Pratte,
J.:
—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
order
of
the
Trial
Division
dismissing
an
application
made
by
Her
Majesty
under
Rule
341
of
the
Federal
Court
Rules.
By
that
application,
Her
Majesty
sought
a
judgment
summarily
dismissing
the
appeal
brought
by
the
respondent
from
income
tax
reassessments
for
its
1981
and
1982
taxation
years
on
the
ground
that
the
only
existing
income
tax
assessments
with
respect
to
the
respondent's
1981
and
1982
taxation
years
were
nil
assessments
from
which
there
could
be
no
appeal.
The
facts
and
proceedings
are
easily
summarized.
On
January
4,
1984,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
sent
the
respondent
notices
of
reassessment
of
its
income
tax
for
the
1981
and
1982
taxation
years.
According
to
those
notices,
the
respondent
owed
an
amount
of
income
tax
in
excess
of
$2
million
for
each
one
of
those
years.
Those
reassessments
were
apparently
made
as
a
consequence
of
the
rejection
by
the
Minister
of
the
respondent's
view
that,
in
calculating
its
income
tax
for
those
years,
certain
property
acquired
by
it
in
1981
was
to
be
treated
as
depreciable
property
falling
within
Class
29
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
Two
months
later,
on
March
6,
1984,
pursuant
to
a
request
made
by
the
respondent
that
investment
credits
earned
in
1983
be
carried
back
to
its
1981
and
1982
taxation
years,
the
Minister
reassessed
the
respondent
and
sent
it
notices
of
reassessment
showing
that
no
tax
was
payable
for
those
years.
Notwithstanding
those
notices,
the
respondent,
on
April
2,
1984,
served
on
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
notices
of
objection
with
respect
to
the
notices
of
reassessment
of
January
4,
1984,
and,
on
February
7,
1985,
the
Minister
issued
a
notice
of
confirmation
with
respect
to
those
notices.
The
respondent
thereafter
filed
a
statement
of
claim
in
the
Trial
Division
appealing
the
confirmation
of
the
notices
of
reassessment
of
January
4,
1984.
That
is
the
action
of
which
Her
Majesty
unsuccessfully
sought
the
dismissal
under
Rule
341
on
the
ground
that
the
only
assessments
that
were
still
in
existence
with
respect
to
the
1981
and
1982
taxation
years
were
the
“nil”
reassessments
of
March
6,
1984,
from
which
there
could
be
no
appeal.
In
his
reasons
for
judgment,
the
judge
of
first
instance
recognized
the
existence
of
the
well-established
rule
that
there
can
be
no
appeal
from
a
“nil”
assessment.
He
did
not
ignore,
either,
the
rule
established
in
Coleman
C.
Abrahams
(No.
1)
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
C.T.C.
690;
66
D.T.C.
5451,
to
the
effect
that
the
reassessment
by
the
Minister
of
a
taxpayer's
total
income
tax
for
a
year
nullifies
and
replaces
any
previous
income
tax
assessment
for
that
year.
He
was
of
opinion,
though,
that
the
rule
in
Abrahams
had
no
application
in
this
case
and
that,
as
a
consequence,
it
could
not
be
said
that
the
“nil”
reassessments
of
March
6,
1984,
had
had
the
effect
of
replacing
and
nullifying
the
January
4,
1984
reassessments.
The
judge
reached
that
conclusion
for
two
reasons.
The
first
one
was
that,
in
his
view,
the
rule
in
Abrahams
applies
only
in
cases
where,
as
a
consequence
of
a
reassessment,
there
is
no
longer
any
issue
relating
to
the
previous
assessment
that
remains
outstanding
and
unresolved.
In
support
of
that
proposition,
he
quoted
a
passage
of
the
decision
of
Mr.
Justice
Walsh
in
Walkem
v.
M.N.R.,
[1971]
C.T.C.
513;
71
D.T.C.
5288.
As
the
reassessments
of
March
6,
1984,
were
made
for
the
sole
purpose
of
giving
effect
to
the
taxpayer's
intention
of
deducting
the
investment
tax
credit
earned
in
1983
from
the
tax
otherwise
payable
for
the
1981
and
1982
taxation
years,
those
reassessments,
according
to
the
judge,
left
outstanding
the
question
whether
the
calculation
of
the
tax
for
those
years
had
been
properly
made.
More
precisely,
they
left
unresolved
the
question
of
the
proper
classification
for
capital
cost
allowance
purposes
of
that
asset
which,
according
to
the
respondent,
was
to
be
treated
as
falling
within
Class
29
of
Schedule
Il
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
The
second
reason
on
which
the
learned
judge
based
his
conclusion
that
the
rule
in
Abrahams
had
no
application
was
that,
in
his
view,
the
reassessments
of
March
6,
1984,
were
not
real
tax
reassessments
since
they
had
been
made
for
the
sole
purpose
of
applying
a
tax
credit
earned
in
1983
to
the
tax
otherwise
payable
for
1981
and
1982.
The
judge
also
saw
a
confirmation
of
his
opinion
in
the
fact
that
the
Minister
had
confirmed
the
reassessments
of
January
4,
1984,
long
after
the
issuance
of
the
notices
of
reassessment
of
March
6,
1984.
This
appeal,
in
my
view,
must
succeed.
The
reassessments
of
March
6,
1984,
were
reassessments
of
the
totality
of
the
tax
payable
by
the
respondent
for
1981
and
1982.
They,
therefore,
replaced
prior
assessments
that
had
been
made
for
those
years.
Those
prior
assessments
were
no
longer
in
existence
and
could
not,
for
that
reason,
be
the
subject
of
an
appeal.
I
see
no
merit
in
the
reasons
invoked
by
the
judge
of
first
instance
in
support
of
his
conclusion.
First,
it
is
simply
untrue
that
the
rule
in
Abrahams
does
not
apply
in
cases
where,
in
spite
of
the
reassessment,
the
taxpayer
retains
an
interest
in
the
solution
of
an
issue
relating
to
a
prior
assessment.
This
presupposes
that
a
taxpayer
may
appeal
from
alleged
errors
made
by
the
Minister
in
calculating
the
tax
owed
by
him.
There
is
no
such
right
of
appeal.
The
right
of
appeal
that
exists
is
from
the
result
of
the
calculation
made
by
the
Minister,
not
from
those
calculations.
The
decision
rendered
by
Walsh,
J.
in
Walkem,
supra,
which
was
cited
by
the
judge
of
first
instance,
does
not
support
his
conclusion.
In
that
case,
Walsh,
J.
merely
applied
the
rule
established
in
the
Abrahams
case.
As
to
the
assertion
that
the
reassessments
here
in
question
were
reassessments
of
a
special
kind,
I
can
find
no
support
for
it
in
the
statute.
Like
all
reassessments,
those
of
March
6,
1984,
were
made
in
the
exercise
of
the
power
of
reassessment
conferred
on
the
Minister
by
subsection
152(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
power
of
reassessment
conferred
by
that
subsection
is
the
same,
whatever
be
the
circumstances
that
warrant
its
exercise.
Finally,
I
see
no
pertinence
in
the
fact
that
the
Minister,
after
having
issued
the
March
6,
1984,
notices
of
reassessment,
confirmed
the
January
4
notices.
Only
one
inference
can
be
drawn
from
that
confirmation:
that
the
Minister
was
of
opinion
that
the
respondent
still
had
the
right
to
appeal
from
the
January
4,
1984,
reassessments.
But
the
question
that
must
be
decided
in
this
case
is
precisely
whether
that
opinion
was
well
founded
in
law.
The
fact
that
it
was
entertained
by
the
Minister
cannot
help
in
answering
that
question.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
also
argued
in
support
of
the
judgment
that
the
notices
of
reassessment
of
January
4,
1984,
were
not
superseded
by
those
of
March
6
because
the
latter
left
intact
the
assessment
of
provincial
tax
contained
in
the
earlier
ones.
This
argument
has
no
merit
since
this
Court
has
no
jurisdiction
to
entertain
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
provincial
income
tax.
I
would
allow
the
appeal,
set
aside
the
order
of
the
Trial
Division
and,
allowing
the
appellant's
motion
under
Rule
341
of
the
Federal
Court
Rules,
I
would
dismiss
the
respondent's
action,
the
whole
with
costs
both
in
this
Court
and
in
the
Trial
Division.
Appeal
allowed.