McArthur
T
.
C.J.:
Facts:
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(“the
Minister”)
has
moved
for
the
dismissal
of
the
appeal
under
subsection
58(3)
of
the
General
Procedure
Rules.
The
appellant
went
bankrupt
on
April
15,
1997,
and
the
firm
of
Lussier,
Tull
et
associés
was
appointed
trustee
in
bankruptcy.
The
appellant’s
director
and
president,
Jules
Fafard,
wishes
to
continue
in
his
own
name
the
proceedings
instituted
in
this
Court.
The
appellant
had
appealed
from
an
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
for
the
1992,
1993,
1994
and
1995
taxation
years.
On
May
2,
1996,
a
notice
of
confirmation
was
issued
in
respect
of
the
assessment.
In
the
notice
of
assessment,
the
Minister
referred
to
section
227
of
the
Income
Tax
Act!
(“the
Act”).
He
assessed
the
appellant
for
the
arrears
of
source
deductions
owed
by
130360
Canada
Inc.
(“130360”).
In
assessing
the
appellant,
the
Minister
relied
on
certain
facts.
The
appellant
is
a
corporation
that
operated
in
the
construction
industry.
The
Minister
claimed
that
130360
was
related
to
the
appellant.
No
tax
returns
had
been
filed
by
130360
since
1989.
It
did
not
have
any
assets
during
the
period
at
issue.
It
was
also
run
by
Jules
Fafard.
According
to
the
Minister,
130360
was
related
to
the
appellant.
It
was
basically
a
management
company
that
did
nothing
but
pay
wages.
On
a
few
occasions,
it
remitted
source
deductions
that
were
paid
directly
by
the
appellant.
The
appellant
is
thus
required
to
remit
the
source
deductions
owed
by
130360.
It
also
owes
the
penalties
provided
for
in
subsections
227(8)
and
(9)
of
the
Act
and
interest
as
provided
for
in
subsection
227(8.3)
of
the
Act.
The
appellant
argued
only
that
130360
was
not
related
to
it.
It
also
submitted
that
130360
ceased
operating
at
the
end
of
1995
and
was
dissolved
on
January
23,
1996.
Jules
Fafard
brought
a
motion
in
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
to
force
the
trustee
to
continue
the
proceedings
pending
in
this
Court.
The
motion
was
granted
on
August
25,
1997.
However,
during
a
proceeding
before
this
Court
on
September
4,
1998,
the
Minister
moved
to
dismiss
the
appeal.
The
trustee
had
clearly
stated
that
it
would
not
continue
the
proceedings
despite
the
order
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec.
This
Court
therefore
adjourned
to
allow
the
trustee
to
comply
with
the
order.
On
December
4,
1998,
the
Minister
again
appeared
before
this
Court
to
ask
that
the
appeal
be
dismissed.
By
that
time,
Mr.
Fafard,
through
his
counsel
Mr.
Bérubé,
had
obtained
a
correction
of
the
judgment
of
August
25,
1997
rendered
by
the
Superior
Court
on
the
motion.
The
judgment
dated
October
29,
1998,
authorized
Mr.
Fafard
to
continue
the
proceedings
pending
in
this
Court.
The
issue
is
whether
Mr.
Fafard
has
the
capacity
to
continue
the
proceedings
in
his
own
name.
Our
legal
system
operates
as
a
two-party
adversary
system.
A
case
necessarily
involves
two
parties
with
opposing
ideas
and
opinions,
the
object
being
to
find
an
answer
or
solution
to
the
problem.
Our
system
is
based
on
a
fundamental
idea,
that
of
a
dialectic.
However,
it
is
also
fundamental
to
our
system
that
justice
be
done,
and
it
is
accordingly
true
to
say
that
there
are
exceptions
to
every
rule.
Our
legal
system
thus
provides
for
situations
in
which
more
than
two
parties
may
have
an
interest
in
a
case.
For
example,
the
civil
law
of
Quebec
provides
for
situations
in
which
a
person
may
intervene
in
a
case
if
that
person
proves
that
he
or
she
has
an
interest
therein
(article
208
of
the
Code
of
Civil
Procedure).
That
article
goes
even
further:
it
authorizes
a
person
to
represent
a
party
who
is
incapable
of
acting.
However,
the
impact
of
that
provision
is
uncertain
in
the
case
at
bar,
since
Mr.
Fafard
is
not
acting
as
an
intervener
but
would
like
to
be
substituted
for
or
to
replace
the
appellant.
In
the
civil
law,
a
person
can
bring
legal
proceedings
or
an
action
if
he
or
she
has
the
required
interest.
This
rule
is
set
out
in
articles
55
and
56
of
the
Code
of
Civil
Procedure
of
Québec,
which
read
as
follows:
55.
Whoever
brings
an
action
at
law,
whether
for
the
enforcement
of
a
right
which
is
not
recognized
or
is
jeopardized
or
denied,
or
otherwise
to
obtain
a
pronouncement
upon
the
existence
of
a
legal
situation,
must
have
a
sufficient
interest
therein.
56.
A
person
must
be
able
to
fully
exercise
his
rights
to
be
a
party
to
an
action
in
whatever
form
it
may
be,
saving
contrary
provisions
of
law.
A
person
who
is
not
able
to
fully
exercise
his
rights
must
be
represented,
assisted
or
authorized,
in
the
manner
provided
by
the
laws
which
govern
his
status
and
capacity
or
by
this
Code.
In
the
case
at
bar,
Mr.
Fafard
has
obtained
the
authorization
referred
to
in
article
56
of
the
Code
of
Civil
Procedure.
However,
this
Court
is
not
bound
by
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec’s
authorization,
since
this
Court
does
not
have
inherent
powers
and
its
jurisdiction
is
limited.
The
rules
of
this
Court
include
a
special
rule
authorizing
the
“transfer”
of
interest.
Section
29
of
the
General
Procedure
Rules
provides
as
follows:
29.
(1)
Where
at
any
stage
of
a
proceeding
the
interest
or
liability
of
an
appellant
or
a
taxpayer
referred
to
in
section
173
or
174
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
section
310
or
311
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
is
transferred
or
transmitted
to
another
person
by
assignment,
bankruptcy,
death
or
other
means,
a
proceeding
shall
be
stayed
until
the
Registrar
is
notified
of
the
transfer
or
transmission
and
the
particulars
thereof.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
argued
that
only
a
taxpayer
may
appeal
a
decision
by
the
Minister
and
institute
an
appeal
to
this
Court.
In
Nova
Ban-Corp
Ltd.
v.
Tottrup
(1989),
89
D.T.C.
5489
(Fed.
T.D.),
Strayer
J.
of
the
Federal
Court
—
Trial
Division
stated
the
following
principle:
Nor
does
the
Income
Tax
Act
[S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63]
authorize
anyone
but
the
taxpayer
to
challenge
a
tax
assessment.^
This
principle
derives
from
the
wording
of
subsection
169(1)
of
the
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
169.
(1)
Appeal
—
Where
a
taxpayer
has
served
notice
of
objection
to
an
assessment
under
section
165,
the
taxpayer
may
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
have
the
assessment
vacated
or
varied....
That
provision
refers
to
a
“taxpayer”,
which
is
a
term
defined
in
subsection
248(1)
of
the
Act.
A
taxpayer
is
“any
person
whether
or
not
liable
to
pay
tax”.
In
Nova
Ban-Corp
Ltd.
supra,
the
appellant
was
a
creditor
of
the
taxpayer
and
was
objecting
to
the
Minister’s
assessment.
Strayer
J.
concluded
that
the
appellant,
as
a
third
party,
did
not
have
the
necessary
capacity
to
appeal
such
an
assessment.
He
noted
that
the
fundamental
principle
involved
is
to
maintain
taxpayer
confidentiality.
As
well,
reference
should
be
made
to
another
line
of
cases
that
seems
to
authorize
a
director
of
a
corporation
to
contest
an
assessment
against
the
corporation.
The
decisions
in
question
all
involve
challenges
to
assessments
based
on
unpaid
taxes.
495187
Ontario
Ltd.
v.
R.
(1992),
92
D.T.C.
6311
(Fed.
T.D.);
affirmed
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
(1993),
94
D.T.C.
6229
(Fed.
C.A.),
deals
with
the
capacity
of
a
director
to
continue
in
his
or
her
own
name
proceedings
brought
by
a
dissolved
corporation.
Reed
J.
wrote
the
following
at
page
6313:
In
the
present
case,
Mr.
Hadi
Sarraf
was
the
only
shareholder
and
the
only
director
of
the
plaintiff
company.
It
is
he,
to
the
extent
that
he
holds
any
property
of
the
company,
who
would
have
an
obligation
to
pay
the
tax
assessed
under
the
reassessment.
In
my
view,
the
correct
plaintiff
is
Mr.
Hadi
Sarraf
in
his
capacity
as
shareholder
and
director
of
495187
Ontario
Limited
at
the
time
of
its
dissolution.
An
order
will
issue
amending
the
style
of
cause
accordingly.
[Emphasis
added.]
Although
that
case
related
to
a
dissolved
corporation,
the
same
logic
can
be
applied
in
the
case
at
bar.
At
the
time
of
the
assessment,
Mr.
Fafard
was
a
director
of
the
appellant.
The
appellant’s
bankruptcy
did
not
remove
him
from
his
position
as
a
director.
The
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act?
is
silent
as
to
the
status
of
directors
after
a
corporation
goes
bankrupt.
The
statute
under
which
the
appellant
was
incorporated
must
therefore
be
examined.
In
the
instant
case,
no
mention
has
been
made
of
the
legislation
under
which
the
appellant
was
incorporated.
Regardless
of
that
omission,
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act*
and
the
Companies
Act
set
out
the
conditions
under
which
a
director
holds
office.
Section
108
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act
states
the
circumstances
in
which
a
director
ceases
to
hold
office.
It
reads
as
follows:
108.
(1)
[Ceasing
to
hold
office]
A
director
of
a
corporation
ceases
to
hold
office
when
(a)
he
dies
or
resigns;
(b)
he
is
removed
in
accordance
with
section
109;
or
(c)
he
becomes
disqualified
under
subsection
105(1).
Thus,
a
director
can
lose
his
or
her
position
only
for
the
reasons
referred
to
above.
Subsection
105(1)
of
the
same
statute
provides
that
a
bankrupt
is
disqualified
from
being
a
director,
but
it
does
not
deal
with
the
situation
in
which
a
corporation
goes
bankrupt.
In
the
same
vein,
section
123.73
of
the
Companies
Act
provides
that
an
undischarged
bankrupt
cannot
become
a
director
of
a
company;
it
says
nothing,
however,
regarding
the
case
in
which
a
company
goes
bankrupt.
In
this
respect,
it
is
my
view
that
Mr.
Fafard
never
ceased
to
be
a
director
of
the
appellant.
This
is
an
important
conclusion,
since
in
the
case
at
bar
the
Minister
is
assessing
the
bankrupt
appellant
for
taxes
that
were
not
paid
by
another
corporation.
The
Minister
generally
begins
by
assessing
the
corporation
for
unpaid
taxes.
However,
section
227.1
of
the
Act
provides
that
directors
are
jointly
and
severally
liable
to
pay
unpaid
taxes.
Mr.
Fafard
could
therefore
be
assessed
for
the
appellant’s
unpaid
taxes.
If
Mr.
Fafard
has
the
capacity
to
continue
the
proceedings
pending
in
this
Court
and
is
able
to
convince
the
Court
that
the
assessment
is
unfounded,
his
liability
as
a
director
will
not
come
into
play,
since
the
initial
assessment
against
the
corporation
will
have
been
held
to
be
unfounded.
The
primary
purpose
of
section
227.1
of
the
Act
has
been
described
as
follows:
The
justification
for
the
imposition
of
vicarious
liability
is
simple.
The
directors
of
a
company
are
its
directing
mind.
They
are
the
persons
responsible
for
insuring
that
the
corporation
fulfils
its
financial
obligations.^
In
Kalef
v.
R.
(1996),
96
D.T.C.
6132
(Fed.
C.A.),
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
a
director
does
not
cease
to
hold
that
position
as
a
result
of
the
corporation’s
bankruptcy.
The
director
remains
jointly
and
severally
liable
for
the
corporation’s
unpaid
taxes.
In
that
decision,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
looked
at
the
provisions
of
the
Ontario
Business
Corporations
Act,
which
are
virtually
identical
to
those
of
the
Canada
Business
Corporations
Act.
Writing
for
the
court,
McDonald
J.A.
found
that
Mr.
Kalef
had
not
ceased
to
act
as
a
director,
since
the
statute
governing
the
corporation’s
incorporation
did
not
provide
that
a
director
ceased
to
be
such
when
the
corporation
went
bankrupt
and
a
trustee
in
bankruptcy
was
appointed.
An
analogy
may
be
drawn
with
that
case.
If
a
director
does
not
cease
to
hold
that
position
as
a
result
of
a
corporation’s
bankruptcy,
that
director
will
remain
jointly
and
severally
liable
for
the
bankrupt
corporation’s
unpaid
taxes.
Since
Mr.
Fafard
did
not
cease
to
be
a
director,
I
would
adopt
reasoning
similar
to
that
of
Reed
J.
in
495187
Ontario
Ltd.
supra.
Mr.
Fafard
therefore
has
the
capacity
to
be
a
party
to
proceedings
in
his
own
name.
Moreover,
as
I
noted
above,
in
civil
matters,
the
only
applicable
criterion
for
determining
whether
a
person
can
be
a
party
to
proceedings
is
sufficient
interest.
In
the
case
at
bar,
Chabot
J.
of
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
authorized
Mr.
Fafard
to
continue
the
proceedings
pending
in
this
Court.
He
held
that
Mr.
Fafard
had
the
required
interest.
I
am
aware
that
interest
is
not
a
determining
factor
in
tax
matters.
However,
given
the
comments
of
Reed
J.
in
495187
Ontario
Ltd.
supra,
I
am
not
prepared
to
accept
that
a
director’s
interest
in
proceedings
is
irrelevant.
The
director
of
a
corporation
is
responsible
for
tax
liabilities
originating
with
the
corporation.
In
the
instant
case,
it
seems
to
me
that
Mr.
Fafard
obtained
authorization
to
continue
the
proceedings
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Bankruptcy
and
Insolvency
Act.
Moreover,
if
I
denied
Mr.
Fafard
the
right
to
continue
the
pending
proceedings,
the
result
would
be
unfair.
The
appellant
would
not
be
represented,
since
the
trustee
is
refusing
to
act.
What
would
then
become
of
the
adversary
process,
one
of
the
pillars
of
our
entire
legal
system?
Injustice
would
be
the
result:
the
appellant
could
not
appear
before
the
Court
since
there
would
be
no
one
who
could
represent
it.
Trustees
often
refuse,
for
whatever
reason,
to
continue
pending
proceedings.
If
the
directors
do
not
have
the
capacity
to
be
parties
to
proceedings
after
a
corporation’s
bankruptcy,
many
proceedings
will
remain
pending
or
will
simply
be
dismissed
because
of
a
lack
of
representation.
In
the
case
at
bar,
proceedings
had
been
instituted
in
this
Court
before
the
appellant
even
went
bankrupt.
It
would
be
unfair
not
to
allow
Mr.
Fafard
to
continue
them.
Moreover,
authorizing
Mr.
Fafard
to
do
so
is
the
most
effective
way
to
dispense
justice
expeditiously.
The
Court
will
first
determine
whether
the
assessment
against
the
appellant
is
correct,
which
will
determine
the
validity
of
any
assessment
against
Mr.
Fafard.
In
this
regard,
I
need
only
refer
to
Leith
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1990),
70
D.T.C.
1144
(Can.
Tax
App.
Bd.),
where
Board
member
Fordham
stated
the
following:
I
do
not
think
that
deeming
the
trustee
to
be
the
agent
of
the
bankrupt
precludes
the
latter
from
acting
on
his
own
behalf
when
the
trustee
prefers
to
remain
aloof.
In
prosecuting
this
appeal
the
appellant
has
only
spent
the
negligible
sum
of
$15
and
will
incur
no
further
costs
before
the
Board.
What
he
is
doing
may
prove
of
benefit
to
the
estate
—
it
certainly
can
do
no
harm
—
in
that,
if
he
succeeds,
the
estate
will
be
considerably
better
off
than
if
the
re-assessment
involved
were
to
be
disregarded
and
the
Minister
thereby
enabled
to
obtain
judgment
by
default
for
the
large
amount
claimed
by
him.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
argued
that
that
decision
is
not
applicable
to
the
case
at
bar
since
the
appellant
is
a
bankrupt
corporation.
I
cannot
accept
that
distinction.
Directors
are
the
directing
mind
of
a
corporation.
The
corporation
is
merely
an
artificial,
intangible
legal
entity.
It
is
therefore
appropriate
to
give
Mr.
Fafard
permission
to
continue
the
proceedings
in
this
Court.
A
few
comments
must
be
made
about
the
principle
set
out
in
Nova
Ban-
Corp
Ltd.
supra,
that
only
a
taxpayer
may
challenge
a
tax
assessment.
Under
section
160
of
the
Act,
a
transferee
is
jointly
and
severally
liable
with
the
transferor
for
the
amounts
the
transferor
owes
the
Minister.
The
question
of
whether
the
transferee
may
challenge
the
validity
of
the
transferor’s
assessment
has
been
considered
by
this
Court
on
several
occasions.
In
Thorsteinson
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1980),
80
D.T.C.
1369
(T.R.B.),
Judge
Taylor
wrote
the
following
at
page
1372:
It
is
open
to
a
transferee
assessed
under
section
160(2)
of
the
Act
to
challenge
the
bona
fides
of
the
Minister’s
claim
that
the
liability
for
tax
of
the
transferor
actually
existed
at
a
particular
point
in
time.
The
assessed
transferee
has
available
all
the
rights
of
any
taxpayer,
including
the
opportunity,
indeed
the
obligation,
to
dislodge
the
basis
for
the
liability,
not
merely
to
challenge
the
mechanics
of
the
assessment
of
the
transferor.
Finally,
Judge
Bowman
took
the
same
approach
in
Sarrafv.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1994),
94
D.T.C.
1506
(T.C.C.),
where
he
stated
the
following
at
page
1508:
It
is
of
course
open
to
the
transferee
to
challenge
the
correctness
of
the
assessment
against
the
transferor
even
if
the
transferor
has
failed
to
do
so,
or
is,
as
is
the
case
here,
precluded
from
doing
so:
Thorsteinson
v.
M.N.R.,
80
DTC
1369;
Ramey
vThe
Queen,
93
DTC
791.
For
all
these
reasons,
it
is
my
view
that
Mr.
Fafard
has
the
capacity
to
continue
in
his
own
name
the
proceedings
pending
in
this
Court.
The
second
motion
was
brought
by
the
respondent
to
quash
a
subpoena
that
the
appellant
had
served
on
Pierre
Gravelle,
a
former
deputy
minister
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
That
subpoena
directs
Mr.
Gravelle
to
bring
with
him
all
relevant
documents
concerning
the
appellant’s
file.
On
June
29,
1995,
Mr.
Fafard
wrote
Mr.
Gravelle
and
told
him
of
the
seizures
carried
out
by
the
Minister.
He
asked
Mr.
Gravelle
to
give
the
appellant’s
file
to
another
official,
alleging
that
Mr.
Gravelle
was
in
bad
faith.
Mr.
Gravelle
answered
that
letter
on
July
17,
1995,
and
then
referred
the
appellant’s
file
to
another
official.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
had
a
subpoena
served
on
Mr.
Gravelie
at
a
time
when
Mr.
Gravelle
was
no
longer
employed
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
In
an
affidavit
dated
September
3,
1998,
Michel
Lamarre,
counsel
for
the
Minister,
described
his
discussions
with
counsel
for
the
appellant.
Mr.
Lamarre
explained
to
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
Mr.
Gravelie
was
no
longer
in
possession
of
the
appellant’s
documents
and
that
his
knowledge
of
the
file
was
limited.
He
even
offered
to
file
Mr.
Gravelle’s
letter
by
consent.
Finally,
he
offered
to
summon
other
officials
of
the
Minister
who
might
have
better
knowledge
of
the
file.
However,
counsel
for
the
appellant
maintained
his
objection
to
the
proposals.
In
support
of
his
motion,
the
Minister
argued
that,
since
Mr.
Gravelle
is
no
longer
employed
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
he
does
not
have
the
documents
concerning
this
case
and
his
knowledge
thereof
is
limited.
The
subpoena
served
on
Mr.
Gravelle
is
therefore
irrelevant
to
the
disposition
of
this
case
and
is
unreasonable.
This
Court’s
rules
do
not
have
anything
specific
to
say
about
the
summoning
of
witnesses.
The
provincial
rules
of
civil
procedure
must
therefore
be
referred
to.
Article
295
of
the
Code
of
Civil
Procedure
provides
that
any
person
competent
to
testify
may
be
compelled
to
do
so.
The
same
article
indicates
that
all
persons
are
competent
to
testify
if
they
are
in
a
fit
state
to
report
the
facts
of
which
they
have
knowledge.
It
would
seem
that
such
knowledge
must
be
personal.
Professor
Léo
Ducharme
has
written
the
following:
[TRANSLATION]
While
in
theory
any
person
competent
to
testify
may
be
compelled
to
do
so,
in
practice
the
only
persons
who
may
be
compelled
to
testify
are
those
who
have
personal
knowledge
of
the
facts
involved
in
the
case
and
who
are
subject
to
the
jurisdiction
of
our
courts.
With
regard
to
the
summoning
of
a
Minister,
Professor
Ducharme
stated
the
following
at
the
same
page:
[TRANSLATION]
Moreover,
the
reason
section
69
of
the
Act
respecting
the
Ministère
du
Revenu
states
that
the
Minister,
the
Deputy
Minister
and
assistant
deputy
ministers
are
not
compellable
in
proceedings
to
which
the
Deputy
Minister
is
a
party
is
that
those
individuals
are
normally
not
able
to
give
useful
testimony
since
they
have
no
personal
knowledge
of
the
facts
in
issue.
That
is
why
the
same
section
provides
that
those
individuals
must,
upon
the
written
application
of
a
party
served
at
least
30
days
before
the
date
of
hearing
and
specifying
the
facts
requiring
testimony,
designate
a
public
servant
who
is
aware
of
the
facts
to
testify.
Although
there
is
no
similar
provision
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
is
well
settled
that
a
Minister
cannot
be
summoned
unless
he
or
she
has
personal
knowledge
of
the
facts.
In
Létourneau
c.
Powers,
[1975]
C.A.
458
(Que.
C.A.),
the
appellant
had
served
a
subpoena
on
the
Minister
of
Justice
and
the
Solicitor
General
of
Canada.
The
Quebec
Court
of
Appeal
upheld
the
trial
judge’s
decision
quashing
the
subpoena.
Rinfret
J.A.
stated
the
following
at
page
459:
[TRANSLATION]
Neither
the
testimony
of
the
Solicitor
General
of
Canada
nor
that
of
the
Minister
of
Justice
of
Quebec
can
help
the
Court
judge
these
acts,
since
they
were
not
present;
the
reports
they
might
file
are
not
in
themselves
proof
of
their
content;
to
have
any
probative
value,
they
would
have
to
come
from
the
persons
concerned,
who
are
already
before
the
Court
and
can
be
questioned.
In
light
of
these
comments,
it
is
my
view
that
the
appellant
cannot
summon
Mr.
Gravelle
to
appear
before
this
Court.
Although
Mr.
Gravelle
wrote
a
letter
in
his
own
name,
I
am
not
convinced
that
he
has
any
personal
knowledge.
The
personal
knowledge
to
which
the
courts
refer
involves
drawing
conclusions
and
making
observations
based
on
what
one
has
seen
oneself.
At
the
time
the
letter
was
written,
the
Minister
had
already
begun
making
seizures.
In
order
to
write
the
letter,
Mr.
Gravelle
therefore
relied
on
the
observations
of
the
Minister’s
officials.
Moreover,
in
both
Mr.
Fafard’s
letter
dated
June
29,
1995,
and
the
Reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal,
references
are
made
to
the
Minister’s
officials
and
not
Mr.
Gravelle.
Finally,
Mr.
Gravelle
wrote
in
his
letter
that
he
had
had
to
make
inquiries
of
the
officials
responsible
for
the
file
to
learn
about
the
situation.
He
did
not
have
personal
knowledge
of
the
appellant’s
file.
Accordingly,
it
is
my
view
that
the
subpoena
should
be
quashed.
Application
to
dismiss
appeal
dismissed;
application
to
set
aside
subpoena
granted.