Christie,
CJTC:—These
are
ten
applications
to
quash
appeals
which
were
heard
together
by
agreement.
What
is
essential
to
the
determination
of
the
issue
is
the
same
in
each
case.
At
different
dates
between
April
10,
1981,
and
June
15,
1981,
inclusive,
an
assessment
was
made
in
respect
of
each
respondent’s
1980
taxation
year
by
including
in
their
income
certain
expenses
which
had
been
reimbursed
to
them
by
their
employer.
Notices
of
objection
to
these
assessments
were
served
on
the
applicant
in
compliance
with
subsections
165(1)
and
(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(“the
Act”).
The
applicant
confirmed
all
of
the
assessments
and
on
January
29,
1982,
he
notified
each
respondent
of
his
action
by
registered
mail
pursuant
to
subsection
165(3)
of
the
Act.
January
29,
1982,
is
the
crucial
date
because
what
must
be
determined
is
whether
there
is
jurisdiction
in
this
Court
to
hear
the
ten
appeals
which
were
launched
after
the
Minister
notified
the
respondents
of
the
confirmation
of
his
assessments.
Paragraph
169(a)
of
the
Act
provides
that
where
a
taxpayer
has
served
notice
of
objection
to
an
assessment
under
section
165,
he
may
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
to
have
the
assessment
vacated
or
varied
after
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
confirmed
the
assessment,
but
no
appeal
may
be
instituted
after
the
expiration
of
90
days
from
the
day
notice
has
been
mailed
to
the
taxpayer
under
section
165
that
the
Minister
has
confirmed
the
assessment.
The
90
days
is
to
be
calculated
in
accordance
with
section
25
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
1-23.
This
section
provides,
inter
alia,
that
in
calculating
the
90
days,
January
29,
1982,
shall
not
be
included.
Applying
that
formula,
the
appeals
should
have
been
instituted
not
later
than
April
29,
1982.
The
Act
is
silent
regarding
what
constitutes
instituting
an
appeal
within
the
meaning
of
paragaph
169(a).
This
is
another
of
the
inexplicables
of
the
legislation.
Subsection
14(1)
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
and
section
2
of
the
Rules
of
Practice
and
Procedure
applicable
to
the
Court
deal
with
appeals
to
it,
but
what
is
said
there
is
confined
to
the
form
of
the
notice
of
appeal
and
giving
of
an
address
for
service.
Compare,
for
example,
subsections
165(1)
and
(2)
and
subparagraph
175(
l)(a)(i)
of
the
Act.
The
subsections
provide
that
a
taxpayer
who
objects
to
an
assessment
may,
within
90
days
from
the
day
of
mailing
of
the
notice
of
assessment,
serve
on
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
a
notice
of
objection
and
that
service
shall
be
effected
by
being
sent
by
registered
mail
addressed
to
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Taxation
at
Ottawa.
The
subparagraph
provides
that
in
the
case
of
an
appeal
by
a
taxpayer
to
the
Federal
Court—Trial
Division,
it
shall
be
instituted
in
the
manner
set
forth
in
section
48
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
Subsection
48(1)
reads:
48
(1)
A
proceeding
against
the
Crown
may
be
instituted
by
filing
in
the
Registry
of
the
Court
a
document
in
the
form
set
out
in
Schedule
I
to
this
Act.
While
the
Act
is
definite
regarding
what
constitutes
serving
a
notice
of
objection
or
instituting
an
appeal
by
a
taxpayer
to
the
Federal
Court—Trial
Division,
that
is
lacking
with
respect
to
appeals
to
this
Court.
In
my
opinion
the
interpretation
most
favourable
to
an
appellant
which
can
be
placed
on
paragraph
169(a)
and
the
one
which
I
am
willing
to
adopt
is
that
an
appeal
is
instituted
thereunder
on
the
day
the
evidence
establishes
as
being
the
day
the
notice
of
appeal
was
mailed
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
or
its
Registrar
or
placed
in
the
hands
of
a
licensed
commercial
courier
service
for
delivery
to
either
of
those
destinations.
It
does
not
necessarily
have
to
be
sent
by
registered
mail.
There
are
a
number
of
decisions
of
the
predecessor
to
this
Court,
the
Tax
Review
Board,
which
held
that
an
appeal
was
not
instituted
within
the
90
day
period
because
the
evidence
established
that
the
notice
of
appeal
was
sent
by
registered
mail
or
ordinary
mail
after
that
time.
The
obvious
implication
of
these
decisions
is
that,
if
the
notice
of
appeal
had
been
mailed
within
the
90
days,
the
statutory
requirement
would
have
been
regarded
as
having
been
complied
with.
Exemplary
of
what
I
am
alluding
to
is
Thomson
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2064;
72
DTC
1069;
A
A
Wurz
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2293;
72
DTC
1238
and
G
E
Hofer
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2293;
72
DTC
1241.
In
Lepore
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2713;
79
DTC
294,
Cardin,
TCJ,
who
was
then
Chairman
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
heard
an
appeal
in
which
counsel
acting
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
raised
a
preliminary
objection
to
the
appeal
based
on
the
fact
that,
although
the
notice
of
appeal
had
been
delivered
to
a
courier
service
within
the
90
day
period
for
transmission
to
the
Tax
Review
Board,
it
was
not
received
by
the
Board
until
the
91st
day
following
the
Minister’s
confirmation
of
his
assessment.
Judge
Cardin
dismissed
the
preliminary
objection
and
held
that
the
taxpayer
had
complied
with
paragraph
19(a)
by
placing
his
notice
of
appeal
with
the
courier
service
within
the
90
day
period.
Affidavits
filed
in
support
of
each
application
stated
that
the
notices
of
appeal
are
all
postmarked
April
30,
1982,
and
were
received
by
the
Tax
Review
Board
on
May
4,
1982.
This
evidence
was
not
contradicted.
Indeed
Mr
Thachuk,
who
appeared
for
the
respondents,
volunteered
that
the
institution
of
the
appeals
was
one
day
later.
Regardless
of
the
propinquity
of
the
steps
taken
to
appeal
to
the
expiration
of
the
90
day
period,
this
Court
is
without
jurisdiction
to
hear
an
appeal
which
is
not
instituted
before
that
period
has
elapsed.
The
right
of
appeal
granted
by
paragraph
169(a)
is
purely
statutory
and,
if
it
is
to
be
invoked,
the
conditions
pertaining
thereto
must
be
strictly
complied
with.
If
that
is
not
done,
then
this
Court
is
without
jurisdiction.
For
this
Court
to
add
even
one
day
to
the
90
day
period
would
be
tantamount
to
rewriting
paragraph
169(a)
which,
of
course,
it
cannot
do.
There
is
ample
authority
for
my
conclusion:
Horowitz
v
MNR,
[1962]
CTC
17;
62
DTC
1038,
MNR
v
Simard,
[1962]
CTC
310;
62
DTC
1192
and
Maclsaac
v
The
Queen,
[1983]
CTC
213;
83
DTC
5258.
The
respondents
might
have
made
application
after
April
30,
1982,
for
an
order
extending
the
time
within
which
to
institute
the
appeals
as
provided
by
section
167
of
the
Act,
but
the
time
for
pursuing
that
course
of
action
has
long
since
passed.
The
applications
are
granted.
Applications
granted.