Citation: 2017 TCC 233
Date: 20171123
Docket: 2015-2662(IT)G
BETWEEN:
PASQUALE
PALETTA,
Appellant,
and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS
FOR ORDER
D'Arcy J.
[1]
These reasons address a motion brought by the
Appellant for an order requiring the Respondent:
-
to provide, within 30 days of the date of my
order, answers to the questions on examination for discovery for which answers were
refused or to which unresponsive answers were provided; and
-
to reattend examinations for discovery within 30
days from the date on which the above-mentioned questions are answered.
[2]
The questions at issue are those set out in
Schedule 1 to the Appellant’s Further Amended Notice of Motion.
[3]
The Appellant’s appeal relates to the Minister’s
denial of approximately $55 million of non-capital losses that the Appellant
claimed in his income tax returns for the taxation years between 2000 and 2006.
The Appellant claimed the losses in respect of foreign currency trading
activities (the “Trading Transactions”).
[4]
The Appellant had previously brought a motion
pursuant to section 58 of the Tax Court of Canada Rules (General Procedure).
In his reasons for his order dismissing the Appellant’s motion, my colleague
Justice Owen stated the following with respect to the issues before the Court:
[3] The
Notice of Appeal, the Amended Reply and the Answer filed by the parties
(collectively, the “pleadings”) suggest a complex appeal in which a number of
significant issues will have to be addressed by the trial judge, including:
1. Whether under subparagraph 152(4)(a)(i)
of the Income Tax Act (the “ITA”) the Minister of National Revenue (the
“Minister”) was entitled to issue the reassessments of the Taxation Years (the
“Reassessments”) outside the “normal reassessment period” as defined in
paragraph 152(3.1)(b) of the ITA. I will refer to this issue as the
“statute-barred issue”.
2. If the Minister was entitled to issue the
Reassessments outside the normal reassessment period, whether the Reassessments
should be sustained, vacated or sent back to the Minister for reconsideration
and reassessment on some specified basis. I will refer to this as the
“reassessment issue”. In light of the pleadings, as a minimum, this question
will require the Court to address:
(a) Whether the Trading Transactions were a sham
and, if so, the effect of the sham in the circumstances.
(b) If the Trading Transactions were not a sham:
(i) Whether the Trading Transactions were legally effective.
(ii) Whether the losses reported by the
Appellant in each of his 2000 through 2006 taxation years (the “Loss Years”) as
being from the Trading Transactions (collectively, the “Losses”) were incurred
by the Appellant.
(iii) Whether the Trading Transactions were
commercial transactions.
(iv) Whether the Trading Transactions constituted
a source of income for the Appellant.
(v) Whether the Losses were realized by the Appellant.
(c) If the Trading Transactions were not a sham,
whether they gave rise to the income reported by the Appellant for his 2007
taxation year.
(d) Whether penalties assessed against the
Appellant under subsection 163(2) of the ITA should be sustained, varied or
vacated.
[5]
As Justice Owen noted in his reasons, the
Appellant bears the onus described in House v. The Queen with respect to whether
the Minister assessed the correct amount of income tax for each of the taxation
years at issue. The Minister bears the onus with respect to the statute-barred
issue and with respect to the penalties assessed under subsection 163(2) of the
Income Tax Act (the “Act”).
I. Summary
of Facts
[6]
The Appellant’s Motion Record contains an
affidavit of Wajiha Kahn sworn on February 8, 2017 (the “Kahn Affidavit”). In
addition, the Appellant filed an affidavit of Jena McCaustlin sworn on February
15, 2017 (the “First McCaustlin Affidavit”) and an affidavit sworn by Ms. McCaustlin on March
24, 2017 (the “Second McCaustlin Affidavit”).
[7]
The Respondent filed an affidavit sworn by
Olinda Samuel on February 16, 2017 (the “Samuel Affidavit”).
[8]
The four affidavits that counsel for the Appellant
and counsel for the Respondent provided in respect of the Respondent’s
undertakings given at discovery and the matters the Respondent took under
advisement contain the following written responses:
-
The Khan Affidavit contains a letter from
counsel for the Respondent dated September 14, 2016, which contains answers to
the discovery undertakings of the Respondent and matters taken under advisement
at the examination for discovery (the “Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter”).
-
The Samuel Affidavit contains two letters from
counsel for the Respondent providing additional answers to the Respondent’s
undertakings and the matters she took under advisement. The first letter, also
contained in the First McCaustlin Affidavit, is dated February 8, 2017 (the “Respondent’s February 8, 2017 letter”)
and the second letter is dated February 15, 2017 (the “Respondent’s February 15,
2017 letter”).
-
The Second McCaustlin Affidavit contains a
letter from counsel for the Respondent dated March 16, 2017 providing
additional answers to the Respondent’s undertakings and the matters she took
under advisement (the “Respondent’s March 16, 2017 letter”).
[9]
The Appellant’s Motion Record also contains the
following relevant documents:
-
Portions of the transcript from the discovery of
the Respondent’s nominee, Ms. Marie Andrews, the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”)
auditor who conducted the audit of the Appellant.
-
Excerpts from a 151-page position paper prepared
by Ms. Andrews entitled “Paletta Group, Re:
Forex Trading Losses” (the “Position Paper”). The complete position paper is
marked as Exhibit No. 3 on the examination of Ms. Andrews.
-
Portions of Ms. Andrews’ audit report (the “Audit
Report”), which is marked as Exhibit No. 5 on the examination of Ms. Andrews.
-
Numerous memorandums entitled “Memo for File”, which
contain numerous entries made by Ms. Andrews between August 2008 and November
2013 (the “Memorandums to File”).
The Memorandums to File are marked as Exhibit No. 7 on the examination of Ms.
Andrews.
-
A document prepared by Ms. Andrews entitled “Paletta Group Audit Plan”
(the “Audit Plan”), which is marked as Exhibit No. 8 on the examination of Ms.
Andrews.
[10]
The pleadings refer to a number of persons and
corporations who were involved (or purported to be involved) in the Trading
Transactions, including the following:
-
The Appellant’s son, Angelo Paletta
-
Tim Hodgins and John Hodgins
-
David Lewis of Affinity Financial Group Inc.
-
Brokerages that Tim and John Hodgins represented
at various times during the relevant periods: Union Cal Limited (“UCAL”), IFX
Securities (“IFX”) and ODL Securities Ltd. (“ODL”).
II. The
Law
[11]
The law with respect to discovery principles is
well settled. My colleague Justice Campbell provided the following summary of
the core discovery principles in her reasons for judgment in Burlington
Resources Finance Co. v. The Queen:
[11] Caselaw is clear and abundant. The core of discovery principles
is that its scope should be wide, with relevancy construed liberally, without,
however, allowing it to enter the realm of a fishing expedition. These basic
principles are essential because the purpose of discovery is to enable parties
to know the case they have to meet at trial, to know the facts upon which the
opposing party relies, to narrow or eliminate issues, to obtain admissions that
will facilitate the proof of matters in issue and, finally, to avoid surprise
at trial (General Electric Capital Canada Inc. v The Queen, 2008 TCC
668, 2009 DTC 1186, at para 14). This is all with a view to making the hearing
of an appeal streamlined and to ensure that the parties are focussed on the
appropriate issues.
[12]
After reviewing Justice Campbell’s decision and
numerous other decisions of this Court and the Federal Court of Appeal, Chief
Justice Rossiter, in Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce v. The Queen, provided the following
summary of points stated in the numerous decisions:
[18] The above
principles governing discovery thus reveal the following salient points:
-
Relevancy is extremely broad and should be
liberally construed. The threshold for relevancy on discovery is very low but
does not allow for a fishing expedition, abusive questions, delaying tactics or
completely irrelevant questions;
-
Everything is relevant that may directly or
indirectly aid the party seeking the discovery to maintain its case or combat
that of its adversary. If the questions are broadly related to the issues
raised, they should be answered;
-
Discovery is limited by the pleadings to some
extent; and
-
The examining party conducting the discovery is
doing so for the purposes of: supporting his or her own case; obtaining
admissions; attacking the opponent’s case; limiting the issues at trial; and
revealing the case that he or she must meet at trial and the facts that the
opponent relies upon.
[13]
A principle that has been enunciated by this
Court on numerous occasions is that one must always remember that a motions
judge is in a very different position from the trial judge, who hears the
entire case and is better placed to judge whether something is or is not
relevant.
[14]
One issue raised in this motion is the
disclosure of third party information. As my colleague Justice Jorré noted in Dominion
Nickel Investments v. The Queen,
paragraph 241(3)(b) of the Act allows for such disclosure. Justice Jorré
explained the application of paragraph 241(3)(b) as follows:
. . .
[26] In section
241 of the Act, Parliament has clearly expressed a strong policy
protecting privacy in income tax matters. However, paragraph 241(3)(b) clearly
allows for the production of evidence in “any legal proceedings relating to the
administration or enforcement of” the Act.
[27] Accordingly,
while the privacy of tax information is, of course, an important consideration,
section 241 has no direct application here.
[28] The general
rule is that, where a document is relevant, it will have to be produced in its
entirety. However, parts of it may be redacted where the part is “clearly
irrelevant”.
. . .
[32] In
considering privacy interests, it is important to keep in mind that there is
now a strong implied undertaking established in Canada that information
obtained on discovery may only be used for the purpose of the action in the
course of which it was obtained. Except to the extent that the information
becomes public in the course of trial, the undertaking survives after the end
of the action.
[33] This
undertaking inherently limits the further disclosure of the information and
helps protect privacy interests of others.
III. Requested
Answers or Documents
[15]
The Appellant grouped the questions (and
documents) at issue into the following five categories:
a.
Request for disclosure of the complete report by
RSD Solutions (the“RSD Report”);
b.
Requests for copies of various CRA working
papers, position papers and proposal letters from other CRA tax services
offices (“TSOs”) that were reviewed and relied on by Ms. Andrews, the CRA auditor
who audited the Appellant;
c.
Requests for copies of instructions given by CRA
headquarters and of communications with the CRA commissioner’s office;
d.
Requests for information obtained by the CRA
pertaining to Timothy Hodgins, UCAL, IFX or ODL, who the CRA or the
Respondent alleges are parties to the sham; and
e.
Requests for information on negotiations between
the Minister and other taxpayers which may have resulted in inconsistent
assessing positions being taken by the Minister.
[16]
I will follow the Appellant’s categories when
considering the discovery questions at issue.
IV. First
Category: Request for disclosure of the complete “RSD Report”
[17]
In the following question, the Appellant is
asking for a complete copy of a report prepared for the CRA by a third party
consultant:
Question 171
[Question] Counsel, we would like a copy of the RSD report. I
understand that it was not provided previously, but given that she did rely on
it, we would like a copy of the report.
[Answer (counsel for the Respondent)] I’m going to take it under
advisement to the extent you can establish how much she relied on it, whether
anything in addition to what she put in her position paper. We’ll take it under
advisement for now.
[18]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide a copy of the RSD Report stating
the following: “The RSD Report will not be
produced. The Respondent will not be relying on the RSD expert report and gives
an undertaking to that effect. Information collected relating to the audit of
other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be produced.”
[19]
Subsequently, in the Respondent’s February 8,
2017 letter, counsel for the Respondent provided what he referred to as a
redacted copy of the RSD Report.
The copy supplied is not a redacted copy of the RSD Report. It is an incomplete
copy of the document. It is missing pages 5 to 13, all but the first page of
Appendix IV, and pages 1 and 2 of Appendix V.
[20]
Counsel for the Respondent argued that the
Respondent is only required to produce the incomplete copy of the RSD Report,
since Ms. Andrews only attached those particular portions of the RSD Report to
the Position Paper.
[21]
Counsel for the Respondent provided the Court
with a complete copy of the RSD Report, to allow me to see exactly what is
missing from the incomplete copy provided to the Appellant. The Respondent is
not claiming privilege with respect to the missing portions of the report.
[22]
Counsel for the Respondent’s argument is similar
to the argument he made with respect to other questions and documents: the
Respondent should only be required to produce documents, or, in the case of the
RSD Report, parts of a document that Ms. Andrews reviewed and considered
relevant for establishing her assessing position. In other words, I should let
Ms. Andrews be the gatekeeper with respect to the documents that should be
provided to the Court. I do not accept this argument; it has no basis in law.
[23]
It is for the Court, not Ms. Andrews, to decide
whether a document is relevant. The Appellant is entitled to all documents that
are relevant with respect to issues raised in the pleadings, both those that
support the Respondent’s case and those that damage her case. Further, once the
Court determines that a document is relevant, the Respondent must produce the
complete document. It is a basic rule of evidence that, if a party has a
complete document, the party must produce the entire document not selected
portions of the document. Certain portions of the document, which are clearly
irrelevant, may be redacted to protect the privacy of a third party taxpayer.
[24]
Mr. Tim Hum, a CRA headquarters employee appears
to have brought the report to Ms. Andrews’ attention. The Respondent stated, in
her reply to an undertaking, that Mr. Hum was Ms. Andrews’ contact at CRA
headquarters during the audit of the Appellant. He stated the following in a
May 31, 2013 email to Ms. Andrews:
Also, we
discussed the RSD report as a group earlier today. You should read and
understand the entire report (body of report and appendices). Auditors can
leverage off of the report and what David Leblanc (Edmonton Team Leader) will
reflect in the updated Edmonton positon paper guideline. However, please note
that you need to demonstrate that the trading pattern and anomalies (for your
specific file) are similar to what RSD reviewed. (3 samples).
[25]
Ms. Andrews followed Mr. Hum’s directions. She
obtained a copy of the RSD Report from CRA headquarters. She noted in a June 2013 memo
to file:
Copy of full RSD report obtained from HQ ATP – 54 pages including
the appendices. Review indicated that it was excellent and would definitely
provide additional support for audit’s arguments.
Continuing to work on position paper [the Position Paper] – nearing
completion. Material from RSD report to be incorporated as applicable per
direction from HQ ATP.
[26]
The Position Paper formed the technical basis
for the Audit Report.
Ms. Andrews attached portions of the RSD Report as an exhibit to the
Position Paper.
She acknowledged during discovery that she relied on the RSD Report when
developing the concept of a normal trading instruction with respect to foreign
currency trading.
[27]
The document is clearly relevant. As noted in
the executive summary, the purpose of the report is to review various over-the-counter
foreign currency transactions undertaken by several Canadian partnerships “to assist the CRA in determining whether or not the
transactions had the attributes of legitimate transactions and occurred under
normal industry/commercial practice or were solely for the purpose of
generating losses that were offset against income by the partners of the
partnerships.”
The report specifically mentions ODL.
[28]
The missing portion of the RSD Report, from page
5 to page 13, contains the author’s review of three samples of “trading patterns and how losses were created”. These three examples form the factual basis for the
RDS Report. As Mr. Hum noted in his May 31, 2013 email to Ms. Andrews, she
needed to demonstrate that the trading patterns and anomalies for the Appellant
are similar to the three samples reviewed in the RSD Report.
[29]
The Respondent will produce the complete RSD
Report. The Respondent may redact the name of any taxpayer under audit
(including employees of the taxpayer) that appears on pages 5 to 13 and in
Appendix I. However, each name shall be replaced by a specific letter, to allow
the reader to follow the complex fact situation. For example, if there is a
reference to Joe Smith and he is a taxpayer that was under audit, then all
references to Joe Smith in the document shall be redacted and replaced by the
letter A. If there is a reference to another taxpayer under audit, for example
Jane Smith, then all references to Jane Smith shall be redacted and replaced by
the letter B.
[30]
The Appellant included two other questions in
this grouping: questions 183 and 337. I will deal with these two questions in
subsequent sections of my reasons.
V.
Second Category: Requests for copies of various CRA
working papers, position papers and proposal letters from other CRA tax
services offices (“TSOs”) that were reviewed and relied on by Ms. Andrews, the
CRA auditor who audited the Appellant
[31]
This category covers the Appellant’s requests
for position papers prepared by CRA officials located in other CRA offices. The
Appellant asserts that these CRA offices provided the position papers at issue
to Ms. Andrews to assist her with her audit of the Appellant.
[32]
The Respondent argues that she should not be
required to produce the position papers because Ms. Andrews did not rely on the
position papers in question.
[33]
The category contains four groups of questions:
questions 326-330, 784‑785, 823-826 and 887-890. The first group of
questions, 326-330, concerns a position paper prepared by an unidentified CRA
officer; the three remaining groups of questions relate to position papers
prepared by CRA officials located in the Edmonton, Vancouver and London CRA
offices respectively. I will now set out each of the questions and the
Respondent’s written reply to any undertaking provided or her reply given as a
result of taking the question under advisement.
A. Questions 326-330
[Question] Was
any of this document part and parcel of a template?
[Answer] Not
inasmuch. I mean, I did look at another working paper, but it wasn’t a template
per se.
[Question] And
did you cut and paste or use any of the information part and parcel in that
template?
[Answer] It
wasn’t a template, but I’m thinking that you’ve probably seen it.
[Question] No,
I’ve never seen it.
[Answer] Okay,
regardless, but it wasn’t a template. It was just something that I’d seen, I
liked a bit of the wording.
[Question] Do you
still have it?
[Answer] No.
[Question] Is it
possible that we could get a copy of what you’re referring to? You didn’t say
it was a template, but a position paper you’ve seen.
[Answer] It
wasn’t given to me to use, it was just something that I had seen and read along
the way.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] I’ll take it under advisement. [25]
[34]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the information requested in
questions 326-330. He stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers and any legal research done by Ms.
Andrews is irrelevant and will not be produced.”[26]
B. Questions 784-785
[Question] Did
you review what David Leblanc provided as the Edmonton position paper
guideline?
[Answer] Well, he
said we could leverage off of that. I had access to it. I can’t remember if I
actually really looked at it. I may have, but I probably did it very quickly.
[Question] I’m
assuming the guideline is very non-taxpayer specific because it is a guideline,
but in any event, counsel, I would like a copy of this Edmonton position paper
guideline.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take that under advisement.
C. Questions 823-826
[Question]
January 2013, no specific time, “Obtained lengthy FX position paper (with
appendices) that had recently been completed by Vancouver TSO – to be used as
basic template for Paletta group.”
[Answer] That’s
more my comment to myself. I mean, they gave it to me and I was using it as one
of my reference points here. That’s probably why you see some of that wording
picked up.
[Question] And
that’s probably the reason why I was asking if there was a template being done.
[Answer] Not in a
formal sense, no. Like it wasn’t given to me, you must use this as a template.
It was me using it because it was a good position paper and thinking it was
valuable.
[Question] I’m
not sure if this particular document is different from another undertaking that
we asked because at the time you said there was not a template document, but
I’m going to ask specifically if you could produce or identify this basic
template of the FX position paper that was provided to you in January 2013.
[Answer] Well,
again, that’s my wording that it’s a basic template. That wasn’t headquarters’
direction, just to be clear.
[Question] And
that’s fine, even if it is headquarters’ direction, it doesn’t make a
difference. My point is that there is a document here obtained from Vancouver
TSO that was provided to you.
[Answer] Yes.
[Answer – (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’re going to take that under advisement.
D. Questions 887-890
[Question] But in
November 2009, you definitely looked at a position paper and proposal letter by
the London TSO. Who from the London TSO?
[Answer] I can’t
recall.
[Question] Was
the position paper and proposal dealing with transactions with ODL, IFX, or
Union CAL?
[Answer] I can’t
recall. I mean, I just know there was, obviously, there was one and I briefly
looked at it.
[Question] Can
you look into your records and confirm whether it had to do with trading
transactions dealing with IFX, Union CAL, or ODL, and [if] Mr. Tim Hodgins
[was] involved in those tradings?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take that under advisement.
[Question] And,
if so, we would like a copy of that produced, please.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] Again, we’ll take that under advisement.
[35]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the information requested in
questions 784-785, 823-826 and 887-890 (both questions). For each question he
stated, “Refused. Any information relating to
the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or Paletta International
Corporation has been produced. Information collected relating to the audit of
other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be produced.”[30]
[36]
The CRA conducted audits of other taxpayers
involved in transactions similar to the Trading Transactions, which also
involved Tim and John Hodgins, UCAL, IFX and ODL. These audits were part of a project
co-ordinated by officials located in CRA’s Ottawa headquarters.
[37]
It is clear from the Appellant’s Motion Record
that Ms. Andrews, in the course of her audit of the Appellant, had significant
interaction with officials at CRA headquarters in Ottawa and with CRA auditors
at other local CRA offices.
[38]
Ms. Andrews states the following in the introduction
to the Position Paper:
This paper discusses and details the Canada Revenue
Agency’s (CRA or Agency) position on the foreign currency straddle strategy and
the timing losses that arise from the strategy. This Position Paper has as its
basis, information obtained from a review of foreign currency losses as they
pertain to these specific files and from the Agency’s review of a number of
taxpayers that have claimed foreign currency losses arising from transactions
with UCAL, IFX and ODL.
[Emphasis added.]
[39]
The Position Paper contains a summary of the
activities of ODL. It also contains numerous references to specific business
activities of Tim and John Hodgins, UCAL, IFX and ODL. Footnotes 8, 11,
14, 15, 16, 18 and 19 to the Position Paper state that a significant portion of
this information is based on “general
information gathered in similar audits conducted by the Vancouver TSO”.
[40]
In the Audit Report, Ms. Andrews specifically refers
to the involvement of CRA Headquarters and the Vancouver CRA office. She notes
the following:
The complex
issues addressed in this audit were similar to those being simultaneously
addressed in numerous other audits across the country, so consultation with contacts
in head office ATP was ongoing.
. . .
Extensive
consultation with ATP HQ was conducted during the course of the audit in order
to determine audit’s final assessing positions. The final Position Paper in
fact relies heavily on HQ sanctioned positions developed by the Vancouver TSO
in connection with a similar type of audit.
[Emphasis added.]
[41]
It is clear that the CRA was conducting
simultaneous audits, in various CRA offices, of different taxpayers involved in
transactions very similar to the transactions engaged in by the Appellant. CRA
headquarters officials provided direction to the various auditors in an attempt
to ensure consistency in the various assessments. In addition, auditors in
various CRA offices shared information, and their work, with auditors in other
CRA offices, including with Ms. Andrews. This can be seen from the following
quotation in the Audit Plan under the heading “Status - Update November, 2010”:
Steve Shalaby (HQ) provided information on a court
case that might be of assistance in preparing proposals affecting the early
Union CAL years. Certain ODL assessments already issued by London TSO also
available – could be useful for comparison to the situation with our three
taxpayers. General position paper still being worked on for the ODL years by Ed
Eng in Vancouver – audit therefore to hold off until consistent positions
finally available for all brokerages.
[42]
The Audit Plan and the Memorandums to File, which
are documents prepared by Ms. Andrews, contain numerous references to
information made available to her by other CRA offices.
[43]
The following are examples of such references in
the Audit Plan:
-
Under the heading “Work
Completed as of October, 2009”:
[Liaison] with CRA contacts in Vancouver and
Ottawa regarding issues such as the degree to which these taxpayers were likely
to fit within the framework of the B.C. project.
-
Under the heading
“Additional Work Completed to November, 2009”:
Review of a Position Paper and Proposal
Letter issued in connection with a similar type of audit recently completed by
the London TSO.
-
Under the heading “Next
Steps – December, 2009”:
Review Position Paper issued in connection
with the Vancouver project (once this becomes available).
Determine possible assessing positions in light of the approaches
chosen by Vancouver and London (and perhaps other TSO’s if any additional
audits of a similar nature also come to our attention).
-
Under the heading
“Status Update – January, 2013”:
Final draft Position Paper template received
from Ed Eng in Vancouver – assessing positions fully clarified. Work begun to
prepare detailed Position Paper for the Paletta group using Ed Eng’s approach
as a template.
[44]
Similar references to Mr. Eng and his position
paper are contained in the Memorandums to File.
[45]
I previously referred to the email of CRA
headquarters official Tim Hum which suggests that Ms. Andrews should “leverage off of” a
position paper prepared by an official in the Edmonton CRA office. Ms. Andrews
noted in her reply to counsel’s question that she had access to the position
paper and may have reviewed it very quickly.
[46]
In my view, the Respondent is required to
produce the documents requested by the Appellant in the group of questions
326-330, 784-785 and 823‑826. With respect the group of questions
887-890, the Respondent will answer the question whether the position paper and
proposal letter prepared by the London CRA office “had
to do with trading transactions dealing with” IFX,
UCAL, or ODL and whether Mr. Tim Hodgins was involved in those transactions. If
the paper and letter deal with any of these parties, the Respondent will
produce the position paper and proposal letter.
[47]
Ms. Andrews was provided with each of the
documents in this category in an attempt to ensure that the CRA assessed in a
“consistent manner”. The documents clearly relate to the issues raised in the
Appellant’s assessments.
[48]
Further, Ms. Andrews, to varying degrees,
reviewed each of the papers. The question of whether or not she relied on them
when developing her assessing position is not a deciding factor. The Appellant
is entitled to information that supports the Respondent’s position and to
information that may damage her position.
[49]
I wish to note that, contrary to what is argued
by counsel for the Respondent, it is clear from the record that Ms. Andrews
relied upon the information contained in position papers prepared by other CRA
offices when assessing the Appellant.
[50]
Any taxpayer’s name that appears in any of these
documents shall be redacted in the same manner as the names are redacted in the
RSD Report.
E. Question 183
[Question] Did
the Vancouver TSO rely on that expert report?
[Answer (Ms.
Andrews)] I have no idea.
[Question] Can
you find out?
[Answer (Ms.
Andrews)] – I don’t know. Could we find out?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] No, I’m not going to give that undertaking. I don’t think
it’s relevant.
[51]
As I just noted, Ms. Andrews indicates in her
Audit Report that when drafting the paper she relied heavily on positions
developed by the Vancouver TSO. Further, the Respondent will be producing a
copy of the Vancouver Position Paper. As a result, the information requested in
question 183 is relevant; the Respondent will answer the question.
VI. Third Category:
Requests for copies of instructions given by CRA headquarters, and communications
with the CRA commissioner’s office
[52]
The Appellant emphasized that in a case such as
the present one, where the audit of the Appellant is part of a project audit
co-ordinated by officials at the CRA’s headquarters, the Court must consider
the documents relied upon by such headquarters officials in formulating
directions sent to CRA auditors in the CRA’s various local offices, including
the CRA auditor who audited the Appellant. Counsel for the Appellant argued
that the courts must look at information relied upon by the Minister, not just
the auditor of the Appellant.
[53]
There are two groups of questions in this
category. The first group is set out below:
A. Questions 786-787
[Question] Thank
you. We already spoke about the RSD report, but I’d like you to ask Mr. Hum
what he meant by the last sentence, in particular, what he meant by, “you need
to demonstrate that the trading pattern and anomalies . . . are similar”. What
trading pattern and what anomalies is he speaking to or referring to?
[Answer] In my
understanding, he would be – I would have to look at what was is the RSD report
again, it’s been quite a while since I read it, but he was saying that I needed
to demonstrate certain patterns and anomalies, which I did already demonstrate,
that were also discussed in the report.
[Question] I
would like you to ask him as an undertaking to see what was his view of the
patterns and anomalies. What are the patterns and what are the anomalies is he
specifically referring to in that sentence?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take it under advisement.
[54]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the information requested in
questions 786-787 stating: “Refused. Any information relating to the audit of
the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or Paletta International Corporation
has been produced. Information collected relating to the audit of other
taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be produced.”[42]
[55]
In the first instance, the Respondent’s answer
is nonsensical. Mr. Hum was not an auditor. He was one of the CRA headquarters
officials who co-ordinated the audit of a number of taxpayers, including the audit
of the Appellant, with respect to foreign exchange trading. The requested
information relates to specific instructions Mr. Hum provided to Ms. Andrews
regarding the use of the RSD Report when auditing the Appellant. It does not
relate to an audit of another taxpayer.
[56]
The Respondent, in her written argument, argued
that the question has been answered, since the Respondent produced information
with respect to anomalies identified by Ms. Andrews. However, this is not the
question. The Appellant is asking for the trading patterns and anomalies that
Mr. Hum was referring to when providing his instructions to Ms. Andrews with respect
to the audit of the Appellant. The information is relevant and the Respondent
will answer the question.
[57]
I will now turn to the second group of
questions.
B. Questions 845-848
[Question] And,
counsel, again, it’s going to be in our list of Exhibit 6, and you received
final approval October 28, 2013. I just got a sticky here from my colleague
which says we did not include the commissioner in the list. I’m not going to
ask for the commissioner himself, I highly doubt the commissioner was involved,
but the commissioner’s office must have been involved and all I’m going to ask
about this particular transaction itself if they have communications going back
and forth. That would be sufficient for our purposes.
[Answer] It was
just an unusual audit with, you know, with statute barred years and so many
years being assessed and it’s so big.
[Question] And
you’re waiting for their approval, though, to issue the assessments?
[Answer] Yes, I
never - yes, I waited for them to approve it.
[Question] So if
the commissioner had said no, you would not have gone forward?
[Answer] Correct.
[Question] Again,
the communications going back and forth with the commissioner’s office, we
would like that as well?
[Answer (counsel for the Respondent)] Yes.
[58]
Even though counsel for the Respondent agreed
during discovery to provide the requested information, he stated the following
in the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter: “Ms.
Caines did not have any communications with the commissioner’s office.”
In the Respondent’s February 15, 2017 letter, the Respondent identified Ms.
Caines as “the auditor assigned to the audits in
the early stages prior to Ms. Andrews taking over as the auditor.”
I have no idea why the Respondent felt that the action of an auditor who was
only involved in the early stages of the audit is relevant to the production of
the requested communications.
[59]
Counsel for the Respondent took a different
approach in his March 16, 2017 letter, where he stated the following:
In Ms. Andrew’s
answer to Q. 843, she stated that she thought Vic Djurdjevic was the person who
was communicating with the commissioner. As we advised in our letter of
February 15, 2017, it appears Mr. Djurdjevic no longer works at CRA and we
cannot confirm whether he has a file associated with this matter. However, we
are making best efforts to locate and produce documents, if any exist, of Mr.
Djurdjevic communicating with the commissioner’s office”.
[60]
In her written argument, the Respondent states
that no documents have been located to date.
[61]
As I previously discussed, the record shows that
CRA headquarters was extensively involved with the audit of the Appellant.
Further, the record clearly shows that approval was required and received from
the Commissioner’s office. Ms. Andrews made the following entries in a Memo For
File:
-
[September 2013] Position paper substantially
complete and ready to assess. Request to proceed submitted to and received from
HQ ATP. . .
-
[October 2013] Position paper complete. Closure
temporarily on hold pending final approval from the Commissioner’s office. . .
-
[October 28, 2013] Final approval to proceed
received from Commissioner’s office.
[62]
I do not understand why the Respondent has not
produced the communications between the Hamilton CRA office and the
Commissioner’s office. I have a difficult time accepting that both the Hamilton
TSO and the Commissioner’s office lost their copies of such communications.
[63]
Counsel for the Respondent, during his oral
argument, informed the Court that the Respondent would provide the requested
information. However, I wish to make it clear that the Court is ordering the
Respondent to answer the question and provide the “communications
going back and forth with the commissioner’s office”.
[64]
The Appellant included question 337 in his first
category of questions. It is more appropriate to address it with the other
questions relating to CRA headquarters.
C. Question 337
[Question] Can
you go and endeavour and ask the people at head office that you were speaking
to whether they relied on that report in creating their position?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take that under advisement.
[65]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the requested information. He
stated: “Refused. Any information relating to
the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or Paletta International
Corporation has been produced. Information collected relating to the audit of
other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be produced.”
[66]
In light of the extensive involvement of CRA headquarters
staff in the audit of the Appellant, the Respondent will answer the question.
VII. Fourth Category: Requests
for information obtained by the CRA pertaining to Timothy Hodgins, UCAL, IFX or
ODL, who the CRA or the Respondent alleges are parties to the sham
A. Question 116
[Question] And
they did gather quite a bit of information. Again, the information I’m looking
for, and I’ll just pose it to your counsel, is that we understand that there
have been audits or investigations of third parties and that formulated the
view of the Minister at the time of raising the assessment, either directly
through her or indirectly through using some of that information. So we would
like to have copies or production of what information they received from ODL,
Union CAL, IFX, Tim Hodgins, John Hodgins, whether there are audits or
investigations of them, and any information they had of these currency
straddles or the structure of the straddles. That would be the first part and
we would like the Attorney General to produce that.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] I’ll take it under advisement, but whatever Ms. Andrews
says today, I think, essentially is that anything she relied on is in the
position paper. To the extent there is information collected, for instance,
about Tim Hodgins, she didn’t rely on it and I think it’s safe to say we’re not
going to be producing that, but I’ll take the request you just made under
advisement.
[67]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be
produced.”
[68]
The Respondent subsequently changed her
position. Counsel for the Respondent states in the Respondent’s February 8,
2017 letter: “We enclose the documents that
respond to this request.” Further, counsel stated in
the Respondent’s March 16, 2017 letter: “Additional
information and documents concerning this request is found in the documents of
Deborah Chisholm. We are making best efforts to locate and produce documents,
if any exist, of Ed Eng as referred to in Ms. Chisholm’s emails.”
[69]
The Appellant argues that the documents attached
to the Respondent’s February 8, 2017 letter and the Respondent’s March 16, 2017
letter are not the requested information. Counsel for the Appellant argues that
many of the documents pertain to the Appellant or related corporations.
[70]
The Respondent states in her written argument
that there are no further documents.
[71]
I have already noted that Ms. Andrews did not
conduct her audit in isolation; rather she took instructions from officials at CRA
headquarters, who clearly provided direction and she reviewed her work. In
addition, Ms. Andrews relied heavily on positions developed by the Vancouver
TSO and she reviewed position papers prepared by the Edmonton and London TSOs.
[72]
Information that CRA headquarters officials
either provided to Ms. Andrews or used when reviewing her work is
relevant. Similarly, information that the Vancouver TSO used when providing
advice to Ms. Andrews is also relevant.
[73]
The Respondent will confirm in writing to the
Appellant that there are no further documents in the possession of the CRA with
respect to the Appellant’s question stating that he “would like to have copies or production of what information they
[the CRA] received from ODL, Union CAL, IFX, Tim Hodgins, John Hodgins,
whether there are audits or investigations of them, and any information they
had of these currency straddles or the structure of the straddles.”
[74]
The Respondent will also answer the question
whether the CRA conducted audits or investigations of ODL, UCAL, IFX, Tim
Hodgins and John Hodgins.
B. Question 119
[Question]
Again, counsel, my concern is I don’t want any surprises of any information
coming from any of these audits or investigations that took place of other
third parties to [affect] my client. So we would like any documents or any
notes from those meetings that relate to our particular taxpayer or any of the
parties to the alleged sham, that we get that information.
[Answer
(counsel for the Respondent)] And on the same basis we’ll take that under
advisement.
[75]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be
produced.”
[76]
In his written argument, counsel for the
Respondent acknowledges that different CRA auditors gathered information on Tim
Hodgins and the various brokerages, such as UCAL and IFX. However, he argues
that “unless referred to in her [Ms. Andrews’] Position
Paper or she admitted during the examination that she relied on particular
information, the remainder of the information possessed by the CRA is
irrelevant to the assessments at issue.”
[77]
The Respondent’s argument is based on the incorrect
assumption that Ms. Andrews worked on the audit of the Appellant without
the help of other CRA officials. I have already discussed her reliance on other
CRA officials, particularly CRA headquarters officials and officials in the CRA’s
TSOs. A memorandum from a Ms. Deborah Chisholm to Ms. Andrews provides a
further example of the help Ms. Andrews received from other CRA offices. At the
time, Ms. Chisholm was an auditor in the Tax Avoidance Section of the Vancouver
TSO. In the memorandum, Ms. Chisholm provides instructions to Ms. Andrews on
trading transactions involving UCAL and IFX.
[78]
The Respondent will provide the requested
information with respect to the Appellant and any parties to the alleged sham
that was obtained by the CRA offices that assisted Ms. Andrews in her audit,
namely CRA headquarters and the CRA offices in Vancouver, Edmonton and London.
C. Question 125
[Question] I’m
going to add, counsel, besides ODL, regarding with other tax authorities, if
the Minister or the Attorney General has any information from other tax
authorities, not just for ODL but also for IFX and Union CAL, and they will be
relying on that information as well, to produce that information.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] I can tell you an answer to that. If we have any further
documents we intend to rely on we’re going to have to file a supplementary
list. Both sides have to do that kind of thing, but I can tell you my
understanding from Ms. Andrews is that anything she relied on is in the current
productions. But, again, I’ll take our [sic] request under advisement.
[79]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be
produced.”[55]
[80]
The Appellant’s question is narrow, he asks for
information that the Respondent will be relying upon to prove her case. Counsel
for the Respondent states that the Respondent will file a supplemental list of
documents if she intends to rely upon documents that were not in her list of
documents. This is a sufficient answer to the question. Regardless, because of
my direction with respect to question 119, the Respondent is required to
produce any information regarding the Appellant or any party to the alleged
sham that was obtained from other tax authorities by the CRA offices referred
to.
D. Questions 426-430
[Question] Did
you access the responses, and it seems like many responses, from the aggressive
tax planning department in Vancouver regarding the ODL Securities?
[Answer] I had
access to what’s in here, what was given to me.
[Question] So any
of these footnotes, anything mentioned, you had access to those things?
[Answer] I had
access to the information that I referenced and I know that that’s where it
came from, that it was related to that, and that’s as far as that goes.
[Question] So you
had only questions 30 and 31?
[Answer] I’d have
to go back through and see exactly. I would think I probably had other
questions and these seemed perhaps the most relevant to include here. They are
probably in other documentation and form part of the audit, to the extent that
I’ve got them.
[Question] I want
you to go check your records. . .
[Answer] Okay.
[Question] . . . and
see which questions you have that ODL answered and I want you to produce the
responses.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] Yes, we’ll do that.
[81]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent stated: “At this
point, we have not been able to determine what, if any, questions ODL answered
(in addition to those referred to in the Position Paper which has been marked
as Exhibit 3 to Ms. Andrews’ examination) nor have we located any documents
containing the ODL responses. We will continue to search for and make best
efforts to find any further answers reviewed by Ms. Andrews and provide same if
they exist.”
[82]
Counsel for the Respondent then informed the Appellant
that the Respondent could not locate copies of the requested information.
Specifically, in the Respondent’s February 8, 2017 letter, counsel for the
Respondent stated: “We confirm that we have
searched and made best efforts to find copies of any questions ODL was asked to
answer. We are unable to locate copies of any questions that ODL was asked to
answer or any responses received from ODL.”
[83]
Counsel provided a different response in the
Respondent’s March 16, 2017 letter when he stated: “Additional
information and documents concerning this request is [sic] found in the
documents of Deborah Chisholm. We are making best efforts to locate and produce
documents, if any exist, of Ed Eng as referred to in Ms. Chisholm’s emails.”
[84]
As I indicated during the hearing, I am troubled
by the Respondent’s responses to this series of questions. Counsel for the
Respondent stated during discovery that the Respondent will produce the
information. Then, counsel stated that the Respondent was unable to locate
copies of any questions that ODL was asked or any responses received from ODL.
However, a month later the Respondent produces documents and informs the
Appellant that the Respondent is looking for additional information.
[85]
During the hearing, counsel for the Respondent
informed the Court that the Respondent still does not know “which of the
questions and answers Ms. Andrews had in her possession. When we determine
that, the appellants [sic] will get that.”
[86]
It is not clear to me how there can be no
documents and then, suddenly, a month later, documents are produced. Further, I
am left with the impression that there are additional documents, however the
Respondent cannot locate them, which is surprising considering the extremely
large amounts at stake in this appeal and, I assume, other appeals involving
ODL, UCAL and IFX.
[87]
The Respondent will produce all the requested
documents. Specifically, the CRA will produce all responses provided by ODL
that Ms. Andrews had either physical or electronic access to in respect of
questions asked by the aggressive tax-planning department in Vancouver, regardless
of where such documents are currently physically located.
E. Questions 431-433
[Question] Thank
you. And, Ms. Andrews, if you have any questions and answers in your records
from UCAL and IFX, the other brokerages. . .
[Answer] I don’t
believe so, but we’ll check.
[Question] . . . Please
check.
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll do that.
[Question] And, if you do, please produce them.
[88]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent stated: “At this
point, we have not been able to determine what, if any, questions UCAL and IFX
answered that were reviewed by Ms. Andrews nor have we located any documents
containing UCAL and IFX responses. We will continue to search for and make best
efforts to find and provide same if they exist.”
[89]
The Respondent provided a similar response in her
February 8, 2017 letter in which counsel for the Respondent stated: “We confirm that we have searched and made best
efforts to find copies of any questions UCAL or IFX were asked to answer. We
were unable to locate copies of any questions that . . . UCAL or IFX were asked
to answer or any responses received from same.”
[90]
As with the previous questions, counsel for the
Respondent provided a different answer in the Respondent’s March 16, 2017
letter, in which counsel stated: “Additional
information and documents concerning this request is [sic] found in the
documents of Deborah Chisholm. We are making best efforts to locate and produce
documents, if any exist, of Ed Eng as referred to in Ms. Chisholm’s
emails.”
[91]
Again, as with the previous group of questions,
the Respondent will produce all responses provided by UCAL and/or IFX that Ms.
Andrews had either physical or electronic access to in respect of questions
asked by the aggressive tax‑planning department in Vancouver, regardless
of where such documents are currently physically located.
F. Question 477
[Question] Thank
you. We’re going to get back to that, but let’s continue on. Counsel, I’m not
sure if you’ll provide the refusal on this, I’m assuming it’s going to be a refusal
because I think I asked one question similar to it, but I want to make it clear
on the record just in case. In regards to, aside from the information given by
the Appellant, if the Minister or the Attorney General received any information
from anyone else that indicated that the Appellant entered into a sham
transaction, that is whether they audited or investigated other parties
(including but not limited to Tim Hodgins, John Hodgins, Union CAL, IFX, ODL,
RBC bank or any other banks, Affinity Financial, Taggart Galt, David Lewis,
Andrew[?] Henwick[?], Richard Knight, anyone from Taylor Leibow, Stephen
Wiseman, Michael Moore, anyone else) if they received any information from
those other third parties that provide information as to there was a sham, the
contracts were legally ineffective, anything to support that particular
position, we would like copies of that information.
[Answer (Counsel
for the Respondent)] I’m going to take it under advisement.
[92]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the information requested in
question 477. He stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods Inc. or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be
produced.”[64]
G. Questions 635-638
[Question] I’m
not speaking about Tim Hodgins, I’m asking about the actual brokerages, the
other counterparty to the transaction. What information, knowledge, belief do
you have that the brokerages received any benefits from this transaction?
[Answer] I don’t
think they did receive any benefit, the brokerages themselves didn’t receive a
benefit.
[Question] And
you never communicated to any of the brokerages, correct?
[Answer] No.
[Question] Has
the Minister communicated to any of the brokerages?
[Answer] I don’t
know.
[Question] Can
you look into that?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] I think she just said she hasn’t looked into it with
respect to any of these particular trades and I don’t think anyone else would
have looked at it with respect to these particular trades.
[Question] Any
trades dealing with . . . .
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] No, we’re not going to go into whether the brokerage
actually benefitted from trades undertaken by someone else other than the
Appellant is these particular years. No, we’re not going to do that.
H. Questions 916-917
[Question] Thank
you. Could you ask Mr. Eng as well whether he was the individual that went to
London, U.K., and attended a meeting with ODL Securities?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take that under advisement.
[Question] Thank
you, counsel, and we’ll have some follow-up questions on that, obviously, if
there are any notes from the meetings, any findings, correspondence,
conclusions made based upon those meetings, to produce those as well?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll take that under advisement, yes.
[93]
In the Respondent’s September 14, 2016 letter,
counsel for the Respondent refused to provide the information requested in
questions 916-917. He stated: “Refused. Any
information relating to the audit of the Appellant, Tender Choice Foods or
Paletta International Corporation has been produced. Information collected
relating to the audit of other taxpayers is irrelevant and will not be
produced.”
[94]
The information requested in these three series
of questions is relevant in light of the extensive direction provided by CRA
headquarters officials to Ms. Andrews with respect to her conduct of the
audit and given the control the CRA headquarters officials exercised over the
audit. The Respondent will produce the information requested in questions 477,
635-638 and 916-917.
VIII. Fifth Category: Requests
for information on negotiations between the Minister and other taxpayers which
may have resulted in inconsistent assessing positions being taken by the
Minister
This category
is comprised of the following two sets of questions:
A. Questions 928-932
[Question]
“Negotiations with Deloitte & Touche taxpayers (the Vancouver Project)
currently in process – HQ involved at a high level (Francois Ranger, Director
of ATP).” Do you know anything about this negotiation?
[Answer] Sorry,
which point is this?
[Question] The
next point afterwards.
[Answer] Is this
July?
[Question]
November, the fifth paragraph.
[Answer] Sorry,
yes, I only knew about that sort of in a general sense. I was not privy to the
actual details of it.
[Question] “Audit
further advised to hold off pending results of these discussions in order that
we can ultimately propose in a consistent manner.”
[Answer] Correct.
[Question] What
were the results of that negotiation?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’re not going to answer that question.
B. Question 937
[Question] Counsel,
I’m going to ask for an undertaking. I want the Attorney General to ask Mr.
Francois Ranger, director of ATP, what were the results of his negotiations,
were there any settlements to these negotiations, were there any facts,
conclusions, or information that the Minister knew or has known post these
assessments that dealt with these negotiations that reflect the currency
straddles that Tim Hodgins was involved in with IFX, Union CAL, or ODL?
[Answer (counsel
for the Respondent)] We’ll refuse that.
[95]
I agree with the Respondent that the requested
information is subject to settlement privilege. The Respondent is not required
to produce the requested information.
IX. Conclusion
[96]
In the CIBC motion Chief Justice Rossiter
concluded his reasons at as follows:
[362]. . . This
particular motion seems in large part to be the result of obstruction by CIBC
when it comes to the discovery process. Discovery is about allowing both sides
to fully prepare for trial and identify all relevant facts and issues. Full and
open discovery promotes settlement and proper and efficient trials. Discovery
is not about curtailing information production – it is about production of
relevant information.
[363] The parties
would be better served if they forged ahead and engaged in proper discovery,
which would allow them to truly arrive at the facts and issues that are
relevant to these appeals. I for one do not believe that obstruction is the
proper way to litigate, and there are certainly consequences to that strategy
that the Court should and will consider.
[97]
In the current appeal, it is the Respondent who
is obstructing the discovery process. As the Chief Justice noted, there are
consequences for such obstruction. In the current motion, the consequence is
costs. I will award the Appellant costs of $10,000 plus disbursements.
Signed
at Ottawa, Canada, this 23rd day of November 2017.
“S. D’Arcy”