Rip,
T.C.J.:—McMillen
Holdings
Limited
("McMillen"),
the
appellant,
appeals
from
a
reassessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
the
respondent,
wherein
tax
in
the
sum
of
$64,302.55
was
levied
in
respect
of
income
for
the
taxation
year
ending
January
31,
1982.
McMillen
does
not
object
to
the
levy
of
tax.
However
the
appellant
appeals
to
the
Court
to
vary
the
reassessment
to
provide
for
the
payment
of
interest
by
the
respondent
to
the
appellant.
The
hearing
before
the
Court
proceeded
by
way
of
the
following
agreed
statement
of
facts:
1.
The
Appellant,
McMillen
Holdings
Limited
("McMillen"),
is
a
Canadian-controlled
private
corporation
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
"Act")
formed
by
amalgamation
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
on
December
19,
1981.
2.
In
its
taxation
year
ending
January
31,
1982,
McMillen
paid
taxable
dividends
in
the
amount
of
$2,596,448.00
entitling
it
to
a
refund
of
$649,112.00
pursuant
to
subsection
129(1)
of
the
Act.
3.
At
July
31,
1982
McMillen
had
not
made
any
payments
to
Minister
of
National
Revenue
on
account
of
its
income
tax
liability
for
its
1982
taxation
year.
4.
McMillen,
in
its
return
for
the
1982
taxation
year
filed
on
or
about
July
31,
1982,
applied
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
payment
of
such
refund
net
of
federal
tax
payable
for
the
year
(the
"Refund
Amount”).
5.
The
Refund
Amount
of
$584,809.00
was
paid
to
McMillen
on
or
about
August
22,
1983,
without
interest.
6.
Pursuant
to
a
reassessment
dated
December
19,
1983,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
confirmed
that
the
dividend
refund
of
McMillen
for
its
1982
taxation
year
was
$649,112.00.
McMillen
says
that
interest
pursuant
to
subsection
164(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
("Act")
was
payable
by
the
Minister
“in
respect
of
an
amount
equal
to
the
Refund
Amount
for
the
period
July
31,
1982”
and
ending
when
paid.
The
appellant
states
that
an
amount
equal
to
the
Refund
Amount
represented
an
"overpayment"
for
its
1982
taxation
year
within
the
meaning
of
subsections
164(2)
and
164(7)
of
the
Act
as
either:
(i)
an
overpayment
of
Part
IV
tax
as
at
the
end
of
such
taxation
year;
or
(ii)
an
application
of
such
amount
by
the
Minister
on
or
about
July
31,
1982,
to
a
liability
under
the
Act
of
McMillen
in
respect
of
such
taxation
year
pursuant
to
either
subsection
129(2)
or
164(2)
of
the
Act,
which
liability
was
determined
on
or
about
August
22,
1983,
not
to
be
owing
by
McMillen.
In
respect
to
interest
paid
or
applied
prior
to
April
20,
1983,
subsection
164(3)
provided
that:
164
(3)
Where
an
amount
in
respect
of
an
overpayment
is
refunded,
or
applied
under
this
section
on
other
liability,
interest
at
a
prescribed
rate
per
annum
shall
be
paid
or
applied
thereon
for
the
period
commencing
with
the
latest
of
(a)
the
day
when
the
overpayment
arose,
(b)
the
day
on
or
before
which
the
return
of
the
income
in
respect
of
which
the
tax
was
paid
was
required
to
be
filed,
and
and
ending
with
the
day
of
refunding
or
application
aforesaid,
unless
the
amount
of
the
interest
so
calculated
is
less
than
$1,
in
which
event
no
interest
shall
be
paid
or
applied
under
this
subsection.
In
section
164,
for
the
1982
taxation
year,
"overpayment"
meant:
.
I.
.
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
paid
on
account
of
tax
minus
all
amounts
payable
under
this
Act
or
an
amount
so
paid
where
no
amount
is
so
payable.
(subsection
164(7))
Section
129
provides,
amongst
other
things,
for
payment
of
a
refund
by
the
Minister
to
a
private
corporation
of
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
one-quarter
of
all
taxable
dividends
paid
by
the
corporation
in
the
year
and
its
refundable
dividend
tax
on
hand,
as
defined,
at
the
end
of
the
year.
Subsection
129(2)
states
that:
Instead
of
making
a
refund
that
might
otherwise
be
made
under
subsection
(1),
the
Minister
may,
where
the
corporation
is
liable
or
about
to
become
liable
to
make
any
payment
under
this
Act,
apply
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
refundable
to
that
other
liability
and
notify
the
corporation
of
that
action.
Interest
on
Dividend
Refund
(a)
"Overpayment"
of
Taxes
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submits
that
where,
pursuant
to
subsection
129(1),
the
Minister
makes
a
refund
to
a
corporation
taxpayer
for
its
1982
taxation
year
the
amount
refunded
is
on
account
of
tax
that
has
been
overpaid
by
the
taxpayer
under
Parts
I
and
IV
of
the
Act
for
taxation
years
ending
prior
to
1982.
The
refund
amount
may
include
tax
paid
in
prior
years
on
income
from
property
and
taxable
capital
gains
under
Part
I
and
tax
paid
on
portfolio
dividends
under
Part
IV.
Counsel
bases
his
argument
on
the
difference
in
the
wording
of
subsection
164(7)
prior
to
the
amendment
of
the
meaning
of
"overpayment"
by
1983-84,
c.
1,
s.
88(5)
and
the
amendment.
The
amendment
reads
as
follows:
164
(7)
In
this
section,
"overpayment"
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
means
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
paid
on
account
of
his
tax
under
this
Part
for
the
year*.
.
.
The
preamended
subsection
refers
to
amounts
of
tax
payable
under
the
Act;
the
amended
subsection
refers
to
amounts
of
tax
paid
under
Part
I
of
the
Act.
This
difference,
counsel
says,
supports
his
client's
position
since
the
preamended
version,
in
force
for
the
appellant's
1982
taxation
year,
refers
to
"overpayment"
of
amounts
of
all
taxes
payable
under
the
Act
while
the
amended
version
restricts
the
term
"overpayment"
to
excess
amounts
paid
on
account
of
tax
levied
only
under
Part
I
of
the
Act.
Since
the
appellant
paid
taxes
under
Parts
I
and
IV
of
the
Act
during
years
prior
to
1982,
the
refund
he
was
entitled
to
receive
at
the
end
of
1982
was
in
respect
of
amounts
paid
in
previous
years
on
account
of
tax
under
the
Act
which
were
excessive.
Counsel
therefore
concludes
that
once
the
appellant
applied
for
the
refund
amount
on
June
30,
1983,
interest
began
to
run
in
favour
of
the
appellant
because,
pursuant
to
subsection
164(3)
of
the
Act,
it
had
overpaid
its
taxes.
Counsel
acknowledges
that
the
amendment
to
subsection
164(7)
in
1983
would
preclude
the
appellant
from
eligibility
for
interest
on
late
payment
by
the
Minister
of
a
refund
amount
in
1983
and
subsequent
taxation
years.
Counsel
asked
the
Court
to
look
at
the
term
"overpayment"
on
a
cumulative
basis.
For
several
years
prior
to
1982
the
appellant
paid
tax
under
Part
I
and
Part
IV
of
the
Act.
The
appellant
filed
its
return
of
income
for
1982
on
June
30,
1982,
and
requested
a
refund
of
tax
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
129(1)
of
the
Act.
As
soon
as
this
request
was
made,
submits
counsel,
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
a
refund.
In
other
words,
once
the
request
for
refund
was
made,
the
payments
of
certain
amounts
of
tax
under
Parts
I
and
IV
made
in
previous
years
become
overpayments
of
tax.
To
the
Minister's
counsel
the
refund
of
the
refundable
dividend
tax
on
hand
is
a
payment
of
an
"amount"
and
not
an
overpayment
of
tax.
Counsel
also
submits
that
it
is
well
within
the
intent
of
Parliament
that
no
interest
be
payable
on
a
refund
made
pursuant
to
subsection
129(1).
Subsection
129(2)
authorizes
the
Minister
to
apply
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
refundable
to
the
corporation
to
any
liability
of
the
corporation
under
the
Act.
Subsections
133(7)
and
164(2)
give
the
Minister
similar
authorization
to
apply
an
otherwise
refundable
amount
to
any
liability
of
a
taxpayer
under
the
Act.
Subsection
164(2)
permits
the
Minister
to
apply
an
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
refundable
to
a
taxpayer
as
a
result
of
overpayment
of
tax
to
any
liability
of
the
taxpayer
under
the
Act.
She
argues
that
if
the
payment
of
refundable
dividend
tax
(refund
amount)
is
an
"overpayment"
of
tax
contemplated
by
subsection
164(7),
there
would
be
no
need
for
subsections
129(2)
and
133(7);
section
164,
she
adds,
codifies
the
procedure
for
overpayment
of
taxes
and
not
for
refunds
of
amounts
of
tax.
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
meaning
of
"overpayment"
was
altered
when
amended
by
1983-84,
c.
1,
s.
88(5);
prior
to
the
amendment
"overpayment"
in
section
129
referred
to
excess
amount
paid
on
all
taxes
levied
by
the
Act;
the
amendment
limited
the
meaning
of
overpayment
to
excess
amounts
paid
on
taxes
levied
only
by
Part
I
of
the
Act.
However
I
do
not
see
how
this
helps
the
appellant.
For
taxation
years
prior
to
1982
the
appellant
paid
taxes
under
Parts
I
and
IV
in
the
amounts
determined
by
the
Act.
There
is
no
evidence
—
nor
was
it
suggested
—
that
in
any
previous
year
there
was
an
overpayment
of
tax.
As
I
understand
it,
the
appellant's
position
is
that
a
tax
"overpayment",
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
164(7),
results
once
the
corporate
taxpayer
applies
for
a
refund
pursuant
to
subsection
129(1).
I
do
not
share
the
appellant's
view.
There
was
no
"overpayment"
of
tax
by
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
164(7).
At
no
time
when
the
appellant
became
entitled
to
the
refund
had
it
paid
any
amount
on
account
of
tax
which
was
greater
than
any
amounts
payable
under
the
Act
or
an
amount
so
paid
when
ho
amount
was
so
payable.
In
other
words
the
amounts
of
tax
previously
paid
by
the
appellant
under
Parts
I
and
IV
were
amounts
paid
under
the
Act
because
under
Parts
I
and
IV
such
amounts
were
so
payable;
there
had
been
no
overpayment.
The
appellant's
entitlement
to
a
refund
by
virtue
of
payments
of
dividends
to
its
shareholders
in
1982
does
not
in
my
view
turn
what
were
properly
assessed
amounts
of
tax
for
prior
years
to
an
overpayment
of
tax
in
1982.
There
is
no
provision
in
sections
129
and
164
or
elsewhere
in
the
Act,
for
example,
similar
to
subsection
164(5),
which
provides
for
interest
on
overpayment
of
tax
as
a
result
of
the
carryback
of
losses,
to
provide
satisfaction
to
the
appellant.
(b)
Interest
on
Liability
Not
Owing
to
the
Appellant
There
is
no
evidence
in
the
agreed
statement
of
facts,
nor
can
I
infer,
that
on
or
about
July
31,
1982,
the
Minister
applied
the
refund
amount
to
a
liability
of
McMillen
under
the
Act
pursuant
to
either
subsection
129(2)
or
164(2),
which
liability
was
determined
on
or
about
August
22,
1983,
not
to
be
owing
to
McMillen.
There
is
no
evidence
that
McMillen
was
liable
to
the
Minister
in
respect
of
taxation
years
prior
to
1982.
The
appellant’s
tax
liability
to
the
respondent
in
respect
of
its
1982
taxation
year
was
reduced
to
nil
as
a
result
of
the
appellant
paying
taxable
dividends
in
1982
of
$2,596,448
and
applying
for
a
dividend
refund
"net
of
federal
tax
payable
for
the
year".
However,
it
is
obvious
from
the
agreed
statement
of
facts
the
Minister
did
not
act
as
expeditiously
as
one
would
have
expected
him
to.
The
obvious
question
which
arises
is
whether
the
Minister
can
be
held
responsible
in
any
way
for
his
dilatory
behaviour.
This
is
really
why
the
appellant
is
before
the
Court.
In
The
Great
Atlantic
and
Pacific
Tea
Company
Limited
v.
The
Queen,
[1975]
C.T.C.
432;
75
D.T.C.
5283,*
the
Minister
also
had
the
use
of
money
for
a
period
of
time
which
Mr.
Justice
Collier
of
the
Trial
Division
of
the
Federal
Court
held
he
had
no
right
to.
Collier
J.
said,
at
page
438
(D.T.C.
5287):
To
my
mind,
equity
and
justice
demand,
in
view
of
the
result
reached
in
this
action,
the
plaintiff
should
be
refunded
the
interest
paid.
The
tax
collector
has
had,
for
a
period
of
time,
the
use
of
what
is
in
effect
double
tax
monies.
The
plaintiff,
in
its
calculations,
felt
there
was,
for
practical
purposes,
a
set-off.
It
did
not
remit
tax,
as
technically
required,
and
then
wait
for
a
refund.
It
seems
unjust
the
revenue
department
should,
in
addition
to
the
use
of
the
$474,008.59,
keep
the
interest
charged
on
that
now
refundable
sum.
As
I
have
stated,
I
have
not
the
power
to
make
the
direction
sought.
The
power
to
do
what
appears
in
the
circumstances
to
be
right
may
lie
elsewhere.
+
+See
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
F-10.
Section
19
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
F-10
states
that:
Subject
to
the
British
North
America
Acts,
1867
to
1965,
no
payments
shall
be
made
out
of
the
Consolidated
Revenue
Fund
without
the
authority
of
Parliament,
R.S.,
c.
116,
s.
24.
The
common
law
principle
regarding
interest
payable
by
the
Crown
was
laid
down
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
The
King
v.
Carroll
et
al.,
[1948]
2
D.L.R.
705
at
710;
[1948]
S.C.R.
126
at
132,
per
Taschereau,
J.,
as
he
then
was:
It
is
settled
jurisprudence
that
interest
may
not
be
allowed
against
the
Crown,
unless
there
is
a
statute
or
a
contract
providing
for
it:
R.
v.
Miller
&
Sons,
[1930]
S.C.R.
293;
Hochelaga
Shipping
&
Towing
Co.
v.
The
King,
[1944]
S.C.R.
138;
R.
&
Royal
Bank
v.
Racette,
[1948]
S.C.R.
28.
Unfortunately,
there
is
no
statutory
provision
in
the
Act
for
the
payment
of
any
interest
on
amounts
refunded
under
section
129
nor
is
there
any
mechanism
in
the
Act
to
compel
the
Minister
to
make
a
refund
pursuant
to
subsection
129(1)
within
a
reasonable
delay.
To
quote
Collier,
J.
(supra):
"The
power
to
do
what
appears
in
the
circumstances
to
be
right
may
lie
elsewhere."
Jurisdiction
During
the
course
of
argument
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
I
questioned
whether
this
Court
had
jurisdiction
to
order
the
Minister
to
pay
interest
to
the
appellant.
Both
counsel
agreed
that
the
trial
should
proceed
on
its
merits
and
subsequently
they
would
submit
written
arguments
in
respect
of
the
Court's
jurisdiction.
Section
169
provides
that
a
taxpayer
may
appeal
to
this
Court
to
have
an
assessment
of
tax
vacated
or
varied.
Subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
provides
that:
171.
(1)
The
Tax
Court
of
Canada
may
dispose
of
an
appeal
by
(a)
dismissing
it,
or
(b)
allowing
it
and
(i)
vacating
the
assessment,
(ii)
varying
the
assessment,
or
(iii)
referring
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment.
There
appears
to
be
no
statutory
provision
authorizing
this
Court
to
direct
the
Minister
to
pay
interest
to
a
taxpayer
on
the
refund
amount.
Thus
even
if
I
found
that
the
refund
amount
was
an
overpayment
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
164(7)
I
was
concerned
I
was
without
authority
to
satisfy
the
appellant.
Also,
an
alternative
argument
of
the
appellant
was
that
if
the
refund
amount
is
not
an
overpayment
of
tax,
then
from
the
time
the
appellant
applied
for
the
refund
amount
the
Minister
was
holding
the
refund
amount
as
a
constructive
trustee
for
the
benefit
of
the
appellant;
consequently,
the
Minister
was
liable
for
payment
of
interest
to
the
appellant
for
the
13
months
prior
to
making
the
refund
and
to
make
an
accounting
to
the
appellant.
Here
too,
I
questioned
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Court.
(a)
Submissions
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submits
that
sections
12
and
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
gives
the
Court
jurisdiction
to
hear
the
case
at
bar
and
to
provide
the
appellant
with
the
relief
it
has
requested.
Sections
12
and
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
read
as
follows:
12.
Jurisdiction.
The
Court
has
original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
to
the
Court
on
matters
arising
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Canada
Pension
Plan,
the
Petroleum
and
Gas
Revenue
Tax
Act,
Part
IV
of
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Act,
1971
and
any
other
Act
of
Parliament
in
respect
of
which
an
appeal
is
provided
under
any
such
Act
to
the
Court.
13.
Powers.
The
Court
has,
with
respect
to
the
attendance,
swearing
and
examination
of
witnesses,
the
production
and
inspection
of
documents
and
other
matters
necessary
or
proper
for
the
due
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction,
all
such
powers,
rights
and
privileges
as
are
vested
in
a
superior
court
of
record.
Counsel
says
that
since
the
matters
arising
under
this
appeal
arose
under
the
Act,
section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
provides
this
Court
with
the
requisite
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
dispose
of
this
matter.
Section
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
gives
this
Court
the
powers,
rights
and
privileges
as
are
vested
in
a
superior
court
of
record
which
are
proper
for
the
due
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
to
dispose
of
the
appeal
in
the
manner
the
appellant
has
requested.
The
ability
of
the
Court,
adds
counsel,
is
not
restricted
by
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act.
The
word
"may"
in
subsection
171(1)
is
to
be
construed
as
permissive:
The
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
I-23.
Thus,
he
concludes,
the
Court
is
given
two
options
with
respect
to
its
disposition
of
an
appeal,
one
option
under
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
and
a
second
option
under
sections
12
and
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act.
He
relies
on
McCambridge
v.
The
Queen,
[1979]
C.T.C.
473
at
475
;
79
D.T.C.
5412
at
5414,
per
Heald,
J.:
There
are
only
two
ways
in
which
the
present
legislation
provides
for
disposing
of
appeals
to
the
Board.
One
way
is
in
the
manner
discussed
above,
by
virtue
of
sections
7
and
9
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
Act.
The
other
is
provided
in
paragraph
171(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(supra)
which
provides
for
dismissal.
Because
the
powers
given
to
the
Tax
Court
in
section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
are
much
broader
than
those
set
out
in
section
7*
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
Act,
says
counsel,
the
Tax
Court
can
either
dispose
of
the
appeal
pursuant
to
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
or
pursuant
to
sections
12
an
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submits
this
Court
does
not
have
the
jurisdiction
to
grant
relief
to
the
appellant
since
the
items
of
assessment,
tax,
interest
and
penalties
payable
by
the
appellant
are
not
in
issue.
Section
169
of
the
Act
reads,
in
part,
"Where
a
taxpayer
has
served
a
notice
of
objection
to
an
assessment
.
.
.
he
may
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
have
the
assessment
vacated
or
varied
.
.
.
.”
The
assessment
is,
counsel
submits,
the
assessment
under
section
152,
which
calls
for
the
levying
of
amounts
payable
by
a
taxpayer
to
the
Minister,
not
amounts
payable
by
the
Minister
to
a
taxpayer.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submits
that
the
basis
of
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
by
the
Minister
is
an
appeal
against
the
amount
of
the
assessment:
Vineland
Quarries
and
Crushed
Stone
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1970]
C.T.C.
12;
70
D.T.C.
6043
(Ex.
Ct.)
per
Cattanach
J.
at
page
15
(D.T.C.
6045),
citing
Harris
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
2
Ex.
C.R.
653;
[1964]
C.T.C.
562.
This
Court
has
jurisdiction
to
render
a
decision
where
the
amount
of
tax,
interest
or
penalty
payable,
as
assessed
pursuant
to
subsection
152(1)
of
the
Act,
are
in
issue,
but
has
no
jurisdiction
where
the
items
of
assessment
are
not
in
issue:
The
Queen
v.
B.
&
J.
Music
Ltd.,
[1980]
C.T.C.
287;
80
D.T.C.
6219
(F.C.T.D.),
per
Grant,
D.J.,
at
page
293
(D.T.C.
6223).
Counsel
submits
that
the
appellant's
appeal
must
come
within
the
provisions
of
Divisions
I
and
J
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
or,
no
appeal
lies.
"A
right
of
appeal
is
a
right
of
exception
which
exists
only
when
given
by
statute.":
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
271
at
273;
55
D.T.C.
1176
at
1177
(S.C.C.).
Counsel
also
submits
that
the
appellant's
argument
that
section
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
empowers
this
Court
to
grant
relief
in
the
nature
of
a
mandamus
is
founded
on
an
incorrect
premise.
Section
12
gives
the
Court
jurisdiction
in
matters
“in
respect
of
which
an
appeal
is
provided
under.
.
.”
an
Act
of
Parliament.
An
appeal
is
provided
under
the
Act
only
with
respect
to
assessments
of
a
taxpayer.
As
was
stated
in
the
McCambridge
case
(op.
cit.),
subsection
8(2)
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
Act
cannot
be
invoked
to
extend
jurisdiction
given
to
the
Board
(now
the
Court)
under
sections
7
and
9
(now
sections
12
and
14
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act).
Section
13
merely
confers
on
the
Court
the
ancillary
powers
of
a
superior
court
to
exercise
properly
the
jurisdiction
given
to
it
by
section
12
but
it
does
not
confer
upon
it
added
jurisdiction.
Counsel
states
that
Mr.
Justice
Heald's
comments
in
the
McCambridge
case
was
only
that
the
Board
could
dispose
of
appeals
in
accordance
with
sections
7
and
9
which,
she
says,
indicate
allowing
the
appeal
in
one
of
the
manners
contemplated
by
paragraph
171(1)(b),
or
could
dismiss
the
appeal
necessary
or
proper
for
the
due
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction,
all
such
powers,
rights
and
privileges
as
are
vested
in
a
superior
court
of
record.
9.
(3)
Every
appeal
to
the
Board
and
all
business
arising
out
of
the
appeal
shall
be
heard,
determined
and
disposed
of
by
a
single
member;
and
where
a
member
has
been
assigned
by
the
Chairman
to
preside
at
a
hearing
in
respect
of
an
appeal,
he
constitutes
the
Board
in
relation
to
that
appeal
and
all
business
arising
out
of
it
unless
such
assignment
is
revoked
and
another
member
is
assigned
in
relation
thereto."
in
accordance
with
paragraph
171(1)(a);
she
submits
no
more
than
this
can
or
should
be
read
into
Mr.
Justice
Heald's
reasons.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
disputes
the
argument
of
the
opposing
counsel
than
an
assessment
is
limited
to
situations
where
a
taxpayer
owes
tax
to
the
Minister.
The
Minister
has
a
duty
to
examine
the
taxpayer's
return
and
to
make
an
assessment
under
subsection
152(1)
in
accordance
with
the
laws
in
effect
at
that
time.
Not
only
must
the
Minister
determine
the
amount
of
the
tax,
interest
and
penalty
payable
by
the
taxpayer
but
before
sending
a
notice
of
assessment
to
the
taxpayer,
the
Minister
must
also
“determine”
the
amount
of
the
refund
to
which
the
taxpayer
is
entitled
to
by
virtue
of,
inter
alia,
section
129
of
the
Act
and
the
amount
of
tax
deemed
by
certain
enumerated
sections
to
have
been
paid
on
account
of
his
tax
under
Part
I
through
the
year.
The
Minister
must
also
make
the
determination
required
under
subsection
152(1.1)
of
the
Act.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
also
submits
that
the
interest
referred
to
in
subsection
152(1)
may
be
interest
payable
by
either
the
taxpayer
or
the
Minister.
He
relied
on
the
Minister's
current
assessing
practice
to
set
out
the
amount
of
interest
due
to
a
taxpayer
in
the
notice
of
assessment.
The
appellant's
counsel
says
the
length
of
cases
exemplified
by
Vineland
Quarries
and
Crushed
Stone
Limited,
op.
cit.,
and
B.
&
J.
Music
Ltd.,
op.
cit.,
relate
to
appeals
from
assessments
of
nil
tax.
The
comments
in
those
cases
relied
on
by
the
respondent
are
obiter
dicta
and
do
not
apply
to
the
facts
in
the
appeal
at
bar.
In
those
cases,
adds
counsel,
is
a
common
thread:
the
subject
matter
of
the
appeal
did
not
affect
an
existing
legal
right
of
a
taxpayer
which
was
relevant
for
the
taxation
year
in
question.
He
refers
to
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
271;
55
D.T.C.
1176
(S.C.C.)
per
Mr.
Justice
Fauteux
at
page
274
(DTC
1178):
It
was
conceded
by
counsel
for
respondent
—
and
with
this
view,
we
agree
—
that
the
action
of
the
Minister
in
modifying
the
tax
returns
submitted
by
the
appellant,
would
have
no
future
binding
effect.
and
to
B.
&
J.
Music
Ltd.,
op.
cit.,
at
page
292
(D.T.C.
6223),
per
Grant,
D.J.:
[The
Respondent
relied
upon
two
cases]
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
an
appeal
can
be
properly
taken
by
a
taxpayer
where
the
assessment
of
the
Minister
is
nil
or
is
showing
no
tax
payable.
Both
these
cases
are
decisions
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
and
in
each
of
them
the
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
affected
some
existing
legal
rights
of
the
taxpayer
which
were
relevant
for
the
returns
for
the
year
in
question.
In
the
present
case
no
legal
right
of
the
taxpayer
is
affected
by
the
Minister's
calculation
or
his
statement
as
to
the
status
of
the
taxpayer's
cumulative
deduction
account
sent
with
his
confirmation
of
the
company's
tax
liability
as
shown
in
its
return
for
that
year.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submits
that
in
the
case
at
bar
a
legal
right
of
the
taxpayer
relevant
to
the
year
in
question
is
affected
by
the
assessment
of
the
Minster,
namely,
whether
the
Minister
is
permitted
to
retain
the
appellant's
refund
for
almost
13
months
without
compensation.
Accordingly,
in
his
view,
the
cases
relied
upon
by
the
respondent
can
be
distinguished
on
that
basis.
If
the
Court
holds
that
it
has
no
jurisdiction
the
appellant
will
not
have
the
ability
to
dispute
the
matters
in
question
in
subsequent
taxation
years,
he
says.
Counsel
concludes
that
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Court
is
stated
in
section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
as
“original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
to
the
Court
on
matters
arising
under
the
Income
Tax
Act".
Consequently
since
the
appellant
has
correctly
appealed
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
the
Court
has
the
power
to
determine
the
matter
before
it
as
would
a
superior
court
of
record.
This,
counsel
states,
is
clear
from
section
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
which
gives
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
the
powers
of
a
superior
court
with
respect
to
"matters
necessary
or
proper
for
the
due
execise
of
its
jurisdiction”.
As
the
Court's
jurisdiction
is
to
determine
any
appeal
to
the
Court,
the
Court
then
has
the
power
of
a
superior
court
to
dispose
of
that
appeal
in
any
way
that
a
superior
court
of
record
could
so
dispose
of
an
appeal.
This
includes
the
power
to
order
the
Minister
to
pay
interest
on
the
overpayment
of
tax
or
to
order
an
accounting
if
the
Court
holds
that
the
Minister
held
the
appellant's
moneys
as
a
constructive
trustee.
Sections
12
and
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
do
not
extend
the
Court's
jurisdiction
but
merely
permit
it
to
determine
the
appellant’s
appeal
in
accordance
with
the
law.
(b)
Conclusion
Section
152
states
that
the
Minister
shall
examine
a
taxpayer's
return
of
income
for
a
taxation
year,
assess
the
tax
of
the
year,
interest
and
penalties
and
determine
any
refund
or
tax
paid
on
account.
The
term
"assessment"
or
"reassessment"
is
not
defined
in
the
Act
except
to
provide
that
an
assessment
includes
a
reassessment.
The
terms
"reassessment"
and
“notice
of
reassessment”
were
discussed
by
Mr.
Justice
Thorson
in
Pure
Spring
Company
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1946]
C.T.C.
169
at
198;
46
D.T.C.
844
at
857:
The
assessment
is
different
from
the
notice
of
assessment;
the
one
is
an
opertion,
the
other
a
piece
of
paper.
The
nature
of
the
assessment
operation
was
clearly
stated
by
the
Chief
Justice
of
Australia,
Isaacs,
A.C.J.,
in
Federal
Commission
of
Taxation
v.
Clarke
(1927),
40
C.L.R.
246
at
277:
"An
assessment
is
only
the
ascertainment
and
fiscation
of
liability.”
a
definition
which
he
had
previously
elaborated
in
The
King
v.
Deputy
Federal
Commission
of
Taxation
(S.A.);
ex
parte
Hooper
(1926),
37
C.L.R.
368
at
373:
"An
'assessment'
is
not
a
piece
of
paper;
it
is
an
official
act
or
operation;
it
is
the
Commissioner's
ascertainment,
on
consideration
of
all
relevant
circumstances,
including
sometimes
his
own
opinion,
of
the
amount
of
tax
chargeable
to
a
given
taxpayer.
When
he
has
completed
his
ascertainment
of
the
amount
he
sends
by
post
a
notification
thereof
called
‘a
notice
of
assessment'
.
.
.
But
neither
the
paper
sent
nor
the
notification
it
gives
is
the
'assessment'.
That
is
and
remains
the
act
of
operation
of
the
Commissioner."
It
is
the
opinion
as
formed,
and
not
the
material
on
which
it
was
based,
that
is
one
of
the
circumstances
relevant
to
the
assessment.
The
assessment,
as
I
see
it,
is
the
summation
of
all
the
factors
representing
tax
liability,
ascertained
in
a
variety
of
ways,
and
the
fixation
of
the
total
after
all
the
necessary
computations
have
been
made.
An
assessment
by
its
very
nature
is
a
determination
of
liability
of
a
taxpayer.
An
amount
of
money
owed
to
the
taxpayer
by
the
Crown
on
account
of
interest
is
not
an
amount
which
is
subject
to
an
assessment
or
an
assessed
amount
of
money.
It
is
the
taxpayer
who
is
assessed
tax,
interest
and
penalties
and
he
is
assessed
by
the
Minister.
If
the
taxpayer
does
not
agree
with
an
assessment
he
may
object
and
if
the
assessment
is
confirmed
by
the
Minister,
or
if
the
Minister
reassesses,
the
taxpayer
may
appeal
to
this
Court
or
the
Federal
Court
to
have
the
assessment
vacated,
varied
or
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment:
sections
165,
169
and
171.
Where
in
examining
a
taxpayer's
return
of
income
for
a
taxation
year
the
Minister
has
determined
a
refund
of
tax
or
interest
owing
to
the
taxpayer
on
account
of
an
overpayment
of
tax
in
accordance
with
section
164,
the
Minister
may,
on
or
after
mailing
the
notice
of
assessment
for
the
particular
year,
refund
any
overpayment
made
on
account
of
the
tax
and
pay
interest
on
that
amount.
The
Minister
may
notify
the
taxpayer
of
any
interest
due
to
him
in
the
notice
of
assessment.
If,
however,
the
Minister
does
not
make
such
refund
at
the
time
of
mailing
the
notice
of
assessment
the
taxpayer
has
four
years
from
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
to
apply
for
such
refund.
But
the
determination,
calculation
or
amount
of
refund
and
the
interest
resulting
from
any
overpayment
of
tax
do
not
constitute
the
assessment
of
tax,
interest
or
penalty
although
the
question
of
interest
is
determined
in
the
assessment
process
and
may
be
indicated
on
the
notice
of
assessment.
However,
the
notice
of
assessment
is
not
the
assessment.
In
my
view
the
appellant
at
bar
is
not
appealing
from
any
assessment
of
income
tax
or
interest
but
is
asking
the
Court
to
make
a
direction
to
order
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
make
a
payment
of
interest.
In
Guerin
et
al.
v.
The
Queen,
[1982]
2
F.C.
445,
the
issue
was
whether
or
not
the
Federal
Court
had
jurisdiction
to
award
prejudgment
interest
against
the
Crown
in
an
action
for
breach
of
trust.
Collier,
J.
stated
at
page
448:
.
.
.
this
is
a
statutory
Court.
Its
jurisdiction,
in
respect
of
the
subject-matter
of
the
claims,
and
over
persons,
and
its
jurisdiction
in
respect
of
the
remedies
and
other
relief
it
can
grant,
must
be
found
in
existing
federal
statute
or
federal
common
law:
McNamara
Construction
(Western)
Ltd.
et
al.
v.
The
Queen
(1977),
75
D.L.R.
(3d)
273
at
pp.
267-7,
[1977]
2
S.C.R.
654
at
p.
658,
13
N.R.
181.
Section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
grants
this
Court
original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
on
matter
arising
under
the
Act
and
other
statutes.
Subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
regulates
how
the
Court
may
exercise
its
original
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
an
appeal
under
the
Act.
Section
13
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
simply
grants
the
Court
all
powers,
rights
and
privileges
as
are
vested
in
a
superior
court
of
record
in
respect
of
witnesses,
documents
and
other
matters
necessary
or
proper
for
the
due
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction,
that
is,
to
hear
and
determine
appeals,
but
section
13
does
not
increase
the
Court's
jurisdiction
to
that
of
a
superior
court
of
record.
The
due
exercise
of
this
Court's
jurisdiction
on
matters
arising
under
the
Act
is
to
hear
and
determine
an
appeal
from
a
tax
assessment.
I
cannot
overemphasize
that
the
Court's
original
jurisdiction
is
to
hear
and
determine
appeals
in
matters
arising
under
the
Act;
an
action
against
the
Crown
based
on
the
Act,
but
is
not
an
appeal
from
an
assessment,
is
not
an
appeal
arising
under
the
Act,
which
is
within
the
jurisdiction
of
this
Court.
In
McCambridge
v.
The
Queen,
op.
cit.,
Mr.
Justice
Heald
states
that
the
Tax
Review
Board
may
only
dispose
of
an
appeal
in
accordance
with
section
7
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
Act,
and
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act.
These
sections
complement
each
other
and
are
not
in
opposition.
Section
7
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
Act
simply
provides
that
"the
duties
of
the
Board
are
to
hear
and
dispose
of
appeals
to
the
Board
.
.
.
”
and
subsection
171(1)
provides
how
the
Board
may
dispose
of
an
appeal.
These
two
sections
did
not
extend
the
Board's
jurisdiction
in
the
manner
argued
by
the
appellant's
counsel.
The
question
is
whether
or
not
if
there
is
no
overpayment
of
tax
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
164(7)
whether
this
Court
is
the
proper
forum
to
hear
and
determine
whether
the
Minister
was
a
constructive
trustee.
In
my
view,
on
the
facts
presented
to
me,
this
Court
has
no
jurisdiction
to
order
the
Minister
to
pay
interest
or
make
an
accounting.
This
Court
only
has
jurisdic-
tion
to
hear
and
dispose
of
an
appeal
from
an
assessment.
The
assessment
of
income
tax,
interest
and
penalties
is
not
in
issue.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.