Mogan
T
.
C.J.:
The
Appellant
was
assessed
under
section
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
his
capacity
as
a
former
director
of
Seven
S
Structures
Inc.
(hereafter
referred
to
as
the
“Corporation”).
By
notice
of
assessment
dated
April
25,
1996,
the
Appellant
was
assessed
the
aggregate
amount
of
$27,833.34
under
section
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Federal)
and
corresponding
provisions
of
the
Alberta
Income
Tax
Act,
Canada
Pension
Plan
and
Unemployment
Insurance
Act.
In
a
schedule
attached
to
the
notice
of
assessment
(Exhibit
A-17)
the
aggregate
amount
of
$27,833.34
is
allocated
among
the
following
headings:
|
Federal
Tax
|
$
8,964.60
|
|
Federal
Penalty
|
2,981.94
|
|
Provincial
Tax
|
1,768.68
|
|
Provincial
Penalty
|
426.51
|
|
CPP
|
1,564.57
|
|
CPP
Penalty
|
253.27
|
|
VIC
|
4,472.00
|
|
UIC
Penalty
|
447.20
|
|
Accrued
Interest
|
6,740.07
|
|
Other
|
214.50
|
|
Total
|
$27,833.34
|
Although
there
were
a
number
of
issues
raised
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
the
Appellant’s
counsel
stated
at
the
commencement
of
the
hearing
that
there
were
only
two
issues
to
be
decided
by
the
Court:
whether
the
Appellant
had
satisfied
the
due
diligence
test
in
subsection
227.1(3);
and
when
should
a
director
take
positive
steps
in
order
to
discharge
his
responsibility
with
respect
to
due
diligence.
Neither
counsel
referred
to
the
conditions
in
subsection
227.1(2).
I
therefore
conclude
from
other
statements
by
counsel
and
from
the
manner
in
which
this
appeal
was
presented
that
those
conditions
have
been
satisfied.
The
Corporation
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Alberta
sometime
in
the
mid-1980s.
Its
purpose
was
to
manufacture
and
sell
a
product
used
in
the
building
industry.
The
Appellant
described
the
product
in
layman’s
language
as
two
slabs
of
chipboard
approximately
4'
x
8'
which
were
like
the
bread
of
a
sandwich.
Between
the
two
slabs
a
special
machine
pumped
a
special
foam
insulation
product
which
was
like
the
meat
of
the
sandwich.
The
result
of
this
process
was
a
prefabricated
insulated
panel
covering
about
32
square
feet.
These
panels
were
manufactured
in
standard
widths
of
3",
4”,
6”
and
8".
The
panels
were
designed
to
be
used
in
the
construction
of
houses
and
buildings
as
part
of
the
outside
wall
in
the
sense
that
they
would
provide
a
better
insulation
than
the
normal
insulation
packed
between
studs.
A
man
named
Sidney
Tissington
held
the
original
patent
for
the
design
of
these
panels
comprising
the
two
slabs
of
chipboard
with
the
foam
content
pumped
in
between.
Immediately
after
incorporation,
the
Tissington
family
held
enough
shares
to
control
the
Corporation
but,
at
a
later
time,
certain
members
of
the
public
were
invited
to
become
shareholders
in
order
to
put
more
capital
into
the
Corporation.
It
appears
that
Mr.
Tissington
transferred
his
patent
to
the
Corporation.
At
all
relevant
times,
the
Appellant
was
an
entrepreneur
owning
many
businesses
and
residing
in
Chetwynd,
British
Columbia,
a
small
community
approximately
200
miles
northeast
of
Prince
George.
The
Appellant
has
been
in
business
for
more
than
45
years.
In
1952,
he
purchased
his
first
truck.
Later,
he
developed
a
trucking
business
and
then
expanded
into
other
activities.
He
said
that
at
one
time
he
had
17
companies
whose
businesses
included
oil
delivery,
a
helicopter
service,
construction,
and
financial
services.
The
Appellant
is
a
hands-on
businessman
who
ran
most
of
these
companies
on
a
day-to-day
basis.
He
is
hard-working.
According
to
his
own
evidence
which
is
all
credible
without
qualification,
he
is
up
about
5:00
every
morning
and
he
gets
home
around
8:00
in
the
evening
putting
in
a
13-
hour
day
with
time
out
for
lunch
and
supper.
The
Appellant
freely
acknowledged
in
his
examination-in-chief
that,
as
the
owner
of
many
businesses,
he
knows
about
source
deductions
from
wages
and
salaries;
and
he
knows
about
a
director’s
potential
liability
if
a
Corporation
fails
to
remit
such
source
deductions.
The
Appellant
first
saw
the
prefabricated
insulated
panels
in
Grand
Prairie,
Alberta
around
1988.
He
was
very
impressed
with
the
product
and
concluded
that
it
would
have
great
value
in
the
construction
industry.
In
1989,
when
Mr.
Tissington
was
raising
additional
capital
for
the
Corporation
by
inviting
persons
outside
the
family
to
subscribe
for
shares,
the
Appellant
purchased
his
first
shares
in
the
Corporation
for
$37,500.
It
never
did
come
out
in
evidence
how
many
shares
the
Appellant
acquired
for
$37,500
but
the
Appellant’s
copy
of
a
bank
draft
for
that
amount
dated
January
23,
1989
is
Exhibit
A-l.
The
Appellant
cannot
recall
when
he
first
became
a
director
of
the
Corporation
but
the
earliest
minutes
of
any
directors’
meeting
in
evidence
is
Exhibit
A-3
showing
that
the
Appellant
was
a
director
when
they
met
on
December
7,
1990.
A
man
named
Vern
Estabrook
had
loaned
some
money
to
the
Corporation
and
introduced
the
Appellant
to
a
number
of
the
directors.
It
is
the
Appellant’s
recollection
that
it
was
through
Vern
Estabrook
that
he
was
invited
to
become
a
director.
The
Appellant
and
Harvey
Jager
became
directors
at
the
same
time.
The
Appellant
had
met
the
other
members
of
the
board
before
becoming
a
director
but
he
did
not
know
them
well.
Specifically,
he
was
not
related
in
any
way
to
any
other
director
nor
did
he
have
any
prior
business
dealings
with
them.
According
to
Exhibit
A-3,
the
following
persons
were
directors
of
the
Corporation
on
December
7,
1990:
Harvey
Jager
Sid
Tissington
Jerry
Wright
Norman
Husband
Lorne
Dalke
The
minutes
of
the
directors’
meeting
on
December
7,
1990
show
that
the
directors
accepted
the
resignation
of
Harvey
Jager
as
president
of
the
Corporation
but
Mr.
Jager
did
not
resign
as
a
director.
Curiously,
the
minutes
do
not
indicate
that
the
directors
appointed
any
other
person
as
president
to
replace
Mr.
Jager.
The
Appellant’s
oral
testimony
indicates
that
the
Tissingtons
took
over
management
of
the
Corporation
effective
on
or
prior
to
December
7,
1990.
Sid
Tissington
was
of
course
the
original
inventor
of
the
prefabricated
insulated
panel
and
he
became
the
effective
manager
of
the
Corporation’s
operation.
His
wife
Evelyn
was
the
bookkeeper
and
his
son
Keith
was
a
foreman
or
manager
of
the
production
plant
at
Innisfail,
Alberta.
Soon
after
the
Appellant
became
involved
in
the
Corporation,
he
realized
that
it
was
in
serious
financial
difficulty.
From
time
to
time
over
the
next
two
or
three
years,
the
Appellant
provided
financial
assistance
to
the
Corporation
in
a
truly
significant
way.
By
1994,
he
had
invested
approximately
$1,000,000
directly
or
indirectly
in
the
Corporation’s
business.
The
last
page
of
Exhibit
A-7
is
a
schedule
prepared
by
the
Appellant
showing
the
amounts
which
he
advanced
to
the
Corporation
at
various
times
up
to
and
including
June
30,
1994.
The
schedule
does
not
show
the
date
when
each
advance
was
made
but
the
Appellant
described
almost
all
of
the
amounts
and
the
circumstances
in
which
the
advances
were
made.
Set
out
below
is
the
schedule
from
Exhibit
A-7
as
prepared
by
the
Appellant:
|
Advanced
by
way
of
bank
draft
to
cover
payroll
|
$
20,000.00
|
|
(1990)
|
|
|
Paid
to
Louisiana
Pacific
for
5
Truckloads
of
O.S.B.
|
$
42,023.00
|
|
Paid
to
Seven
’S’
re:
Cranes
|
$
30,000.00
|
|
Paid
to
Northern
Metallic
re:
Judgment
|
$
27,000.00
|
|
Paid
to
Phil
Swagg
(re:
business
plan)
|
$
|
1,000.00
|
|
Paid
to
Kaverit
Crane
re:
insurance
deductible
|
$
|
708.47
|
|
Expenses
owing
since
1989
|
$
23,993.64
|
|
Advanced
to
Seven
(S’)
loan
$50,000.00
plus
inter
|
$116,662.00
|
|
est
|
|
|
Share
Subscription
490,000
shares
@
.25
|
$122,500.00
|
|
Investment
in
mortgage
at
Innisfail
|
$352,000.00
|
|
Investment
in
Cement
Plant
at
Innisfail
|
$176,000.00
|
|
Total
Investment
in
Seven
’S’
Since
March
of
1989
|
$969,387.11
|
The
schedule
has
some
inaccuracies
as
will
appear
in
the
comments
below
but
it
is
a
useful
summary
of
the
circumstances
and
certain
times
when
the
Appellant
came
to
the
rescue
of
the
Corporation.
I
shall
review
most
of
the
amounts
in
the
same
order
in
which
they
appear
in
the
schedule
with
the
Appellant’s
description
of
the
amount.
$20,000
An
amount
advanced
by
the
Appellant
sometime
in
1990
to
cover
the
payroll.
$42,023
By
April
1991,
the
Corporation
had
exhausted
its
credit
with
most
suppliers
who
would
not
deliver
any
further
product
except
on
a
cash
basis.
One
of
the
biggest
suppliers
was
Louisiana
Pacific
Panel
Products
Ltd.
In
April
1991,
the
Corporation
needed
product
from
Louisiana
Pacific
but
had
no
cash.
The
Appellant
advanced
$42,023
to
pay
those
invoices
from
Louisiana
Pacific
which
are
Exhibit
A-9.
$30,000
When
the
Corporation
purchased
the
plant
and
land
at
Innisfail,
Alberta
in
1988,
it
acquired
four
Gantry
cranes
in
new
condition.
Sometime
in
1992
when
the
Corporation
was
desperate
for
money,
the
Appellant
loaned
$30,000
on
condition
that
one
of
the
Appellant’s
operating
companies
in
Chetwynd,
British
Columbia,
be
granted
a
chattel
mortgage
on
two
of
the
cranes.
This
transaction
was
effected
and
the
Appellant
ended
up
with
a
chattel
mortgage
for
$30,000.
$27,000
In
April,
1991,
Northern
Metallic
Inc.
had
a
law
suit
against
the
Corporation
for
$27,000.
The
directors
were
concerned
that
if
Northern
Metallic
were
to
pursue
its
law
suit,
other
creditors
might
become
nervous
and
commence
legal
proceedings
which
could
put
the
Corporation
into
receivership.
To
avoid
this,
the
Appellant
paid
$27,000
to
Northern
Metallic
to
settle
the
law
suit.
As
security
for
the
$27,000,
one
of
the
Appellant’s
companies
took
a
chattel
mortgage
on
the
other
two
cranes.
$1,000
The
Appellant
and
one
or
two
other
directors
retained
Phil
Swagg
personally
to
prepare
a
business
plan
for
the
Corporation
and
they
paid
Mr.
Swagg
out
of
their
own
pockets.
$23,933.64
This
amount
represents
an
accumulation
of
casual
disbursements
incurred
from
time
to
time
by
the
Appellant
for
the
benefit
of
the
Corporation.
He
said
that
the
total
amount
would
include
his
transportation
costs
of
going
to
and
returning
from
directors’
meetings
(those
costs
were
apparently
never
reimbursed),
fees
for
directors’
meetings
which
were
not
paid,
and
other
incidental
expenses
which
the
Appellant
incurred
from
time
to
time.
$116,662
On
March
30,
1992,
the
Appellant
loaned
$50,000
to
the
Corporation.
Exhibit
A-6
is
a
record
of
the
wire
payment
from
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank.
Exhibit
A-7
is
the
loan
agreement
between
the
Appellant
and
the
Corporation
and
Exhibit
A-8
is
an
acknowledgement
of
the
loan
signed
by
Jerauld
G.
Wright
as
chairman
of
the
board.
The
acknowledgement
in
Exhibit
A-8
shows
that
the
interest
is
at
the
rate
of
2.5%
per
month
and
Exhibit
A-7,
the
loan
agreement,
states
that
the
rate
of
interest
is
30%
per
annum.
To
the
best
of
the
Appellant’s
recollection,
the
amount
of
$116,662
is
the
basic
loan
of
$50,000
plus
accrued
interest
at
30%
per
annum
from
March
30,
1992
to
June
30,
1994.
According
to
my
calculations,
the
basic
loan
amount
plus
accrued
interest
even
at
30%
per
annum
would
not
make
up
a
total
of
$116,662
by
June
30,
1994
but
that
is
the
Appellant’s
best
recollection
given
in
Court
in
December
1998.
$122,500
The
Appellant’s
first
purchase
of
shares
in
the
Corporation
on
January
23,
1989
cost
$37,500.
Exhibit
A-1
is
a
bank
draft
in
that
amount
payable
to
the
Corporation
and
the
Appellant
identified
that
as
his
first
payment
for
shares.
At
some
later
time,
when
the
Corporation
needed
money,
the
Appellant
agreed
to
take
up
an
additional
490,000
shares
at
$.25
a
share
resulting
in
a
total
cost
of
$122,500.
This
is
the
amount
recorded
in
Exhibit
A-7
but
it
does
not
include
the
Appellant’s
initial
investment
of
$37,500.
The
Appellant
could
not
explain
how
the
directors
set
a
value
of
$.25
on
the
shares
which
he
later
purchased.
$352,000
The
Corporation
had
purchased
the
land
and
plant
around
1988
at
a
total
cost
of
approximately
$700,000.
The
Corporation
failed
to
pay
its
municipal
taxes
in
subsequent
years
until
some
time
around
1992
when
the
Town
of
Innisfail
needed
$800,000
for
arrears
of
municipal
taxes
on
the
property.
The
Corporation
did
not
have
the
funds
to
pay
these
taxes.
Three
of
the
directors
put
up
the
$800,000
and
collectively
took
back
a
mortgage
on
the
property
as
security
for
their
loan.
The
three
directors
and
the
amounts
they
respectively
advanced
are:
|
Jerauld
Wright
|
$500,000
|
|
The
Appellant
|
$200,000
|
|
Harvey
Jager
|
$100,000
|
The
amount
of
$352,000
in
Exhibit
A-7
is
the
Appellant’s
share
($200,000)
of
the
$800,000
advanced
to
pay
the
municipal
taxes
to
Innisfail,
plus
accrued
interest
on
the
Appellant’s
share.
$176,000.00
When
the
Corporation
bought
its
plant
in
1988,
it
acquired
not
only
the
land
and
the
building
but
all
of
the
equipment
in
the
building.
Apparently,
the
plant
had
been
intended
to
be
used
as
a
cement
manufacturing
facility
because
most
of
the
equipment
related
to
cement-making.
That
equipment
was
redundant
to
the
Corporation’s
operation.
Therefore,
it
was
decided
to
sell
the
equipment
by
auction.
The
auction
was
held
in
Edmonton
but,
because
the
equipment
was
heavy
and
could
not
easily
be
moved,
it
was
left
in
the
plant
at
Innisfail
and
only
pictures
of
the
equipment
were
on
display
at
the
auction.
The
Appellant
and
Jerry
Wright
attended
the
auction
sale.
When
the
bidding
stalled
at
$55,000,
the
Appellant
intervened
and
started
bidding
on
the
equipment
for
his
own
personal
use.
As
a
result,
the
Appellant
was
the
buyer
at
some
price
in
the
range
of
$180,000.
There
is
no
precise
reconciliation
between
the
amount
of
$186,000
which
the
Appellant
claims
in
Exhibit
A-11
to
be
the
actual
auction
price;
the
amount
of
$171,000
which
was
the
net
proceeds
to
the
Corporation
according
to
Exhibit
A-3,
the
minutes
of
the
directors’
meeting
on
December
7,
1990;
and
the
amount
of
$176,000
appearing
in
Exhibit
A-7.
In
the
Appellant’s
mind,
the
$176,000
in
Exhibit
A-7
is
higher
than
the
net
amount
($171,000)
received
by
the
Corporation
because
of
some
prior
charge
on
the
equipment.
The
Appellant’s
schedule
in
Exhibit
A-7
is
not
100%
accurate
but
I
am
satisfied
that
in
substance
it
is
true.
Specifically,
there
are
two
significant
omissions.
The
$37,500
for
the
Appellant’s
first
purchase
of
shares
in
1989
is
missing.
Also,
there
is
a
further
amount
of
$93,416
which
the
Appellant
advanced
to
the
Town
of
Innisfail
on
March
25,
1993
in
order
to
pay
the
municipal
taxes
on
the
plant.
See
Exhibit
A-12.
The
Appellant’s
explanation
is
that,
as
one
of
the
three
mortgagees
holding
a
mortgage
on
the
plant
(the
Appellant’s
share
of
$200,000
being
part
of
the
$800,000
mortgage
described
above),
he
decided
to
pay
the
municipal
taxes
of
$93,416
without
any
immediate
contribution
at
that
time
from
Jerry
Wright
or
Harvey
Jager
because
it
was
the
only
way
of
protecting
their
collective
mortgage
on
the
property
if
they
wanted
to
foreclose
at
some
future
time.
He
was
confident
that
on
a
foreclosure
and
sale,
he
would
recover
from
Wright
and
Jager
their
proportionate
share
of
the
$93,416.
The
number
of
times
when
and
the
circumstances
in
which
the
Appellant
provided
financial
assistance
to
the
Corporation
is
truly
impressive.
He
said
that
he
advanced
the
money
from
time
to
time
because
he
really
believed
in
the
product.
Unfortunately,
the
Corporation
went
out
of
business
in
March
1994.
The
Appellant
thinks
the
Corporation
failed
because
of
poor
management,
lack
of
orders
and
lack
of
capital.
Although
the
Corporation
survived
as
a
business
operation
until
March
1994,
there
were
a
number
of
events
along
the
way
which
sent
out
a
constant
signal
that
the
Corporation
was
in
financial
difficulty.
I
will
first
comment
on
the
minutes
of
three
directors’
meetings.
Exhibit
A-3
is
minutes
of
the
directors’
meeting
held
on
December
7,
1990.
It
is
apparent
from
these
minutes
that
the
auction
sale
in
which
the
Appellant
had
stepped
in
to
rescue
the
bidding
at
the
$55,000
level
(described
above)
had
occurred
some
time
prior
to
this
meeting.
The
first
item
in
the
minutes
is
a
review
of
the
results
of
the
auction.
Mr.
Wright
advised
that
the
auction
of
excess
equipment
of
Seven
S
took
in
a
gross
amount
of
$190,000
which,
after
a
10%
fee
to
the
auctioneers
left
$171,000.
Of
the
$171,000,
17%
belongs
to
Vern
Estabrook
as
the
holder
of
an
undivided
interest
in
the
excess
equipment
equalling
$29,070.00.
This
left
a
balance
of
$141,930
to
be
paid
by
the
auctioneers
to
Seven
S.
Of
this
amount,
Revenue
Canada
Taxation
and
Revenue
Canada
Excise
are
to
receive
$71,398.92
and
$45,001.38
respectively.
This
left
a
balance
of
$25,530.
After
a
discussion
of
the
outstanding
accounts
owed
by
Seven
S
to
Howard,
Mackie
on
motion
by
Mr.
Dalke,
seconded
by
Mr.
Tissington
and
carried
unanimously
it
was
RESOLVED
THAT
the
balance
of
the
proceeds
of
the
concrete
plant
auction
being
$25,530
be
paid
to
Howard,
Mackie
towards
settlement
of
the
outstanding
accounts
of
Seven
S
with
such
law
firm.
The
above
passage
speaks
for
itself
as
to
the
Corporation’s
debts
to
Revenue
Canada.
Also,
I
infer
from
the
wording
of
the
resolution
that
the
Corporation
owed
a
larger
amount
to
the
Howard,
Mackie
law
firm
because
the
resolution
states
that
the
amount
of
$25,530
is
paid
“towards
settlement
of
the
outstanding
accounts”.
Exhibit
A-5
is
minutes
of
the
directors’
meeting
held
on
April
17,
1991.
There
had
been
no
meeting
since
December
7,
1990
because
the
first
item
of
business
was
to
adopt
the
minutes
of
the
meeting
on
that
date.
The
next
item
was
a
review
of
the
Corporation’s
financial
status.
The
Directors
reviewed
the
financial
status
of
Seven
S
and
discussed
the
approximate
$500,000
in
trade
creditor
debt.
The
Board
also
discussed
the
current
outstanding
amounts
owing
to
income
tax
in
the
amount
of
approximately
$26,000
and
Workers’
Compensation
of
approximately
$20,000.
Mr.
Husband
suggested
that
unaudited
financials
be
provided
to
the
Directors
on
a
monthly
basis.
On
motion
by
Mr.
Husband,
seconded
by
Mr.
Tissington
and
carried
unanimously,
RESOLVED
THAT
the
Directors
receive
financial
statements
including
trial
balance
and
complete
breakdown
of
payables
and
receivables
within
15
days
of
the
end
of
each
and
every
month.
Again,
the
above
passage
speaks
for
itself.
The
Corporation
had
trade
creditor
debts
of
$500,000;
it
owed
income
tax
of
$26,000
and
Workers’
Compensation
levies
of
$20,000.
These
obligations
are
not
the
sign
of
a
healthy
Corporation.
Exhibit
A-10
is
minutes
of
the
directors’
meeting
held
on
August
19,
1992.
This
was
an
important
meeting
because
it
marked
the
departure
of
the
Tissingtons
(Sid,
Evelyn
and
Keith)
from
the
management
of
the
Corporation.
On
page
2
of
the
minutes,
the
Appellant
made
a
motion
to
offer
a
certain
proposal
to
the
Tissingtons
but
his
motion
died
because
it
was
not
seconded.
A
different
motion
was
then
put
forward
by
Norman
Husband
and
adopted
by
the
directors
with
the
Appellant
dissenting.
These
minutes
show
the
Appellant’s
willingness
to
stand
apart
from
his
fellow
directors.
According
to
the
Appellant,
after
this
meeting
the
management
of
the
Corporation
was
left
in
the
hands
of
Jerry
Wright
who
was
the
chairman
of
the
board
and
de
facto
president
of
the
Corporation
whether
he
was
appointed
to
that
office
or
not.
Because
Mr.
Wright
was
an
Ontario
businessman
living
in
Ottawa,
it
was
decided
to
move
the
head
office
of
the
Corporation
from
Innisfail
to
Ottawa
but
the
banking
was
left
at
Innisfail.
From
and
after
August
1992,
all
of
the
Corporation’s
cheques
were
sent
by
Judy
(the
bookkeeper
in
Innisfail)
to
Mr.
Wright
in
Ottawa
for
signature.
This
procedure
persisted
from
August
1992
until
the
Corporation
went
out
of
business
in
March
1994.
The
Appellant
said
that
it
was
appropriate
to
transfer
the
head
office
to
Ottawa
because
Mr.
Wright
was
the
largest
shareholder
in
the
Corporation
and
had
also
invested
the
most
money.
The
Appellant
had
obtained
a
list
of
the
shareholders
(Exhibit
A-13)
and,
according
to
his
own
calculations,
the
five
biggest
shareholders
of
the
Corporation
with
their
respective
percentage
of
the
issued
shares
were
as
follows:
Jerry
Wright
20.5%
Tissington
Family
17.2%
Harvey
Jager
19.0%
Norman
Husband
7.7%
Lorne
Dalke
7.4%
Another
reason
for
the
Appellant
placing
importance
on
the
directors’
meeting
of
August
1992
is
the
fact
that,
prior
to
that
meeting,
he
was
often
asked
to
advance
money
directly
to
the
Corporation
or
to
its
suppliers
as
indicated
in
Exhibit
A-7.
After
that
meeting,
however,
the
Appellant
said
that
he
was
not
asked
to
advance
money
directly
to
the
Corporation.
I
do
not
in
any
way
doubt
the
Appellant’s
sincerity
or
credibility
but
that
statement
must
be
qualified
by
the
fact
that
in
March
1993,
when
the
Corporation
had
failed
to
pay
the
municipal
taxes
on
its
plant
in
Innisfail,
the
Appellant
himself
had
to
pay
$93,416
to
the
Town
of
Innisfail
to
pay
the
back
taxes
and
prevent
the
loss
of
the
plant.
That
amount
is
described
in
paragraph
11
above
as
an
addendum
to
the
schedule
which
is
the
last
page
of
Exhibit
A-7.
The
Appellant
stated
that,
after
August
1992,
he
thought
that
the
Corporation
was
doing
okay.
He
said
that
he
had
no
cause
to
check
on
tax
remittances
because
every
time
he
called
Judy
(the
bookkeeper
in
Innisfail)
she
always
told
him
that
the
cheques
had
been
sent
to
Ottawa.
Judy
would
assure
the
Appellant
that
among
the
cheques
she
sent
to
Ottawa
were
the
remittance
cheques
to
Revenue
Canada
for
source
deductions
but
the
Appel-
lant
did
not
ask
Jerry
Wright
if
he
actually
signed
and
mailed
those
cheques.
When
he
asked
Mr.
Wright
about
the
Corporation’s
debts,
he
was
told
that
there
were
lots
of
receivables.
Sometime
in
1993,
Harvey
Jager
and
Norman
Husband
resigned
as
directors
of
the
Corporation
because
they
could
not
get
any
financial
information.
The
Appellant
stated
that
he
knew
that
Jager
and
Husband
had
resigned
but
that
he
could
not
resign
because
he
had
too
much
invested
in
the
Corporation
and
he
needed
to
stay
on
the
scene
to
protect
his
investment.
After
August
1992,
Judy
(the
bookkeeper)
may
very
well
have
assured
the
Appellant
from
time
to
time
that
she
had
sent
to
Jerry
Wright
in
Ottawa
the
cheques
necessary
to
pay
current
debts
including
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada.
The
schedule
to
the
Appellant’s
notice
of
assessment
(Exhibit
A-17)
shows
that
the
total
liability
of
$27,833.34
assessed
against
the
Appellant
was
accumulated
against
the
Corporation
from
April
5,
1993
through
to
March
22,
1994.
In
other
words,
it
was
over
this
12-month
period
that
the
Corporation
accumulated
its
liability
through
failure
to
remit
amounts
to
Revenue
Canada;
and
that
liability
has
descended
upon
the
Appellant
as
a
director
of
the
Corporation
during
that
period.
Exhibit
A-16
is
the
Appellant’s
resignation
as
a
director
on
February
8,
1996.
According
to
Exhibit
A-18,
Jerry
Wright
and
Sid
Tissington
were
the
only
directors
of
the
Corporation
on
June
17,
1996.
Counsel
for
the
Appellant
made
the
following
argument.
The
Appellant
was
an
outside
director;
not
a
part
of
any
controlling
group;
and
not
an
officer
of
the
Corporation.
At
all
relevant
times,
the
Appellant
lived
in
Chetwynd,
British
Columbia
approximately
four
hours
by
air
(no
direct
flights)
from
Innisfail,
Alberta
and
10
hours
by
highway.
Although
the
Corporation
was
in
constant
financial
difficulties
up
to
and
including
August
1992
when
the
Tissington
family
was
removed
from
any
further
management,
the
Appellant
had
no
reason
to
believe
that
there
was
any
problem
with
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada
after
August
1992
when
Jerry
Wright
took
over
the
management
of
the
Corporation.
The
Appellant’s
position
is
that
he
did
all
that
was
required
by
enquiring
of
Judy
if
she
had
sent
the
cheques
to
Jerry
Wright
and
by
asking
Mr.
Wright
from
time
to
time
if
the
debts
were
being
paid.
Section
227.1
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
imposes
a
liability
on
the
directors
of
a
corporation
who
meet
the
conditions
in
subsection
(1)
and
grants
relief
to
a
director
who
can
satisfy
the
so-called
due
diligence
test
in
subsection
(3).
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
the
director
exercised
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failure
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
There
are
many
cases
which
have
interpreted
and
applied
section
227.1
of
the
Act
and
it
would
not
be
possible
to
reconcile
those
cases.
A
recent
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Soper
v.
R.
(1997),
97
D.T.C.
5407
(Fed.
C.A.)
provides
a
very
helpful
analysis
of
the
duty
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
imposed
by
subsection
227.1(3).
Neil
Soper
was
an
outside
director
of
Ramona
Beauchamp
International
(1976)
Inc.
(“RBI”)
and
assessed
under
section
227.1.
This
Court
had
previously
allowed
an
appeal
by
Sanford
v.
R.
(1995),
96
D.T.C.
1912
(T.C.C.)
who
was
an
inside
director
of
RBI.
The
decision
in
Soper
has
special
interest
because
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
upheld
the
assessment
against
Mr.
Soper
as
an
outside
director.
At
page
5416,
Robertson
J.A.
(Linden
J.A.
concurring)
summarized
the
standard
of
care
as
follows:
This
is
a
convenient
place
to
summarize
my
findings
in
respect
of
subsection
227.1(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
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,
infer
alia,the
company’s
organization,
resources,
customs
and
conduct.
Thus,
for
example,
more
is
expected
of
individuals
with
superior
qualifications
(e.g.
experienced
businesspersons).
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
page
5417,
there
is
a
description
of
an
“inside
director”
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....
And
finally,
at
page
5418,
there
is
a
useful
comment
on
when
the
positive
duty
to
act
arises:
...I
would
not
expect
an
outside
director,
upon
appointment
to
the
board
of
one
of
Canada’s
leading
companies,
to
go
directly
to
the
comptroller’s
office
to
inquire
about
withholdings
and
remittances.
Obviously,
if
I
would
not
expect
such
steps
to
be
taken
by
the
most
sophisticated
of
business-persons,
then
I
would
certainly
not
expect
such
measures
to
be
adopted
by
those
with
limited
business
acumen.
This
is
not
to
suggest
that
a
director
can
adopt
an
entirely
passive
approach
but
only
that,
unless
there
is
reason
for
suspicion,
it
is
permissible
to
rely
on
the
day-to-day
corporate
managers
to
be
responsible
for
the
payment
of
debt
obligations
such
as
those
owing
to
Her
Majesty....
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....
I
accept
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
was
an
outside
director
but
I
do
not
accept
the
Appellant’s
argument
that
there
was
no
cause
for
him
to
be
concerned
after
August
1992
about
the
financial
difficulties
of
the
Corporation.
In
my
opinion,
there
are
four
independent
reasons
why
the
Appellant
should
have
been
concerned,
after
August
1992,
as
to
whether
the
Corporation’s
debts
were
being
paid
including
the
necessary
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada.
The
first
reason
is
the
track
record
of
the
Corporation.
It
had
never
been
out
of
financial
difficulty
since
the
Appellant
became
involved.
He
had
intense
personal
knowledge
of
the
Corporation’s
obligations
to
him
because
of
the
many
times
he
had
advanced
money
either
directly
to
the
Corporation
or
to
its
creditors.
There
was
no
indication
to
the
Appellant
that
the
Corporation
was
able
either
to
redeem
his
chattel
mortgage
on
the
cranes
or
otherwise
to
repay
amounts
owing
to
him.
The
Appellant
was
himself
a
significant
creditor
of
the
Corporation
only
because
of
its
bad
financial
track
record.
The
second
reason
is
the
remarkable
payment
of
$93,416
which
the
Appellant
made
on
March
25,
1993
to
the
Town
of
Innisfail
to
protect
his
personal
interest
in
the
three-party
mortgage
on
the
Corporation’s
plant.
This
payment
was
required
because
the
Corporation
did
not
pay
all
or
any
part
of
the
$93,416
owing
to
the
Town
with
respect
to
municipal
taxes.
According
to
Exhibit
A-17,
the
Corporation’s
failed
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada
commenced
on
April
5,
1993
just
11
days
after
the
Appellant
paid
$93,416
to
the
Town.
This
huge
payment
was,
or
should
have
been,
a
signal
to
the
Appellant
that
the
Corporation
was
in
serious
financial
difficulties
when
it
could
not
even
protect
its
manufacturing
plant
from
municipal
taxes.
As
a
man
with
long
and
varied
experience
in
business,
the
Appellant
knew
about
cash
flow
problems
and
the
temptation
to
hold
insolvency
at
bay
by
deferring
payment
to
parties
like
Revenue
Canada
who
were
not
providing
essential
goods
or
services
to
the
Corporation.
At
the
very
least,
the
Appellant
should
have
required
an
accounting
each
month
of
all
outstanding
debts
of
the
Corporation
including
a
precise
statement
from
the
bookkeeper
as
to
when
those
debts
were
paid.
The
loans
from
the
Appellant
and
Jerry
Wright
would
have
been
included
among
those
debts.
There
was
no
evidence
that
the
Appellant
made
any
separate
journey
to
Innisfail
after
August
1992
to
demand
personal
access
to
the
records
of
the
Corporation
to
determine
whether
its
debts
were
being
paid.
I
believe
the
Appellant
when
he
stated
that
he
was
concerned
and
that
he
did
phone
Judy
from
time
to
time
particularly
on
pay-day
to
ask
if
the
required
cheques
were
being
sent;
and
I
believe
the
Appellant
when
he
said
he
phoned
Jerry
Wright
from
time
to
time
to
see
if
the
debts
were
being
paid.
In
all
of
the
circumstances,
those
were
not
adequate
steps
to
take
given
the
track
record
of
the
Corporation
and
the
Appellant’s
required
payment
of
$93,416
to
the
Town
in
March
1993.
It
is
particularly
significant
that
the
payment
to
the
Town
was
a
tax
payment.
Why
did
the
Appellant
not
ask
himself
in
and
after
March
1993
if
payment
to
some
other
taxing
authority
might
be
deferred?
The
third
reason
is
the
Appellant’s
knowledge
that
Jerry
Wright
was
not
only
the
largest
shareholder
of
the
Corporation
but
also
had
advanced
to
the
Corporation
more
money
than
the
Appellant.
No
matter
how
much
the
Appellant
trusted
and
relied
on
Jerry
Wright,
he
should
have
wanted
to
know
whether
Mr.
Wright
as
a
creditor/director
of
the
Corporation
was
attempting
to
recover
any
of
his
(Mr.
Wright’s)
advances
to
the
Corporation
in
priority
to
the
Appellant’s
advances
and
before
the
necessary
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada.
Common
business
prudence
should
have
impelled
the
Appel-
lant
as
a
director
and
significant
creditor
of
the
Corporation
to
monitor
more
closely
the
cheques
being
issued
and
the
identity
of
certain
creditors
(i.e.
Revenue
Canada)
who
were
being
paid.
Having
regard
to
the
Appellant’s
big
investment
in
the
Corporation
which
caused
him
to
stay
on
as
a
director
in
1993
when
Harvey
Jager
and
Norman
Husband
resigned,
it
was
not
too
much
of
a
burden
to
expect
the
Appellant
to
travel
from
time
to
time
from
Chetwynd
to
Innisfail
to
meet
with
Judy
and
review
not
just
the
cheques
she
was
sending
to
Jerry
Wright
but
also
the
cheques
which
were
being
cashed
and
returned
with
monthly
bank
statements.
The
Appellant
would
then
have
known
what
cheques
were
in
fact
being
signed
and
mailed
by
Jerry
Wright
and
cashed
by
various
creditors
of
the
Corporation
including
Revenue
Canada.
The
fourth
reason
is
the
resignation
in
1993
of
two
directors.
According
to
the
Appellant,
Harvey
Jager
and
Norman
Husband
resigned
because
they
could
not
get
adequate
financial
information
about
the
Corporation.
Although
they
did
not
appear
as
witnesses
in
this
case,
I
assume
that
Messrs.
Jager
and
Husband
are
reasonable
businessmen.
As
a
benchmark
for
reasonable
conduct,
what
did
the
resignations
of
Jager
and
Husband
say
to
the
Appellant?
They
were
not
replaced
as
directors.
After
their
departure,
the
Appellant
was
left
with
only
two
other
directors:
Sid
Tissington
and
Jerry
Wright.
In
August
1992,
the
directors
had
removed
Sid
Tissington
and
his
family
from
any
further
role
in
the
management
of
the
Corporation.
On
March
12,
1993,
the
Appellant
was
writing
a
nasty
letter
to
Jerry
Wright
(Exhibit
A-l
1)
accusing
him
of
trying
to
take
over
as
“abandoned”
certain
assets
which
the
Appellant
had
purchased
at
the
auction
sale.
Toward
the
end
of
that
letter,
the
Appellant
stated:
Jerry
I
have
always
believed
in
the
old
saying
that
a
man
is
as
good
as
his
word
and
if
his
word
is
no
good
then
neither
is
the
man.
Jerry
you
also
told
us
that
you
would
send
us
a
audited
statement
of
your
accounts
with
Seven
S
that
was
over
two
years
ago,
I
sent
you
mine
but
you
never
sent
me
yours.
In
my
opinion,
March
1993
is
a
really
important
month
in
this
case.
On
March
25
(Exhibit
A-12),
the
Appellant
was
required
to
pay
$93,416
to
the
Town
of
Innisfail
to
protect
the
Corporation’s
plant.
On
March
12,
the
Appellant
wrote
to
Jerry
Wright
(Exhibit
A-11
)
challenging
his
good
faith
when
Mr.
Wright
was
the
de
facto
president
and
manager
of
the
Corporation
with
sole
cheque-signing
authority.
And,
according
to
the
Appellant’s
notice
of
assessment
(Exhibit
A-17),
March
was
the
last
month
when
all
required
source
deductions
were
remitted
to
Revenue
Canada.
Applying
the
objective
standard,
by
the
end
of
March
1993,
there
were
many
signals
warning
the
Appellant
that
he
should
question
the
competency
of
Mr.
Wright’s
management
and
should
question
the
Corporation’s
ability
to
survive.
Applying
the
subjective
standard,
the
Appellant
was
an
experienced
businessman
and
knew
from
prior
directors’
meetings
(Exhibits
A-3
and
A-5)
that
the
Corporation
had
previously
failed
to
remit
to
Revenue
Canada.
He
knew
about
the
temptation
to
defer
such
remittances
when
there
was
a
shortage
of
cash.
He
knew
that
the
Corporation
was
in
fact
short
of
cash.
History
has
proved
that
remittances
to
Revenue
Canada
were
deferred
from
April
1993
to
March
1994
(see
Exhibit
A-17).
By
the
end
of
March
1993,
the
Appellant
had
a
duty
to
take
positive
steps
to
ensure
that
future
source
deductions
would
be
remitted
to
Revenue
Canada.
The
Appellant
took
no
such
steps.
On
the
basis
of
the
“objective
subjective”
standard
of
care
as
described
in
Soper,
I
find
that
the
Appellant
did
not
exercise
the
degree
of
care,
diligence
and
skill
to
prevent
the
failed
remittances
that
a
reasonably
prudent
person
would
have
exercised
in
comparable
circumstances.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.