Jackett,
CJ
(judgment
delivered
from
the
Bench—all
concurring):—
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
by
which
an
appeal
by
the
respondent
from
its
reassessment
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1967
taxation
year
was
allowed
in
respect
of
the
issue
referred
to
in
paragraph
1
of
a
Memorandum
of
Agreement
between
counsel
filed
in
the
Trial
Division,
which
paragraph
reads
as
follows:
1.
With
respect
to
each
of
the
years
1966,
1967,
1968
and
1969:
whether
scientific
research
expenditures
deductible
under
Section
72(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
incurred
by
the
Plaintiff
during
the
year
must
be
deducted
in
determining
profits
for
the
purpose
of
Section
1201
(2)(a)
of
the
Regulations
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
(There
is
also
an
appeal
in
which
the
same
problem
is
raised
in
respect
of
the
1968
taxation
year
and
which
was
heard
at
the
same
time
on
the
same
record.)
The
relevant
facts
and
the
manner
in
which
the
matter
was
put
before
the
Trial
Division
sufficiently
appear
from
the
following
portion
of
the
Reasons
for
Judgment
of
the
learned
trial
judge:
The
Plaintiff
herein
appeals
to
this
Court
from
the
reassessment
for
income
tax
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
the
years
1967
and
1968,
wherein
he
deducted
from
the
Plaintiff’s
profits
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metal
from
the
resources
operated
by
it,
for
the
purpose
of
computing
depletion
allowance
to
which
it
was
entitled
under
Section
11(1)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Regulation
1201(2)
of
the
Regulations
made
pursuant
to
the
said
Act,
the
sum
of
$4,363,282.00
for
the
year
1967
and
the
sum
of
$5,890,205.00
for
the
year
1968.
The
issues
in
both
appeals
are
the
same
and
by
Order
of
the
Court
made
August
22,
1973,
the
actions
were
tried
together
on
common
evidence.
By
agreement
between
the
parties
dated
August
8,
1973,
the
issues
to
be
decided
are
as
follows:
1.
With
respect
to
each
of
the
years
1967
and
1968:
whether
scientific
research
expenditures
deductible
under
Section
72(1
)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
incurred
by
the
Plaintiff
during
the
year
must
be
deducted
in
determining
profits
for
the
purpose
of
Section
1201(2)(a)
of
the
Regulations
made
under
the
Income
Tax
Act;
2.
that
the
issue
regarding
deductibility
of
scientific
research
expenditures
in
determining
profits
for
the
purpose
of
Section
1201(2)(a)
of
the
Regulations
for
the
years
subsequent
to
the
year
1965
is
res
judicata
by
virtue
of
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
in
the
action
of
The
International
Nickel
Company
of
Canada
Limited
v
MNR,
[1971]
Ex
CR
p
213;
3.
that
if
such
expenditures
for
scientific
research
are
held
to
be
expenditures
that
are
deductible
in
the
determination
of
the
Plaintiff’s
profit
from
its
business
under
Section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
Plaintiff
is
entitled
to
deduct
the
same
amount
in
computing
its
income
under
the
said
Section
4
pursuant
to
Section
72(1)
of
the
Act.
In
his
pleading
and
in
his
submissions
at
trial
Counsel
for
the
Plaintiff
argued
that
the
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
were
of
a
capital
nature
as
found
by
my
brother,
Cattanach,
J
in
the
case
of
The
International
Nickel
Company
of
Canada
v
MNR
(supra)
and
as
such
were
not
deductible
in
computing
the
Plaintiff’s
“profits”
for
the
purposes
of
Regulation
1201(2)
and
that
the
word
“profits”
as
so
used
must
be
interpreted
in
accordance
with
its
usage
within
the
context
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
in
accordance
with
judicial
principles.
Counsel
for
the
Defendant
did
not
argue
strenuously
that
scientific
research
expenditures
were
not
capital
in
nature
in
the
sense
found
by
Cattanach,
J
in
the
previous
case.
However,
he
did
argue
that
the
evidence
adduced
in
this
case
was
different
than
that
in
the
previous
case
and
that
it
had
not
been
argued
before
Cattanach,
J
that
the
word
“profits”
in
Regulation
1201
was
unrelated
to
the
determination
of
income
under
Section
4
of
the
Act,
the
only
other
place
in
which
the
word
“profit”
is
used,
and
that
the
calculation
of
profits
must
be
made
in
accordance
with
its
ordinary
meaning
and
generally
accepted
accounting
principles.
If
this
were
so,
profit
would
have
to
be
determined
by
deducting
from
net
revenues
expenditures
for
scientific
research
incurred
in
the
current
fiscal
year
since
they
are
partly
causal
of
current
revenues
and
partly
of
future
revenues.
They
should
also
be
charged
with
past
research
expenditures
which
resulted
in
profits
during
the
current
year.
Since
the
Plaintiff’s
accounting
practice
did
not
account
for
research
expenditures
against
particular
projects,
it
was
not
possible
to
determine
those
portions
thereof
attributable
to
current
revenues.
For
this
and
other
cogent
reasons
he
argued
that
the
best
accounting
practice
was
to
charge
such
expenditures
against
net
revenues
for
the
current
period.
In
my
view,
the
evidence
adduced
before
me
of
the
nature
and
extent
of
the
scientific
research
engaged
in
by
the
Plaintiff
is
no
different
from
that
adduced
before
Cattanach,
J
in
the
earlier
case.
At
page
229
he
succinctly
describes
the
nature
of
that
work
as
determined
from
the
evidence
adduced
before
him
and
I
do
not
think
that
any
testimony
in
this
case
changes
it
in
any
way:
‘The
appellant
in
the
present
case
because
of
the
extent
and
nature
of
its
business
expends
large
sums
on
scientific
research
and
had
done
so
for
many
years.
It
employs
highly
qualified
personnel
whose
exclusive
function
is
to
devote
their
entire
time
and
outstanding
ability
to
a
constant
study
of
existing
processes
used
by
the
appellant
with
a
view
to
improving
and
making
those
processes
more
efficient
as
well
as
projects
as
to
the
feasibility
of
hitherto
untried
processes
and
methods
or
discovery
of
unknown
processes.
If
those
studies
prove
the
feasibility
of
such
new
projects
it
has
resulted
and
may
again
result
in
the
appellant
expending
large
sums
to
build
a
plant
to
utilize
the
process
so
discovered
or
an
improvement
on
a
process
in
use.
It
has
been
by
this
constant
search
for
better
ways
that
the
appellant
has
kept
in
the
forefront
of
its
field.
This
necessarily
results
in
a
continual
outlay
on
scientific
research
by
the
appellant.
It
is
a
continuing
and
never
ending
programme.”
At
page
231
he
pointed
out
that
the
Plaintiff
carefully
segregated
the
expenditures
on
scientific
research
between
those
directed
to
creating
new
processes
or
improving
existing
processes
from
those
directed
to
maintaining
and
operating
existing
processes,
the
information
for
such
segregation
being
supplied
from
records
kept
by
the
many
research
departments
of
the
Plaintiff.
The
evidence
before
me
showed
conclusively
that
such
segregation
was
still
being
maintained
in
the
years
1967
and
1968.
These
expenditures
were
properly
deducted
in
computing
the
depletion
base
for
the
purposes
of
Regulation
1201
because
they
were
“reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metal”.
It
is
argued
that
in
addition
to
such
costs
there
should
also
have
been
deducted
in
the
years
1967
and
1968
those
directed
to
creating
new
processes
or
improving
existing
processes.
In
my
opinion
there
was
no
evidence
adduced
before
me
that
the
latter
costs
incurred
in
1967
and
1968
were
“reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metal”
in
either
of
those
years.
As
Cattanach,
J
pointed
out
at
page
232:
“For
the
appellant’s
own
commercial
purposes
all
such
expenditures
on
scientific
research
were
included
in
operating
costs
and
not
as
capital
costs.
The
segregation
was
made
for
the
purpose
of
preparing
income
tax
returns.
I
do
not
attach
great
significance
to
this
bookkeeping
or
accounting
practice.
The
outlay
on
scientific
research
is
not
easily
classifiable
and
I
can
readily
understand
why
for
commercial
purposes
the
appellant
would
regard
these
expenditures
as
affecting
its
net
profit
or
loss.
But
different
considerations
apply
for
income
tax
purposes.
It
is
quite
understandable
that
a
commercial
enterprise
in
its
books
of
account
for
its
own
purposes
will
treat
certain
classes
of
expenditures
as
revenue
expenditures
which
are,
in
reality,
for
income
tax
purposes
capital
expenditures
and
conversely
many
items
treated
in
the
accounts
of
business
as
capital
receipts
are
for
income
tax
purposes
taxable
as
income.
How
an
item
is
treated
in
the
books
of
account
is
not
the
true
or
adequate
test
of
the
nature
of
the
expenditure.
As
I
understand
the
essence
of
Lord
Cave’s
declaration
it
is
that
an
expenditure
is
of
a
capital
nature
when
it
is
made
with
a
view
to
securing
an
asset
or
advantage
for
the
enduring
benefit
of
the
trade.
The
intention
of
the
appellant
in
embarking
upon
and
continuing
its
programme
of
scientific
research
was
to
acquire
for
itself
a
fund
of
scientific
“know
how”
upon
which
it
could
draw
when
necessity
might
arise.
Some
projects
were
abandoned.
Some
proved
fruitless.
Some
continued
over
many
years.
Many
projects
were
undertaken
which
accounts
for
the
con-
tinuing
nature
of
the
expenditure
as
does
the
fact
that
some
projects
take
many
years
for
their
culmination.
It
is
immaterial
that
some
of
the
projects
failed
if
the
intention
is
such
that
had
the
object
been
realized
an
asset
or
advantage
would
have
been
obtained.
If
the
ultimate
object
was
an
asset
or
advantage
of
a
capital
nature
then
the
expenditures
antecedent
thereto,
are
also
of
a
capital
nature.”
After
having
considered
all
of
the
facts
which,
as
above
stated,
I
find
were
substantially
the
same
as
those
adduced
before
me,
Cattanach,
J
concluded
that
the
appellant’s
expenditures
for
scientific
research
which
it
claimed
as
deductions
under
Sections
72,
72A
and
by
virtue
of
Section
11(1
)(j)
in
computing
its
taxable
income
for
the
year
were
expenditures
of
a
capital
nature
as
a
consequence
of
which
those
expenditures
were
not
deductible
in
determining
the
base
for
the
calculation
of
the
depletion
allowance
for
the
purposes
of
Regulation
1201.
For
the
reasons
given,
I
wholly
agree
with
his
conclusion
and,
subject
to
my
disposition
of
the
Defendant’s
arguments
with
which
I
shall
hereinafter
deal,
I
find
that
in
1967
and
1968
the
Plaintiff’s
expenditures
on
scientific
research,
other
than
those
directed
to
maintaining
and
operating
existing
processes,
were
capital
in
nature.*
Very
briefly,
the
question
is
whether
the
current
expenses
of
operating
its
long-term
research
activities
must
be
deducted
in
computing
the
base
upon
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
compute
depletion
allowance
under
Income
Tax
Regulation
1201(2),
which
reads
as
follows:
1201.
(2)
Where
a
taxpayer
operates
one
or
more
resources,
the
deduction
allowed
is
33
1/3%
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
his
profits
for
the
taxation
year
reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
oil,
gas,
prime
metal
or
industrial
minerals
from
all
of
the
resources
operated
by
him,
minus
(b)
the
aggregate
amount
of
the
deduction
provided
by
subsection
(4).
As
appears
from
his
Reasons,
the
learned
trial
judge
adopted
the
decision
of
Cattanach,
J
in
an
earlier
case
to
the
effect
that
the
current
expenses
of
the
respondent’s
long-term
research
operations
were
capital
expenses
of
the
respondent’s
prime
metal
production
business
and,
for
that
reason,
were
not
deductible
in
computing
its
depletion
base
under
Regulation
1201(2).
In
my
view,
his
conclusion
was
right
but
I
reach
it
by
another
route.
What
has
to
be
determined
under
Regulation
1201(2)
is
the
respondent’s
profits
for
the
1967
taxation
year
“reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
.
.
.
prime
metal”.
In
my
view,
the
correct
approach
to
that
question
is
to
be
found
in
MNR
v
Imperial
Oil
Ltd,
[1960]
SCR
735:
[1960]
CTC
275;
60
DTC
1219,
per
Judson,
J
at
pages
744-45
[pp
285;
1222]
where,
dealing
with
an
earlier
version
of
Regulation
1201(2)
(which
did
not
differ
in
any
material
respect
from
the
one
now
under
consideration),
he
said,
in
effect,
that
the
Regulation
required,
in
relation
to
oil
or
gas
wells,
as
a
first
step,
that
one
“determine
the
profits
or
losses
of
each
producing
well
in
the
normal
manner
by
ascertaining
the
difference
between
the
receipts
reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
oil
or
gas
from
the
well
and
the
expenses
of
earning
those
receipts”.
In
my
view,
therefore,
the
normal
manner
of
ascertaining
the
“profits”
for
any
taxation
year
attributable
to
production
of
prime
metal
from
a
“resource”
is
to
ascertain
the
difference
between
the
receipts
reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metals
from
the
resource
for
that
year
and
“the
expenses
of
earning
those
receipts”.
Applying
that
view
to
our
present
problem,
I
should
have
thought
that
the
respondent’s
“receipts”
for
the
1967
taxation
year
from
its
production
of
prime
metals
are
the
amounts
for
which
it
sold
prime
metals
in
that
year
and
that
our
problem,
therefore,
is
to
determine
whether
the
costs
sustained
by
it
in
1967
in
carrying
on
long-term
research
were
costs
of
earning
its
proceeds
from
sales
in
the
year
of
prime
metals,
In
my
view,
to
state
the
problem
is
to
answer
it.
My
view
is
not
based
on
an
attempt
to
trace
a
direct
connection
between
each
current
expense
incurred
and
the
actual
sales
in
the
year.
The
matter
must,
of
course,
be
regarded
as
a
businessman
would
regard
it.
Nobody
is
going
to
inquire
whether
the
expense
incurred
in
the
taxation
year
on
scientific
research
directed
to
maintaining
and
operating
existing
processes,
which
research
is
a
part
of
the
process
of
producing
and
disposing
of
prime
metals,
contributed
exclusively
to
sales
made
in
the
year.
They
must
be
treated
as
current
expenses,
and,
like
such
expenses
as
the
expenses
of
advertising
carried
on
in
the
year
and
the
expenses
for
repairs
done
in
the
year,
must
be
treated
as
current
expenses
of
the
year
in
which
they
were
incurred.
My
view
of
the
problem
in
this
case
is
based
on
the
facts,
as
I
appreciate
them,
that
the
research
with
which
we
are
concerned
is
not
part
of
the
operation
of
producing
and
disposing
of
prime
metals
at
all
but
is
a
separate
operation
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
operation
of
producing
and
disposing
of
prime
metals
except
in
the
remote
sense
that
it
is
anticipated
that
its
long
term
results
will
provide
the
prime
metal
production
business
of
the
future
with
the
wherewithal
to
make
it
a
more
vigorous
and
successful
operation
than
it
would
otherwise
be.
Such
long-time
research
is
a
long-term
operation
by
the
company
which,
in
addition
to
any
profits
it
may
produce
directly,
is
designed
to
ensure
a
successful
enduring
metal
production
business
for
the
respondent
in
the
future.
As
such,
the
costs
incurred
are
not
expenses
of
the
respondent’s
production
of
prime
metal.
It
is
because
that
type
of
long-term
research
is
not
ordinarily
part
of
a
company’s
current
profit-producing
activities
that
section
72
is
included
in
the
statute
to
allow
the
deduction
of
its
expenses
in
the
computation
of
world
income
even
though
they
might
otherwise
not
be
deductible
in
computing
income
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
at
all.
One
way
of
putting
the
matter
in
perspective
is
to
assume
that
the
respondent
had
operated
its
long-term
research,
as
it
might
have
done,
so
as
to
show
it
as
an
independent
profit-making
operation
producing
in
any
particular
year
either
a
profit
or
a
loss.
It
would
be
quite
clear
that
the
revenues
of
such
an
operation
would
not
be
receipts
reasonably
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metals
for
the
purpose
of
Regulation
1201(2)
and
that
the
expenses
now
in
question
would
be
expenses
of
earning
such
revenues
and
not
expenses
of
earning
the
receipts
attributable
to
the
production
of
prime
metals.
The
result
can
be
no
different
when
the
respondent
chooses
simply
to
turn
its
research
results
over
to
its
operating
people
and
chooses
not
to
turn
them
to
advantage,
as
it
might
do,
for
example,
by
embarking
on
a
major
licensing
operation.
I
fully
appreciate
that
the
result
of
the
judgment
appealed
from
is
that
the
depletion
base
may,
in
many
cases,
be
much
larger
than
the
"income”
that
would,
apart
from
paragraph
11(1)(b),
serve
as
a
base
for
the
calculation
of
income
tax
itself.
However,
when
one
considers
the
matter
from
that
point
of
view,
one
is
driven,
I
believe,
to
the
conclusion
that
Regulation
1201
was
deliberately
fashioned
to
leave
that
result
open
as
was
done
in
the
case
of
the
predecessor
regulation
under
consideration
in
Home
Oil
Co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1955]
SCR
733;
[1955]
CTC
192;
54
DTC
1148.
A
method
whereby
any
such
result
could
have
been
avoided
is
to
be
found
in
the
statute
itself.
Subsection
139(1
a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provides
a
formula
for
determining
Inter
alia
a
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
particular
source
for
a
taxation
year.
That
formula
requires
that
the
taxpayer’s
income
be
computed
in
accordance
with
the
Act
on
the
assumption
that
he
had
no
income
except
from
that
source.
Subsection
139(1
b)
then
provides
that,
in
applying
subsection
139(1
a)
for
certain
purposes,
all
deductions
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
year
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I,
with
irrelevant
exceptions,
“shall
be
deemed
to
be
applicable
either
wholly
or
in
part
to
a
particular
source
.
.
.”.
That
scheme
of
allocating
income
to
a
source
was
so
devised
that
all
deductions,
such
as
research
expenses,
not
otherwise
deductible
but
made
deductible
by
special
statutory
provisions,
have
to
be
allocated
to
some
source
of
income.
If
that
scheme
had
been
adopted
with
reference
to
the
depletion
base
in
Regulation
1201,
research
expenses
would
have
been
deductible
in
computing
the
depletion
base.
Regulation
1201
does
not,
however,
adopt
such
a
scheme.
It
provides
for
a
calculation
of
profit
reasonably
attributable
to
the
particular
activity
and,
by
Regulation
1201(4),*
enumerates
what
is
to
be
deducted
from
the
profit
so
calculated.
Moreover,
while
that
enumeration
specifically
singles
out
such
amounts
as
capital
cost
allowance
(depreciation)
and
interest
on
borrowed
money
for
deduction
from
gross
profit
in
computing
the
deple-
tion
base,
it
does
not
require
deduction
in
that
computation
of
the
research
expenses
that
are
deductible
in
computing
income
by
virtue
of
paragraph
11
(1)(j)
and
section
72.
In
the
face
of
such
a
very
precise
formula
adopted
under
statutory
authority
for
the
specific
purpose
of
computing
the
depletion
base,
I
am
of
the
view
that
it
is
not
open
to
the
Courts
to
read
into
the
statutory
formula
any
unspecified
deduction
that
might
seem
to
be
dictated
by
policy
considerations.
For
the
above
reasons,
I
formed
the
opinion
at
the
conclusion
of
argument
for
the
appellant
that
the
conclusion
of
the
trial
judge
was
correct
and
that
the
judgment
of
this
Court
should
be
that
the
appeal
be
dismissed
with
costs.
subsections
(3)
and
(10)
of
section
141
of
the
Act
and
sections
1204
and
1205
of
these
Regulations,
(c)
such
part
of
any
amount
deducted
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
Income
for
the
taxation
year
under
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act
as,
(i)
in
the
case
of
a
taxpayer
whose
principal
business
is
contract
drilling,
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
having
been
deducted
in
respect
of
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
production
of
oil,
gas,
metals
or
industrial
minerals,
and
(ii)
in
any
other
case,
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
having
been
deducted
in
respect
of
property
acquired
for
the
purpose
of
exploring
or
searching
for,
or
production
of,
oil,
gas,
metals
or
industrial
minerals,
to
the
extent
that
that
part
thereof
has
not
already
been
deducted
in
computing
profits
for
the
purpose
of
subsection
(2)
or
(3)
or
deducted
under
another
paragraph
of
this
subsection,
(d)
any
amount
deducted
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
taxation
year
under
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
(i)
borrowed
money
used
in
connection
with,
or
used
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
property
used
in
connection
with,
or
(ii)
an
amount
payable
for
property
used
in
connection
with
exploring
or
searching
for,
or
production
of,
oil,
gas,
metals
or
industrial
minerals,
to
the
extent
that
the
amount
so
deducted
has
not
already
been
deducted
in
computing
profits
for
the
purpose
of
subsection
(2)
or
(3)
or
deducted
under
another
paragraph
of
this
subsection,
and
(e)
amounts
not
included
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income
for
the
year
by
virtue
of
subsection
(5)
or
section
83
of
the
Act.