John A. Sorensen
Partner
National Leader, Tax Dispute Resolution & Co-Department Head, Toronto Business Law Department
Article
17
The remedies of rescission and rectification were unavailable to the taxpayers in the Alberta application RJ McLeod Investments Inc. v McLeod.[1] The McLeod judgment includes common themes and highlights ongoing problems in these kinds of matters:
As noted above, rescission applications are fact-specific. The facts in McLeod are summarized as follows:
In January, 2015, the Canada Revenue Agency ("CRA") informed RJM that it had made excessive capital dividend elections, so the Dividends would be subject to punitive Part III tax unless RJM elected to treat the Dividends as taxable. In June, 2017, McLeod and RJM sued their former accounting advisors (Messrs. Luna and MacFarlane) in connection with "alleged breaches of duty and negligence" relating to the CDA matter. The two accountants filed their statements of defense in 2018 and 2019. There was predictable finger-pointing in all directions. The litigation was put on hold when, in September, 2020, the rescission application was filed. The Alberta Court did not make an issue of the delay between the discovery of the problem in 2015 and the 2020 application seeking rescission, although it does seem like a lengthy delay.[2]
RJM and McLeod argued that the Dividends were only paid on the basis that they were tax-free, and that it would be unconscionable, unfair and/or inequitable that tax should be payable because of the accountants' mistake. Thus, they sought equitable relief in the form of rescission.
The Court relied on Stone's Jewellery Ltd v Arora[3] and Beazer v Tollestrup Estate,[4] both Alberta cases, as well as on Supreme Court jurisprudence. The Court disregarded Collins Family Trust v Canada (AG)[5] as a non-binding authority from another jurisdiction but, oddly, in another breath cited the Ontario case Canada Life Insurance Company of Canada v Canada (AG).[6]
The Court stated that the purpose of rescission is to eliminate an unfair benefit to one party to a contract due to a mistake, which is achieved by cancelling and unwinding the contract and putting the parties back to their pre-contract positions. While the Court described the test for rescission of a contract, it also said that this case was not about contract rescission after all (which was correct, since the case concerned the declaration and payment of a dividend). The test for contractual rescission from Stone's Jewellery was nonetheless set out and applied, as follows:[7]
Despite the puzzling approach, the Alberta Court's formulation of the test for rescission in McLeod bore some resemblance to the test articulated in BC case law, which relies on the following formulation: "… a court may rescind a voluntary disposition where it is found that it [sic] a mistake of sufficient causative gravity was made that would make it unconscionable, unjust or unfair to leave the mistake uncorrected."[8] BC cases will also consider whether an adequate alternative legal remedy was available, and the frequently cited authority of Pitt v. Holt[9] made reference to the requirement of no prejudice to third parties. Whether a prohibition against retroactive tax planning is part of BC rescission case law is dubious, since the rescission orders were granted in Collins Family Trust and Pallen Trust to unwind tax plans that were deliberately implemented based on a generally accepted legal interpretation that was refuted in The Queen v. Sommerer.[10]
In any case, relying on Stone's Jewellery, the Alberta Court in McLeod reached the following conclusions:
Subsection 23(2) of the Financial Administration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-11, allows the federal government to provide full or partial relief from any tax or penalty, including interest paid or payable thereon, where the Governor in Council "considers that the collection of the tax or the enforcement of the penalty is unreasonable or unjust or that it is otherwise in the public interest to remit the tax or penalty." A remission order is an extraordinary remedy granted by the Governor in Council on the recommendation of the appropriate Minister. Remission orders are highly discretionary and are entitled to significant deference on judicial review.
One wonders what standard for "adequacy" is used in the context of the adequate alternative legal remedy. Certainly, from the taxpayer's subjective perspective, none of these remedies is remotely adequate. What about from the perspective of a revenue authority? No government lawyer should argue straight-faced that a notice of objection on its own is an adequate remedy, and the conclusion in Canada Life in this regard was highly questionable. Along the same lines, it is unreasonable for the Government of Canada to argue that seeking administrative relief is an adequate option when the CRA's own policy flagrantly contradicts that argument. Further, given the restrictive parameters and protracted timeframes for a remission application, arguing that remission is adequate in any way is unsupportable. The regrettable approach taken by the Alberta Court in McLeod seems to effectively disregard the word "adequate", opting instead for an approach bordering on absolute liability: any option other than rescission, regardless of how impractical or ineffective it may be, is better than rescission, so rescission cannot be granted. Respectfully, that cannot be the correct analysis because it essentially means that in Alberta, at least, a taxpayer would nearly always be precluded from obtaining rescission in a tax matter.
Despite the drawbacks in the reasoning in McLeod, the denial of rescission is probably the right outcome. There is no need to read between the lines – the main problem with the taxpayer's argument was plain to see: Mr. McLeod was a lawyer who drafted documents that included language that expressly contemplated and addressed a scenario in which an excessive capital dividend was declared. The case defined the meaning of the colloquial term "flyer". That said, McLeod highlights the need for the Supreme Court to speak to the rescission remedy, to achieve harmony across the provinces and ensure sound reasoning in future cases. Hopes are high that the pending appeal in Collins Family Trust will confirm a robust and effective rescission doctrine.
Should you have any specific questions about this article or would like to discuss it further, you can contact the author or a member of our Tax Dispute Resolution Group.
[1] 2021 ABQB 439 ("McLeod").
[2] Equitable relief may potentially be subject to a provincial limitations act: see Bouchan v. Slipacoff, 2010 ONSC 2693.
[3] 2009 ABQB 656 ("Stone's Jewellery").
[4] 2017 ABCA 429.
[5] Collins Family Trust v. Canada (Attorney General), 2020 BCCA 196 ("Collins Family Trust") (under appeal – Supreme Court of Canada file no. 39383).
[6] 2018 ONCA 562 ("Canada Life"). The leave application in Canada Life was denied on March 7, 2019 (docket 38302). However, on April 22, 2021, Canada Life Insurance Company of Canada sought reconsideration of its denied leave application, in light of the granting of leave in Collins Family Trust. The status of this reconsideration is not known.
[7] This test for contractual rescission appears different from the formulation of the test in Ontario under Miller Paving Limited v. B. Gottardo Construction Ltd., 2007 ONCA 422, which was relied upon in Canada Life. That is not to say that the Ontario test is in any way preferable to the test from Stone's Jewellery. To the contrary, Canada Life was wrongly decided and ignored other Ontario precedent too.
[8] Re: Pallen Trust, 2014 BCSC 305 (aff'd 2015 BCCA 222) ("Pallen Trust"), at para. 34. See also Collins Family Trust.
[9] 2013 UKSC 26.
[10] 2012 FCA 207.
[11] Impermissible retroactive tax planning in the context of a CRA administrative process should not be confused with the test for rectification (see Brent Carlson Family Trust v. Canada (National Revenue), 2021 FC 506).
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