Date: 20000626
Dockets: 98-616-IT-G; 98-618-IT-G
BETWEEN:
SHAW INDUSTRIES LTD.,
Applicant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent,
And
BETWEEN:
AVTAR SINGH GILL,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Order
Beaubier, J.T.C.C.
[1] These Appellants' motions to reopen consent judgments
were heard together at Vancouver, British Columbia on June 13,
2000. No affidavits or evidence were filed in support of either
motion. The Rules are clear that affidavits should be filed and
that is one reason for the dismissal of each motion.
[2] The more fundamental reason for dismissing each motion
comes from two sources: First, each consent was executed by
counsel for both parties. In particular, counsel for each of the
Appellants is a well recognized competent tax counsel in not just
Vancouver but in the Tax Court of Canada throughout the country.
He is not a counsel who would sign a consent that did not contain
the substance of the judgment consented to in respect to each
appeal.
[3] The second source is even more substantive and I take it
from the Federal Court of Appeal case, William Lehner v.
M.N.R., 97 DTC 5270. The second last paragraph of that
judgment says:
In effect, the applicant, in making these motions before the
Tax Court, did not intend to re-open the two appeals. His purpose
was to challenge the correctness of the reassessments made by the
Minister following the two consent judgments. However, the only
proper way to do that was to object to and appeal from those
reassessments.
To some extent the paragraph quoted does not describe the
problems that have been raised by each of the parties in these
two cases but the gist is the same and that is Mr. Gill, in
submitting the arguments for each of the Appellants, has said
that the consequences or the matters derived from these consents
were not what was expected and, in his view, were not what each
of the Appellants intended.
[4] In the Court's view, the way that this should be
resolved is to wait for the reassessments and appeal the
reassessments in each case if they do not prove suitable. That is
particularly so where, as here, competent counsel for each party
has executed a consent.
[5] As a final conclusion, Mr. Gill, in each of his
submissions, both in chief and in rebuttal, raised the concept of
"settlement" in these cases. Each of these cases was
apparently settled by the consents to judgment. Perhaps, if the
Appellants again see fit to appeal, the best course is to
litigate the matters through the courts without any settlements
or misunderstandings that may arise from concepts that occur in
the settlements.
[6] For these reasons, the motions are dismissed.
Signed at Saskatoon, Saskatchewan this 26th day of
June 2000.
"D.W. Beaubier"
J.T.C.C.