Garon,
T.C.J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
dated
June
11,
1985
made
by
the
respondent
pursuant
to
section
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
section
68.1
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
19717
In
particular,
this
assessment
is
based
on
the
fact
that
the
appellant
did
not
act
as
Director
of
Les
Industries
Cadrebec
Ltée,
hereinafter
referred
to
as
"Cadrebec",
with
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
The
failure
referred
to
by
the
respondent
was
the
fact
that
Cadrebec
omitted
to
submit
to
the
Receiver
General
source
deductions
made
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1971
for
a
certain
period
of
time
in
1982,
1983
and
1984.
It
was
admitted
by
the
parties
that
this
company
did
not
submit
the
amounts
in
question
to
the
Receiver
General
and
pay
the
interest
and
penalties
relating
thereto,
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
these
two
statutes.
The
debate
in
this
appeal
concerns
whether
the
appellant
was
a
Director
of
Cadrebec,
and
if
so,
whether
he
met
the
requirement
contained
in
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.?
Cadrebec
was
established
pursuant
to
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
on
May
15,
1981.
It
operated
in
the
field
of
manufacturing
steel
doors
and
frames
for
all
kinds
of
buildings.
At
the
time
it
was
incorporated
Cadrebec
had
only
one
Director,
Mr.
Ronald
Perks,
as
appears
inter
alia
from
the
document
titled
“Notice
of
Directors
or
Notice
of
Change
of
Directors”
entered
in
the
record
of
this
case.
Mr.
Perks
was
also
the
company's
President
and
Secretary.
The
evidence
further
disclosed
that
Mr.
Perks
was
in
fact
responsible
for
managing
Cadrebec's
day-to-day
operations.
It
was
he,
for
example,
who
hired
and
fired
employees,
sent
orders
to
suppliers
and
set
sales
objectives
for
the
company's
products.
For
much
of
the
relevant
period,
the
company's
employees
numbered
between
25
and
35.
Mr.
Perks
had
his
office
at
the
company's
place
of
business
in
Montreal.
So
far
as
the
appellant's
function
in
managing
the
affairs
of
the
company
is
concerned,
he
obtained
information
on
its
activities
by
meeting
with
Mr.
Perks
from
time
to
time.
These
meetings
were
irregular
and
they
might
see
each
other
twice
in
the
same
week
or
two
or
three
times
in
a
three-month
period.
The
appellant
signed
the
necessary
cheques
jointly
with
Mr.
Perks.
They
sometimes
signed
blank
cheques
weeks
in
advance:
neither
the
amounts
nor
the
names
of
the
persons
to
whom
they
were
to
be
paid
would
be
shown.
The
appellant
had
no
office
at
Cadrebec's
place
of
business.
However,
the
evidence
showed
that
the
appellant
signed
several
documents
on
behalf
of
the
company
as
its
"Executive
Vice-President”.
The
appellant
and
Mr.
Perks
both
stated
categorically
that
the
appellant’s
name
did
not
appear
in
Cadrebec's
books
as
a
Director.
This
was
given
as
the
explanation
for
why
Mr.
Ronald
Perks
was
the
only
one
who
signed
the
proposal
filed
pursuant
to
the
Bankruptcy
Act.
Not
only
was
the
appellant
not
consulted
when
[the]
decision
was
made
to
file
this
proposal,
but
in
addition
he
only
learned
of
it
after
it
was
done.
Mr.
Perks
told
the
trustee
that
he
was
Cadrebec's
only
Director.
Both
Mr.
Perks
and
the
appellant
himself
stated
the
appellant's
function
was
simply
that
of
an
investor.
He
was
never
invited
to
meetings
of
the
board
of
directors
and
never
tried
to
call
such
meetings.
He
had
never
seen
Cadrebec's
financial
statements
before
it
went
into
bankruptcy.
The
irregularity
of
the
consultations
between
Mr.
Perks
and
the
appellant
and
the
appellant's
reliance
on
Mr.
Perks,
specifically
regarding
the
signature
of
cheques,
is
easily
understood.
First,
they
had
been
friends
for
a
long
time.
Then,
for
a
good
part
of
this
period
at
least,
the
appellant
was
President
of
the
Association
des
propriétaires
des
meubles
du
Québec
and
was
completely
occupied
by
his
duties
with
that
organization.
The
appellant
even
said
that
he
worked
up
to
18
hours
a
day.
He
was
also
concerned
in
the
affairs
of
another
company
controlled
by
him,
Entreprises
Ju-An
Inc.,
which
had
its
head
office
in
Québec,
but
he
admitted
that
he
devoted
very
little
of
his
time
to
the
activities
of
this
latter
business.
The
evidence
further
showed
that
before
Cadrebec
went
into
bankruptcy,
the
appellant
in
his
discussions
with
Mr.
Ronald
Perks
was
concerned
primarily
with
sales,
and
especially
with
the
company's
production
and
sales
objectives.
Except
for
one
occasion,
he
did
not
pay
any
particular
attention
to
the
state
of
source
deductions
payments
to
governments.
It
should
be
mentioned
that
another
corporation
was
created
under
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
on
October
27,
1982.
This
was
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
At
the
time
of
its
incorporation
the
latter
company
had
two
Directors,
the
appellant
and
Mr.
Ronald
Perks,
who
it
will
be
remembered
was
originally
Cadrebec's
sole
Director.
Except
for
the
foregoing,
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
had
no
other
employees.
This
company
was
to
handle
international
contracts
and
the
role
played
by
Cadrebec
was
to
complement
that
of
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
The
appellant
knew
some
contractors
who
were
doing
business
abroad
and
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
thus
came
close
to
obtaining
a
contract
for
a
sum
of
over
a
million
dollars.
This
contract
was
to
be
performed
in
Algeria.
In
actual
fact,
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
was
never
active.
The
appellant's
financial
interests
in
Cadrebec
when
it
was
created
by
Mr.
Perks
were
substantial.
The
appellant
testified
that
on
two
occasions
he
invested
$25,000
in
this
company.
Subsequently,
the
appellant
and
a
company
controlled
by
him,
Entreprises
Ju-An
Inc.,
acted
as
sureties
for
Cadrebec's
debts
up
to
the
sum
of
$47,000.
The
appellant
also
gave
this
company
a
loan
of
$50,000.
Apart
from
the
surety,
the
evidence
did
not
disclose
the
specific
dates
of
these
investments
and
the
other
transactions
just
referred
to.
According
to
the
trustee's
report
to
Cadrebec's
creditors
on
June
11,
1984,
the
appellant
and
Ronald
Perks
each
held
51
ordinary
shares
at
the
time
the
proposal
was
filed.
They
were
the
only
two
shareholders
who
held
voting
shares.
At
the
same
time
these
two
persons,
members
of
Mr.
Ronald
Perks’
family
and
employees
and
former
employees
of
Cadrebec
held
non-voting
class
B
shares.
When
this
appeal
was
heard
the
respondent
admitted
that
the
appellant
was
not
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
before
May
31,
1983.
He
argued
that
the
appellant
was
a
Director
after
that
date.
In
support
of
this,
he
filed
a
resolution
dated
May
31,
1983
as
No.
1-1,
which
reads
as
follows:
RESOLUTION
OF
THE
SHAREHOLDERS
OF
“LES
INDUSTRIES
CADREBEC
LTEE/
CADREBEC
INDUSTRIES
LTD.",
effective
May
31st,
1983.
INCREASE
OF
NUMBER
OF
DIRECTORS
RESOLVED:
"THAT
the
number
of
Directors
of
the
Corporation
be
and
is
hereby
increased
from
one
(1)
to
two
(2)".
APPOINTMENT
OF
NEW
DIRECTOR
RESOLVED:
"THAT
Jules
Maroist
be
and
is
hereby
appointed
a
Director
of
the
Corporation.”
THE
FOREGOING
RESOLUTIONS
ARE
HEREBY
ADOPTED
BY
THE
SOLE
SHAREHOLDERS
OF
THE
CORPORATION
ENTITLED
TO
VOTE
THEREON
PURSUANT
TO
THE
CANADA
BUSINESS
CORPORATIONS
ACT.
(signature)
RONALD
PERKS
(signature)
JULES
MAROIST
The
wording
of
this
document,
entered
in
evidence
at
the
examination
of
an
employee
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
clearly
indicates
that
the
appellant
was
appointed
a
Director
as
of
May
31,
1983.
The
appellant
and
Mr.
Perks
both
acknowledged
their
signatures.
They
explained
that
they
had
forgotten
the
adoption
of
this
resolution
by
the
shareholders.
The
appellant
stated
that
he
signed
by
mistake.
The
evidence
appeared
to
indicate
that
the
wording
of
the
resolution
at
issue
was
prepared
by
counsel
for
the
Bank
of
Montreal
and
that
this
document
was
part
of
a
large
number
of
documents
apparently
signed
at
the
same
meeting—which
lasted
for
several
hours—held
in
the
offices
of
the
Bank
of
Montreal.
In
order
to
obtain
a
$200,000
loan
and
an
extension
of
a
$75,000
credit
line,
Cadrebec,
the
appellant
and
Mr.
Perks
had
at
that
time
to
sign
a
number
of
contracts
and
other
documents.
It
was
at
a
time
when
the
company
was
experiencing
very
serious
financial
problems.
It
was
further
established
that
certain
bank
documents
involving
the
Bank
of
Montreal
were
signed
by
Ronald
Perks
and
the
appellant
as
"Executive
Vice-
President"
of
Cadrebec
during
the
period
prior
to
the
filing
of
the
proposal
with
the
trustee.
They
were
the
following
documents:
"Agreement
as
to
Loans
and
Advances
and
Security
therefor",
"Application
for
Credit
and
Promise
to
Give
Bills
of
Lading,
Warehouse
Receipts,
or
Security
under
Section
178
of
the
Bank
Act"
and
"Security
under
subsection
178(1)
of
the
Bank
Act".
These
three
documents
issued
by
the
Bank
of
Montreal
are
dated
August
20,
1983.
A
fourth
document
dated
June
20,
1983,
titled
"Trust
Deed
of
Hypothec,
Mortgage,
Pledge
and
Charge"
was
issued
by
Cadrebec
in
favour
of
Royal
Trust;
in
this
contract
the
company
was
represented
by
the
appellant,
who
is
described
as
"Executive
Vice-President”,
and
Mr.
Perks
as
President
and
Secretary.
Other
documents
subsequent
to
the
filing
of
the
proposal
under
the
Bankruptcy
Act
were
signed
by
the
appellant
with
the
notation
that
he
was
Cadrebec's
"Executive
Vice-President".
Certain
additional
items
of
evidence
were
submitted
when
the
hearing
of
this
appeal
resumed.
On
the
appellant's
behalf,
the
most
significant
document
was
the
minutes
of
a
meeting
of
the
Company's
Directors
held
at
its
head
office
in
Montreal
on
May
24,
1984.
By
this
resolution
of
the
Board
of
Directors,
the
company
was
authorized
to
file
a
proposal
under
the
Bankruptcy
Act
and
the
president
was
authorized
to
sign
the
necessary
documents.
These
minutes
contain
certain
notations
that
are
worth
considering.
Inter
alia,
the
following
is
stated
at
the
beginning
of
the
minutes:
Present
Ronald
A.
Perks,
Sole
Director
being
a
quorum
of
the
Directors
of
the
Company,
and
being
all
of
the
Directors
of
the
Company
For
the
respondent,
the
annual
report
dated
August
25,
1983
for
the
period
ending
June
30,
1983
was
the
most
important
document.
This
report
should
be
read
together
with
Cadrebec's
annual
report
for
the
year
ending
June
30,
1982
and
the
contemporaneous
reports
of
Cadrebec
International
Inc.
The
annual
report
for
the
period
ending
June
30,
1983
indicates
that
the
appellant
and
Mr.
Perks
each
held
50
per
cent
of
the
voting
shares
and
that
Mr.
Perks
was
President
and
Secretary-Treasurer
by
use
of
two
codes,
07
and
019.
In
one
of
the
columns
on
the
last
page
of
this
annual
report,
it
can
also
be
seen
by
a
line
drawn
under
the
heading
“Director”
that
Mr.
Perks
and
the
appellant
are
Directors.
This
report
nowhere
indicates
that
the
appellant
was
"Vice-
President",
though
the
code
09
covered
this
item.
It
should
be
noted
that
the
Director
in
question
in
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
was
never
told
of
the
change
in
the
composition
of
Cadrebec's
Board
of
Directors,
contrary
to
the
provisions
of
section
108
of
the
aforesaid
Act,
which
requires
that
such
a
notice
in
the
prescribed
form
be
sent
to
the
Director
within
15
days
of
the
change.
The
evidence
further
showed
that
the
company
made
a
proposal
under
the
Bankruptcy
Act
on
May
30,
1984.
This
proposal
was
signed
by
Mr.
Ronald
Perks
only.
This
proposal
was
rejected
by
the
creditors
and
Cadrebec
accordingly
became
bankrupt
a
few
months
later.
The
company
was
wound
up
on
August
31,
1987
in
accordance
with
section
205
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
admitted
that
under
sections
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
68.1
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1971,
the
appellant
could
not
be
held
responsible
for
the
period
preceding
May
31,
1983
as
to
source
deductions
made
but
not
paid
by
Cadrebec
and
interest
and
penalties
unpaid
on
that
date.
He
thus
admitted
that
the
assessment
of
the
respondent
should
be
reduced
from
$49,584.99
to
$34,788.41.
Analysis
Accordingly,
it
must
be
determined
in
light
of
these
facts
whether
the
appellant
was
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
from
May
31,
1983
onwards.
In
considering
this
matter,
I
am
inclined
to
think
that
the
burden
of
proof
rests
with
the
respondent.
The
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
on
June
11,
1985
was
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
had
been
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
since
at
least
May
1982,
since
according
to
the
evidence
in
making
the
assessment
at
issue
amounting
to
$49,584.89
allowance
was
made,
in
particular,
for
unpaid
amounts
of
income
tax
deducted
at
source
and
interest
and
penalties
relating
thereto
from
May
1,
1982
onwards.
As
indicated
earlier,
the
respondent
altered
his
position
while
this
appeal
was
being
held
and
advanced
the
proposition
that
the
appellant
had
not
become
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
until
May
31,
1983,
that
is
approximately
a
year
later.
In
my
view,
this
is
a
new
allegation
of
fact
which
is
substantially
different
from
the
assumption
made
by
the
respondent
when
the
assessment
was
made.
The
following
observations
of
Cattanach
J.,
then
a
judge
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
in
M.N.R.
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Limited,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676;
[1964]
C.T.C.
294;
64
D.T.C.
5184
at
page
302
(D.T.C.
5188),
support
the
conclusion
I
have
come
to
regarding
the
shifting
of
the
burden
of
proof.
The
Minister
could,
of
course,
as
an
alternative
to
relying
on
the
facts
he
found
or
assumed
in
assessing
the
respondent,
have
alleged
by
his
Notice
of
Appeal
further
or
other
facts
that
would
support
or
help
in
supporting
the
assessment.
If
he
had
alleged
such
further
or
other
facts,
the
onus
would
presumably
have
been
on
him
to
establish
them.
In
any
event,
the
Minister
did
not
choose
such
alternative
in
this
case
and
relied
on
the
facts
that
he
had
assumed
at
the
time
of
the
assessment.
The
statement
regarding
the
burden
of
proof
in
the
preceding
passage,
though
in
the
nature
of
an
obiter
dictum,
has
not
to
my
knowledge
been
questioned
by
any
subsequent
decision
of
the
courts
and
appears
to
be
generally
accepted.
In
reviewing
the
evidence,
the
documentary
evidence
may
first
be
examined.
In
this
connection,
there
are
two
principal
documents
which
show
that
the
appellant
was
a
Director,
the
resolution
of
the
shareholders
on
May
31,
1983
(Exhibit
I-1)
and
the
annual
report
for
1983
filed
with
the
inspector
general
of
financial
institutions
of
the
Government
of
Quebec.
This
annual
report
was
not
signed
by
the
appellant,
but
the
signature
of
Mr.
Perks
appears
on
it.
I
am
not
inclined
to
place
much
importance
on
the
latter
document
particularly
because
of
its
format.
An
error
can
easily
be
made
when
using
tick
marks.
A
reference
in
such
a
document
seems
to
me
to
be
less
conclusive
than
one
in
a
document
stating
in
as
many
words
that
the
appellant
was
a
director,
as
was
the
case
in
the
resolution
of
May
31,
1983
by
the
Cadrebec
shareholders.
This
latter
resolution
is
unambiguous
and,
as
mentioned
earlier,
the
appellant
and
Mr.
Perks
acknowledged
their
signatures
without
hesitation.
The
evidence
is
not
more
specific
as
to
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
signature
of
this
resolution.
A
great
many
documents
were
signed
at
the
meeting
in
the
offices
of
the
Bank
of
Montreal.
The
signature
of
these
documents
was
a
preliminary
to
obtaining
a
$200,000
loan
from
the
Bank
of
Montreal
that
would
be
guaranteed
in
part
by
the
Government
of
Quebec.
These
documents
included
a
trust
deed,
a
commercial
pledge
contract,
certain
forms
relating
to
participation
in
the
PME
aid
program,
documents
dealing
with
the
credit
line,
security
deeds,
mortgages
and
documents
indicating
assignments
of
priority.
In
his
testimony,
Mr.
Perks
used
the
expression
“pile
of
documents"
to
describe
this
copious
documentation.
Among
the
documentary
evidence
for
the
appellant
is
the
resolution
of
May
24,
1984
which
states,
at
the
time
Cadrebec
was
authorized
to
file
a
proposal
under
the
Bankruptcy
Act,
that
Mr.
Perks
was
the
Company's
sole
Director.
In
a
letter
from
the
Acting
Registrar
of
this
Court,
dated
October
20,
1989,
telling
counsel
for
the
parties
that
the
hearing
of
this
appeal
would
resume,
it
was
indicated
that
the
Court
wished
counsel
to
file
the
Cadrebec
board
of
directors’
resolution
of
June
13,
1983
expressly
mentioned
on
page
1
of
the
notarized
deed,
Exhibit
1-6,
titled
"Trust
Deed
of
Hypothec,
Mortgage,
Pledge
and
Charge".
This
document
was
not
attached
to
the
notarized
contract
when
it
was
filed
by
the
respondent.
The
Court
also
wanted
settlement
A,
mentioned
in
this
same
notarized
contract,
to
be
filed
if
it
was
attached
to
the
contract
at
the
time
the
latter
was
concluded.
I
was
given
no
valid
explanation
as
to
why
these
two
documents
were
not
filed.
They
should
have
been
filed
with
the
Registry
office
at
the
same
time
as
the
notarized
deed
of
June
20,
1983.
If
that
had
been
done,
there
would
have
been
no
problem
in
obtaining
copies
of
this
documentation
and
counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
tell
me
he
encountered
any
problem
in
this
regard.
This
situation
may
probably
require
application
of
the
rule
of
law
established
by
the
courts
that
the
failure
of
a
party
to
file
evidence
to
which
it
had
access
allows
a
court
to
assume
that
the
evidence
was
unfavourable
to
that
party.
See
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Levesque
et
al.
v.
Comeau
et
al.,
[1970]
S.C.R.
1010,
at
1012,
and
the
comments
of
Sopinka
and
Lederman
in
their
volume
The
Law
of
Evidence
in
Civil
Cases,
at
pp.
535
to
537.
It
is
true
that
the
appellant
might
also
have
been
able
to
have
access
to
this
evidence,
since
in
all
probability
the
documents
were
registered,
but
in
my
view
the
respondent
had
a
greater
obligation
since
it
was
he
who
entered
the
notarized
deed
in
question
in
evidence.
Further,
the
Court's
request
to
file
these
documents
was
made
in
the
circumstances
to
the
respondent.
If
we
look
at
the
testimony,
we
have
the
categorical
statement
by
Mr.
Perks
that
the
appellant
was
not
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
at
any
time,
which
essentially
corroborates
the
appellant's
version.
In
his
testimony
given
on
August
17
and
November
29,
1989,
Mr.
Perks
seemed
to
me
to
be
a
reliable,
honest
and
credible
witness.
I
observed
him
on
those
two
occasions
and
I
am
prepared
to
accept
his
version
of
the
facts.
There
was
no
evidence
that
at
the
present
time
Mr.
Perks
had
any
other
connection
with
the
appellant
than
that
of
friendship.
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
resolution
of
May
31,
1983
was
signed
by
mistake.
The
appellant
certainly
demonstrated
negligence
in
not
understanding
the
nature
and
scope
of
the
resolution
of
May
31,
1983
when
he
signed
that
document
and
in
not
taking
the
existence
of
that
resolution
into
account
subsequently.
However,
I
consider
that
on
the
evidence
as
a
whole
a
reasonably
prudent
person
in
comparable
circumstances
could
have
been
the
victim
of
such
a
mistake.
In
fact,
Mr.
Perks
himself
demonstrated
the
same
negligence
by
subsequently
acting
as
if
the
May
31,
1983
resolution
bearing
his
signature
did
not
exist.
In
particular,
it
is
not
inconceivable
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
could
have
inadvertently
signed
a
document
such
as
the
May
31,
1983
resolution,
taking
into
account
in
particular
the
large
number
of
documents
signed
on
that
day,
the
number
of
people
present
at
the
meeting
and
the
inevitable
tension
accompanying
the
conclusion
of
such
arrangements
which
could
be
essential
to
the
survival
of
Cadrebec.
It
is
possible
that
the
appellant
became
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
in
law,
as
regards
third
parties,
despite
certain
irregularities
which
may
have
accompanied
the
resolution
of
May
31,
1983
by
the
Cadrebec
shareholders.
I
am
thinking,
first,
of
subsection
101(3)
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
which
provides
in
principle
that
appointments
of
Directors
should
be
made
at
an
annual
meeting,
and
second,
the
failure
to
inform
the
Director
under
section
108
of
that
same
Act.
Assuming
that
the
appellant
was
a
Director
of
Cadrebec
in
law,
I
consider
that
he
acted
in
good
faith
in
thinking
that
he
was
not
a
Director
and
that,
as
I
sought
to
show
above,
a
reasonably
prudent
person
could
have
made
the
same
mistake
in
comparable
circumstances.
It
can
be
seen
from
reading
subsection
227.1(3)
that
the
standard
to
be
applied
concerns
only
actions
to
be
taken
or
provisions
that
must
be
made
by
a
Director
to
prevent
the
failure
to
deduct,
withhold
or
pay
certain
amounts,
covered
by
subsection
227.1(1).
However,
I
do
not
think
it
is
illogical
to
use
this
same
standard
of
care,
diligence
or
skill
to
determine
whether
a
director
is
at
fault
in
misunderstanding
whether
he
is
a
director.
There
is
no
rule
of
law
of
which
I
am
aware
that
requires
a
higher
standard.
The
standard
in
subsection
227.1(3)
seems
to
me
to
be
similar
to
the
concept
of
the
prudent
man
in
Quebec
civil
law.
Paragraph
122(1)(b)
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
confirms
the
validity
of
this
point
of
view.
Accordingly,
I
do
not
think
that
the
appellant
can
be
blamed
for
not
making
the
necessary
provision
to
ensure
the
payment
of
source
deductions.
This
approach
was
adopted
in
essence
by
the
Associate
Chief
Judge
of
this
Court,
D.H.
Christie,
in
Denis
John
Cybulskiv.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
2180;
88
D.T.C.
1531,
which
is
now
pending
before
the
Trial
Division
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada.
The
following
comments
at
page
2185
(D.T.C.
1535)
are
of
particular
interest.
In
my
opinion
the
general
principle
that
ignorance
of
the
law
is
no
excuse
can
have
no
application
here.
In
enacting
subsection
227.1(3)
Parliament
established
an
exonerating
standard
of
conduct
the
presence
of
which
is
to
be
determined
in
particular
cases
by
the
actual
relevant
facts
and
not
by
fixing
to
a
taxpayer
knowledge
of
a
somewhat
esoteric
point
of
corporation
law
that
in
reality
is
probably
not
within
the
actual
knowledge
of
a
good
number
of
legal
practitioners.
While
at
first
blush
subsection
227.1(3)
suggests
a
requirement
for
positive
assertion
on
the
part
of
a
taxpayer
in
order
to
bring
himself
within
its
ambit,
this
is
not
necessarily
so
in
all
situations.
It
may
well
be
that
a
taxpayer
would
not
take
positive
steps
in
some
circumstances
and
still
be
correctly
regarded
as
having
"exercised"
that
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
expected
of
a
reasonably
prudent
person
that
creates
the
protection
from
liability
afforded
by
the
subsection.
That
obtains
in
respect
of
this
appeal.
I
am
satisfied
that
reasonable
grounds
existed
for
the
appellant's
belief
that
he
had
severed
his
connection
with
the
Company
as
director
and
secretarytreasurer
and
concomitantly
his
responsibility
for
it
when
he
placed
his
resignation
in
the
hands
of
the
Company's
president
and
it
was
accepted
by
him.
This
relieves
him
of
vicarious
liability
for
the
Company's
default
in
remitting
the
deductions
at
source
and
this
is
so
a
fortiori
where,
as
here,
the
appellant
was
effectively
barred
from
exercising
influence
over
the
management
of
the
company
by
the
person
in
de
facto
control
of
its
affairs
after
the
resignation
was
submitted.
In
the
instant
case
we
have
a
situation
which
is
somewhat
different
from
that
at
issue
in
Cybulski.
In
the
instant
case
the
appellant
believed
in
good
faith
that
he
had
not
become
a
Director
whereas
he
could
have
been,
while
in
Cybulski
the
taxpayer
was
justified
in
believing
he
had
ceased
to
be
a
Director
even
though
in
law
he
continued
to
be.
This
divergence
in
the
facts
is
not
such
as
to
justify
the
application
of
a
different
rule
in
assessing
the
appellant's
conduct.
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
Minister's
assessment
is
incorrect.
The
appeal
is
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessment
is
set
aside.
Appeal
allowed.