Bell
T.C.J.:
All
references
to
sections
are
in
respect
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(the
“Acf”).
Issues:
The
issue
is
whether
the
Appellant
is,
for
his
1988,
1989
and
1990
taxation
years,
entitled
to
deductions
in
respect
of
Canadian
explorations
expense
(“E”)
and
Canadian
development
expense
(“D”)
where,
(a)
A
“joint
exploration
corporation”
(“JEC”)
as
defined
in
paragraph
66(15)(g)
renounced
E
and
D
pursuant
to
subsections
66(10.1)
and
66(10.2)
to
its
shareholder
corporation
(“SC”)
as
defined
in
paragraph
66(15(z),
and
(b)
SC
renounced
that
E
and
D
to
the
Appellant
under
a
“flow-
through
share”
(“FTS”)
arrangement
pursuant
to
subsections
66(12.6)
and
66(12.62).
Facts:
The
parties
filed
an
AGREED
STATEMENT
OF
FACTS
which
included
the
following
statement:
The
parties
agree
that
the
questions
of
fact
in
this
appeal
will
be
limited
to
the
following
facts
and
to
the
attached
documents,
and
that
there
will
be
no
witness
and
no
other
documents
produced
during
the
hearing
of
this
appeal.
It
is
agreed
that:
(1)
JEC,
was
a
“joint
exploration
corporation”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
66(15)(g).
(2)
SC
was
a
“shareholder
corporation”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
66(15)(z)
and
owned
51%
of
the
voting
rights
of
JEC.
(3)
The
Appellant
was
a
director
and
the
sole
shareholder
of
SC.
(4)
JEC
was
incorporated
on
December
30,
1987
and
commenced
business
on
June
9,
1988.
Its
taxation
years
ended
on
December
30,
1988,
December
30,
1989
and
December
12,
1990,
it
having
been
dissolved
on
this
latter
date.
(5)
SC
was
incorporated
on
December
30,
1987
and
commenced
business
on
June
9,
1988.
Its
taxation
years
ended
on
January
31
in
each
year
commencing
in
1989.
(6)
By
agreement
dated
June
9,
1988
(“Renunciation
Agreement”),
JEC
agreed
to
issue
voting
shares
to
SC
for
$300,000
and
to
incur
E
and
D
in
that
total
amount
and
renounce
to
SC
those
expenses
pursuant
to
subsections
66(10.1)
and
66(10.2).
(7)
By
agreement
dated
June
9,
1988
(“Flow-Through
Agreement”),
SC
agreed
to
issue
to
the
Appellant
300,000
common
shares
for
$300,000,
to
incur
$300,000
of
E
and
D
during
the
period
commencing
on
June
9,
1988
and
ending
on
February
28,
1990
and
to
renounce
those
expenses
to
the
Appellant.
(8)
SC
did
not
expend
any
of
its
funds
on
activities
which
qualified
as
E
or
D
and
hence
did
not
itself
incur
any
E
or
D
between
the
above
dates.
(9)
JEC
incurred:
(a)
$154,909
of
E
in
its
1988
taxation
year,
(b)
$120,091
of
E
in
its
1989
taxation
year,
and
(c)
$25,000
of
D
in
its
1989
taxation
year.
(10)
On
May
29,
1989,
JEC
filed
with
Revenue
Canada
an
election
dated
April
26
1989
to
renounce
E
in
favour
of
SC
in
the
amount
of
$154,909
incurred
by
JEC
before
the
end
of
its
1988
taxation
year.
(11)
On
April
28,
1989,
SC
filed
with
Revenue
Canada,
a
prescribed
form
renouncing
to
the
Appellant,
effective
December
31,
1988
(“1988
Renunciation”),
the
$154,909
of
E
incurred
by
JEC
and
renounced
to
SC.
(12)
On
April
16,
1990,
JEC
filed
with
Revenue
Canada
an
election
dated
April
12,
1990
to
renounce
E
to
SC
in
the
amount
of
$120,091
incurred
by
JEC
before
the
end
of
its
1989
taxation
year
and
D
of
$25,000
incurred
by
JEC
before
the
end
of
its
1989
taxation
year.
(13)
On
May
14,
1990,
SC
filed
with
Revenue
Canada
a
prescribed
form
renouncing
to
the
Appellant,
effective
December
31,
1989
(“1989
Renunciation”),
$120,091
of
E
and
$25,000
of
D.
(14)
The
Appellant
added
the
amounts
of
$154,909
and
$120,091
to
his
“cumulative
Canadian
exploration
expense”
for
his
1988
and
1989
taxation
years
respectively
and
the
amount
of
$25,000
to
his
“cumulative
Canadian
development
expense”
for
his
1989
taxation
year.
(15)
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
for
the
Appellant’s
1988,
1989
and
1990
taxation
years,
disallowed
all
such
additions.
The
parties
made
written
submissions
to
the
Court,
no
hearing
having
been
held.
Appellant’s
Submissions
The
Appellant’s
position
is
straight
forward
and
clear.
The
pertinent
portion
of
subsection
66(10.1)
reads:
A
joint
exploration
corporation
may,
in
any
particular
taxation
year
or
within
6
months
from
the
end
of
that
year,
elect
in
prescribed
form
in
respect
of
that
year
to
renounce
in
favour
of
another
corporation
an
agreed
portion
of
the
aggregate
of
such
of
the
joint
exploration
corporation’s
Canadian
exploration
expenses
as
were
incurred
by
it
during
a
period
(ending
before
the
end
of
the
particular
taxation
year)
throughout
which
the
other
corporation
was
a
shareholder
corporation
...
and,
on
the
making
of
the
election,
the
said
[expenses]
...
shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
66.1
(6)
(a)
and
(b),
to
be
a
Canadian
exploration
expense
incurred
by
the
other
corporation
during
its
taxation
year
in
which
the
particular
taxation
year
ends...
(emphasis
added)
There
are
analogous
provisions
for
renounced
D
in
paragraphs
66(10.2).
Paragraphs
66.1
(6)(«)
defines
“Canadian
exploration
expense”
of
a
taxpayer
to
be
any
expense
incurred
...
that
is
one
of
a
number
of
defined
expenses,
the
nature
of
none
of
which
is
in
question
in
this
case.
Counsel
submits,
therefore,
that
the
E
and
D
incurred
by
JEC
become,
under
the
deeming
provisions,
E
and
D
incurred
for
all
purposes
by
SC.
Such
E
and
D,
by
virtue
of
paragraphs
66.1(6)(b)
and
66.2(5)(b),
fall
into
SC’s
“cumulative
Canadian
exploration
expense”
and
“cumulative
Canadian
development
expense”.
Counsel
then
says
that
by
virtue
of
subsections
66(12.6)
and
66(12.61),
such
E
may
be
renounced
and,
by
virtue
of
subsections
66(12.62)
and
66(12.63),
such
D
may
be
renounced
to
the
Appellant,
and
are
thereby
deemed
to
be
E
and
D
incurred
by
the
Appellant
and
never
to
have
been
incurred
by
SC.
Those
provisions
read
as
follows:
66(12.6)
Where
a
person
has
given
consideration
under
an
agreement
to
a
corporation
for
the
issue
of
a
flow-through
share
of
the
corporation
and,
during
the
period
commencing
on
the
day
the
agreement
was
entered
into
and
ending
24
months
after
the
end
of
the
month
that
included
that
day,
the
corporation
has
incurred
Canadian
exploration
expenses,
the
corporation
may
…
in
respect
of
the
share
and
within
that
period
or
within
30
days
thereafter,
renounce,
effective
on
the
date
on
which
the
renunciation
is
made
or
on
such
earlier
date
as
may
be
set
out
in
the
form
prescribed
...
to
the
person
in
respect
of
the
share
...
those
expenses
incurred
by
it
during
that
period.
Subsection
66(12.61)
reads:
Where
a
corporation
renounces
an
amount
to
a
person
under
subsection
(12.6):
(a)
the
Canadian
exploration
expenses
to
which
the
amount
relates
shall
be
deemed
to
be
Canadian
exploration
expenses
incurred
in
that
amount
by
the
person
on
the
effective
date
of
the
renunciation;
and
(b)
the
Canadian
exploration
expenses
to
which
the
amount
relates
shall,
except
for
the
purposes
of
that
renunciation,
be
deemed
on
and
after
the
effective
date
of
the
renunciation
never
to
have
been
Canadian
exploration
expenses
incurred
by
the
corporation.
(emphasis
added)
Counsel
then
referred
to
subsection
66(12.67)
which
reads:
A
corporation
shall
not
renounce
under
any
of
subsections
(12.6),
(12.62)
and
(12.64)
any
expenses
that
are
deemed
to
have
been
incurred
by
it
by
virtue
of
a
renunciation
under
this
section
by
another
corporation
that
is
not
related
to
it.
It
is
implicit
in
Counsel’s
submission
that
because
SC
controlled
JEC,
those
two
corporations
were
related
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
Appellant’s
Counsel,
in
his
written
submission,
said
that
there
is
no
debate
that
had
SC
actually
incurred
the
expenses
it
could
have
renounced
them
to
the
Appellant.
He
further
said
that
the
effect
of
the
deeming
rule
is
that
the
expenses
that
were
deemed
to
be
incurred
by
SC
are
treated
as
if
actually
incurred
by
SC.
He
submitted
that
it
is
through
deeming
rules
that
Parliament
indicates
its
intention
to
treat
a
thing
as
something
that
it
is
not.
He
then
quoted
from
R.
v.
Verrette,
[1978]
2
S.C.R.
838
(S.C.C.)
at
845:
A
deeming
provision
is
a
statutory
fiction;
as
a
rule
it
implicitly
admits
that
a
thing
is
not
what
it
is
deemed
to
be
but
decrees
that
for
some
particular
purpose
it
shall
be
taken
as
if
it
were
that
thing
although
it
is
not
or
there
is
a
doubt
as
to
whether
it
is.
A
deeming
provision
artificially
imports
into
a
word
or
an
expression
an
additional
meaning
which
they
would
not
otherwise
convey
beside
the
normal
meaning
which
they
retain
where
they
are
used;
it
plays
a
function
of
enlargement
analogous
to
the
word
“includes”
in
certain
definitions;
however,
“includes”
would
be
logically
inappropriate
and
would
sound
unreal
because
of
the
fictional
aspect
of
the
provision.
Analysis
and
Conclusion
I
agree
with
the
Appellant’s
submissions.
I
shall
set
forth
Respondent’s
main
submissions
together
with
my
responses
thereto.
Respondent’s
counsel
suggested
that
the
deeming
provisions
found
in
the
joint
exploration
corporation
rules
are
not
broad
enough
to
contemplate
a
“double
renunciation”
and
that,
therefore,
the
expenses
claimed
by
the
Appellant
do
not
fit
within
the
letter
of
the
renunciation
rules.
She
submitted
that
subsection
66(10.1)
only
deems
the
expenses
to
have
been
incurred
by
the
“other
corporation”,
in
this
case,
SC,
“for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
66.1
(6)(ri)
and
(b)
of
the
Act”.
She
then
submitted
that
the
deeming
provisions
were
merely
intended
to
be
mechanisms
to
allow
the
“other
corporation”,
in
whose
favour
the
renunciation
was
made,
to
treat
the
expenses
as
having
been
incurred
by
it
for
the
purpose
of
calculating
its
various
pools
of
expenses
from
which
it
could
then
claim
its
deductions.
She
continued
with
the
statement
that
the
language
is
specific
enough
for
those
purposes
but
does
not
deem
the
expenses
to
have
been
incurred
for
all
purposes.
I
find
no
reason
to
construe
the
language
to
that
end.
Subsection
66(10.1)
in
deeming
the
E
renounced
by
JEC
to
SC
to
have
been
incurred
by
SC,
clearly
and
simply
does
just
that
—
nothing
more
and
nothing
less.
Neither
that
subsection
nor
paragraphs
66.1(6)(a)
and
66.1(6)(b)
limit
the
use
of
such
E.
The
same
reasoning
applies
to
subsection
66(10.2)
and
paragraphs
66.2(5)(a)
and
66.2(5)(b)
respecting
D.
The
written
submission
continued:
Subsection
66(10.1)
then
goes
on
to
deem
the
expenses
to
have
been
incurred
“during
a
particular
taxation
year
of
the
other
corporation”
[i.e.
SC].
However,
it
does
not
deem
them
to
have
been
incurred
at
any
particular
time
during
the
taxation
year.
While
this
is
all
that
is
required
to
enable
[SC]
to
add
the
expenses
to
its
Own
resource
pools,
it
is
not
broad
enough
language
to
convert
these
expenses
into
[SC’s]
expenses
for
all
purposes.
In
fact,
the
words
used
by
counsel,
namely
“during
a
particular
taxation
year
of
the
other
corporation”
are
not
an
accurate
quote.
As
set
forth
above,
subsection
66(10.1)
states
that
a
joint
exploration
corporation
may,
in
any
particular
taxation
year,
renounce
by
election
and
on
so
doing,
the
expense
shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
paragraphs
66.1
(6)(«)
and
(b),
to
be
a
Canadian
exploration
expense
incurred
by
the
other
corporation
during
its
taxation
year
in
which
the
particular
taxation
year
ends...
(emphasis
added)
Counsel
states
further
that
...because
those
provisions
do
not
specify
the
day
the
expenses
were
deemed
to
have
been
incurred,
the
possibility
of
such
expenses
qualifying
for
treatment
under
provisions
requiring
that
the
expense
be
incurred
at
a
particular
point
in
time
is
thereby
eliminated.
In
the
case
at
hand
the
FTS
provisions
(subsections
66(12.6)
and
66(12.62)
of
the
Act)
upon
which
the
Appellant
relies
require
that
the
expense
be
incurred
“during
the
period
commencing
on
the
day
the
agreement
was
entered
into
and
ending
24
months
after
the
end
of
the
month
that
included
that
day”.
She
then
stated
that
As
the
expenses
in
question
are
not
deemed
by
virtue
of
subsection
66(10.1)
and
66(10.2)
of
the
Act
to
have
been
incurred
on
a
particular
day,
it
cannot
be
concluded
that
they
were
incurred
during
the
particular
time
period
referred
to
in
subsections
66(12.6)
and
66(12.62)
of
the
Act.
I
do
not
agree.
There
is
no
provision
requiring
an
expense
to
be
incurred
“at
a
particular
point
in
time”
or
on
a
“particular
day”.
Subsection
66(12.6)
provides
that
where
a
person
(Appellant)
has
given
consideration
($300,000)
under
an
agreement
(Flow-Through
Agreement)
to
a
corporation
(SC)
for
the
issue
of
a
flow-through
share
and,
during
the
period
commencing
on
the
day
the
agreement
was
entered
into
[June
9,
1988]
and
ending
24
months
after
the
end
of
the
month
that
included
that
day
[July
1,
1990]
the
corporation
has
incurred
E,
it
may
within
that
period
or
within
30
days
thereafter,
renounce
effective
on
the
date
on
which
the
renunciation
is
made
or
on
such
earlier
date
as
may
be
set
out
in
the
form
prescribed
...
to
the
person
in
respect
of
the
share
[Appellant]
the
amount
of
expenses
incurred
by
it
during
that
period.
All
of
the
E
and
D
were
deemed
to
have
been
incurred
by
SC
in
the
above
described
period.
The
$154,909
of
E
incurred
by
JEC
in
its
taxation
year
ended
December
30,
1988
is
deemed
to
have
been
incurred
by
SC
in
its
1989
taxation
year.
It
is
agreed
that
SC
renounced
that
E,
effective
on
December
31,
1988,
to
the
Appellant.
The
$120,091
of
E
and
$25,000
of
D
incurred
by
JEC
in
its
taxation
year
ended
December
30,
1989,
is
deemed
to
have
been
incurred
by
SC
in
its
1990
taxation
year.
It
is
agreed
that
SC
renounced
that
E
and
D,
effective
on
December
31,
1989,
to
the
Appellant.
Respondent’s
counsel
then
compared
the
language
used
in
the
joint
exploration
corporation
deeming
provisions
[66(10.1)
and
66(10.2)]
with
the
language
used
in
the
flow-through
share
deeming
provisions
[66(12.61)
and
66(12.63)].
She
went
on
to
refer
to
budget
proposals
respecting
subsection
66(12.67)
and
the
“statutory
scheme”
of
the
Act
relating
to
resource
expenditures.
She
referred
to
“tax
incentive
schemes”
upon
which
the
Appellant
relies
and
described
the
history
of
the
introduction
of
the
joint
exploration
corporation
concept
in
1962
including
a
statement
respecting
the
object
of
the
joint
exploration
corporation
provisions.
She
also
referred
to
“Technical
Notes
to
a
Notice
of
Ways
and
Means
Motion
Relating
to
Income
Tax”
issued
by
the
Minister
of
Finance
in
October
1986.
There
followed
a
discussion
of
object
and
spirit
submitting
that
the
joint
exploration
corporation
provisions
and
flow-through
share
provisions
were
conceived
with
a
different
object
in
mind
and
that
if
this
were
not
so,
there
would
be
no
need
for
two
different
incentives
with
two
different
sets
of
rules
providing
for
the
renunciation
of
expenses
by
one
person
to
another.
In
studying
this
approach
I
do
not
agree
with
this
construction
of
these
statutory
provisions.
In
this
regard,
with
specific
reference
to
the
object
and
spirit
of
the
legislation,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
has
commented
on
several
occasions.
In
Antosko
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1994),
94
D.T.C.
6314
(S.C.C.),
lacobucci,
J.
at
6321
said:
Where
the
words
of
the
section
are
not
ambiguous,
it
is
not
for
this
Court
to
find
that
the
appellants
should
be
disentitled
to
a
deduction
because
they
do
not
deserve
a
“windfall”,
as
the
respondent
contends.
In
the
absence
of
a
situation
of
ambiguity,
such
that
the
Court
must
look
to
the
results
of
a
transaction
to
assist
in
ascertaining
the
intent
of
Parliament,
a
normative
assessment
of
the
consequences
of
the
application
of
a
given
provision
is
Within
the
ambit
of
the
legislature,
not
the
courts.
In
Duha
Printers
(Western)
Ltd.
v.
R.
(1998),
98
D.T.C.
6334
(S.C.C.)
at
6350
lacobucci,
J.
said:
Moreover,
this
Court
emphasized
in
Antosko
supra,
...
that,
although
various
techniques
may
be
employed
in
interpreting
the
Act,
“such
techniques
cannot
alter
the
result
where
the
words
of
the
statute
are
clear
and
plain
and
where
the
legal
and
practical
effect
of
the
transaction
is
undisputed”.
In
Mattabi
Mines
Ltd.
v.
Ontario
(Minister
of
Revenue),
[1988]
2
C.T.C.
294
(S.C.C.)
at
304,
Wilson
J.
said:
Interpretation
according
to
the
“object
and
spirit”
of
the
legislation
cannot,
in
my
view,
overcome
a
clear
statutory
definition.
This
is
not
a
case
in
which
the
Court
has
a
choice
of
the
interpretations
it
may
put
upon
the
language
used
by
the
legislature.
The
legislature
has
specifically
addressed
the
subject.
Estey,
J.
in
Stubart
Investments
Ltd.
v.
R.
(1984),
84
D.T.C.
6305
(S.C.C.)
at
6323
said
that
E.A.
Driedger,
in
“Construction
of
Statutes”
2
ed.
(1983)
at
p.
87
“put
the
modern
rule
succinctly”,
namely:
Today
there
is
only
one
principle
or
approach,
namely,
the
words
of
an
Act
are
to
be
read
in
their
entire
context
and
in
their
grammatical
and
ordinary
sense
harmoniously
with
the
scheme
of
the
Act,
the
object
of
the
Act,
and
the
intention
of
Parliament.
In
Neuman
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1998),
98
D.T.C.
6297
(S.C.C.)
at
6305,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
said:
We
should
not
be
quick
to
embellish
the
probation
at
issue
here
when
it
is
open
for
the
legislator
to
be
precise
and
specific
with
respect
to
any
issue
to
be
avoided.
In
Friesen
v.
R.
(1995),
95
D.T.C.
5551
(S.C.C.)
Major,
J.
said
at
5553,
1
accept
the
following
comments
on
the
Antosko
case
in
P.W.
Hogg
and
J.E.
Magee,
Principles
of
Income
Tax
Law
(1995),
Section
22.3(c)
’Strict
and
purposive
interpretation;
at
p.
453-454:
It
would
introduce
intolerable
uncertainty
into
the
Income
Tax
Act
if
clear
language
in
a
detailed
provision
of
the
Act
were
to
be
qualified
by
unexpressed
exceptions
derived
from
a
court’s
view
of
the
object
and
purpose
of
the
provision
...
[The
Antosko
case]
is
simply
a
recognition
that
“object
and
purpose”
can
play
only
a
limited
role
in
the
interpretation
of
a
statute
that
is
as
precise
and
detailed
as
the
Income
Tax
Act.
When
a
provision
is
couched
in
specific
language
that
admits
of
no
doubt
or
ambiguity
in
its
application
to
the
facts,
then
the
provision
must
be
applied
regardless
of
its
object
and
purpose.
Only
when
the
statutory
language
admits
of
some
doubt
or
ambiguity
in
its
application
to
the
facts
is
it
useful
to
resort
to
the
object
and
purpose
of
the
provision.
As
stated
above,
the
language
in
subsection
66(10.1)
deems
the
E
renounced
by
JEC
to
SC:
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
66.1
(6)(cz)
and
(b),
to
be
Canadian
exploration
expenses
incurred
by
SC.
There
is
no
limitation
upon
the
E
so
incurred
by
SC.
The
same
reasoning
applies
to
D
renounced
under
subsection
66(10.2).
The
language
is
clear
and
plain.
No
research
of
object
and
spirit
is
necessary.
The
E
and
D
has
been
claimed
by
the
Appellant
and
can
only
be
claimed
once.
That
is
the
“legal
and
practical”
result
of
the
pertinent
legislation.
No
one
other
than
the
Appellant
would
be
entitled
to
the
deductions
claimed
by
the
Appellant.
One
of
the
incidents
of
incentive
legislation
is
that
deductions
are
given.
The
fisc
in
no
way
suffers
from
the
Appellant’s
success
in
this
case.
For
the
reasons
outlined,
the
appeals
are
allowed
with
costs.
Appeal
allowed.