Mahoney,
       
        J:—The
      
      plaintiff,
      a
      chartered
      accountant,
      was
      an
      equal
      
      
      partner
      with
      another
      chartered
      accountant
      in
      the
      practice
      of
      their
      
      
      profession
      in
      Edmonton,
      Alberta
      from
      December
      1,
      1966
      until
      some
      
      
      time
      after
      the
      end
      of
      the
      partnership’s
      fiscal
      year
      on
      May
      31,
      1969.
      
      
      In
      filing
      his
      1970
      personal
      tax
      return,
      he
      reported
      income
      from
      
      
      the
      partnership
      on
      the
      basis
      that
      it
      had
      continued,
      on
      a
      50/50
      basis,
      
      
      beyond
      May
      31,
      1969.
      He
      was
      assessed
      on
      the
      basis
      of
      his
      representations
      
      
      which
      were
      substantiated
      by
      the
      records
      of
      the
      partnership,
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      fact,
      in
      July
      1969
      the
      plaintiff
      and
      his
      partner
      had
      agreed
      to
      
      
      terminate
      their
      association
      effective
      as
      of
      May
      31,
      1969.
      The
      financial
      
      
      settlement
      was
      predicated
      on
      the
      fiction
      that
      no
      partnership
      had
      ever
      
      
      existed
      but
      that
      they
      had
      merely
      shared
      office
      and
      other
      facilities,
      
      
      billed
      their
      own
      clients
      direct,
      paid
      the
      direct
      costs
      of
      servicing
      them
      
      
      and
      shared
      the
      office
      overhead
      equally.
      The
      process
      giving
      effect
      to
      
      
      the
      termination
      agreement
      was
      not
      friendly.
      Solicitors
      were
      eventually
      
      
      involved.
      The
      plaintiff
      and
      his
      ex-partner
      were
      still
      disputing
      details
      of
      
      
      the
      settlement
      in
      April
      1973.
      The
      matter
      was
      concluded
      some
      time
      
      
      before
      May
      15,
      1974,
      when
      a
      mutual
      release
      was
      executed.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      result,
      the
      plaintiff
      was
      allocated
      no
      income
      from
      the
      partnership
      
      
      after
      May
      31,
      1969.
      The
      adjustments
      in
      the
      partnership
      accounts
      
      
      to
      reflect
      the
      termination
      agreement
      result
      in
      a
      reallocation
      of
      income
      
      
      to
      the
      plaintiff
      and
      his
      ex-partner
      as
      far
      back
      as
      their
      1967
      tax
      years.
      
      
      The
      termination
      agreement
      did
      not
      reduce
      the
      total
      income
      of
      the
      
      
      partnership,
      it
      merely
      reallocated
      it.
      To
      the
      extent
      that
      the
      plaintiff’s
      
      
      income
      from
      the
      partnership
      after
      May
      31,
      1969
      was
      reduced,
      either
      
      
      his
      ex-partner’s
      income
      or
      his
      own
      income
      for
      one
      or
      more
      prior
      
      
      periods
      was
      increased.
      The
      increase
      cannot
      be
      taxed
      to
      them
      for
      the
      
      
      years
      to
      which
      it
      was
      allocated
      because
      such
      reassessments
      are
      
      
      statute-barred.
      
      
      
      
    
      This
      is
      a
      text
      book
      example
      of
      estoppel
      by
      representation.
      The
      
      
      plaintiff
      having
      represented
      that
      the
      partnership
      income
      was
      distributed
      
      
      in
      a
      certain
      way,
      the
      Minister
      of
      National
      Revenue
      having
      acted
      on
      that
      
      
      representation
      and,
      by
      so
      doing,
      now
      finding
      himself
      statute-barred
      
      
      from
      taxing
      the
      partnership
      income
      as
      the
      plaintiff
      now
      says
      it
      was
      
      
      distributed,
      the
      plaintiff
      cannot
      deny
      the
      truth
      of
      his
      original
      
      
      representations.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      appeal
      is
      dismissed
      with
      costs.