So in part we established the issue that this special charge is levied. There are very specific deadlines as to when that is due, but there are penalties that can be applied to that special charge.
I'd like to go to clause 39, because there it mentions:
Except as specifically provided under this Act or the Financial Administration Act, no person has a right to recover any money paid to Her Majesty in right of Canada as or on account of, or that has been taken into account by Her Majesty in right of Canada as, an amount payable under this Act.
Under the Financial Administration Act there is no provision for these kinds of special charges. But in the provisions provided for under this particular act in subclause 89(1)--this is one of the very many punitive clauses that are there, including imprisonment of up to 18 months for folks who violate this act--it says:
If the Minister has knowledge or suspects that a person is, or will be within one year, liable to make a payment to another person who is liable to pay an amount under this Act (in this section referred to as a “debtor”), the Minister may, by notice in writing, require the person to pay without delay, if the money is immediately payable, and in any other case, as and when the money becomes payable, the money otherwise payable to the debtor in whole or in part to the Receiver General on account of the debtor’s liability under this Act.
I am working my way through this. I'll be asking you a question on all of this argument in a moment.
In other words, we basically have the special charge levy. We have no provision for any refunds under this, except as specifically referred to under the act. Under the act the minister has unlimited ability, even if the minister just suspects that a company is liable for moneys that should be paid to a company that owes money under this act--which means the customers. So we have the issue that the minister could very well follow up on customers and demand money that the companies may owe under this act.
Then under subclause 95(1) we have directors' liability:
If a corporation fails to pay any amount as and when required under this Act, the directors of the corporation at the time it was required to pay the amount are jointly and severally or solidarily liable, together with the corporation, to pay it and any interest that is payable on it under this Act.
Then we go to subclause 96(1), where it says:
Where at any time a person has transferred property, either directly or indirectly, by means of a trust or by any other means
That would mean that in the case of a director of a small company in British Columbia who transferred trust money for an education fund for his or her children, we have given power to the minister to establish the amount to basically, except by provision of this act, not provide any recovery moneys that might be paid, even if the charge were miscalculated. Then the directors would become personally liable and any moneys that were transferred out in trust could be subject to punitive action by the minister. These are all very punitive measures.
So I want you respond as to what actually protects the individual. We've talked about the period through the tax court, but that's many months away, if not more than a year away. With all these punitive clauses--I could go into many more of them but I don't want to take all my time--what protects the companies from the punitive charges established in this legislation that are payable even before any refunds come back? What protects the small companies from the kind of minister fiat in this regard? What are the protective clauses?