Sarchuk,
T.CJ.:—This
is
an
application
by
the
respondent
for
an
order
quashing
the
appellant's
appeal
for
his
1985
taxation
year
on
the
grounds
that
lacks
jurisdiction
by
virtue
of
its
order
entered
July
27,
1989,
dismissing
the
appeal
and
therefore
is
functus
officio.
By
way
of
cross
motion
the
appellant
seeks
an
order
setting
aside
the
dismissal
dated
July
27,
1989
or
alternatively,
an
order
declaring
that
the
Court
retains
jurisdiction
with
respect
to
the
appeal
herein
on
the
ground
that
the
original
dismissal
is
not
intended
to
finally
determine
the
appeal
since
it
was
made
in
contemplation
of
a
refiling
of
a
notice
of
appeal.
By
consent
of
all
parties
the
applications
were
heard
together.
The
sequence
of
events
giving
rise
to
these
applications
follows.
The
appellant
was
reassessed
for
taxation
year
1985
on
or
about
September
21,
1988.
A
notice
of
objection
dated
September
30,
1988
was
served
by
the
appellant
and
received
by
the
respondent
on
October
11,
1988.
No
confirmation
having
been
received
within
the
time
period
prescribed
by
section
169
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
Act),
on
June
15,
1989
the
appellant
forwarded
a
notice
of
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
which
said
notice
was
received
on
June
19,
1989.
On
June
28,
1989
George
Nikolakakos,
the
appellant's
accountant,
had
a
conversation
with
Mr.
D.
Gatten
of
the
Appeals
Division,
Revenue
Canada,
Taxation
regarding
this
notice
of
appeal.
Gatten
erroneously
stated
that
the
notice
of
appeal
was
premature
and
asked
Nikolakakos
to
arrange
to
have
it
withdrawn
with
the
understanding
that
it
could
be
refiled
following
confirmation.
On
June
30,
1989,
Gatten
wrote
the
following
letter
to
Nikolakakos:
As
discussed
in
our
telephone
conversation
of
June
28,
1989,
this
letter
is
to
confirm
that
as
of
this
date
the
finalization
of
the
Notice
of
Objection
for
the
above
taxpayer,
upon
which
you
have
based
your
Appeal,
has
not
yet
been
completed.
Therefore,
we
have
enclosed
for
your
convenience
a
letter
in
duplicate
covering
the
withdrawal
of
the
Appeal
on
that
basis.
We
would
appreciate
the
return
of
the
original,
duly
signed
and
dated,
in
the
envelope
provided
and
we
will
forward
it
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
on
your
behalf.
Upon
receipt
of
the
Minister’s
Notification
in
the
form
of
a
confirmation
or
reassessment
finalizing
the
objection,
you
have
a
right
to
appeal
the
decision
within
90
days
from
the
date
of
the
Notification.
The
document
enclosed
by
Gatten
was
a
letter
dated
June
30,
1989
and
addressed
to
the
Registrar
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
It
read:
Re:
Notice
of
Appeal
for
George
Laskaris,
Post
Marked
June
15,
1989
Taxation
years
1985
and
1986
The
Withdrawal
of
the
above
Notice
of
Appeal
is
hereby
confirmed
on
the
basis
that
the
Notice
of
Objection
for
the
above
taxation
years
has
not
to
date
been
finalized.
This
letter
was
signed
by
Nikolakakos
as
agent
for
the
appellant
on
July
7,
1989,
was
forwarded
to
Gatten,
who
then
sent
it
on
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
where
it
was
received
on
July
20,
1989.
On
the
reverse
side
of
this
letter
the
following
notation
has
been
added:
Withdrawal
of
appeal
accepted—appeal
dismissed.
Initialled
at
Ottawa,
Canada,
this
27
day
of
July
1989.
which
notation
is
initialled
by
the
Chief
Judge
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada.
On
August
1,
1989
an
official
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
wrote
to
Nikolakakos
stating:
I
acknowledge
receipt
of
the
Notice
of
Withdrawal
in
the
above-noted
matter.
Pursuant
to
subsection
171(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
transmit
herewith
by
registered
mail
a
copy
of
the
decision
of
the
Court
dismissing
the
appeal,
the
original
of
which
has
been
duly
filed
of
record
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
on
July
27,1989.
Quite
by
coincidence,
on
July
20,
1989,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
confirmed
in
writing
that
the
reassessment
in
respect
of
the
taxation
year
1985
had
been
made
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act.
Following
the
confirmation
the
appellant,
on
August
8,
1989,
refiled
his
notice
of
appeal
with
respect
to
the
reassessment
of
his
1985
taxation
year.
This
notice
was
received
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
on
August
15,
1989.
In
the
covering
letter
Nikolakakos
writes:
The
enclosed
Appeal
is
being
filed
in
the
place
of
an
Appeal
which
we
had
filed
before
and
which
was
supposed
to
have
been
withdrawn
instead
of
dismissed.
.
.
.
As
required
by
section
170
of
the
Act
a
copy
of
this
notice
of
appeal
was
sent
to
the
office
of
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Taxation.
The
respondent's
motion
followed
in
due
course.
The
only
provision
of
the
Act
which
is
relevant
to
the
issue
before
me
follows:
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.
The
position
of
the
respondent
as
expressed
by
counsel
was
that
this
Court
was
functus
officio
since
the
dismissal
endorsed
on
the
letter
of
withdrawal,
a
copy
of
which
was
forwarded
by
registered
mail
to
the
appellant
and
to
the
Minister,
had
the
effect
of
disposing
of
the
appeal
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
section
171
of
the
Act.
There
is
no
dispute
that
the
first
appeal
was
validly
before
the
Court.
Accordingly
the
respondent's
position
is
that
once
the
matter
is
validly
before
the
Court
it
is
taken
out
of
the
hands
of
Revenue
Canada
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
169(b)
and
the
confirmation
in
such
circumstances
was
a
nullity.
The
Minister
had
within
his
power,
provided
he
was
not
statute
barred,
to
issue
a
reassessment
which
would
have
had
the
effect
of
vacating
the
existing
reassessment
and
in
that
way
to
commence
the
process
again.
That
he
did
not
do
but
rather
purported
to
issue
a
notice
of
confirmation.
Since
the
appeal
which
the
taxpayer
launched
was
validly
before
the
Court
the
provisions
of
subsection
171(1)
applied
and
this
Court
had
no
authority
to
do
anything
other
than
to
dismiss
or
allow
the
appeal.
Counsel
contended
that
it
was
clear
on
the
material
filed
that
nothing
was
done
by
the
Court
to
allow
the
appeal
and
the
notation
stating
that
the
matter
was
dismissed,
initialled
by
the
Chief
Judge,
coupled
with
the
mailing
of
the
order
to
the
various
parties
concerned,
constituted
a
proper
dismissal
of
the
appeal.
While
there
may
have
been
some
misunderstanding
between
the
parties
as
to
what
was
intended,
there
is
no
error
in
the
order
of
the
Court
dismissing
the
appeal.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
further
submitted
that
the
“slip”,
a
procedural
concept
analyzed
in
M.N.R.
v.
Gunnar
Mining
Limited,
[1970]
C.T.C.
152;
70
D.T.C.
6135
(Exch.)
does
not
apply
to
the
case
at
bar
to
allow
this
Court
to
amend
or
set
aside
its
prior
order.
Counsel
suggested
that
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
John
Shairp
v.
The
Queen,
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
344;
88
D.T.C.
6484
could
be
looked
to
as
an
example
of
the
circumstances
in
which
the
“slip”
rule
could
be
utilized.
In
that
matter
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
where
the
formal
order
of
the
Court
did
not
reflect
what
the
Court
intended,
the
Court
had
the
authority
to
issue
an
amending
order
to
properly
reflect
its
decision.
Such,
however,
was
not
the
case
here.
I
turn
first
to
the
respondent's
submission
that
this
Court
is
functus
officio
and
does
not
have
the
power
to
amend
or
set
aside
its
prior
order.
The
circumstances
in
which
a
Court
may
do
so
were
considered
in
Gunnar
Mining.
In
that
case
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
issued
a
judgment
in
1963
which
dismissed
the
appeal
of
the
respondent
mining
company
against
its
assessments
for
1958,
1959
and
1960.
The
Board
ruled
against
the
taxpayer
on
its
two
principal
contentions.
However,
the
company
submitted
in
its
notice
of
objection,
the
notice
of
appeal
to
the
Board,
and
its
pleadings
before
the
Board
that,
if
the
company
were
unsuccessful
in
its
principal
contentions,
the
income
subject
to
tax
during
the
taxation
years
under
appeal
should
be
reduced
by
the
deduction
of
additional
capital
cost
allowance
and
by
deferred
exploration
expense
deductions.
Apparently
the
Minister
agreed
at
the
time
of
the
hearing
to
this
alternative
submission,
and
agreed
that,
even
if
the
company
lost
its
appeal
on
the
principal
issues,
the
assessments
should
be
referred
back
to
him
for
reassessment.
By
a
notice
of
motion,
the
company
applied
to
the
Board
for
an
order
amending
its
earlier
judgment
to
refer
the
assessments
back
to
the
Minister
with
instructions
to
reassess
in
accordance
with
the
agreed-to
alternative
submission.
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
granted
the
motion
and
made
an
order
to
amend
its
original
judgment
as
requested.
The
Minister
appealed
to
the
Exchequer
Court
from
the
Board's
order
and
amended
judgment.
The
Minister’s
appeal
was
allowed.
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
had
no
power,
jurisdiction
or
authority
to
make
the
order
by
which
it
purported
to
amend
its
original
judgment.
The
general
rule
is
that
no
Court
can,
without
special
authority,
re-hear
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.
However,
there
are
exceptions
to
this
general
rule.
As
stated
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Paper
Machinery
Ltd.
v.
J.O.
Ross
Engineering
Corporation,
[1934]
S.C.R.
186;
[1934]
2
D.L.R.
239,
there
is
no
power
to
amend
a
judgment
that
has
been
drawn
up
and
entered
except
in
two
cases:
1.
when
there
has
been
a
slip
in
drawing
it
up
(commonly
known
as
the
“slip”
rule),
or
2.
where
there
has
been
error
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Court.
I
am
satisfied
on
the
authority
of
Paper
Machinery
and
Gunnar
Mining
that
the
“slip”
rule
is
a
device
that
may
be
utilized
by
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
and
proceed
to
the
question
of
whether
it
would
have
been
appropriate
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case
to
utilize
the
rule.
In
Gunnar
Mining
Limited
Jackett,
P.
analyzed
its
application
in
a
number
of
cases
and
then
said
at
page
173
(D.T.C.
6147):
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.
Jackett,
P.
then
went
on
to
say
at
page
174
(D.T.C.
6148):
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.
Consideration
must
also
be
given
to
the
second
exception
to
the
rule
expressed
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Paper
Machinery,
that
is
whether
there
has
been
error
in
expressing
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Tax
Court
in
dismissing
Laskaris'
appeal.
In
his
analysis
of
this
exception
in
Gunnar
Mining
President
Jackett
referred
to
Thynne
v.
Thynne,
[1955]
3
All
E.R.
129;
[1955]
P.
272.
In
that
case
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.
To
which
President
Jackett
said
at
page
171
(D.T.C.
6146):
This
would
seem
to
go
somewhat
further
than
the
bounds
established
in
the
Paper
Machinery
case,
supra,
but
does
not
go
any
further
than
making
changes
necessary
to
make
the
judgment
reflect
what
the
Court
really
intended
to
do
.
.
.
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.
[Emphasis
added.]
These
words
apply
in
the
case
at
bar.
In
my
opinion,
the
taxpayer's
case
does
not
fall
within
either
of
the
two
"exceptions"
outlined
in
the
Paper
Machinery
case
and
analyzed
so
thoroughly
in
Gunnar
Mining.
Therefore
this
Court
could
not
set
aside
or
amend
the
original
order.
In
these
circumstances
I
conclude
that
the
appellant
cannot
avail
himself
of
the
"slip"
rule
or
the
“manifest
intention”
exception
to
have
this
Court
set
aside
or
amend
the
order
in
the
original
appeal.
Although
the
foregoing
conclusion
is
sufficient
to
determine
the
issue
before
me
the
appellant's
submissions
warrant
the
following
observations.
The
primary
position
advanced
is
that
the
withdrawal
of
the
notice
of
appeal
was
merely
an
interlocutory
procedural
step
which
was
not
intended
to
dispose
of
the
appeal.
Reference
to
/.S.
Robert
Lafleur
Estate
v.
The
Queen,
[1974]
C.T.C.
1;
74
D.T.C.
6033
(F.C.T.D.)
and
John
R.
Wiebe
v.
M.N.R.,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
411;
89
D.T.C.
5179
(F.C.A.)
satisfies
me
that
that
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
may
entertain
“interlocutory
proceedings”
notwithstanding
the
absence
of
any
specific
statutory
authority
or
Court
rules.
It
may
well
be
that
the
appellant's
representative
and
Gatten
intended
that
the
appeal
filed
by
the
appellant
be
discontinued
without
prejudicing
his
right
to
refile
following
confirmation.
However
on
the
authority
of
Charles
R
McCambridge
v.
The
Queen,
[1979]
C.T.C.
473
;
79
D.T.C.
5412
(F.C.A.)
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
may
not
deal
with
an
appeal
by
way
of
"discontinuance"
since
it
is
not
an
option
allowed
by
the
statute.
In
McCambridge
the
taxpayer
filed
an
appeal
with
the
Tax
Review
Board
and
later
withdrew
the
appeal
by
letter.
Some
time
later
the
taxpayer
sought
to
have
the
appeal
heard.
The
Board
refused
the
taxpayer's
request
to
reopen
the
appeal
and
the
taxpayer
applied
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
to
review
and
set
aside
the
decision.
The
taxpayer's
appeal
was
allowed.
The
Court
decided
that
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
was
to
hear
and
dispose
of
appeals
in
the
manner
stipulated
by
the
relevant
statutory
provisions.
In
this
case,
the
only
action
taken
by
the
Board
in
response
to
the
letter
of
withdrawal
from
the
applicant's
solicitor
was
a
letter
of
May
17,
1978,
saying
that
the
"matter
is
now
concluded
so
far
as
the
Board
is
concerned"
which
was
signed,
not
by
a
member
of
the
Board,
but
by
Michael
L.
Artelle,
Senior
Court
Registrar.
Heald,
J.
commented
on
page
475
(D.T.C.
5414)
that:
.
.
.
an
appeal
can
be
disposed
of
only
by
a
member
of
the
Board,
and
not
by
administrative
action
pursuant
to
some
policy
of
the
Board
by
an
employee
of
the
Board.
The
statute
requires
a
member
of
the
Board,
by
affirmative
action,
such
as
an
order
of
judgment
to
dispose
of
the
appeal.
For
the
purposes
of
the
case
at
bar,
the
response
of
Heald,
J.
to
the
respondent's
position
is
most
interesting.
The
respondent
submitted
that
the
effect
of
the
appellant's
letter
was
to
annul
or
discontinue
the
notice
of
appeal
so
that
from
that
point
in
time
there
was
no
valid
notice
of
appeal.
Heald,
J.
responded
as
follows
on
page
475
(D.T.C.
5414):
I
do
not
read
the
statutory
provisions
referred
to
supra
as
permitting
such
a
result.
If
Parliament
had
intended
to
provide
that
one
means
of
disposing
of
an
appeal
could
be
by
way
of
filing
a
notice
of
discontinuance,
it
would
have
been
an
easy
matter
to
so
provide
in
the
statute.
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
subsection
171(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(supra)
which
provides
for
dismissal.
However,
in
both
cases,
the
legislation
provides
for
action
by
the
Board
itself.
Since
there
is
no
mechanism
by
virtue
of
which
this
Court
could
accept
or
otherwise
permit
the
“discontinuance”
or
“withdrawal”
of
the
appeal
what
occurred
(whether
inadvertently
is
irrelevant)
was
that
the
letter
of
June
30,
1989
was
treated
as
tantamount
to
a
consent
to
dismissal
and
the
appeal
was
disposed
of
on
that
basis
by
the
Chief
Judge
of
the
Tax
Court.
He
could
not
have,
on
the
basis
of
the
very
limited
information
available
to
him,
intended
to
do
anything
else.
In
the
alternative
counsel
submits
that
the
letter
of
withdrawal
combined
with
the
endorsement
of
the
Chief
Judge
in
this
particular
case
did
not
render
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
functus
officio
in
the
subsequently
filed
appeal
with
respect
to
the
same
taxation
year.
It
was
argued
that
this
order
was
made
in
contemplation
of
the
refiling
of
a
notice
of
appeal
following
Ministerial
confirmation
and
was
in
essence
the
discontinuance
of
an
action
which
per
se
does
not
preclude
a
subsequent
appeal
with
respect
to
the
same
subject
matter
on
the
principle
of
res
judicata.
There
has
been,
counsel
argued,
no
discontinuance
or
dismissal
of
the
appeal
on
the
merits.
In
support
counsel
cited
Femini
v.
McGuire
et
al.
(1984),
42
C.P.C.
189;
64
N.S.R.
(2d)
421,
a
decision
of
the
Nova
Scotia
Supreme
Court
(Appeal
Division).
I
have
concluded
that
is
precluded
by
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act
and
the
absence
of
rules
of
the
Court
to
afford
any
relief
to
this
taxpayer.
Regardless
of
the
merits
of
his
argument
(Fermini
v.
McGuire
et
al.)
he
may
not
argue
them
in
this
Court.
There
are
no
such
devices
as
withdrawal
or
discontinuance
at
this
Court.
In
the
case
at
bar
accepting
for
the
sake
of
argument
that
the
Tax
Court
dealt
with
what
the
appellant
characterizes
as
“an
interlocutory
procedural
step"
it
did
so
by
disposing
of
the
appeal
in
one
of
the
ways
permitted
by
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act.
A
final
decision
having
been
made,
on
the
authority
of
Lafleur,
an
appeal
from
that
decision
must
go
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada.
It
follows,
therefore,
that
the
respondent's
motion
must
be
allowed
and
an
order
quashing
the
appellant's
purported
appeal
for
his
1985
taxation
year
is
hereby
granted.
Appeal
quashed.