Docket: A-400-15
Citation: 2017 FCA 162
CORAM:
|
PELLETIER J.A.
NEAR J.A.
RENNIE J.A.
|
BETWEEN:
|
HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN
|
Appellant
|
and
|
CALLIDUS
CAPITAL CORPORATION
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
RENNIE J.A.
I.
Introduction
[1]
The Crown appeals from the Order of the Federal
Court (per McVeigh J.), dated August 17, 2015 (2015 FC 977), in which the Court
answered the following question in the affirmative and awarded costs to
Callidus Capital Corporation (Callidus):
Does the bankruptcy of a tax debtor and
subsection 222(1.1) of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1986, c. E-15, as
amended (the “ETA”) render the deemed trust under section 222 of the ETA
ineffective as against a secured creditor who received, prior to bankruptcy,
proceeds from the assets of the tax debtor that were deemed to be held in trust
for the Plaintiff?
[2]
The Crown claimed it was owed $177,299.70 plus
interest in unremitted GST and HST by the operation of the deemed trust
mechanism in section 222 of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1986, c. E-15, as
amended (Excise Tax Act). It commenced an action in the Federal Court to
recover the debt. Callidus defended, and the parties agreed to set down a
question of law for determination. For the purposes of determining the question
of law the parties submitted an agreed statement of facts, which is reproduced
below:
Background
1. Cheese Factory Road Holdings Inc.
(“Cheese Factory”) is a privately-held Ontario corporation that carried on
business as a real estate investment company. Cheese Factory is or was the
registered owner of properties municipally known as 680 Bishop Street,
Cambridge, Ontario (the “Bishop Property”) and 181 Pinebush Road, Cambridge,
Ontario (the “Pinebush Property”).
2. At all material times Callidus was a
privately-held Ontario corporation that carried on business throughout Canada
as a lender of monies to commercial enterprises on a secured basis.
Failures to remit GST and HST
3. The Plaintiff [Her Majesty the Queen,
or the appellant] claims that between 2010 and 2013, Cheese Factory collected
but failed to remit GST and HST to the Receiver General for a total amount of
$177,299.70.
BMO credit facilities
4. Pursuant to a commitment letter dated
September 22, 2004, Cheese Factory obtained a credit facility in the principal
amount of $1,950,000 from the Bank of Montreal (“BMO”). Cheese Factory
also granted the guarantee and security documents listed on Schedule “A”
attached hereto [not attached, can be found at AB, Tab 4, page 35] in favour of
BMO to secure its direct and indirect obligations to BMO (collectively, the “Security”).
5. As of December 2, 2011:
(a) Cheese Factory was in default under
the credit facility extended to it by BMO in the principal amount of
$1,950,000;
(b) Cheese Factory was indebted to
BMO as borrower under the commitment letter in the amount of $1,416,418.61
(inclusive of principal and interest but exclusive of fees;
(c) Cheese Factory was in default
under the guarantees granted by it to BMO; and
(d) Cheese Factory was indebted to
BMO as guarantor in the amounts of $3,387,658.53 and US$81,233,28, which
amounts include principal and interest but do not include fees.
Assignment of debt and obligations to
Callidus
6. Pursuant to an Assignment of Debt and
Security agreement dated December 2, 2011, BMO assigned to Callidus all of its
right, title and interest in and to the direct and indirect indebtedness and
obligations owed to it by Cheese Factory, along with the Security.
7. Pursuant to a Forbearance Agreement
dated December 2, 2011, Callidus agreed to forbear from enforcing the BMO
agreements, subject to and in accordance with the terms and conditions of the
Forbearance Agreement. Pursuant to the Forbearance Agreement, Callidus also
agreed to extend to Cheese Factory (and other debtors) certain demand credit
facilities, which amended the credit facilities granted by BMO.
Sale Proceeds from the Bishop Property
8. Pursuant to the terms of the
Forbearance Agreement, Cheese Factory agreed to market the Bishop Property,
among other properties, for sale and to deliver the net sales proceeds to
Callidus to partially repay the amounts owed to Callidus under the credit
facilities.
9. On or about April 5, 2012, Cheese
Factory sold the Bishop Property to Poladian Holdings Inc. for a purchase price
of $790,000.
10. On or about April 9, 2012, Callidus
received the sum of $590,956.62 from the sale of the Bishop Property (the “Sale
Proceeds”).
11. Callidus has applied the Sale Proceeds
to partially reduce the outstanding indebtedness and obligations owed to it by
Cheese Factory.
Rent Proceeds from the Pinebush
Property
12. Pursuant to the terms of the
Forbearance Agreement and a Blocked Accounts Agreement dated November 9, 2011
(the “Blocked Accounts Agreement”), Cheese Factory also agreed to open
blocked accounts (the “Blocked Accounts”) at a Royal Bank of Canada (“RBC”)
and to deposit all funds received from all sources into the blocked accounts.
13. The Blocked Accounts Agreement provides
that:
(a) Cheese Factory shall hold all
cash and Cheques (as defined therein) received by it in trust for Callidus,
segregated from all other funds and other property of Cheese Factory, until
such time as the cash and Cheques are delivered to RBC for deposit in the
Blocked Accounts; and
(b) RBC shall transfer, prior to the
end of each Business Day, all amounts on deposit in the Blocked Accounts to
Callidus’ account or accounts.
14. All rent proceeds received from Cheese
Factory or from the tenant of the Pinebush Property since December 2011 have
been deposited into the Blocked Accounts.
15. Since the date that Callidus received
an assignment of the BMO credit facilities and security on December 2, 2011 up
to and including July 31, 2014, the sum of $780,387.62 in gross rent has been
deposited into the Blocked Accounts.
16. Callidus has applied all amounts
deposited into the Blocked Accounts to partially reduce the outstanding
indebtedness and obligations owed to it by Cheese Factory.
Deemed Trust Asserted by the Plaintiff
17. On or about April 2, 2012, the
Plaintiff, by way of a letter to Callidus, claimed an amount of $90,844.33 on
the basis of the deemed trust mechanism of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. E.15, as amended (the “ETA”)
Bankruptcy of Cheese Factory
18. On or about November 7, 2013, at the
request of Callidus, Cheese Factory made an assignment in bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy
or Insolvency Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. B-3, as amended.
Action Commenced by the Plaintiff
19. The Plaintiff commenced this proceeding
against Callidus pursuant to a statement of claim dated November 25, 2013.
20. The Plaintiff claims the total amount
of $177,299.70 plus interest from Callidus on the basis of the deemed trust mechanism
governed by section 222 of the ETA on account of GST and HST that Cheese
Factory collected but failed to remit for reporting periods commencing on
October 31, 2010 up to and including January 31, 2013.
21. The Plaintiff contends that as a result
of Cheese Factory’s failures to remit GST and HST to the Receiver General:
(a) all of Cheese Factory’s assets
were deemed to be held in trust in favour of the Plaintiff in priority to the
claims of Callidus pursuant to section 222 of the ETA; and,
(b) all proceeds of Cheese Factory’s
property received by Callidus, up to the amount secured by the deemed trust,
should have been paid to the Receiver General of Canada as a result of the
deemed trust mechanism under section 222 of the ETA.
22. Callidus served and filed a statement
of defence.
Question of Law
23. Does the bankruptcy of a tax debtor and
subsection 222(1.1) of the ETA render the deemed trust under section 222 of the
ETA ineffective as against a secured creditor who received, prior to the
bankruptcy, proceeds from the assets of the tax debtor that were deemed to be
held in trust?
II.
Legislation
[3]
The relevant provisions of the Excise Tax Act
provide:
Excise Tax Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. E-15
|
Loi sur la taxe d’accise, L.R.C. (1985), ch. E-15
|
Trust for
amounts collected
|
Montants
perçus détenus en fiducie
|
222 (1) Subject to subsection (1.1), every person who collects an
amount as or on account of tax under Division II is deemed, for all purposes
and despite any security interest in the amount, to hold the amount in trust
for Her Majesty in right of Canada, separate and apart from the property of
the person and from property held by any secured creditor of the person that,
but for a security interest, would be property of the person, until the
amount is remitted to the Receiver General or withdrawn under subsection (2).
|
222 (1) La personne qui perçoit un montant au titre de la taxe
prévue à la section II est réputée, à toutes fins utiles et malgré tout droit
en garantie le concernant, le détenir en fiducie pour Sa Majesté du chef du
Canada, séparé de ses propres biens et des biens détenus par ses créanciers
garantis qui, en l’absence du droit en garantie, seraient ceux de la
personne, jusqu’à ce qu’il soit versé au receveur général ou retiré en
application du paragraphe (2).
|
Amounts
collected before bankruptcy
|
Montants perçus avant la faillite
|
(1.1) Subsection (1) does not apply, at or after the time a person
becomes a bankrupt (within the meaning of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act),
to any amounts that, before that time, were collected or became collectible
by the person as or on account of tax under Division II.
|
(1.1) Le paragraphe (1) ne s’applique pas, à compter du moment de
la faillite d’un failli, au sens de la Loi sur la faillite et
l’insolvabilité, aux montants perçus ou devenus percevables par lui avant la
faillite au titre de la taxe prévue à la section II.
|
Withdrawal
from trust
|
Retraits de montants en fiducie
|
(2) A person who holds tax or amounts in trust by reason of
subsection (1) may withdraw from the aggregate of the moneys so held in trust
|
(2) La personne qui détient une taxe ou des montants en fiducie en
application du paragraphe (1) peut retirer les montants suivants du total des
fonds ainsi détenus :
|
(a) the amount
of any input tax credit claimed by the person in a return under this Division
filed by the person in respect of a reporting period of the person, and
|
a) le crédit de
taxe sur les intrants qu’elle demande dans une déclaration produite aux
termes de la présente section pour sa période de déclaration;
|
(b) any amount
that may be deducted by the person in determining the net tax of the person
for a reporting period of the person,
|
b) le montant
qu’elle peut déduire dans le calcul de sa taxe nette pour sa période de
déclaration.
|
as and when the return under this Division for the reporting
period in which the input tax credit is claimed or the deduction is made is
filed with the Minister.
|
Ce retrait se fait lors de la présentation au ministre de la
déclaration aux termes de la présente section pour la période de déclaration
au cours de laquelle le crédit est demandé ou le montant déduit.
|
Extension
of trust
|
Non-versement ou non-retrait
|
(3) Despite any other provision of this Act (except subsection
(4)), any other enactment of Canada (except the Bankruptcy and Insolvency
Act), any enactment of a province or any other law, if at any time an amount
deemed by subsection (1) to be held by a person in trust for Her Majesty is
not remitted to the Receiver General or withdrawn in the manner and at the
time provided under this Part, property of the person and property held by
any secured creditor of the person that, but for a security interest, would
be property of the person, equal in value to the amount so deemed to be held
in trust, is deemed
|
(3) Malgré les autres dispositions de la présente loi (sauf le
paragraphe (4) du présent article), tout autre texte législatif fédéral (sauf
la Loi sur la faillite et l’insolvabilité), tout texte législatif provincial
ou toute autre règle de droit, lorsqu’un montant qu’une personne est réputée
par le paragraphe (1) détenir en fiducie pour Sa Majesté du chef du Canada
n’est pas versé au receveur général ni retiré selon les modalités et dans le
délai prévus par la présente partie, les biens de la personne — y compris les
biens détenus par ses créanciers garantis qui, en l’absence du droit en
garantie, seraient ses biens — d’une valeur égale à ce montant sont réputés :
|
(a) to be held,
from the time the amount was collected by the person, in trust for Her
Majesty, separate and apart from the property of the person, whether or not
the property is subject to a security interest, and
|
a) être détenus
en fiducie pour Sa Majesté du chef du Canada, à compter du moment où le
montant est perçu par la personne, séparés des propres biens de la personne,
qu’ils soient ou non assujettis à un droit en garantie;
|
(b) to form no
part of the estate or property of the person from the time the amount was
collected, whether or not the property has in fact been kept separate and
apart from the estate or property of the person and whether or not the
property is subject to a security interest
|
b) ne pas faire
partie du patrimoine ou des biens de la personne à compter du moment où le
montant est perçu, que ces biens aient été ou non tenus séparés de ses
propres biens ou de son patrimoine et qu’ils soient ou non assujettis à un
droit en garantie.
|
and is property beneficially owned by Her Majesty in right of
Canada despite any security interest in the property or in the proceeds
thereof and the proceeds of the property shall be paid to the Receiver
General in priority to all security interests.
|
Ces biens sont des biens dans lesquels Sa Majesté du chef du
Canada a un droit de bénéficiaire malgré tout autre droit en garantie sur ces
biens ou sur le produit en découlant, et le produit découlant de ces
biens est payé au receveur général par priorité sur tout droit en garantie.
|
[Emphasis added]
|
[Emphase jouté]
|
III.
Federal Court decision
[4]
The Court answered the question in the
affirmative.
[5]
The Court found that the deemed trust mechanism
under section 222 of the Excise Tax Act operates to grant the Receiver
General “absolute priority”, but that the deemed
trust, and the accompanying priority, are extinguished upon bankruptcy of the
debtor such that the Crown becomes an unsecured creditor in respect of
unremitted amounts. The Court determined that any liability that arises under
subsection (3) to disgorge proceeds is extinguished upon bankruptcy by the
operation of subsection (1.1). Subsection (3) operates to extend the deemed
trust created pursuant to subsection (1) to the debtor’s property, and any
liability arising from it is dependent on the continuing existence of the
deemed trust.
[6]
The Court reviewed the legislative history and
priority schemes of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, R.S.C., 1985, c.
B-3 (the BIA), the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, R.S.C., 1985,
c. C-36 (the CCAA) and the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Canada in Century
Services Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 60, [2010] 3 S.C.R.
379 (Century Services), and observed that the enactment of subsection 222(1.1)
appeared to align with Parliament’s intent to “move
away from asserting priority for Crown claims in insolvency law”. While
deemed trusts in relation to source deductions, such as Canada Pension Plan
contributions, “remain operative” in bankruptcy,
deemed trusts over GST/HST do not.
[7]
Applying the reasoning in Century Services and
the earlier decision of Caisse populaire Desjardins de l’Est de Drummond v.
Canada, 2009 SCC 29, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 94 (Caisse), the judge held
that the absence of express confirmation of the trust upon bankruptcy in the
BIA reflected “Parliament’s intention to allow it to
lapse upon insolvency proceedings being commenced”. The judge found
that, similar to the factual scenarios in both Supreme Court of Canada cases, “the Crown seeks to maintain the deemed trust without express
legislative language to do so,” and further, that subsection 222(1.1)
operates to “remove [the] imperative” language
in subsection 222(3) of “shall be paid”. The
judge was not persuaded by the Crown’s reference to legislative amendments in
the year 2000 (the 2000 amendments) to the deemed trust mechanism in the Income
Tax Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.)) (Income Tax Act) because
they were specific to source deductions, and distinguished the cases on which
the Crown relied for the same reason. The judge favoured Callidus’ argument
that the amendments made to the Excise Tax Act in 1992 demonstrated
Parliamentary intent to “oust the Crown priority over
all other interests in bankruptcy,” and that this interpretation was
evident in the jurisprudence.
[8]
The judge dismissed the Crown’s analogy to other
collection tools in the Excise Tax Act, noting that those provisions did
not assist the Crown’s position. Both sections 317 (garnishment) and 325
(non-arms’ length transfers) require a “crystallizing
event” before liability will attach prior to bankruptcy, and the Crown
had not demonstrated how to reconcile a “pre-existing,
fully engaged cause of action” with subsection (1.1). In the case of a
non-arms’ length transfer, the event is the transfer of property for less than
fair market value, while in the garnishment context the crystallizing event is
service of a “requirement to pay” (RTP) notice.
The judge stated that, had an RTP notice been issued in this case, Callidus’
obligation to pay would have survived bankruptcy of the debtor.
[9]
The judge ultimately held that the tax debtor’s
bankruptcy engaged subsection 222(1.1) of the Excise Tax Act, which
rendered the deemed trust, and any independent liability arising from operation
of the deemed trust, ineffective in regard to the pre-bankruptcy amounts Callidus
had received.
IV.
Issues
[10]
Before this Court, Callidus submits that, on a
proper reading of the statutory language, the deemed trust under subsection (1)
and the extension under subsection (3) are both extinguished upon bankruptcy.
As the Crown relies on subsection (3) to establish the personal liability of
the secured creditor, Callidus argues it should follow that any personal
liability must be extinguished upon bankruptcy as well.
[11]
The Crown concedes that, upon the bankruptcy of
a tax debtor, subsection 222(1.1) of the Excise Tax Act renders the
deemed trust under subsection 222(3) of the Excise Tax Act ineffective with
respect to the debtor’s property at the time of bankruptcy. The Crown assert,
however, that the contested question on appeal is whether subsection 222(1.1)
of the Excise Tax Act also extinguishes the distinct and personal
liability of the secured creditor that may arise prior to bankruptcy by virtue
of subsection 222(3) of the Excise Tax Act.
[12]
The respondent urges that the judge correctly
found that subsection (1.1) reflects Parliament’s intent to move away from
Crown priority in insolvency law, in particular with respect to GST/HST. It is
conceded by the Crown that the deemed trust ceases to operate upon the debtor’s
bankruptcy, specifically in relation to GST/HST amounts collected but not
remitted prior to bankruptcy. I agree with the judge that Parliament has drawn
a clear distinction post-bankruptcy between source deductions under the Income
Tax Act and GST/HST amounts under the Excise Tax Act by virtue of
subsection 222(1.1) and subsections 67(2) and (3) of the BIA.
[13]
The issue here however, is the priority that may
have existed prior to any insolvency or bankruptcy proceedings. Determination of
the question of law turns on the interpretation of the effect of bankruptcy on
the prior operation of the deemed trust mechanism as against a secured
creditor who received proceeds from deemed trust assets of the tax debtor prior
to bankruptcy.
V.
Analysis
[14]
The answer to the question on appeal turns on
the application of the governing principles of statutory interpretation. Rizzo
& Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27 (Rizzo) instructs at
para. 21, quoting E.A. Driedger, Construction of Statutes (2nd ed.
1983), at p. 87 that “[t]oday there is only one
principle or approach, namely, the words of an Act are to be read in their
entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with
the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament”.
Put otherwise, the intention of Parliament is to be gleaned from the text, read
in its context and in light of its purpose. Applying these principles, it is my
view that the question should be answered in the negative.
[15]
Support for this conclusion is found in the
language of section 222, to which I turn. Section 222 of the Excise Tax Act
provides a mechanism whereby the Crown can recover collected, but unremitted,
GST or HST.
[16]
Subsection 222(3) operates to deem all of a tax
debtor’s property to be held in trust for the benefit of the Crown where GST/HST
is collected but not remitted. It is undisputed that subsection 222(1.1)
renders the deemed trust ineffective with respect to the property of the tax
debtor at the time of bankruptcy. The issue in this appeal concerns the Crown’s
recovery mechanisms for dispositions made prior to bankruptcy.
[17]
The importance of timing is reflected in the
text of subsection 222(3). Assets sold by the tax debtor, or realized upon by
the secured creditor prior to bankruptcy are no longer “property
of the person and property held by any secured creditor of the person that, but
for a security interest, would be property of the person” at the time of
bankruptcy, and as a result, are not available to all creditors upon
bankruptcy. First Vancouver Finance v. Minister of National Revenue, 2002
SCC 49, para. 42, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 720 (First Vancouver) confirms that “when an asset is sold by the tax debtor, the deemed trust
ceases to operate over that asset”. The subsequent extinction of the
deemed trust on bankruptcy is irrelevant with respect to assets that have
already been sold – it has already disappeared. This interpretation is
supported by the legislative evolution of subsection (1.1).
[18]
Amendments in the year 2000 to the deemed trust
mechanism in both the Income Tax Act and the Excise Tax Act
imposed an obligation on secured creditors to pay proceeds derived from trust
assets to the Crown (subsection 222(3)). This amendment, including wording that
proceeds “shall be paid to the Receiver General in
priority to all security interests” was prompted by the decision in Royal
Bank of Canada v. Sparrow Electric Corp., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 411 (Sparrow).
In Sparrow, the Court held that analogous deemed trust provisions for
source deductions did not oust a secured creditor’s security interest in a
debtor’s inventory. In Sparrow, the Supreme Court of Canada suggested this
wording as the language that Parliament could add if it wished to confirm the priority
of the Crown’s deemed trust.
[19]
The first test of the amended provisions arose
in First Vancouver. The Court held that the enhanced trust provisions
confirmed Crown priority over secured creditors.
[20]
The amended trust provisions in the ITA came
before this Court in Canada (Procureure generale) c. Banque Nationale du
Canada, 2004 FCA 92, [2004] F.C.J. No. 371 (Banque Nationale) where,
at paragraph 40, the Court held:
[40] It seems obvious to me that a secured
creditor who does not comply with his statutory obligation to “pay” the
Receiver General the proceeds of property subject to the deemed trust in
priority over his security interest is personally liable and thereby becomes
liable for the unpaid amount. The amount is “payable” out of the proceeds
flowing from the property and, as we have seen, section 222 of the ITA provides
that “All... amounts payable under this Act are debts due to Her
Majesty and recoverable as such....” (Emphasis added). In light of these
provisions, and since the respondents concede that they received the proceeds
from the sale of the property subject to their security interest, without
making the remittance that was payable, the appellant has a cause of action to
recover these amounts.
[Emphasis in original]
[21]
This Court, in Banque Nationale noted
that the Crown has absolute priority over proceeds from property subject to a
deemed trust, and that “the positive obligation imposed
on the secured creditor to pay the Receiver General the proceeds from the
property subject to the trust could not be clearer”: Banque Nationale
at para 37. The Court went on to note that a secured creditor who does not
comply with this obligation “is personally liable,”
and the amount is “payable” to the Receiver
General and may be enforced as a cause of action under the appropriate Income
Tax Act provisions.
[22]
Similarly, I note that a “tax debt” in the “Collection”
section of the Excise Tax Act is defined as “any
amount payable or remittable by a person under this Part,” and tax debts
are recoverable by the Crown in Federal Court: Excise Tax Act
subsections 313(1) and (1.1). The Court in Banque Nationale held that
the cause of action arises “when the Minister becomes
aware of the failure by the secured creditor to pay”: at para. 44. On
this Court’s reasoning in Banque Nationale, the Crown has a cause of
action to enforce the personal liability of a secured creditor who does not
comply with its statutory obligation to pay under the Excise Tax Act.
[23]
Given the near-identical language of the two
provisions, it is my view that the reasoning in Banque Nationale is
dispositive of this appeal. Secured creditors who do not comply with the
obligation to pay proceeds derived from deemed trust assets are personally
liable to the Crown, which has a separate cause of action against them,
irrespective of the subsequent bankruptcy of the debtor.
[24]
I note that the use of the imperative “shall” in subsection 222(3) “confers
no residual discretion”: Ruth Sullivan, Sullivan on the Construction
of Statutes, 6th ed. (Canada: LexisNexis, 2014), at 91-92. The
protection offered the Crown by the provision is not passive – it creates a
mandatory obligation: see Banque Nationale at paras. 37, 40. While the judge
was correct to note that Sparrow, First Vancouver and Banque
Nationale pertained to the deemed trust mechanism specific to source
deductions under the Income Tax Act, the salient point, from a statutory
interpretation perspective, is that the 2000 amendments are materially
identical to those made contemporaneous to the amendments to the Excise Tax
Act and operate analogously prior to bankruptcy.
[25]
Given this similarity, both mechanisms render a
secured creditor who receives funds out of the deemed trust personally liable
for the amount owed to the Crown under an independent cause of action: Banque
Nationale, at para. 40. The distinction urged by Callidus, namely that Banque
Nationale concerned payroll deductions and not GST, is of no consequence.
Prior to bankruptcy, the recovery mechanisms in subsection 227(4.1) of the Income
Tax Act and subsection 222(3) of the Excise Tax Act operate, for
present purposes, identically, and the related jurisprudence is equally
applicable.
[26]
While subsection 222(1.1) releases a tax
debtor’s assets from the deemed trust upon bankruptcy, the subsection does not
extinguish the pre-existing personal liability of a secured creditor who
received proceeds from the deemed trust. The personal liability is fully
engaged, the debt is due and can be pursued by the Crown in a cause of action independent
of any subsequent bankruptcy proceedings. The continued existence of the cause
of action is not dependent on the debtor’s other assets that may or may not
remain in trust, as it arises because of the secured creditor’s breach of a
statutory obligation to remit. To find otherwise would effectively neutralize
the deemed trust mechanism with respect to GST/HST amounts.
[27]
I note that Callidus relies heavily on Caisse
and Century Services to support its argument with respect to
liability. These cases are of limited assistance. Caisse did not concern
either the issue of a deemed trust or the independent liability of a secured
creditor, rather, the issue was the extent of the Crown’s interest in GST
collected by a trustee in bankruptcy. Century Services concerned whether
the deemed trust provisions of the Excise Tax Act continued under CCAA
proceedings, which are not at issue.
[28]
Callidus points further to the case of The
Bank of Nova Scotia v. Huronia Precision Plastics Inc. (2009), 50 C.B.R.
(5th) 58 (Ont. S.C.J. - Commercial List) (Huronia), in which a receiver
was appointed, some of the debtor’s assets were sold, and the bank made a
motion to lift the stay in order to bring a bankruptcy application against the
debtor. The Crown moved for an order directing the receiver to pay unremitted
GST immediately. The motion judge held that the bank had the ability to reverse
the priority of the deemed trust by bringing an application for bankruptcy, and
denied the Crown’s motion. Callidus argues that, on the appellant’s reading of
the statute, the receiver in Huronia would have had a duty to remit GST
to the Crown notwithstanding the subsequent bankruptcy of the debtor. Callidus
argues that this was exactly what the motion judge in Huronia
specifically rejected.
[29]
It is difficult to glean much from the very
brief Huronia decision, which focused on the particular wording of a
court order. There was also a receiver and a stay of proceedings in place in Huronia,
such that it is not clear whether insolvency proceedings had already
commenced. As well, the factual matrix in this appeal does not invoke the
reversal of priority post-bankruptcy; rather this appeal addresses the effect
of bankruptcy on the liability of a secured creditor that may arise as a result
of pre-bankruptcy priority.
[30]
Again, continuing with the plain language of
section 222, subsection (1.1) does not say that, upon the debtor’s bankruptcy,
all rights that arose as a result of the deemed trust are extinguished. Nor is
there language in section 222 to the effect that the deemed trust evaporates
retroactively so as to extinguish liability arising before bankruptcy. Subsequent
bankruptcy simply operates to release the debtor’s assets from the deemed
trust. The argument that the evaporation of the trust on bankruptcy works
retroactively, and undoes or unwinds legal obligations that are already
engaged, has no support in the text, and, as we will see, undermines the
purpose of the 1992 amendment.
[31]
In the present case, proceeds from a sale of the
tax debtor’s property were paid to the secured creditor. The debtor
subsequently made an assignment into bankruptcy. Pursuant to the language of
subsection (3), any proceeds should have been paid to the Crown in priority to
any security interest pre-bankruptcy. Callidus has conceded that the deemed
trust mechanisms in both the Income Tax Act and the Excise Tax Act
operate in the same manner prior to bankruptcy. Proceeds were paid out of
priority in contradiction to the express wording of subsection (3), which
created an obligation, independent of the existence of the deemed trust, to
pay.
[32]
I turn next to context, which includes analogous
collection tools within the Excise Tax Act that impose obligations on
third parties. For example, the garnishment provisions in section 317 of the Excise
Tax Act use the same language regarding paramountcy over all statutes except
the BIA. In this context, the courts have accepted that, where an RTP notice is
served pre-bankruptcy, subsequent bankruptcy does not extinguish liability of a
third party who fails to abide by the notice: Toronto Dominion Bank v.
Canada, 2010 FCA 174, 325 D.L.R. (4th) 174, affirmed 2012 SCC 1, [2012] 1 S.C.R.
3 (Toronto Dominion).
[33]
Further, section 325 of the Excise Tax Act
establishes liability for a non-arms’ length third party who has been
transferred property. The liability of the third party is not affected by the
debtor’s subsequent bankruptcy: Heavyside v. Canada, [1996] F.C.J. No.
1608. Absent language suggesting otherwise, statutes should be read so as to
achieve consistency and harmony across like provisions.
[34]
Referencing other collection tools available to
the Crown, the judge stated that there must be a “crystallizing
event” in order to ground an independent cause of action. Had an RTP
issued, Callidus’ obligation to pay would have survived bankruptcy. In my view,
the search for a crystallizing event or something analogous to that is not
quite apt, given that the deemed trust mechanism is not located within the section
of the legislation dealing with assessments, and, in any event, there is no
legislative requirement for, or mechanism by which, such a notice could issue.
There is no need for a crystallizing event, as the legislation establishes the
obligation to pay. The words “if at any time”
make clear that the obligation has no temporal limitation, nor is it contingent
on crystallizing events.
[35]
It has been held by this Court, and affirmed by
the Supreme Court of Canada, that section 317 (garnishment) transfers ownership
of amounts otherwise owing to a tax debtor, on receipt by the garnishee of an
RTP notice: Toronto Dominion at para. 52. In Toronto Dominion,
this Court held that the words establishing the supremacy of the Excise Tax
Act over legislation except the BIA was simply intended to limit the
Crown’s power to issue an RTP post-bankruptcy.
[36]
Although the circumstances are not entirely
analogous, under section 317 the Minister “may issue”
an RTP and the amount similarly “shall be paid”.
It appears that amounts owing to the tax debtor by a third party may require
notice in order to “crystallize,” in the words
of the judge, the Crown’s cause of action in garnishment proceedings. Where the
Crown seeks to garnish, it is not necessarily clear who the cause of action is
against, and for what amount. The present circumstance is the opposite. Here,
the trust operates over the amounts already in the debtor’s possession, and the
circumstances are such that an amount has left the trust. Both the amount and
the party in receipt are known.
[37]
I note further that the subsequent bankruptcy of
a tax debtor does not extinguish the Crown’s right to amounts owing where an
RTP issued pre-bankruptcy. It would be inconsistent if the Crown could prevent
funds from entering the debtor’s estate, but it could not recover amounts that
were removed from the deemed trust out of priority to it and which have not
since been returned to the debtor’s estate.
[38]
To conclude, I turn to the purpose of the
provision in question.
[39]
Callidus argues that Parliament’s intent was
that the Crown becomes an unsecured creditor upon the bankruptcy of the debtor
in relation to amounts owed pre-bankruptcy, and that allowing this appeal would
allow the Crown to recover indirectly what it cannot recover directly.
[40]
Callidus contends that, upon bankruptcy,
subsection (1.1) operates to extinguish both the deemed trust and to remove the
imperative in subsection (3) such that the personal liability of a secured
creditor who received funds is also extinguished. I have explained why this
interpretation is not supported by the language of the statute, but it would
also undermine the purpose of the provision. The interpretation urged by
Callidus would allow a secured creditor to manipulate both pre- and
post-bankruptcy priority. Callidus agrees that the Crown has priority
pre-bankruptcy, and it admits that it did not abide by that priority. Yet it asks
this Court to enforce post-bankruptcy priority to the opposite effect or, put
otherwise, to enforce post-bankruptcy priority to defeat priorities related to
pre-bankruptcy distributions.
[41]
Callidus’ interpretation effectively defeats the
purpose of the addition of subsection 222(3), and would create perverse
incentives on the part of the secured creditors to not abide by the deemed
trust. This was the very mischief to which the amendments were directed:
Thus, the
amendment will ensure that tax revenue losses are minimised and that delinquent
taxpayers and their secured creditors do not benefit from failures to remit
source deductions and GST at the expense of the Crown.
The deemed trust
provisions will not, however, override a prescribed security interest such as a
mortgage interest in real estate or other exceptions that may be provided by
regulation, where the failure to remit source deductions or net GST cannot
benefit the secured creditor.
[Department of
Finance, Press Release, 1997-030, “Unremitted Source Deductions and Unpaid GST”
(7 April 1997), online: Media Room – Press Releases www.fin.gc.ca, p.2;
Appellant`s Memorandum of Fact and Law, at para. 75]
[42]
A finding that the secured creditor’s obligation
to pay Crown proceeds from the deemed trust disappears on bankruptcy would
allow the secured creditor to benefit from the debtor’s failure to remit, as
noted by the Supreme Court of Canada in Sparrow. As happened here, a secured
creditor could choose the timing of bankruptcy and liquidate the deemed trust
assets so as to satisfy their interests at the expense of the Crown. Even if
the Crown sends a demand letter or commences an action, the secured creditor could,
at any time, simply trigger the bankruptcy of the tax debtor and avoid all
consequences of the deemed trust priority.
[43]
Callidus’ interpretation would significantly dilute
the absolute priority of the Crown confirmed by both Parliament and the courts
in this context. This cannot be what Parliament intended. Part of the broader
context is the fact that the Crown does not have knowledge of the state of
affairs between the tax debtor and its creditors; hence the provision, in
statute, of the ability to enforce the duty to collect and remit by third
parties: First Vancouver, at para. 22. To allow a secured creditor to
avoid the priority created by the deemed trust mechanism pre-bankruptcy would
render the mechanism, and the priority it creates, effectively useless. If
Parliament had intended, as it did post-bankruptcy, for the deemed trust to
have no discernable effect on priorities pre-bankruptcy, it simply could have
removed the provision altogether.
[44]
I would allow the appeal with costs and answer
the question in the negative to the extent outlined above.
“Donald J. Rennie”
“I agree
|
D. G. Near
J.A.”
|
PELLETIER J.A. (Dissenting reasons)
[45]
I have read the reasons of my colleague. I come
to a different conclusion for the following reasons.
[46]
In brief, I am of the view that the trust
created by subsection 222(3) of the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985 c. E-15
(the Act) lapsed due to lack of subject matter by operation of subsection
222(1.1) of the Act following Cheese Factory Road Holdings Inc.’s (Cheese
Factory) bankruptcy. As of the date of bankruptcy, there were no amounts
subject to the subsection 222(1) trust and therefore no property of Cheese
Factory subject to a deemed trust pursuant to subsection 222(3) of the Act. As
a result, no proceeds of that property were payable to the Crown by Callidus
Capital Corporation (Callidus). The fact that, prior to the bankruptcy, a
demand for payment was made on Callidus is irrelevant.
[47]
This is an appeal from a decision of the Federal
Court in which it decided a question of law. As a result, the standard of
review is the appellate standard set out in Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002
SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235: correctness for questions of law and palpable and
overriding error for questions of fact and mixed fact and law, except when it
is possible to identify an extricable error of law, in which case the
correctness standard applies. In this case, the standard of review is
correctness
[48]
To assist in the analysis, I reproduce below
subsections 222(1), (1.1) and (3).
222(1) Subject to subsection (1.1),
every person who collects an amount as or on account of tax under Division II
is deemed, for all purposes and despite any security interest in the amount,
to hold the amount in trust for Her Majesty in right of Canada, separate and
apart from the property of the person and from property held by any secured
creditor of the person that, but for a security interest, would be property
of the person, until the amount is remitted to the Receiver General or
withdrawn under subsection (2).
|
222 (1) La personne qui perçoit un
montant au titre de la taxe prévue à la section II est réputée, à toutes fins
utiles et malgré tout droit en garantie le concernant, le détenir en fiducie
pour Sa Majesté du chef du Canada, séparé de ses propres biens et des biens
détenus par ses créanciers garantis qui, en l’absence du droit en garantie,
seraient ceux de la personne, jusqu’à ce qu’il soit versé au receveur général
ou retiré en application du paragraphe (2).
|
(1.1) Subsection (1) does not apply,
at or after the time a person becomes a bankrupt (within the meaning of the
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act), to any amounts that, before that time, were
collected or became collectible by the person as or on account of tax under
Division II.
|
(1.1) Le paragraphe (1) ne
s’applique pas, à compter du moment de la faillite d’un failli, au sens de la
Loi sur la faillite et l’insolvabilité, aux montants perçus ou devenus
percevables par lui avant la faillite au titre de la taxe prévue à la section
II.
|
(3) Despite any other provision of
this Act (except subsection (4)), any other enactment of Canada (except the
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act), any enactment of a province or any other law,
if at any time an amount deemed by subsection (1) to be held by a person in
trust for Her Majesty is not remitted to the Receiver General or withdrawn in
the manner and at the time provided under this Part, property of the person
and property held by any secured creditor of the person that, but for a
security interest, would be property of the person, equal in value to the
amount so deemed to be held in trust is deemed
|
(3) Malgré les autres dispositions de
la présente loi (sauf le paragraphe (4) du présent article), tout autre texte
législatif fédéral (sauf la Loi sur la faillite et l’insolvabilité), tout
texte législatif provincial ou toute autre règle de droit, lorsqu’un montant
qu’une personne est réputée par le paragraphe (1) détenir en fiducie pour Sa
Majesté du chef du Canada n’est pas versé au receveur général ni retiré selon
les modalités et dans le délai prévus par la présente partie, les biens de la
personne — y compris les biens détenus par ses créanciers garantis qui, en
l’absence du droit en garantie, seraient ses biens — d’une valeur égale à ce
montant sont réputés
|
(a) to be held,
from the time the amount was collected by the person, in trust for Her
Majesty, separate and apart from the property of the person, whether or not
the property is subject to a security interest, and
|
a) être détenus
en fiducie pour Sa Majesté du chef du Canada, à compter du moment où le
montant est perçu par la personne, séparés des propres biens de la personne,
qu’ils soient ou non assujettis à un droit en garantie;
|
(b) to form no
part of the estate or property of the person from the time the amount was
collected, whether or not the property has in fact been kept separate and
apart from the estate or property of the person and whether or not the
property is subject to a security interest and is property beneficially owned
by Her Majesty in right of Canada despite any security interest in the
property or in the proceeds thereof and the proceeds of the property shall be
paid to the Receiver General in priority to all security interests.
|
b) ne pas faire
partie du patrimoine ou des biens de la personne à compter du moment où le
montant est perçu, que ces biens aient été ou non tenus séparés de ses
propres biens ou de son patrimoine et qu’ils soient ou non assujettis à un
droit en garantie. Ces biens sont des biens dans lesquels Sa Majesté du chef
du Canada a un droit de bénéficiaire malgré tout autre droit en garantie sur
ces biens ou sur le produit en découlant, et le produit découlant de ces
biens est payé au receveur général par priorité sur tout droit en garantie.
|
[49]
In order to avoid repetition and to enhance the
readability of these reasons, references to subsections in the text which
follows are references to subsections of section 222 of the Act, unless
otherwise specified.
[50]
Subsection (1) creates a trust with respect to
amounts collected as tax but not remitted or applied as permitted by subsection
(2) which has no application here. Subsection (3) on the other hand creates a
trust with respect to the property of the “person”
i.e. the tax debtor.
[51]
The subsection (1) trust arises when an amount
is collected as or on account of tax and ends when the amount is remitted to
the Receiver General. The result is that the amount subject to the subsection
(1) trust varies as amounts are collected and remittances are made to the
Receiver General.
[52]
The event which gives rise to the deemed trust
pursuant to subsection (3) is not the failure to remit the amounts collected as
tax to the Receiver General, as is the case in subsection (1). It is the
failure to remit the amount deemed by subsection (1) to be held in trust for Her
Majesty:
…if at any time an
amount deemed by subsection (1) to be held by a person in trust for Her Majesty
is not remitted to the Receiver General …property of the person …. is
deemed … to be held, from the time the amount was collected by the person, in
trust for Her Majesty… [emphasis added]
[53]
As a result, if amounts are deemed to be held in
trust pursuant to subsection (1) and not remitted to the Receiver General, then
the property of the person is deemed to be held in trust from the time the
amount was collected. It follows from this that if no amounts are deemed to be
held in trust, no subsection (3) trust arises.
[54]
While the subsection (3) trust attaches to
property of the person, it does not capture the whole of the person’s interest
in their property. The property subject to the subsection (3) trust is defined
as:
… property of the
person … equal in value to the amount so deemed to be held in trust
[pursuant to subsection 222(1)] is deemed … to be held … in trust for Her
Majesty … [emphasis added]
[55]
This means that the corpus of the statutory
trust is a limited pecuniary interest in the property of the tax debtor. Every
item of the tax debtor’s property is subject to this trust but only to the
extent of the amount deemed to be held in trust by subsection (1). This is a
necessary limitation because of the obligation to pay imposed on secured
creditors who realize on their security. Subsection (3) requires them to pay “the proceeds of the property” in priority to their
security interest. The unqualified obligation to pay the proceeds would require
secured creditors to pay the entire proceeds, not simply that portion of the
proceeds equal to the amount deemed to be held in trust pursuant to subsection
(1).
[56]
Absent a clear indication of a contrary
intention, legislation should be drafted and interpreted on the assumption that
the Crown only collects amounts which it is owed and not more. In this case, the
legislative draftsman dealt with this issue by defining the property subject to
the deemed trust in such a way that trust property, and therefore the proceeds
of trust property, is equal to the amount of the subsection (1) deemed trust.
[57]
As this review shows, the deemed trusts created
by subsections (1) and (3) are distinct but interlinked in two important ways.
First, the subsection (3) trust arises when amounts deemed to be held in trust
pursuant to subsection (1) are collected but not remitted. Second, the
subject-matter of the subsection (3) trust is property of the tax debtor to the
extent of the amounts deemed to be held in trust pursuant to subsection (1).
The effect of this interlinking is that the creation of the subsection (3)
trust depends on the existence of the subsection (1) trust. If no amounts are
deemed to be held in trust pursuant to subsection (1), then no subsection (3)
trust arises. However, once a trust has arisen, it may subsequently fail for
lack of subject-matter if the amount deemed to be held in trust is reduced to nil
because of payments on account or otherwise. This is because the subject matter
of the subsection (3) trust is defined by reference to the amount deemed to be
held in trust pursuant to subsection (1).
[58]
The application of these provisions to property
in the hands of the tax debtor is reasonably straightforward. The issue in this
case is how these provisions apply to the tax debtor’s secured creditors.
[59]
Prior to bankruptcy, subsection (3) provides
that where amounts deemed to be held in trust pursuant to subsection (1) have
not been remitted:
… property held
by any secured creditor of the person that, but for a security interest, would
be property of the person, equal in value to the amount so deemed to be
held in trust, is deemed … to be held, from the time the amount was
collected by the person, in trust for Her Majesty … and the proceeds
of the property shall be paid to the Receiver General in priority to all
security interests.
[emphasis added]
[60]
The operation of the deemed trusts in section
222 of the Act can be illustrated by an example. Let us assume that a tax
debtor has collected and failed to remit $20,000 on account of GST/HST. The tax
debtor has real property which is subject to a mortgage. The mortgage lender
forces the sale of the property and receives proceeds of $50,000. Subsection
(1) creates a deemed trust with respect to the $20,000 collected as tax but not
remitted to the Receiver General. Subsection (3) creates a trust with respect
to the debtor’s property but only to the extent of the amounts held in trust
pursuant to subsection (1). As a result, the mortgage lender, having received
proceeds of property equal in value to the amount deemed to be held in a
subsection (1) trust, i.e. $20,000, is liable to pay that amount to the Crown.
[61]
Would the result be any different if subsequent
to the Crown’s demand for payment of $20,000, the tax debtor made a $10,000
payment to the Receiver on account of GST/HST collected but not remitted? The
amount for which the secured creditor was liable would be different but the
manner of determining the amount of that liability would be the same. The
payment to the Receiver General would reduce the amount of the subsection (1)
deemed trust to $10,000 which in turn would reduce the extent to which the
debtor’s property was subject to the subsection (3) deemed trust. The secured
creditor would be liable to pay the proceeds of the property subject to the
subsection (3) trust, i.e. $10,000. Similarly, if the tax debtor were to pay
the entire $20,000, the amount of the secured creditor’s liability would be
reduced to nil.
[62]
The significance of the last example is that a
demand for payment by the Crown does not “crystallize”
the amount of the debtor’s or the secured creditor’s liability to the Crown.
That liability is determined by the amount deemed to be held in the subsection
(1) trust which in turn determines the extent to which property of the debtor
is deemed to be held pursuant to the subsection (3) trust.
[63]
How is this scheme affected by the bankruptcy of
the tax debtor? Subsection (1.1) provides that at or after the time of
bankruptcy, subsection (1) does not apply to any amounts that were collected on
account of tax prior to that time. The result is that after bankruptcy, there
is no amount deemed to be held in trust pursuant to subsection (1) for amounts
collected as tax but not remitted pre-bankruptcy. The subsection (3) trust
which arose prior to bankruptcy no longer has any subject matter because the
trust only attaches to property of the tax debtor to the extent of the
subsection (1) trust which no longer exists. This is true for the tax debtor as
well as for the tax debtor’s secured creditors.
[64]
I can see no difference in principle between the
reduction of the subsection (1) trust to nil by payment or by operation of law.
In either case, the subsection (3) trust whose operation depends upon the existence
of an amount deemed to held in trust pursuant to subsection (1), is at an end.
Had Parliament meant to make the subsection (3) trust a function of the
continued existence of unremitted amounts, it could have said so easily enough.
[65]
Does this Court’s decision in Canada
(Attorney General) v. National Bank of Canada, 2004 FCA 92, 324 NR 31 (National
Bank) affect this conclusion? In that case, this Court said, with respect
to provisions of the Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985 c.1 (5th Supp.) (the
ITA) and the Employment Insurance Act, S.C. 1996 c. 23 (the EIA) that
are substantially the same as subsections (1) and (3), that a secured creditor
who received proceeds of property subject to a trust without remitting the
amount of tax payable was liable to the Crown:
It seems obvious to me that a secured
creditor who does not comply with his statutory obligation to "pay"
the Receiver General the proceeds of property subject to the deemed trust in
priority over his security interest is personally liable and thereby becomes
liable for the unpaid amount. The amount is "payable" out of the
proceeds flowing from the property … and since the respondents concede that
they received the proceeds from the sale of the property subject to their
security interest, without making the remittance that was payable, the
appellant has a cause of action to recover these amounts.
National Bank
at paragraph 40.
[66]
It is important to keep the facts of National
Bank in mind. Secured creditors of tax debtors under the ITA and the EIA
had realized on their security and had failed to remit the proceeds to the
extent of the outstanding tax debt to the Minister of National Revenue. At all
material times, the tax debt was outstanding and, therefore, the deemed trusts
under the legislation were in effect. As a result, National Bank is a
case about enforcing existing deemed trusts.
[67]
It is true that this Court, citing the decision
of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in First Vancouver Finance v.
M.N.R., 2002 SCC 49, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 720 (First Vancouver Finance),
said that “The trust continues to apply to all the
assets for as long as the default [to remit source deductions] continues”:
National Bank, at paragraph 29. Both National Bank and First
Vancouver Trust involved deemed trusts under the ITA which is not
the case here. Furthermore, the ITA has no provision equivalent to
subsection (1.1). As a result, National Bank is authority for the
proposition that, prior the tax debtor’s bankruptcy, the deemed trusts created
by subsection 222 apply to all assets as long as there are amounts subject to
the subsection (1) deemed trust. However, National Bank is not authority
for the proposition that this state of affairs persists after the latter’s
bankruptcy.
[68]
The Crown argues that the failure to pay the
proceeds of subsection (3) trust property to the Receiver General gives rise to
a separate and fully engaged cause of action against the secured creditor. Contrary
to the Crown’s submissions, this argument cannot be supported by this Court’s
decision in National Bank which is authority for a much narrower
proposition. As I hope to have shown earlier, the notion that a secured
creditor’s obligation is somehow crystallized at a particular point in time without
regard to the status of the subsection (1) deemed trust cannot account for
reductions in the secured creditor’s obligations as a result of reductions in
the amounts deemed to be held in trust. If, on the other hand, the secured
creditor’s obligation varies with the amounts held in the subsection (1) deemed
trust, there is no statutory basis for distinguishing between reduction in the
subsection (1) deemed trust due to payments on account and reductions which
occur by operation of law.
[69]
I recognize that this results in a situation in
which a secured creditor has an incentive to resist payment in the hope that
the amount of the subsection (1) deemed trust will be extinguished and may even
help that process along by petitioning the tax debtor into bankruptcy. I would
only say that in this case, the Crown made a demand for payment in April 2012
but appears to have taken no steps to enforce its demand until November 2013.
Nor does the Crown appear to have had recourse to the other collection tools
available to in under the Act. I am not persuaded that the view I take of this
matter puts the Crown’s interests unjustifiably at risk.
[70]
To summarize, an examination of the text of
subsection 222 of the Act teaches that the relationship between the deemed
trusts created by subsection (1) subsection (3) is such that the extinction of
the former upon bankruptcy - by operation of subsection (1.1) - puts an end to
the latter at the same time.
[71]
As pointed out in Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes
Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27 at para. 21, [1998] S.C.J. No. 2 (QL), the
interpretation of a statute must consider the text, the context and the purpose
of the legislation. The conclusion to which I have arrived following my
examination of the text of section 222 is supported by both its context and
purpose.
[72]
Part of the context subsection 222, and
subsection (1.1) in particular, is subsections 67(2) and (3) of the Bankruptcy
and Insolvency Act R.S.C. 1985 c. B-3 (BIA)which provide as follows:
(2) Subject to subsection (3),
notwithstanding any provision in federal or provincial legislation that has
the effect of deeming property to be held in trust for Her Majesty, property
of a bankrupt shall not be regarded as held in trust for Her Majesty for the
purpose of paragraph (1)(a) unless it would be so regarded in the absence of
that statutory provision.
|
(2) Sous réserve du paragraphe
(3) et par dérogation à toute disposition législative fédérale ou provinciale
ayant pour effet d’assimiler certains biens à des biens détenus en fiducie
pour Sa Majesté, aucun des biens du failli ne peut, pour l’application de
l’alinéa (1)a), être considéré comme détenu en fiducie pour Sa Majesté si, en
l’absence de la disposition législative en question, il ne le serait pas.
|
3) Subsection (2) does not apply
in respect of amounts deemed to be held in trust under subsection 227(4) or (4.1)
of the Income Tax Act, subsection 23(3) or (4) of the Canada
Pension Plan or subsection 86(2) or (2.1) of the Employment Insurance
Act (each of which is in this subsection referred to as a “federal
provision”) nor in respect of amounts deemed to be held in trust under any
law of a province that creates a deemed trust …
|
(3) Le paragraphe (2) ne
s’applique pas à l’égard des montants réputés détenus en fiducie aux termes
des paragraphes 227(4) ou (4.1) de la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu,
des paragraphes 23(3) ou (4) du Régime de pensions du Canada ou des
paragraphes 86(2) ou (2.1) de la Loi sur l’assurance-emploi (chacun
étant appelé « disposition fédérale » au présent paragraphe) ou à l’égard des
montants réputés détenus en fiducie aux termes de toute loi d’une province
créant une fiducie présumée …
|
[73]
Subsection 67(2) makes it clear that Parliament
intended to do away with the deemed trusts in bankruptcy. The effect of these
trust is to withdraw the property subject to the deemed trust from the estate
of the bankrupt so that the federal government’s claim takes priority over the
claims of unsecured creditors. By eliminating these trusts in bankruptcy,
Parliament put the Crown on the same footing as unsecured creditors.
[74]
The preservation of the deemed trust for
unremitted source deductions in subsection 67(3) is explained by the fact that
source deductions are amounts which belong to the employee in question. The
trust in respect of those funds is a real trust in favour of the employees as
well as a deemed trust in favour of the Crown:
Although [s. 227(4)] calls the trust created
by it a deemed one, the trust is in truth a real one. The employer is required
to deduct from his employees' wages the amounts due by the employees under the
statute. This money does not belong to the employer anymore. It belongs to the
employees. The employer holds it in a statutory trust to satisfy their
obligations.
Roynat Inc. v. Ja-Sha Trucking &
Leasing Ltd., [1992] 2 W.W.R. 641 (Man. C.A.) at p.
646, cited with approval in Royal Bank of Canada v. Sparrow Electric Corp.,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 411at paragraph 28, 143 D.L.R. (4th) 385.
[75]
As a contextual factor, these provisions,
together with the absence of a provision equivalent to subsection (1.1) in any
of the Acts referred in subsection 67(3) of the BIA, tend to show that
the Parliament intended to create a special regime for source deductions in the
event of bankruptcy but that no such regime was intended in the case of amounts
of unremitted tax under the Act.
[76]
The purpose of subsection (1.1) was outlined in Quebec
(Revenue) v. Caisse populaire Desjardins de Montmagny, 2009 SCC 49, [2009]
3 S.C.R. 286 where the rationale for amendments to statutory trusts in
bankruptcy proceedings (including subsection (1.1) is reviewed at paragraphs
12-17. The purpose of amendments to the BIA and the Act was to ensure
that “the Government of Canada, the Crown, does not put
itself in a priority position. It stands in line with the unsecured creditors
in almost all cases except for the deductions of tax and unemployment owed”:
see paragraph 14.
[77]
The interpretation which I propose of
subsections (1), (1.1) and (3) gives effect to this purpose.
[78]
As a result, I am of the view that the Federal
Court correctly answered the question which was put to it. I would therefore
dismiss the appeal with costs.
“J.D. Denis Pelletier”