Bowie
T.C.J.:
This
appeal
is
from
an
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
pursuant
to
subsection
227.1(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
by
which
the
directors
of
a
corporation
are
made
jointly
and
severally
liable
with
the
corporation
for
unremitted
source
deductions.
The
assessment
also
encompasses
amounts
which
should
have
been
but
were
not
remitted
under
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act
and
the
Canada
Pension
Plan.
There
are
a
number
of
limitations
upon
the
operation
of
subsection
227.1(1).
The
only
one
invoked
by
the
Appellant
in
this
case
is
what
is
sometimes
called
the
due
diligence
defence
found
in
subsection
(3).
Subsections
227.1(1)
and
(3)
read
as
follows:
227.1(1)
Where
a
corporation
has
failed
to
deduct
or
withhold
an
amount
as
required
by
subsection
135(3)
or
section
153
or
215,
has
failed
to
remit
such
an
amount
or
has
failed
to
pay
an
amount
of
tax
for
a
taxation
year
as
required
under
Part
VII
or
VIII,
the
directors
of
the
corporation
at
the
time
the
corporation
was
required
to
deduct,
withhold,
remit
or
pay
the
amount
are
jointly
and
severally
liable,
together
with
the
corporation,
to
pay
that
amount
and
any
interest
or
penalties
relating
thereto.
(3)
A
director
is
not
liable
for
a
failure
under
subsection
(1)
where
he
exercised
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
The
assessment
under
appeal
is
in
respect
of
the
liability
of
Collins
Seafood
Ltd.
(Collins)
for
unpaid
deductions
for
federal
and
provincial
income
tax,
Canada
Pension
Plan
contributions
and
unemployment
insurance
premiums
which
Collins
failed
to
remit
to
the
Receiver
General
for
Canada.
The
unremitted
amounts,
augmented
by
interest
and
penalties,
total
$33,383.12.
The
Appellant
is
a
lawyer
who
has
practiced
in
Moncton,
New
Brunswick
since
1973.
Together
with
a
partner,
Mr.
Tippett,
he
engaged
from
time
to
time,
with
some
success,
in
the
business
of
developing
real
estate.
More
recently
they,
with
a
third
partner,
Mr.
Eaton,
bought
into
a
lobster
processing
business
at
Cap
Brulé,
near
Moncton.
The
Appellant
had
little
to
do
with
the
day-to-day
operation.
This
was
run
by
Mr.
Tippett
and
a
Mr.
Cormier,
who
had
been
the
long-time
owner
of
the
business.
The
partners
expanded
their
venture
in
the
seafood
industry
in
1988
by
purchasing
the
business
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Collins
at
Alma,
New
Brunswick,
some
120
kilometres
from
Moncton.
Unlike
Cap
Brulé,
where
the
principal
business
was
processing
and
canning
lobsters,
the
business
at
Alma
was
the
purchase
from
fishermen
of
lobsters
for
resale
live
to
restaurants
and
wholesalers,
and
to
a
small
extent
for
sale
at
a
retail
outlet
on
the
premises.
Market
lobsters
are
larger
than
canners,
and
they
must
be
kept
alive
under
very
carefully
controlled
conditions
until
they
are
resold.
The
pound
where
they
are
stored
must
be
kept
supplied
with
salt
water
whose
oxygen
content,
temperature
and
salinity
must
all
be
carefully
maintained.
The
facility
at
Alma
was
capable
of
holding
approximately
10,000
lbs.
of
live
lobster
for
resale.
The
salinity
of
the
water
was
maintained
by
means
of
a
saltwater
well
in
the
Bay
of
Fundy
designed
to
feed
the
lobster
pound.
When
the
Appellant
and
his
partners
purchased
the
business,
they
incorporated
Collins
Seafood
Ltd.
to
own
and
operate
it.
The
Appellant
was
president,
and
a
director.
In
1989,
they
added
a
further
business,
Buctouche
Fish
Market
(Buctouche),
to
their
enterprise.
For
various
reasons,
which
are
not
material
to
the
decision
of
this
appeal,
the
partners
decided
to
divide
their
various
businesses
among
them.
The
Appellant
and
Mr.
Tippett
became
the
owners
and
operators
of
Collins
and
Buctouche.
The
Appellant
was
engaged
on
a
full-time
basis
in
the
practice
of
law,
and
Mr.
Tippett
also
had
other
interests
to
attend
to.
They
soon
sold
the
Buctouche
business,
and
the
Collins
business
was
operated
for
them
by
a
series
of
managers.
The
first
was
Mr.
Wood,
who
managed
Collins
in
1989,
and
then
left
to
return
to
fishing.
In
that
year
the
business
broke
even,
more
or
less.
The
manager
in
1990
was
Mr.
Hyslop.
According
to
the
Appellant’s
evidence,
Mr.
Hyslop
was
not
capable
of
managing
the
business,
and
he
ultimately
resigned,
but
not
before
beginning
a
series
of
losses
from
which
the
business
never
was
able
to
recover.
The
losses
that
year
were
no
doubt
due,
at
least
in
part,
to
the
fact
that
the
United
States
market
was
closed
to
Collins
by
an
embargo
on
Canadian
lobsters,
and
to
depressed
prices
in
Canada.
In
1991,
they
hired
Mr.
Sutherland
to
be
the
on-site
manager
of
the
Collins
operations
at
Alma.
By
late
1991,
it
was
becoming
apparent
to
the
Appellant
and
Mr.
Tippett
that
the
business
was
not
likely
to
prosper,
and
they
were
looking
for
an
opportunity
to
sell
it.
The
company
had
a
$40,000.00
line
of
credit
at
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
which
was
more
or
less
fully
utilized
most
of
the
time.
There
was
also
a
mortgage
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Collins,
the
vendors,
which
had
to
be
paid.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
in
1991,
the
business
was
undercapitalized.
The
cash
flow
situation
was
such
that
when
lobsters
were
delivered
by
the
fleet
of
a
dozen
or
so
vessels
fishing
out
of
Alma,
the
funds
to
pay
the
fishermen,
and
for
the
withholdings
for
income
tax,
unemployment
insurance
premiums
and
Canada
Pension
Plan
contributions
which
Collins
was
required
to
remit,
could
only
be
paid
out
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
of
those
lobsters;
there
simply
was
not
sufficient
working
capital
to
make
the
payments
any
other
way.
This
chronic
shortage
of
working
capital
had
caused
Collins
to
be
in
default
of
its
obligations
to
remit
withholdings
as
early
as
1990.
It
made
no
remittances
from
August
1990
to
November
1990.
In
November,
in
response
to
pressure
from
officers
of
Revenue
Canada,
Mr.
Tippett
provided
Revenue
Canada
with
two
cheques
for
$4,000.00
each,
in
payment
of
the
company’s
arrears
as
revealed
by
an
audit
done
at
that
time.
From
then
on,
the
company
was
more
or
less
perpetually
in
arrears.
An
audit
on
January
15,
1991
found
arrears
in
excess
of
$18,000.00.
In
July
1991,
the
arrears
were
slightly
more
than
$19,000.00
and
in
August
1992,
the
total
arrears
amounted
to
$27,696.23,
of
which
the
company
paid
$11,459.99,
representing
the
arrears
for
the
period
from
January
to
July
1992.
The
previous
arrears
of
$16,236.24
remained
outstanding.
It
was
apparent
to
the
Appellant
by
the
spring
of
1992
that
Collins
was
not
profitable,
and
that
its
operations
would
probably
have
to
be
discontinued
at
the
end
of
that
year.
The
Appellant’s
hope
and
expectation
was
that
by
operating
through
the
summer
season
of
1992
it
would
be
possible
to
produce
sufficient
profits
to
pay
the
indebtedness
to
Revenue
Canada
and
to
the
Royal
Bank,
and
then
return
the
lobster
pound
and
other
operating
assets
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Collins
to
discharge
the
mortgage
debt,
and
thereby
wind-up
the
business
debt-free.
Unfortunately,
that
was
not
to
be.
Mr.
McGrath
knew
in
the
spring
of
1992
that
there
was
a
significant
debt
owing
to
Revenue
Canada
in
respect
of
unremitted
withholdings.
By
this
time,
Mr.
Tippett
had
gone
on
to
other
ventures,
leaving
the
Appellant
to
run
the
company,
along
with
Mr.
Sutherland.
He
gave
instructions
to
Mr.
Sutherland
that
he
was
not
to
pay
the
fishermen
for
lobster
delivered
until
such
time
as
the
lobster
had
been
sold,
the
proceeds
of
the
sale
deposited
in
Collins’
bank
account,
and
the
funds
cleared.
Deliveries
were
to
be
made
by
Collins
to
its
customers
on
a
cash
basis,
and
the
accounts
payable,
including
those
for
source
deductions,
were
to
be
met
as
they
fell
due,
out
of
the
proceeds
of
the
sales.
In
the
middle
of
August
1992,
the
fishers
at
Alma,
who
were
the
company’s
suppliers,
demanded
of
Mr.
Sutherland
that
they
be
paid
for
their
product
immediately
upon
delivery.
For
reasons
that
were
not
fully
explained
in
his
evidence,
Mr.
Sutherland
chose
to
accede
to
this
demand,
without
consulting
the
Appellant.
There
were
some
funds
available
in
the
bank
to
pay
source
deductions
owing
to
Revenue
Canada,
and
it
was
these
funds
which
were
used
to
pay
the
fishers.
In
Mr.
Sutherland’s
mind,
according
to
his
evidence,
the
sale
of
the
inventory
which
he
was
paying
for
with
these
funds
would
enable
the
company
to
meet
its
liability
for
source
deductions.
Unfortunately,
between
the
time
that
the
customer,
Bluenose
Fishmarket
of
Riverview,
New
Brunswick,
gave
Mr.
Sutherland
its
cheque
payable
to
Collins
for
$11,827.73,
and
the
time
that
it
was
presented
for
payment,
Revenue
Canada
had
served
a
third-party
demand
upon
Bluenose
Fishmarket’s
bank,
effectively
freezing
the
account
of
Bluenose.
In
the
result,
the
bank
was
unable
to
honour
the
Bluenose
cheque
payable
to
Collins,
and
Collins
in
turn
was
unable
to
apply
the
proceeds
against
its
arrears
of
source
deductions
owing.
While
this
was
a
serious
setback
for
Collins,
Mr.
McGrath
and
Mr.
Sutherland
did
not
view
it
as
fatal.
Their
expectation
was
that
the
inventory
in
the
pound
of
some
10,000
lbs.
of
lobster
could
be
sold,
and
the
proceeds
used
to
pay
off
the
outstanding
liabilities
for
source
deductions
to
Revenue
Canada,
and
the
other
outstanding
debts.
Some
or
all
of
the
line
of
credit
at
the
Royal
Bank
might
remain
outstanding,
but
Mr.
McGrath
still
considered
that
he
could
discontinue
the
operations
of
Collins,
return
the
property
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Collins,
and
wind
up
the
business
with
all
of
the
debts
retired,
other
than
the
line
of
credit,
by
the
end
of
1992.
The
second
catastrophic
event
came
in
late
October
or
November.
A
severe
storm
in
the
Bay
of
Fundy
caused
fresh
water
to
get
into
the
saltwater
well,
and
from
there
into
the
lobster
pound.
The
inventory
in
the
pound
at
that
time
was
approximately
8,000
lbs.,
having
a
value
of
about
$55,000.00.
Approximately
one-half
of
this
inventory
died
as
a
result
of
the
fresh
water
entering
the
system,
causing
a
loss
to
the
company
of
some
$20,000.00
or
$25,000.00.
The
remaining
inventory
was
sold,
but
the
proceeds
were
insufficient
to
pay
off
the
existing
debts.
The
company
ceased
operations,
and
the
mortgage
on
the
lobster
pound
and
other
property
was
foreclosed.
Some
creditors,
including
the
fishers,
were
paid,
but
the
indebtedness
to
the
Royal
Bank
remained
outstanding,
as
did
some
$30,000.00
worth
of
indebtedness
to
Revenue
Canada
for
unremitted
withholdings
which,
together
with
interest,
forms
the
basis
of
the
assessment
under
appeal.
As
I
stated
earlier,
the
Appellant
contests
the
assessment
only
upon
the
basis
of
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act.
He
says
that
he
acted
with
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
to
remit
that
the
subsection
calls
for,
which
is
to
say
that
degree
which
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
In
support
of
this
contention
his
counsel
points
to
the
following
facts:
l.
The
Appellant
borrowed
some
$25,000
to
inject
into
the
company
as
working
capital
at
the
beginning
of
the
1992
season,
without
which
the
company
could
not
have
operated
at
all
that
year;
2.
The
Appellant’s
instructions
to
the
plant
manager,
Mr.
Sutherland,
that
no
payments
were
to
be
made
until
the
inventory
had
been
sold,
and
that
the
source
deductions
must
be
paid
out
of
the
proceeds
of
each
catch;
3.
The
Appellant
had
no
prior
knowledge
when
Mr.
Sutherland
chose
to
depart
from
these
instructions
and
pay
the
fishers
for
their
catch
before
it
was
sold
and
paid
for;
4.
The
arrears
of
withholdings
owing
would
have
been
paid
but
for
two
events
beyond
his
control;
the
cheque
of
the
Bluenose
Fish
Market,
which
Sutherland
had
accepted
contrary
to
his
instructions,
was
not
honoured
by
the
bank,
and
the
storm
in
the
fall
of
1992
killed
much
of
the
inventory
on
hand.
But
for
these
latter
events,
he
says,
the
arrears
would
have
been
paid
before
the
end
of
the
1992
season,
and
the
business
wound
up.
It
therefore
would
not
be
fair
to
penalize
him
for
the
company’s
failure
to
pay,
as
these
events
were
outside
his
control.
This
argument
overlooks
a
number
of
important
facts.
First,
the
failure
to
remit
in
a
timely
way
began
as
early
as
July
1990,
and
after
that
time,
not
more
than
two
monthly
remittances
which
were
made
when
they
were
due.
After
the
middle
of
1991,
the
company
made
virtually
no
remittances,
and
it
was
only
through
audits
by
Revenue
Canada
that
the
arrears
were
established
from
time
to
time.
It
is
clear
that
the
other
trade
creditors
were
being
paid
throughout
this
period;
if
they
had
not
been,
there
would
have
been
no
product
to
sell,
and
the
pound
would
have
been
shut
down
for
lack
of
electric
power.
In
effect,
the
unremitted
funds
were
being
used,
as
well
as
the
line
of
credit,
to
provide
working
capital
to
the
business.
Throughout
most
of
the
period
there
was
not
adequate
office
staff
to
ensure
that
the
bookkeeping
was
done
and
the
remittances
paid.
The
cheque
from
Bluenose
Fish
Market
being
dishonoured
at
the
bank
no
doubt
was
a
blow
to
the
company,
but
if
those
funds
had
been
available
they
would
have
discharged
less
than
one-half
the
outstanding
liability
to
the
Crown
at
that
time.
Finally,
cheques
on
the
company’s
bank
account
required
the
signature
of
two
people;
at
the
time
of
the
payment
to
the
fishers
in
August
1992,
which
was
made
contrary
to
the
Appellant’s
express
instructions,
Mr
Sutherland
was
making
payments
to
creditors
using
about
50
cheques
on
the
company’s
account
which
had
been
signed
in
blank
and
given
to
him
by
the
Appellant.
Mr.
Sutherland
may
have
acted
contrary
to
his
instructions,
but
it
was
the
Appellant
who,
by
by-passing
a
normal
safeguard
of
business
practice,
put
him
in
a
position
to
do
so.
In
support
of
his
argument,
counsel
for
the
Appellant
referred
me
to
a
number
of
cases
decided
in
this
Court,
and
to
the
decision
of
Addy
J.,
as
he
then
was,
of
the
Federal
Court
-
Trial
Division
in
Robitaille
v.
R..
As
Addy
J.
correctly
observed
in
that
case:
...when
dealing
with
‘the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill’
to
be
exercised
by
‘a
reasonably
prudent
person’
in
‘comparable
circumstances’,
each
case
must
necessarily
depend
on
its
particular
facts,....
I
do
not
find
any
helpful
principle
in
the
cases
to
which
counsel
referred
me;
they
all
turn
on
their
own
facts,
which
differ
greatly
from
those
of
the
case
at
bar.
The
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
has
recently
considered
the
due
diligence
defence
found
in
subsection
227.1(3)
in
Soper
v.
R.
In
reasons
concurred
in
by
Linden
J.A.,
Robertson
J.A.,
after
a
review
of
the
decided
cases,
concluded
that
the
test
to
be
used
in
applying
the
subsection
requires
that
both
subjective
and
objective
factors
be
taken
into
account.
At
pages
23-25
he
said:
...
The
standard
of
care
laid
down
in
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act
is
inherently
flexible.
Rather
than
treating
directors
as
a
homogeneous
group
of
professionals
whose
conduct
is
governed
by
a
single,
unchanging
standard,
that
provision
embraces
a
subjective
element
which
takes
into
account
the
personal
knowledge
and
background
of
the
director,
as
well
as
his
or
her
corporate
circumstances
in
the
form
of,
inter
alia,
the
company’s
organization,
resources,
customs
and
conduct.
Thus,
for
example,
more
is
expected
of
individuals
with
superior
qualifications
(e.g.
experienced
business-persons).
The
standard
of
care
set
out
in
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Act
is,
therefore,
not
purely
objective.
Nor
is
it
purely
subjective.
It
is
not
enough
for
a
director
to
say
he
or
she
did
his
or
her
best,
for
that
is
an
invocation
of
the
purely
subjective
standard.
Equally
clear
is
that
honesty
is
not
enough.
However,
the
standard
is
not
a
professional
one.
Nor
is
it
the
negligence
law
standard
that
governs
these
cases,
Rather,
the
Act
contains
both
objective
elements
-
embodied
in
the
reasonable
person
language
-
and
subjective
elements
-
inherent
in
individual
considerations
like
“skill”
and
the
idea
of
“comparable
circumstances”.
Accordingly,
the
standard
can
be
properly
described
as
“objective
subjective”.
At
the
outset,
I
wish
to
emphasize
that
in
adopting
this
analytical
approach
I
am
not
suggesting
that
liability
is
dependent
simply
upon
whether
a
person
is
Classified
as
an
inside
as
opposed
to
an
outside
director.
Rather,
that
characterization
is
simply
the
starting
point
of
my
analysis.
At
the
same
time,
however,
it
is
difficult
to
deny
that
inside
directors,
meaning
those
involved
in
the
day-to-day
management
of
the
company
and
who
influence
the
conduct
of
its
business
affairs,
will
have
the
most
difficulty
in
establishing
the
due
diligence
defence.
For
such
individuals,
it
will
be
a
challenge
to
argue
convincingly
that,
despite
their
daily
role
in
corporate
management,
they
lacked
business
acumen
to
the
extent
that
that
factor
should
overtake
the
assumption
that
they
did
know,
or
ought
to
have
known,
of
both
remittance
requirements
and
any
problem
in
this
regard.
In
short,
inside
directors
will
face
a
significant
hurdle
when
arguing
that
the
subjective
element
of
the
standard
of
care
should
predominate
over
its
objective
aspect.
This
Appellant
certainly
has
“superior
qualifications”,
and
so
must
be
held
to
the
highest
standard
of
care.
As
a
practicing
lawyer
for
some
twenty
years,
he
must
have
understood
his
obligations
as
a
director.
He
has
a
degree
in
business
administration,
and
some
years
of
experience
as
a
businessman.
He
must
be
taken
to
understand
the
importance
of
following
sound
business
practices,
and
what
those
practices
are.
Throughout
the
life
of
this
company
he
was
an
inside
director,
and
by
the
summer
of
1992
he
was,
if
not
the
only
director,
then
at
least
the
only
one
actively
participating
in
the
business.
Even
an
outside
director
has
a
positive
duty
to
act,
upon
learning
that
there
is
a
problem.
Robertson
J.A.
puts
it
this
way:
In
my
view,
the
positive
duty
to
act
arises
where
a
director
obtains
information,
or
becomes
aware
of
facts,
which
might
lead
one
to
conclude
that
there
is,
or
could
reasonably
be,
a
potential
problem
with
remittances.
Put
differently,
it
is
indeed
incumbent
upon
an
outside
director
to
take
positive
steps
if
he
or
she
knew,
or
ought
to
have
known,
that
the
corporation
could
be
experiencing
a
remittance
problem.
The
duty
of
an
inside
director
is
necessarily
no
less.
In
the
present
case
the
Appellant
clearly
was
aware
of
the
failure
to
make
the
required
remittances
as
early
as
1990.
He
was
involved
in
discussions
with
Revenue
Canada
officials
about
the
arrears
on
numerous
occasions
thereafter.
The
positive
action
that
he
cites
is
the
borrowing
at
the
bank,
and
his
instructions
to
Mr.
Sutherland
to
sell
only
C.O.D.,
and
to
make
no
payments
from
the
proceeds
of
a
delivery
to
the
pound
until
after
the
remittances
were
paid
to
Revenue
Canada.
As
to
the
first
of
these,
the
borrowing
at
the
bank
was
to
obtain
the
necessary
working
capital
to
open
the
business
for
the
1992
season;
it
was
certainly
not
used
to
pay
off
the
arrears
owing
to
the
Crown,
although
some
part
of
it
may
have
gone
to
pay
some
part
of
the
arrears.
The
Appellant’s
instructions
to
Mr.
Sutherland
in
1992
fall
far
short
of
satisfying
the
duty
on
him.
First,
it
is
a
clear
case
of
locking
the
barn
door
long
after
the
horse
has
gone.
As
Robertson
J.A.
said
in
Soper:
the
purpose
of
subsection
227.1(3)
is
to
prevent
failure
to
make
remittances
and
not
to
cure
default
after
the
fact
(though,
as
a
practical
matter,
the
provision
should
have
the
latter
effect
as
well).
The
Appellant
was
under
a
duty
to
take
positive
steps,
both
to
remedy
the
default
and
to
prevent
recurrences,
at
least
as
early
as
April
1991
when
he
learned
that
the
audit
had
shown
arrears
of
more
than
$18,000.
Moreover,
at
the
same
time
that
he
was
issuing
his
instruction
to
Mr.
Sutherland,
he
was
furnishing
him
with
blank
cheques
bearing
his
signataure,
thus
thwarting
the
most
effective
control
he
had
over
the
company’s
bank
account.
The
explanation
offered
for
this
was
that
the
business
was
located
a
long
way
from
the
Appellant’s
office
in
Moncton,
and
that
it
would
be
inconvenient
if
he
had
to
sign
cheques
one
by
one
as
they
were
issued.
I
am
not
impressed
by
this
reasoning.
It
was
up
to
the
Appellant
to
devise
a
means
of
control
under
the
circumstances.
It
is
no
doubt
correct
to
say
that
directors
can
delegate
to
managers,
and
that
to
do
so
is
not
of
itself
a
breach
of
their
duty.
In
the
circumstances
prevailing
here,
however,
where
the
company
had
a
long
history
of
arrears,
chronic
cash
flow
problems,
and
limited
available
credit,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
one
active
director
of
the
company
handed
blank
cheques
signed
by
him
to
the
manager
at
his
own
peril.
The
Appellant
was
in
breach
of
the
duty
imposed
on
him
by
section
227.1
from
at
least
April
1991
onward.
The
appeal
is
dismissed,
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.