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This Act is current to September 17, 2024
See the Tables of Legislative Changes for this Act’s legislative history, including any changes not in force.

Taxation (Rural Area) Act

[RSBC 1996] CHAPTER 448

Contents
1Definitions
Part 1 — General Taxation Provisions
2Taxation and appeals
2.1Repealed
3Information sharing
3.1Information-sharing agreements
3.2Offences — confidential information
4Duty of taxpayer to keep records
5Offences — failure to provide access or be examined
6Repealed
7Defacing posted advertisement
8Fines
9Liability of officers of corporations
10Consent to prosecution: limitation
11Date for payment of taxes
12Due date for taxes levied in supplementary taxation notices
13Prepayment of taxes
14Place and mode of payment
Part 2 — Taxation of Land and Improvements
15Exemption from taxation
16Levy if land in more than one district
17Year in which exemption change takes effect
18Assessment in name of owner or occupier
19Assessed value
20Variable tax rate system
Part 3 — Taxation Rolls
21Taxation roll and notices
21.1Property tax collection fee
22Taxation roll open to public
23Taxation roll property of government
24Refund of taxes
24.1Collection not affected by appeal
Part 4
25-28Repealed
Part 5 — Recovery of Taxes
29Recovery: personal liability
30Lien for taxes
30.1Lien for taxes respecting Crown land
31Effect of sale of real or personal property subject to lien
32Unpaid taxes constitute first charge
33Notice before taking proceedings
34Recovery of taxes by action in court
35Attachment
36Recovery of taxes by distress
37Certificate may be filed in court
38Right of tenant to deduct taxes from rent
39Forfeiture for unpaid taxes
40Vesting of property in former owner
41Registrar of land title office
42Procedure if fee simple is in the government
43Repealed
44Power to cancel official survey of forfeited property
45Recovery of taxes on municipal land
46Powers for recovery of taxes
47Apportionment of taxes
48Statement of taxes paid or in arrears
49Power to prohibit timber cutting on tax delinquent land
Part 6 — Administration of Act
50Creation of collection districts
51Staff appointments
52Duty of Surveyor of Taxes
53Ministry rules and regulations
54Repealed
55Neglect of duties by collector
56Offence
57Power to make regulations
58Extension of time to comply with Act

Definitions

1   In this Act:

"assessment roll" has the same meaning as in the Assessment Act;

"assessor" means an assessor appointed under the Assessment Authority Act;

"collector" includes a deputy collector;

"copy taxation notice" means a copy of the taxation notice referred to in section 21 (2);

"farm land" means a farm as defined in the Assessment Act;

"improvements" means improvements as defined in the Assessment Act;

"land" means land as defined in the Assessment Act;

"legal description" means a description sufficient to describe a property for the purpose of its registration in a land title office;

"ministry" means the ministry of the minister responsible for the administration of this Act;

"occupier" means an occupier as defined in the Assessment Act;

"owner" means an owner as defined in the Assessment Act;

"parcel" means a parcel as defined in the Assessment Act;

"person" means a person as defined in the Assessment Act;

"property" includes land and improvements;

"registered" and "registration", in relation to property, means registration in the records of the land title office of the land title district in which the property is located;

"review panel" means a review panel as defined in the Assessment Act;

"rural land" means land outside a municipality other than farm, forest, timber, tree farm and wild land;

"Surveyor of Taxes" means the Surveyor of Taxes appointed under this Act;

"taxes" includes all taxes on property or other basis of assessment imposed, levied, assessed or assessable under this Act, and all percentage additions, penalties and interest added to taxes under this Act;

"trustee" means a trustee as defined in the Assessment Act.

Part 1 — General Taxation Provisions

Taxation and appeals

2   (1) As provided in this Act, and for raising a revenue for Provincial purposes,

(a) property in British Columbia is subject to taxation,

(b) every owner must be assessed and taxed on the owner's property, and

(c) every occupier of Crown land must be assessed and taxed on the land and improvements on it held by the occupier as an occupier.

(2) A person assessed and taxed may appeal as provided in the Assessment Act.

(3) Taxes levied under this Act relate to the calendar year in which the levy is first made and are based on the assessed values of land and improvements as confirmed by a review panel.

Repealed

2.1   [Repealed 2024-13-249.]

Information sharing

3   (1) In this section:

"authorized person" means,

(a) in subsection (5) (l), an authorized person as defined in section 13.1 of the Assessment Act,

(b) in subsection (5) (m), a person who is engaged or employed, or was formerly engaged or employed, by or on behalf of the Land Title and Survey Authority of British Columbia, to assist in carrying out the provisions of the Land Title and Survey Authority Act, and

(c) in any other case, a person who is engaged or employed, or was formerly engaged or employed, by or on behalf of the government, to assist in carrying out the provisions of this Act;

"confidential information" means information of any kind and in any form, other than information set out in a taxation roll, relating to one or more persons,

(a) that is obtained for the purposes of this Act by or on behalf of the minister, or

(b) that is prepared from information referred to in paragraph (a),

but does not include information that does not directly or indirectly reveal the identity of the person to whom the information relates;

"designated person" has the same meaning as in section 241 (10) of the Income Tax Act (Canada);

"official" means any person

(a) who is employed in the service of, is engaged by or on behalf of, or occupies a position of responsibility in the service of the government of British Columbia, another province or Canada, or

(b) who was formerly so employed or engaged or formerly occupied such a position,

and, for the purposes of subsections (2) and (3), "official" includes a designated person;

"police officer" means a police officer as defined in section 462.48 (17) of the Criminal Code.

(2) Despite any other enactment or law, except as authorized by this section, an official must not

(a) knowingly provide, or knowingly allow to be provided, any confidential information to any person,

(b) knowingly allow any person to have access to any confidential information, or

(c) knowingly use any confidential information otherwise than in the course of the administration and enforcement of this Act or for a purpose for which it was provided under this section.

(3) Despite any other enactment or law, an official must not be required, in connection with any legal proceedings, to give or produce evidence relating to any confidential information.

(4) Subsections (2) and (3) do not apply in relation to the following:

(a) criminal proceedings that have been commenced by the laying of an information or the preferring of an indictment under an Act of the Parliament of Canada;

(b) any legal proceedings relating to the administration or enforcement of

(i) any enactment of British Columbia, another province or Canada that provides for the imposition or collection of a tax or duty,

(ii) the Home Owner Grant Act, or

(iii) the Land Tax Deferment Act.

(5) Subject to subsection (6), an official may do one or more of the following:

(a) provide to any person confidential information that can reasonably be considered necessary for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of this Act, solely for those purposes;

(b) provide to any person confidential information that can reasonably be considered necessary for the purposes of determining

(i) any taxes or other amounts that are or may become payable by the person under this Act,

(ii) any refund to which the person is or may become entitled under this Act, or

(iii) any other amount that is relevant for the purposes of a determination under subparagraph (i) or (ii);

(c) provide confidential information as follows:

(i) to an official of the Department of Finance of the government of Canada, solely for the purposes of the formulation or evaluation of fiscal policy;

(ii) to an official solely for the purposes of the initial implementation of a fiscal policy;

(iii) to an official of the ministry, solely for the purposes of the formulation or evaluation of fiscal policy;

(iv) to an official solely for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of an enactment of British Columbia that provides for the imposition or collection of a tax or duty;

(v) to an official solely for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of the Home Owner Grant Act, the Land Tax Deferment Act or the Real Estate Development Marketing Act;

(vi) to an official solely for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of an Act of the Parliament of Canada, or an enactment of another province, that provides for the imposition or collection of a tax or duty;

(vii) to an official solely for the purposes of the compilation of statistical information by the government or the government of Canada, as the case may be;

(viii) to an official solely for the purposes of setting off, against any sum of money that may be due or payable by the government, a debt due to the government;

(d) provide confidential information, or allow inspection of or access to confidential information, as the case may be, under, and solely for the purposes of,

(i) sections 44 (1) and 61 (1) of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, or

(ii) sections 15, 16 and 17 of the Auditor General Act;

(e) provide confidential information as provided for in, or ordered under, section 239 or 242 of the Family Law Act or section 8.2 or 9 of the Family Maintenance Enforcement Act;

(f) provide confidential information relating to a person

(i) to the person, and

(ii) with the consent of the person, to any other person;

(g) use confidential information to compile information in a form that does not directly or indirectly reveal the identity of the person to whom the information relates;

(h) provide confidential information solely for the purposes of sections 17, 18 and 19 of the Financial Administration Act;

(i) use, or provide to any person, confidential information solely for a purpose relating to the supervision, evaluation or discipline of an authorized person by the government in respect of a period during which the authorized person was employed by, or engaged by or on behalf of, the government to assist in the administration or enforcement of this Act, to the extent that the information is relevant for the purpose;

(j) provide confidential information to a police officer, solely for the purposes of an investigation into whether an offence has been committed under the Criminal Code, or the laying of an information or the preferring of an indictment, if

(i) the confidential information can reasonably be considered necessary for the purpose of ascertaining, with respect to an official, or with respect to any person related to the official,

(A) the circumstances in which an offence under the Criminal Code may have been committed, or

(B) the identity of the person who may have committed an offence under the Criminal Code,

(ii) the official was or is engaged in the administration or enforcement of this Act, and

(iii) the offence can reasonably be considered to be related to the administration or enforcement of this Act;

(k) provide confidential information to, or allow inspection of or access to confidential information by, any person otherwise legally entitled to the information under a prescribed enactment of British Columbia, solely for the purposes for which the person is entitled to the information;

(l) provide confidential information to, or allow inspection of or access to confidential information by, an authorized person, solely for the purposes of the administration or enforcement of the Assessment Act;

(m) provide confidential information to, or allow inspection of or access to confidential information by, an authorized person, solely for the purposes set out in section 4 (1) (a) of the Land Title and Survey Authority Act.

(6) Except in accordance with an information-sharing agreement entered into under section 3.1, an official must not, under subsection (5) (a) to (c) and (h) to (m) of this section, provide confidential information to, or allow inspection of or access to confidential information by,

(a) an official of a public body, as defined in the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, other than the ministry,

(b) an official of the government of Canada, or

(c) an official of the government of another province.

(7) An official may provide to appropriate persons any confidential information relating to imminent danger of death or physical injury to any individual.

(8) The person who presides at a legal proceeding in relation to the supervision, evaluation or discipline of an authorized person may make orders necessary to ensure that confidential information is not used or provided to any person for any purpose unrelated to the proceeding, including

(a) an order that the proceeding be held in private,

(b) an order banning publication of the confidential information,

(c) an order to conceal the identity of the person to whom the confidential information relates, and

(d) an order sealing the records of the proceeding.

(9) To the extent of any inconsistency or conflict with section 32 or 33 of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, this section applies despite that Act.

Information-sharing agreements

3.1   (1) In this section:

"confidential information" has the same meaning as in section 3;

"information-sharing agreement" means an agreement or arrangement to exchange, by electronic data transmission, electronic data matching or any other means, information for a purpose described in section 3 (5).

(2) The minister may enter into an information-sharing agreement with

(a) a public body as defined in the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act,

(b) the government of Canada or an agency of that government, or

(c) the government of a province or other jurisdiction in Canada or an agency of that government.

(3) Subject to subsection (4), confidential information obtained by the minister under an information-sharing agreement may be used or disclosed only for the purposes for which it was obtained under the applicable agreement.

(4) Subsection (3) does not prevent

(a) any confidential information obtained by the minister under an information-sharing agreement with the government of Canada or an agency of that government from being used or disclosed for the purpose of administering and enforcing

(i) an enactment administered by the minister that provides for the imposition or collection of a tax or duty,

(ii) the Home Owner Grant Act, or

(iii) the Land Tax Deferment Act, or

(b) any confidential information obtained by the minister under an information-sharing agreement from being used or disclosed for the purpose of administering and enforcing an Act of the Parliament of Canada that provides for the imposition or collection of a tax or duty.

(5) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may prescribe terms and conditions to be included in the information-sharing agreements entered into by the minister.

(6) For the purposes of section 3 (6), an information-sharing agreement entered into before the coming into force of this section is considered to be an information-sharing agreement entered into by the minister under this section.

Offences — confidential information

3.2   (1) Without limiting section 5 of the Offence Act as it applies for the purposes of this Act, a person commits an offence if the person

(a) contravenes section 3 (2), or

(b) knowingly contravenes an order made under section 3 (8).

(2) A person commits an offence if

(a) the person has been provided with confidential information for a particular purpose under section 3 (5) (a) to (e), (h), (i) or (k) to (m), and

(b) the person knowingly, for a purpose other than the purpose referred to in paragraph (a), uses the information, provides the information or allows the information to be provided to any person or allows any person to access the information.

(3) A person who commits an offence under subsection (1) or (2) is liable to one or both of the following:

(a) a fine of not more than $5 000;

(b) imprisonment for not more than 12 months.

Duty of taxpayer to keep records

4   A person must keep adequate books of account and records for the purposes of this Act, and if the books or records kept by a person are in the opinion of the minister inadequate for those purposes, the minister may specify the books and records that must be kept by that person.

Offences — failure to provide access or be examined

5   A person commits an offence if the person, without reasonable excuse, in violation of this Act or the regulations does any of the following:

(a) and (b) [Repealed 2004-40-57.]

(c) refuses or fails to provide to an officer any access, facility or assistance required for an entry on or examination of property or accounts;

(d) refuses or fails to attend or to submit to examination on oath or otherwise.

(e) [Repealed 2004-40-57.]

Repealed

6   [Repealed 2004-40-58.]

Defacing posted advertisement

7   A person who without reasonable excuse tears down, injures or defaces an advertisement, notice or document that, under this Act, is posted in a public place, commits an offence.

Fines

8   A person who commits an offence for which no other penalty is specifically provided is liable on conviction

(a) for a first offence to a fine not exceeding $500, and

(b) for a second or subsequent offence to a fine of not less than $100 and not more than $1 000.

Liability of officers of corporations

9   A director, manager, secretary or other officer of a corporation or association, or a member of a partnership or syndicate, who knowingly and wilfully authorizes or permits an act, default or refusal for which the corporation, association, partnership or syndicate is by this Act declared guilty of an offence is also guilty of an offence.

Consent to prosecution: limitation

10   (1) A prosecution for an offence for which a fine is imposed under this Act must not be instituted without leave of the Attorney General, and fines recovered under this Act

(a) must be paid to the Minister of Finance, and

(b) form part of the consolidated revenue fund.

(2) An information for an offence must be laid within 24 months of the time the matter of the information arose.

Date for payment of taxes

11   (1) Taxes levied in a taxation notice mailed under section 21 (2) on or before May 31 of any year are due and payable on July 2 of the year they are first levied.

(1.1) The Surveyor of Taxes must issue a copy taxation notice

(a) to a taxpayer if, on or before July 2 of the year the taxes are first levied,

(i) the taxpayer reports to the Surveyor of Taxes that the taxation notice mailed under section 21 (2) was not received and the Surveyor of Taxes is satisfied that the taxpayer did not receive the taxation notice, or

(ii) the British Columbia Assessment Authority reports to the Surveyor of Taxes that there has been a change in address of the taxpayer, or

(b) to the new owner of a parcel of land if, on or before July 2 of the year the taxes are first levied, the British Columbia Assessment Authority reports to the Surveyor of Taxes that there has been a change in ownership of the parcel of land to which the notice relates.

(1.11) Despite subsection (1), if a copy taxation notice is issued under subsection (1.1) in relation to taxes levied in a taxation notice mailed under section 21 (2), the taxes levied are due and payable on the later of

(a) July 2 of the year the copy taxation notice is issued, and

(b) 38 days after the issue date of the copy taxation notice.

(1.2) For the purposes of a copy taxation notice issued under subsection (1.1),

(a) subsection (1) does not apply to the taxpayer,

(b) a reference in subsection (2) (a) to "a portion of the taxes referred to in subsection (1) remains unpaid on July 2 of the year they are first levied" is deemed to read "a portion of the taxes referred to in subsection (1.11) remains unpaid on the later of July 2 of the year the copy taxation notice is issued and 38 days after the issue date of the copy taxation notice", and

(c) a reference in subsections (2) (b) and (3) to "taxes referred to in subsection (1)" is deemed to read "taxes referred to in subsection (1.11)".

(2) Subject to subsection (5), if

(a) a portion of the taxes referred to in subsection (1) remains unpaid on July 2 of the year they are first levied, there must be added to them, as a penalty, 5% of the unpaid taxes, and

(b) a portion of taxes referred to in subsection (1) remains unpaid on October 31 of the year they are first levied, there must be added to them, as an additional penalty, a further 5% of the unpaid taxes

and the amount added under paragraph (a) or (b) is, for all purposes, deemed to be part of the taxes.

(3) If a portion of the taxes referred to in subsection (1), including penalties, remains unpaid on December 31 in the year they are first levied, they are deemed delinquent on that day, and after that day bear interest calculated at the rate and in the manner prescribed by the Lieutenant Governor in Council until paid or recovered.

(4) Accrued interest is, for all purposes, deemed to be part of the delinquent taxes as if the accrued interest had originally formed part of the taxes.

(5) An owner of farm land may apply in writing on or before July 2 to the Surveyor of Taxes for an extension of the time for payment of the taxes levied on the property for the current year if the taxes levied on that property for all previous years in a taxation notice under this Act have been paid and the owner 

(a) is producing seasonal crops or produce, and 

(b) is unable to pay the taxes levied on the land for the current year on or before July 2 of that year.

(5.1) If the Surveyor of Taxes is satisfied that an owner of farm land who has made application under subsection (5) meets the requirements of that subsection, the Surveyor of Taxes must grant the owner an extension of time for payment to October 31 of the year in which the taxes are first levied.

(5.2) If taxes remain unpaid after October 31 of the year referred to in subsection (5.1), a penalty of 10% of the unpaid taxes will be added to the amount of the unpaid taxes and the amount so added is, for all purposes, deemed to be part of the taxes.

(6) An application under subsection (5) may be made to the Surveyor of Taxes by electronic means or other format if that means or format is acceptable to the Surveyor of Taxes.

(7) If an application is made under subsection (5) and an extension of time is granted for a tax year under subsection (5.1),

(a) the application may be regarded by the Surveyor of Taxes as an application under subsection (5) for relief for subsequent tax years as well, and

(b) the facts asserted in the application may be regarded by the Surveyor of Taxes as correctly stating the circumstances of the owner of the land in the subsequent tax years without further verification unless the Surveyor of Taxes has reason to believe that those circumstances have changed.

(8) If an owner of farm land has made an application under subsection (5) and the circumstances stated in the application change, the owner must report that change of circumstances to the Surveyor of Taxes promptly.

(9) If the Surveyor of Taxes has reason to believe that the circumstances of an owner of farm land have changed since that owner made an application under subsection (5), the Surveyor of Taxes may, by written notice to the owner, require that the owner

(a) make a new application under subsection (5), or

(b) pay the taxes levied in the taxation notice referred to in subsection (1) by the date referred to in that subsection.

Due date for taxes levied in supplementary taxation notices

12   (1) Taxes levied in a supplementary taxation notice mailed under section 21 (7) or (8.2) are due and payable 38 days after the statement date on that notice.

(2) A penalty, calculated as follows, must be added to any portion of the taxes referred to in subsection (1) that remains unpaid after the due date:

(a) if the taxes were levied in respect of the taxation year in which the supplementary taxation notice is mailed and the due date is before October 31 of that year, the penalty equals the sum of

(i) 5% of the unpaid taxes, and

(ii) a further 5% of any portion of those taxes that remains unpaid on October 31 of that year;

(b) if the taxes were levied in respect of the taxation year in which the supplementary taxation notice is mailed and the due date is on or after October 31 of that year, the penalty equals 10% of the unpaid taxes;

(c) if the taxes were levied in respect of a taxation year before the year in which the supplementary taxation notice is mailed, the penalty equals 10% of the unpaid taxes.

(3) Section 11 (3) and (4) applies in respect of taxes levied in a supplementary taxation notice, except that taxes referred to in subsection (2) (c) of this section that remain unpaid the day after the due date are deemed to be delinquent on that day.

Prepayment of taxes

13   (1) The Treasury Board may make regulations to authorize the Surveyor of Taxes or a local collector to receive deposits of money to be applied to taxes levied under this Act and to provide for the payment to the taxpayer of interest as prescribed.

(2) Money required

(a) to be paid under a regulation under this section, or

(b) as a refund of that part of a deposit in excess of tax payable,

may be paid out of the consolidated revenue fund.

Place and mode of payment

14   (1) Taxes are payable at the office of the local collector appointed for the collection district in which they are due, or at a bank, credit union or trust company acceptable to the Surveyor of Taxes, and may be paid by cash, cheque, postal or express company money order or by electronic means in accordance with a regulation made under subsection (1.1).

(1.1) For the purposes of subsection (1), the Surveyor of Taxes may make regulations respecting the manner in which payment of taxes by electronic means is to be made and, despite section 57 (2) (e), may define any word or expression used in this section or the regulations under this section that is not defined in this Act.

(2) Payment tendered by cheque or other order must be made payable to the Minister of Finance and the tax is deemed not to be paid, even if a receipt is given, until the amount of the cheque or order is received by the Minister of Finance.

Part 2 — Taxation of Land and Improvements

Exemption from taxation

15   (1) The following property is exempt from taxation:

(a) land and improvements in a municipality;

(b) land and improvements owned by a municipal corporation, except if held or occupied otherwise than by or on behalf of the municipality as provided in section 28 of the Assessment Act;

(c) land consisting of a public road, way, highway or public square or park used exclusively for public purposes;

(d) every place of public worship;

(d.1) land used exclusively for a public cemetery, mausoleum or columbarium, not exceeding 2.023 ha;

(e) fruit trees on farm land;

(f) improvements consisting of buildings, fixtures and things erected on or affixed to land necessarily and actually used for agriculture, horticulture, poultry raising or stock raising, including a farmer's dwelling, that have been assessed on farm land;

(f.1) an owner's dwelling as defined in section 23 (0.1) of the Assessment Act on land that is classified as a farm under section 23 (3.1) of that Act;

(g) land and improvements vested in or held by Her Majesty, or held in trust for Her Majesty in right of Canada or of British Columbia, or held in trust for the public uses of British Columbia;

(h) land and improvements vested in or held by Her Majesty in trust for a band of Indians, and either unoccupied, or occupied by a person in an official capacity or by the Indians;

(i) buildings with the land attached to them, not exceeding 4 046.8 m2, of a public library, or farmers', mechanics', women's, mining, literary or scientific institute or society, if they are used exclusively for the purposes of the library, institute or society;

(j) buildings with the land attached to them, not exceeding 8.094 ha, of an agricultural or horticultural society, if they are used exclusively for the purposes of agriculture or horticulture;

(k) buildings and land of a university, orphanage, public hospital, asylum or home for care of the sick, the aged and the infirm or of persons who have a mental or physical disability if the institution is supported in whole or in part by public donations, private charity or grants from the government, and the buildings and land are used exclusively for the purposes of the institution;

(l) Crown land held under a tree farm licence under the Forest Act, or held under an agreement with the government under the Forest Act, but only if both the land and the timber on it are subject to management by the licensee or holder for the purpose of growing continuously and perpetually, and harvesting, successive crops of forest products on a sustained yield basis;

(m) subject to subsection (2), improvements in a mine that are used for exploration or proving of the ore;

(n) tunnels and similar excavations of a mine;

(o) a building owned by an incorporated institution of learning that is regularly giving children instruction accepted as equivalent to that given in a public school, and that is actually occupied and wholly in use by the incorporated institution for the purpose of giving the instruction, together with

(i) the land on which the building stands, and

(ii) an area of the land surrounding the land referred to in subparagraph (i) or improvements on the area of land, or both, that are owned by the incorporated institution and that are reasonably necessary for the purposes of the incorporated institution, including, without limitation, the following areas of land and improvements:

(A) playing fields, athletic grounds and facilities, playgrounds and improvements related to any of them;

(B) storage, maintenance and administrative facilities;

(C) dormitories for students;

(D) parking lots, walkways and roads;

(o.1) in relation to property exempt under paragraph (o), any area of land, surrounding the exempt property, that the minister, by order, may exempt;

(p) a building, including the land on which it actually stands, constructed or reconstructed with the assistance of aid granted and given by the government after January 1, 1947, and owned and used exclusively by a nonprofit corporation for providing homes for elderly citizens, and also an area of land surrounding the building determined by the minister;

(q) land and improvements if the land and improvements are

(i) owned or occupied, and

(ii) used exclusively

by a nonprofit organization for activities that are of demonstrable benefit to all members of the community where the land is located;

(r) sewage treatment plants, manure storage facilities, effluent reservoirs, effluent lagoons, deodorizing equipment, dust and particulate matter eliminating equipment;

(s) to the extent established by subsection (3), land and improvements that were exempted for the 1996 taxation year under a pollution abatement provision, if

(i) the land and improvements were exempted under that provision for the 1996 taxation year on final determination under the Assessment Act, and

(ii) as applicable,

(A) for an exemption in relation to land only, the land continues to be exclusively or primarily used for the purpose of abating pollution,

(B) for an exemption in relation to improvements only, the improvements continue to be exclusively or primarily used for the purpose of abating pollution, or

(C) for an exemption in relation to land and improvements, the land and improvements continue to be exclusively or primarily used for the purpose of abating pollution;

(t) land and improvements for future hospital requirements, designated for the purpose of this section by the minister responsible for the administration of the Hospital Act, that are vested in or held by a nonprofit society or corporation that has, as one of its objects, the operation of a hospital;

(u) land held under a lease or licence issued under the Coal Act;

(v) land or improvements, or both, that are exempted by bylaw under section 391 (3) or 392 (2) of the Local Government Act;

(w) land that is exempted by bylaw under section 394 (2) of the Local Government Act;

(x) land or improvements, or both, that are exempted under section 131 (6) or (8) of the School Act;

(y) land or improvements or both that are

(i) owned by or held in trust for a registered charity, or

(ii) occupied by a registered charity,

and

(iii) used primarily as a recreational camp;

(z) property that is exempted by regulation under section 57 (2) (k) [property owned in part by Crown or Crown agent], to the extent of the exemption provided by the regulation.

(2) The exemption in subsection (1) (m) does not extend to the improvements referred to in that subsection after any ore is mined or won.

(3) The amount of an exemption under subsection (1) (s) for a taxation year is limited to the portion of the assessed value of land and improvements that is the least of the following:

(a) the portion that the British Columbia Assessment Authority determines is attributable to the use of pollution abatement for that taxation year, subject to final determination under the Assessment Act;

(b) the portion that was exempted for pollution abatement purposes for the immediately preceding taxation year on final determination under the Assessment Act;

(c) the portion that was exempted for the 1996 taxation year on final determination under the Assessment Act.

(4) Septic disposal systems are not exempt from taxation under this section.

(5) In this section,

"final determination under the Assessment Act" means a determination on the assessment roll for a taxation year, subject to any change that is finally determined under the Assessment Act by revised assessment roll, by supplementary assessment roll or on further appeal;

"pollution abatement provision" means section 15 (1) (s) of this Act, section 339 (1) (q) of the Local Government Act or section 396 (1) (e.01) of the Vancouver Charter, as those provisions read before their repeal and replacement by the Budget Measures Implementation Act, 1997;

"recreational camp" means a camp that provides one or more of the following:

(a) recreational experiences;

(b) educational experiences;

(c) rehabilitative or therapeutic experiences for persons with disabilities or chronic or life-threatening illness;

(d) religious instruction;

(e) leadership training;

"registered charity" has the same meaning as in section 248 (1) of the Income Tax Act (Canada).

Levy if land in more than one district

16   A person must be taxed annually on the person's land and its improvements in the collection district where the land is located, and if a parcel of land is partly in one district and partly in another, the levy for that parcel must be made in the district where the greater part is located.

Year in which exemption change takes effect

17   If a property is acquired by a person entitled to tax exemption or begins to be used for a purpose qualifying it for tax exemption, the exemption becomes effective in the taxation year following the year in which

(a) the property is acquired by the person, or

(b) the change in use has occurred.

Assessment in name of owner or occupier

18   (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (4), land and the improvements on it must be assessed and taxed in the name of the owner.

(2) If a statement verified by affidavit is provided to the assessor showing that a parcel of land and the improvements on it have been sold or leased by the owner to another person, the other person's name must be noted on the assessment roll, and a similar notice of the assessment must be sent to that other person as to the owner.

(3) After the notice referred to in subsection (2) has been sent, the taxes assessed in respect of the land and improvements referred to in that subsection may be recovered either from a person who is the owner or from a person who is the purchaser or tenant, or from a person who is the future owner, purchaser or tenant, saving the person's recourse against other persons but in the case of a sale, if the registered owner provides a statement to the assessor under this section showing that a deed of the land and improvements has been executed and delivered to the person who is the purchaser, the person who is the registered owner is not personally liable to pay taxes assessed after that for the land and improvements.

(4) If

(a) land belonging to the Crown in right of British Columbia or Canada is held under a homestead entry, pre-emption record, lease, licence, agreement for sale, accepted application for purchase, easement or otherwise,

(b) land is held by Her Majesty in trust for a band of Indians and occupied by a person who is not an Indian in other than an official capacity, or

(c) land is assessed under section 27 of the Assessment Act,

the land and its improvements must be assessed and the occupier taxed as if the occupier were the owner of the land and improvements but the assessment or taxation in no way affects the rights of Her Majesty in the land.

(5) Despite subsection (4) and section 2, if a person is an occupier of Crown property and

(a) donated it to the government,

(b) sold it to the government at a value that was, in the opinion of the Lieutenant Governor in Council, substantially less than its market value, or

(c) is a person

(i) designated by a person who donated or sold the property to the government under paragraph (a) or (b), and

(ii) who does not pay rent or other valuable consideration in respect of that property to the person who donated or sold the property to the government under paragraph (a) or (b),

the person described in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) must not be taxed as an occupier under subsection (4) so long as the Lieutenant Governor in Council is satisfied that the person who is an occupier of Crown property qualifies under this section and the regulations.

Assessed value

19   The assessed value of land and improvements must be determined under the Assessment Act.

Variable tax rate system

20   (1) In this section:

"property class" means a class of property prescribed by the Lieutenant Governor in Council under section 19 of the Assessment Act;

"variable tax rate system" means a system under which individual tax rates are determined and imposed for each property class.

(2) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations for the taxation of land and improvements under this Act, including regulations prescribing

(a) tax rates,

(b) relationships between tax rates,

(c) formulas for calculating the relationships referred to in paragraph (b), and

(d) different tax rates for different areas.

(3) If the Lieutenant Governor in Council prescribes tax rates under subsection (2) (a), the Lieutenant Governor in Council must adopt a variable tax rate system.

(4) If the tax imposed on a parcel of land under subsection (2) is less than $1, the parcel must be taxed $1, and the collector must place that sum on the taxation roll.

Part 3 — Taxation Rolls

Taxation roll and notices

21   (0.1) In this section, "taxing authority" means an entity that is authorized under an enactment to receive revenue from taxes imposed or collected for it by the Surveyor of Taxes.

(1) The Surveyor of Taxes must prepare a taxation roll that sets out the information in the form that the minister may prescribe for each parcel of land on which taxes are imposed or levied under this Act, or under another Act that provides for collection of taxes under this Act.

(2) On completion of the taxation roll, the Surveyor of Taxes must mail to every person named in it, on or before May 31 in every year, a taxation notice in a form and containing the prescribed information, if any, and the information that the Surveyor of Taxes considers appropriate.

(3) Despite subsection (2), the Surveyor of Taxes may, with the written agreement of a taxpayer,

(a) send a taxation notice to the taxpayer, and

(b) provide the information required to be contained in a taxation notice,

other than by mail, including by means of electronic information storage and electronic data transmission.

(4) The taxation notice must be directed to the last known assessed owner.

(5) Taxes levied and collected under this Act must, except as otherwise provided, be calculated, levied and accounted for by the Surveyor of Taxes on the assessed values entered in the revised assessment roll and as amended by a supplementary assessment roll that is prepared under the Assessment Act and is provided to the Surveyor of Taxes before the calculation of the tax levy.

(6) Subject to subsection (7), the duties imposed on the Surveyor of Taxes as to the annual taxation roll and all provisions of this Act on taxation rolls apply to supplementary taxation rolls.

(7) Unless a supplementary assessment roll has been incorporated into the taxation roll for the purposes of subsection (5) or under subsection (8), the Surveyor of Taxes must mail to every person named on the supplementary taxation roll a supplementary taxation notice.

(8) If, before or after a taxation roll is completed and before a taxation notice is mailed under subsection (2), a supplementary assessment roll is prepared under the Assessment Act, the Surveyor of Taxes may incorporate the supplementary assessment roll into the taxation roll and may issue to each person named in the taxation roll a single tax notice reflecting any information that was contained in the supplementary assessment roll.

(8.1) If, on or before December 31 of the calendar year for which a taxation roll has been completed, the Surveyor of Taxes finds that an incorrect amount of taxes was levied as a result of

(a) an error in an entry on the taxation roll in relation to a parcel of land that is caused by incorrectly

(i) identifying a taxing authority,

(ii) including the parcel or another parcel of land in a particular area, or

(iii) excluding the parcel or another parcel of land from a particular area, or

(b) an error in the preparation of the taxation roll by a person who is employed in, or retained under a contract to perform services for, the ministry,

the Surveyor of Taxes may prepare a supplementary taxation roll correcting the error.

(8.2) If a supplementary taxation roll is prepared under subsection (8.1), the Surveyor of Taxes must, on or before December 31 of the year following the calendar year for which the supplementary taxation roll was prepared, mail to every person named on the supplementary taxation roll a supplementary taxation notice.

(9) Despite subsections (2), (3), (7), (8) and (8.2) and section 11 (1.1), the Surveyor of Taxes may decline to send a taxation notice, a supplementary taxation notice or a copy taxation notice for a calendar year to a person if the total amount of taxes payable for the calendar year as shown on the notice is less than the prescribed amount.

(10) Subject to the regulations, the Surveyor of Taxes must include with a taxation notice, mailed or otherwise sent to a taxpayer in accordance with this section, an application for a grant under the Home Owner Grant Act.

Property tax collection fee

21.1   (1) In this section, "aggregate fee" means an amount the minister considers sufficient to cover

(a) the costs and outlays of the assessment and collection of the taxes to be collected in accordance with this Act under the authority of the Acts specified under subsection (2),

(b) interest on any money paid in advance of collection of those taxes, and

(c) losses through failure of collection of those taxes.

(2) The Surveyor of Taxes may add an aggregate fee to the amount to be collected under this Act, levied under any of the following:

(a) [Not in force.]

(b) section 25 or Part 7 of the South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority Act;

(c) [Not in force.]

(d) section 48 of the Islands Trust Act;

(e) section 388 or 711 of the Local Government Act;

(f) section 8 of the Local Services Act;

(g) [Not in force.]

(h) section 4 of the University Endowment Land Act;

(i) a prescribed enactment.

(3) The Surveyor of Taxes may impose the amounts to be collected in accordance with this Act under an enactment specified in subsection (2) at rates that combine the rate or amount authorized under the enactment and the aggregate fee.

(4) Subject to subsection (5), the amount of an aggregate fee added under subsection (2) is deemed to be taxes for the purposes of this Act and the provisions of this Act respecting assessment, levy, collection and recovery of taxes and the addition of penalty and interest on unpaid taxes apply in respect of the aggregate fee.

(5) Despite any provision of an enactment referred to in subsection (2), aggregate fees under this section must be deducted from the amounts collected as taxes and retained to cover

(a) the costs and outlays of assessment and collection of taxes in rural areas,

(b) interest on any money paid in advance of collection of those taxes, and

(c) losses through failure of collection of those taxes.

Taxation roll open to public

22   The taxation roll must be placed in the office of the collector of the district, or in another place the minister may direct, and the roll must be open for inspection by the public during office hours.

Taxation roll property of government

23   The taxation roll is the property of the government.

Refund of taxes

24   (1) Except as provided in subsection (2), no person has a right of action or other remedy against the government for the recovery of money paid as taxes by mistake.

(2) A person who has paid money as taxes may apply to the minister for a refund of the amount of money paid as taxes by mistake if

(a) the entry on the assessment roll on which the taxes were based is set aside, altered or quashed as a result of

(i) a complaint or appeal made under the Assessment Act, or

(ii) a proceeding by way of judicial review that is commenced within

(A) 30 days after the date the assessment notice was issued, or

(B) 21 days after the date the person received the property assessment appeal board's decision on the entry,

(b) the amount paid was more than the amount levied, or

(c) as a result of a clerical or arithmetical error, more than the correct amount of taxes was levied.

(3) If the minister is satisfied that an applicant is eligible under subsections (2) and (5), the minister must refund from the consolidated revenue fund the amount of money paid as taxes by mistake.

(4) The minister may remit taxes

(a) in the circumstances described in subsection (2) (a) or (c), or

(b) if, as a result of an error or omission by the assessor, more than the correct amount of taxes was levied and the minister is satisfied that the person liable for the taxes

(i) has not received the assessment notice, and

(ii) has advised the Surveyor of Taxes of the error or omission within 30 days after the date the person first knew or reasonably ought to have known of the error or omission.

(5) No person may apply for a refund under subsection (2) (b) or (c) or for a remission under subsection (4) more than 6 years after the taxes were due.

(6) If taxes imposed under this Act are due or accruing due from a taxpayer to whom an amount is to be refunded under this section, all or part of the amount may, in the minister's discretion, be refunded by being applied as a credit on account of the taxes due or accruing due.

Collection not affected by appeal

24.1   (1) If an appeal is made under the Assessment Act, the giving of a notice of appeal or a delay in the hearing of the appeal does not affect the due date, the delinquency date, the interest or penalty or any liability for payment provided by this Act in respect of tax levied on the assessed value that is the subject of the appeal.

(2) If an assessment is set aside or the assessed value reduced on appeal under the Assessment Act, the minister must refund to the taxpayer on completion of the action the tax or excess tax paid by the taxpayer, and any interest or penalty imposed or paid on the tax or arrears.

Part 4

Repealed

25-28   [Repealed 2014-14-75.]

Part 5 — Recovery of Taxes

Recovery: personal liability

29   (1) Except as otherwise provided in this Act, a taxpayer is personally liable to pay all taxes for which the taxpayer is assessed.

(2) A person is not personally liable to pay taxes for a calendar year if the Surveyor of Taxes has declined under section 21 (9) to send a taxation notice, a supplementary taxation notice or a copy taxation notice to the person in respect of the taxes payable for the calendar year.

Lien for taxes

30   (1) Taxes assessed or imposed and due for land and improvements under this Act, or any property subject to taxation under another Act, form a lien and charge in favour of the government on the entire property taxed.

(2) A lien or charge created by subsection (1) has priority over every other lien, charge or encumbrance on the property.

(3) The lien or charge created by subsection (1) and its priority is not lost or impaired by

(a) any neglect, omission or error of the collector or of an agent or officer,

(b) taking or failing to take proceedings to recover the taxes due,

(c) tender or acceptance of partial payment of the taxes, or

(d) registration or want of registration.

(4) If the collector considers it appropriate to do so, the collector may register the lien or charge created by subsection (1) by registering a lien form against the property in the appropriate land title office in the same manner as a charge is registered under the Land Title Act.

Lien for taxes respecting Crown land

30.1   (1) If

(a) the property for which taxes are assessed or imposed is Crown land held by an occupier, and

(b) the taxes on the property are delinquent,

the collector may register in the personal property registry under the Miscellaneous Registrations Act, 1992 a claim respecting the personal property of the occupier.

(2) A claim registered under subsection (1) creates a lien and charge in favour of the government against the personal property of the occupier for the amount of the delinquent taxes and any current year taxes that are due and payable.

(3) A lien or charge created under subsection (2) has priority over all other claims of every person except claims secured by liens, charges or encumbrances registered before the date that the claim is registered under subsection (1).

(4) A lien or charge under subsection (2) and its priority are not lost or impaired by

(a) any neglect, omission or error of the collector or of an agent or officer,

(b) taking or failing to take proceedings to recover the taxes due, or

(c) tender or acceptance of partial payment of the taxes.

Effect of sale of real or personal property subject to lien

31   (1) A sale or transfer of possession of any property or personal property that is subject to a lien or charge in favour of the government does not affect the right of distress or sale of that property or personal property for the recovery of the taxes under this Act.

(2) A person who acquires any property against which a lien under section 30 exists is jointly liable with the owner originally assessed for payment of the taxes.

Unpaid taxes constitute first charge

32   If property is sold, the amount of the tax lien under section 30 for unpaid taxes constitutes a first charge on the proceeds of sale.

Notice before taking proceedings

33   (1) Before taking proceedings for the recovery of taxes under this Act, the collector must notify the taxpayer of the collector's intention to enforce payment.

(2) The notice may be given by letter mailed to the taxpayer's address as last known to the collector, or by a general or special advertisement in the Gazette or in a newspaper of general circulation published in British Columbia.

(3) Failure to give the notice required by this section does not affect the validity of proceedings taken for the recovery of taxes under this Act.

Recovery of taxes by action in court

34   (1) Taxes that are due may be recovered by action in any court as a debt due to the government, and the court may order costs in favour of or against the government.

(2) A copy of the part of the taxation roll that relates to the taxes sought to be recovered, purporting to be certified by the collector as a true copy, is admissible in all courts as evidence of the debt.

Attachment

35   (1) If the collector knows or suspects that a person is or is about to become indebted or liable to make a payment to a taxpayer, the collector may demand that that person pay all or part of the money otherwise payable to the taxpayer to the collector on account of the taxpayer's liability under this Act.

(2) Without limiting subsection (1), if the collector knows or suspects that a person is about to advance money to, or make a payment on behalf of, or make a payment in respect of a negotiable instrument issued by a taxpayer, the collector may demand that that person pay to the collector on account of the taxpayer's liability under this Act the money that would otherwise be so advanced or paid.

(2.1) A demand under this section may be served by

(a) personal service,

(b) registered mail, or

(c) electronic mail or fax.

(3) If under this section the collector demands that a person pay to the collector, on account of the liability under this Act of a taxpayer, money otherwise payable by that person to the taxpayer as interest, rent, remuneration, a dividend, an annuity or other periodic payment, the demand

(a) applies to all of those payments to be made by the person to the taxpayer until the liability under this Act is satisfied, and

(b) operates to require payments to the collector out of each payment of the amount stipulated by the collector in the demand.

(4) Money or a beneficial interest in money in a savings institution

(a) on deposit to the credit of a taxpayer at the time a demand is served, or

(b) deposited to the credit of a taxpayer after a demand is served

is money for which the savings institution is indebted to the taxpayer within the meaning of this section, but money on deposit or deposited to the credit of a taxpayer as described in paragraph (a) or (b) does not include money on deposit or deposited to the credit of a taxpayer in the taxpayer's capacity as a trustee.

(5) A demand under this section continues in effect until

(a) the demand is satisfied, or

(b) 90 days after the demand is served,

whichever is earlier.

(6) Despite subsection (5), if a demand is made in respect of a periodic payment referred to in subsection (3), the demand continues in effect until it is satisfied unless no periodic payment is made or is liable to be made within 90 days after the demand is served, in which case the demand ceases to have effect on the expiration of that period.

(7) A person who fails to comply with a demand under subsection (1) or (3) is liable to pay to the government an amount equal to the amount that the person was required under subsection (1) or (3), as the case may be, to pay to the collector.

(8) A person who fails to comply with a demand under subsection (2) is liable to pay to the government an amount equal to the lesser of

(a) the aggregate of the money advanced or paid, and

(b) the amount that the person was required under subsection (2) to pay to the collector.

(9) The receipt of the collector for money paid under this section is a good and sufficient discharge of the original liability to the extent of the payment.

(10) Money paid by any person to the collector in compliance with a demand under this section is deemed to have been paid by that person to the taxpayer.

(11) If a person carries on business under a name or style other than the person's own name, the demand under subsection (1), (2) or (3) may be addressed to the name or style under which the person carries on business and, in the case of personal service, is deemed to have been validly served if it was left with an adult person employed at the place of business of the addressee.

(12) If persons carry on business in partnership, the demand under subsection (1), (2) or (3) may be addressed to the partnership name and, in the case of personal service, is deemed to have been validly served if it was served on one of the partners or left with an adult person employed at the place of business of the partnership.

Recovery of taxes by distress

36   (1) A collector may, directly or by a sheriff as agent, levy taxes due, with costs payable as between landlord and tenant, by distress, of

(a) the property for which the taxes were assessed or imposed, the personal property of the person liable to pay the taxes, or personal property in that person's possession, wherever they are found in British Columbia, or

(b) personal property found on the premises of the person liable to pay the taxes that is owned by or in the possession of another occupant of the premises and that would be subject to distress for arrears of rent due to a landlord.

(2) If distress is made for recovery of taxes, the collector must, by advertisement posted in at least 3 conspicuous public places in the area where the sale of the property distrained is to be made, give at least 10 days' public notice of the time and place of the sale and the name of the taxpayer whose property is to be sold; and at the time named in the notice the collector or the collector's agent must sell at public auction the property distrained, or so much as is necessary.

(3) If the property distrained is sold for more than the taxes and costs and no claim to the surplus is made by another person, on the ground that the property sold belonged to the other person or that the other person was entitled by lien or other right to the surplus, the surplus must be paid to the person in whose possession the property was when the distress was made and that person's receipt taken.

(4) If a claim is made by the person for whose taxes the property was distrained, and the claim is admitted, the surplus must be paid to the claimant and the claimant's receipt taken.

(5) If the claim is contested, the surplus must be retained by the collector until the rights of the parties have been determined by action at law or otherwise.

Certificate may be filed in court

37   (1) Despite other action taken under this Part, if payment is not made of taxes due and payable under this Act, the Surveyor of Taxes may issue a certificate stating

(a) the description of the property taxed,

(b) the amount of due or delinquent taxes remaining unpaid, including interest and penalty,

(c) the years for which the tax is owing, and

(d) the name of the owner, occupier or other person liable for payment.

(2) The Surveyor of Taxes may file the certificate with any district registrar of the Supreme Court, and the filed certificate has the same effect and all proceedings may be taken on it as if it were a judgment of the court for recovery of a simple contract debt of the amount stated in the certificate against the person or persons named in it.

Right of tenant to deduct taxes from rent

38   Unless there is a special agreement to the contrary between a tenant or occupant and a landlord,

(a) a tenant may deduct, from the tenant's rent, taxes paid by the tenant, and

(b) an occupant may deduct, from the occupant's rent, taxes paid by the occupant,

if those taxes could also have been recovered from the landlord or previous tenant or occupant.

Forfeiture for unpaid taxes

39   (1) In this section and in section 40, "notice" means notice given under and in accordance with this section or the regulations.

(2) Despite any other action for the recovery of taxes under this Act, if any taxes for a calendar year remain unpaid until the end of November of the second year after that calendar year, the property in respect of which the taxes remain unpaid is, subject to subsections (3) and (4), absolutely forfeited to and vested in the government clear of all charges other than those set out in section 276 (2) of the Land Title Act.

(3) Property does not forfeit under subsection (2) until the Surveyor of Taxes gives notice to the owner of the property and to each registered charge holder who may be affected and, for the purposes of that subsection, if notice has been given, the date on which property forfeits is, for nonpayment of taxes for a calendar year, the later of

(a) December 1 of the second year after that calendar year, and

(b) the 40th day after the date on which the notice was given.

(4) If any taxes for a calendar year remain unpaid on December 1 of the first year after that calendar year, the payment of those taxes does not prevent forfeiture unless the payment

(a) includes all taxes then due and payable, costs and fees, and

(b) is made before forfeiture occurs under this section.

(5) Properties forfeited under this section must be administered by the minister responsible for the administration of the Land Act or another minister designated by the Lieutenant Governor in Council under this subsection for all or particular properties.

(6) The notice must state

(a) that the property is subject to forfeiture under this section,

(b) the amount of all taxes, costs and fees that are due and payable to the date of the notice,

(c) the date on which the property forfeits,

(d) the right to prevent forfeiture by payment under this section, and

(e) that on forfeiture under this section, the property will vest in the government clear of all charges other than those set out in section 276 (2) of the Land Title Act.

(7) The notice must be given by

(a) mailing it to the person entitled to it at that person's last known address or to the address of that person that is specified in the records of the land title office, or

(b) publishing it in the Gazette and in at least one newspaper of general circulation in British Columbia and one newspaper of general circulation in or nearest the area in which the property is located.

(8) [Repealed 2024-13-250.]

Vesting of property in former owner

40   (1) In this section, "interested person" in relation to property means a person who under section 39 (3) received or was entitled to receive notice respecting the property and includes a person acting on the person's behalf.

(2) Property that has been forfeited under this Act for nonpayment of taxes vests in the person from whom it was forfeited on an interested person paying, at any time during the first year after the forfeiture, the sum of the following:

(a) the prescribed fee;

(b) the total amount of taxes owing to the government in respect of the property at the date of forfeiture;

(c) the taxes that at the date of payment would have been payable but for the forfeiture;

(d) any costs incurred by the minister responsible for the administration of the Land Act after the date of forfeiture

(i) for maintaining or improving the property, or

(ii) for cleaning up or remedying any contamination of the property by hazardous substances, including costs incurred in connection with mitigating a threat to the environment or to the health of a person as a result of that contamination.

(3) When property vests under subsection (2) in the person from whom it was forfeited, any charge that was cleared from the title to the property under section 39 (2) is reinstated in accordance with the priorities existing immediately before forfeiture.

(4) At any time during the second and third years after property has been forfeited under this Act for nonpayment of taxes, an interested person may on payment of the prescribed fee apply to the Surveyor of Taxes for an order under subsection (5).

(5) The Surveyor of Taxes may, if the Surveyor of Taxes considers it just and equitable and on terms the Surveyor of Taxes considers appropriate, order that

(a) the property be vested in the person from whom it was forfeited, on payment by the applicant of

(i) the total amount owing at the date of forfeiture,

(ii) the taxes that would have been payable but for the forfeiture, and

(iii) any costs incurred in connection with the property by the minister responsible for the administration of the Land Act after the date of forfeiture for anything referred to in subsection (2) (d), and

(b) any charge that was cleared from the title to the property under section 39 (2) be reinstated in accordance with the priorities existing immediately before forfeiture.

Registrar of land title office

41   (1) An order under section 40 (5) affecting title to land, or a copy of it certified by the Surveyor of Taxes, accompanied by an application for the registration of the order under the Land Title Act, on compliance with that Act, is sufficient authority for the registrar of the land title office to act in pursuance of the order.

(2) The certificate of the Surveyor of Taxes that the requirements of section 40 (2) have been satisfied respecting property described in the certificate, accompanied by an appropriate application for registration under the Land Title Act, on compliance with that Act, is sufficient authority for the registrar of the land title office to record the changes to title made under that section.

Procedure if fee simple is in the government

42   (1) The collector must not sell property if the fee simple is in the government, but if taxes are delinquent for property so held by the government, the collector must make a final demand by notice mailed to a person who is a lessee, licensee, purchaser or other person in whose favour a lease, licence, agreement for sale, notice of acceptance of application to purchase or other record for the property has been made or issued, giving the person 3 months from the day on which the notice is mailed to pay the delinquent taxes, and giving that person notice that, if the delinquent taxes are not paid within the period, the lease, licence, agreement for sale, notice of acceptance of application to purchase or other record may be cancelled.

(2) In default of payment by the taxpayer of the delinquent taxes, plus the current year's taxes, within the 3 months, the collector must forward to the minister who issued tenure a statement of the fact of the default, the property for which it has taken place and the name of the defaulting taxpayer.

(3) The minister who issued tenure must by notice in writing begin cancellation proceedings under the Land Act or other applicable enactment, for cancellation of the lease, licence, agreement for sale, notice of acceptance of application to purchase or other record for the property.

(4) If it is shown to the satisfaction of the minister who issued tenure that the defaulting taxpayer by reason of poverty, sickness or other sufficient cause has been unable to pay the amount due in the time limited for payment in the notice under subsection (3), that minister may extend the time for payment for a further 3 months before the cancellation becomes effective.

(5) On cancellation of the tenure, the minister who issued tenure must notify the collector and assessor of the cancellation.

Repealed

43   [Repealed 2004-40-60.]

Power to cancel official survey of forfeited property

44   (1) In the case of a property that has been Crown granted under the Mineral Tenure Act, under an ordinance or Act affecting precious or base minerals, or under the Land Act or another statute providing for granting of land by the government, if the property so granted has become forfeited to and vested in the government under this Part and has not been sold or leased under this Part, and it is for any reason inconvenient and inadvisable to deal with the property under this Part, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may direct the Surveyor General to cancel the survey, field notes and official plan of survey of the property forfeited, and the property is then for all purposes deemed to be Crown land of British Columbia within the meaning of the Land Act, and that Act applies to that land and to its sale, lease or other alienation as if no grant of the land had ever been issued.

(2) The Surveyor General, when directed, must by notice in the Gazette cancel the survey, field notes and official plan of survey of the property forfeited, and must forward for registration a notice of the cancellation to the registrar of the land title district in which the land is located.

Recovery of taxes on municipal land

45   If land for which taxes are due to the government has been included in a municipality, or within an extension of it, the collector has the powers for recovery of the taxes by action in court, by distress and by sale of property, conferred by this Act, as if the land had not been included in the municipality.

Powers for recovery of taxes

46   The powers conferred by this Part for recovery of taxes by court proceedings, distress, cancellation of tenure and forfeiture may be exercised separately, concurrently or cumulatively.

Apportionment of taxes

47   (1) On

(a) the request of the collector, and

(b) satisfactory evidence being produced to the assessor that a parcel of land for which taxes are due has been subdivided by a plan of subdivision registered in the land title office,

the assessor must provide to the collector an apportionment of the land and improvement assessed values between the separate parts of the subdivided parcel shown on the plan.

(2) The collector may apportion the taxes to the separate parcels, receive payment of the taxes so apportioned for part of the subdivided parcel or for the part of the other parcel sold and conveyed, and leave the remainder of the subdivided parcel or other parcel chargeable with the remainder of the taxes due.

Statement of taxes paid or in arrears

48   (1) The collector must give on demand, to a person making an application, a written statement of the taxes, penalty and interest outstanding or a statement that no taxes are outstanding, as the case may be, at that date and the collector may charge for a search and written statement a fee that is established under the regulations.

(2) The collector must not charge a person for a search if taxes found to be owing are paid promptly.

Power to prohibit timber cutting on tax delinquent land

49   (1) If taxes on land with timber in commercial quantities on it, from which the timber is being cut or removed, have become delinquent, the collector may make an order in writing, one copy of which must be served on the taxpayer or on the person by whom the timber is being cut or removed, and another copy of which must be posted in a conspicuous position on the land, prohibiting the cutting and removal of timber from that land until the delinquent taxes have been paid in full.

(2) If an order has been made under this section, a person who, while the delinquent taxes or a part of them remain unpaid, cuts or removes timber from the land for which the order is made commits an offence.

Part 6 — Administration of Act

Creation of collection districts

50   For the purposes of this Act, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may divide British Columbia into collection districts, define their boundaries, group or subdivide them for their better administration, alter their boundaries and create new districts.

Staff appointments

51   A Surveyor of Taxes, collectors and deputies of the collection districts as are considered necessary for the administration of this Act must be appointed under the Public Service Act as officers of the minister's ministry.

Duty of Surveyor of Taxes

52   (1) The Surveyor of Taxes, under the direction of the minister, is charged with the administration and enforcement of this Act.

(2) The Surveyor of Taxes has and may exercise all the power conferred on a collector under this Act.

Ministry rules and regulations

53   Collectors must obey ministerial rules and regulations that are issued for the purposes of this Act.

Repealed

54   [Repealed 2004-40-62.]

Neglect of duties by collector

55   If the collector for a district neglects or refuses to perform the collector's duties, another collector designated by the Surveyor of Taxes or a collector appointed temporarily for the purpose must, until the appointment of a new collector, perform those duties and must certify on the taxation roll the name of the delinquent collector and, if known, the cause of the delinquency.

Offence

56   A collector commits an offence and is liable to the penalties under the Offence Act if the collector, acting under this Act, does any of the following:

(a) makes an unjust or fraudulent levy and collection;

(b) wilfully and fraudulently inserts in the taxation roll the name of a person who should not be entered;

(c) omits the name of a person who should be entered;

(d) wilfully omits to perform a duty required of the collector by this Act.

Power to make regulations

57   (1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations referred to in section 41 of the Interpretation Act.

(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make the following regulations:

(a) vesting in the Surveyor of Taxes powers and rights to enable the Surveyor of Taxes to carry out section 39, and administer the regulations effectively;

(a.1) prescribing an enactment for the purposes of section 3 (5) (k);

(b) prescribing fees to be paid for property that becomes subject to section 39;

(c) prescribing fees for the purposes of section 40;

(c.1) prescribing an amount for the purposes of section 21 (9);

(d) respecting appeals to the minister from orders and directions of the Surveyor of Taxes;

(e) defining any word or expression used in this Act or the regulations that is not defined in this Act;

(f) enlarging, extending or altering times or dates as the Lieutenant Governor in Council sees fit and changing practice, procedure or method if

(i) the time limited for an act or step is insufficient,

(ii) the act or step has not been taken,

(iii) it appears to the Lieutenant Governor in Council that an alteration in dates is necessary or desirable,

(iv) a proceeding under this Act has been taken and failed,

(v) in the opinion of the Lieutenant Governor in Council, an ambiguity or difficulty arises in the construction or application of this Act, or

(vi) any change of practice, procedure or method is considered desirable;

(g) respecting matters for which no express, or only partial or imperfect, provision has been made;

(h) establishing the fees and methods of determining the fees that may be charged under section 48;

(i) and (j) [Not in force.]

(k) providing, subject to any conditions or limitations established by the regulation, a partial tax exemption

(i) for specified property that is vested in

(A) one or more of Her Majesty in right of British Columbia, Her Majesty in right of Canada and an agent of Her Majesty, and

(B) one or more persons who are not Her Majesty or agents of Her Majesty

as tenants in common, or

(ii) for property vested as referred to in subparagraph (i) that is of a class established by the regulation,

that is in proportion to the sum of the fractions representing the registered fractional interests of Her Majesty and Her Majesty's agents, as applicable, in the property;

(l) for the purposes of section 21 (2) and (10), respecting the information that must be included in or with a taxation notice.

Extension of time to comply with Act

58   (1) If an act, matter or thing required by this Act to be made, performed or done by the collector, or other officer appointed to carry out this Act, at or within a fixed time cannot be or is not so made, performed or done, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may, by order, appoint a further or other time for making, performing or doing it, whether or not the time in which it ought to have been made, performed or done has elapsed or expired.

(2) An act, matter or thing made, performed or done in the time specified by the order in council is as valid as if it had been made, performed or done in the time set by this Act.