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T-1192-74
Chrysler Canada Ltd.-Chrysler Canada Ltée (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.—Toronto, April 25; Ottawa, April 28, 1977.
Practice Amendment of pleadings Application to amend statement of defence Plaintiff opposes one amend ment Federal Court Rule 419(1).
In an appeal by the plaintiff against income tax assessment, the defendant seeks leave to amend its statement of defence. One amendment is opposed by the plaintiff.
Held, the application is granted, except for the subparagraph opposed by the plaintiff. If the subparagraph were already contained in the statement of defence, ought the plaintiff succeed in a motion to strike it out? If not, there is no good reason for refusing to allow it. If the statement of defence already contained such a pleading, the plaintiff would be entitled to succeed in an application to strike it out under Rule 419(1)(a) as disclosing no reasonable defence; under 419(1)(b) as immaterial and under 419(1)(d) as tending to delay substan tially the fair trial of the action.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
M. A. Mogan for plaintiff.
C. T. A. MacNab for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Miller, Thomson, Sedgewick, Lewis & Healy, Toronto, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MAHONEY J.: By a statement of claim filed herein March 21, 1974, the plaintiff appeals against income tax assessments for its 1967 and 1968 taxation years. It raises a number of issues. The only one in contention in this application arises out of the sale, on March 1, 1967, of the plaintiff's parts division to Walker Metal Products Limited (hereafter called "Walker"), its wholly owned subsidiary, the setoff of substantial past and current losses in Walker's original business by
current profits from the parts business during 1967 and 1968 and the winding up of Walker effective December 31, 1968.
Examination for discovery was conducted, but not concluded, on behalf of the defendant, prior to filing the statement of defence on February 10, 1977. The defence is that the Walker transactions were a sham.
The defendant seeks, by this application, leave to amend the statement of defence in a number of particulars, some of which the plaintiff consents to and others, in the prayer for relief, which it does not oppose. The only amendment opposed is that which would add subparagraph 7(c.1).
7. With respect to paragraphs 6, 7, 10, 11, 12 and 13 generally, of the Statement of Claim, he states as follows:
(c.1) during the period from the end of 1966 to the middle of 1968, the Plaintiff temporarily halted the portion of its overall scheme of tax loss absorption that related to its Dealership Companies and which had been in effect from September 1, 1963, and it later resumed that portion of the said scheme on July 1, 1968, after the absorption of the Walker losses;
Paragraphs 6, 7, 10, 11, 12 and 13 of the state ment of claim contain nothing that would render proposed subparagraph 7(c.1) of the statement of defence obviously relevant or material. If it is relevant or material, it can only be so to the allegation of sham.
In the circumstances, it seems proper to approach this application on the following basis: if the subparagraph were already contained in the statement of defence, ought the plaintiff succeed in a motion to strike it out? If not, I see no good reason for refusing to allow it.
Rule 419. (1) The Court may at any stage of an action order any pleading or anything in any pleading to be struck out, with or without leave to amend, on the ground that
(a) it discloses no reasonable cause of action or defence, as the case may be,
(b) it is immaterial or redundant,
(c) it is scandalous, frivolous or vexatious,
(d) it may prejudice, embarrass or delay the fair trial of the action,
(e) it constitutes a departure from a previous pleading, or
(f) it is otherwise an abuse of the process of the Court,
and may order the action to be stayed or dismissed or judgment to be entered accordingly.
This is no occasion for yet another homily on the legality of a taxpayer arranging his affairs to avoid taxation and the illegality of his arranging them to evade it. However, I fail to see that the legality or illegality of one set of transactions, namely the portion of the plaintiff's "overall scheme of tax loss absorption" vis-à-vis its "Dealership Compa nies" can have any bearing at all on whether or not another set of transactions was a sham. On the other hand, if the amendment were allowed, the defendant would be entitled to an extensive exami nation for discovery on matters that, on the face of its own pleading, occurred both before the alleged sham was effected and after such of its results as are material in this action had been achieved.
In my view, if the statement of defence already contained such a pleading, the plaintiff would be entitled to succeed in an application to strike it out under Rule 419(1)(a) as disclosing no reasonable defence; under 419(1)(b) as immaterial and under 419(1)(d) as tending, at the very least, to delay substantially the fair trial of the action.
ORDER
The application is granted except as to subpara- graph 7(c.1). Costs shall be in the cause.
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