Lexpert Magazine

June 2016

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JUNE 2016 55 | TAX LITIGATION | available, we'll sit in hotels, church halls, municipal offices or even rinks," Rossiter says. "We're built for speed and manage our inventory tightly." To make things worse, the TCC lacks jurisdiction in other key areas. By way of example, only the Federal Court can re- view the CRA's failure to act lawfully when making information demands in tax au- dits; to issue notices of assessment, reassess- ments, or determinations or pay uncontest- ed refunds in a timely manner; and to act lawfully in collection matters. e TCC also lacks jurisdiction to deal with late fil- ing of designations or elections, or reassess- ments issued beyond the expiry of statutory limitation periods. e situation confounds and frustrates Rossiter. "I have never heard a single, soli- tary rational argument against having one court deal with all tax matters," he says. "e public wants it and the Bar wants it." Besides, it's not an expensive proposi- tion. "How many changes can be made where you can say it won't cost the govern- ment any significant amount of money?" Rossiter asks. Alexandra Brown, formerly with the federal Justice Department and now at Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP in Toronto, will disappear. "e judges are fighting over jurisdiction and that remains a divisive issue," Robert- son says. So much so that not only will the prob- lems arising from bifurcation continue to hover in the background, they'll most likely get worse. e reason? e courts are finally start- ing to respond to demands that the CRA be held accountable for its actions by im- posing a duty of care on the tax collector. Most notable is the jurisprudential trend recognizing an ongoing duty of care to tax- payers on the part of tax authorities. "It will now be easier for businesses and individuals to argue that the CRA and oth- er tax authorities must administer the law in good faith and refrain from behaviour that is abusive or irrational," says Martin Sorensen of Bennett Jones LLP in Toronto. e problem is that they won't be able to make that argument in the TCC, which has no jurisdiction to deal with alleged breaches of the duty or damages ensuing from those breaches, nor can it provide re- lief from interest or penalties on the basis of CRA misconduct. Aggrieved taxpay- ers, then, have no choice but to start from scratch and make their way to provincial superior courts or the Federal Court. To be sure, the existence of a duty of good faith might make the CRA and other tax authorities somewhat easier to deal with as they suggest that the agency is not at liberty to intimidate and threaten tax- payers as it chooses and has a responsibility to take appropriate care in deciding to take steps against them. "ese decisions should over time result in a difference in the way the CRA treats taxpayers and their rights," says tax lawyer David Rotfleisch of Rotfleisch & Samulo- vitch Professional Corporation in Toronto. e most notable decision, Agence du revenu du Québec c. Groupe Enico inc., turned on the duty of good faith enshrined in Québec's Civil Code. But the decision is in line with two common-law rulings on the point: both the Federal Court of Appeal's decision in Canada v. Scheuer, released just weeks before Enico, and the British Columbia Supreme Court's 2014 judgment in Leroux v. Canada Revenue Agency affirmed that the CRA has a duty of care to taxpayers. believes there are "good reasons" why "all tax-related functions" should be in the ju- risdiction of one court. "To have the jurisdiction bifurcated isn't consistent with judicial economy and it creates temptations for forum-shopping," she says. "Despite the Federal Court of Ap- peal's best efforts, clarity is sometimes lack- ing in where relief should be sought, mean- ing prudent counsel may have to go to both courts, and that's not a good use of parties' resources either." The bugbear, apparently, can be found in the Federal Court hierarchy. "It's a very sensitive subject about which there has been a great deal of acrimony between the Tax Court and the Federal Court," former chief justice Rip says. "e Federal Court has forever been pushing the merger of the two courts." In 2012, Paul Crampton, who had re- cently been appointed Chief Justice of the Federal Court, publicly disavowed any plan to revive the merger proposal. He told media that his priority is "working co-oper- atively" with the Tax Court. But simultaneously, Crampton (who de- clined to speak with Lexpert) resisted the Canadian Bar Association's proposal that some 400 tax-related judicial reviews that his court hears each year be transferred to the Tax Court. He opined that judicial reviews were "different types of decisions" best handled by judges who did judicial re- views on a daily basis. "e Federal Court feels better qualified to do judicial reviews be- cause administrative law is part of their bread and but- ter," Robertson says. Rip counters that the TCC leans to recruiting judges who have good tax or litigation experience. "You wouldn't necessarily get that in the Federal Court where judges are back and forth dealing with different areas of the law," he says. Muted though the con- troversy might be by the twin realities of judicial dis- cretion and lawyers' reluctance to criticize courts in front of which they must advance their clients' interests, it's unlikely that it "It seems that every significant law firm in the country is setting up a tax litigation practice group. It's a big growth area because governments are in need of money and they're going after it more aggressively." GUY DU PONT > DAVIES WARD PHILLIPS & VINEBERG LLP

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