Removing the control of Canada by the BIS and other agents
Go to the URL below to see the lawsuit was filed on 2011-12-12
Thanks to DS Mahal for the tip on this!
COURT SEAL
Court File No.:T-2010-11
FEDERAL COURT BETWEEN
COMMITTEE FOR MONETARY AND ECONOMIC REFORM (“COMER”), WILLIAM KREHM, AND ANN EMMETT
Plaintiffs
- and -
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, THE MINISTER OF FINANCE,
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL REVENUE, THE BANK OF CANADA,
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
Defendants
STATEMENT OF CLAIM
(Pursuant to s.17 (1) and (5)(b) Federal Courts Act,and s.24(1) and 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982)
(Filed this 12th day of December, 2011)
TO THE DEFENDANT:
A LEGAL PROCEEDING HAS BEEN COMMENCED AGAINST YOU by theApplicant. The claim made against you is set out in the following pages.
IF YOU WISH TO DEFEND THIS PROCEEDING, you or a solicitor acting for you arerequired to prepare a statement of defence in Form 171B prescribed by the Federal Courts Rules, serve it on the applicant’s solicitor or, where the applicant does not have a solicitor, serve it on the applicant, and file it, with proof of service, at a local office of this Court,WITHIN 30 DAYS after this statement of claim is served on you, if you are served withinCanada.
Copies of the Federal Courts Rules, information concerning the local offices of the Court and other necessary information may be obtained on request to the Administrator of this Court at Ottawa (telephone 613-992-4238) or at any local office.
IF YOU FAIL TO DEFEND THIS PROCEEDING, judgment may be given against youin your absence and without further notice to you.
Date: December 12th, 2011
Issued by:
Address of local office:
Federal Court of Canada
180 Queen Street West, Suite 200
Toronto, Ontario M5V 3L6
TO:
Department of Justice Ontario Regional Office First Canadian Place The Exchange Tower 130 King Street West Suite 3400, Box 36 Toronto, Ontario M5X 1K6
CLAIM
1. The Plaintiffs claim:
(a) declarations that:
i) the Minister of Finance, and Government of Canada is required to
request, and that the Bank of Canada is statutorily required, whennecessary, to make interest-free loans, on the terms set out under s.18(i)and (j) of the Bank of Canada Act, RSC, 1985, c. B-2 (the “Act”)
for the purposes of “human capital” expenditures and/ormunicipal/provincial/federal “human capital” and/or infrastructureexpenditures;
ii) that the “Government of Canada”, the Minister of Finance, and Her
Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, with the Bank of Canada,
A/ have abdicated their statutory and constitutional duties with
respect to ss. 18(i) and (j) of the Bank of Canada Act which
subsections read:
18. The Bank may
…
(i) make loans or advances for periods not exceeding six months to the Government of Canada or the government of a province on taking security in readily marketable securities issued or guaranteed by Canada or any province;
(j) make loans to the Government of Canada or the government of any province, but such loans outstanding at any one time shall not, in the case of the Government of Canada, exceed one-third of the estimated revenue of the Government of Canada for its fiscal year, and shall not, in the case of a provincial government, exceed one-fourth of that government's estimated revenue for its fiscal year, and such loans shall be repaid before the end of the first quarter after the end of the fiscal year of the government that has contracted the loan;
B/ and further that the refusal to request and make (interest free) loans under s. 18(i) and (j) of the Bank of Canada Acthas resulted in negative and destructive impact on Canadians by the disintegration of Canada’s economy, its financialinstitutions, increase in public debt, decrease in socialservices, as well as a widening gap between rich and poorwith an continuing disappearance of the middle class;iii) that s. 18(m) of the Bank of Canada Act, and its administration andoperation, is unconstitutional and of no force and effect, inParliament and the government, including the Defendant Minister ofFinance, abdicating their duty to govern, and insofar, as monetary,currency and financial policies, per se, are concerned, and in turn asthey effect socio-economic governance, have abdicated theirconstitutional duty(ies)and handed them over to those international,private entities, whose interests, and directives, are placed above theinterests of Canadians, and the primacy of the Constitution ofCanada, not only with respect to its specific provisions, but also withrespect to the underlying constitutional imperatives, and whichprovision reads:(m) open accounts in a central bank in any other country or in the Bank for International Settlements, accept deposits from central banks in other countries, the Bank for International Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and any other official international financial organization, act as agent or mandatary, or depository or correspondent for any of those banks or organizations, and pay interest on any of those deposits;
iv) that the maintaining of minutes of meetings by the Governor of the Bank of Canada, with other central bank “governors” from other states and federation(s), as secret and not open to parliamentary and public view and scrutiny, constitutes:
A/ ultra vires action by the Governor of the Bank of Canada contrary tointer alia, s. 24 of the Act
B/ unconstitutional conduct by the Governor of the Bank of Canada;
A/ ultra vires action by the Governor of the Bank of Canada contrary tointer alia, s. 24 of the Act
B/ unconstitutional conduct by the Governor of the Bank of Canada;
v) that the Parliament of Canada, in:A/ allowing the Governor of the Bank of Canada to hold secret the nature and content of his meetings with other central bank(ers); and
B/ in not exercising the authority and duty contained in 18(i) and (j) of the Act; and
C/ enacting s. 18(m) of the Bank of Canada Act; has unconstitutionally abdicated its duty and function as mandated by ss. 91 (1a), (3), (14), (15), (16), (18), (19) and (20) of the Constitution Act, 1867, as well as s. 36 of theConstitution Act, 1982;vi) that the Minister of Finance is required to list expenditures(s) on “human capital”, including infrastructural capital expenditures relating to “human capital”, as an “asset” and not a “liability” with respect to budgetary accounting;vii) that the Minister of Finance is required to list, in his budgetaryaccounting, all revenues collected prior to the return of “tax credits” to individuals, and moreover, corporate taxpayers, with tax credits subtracted from the total revenue due, before subtracting total expenditures from total revenue, and arriving at either a budgetary “surplus” or “deficit” as required, inter alia, by s. 91(5) of the Constitution Act, 1867;
viii) that the defendants’ (officials) are wittingly and/or unwittingly, in varying degrees, knowledge, and intent, engaged in a conspiracy, along with the BIS, FSB, an IMF, to render impotent the Bank of Canada Act, as well as Canadian sovereignty over financial, monetary, and socio-economic policy, and in fact by-pass the sovereign rule of Canada, through its Parliament, by means of banking and financial systems, which conspiracy and elements of suchtortious conduct are set out, in inter alia, Hunt v. CareyCanada Inc. [1990] 2 S.C.R. 959 namely:A/ that the Defendants’ (officials), including and together with the BIS, engage(d) in an agreement for the use of lawful and unlawful means, and conduct, the predominant purpose of which is to cause injury to the Plaintiffs, and all otherCanadians;
B/ that the Defendants’ (officials), including and together with the BIS, engage(d), in an agreement, to use unlawful means and conduct, whose predominant purpose and conduct directed at the Plaintiffs, and all other Canadians, is to cause injury to the Plaintiffs and all other Canadians, or the Defendants’ officials should know, in the circumstances, that injury to the Plaintiffs, and all other Canadians, is likely to,and does result;ix) that the privative clause in s. 30.1 of the Bank of Canada Act,A/ does not apply to the seeking of “judicial review”, by way ofaction or otherwise, of declaratory relief with respect to any statutory or constitutional ultra vires action and/or section of theAct, by way of declaratory relief, or any other prerogative remedy, available to hear and determine the statutory and/or constitutional limits or actions under the Act, in accordance with, inter alia, in Supreme Court of Canada’s pronouncement in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick [2008] 1 SCR 190, nor does it apply to seeking damages for ultra vires or unconstitutional damages:andB/ if s.30.1 of the Bank of Canada Act is interpreted to soapply as a privative clause, then it is unconstitutional and of no force and effect for breaching the Plaintiffs’ constitutional right to judicial review, as well as breaching the underlying constitutional imperatives of Rule of Law, Constitutionalism, and Federalism;
(b) damages in the amount of:
i) $10, 000.00 per plaintiff; and
ii) should the within action be certified as a class action proceeding,
i) $10, 000.00 per plaintiff; and
ii) should the within action be certified as a class action proceeding,
$1.00 (one dollar) for every Canadian citizen/resident, to be calculated based on the last population figure published in the last census, in accordance with s. 91(5) of the Constitution Act, 1867;
which damages are on account of:
iii) the constitutional breaches pleaded in the statement of claim herein; and
iv) the conspiracy pleaded in the statement of claim herein;
(c) such further declaratory and/or consequential injunctive and/or prerogative order and/or relief as counsel may advise and this Honourable Court grant;
(d) costs of this action and such further or other relief this Court deems just.
THE PARTIES
2. (a) the Plaintiff, Committee for Monetary and Economic Reform (hereinafter
“COMER”) historically to date is an international economic “think-tank”, based in Toronto, and was established in 1970, dedicating itself to the monetary and economic reform policies of Canada and conducts research, analysis, and publication(s) on these issues. For the past 23 years it has published a monthly publication entitled COMER with articles and analysis from various authors including some of its own committee members. Its committee members have consisted of economists, academics, and published authors expert in their respective fields;
(b) the Plaintiff, William Krehm, is and has been a member of COMER, since its inception, and has devoted much of his life to the study, research, analysis and writing on economic, monetary, and social reform, and is a published author on economic and monetary reform, included various articles, papers, as well as books as recent as 2010;
(c) the Plaintiff, Ann Emmett, is a member of COMER, and has devoted much of her life to the study, research, analysis and writing on economic, monetary, and social reform, and is a published author on economic and monetary reform, included various articles, and papers, as recent as 2010;
(d) the Defendant, Her Majesty the Queen, is statutorily and constitutionally liable for the acts and omissions of her officials pursuant to s. 17 of the Federal Courts Act as well as s. 24(1) and 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982;
(e) the Defendant, the Minister of Finance, is statutorily and ultimately, with the consent of Governor-in-Council, responsible for overseeing both the Bank of Canada, as well as the Governor of the Bank of Canada, pursuant s.14 of theBank of Canada Act, and the Minister of Finance is also, constitutionally, responsible for setting out the budgetary process, and expenditures for each session of Parliament, upon the appropriation request, through the taxing power, of Her Majesty the Queen, as set out in Her Parliamentary throne speech delivered by the Governor General for that purpose;
(f) the Defendant, the Minister of National Revenue, is statutorily responsible for administering the Income Tax Act, and other Federal taxing statutes related to the collection of revenue through, inter alia, the taxing power, under s. 91(3) of the Constitution Act, 1867;
(g) the Defendant, the Attorney General of Canada, is, constitutionally, the Chief Legal Officer, responsible for and defending the integrity of all legislation, aswell as responding to declaratory relief with respect to legislation, including with respect to its constitutionality and required to be named as a Defendant in any action for declaratory relief.
THE FACTS
3. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that The Bank of Canada was established as
Canada’s central bank, in 1934, and nationalized in 1938,with the intended purpose of:
(a) Asserting domestic and public control of monetary and economic control and
public policy pursuant to its constitutional sources of jurisdiction contained
in s. 91 and 91 A of the Constitution Act, 1867, namely:
(i) 1A. The Public Debt and Property;
public policy pursuant to its constitutional sources of jurisdiction contained
in s. 91 and 91 A of the Constitution Act, 1867, namely:
(i) 1A. The Public Debt and Property;
… (ii) 3. The raising of Money by any Mode or System of Taxation; (iii) 4. The borrowing of Money on the Public Credit;
… (iv) 14. Currency and Coinage;
… (v) 16. Savings Banks;
… (vi) 18. Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes; (vii) 19.Interest; (viii) 20. Legal Tender. and as set out in s. 18 of the Act and its predecessor provisions;
(b) to be a vehicle to provide the Federal and Provincial governments interest-free loans for physical infrastructure as well as “human capital” expenditures(education, health, other social services); and
(c) maintain sovereign control over credit and currency with the aim to promotethe economic interests of Canada in all its aspects.
4. The preamble to the Bank of Canada Act, upon its enactment in 1934, as a private
corporation, and as re-enacted as a Crown corporation in 1938, read as follows:
WHEREAS it is desirable to establish a central bank in Canada to regulatecredit and currency in the best interests of the economic life of the nation, tocontrol and protect the external value of the national monetary unit and tomitigate by its influence fluctuations in the general level of production, trade,prices and employment, so far as may be possible within the scope of monetary action, and generally to promote the economic and financial welfare of the Dominion: Therefore, His Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:
5. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the current Bank of Canada Act, continues
to reflect a public statutory duty and responsibility, as borne out by the preamble to
the Act, which reads:
WHEREAS it is desirable to establish a central bank in Canada to regulate credit and currency in the best interests of the economic life of the nation, to control and protect the external value of the national monetary unit and to mitigate by its influence fluctuations in the general level of production, trade, prices and employment, so far as may be possible within the scope of monetary action, and generally to promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada
6. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Bank of Canada is the only “public” central bank created by statute, and accountable to the legislative and executive branches, to be found in any of the G-8 nations. All other central banks are “private” banks and are not directly created nor governed by legislation nor directly accountable nor reportable to the legislative or executive branches of the governments in the nations in which they operate.
7. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that Policies such as interest rates, and other policies set by the Bank of Canada are set in consultation, and at times, but mostly at the direction of the “Financial Stability Board” (“FSB”), established after the 2009 “G-20” London Summit in April, 2009. The FSB is a successor of the “Financial Stability Forum” (“FSF”). The current FSB, like its predecessor, is an international body of central bankers that monitors and makes recommendations about the global
financial system. The Board includes all major G-20 major economies, FSF members, and the European Commission. The FSB is based in Basel, Switzerland.
8. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the current FSB, like its predecessor FSF,continues to serve the same function. It consists of the major national financialauthorities such as Finance Ministers, central bankers, and international financialbodies.
9. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the FSF was and is managed by a small secretariat, which secretariat was housed at the “Bank of International Settlements”(“BIS”) in Basel, Switzerland. It was established by the Hague Agreements, in 1930,prior to the creation of the Bank of Canada.
10. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the BIS is a so-called inter-governmentalorganization of central banks which purports to execute financial co-operation and purports to serve as a “bank for central banks”. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the BIS in fact formulates policies and dictates to central banks, including the Bank of Canada.
12. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that Canada, through its Bank of Canada, became a member of an expanded BIS in 1974. The Plaintiffs further state, and the fact is, that between 1934 to 1974 the Bank of Canada, and Canada, was completely independent, from international private interests, with respect to its statutory duties under the Bank of Canada Act, as well as its monetary and financial policies reflected in the preamble to the Act, and as it flowed through to its economic and social policies. The Plaintiffs further state, and fact is, that since 1974, there has been a gradual, but sure, slide into the reality that the Bank of Canada and Canada’s monetary and financial policy are in fact, by and large, dictated by private foreign bank and financial interests, contrary to the Act.
13. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the BIS is not accountable to anygovernment. It holds annual meetings, which are secret, and provides bankingservices to central banks, including the Bank of Canada.
14. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the BIS is effectively in control of the FSB when it comes to credit, currency, monetary and financial policies for G-20 countries, including Canada, with far-reaching economic and social impact not in the interests of either the Bank, government, nor people of Canada.
15. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the meetings of the BIS and FSB, their minutes, their discussions, and deliberations are secret and not available to Parliament, the executive, nor the Canadian public, notwithstanding that the Bank of Canada policies directly emanate, and are directed by these meetings.
16. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that in its early and middle existence the Bank ofCanada issued (interest-free) loans, pursuant to s. 18 (i) and (j) of the Act, and predecessor statutes, not only to the federal and provincial governments , but alsodirectly to municipal councils. (It also printed money and bought government debt infinancing the war efforts in World War II). It stopped doing so in the early 1974 infavour of loans from foreign private banks with interest, with the resulting anddetrimental negative effects:
(a) loss of the control of domestic monetary policy, including interest ratepolicy;
(b) loss of control of domestic economic policy insofar as bond raters, from foreign private banks lending to Canada, would insist on the direction of Canada’s domestic economic policy under threat of downgrading Canada’sborrowing/lending worthiness;
(c) loss of control over social policies, from foreign private banks lending toCanada would insist on the direction of Canada’s domestic social policies,under threat of downgrading Canada’s borrowing/lending worthiness;
(d) loss of investment in human capital and infrastructure expenditures, from foreign private banks lending to Canada who would insist on direction ofCanada’s domestic human capital and infrastructure expenditures under threat of downgrading Canada’s borrowing/lending worthiness;
(e) a corresponding loss of sovereignty over decision related to banking,monetary policy, economic policy, as well as social policy;
(f) as a result, spiralling schism between the rich and the poor in Canada with acontinuing removal of the middle class and a corresponding rise in socio-economic crime related to poverty;
(g) the bizarre, and absurd result that, while private banks can borrow money from the Bank of Canada, currently, next-to-zero interest (0.25%), Canadian citizens, through the government’s debt to private banks, and foreign privatebanks holding Canadian bonds and currency, relend at a higher interest ratethan they borrow.
18. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that this loss of control coincides with the Bank of Canada being a member of the BIS, FSF and FSB, without public scrutiny noraccountability with respect to the actions of the Bank of Canada, at the direction anddecisions of foreign, private bodies and interests.
19. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that in or about 1974, after Canada’s entry into the expanded BIS, an agreement or directive was reached, at which BIS , where Canada’s (central) Bank of Canada was the only publicly-created and accountable to its Parliament or Legislative body, that the central banks would not be used to create or lend-interest free money, contrary to ss. 18(i) and (j) of the Act, and its original purpose for its creation, but that governments obtain borrowed money from and through the BIS (FSF, FSB, and International Monetary Fund (“IMF”)).
20. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that no sovereign government such as Canada,under any circumstances, should borrow money from commercial banks, at interest,when it can, instead, borrow from its own central bank interest-free, particularly when that central bank, unlike any other G-8 nation, is publicly established, mandated, owned, and accountable to Parliament, and the Minister of Finance, and was created with that purpose as one of its main functions.
21. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that over the years, Ministers of Finance have hadrequests to have the Minister make interest free loan requests from the Bank ofCanada, which have been refused, examples of which are:
(a) on June 11th, 2004 the Town of Lakeshore, Ontario wrote the Minister ofFinance, the Right Honourable Ralph Goodale, on Municipal CouncilResolution, requesting such loans be made, which request is a documentreferred to in the pleadings herein;
(b) the Minister of Finance on August 18th, 2004 refused the request and indoing so did not have regard to either the nature of the request, nor thepertinent provisions of the Bank of Canada Act, which response is adocument referred to in the pleadings herein.
20. In his response, the Minister of Finance gave the following reasons for refusing to
do so:
do so:
(a) that “…relying on the printing press to finance government expenditures results in inflation…”;
(b) “….If the Bank had to borrow the funds that it loaned to the government itwould have to pay whatever interest rate prevailed in the market…”
(c) “Other nations that have relied extensively on, low-interest credit extended by central banks….have experienced very high inflation…”
(d) “It is also inadvisable for the Bank of Canada to issue low-interest loans toprovincial or municipal governments. To understand why, let us consider thetwo approaches that the Bank of Canada could follow if it chose to issue such loans. Suppose that the Bank of Canada did not want to change the total
amount of loans it had outstanding. In this case, the Bank of Canada could rearrange its portfolio of assets to provide some loans to provinces at relatively low interest rates. However, this would reduce the Bank of Canada's profits. Since the Bank is owned by the Government of Canada, this policy would result in federal taxpayers subsidizing provincial governments.” This has been a consistent response from the government of Canada.
21. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister’s reasons for refusing what was requested from the Town of Lakeshore’s Council, is both financially and economically fallacious and not in accordance with his statutory duties under the Bank of Canada Act, nor his constitutional duties as Finance Minister. For example:
(a) any (interest-free) loans granted under s. 18 (i) and (j) would have to be repaid within a very short period and therefore would not be “inflationary”;
(b) the Bank of Canada does not have to acquire its money from commercial banks to pay back any (interest-free) loans under s. 18 (i) and (j) in that its isstatutorily mandated to do so, has done so in that past, and in fact lends money to the commercial banks currently, at almost zero percent (0.25%);
(c) that inflation would ensue is simply negated by the fact that currently, the U.S. Federal Reserve has a 0% interest rate while the Bank of Canada has a 0.25% rate with no inflating consequences, above and beyond the fact that,historically, such short-term (interest-free loans) have not, in and by themselves, caused inflation because they have to be repaid the next fiscal year; and
(d) on the fact the some Provinces may get more (interest-free) loans than others, this is neither contrary to the underlying constitutional principle of Federalism, nor the explicit terms of s. 36 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
22. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister’s response is financially and economically fallacious, as witnessed by the current state of affairs, such as the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank (a private central bank) printing currency and “lending” it, to the commercial banks at 0% (interest-free), while the Bank of Canada’s current lending rate is 0.25% (one quarter of one percent), above and beyond the “giving” or “bail-out” of hundreds of billions of dollars by the US and Canadian governments, as well as by the Bank of Canada, to purportedly avert a collapse of the international banking and financial systems.
23. The Plaintiffs further state, and the fact is, that this leads to the absurd and ultra viresresult that while commercial banks obtain their money, from the Bank of Canada, atthe Bank of Canada’s prime leading rate, today at 0.25%, the citizens of Canada, through the government of Canada, pay back the commercial banks, commercial lending rates which are higher than the Bank of Canada’s prime rate, on the “national debt” owed to private commercial banks, accumulated on the annual “deficit” as calculated and set down by the Minister of Finance in the annual budget, and budgetary process.
24. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister of Finance’s refusal ispurportedly based on the reasoning that such loans would increase the annualdeficits and public “debt”.
25. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister’s calculation of the public deficit and debt, as calculated and not amortised, is based on fallacious accounting methods, namely with respect to how expenditures directly relating to “human capital” are set out and amortised as “liabilities” as opposed to “assets”. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that expenditures and the capital obtained through those expenditures and the capital obtained through those expenditures with respect to human capital are “assets” and not “liabilities”. The Plaintiffs further state that the Minister of Finance’s budgetary accounting is also misleading and fallacious in the calculation of “revenues” as excluding tax credits given back on collected/collectable taxes.
26. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that it has been long recognized that investment and expenditure in human capital is the most productive investment and expenditure a government can make. This was amplified and borne out by the phenomenal success and results of the reconstruction of Germany and Japan following World War II, which was realized by a subsequent study by Theodore Shultz, a Nobel Prize Winner, from the University of Chicago, and other noted economists.
27. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the notion and reality of “human capital” with its origins going back to Adam Smith, boil down to:
(a) acquired competency and knowledge of individuals, through education andexperience, which in turn leads to the ability to perform labour producingeconomic output;
(b) along with this “human capital” attributable to individuals are the capitalexpenditures to make it possible such as schools, universities, and hospitals, etc;
(c) human capital it tied to the qualitative and quantitative progress of anynation;
(d) human capital is developed through health, education, and quality of standard of living which in turn translates to government expenditures and investments in schools, universities, hospitals, and other public infrastructures;
(e) human capital is always central to any analysis about the welfare, education,healthcare, and retirement of individuals, which in turn is central to a person’s life, liberty, security of the person, as well as their equality within the Canadian state.
28. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that while “human capital” expenditure, on human beings, and human capital expenditures (such as schools, universities, hospitals), while, in Canada, may not have a “marketable” or “sellable” value on the “free”, “private” market, this does not mean, as interpreted and calculated by the Defendant Minister of Finance, that it has zero value when calculating assets and liabilities for deficit/debt purposes, nor in the manner in which these capital human expenditures assets areamortised for accounting purposes in that budgetary process.
29. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that human capital has been viewed as a means ofproduction through which additional investment yields additional output to the economy of any nation. This investment applies both to government and the privatesector investments and expenditures.
30. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that so long as the notion of expenditures on human capital are discarded, a critical intent and purpose of the Bank of Canada Act is rendered impotent, and equally discarded, with the results of statutory andconstitutional breach(es) by the Minister of Finance and the Bank of Canada.
31. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that BIS, FSF, FSB, and IMF were all created with the cognizant intent of keeping poorer nations “in their place”, which has nowexpanded to all nations in that, these financial institutions attempt, and largely succeed, to over-ride governments and constitutional orders in countries, such as Canada, over which they exert financial control.
32. The Plaintiffs further state, and fact is, that, so long as human capital expenditures are treated strictly as “liability” and “debt”, with no corresponding asset value, the government will not be investing in human capital infrastructure, or its owninfrastructure for that matter, which is manifested for example, in government paying exorbitant rents on space for such things as Ministerial Departments, such as the Justice Department, as well as the Court themselves, where building or purchasing such assets would, in the long run, reduce those costs to a negligible fraction of the actual rental expenditures which increases the “deficit” and “debt” as (mis)calculated by the current budgetary process. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that such is the case with all sales, rentals, or disposition (“privatization”) of human capital infrastructure, including government infrastructure serving Canadians.
33. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that with respect to the private corporate context, a company’s value is routinely calculated as an aggregate of its capital assets and its“goodwill” for accounting, valuation, and income tax purposes. The “goodwill” of the company essentially boils down its “human capital”.
34. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister of Finance’s calculation ofrevenue, expenditures, and surplus/deficit, on an annual basis, is also fallacious andinaccurate by the statutory slight of hand and ultra vires accounting which is effected by means of the Income Tax Act, through “tax credits”. Thus, the annual budget is presented, in simple terms, as follows:
(a) total revenue collected (without setting out total tax credits given back totaxpayers before final payable tax is calculated);
(b) minus government expenditures (which includes misamortization of humancapital expenditures);
(c) equals total surplus/deficit.
35. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that on the Minister’s presentation of a budget,
the calculation is, for example, set out as follows:
the calculation is, for example, set out as follows:
(a) total revenue equals $240 billion;
(b) minus total expenditure of $280 billion;
(c) equals a $40 billion deficit.
When in fact, the real calculation and accounting should read, for example asfollows:
(a) total revenue collected/collectable:
(i) $340 billion,
(ii) minus $100 billion returned to taxpayers by way of tax credits,
(i) $340 billion,
(ii) minus $100 billion returned to taxpayers by way of tax credits,
for a total of $240 billion in revenues;
(b) minus total expenditures of:
(i) $280 billion,
(ii) while not counting nor properly amortizing human capital
(i) $280 billion,
(ii) while not counting nor properly amortizing human capital
expenditures and assets;
(c) equals a deficit of $40 billion.
36. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the “deficit” amount of $40 billion, which isadded to the annual debt every year, more often than not equals or constitutes the bulk of the “carrying charges” (interest/paid on the debt, to commercial banks, at market rate interest rates), while the Bank of Canada gives that money to commercial banks at the Bank of Canada’s lower lending rate, an amount depravingly lower than what the government pays them back on its annual “debt”.
37. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that tax credits do not show up as government revenue, on the one hand, but are simply off-set against tax revenue and then a netfigure reported as tax revenue, as out in paragraphs 34 and 35 above.
38. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that on the other hand “refundable” tax credits, which are credits whereby monies are remitted to the taxpayer, as opposed to non-refundable tax credits which simply reduce the amount of a taxpayers’ taxableincome, on the other hand, show up as “expenditures” or government spending in the budgetary process.
39. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the above “accounting method” used in the budgetary process are not in accordance with accepted accounting practices, areconceptually and logically wrong, and have the effect of perpetually making the realand actual picture of what total “revenues”, “total expenditures”, and what the annual deficits/surplus” actually is, what the annual “deficit/surplus” actually is, in any given year, and what, as a result the standing national “debt” actually is. Moreover, and more importantly, the Plaintiffs state, and fact is, that such “accounting” methods foreclose any actual or real debate, or consideration, by elected MPs, in Parliament, as the actual financial picture is not available nor disclosed to either Parliamentarians nor the Canadian public. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that such accounting method breaches s. 91(5) of the Constitution Act,1867 and the duty of the Defendant(s) to maintain accurate “statistics”.
40. The Plaintiffs further state, and the fact is, that this “accounting” has, in the past, been heavily criticized by the Auditor General.
41. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the defendants’ (officials) are wittingly and/or unwittingly, in varying degrees, knowledge, and intent, engaged in a conspiracy, along with the BIS, FSB, an IMF, to render impotent the Bank of Canada Act, as well as Canadian sovereignty over financial, monetary, and socio-economic policy, and in fact by-pass the sovereign rule of Canada, through its Parliament, by means of banking and financial systems, which conspiracy and elements of such tortious conduct are set out,inter alia, Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc. [1990] 2 S.C.R. 959 namely:
A/ that the Defendants’ (officials), including and together with the BIS, engage(d) in an agreement for the use of lawful andunlawful means, and conduct, the predominant purpose of which is to cause injury to the Plaintiffs, and all otherCanadians;
B/ that the Defendants’ (officials), including and together with the BIS, engage(d), in an agreement, to use unlawful means and conduct, whose predominant purpose and conduct directed at the Plaintiffs, and all other Canadians, is to cause injury to the Plaintiffs and all other Canadians, or the Defendants’ officials should know, in the circumstances, that injury to the Plaintiffs, and all other Canadians, is likely to, and does result;
42. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the proper accounting and setting out of thebudgetary process, including the aggregate amount of taxes collected/collectable which is “given back” to taxpayers, and notably corporate tax payers, through tax credits, would result in the proper accountability and consequential political debate, through the elected MPs in Parliament, on the actual state of Revenues, Expenditures, Surplus/Deficit account, announced, and tabled in Parliament by the Minister of Finance, in his constitutional duty over the budgetary process.
43. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the “accounting” employed in the budgetary process, and an inaccurate and unavailable “statistic” of the aggregate of tax creditstransferred back before calculations of net revenue, as well as the absence of the“asset” value of human capital and expenditures and infrastructure, violates s.91(5) of the Constitution Act, 1867.
44. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the Minister’s statutory and Parliamentary duty over the budgetary process, goes hand in hand with his statutory duty as ultimate authority, with the consent of Governor-in-Council, over the Bank Canada, under s.14 of the Bank of Canada Act, and the authority and duty imposed by s. 18 (i) and (j) , and other duties, which includes the exercise of the statutory duty to ensure interest-free loans to the government of Canada and the Provinces to execute and implement human capital expenditures which expenditures ought to be properly amortized and accounted, along with the proper accounting of tax credits, in the budgetary process, which process is constitutionally mandated, going back to the Magna Carta in the constitutional guarantee that the Crown can only imposes taxes, for the declared proposed expenditures, as set out in the throne speech, upon the consent (over the taxing power) of the House of Commons.
45. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that s. 18(m) of the Bank of Canada Act, and itsadministration and operation, is unconstitutional and of no force and effect, in Parliament and the government, including the Defendant Minister of Finance, abdicating their duty to govern, and insofar, as monetary, currency and financial policies, per se, are concerned, and in turn as they affect socio-economic governance, have abdicated their constitutional duty(ies)and handed them over to those international, private entities, whose interests, and directives, are placed above the interests of Canadians, and the primacy of the Constitution of Canada, not only with respect to its specific provisions, but also with respect to the underlying constitutional imperatives.
46. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that ultimate control and decision(s) under theBank of Canada Act, are made by the Minister of Finance, with the approval of theGovernor in Council, by “government directive” under s. 14 of the Act.
47. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is, that the ultra vires (in)actions of both the Minister of Finance, and the Bank of Canada, as set out in the within statement ofclaim, have the result of breaching the rights of the Plaintiffs and all other Canadians, not only statutorily, but also their constitutional rights as follows:
(a) their right to life, liberty, and security of the person under s. 7 of the Charter by a reduction, elimination, and/or fatal delay of health care services, education and other human capital expenditures and services;
(b) their right to equality both under ss. 7 and 15 of the Charter, but also the underlying constitutional right to equality, as identified in, inter alia, the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern) Ltd.,[1951] S.C.R. 887;
(c) the underlying constitutional principle of Federalism;
(d) the expressed provision(s) giving effect to the underlying principles ofFederalism, contained in s. 36 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
(e) the constitutional right that statutes do not be rendered impotent inParliament de facto abdicating its duty to govern.
48. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is that as a result of the Defendants (’) officialstortious, ultra vires, and unconstitutional conduct, they have suffered damages as set out above, and in reduced services in human capital expenditures and infrastructure, as has every other Canadian citizen/resident.
49. The Plaintiffs state, and the fact is that as a result of the Defendants (’) officialstortious, ultra vires, and unconstitutional conduct they have also suffered damage totheir normative constitutional order by irreparable harm to the constitutional supremacy required and dictated not only by s.52 Constitution Act, 1982, but also by the supremacy required and dictated by its underlying principles.
50. The Plaintiffs propose that this action be tried at Toronto.
Dated at Toronto this 12th day of December, 2011.
_signed_______________________________
ROCCO GALATI LAW FIRM
PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION
Rocco Galati, B.A., LL.B., LL.M.
637 College Street, Suite 203
Toronto, Ontario
M6G 1B5
TEL: (416) 536-7811
FAX: (416) 536-6801
Solicitor for the PlaintiffsCourt File No.:T-2010-11
“Proposed Class Action Proceeding”
FEDERAL COURT
B E T W E E N:
COMMITTEE FOR MONETARY
AND ECONOMIC REFORM
(“COMER”), WILLIAM KREHM,
AND ANN EMMETT
Plaintiffs
- and -
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
THE MINISTER OF FINANCE,
THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL
REVENUE, THE BANK OF CANADA,
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
CANADA
Defendants__________________________________STATEMENT OF CLAIM
(Pursuant to s.17(1) and (5) (b)Federal
Courts Act, and s.24(1) of the Charter)
(Filed this ___day of December, 2011)
____________________________________
ROCCO GALATI LAW FIRM
PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION
Rocco Galati, B.A., LL.B., LL.M.
637 College Street
Suite 203
Toronto, Ontario
M6G 1B5
TEL: (416) 536-7811
FAX: (416) 536-6801
Solicitor for the Plaintiffs
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