Rip
T.CJ.:
Graham
Farrell
appeals
from
an
assessment
of
tax,
notice
of
which
is
dated
December
30,
1994
(Number
31782),
issued
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(“Minister”)
in
accordance
with
paragraph
227(l)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(“Act”).
The
Minister
says
that
Summerwood
Products
Inc.
(“Summerwood”
or
“Company”)
failed
to
deduct
or
withhold
amounts
(“source
deductions”)
from
salary,
wages
or
remuneration
paid
to
employees
and
remit
that
amount
to
the
Receiver
General
for
Canada
at
the
prescribed
times
on
account
of
the
payees’
income
tax
for
the
year
pursuant
to
paragraph
153(
1)(#)
of
the
Act.
The
failures
to
remit
took
place
during
autumn
1992.
The
appellant
was
one
of
three
directors
of
Summerwood
at
the
times
the
Company
failed
to
deduct
or
remit
the
amounts
and
therefore,
says
the
Minister,
pursuant
to
subsection
227.1(1),
he
is
jointly
and
severally
liable
together
with
the
corporation
and
the
other
directors
to
pay
that
amount
and
any
interest
and
penalties.
Mr.
Farrell
appealed
on
the
basis
he
exercised
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances
and
therefore
is
not
liable
for
the
Company’s
failures
to
withhold
and
remit
the
source
deductions:
subsection
227.1(3).
The
appellant
and
his
two
friends
at
the
time,
Peter
Harvey
and
Bruce
Jenkins,
started
the
business
carried
on
by
Summerwood
in
1988
in
partnership.
The
business
consisted
of
manufacturing
garden
sheds,
gazebos
and
related
products.
In
1990
the
business
was
incorporated
and
each
of
Farrell,
Harvey
and
Jenkins
became
directors,
officers
and
equal
shareholders.
Each
director
was
in
charge
of
a
specific
area
of
the
business.
Jenkins
was
president.
He
worked
at
the
workshop
and
was
in
charge
of
the
workshop
and
production.
Harvey
was
secretary
and
had
administrative
financial
responsibility.
He
also
acted
as
the
Company’s
controller.
Farrell
was
vice-president
and
worked
out
of
the
office
on
sales,
supervising
and
working
on
installing
products.
In
the
business’
best
years,
according
to
Farrell,
annual
sales
approached
$1,000,000.
However,
in
1992,
the
economy
was
“bleak”
and
the
business
suffered,
despite
“our
best
efforts”.
The
Company
had
a
line
of
credit
of
$60,000
with
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
(“Bank”).
The
Bank
was
concerned
the
Company
was
not
making
enough
money.
“They
said
they
wanted
their
money
and
curtailed
the
line
of
credit”.
The
Bank
“put
the
Company
into
receivership”
on
November
27,
1992.
At
the
time
this
was
happening,
the
relationship
between
the
appellant
and
the
other
two
directors
were
“acrimonious”
but
the
business
continued.
No
formal
meetings
of
directors
of
the
Company
were
ever
held,
declared
Mr.
Farrell,
but
the
three
directors
talked
every
day
about
sales,
busi
ness
and
“what
to
do
over
the
next
days”.
The
appellant
stated
“Peter
never
indicated
he
was
not
remitting
to”
the
Receiver
General
and
“we’d
never
ask”
because
there
was
no
reason
to
do
so.
“My
job
was
to
sell”.
There
were
“three
guys
running
a
company
and
there
was
no
time
to
duplicate
the
other’s
work”.
The
appellant
said
he
trusted
Mr.
Harvey.
They
were
friends
before
“we
got
the
business...
We
worked
at
advertising
together...
He
was
an
usher
at
my
wedding...”.
He
considered
Harvey
his
“best
friend”.
The
appellant
was
of
the
view
that
“for
five
years
[we]
remitted
faithfully”.
It
was
only
during
the
“last
two
or
three
months”,
according
to
the
appellant,
the
Company
failed
to
remit.
In
correspondence,
dated
June
21,
1994,
to
Revenue
Canada
by
Mr.
Harvey,
Mr.
Harvey
opined
that
“the
demise
of
the
Company
was
triggered
by
a
Ministry
of
Revenue
audit
in
September
1992...”.
The
difficulty
with
the
Provincial
Sales
Tax
office,
he
wrote,
was
based
on
a
misunderstanding
of
the
Ontario
Retail
Sales
Tax
Act.
Mr.
Farrell
agreed
with
this
view.
Mr.
Farrell
testified
that
about
a
month
before
November
27,
1992
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
stopped
honouring
cheques
issued
by
Summerwood.
He
recalled
he
deposited
a
cheque
in
the
amount
of
$7,000
n
the
Bank
and
then
could
not
access
the
money.
Summerwood
employed
approximately
16
people.
The
payroll
was
prepared
on
the
Company’s
own
computer.
The
employees
were
paid
by
cheque
every
two
weeks,
on
the
15th
and
last
working
day
of
each
month.
The
payroll
cheques
were
distributed
manually
to
the
employees.
Mr.
Harvey
was
in
charge
of
the
Company’s
deposits
and
issuance
of
cheques.
When
he
was
away
the
other
directors,
including
the
appellant,
signed
the
cheques.
All
three
directors
had
cheque
signing
authority.
The
Company
had
a
chequing
account
at
Canada
Trust.
That
account
was
not
affected
by
the
action
taken
against
the
Company
by
the
Toronto-
Dominion
Bank.
During
October
and
November
1992,
monies
were
deposited
and
withdrawn
from
this
account
on
the
normal
course
of
the
Company’s
business.
The
Company
had
daily
revenue
at
the
time
of
about
$5,000
and
the
balance
in
the
Canada
Trust
account
varied
between
zero
and
$5,000.
The
appellant
stated
“We
lived
day-to-day”.
Mr.
Farrell
explained
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
branch
was
some
distance
from
the
Company’s
premises
in
Markham
and
that
the
Canada
Trust
branch
was
“down
the
street”.
His
father-in-law
dealt
with
the
branch
of
the
Bank
and
directed
the
Company
to
that
branch
when
he
guaranteed
the
Company’s
line
of
credit.
The
appellant
also
guaranteed
the
Company’s
liability
to
banks;
apparently,
the
other
directors
did
not.
As
difficulties
were
encountered
with
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank,
“financial
activity”
moved
to
Canada
Trust.
He
explained
the
directors
“knew
receivership
was
coming
and
wanted
to
continue
[in
business]...
[There
was]
no
cash
flow
at
TD
Bank
...
so
[we]
used
Canada
Trust”.
It
appears
from
the
documents
filed
as
exhibit,
that
Summerwood’s
last
payment
of
source
deductions
to
the
Receiver
General
was
on
October
15,
1992.
This
payment
of
$3,062.71
was
for
amounts
withheld
from
wages
paid
in
September.
The
amount
of
$3,062.71
appears
to
have
been
paid
at
Canada
Trust
—
a
Canada
Trust
stamp
is
on
the
remittance
—
but
the
remittance
was
returned.
According
to
Mr.
Harvey’s
June
21,
1994
letter
to
Revenue
Canada,
the
last
payment
of
source
deductions
was
made
on
November
13,
1992
in
the
amount
of
$7,371.16.
Mr.
Farrell
agreed
such
payment
was
made
but
there
was
no
evidence
to
support
this
claim.
A
Revenue
Canada
remittance
form,
duly
completed
in
the
amount
of
$7,371.16,
is
included
among
the
documentary
evidence,
but
there
is
no
receipt
of
remittance
by
Revenue
Canada,
a
bank
or
trust
company,
although
the
amount
does
appear
as
a
credit
in
Summerwood’s
General
Ledger.
During
the
months
of
October
and
November
1992,
the
aggregate
of
$7,260.19
was
withdrawn
by
Summerwood
for
salaries
to
the
directors.
The
appellant
acknowledged
that
during
the
months
of
September,
October
and
November
1992
the
Company’s
suppliers
were
paid,
as
were
its
employees.
Mr.
Farrell
declared
he
made
“every
effort
to
pay”
the
first
time
he
realized
any
source
deductions
had
not
been
remitted.
That
was
when
he
was
contacted
by
Revenue
Canada.
However
this
“effort”
would
have
been
made
after
the
fact
the
Company
failed
to
remit.
Once
the
Receiver
was
appointed,
the
Receiver
carried
on
the
business
until
the
business
was
sold.
Mr.
Farrell
left
the
Company
the
day
the
Receiver
was
appointed.
The
Minister
assessed
Summerwood
on
January
8,
1992,
November
20,
1992,
November
26,
1992
and
December
18,
1992
unpaid
amounts
of
deductions,
interest
and
penalties
under
the
Act
and
other
statutes.
The
appel
lant
was
under
the
impression
that
before
October
1992,
Summerwood
had
consistently
remitted
source
deductions.
It
appears
from
documents
tendered
in
evidence
that
Summerwood
may
have
been
sometimes
late
in
making
remissions
and
may
also
have
been
short
in
calculating
the
amounts
due.
In
my
view,
Mr.
Farrell
did
not
exercise
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
of
Summerwood
to
remit
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
He
is
not
freed
of
his
liability
by
virtue
of
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act.
Mr.
Farrell
did
absolutely
nothing
to
prevent
the
failure
to
remit
source
deductions
to
the
Receiver
General
for
Canada.
He,
Harvey
and
Jenkins,
were
equally
involved
in
Summerwood’s
business
at
all
relevant
times.
So
long
as
everything
was
going
well
the
appellant
trusted
the
other
two
directors.
Indeed,
as
late
as
June
21,
1994,
Mr.
Farrell
entrusted
negotiations
with
Revenue
Canada
respecting
the
indebtedness
of
Summerwood
to
the
Crown
to
Mr.
Harvey.
Together,
the
three
directors
acted
in
concert,
as
far
as
I
surmise,
even
to
the
extent
of
the
Company
operating
out
of
two
bank
accounts.
Mr.
Farrell
testified
he
and
the
other
directors
realized
“receivership
was
coming”
yet
did
nothing
to
ensure
the
payment
of
the
source
deductions
to
the
Receiver
General.
Suppliers
were
paid
but
not
the
Receiver
General.
I
can
find
no
case
law
that
would
assist
Mr.
Farrell
in
his
appeal.
One
cannot
escape
the
fact
that
all
three
directors,
including
the
appellant,
were
oblivious
to
their
responsibilities
under
the
Act.
See,
for
example,
Fraser
(Trustee
of)
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
(1987),
87
D.T.C.
250
(T.C.C.).
The
appellant
ceased
to
act
as
director
on
November
27,
1992.
From
that
day
on
he
was
in
no
position
to
prevent
the
failure
of
the
Company
to
remit
source
deductions
for
November
which
were
due
only
on
December
15,
1992.
The
evidence
does
not
indicate
whether
the
assessment
of
December
18,
1992
is
in
respect
of
amounts
withheld
from
employees’
wages
in
November;
respondent’s
counsel
advised
that
such
information
was
not
available
from
the
files
he
had
with
him
at
trial.
Accordingly,
the
appeal
will
be
allowed
without
costs
and
the
assessment
will
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
to
delete,
if
necessary,
any
portion
of
the
amount
assessed
relating
to
source
deductions
Summerwood
failed
to
remit
as
required
after
November
27,
1992.
The
appellant
will
not
be
entitled
to
any
other
relief.
Appeal
allowed.