Date: 20100128
Docket: T-327-09
Citation: 2010 FC 97
Ottawa, Ontario, January 28,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mainville
BETWEEN:
SYLVIE LAPERRIÈRE, in her capacity as
Senior
Analyst – Professional Conduct of the
Office
of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy
Applicant
and
ALLEN W. MACLEOD and
D&A MACLEOD COMPANY LTD.
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This concerns an application submitted by Sylvie
Laperrière (the “Applicant”), a Senior Analyst – Professional Conduct with the
Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, seeking judicial review of related
decisions made by the Honourable James B. Chadwick, acting in his capacity as
Delegate of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, and under which most of the
allegations of misconduct against the bankruptcy trustees Allen W. MacLeod and
D. & A. MacLeod Company Ltd. (the “Respondents”) were rejected, but however
imposing a sanction in the form of a reprimand against the Respondents for
delay in the administration of two estates.
Background
[2]
The licencing and professional conduct of
bankruptcy trustees are under the control and supervision of the Superintendent
of Bankruptcy (the “Superintendent”). For these purposes, the Superintendent is
entrusted with supervising the activities of bankruptcy trustees and
disciplining them in appropriate circumstances. The powers of investigation and
discipline of bankruptcy trustees must be carried out with due regard to the
rules of fundamental justice. Consequently, a particular scheme has been
established under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act , R.S., 1985, c. B-3
(the “Act”) to afford trustees a fair hearing and certain procedural safeguards
prior to imposing a measure or sanction under the Act.
[3]
This scheme is principally set out in sections
14.01 and 14.02 of the Act which read as follows:
14.01 (1) If, after
making or causing to be made an inquiry or investigation into the conduct of
a trustee, it appears to the Superintendent that
(a) a trustee has not properly
performed the duties of a trustee or has been guilty of any improper
management of an estate,
(b) a trustee has not
fully complied with this Act, the General Rules, directives of the
Superintendent or any law with regard to the
proper administration of any
estate, or
(c) it is in the public
interest to do so, the Superintendent may do one or more of the following:
(d) cancel or suspend
the licence of the trustee;
(e) place such
conditions or limitations on the licence as the Superintendent considers
appropriate including a requirement that the trustee successfully take an
exam or enrol in a proficiency course;
(f) require the trustee
to make restitution to the estate of such amount of money as the estate has
been deprived of as a result of the trustee’s conduct; and
(g) require the trustee
to do anything that the Superintendent considers appropriate and that the
trustee has agreed to.
(1.1) This section and section 14.02 apply, in so far as they are
applicable, in respect of former trustees, with such modifications as the circumstances
require.
(2) The Superintendent may delegate by written instrument, on such terms
and conditions as are therein specified, any or all of the Superintendent’s
powers, duties and functions under subsection (1), subsection 13.2(5), (6) or
(7) or section 14.02 or 14.03.
(3) Where the Superintendent delegates in accordance with
subsection (2), the Superintendent or the delegate shall
(a) where there is a delegation in relation to trustees
generally, give written notice of the delegation to all trustees; and
(b) whether or not paragraph (a) applies, give written
notice of the delegation of a power to any trustee who may be affected by the
exercise of that power, either before the power is exercised or at the time
the power is exercised.
14.02 (1) Before deciding whether to exercise any of the powers
referred to in subsection1 4.01(1), the Superintendent shall send the trustee
written notice of the powers that the Superintendent may exercise and the
reasons why they may be exercised and afford the trustee a reasonable
opportunity for a hearing.
(1.1) The Superintendent may, for the purpose of the
hearing, issue a summons requiring and commanding any person named in it
(a) to appear at the time and place mentioned in
it;
(b) to testify to all matters within their knowledge
relative to the subject matter of the inquiry or investigation into the
conduct of the trustee; and
(c) to bring and produce any books, records, data, documents or
papers — including those in electronic form — in their possession or under
their control relative to the subject matter of the inquiry or investigation.
(1.2) A person may be summoned from any part of Canada by virtue of a
summons issued under subsection (1.1).
(1.3) Any person summoned under subsection (1.1) is entitled to receive
the like fees and allowances for so doing as if summoned to attend before the
Federal Court.
(2) At a hearing referred to in subsection (1), the
Superintendent
(a) has the power to administer oaths;
(b) is not bound by any legal or technical rules
of evidence in conducting the hearing;
(c) shall deal with the matters set out in the notice of the
hearing as informally and expeditiously as the circumstances and a
consideration of fairness permit; and
(d) shall cause a summary of any oral evidence to be made in
writing.
(3) The notice referred to in subsection (1) and, where applicable, the
summary of oral evidence referred to in paragraph (2)(d), together with
such documentary evidence as the Superintendent receives in evidence, form
the record of the hearing and the record and the hearing are public, unless
the Superintendent is satisfied that personal or other matters that may be disclosed
are of such a nature that the desirability of avoiding public disclosure of
those matters in the interest of a third party or in the public interest,
outweighs the desirability of the access by the public to information about
those matters.
(4) The decision of the Superintendent after a hearing referred to in
subsection (1), together with the reasons therefore, shall be given in
writing to the trustee not later than three months after the conclusion of
the hearing, and is public.
(5) A decision of the Superintendent given pursuant to subsection (4) is
deemed to be a decision of a federal board, commission or other tribunal that
may be reviewed and set aside pursuant to the Federal Courts Act.
|
14.01 (1) Après avoir tenu ou fait tenir une investigation ou une
enquête sur la conduite du syndic, le surintendant peut prendre l’une ou
plusieurs des mesures énumérées ci-après, soit lorsque le syndic ne remplit
pas adéquatement ses fonctions ou a été reconnu coupable de mauvaise
administration de l’actif, soit lorsqu’il n’a pas observé la présente loi,
les Règles générales, les instructions du surintendant ou toute autre règle
de droit relative à la bonne administration de l’actif, soit lorsqu’il est
dans l’intérêt public de le faire :
a) annuler ou suspendre la licence du syndic;
b) soumettre sa licence aux conditions ou restrictions qu’il estime
indiquées, et notamment l’obligation de se soumettre à des examens et de les
réussir ou de suivre des cours de formation;
c) ordonner au syndic de rembourser à l’actif toute somme qui y a
été soustraite en raison de sa conduite;
d)
ordonner au syndic de prendre toute mesure qu’il estime indiquée et que
celui-ci a agréée.
(1.1) Dans la mesure où ils sont applicables, le présent
article et l’article 14.02 s’appliquent aux anciens syndics avec les
adaptations nécessaires.
(2) Le surintendant peut, par écrit et aux conditions
qu’il précise dans cet écrit, déléguer tout ou partie des attributions que
lui confèrent respectivement le paragraphe (1), les paragraphes 13.2(5), (6)
et (7) et les articles 14.02 et14.03.
(3) En cas de délégation
aux termes du paragraphe (2), le surintendant ou le délégué doit :
a) dans la
mesure où la délégation vise les syndics en général, en aviser tous les
syndics par écrit;
b) en tout état de cause, aviser par écrit, avant
l’exercice du pouvoir qui fait l’objet de la délégation ou lors de son
exercice, tout syndic qui pourrait être touché par l’exercice de ce pouvoir.
14.02 (1) Avant de décider de prendre l’une ou
plusieurs des mesures visées au paragraphe 14.01(1), le surintendant envoie
au syndic un avis écrit et motivé de la ou des mesures qu’il peut prendre et
lui donne la possibilité de se faire entendre.
(1.1) Il peut, aux
fins d’audition, convoquer des témoins par assignation leur enjoignant :
a) de
comparaître aux date, heure et lieu indiqués;
b) de
témoigner sur tous faits connus d’eux se rapportant à l’investigation ou à
l’enquête sur la conduite du syndic;
c) de produire tous livres, registres, données, documents
ou papiers, sur support électronique ou autre, qui se rapportent à
l’investigation ou à l’enquête et dont ils ont la possession ou la
responsabilité.
(1.2) Les assignations visées au paragraphe (1.1) ont
effet sur tout le territoire canadien.
(1.3) Toute personne assignée reçoit les frais et
indemnités accordés aux témoins assignés devant la Cour fédérale.
(2) Lors de
l’audition, le surintendant :
a) peut
faire prêter serment;
b) n’est
lié par aucune règle juridique ou procédurale en matière de preuve;
c) règle
les questions exposées dans l’avis d’audition avec célérité et sans
formalisme, eu égard aux circonstances et à l’équité;
d) fait établir un résumé écrit de toute preuve orale.
(3) L’audition et le dossier de l’audition sont publics à
moins que le surintendant ne juge que la nature des révélations possibles sur
des questions personnelles ou autres est telle que, en l’espèce, l’intérêt
d’un tiers ou l’intérêt public l’emporte sur le droit du public à
l’information. Le dossier de l’audition comprend l’avis prévu au paragraphe
(1), le résumé de la preuve orale visé à l’alinéa (2)d) et la preuve
documentaire reçue par le surintendant.
(4) La décision du surintendant est rendue par écrit,
motivée et remise au syndic dans les trois mois suivant la clôture de
l’audition, et elle est publique.
(5) La décision du surintendant, rendue et remise
conformément au paragraphe (4), est assimilée à celle d’un office fédéral et
comme telle est soumise au pouvoir d’examen et d’annulation prévu à la Loi
sur les Cours fédérales.
|
[4]
Under the scheme, the Superintendent has
delegated authority to investigate the conduct of bankruptcy trustees to
certain members of the staff of his office, including, in this case, the
Applicant. Once the results of an investigation allow the investigator to
conclude that a bankruptcy trustee should be subjected to remedial measures or sanctions
under subsection 14.1(1) of the Act, the concerned bankruptcy trustee must be
provided with a notice thereof and afforded a reasonable opportunity for a
hearing, which hearing may be conducted by the Superintendent himself, but
which more often than not is conducted by a delegate of the Superintendent
designated for this purpose.
[5]
In this case, various monitoring activities were
carried out over the years by the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy
(the “OSB”) in regard to Allen MacLeod, his now deceased father Donald A.
MacLeod, and their joint trustee in bankruptcy business D. & A. MacLeod
Company Limited (collectively referred to as the “MacLeod bankruptcy
trustees”). These monitoring activities revealed various alleged irregularities
in the operations of these trustees, including particularly the operation of an
interest trust account. The operation of this account, of which more will be
discussed below, appears to have been the determining factor in pursuing
further investigations into the MacLeod bankruptcy trustees.
[6]
These monitoring activities eventually resulted
in an investigation of the MacLeod bankruptcy trustees by the Applicant,
culminating in a long report dated February 27, 2007 (the “Report”), in which
the Applicant alleged numerous professional conduct breaches by the MacLeod
bankruptcy trustees, and recommended that sanctions be taken against these
trustees as a result thereof.
[7]
The Superintendent appointed the Honourable
James B. Chadwick to carry out hearings in order to adjudicate these
allegations. These hearings were delayed by various procedural matters
concerning principally the production of documents and the disclosure of
evidence. Moreover, as a result of the ill health of Mr. Donald MacLeod, the
allegations against him were stayed. Mr. Donald MacLeod subsequently passed
away. The proceedings thus concern Mr. Allen W. MacLeod and
D. & A.
MacLeod Company Limited.
[8]
The hearings resulted in a first decision by the
Honourable Chadwick dated December 1, 2008 (the “Liability Decision”) in which
he found that almost all the allegations against the Respondents were without
merit. He however found that the Respondents had not completed the
administration of two estates in a timely manner, and called for written
submissions from the parties regarding both the question of costs and the
sanctions which would be appropriate in the circumstances.
[9]
Following these submissions, the Honourable
Chadwick issued a second decision on sanctions and costs dated February 5, 2009
(the “Sanctions Decision”), in which he imposed a reprimand on the Respondents
and found that he had no jurisdiction to award costs under the provisions of
the Act.
The Decisions
[10]
In the Liability Decision dated December 1,
2008, the Delegate described the allegations against the Respondents under 12
headings, following the structure of the Report prepared by the Applicant.
These headings are as follows and for purposes of consistency will be
maintained throughout this judgment:
A. Bank balances of estate and insolvency files deposited in
an “Interest Account”.
B. Applications for trustee discharge while
having a bank balance in the estate account.
C. Surplus from the consolidated trust account
for summary administrations deposited in an “Interest Account”.
D. Monies withdrawn for various uses from an “Interest
Account”.
E. Statements of Receipts and Disbursements.
F. Unauthorized fee withdrawal in a consumer proposal.
G. “Clearing Account” used to post estate transactions.
H. Co-mingling of funds in consolidated trust accounts.
I. Disbursement claimed for services performed by a related
person.
J. “Third Party Account” used to post estate transactions.
K. Monies not deposited forthwith.
L. Delay in the administration of estates.
[11]
The Delegate first addressed in his decision a
motion to stay the proceedings which had been submitted by the Respondents on
the basis of alleged prosecutorial partiality and overzealousness by the
Applicant. The Delegate dismissed this motion on the basis that the issues
raised by it could be better dealt with on the merits of the case.
[12]
At the outset, the first issue to address on the
merits was deemed by the Delegate to be the application of strict liability as
opposed to absolute liability in regard to the alleged misconduct of the
Respondents. The Delegate was of the view (at para. 13 of the Liability
Decision) that the allegations of misconduct pursuant to the Act, its
regulations and any resulting directives were strict liability offences, and consequently
it was open for the Respondents to prove that they took all reasonable steps
under the circumstances in order to avoid a finding of misconduct.
[13]
The Delegate then commented on the objectivity
of the Applicant in carrying out her investigation and drafting her Report. He
concluded that her Report “had been crafted to support the allegations and
lacked both impartiality and objectivity” (at para. 44 of the Liability
Decision). Consequently, the Report was to be “weighed and scrutinized very
carefully” (at para. 47 of the Liability Decision). He also noted that there
was some controversy within the OSB about the appropriateness of proceeding
with disciplinary measures against the MacLeod bankruptcy trustees in the
circumstances of this case (at paras. 48-49 of the Liability Decision).
[14]
Concerning the merits of the allegations, the
Delegate first addressed what appeared to be the principal allegation and which
was described under heading A as bank balances of estate and insolvency files
deposited in an “Interest Account”. The Delegate noted that the most serious
alleged irregularity related to the operation of this Interest Account by the
Respondents (at para. 36 of the Liability Decision). It indeed appears from the
record that the operation of this account was the kingpin underlying the
investigation by the Applicant and her subsequent Report.
[15]
Some background explanation is required to
properly understand the circumstances surrounding this allegation.
[16]
Pursuant to subsection 25(1) of the Act, a trustee
in bankruptcy must deposit in a bank all funds received for an estate in a
separate trust account for each estate. Moreover, sections 151 and 152 of the
Act provide that when the trustee has realized all the property of the
bankrupt, he must prepare a final statement of receipts and disbursements and a
dividend sheet and, subject to the Act, divide the property of the bankrupt
among the creditors who have proved their claims. In light of delays in closing
accounts between the time the final statement of receipts and disbursements is
made and the discharge of the trustee pursuant to the Act, amounts in the
estate trust accounts may accumulate interest.
[17]
Subsection 154(1) of the Act provides that
before proceeding to discharge, the trustee must forward to the Superintendent
for deposit with the Receiver General, according to the directives of the
Superintendent, the unclaimed dividends and undistributed funds that the
trustee possesses. Consequently, the interest accumulated in the trust accounts
between the final statement of receipts and disbursements and the discharge of
the trustee may end up in the hands of the Receiver General rather than those
of the creditors.
[18]
This eventuality is specifically contemplated by
Directive number 5 issued on November 17, 1994 by the Superintendent and
concerning “Estate Funds and Banking”. Section 12 of this Directive 5 states
that any amount of interest earned on a trust account and not apportioned to
individual estate accounts shall be remitted to the Superintendent as an undistributed
asset as provided in Directive 8 entitled “Unclaimed Dividends and
Undistributed Funds”. However, this Directive 8 issued June 19, 1986 itself
provides in its section 15 that where additional interest is received after the
preparation of the statement of receipts and disbursements, the amount should
be distributed to the creditors by way of an amended or additional dividend
sheet where the amount available exceeds that set out in guidelines.
[19]
The Respondents took an original approach to
compliance with these provisions by operating an “Interest Account” in which
surplus interest from the various estates would be deposited or paid out. At
the time of the preparation of the final statement of receipts and
disbursements, the Respondents would estimate the interest which would be
earned up to the closing of the estate. If at the time of closing, the actual
amount accumulated in the estate was more than the estimate, this excess amount
would be transferred to the “Interest Account”. Conversely, if the amount was
underestimated, then this sum would be transferred into the estate from the
“Interest Account”. In this manner, the interest generated in the estates
would, in principle, be returned to the creditors rather than end up in the
hands of the Receiver General.
[20]
Based on his assessment of the evidence, the
Delegate found no impropriety or misconduct on the part of the Respondents in
the operation of this account. He based this finding on the evidence submitted
that the account had been authorized by the OSB pending a final decision as to
its continued operation, and had been subsequently closed when the OSB
requested such closure.
[21]
In regard specifically to the allegations under
heading D concerning monies withdrawn for various uses from the Interest
Account, the Delegate found as follows at paragraph 73 of his decision: “In
view of my decision in paragraph A relating to a finding that the trustees were
authorized to maintain the interest account for a definite period and when
directed to cease they closed the account. Since they did so, I find no
misconduct on behalf of the trustees.”
[22]
The allegations under headings B, E, H, J and K
were all rejected on the basis that a strict liability defence had been made
out by the Respondents. It was also found by the Delegate that these allegations
resulted from minor administrative errors which were subsequently either
corrected or had no real impact on any creditor. The Delegate however recognized
at paragraph 102 of the Liability Decision that his conclusions in regard to
these headings were premised on the applicability of strict liability:
With reference
to the allegations B, E, H, J, and K, these were all as a result of
administrative error. If I am wrong in the interpretation of the nature of the
contraventions, and they are absolute, then the trustee’s are in contravention
of the various sections of the Act. The fact the trustees made
administrative errors would have to be taken into consideration under the
sanction section of this hearing.
[23]
The allegations under headings C, F, G, and I
were rejected on the basis that no contravention of the Act or of its related
Rules or Directives had occurred.
[24]
It is useful to note that the Delegate stated in
paragraph 67 of the Liability Decision that most of the allegations against the
Respondents were minor technical issues which had been taken out of context by
the Applicant:
Mr. MacLeod, in
his evidence, testified as to the number of estates that their firm handled.
Filed as an exhibit was a breakdown showing that they handled 2177 estates,
which included 89,268 transactions and the dollars transacted were
$21,595,694.41. When one looks at the volume of transactions and estates, the
allegations against MacLeod appear to be taken out of context. It would almost
appear that OSB is searching to find some irregularity, no matter how small, in
order to support their allegations of misconduct.
This is a
recurring theme throughout the Liability Decision, notably paragraph 84 thereof
where the Delegate found that certain allegations concerned matters involving only
100th of 1% of the summary estate management of the Respondents.
[25]
Finally, in regard to allegations under heading
L, the Delegate found that the Respondents had not acted with celerity in the
administration of two estates. The sanctions related to these two proven
allegations of misconduct were dealt with under a separate decision on
sanctions and costs dated February 5, 2009.
[26]
Concerning sanctions, the Applicant requested
that the corporate trustee licence of D. & A. MacLeod Company Limited be
restricted for a period of four (4) weeks during which time it would not be
permitted to accept new appointments under the Act but would be able to
administer estates for which it had already been appointed. The Applicant also
requested that the trustee licence of Allen W. McLeod be suspended for four (4)
weeks.
[27]
Conversely, the Respondents argued that no
sanctions should be imposed based on the alleged lack of impartiality and
objectivity of the investigation, on the impact the investigation and related
proceedings had on their trustee business, their reputation in the community,
and on their emotional and economic suffering resulting from all these
proceedings.
[28]
The Delegate concluded that a reprimand was
appropriate in the circumstances and expressed himself as follows at paragraph
20 of the Sanctions Decisions:
In my view the
sanction to be imposed upon Mr. MacLeod and D. & A. MacLeod Company Ltd.
should be in the form of a reprimand. The reprimand is set out in my reasons and
findings of December 1, 2008. In my view, it does not require any further
reprimand or sanction. I am sure what the trustee has experienced will serve as
a general deterrence to other trustees. Having spent over $150,000 to defend
himself, along with all the time and effort expended over the years he does not
need any more of a specific deterrence.
Position of the Applicant
[29]
Those parts of the Liability Decision of the
Delegate rejecting the allegation under headings C, F, G, and I are not
challenged by the Applicant. The remaining parts of the Liability Decision as
well as the Sanctions Decision are challenged by the Applicant on various
grounds.
[30]
As concerns the allegations described under
heading A as bank balances of estate and insolvency files deposited in an
“Interest Account”, the Applicant seeks to have this Court overturn the
Delegate’s finding of fact that the Respondents had been authorized by the OSB
to maintain such an account. The Applicant contends that this finding of fact
runs contrary to the documentary evidence and the testimony in the record and
is thus unreasonable and made without regard to the evidence.
[31]
Concerning the allegations contained under
heading D relating to monies withdrawn for various uses from the Interest
Account, the Applicant argues that even if the Delegate did not err in finding
that the authorization to operate the account was given, liability should still
be found as the Respondents admitted that they did not use the Interest Account
solely to maximize interests for creditors, and thus also used this account to
replace monies missing in estates due to their own errors.
[32]
Concerning the allegations contained under
headings B, E, H, J and K, the Applicant contends that the Delegate made a
reviewable error in law by applying strict liability principles to
contraventions of the Act and of its related Rules and Directives. In a
nutshell, the Applicant states that it is not appropriate to import the
criminal law classification of offences into regulatory proceedings concerning
the termination or suspension of a licence authorizing the performance of
regulated activities. Consequently, the defence of due diligence should not
apply to the allegations under these headings, and the Delegate erred in law in
finding otherwise. For the Applicant, evidence of due diligence is only
relevant at the stage of determining which measure or sanction, if any, should
be issued in the exercise of the appropriate remedies set out in section 14.01
of the Act.
[33]
As a subsidiary argument concerning the
allegations contained under headings B, E, H, J and K, the Applicant adds that
even if the Delegate was correct to hold that the defence of due diligence was
available to the Respondents, he committed reviewable errors in fact and in law
by concluding that the Respondents discharged their burden of proving due
diligence.
[34]
The Applicant also argues that the Delegate
erred in law by issuing a reprimand against the Respondents for acting without
celerity in the administration of two estates. The Applicant argues that a
reprimand is not a measure provided for in section 14.01 of the Act.
[35]
Finally, the Applicant argues that the Delegate
erred both in law and in fact in finding that her Report lacked objectivity and
impartiality. First, it is argued that it is an error in law to require an
investigator to be impartial. Impartiality is a procedural guarantee required
from an adjudicator and is a notion at odds with the functions performed by an
investigator in disciplinary proceedings. In addition, the Applicant adds that
the findings of partiality were not supported by the evidence.
[36]
Consequently, the Applicant asks this Court to
set aside both the Liability Decision and the Sanctions Decision and to refer
the matter back to the Superintendent to be dealt with in conformity with
section 14.01 of the Act, with costs being awarded in favour of the Applicant.
Position of the Respondents
[37]
A few days prior to the hearing on the merits of
this judicial review, the Respondents submitted a motion to the Court challenging
the Applicant’s right to submit the Application in regard to the Liability
Decision on the basis of tardiness and the fact that the Application concerned
both the Liability Decision and the Sanctions Decision, thus contravening Rule
302 of the Federal Courts Rules. I have rejected these arguments for the
reasons set out in a separate decision on the motion issued concurrently with
this judgment.
[38]
The Respondents note that they have been made to
endure a seven year process of monitoring, auditing, and investigations
characterized by delays, refusal to provide full disclosure, demonstrated bias
and a lack of objectivity. They note the strong words used by the Delegate in
criticising the OSB in the conduct of this investigation. They argue that this
Court should thus consider this judicial review application against the same
backdrop of unfairness, impropriety and inappropriate treatment of the
Respondents by the OSB as found by the Delegate.
[39]
As concerns the allegations described under
heading A as bank balances of estate and insolvency files deposited in an
“Interest Account”, the Respondents note that they did not believe they were
contravening any rules when they opened the Interest Account, and they took no
personal advantage from this account. The Interest Account was operated in an
attempt to increase the return to the stakeholders in the bankruptcy system.
When the OSB first questioned their operation of the Interest Account, the
matter was discussed extensively with the concerned officials since the operation
of the account was far from being viewed as inappropriate. The Respondents
sought to continue to operate the account pending a final determination on the
matter, and an authorization to proceed with the continued operation of the
account was provided to them by the OSB. When the final decision was made by
the OSB to close the account, they complied. The Respondents thus submit that
the Applicant is barred from arguing that there was any impropriety in the
manner in which the Interest Account was operated since it was operated with
the knowledge and authorization of officials from the OSB.
[40]
The Delegate made findings of fact concluding
that the continued operation of the Interest Account had been authorized by the
OSB. These findings of fact were based on the assessment of the credibility of
the witnesses who testified and were reasonable given the totality of the
evidence submitted. Consequently, the Respondents argue that this Court should
not disturb such findings of fact in judicial review.
[41]
Alternatively, even if the continued operation
of the Interest Account was not approved, the Respondents argue that no
impropriety was established in regard to its operation. The Applicant failed to
adduce any evidence to prove that any creditor lost money as a result of the
operation of the Interest Account. Moreover, subsection 154(1) of the Act
requires the trustee to forward to the Superintendent the unclaimed dividends
in estate accounts. When the Respondents were required to close the account,
they complied and remitted the balance of $19,553.27 in the account to the
Superintendent with the detail trial balance for the account when it was
closed. Overall, taken as a whole, the operations of the account were not in
contravention of the Act and were to the benefit of the estates. Consequently,
no breach of conduct can be found to have occurred irrespective of whether or
not the account had been authorized.
[42]
Concerning the allegations contained under
heading D relating to monies withdrawn for various uses from the Interest
Account, the Respondents argue that the impugned transactions in the Interest
Account were known to the OSB prior to its approval of the continued operation
of this account. The Applicant refused to admit that the account approval had
been provided; consequently the Applicant adduced no evidence of the parameters
of this approval or establishing that the Respondents exceeded this approval.
The Delegate was thus justified in concluding that these operations were within
the ambit of the authorization provided, and he certainly committed no
reviewable error in so finding.
[43]
The Respondents argue that all the allegations,
including those set out under headings B, E, H, J and K, are subject to
principles of strict liability, and consequently a defence of due diligence is
available to them to counter these allegations, and that consequently the
Delegate did not err in so finding.
[44]
The Respondents further argue that the Delegate
did not err in finding that they had proved due diligence countering the allegations
under headings B, E, H, J and K. They note that for the period of 1993 to 2007
covered by the allegations made against them, they would have managed
approximately 9,954 estates representing close to $100 million in transactions.
They also note that the average transaction size was $241.92 and that there
were approximately 108,160 transactions. They further note that they did not
benefit financially from any errors nor were the estates or creditors deprived
of any monies.
[45]
Finally, the Respondents argue that it was open
for the Delegate to issue a reprimand as a sanction for the two minor offences
he found them to have committed, since the range of sanctions set out in
subsection 14.01 of the Act should not be construed as limited to those
enumerated therein.
[46]
Consequently, the Respondents ask this Court to
dismiss the judicial review application with costs against the Applicant.
The Issues
[47]
The principal issues to be dealt with in this
judicial review can be stated as follows:
(a)
What is the applicable standard of review?
(b)
Did the Delegate commit reviewable errors in
finding as a matter of fact that the
operations of the Interest Account had been authorized
(allegations under headings
A and D)?
(c)
Are the allegations under headings B, E, H, J
and K subject to a due diligence
defence?
(d)
If these allegations are subject to a due
diligence defence, did the Delegate commit
reviewable errors in finding that such a defence had been made out
to counter the allegations under headings B, E, H, J and K?
(e)
Is a reprimand an available remedy or sanction
under the scheme of the Act?
(f)
Are prosecutorial partiality and overzealousness
factors to take into account in
proceedings under sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act, and if so, did
the Delegate commit reviewable errors in finding as a matter of fact that such
factors were present in this case?
The Standard of Review
[48]
The Applicant asserts on the basis of Jacques
Roy v. Sylvie Laperrière, 2006 FC 1386, Canada (Attorney General) v.
Jacques Roy, 2006 FC 1387 and Canada (Attorney General) v. Jacques Roy,
2007 FCA 410, that questions of law decided by the Delegate are reviewable on a
standard of correctness, while questions of fact are to be reviewed on a
standard of reasonableness.
[49]
On the other hand, the Respondents asserts on
the basis of Jacques Roy v. Sylvie Laperrière, supra, and Sheriff
v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FC 305,
that both questions of fact and mixed questions of fact and of law decided by
the Delegate are reviewable on a standard of reasonableness. Moreover, the
Respondents add, on the basis of Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190 (“Dunsmuir”), that certain questions of law are also
reviewable on a standard of reasonableness, most notably questions of law in
the interpretation of an administrative tribunal’s constitutive legislation or
for which the administrative tribunal has special expertise. The Respondents argue
that the determination of whether strict liability as opposed to absolute
liability applies to trustee misconduct allegations under the Act is one of
those issues of law reviewable on a standard of reasonableness, as is the issue
of the availability of a reprimand as a remedy or sanction under the Act, since
both these issues of law fall under the special expertise of the Delegate.
[50]
Dunsmuir, at para. 62 established a two-step
process for determining the standard of review. First, the Court ascertains
whether the jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the
degree of deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of
question. Second, where the first inquiry proves unfruitful, the Court
must proceed to an analysis of the factors making it possible to identify the
proper standard of review.
[51]
Prior jurisprudence has held that issues of jurisdiction, fundamental
justice and procedural fairness arising out of proceedings before delegates of
the Superintendent acting under section 14.01 of the Act are to be reviewed on
a standard of correctness: Sam Lévy & Associés v. Canada (Superintendent
of Bankruptcy), 2005 FC 702, at paragraphs 26-27; Sheriff v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2006 FCA 139 at paragraph 24. Likewise, questions of
law arising in such proceedings have also been held to be subject to review on
a standard of correctness: Jacques Roy v. Sylvie Laperrière, 2006 FC 1386 at paragraph 70; Canada (Attorney General) v.
Jacques Roy, 2006 FC 1387 at paragraph 21; Sheriff v. Canada (Attorney General), 2005 FC 305 at paragraph 32. However, questions of mixed
law and fact have been held reviewable on the standard of reasonableness simpliciter:
Jacques Roy v. Sylvie Laperrière, supra, at paragraphs 21 to 23; Canada (Attorney General) v. Jacques Roy, supra,
at paragraph 19; Sheriff v. Canada (Attorney General), supra, at
paragraph 30.
[52]
Since this judicial review is the first to arise
in the context of sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act since the decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir, and since the Respondents are
arguing that pursuant to Dunsmuir, a standard of reasonableness rather
than that of correctness should be applied to the issues of law raised by these
proceedings, it is appropriate to carry out a standard of review analysis in
this case.
[53]
Dunsmuir states at
paragraph 64 that the standard of review analysis must be contextual and is
dependent on the application of a number of relevant factors, including: (1)
the presence or absence of a privative clause; (2) the purpose of the tribunal
as determined by interpretation of enabling legislation; (3) the nature of the
question at issue, and; (4) the expertise of the tribunal.
[54]
Here the decision of the Delegate is not protected by a privative
clause. This tends to imply that a lesser degree of deference, particularly on
issues of law, is to be shown by a reviewing court. No appeal is provided for,
however subsection 14.02(5) of the Act specifically sets out that a decision of
the Superintendent, and by implication of his Delegate, concerning the
professional misconduct of a bankruptcy trustee, may be reviewed and set aside
pursuant to the Federal Courts Act. Though this provision may be
inserted in the concerned section principally in order to clearly point out the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal Court in reviewing decisions of the
Superintendent or his delegate under sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act, it
nevertheless indicates a clear intention by Parliament to subject such
decisions to judicial review, and it constitutes to some extent an explicit
legislative repudiation of any privative clause in regard to such decisions.
[55]
The purpose of such proceedings under the Act is also instructive. The
Superintendent is entrusted under paragraphs 5(3) (a) and (b) of the Act to
issue a licence to a bankruptcy trustee and to monitor the conditions under
which such licence has been issued, and to take appropriate action if these
conditions no longer exist. The Superintendent also has vast powers under
paragraphs 5(4) (c), (d) and (d.1) of the Act to issue directives relating to
the powers, duties and functions of trustees, governing the criteria to be applied
in determining whether a trustee licence is to be issued, governing the
qualifications and activities of trustees, and respecting the rules governing
hearings held for the purposes of section 14.02 of the Act.
[56]
Accordingly, subsection 14.01(1) of the Act specifically empowers the
Superintendent to carry out an investigation into the conduct of a trustee. Where,
following such an investigation, it appears that the trustee has not properly
performed his duties, has improperly managed an estate, has not fully complied
with the Act, its General Rules, or the directives of the Superintendent, or
any law with regard to the proper management of an estate, or if it is in the
public interest to do so, and following a notice to this effect and subject to
the trustee being afforded a reasonable opportunity for a hearing under section
14.02 of the Act, the Superintendent may cancel or suspend the licence of a
trustee, place conditions or limitations on such licence, and require the
trustee to make restitution to an estate.
[57]
These vast powers, and the general scheme of the Act, tend to imply a
high degree of deference to the Superintendent in the management of bankruptcy
trustees and of the licencing scheme concerning such trustees. These powers are
clearly geared to the protection of the public, and their purpose is to ensure
that, in light of the key role played by bankruptcy trustees under the overall
scheme of the Act, that a very high standard of probity, honesty and competence
be maintained by such trustees across Canada, and that this be accomplished
through a serious licencing scheme involving ongoing supervision and review by
the Superintendent and providing for remedial measures and sanctions in
appropriate circumstances.
[58]
It should be noted that the expertise of the Superintendent is not at
stake here. Rather, under the scheme set out under sections 14.01 and 14.02 of
the Act, the Superintendent has, for the most part, delegated his authorities
under these sections to senior members of his staff in regard to the
prosecutorial aspect of these provisions, and to outside third parties, more
often then not retired superior court judges or practicing lawyers, in regard
to the adjudicative aspects of these provisions (see Sam Lévy & Associés
v. Canada (Superintendent of Bankruptcy), 2005 FC 702 at para. 145 and 156).
The delegations of the prosecutorial aspects are long term delegations, while
the adjudicative delegations are rather made on an ad hoc basis.
[59]
The questions at issue in this case principally involve facts or issues
of mixed law and fact. Such issues are generally reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness: Dunsmuir, supra, at paragraph 53. The nature of the
regime set out in the Act and the nature of the questions of fact and of mixed
law and fact here at issue lead me to conclude that the appropriate standard of
review in this case involving issues of fact or mixed issues of law and fact is
reasonableness.
[60]
However, there are two questions of law which were addressed by the
Delegate and which must be reviewed here, namely if the
allegations under headings B, E, H, J and K are subject to strict liability or
absolute liability, and whether the Act provides for a reprimand as a form of
sanction or remedy. The absence of a privative clause, the nature of the
regime set out in the Act, the nature of the two questions of law at issue, and
the ad hoc basis on which adjudicative delegations are made under the
Act, lead me to conclude that the appropriate standard of review on these two
questions of law is correctness.
[61]
The Respondents argue that under the principles set out
in Dunsmuir these two issues should be reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness. I disagree. The Supreme Court in Dunsmuir noted that not
every question of law is subject to the standard of correctness, and that
consequently in certain circumstances, such as when an administrative tribunal
is interpreting its home statute, reasonableness could govern the standard of
review. However, while reiterating this principle, the Supreme Court of Canada
took care in Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa [2009] 1
S.C.R. 339 at paragraph 44 to state that “[e]rrors of law are generally
governed by a correctness standard”. The principle, therefore, is that
questions of law are to be reviewed on a standard of correctness; and the
exception is that they should be reviewed, in certain particular circumstances,
under a standard of reasonableness.
[62]
One of these exceptions is where the
administrative tribunal is interpreting its enabling or “home” statute. In such
circumstances there is a presumption that the tribunal’s interpretation of such
statute is normally reviewable on a standard of reasonableness, provided the
administrative tribunal has explicit or implied authority to decide questions
of law: Dunsmuir, supra, at paras. 54-55: Association
des courtiers et agents immobiliers du Québec v. Proprio Direct Inc.,
[2008] 2 S.C.R. 195 at para. 21, Khosa, supra, at para. 25; Nolan v.
Kerry (Canada) Inc., 2009 SCC 39 at paras. 33
and 34; Canadian Federal Pilots Association v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2009 FCA 223 at paras. 36 and 51.
[63]
This presumption can however be rebutted,
particularly where questions of law of central importance, or true questions of
jurisdiction or vires are at issue in the interpretation of the enabling
statute: Dunsmuir, supra, at paras. 55, 60 and 61. The circumstances
under which the presumption may be rebutted are not limited to those set out in
Dunsmuir. Thus, as example, the presumption can also be rebutted where
an administrative tribunal has developed two
conflicting lines of authority concerning the interpretation of its enabling
statute: Canada (Attorney General) v. Mowat, 2009 FCA 309, at para. 45; Abdoulrab v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board), 2009 ONCA 491 at para. 48.
[64]
In this case, it is first useful to note that the Bankruptcy and
Insolvency Act is not a “home statute” in the same sense as statutes
setting up comprehensive labour relations dispute settlement mechanisms may be.
The Act is a comprehensive scheme for the orderly resolution of bankruptcy and
insolvency cases across Canada, and superior courts are generally called upon
to interpret and apply its often complex provisions pursuant, notably, to
section 183 of the Act. Since the licencing scheme for bankruptcy trustees and
the related disciplinary scheme set out in sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act
are intimately related to the entire scheme of the Act itself, it would be
incongruent to somehow apply a principle of judicial deference to the multiple
legal issues arising from the Act simply because they are being dealt with
within the context of a professional misconduct hearing.
[65]
In addition, the two issues of law at issue here transcend the interests
of the parties in this case. Applying strict liability with its attending defence of due diligence rather than absolute liability in
the context of professional misconduct proceedings is a legal issue of
importance which does not attract a standard of deference. The defence of due diligence is either available or not, and it
would be unacceptable if, on a standard of reasonableness, different legal
principles would apply to such a critical issue. Such a result would discredit
the legal system.
[66]
Third, the concept of absolute liability and the creation of a
demarcation between strict liability and absolute liability flow from the
common law and are a creation of the judiciary: R. v.
Sault Ste. Marie, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1299 at pages
1324-25 (“Sault Ste. Marie”). Consequently, the exception
relating to the interpretation of the home statute clearly does not apply to
that legal issue.
[67]
The same conclusion on the
standard of review is reached in regard to the availability of a reprimand as a
sanction under subsection 14.01(1) of the Act. As noted by Brown, Donald J. M.
and Evans, J. M., in Judicial review of administrative action in Canada, Canvasback Publishing, 1998 (loose-leaf), at 14:4523:
“Today,
notwithstanding a standard-of-review analysis, courts typically determine on
the basis of correctness whether a tribunal had the authority to award
compensation, exemplary damages, interest, costs, to substitute one penalty for
another, or to make other remedial orders.
Of
course, if the various remedies are within the jurisdiction of an
agency, then generally its exercise of discretion in the selection of the
remedy will be subject to curial deference on review.” [Emphasis added].
[68]
This approach was moreover followed in Jacques Roy v. Sylvie
Laperrière, supra, at paragraph 70 where a standard of correctness was
applied to the interpretation of subsection 14.01(1) of the Act concerning the
availability of possible sanctions under that provision.
[69]
In conclusion, a standard of reasonableness shall be applied to the
review of all issues of fact or of mixed law and fact in this case, and a standard
of correctness shall be applied to the two questions of law raised by these
proceedings.
Did the Delegate commit reviewable
errors in finding as a matter of fact that the operations of the Interest
Account had been authorized (allegations under headings A and D)?
[70]
As noted above, findings of fact by the Delegate are to be reviewed on a
standard of reasonableness.
[71]
The Applicant alleges that the findings of fact by the Delegate in
regard to the operation of the Interest Account and various related allegations
run contrary to the documentary evidence and the testimony in the record and
are thus unreasonable.
[72]
The decision of the Delegate in this matter is entirely based on his
assessment of the evidence, and particularly his assessment of the credibility
of the testimony of the various witnesses he heard. The Delegate decided to
accept the testimony of Mr. Allen W. MacLeod over that of other witnesses. This
is dealt with extensively by the Delegate in paragraphs 55 to 61 of the
Liability Decision:
[55] After it was
recommended that the account be closed, the trustees wrote to Claude Leduc, the
District Assistant Superintendent at the Office of the Superintendent in
Bankruptcy. The letter read in part as follows:
…The monitors state that we
should not be including the estimated interest in the ordinary accounts that
the interest account should be closed and the funds in this account should be
forwarded to the Superintendent of Bankruptcy as undistributed assets. This
matter was discussed with the monitor at some length, and while he agreed with
some of our arguments, he said the final decision rests with you. We’d like to
discuss this matter with you in more detail.
[56] According to the
evidence of Allen MacLeod, which I accept, he arranged to meet with Mr. Leduc
to discuss the matter. He met with him on September 24, 2001 as noted in Mr.
Allen MacLeod’s daybook. There was no follow-up confirmation, but according to
Allen MacLeod, Mr. Leduc authorized them to continue with the interest account.
[57] Claude Leduc testified
at the hearing and all he could say was he did not recall any meeting. He
could not deny that such a meeting took place. He did say, however, he did not
think he would have authorized the continuation of the interest account.
[58] Mr. Leduc has been
retired for a number of years and, unfortunately, all his files and records
were either destroyed or lost. As a result, he had no way in which to refresh
his memory or to verify or reject the evidence of Allen MacLeod. I therefore accept
the evidence of Allen MacLeod and conclude they were authorized to continue the
interest account until they received notice in March of 2003 from Jean-Louis
Boucher, then a senior analyst with the OSB, to close the account and to
forward all monies to the Superintendent of Bankruptcy.
[59] Although there is some
issue as to whether the trustees forwarded all of the monies, I am satisfied
with the explanation given by Allen MacLeod that any discrepancy was as a
result of adjustments made to the estates.
[60] On March 31, 2003
Jean-Louis Boucher wrote to Donald MacLeod confirming that they received the
monies and there was a balance of $1126.00 owing in order to close the
account. In that letter, he concludes by stating:
This should conclude our concerns
relating to the accumulation of undistributed funds in the account called
interest.
[61] On that basis, I find
that there was no impropriety or misconduct on behalf of the trustees in the
operation of the interest account.
[73]
The Applicant contends that the Delegate should have considered the
documentary evidence in deciding the credibility of the testimony of Mr.
MacLeod, and in particular notes that the Respondents failed to notify the OSB
of the authorization to operate the account though they had many opportunities
to do so in response to various reports and correspondence with the OSB
concerning this matter. This, the Applicant contends, renders suspicious the
assertion of Mr. MacLeod that he had forgotten about the authorization, but
that at a meeting in September of 2006 he had jogged his memory when the issue
was raised and had remembered receiving the authorization.
[74]
The record however shows that there was ample evidence before the
Delegate to justify his findings of fact on the authorization of the Interest
Account. Indeed, in response to a report from the OSB requesting the closure of
the Interest Account, the Respondents wrote to Claude Leduc, the then District
Assistant Superintendent of the OSB, on September 21, 2001, seeking further
discussions on the matter in light of the fact that representatives of the OSB
agreed with some of the arguments of the Respondents concerning the
appropriateness of maintaining such an account and the perceived benefits which
may accrue to creditors. The pertinent extract of that letter is set out in
paragraph 55 of the Liability Decision.
[75]
The testimony of the Respondent Allen W. MacLeod on this issue,
reproduced in the transcript of hearing pages 690 to 706 (Application Record
Vol. 11 pages 2622 to 2638), shows that a meeting was subsequently held with
Mr. Leduc to discuss this matter. This meeting was recorded by the Respondent
in his appointment book. The Respondent Allen MacLeod testified as to what was
discussed at that meeting and confirmed that an authorization to operate the
account pending a final decision on the matter had been provided by Mr. Leduc.
[76]
On the other hand, Mr. Leduc had no recollection of the meeting, but
since he was meeting quite often with the Respondent, he could not deny that
this specific meeting had been held (transcript of hearing pages 575 to 588,
reproduced in the Application Record Vol. 11 pages 2508 to 2522). In
cross-examination, Mr. Leduc noted that “I’m not saying there was not a
meeting. I’m just saying I don’t remember it.”(transcript of hearing at page
581, reproduced in the Application Record Vol. 11 page 2514). It should also be
noted that all the records of Mr. Leduc with the OSB had been destroyed
following his retirement.
[77]
Some time subsequent to this meeting, Mr. Jean-Louis Boucher, who was a
senior analyst with the OSB, sent an email to the Respondents in March of 2003
confirming that the OSB no longer had concerns about the Interest Account. In
addition, Mr. Boucher’s letter of March 2003 confirming the settlement of all
matters related to the Interest Account was further confirmed in a memo dated
January 27, 2005 from Richard Hunter of the OSB, the pertinent extracts of
which are reproduced at paragraph 49 of the Liability Decision. In that memo,
Mr. Hunter confirmed that Mr. Boucher “did not acknowledge the seriousness of
what had been done to the audit report, adding that everything seemed to be
settled” [emphasis added].
[78]
All leads to the conclusion that the findings of the Delegate in regard
to the authorization of the account are reasonable and fall “within a range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law” (Dunsmuir at paragraph 47).
[79]
The Applicant further argues that even if the Interest Account was
authorized, this authorization could not extend to certain of the transactions
which occurred in the account. This argument forms the basis of the Applicant’s
allegations under heading D.
[80]
However, since the Delegate found that the operation of the Interest
Account had been authorized by the OSB until the decision to close it was made
effective, and in light of the fact that the OSB was aware of impugned
transactions referred to in the allegations under heading D when this
authorization was provided, the finding of the Delegate that no misconduct had
occurred in relation to these heading D allegations flows from his finding of
fact under heading A. Moreover, as noted above, Mr. Boucher of the OSB further
confirmed to the Respondents in March 2003 that all concerns related to the
Interest Account were resolved. All this leads to the conclusion that the
findings of the Delegate in regard to the allegation under heading D are also
reasonable.
[81]
With all due respect, the Applicant is seeking to have this Court carry
out a new assessment of the evidence and of the credibility of the witnesses,
and to substitute this alternative assessment to the assessment carried out by
the Delegate. The case law has consistently noted that a reviewing court has no
authority to proceed in such a fashion, and this Court will not do so in this
case.
[82]
Consequently, the findings of the Delegate respecting the allegations
under headings A and D shall not be disturbed.
Are the allegations under headings B, E, H, J and K
subject to a defence of due diligence?
Review of the jurisprudence
[83]
Under the principles set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in Sault
Ste. Marie, offences are classified under three categories: those for which
a culpable intent (or mens rea) must be established by the prosecution,
those said to be of “absolute liability” for which proof of the commission of
the prohibited act entails culpability, and those said to be of “strict
liability”, where proof of the prohibited act prima facie imports the
offence, but the accused may avoid liability by proving either that he
reasonably believed in a mistaken set of facts which, if true, would render the
act innocent, or either that he took all reasonable care to avoid the act : Sault
Ste. Marie at pages 1325-26.
[84]
It did not take long for this approach to be applied to professional
misconduct situations. Indeed, in Ghilzon v. Royal College of Dental
Surgeons, [1979], 94 D.L.R. (3d) 617, [1979] O.J. No. 4037, the Divisional
Court of the High Court of Justice of Ontario, sitting in appeal from a decision
of the Discipline Committee of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario,
found that the professional misconduct offence of the dentist at issue in that
case fell under the category of strict liability set out by the Supreme Court
of Canada in the Sault Ste. Marie case, and that consequently the
concerned dentist could avoid liability by proving that he took all reasonable
care to avoid the offence.
[85]
The availability of strict liability defences
within the framework of professional disciplinary proceedings appears to be
well settled in Quebec (see among other decisions Chauvin c. Beaucage, 2008
QCCA 922 at para. 88). It is also recognized in New Brunswick under Mann v.
New Brunswick Pharmaceutical Society, (1987) 35 D.L.R. (4th)
426, a case involving professional misconduct by a pharmacist, and in British
Columbia in a case involving professional misconduct of a teacher: Stuart v.
British Columbia College of Teachers, (2005) 254 D.L.R. (4th)
154. In Mann, the following sentence summarizes the applicable principle
(at page 428):
In my opinion the offence of
professional misconduct in failing to maintain the professional standard set
out in s. 13.12 of the Regulations, in the circumstances of this case, must be
classified as a public welfare or strict liability offence with respect to
which an accused person may rely on a defence of due
diligence or reasonable care.”
[86]
Though the parties also referred to numerous cases involving liquor licences, the vast majority of which recognize the
availability of strict liability defences, I find these
cases of little pertinence to the issue at stake here: Papa Holding Ltd. v.
Northwest Territories, [1987] N.W.T. R. 96; Whistler Mountain Ski Corp.
v. British Columbia, 2002 BCCA 426; Shooters 222 Restaurant v. Ontario
(Securities Commission), [2004] O.J. No. 5595; 504174 N. B. Ltd. (c.o.b.
Choo Choo’s) v. New Brunswick (Minister of Public Safety),
2005 NBCA 18.
[87]
Notwithstanding the numerous case law recognizing the availability of
strict liability defences in professional misconduct
proceedings, the Applicant argues that a reconsideration of the issue was
carried out by the Ontario Divisional Court in Gordon Capital Corp. v.
Ontario, (1991), 50 O.A.C. 258; [1991] O.J. No. 934 (QL) (“Gordon
Capital”) and in Carruthers v. College of Nurses of Ontario, (1996)
31 O.R. (3d) 377; [1996] O.J. No. 4275 (QL) (“Carruthers”), and that
consequently this Court should follow this second line of jurisprudence and
deny strict liability defences to bankruptcy trustees involved in professional
misconduct proceedings under the Act. The Applicant further argues that the
scheme of the Act regarding the licencing of trustees would be better served by
such an approach.
[88]
Gordon Capital concerned an appeal from a decision of the Ontario
Securities Commission placing conditions on the registration of Gordon Capital
Corporation (“Gordon”) as an investment dealer under the Ontario Securities
Act and thus prohibiting Gordon from carrying out certain stock trading
activities for a period of 10 days. This suspension followed unintended and
inadvertent breaches of provisions of the Securities Act concerning
take-over bid rules and insider reporting rules in the context of heavy trading
in the securities of ITL Industries Limited by a Toronto Stock Exchange floor
trader working for Gordon. Accordingly, a strict liability defence of due diligence was raised by Gordon but
rejected by the Ontario Securities Commission. On appeal, the Divisional Court noted the following
concerning the availability of such a defence (at para. 28 and 33 to 35):
As
indicated earlier, Gordon is not charged with an offence. We have not been
referred to any case holding, either expressly or by analogy, that the due
diligence defence applies to a subsection 26(1) hearing.
The
general legislative purpose of the Act and the OSC's role thereunder is to
preserve the integrity of the capital markets of Ontario and
protect the investing public. In this context, the proceedings against Gordon
and Bond under subsection 26(1) of the Act are properly characterized as
regulatory, protective or corrective. The primary purpose of the proceedings is
to maintain standards of behaviour and regulate the conduct of those who are
licensed to carry on business in the securities industry. The proceedings are
not criminal or quasi-criminal in their design or punitive in their object.
This distinction has been made in a number of cases involving proceedings of a
regulatory or public protective nature such as that under Subsection 26(1) of
the Act. […]
Of
course if Gordon had been charged with breaches of the Act under s. 118, the
defence of due diligence would have been available to it. Such charges result
in criminal or quasi-criminal proceedings with penal consequences; a conviction
under s. 118 can lead to a fine or imprisonment or to both.
The
decisions in the last mentioned cases support the proposition that the
classification of criminal and quasi-criminal offenses into categories of
"absolute liability", "strict liability" and full
"mens rea" as defined in R. v. Sault Ste. Marie is irrelevant
to proceedings under subsection 26(1). The fact that Gordon may have acted
without malevolent motive and inadvertently is not determinative of the right
of the OSC to exercise its regulatory and discretionary powers to impose a
sanction upon Gordon.
For
the above reasons, Gordon has failed to demonstrate that the OSC has committed
any error in law in rejecting the defence of due diligence.
[89]
In Carruthers, decided a few years after Gordon Capital, the
Divisional Court was sitting in appeal of the Discipline Committee of the
College of Nurses of Ontario which had found the appellant nurse guilty of
professional misconduct for having inappropriately kissed a mental patient
under her care. In the past, the patient had had a traumatic lesbian
relationship with a nurse. The appellant admitted having kissed the patient,
but claimed she intended no harm and thus raised a strict
liability defence of a reasonable, albeit mistaken, belief in the therapeutic
value of her conduct. The Divisional Court found that it was up to the disciplinary committee to determine if,
in the circumstances, the allegation of professional misconduct had occurred.
In so doing, the Divisional Court questioned the availability of strict liability defences in the
context of disciplinary proceedings (at pages 392-93 of Carruthers).
However, the Divisional Court further found that a determination whether the
conduct of the nurse in that case constituted professional misconduct involved
a consideration of all the circumstances, including “the intent, purpose or
motive of the member engaging in the conduct” (at pages 391 and 393-94 of Carruthers). Consequently, though the availability of
strict liability defences on the basis of Sault Ste.
Marie was questioned in that case, the professional misconduct at issue was
nevertheless determined according to a sui generis approach
incorporating the consideration of the intent, purpose or motive involved in
the alleged wrongdoing.
[90]
The sui generis nature of professional misconduct proceedings has
been recognized by the Federal Court of Appeal within the context of
proceedings involving bankruptcy trustees in Canada
(Attorney General) v. Roy , 2007 FCA 410 at
paragraph 11, referring to the decision of the Quebec Court of Appeal in Béliveau
v. Comité de discipline du Barreau du Québec, [1992] R.J.Q. 1822.
Consequently, principles of criminal law do not necessarily apply to
professional conduct proceedings. However, though professional conduct
proceedings are sui generis, “there are similarities and overlapping
elements in terms of the fault required for a finding of guilt” Canada
(Attorney General) v. Roy, supra, at paragraph 11).
[91]
A sui generis approach to professional misconduct cases appears
to be appropriate in determining if a particular alleged
professional misconduct is subject or not to a defence
of due diligence or reasonable care. The availability of such a defence in a particular case will depend on the nature of the
alleged misconduct and on the terms of the legislative or regulatory provisions
which are claimed to have been breached. A review of these provisions will, in
most cases, show if an element of reasonable care is involved or not in the
circumstances of a particular professional activity. If the legislative or
regulatory provision at issue shows that an element of reasonable care is
involved, then the defence of due diligence will
generally be available to counter an allegation of professional misconduct in
regard to that activity.
Pertinent provisions of the
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and Related Rules
[92]
Determinations as to the availability of strict liability defences for the Respondents cannot be carried out in a vacuum. It
is therefore important in each case to clearly review the legislative or regulatory
provisions under which the alleged professional misconduct is said to have
occurred in order to ascertain if these provisions include an element of
reasonable care or can be otherwise interpreted as making
available to the Respondents a strict liability defence.
[93]
In this case, a review of the Act and Rules shows that for each of the
professional misconduct allegations under headings B, E, H, J and K, the
concerned sections of the Act and the Rules, read together, refer to wording
such as “due care” or “reasonably ought to know”, which imply that, for these
provisions at least, a defence of due diligence is
available to the Respondents.
[94]
The allegations under heading B, concerning applications for discharge
while still having a bank balance in an estate, are said by the Applicant in
paragraph 32 of her Report to involve breaches of sections 13.5 and subsection
154(1) of the Act as well as to sections 36 and 45 of the Bankruptcy and
Insolvency General Rules (the “Rules”). When these provisions are read
together, it becomes apparent that an element of “due care” is involved on the
part of the trustee, leading to the conclusion that a defence
of due diligence is thus available to counter these professional misconduct
allegations:
13.5 A trustee shall comply with the prescribed Code
of Ethics.
154. (1) Before proceeding to discharge, the
trustee shall forward to the Superintendent for deposit, according to the
directives of the Superintendent, with the Receiver General the unclaimed
dividends and undistributed funds that the trustee possesses, other than
those exempted by the General Rules, and shall provide a list of the names
and the post office addresses, in so far as known, of the creditors entitled
to the unclaimed dividends, showing the amount payable to each creditor.
36. Trustees shall perform their duties in a timely
manner and carry out their functions with competence, honesty,
integrity and due care.
45. Trustees shall not sign any document, including
a letter, report, statement, representation or financial statement that they
know, or reasonably ought to know, is false or misleading, and shall not
associate themselves with such a document in any way, including by adding a
disclaimer of responsibility after their signature.
[Emphasis added]
|
13.5 Les
syndics sont tenus de se conformer au code de déontologie prescrit.
154. (1)
Avant de procéder à sa libération, le syndic fait parvenir au surintendant,
pour qu’ils soient déposés, conformément aux instructions de ce dernier, chez
le receveur général, les dividendes non réclamés et les fonds non distribués
qui restent entre ses mains, pourvu que ces dividendes et ces fonds ne
fassent pas l’objet d’une exemption aux termes des Règles générales; il
fournit une liste des noms et des adresses postales, dans la mesure où ils
sont connus, des créanciers qui ont droit aux dividendes non réclamés en
indiquant le montant payable à chacun d’eux.
36. Le
syndic s’acquitte de ses obligations dans les meilleurs délais et exerce ses
fonctions avec compétence, honnêteté, intégrité, prudence et
diligence.
45. Le syndic ne signe aucun document, notamment
une lettre, un rapport, une déclaration,
un exposé et un état financier, qu’il sait ou devrait raisonnablement
savoir être faux ou trompeur, ni ne s’associe de quelque manière à un tel
document, y compris en y joignant sous sa signature un déni de
responsabilité.
|
[95]
The provisions of section 36 of the Rules clearly refer to the concepts
of “competence” and “due care”, thus implying the availability of a due diligence
defence.
[96]
Moreover, the provisions of section 45 of the Rules
were reviewed by the Federal Court of Appeal in Canada (Attorney General) v. Roy, supra. In that case, it was found that section 45
establishes objective responsibility incompatible with a requirement of a mens
rea of intent to deceive. The Federal Court of Appeal however found, at
paragraph 25 of that decision, that the objective responsibility under this
section 45 is to be assessed following the principles set out by the Supreme
Court of Canada in R v. Creighton, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 3 at page 58:
Objective mens rea, on the
other hand, is not concerned with what the accused intended or knew. Rather,
the mental fault lies in the failure to direct the mind to a risk which a
reasonable person would have appreciated. Objective mens rea is not
concerned with what was actually in the accused mind, but with what should have
been there, had the accused proceeded reasonably. [Emphasis added]
[97]
Consequently, a defence of due diligence was open to the Respondents in
regard to the allegations set out under heading B.
[98]
This is also the case concerning the allegations under heading E
involving minor errors in certain statements of receipts and
disbursements. In respect to allegations under heading E, the Applicant refers
in paragraphs 46 to 50 of her Report to alleged breaches to section 13.5 and to
subsections 23(1.3), 152(1) and 246(3) of the Act and to sections 36, 39 and 45
of the Rules. As already noted, sections 36 and 45 of the Rules, reproduced
above, clearly allow for a defence of due diligence. Consequently, a defence
of due diligence was also open to the Respondents in regard to the allegations
set out under heading E.
[99]
The allegations under heading H concern the co-mingling
of funds in consolidated trust accounts. In respect to allegations under this
heading, the Applicant refers in paragraphs 68, 69 and 72 of her Report to
alleged breaches concerning principally subsections 5(5) and 25(1) of
the Act and sections 5 and 13 of Directive no. 5 issued November 17, 1994 and
concerning Estate Funds and Banking. These provisions read as follows:
5. (5) Every person to whom a directive is issued by the
Superintendent under paragraph (4)(b) or (c) shall comply with
the directive in the manner and within the time specified therein.
25. (1) When acting under the authority of this
Act, a trustee shall, without delay, deposit in a bank all funds received for
an estate in a separate trust account for each estate.
5. Subject to section 6, an individual trustee may,
with the approval of the District Assistant Superintendent, operate one
consolidated trust account for summary administrations pursuant to paragraph
155(g) of the Act and another for consumer proposals pursuant to subsection
66.26(2) of the Act […]
13. Where an estate is converted
from a summary to an ordinary administration, and where the estate funds
therein were previously held in a consolidated trust bank account, a trustee
shall immediately open a separate trust bank account to hold such estate funds.
|
5. (5) Les
personnes visées par les instructions du surintendant sont tenues de s’y
conformer.
25. (1)
Lorsqu’il exerce les pouvoirs que lui confère la présente loi, le syndic
dépose sans délai dans une banque tous les fonds reçus pour le compte de
chaque actif dans un compte en fiducie ou en fidéicommis distinct.
5. Sous réserve de l’article 6, un
syndic individuel peut, avec l’approbation du surintendant adjoint de
district, gérer un compte bancaire consolidé en fiducie dans les cas
d’administrations sommaires, en vertu de l’alinéa 155g) de la Loi, et un
autre pour les propositions de consommateurs, en vertu du paragraphe 66.26(2)
de la Loi […]
13. Lorsqu’un actif passé d’une
administration sommaire à une administration ordinaire et que les fonds de
l’actif sont détenus dans un compte bancaire consolidé en fiducie, un syndic
doit immédiatement ouvrir un compte bancaire en fiducie distinct pour y déposer
ces fonds.
|
[100]
These provisions do not in themselves impart an
element of due diligence in the conduct required from a trustee. The provisions
rather require that a separate trust account for
each ordinary administration estate be maintained, and that a
separate bank account be set up immediately upon conversion of an estate from a
summary to an ordinary administration. However, these provisions cannot be read
in isolation. Section 36 of the Rules, reproduced above, sets out as a general
principle that trustees are to perform their duties with “due care”. Moreover,
section 52 of the Rules also sets out the following principle:
52. Trustees, in the course of their professional
engagements, shall apply due care to ensure that the actions carried
out by their employees, agents or mandataries or any persons hired by the
trustees on a contract basis are carried out in accordance with the same
professional standards that those trustees themselves are required to follow
in relation to that professional engagement. [Emphasis added]
|
52. Dans
toute activité professionnelle, le syndic veille avec prudence et diligence
à ce que les actes accomplis par ses mandataires, ses employés ou toute
personne engagée par lui à contrat respectent les mêmes normes
professionnelles qu’il aurait lui-même à appliquer relativement à cette
activité.
|
[101]
Consequently, on a proper construction of the
Act, the Rules and of Directive number 5, a defence of due diligence was open
to the Respondents to disclaim professional misconduct for the allegations set
out under heading H.
[102]
The allegations under heading J concern the use
of a “Third Party Account” to post certain estate transactions. The Applicant
refers in paragraph 82 of her Report to alleged breaches of section 13.5 and
subsections 25(1) and (2) of the Act and of paragraph 48b) of the Rules.
Section 13.5 and subsection 25(1) of the Act are reproduced above, while
subsection 25(2) of the Act and paragraph 48b) of the Rules read as follows:
25. (2) All payments made by a trustee under
subsection (1) shall be made by cheque drawn on the estate account or in such
manner as is specified in directives of the Superintendent.
48. Trustees who hold
money or other property in trust shall
[…]
(b) administer the
money or property with due care, subject to the laws, regulations and
terms applicable o the trust.
|
25. (2)
Tous paiements faits par un syndic sont opérés au moyen de chèques tirés sur
le compte de l’actif ou de la manière qui peut être spécifiée par les
instructions du surintendant.
48. Le syndic qui détient de l’argent ou d’autres biens en fiducie ou
en fidéicommis :
[…]
b) sous réserve des lois, règlements et
conditions applicables à la fiducie ou au fidéicommis, administre l’argent et
les biens avec prudence et diligence.
|
[103] The
administration of estate monies and property is subject to a
standard of conduct based on due care. Consequently, a professional misconduct
allegation based on paragraph 48b) of the Rules is subject to a defence of due
diligence. A defence of due diligence was thus open to the Respondents
in regard to the allegations set out under heading J.
[104] The allegations under heading K concern certain relatively small
amounts of money received by the Respondents but not deposited forthwith in an
account. The Applicant refers in paragraphs 87 and 88 of her Report to alleged
breaches of section 13.5 and of subsection 25(1) of the Act reproduced above
and of section 36 and paragraph 48b) of the Rules also reproduced above.
[105] As already noted, section 36 of the Rules requires that a bankruptcy
trustee perform his duties with “due care”, while paragraph 48b) of the Rules requires
trustees to administer money or property with “due care”. Consequently, a
defence of due diligence was also open to the Respondents in regard to the
allegations set out under heading K.
[106] In
conclusion, the Delegate was correct in finding that a defence of due diligence
was available to the Respondents in regard to the allegations under headings B,
E, H, J and K.
Did the Delegate commit
reviewable errors in finding as a matter of fact that a defence of due
diligence had been made out to counter the allegations under headings B, E, H,
J and K?
[107] Since
the defence of due diligence was open to the Respondents under headings B, E,
H, J and K, the Applicant submits that the Delegate made reviewable errors in
finding that such a defence had been properly made out by the Respondents to
counter all these allegations under these headings. This raises issues of mixed
law and fact which are to be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness.
[108] In
Sault Ste. Marie, at pages 1326 and 1331, the type of evidence required
to make out such a defence, was described as follows:
[Strict liability offences leave] it open to the accused to avoid liability by proving that
he took all reasonable care. This involves consideration of what a reasonable
man would have done in the circumstances. The defence will be available if the
accused reasonably believed in a mistaken set of facts which, if true, would
render the act or omission innocent, or if he took all reasonable steps to
avoid the particular event. These offences may properly be called offences of
strict liability. Mr. Justice Estey so referred to them in Hickey’s case.
[…]
Where
an employer is charged in respect of an act committed by an employee acting in
the course of employment, the question will be whether the act took place
without the accused's direction or approval, thus negating wilful involvement
of the accused, and whether the accused exercised all reasonable care by
establishing a proper system to prevent commission of the offence and by taking
reasonable steps to ensure the effective operation of the system. The
availability of the defence to a corporation will depend on whether such due
diligence was taken by those who are the directing mind and will of the
corporation, whose acts are therefore in law the acts of the corporation
itself. For a useful discussion of this matter in the context of a statutory
defence of due diligence see Tesco Supermarkets v. Nattras [[1972] A.C.
153.]. [Emphasis added]
[109] Though
the evidentiary burden of establishing due diligence was on the Respondents, in
this case the Delegate found that this burden had been discharged.
[110] The
Delegate, at paragraphs 62 to 68 of his Decision, reviewed the evidence
submitted concerning the alleged irregularities under heading B concerning
applications for trustee discharge while having a bank balance in the estate
account. The Delegate noted that these allegations concerned minor
irregularities which had been taken out of context by the Applicant. The
Delegate further found that these heading B irregularities had been
unintentional, and the result of administrative errors with no ensuing
prejudice to the estates or creditors, and with no benefits to the Respondents.
The Delegate also noted that some of the allegations related to old estates.
[111] In
regard to the due diligence defence relating to the irregularities under
heading B, the Delegate accepted the Respondents’ evidence that they had
handled 2177 estates in the concerned period, which included 89,268
transactions with a dollar transaction value of $21,595,694. The Delegate
obviously inferred from this evidence that the Respondents had thus established
a successful due diligence defence in light of the fact that the minor and
somewhat petty allegations under heading B represented a minuscule segment of
the overall transactions carried out by the Respondents.
[112] Deference
is to be shown to findings of fact and of mixed law and fact made by the
Delegate, and it is not the role of this Court to re-evaluate the evidence
submitted before the Delegate.
[113] Suffice
to say that in regard to the allegations under heading B, and after carefully
reviewing the record, including the transcripts of the testimony submitted
before the Delegate, the findings of fact and the inferences from these
findings made by the Delegate in this case concerning the defence
of due diligence in regard to the allegations under heading B fall within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law (Dunsmuir, supra, at paragraph 47). Consequently, these findings
will not be disturbed.
[114] Concerning
the allegations under heading E related to alleged inaccurate statements of
receipts and disbursements, the Delegate also found, at paragraph 75 of his
Decision, that the defence of due diligence had been
made out by the Respondents. The Delegate noted that these were minor
administrative errors made by the Respondents’ staff and which resulted in no
financial benefit to the Respondents. The Delegate, though not specifically so
stating, was obviously again accepting the evidence of the Respondents that
these irregularities represented a minuscule segment of their business, thus
leading to the inference that the Respondents had maintained due diligence
overall in their bankruptcy trustee business.
[115] Here
again, these are findings of fact and inferences from findings of fact which
squarely fall within the mandate of the Delegate, and which are therefore
entitled to a high degree of deference by this Court. After reviewing the
record, I also find that these findings of the Delegate fall within a range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law.
[116] Concerning
the allegations under heading H, the Delegate accepted the evidence submitted
by the Respondents showing that the summary estates which had been converted
into an ordinary administration and for which a bank account had not been
opened “forthwith” represented an infinitesimal proportion of the overall
estates administered by the Respondents during the relevant period. The evidence
submitted in this regard, and which was accepted by the Delegate, indicated
that the allegations represented 100th of 1% of the summary estates
which had been managed by the Respondents, thus leading to the inference that
the remaining 99.99% of these estates were properly managed with due care.
[117] The
Applicant takes exception with these findings of fact, both in regard to the
methodology used and the resulting inference made. However, here again, the
Applicant is seeking from this Court a reevaluation of the evidence, an
exercise which this Court is not entitled to carry out. The issue to address
here is whether the findings of fact and the inferences of fact and of mixed
fact and law drawn by the Delegate fall within a range of possible outcomes
defensible in respect of the facts and law. This is not an exercise of
reevaluating the evidence. In the circumstances of this case, and after careful
review of the record submitted, the findings of fact and the inferences drawn
by the Delegate from the evidence submitted concerning the allegations under
heading H are reasonable since they fall within an acceptable range of possible
outcomes. These findings shall therefore not be disturbed.
[118] A
different conclusion is however warranted in regard to the allegations under
headings J and K. The allegations under heading J concern the use of a “Third
Party Account” to post certain estate transactions, while the allegations under
heading K concern the receipt of certain payments by the Respondents which were
not deposited in the concerned estate accounts. The Respondent Allen W. MacLeod
admitted at the hearing before the Delegate that he had made mistakes with
regard to the allegations under both headings J and K.
[119] The
Delegate recognized these admissions at paragraphs 92 and 93 of his Decision,
and made no comments as to any additional evidence on a due diligence defence
to these allegations under headings J and K. A review of the transcript of
hearing also shows that no such evidence was tendered by the Respondents to counter
the allegations under headings J and K.
[120] The
entire defence of the Respondents to these allegations is set out in the
testimony in examination-in-chief of the Respondent Allen W. MacLeod before the
Delegate on October 9, 2008 and which is reproduced at pages 726 to 729 of the
transcript (reproduced at Volume 11 pp. 2658 to 2661 of the Applicant’s
Record):
Q. Now I want to talk about
allegation J.
[…]
Q. What did you do here and what
is your explanation with respect to this?
A. This is an administrative
error.
Q. Was there any money lost, Mr.
MacLeod?
A. No.
Q. Allegation K. […] When did you
first become aware that there was anything missing?
A. We prepared the report on the
bankruptcy application for discharge for Mr. and Mrs. Deady, which is required to
be sent to all of the parties involved in an estate including the bankrupt, the
creditors and the OSB.
After that was sent,
Mrs. Deady called me – I can’t tell you the specific date – and said to me, it
appears that there is money missing with respect to money that we paid to you.
While I spoke to her, as my recollection, I checked the account in case there
was a misallocation between her and her husband, between some other Deady, and
we looked and there was no money there for her. I told her at that point send
me a copy of your receipt so I have it. I will look in our file to see what we
have, and I suspect it has just been put into a wrong account.
[…]
Q. Did you take that money, Mr.
MacLeod?
A. No.
Q. What happened to that money?
A. No idea. I thought it might
show up, but it didn’t.
[121] With
no evidence of due diligence from the Respondents on these headings J and K
allegations, and no explanation by the Delegate in the Liability Decision as to
why and how a due diligence defence was sustained in regard to these
allegations, this Court must respectfully conclude that these findings of the
Delegate are such as to warrant intervention. Indeed, as noted in Dunsmuir,
supra, at paragraph 47, in judicial review, reasonableness is concerned
mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility
within the decision making process. In light of the clear admission of
wrongdoing by the Respondents regarding the allegations under headings J and K,
the absence of any evidence tendered by the Respondents in regard to a due
diligence defence to these allegations, and the absence of explanations by the
Delegate in the Liability Decision as to why a due diligence defence was held
to have been made out to counter these allegations, this Court concludes that
the findings of the Delegate concerning the adequacy of a due diligence defence
to these allegations cannot be sustained.
Is a reprimand an available remedy or
sanction under the scheme of the Act?
[122] As
already noted above, in the Sanctions Decision, the Delegate imposed a
reprimand to the Respondents for the breaches set out in the allegations under
heading L concerning certain delays in the administration of two estates. The
Applicant challenges the legality of such a sanction.
[123] Subsection
14.01(1) of the Act sets out the measures which are available in the event
professional misconduct of a bankruptcy trustee is found to have been established.
It is useful to reproduce again here those provisions of this subsection
dealing with the remedial measures or sanctions available in such
circumstances:
14.01 (1) […] the
Superintendent may do one or more of the following:
(d) cancel or suspend
the licence of the trustee;
(e) place such
conditions or limitations on the licence as the Superintendent considers
appropriate including a requirement that the trustee successfully take an
exam or enrol in a proficiency course;
(f) require the trustee
to make restitution to the estate of such amount of money as the estate has
been deprived of as a result of the trustee’s conduct; and
(g) require the trustee to do anything that the
Superintendent considers appropriate and that the trustee has agreed to.
|
14.01 (1) […] le surintendant peut prendre l’une ou plusieurs des
mesures énumérées ci-après, […] :
a) annuler ou suspendre la licence du syndic;
b) soumettre sa licence aux conditions ou restrictions qu’il estime
indiquées, et notamment l’obligation de se soumettre à des examens et de les
réussir ou de suivre des cours de formation;
c) ordonner au syndic de rembourser à l’actif toute somme qui y a
été soustraite en raison de sa conduite;
d)
ordonner au syndic de prendre toute mesure qu’il estime indiquée et que
celui-ci a agréée.
|
[124]
The overriding objective of this provision is to
ensure the protection of the public: Sam Lévy & Associés Inc. v. Canada
(Superintendent of Bankruptcy), supra, at paras. 127-128.
For these purposes, two sets of measures are contemplated. The first are
remedial in nature and seek to have the situation corrected for the future
through measures involving the requirement for additional training, the
restitution of amounts to estates and any other measure agreed to by the
trustee which would be appropriate to remedy the situation. The second set of
measures is disciplinary in nature and involves placing limitations or
conditions on a licence, suspending a licence or, in appropriate and extreme
cases, cancelling a licence. These remedial measures and disciplinary sanctions
can be combined.
[125]
It is also useful to note that the use of the
word “may” (in French “peut”) in the introductory provision of subsection
14.01(1) of the Act makes it clear that the option of not imposing any remedial
measure or sanction against a trustee is available, even where the allegations
of misconduct have been made out. The decision to impose or not such a measure
or sanction is thus discretionary and falls within the exclusive authority or
mandate of the Superintendent or his Delegate, taking into account all the
circumstances of a particular case. This was conclusively decided in Jacques
Roy v. Sylvie Laperrière, supra, at paras. 75 to 80.
[126]
In this case, the Delegate imposed what he
called a “reprimand”. A “reprimand” is not specifically provided for under
subsection 14.01(1) of the Act. In light of the disciplinary nature of a
reprimand, and taking into account the principle that disciplinary authority
should be interpreted restrictively, the sanction of a reprimand was not
available to the Delegate. However, it is important to go beyond the use of
specific expressions and to actually examine what the Delegate was attempting
to achieve in the Sanctions Decision.
[127]
Though the use of the notion of a “reprimand”
was unfortunate, when reading the Sanctions Decision as a whole, it becomes
apparent that the Delegate was of the view that no specific sanction or measure
contemplated by subsection 14.01(1) was required in this case principally in
light of the fact the Respondents had been put through a rigorous investigation
and ensuing hearing and decision, and this was sufficient punishment for the
Respondents. The Delegate was also of the view that what the Respondents
experienced in the disciplinary process will serve as a general deterrence to
other trustees (para. 20 of the Sanctions Decision).
[128]
Thus, as I read the Sanctions Decision of the
Delegate, no specific remedial measure or sanction under subsection 14.01 of
the Act was deemed appropriate by the Delegate. Though expressed in terms of a
“reprimand”, the net result was that the Delegate decided that in the
particular circumstances of this case, no specific sanction or measure contemplated
by subsection 14.01(1) of the Act was required since the Liability Decision and
the process leading to it served the purposes of the Act. As noted by Justice
Martineau in Sam Lévy & Associés v. Canada (Superintendent of
Bankruptcy), supra, at paragraph 105, “[…] the public nature of the
disciplinary record and the hearing, together with the publicity of the
tribunal's proceedings and decisions, are likely to have a negative impact on
the reputation, if not the future career, of any individual whose conduct is
considered by the tribunal.”
[129] Though the determination of the spectrum of available remedial
measures or sanctions is a question of law to be reviewed on a standard of
correctness, the determination of which remedial measure or sanction, if any, is
to be imposed in a particular case is an issue which falls squarely within the
authority of the Delegate and which is to be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness:
Dunsmuir at para. 53; Royal Oak Mines Inc. v. Canada
(Labour Relations Board), [1996] 1
S.C.R. 369) at para. 59; Cartaway
Resources Corp., [2004] 1 S.C.R. 672; Donnini v. Ontario Securities
Commission (2005), 76 O.R. (3d) 43 (Ont. C.A.) at paras. 73-74; Canada
(Attorney General) v. Envoy Relocation Services (2007), 283 D.L.R. (4th)
465, 2007
FCA 176 at paras 15 and 17.
[130] In this case, though drafted in terms of a “reprimand”, the Delegate
found in fact that no specific measure or sanction contemplated by subsection
14.01(1) of the Act was required. This option was available to the Delegate,
and in light of the particular circumstances of this case, I find that, when
viewed globally, the decision of the Delegate to choose this option was
reasonable.
[131]
Of course, since this case will be returned to
the Delegate for re-determination of the appropriate remedies or sanctions in
light of this judgment, the Delegate will need to determine anew which remedial
measures or sanctions set out under subsection 14.01(1) of the Act are
appropriate in the circumstances, including the option of imposing no measure
or sanction in light of the particular circumstances of this case.
Are prosecutorial partiality and
overzealousness factors to take into account in proceedings under sections
14.01 and 14.02 of the Act, and if so, did the Delegate commit reviewable
errors in finding as a matter of fact that such factors were present in this
case?
[132]
As I noted to counsel at the hearing on this
judicial review, I am of the view that this issue has little bearing on these
proceedings. The Applicant raised this issue in her Application for Judicial Review
and in her Memorandum of Fact and Law, taking offence with the findings of the
Delegate that her Report lacked objectivity and impartiality.
[133]
I note that prosecutorial partiality and
overzealousness may result in a stay of proceedings against a bankruptcy
trustee under sections 14.01 and 14.02 of the Act: In
the Matter of the Disciplinary Hearing of the Trustees PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. and Robert Brochu and Serge Morency and
Serge Morency & Associates Inc, January 19,
2005, Marc Mayrand.
[134]
In this case, a motion to stay the proceedings
against the Respondents based on prosecutorial partiality and overzealousness
was submitted to the Delegate, who dealt with it in paragraphs 1 to 17 of the
Liability Decision. The Delegate decided to dismiss this motion on the basis
that the “matters raised by the trustees in their stay application can be dealt
with in dealing with the allegations on their merits.” (Liability Decision at
para. 17)
[135]
The Delegate further addressed the issue of
prosecutorial partiality and overzealousness in reviewing the evidence which
had been submitted to him, particularly in paragraphs 44 to 50 of the Liability
Decision. Yet the Delegate’s conclusions at paragraph 47 of this decision
concerning the lack of objectivity and impartiality in the Report prepared by
the Applicant are not referred to later in the Liability Decision concerning
the merits of the allegations against the Respondents or in the Sanctions
Decision determining the appropriate remedial measures or sanctions.
[136]
In these circumstances, I see no reason to
address this issue further.
Conclusions
[137]
At the hearing on the merits of this
Application, counsel for both the Applicant and the Respondents agreed that
should I allow the Application in whole or in part, the case could be returned
to the Honourable Chadwick insofar as he was willing and capable of acting.
[138]
For the reasons set out herein, the case shall
be returned to the Honourable James B. Chadwick solely for the purpose of
determining the appropriate remedial measures or sanctions, if any, warranted
pursuant to subsection 14.01(1) of the Act concerning the proven allegations
against the Respondents under headings J, K and L.
[139]
In light of the particular circumstances of this
case, I have decided to exercise my judicial discretion not to award costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that the
application for judicial review is allowed in part only, and the case is
returned to the Honourable James B. Chadwick solely for the purpose of
determining the appropriate remedial measures or sanctions, if any, warranted
pursuant to subsection 14.01(1) of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act in
regard to the proven allegations against the Respondents under headings J, K
and L, the whole without costs.
"Robert
M. Mainville"