Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

77-T-625
In re Jung and in re section 223 of the Income Tax Act
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Ottawa, October 3 and 24, 1977.
Practice — Refusal of Court to register Minister's certifi cate produced for registration under s. 223 of Income Tax Act — Improper form — If proper form, whether registration mandatory or whether person to be given opportunity to oppose registration — Whether proof of conditions precedent to registration to be presented at registration — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63, s. 223.
This is an ex parte notice of motion by the Minister of National Revenue for directions as to the registration of a certificate produced pursuant to section 223 of the Income Tax Act. The certificate tendered had been refused by the Adminis trator of the Court because of the decision in The Queen v. Star Treck Holdings Ltd. concerning the form of the certificate. Other substantive issues arose for consideration. Was it manda tory that a certificate in proper form be registered or was the person affected to be first afforded the opportunity of opposing the registration? Further, when a proper certificate is produced for registration, must that certificate be accompanied by proof that the conditions precedent to the Minister's author ity exist?
Held, the certificate in present form is not registrable. The inclusion of a style of cause appropriate to a style of cause in a statement of claim and language implying that the document is one issued by the Court rather than merely a certificate made by the Minister or an officer of the Department authorized to do so, is inaccurate and misleading so as to constitute justifica tion for the rejection of a certificate in such form when produced for registration. On production under section 223(2) of a certificate in proper form, registration is mandatory. It is to be presumed that the prerequisites to the making of the certificate by the Minister have been complied with and on its face the certificate is to be taken as rightly made and accord ingly shall be accepted for registration on production subject always to that presumption being rebutted by the person adversely affected in a subsequent hearing.
R. v. Star Treck Holdings Ltd. [1978] 1 F.C. 61, applied.
NOTICE of motion. COUNSEL:
E. Bowie for Minister of National Revenue.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Min ister of National Revenue.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANACH J.: This is an ex parte notice of motion by the Minister of National Revenue for directions as to the registration of the certificate mentioned in the above style which had been refused when tendered for registration by the Administrator of the Court no doubt as the conse quence of a decision by myself in The Queen v. Star Treck Holdings Ltd.'
In the Star Treck matter an application was made to correct an error in a certificate by the Minister produced under section 223 of the Income Tax Act which had been registered.
This I refused to do for the reason that the certificate is not a judgment nor does it become a judgment of this Court when registered but rather it remains what it always has been and that is merely a certificate of the Minister even though section 223 of the Income Tax Act provides that when such a certificate is registered it has the same force and effect, and all proceedings may be taken thereon as if the certificate were a judgment obtained in this Court.
That being so there was no Rule of the Federal Court nor any provision in the Income Tax Act which authorizes a judge of this Court to direct the correction of an error in a certificate which had been registered. That was the ratio decidendi.
However I did continue to say that when the Minister, and the officers of his Department, to whom he is authorized to delegate his responsibili ty in these respects, are armed with such extraordi nary powers it is incumbent upon them to be cautious and accurate in exercising the powers so bestowed upon them.
I continued to further say that the form of certificate in use, and the same applies to the certificate now under consideration, is fraught with inaccuracies.
Without attempting to be all-inclusive I pointed out that the certificates recite a style of cause as
' [1978] 1 F.C. 61.
between Her Majesty the Queen, as plaintiff, and a named person or persons, as defendant or defendants.
In the certificate presently under consideration the same inaccuracy occurs. The Queen is named as plaintiff and Taehoon Jung, 26 Courtwright Road, of the Borough of Etobicoke, Ontario, is named as defendant.
In the printed form used, the words "Her Majesty the Queen" are printed as part of the form indicative of the degree of permanency in the practice adopted by the Department with a blank space provided to permit the typing in of the name of the person selected to be a defendant.
As I pointed out in the Star Treck matter, there is no authority in the Income Tax Act, the Federal Court Act, the Federal Court Rules or elsewhere for converting what is not an action into an action nor is it deemed to be an action between the parties so named.
There is, in fact, no action within the meaning of that word in that there is no proceeding in the Trial Division between the parties named and accordingly to use the form prescribed by the Federal Court Rules for use in the style of cause of an action in the Court between parties is grossly misleading. It confuses the certificate with a pro ceeding by action and thus represents it to be what in fact it is not.
Furthermore the form of certificate contains in prominent printed block capital letters at its very beginning the words, "IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF CANADA" followed by the words, "TRIAL DIVISION" in smaller type capital letters and are preceded by the words, "COURT NO." with space for an assigned Court number for an action.
This is not a document issued by the Court. It is a certificate prepared by the Minister or his offi cers to whom authority is delegated to do so. On registration the certificate becomes available for public inspection. The manner in which the docu ment is printed gives the appearance that it was deliberately designed to convey to the unwary or uninitiated to whose attention it might come, the
impression that it is a document which emanates from the Court. This is wrong. There is no statute or Rule which authorizes the Minister or any officer of his Department to issue documents in the name of the Court.
Furthermore the certificate is prepared to be manually signed over the printed title, "Director, Collection Division, Department of National Reve nue, Taxation". The holder of that office is obvi ously an officer of the Department and is not an officer of this Court authorized to sign such a document in such capacity.
As I said in the Star Treck matter the use of the words, "IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF CANADA", displayed with such prominence, should be discontinued. I also said that the certifi cate by the Minister should be directed, "TO THE FEDERAL COURT OF CANADA" and the appropriate Division of the Court. On reflection I do not think it needs to be directed to anyone, but if it is to be directed to anyone it should be to the Court.
It is quite obvious what the draftsman of the form of the certificate did. He adapted the styles appearing in Forms 1 and 2 in the Appendix to the Federal Court Rules. These forms prescribe the appropriate court title by division and the style of cause to appear upon a statement of claim.
Because there is no cause of action and no statement of claim in these matters the adoption of those forms is not analogous and is most inept.
Counsel for the Minister agreed that the criti cisms I have made of the form of the certificate in use, in these two particulars, are well-founded.
I did not decide in the Star Treck matter that the registration of a certificate prepared in such form was rendered invalid thereby. However I did say that the form of the certificate was inappropri ate, grossly misleading and inaccurate. In the Star Treck matter I made suggestions as to the proper form to be adopted in respect of the two particu lars above mentioned with which counsel for the Minister also agreed. It follows that these factors, standing alone, are sufficient justification for
refusing to direct the Administrator to accept the certificate produced for registration in its present form.
While this conclusion disposes of the present application so long as the certificate is produced for registration without amendment, as indicated above, there still remains for determination a far more crucial issue and that is when the certificate, amended as I have indicated, is produced for registration whether it is mandatory that the cer tificate be registered and the consequences thereby follow automatically or whether the person adversely affected thereby must first be afforded the opportunity of opposing the registration at this point in time.
The Federal Court Rules are silent upon the matter.
If the person adversely affected has the right to oppose the registration it follows that under the Rules as they presently read the application for registration must be by way of a notice of motion supported by an appropriate affidavit establishing that all conditions precedent to registration have been complied with and the opposite party may cross-examine on the affidavit filed in support of the motion and file an affidavit in reply.
It would appear that with respect to the regis tration of the Minister's certificates under section 223 of the Income Tax Act, assuming always that there must be a notice of motion as a condition to registration, the appropriate procedure would be by way of an originating notice of motion under Rule 304(1) which by virtue of that Rule must be served personally on the interested person and in that event I entertain doubt if resort might be had to Rule 324 to dispose of the matter without personal appearance on the basis of written representations.
Section 223 reads:
223. (1) An amount payable under this Act that has not been paid or such part of an amount payable under this Act as has not been paid may be certified by the Minister
(a) where there has been a direction by the Minister under subsection 158(2), forthwith after such direction, and
(b) otherwise, upon the expiration of 30 days after the default.
(2) On production to the Federal Court of Canada, a certifi cate made under this section shall be registered in the Court and when registered has the same force and effect, and all
proceedings may be taken thereon, as if the certificate were a judgment obtained in the said Court for a debt of the amount specified in the certificate plus interest to the day of payment as provided for in this Act.
(3) All reasonable costs and charges attendant upon the registration of the certificate are recoverable in like manner as if they had been certified and the certificate had been regis tered under this section.
By virtue of subsection (1) what the Minister is to certify is the amount expressed in terms of money that is payable under the Income Tax Act which would be inclusive of all taxes assessed, interest accumulated thereon in accordance with the Act, penalties imposed, costs and other like amounts or such part of the total amount which has not been paid. This is the certification required to be made by the Minister. It would follow there from that other language included in the certifi cate such as a style of cause and the title of the Court to which the certificate is to be produced is a mere surplusage of verbiage and would not affect the validity of the certificate if the essential ingredient thereof, that is the amount payable and not paid, is certified. This does not detract from my conclusion that the inclusion of a style of cause appropriate to a style of cause in a statement of claim and language implying that the document is one issued by the Court rather than merely a certificate made by the Minister or an officer of the Department authorized to do so, is inaccurate and misleading so as to constitute justification for the rejection of a certificate in such form when produced for registration.
However the much more substantive question arises for consideration and that is, when a proper certificate is produced for registration, must that certificate be accompanied by proof that the con ditions precedent in section 223(1)(a) or (b) to the Minister's authority to make the certificate exist?
If that be so then I should think that a mere statement contained in the certificate that a notice of assessment was mailed to the taxpayer on a certain day, that 30 days have elapsed from the day of mailing of the notice of assessment and that the whole has not been paid or a part remains unpaid or that the Minister was of the opinion that the taxpayer was attempting to avoid payment of
taxes and directed that all taxes, penalties and interest assessed shall be paid forthwith upon assessment without the grace of 30 days from the mailing of the notice of assessment, which are the conditions precedent to the Minister making the certificate, would not be enough. The proof, if such is requisite to registration, should be by means of an affidavit.
My brother Walsh had occasion to consider a similar problem which arose following the filing and registration of an order of an arbitration board pursuant to section 159 of the Canada Labour Code (R.S.C. 1970, c. L-1 as amended by S.C. 1972, c. 18) in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation [1976] 2 F.C. 151.
Section 159 reads:
159. (1) Where any person or organization has failed to comply with any order or decision of an arbitrator or arbitra tion board, any person or organization affected by the order or decision may, after fourteen days from the date on which the order or decision is made, or the date provided in it for compliance, whichever is the later date, file in the Federal Court of Canada a copy of the order or decision, exclusive of the reasons therefor.
(2) On filing in the Federal Court of Canada under subsec tion (1), an order or decision of an arbitrator or arbitration board shall be registered in the Court and, when registered, has the same force and effect, and all proceedings may be taken thereon, as if the order or decision were a judgment obtained in the Court.
Mr. Justice Walsh had before him the question of the validity off the registration of an arbitration award purporting to be registered with this Court under section 159.
On behalf of the petitioner it was contended that under section 159(2) no prior notice to the party adverse in interest was necessary for registration.
Mr. Justice Walsh held otherwise.
He said that section 159(2) must be read with section 159(1) which provides that when 14 days have elapsed from the date of the Board's decision and the person required to comply with the Board's order has not done so, then the person in
whose favour the order was given may file in the Federal Court a copy of the Board's order for registration.
He continued to say that the failure to comply with the Board's order was a condition precedent to filing for registration.
Walsh J. pointed out [at pages 152-1531 that:
Rule 321 of the Federal Court Rules clearly provides that unless otherwise authorized to be made ex parte motions must be served on the opposite parties at least 2 clear days before the hearing, unless this is dispensed with. Rule 319 requires that the motion shall be supported by an affidavit setting out all the facts on which the motion is based that do not appear from the record, and that the adverse party may fife an affidavit in reply, and that by leave of the Court a witness may be called to testify in relation to an issue of fact raised by an application.
He went on to say [at page 1531:
While petitioner's motion for inter alla, the registration of the arbitration award was accompanied by an affidavit setting out that respondent has not complied entirely with the arbitra tion award, no details were given as to which conditions were not complied with, and more important it was not served on the opposite party before the registration was effected so as to give the respondent the opportunity to deny, as it does, that the award was not complied with. This is contrary to Federal Court Rule 321 and to '' a basic principle of equity audi alteram partem. The establishment that the arbitration award has not been complied with is a condition sine qua non of its registra tion in this Court.
After having annulled and struck out the regis tration of the Arbitration Board's order, he con cluded by saying [at page 1531:
It will however be up to the judge heating the motion if same is presented again, after due service, to decide whether his deci sion as to whether the award has not been complied with, and hence can be registered should he made on the basis of affida vits alone, or after hearing evidence.
In International d,'rotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 529 v. Central Broadcast ing Company Ltd. Q[14771 2 F.C. 78) an applica tion was made before me to have an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board, which had been filed unilaterally and subsequently registered on March 12, 1975 under section 123 of the Canada Labour Code without notice having been served on the party affected thereby, to register pursuant to the motion currently made, service of which notice of motion to this and other ends having been
served, with retroactive effect to March 12, 1975 if such re-registration should be required together with many other requests for relief.
The relief sought in the notice of motion for registration of the order of the Board with retro spective effect was inspired by the decision of Walsh J. in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (supra).
Section 123 and section 159 of the Canada Labour Code are identical in language except for minor differences dictated by the necessity of the subject matters and the decision of Walsh J. is an equally authoritative interpretation of section 123 as it is of section 159.
The issue as to the validity of the filing and registration of the order of the Board was before me and on the basis of the decision of my brother Walsh I held the filing of the order and its subse quent registration to be a nullity.
I also refused to amend the order of the Board to fix a time for compliance, to direct the registra tion of the order pursuant to the request to do so because the order of the Board was conditional and not a final order, and because the order was so inexplicit in other respects that it could not be determined what was ordered to be done I denied an order for committal and leave to issue a writ of sequestration, but in addition to these reasons I refused the relief sought for the overriding reason that no order of the Board had been filed and registered as an order of this Court to enforce.
There are remarkable areas of similarity and dissimilarity in the purposes and language of sec tions 123 and 159 of the Canada Labour Code and section 223 of the Income Tax Act.
Under sections 123 and 159 of the Canada Labour Code the conditions precedent are a failure to comply with the order of the Board within fourteen days. When these conditions exist any person affected by the Board's order may file a copy in the Federal Court of Canada. Under sub-
section (1) of section 223 of the Income Tax Act the Minister may certify that an amount payable under the Act has not been paid, when there has been a direction by the Minister under section 158(2) or otherwise upon the expiration of thirty days after the default.
Counsel for the applicant referred me to the decision of my brother Mahoney in In re Anishe- nineo Piminagan Inc. [1978] 1 F.C. 642, presum ably as authority for the proposition that, by analogy, section 223 of the Income Tax Act pro vides a procedure for the registration of the Minis ter's certificate in the Federal Court.
If that was the purpose for the decision of Mahoney J. being cited, as I understood it to be, I do not agree that it is authority for the proposition for which it was cited.
Mr. Justice Mahoney had for consideration before him the rescission or stay of execution of an order made by the Canadian Transport Commis sion, a copy of which order had been entered of record in this Court pursuant to and with the effect prescribed by subsections (1), (2) and (3) of section 61 of the National Transportation Act.
Under section 61(1) any order made by the Commission may be made an order of the Federal Court of Canada or of any superior court of any province of Canada and shall be enforced in like manner as any order of the Court.
Subsection (2) of section 61 provides the proce dure to make the order of the Commission an order of the Court and that procedure is twofold: (1) the usual practice and procedure of the Court in such matters may be followed, or (2) in lieu thereof a certified copy of the Commission's order may be made by the Secretary which copy shall have an endorsement thereon signed by the Presi dent with the seal of the Commission affixed moving to make the order of the Commission an order of the Federal Court.
Under subsection (3), in this latter event, the Secretary forwards such certified copy so endorsed to the proper officer of this Court and thereupon the Commission's order becomes an order of this Court.
It was the second of these two procedures that the Commission adopted and the persons respon sible for so electing the second procedure available to the Commission were astute in doing so. First, because there is no rule in the Federal Court Rules which specifically deals with such matters and there may well be no "usual practice and procedure of the court" or if there is a usual practice and procedure it would be that concluded by Mr. Justice Walsh to be applicable to the filing and registration of an order of a Board under section 159 of the Canada Labour Code, that is by way of notice of motion under Rules 319 and 321.
Section 61 of the National Transportation Act differs dramatically from section 223 of the Income Tax Act. While Mahoney J. did not base his decision on this point, under section 61 the order of the Canadian Transport Commission becomes an order of this Court whereas an order filed and registered under sections 123 and 159 of the Canada Labour Code and a certificate under section 223 of the Income Tax Act do not.
This was made abundantly clear by Thurlow J. (as he then was) in M.N.R. v. Bolduc ([1961] Ex.C.R. 115) where he said, in effect, that a certificate is not a judgment nor does it become a judgment of the Court when registered but it remains merely a certificate, albeit one of a unique nature, upon which the proceedings authorized by the Income Tax Act may be taken.
Mr. Justice Mahoney said [at pages 648-649]:
Parliament's prescription for the making of an order of the CTC an order of this Court under section 61 of the National Transportation Act is quite different from its prescription for giving similar effect to orders under sections 123 and 159 of the Canada Labour Code. It is unnecessary here to consider the significance, if any, of the distinction that, by subsection 61(3), a CTC order, upon entry of record in the Court, "shall there upon become and be" the order of the Court while under the particular provisions of the Canada Labour Code, an order,
upon registration, ''has the same force and effect...as if... [it] were a jam,yacicnt obtained in the Court." The sections of the Canada labour Code prescribe no procedure for effecting re;à tratioo. In the absence of such prescription, the procedures of the Court 1. ' warn with the result indicated in the decisions cited. Section 61 of the National Transportation Act does, however, prr -rik procedure. The CTC has the choice of ffoHHowin , i,e "usual practice and procedure" of the Court or it may follow the procedure it did in this instance. Where Parlia ment has given the CTC that clear option, it would be unrea sonable to hold at if it chooses the second, it is bound by requirements that pertain only to the first.
Parliament has, in unambiguous terms, prescribed a proce dure for the making of orders of the CTC orders of this Court w E:ch, unlike the Court's own procedures, excludes compliance wi 6: the principle arrdi alteram partem. That procedure has been scrupulously followed here and, accordingly, the order is no more subject to rescission than had it been registered after due compliance with the "usual practice and procedure" of the Court- The motion to rescind the order will be dismissed ... .
Ha\, it so disposed of the question as to the rescission of the order he then turned his attention to the alternative motion to stay the execution of the order and his reasoning in this respect has no application to ï u e present motion.
/i ccordl gly l revert to a consideration of the areas of similarity and dissimilarity between sec tion 159 of the Canada Labour Code which was the subject of Mr. Justice Walsh's decision in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (supra) and section 123 of the Canada Labour Code which was the subject of the decision in International Broth erhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 529 v. Centr u l Broadcasting Company Ltd. (supra) on the one hand and section 223 of the Income Tax Act on the other to ascertain if these decisions are applicable to the production and registration of a Minister's certificate under section 223 of the Income Tax Act.
All statutes are to be construed so as to give effect to the intention which is expressed by the words used in the statute. But that is not to be discovered by considering those words in the abstract but by inquiring what is the intention
expressed by those words used in a statute with reference to the subject matter and i' a object with which the statute was enact-•.
Under subsections (2) of sections 123 ,., nd 159 of the Canada Labour Code it is provided i . t on the "filing" of a copy of an order of the i,t I . rd under subsection (1) then the order of the 'u .' rd sio s 11 be registered and upon registration the order of the Board has the same force and effect and all pro ceedings may be taken rrereon as if t'r,e order were a judgment of the Court.
Under subsection (2) of section 223 of the Income Tax Act it is provid - , k that "On ,: educ- tion" to the Federal Court the Minister's certifi cate shall be registered and when res °.tered it shall have the same force and effect, and all pr i.,iinf may be taken thereon, as if the certificate were a judgment obtained in the Court for a debt in the amount certified by the Minister plus interest as provided in the Income Tax Act until payment.
In the section of the Canada u-our Code the phrase used is "On filing" whereas in the section of the Income Tax Act the phrase is "0 rr produc tion". As I appreciate the mean,. rig of "to file" it is to place a document in the Court records a "to produce" is to offer for inspection or consideration.
For practical purposes it would appear that the phrases "On filing" and "On prn suction" basically and substantially have the same meaning with the exception that the phrase "On production" has the implication of inspection and if, on inspection, the certificate so produced, a l ,. rt from the substance in the body thereof, patently displays inaccuracies such as that it is susceptible of being interpreted as a document issued by the Court when it is not and refers to a cause of action where none exists, it is then that such patent irregularities constitute jus tification for the rejection of a certificate in such form on production as I have concluded to Li;- the case.
The object of the Canada Labour Code can be gleaned, in general terms, from the preamble which is support for freedom of association among
employees on the one hand and employers on the other and the principle of free collective bargain ing as the bases of effective industrial relations for good working conditions and sound labour-man agement relations.
The Canada Labour Code, being a code, then enacts specific provisions designed to accomplish that general objective as expressed in the preamble such as the determination of appropriate collective bargaining units, certification of bargaining units and the hearing and determination of complaints, disputes and allegations of unfair practices.
To do so provision is made for the establishment of a board for these purposes.
Every order of such a board is final, in the sense that it shall not be questioned or reviewed in any court except in accordance with section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
From the very nature of the powers, duties and functions of the board the orders and decisions given by it necessarily will direct compliance with a provision of the Code by a party.
Therefore it is almost invariably an order direct ing some person to do some specific act or refrain from doing some specific act. The order is positive in the sense that it directs some person to do something such as directing an employer to rein state a discharged employee and the like.
In International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local Union 529 v. Central Broadcast ing Company Ltd. (supra) these considerations led me to say at pages 81-82:
The legislative intent is abundantly clear in subsection (2) of section 123. It is that when an order of the Board has been registered it shall have the same force and effect as if the order of the Board had been an order of this Court for purposes of enforcement and that all processes available for the enforce ment of an order of this Court are equally available for the enforcement of an order of the Board when it has been regis tered as contemplated by the section.
Section 123 is ranged with section 122 under the heading "Review and Enforcement of Orders". In my view a heading such as this is not to be treated as if it were a marginal note or merely for the purpose of classifying the enactments. In my opinion it constitutes an important part of the statute itself and
may be read, not only as explaining the sections which follow, as a preamble may be read, but as a better key to the construction of the sections which follow than might be afford ed by a mere preamble.
It is for this reason added to the language of the section that I conclude that section 123(2) was inserted in the statute for the purpose of providing for the enforcing of orders of the Board by the processes of this Court, no similar means being provided in the Canada Labour Code for the Board to enforce its orders. That is the obligation thrust upon this Court by section 123(2). That being so, the orders of the Board must be cast in the precise language as are orders of the judges of this Court and must be so framed as to be capable of enforcement by the normal processes of this Court.
The normal processes of this Court usually sought to enforce an order or decision of the Court are orders of committal for contempt of the Court's order and sequestration of property.
However before the Board makes its finding and consequent order or decision there has been a hearing before that tribunal. There has been a quasi -lis between quasi-parties and the principles of natural justice will have been complied with, and if not resort may be had to section 28 of the Federal Court Act, particularly notice and the opportunity to be heard.
Because there is no provision in the Code for the Board to enforce its orders sections 123 and 159 make provision for the registration of the order of the Board in this Court whereupon that order becomes enforceable as an order of this Court.
The condition for doing so under sections 123 and 159 are, as stated before, that the order or decision of the Board has not been complied with by the party ordered to do some act within a period of fourteen days from which the order of the Board was made or a date provided therein for compliance. These conditions prevailing, then the other party may file a copy of the order or decision of the Board and upon registration the conse quences provided for in subsection (2) follow.
The gist of the decision of Walsh J. in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadi- an Broadcasting Corporation (supra), as I appreciate it, is that whether there has been failure to comply with the Board's order within the pre-
scribed time is a justiciable issue. That being so the principles of natural justice apply, particularly the requirement of notice and the opportunity to be heard.
The only procedure available to so ensure under the Federal Court Rules, and which would be the "usual practice and procedure of the court", would be by way of notice of motion under Rule 321 and Rule 319. That this was the proper procedure to be followed was held by Walsh J. and failure to follow that procedure vitiated the registration of the order.
In International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 529 v. Central Broadcasting Com pany Ltd. (supra) at pages 89-90, I adopted and applied the decision of my brother Walsh by saying:
I think I am bound to approach this matter in the same way as the similar problem was approached by Mr. Justice Walsh until such time, if any, as a different course is indicated by a higher court. When I say bound, I do not mean that I am bound by any strict rule of stare decisis but by my own view as to the desirability of having this Court follow a consistent course as far as possible. That being so, the original filing and registration of the Board's order in the Registry of this Court on March 12, 1975, was a nullity.
In addition to the reasons outlined by my broth er Walsh I added further comment at page 99:
The decision of Mr. Justice Walsh in Public Service Alliance of Canada v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (supra) makes eminent common sense. If this Court is to enforce an order of the Canada Labour Relations Board as its own order then the Court must have control over the order of the Board which is to be filed and consequently registered. That control is present in a limited extent in subsection (1) of section 123 of the Canada Labour Code which provides that failure to comply with an order of the Board must be established before the order is filed. If the Board's order is imprecise, as this order is, then it is impossible to establish non-compliance therewith and the order must be rejected for filing.
Upon examination of the Board's order, which examination would have been denied me if regis tration followed ex debito justitiae on filing, it was evident that the Board's order was not intended to be final in that the Board reserved unto itself the right to fix the "quantum" of salaries to dis charged employees failing agreement between the
parties (there was no agreement between the par ties and no reference made to the Board to fix the quantum) and even if the Board's order was final, in the sense that it was to be enforced by the processes of this Court, the order was so vague, imprecise, ambiguous and inexplicit as not to be capable of enforcement.
Furthermore I was not satisfied on the evidence before me that the order of the Board had not been complied with and I declined the request that I should amend the Board's order to fix a time for compliance with its order first because this was not an appeal proper from the Board's order so that I might give the order the Board ought to have given and secondly because the Board's order remains what it always has been and that is the order of the Board even though enforceable as an order of this Court and the only proper authority to amend that order, if it can be amended, is the Board. This was the reason for which the request to amend a certificate made by the Minister under section 223 of the Income Tax Act was refused in the Star Treck matter.
I turn now to a consideration of section 223 of the Income Tax Act in the light of the legislative intent of the Income Tax Act with respect thereto.
It is axiomatic that there is no equity in a taxing statute and the Income Tax Act is no exception to that axiom. On the contrary the Act is stacked against the taxpayer and in favour of the tax collector designed, no doubt, as a matter of public policy to strengthen the hand of the tax collector and to ensure that the taxpayer and his assets fall within the net cast by the collector even though the taxpayer may contest his liability to tax. Under section 158(1) of the Act the taxpayer shall, within 30 days from the mailing of the notice of assessment (not from the date of the receipt of the notice, there having been instances where the entire 30 days from mailing the notice was con sumed in delivery) the taxpayer shall pay the tax assessed whether or not an objection to or appeal from the assessment is outstanding.
Clearly from section 158 the tax assessed is payable 30 days from the mailing of the notice of
assessment even if it is subsequently established that the taxpayer is not liable therefor and if the Minister so orders under section 158(2) the tax may become payable forthwith upon assessment.
If the taxpayer does not pay the assessed tax on the date fixed for payment he is assessed for interest at a rate of 6% on the amount unpaid so long as it remains unpaid, either in whole or in part. However, if there has been an overpayment of tax or if it has been found by a court of competent jurisdiction that no tax is payable as assessed, a refund shall be made to the taxpayer with interest from the day the overpayment arose but with interest at a prescribed rate of 3% and the interest so paid is assessed as income to the tax payer in the year in which the payment was made.
Of course there is no equity in the Income Tax Act but the cold fact remains that tax is payable upon assessment as indicated above.
Therefore, under section 223 (1) the amount payable under the Act is all taxes assessed, interest accumulated thereon, penalties imposed and the like which have not been paid. That is the amount to be certified by the Minister. The conditions to that certification are either one of those recited in paragraph (a) or (b) of section 223(1).
After careful reflection I have reached the con clusion that the requirements of section 223(1) that an amount has been assessed and remains unpaid and that thirty days have elapsed from the mailing of the notice of assessment or a direction has been made by the Minister under section 158(2) waiving the thirty-day period, are condi tions precedent to the making of the certificate by the Minister as opposed to conditions precedent to the registration of the certificate under section 223(2) on production.
In the Star Treck matter I pointed out that a person affected by such a certificate can impugn the making thereof and its registration in an origi nal proceeding in this Court but I made the tenta tive suggestion by way of obiter that for the Minis-
ter not to establish the conditions precedent to his making the certificate was an open invitation to attack its validity. To do so is still open to the person adversely affected by the certificate but in view of the conclusion I have reached that the conditions in section 223(1) are prerequisites to the Minister making the certificate as opposed to registration itself that gratuitous suggestion was not well-founded. On the other hand, since I have concluded that the material content of the certifi cate dictated by section 223(1) is the amount payable that has not been paid, then other recitals are surplus and it may well be advantageous to state by recital or otherwise that the conditions precedent to the making of the certificate exist, ex abundanti cautela.
As a result of the foregoing conclusion it follows that on production under section 223(2) of a cer tificate in proper form registration thereof is man datory particularly from the use of the word "shall".
By virtue of section 244(13) of the Income Tax Act every document purporting to be a certificate, amongst other specified instruments, over the name of the Minister, the Deputy Minister or officer authorized by regulation, shall be deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, his deputy or authorized official and can be called into question only by the Minister or some person acting for him or Her Majesty. That means that the document must be accepted by other persons for what it purports to be and the authority of the signatory cannot be questioned. That does not mean that the conditions precedent to making the certificate and the accuracy of the content of the certificate cannot be attacked by the person adversely affected by it.
The maxim omnia praesumuntur rite et solem- niter esse acta donec probetur in contrarium would be applicable, which is simply that every thing is presumed to be rightly done and duly performed until the contrary is shown, that is until the contrary is shown by the person attacking the registration. Therefore it is to be presumed that the prerequisites to the making of the certificate by the Minister have been complied with and on its
face such certificate is to be taken as rightly made and accordingly shall be accepted for registration on production under section 223(2) subject always to that presumption being rebutted by the person adversely affected in a subsequent proceeding.
I am confirmed in this conclusion by the com ments made by my brother Addy in Lambert v. The Queen ([1975] F.C. 548) in which the plain tiff sought a declaration that section 223 of the Income Tax Act is unconstitutional and ultra vires of the Parliament of Canada as being contrary to the principles of natural justice and the Canadia n Bill of Rights.
Mr. Justice Addy dismissed the action. He pointed out that under the Income Tax Act proce dure is provided for a taxpayer to contest an assessment against him, that the obligation of a taxpayer to pay the tax assessed, pending final determination of the liability, is not a final deter mination of the taxpayer's liability, since it is still open to him to contest the assessment and if successful to claim a refund for any overpayment. He also stated that the powers given the Minister by section 223 to ensure speedy and effective tax collection do• not infringe the principle of audi alteram partem and section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights.
On appeal to the Appeal Division of the Federal Court the appeal from the decision of Addy J. was dismissed (Lambert v. The Queen [1977] 1 F.C. 199) but the issue on appeal was decided on the question whether a subsequent assessment to the assessment on which the Minister's certificate under section 223(1) was based nullified the liabil ity to pay tax under the prior assessment. The Court of Appeal held that this did not render the Minister's certificate void so that in all other respects the decision of Addy J. stands inviolate.
Accordingly many of Mr. Justice Addy's com ments warrant repetition in the context of the present motion. He said at page 551:
Generally speaking, even an administrative act or procedure, where it involves a decision, which results in a fmal determina tion of rights, is subject to the common law rule as to the right to be heard and also to the provisions of section 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights as aforesaid, while one that does not result in a final determination of rights is not subject to either. Cartwright J. (as he then was), in delivering reasons on behalf of the Supreme Court of Canada in its unanimous decision in the case of The Queen v. Randolph ([19661 S.C.R. 260) stated at page 266:
Generally speaking the maxim audi alteram partem has reference to the making of decisions affecting the rights of parties which are final in their nature, and this is true also of s. 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights upon which the respondents relied.
The following passage in Broom's Legal Maxims, 10th ed., at p. 117 is in point:
Although cases may be found in the books of decisions under particular statutes which at first might seem to conflict with the maxim, it will be found on consideration that they are not inconsistent with it, for the rule, which is one of elementary justice, only requires that a man shall not be subject to final judgment or to punishment without an opportunity of being heard.
He then defined the legal issue before him as follows [at page 552]:
The legal issue turns on whether the issuing of the certificate and the registering thereof in the Federal Court of Canada constitute in effect a final determination of any fundamental rights of the plaintiff.
Having so defined the issue he continued to say [at page 552]:
It is clear that where a judgment fixes the liability for taxes and the amount thereof, there will be no further right to be heard on the merits of the case unless some error had occurred on the conduct of the trial or in the making of the decision which flows at law from the evidence adduced at the trial or from the facts alleged in the pleadings in the case of a judgment in default of either appearance or pleading.
At this point it is significant to repeat that the certificate of the Minister when registered does not become a judgment but is enforceable as such by the processes of the Court for which reason the certificate should not recite a style of cause where no cause exists.
Addy J. then continues to outline the right of a taxpayer to be heard on the merits of the assess ment in these words [at pages 552-553]:
In the case of a certificate issued under section 223, however, there is a full right to be heard on the merits if an objection to the assessment is made within the time limited for making such
an objection, and section 165 provides for the method of objecting, imposes an obligation on the Minister to reconsider the assessment and also confers the right on a taxpayer to appeal directly to the Tax Review Board or to the Federal Court.
While the right off the taxpayer to contest an assessment is preserved, Addy J. points out the unique effect of the registration of a Minister's certificate in these words [at page 5531:
The procedure laid down in the Act gives full right to the taxpayer to contest the assessment either before or after the certificate is registered depending on when the Minister has issued and registered the certificate. It is clear that the issuing of the certificate does not put an end to the normal right of the taxpayer to contest any assessment. It does, however, permit execution against the assets of the taxpayer to take effect even before the case as to liability has been finally heard, in the event of the taxpayer failing to pay the tax in the meantime. The obligation to pay the tax, pending final determination of the liability to do so, is not a final determination of the taxpayer's liability for the tax, since, notwithstanding any such payment, it is still open to him to contest the assessment and, if successful, to claim the return of any overpayment after final determination. These are obviously two different matters. Although it might be argued that the right to register a certificate, before the liability to pay the taxes has been finally determined, is an extraordinary one, and although that right carries with it a right to a writ of execution which in turn carries with it the right to have the assets seized and subse quently disposed of by sale or otherwise, the execution aspect is merely a means of guaranteeing or of assuring the payment of the tax by the taxpayer either before or after the liability for same has been finally established.
In Morch v. M.N.R. ([1949] Ex.C.R. 327) it has been held that there is nothing unreasonable or unduly oppressive in the summary procedure pro vided by Parliament for the registration of a Min ister's certificate and the effects which flow there from where execution has been issued on the certificate, notwithstanding an objection to or appeal against the assessment.
As I have mentioned above and as Mr. Justice Addy also states, the obligation of a taxpayer to pay the tax assessed against him arises upon the assessment, subject to the right of contesting the ultimate liability therefor.
Addy J. expressed the policy of the Income Tax Act in these words [at page 555]:
The public policy behind the power in many taxing statutes to declare an amount payable before final liability for the
amount has been determined and to take effective steps of securing such payment by means of seizure of assets and of sale of same if necessary, is of course founded on the principle that the tax collector must be furnished some means of preventing tax avoidance by dissipation of assets or by the taxpayer removing them from the jurisdiction. Where the fundamental right of the taxpayer to have his liability for taxes ultimately determined on the merits is preserved, such as in the Income Tax Act, the powers given the Minister of National Revenue by section 223 to ensure speedy and effective tax collection do not infringe the principle of audi alteram partem or the Canadian Bill of Rights.
As has been held by my brother Thurlow in M.N.R. v. Bolduc (supra) the right of the taxpay er to contest the facts upon which the au thority of the Minister to make and register a certificate under section 223 are based, remains available to the taxpayer.
In effect the result is that while the right of a taxpayer to contest an assessment to tax and to impugn the Minister's certificate both remain, these rights are postponed and do not constitute an impediment to the registration of a certificate by the Minister under section 223 on production if, on its face, it is in proper form.
It is not the proper function of a judge to inquire into the policy and public expediency which moti vate the legislative branch of government in enact ing statutes save as is necessary to determine the purpose and object of a statute as an aid in interpreting the intention of the legislature as expressed in the words it used. To do otherwise would be an abandonment of the role of judge and the assumption of the role of the legislator.
In comparing a certificate under sections 123 and 159 of the Canada Labour Code which were the subjects of decision in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (supra) and International Brother hood of Electrical Workers, Local 529 v. Central Broadcasting Company Ltd. (supra) with a certifi cate under section 223 of the Income Tax Act, different legislative intention, policy and procedure are apparent.
Under the Canada Labour Code there has been a lis inter partes with a hearing to be conducted
within the principles of natural justice. Following that hearing one party may be directed by the Board established under the Code to do a specific act. If there has been a failure to perform that act within a time prescribed then the adverse party affected thereby may file a copy of the Board's order to obtain enforcement of that order by the processes of the Court, there being no such facili ties vested in the Board. The question as to failure to comply with the Board's order within a pre scribed time is susceptible of dispute and being a condition precedent to the filing and registration of the order it follows that the filing and registration must be by way of an application, notice of which has been served on the opposite party otherwise no opportunity is afforded the adverse party to be heard. That was the ratio decidendi of Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 660 v. Canadi- an Broadcasting Corporation (supra).
Under the Income Tax Act a sum of money assessed as tax becomes payable on assessment. Mr. Justice Addy has outlined the policy explicit in the statute whereby the tax collector is empow ered to seize the taxpayer's assets and thus pre serve the certainty of collection. This is a means to that end and does not end the taxpayer's right to contest the assessment or the correctness of the basis of the Minister's certificate. It postpones these rights with the taxpayer's assets secure in the hands of the tax collector during the interval.
By virtue of section 122 of the Canada Labour Code every order or decision of a board is final and should not be questioned or reviewed in any court, except in accordance with section 28 of the Feder al Court Act.
As Cartwright J. (as he then was) stated in The Queen v. Randolph (supra) the maxim audi alteram partem has reference to the making of decisions affecting the rights of parties that are final in their nature.
Since an order of a board under the Canada Labour Code is final the maxim is applicable, as Walsh J. held in Public Service Alliance of Canada, Local 529 v. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (supra), but since the certificate
under section 223 of the Income Tax Act is not final but the content thereof and the prerequisites to its making are subject to attack, albeit a post poned attack, the maxim is not applicable as held by Addy J. in Lambert v. The Queen (supra).
It is for the foregoing reasons that I have con cluded that upon the production of a Minister's certificate under section 223 of the Income Tax Act proper on its face such a certificate must be accepted for registration under subsection (2) of section 223. For the reasons also expressed the certificate produced for registration in the present application is not a proper certificate on its face because of the objectionable matter therein and accordingly I decline to direct its registration in its present form as is requested.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.