 Delta Graphics only
received the first two payments and part of the August
payment.
[14] The Appellant's lawyer advised him to hold on to his
shares until the foregoing debts had been paid and further not to
resign as a director to retain some leverage to assure the debts
would be paid as promised.
[15] The Appellant considered himself out of the Corporations
as of May 21, 1991 notwithstanding that he continued to hold the
shares and did not resign as director. It became apparent in the
fall of 1991 that the payments promised under the agreement were
not being made on time. The Appellant attempted to push Pollack
to come up with the payments. From and after May 21, 1991 the
Appellant was unable to extract any information from Pollack as
to the financial condition of the Corporations. He was not
consulted on any matters and there were no directors'
meetings. Although the Appellant received no documentation,
Pollack verbally advised the Appellant from the period after May,
1991 that the stores were doing all right but little specific
information was given. Late in 1992 the Appellant learned that
Revenue Canada had not received certain source deductions
withheld by the Corporations and was considering proceeding
against the Appellant as a director. The Appellant retained
Stanley O. Kotick, Q.C. as his lawyer. Kotick
wrote a letter to Revenue Canada – (Tab 4 of Exhibit A-1)
outlining the fact that since May of 1991 the Appellant had
nothing to do with the Corporations and could not get information
from Pollack. The testimony of Pollack to a very large extent
confirms the testimony of the Appellant, principally that Pollack
ran the business of the Corporations and that the Appellant had
little or no input. Also the stores were doing well in May, 1991
but sales started dropping thereafter and the stores were closed
at the end of 1991. Pollack may have let Bagri know about the
failure of remittances but he did not tell the Appellant of same
as he considered that the Appellant was no longer a
"partner" in the businesses of the Corporations.
Submissions of the Appellant
[16] The Appellant's Memorandum of Law and Argument states
as follows:
APPELLANT'S MEMORANDUM OF LAW &
ARGUMENT
The issue in these matters is whether the Appellant, as a
director of Country Pride Discount Stores Incorporated and
Country Pride Leasing Incorporated (the
"Corporations"), should be liable for the unremitted
employee source deductions of the Corporations, or whether the
Appellant is entitled to rely upon the due diligence defence in
subsection 227.1(3) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
I (5th Supp), as amended.
I. LAW AND ARGUMENT
A. The Income Tax Act
1. Subsection 227.1 (1) of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. 1 (5th Supp), as amended (the
"Act") provides as follows:
Where a corporation has failed to deduct or withhold an amount
as required by subsection 135(3) or section 153 or 215, has
failed to remit such an amount ... the directors of the
corporation at the time the corporation was required to deduct,
withhold, remit or pay the amount are jointly and severally
liable, together with the corporation, to pay that amount and any
interest or penalties relating thereto.
Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1
(5th Supp), as amended, ss. 227.1(1)
2. Subsection 227.1(3) of the Act provides for a "due
diligence" defence where the director exercised the degree
of care, diligence and skill to prevent the failure that a
reasonably prudent person would have exercised in comparable
circumstances.
Income Tax Act, supra, ss.227.1(3)
3. The Appellant was a director of the Corporations during the
periods in issue, being June to July, 1992 in respect of Country
Pride Leasing Incorporated, and February, May, June, July and
August, 1992 in respect of Country Pride Discount Stores
Incorporated. The Appellant submits that he is entitled to rely
upon subsection 227.1(3) of the Act on the basis that he
exercised the degree of care, diligence and skill to prevent the
failure to remit that a reasonably prudent person would have
exercised in comparable circumstances. The Appellant's
position is based upon the fact that he had no influence over the
day-to-day management and affairs of the Corporations
and further that in May, 1991, a full 9 months prior to the
first date of default, his relationship with the Corporations
effectively ended.
B. Case Law
(i)The Standard of Care Generally
4. In determining whether a director is entitled to rely upon
the "due diligence" defence, the appropriate standard
of care involves an "objective-subjective"
element. More particularly:
... The standard of care laid down in subsection 227.1(3)
of the Act is inherently flexible. Rather than treating directors
as a homogenous group of professionals whose conduct is governed
by a single, unchanging standard, that provision embraces a
subjective element which takes into account the personal
knowledge and background of the director, as well as his or her
corporate circumstances in the form of, inter alia, the
company's organization, resources, customs and conduct. Thus,
for example, more is expected of individuals with superior
qualifications (e.g. experienced
business-persons).
The standard of care set out in subsection 227.1(3) of the Act
is, therefore, not purely objective. Nor is it purely subjective.
It is not enough for a director to say he or she did his or her
best, for that is an invocation of the purely subjective
standard. Equally clear is that honesty is not enough. However,
the standard is not a professional one. Nor is it the negligence
law standard that governs these cases. Rather, the Act contains
both objective elements - embodied in the reasonable person
language - and subjective elements - inherent in
individual considerations like "skill" and the idea of
"comparable circumstances". Accordingly, the standard
can be properly described as "objective
subjective".
Soper v. Canada, [1998] 1 F.C. 124 (C.A.), at
155
5. The Appellant submits that when applying the
"objective subjective" test, he acted with the degree
of care, diligence and skill that a person in comparable
circumstances would have exercised. He reviewed financial
information but had limited influence over the management of the
Corporations. Furthermore, following the date upon which he
agreed to sell his shares, the Appellant received no information
and was effectively barred from having influence over the affairs
of the Corporations.
(ii) The Standard as Between Inside and Outside
Directors
6. While liability as a director is not based simply upon a
person's classification as an inside versus an outside
director, this is an appropriate starting point for the analysis
in any given case. Further:
... it is difficult to deny that inside directors, meaning
those involved in the day-to-day management of the
company and who influence the conduct of its business affairs,
will have the most difficulty in establishing the due diligence
defence ... In short, inside directors will face a significant
hurdle when arguing that the subjective element of the standard
of care should predominate over its objective aspect.
Soper, supra, at 156
7. The Appellant submits that he was not a "inside"
director of either of the Corporations as he was not involved in
day-to-day management and was not able to influence
the conduct of the businesses. As a consequence, the Appellant is
not held to the higher standard of care which may apply to inside
directors.
8. In order to satisfy the due diligence defence, a director
may take positive action by setting up controls to accounts for
remittances, asking for regular reports and confirming that
remittances have occurred. However, such precautionary steps are
not necessary conditions precedent to the establishment of a
defence. An outside director cannot be required to go to such
lengths. Unless there is reason for suspicion, it is permissible
to rely on the day-to-day corporate manager to be
responsible for the payment of debt obligations such as those
owing to Her Majesty.
Soper, supra, at 159 to 160
Sanford v. The Queen, 96 DTC 1912 (T.C.C.),
at 1914 to 1915
Cybulski v. M.NA, 88 DTC 1531 (T.C.C.), at
1535
9 Further, where a person reviews financial statements and
receives information which supports the view that the financial
situation of the company is healthy, the director is entitled to
rely upon such information unless there is reason to believe
otherwise. Where there is no reason to question the veracity of
the statement and the reliability of assurances provided by other
persons, the director should not be held liable.
Golfman v. M.N.R, 90 DTC 1863 (T.C.C.), at
1868
10. The Appellant submits that prior to May 1991, positive
actions were taken with respect to Revenue Canada remittances,
including regular meetings to discuss business and financial
information and regular reviews of financial statements. In fact,
the Corporations were not in default to Revenue Canada during
this period. The Appellant submits that as a director who was not
involved in day-to-day management he had no
obligation to take such positive actions in order to establish
that he acted with due diligence. The fact that he took such
positive action further supports his entitlement to the
defence.
11. In Cloutier v. M.N.R., 93 DTC 544 Bowman, T.C.C.J.
quoted with approval the decision of the Tax Court of Canada in
Merson v. M.N.R., 89 DTC 22 which held that subsection
227.1(3) of the Act does not require the care, diligence and
skill that is exercised with an unduly excessive measure of
prudence. Bowman T.C.C.J. further stated:
... The directors of a corporation are neither trustees for
nor insurers of the Minister of National Revenue. They are
required under section 227.1 to act with reasonable skill and
prudence to ensure that the Minister is paid that which is owing
to him. Where, however, individual directors who control neither
the company nor the board of directors are powerless to influence
the course taken by the corporation the law does not require that
they should be held responsible for the corporation's
obligations to the fisc.
Cloutier v. M.N.R, 93 DTC 544, at 551
12. The Appellant submits that he was, at all times, an
outside director of the Corporations who was not involved in
day-to-day management and had little ability to
control the Corporations or the boards of directors. Furthermore,
the Appellant submits that he was powerless to influence the
course taken by the Corporations and thus should not be
responsible for their obligations to Revenue Canada.
13. The Appellant further submits that from May, 1991 he was a
director of the Corporations in name only, in order to preserve
his leverage under the agreement to have his shares bought. The
Appellant had absolutely no influence over the board of directors
and was completely powerless to have any influence over the
affairs of the Corporations after this date. As a consequence, he
should not be liable for the failure to remit amounts to Revenue
Canada which became due some nine months later.
(iii) The Standard Where a Director Has Severed His Ties
to the Corporation
14. Where a person has severed his connection with the
corporation of which he is a director, such action relieves the
person of vicarious liability for the corporation's default
in remitting deductions at source. This is particularly so where
the person is banned from having influence on the corporation by
virtue of the severance of the relationship:
In my opinion the general principle that ignorance of the law
is no excuse... can have no application here. In enacting
subsection 227.1(3) Parliament established an exonerating
standard of conduct the presence of which is to be determined in
particular cases by the actual relevant facts and not by fixing
to a taxpayer knowledge of a somewhat esoteric point of
corporation law that in reality is probably not within the actual
knowledge of a good number of legal practitioners. While at first
blush subsection 227.1(3) suggests a requirement for positive
assertion on the part of a taxpayer in order to bring himself
within its ambit, this is not necessarily so in all situations.
It may well be that a taxpayer would not take positive steps in
some circumstances and still be correctly [regarded] as having
"exercised" that degree of care, diligence and skill
expected of a reasonably prudent person that creates the
protection from liability afforded by the subsection. That
obtains in respect of this appeal. I am satisfied that reasonable
grounds existed for the appellant's belief that he had
severed his connection with the Company as director and
secretary-treasurer and concomitantly his responsibility for it
when he placed his resignation in the hands of the Company's
president and it was accepted by him. This relieves him of
vicarious liability for the Company's default in remitting
the deductions at source and this is so a fortiori where, as
here, the appellant was effectively barred from exercising
influence over the management of the company by the person in
defacto control of its affairs after the resignation was
submitted.
Cybulski v. M.N.R., supra, at
1535
Schultheiss v. The Queen, 97 DTC 863
(T.C.C.), at 865
15. The Appellant submits that his relationship with the
Corporations was effectively severed when he agreed to sell his
shares to the other shareholders and directors in May, 1991.
While be had very limited influence over the management of the
Corporations before that date, the Appellant had absolutely no
influence after that date. He was powerless. While the Appellant
did not tender resignations as a director of the Corporations,
this was solely to retain some leverage in order to ensure that
payments were made under the said Agreement. The purpose and
effect of the Agreement was to sever the Appellant's role in
the Corporations and to bar him from participating at all in the
business and financial affairs.
16. The Appellant submits that because the failures to remit
occurred at least nine months after the agreement to be bought
out of the Corporations, he should not be held liable under
subsection 227.1(1). By the time that the defaults to Revenue
Canada had occurred the Appellant's relationship to the
Corporation had been terminated for at least nine months. The
severance of the Appellant's relationship to the Corporations
barred him from exercising any influence. Thus he exercised the
degree of care, diligence and skill that a reasonably prudent
person would have in comparable circumstances.
Submissions of the Respondent
[17] Counsel for the Respondent points to the Appellant's
education and business experience. Also he was a major creditor
of the Corporations. The Appellant did nothing to prevent the
remittance failures. She referred to Tab 18 of Exhibit R-1 which
contains the details of the Appellant's claim for an
allowable business investment loss in 1991 resulting from the
Appellant's write-off of the $50,000 mentioned above. Counsel
concedes this was probably prepared in March or April of 1992 but
she refers to the statement in the claim that Discount was
insolvent as of July 31, 1991. The Appellant must have been aware
of the fact the Corporations were in financial difficulties
because the payments under the Agreement were not forthcoming.
She argues that the Appellant had a right to demand an audit
under Section 1.04 in both Corporations' Shareholders'
Agreements (Tabs 1 and 2 of Exhibit A-1) and further he had the
rights provided in the Ontario Business Corporations Act
as a shareholder to demand an audit. He should not simply have
waited on the sidelines and let things deteriorate.
[18] She refers to the decision of this Court in Byrt v.
Minister of National Revenue, 91 DTC 923, in particular the
following passage at pp. 930-931:
A director must be prudent. A director cannot ignore
disturbing actions of a president of a corporation, even if the
president also controls a majority of the shares of the company.
The degree of prudence required by subsection 227.1(3) leaves no
room for risk. In exercising the degree of care, diligence and
skill to prevent a corporation's failure to remit source
deductions as Part VIII tax, the director must heed what is
transpiring within the corporation and his experience with the
people who are responsible for the day-to-day affairs of the
corporation. Once a director knows something negative about the
corporation's affairs other directors do not know and he does
not even attempt to inform the other directors, he is lacking a
degree of care and diligence. He lacks skill, care and diligence
when after querying the integrity and sincerity of a person, he
does nothing to control the actions of that person. A prudent
person, in such circumstances, would have become at least
suspicious and the person's degree of care and diligence
ought to have increased substantially if he chooses to remain a
director of the corporation. A director cannot be said to have
done anything which is reasonable, proper, right or just when he
permits irregularities to continue.
Analysis and Decision
[19] In my opinion, for the following principal reasons, the
Appellant has succeeded in establishing due diligence,
namely:
1. Perhaps from the outset, i.e., the dates of incorporation
of the Corporations, the Appellant was an outside director. In
any event, he certainly must be considered as an outside director
from and after the Agreement of May 21, 1991.
2. That Agreement of May 21, 1991 evidences the fact that the
Appellant wanted to be out of the Corporations but, on the advice
of his lawyer, he remained on as a shareholder and a director. It
is clear from his testimony and that of Pollack that from and
after the date of that Agreement he was no longer "a
partner" in the Corporations. The provisions of the
Agreement discussed above support this position.
3. From and after the Agreement the Appellant was essentially
totally barred from receiving any financial information
concerning the Corporations. His relations with the Corporations
had been terminated and he was no longer involved in any way with
the operations of the businesses.
4. Until May of 1991 the Appellant received and reviewed the
written information supplied by Pollack and the bookkeeper with
respect to sales, inventory and payables and there had been no
problems with any payables including particularly amounts obliged
to be remitted to Revenue Canada.
5. Defaults in making remittances occurred long after the
May 21, 1991 Agreement, the earliest default occurring
nine months thereafter.
6. The education and business experience of the Appellant
militates against him in his due diligence defence but in my
opinion that is offset by the other considerations discussed
above.
7. I do not consider critical the failure to cause an audit of
the Corporations to be made. Such a remedy is certainly an
extreme measure and in any event it would take a very legalistic
minded director to even know that the remedy existed.
8. The various court decisions referred to in the
Appellant's Memorandum of Law and Argument, in particular the
decision in Cybulski in my opinion support the conclusion
arrived at herein.
[20] Consequently, for the above reasons, the appeal is
allowed with costs and the assessment is vacated.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada this 22nd day of February
1999.
"T.P. O'Connor"
J.T.C.C.