JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
order
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
September
30,
1969,
whereby
the
Board
purported
to
amend
a
judgment
delivered
by
the
Board
on
September
24,
1963
so
that
the
judgment,
which
had
previously
dismissed
the
appellant’s
appeals
from
its
assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years,
allowed
such
appeals
in
part;
and
it
is
also
an
appeal
from
the
judgment
as
so
amended.
The
sole
ground
for
the
appeal
is
that
the
Board
had
no
power,
jurisdiction
or
authority
to
make
the
order
by
which
it
purported
to
amend
its
decision.
Both
parties
take
the
position
that
the
Court
has
jurisdiction
to
hear
his
appeal
and
I
am
satisfied
that
this
is
so.
If
the
Board
had
power
to
deliver
the
judgment
as
it
appeared
to
be
after
the
amending
order,
which
judgment
first
came
into
existence
on
December
30,
1969,
it
was
by
virtue
of
Section
59
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
read
with
Section
92
thereof;*
and,
by
virtue
of
Section
60
thereof,
‘‘The
Minister
.
.
.
may,
within
120
days
from
the
day
on
which
the
Registrar
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
mails
the
decision
on
an
appeal
under
section
59
to
the
Minister
.
.
.
,
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada’’.
In
my
view,
this
right
of
appeal
extends
to
a
case
where
the
attack
is
based
on
a
lack
of
jurisdiction
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
to
deliver
the
judgment
attackedt
and,
that
being
so,
it
follows
that
it
extends
to
a
case
where,
as
I
conceive
it
to
be
here,
the
attack
is
really
based
on
a
contention
that,
while
the
matter
falls
within
the
Board’s
jurisdiction,
that
Court
had
no
power
or
authority
to
deliver
the
Judgment
under
attack.
On
one
view,
the
only
facts
relevant
to
the
disposition
of
this
appeal
are
that,
after
duly
hearing
an
appeal
that
was
within
its
jurisdiction,
the
Board,
on
September
24,
1963,
delivered
a
judgment
reading,
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
and
that,
after
hearing
an
application
by
the
appellant
for
a
further
order,
on
December
30,
1969,
the
Board
made
an
order
reading
as
follows:
It
is
ordered
that
the
Judgment
of
the
Board
herein
dated
September
24,
1963
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
is
hereby
amended
to
read
as
follows:
“The
appeal
with
regard
to
the
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
is
hereby
allowed
in
part
for
the
purpose
only
of
referring
the
relevant
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment
taking
into
account
the
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
agreed
upon
between
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
at
or
prior
to
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
before
the
Board
on
March
19,
1963,
as
being
the
amounts
to
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
in
respect
of
the
said
taxation
years,
the
appeal
with
regard
to
the
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
to
be
dismissed
in
all
other
respects.”
And
it
is
further
ordered
that
the
Judgment
amended
as
set
out
above
shall
also
be
dated
September
24,
1963,
and
shall
have
effect
as
and
from
that
date.
In
order
to
appreciate
the
argument,
however,
I
must,
before
dealing
with
the
question
in
issue,
attempt
to
explain
the
somewhat
complicated
events
that
resulted
in
the
unusual
order
that
is
under
attack
in
this
appeal.
by
proceedings
by
way
of
certiorari.
and
prohibition.
A
tribunal
exercising
a
limited
statutory
jurisdiction
has
no
authority
to
give
a
binding
decision
upon
its
own
jurisdiction
and
where
it
wrongfully
assumes
jurisdiction
it
follows,
as
a
general
rule,
that,
since
what
he
has
done
is
null,
there
is
nothing
to
appeal
from.
But
here
we
have
a
statute
and
this
is
only
pertinent
on
the
point
of
the
meaning
and
effect
of
the
statute.
It
has
always
seemed
to
me
that
the
proceeding
by
way
of
appeal
would
be
the
most
convenient
way
of
questioning
the
judgment
of
any
judicial
tribunal
whose
judgment
is
alleged
to
be
wrong,
whether
in
point
of
wrongful
assumption
of
jurisdiction,
or
otherwise.
There
is
no
appeal,
of
course,
except
by
statute
and,
I
repeat,
the
question
arising
upon
this
point
is
entirely
a
question
of
the
scope
and
effect
of
this
statute.
To
appreciate
the
events
that
led
up
to
the
application
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
resulted
in
the
order
or
judgment
of
the
Board
from
which
this
appeal
was
taken,
it
is
necessary
to
have
in
mind
several
features
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
the
first
place
there
is
the
peculiarity
of
capital
cost
allowance
that
it
is
only
deductible
in
computing
the
income
for
any
year
to
the
extent
claimed
by
the
taxpayer
(Regulation
1100)
and
the
peculiarity
of
the
deduction
for
“pre-production
expenses”
that
it
is
only
deductible
in
computing
the
income
for
any
year
to
the
extent
of
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
year
(e.g.
Section
83A(8)),
so
that
deductions
will
not
be
made
under
either
of
these
heads,
in
computing
income
for
a
year,
to
the
extent
that
a
taxpayer
otherwise
escapes
taxation
for
the
year
because
it
has
no
‘
‘
income
”
or
by
reason
of
exempting
provisions
in
the
Act.
Such
allowances
or
deductions
not
deducted
or
deductible
in
any
year
remain
available
for
use
in
a
subsequent
year
when
they
are
required.
In
the
second
place,
one
must
have
in
mind
the
broad
outline
of
the
procedure
for
determination
and
payment
of
the
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This
may
be
summarized,
to
the
extent
relevant,
as
follows
:
(a)
a
corporation
is
required
to
file
its
tax
return
for
a
year
within
six
months
from
the
end
of
the
year
(Section
44(1)
(a))
and
the
Minister
is
required
to
examine
the
return
and
“assess”
with
all
due
despatch
and
is
authorized
to
re-assess
or
make
additional
assessments
within
four
years
from
the
original
assessment
(and
in
certain
other
cases
that
are
not
relevant
here)
(Section
46)
;
(b)
a
corporation
is
required
to
make
monthly
payments
on
account
of
tax
(Section
50)
and
to
pay
the
balance
of
the
assessed
tax
within
thirty
days
after
the
assessment
;
(c)
the
first
step
to
be
taken
by
a
taxpayer
who
objects
to
an
assessment
is
to
send
a
notice
of
objection
to
the
Minister
and,
upon
receipt
of
such
a
notice,
the
Minister
is
required
to
reconsider
the
assessment
and
vacate,
confirm
or
vary
the
assessment
or
re-assess’’
(Section
58)—(a
re-assessment
made
pursuant
to
Section
58
is
not
invalid
because
it
is
not
made
within
the
four
years
contemplated
by
Section
46
(Section
58(4))
;
(d)
the
second
step
open
to
an
objecting
taxpayer
is
an
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
(Section
59),
which
Board
may
dispose
of
an
appeal
inter
alia
by
“dismissing
it’’,
or
“allowing
it”
and
either
vacating
or
varying
the
assess-
ment
or
referring
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
re-assessment
(Section
92)
;
(e)
after
the
decision
of
the
Board,
either
party
may
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
(Section
60),
which
may
dispose
of
the
appeal
by
‘‘dismissing
it’’,
or
‘‘allowing
it’’
and
either
vacating
or
varying
the
assessment,
restoring
the
assessment,
or
referring
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
re-assessment
(Section
100)
;
(f)
finally,
there
is
an
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada,
which
appeal
is
governed
by
the
Exchequer
Court
Act
and
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
Act.
The
third
feature
of
the
Act,
which
one
should
have
in
mind
when
trying
to
appreciate
what
happened
in
this
case,
is
that,
while
the
Minister
is
required
to
refund
overpayments
of
tax
after
assessment
(Section
57(1)),
the
interest
payable
on
such
refunds
is
computed
at
3
per
cent
(Section
57(3))
unless,
by
a
decision
of
the
Minister
under
Section
58
on
a
notice
of
objection,
or
by
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
Exchequer
Court
or
the
Supreme
Court,
it
is
finally
determined
that
the
tax
is
less
than
the
amount
assessed
under
Section
46,
in
which
event
the
interest
is
computed
at
6
per
cent
(Section
57(3a)).
I
turn
now
to
what
happened
in
this
case.
It
would
appear
that,
in
making
its
return
for
the
years
in
question,
the
taxpayer
did
not
deduct
all
the
capital
cost
allowance
or
pre-production
expenses
that
were
available
to
it
because,
presumably,
other
substantive
claims
made
by
it,
if
accepted
by
the
Minister,
made
such
deductions
unnecessary
or
unavailable.
The
Minister,
however,
did
not
accept
such
other
substantive
claims
and,
by
its
notice
of
objection,
the
appellant,
in
addition
to
asking
for
reconsideration
of
such
claims,
put
forward
claims
in
the
alternative
for
capital
cost
allowance.*
The
Minister,
however,
in
disposing
of
the
notices
of
objection
under
Section
58
merely
confirmed
the
assessments.
The
taxpayer
then
appealed
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
and
by
its
notice
of
appeal
to
the
Board,
carefully
spelled
out
not
only
its
main
substantive
claims
but
also
its
alternative
claims
to
capital
cost
allowance
and
for
deduction
of
pre-production
expenses.
When
the
matter
came
on
for
hearing
before
the
Board,
counsel
for
the
parties
made
it
clear
that
the
parties
were
in
agreement
that,
if
the
taxpayer
did
not
succeed
on
its
main
substantive
claims,
it
was
nevertheless
entitled
to
capital
cost
allow-
wance,
deduction
of
pre-production
expenses,
or
both,
and
that,
in
the
event
that
the
Board
decided
against
the
taxpayer
on
such
main
questions,
the
judgment
of
the
Board
should
be
that
the
assessment
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
it
was
not
entitled
to
the
main
relief
sought
but
was
to
be
allowed
capital
cost
allowance,
deduction
of
pre-production
expenses,
or
both.
When
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
after
a
hearing
that
was
thereafter
restricted
to
the
main
substantive
claims
of
the
taxpayer,
came
to
deliver
judgment,
it
decided
against
the
taxpayer
on
such
claims
and
dismissed
the
appeal,
overlooking
the
agreement
of
the
parties
that
there
should
nevertheless
be
a
reference
back.
Following
that
judgment,
counsel
for
the
taxpayer
wrote
to
counsel
for
the
Minister
on
January
16,
1964,
as
follows:
We
have
been
instructed
to
appeal
the
adverse
decision
rendered
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
on
September
24,
1963
with
respect
to
the
above
Company’s
appeal
from
its
assessments
for
the
years
1958,
1959
and
1960.
You
will
recall
that
at
the
opening
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
hearing
we
agreed,
and
so
stated
to
the
Board,
that
if
the
Company
was
unsuccessful
in
its
principal
contentions,
any
income
during
the
years
under
appeal
otherwise
subject
to
tax
could
be
reduced
first,
by
capital
cost
allowances
and
if
required,
secondly,
by
deferred
exploration
deductions
(to
the
extent
of
the
amounts
available
for
this
purpose)
before
reaching
the
actual
net
figure
on
which
tax
was
payable.
Further,
and
for
the
same
reasons,
it
was
agreed,
and
the
Board
was
so
advised,
that
no
charge
for
interest
on
late
or
deficient
instalment
payments
with
respect
to
the
1960
assessment
would
be
properly
payable.*
My
notes
indicate
that
we
instructed
Mr.
Weldon
in
rendering
his
decision
to
refer
the
matter
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment,
in
any
event,
in
order
that
effect
could
be
given
to
these
agreements.
The
decision
of
the
Board
simply
dismisses
the
appeals
and
confirms
the
relevant
re-assessments.
I
would
prefer
to
keep
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
as
simple
as
possible
and
hence
to
avoid
reference
in
it
to
the
matters
dealt
with
in
the
following
paragraphs
of
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
(a)
Paragraph
10
of
the
Allegations
of
Fact.
(b)
Paragraph
3
of
the
Statement
of
Reasons.
(c)
Sentences
2
and
3
of
Paragraph
4
of
the
Statement
of
Reasons.
(d)
Paragraphs
5,
6
and
8
of
the
Statement
of
Reasons.
If
you
can
now
indicate
the
Department’s
agreement
to
reassessment
of
the
years
in
question
in
any
event
on
the
same
basis
as
the
agreements
reached
before
the
hearing
at
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
level,
simplicity
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
could
be
achieved.
Could
you
let
me
have
your
views
on
this
matter.
To
this
letter,
counsel
for
the
Minister
replied
on
January
17,
1964,
as
follows:
This
will
acknowledge
receipt
of
your
letter
of
January
16th,
1964,
and
will
confirm
the
verbal
message
the
writer
left
with
your
secretary
today.
We
agree
that
in
the
event
the
Appellant,
Gunnar
Mining
Limited,
is
unsuccessful
with
respect
to
the
principal
issue
in
these
appeals
which
concerns
the
treatment
afforded
on
assessment
of
the
interest
income
received
by
the
taxpayer
on
short
term
obligations
and
certain
profits
from
the
sale
of
sulphuric
acid,
then
the
Minister
will
be
prepared
to
re-assess
and
to
reduce
the
income,
first
by
capital
cost
allowances
and
if
required,
secondly,
by
deferred
exploration
deductions
(to
the
extent
of
the
amounts
available
for
this
purpose)
before
reaching
the
actual
net
figure
on
which
tax
was
payable.
In
addition,
in
the
event
that
the
Crown
is
successful
in
this
appeal,
no
charge
on
late
or
deferred
instalment
payments
with
respect
to
the
1960
assessment
will
be
properly
payable.*
We
trust
this
will
enable
you
to
omit
the
sentences
and
paragraphs
contained
in
the
Notice
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
listed
on
the
second
page
of
your
letter
of
January
16th.
Thereafter,
the
appeals
to
this
Court
and
the
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
proceeded
without
reference
to
the
questions
of
capital
cost
allowance
and
pre-production
expenses
and
each
appeal
resulted
simply
in
the
taxpayer’s
appeal
being
dismissed.
After
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
two
self-
explanatory
letters
were
written
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
to
the
solicitors
for
the
taxpayer.
The
first
was
written
on
March
22,
1968,
by
Mr.
T.
Z.
Boles,
who
had
acted
as
counsel
for
the
Minister
on
the
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
and
reads
as
follows
:
Following
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
appeal
of
the
above
taxpayer,
I
have
been
advised
by
an
appeal
assessor
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
of
his
proposed
re-assessments
to
allow
the
taxpayer
the
deduction
of
additional
capital
cost
allowance
pursuant
to
an
undertaking
to
that
effect
given
by
officials
of
the
Department
of
National
Reve-
nue
prior
to
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
later
by
the
Exchequer
Court.
The
proposed
re-assessments,
I
am
advised,
will
result
in
a
substantial
refund
payable
to
the
taxpayer.
The
question
then
arises
whether
such
a
refund
of
overpayment
of
tax
is
made
under
the
provisions
of
Section
57(3)
or
of
Section
57
(3a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
If
subsection
(3)
applies,
interest
at
3%
will
be
paid
on
the
refund
whereas
under
subsection
(3a)
interest
at
the
rate
of
6%
will
be
applied.
In
the
Notices
of
Objection
and
Notices
of
Appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
the
Appellant
claimed
as
an
alternative
the
right
to
claim
additional
capital
cost
allowance
in
the
event
that
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dismissed
the
Appellant’s
appeal
on
the
main
issue
involving
the
right
to
deduct
certain
interest
payments.
This
alternative
claim
was
referred
to
by
you
in
your
opening
statement
at
the
hearing
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
However,
the
Minutes
of
Judgment
as
given
by
Mr.
Weldon,
the
presiding
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
were
entered
and
issued
in
the
following
terms:
“Appeal
dismissed”
with
no
reference
whatsoever
to
the
alternative
claim.
An
appeal
was
taken
from
these
assessments
to
the
Exchequer
Court
and
from
the
judgment
of
that
Court
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
The
only
issue
before
the
Exchequer
Court
and
therefore
the
only
one
dealt
with
by
that
Court,
concerned
the
disallowance
of
the
interest
payments,
and
as
the
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
was
from
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
the
Supreme
Court
dealt
only
with
the
same
issue.
Under
these
circumstances,
I
have
concluded
that
the
reassessments
which
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
now
propose
to
make
will
not
be
made
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
(8a)
of
Section
57
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
reconsidered
the
assessments
upon
receipt
of
the
Notices
of
Objection
as
directed
by
Section
58
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
having
done
so
confirmed
such
assessments.
The
Minister
having
so
exercised
his
power
and
the
Courts
having
upheld
the
assessments,
the
Minister,
in
my
opinion,
has
not
the
power
or
authority
to
reconsider
his
original
decision.
In
addition,
as
the
judgments
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
Exchequer
Court
and
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
respectively
make
no
reference
to
a
claim
for
additional
cost
allowance
but
merely
find
that
the
assessments
in
question
were
properly
made,
no
re-assessments
under
the
terms
of
those
judgments
were
necessary.
Therefore
if
it
is
finally
determined
because
of
a
claim
for
additional
capital
cost
allowance
that
the
tax
payable
by
this
taxpayer
is
less
than
the
amount
originally
assessed
under
Section
46
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
is
not
as
a
result
of
a
decision
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
under
Section
58
or
of
any
Court
decision
but
arises
only
to
implement
an
undertaking
given
by
officials
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
I
have
considered
your
suggestion
that
possibly
the
Minutes
of
Judgment
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
could
be
amended
to
refer
the
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment.
In
my
view,
this
would
create
an
impossible
situation.
If
a
judgment
in
those
terms
had
been
issued
and
entered
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
originally,
it
is
difficult
to
predict
on
what
grounds
an
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
would
have
been
taken
and
what
the
position
of
the
Minister
would
have
been
with
regard
to
a
cross-appeal.
In
any
event,
I
believe
that
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
does
not
have
the
power
to
amend
this
judgment
under
these
circumstances.
This
question
was
considered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
case
of
Paper
Machinery
Limited
et
al.
v.
Ross
Engineering
Corp.
et
al.,
[1934]
2
D.L.R.
239.
In
the
judgment
of
the
Court
at
page
240,
Justice
Rinfret
states
the
following:
“The
question
really
is
therefore
whether
there
is
power
in
the
Court
to
amend
a
judgment
which
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered.
In
such
a
case,
the
rule
followed
in
England
is,
we
think,—and
we
see
no
reason
why
it
should
not
also
be
the
rule
followed
by
this
Court—that
there
is
no
power
to
amend
a
judgment
which
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered,
except
in
two
cases:
(1)
Where
there
has
been
a
slip
in
drawing
it
up,
or
(2)
Where
there
has
been
an
error
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Court
(Re
Swire
(1885),
30
Ch.D.
239;
Preston
Banking
Co.
v.
Allsup
&
Sons,
[1895]
1
Ch.
141;
Ainsworth
v.
Wilding,
[1896]
1
Ch.
673).
In
a
very
recent
case
(MacCarthy
v.
Agard,
[1933]
2
K.B.
417)
the
authorities
were
all
reviewed
and
the
principle
was
re-asserted.
In
that
case,
although,
indeed,
all
the
Judges
expressed
the
view
that
the
circumstances
were
particularly
favourable
to
the
applicant,
but
because
neither
of
the
conditions
mentioned
were
present,
the
Court
of
Appeal
came
to
the
conclusion
that
it
has
no
power
to
interfere.
(The
rule
as
stated
was
approved
by
the
Privy
Council
in
Firm
of
R.M.K.R.M.
v.
Firm
of
M.R.M.V.L.,
[1926]
A.C.
761
at
p.
771).”
The
recent
English
case
referred
to
in
the
above
judgment
(MacCarthy
v.
Agard),
the
principle
was
stated
as
follows:
“So
far
as
I
am
aware,
the
only
cases
in
which
the
court
can
interfere
after
passing
and
entering
of
the
judgment
are
these:
(i)
Where
there
has
been
an
accidental
slip
in
the
judgment
as
drawn
up—in
which
case
the
court
has
power
to
rectify
it
under
Order
XXVIII,
r.
11;
(ii)
when
a
court
itself
finds
that
the
judgment
as
drawn
up
does
not
correctly
state
what
the
court
actually
decided
and
intended.”
I
am
forwarding
a
copy
of
this
letter
to
the
Appeal
Section
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
with
a
request
for
instructions.
I
am
returning
the
transcript
of
the
evidence
before
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
which
you
kindly
loaned
to
me.
The
second
was
written
by
an
assessment
officer
on
April
2,
1968
and
reads
as
follows:
We
have
been
advised
by
the
Department
of
Justice
that
any
refund
which
will
be
issued
in
respect
of
the
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years,
will
bear
interest
of
3%
rather
than
6%
per
annum
pursuant
to
Section
57
(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Re-assessments
of
these
years
will
be
prepared
as
soon
as
their
acceptance
in
writing
has
been
received.
At
that
stage
the
taxpayer
took
the
matter
up
with
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
in
Ottawa
and,
finally,
after
correspondence
and
interviews,
received
a
letter
from
the
Deputy
Minister
dated
November
6,
1968,
reading
as
follows:
The
matter
of
re-opening
this
taxpayer’s
1958,
1959
and
1960
assessments
which
we
discussed
some
months
ago
has
been
considered
further.
For
the
reasons
given
to
you
by
Mr.
T.
Z.
Boles
in
his
letter
of
March
22,
1968
I
do
not
believe
that
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
can
be
re-opened
to
permit
re-assessments
under
Section
92
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
is
also
now
too
late
to
reassess
under
Section
46(4)
of
that
Act.
I
am
prepared
to
recommend
to
the
Minister
that
a
submission
be
made
to
the
Treasury
Board
under
Section
22
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act
to
remit
income
taxes
to
the
extent
of
$457,963.90.
There
is
no
statutory
authority,
however,
to
pay
any
interest
in
respect
of
the
tax
being
remitted.
Because
of
the
time
limits,
Section
57
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
not
applicable.
For
your
information,
attached
is
a
calculation
showing
how
the
amount
of
$457,963.90
was
determined.
By
notice
of
motion
dated
November
7,
1969,
the
taxpayer
made
the
motion
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
resulted
in
the
order
amending
the
judgment
that
gave
rise
to
this
appeal.
Mr.
Weldon,
the
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
who
heard
the
motion,
gave
reasons
for
granting
it,
which
read,
in
part,
as
follows
:
Gunnar’s
appeal
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
came
on
for
hearing
before
me
at
the
City
of
Toronto
on
March
19,
1963.
At
the
conclusion
of
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
I
reserved
judgment
and,
subsequently,
dealt
with
the
two
matters
in
dispute
therein
in
the
above-mentioned
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963,
which
held,
first,
that
the
interest
income
earned
by
Gunnar’s
short
term
investments
purchased
out
of
revenue
derived
from
the
operation
of
its
uranium
mine
was
not,
itself,
derived
from
the
operation
of
the
mine
for
the
purpose
of
Section
83(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
chap.
148,
and
secondly,
that
the
profit
derived
from
the
sale
of
sulphuric
acid
from
the
appellant’s
sulphuric
acid
plant
was,
similarly,
not
income
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
mine
for
the
purpose
of
said
Section
83(5)
of
the
Act.
The
said
appeal
was
thereupon
dismissed
and
the
relevant
assessments
confirmed
by
said
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963.
It
is
now
quite
apparent,
and
was,
according
to
the
material
now
before
the
Board,
so
apparent
shortly
after
the
issuance
of
the
said
judgment
to
counsel
who
acted
for
the
parties
at
the
original
hearing
of
the
appeal
on
March
19,
1963,
namely,
R.
M.
Sedgewick,
Esq.,
Q.C.,
for
the
appellant
Gunnar
and
T.
Z.
Boles,
Esq.,
for
the
Minister,
that,
in
view
of
the
appellant’s
alternative
pleading
in
its
Notice
of
Appeal
dated
December
26,
1962
and
the
Board’s
unfavourable
disposition,
from
its
standpoint,
of
the
two
matters
in
dispute
in
the
appeal,
outlined
above,
the
said
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963
should
clearly
have
allowed
Gunnar’s
appeal
in
part
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years—instead
of
simply
dismissing
it—for
the
specific
purpose
only,
after
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
in
respect
of
the
said
two
main
issues
in
the
appeal,
of
referring
the
relevant
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment,
thereby
giving
him
the
opportunity
of
taking
into
account
the
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
which
had
previously
been
agreed
to
between
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
as
being
the
amounts
to
which
the
appellant
was
entitled
in
respect
of
the
said
taxation
years.
As
I
apprehend
the
situation
in
which
the
appellant
now
finds
itself
:
1.
The
Deputy
Minister
frankly
concedes
that
Gunnar
has
overpaid
its
tax
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
by
the
total
sum
of
$469,934.67,
and
has
indicated
his
willingness
to
recommend
to
the
Minister
that
a
submission
be
made
to
the
Treasury
Board
under
Section
22
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
chap.
116,
to
remit
the
said
sum
of
$469,934.67
to
Gunnar
less
the
sum
of
$11,970.77
representing
a
capital
cost
allowance
adjustment
in
respect
of
its
1962
taxation
year.
2.
The
Deputy
Minister,
however,
does
not
concede
that
the
appellant—having
failed
to
convince
the
Board
in
its
appeal
that
it
had
been
incorrectly
assessed
with
regard
to
the
two
matters
outlined
earlier
herein—had
effectively
claimed
in
its
Notice
of
Appeal,
in
the
alternative,
the
right
to
deduct
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
as
of
September
24,
1963,
the
date
of
the
Board’s
judgment.
3.
It
appears
to
be
perfectly
sound
to
state
that—“if”
the
judgment
issued
by
me
on
September
24,
1963
had
gone
one
step
further
and
had
referred
the
relevant
assessments
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
thereby
giving
him
the
opportunity
of
taking
into
account,
as
of
the
said
date
of
September
24,
1963
(that
date
is
important
because
the
ultimate
purpose
of
this
motion
is
to
establish
the
appellant’s
right
to
interest
at
6%
on
the
amounts
of
overpayment
of
tax
totalling
the
sum
of
$469,934.67
calculated
in
accordance
with
subsections
(3)
and
(3a)
of
Section
57
of
the
Act
covering
interest
on
overpayments
of
tax),
the
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
which
had
previously
been
agreed
to
between
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
as
being
the
amounts
to
which
the
appellant
was
entitled
in
respect
of
the
said
taxation
years—the
appellant
could
then
have
brought
itself
within
Section
57
(3a)
of
the
Act
by
pointing
to
a
decision
of
this
Board
(a
court
of
record)
wherein
it
was
determined
that
the
taxes
payable
by
it
in
connection
with
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
were
less
than
the
respective
amounts
assessed
by
the
relevant
assessments
under
Section
46
of
the
Act
from
which
an
appeal
was
taken,
the
Board’s
decision
making
it
appear
that
there
had
been
overpayments
of
tax
for
the
three
taxation
years
in
question.
4.
In
his
above-quoted
letter
dated
November
6,
1968,
the
Deputy
Minister
stated
that
there
was
no
statutory
authority
to
pay
any
interest
(it
should
be
carefully
observed
that
the
Act
provides
for
interest
at
3%
under
Section
57(3)
on
an
ordinary
overpayment
of
tax
but
interest
at
6%
under
Section
57
(3a)
where
the
overpayment
is
apparent
from
a
decision
of
the
Minister
or
from
one
of
the
three
courts
mentioned
therein)
in
respect
of
the
tax
of
$469,934.67
being
remitted
in
connection
with
the
appellant’s
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
explaining
that
Section
57
of
the
Act
was
not
applicable
“because
of
the
time
limits”.
5.
The
Deputy
Minister
had
earlier
stated
in
his
letter—“It
is
also
now
too
late
to
re-assess
under
Section
46(4)
of
the
Act”.
6.
It
has
not
been
possible
for
me
to
conclude
from
the
material
before
me
on
this
motion
or
from
the
submissions
made
by
Mr.
Bowman
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
in
reply
to
the
submissions
made
by
Mr.
Kelsey
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
whether
or
not
the
Minister
would
have
been
willing
to
re-assess
Gunnar
if
he
had
considered
himself
duly
empowered
to
do
so
under
the
Act.
The
Deputy
Minister
simply
stated
the
fact,
as
mentioned
in
paragraph
5
above,
that
it
was
too
late
to
re-assess
under
Section
46(4)
of
the
Act.
7.
It
is
interesting
to
note
that
there
is
provision
under
Section
46(4)
of
the
Act
for
the
Minister
to
re-assess
at
any
time
if
the
taxpayer
has
filed
with
him
a
waiver
in
prescribed
form
within
4
years
from
the
day
of
mailing
of
a
notice
of
an
original
assessment.
Unfortunately,
by
the
time
the
battle
lines
were
drawn
in
this
matter,
it
was
too
late
for
the
appellant
to
file
the
prescribed
waiver
mentioned
above.
8.
It
should
be
observed
that,
unless
there
are
some
basi?
questions
of
entitlement
involved,
capital
cost
allowances
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expenses
would
seem
to
be
purely
routine
administrative
matters
which
are
regularly
dealt
with
by
the
Minister’s
officials.
Accordingly,
it
would
appear
to
be
reasonable
to
conclude
that
the
amendment
sought
herein
by
the
appellant
to
my
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963
is
plainly
administrative
in
its
nature.
9.
After
carefully
reviewing
the
Deputy
Minister’s
letter
dated
November
6,
1968,
I
cannot
help
but
think
that,
having
satisfied
himself
that
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
a
refund
of
tax
amounting
to
the
sum
of
$469,934.67
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years,
he
should,
at
the
outset,
have
decided
whether
or
not
the
appellant
was
entitled
on
the
facts
of
the
matter
to
interest
at
3%
on
the
said
amount
being
remitted
under
Section
57(3)
of
the
Act,
and
only
then
have
fallen
back
on
his
alleged
lack
of
statutory
authority
to
re-assess
under
Section
46(4)
of
the
Act.
By
so
doing,
he
would
possibly
have
cleared
the
way,
so
to
speak,
for
the
Board
to
amend
its
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963
for
the
purpose
of
bringing
the
appellant
within
both
subsections
(3)
and
(8a)
of
Section
57
of
the
Act
on
a
consent
basis.
When
all
has
been
said
and
done,
the
only
reason—that
is
apparent
to
me—for
not
allowing
interest
at
6%
on
the
sum
of
$469,934.67
being
remitted
to
the
appellant
is,
unquestionably,
the
technical
statutory
objection
relied
on
by
the
Minister
which
has
arisen
through
the
effluxion
of
time
in
a
long
drawn
out
litigation
and
which
can
readily
be
overcome
by
the
amendment
to
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963,
sought
by
the
appellant
in
its
present
motion.*
10.
It
should
be
carefully
noted
that
the
amending
judgment
now
being
contemplated
does
not
involve
the
adducing
of
new
evidence
or
any
further
adjudication
on
the
part
of
the
Board.
11.
I
should
like
to
record
in
these
reasons
and
to
emphasize
the
fact
that,
if
the
matter
had
been
impressed
on
me
more
pointedly
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal,
I
would
have
been
quite
willing
to
frame
the
judgment
issued
by
me
on
September
24,
1963
to
comply
with
the
form
of
judgment
now
being
sought
by
the
appellant.
So,
in
the
result,
the
Board
is
being
asked
in
this
motion
to
correct
a
matter
which
did
come
up
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal,
which
is
administrative
in
its
nature,
which
does
not
require
the
adducing
of
new
evidence
or
further
adjudication
on
the
part
of
the
Board,
and
which
does
not
seem
to
be
in
dispute
so
far
as
the
Minister’s
position
has
been
made
clear
to
me.
It
should
be
noted:
that
the
re-assessments
mentioned
in
Mr.
Boles’
letter
dated
March
22,
1968,
were
never
issued;
that
the
Deputy
Minister’s
letter
to
the
appellant’s
solicitors
dated
November
6,
1968,
quoted
earlier
herein,
was
obviously
intended
to
provide
a
final
answer
to
Mr.
Sheppard’s
3
letters
of
June
11,
July
4
and
August
30,
1968,
listed
above,
and
to
close
out
the
matter
in
so
far
as
the
Minister
was
concerned;
that
re-assessments
covering
the
matters
now
in
dispute
were
promised
by
T.
Z.
Boles,
Esq.,
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
away
back
on
January
17,
1964,
as
evidenced
by
Mr.
Boles’
letter
of
that
date;
that,
if
the
said
re-assessments
had
been
issued,
as
promised,
the
appellant
would
then
have
had
a
clear
right
under
the
Act
to
resort
to
the
courts
to
obtain
an
adjudication
of
its
rights;
that
the
waiver
provision
in
Section
46(4)
of
the
Act
was
plainly
intended
for
the
sole
benefit
and
protection
of
taxpayers
and
was
not
intended
to
prevent
an
assessment
sought
by
a
taxpayer,
and
that,
subject
only
to
that
provision,
since
Parliament
obviously
intended
to
give
the
Minister
the
broadest
possible
powers
of
assessment
under
Section
46,
the
way
appears
to
have
been
left
open
thereunder
for
him
to
make
an
assessment
at
any
time
at
the
request
and
with
the
consent
of
the
taxpayer
involved
having
regard
to
the
Minister’s
almost
impregnable
position
under
subsection
(7)
of
Section
46
which
purports
to
cure
any
error,
defect
or
omission
therein.
It
has
not
been
possible
for
me
to
imagine
how
an
assess-
ment
made
under
those
circumstances
could
run
counter
to
Section
46
or
the
plain
overall
purpose
thereof.
Subsection
(7)
reads
as
follows:
“46.
(7)
An
assessment
shall,
subject
to
being
varied
or
vacated
on
an
objection
or
appeal
under
this
Part
and
subject
to
a
re-assessment,
be
deemed
to
be
valid
and
binding
notwithstanding
any
error,
defect
or
omission
therein
or
in
any
proceeding
under
this
Act
relating
thereto.”
On
the
basis
of
the
material
before
me
on
this
motion,
there
should
be
a
finding
embracing
the
following
matters:
that
the
judgment
issued
by
me
on
September
24,
1963—which
is
the
subject
matter
of
this
motion—is
and
has
been
deficient
since
the
date
of
its
issue
by
reason
of
an
inadvertent
error
of
omission
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Board,
which
can
reasonably
be
characterized
as
a
“slip”;
that,
as
stated
earlier
“the
said
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963
should
clearly
have
allowed
Gunnar’s
appeal
in
part
in
respect
of
its
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years—instead
of
simply
dismissing
it—for
the
specific
purpose
only,
after
dismissing
the
appellant’s
appeal
in
respect
of
the
said
two
main
issues
in
the
appeal,
of
referring
the
relevant
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
reassessment,
thereby
giving
him
the
opportunity
of
taking
into
account
the
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
which
had
previously
been
agreed
to
between
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
as
being
the
amounts
to
which
the
appellant
was
entitled
in
respect
of
the
said
taxation
years”;
that
the
above
form
of
judgment
was,
unquestionably,
mentioned
in
the
course
of
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
on
March
19,
1963
and,
if
it
had
not
been
for
the
unfortunate
error
of
omission
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Board
in
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963,
mentioned
above,
I
would
have
been
quite
willing
to
issue
the
judgment
in
that
form
making
it
clear,
of
course,
that
the
appeal
was
being
dismissed
in
all
other
respects;
that
the
amending
judgment
sought
by
the
appellant
does
not
involve
the
adducing
of
new
evidence
or
any
further
adjudication
on
the
part
of
the
Board;
that
the
appellant’s
lengthy
delay
in
applying
to
the
Board
for
the
now
all-important
amendment
to
its
judgment
dated
September
24,
1963,
while
regrettable
from
every
standpoint,
has
been
satisfactorily
explained
away
by
Mr.
Kelsey
in
the
course
of
his
submissions
to
the
Board
which
are
borne
out
by
the
material
before
me
on
this
motion,
and
that
such
delay
should
not
be
regarded
as
a
barrier
to
the
granting
of
the
relief
sought
by
the
appellant.
In
light
of
the
material
quoted
herein,
which
speaks
for
itself,
and
the
foregoing
reasons
and
observations,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
appellant’s
motion
herein
to
amend
or
enlarge
judgment
of
this
Board
issued
on
September
24,
1963
should
be
granted,
and
that
the
Board
should
issue
an
order,
and
it
is
hereby
ordered
accordingly,
that
a
judgment
in
the
following
terms
should
be
substituted
for
the
present
judgment
of
the
Board
herein
dated
September
24,
1963,
the
judgment
being
substituted
to
be
also
dated
September
24,
1963
and
to
have
effect
as
and
from
that
date
:
“The
appeal
with
regard
to
the
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
should
be
allowed
in
part
for
the
purpose
only
of
referring
the
relevant
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
taking
into
account
the
capital
cost
allowance
and
deferred
exploration
and
development
expense
agreed
upon
between
the
Minister
and
the
appellant
at
or
prior
to
the
hearing
of
the
appeal
before
the
Board
on
March
19,
1963,
as
being
the
amounts
to
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
in
respect
of
the
said
taxation
years,
the
appeal
with
regard
to
the
1958,
1959
and
1960
taxation
years
to
be
dismissed
in
all
other
respects.”
In
reaching
the
above
decision,
I
have
assumed
that,
under
the
cases
of
Prevost
v.
Bedard
and
Paper
Machinery
Limited
et
al.
v.
J.
O.
Ross
Engineering
Corporation
et
al.,
listed
below,
which
were
decided
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
and
generally
under
the
relevant
jurisprudence,
I
have
the
power,
inherent
in
me
as
a
member
of
this
Board
(a
court
of
record
under
the
Act),
to
amend
or
enlarge
the
judgment
of
the
Board
herein
signed
by
me
on
September
24,
1963
by
correcting
the
error
of
omission
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Board
therein,
as
outlined
above.
In
rejecting
Mr.
Bowman’s
submissions
on
behalf
of
the
Minister,
I
have
taken
the
view
that,
notwithstanding
the
present
practice
of
treating
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Board
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
as
a
trial
de
novo,
the
basic
judgment
in
this
matter
is
clearly
that
of
the
Board
dated
September
24,
1963,
and
that
the
effect
of
the
decisions
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
and
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
herein
has
been
simply
to
sustain
and
confirm
that
judgment.
The
fact
that
there
is
no
provision
in
the
Act
or
in
the
Rules
of
the
Board
covering
the
amendment
of
a
judgment
after
it
has
been
issued
is
not
relevant
to
this
matter,
because
the
amendment
in
question
is
being
made
pursuant
to
an
inherent
power
in
the
member
of
the
Board
who
issued
the
said
judgment
to
make
the
necessary
amendment
thereto,
as
explained
earlier
herein.
While
the
general
rule
is,
according
to
Halsbury’s
Laws
of
England,
that
no
court
or
judge
has
power
to
rehear,
review,
alter,
or
vary
any
judgment
or
order
after
it
has
been
entered
or
drawn
up,
the
object
being
to
bring
litigation
to
finality,
it
is
subject
to
a
number
of
exceptions
such
as
the
one
involved
in
this
matter,
i.e.
where
it
is
necessary
to
correct
an
error
of
omission
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Board.
While
Mr.
Kelsey
clearly
had
a
steep
uphill
struggle
during
a
large
part
of
the
hearing
of
the
present
motion
(which
continued
for
a
full
day)
not
only
because
of
the
unusual
nature
of
the
appellant’s
application,
but
also
because
it
was
probably
the
first
time
such
an
application
had
come
before
the
Board,
it
now
appears
to
me
to
have
been
entirely
proper
application
to
make
under
the
peculiar
circumstances
of
the
matter
and,
as
indicated
earlier,
should
be
granted.
This
appeal
is
from
the
order
so
made,
or
from
the
Judgment
created
by
the
order
so
made.
I
cannot
see
that
it
matters
whether
it
is
regarded
one
way
or
the
other.
The
general
rule
is,
of
course,
that
no
court
can,
without
special
authority,
rehear
a
matter
or
change
its
decision
on
a
matter
of
substantive
right
after
its
judgment
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered.
It
is
generally
accepted
“that
the
general
good
of
the
community”
requires
‘‘a
final
end
to
be
put
to
litigation”.
Compare
In
re
St.
Nazaire
Company
(1879),
12
Ch.
D.
88
(C.A.),
per
Jessel,
M.R.
at
p.
100.
See
also
Preston
Banking
Company
v.
William
Allsup
&
Sons,
[1895]
1
Ch.
141;
Ainsworth
v.
Wilding,
[1896]
1
Ch.
673;
Oaley
v.
Link,
[1914]
2
K.B.
734;
Firm
of
R.M.K.R.M.
v.
Firm
of
M.R.M.V.L.,
[1926]
A.C.
761;
MacCarthy
v.
Agard,
[1933]
2
K.B.
417;
Paper
Machinery
Limited
v.
J.
O.
Ross
Engineering
Corporation,
[1934]
S.C.R.
186;
Webster
Co.
v.
Connors
Bros.
Ltd.,
[1936]
2
D.L.R.
164;
Meier
v.
Meier,
[1948]
P.
89;
and
Kuziak
v.
Romuld
(1966),
60
D.L.R.
(2d)
286.
A
judgment
should
normally
be
reviewed
on
appeal
or,
in
an
appropriate
case,
be
set
aside
by
a
new
action
based
on
fraud
or
new
evidence.
These
general
rules
are,
I
am
satisfied,
applicable
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.*
I
am
satisfied,
however,
that
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
which
is
a
court
of
record,
has
the
inherent
power
to
change
the
record!
of
a
judgment
pronounced
by
it
so
that
it
will
express
the
order
actually
made
by
the
Board
even
though
there
is
nothing
in
the
statute
law
or
the
regulations
that
expressly
permits
it
to
do
so.
See
In
re
Swire
(1885),
30
Ch.
D.
239,
per
Cotton,
L.J.
at
p.
243
and
Bowen,
L.J.
at
p.
248,
and
Milson
v.
Carter,
[1893]
A.C.
638.
In
the
absence
of
any
express
authority
such
as
that
conferred
on
most
common
law
courts
and
commonly
known
as
the
“slip
rule’’,t
the
Board’s
power
to
change
the
record
of
its
judgment
or
otherwise
make
corrections
is
no
greater,
and
is
possibly
less,
than
the
power
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
as
laid
down
by
the
judgment
of
that
Court
in
Paper
Machinery
Limited
v.
J.
O.
Ross
Engineering
Corporation,
[1934]
S.C.R.
186,
per
Rinfret,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
at
p.
188:
The
question
really
is
therefore
whether
there
is
power
in
the
Court
to
amend
a
judgment
which
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered.
In
such
a
case,
the
rule
followed
in
England
is,
we
think,—and
we
see
no
reason
why
it
should
not
also
be
the
rule
followed
by
this
Court—that
there
is
no
power
to
amend
a
judgment
which
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered,
except
in
two
cases:
(1)
Where
there
has
been
a
slip
in
drawing
it
up,
or
(2)
Where
there
has
been
error
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
court
(In
re
Swire
(1885),
30
Ch.D.
239;
Preston
Banking
Company
v.
Allsup
&
Sons,
[1895]
1
Ch.
141;
Ainsworth
v.
Wilding,
[1896]
1
Ch.
673).
In
a
very
recent
case
(MacCarthy
v.
Agard,
[1933]
1
K.B.
417),
the
authorities
were
all
reviewed
and
the
principle
was
reasserted.
In
that
case,
although,
indeed,
all
the
judges
expressed
the
view
that
the
circumstances
were
particularly
favourable
to
the
applicant,
but
because
neither
of
the
conditions
mentioned
were
present,
the
Court
of
Appeal
came
to
the
conclusion
that
it
had
no
power
to
interfere.
(The
rule
as
stated
was
approved
by
the
Privy
Council
in
Firm
of
R.M.K.R.M.
v.
Firm
of
M.R.M.V.L.,
[1926]
A.C.
761
at
771-772.)
What
happened
here
would
seem
to
be
clear.
At
the
opening
of
the
hearing
before
the
Board,
the
parties
made
it
clear
to
the
Board
that
they
were
in
agreement
that,
even
if
he
taxpayer
was
unsuccessful
in
its
first
attack
on
the
assessment,
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
and
there
should
be
a
reference
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment,
but
with
a
direction
that
would
relate
to
a
secondary
matter
and
not
the
direction
that
the
taxpayer
sought
to
obtain.
This
fact
was
not
present
in
the
mind
of
the
member
of
the
Board
when
he
rendered
judgment
with
the
result
that
he
delivered
a
judgment
by
which
he
dismissed
the
appeal.
Thinking
that
it
could
obtain
satisfactory
relief
without
doing
so,
the
taxpayer
deliberately
refrained
from
appealing
against
this
error
on
the
part
of
the
Board
when
it
did
appeal
against
its
defeat
on
its
first
attack
on
the
assessments.
After
losing
its
appeals
and
then
finding
that
it
could
not
obtain
satisfactory
relief
on
the
secondary
matter,
it
returned
to
the
Board
and
got
the
order
giving
rise
to
this
appeal.
It
is
clear
that,
when
the
Board
delivered
its
original
judgment,
it
completely
overlooked
the
agreement
of
the
parties
that
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
in
any
event.
This
appears
from
several
passages
in
the
Board’s
Reasons
of
September
30,
1969,
of
which
it
will
be
sufficient
to
refer
to
only
one,
viz:
I
should
like
to
record
in
these
reasons
and
to
emphasize
the
fact
that,
if
the
matter
had
been
impressed
on
me
more
pointedly
(6)
Clerical
mistakes
in
judgments
or
orders,
or
errors
arising
therein
from
any
accidental
slip
or
omission,
may
at
any
time
be
corrected
by
the
Court
without
an
appeal.
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal,
I
would
have
been
quite
willing
to
frame
the
judgment
issued
by
me
on
September
24,
1963
to
comply
with
the
form
of
judgment
now
being’
sought
by
the
appellant.
As
the
matter
had
been
completely
overlooked
at
the
time
of
the
judgment
of
September
24,
1963,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
only
“intention”
of
the
Board
at
that
time,
‘
manifest,’
or
otherwise,
was
to
dismiss
the
appeal.
That
being
so,
within
my
understanding
of
the
Words
as
used
by
Rinfret,
J.
in
the
Paper
Machinery
case,
there
was
no
‘‘error’’
at
that
time
‘‘in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Court’’.
Obviously,
the
Board’s
reasons
for
the
order
appealed
from
proceed
on
a
different
view
of
those
words
when
they
say
‘‘the
judgment
.
which
is
the
subject
of
this
motion
is
and
has
been
deficient
since
the
date
of
its
issue
by
reason
of
an
inadvertent
error
of
omission
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Board
.
.
.’’.
According
to
my
understanding
of
the
matter,
the
1963
judgment
carried
out
exactly
the
intention
as
formulated
by
the
Board
at
that
time.
As
I
view
the
matter,
the
order
appealed
from
can
only
be
supported
if
the
Board
has
power
to
substitute
one
judgment
for
another
so
as
to
do
what
it
would
have
done
if
it
had
had
something
in
mind
at
the
time
of
rendering
the
original
judgment
that
in
fact
it
did
not
have
in
mind
a
that
time.
There
are
authorities,
on
which
the
taxpayer
relies
in
support
of
the
order
appealed
from,
which
would
seem
to
lend
some
support
for
the
view
that
a
court
has
power
to
change
judgments
when
it
discovers
oversights.
In
my
view,
however,
none
of
these
authorities
go
so
far
as
to
hold
that
any
court
can
completely
change
the
substance
of
its
judgment
on
the
ground
that
it
overlooked
or
did
not
know
something
when
it
rendered
it.
In
addition,
most
of
such
decisions
seem
to
be
based
on
the
‘‘slip’’
rule
or
some
other
authority
not
vested
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
In
any
event,
to
the
extent
that
such
authorities
go
beyond
the
bounds
laid
down
in
the
Paper
Machinery
case,
as
I
understand
them,
I
am
of
the
view
that
I
should
apply
the
law
as
stated
in
that
case.
Before
referring
to
the
cases
that
I
have
in
mind,
I
should
say
that,
when
some
of
the
cases
relied
on
by
the
taxpayer.
are
examined,
it
is
found
that
the
changes
made
in
the
judgments
there
under
review
were
made
to
make
the
formal
judgment
express
the
judgment
as
actually
delivered
by
the
Court.
See,
for
example,
Hatton
v.
Harris,
[1892]
A.C.
547,
where
the
decision
was
based
on
the
principle
stated
by
Lord
Watson
at
p.
560,
that
“
...
it
is
always
within
the
competency
of
the
Court.
.
.
to
correct
the
record
in
order
to
bring
it
into
harmony
with
the
order
which
the
judge
obviously
meant
to
pronounce”.
An-
other
example
is
Milson
v.
Carter,
[1893]
A.C.
638,
where
Lord
Hobhouse
said
at
p.
640:
‘‘It
is
obvious
that
the
omission
to
provide
for
the
case
of
dismissal
.
.
.
must
have
been
an
accidental
omission
for
which
the
registrar
of
the
Supreme
Court,
or
perhaps
the
respondent
himself,
is
to
blame.
It
is
impossible
to
suppose
that
the
Court
could
have
intended
to
give
the
appellant
an
opportunity
of
shuffling
out:
of
his
just.
liability
by
making
default
in
the
prosecution
of
his
appeal.’’
See
also
Lawrie
v.
Lees
(1881),
7
App.
Cas.
19,
per
Lord
Penzance
at
pp.
34-5,
Kidd
v.
National
Railway
Association
(1916),
37
O.L.R.
381,
and
Craig
v.
Sinclair
(1944),
61
B.C.R.
253.
A
somewhat
similar
case
carries
this
power
of
the
Court
a
little
further.
In
Thynne
v.
Thynne,
[1955]
P.
272,
it
was
held
that
the
Court
could
correct
a
divorce
decree
after
it
became
absolute
to
make
it
recite
the
marriage
ceremony
which
created
the
state
of
marriage
that
was
dissolved
by
the
decree
instead
of
a
subsequent
ceremony
that
was
the
only
one
of
which
the
Court
had
been
informed
before
the
divorce
decree
was
pronounced.
This
would
seem
to
go
somewhat
further
than
the
bounds
established
in
the
Paper
Machinery
ease,
supra,
but
does
not
go
any
further
than
making
changes
necessary
to
make
the
judgment
reflect
what
the
Court
really
intended
to
do.
See
per
Singleton,
L.J.
at
p.
301:
‘‘It
is
important
to
bear
in
mind
that
the
commissioner
intended
to
dissolve
a
lawful
marriage,
to
put
an
end
to
the
status
of
married
persons
which
up
to
that
time
existed
between
the
wife
and
the
husband
:
.
.
.
”
These
cases
can
have
no
application
here
where
it
is
clear
that
the
Board
did
not
have
in
mind,
when
it
delivered
its
original
judgment,
the
quite
different
judgment
substituted
by
the
later
order.
There
are,
however,
other
cases
where
a
court
has,
subsequent
to
delivering
a
judgment
or
making
an
order,
either
amended
it
so
as
to
change
its
substantive
effect,
or
made
a
further
order,
by
reason
of
having
something
brought
to
its
attention
that
it
had
overlooked
or
had
not
known
about.
The
following
are
the
examples
of
such
cases
that
have
come
to
my
attention
:
1.
Fritz
v.
Hobson
(1880),
14
Ch.D.
542—where,
after
judgment
at
the
end
of
the
trial
of
an
action,
an
application
was
made
for
costs.
of
a
motion
for
an
interlocutory
injunction
that
had
been
adjourned
to
the
trial
and
the
trial
judge
held
that
he
could
still
award
costs
of
that
motion
(even
though
they
would
ordinarily
have
been
dealt
with
in
the
judgment
disposing
of
the
action
if
counsel
had
not
overlooked
applying
for
them)
either
by
reason
of
an
implied
liberty
to
apply
reserved
in
the
original
order
on
the
motion
or
an
express
liberty
to
apply
in
the
judgment
itself
or
by
reason
of
the
“slip”
rule.
2.
Barker
v.
Purvis
(1886),
56
L.T.
131—where
the
judgment
at
the
trial
of
an
action
ordered
a
payment
to
be
made
by
the
defendant
to
the
plaintiff
but
directed
that
he
should
be
at
liberty
to
set
off
a
sum
of
£4538
on
account
of
interest
which
he
had
paid
on
behalf
of
the
plaintiff,
the
amount
of
£453
having
been
fixed
on
the
faith
of
a
statement
of
the
defendant
and
being
in
fact
in
excess
of
the
right
amount,
and
it
was
held
that
the
judgment
could
be
corrected
under
the
‘‘slip’’
rule,
the
mistake
having
been
caused
by
an
‘‘accidental
slip’’.
3.
Hardy
v.
Pickard
(1888),
12
Ont.
P.R
.428—where
Rose,
J.
had
overlooked
expressing
an
award
of
costs
for
the
successful
party
when
he
delivered
judgment
and,
being
satisfied
that
he
had
not
decided
to
deprive
the
successful
party
of
costs,
held
that
he
had
authority
under
the
‘‘slip’’
rule
to
add
the
order
as
to
costs
‘‘
‘
whether
the
omission
was
in
not
considering
the
question,
or
in
not
making
a
record
of
my
judgment’’.
4.
Chessum
&
Sons
v.
Gordon,
[1901]
1
Q.B.
694—where
it
was
held
that,
under
the
‘‘slip’’
rule,
the
Court
could
order
that
a
disbursement
that
a
successful
party
had
omitted
to
claim
on
taxation
of
costs
be
referred
to
the
taxing
master
for
taxation
and
that
his
certificate
might
be
amended.
5.
Prevost
v.
Bedard
(1915),
51
S.C.R.
629—where
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
ordered
that
its
judgment
dismissing
an
appeal
be
varied
by
inserting
a
direction
that
the
judgment
appealed
from
and
the
plaintiff’s
declaration
be
varied
to
correct
the
inadequate
description
of
certain
lands
and
Anglin,
J.
said,
at
p.
635
:
Of
course
this
jurisdiction
is
distinct
from
the
inherent
power
which
the
court
possesses
to
correct
its
formal
judgment
when
it
finds
that
as
drawn
up
it
does
not
correctly
state
what
the
court
actually
directed
and
intended.
There
can
be
no
doubt
that
the
omission
to
provide
in
the
judgment
for
the
amendment
was
due
to
an
accidental
slip
or
oversight.
Had
the
request
and
necessity
for
it
been
present
to
the
minds
of
the
judges
when
delivering
judgment
it
would
certainly
have
been
directed.
In
delivering
its
judgment
dismissing
the
appeal,
the
purpose
of
the
court
clearly
was
that
the
respondent
should
have
an
effective
judgment
for
the
relief
which
he
sought.
That
intention
might
be
defeated
if
the
court
were
powerless
to
grant
the
amendment
now
asked.
6.
McCaughey
v.
Stringer,
[1914]
1
I.R.
Ch.
D.
73—where
it
was
held
that,
following
the
Fritz
case
and
the
Chessum
ease,
an
order
could
be
varied
to
increase
the
amount
payable
be-
cause
the
plaintiff,
in
applying
for
the
order
had,
by
mistake,
allowed
the
defendant
a
credit
greater
than
he
was
entitled
to.
7.
Re
City
Housing
Trust
Ltd.,
[1942]
1
All
E.R.
369—where
it
was
held
that,
the
Master
having
ordered
the
plaintiff’s
costs
in
a
debenture
action
to
be
paid
out
of
the
fund
in
court,
an
order
could
subsequently
be
made
that
the
trustee’s
remuneration
be
paid
out
in
priority
of
the
plaintiff’s
costs.*
8.
Re
Inchcape,
[1942]
2
All
E.R.
157—where
Morton,
J.
held
that
he
could
order
costs
to
be
paid
out
of
an
estate
even
though
they
had
not
been
drawn
to
his
attention
when
he
rendered
a
judgment
in
the
matter
by
which
he
ordered
that
other
costs
be
paid
out
of
the
estate.
In
so
far
as
these
cases
are
cases
where
the
Court
found
that
it
still
had
jurisdiction
to
do
something
in
addition
to
what
was
done
by
its
original
order
or
judgment,
they
cannot
supply
any
support
for
the
order
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
that
is
under
appeal
because
what
it
does
is
to
substitute
a
completely
different
judgment
for
the
one
previously
delivered.
In
so
far
as
they
are
based
on
the
‘‘slip’’
rule,
they
have
no
application,
not
only
because
there
is
no
‘‘slip’’
rule
applicable
to
the
decisions
of
the
Board,
but
also
because
the
“slip”
rule,
while
it
may
well
have
been
properly
applied
in
the
cases
to
which
I
have
referred,
cannot,
properly
considered,
authorize
what
the
Board
did
in
this
case.
The
‘‘slip’’
rule
was
authoritatively
construed
in
Oxley
v.
Link,
[1914]
2
K.B.
734,
per
Vaughan
Williams,
L.J.
at
pp.
737
et
seq.,
where
he
said
:
.
.
.
the
same
objection
which
arises
in
respect
of
the
words
“clerical
mistakes
in
judgments
or
orders”
in
my
opinion
arises
in
respect
of
the
words
“errors
arising
therein
from
any
accidental
slip
or
omission”.
What
is
“therein”?
That
is
in
the
judgment.
It
is
exactly
the
same
thing.
“Clerical
mistakes
in
judgments”
only
covers
the
same
area,
neither
greater
nor
smaller,
as
you
get
from
the
words
“errors
arising
therein
from
any
accidental
slip
or
omission”—that
is
in
judgments
or
orders.
Under
those
circumstances,
I
come
to
the
conclusion
that
this
slip
rule
does
not
apply
in
the
present
case.
The
real
fact
of
the
matter
is
that
what
is
asked
for
here
by
the
judgment
creditors,
if
I
may
call
them
such,
is
this,
not
that
there
may
be
a
correction
in
the
judgment
or
order,
but
that
they
may
substitute
for
the
judgment
or
order
which
has
been
made
something
which
is
a
wholly
different
judgment.
I
heard
Mr.
Sankey
say
this
morning
that
all
that
was
wished
to
be
done
here
was
to
add
an
omitted
clause;
but
it
is
not
so.
The
proposal
is
to
substitute
one
form
of
judgment
or
order
for
another.
He
has
no
desire,
as
I
understand
it,
to
make
any
correction
at
all.
and
by
Buckley,
L.J.:at
pp.
741
et
seq.,
where
he
said:
The
words
relied
upon
are:
“errors
arising
therein,’
that
is
to
say,
in
a
judgment—errors
arising
in
a
judgment
“from
any
accidental
slip
or
omission
may
at
any
time
be
corrected
by
the
Court
or
a
judge
on
motion
or
summons
without
an
appeal.”
To
my
mind
an
error
in
something
means
that
the
thing
of
which
you
are
speaking
contains
parts
which
are
right
and
parts
which
are
wrong,
and
that
you
are
going
to
alter
so
much
of
it
as
is
wrong.
It
is
not
correcting
an
error
in
a
thing
which
is
wrong
from
beginning
to
end
to
substitute
for
it
something
which
is
right.
In
order
to
see
if
this
Order
applies
I
have
to
see
whether
this
judgment
contains
something
which
is
right
and
which
I
am
to
correct
by
adding
something,
if
it
be
a
mistake
which
arises
from
omission,
or
by
correcting
something,
if
it
be
something
which
requires
modification
or
correction
of
some
sort.
So
that
to
see
whether
the
Order
applies
or
not,
it
is
vital
in
the
first
instance
to
see
whether
this
is
a
document
parts
of
which
are
right
and
parts
of
which
are
wrong.
If
I
am
right
in
what
I
have
said
already,
there
is
no
part
of
it
which
is
right;
it
is
wrong
altogether.
For
that
reason
it
seems
to
me
that
the
slip
rule
does
not
apply.
I
am
satisfied,
from
my
examination
of
the
authorities,
that
the
‘‘slip”
rule,
even
if
it
were
applicable,
would
not
have
authorized
the
Board
to
do
what
it
did
here,
namely,
substitute
for
the
judgment
originally
delivered
a
completely
different
Judgment
that
it
had
no
intention
of
delivering
when
it
rendered
its
original
judgment.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
that
are
the
subject
matter
of
the
Board’s
judgment
will
be
restored.