Date: 20000515
Docket: 98-2052-IT-G
BETWEEN:
EMILIO DIRIENZO,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bowman, A.C.J.
[1] This appeal is from an assessment under section 227.1
of the Income Tax Act against the appellant as a director
and officer of Can-Am Windows & Doors Manufacturing Inc. (the
"corporation"). The liability arises from the failure
of the corporation to withhold and remit source deductions for
income tax, provincial tax, employment insurance premiums and
Canada Pension Plan premiums. The total amount assessed exceeds
$30,000.
[2] The appellant was born in 1972. He started to work for the
construction company of his uncle Ubaldo DiRienzo in 1991 or
1992.
[3] The corporation was formed in February 1993 under the laws
of Ontario. It had two directors, the appellant and Luke
DiGiovanni. The appellant totally trusted his uncle. He was told
to sign the documents for the incorporation of the company and he
did so without hesitation. He was never employed by the company
and received no salary or wages. He was told by his uncle to sign
a guarantee of a loan of $36,000 by the Royal Bank to the
corporation and he did so. The bank sued him on the guarantee and
obtained judgment which is still outstanding.
[4] He paid no attention to the financial affairs of the
company. He stated that he took no steps "because I was not
involved". He trusted his uncle because his father had
trusted him. He exhibited an ingenuous blind faith in the family
patriarch who, he believed, would stand behind him and see that
he came to no harm as the result of signing anything his uncle
put in front of him. This faith was misplaced. Ubaldo DiRienzo
was, in fact, an unprincipled knave who had no compunction about
inducing his naive and trusting 20-year old nephew to sign a
guarantee and to become president or director of his corporation.
Ubaldo DiRienzo was the true beneficial owner of the shares of
the corporation and was a de facto director. The appellant
was a mere puppet in the hands of his uncle. Ubaldo DiRienzo did
not have the courage to take responsibility for his own actions.
Rather he chose to hide behind a youth who trusted him and who
could be intimidated or inveigled into doing his bidding. Ubaldo
DiRienzo did not have the decency to stand behind his nephew, but
was content to abandon him to the tender mercies of the bank and
the tax collector.
[5] Two things are perfectly clear. First, whatever liability
the appellant may have incurred or damage he may have suffered as
the result of doing his uncle's bidding, he is entitled to
recover from his uncle. Second, the Minister of National Revenue
would be entitled to pursue the uncle, Ubaldo DiRienzo, as a
de facto director.
[6] I find nothing in the decision of the Federal Court of
Appeal in The Queen v. Corsano et al.,
99 DTC 5658, which would prevent a de facto
director from being liable under subsection 227.1. Under
subsection 1(1) of the Ontario Business Corporations
Act director is defined as
a person occupying the position of a director of a corporation
by whatever name called.
[7] Under subsection 227.1(1) an action or proceeding to
recover an amount payable by a director must be commenced within
two years after the director last ceased to be a director. There
is no evidence that Ubaldo DiRienzo ever ceased to be a director
of the corporation, assuming it has not been wound up.
[8] Do the conclusions stated above absolve the appellant of
his responsibilities under section 227.1? On one view of the
matter, it could be said that he did not exercise the degree of
care, diligence and skill contemplated by
subsection 227.1(3) because he exercised none at all. On the
other hand, he was a mere nominal director with no powers, no
responsibilities and no say in the way the corporation was run.
It is all very well to adopt a hectoring, moralizing tone and say
that if people take on the responsibility of corporate
directorships they should be expected to assume all the
consequences of such a position. I am not however concerned with
what the situation would be in a perfect world. I have to make a
determination of the facts as they exist in a highly imperfect
world where malleable young family members are bullied by
domineering patriarchs.
[9] There have been a multitude of cases under
section 227.1 of the Income Tax Act and the
corresponding section of the Excise Tax Act,
section 323. I reviewed some of them in Dale Holmes v.
The Queen, file number 1999-2182(IT)I, 19 April
2000. The leading case is Soper v. R., [1997]
3 C.T.C. 242 (F.C.A.).
[10] There have, however, been a number of other cases since
this such as Cadrin v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5079
(F.C.A.); The Queen v. Champeval et al.,
99 DTC 5115 (F.C.T.D.).
[11] It is clear on the evidence not only that did the
appellant do nothing but also that he was powerless to do
anything. The uncle dominated the family and all aspects of the
business. The case bears a strong resemblance to Fitzgerald et
al. v. M.N.R., 92 DTC 1019. In that case
Mogan J. stated at page 1021:
It appears to me that the Appellants were directors in law
(i.e., their names appear in the Company's minute book as
directors) but they were not in fact directors. They never met as
directors. They never acted alone or in concert as directors.
They had no knowledge of the management or administration of the
Company's business. They had no equity in the Company. They
had no way of compelling the fifth director (Eugene Fitzgerald,
the sole shareholder) to disclose any information concerning the
Company's financial affairs. They were directors in law only
because of their family connection to Eugene Fitzgerald. Although
any one of them could have resigned as a director if he or she
had thought of it, such resignation would have been a source of
family friction and, from the viewpoint of the male Appellants
(the three sons), the idea of resigning as a director would not
have occurred to them before the idea of quitting their
employment.
I would not hold as a general rule that a passive or inactive
director is free from liability under subsection 227.1(1) of
the Income Tax Act. For example, a person who consents to
being a director of a corporation in order to accommodate a
friend or client and then fails to participate as a director in
the affairs of the corporation is still very much at risk under
subsection 227.1(1). The passive or inactive director is
not, per se, free from liability under
subsection 227.1(1). But when the passive or inactive
director has become a director in the context of a family
business operated by a corporation which is dominated by an
uncompromising patriarch, the domestic responsibility for
maintaining harmony within the family becomes interwoven with the
legal responsibility to third parties and, in these
circumstances, I think that it is not reasonable to impose the
same standard of care, diligence and skill on the passive
"family director" as on the person who is truly free to
become a director and does so outside a family context.
Applying the above proposition to the facts of this case, I
hold that the Appellants satisfy the test in
subsection 227.1(3) because they exercised the degree of
care, diligence and skill that a reasonably prudent person would
have exercised in comparable circumstances. I emphasize "in
comparable circumstances" because a reasonably prudent
person would, in this feudal family, maintain family harmony by
serving as a director in name only and by leaving the management
of the business in the hands of the strong-minded patriarch who
had managed it successfully for 30 years.
[12] That is precisely the situation here.
[13] The appeal is allowed with costs and the assessment is
vacated.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 15th day of May 2000.
"D.G.H. Bowman"
A.C.J.