T-2473-96
B E T W E E
N:
MINISTER
OF NATIONAL REVENUE
Applicant
-
and -
159890
CANADA INC.
Respondent
REASONS
FOR ORDER
GIBSON, J.:
On
the 14th of November, 1996, Mr. Justice Rouleau granted a "jeopardy
order" in this matter in the following terms:
1. IT
IS ORDERED THAT the Minister of National Revenue be and he is hereby authorized
to take forthwith any of the actions described in paragraphs 225.1(1)(a) to (g)
of the Income Tax Act in respect to the respondent.
2. IT
IS ORDERED THAT this order be served upon the respondent by sending a true copy
of same by regular and registered mail on or before November 19, 1996, to
159890 Canada Inc. ...
[address
omitted]
The authority for Mr. Justice Rouleau's order was
subsection 225.2(2) of the Income Tax Act (the "Act"). As provided in
that subsection, the order was made ex parte. In effect, it authorized
the Applicant to take certain collection actions in respect of an amount
assessed against the Respondent (the "taxpayer"), notwithstanding the
fact that the taxpayer had appealed to the Tax Court of Canada from the
assessment and that the appeal had not been disposed of by that Court or
discontinued. The taxpayer applied to this Court for a review of the jeopardy
order pursuant to subsection 225.2 (8). These reasons arise out of the hearing
of that review application.
The evidence that was before Mr. Justice
Rouleau on the application for the jeopardy order indicated that the taxpayer
was, at the time, indebted to Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada as
represented by the Applicant (the "Minister") for a substantial
amount. The Minister's records indicate that, shortly after the question of
the taxpayer's indebtedness was appealed to the Tax Court of Canada, a
"dividend refund" became due to the taxpayer from the Minister for
the taxpayer's taxation year ending December 31, 1987. The amount of that
refund was offset against the taxpayer's alleged indebtedness to the Crown.
The taxpayer wrote to the Minister requesting a refund, pursuant to subsection
164(1.1) of the Act, in an amount equal to the dividend refund.
The evidence before Mr. Justice Rouleau
regarding the potential jeopardy to the Minister's capacity to collect the debt
allegedly due to the Crown was in the following terms:
8. On
September 24, 1996, Katchen wrote to Revenue Canada addressing the issue of the
collection of the Corporation's debt to the Crown. In his letter Katchen gives
various reasons why collection of the Corporation's debt is not in jeopardy:
(a)
the Corporation has a valid appeal outstanding;
(b) in
June, 1994, the Corporation received a refund cheque from Revenue Canada. The
Corporation did not keep the money, which it was entitled to do, but returned it
to Revenue Canada and asked that it be applied against the disputed tax
liability;
(c) through
a holding company Katchen is the sole shareholder of the Corporation. He is a
lawyer. He has lived in the same house in Toronto for 13 years. He does not have
a criminal record, he is not a bankrupt and he does not owe any money to
Revenue Canada. If the money is refunded to the Corporation, there is no
reason to believe that he will abscond with it;
(d) the
Corporation has no other debts and there is no reason to believe that the money
in question will be paid to other creditors, thereby becoming uncollectable to
Revenue Canada should it be successful in its appeal.
...
9. With
respect to Katchen's statement as outlined in paragraph 8(b) above, Revenue
Canada has no record of having issued a refund cheque to the Corporation as
indicated in Katchen's letter.
...
10. According
to the most recent tax return filed by the Corporation, for the year ending
December 30, 1989, the current assets of the Corporation consisted of $739.99
cash; the current liabilities were $10,625.00. ...
11. I
have confirmed with Katchen that the Corporation is inactive and currently has
no assets.
With respect to "dividend refunds"
subsection 129(2) of the Income Tax Act provides as follows:
(2) Instead
of making a refund that might otherwise be made under subsection (1), the
Minister may, where the corporation is liable or about to become liable to
make any payment under this Act, apply the amount that would otherwise be refundable
to that other lability and notify the corporation of that action.
There is no evidence that subsection 129(2) of the Act
was drawn to the attention of Mr. Justice Rouleau. On its face, it would
appear to provide statutory authority for the actions of the Minister in
applying the "dividend refund" against the taxpayer's liability and
for denying the written request for a refund.
Subsections 164(1.1) and (1.2) of the Act
read in part as follows:
(1.1)
Subject to subsection (1.2), where a taxpayer
(a)...
(b)
has appealed from an assessment to the Tax Court of Canada,
and has
applied in writing to the Minister for a payment ..., the Minister shall, where
no authorization has been granted under subsection 225.2(2) in respect of the
amount assessed, with all due dispatch repay all amounts paid on account of
that amount ... to the extent that
...
(1.2)
Notwithstanding subsection(1.1), where, on application by the Minister made
within 45 days after the receipt by the Minister of a written request by a
taxpayer for repayment of an amount ..., a judge is satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the collection of all or any part of an
amount assessed in respect of the taxpayer would be jeopardized by the
repayment of that amount ... to the taxpayer under that subsection, the judge
shall order that the repayment of the amount or a part thereof not be made ....
or make such other order as the judge considers reasonable in the
circumstances.
Unlike a jeopardy order under subsection 225.2(2), an
application for a jeopardy order under subsection 164.(1.2) is made on notice,
within a specified time period and the taxpayer is, of course, entitled to
attend the hearing and make representations.
For whatever reason, on the facts of this
matter, the Minister chose to proceed ex parte under subsection 225.2,
rather than within the limited time frame and on notice as provided for by
subsection 164(1.2). Once again, there was no evidence before me that Mr.
Justice Rouleau was aware that the Minister might have had an option of
proceeding under subsection 164(1.2).
The same day that the motion under
subsection 225.2(2) was filed with the Court, another application was filed
seeking:
1. preliminary advice and directions from the Court as to
the applicability of s. 164(1.1) of the Income Tax Act ("ITA")
in circumstances where the Minister has offset a dividend refund against the
debt of 159890 Canada Inc. to the Minister;
2. subject
to the applicability s. 164(1.1) of the ITA, an order providing that the
Minister not be required to repay the sum of $606,321.24 as demanded by 159890
Canada Inc..
That motion was served on the taxpayer. The court file
indicates that the motion was adjourned sine die, by agreement, after
Mr. Justice Rouleau's order was issued. It was subsequently withdrawn.
In summary then, Mr. Justice Rouleau was
called upon to issue an ex parte jeopardy order, and issued such an
order, in circumstances where, arguably at least, statutory authority existed
to apply the "dividend refund" against the taxpayer's alleged debt
and, once again arguably at least, authority existed for an alternative form of
jeopardy order where the taxpayer would have been entitled to notice of the
application for the order and an opportunity would have been available to speak
to the appropriateness of the order sought. Finally, the evidence before Mr.
Justice Rouleau was sufficient, obviously, to convince him "... that the
collection of all or any part of an amount assessed in respect of a taxpayer
would be jeopardized by a delay in the collection of that amount,
..." even though the amount, being the only amount apparently available
for collection to the knowledge of the Minister, was already in the hands of
the Minister.
In Her Majesty the Queen v. Robert Duncan, Associate Chief Justice
Jerome wrote at page 727:
In Satellite
Earth, MacKay J. reviewed the factors to be considered by a court on a s.
225.2(8) review of a jeopardy collection order. After considering the case law
dealing with the former version of s.225.2 he concluded ... that in a s.
225.2(8) application the Minister has the ultimate burden of justifying the
decision despite the fact that s. 225.2 as amended no longer includes the
former paragraph (5) that specifically stated that "[O]n the hearing of an
application under paragraph 2(c), the burden of justifying the decision is on
the Minister". However, the initial burden is on the taxpayer to show
that there are reasonable grounds to doubt that the test has been met... .
I am satisfied that there are here "reasonable
grounds to doubt" that the Minister met the burden on her or him in the
application before Mr. Justice Rouleau that resulted in the jeopardy order here
under review.
In the Minister of Revenue v. Rouleau, I wrote:
Further, I
find no support for the position that the Minister of National Revenue failed
to make full and frank disclosure, which I am satisfied he is obliged to do,
on the second ex parte application to Mr. Justice Dubé. Full and frank
disclosure does not require the disclosure of material that is simply
irrelevant to the test for issuance of an ex parte jeopardy collection
order.
Full and frank disclosure does, I conclude, require the
Minister to disclosure what might reasonably be regarded as weaknesses in the
case for a jeopardy order that are known to the Minister.
I am satisfied that the Minister should only
proceed by way of application for a jeopardy order under subsection 225.2(2),
ex parte, where she or he is able to demonstrate to a judge that a jeopardy
order is necessary to protect the Minister's position and that no alternative
procedure that is more fair to the taxpayer than an ex parte procedure,
is reasonably available. Neither of those conditions were here met. On the record,
no evidence was placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau to demonstrate that
subsection 129(2) of the Act was insufficient authority for the Minister's
purposes. Further, no evidence was placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau to
demonstrate that the more open procedure provided by subsection 164(1.2) could
not reasonably and in accordance with law have been invoked. Finally, the
evidence placed before Mr. Justice Rouleau that the opportunity to apply the
"dividend refund" against the taxpayer's indebtedness would in fact
be in jeopardy through delay, was marginal.
I conclude that, before me, the taxpayer
discharged the initial burden on it to show that there are reasonable grounds
to doubt that the Minister met the burden on her or him on the application before
Mr. Justice Rouleau. I also conclude that the Minister has failed to discharge
the ultimate burden of justifying the decision of Mr. Justice Rouleau simply
because the Minister failed to satisfy me that he or she made full and frank
disclosure before Mr. Justice Rouleau of all of the information in the
Minister's possession that was relevant to the decision Mr. Justice Rouleau was
called upon to make. The fact that Mr. Justice Rouleau's decision might have
been the same if full and frank disclosure had been made is of no consequence.
Equally, the fact that another judge might issue a fresh jeopardy order on
another application on which full and frank disclosure is made is of no
consequence. I will not speculate on that possibility on the evidence that was
before me and the argument made before me.
On the basis of the foregoing considerations
and conclusions, this application for a review of the authorization granted by
the order of Mr. Justice Rouleau dated the 14th of November, 1996 will be
allowed and, as authorized by subsection 225.2(11) of the Act, that
authorization will be set aside.
Judge
Ottawa,
Ontario
July 30,
1997