Her Majesty the Queen (Appellant) v. Wesbrook Management
Ltd. (Respondent)
96 DTC 6590
Federal Court of Appeal
November 5, 1996
(Court File No. A-790-95.)
Responsible representative assessment -- Corporate taxpayer liquidating corporation
controlled by it and distributing such corporation's assets without obtaining
Ministerial certificate -- Such controlled corporation having losses accepted
by Minister on assessment and reassessment -- Whether Minister later entitled
to assess taxpayer under responsible representative provisions of subsection
159(2) of the Act for tax otherwise payable by controlled corporation had Minister
disallowed its losses -- Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, Chapter 1 (5th Supp.),
ss. 152(3), 152(8), 159(2) and 159(3).
In September 1988, the corporate taxpayer acquired the shares of a numbered
corporation, 466. On December 28, 1988, 466 was liquidated, and its assets were
distributed without the taxpayer having obtained a certificate under subsection
159(2) of the Act certifying that all of 466's taxes had been paid. On March
9, 1989, the Minister assessed 466 for its taxation year ending May 7, 1988,
permitting it to deduct its share of a certain partnership loss ("the Grand
Bell loss"). On July 4, 1989, the Minister reassessed 466 for its taxation
year ending May 7, 1988, allowing the deduction of a loss carryback from its
terminal taxation year (ending December 28, 1988), but making no other changes.
At no time subsequent to July 4, 1989 did the Minister ever reassess 466 so
as to disallow the deduction of the Grand Bell loss. On February 18, 1992, the
Minister assessed the corporate taxpayer under the "responsible representative"
provisions of subsection 159(2) of the Act, claiming tax and interest that would
have been payable by 466 for its May 7, 1988 taxation year, had the deduction
of the Grand Bell loss been disallowed. The taxpayer appealed to the Tax Court
of Canada, and, in the course of that appeal applied for the determination of
a question of law. That question was whether the Minister is entitled to assess
one person under subsection 159(3) of the Act in respect of an alleged tax liability
of another person which has never been, and can never be, assessed or reassessed.
The question was answered "no", the taxpayer's appeal was allowed,
and the Minister's assessment under subsections 159(2), and (3) was vacated.
The Crown appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal.
Held: The Crown's appeal was dismissed. The Minister's difficulty
was that 466 had been both assessed and reassessed in respect of its 1988 taxation
year and, there being no question of fraud or misrepresentation, no further
reassessment could be issued to it after March 9, 1992. In addition, while an
assessment is by no means a condition of liability to pay tax, an assessment,
once issued, and unless and until varied by competent authority, has the effect
of fixing the liability for tax. That was the case with the reassessment issued
on July 4, 1989 against 466, which fixed the latter's tax liability for its
1988 taxation year at nil. As a result, the Minister's assessment under section
159 of the Act in respect of 466's liability could only be made if the Minister
were in a position to vary that liability by issuing a further reassessment,
and if he in fact did so. That did not happen. Hence the Tax Court judge was
right to answer the question in issue in the negative, and to allow the taxpayer's
appeal.
DOMINION TAX CASES
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