Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-407-82
The Queen (Appellant)
v.
Special Risks Holdings Inc. (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Le Dain JJ. and Kerr D.J.—Ottawa, December 1 and 30, 1982.
Income Tax — Practice — Motion to strike pleadings — Discovery — Documents — Appeal from order deleting pas sage from statement of defence and refusing R. 448 list of documents — Respondent engaging in series of transactions with three other corporations, including disposition of R.M. Ltd. shares — Respondent subsequently electing to pay divi dend out of TPUS and CSOH accounts — Minister reassess ing dividend tax on assumption certain provisions applied because respondent controlled R.M. Ltd. immediately before share disposition and not arm's length immediately after — Respondent's statement of claim in reassessments appeal alleging disposition occurred while R.M. Ltd. briefly con trolled by another — Subject passage alleging tax-avoidance motive for transactions — Respondent not denying motive — Continuity of control only issue — Motive immaterial since appellant's pleading not alleging dispositions sham or other wise contrary to law — Such allegations present in earlier cases where tax-avoidance motive warranting careful scrutiny of transactions by Court — Appellant entitled to list of documents re matters specified in motion since might relate to control of R.M. Ltd., and also re all other matters in dispute — Appeal allowed in part — Income Tax Act, S.C. 1970-71- 72, c. 63, ss. 89(1)(1)(ii) (as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 26, s. 53), 89(5)(a)(ii) (enacted by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 26, s. 53), 186(2), 245, 246, 247 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 448, Fm. 21.
Practice — Discovery — Production of documents Appeal from (inter alia) order refusing R. 448 list of docu ments — Respondent disposing of R.M. Ltd. shares and subsequently electing to pay dividend out of TPUS and CSOH accounts — Minister reassessing dividend tax — Continuity of respondent's control of R.M. Ltd. only issue — Appellant entitled to list of documents re matters specified in motion since might relate to control of R.M. Ltd., and also re all other matters in dispute — Appeal allowed in part — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 448, Fm. 21.
The respondent and the corporations H.R.G. Ltd., R.M. Ltd. and M.H.R. Ltd. engaged in a series of transactions among themselves. As part of these dealings, the respondent (in December, 1976) disposed of its shares in R.M. Ltd. In March
of 1978, the respondent elected to pay a dividend out of its TPUS and CSOH accounts; however, in tax reassessments issued by the Minister, the amount debited against the TPUS account was reduced, the amount drawn from the CSOH account was increased, the total of these two amounts was less than the amount of the dividend, and additional tax was therefore exacted. The Minister's calculations were based upon the premise that certain provisions of the Act applied. In turn, this premise derived from the view that the respondent had controlled R.M. Ltd. immediately prior to the disposition of shares, and had not been dealing with R.M. Ltd. at arm's length immediately after the disposition. The respondent appealed the reassessments. In its statement of claim, it outlined the relevant transactions, and took the position that the provisions in question did not apply, because the disposition occurred in the midst of an 11-day period during which R.M. Ltd. was controlled by M.H.R. Ltd. and not by the respondent. The appellant's statement of defence set forth its contrary view, and further alleged that, in engaging in the transactions con cerned, the respondent "entered into a scheme ... with the hope and expectation of avoiding tax on the distribution of dividends". On motion by the respondent, this statement was struck from the appellant's pleading. At the same time, a motion by the appellant under Rule 448, for an order compel ling the respondent to provide a list of documents and a verifying affidavit, was dismissed. The appellant appealed both decisions.
Held: (1) The deletion from the statement of defence was rightly made. The passage in question is concerned with the respondent's reasons for entering into the "scheme". The respondent does not deny that its objective was to avoid taxa tion on the dividend distribution; however, it has contended that, in the absence of sham, a taxpayer is free to arrange its affairs so as to achieve this end. The respondent has therefore maintained that it had a legal right to take the steps which it did, and that the appellant, whose pleading contains no allega tion of sham, is not entitled to delve into the respondent's underlying motives. According to the pleadings and the parties themselves, at issue is the continuity of the respondent's control of R.M. Ltd. Nonetheless, the appellant argues that the impugned passage is relevant. Her position is that since a tax-avoidance "scheme" was pleaded, the Court has a duty to scrutinize carefully every aspect of the "scheme", in order to determine whether the transactions involved actually produced, in fact and in law, the relationships aimed at by the several companies. The cases relied upon as supporting this argument were to be distinguished. In those in which a duty to scrutinize has been found, the Minister had pleaded matters such as: artificiality in the taxpayer's supposed carrying on of a busi ness; sham; lack of a valid business purpose; and the provisions dealing with artificial transactions. By contrast, the appellant herein alleged none of these things, nor did she plead the tax-avoidance or dividend-stripping sections of the Act. In the absence of any such allegation that the relevant transactions were invalidated by a particular enactment or otherwise con trary to law, the respondent's motives are not material.
(2) The appellant's motion sought a list comprising, inter alia, documents relating to negotiations between H.R.G. Ltd.
and the respondent regarding the acquisition of R.M. Ltd., and documents and agreements between H.R.G. Ltd. and the respondent regarding control of M.H.R. Ltd. The materials in each of these two categories might well relate to the control of R.M. Ltd., which has been put in issue by the pleadings. The appellant is therefore entitled to a list of those items, but paragraph (1) of Rule 448 implies more than this. It speaks of documents "relating to any matter in question in the cause...." In this case, the factual allegations in three para graphs of the statement of claim are in dispute. Consequently, the appellant is entitled to a list and a verifying affidavit which encompass the documents pertaining to each and every one of those allegations.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
DISTINGUISHED:
Rose v. Minister of National Revenue, [1973] F.C. 65; 73 DTC 5083 (C.A.); Her Majesty The Queen v. Daly, [1981] CTC 270 (F.C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Stubart Investments Limited v. Her Majesty The Queen (1981), 81 DTC 5120 (F.C.A.); W.T. Ramsay Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, [1982] A.C. 300 (H.L.).
COUNSEL:
P. Plourde for appellant. G. Du Pont for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for appellant.
Verchere, Noël & Eddy, Montreal, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is an appeal from an interlocu tory order of the Trial Division [Federal Court, T-4602-81, order dated May 11, 1982] which:
(a) granted the respondent's motion to delete para graph 8 from the statement of claim and to make certain amendments to paragraph 12 of the state ment of claim;
(b) ordered that the words "but adds that Plaintiff entered into a scheme described in said paragraphs with the hope and expectation of avoiding tax on the distribution of dividends" be struck from para graph 3 of the appellant's statement of defence; and
(c) ordered that the appellant's motion that the respondent be ordered to produce' documents pur suant to Rule 448 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] be dismissed.
While the notice of appeal purports to appeal against all three branches of the Trial Division order supra, the appellant's memorandum of fact and law limits the appeal to paragraphs (b) and (c) supra and the appeal was argued on this basis.
The relevant facts are summarized in the rea sons of the learned Motions Judge as follows (A.B. pages 48 and 49):
The proceedings are an appeal against assessments dated March 19, 1981, resulting from elections made by Defendant [sic] in March 1978 and December 1978 pursuant to subsec tion 83(1) of the Income Tax Act to pay dividends out of its tax paid undistributed surplus on hand account (TPUS) and its 1971 capital surplus on hand account (CSOH). A number of inter-corporate transactions and share subscriptions and changes were involved between Plaintiff, Hogg Robinson Group Ltd., Richards, Melling & Co. Ltd., and Melling Hogg Robinson Ltd., which need not be gone into here. As a result Plaintiff paid a dividend of $185,000 on March 31, 1978, calculating that $181,604 of this was paid out of its TPUS account and $3,396 out of its CSOH account, and another dividend on December 29, 1978 of $1,346,231 out of its 1971 CSOH account. The Minister in the re-assessment calculated that with respect to the March 13, 1978 election an amount of $129,334.35 was deemed to be paid from the TPUS account and $51,171.65 from the CSOH account, and assessed addi tional tax accordingly.
Plaintiff relies on Sections 3, 83, 86, 89, 184 and 248 of the Act as applicable to the 1978 taxation year and on Section 26 of the Income Tax Application Rules. Defendant relies on the same sections.
Defendant admits a number of paragraphs of Plaintiff's Statement of Claim including an admission in Paragraph 3 of Paragraphs 10, 11, 12, 14, 16 and 18 of it, but in the said paragraph then goes on to say "the Plaintiff entered into a scheme described in said paragraphs with the hope and expec tation of avoiding tax on the distribution of dividends".
' The reference to production of documents pursuant to Rule 448 in the order made by the Motions Judge (A.B. page 51) is clearly inaccurate. The notice of motion pursuant to Rule 448 (A.B. page 32) asked for an order "compelling the plaintiff to make and file and serve on the defendant a list of the docu ments...." This is also the language used in paragraph 448(1).
In Paragraph 4 Defendant denies paragraphs 13, 15 and 17 adding that in assessing Plaintiff the Minister assumed that Plaintiff, in effect, controlled at all relevant times, Richards, Melling & Co. Ltd. Paragraphs 5 and 8 supplement this contention that Plaintiff was not dealing at arms [sic] length with the said company after it disposed of its shares, paragraph 8 concluding that the amount referred to in para graph 89(1)(a)(ii) of the Act is deemed to be nil in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 89(5)(a)(ii) of the Act. The parties agree that this is the issue between them.
In respect of that portion of the order set out in paragraph (b) supra, the reasons given by the Motions Judge read as follows (A.B. pages 49 and 50):
Plaintiff objects strongly to the allegation in paragraph 3 of the Defence that it entered into a scheme with the hope and expectation of avoiding tax on the distribution of dividends, pointing out that it is well established that a taxpayer may arrange his affairs in such a manner as to minimize or avoid taxation, and in the absence of sham is entitled to do so. There is no allegation of sham in this case and Defendant [sic] admits that the various manoeuvres with the shares were carried out. Plaintiff does not deny that the objective was to avoid taxation on the dividend distributions but contends that it had a legal right to take the steps it did, and that Defendant has no right to go into its motives for doing so. Defendant [sic] contends that it is the substance, not the form of the transactions which must be looked into, and that for a brief period of 11 days control passed out of the hands of Plaintiff, before returning to it. Defendant has not pleaded Section 245 of the Act dealing with Artificial Transactions, Section 246 respecting Tax Avoidance, or Section 247 dealing with Dividend Stripping. I therefore find that the allegation in the latter part of Paragraph 3 of the Defence relating to Plaintiff's motives should be struck.
It is the position of the appellant that the respond ent controlled Richards, Melling & Co. Ltd. (R.M.C.) immediately before it disposed of its R.M.C. shares on December 23, 1976 and was not dealing at arm's length with R.M.C. immediately after that disposition. Thus, in the submission of the appellant, subparagraph 89(1)(1)(ii) of the Income Tax Act [R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, as am. by S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 63; subpara. 89(1)(1)(ii) as am. by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 26, s. 53] 2 applies and pursuant thereto, the amount referred to therein is
2 89. (1) In this subdivision,
(1) "1971 capital surplus on hand" of a corporation at any particular time after May 6, 1974, means the amount, if any, by which the aggregate of
(Continued on next page)
deemed to be nil in accordance with the provisions of subparagraph 89(5)(a)(ii) of the Act [enacted by S.C. 1974-75-76, c. 26, s. 53]. 3 The respondent, on the other hand, pleads each and every step of the various transactions and takes the position that the deeming provisions of subparagraph 89(5)(a)(ii) do not apply to the circumstances of this case because the respondent did not control R.M.C. immediately before its disposition of the R.M.C. shares owned by it. Based on the transac tions outlined in paragraphs 9 to 18 inclusive of the statement of claim, I perceive the respondent's position to be that from December 20, 1976 to December 31, 1976, the respondent did not control R.M.C. within the meaning of subsection 186(2) of the Act. 4 Thus, put another way, the issue
(Continued from previous page)
(ii) subject to subsection (5), all amounts each of which is an amount in respect of a capital property of the corporation owned by it on December 31, 1971 and disposed of by it after that date and before the particu lar time equal to the amount, if any, by which the lesser of its fair market value on the day fixed by proclamation for the purposes of subdivision c and the corporation's proceeds of disposition thereof exceeds its actual cost to the corporation determined without reference to the Income Tax Application Rules, 1971, other than sub sections 26(15), (17) and (21) to (27) thereof,
3 89....
(5) For the purposes of determining the 1971 capital surplus on hand or paid-up capital deficiency of a corpora tion at any particular time after May 6, 1974, the following rules apply:
(a) the amount referred to in subparagraphs (1)(l)(ii) and (xiv) in respect of a capital property of the corporation shall be deemed to be nil, where the property disposed of is
(ii) a share of the capital stock of another Canadian corporation that was controlled, within the meaning assigned by subsection 186(2), by the corporation immediately before the disposition and that was dis posed of by the corporation after 1971 to a person with whom the corporation was not dealing at arm's length immediately after the disposition, other than by a dispo sition referred to in paragraph (b), or
"186.... .
(2) For the purpose of this Part, one corporation is con trolled by another corporation if more than 50% of its issued share capital (having full voting rights under all circum stances) belongs to the other corporation, to persons with whom the other corporation does not deal at arm's length, or to the other corporation and persons with whom the other corporation does not deal at arm's length.
between the parties is the continuity of respond ent's control of R.M.C. Based on the statement of claim, I understand the respondent to be saying that up until December 20, 1976, the respondent controlled R.M.C. Then, on December 20, 1976, that control passed to Melling, Hogg, Robinson Ltd. (M.H.R.). However, the respondent did not control M.H.R. pursuant to subsection 186(2) because M.H.R.'s voting shares were divided equally between another company and the respondent. Therefore, the respondent could not be said to have control of R.M.C. This, in respond ent's view, was the position when the respondent disposed of its R.M.C. shares on December 23, 1976. It was not until December 31, 1976 that respondent regained control of M.H.R. Thus, in respondent's view, the respondent did not control R.M.C. from December 20, 1976 to December 31, 1976, a period of 11 days. During that 11-day period when it was not in control of R.M.C., that is, on December 23, 1976, the respondent disposed of its R.M.C. shares.
The appellant submits that the impugned por tion of paragraph 3 of her statement of defence should be read together with paragraph 4 of the statement of defence and, if that is done, it will be seen that the impugned portion is necessary and relevant to the issues as defined by the pleadings. It is the appellant's position that since paragraph 3 alleges that the respondent entered into the "scheme" pleaded by the respondent "with the hope and expectation of avoiding tax on the distri bution of dividends", the Court has a duty to carefully scrutinize all aspects of that "scheme" to ascertain whether the parties in fact achieved the position that they set out to achieve, or put another way, the test should be whether subject series of transactions has been effectively implemented in every way so that the legal relationships which the parties claim to have created have in fact and in law really been brought into existence. Counsel for the appellant said that the Crown intended to challenge the result of the scheme and that the impugned portion of paragraph 3 was necessary and relevant to that intention. In support of this submission, counsel relied on the Court's decision in Rose v. Minister of National Revenue. 5 In that case, the former Chief Justice of this Court said at page 69:
5 [[1973] F.C. 65;] 73 DTC 5083 [C.A.] per Jackett C.J.
It does not seem to be in doubt that the reason for the scheme under which the corporations in question would be constituted a partnership to undertake management services for Central Park Estates Limited was to achieve tax advantages for the individuals owning the shares of some or all of those corporations. While this does not affect the result actually achieved by what was done, it does, in my view, warrant a very careful appraisal of the evidence when considering whether what was projected with that end in view was actually carried out. [Footnote omitted.]
However, a perusal of the record in that case shows that the Minister pleaded, in paragraph 7 of his reply to the amended notice of appeal, that the taxpayer's "alleged participation in the alleged Central Park Management Company partnership was not the carrying on of a bona fide active financial, commercial or industrial business but an artificial attempt to create the appearance of the carrying on of such a business". It is also noted that the Minister, in paragraph 16 of his memo randum of fact and law in the Rose case, submit ted, inter alia, that "the arrangement under which the partnership agreement and the management agreement were set up was a sham". In my view, this is a very significant difference between the case at bar and the Rose case (supra). In Rose, artificiality was pleaded. Here there is no such pleading. The decision in Rose and the comments of the former Chief Justice supra in that decision must be considered in the light of the pleadings in that case. In the case of Her Majesty The Queen v. Daly, 6 in writing the judgment of the majority of the Court, I said:
In a case of this kind, where it is acknowledged that what is sought by a certain course of action is a tax advantage, it is the duty of the Court to examine all of the evidence relating to the transaction in order to satisfy itself that what was done resulted in a valid, completed transaction.
Likewise, I observe that in Daly (supra), the Crown pleaded that there was "no business pur pose" for the procedure adopted (statement of defence, paragraph 7) and pleaded further that the Crown assessed the taxpayer on the basis that "there was no valid or legitimate business purpose for the procedure ..." (statement of defence, para graph 8). Additionally, the Crown also pleaded the provisions of section 245 of the Act and the prede-
6 [1981] CTC 270 [F.C.A.] at p. 279.
cessor section to section 245. Those sections deal with artificial transactions.
Accordingly, it is my view that the jurispru dence of this Court as developed in the Rose case and the Daly case must be evaluated in the light of the issues made relevant by the pleadings in those cases. In Rose, the Minister pleaded artificiality. In Daly, the Crown pleaded lack of valid or legiti mate business purpose. In the case at bar there is no such plea. I take it that the references by the learned Motions Judge to sections 245, 246 and 247 of the Act were meant to refer to the circum stance that in this case the Crown had not pleaded facts which, if proven at trial, would bring into play one or more of those sections so as to attract tax liability.
The state of the pleadings herein is that the appellant did not allege facts which would estab lish a sham, lack of valid business purpose, artifi cial transactions under section 245, tax avoidance under section 246 or dividend stripping under sec tion 247.
On the contrary, the appellant admits most of the paragraphs of the statement of claim which establish the so-called "scheme". The only para graphs which it denies are paragraphs 13, 15 and 17. Paragraph 13 relates to control of R.M.C. I do not read paragraphs 15 and 17 as being relevant to the question of control. They are included in the narrative of the entire series of transactions. Thus, the only matter put in issue by the appellant is the matter of control of R.M.C. The Motions Judge said that the respondent did not deny that the objective was to avoid taxation on the dividend distribution. Likewise, before us, respondent's counsel did not deny this objective. However, there is here no allegation by the appellant that subject scheme is contrary to law or invalidated by a particular enactment.' Had the appellant pleaded facts sufficient to constitute sham, lack of a valid and bona fide purpose or any of the statutory
' Compare: Stubart Investments Limited v. Her Majesty The Queen (1981), 81 DTC 5120 [F.C.A.] at page 5124, and W. T. Ramsay Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, [1982] A.C. 300 [H.L.] at page 323.
prescriptions alluded to by the Motions Judge, the situation might have been different. As it is how ever, I fail to see how, on the pleadings as present ly constituted, the respondent's reasons for instituting subject "scheme" can be material to any fairly arguable defence open to the appellant. Accordingly, I think that the impugned portion of paragraph 3 is immaterial and that the Motions Judge was right in striking it from the statement of defence.
I turn now to the appeal from that part of the order detailed in paragraph (c) supra. The reasons of the Motions Judge for refusing this portion of the appellant's motion read as follows [at pages 4-5]:
Turning now to Defendant's Motion under Rule 448, a letter annexed to the accompanying affidavit indicates the documents sought.
Paragraph (a) seeks documents relating to negotiations be tween Hogg Robinson and Plaintiff as to acquisition of Rich- ards, Melling & Co. Ltd., and Paragraph (b) seeks documents as to the capital reorganization of that company. Details of the reorganization have already been produced, and any writings or memoranda of any discussions go to motive and are irrelevant. With respect to Paragraphs (c) and (d) concerning the incorpo ration of Melling Hogg Robinson Ltd. and the distribution of its shares between the Hogg Robinson Group and Plaintiff, and the purchase of shares of Richards, Melling & Co. by Melling Hogg Robinson, here again it appears that these documents have already been produced by Plaintiff in its list filed pursuant to Rule 447, or have been admitted by Defendant in the paragraphs of Plaintiff's Statement of Claim admitted by it. If the documentation is incomplete additional company records (as distinct from correspondence) can no doubt be obtained on discovery. Paragraph (e) asks for documents and agreements between the Hogg Robinson Group and Plaintiff respecting control of Melling Hogg Robinson Ltd. Here again this appears to go to motive, and in the absence of allegations of sham this information need not be provided. For these reasons Defend ant's motion fails.
With respect, I am unable to agree with the decision by the Motions Judge to dismiss the appellant's motion for an order compelling the respondent to make and file and serve the list of documents contemplated by Rule 448(1). As noted earlier herein, the appellant has denied paragraph 13 of the statement of claim, thereby putting in issue the question of control of R.M.C. Paragraph (a) of the letter which is referred to in
the reasons of the Motions Judge (supra) asks for "documents relating to negotiations between Hogg Robinson and Plaintiff as to acquisition of Rich- ards, Melling & Co. Ltd." Such documents might well be relevant to the question of control of R.M.C. The request for documents relative to the acquisition of control of R.M.C. connotes wider parameters than "writings or memoranda of any discussions" going to motive. I therefore conclude that the appellant is entitled to have a Rule 448(1) list in respect of any and all such documents. Likewise I think that paragraph (e) of the letter, in asking for all documents and agreements between the Hogg Robinson Group and the respondent respecting control of M.H.R., is asking for docu ments which might well relate to the issue of control of R.M.C. because of the transactions between the respondent, the Hogg Robinson Group and M.H.R. concerning R.M.C. shares. Accordingly I think the appellant is also entitled to have a Rule 448 (1) list in respect of any and all documents which are within the purview of para graph (e) of subject letter.
I have dealt specifically with the matters described in the letter of April 1, 1982 in respect of which, in my view, the appellant is entitled to Rule 448 discovery. However, Rule 448 (1) pro vides for "a list of the documents ... relating to any matter in question in the cause ...." The matters in question or in issue on these pleadings are the allegations of fact contained in paragraphs 13, 15 and 17 of the statement of claim. I think, therefore, that the appellant is entitled to compli ance with the provisions of Rule 448(1) in respect of each and every allegation of fact contained in paragraphs 13, 15 and 17 of the statement of claim.
To summarize then the disposition I would pro pose to make in this appeal: I would dismiss the appeal from paragraph (b) of the order of the Trial Division; I would allow the appeal from paragraph (c) of the order of the Trial Division and order the respondent, pursuant to the provi sions of Rule 448(1), within 20 days from the date
of judgment in this Court, to make and file and serve on the appellant a list of the documents that are or have been in its possession, custody or power relating to each and every allegation of fact con tained in paragraphs 13, 15 and 17 of the state ment of claim herein and contemporaneously therewith, to make and file an affidavit verifying such a list in Form 21, and to serve a copy thereof on the appellant.
On the questions of costs, I note that the Motions Judge awarded costs to the respondent in respect of the respondent's motion to amend the statement of claim and to strike a portion from the statement of defence as well as in respect of the appellant's motion to file a Rule 448 list. Since success on the appeal is divided, I would make no order as to costs either in this Court or in the Trial Division.
LE DAIN J.: I agree. KERR D.J.: I agree.
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