Muldoon,
J:—This
litigation
is
concerned
with
the
effects
of
retroactive
tax
legislation.
The
plaintiff
corporation
is
appealing
from
an
income
tax
assessment
whereby
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
$1,057,916
of
the
plaintiffs
royalty
expense
claim
of
$1,326,925
in
the
calculation
of
the
plaintiffs
1974
taxable
income.
There
is
in
evidence
a
deep
pile
of
financial
documents
so
chock-full
of
financial
facts
and
suppositions,
in
their
myriad
lines,
that
the
mind
cannot
simultaneously
contemplate
them
all,
except
in
terms
of
a
prodigious
clump
of
numerical
factors
and
sums.
This
is
further
complicated
by
having
to
regard
these
lines
upon
lines
of
numbers
from
differing
points
in
time
during
the
year
1974.
The
material
before
the
court
discloses
that
in
April,
1974,
the
government
of
British
Columbia
announced
a
new
royalty
program
which,
in
effect,
was
to
replace
the
previously
enforced
mining
taxes
in
that
province.
A
Bill
to
that
effect
was
introduced
that
very
month.
After
a
time
that
Bill
was
enacted
as
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act,
SBC
1974,
Chap
54,
to
which
Royal
Assent
was
accorded
on
June
20,
1974.
In
September
a
proclamation
by
the
Lieutenant-Governor
brought
the
Act
into
effect
on
October
1,
1974,
but
the
Act
already
contained
the
following
provision:
27.
(1)
This
Act,
excepting
this
section
and
the
title,
comes
into
force
on
a
date
to
be
fixed
by
the
Lieutenant-Governor
by
his
Proclamation,
and
he
may
fix
different
dates
for
the
coming
into
force
of
the
several
provisions;
and
upon
coming
into
force,
the
Act
or
its
provisions
are
retroactive
and
shall
be
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
on
the
first
day
of
January,
1974
to
the
extent
necessary
to
give
full
force
and
effect
to
the
Act
or
the
provisions
on
and
after
that
date.
(2)
This
section
and
the
title
come
into
force
on
Royal
Assent.
Then,
by
a
statute
passed
to
amend
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
was
added
by
SC
1974-75-76,
Chap
26,
subsection
7(1),
to
which
Royal
Assent
was
accorded
on
March
13,
1975,
Parliament
enacted
paragraph
18(l)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
provided
that
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business
no
deduction
could
be
made
in
respect
of
royalties
paid
or
payable
by
statute
to
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
.
.
.
a
province.
Hopefully
the
foregoing
summary
does
not
erroneously
over-simplify
the
statutory
run-on
sentence
which
is
attempted
to
be
encapsulated.
In
any
event,
by
subsection
7(5)
of
SC
1974-75-76,
Chap
26,
Parliament
further
enacted
that
the
above
summarized
provision
.
.
is
applicable
to
amounts
paid
or
payable
or
the
fair
market
value
of
any
property
paid
or
payable
after
May
6,
1974
in
respect
of
a
period
after
May
6,
1974
.
.
.”.
The
counsel
for
each
party
have
helpfully
produced
a
document
styled:
PARTIAL
AGREEMENT
AS
TO
FACTS
AND
DOCUMENTS,
by
which
they
no
doubt
mean
a
complete
agreement
about
some
certain
facts
and
documents,
although
not
all.
However
it
ought
to
be
styled,
that
agreed
document
is
Exhibit
1
in
these
proceedings.
Several
of
its
paragraphs
refer
sparsely
to
attached
schedules
and
they
are
therefore
necessary,
although
not
edifying
to
recite,
but
the
more
fully
charged
paragraphs
in
Exhibit
1
do
helpfully
set
a
scene
into
which
one
must
plunge
at
some
point
of
entry.
Here
they
are,
preceded
by
a
note
of
caution
which
ought
also
to
be
quoted:
The
parties
hereto
admit
the
several
facts
and
documents
hereinafter
stated
and
identified,
provided
that
these
admissions
are
made
for
the
purpose
of
this
cause
only
and
may
not
be
used
against
either
party
on
any
other
occasion
or
by
anyone
other
than
the
parties
hereto.
1.
The
Plaintiff
is
a
mining
corporation
that
is
owned
70
percent
by
its
parent
company,
Placer
Development
Limited
and
at
all
material
times
to
this
action
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
mining
and
selling
copper,
silver
and
molybdenum
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
2.
The
Plaintiffs
1974
taxation
year
was
from
January
1,
1974,
to
December
31,
1974.
3.
The
Mineral
Royalties
Act,
SBC
1974,
c
54
came
into
force
on
October
1,
1974,
with
effect
retroactive
to
January
1,
1974.
4.
The
Mineral
Royalties
Act
provided
for
a
royalty
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
a
basic
royalty)
on
designated
minerals
produced
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
equal,
in
1974,
to
2.5
percent
of
the
weighted
average
net
value
to
a
producer
of
minerals
sold,
disposed
of
or
used
by
him
during
a
calendar
year.
5.
In
addition
to
the
basic
royalty,
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
provided
for
an
additional
royalty,
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
super
royalty),
of
a
percentage
calculated
in
the
manner
prescribed
by
the
Act
and
regulations,
such
super
royalty
being
payable
only
if
the
gross
value
of
mineral
production
for
the
year
exceeded
by
a
specific
amount
a
base
determined
by
regulation;
the
rate
and
amount
of
super
royalty
payable
for
the
year
therefore
fluctuated
as
the
market
price
of
minerals
fluctuated.
Depending
on
the
relationship
of
the
base
to
the
gross
value
of
mineral
production
for
the
year,
provision
was
also
made
to
reduce
the
basic
royalty
by
either
one-half
or
one
percent.
A
significant
decline
in
mineral
prices
occurred
during
the
period
from
May
7,
1974
to
December
31,
1974.
6.
Pursuant
to
sections
6
and
27(3)(b)
of
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act,
the
Plaintiff
was
required
and
did
file
prior
to
the
15th
of
November,
1974,
a
return
containing
an
estimate
of
the
gross
and
net
value
of
the
designated
minerals
produced
in
the
period
January
1,
1974
to
October
31,
1974,
on
which
a
royalty
was
payable.
The
said
return
was
accompanied
by
a
payment
of
the
royalty
payable.
In
accordance
with
Schedule
1,
(herein,
page
1)*,
the
Plaintiff
made
the
following
estimates
and
calculated
the
royalties
payable
to
October
31,
1974,
as
follows:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
|
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
|
Royalty
|
X
|
Value
|
=
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
61,622,382
lb
|
|
.03896
|
|
$0.74475
|
$1,788,001
|
Silver
|
108,376
oz
|
|
.02500
|
|
$3.66101
|
$
|
9,919
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,797,920
|
7.
Pursuant
to
section
6
of
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
the
Plaintiff
was
further
required
to
file
monthly
returns
with
respect
to
minerals
produced
in
the
months
of
November
and
December,
1974,
containing
respectively
an
estimate
of
the
gross
and
net
value
of
the
designated
minerals
produced
in
each
month
on
which
a
royalty
was
payable.
8.
By
return
dated
November
30,
1974,
for
the
eleven
months
ended
on
November
30,
1974,
the
Plaintiff,
in
accordance
with
Schedule
2,
(herein,
page
11),
made
the
following
estimates
of
the
royalties
payable:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
|
|
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
|
Royalty
|
X
|
Value
|
—
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
71,331,140
lb
|
|
.025
|
|
$0.71280
|
$1,271,120.91
|
Silver
|
123,192
oz
|
|
.025
|
|
$3.59193
|
$
|
11,062.43
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,282,183.34
|
*
Bracketed
page
numbers
refer
to
the
document
produced
by
agreement
of
counsel.
9.
By
return
dated
January
8,
1975,
for
the
twelve
months
ended
December
31,
1974,
the
Plaintiff
in
accordance
with
Schedule
3,
(herein,
page
19),
made
the
following
estimates
of
the
royalties
payable:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
|
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
|
Royalty
|
X
|
Value
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
79,011,653
Ib
|
|
.02500
|
|
$0.67129
|
$1,325,993.31
|
Silver
|
136,147
oz
|
|
.02500
|
|
$3.58042
|
$
|
12,186.59
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,338,179.90
|
10.
Under
section
7
of
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act,
the
Plaintiff
was
required
to
file,
prior
to
February
15,
1975,
a
return
containing
the
detailed
calculation
of
the
royalty
payable
for
the
1974
taxation
year:
it
received
an
extension
of
the
February
15th
deadline
and
the
said
return
was
filed
May
15,
1975.
Section
7(2)
of
the
Act
required
payment
of
the
amount
by
which
the
royalty
payable
under
sub-section
(1)
exceeded
the
royalty
estimated
and
paid
for
the
year
of
calculation
under
section
6.
Attached
as
Schedule
4
(herein,
page
28),
is
the
Plaintiffs
1974
Annual
Return
dated
May
15,
1975,
wherein
the
Plaintiff
calculated
its
1974
royalty
payable
as
follows:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
Royalty
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
Royalty
|
x
|
Value
|
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
79,760,658
lb
|
.025
|
|
$0.65574
|
$1,307,556.35
|
Silver
|
141,057
oz
|
.025
|
|
$3.62306
|
$
|
12,776.45
|
Molybdenum
|
128,133
|
.025
|
|
$2.05806
|
$
|
6,592.64
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,326,925.44
|
11.
The
Plaintiff
filed
an
Amended
Return
dated
January
9,
1976,
Schedule
5,
(herein,
page
40),
to
eliminate
from
the
royalty
calculated
in
its
Annual
Return
the
minerals
contained
in
its
inventory
as
of
December
31,
1973,
and
calculated
its
liability
for
the
1974
years
as
follows:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
Royalty
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
|
Royalty
|
xX
|
Value
|
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
69,115,035
lb
|
|
.025
|
|
$0.59737
|
$1,032,181.21
|
Silver
|
141,057
oz
|
|
.025
|
|
$3.62306
|
$
|
12,776.45
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,044,957.66
|
12.
The
Plaintiff
filed
a
second
Amended
Return
on
March
1,
1976,
Schedule
6,
(herein,
page
43),
to
eliminate
from
the
royalty
calculated
in
its
amended
return
of
January
9,
1976,
a
revised
amount
for
the
mineral
contained
in
its
inventory
as
of
December
31,
1973
and
calculated
its
final
liability
for
the
1974
years
as
follows:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
Royalty
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
Royalty
|
X
|
Value
|
==
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
73,407,387
lb
|
.025
|
|
$0.62582
|
$1,148,495.57
|
Silver
|
130,047
oz
|
.025
|
|
$3.56711
|
$
|
11,597.30
|
Molybdenum
|
82,122
|
.025
|
|
$2,12889
|
$
|
4,370.72
|
|
TOTAL
|
$1,164,463.29
|
13.
In
its
1974
Interim
Reports
to
its
shareholders,
Schedule
7,
(herein,
page
48),
the
Plaintiff
estimated
its
liability
under
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
as
follows:
Report
Dated
|
Year
to
Date
|
Royalties
Payable
|
April
19,
1974
|
March
31,
1974
|
$4,800,000.
|
July
16,
1974
|
June
30,
1974
|
$4,824,000.
|
October
22,
1974
|
September
30,
1974
|
$1,421,000.
|
January
21,
1975
|
December
31,
1974
|
$1,306.00.
|
14.
Section
18(l)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
denies
the
deduction
of
royalties
paid
or
payable
in
respect
of
a
period
after
May
6,
1974.
15.
Attached
as
Schedule
8,
(herein,
page
56),
is
the
Plaintiff's
1974
tax
return
dated
June
20,
1975.
In
adjusting
its
profits
as
determined
in
its
statement
of
earnings
to
arrive
to
its
income
for
tax
purposes,
the
Plaintiff
added
back
the
royalty
expense
of
$1,306,000
and
deducted
$1,326,925
as
royalties
payable
in
respect
of
the
period
prior
to
May
7,
1974.
16.
The
amount
of
$1,326,925
claimed
as
a
deduction
by
the
Plaintiff
represented
the
Plaintiff's
estimate
of
the
royalties
paid
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
period
from
January
1,
1974
to
May
6,
1974,
and
was
calculated
on
the
basis
of
the
data
contained
in
its
1974
Annual
Return
dated
May
15,
1975,
(Schedule
4,
herein,
page
28),
and
on
the
basis
that
production
had
ceased
and
no
further
sales
took
place
after
May
6,
1974.
17.
By
notice
of
assessment
dated
December
12,
1977,
with
respect
to
the
Plaintiffs
1974
taxation
year,
Schedule
9,
(herein,
page
68)
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
the
deduction
of
$1,326,925
claimed
by
the
Plaintiff
and
allowed
an
amount
of
$269,009
on
account
of
royalties
paid
by
the
Plaintiff
with
respect
to
the
period
prior
to
May
7,
1974.
18.
In
so
assessing
the
Plaintiff
for
its
1974
taxation
year,
the
Minister
assumed
that
the
proper
method
to
allocate
the
Plaintiffs
royalty
expense
between
the
periods
prior
to
and
after
May
6,
1974,
was
to
use
the
number
of
units
sold
as
of
May
6,
1974,
and
multiply
it
by
the
rate
of
royalty
determined
for
the
year
and
the
net
unit
value
of
the
minerals
for
the
year.
The
details
of
the
Minister’s
calculations
are
set
forth
in
the
attached
Schedule
10
(herein,
page
70),
and
are
summarized
as
follows:
|
Rate
of
|
|
Net
Unit
|
|
Royalty
|
Mineral
|
Units
sold
|
X
|
Royalty
|
X
|
Value
|
=
|
Payable
|
Copper
|
16,792,737
lb
|
|
.025
|
|
$0.62582
|
$262,731.00
|
Silver
|
70,401
oz
|
|
.025
|
|
$3.56711
|
$
|
6,278.00
|
|
TOTAL
|
$269,009.00
|
19.
Attached
as
Schedule
11,
(herein,
page
71),
is
the
Plaintiffs
calculations
of
Concentrate
Revenue
for
the
calendar
year
1974.
20.
Attached
as
Schedule
12,
(herein,
page
72),
are
the
Plaintiff's
Journal
Vouchers
estimating
its
royalty
payable
from
March
1974
to
December,
1974.
21.
Attached
as
Schedule
13,
(herein,
page
109),
are
the
Plaintiffs
Statements
of
Earnings
for
the
months
January
to
December,
1974,
inclusive.
22.
Attached
as
Schedule
14,
(herein,
page
121),
is
a
copy
of
a
letter
dated
March
24,
1975,
to
the
Plaintiff
from
the
British
Columbia
Department
of
Mines
and
Petroleum
Resources.
23.
Attached
as
Schedule
15,
(herein,
page
124),
is
a
copy
of
the
Plaintiffs
letter
dated
April
2,
1975,
to
the
Department
of
Mines
and
Petroleum
Resources.
William
Keith
Service,
a
chartered
accountant
and
manager
of
taxation
for
the
plaintiff,
as
he
was
also
for
its
parent
company
Placer
Development
Limited,
testified
for
the
plaintiff.
He
said
that
as
a
result
of
seeing
the
provincial
Bill
31
being
introduced:
As
soon
as
we
realized
that
we
would
be
subject
to
this
royalty
we
began
to
reflect
the
royalty
charge
in
the
earnings
statements
of
the
company,
(transcript
p
65)
Thus,
in
paragraph
13
of
the
agreed
facts
one
notes
that
in
the
report
to
March
31,
1974
the
royalties
were
calculated,
as
of
that
date,
to
have
been
$4.8
million.
So
it
proceeds
to
the
end
of
December
1974
when
the
royalties
were
calculated
to
have
been
$1.306
million.
Those
are
the
calculations
for
the
interim
reports
to
shareholders,
produced
quarterly.
Mr
Service
testified
about
how
new
mineral
royalties
represented
quite
a
departure
from
the
previous
form
of
income
tax
levied
on
mining
corporations:
A
Yes,
it
was
a
significant
change.
The
mining
industry
had
previously
paid
to
the
province
as
a
payment
for
the
resource
a
mine
tax,
under
the
Mining
Tax
Act,
which
was
a
tax
—
and
is,
a
tax
based
on
profits.
The
Mineral
Royalties
Act
proposed
to
levy
a
tax
on
the
gross
revenues
of
the
mining
companies
so
that
there
would
be
a
liability
whether
or
not
the
company
was
profitable.
A
.
.
.
the
Act
imposed
a
basic
royalty
which
was
a
fixed
percentage
of
the
value
of
the
minerals
sold
in
the
year.
There
was,
in
addition,
an
additional
royalty
which
came
to
be
called
the
super
royalty,
which
proposed
to
take
as
a
tax
roughly
fifty
per
cent
of
the
amount
by
which
the
revenues
exceeded
a
certain
basic
amount
which
would
be
set
by
regulation.
Q
Had
mineral
prices
been
strong,
weak,
or
what,
in
the
early
months
of
1974?
A
At
that
time
prices
were
very
strong,
strong
enough
that
clearly
at
the
beginning
of
1974
the
mining
industry
would
be
subject
to
this
so-called
super
royalty
in
addition
to
the
basic
royalty.
Q
And
I
think
we’re
all
agreed
that
after,
perhaps
about
May
of
’74,
metal
prices
kind
of
tumbled,
is
that
right”?
A
Yes,
they
plummeted.
In
fact
the
peak
price
for
copper,
which
is
the
principal
metal
at
issue
here,
it
peaked
at
around
$1.50
a
pound
at
the
beginning
of
May
and
by
the
end
of
the
year
it
was
down
in
the
range
of
fifty,
sixty
cents
a
pound.
Because
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
was
both
passed
and
proclaimed
in
force
well
into
the
year,
the
first
monthly
return
was
required
to
be
filed
on
November
15,
1974,
for
the
ten
months
to
October
31.
That
return,
summarized
in
paragraph
6
of
the
agreed
statement
and
shown
above,
revealed
an
estimated
royalty
of
$1,797,920,
a
sum
to
which
counsel
referred
in
rounded
expression
as
$1.8
million.
As
time
went
by,
and
estimates
were
either
confirmed
or
transformed
into
real
facts,
the
plaintiff
filed
with
the
provincial
taxation
authorities
a
second
amended
return,
mentioned
above
in
paragraph
12
of
the
parties’
agreed
statement,
revealing
a
total
sum
of
royalties
payable
of
$1,164,463.29,
a
sum
to
which
counsel
referred
in
rounded
expression
as
$1.1
million.
The
figure
of
$1.8
million
included
some
super
royalty
and
the
average
price
during
the
ten
months
of
1974
up
to
October
31,
was
high
enough
to
have
supported
a
portion
of
super
royalty
in
the
overall
liability
for
royalty.
However,
prices
continued
to
decline
until
the
end
of
1974,
such
that
by
the
end
of
December,
the
year’s
average
price
had
declined
below
the
level
at
which
the
super
royalty
was
engaged.
Thus,
only
the
basic
royalty
applied
for
the
whole
year.
Finally,
taking
into
account
1973
inventory
which
ought
to
have
been
deducted,
the
plaintiffs
finally
computed
liability
for
1974
provincial
mineral
royalties
came
to
approximately
$1.164
million,
referred
to
throughout
this
case
as
$1.1
million.
The
issue
in
dispute
in
this
appeal
can
be
usefully
illuminated
from
the
testimony
in
chief
of
Mr
Service,
speaking
of
notional
or
hypothetical
returns.
A
In
preparing
our
income
tax
return
for
1974
we
had
to
calculate
the
amount
of
the
royalty
that
would
be
deductible
as
being
incurred
for
the
period
prior
to
May
the
7th,
1974.
We
took
the
view,
and
we
received
advice
from
our
auditor,
Price
Waterhouse,
on
this,
that
the
appropriate
method
of
doing
so
was
to
make
a
cutoff
at
May
6th,
1974;
in
other
words,
to
prepare
a
financial
statement
as
of
May
6,
1974,
as
we
would
do
for
our
shareholders,
following
the
same
procedures.
We
did
this,
using
the
annual
return
which
had
been
filed
at
that
time
and
had
a
liability
of
$1.3
million.
We
analysed
the
revenues
reported
in
that
return
and
arrived
at
a
figure
of
$2.8
million
as
being
the
royalty
that
would
have
been
payable
at
May
6th,
1974.
That
calculation
was
done
on
a
royalty
return
form
and
we
called
it
a
hypothetical
return.
Sometime
later,
when
the
final
royalty
was
settled
at
$1.1
million
for
the
year,
and
by
that
time
we
had
in
fact
begun
this
appeal,
I
believe,
we
realized
that
the
calculation
of
the
royalty
applicable
to
the
period
prior
to
May
7th,
1974
would
have
to
be
revised
in
view
of
the
second
amended
royalty
return.
We
then
did
a
second
calculation
of
the
amount
of
royalty
that
was
in
respect
of
that
period
using
the
second
amended
royalty
return
and
arrived
at
a
number
of
$1.9
million.
Q
And
that’s
how
—
A
That’s
called
a
notional
return.
Q
Yes,
and
that’s
how
the
old
figure
of
$2.8
worked
itself
down
to
$1.9.
A
That’s
right.
Q
While
the
royalty
liability
was
working
its
way
down
from
$1.3
to
$1.1.
A
That’s
right.
Q
And
that’s
the
result
of
the
same
adjustment
concerning
inventory
that
you
talked
about.
À
Yes.
Notwithstanding
that
the
price
per
unit
plummeted
from
May
until
the
end
of
1974,
production
seems
to
have
continued
unabated.
In
terms
of
copper
alone,
whereas
approximately
10
million
pounds
were
produced
before
May
7,
the
total
production
during
1974
amounted
to
approximately
73
million
pounds.
So,
approximately
13.7
per
cent,
rounded
up
to
14
per
cent
of
the
year’s
production
occurred
up
to
May
6
and,
accordingly,
approximately
86
per
cent
of
the
year’s
production
took
place
on
and
after
May
7,
until
the
end
of
1974.
That
is
approximately
86
per
cent
of
the
year’s
production
during
only
approximately
65
per
cent
of
the
year.
The
plaintiffs
position
in
regard
to
that
reality
was
aptly
described
by
Mr
Service
on
cross-examination.
Q
Do
I
follow
your
position
to
say,
then,
that
there
was
no
royalty
applicable
to
the
units
after
May
6th
for
the
rest
of
the
year?
A
The
position
is
that
in
the
period
following
May
6th,
to
December
31st,
1974,
that
there
was
effectively
a
recovery
of
overpayment
of
royalties
in
the
period
prior
to
May
7th.
Q
So
that
it
was
on
a
prepayment
before
May
6th?
The
recovery
of
what?
A
The
actual
payment
was
not
made
until
November,
of
course.
Q
That
is
correct,
there
was
no
Act
involved
on
May
6th,
it
was
not
even
proclaimed
yet.
A
That’s
right.
But
the
Act
was
retroactive
to
January
1st,
1974.
The
Act
applied
to
this
period.
Q
So
you
go
back
—
A
So
at
this
period
of
time,
at
May
6th,
1974,
this
is
the
amount
of
royalty
that
would
have
been
payable
had
the
Act
in
fact
been
proclaimed
at
that
time,
for
the
period
prior
to
May
7th.
Q
So
you
are
effectively
saying
you
do
a
notional
closing
of
accounts
as
of
that
date,
May
6th?
A
Yes.
Q
And
you
just
say,
from
that
moment
on,
don’t
look
towards
the
future
of
the
rest
of
the
calendar
year
period.
A
For
this
purpose,
yes.
Q
Notwithstanding
that
the
rest
of
the
calendar
year
period
goes
in
determining
that
final
amount
of
royalty
expense
for
the
year.
A
Yes.
Q
Notwithstanding
that
the
amount
that
you
claim
at
May
6th
is
bigger
than
the
royalty
that
is
paid
for
the
whole
year.
A
The
amount
that
we’re
claiming
now,
remember,
is
the
$1.1
million.
(transcript
pages
112
&
113)
Q
And
when
you
came
to
your
notional
return,
when
you
said
1.9,
that
1.9
was
bigger
than
the
1.3
that
was
in
the
first
annual
return
filed
with
the
income
tax
return,
so
at
that
time,
event,
the
1.9,
you
wanted
to
deduct
more
for
the
whole
year
than
what
you
had
in
fact
paid
for
the
whole
year.
A
Yes,
not
on
accounting
principles,
on
legal
advice
for
the
correct
application
of
Section
18(l)(m).
Q
And
when
you
made
those
calculations
you
knew
the
whole
year’s
facts.
You
knew,
physically,
the
whole
year’s
facts.
The
annual
return
was
prepared
in
May
’75,
the
income
tax
return
is
filed
in
June
’75
amended
returns
are
off
into
1976,
and
in
the
future
you’re
making
those
calculations
going
back
to
May
6th,
you’re
putting
breakers
on,
you
say
that’s
it,
you
stop,
and
you
close
at
May
6th.
A
Yes,
we
prepared
this
return
on
the
basis
that
there
would
be
a
May
6th,
1974
cutoff.
Q
And
when
you
were
doing
those
actual,
factual
returns
you
knew,
right
before
you,
what
the
true
liability
for
the
year
was.
A
Yes,
in
fact
these
calculations
are
derived
from
that
return.
Q
Did
I
understand
you
to
say
a
few
moments
ago
that
those
calculations
in
the
hypothetical
and
the
notional
were
based
on
legal
advice?
A
Yes.
Q
They
were
not
based
on
—
were
the
auditors
consulted
at
all?
A
For
tax
advice.
Q
For
tax
advice,
you
mean
in
the
sense
of
accounting
principles
to
be
applied
in
a
taxation
question?
A
These
returns
are
prepared
for
tax
return
purposes,
not
for
accounting
statements
that
are
presented
to
the
shareholders.
(transcript
pages
114
&
115)
The
plaintiffs
management
did
however
ordain
the
preparation
of
interim,
quarterly
statements
for
shareholders,
which
statements
were,
in
effect,
in
the
public
domain.
Alerted
by
the
introduction
of
Bill
31
in
the
legislature,
Mr
Service
and
his
personnel
made
the
best
estimates
which
they
could
of
liability
for
royalties
exigible
under
what
they
rightly
presumed
would
be
enacted
into
law.
Mr
Service
testified
that
there
was
no
complex
accounting
principle
to
be
followed
and
that
future
estimates
would
be
revised
in
accordance
with
past
realities.
The
issue
generated
by
paragraph
18(l)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
remains:
what
portion,
if
any,
of
the
$1.1
million
royalty
paid
for
the
year
1974
was
paid
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
period
after
May
6,
1974?
The
answer
depends
on
how
one
approaches
the
problem
and
that,
in
turn,
may
depend
on
some
method
of
accounting
as
Mr
Justice
Martland
wrote
in
Canadian
General
Electric
Co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1962]
SCR
3;
[1961]
CTC
512;
61
DTC
1300
or
on
“ordinary
commercial
principles”
as
he
also
mentioned
at
pages
12
and
13.
Reinforcing
that
theme,
President
Jackett
(as
he
then
was)
wrote
in
Associated
Investors
of
Canada
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1967]
2
Ex
CR
96;
[1967]
CTC
138;
67
DTC
5096:
Profit
from
a
business,
subject
to
any
special
directions
in
the
statute,
must
be
determined
in
accordance
with
ordinary
commercial
principles.
The
question
is
ultimately
“one
of
law
for
the
court”.
It
must
be
answered
having
regard
to
the
facts
of
the
particular
case
and
the
weight
which
must
be
given
to
a
particular
circumstance
must
depend
upon
practical
considerations.
As
it
is
a
question
of
law,
the
evidence
of
experts
is
not
conclusive.
(pages
101
&
102
[143])
More
recently
the
appeal
division
of
this
Court,
speaking
unanimously
in
the
reasons
rendered
by
Mr
Justice
Urie
in
Neonex
International
Ltd
v
The
Queen,
[1978]
CTC
485;
78
DTC
6339,
made
this
point:
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
proper
treatment
of
revenue
and
expenses
in
the
calculation
of
profits
for
income
tax
purposes
with
a
view
to
obtaining
an
accurate
reflection
of
the
taxable
income
of
a
taxpayer,
is
not
necessarily
based
on
generally
accepted
accounting
principles.
Whether
it
is
so
based
or
not
is
a
question
of
law
for
determination
by
the
Court
having
regard
to
those
principles
(see:
MNR
v
Anaconda
Brass
Ltd
(1956)
AC
85;
see
also
Associated
Investors
of
Canada
Ltd
v
MNR
(1967)
2
Ex
CR
96
at
pages
101
and
102).
(page
499
[6348]
)
The
same
consideration
was
discussed
by
Mr
Justice
Walsh,
and
he
came
to
the
same
conclusion
in
Mandel
v
The
Queen,
[1976]
CTC
545;
76
DTC
6316
at
565
[6330],
where
he
invoked
the
closely
similar
thoughts
of
the
late
President
Thorson
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
the
earlier
case
of
Publishers
Guild
of
Canada
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1956-60]
Ex
CR
32;
[1957]
CTC
1;
57
DTC
1017
at
pages
49
and
50
[16-17].
Therefore,
on
the
firm
footing
and
understanding
that
the
Court
must
not
abdicate
to
accountants,
be
they
ever
so
eminent,
the
judicial
function
of
determining
the
taxpayer’s
income
tax
liability,
the
parties
each
called
an
eminent
chartered
accountant
to
support
the
contentions
of
the
plaintiff
and
the
defendant
respectively.
Those
experts’
testimony
was
duly
presaged
by
respective
compliances
with
Rule
482(6)(b)
pursuant
to
which
a
written
statement
signed
by
each
expert
and
accompanied
by
a
certificate
of
a
barrister
was
filed
before
trial.
The
plaintiff
called
Robert
Beverley
Harrison,
B
Comm
(Queen’s,
1962),
CA
(1965)
of
Arthur
Andersen
&
Co
as
its
expert
witness.
The
defendant’s
counsel
promptly
accepted
that
Mr
Harrison
is
an
expert
on
the
accounting
principles
and
questions
upon
which
he
was
asked
to
formulate
his
opinion.
Mr
Harrison’s
signed,
written
statement
is
Exhibit
6
in
these
proceedings.
Mr
Harrison
annexed
to
his
written
statement
several
excerpts
from
the
Handbook
of
the
Canadian
Institute
of
Chartered
Accountants.
Contained
in
the
CICA
Handbook
are
recommendations
with
respect
to
accounting
principles
issued
from
time
to
time
by
the
Institute’s
Accounting
Standards
Committee,
of
which
this
witness
was
a
member
from
September
1974
to
September
1977.
In
stating
the
issue
(in
a
somewhat
diffused,
but
generally
acceptable
manner)
Mr
Harrison
noted:
.
.
.
Since
the
Income
Tax
Act
provides
no
method
of
allocating
royalty
expense
to
the
period
before
and
after
May
6,
1974,
we
must
use
generally
accepted
accounting
principles
to
allocate
expense.
Then,
Mr
Harrison’s
opinion
is
expressed
thus:
Pursuant
to
generally
accepted
accounting
principles,
the
amount
of
royalties
under
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
determined
for
the
period
ended
May
6,
1974,
is
the
amount
of
royalty
expense
that
would
be
reflected
in
a
statement
of
Gibraltar
as
at
that
time.
I
understand
that
the
amount
was
determined
to
be
approximately
$1.9
million.
[Later
herein
noted
to
be
approximately
$1.1
million.]
No
part
of
that
amount
is
a
royalty
paid
or
payable
in
respect
of
a
period
subsequent
to
May
6,
1974.
Subsequent
economic
events
should
not
be
used
to
adjust
the
royalty
expense
determined
for
the
period
ended
May
6,
1974.
The
opinion
above
expressed
is
rather
indirect
and
appears
not
to
meet
the
issue
head-on.
In
setting
out
the
basis
of
his
opinion,
Mr
Harrison
placed
much
emphasis
on
section
1750
and
its
several
paragraphs
in
the
CICA
Handbook.
It
begins
at
page
601,
thus:
GENERAL
ACCOUNTING
—
SECTION
1750
An
interim
financial
report
may
be
prepared
as
at
any
date
and
may
cover
any
period
within
the
fiscal
year.
The
Recommendations
in
this
Section
apply
to
those
interim
financial
reports
which
are
sent
by
companies
to
their
shareholders
on
a
regular
periodic
basis.
The
recommendations
deal
with
matters
relating
to
the
financial
position
and
results
of
operations
presented
in
such
reports
and
are
not
intended
to
apply
to
interim
reports
prepared
for
internal
purposes.
It
is
important
for
shareholders
that
more
frequent
and
timely
information
be
available
than
that
provided
by
the
annual
financial
statements.
It
is
therefore
desirable
that
interim
financial
reports
be
issued.
For
many
companies,
interim
financial
reports
are
required
by
regulatory
authorities.
In
most
cases
financial
data
included
in
interim
financial
reports
will
not
be
reported
on
by
the
auditors.
For
greater
clarity
it
is
desirable
in
these
circumstances
that
the
financial
data
be
marked
“unaudited”.
Terms
such
as
“subject
to
audit”
may
incorrectly
imply
that
the
interim
financial
data
presented
will
be
reported
on
by
the
auditors
at
a
later
date
and
therefore
the
use
of
such
terms
is
inappropriate.
This
is
perplexing
and
seems
to
be
moving
further
and
further
from
the
issue
to
be
resolved.
Some
passages
from
Mr
Harrison’s
viva
voce
testimony
in
chief
will
establish
the
perspective
from
which
he
viewed
the
issue.
But
there
was
no
suggestion,
and
in
fact
I
could
find
no
support
in
accounting
literature
for
restating
that
early
period
to
annualize
that
expense
when
preparing
interim
statements.
And
I
therefore
concluded
that
the
proper
royalty
expense
for
Gibraltar
to
include
in
its
interim
statements
was
that
calculated
with
the
facts
and
information
known
at
May
6th,
and
that
no
subsequent
events
should
be
taken
into
account
in
adjusting
that
amount.
(transcript,
page
151)
Q
And
as
I
understand
what
you’re
saying,
you
say
you
don’t
modify
that
by
reason
of
subsequent
economic
events,
namely
the
decline
of
metal
prices.
A
No,
you
don’t.
Q
But
you
do
for
mechanical
adjustments
of
the
sort
that
had
to
do
with
the
inventory
mistake.
A
Yes.
Q
Yes,
thank
you.
A
If
I
might
illustrate
that
one
further,
if
Gibraltar
had
been
preparing
a
prospectus
in
’75
with
comparative
financial
statements
it
would
not
have
recast
those
1974
four
or
five
month
statements
for
anything
other
than
the
error
made.
It
would
not
have
annualized
its
royalty
expense.
In
other
words,
the
interim
statements
would
have
been
just
as
presented
to
its
shareholders
in
its
quarterly
reports
and
the
securities
legislation
would
not
require,
in
fact
it
would
frown
on,
any
annualization
in
the
’74
prospectus.
Q
Thank
you,
Mr
Harrison;
and
to
the
extent
you’ve
not
said
so
orally
I
take
it
you
would
otherwise
affirm
your
statement
as
filed?
A
Yes.
(transcript
page
152)
Q
Mr
Harrison,
just
before
we
conclude,
I
wanted
to
ask
you,
do
you
have
any
comment
you’d
like
to
offer
on
what
you’ve
read
of
what
Mr
Kelsey’s
position
1s?
A
I
guess
there
is
one
section
of
the
Handbook
which
we
both
quote
to
support
our
positions,
which
is
a
little
unusual,
I
suppose.
That
is
the
section
17-50,
I
believe
it’s
25.
Yes,
17-50-25,
I
believe
we
both
used
to
support
our
position.
(transcript,
page
153)
Applied
to
the
Gibraltar
situation
I
read
that
to
say
“Remember,
now,
you’ve
got
high
royalties
here
and
you
need
to
look
at
all
the
facts
that
would
attach
—
I’m
sorry,
the
high
metal
price
and
you
need
to
look
at
all
the
facts
that
will
attach
because
of
the
high
metal
price.”
The
super
royalty
was
one
thing
to
pull
in
there
and
that’s
why
I
refer
to
that
paragraph
and
interpret
it
in
a
different
manner
than
Mr
Kelsey
did,
or
so
it
seemed
to
me.
(transcript,
page
154)
As
was
confirmed
in
cross-examination,
Mr
Harrison
was
concentrating
on
interim
financial
statements
prepared
during
the
year,
and
that
is
why
his
opinion
appears
to
be
off
the
point.
What
have
interim
financial
statements
got
to
do
with
determining
what
portion,
if
any,
of
the
$1.1
million
royalty
paid
for
1974
was
paid
or
payable
in
respect
of
the
period
after
May
6?
They
are
attempts
to
plot
the
enterprise’s
position
from
time
to
time
during
the
course
of
its
annual
voyage.
In
this
instance
the
annual
voyage
from
January
1
to
December
31
—
in
1974
at
least
—
was
that
of
the
taxpayer
as
well
as
of
the
Legislature
of
British
Columbia
and
of
Parliament
in
their
respective
retroactive
enactments.
All
the
interim
financial
statements
do
is
to
apprise
the
shareholders
and
management
how
matters
are
roceeding
and
what
is
their
position
during
the
course
of
the
fiscal
year,
as
the
ICA
Handbook
indicates
at
section
1750.
Being
merely
interim,
each
does
not
efine
the
whole
year’s
operations.
The
reality
of
the
whole
voyage
becomes
down
only
at
the
end
of
the
taxpayer’s
own
year.
The
plaintiff
here
wants
to
seek
its
refuge
in
what
might
have
been,
before
■ay
6,
1974,
when
it
ephemerally
and
temporarily
attracted
gigantic
royalties.
nd
in
order
to
hang
on
to,
and
to
preserve,
that
short-lived,
passing
situation
nd
make
it
appear
to
be
a
salient
reality,
the
plaintiff
is
constrained
to
cut
off
■s
accounting
of
royalty
payments
for
income
tax
purposes
at
midnight,
May
6,
974.
But
that
artifice,
unrealistic
in
itself,
cannot
preserve
the
chimera
of
more
an
a
year’s
royalties
—
logically
reduced
to
the
actual
amount
of
that
year’s
lyalties
—
being
artificially
compressed
into
the
first
four
months
of
that
year.
.11
of
that
was
simply
temporarily
notional,
not
unlike
the
notional
returns.
The
^ality
is
that
the
year
lumbered
on
to
its
end-of-December
end,
and
approximately
86
per
cent
of
the
production
was
effected
in
those
almost
eight
months
ginning
on
May
7.
No
pounds
of
copper
and
no
ounces
of
silver
produced
by
le
taxpayer
after
May
6
escaped
the
royalty
imposed
by
the
Mineral
Royalties
ct
of
British
Columbia.
Consequently
royalties
paid
or
payable
from
and
after
lay
7
—
whether
or
not
they
amounted
to
what
the
plaintiff
apprehended
be-
)re
May
7,
for
that
is
finally
irrelevant
—
cannot
be
deducted
in
computing
icome
tax.
What
says
the
other
eminent
expert,
called
by
the
defendant?
This
was
Den-
am
John
Kelsey,
FCA
who
serves
as
a
consultant
to
Thorne
Riddell,
Chartered
accountants,
of
which
firm
he
was
the
senior
partner
before
retiring
as
a
partner
1
1982.
Mr
Kelsey
graduated
as
a
chartered
accountant
in
1947
and
was
gold
ledallist
for
British
Columbia.
He
has
been
active
in
the
practice
of
his
profes-
mon
as
well
as
in
the
affairs
of
the
CICA
and
the
provincial
institute,
especially
1
regard
to
research
and
education.
He
was
chairman
of
the
CICA
committee
which
studied
and
responded
to
the
Carter
Report
on
tax
reform.
He
is
a
member
of
the
Advisory
Board
to
the
Auditor
General
of
British
Columbia.
Mr
Kelsey
disclosed
that
since
1982,
he
has
become
a
director
of
two
major
compares
in
the
natural
resources
field,
namely
British
Columbia
Forest
Products
Amited
and
Cominco
Ltd,
the
mining
company.
Mr
Kelsey’s
signed
written
tatement
is
Exhibit
7
in
these
proceedings.
In
stating
the
issue
directly
in
the
terms
it
has
been
stated
by
both
counsel
and
1
these
reasons,
Mr
Kelsey
noted:
In
considering
this
question,
I
believe
attention
has
to
be
given
to
a
subsidiary
matter,
namely
the
extent
to
which
finally
established
factual
data
may
and
perhaps
should
be
used
in
arriving
at
the
amount
of
royalty
for
1974
out
of
which
an
allocation
is
to
be
made
for
the
period
May
7
to
December
31,
1974.
"hen,
Mr
Kelsey’s
opinion
is
expressed,
thus:
It
is
my
opinion
that
the
amount
of
the
royalties
in
respect
of
the
period
May
7
to
December
31,
1974
should
be
determined
for
each
designated
mineral
by
multiplying
the
annual
rate
of
royalty
as
determined
for
the
calendar
year
1974
times
the
number
of
units
of
that
mineral
sold
during
the
period
May
7
to
December
31,
1974
times
the
weighted
average
net
value
of
those
units
to
Gibraltar.
It
is
also
my
opinion
that
the
use
of
finally
established
factual
data
in
determining
the
rates
and
amounts
of
the
royalty
should
not
be
constrained.
On
the
contrary,
I
believe
that
the
allocation
of
the
royalty
amounts
should
be
based
on
the
amounts
finally
determined
as
payable
for
1974
under
the
BC
Mineral
Royalties
Act.
Although
Mr
Kelsey
acknowledges
that
his
opinion
is
at
variance
with
the
positons
taken
by
both
the
plaintiff
and
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
it
accords
with
the
court’s
view
of
the
matter.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
acknowledged
that
the
documentary
evidence
and
testimony
which
he
led
differed
somewhat
from
the
Minister’s
position
and
he
bears
the
responsibility
as
counsel
to
conduct
his
client’s
case
in
this
manner.
He
moreover
adopts
Mr
Kelsey’s
opinion
for
and
on
behalf
of
the
Minister
and
the
defendant.
Some
of
the
commentaries
expressed
in
Mr
Kelsey’s
written
statement
so
commend
themselves
to
the
court
for
their
reason
and
good
sense
that
they
bear
repeating
in
these
reasons.
At
this
point
I
should
confirm
that
the
royalties
under
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
appear
to
me
clearly
to
be
.
.
.
costs
only
established
on
an
annual
basis.
The
rates
are
established
for
each
designated
mineral
for
each
calendar
year,
on
the
basis
of
data
for
the
full
year.
Accordingly,
the
rates
of
royalty
cannot
be
determined
until
after
the
end
of
the
calendar
year.
In
the
interim,
estimates
may
be
made
and
refined
as
the
year
proceeds,
and
these
estimates
may
prove
in
the
event
to
range
from
the
reasonably
accurate
to
the
wildly
inaccurate.
First,
there
is
the
principle
that
accounting
measurements
(eg
of
value,
of
income,
of
costs)
should
be
made
on
the
basis
that
the
enterprise
is
a
going
concern.
This
principle
in
my
opinion
seriously
weakens
Gibraltar’s
position
that
the
royalties
should
be
calculated
to
May
6,
1974
on
the
basis
of
what
the
royalty
rates
would
have
been
had
the
enterprise
ceased
activity
on
that
date.
In
fact,
Gibraltar
continued
operations
for
the
rest
of
the
year,
and
beyond,
and
the
experience
of
the
full
year
1974
established
factual,
not
hypothetical,
rates
of
royalty
for
that
year.
It
is
also
important
for
accountants
to
ask
whether
or
not
figures
which
they
arrive
at
“make
sense”.
In
this
connection
it
is
important
to
note
that
the
total
amount
of
royalty
thus
calculated
by
Gibraltar
for
the
period
January
1
to
May
6,
1974
is
substantially
in
excess
of
the
total
amount
of
royalty
which
was
payable
for
the
whole
year.
It
follows
arithmetically
if
this
were
so
that
the
royalty
for
the
period
from
May
7
to
December
31,
1974
would
be
a
negative
amount.
The
concept
of
“negative
royalties”
does
not
make
sense
to
me.
In
1974
royalty
had
to
be
paid
on
designated
minerals
taken
out
of
the
ground
and
sold.
In
the
period
May
7
to
December
31,
1974
Gibraltar
did
sell
designated
minerals
it
had
taken
out
of
the
ground,
and
inescapably
there
were
royalties
to
pay
on
those
sales.
So
the
idea
that
royalties
for
that
period
could
be
negative
is
in
conflict
with
the
facts.
It
does
not
make
sense.
The
second
accounting
principle
which
guides
me
in
reaching
my
opinion
is
the
matching
principle.
.
.
.
In
my
view,
this
need
to
match
costs
with
revenues
weakens
the
position
taken
by
Revenue
Canada
as
their
calculations
utilize
an
annual
net
unit
value
in
allocating
the
royalties
to
the
periods
in
question.
These
calculations
ignore
the
differing
values
of
the
minerals
in
each
of
the
periods.
The
royalty
rates
determined
for
1974
to
apply
to
both
quantities
(units)
and
net
values
attributable
to
those
quantities,
and
to
ignore
this
is
to
ignore
the
existence
of
a
cause
and
effect
relationship
between
the
revenues
and
the
royalty
costs.
Mr
Kelsey
based
his
opinion
directly
on
the
provisions
of
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act,
in
particular
the
definition
of
“weighted
average’’
and
the
words
of
subsection
3(3)
by
which
the
amount
of
royalty
is
determined.
Those
provisions
are
as
follows:
1.
In
this
Act,
unless
the
context
otherwise
requires,
“weighted
average”
means
the
average,
weighted
by
volume
or
weight,
of
the
gross
value
or
net
value,
as
the
case
may
be,
of
the
units
of
a
designated
mineral
sold,
disposed
of,
or
used
by
a
producer
during
the
part
of
a
year
preceding
the
date
the
weighted
average
is
calculated.
3.
(3)
Subject
to
an
order
under
subsection
(2),
the
amount
of
royalty
payable
by
a
producer
shall
be
determined
by
multiplying
the
number
of
units
of
a
designated
mineral
sold,
disposed
of,
or
used
by
him
during
the
year
of
the
determination
by
the
rate
of
royalty
determined
under
subsection
(4)
or
(5),
or
both,
and
by
multiplying
that
product
by
the
weighted
average
net
value
to
the
producer
of
the
units.
After
considering
the
foregoing
provisions,
Mr
Kelsey
stated
“.
.
.
I
am
strengthened
in
my
belief
that
the
allocation
ought
to
be
made
by
multiplying
the
royalty
rate
for
the
year
times
the
units
in
each
period
times
the
net
unit
values
realized
in
each
period.”
Mr
Kelsey,
like
Mr
Harrison,
made
reference
to
section
1750
of
the
CICA
Handbook.
He
stated:
The
matter
of
annually-determined
costs
and
revenues
is
discussed
in
section
1750.25
of
the
CICA
Handbook,
part
of
the
section
on
“Interim
Financing
Reporting
to
Shareholders’’,
as
follows:
“Some
costs
or
revenues
based
on
levels
of
income
or
sales
are
only
determined
once
each
year.
Examples
are
management
bonuses,
volume
discounts
(on
both
purchases
and
sales),
and
sales
commissions
or
rent
based
on
income
or
sales.
However,
effective
rates
could
be
calculated
at
which
each
cost
or
revenue
would
be
accrued
during
the
year
and
the
rates
could
be
used
in
determining
the
interim
portion
of
these
costs
and
revenues.’’
In
my
view,
the
principal
relevance
of
this
to
the
issue
between
Gibraltar
and
Revenue
Canada
is
the
recognition
it
gives
to
costs
which
are
determined
once
each
year,
and
to
the
importance
of
using
annual
rates
to
reflect
these
costs.
The
need
for
estimates
of
such
costs
for
purposes
of
interim
(usually
quarterly)
reporting
to
shareholders,
and
the
necessity
to
make
revisions
to
those
estimates
as
actual
figures
are
known,
pose
problems
in
reporting
to
shareholders
because
of
the
risk
of
confusing
rather
than
enlightening
those
shareholders
by
presenting
frequently
changing
figures
covering
the
same
periods.
This
concern
to
avoid
confusing
the
shareholder
is
not
a
factor
in
the
relationship
between
taxing
authority
and
taxpayer.
The
principles
of
calculation
evinced
in
Mr
Kelsey’s
statement
of
opinion
accord
with
a
fair
construction
of
the
provincial
Mineral
Royalties
Act
and
of
paragraph
18(l)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
are
consistent
with
the
apparent
scheme
and
policy
of
both
statutes.
The
latter
Act
unexceptionably
aims
at
the
determination
of
the
plaintiffs
taxable
income
for
the
fiscal
period
of
January
1
to
December
31,
1974,
not
to
mention
subsequent
fiscal
periods.
The
calculations
based
on
the
cited
principles
will
produce
a
tax
liability
for
that
year
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation.
Counsel
for
both
parties
referred
many
authorities
of
a
jurisprudential
nature
to
the
court,
but
the
above
findings
and
concurrence
with
Mr
Kelsey’s
opinion
will
serve
amply
to
dispose
of
the
appeal.
Counsel
for
both
parties
requested
the
court
to
make
a
particular
disposition,
upon
their
agreement,
that
to
the
extent
required,
the
plaintiffs
1975
non-capital
loss
be
applied
against
its
1974
income.
So
shall
it
be
done.
Now,
it
surely
appears
that
the
effect
of
these
reasons
is
to
dismiss
the
plaintiffs
appeal,
and
so
it
would
be
forthrightly
stated
but
for
a
quirk
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
section
177.
In
order
to
refer
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment,
the
appeal
actually
has
to
be
allowed.
The
effect
of
the
judgment
then
is
that
the
plaintiff's
appeal
is
allowed,
with
costs
in
favour
of
the
defendant,
and
the
assessment
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
(a)
the
1975
non-capital
loss,
to
the
extent
required
shall
be
applied
to
the
plaintiffs
1974
income;
and
(b)
the
calculations
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
with
respect
to
the
royalty
expense
in
1974
under
the
Mineral
Royalties
Act
be
modified
in
accordance
with
the
opinion
evidence
of
the
defendant’s
expert
witness.
In
accordance
with
section
51
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
and
with
Rule
337(2)(b)
it
is
directed
hereby
that
counsel
for
the
defendant
may
prepare
a
draft
of
an
appropriate
judgment
to
implement
the
court’s
conclusions
and
move
for
judgment
accordingly.
Counsel
for
the
defendant
should
strive
to
obtain
approval
as
to
form
from
the
plaintiffs
counsel.