Collier,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
by
the
respondent
which
in
effect
disallowed
the
appellant’s
contention
that
its
income
for
its
fiscal
year
ending
February
28,
1967
was
exempt
from
taxation
by
virtue
of
subsection
83(5)
of
the
income
fax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148
and
amendments.
That
subsection
and
subsection
(6)
read
as
follows:
83.
(5)
Subject
to
prescribed
conditions,
there
shall
not
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
corporation
income
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
mine
during
the
period
of
36
months
commencing
with
the
day
on
which
the
mine
came
into
production.
(6)
In
subsection
(5),
(a)
“mine”
does
not
include
an
oil
well,
gas
well,
brine
well,
sand
pit,
gravel
pit,
clay
pit,
shale
pit
or
stone
quarry
(other
than
a
deposit
of
oil
shale
or
bituminous
sand),
but
does
include
a
well
for
the
extraction
of
material
from
a
sylvite
deposit
and
all
such
wells,
the
material
produced
from
which
is
sent
to
a
single
plant
for
processing,
shall
be
deemed
to
be
one
mine;
and
(b)
“production”
means
production
in
reasonable
commercial
quantities.
In
the
fiscal
year
in
question,
the
appellant’s
income
of
$6,646,130.27
was
derived
from
mining
operations
in
its
so-called
Jersey
mine.
It
had
previously
obtained
a
three
year
tax
holiday
in
respect
to
its
so-called
East
Jersey
mine.
The
issue
as
stated
by
appellant’s
counsel
is:
was
the
Jersey
mine
at
its
opening
and
in
the
year
in
question
a
part
of
the
East
Jersey
mine,
or
were
they
two
separate
and
distinct
mines?
As
stated
by
counsel
for
the
respondent:
was
the
operation
of
the
appellant
commencing
in
1962
and
continuing
into
later
years
the
same
essential
operation
of
one
mine?
The
subtle
differences
in
the
two
formulations
of
the
issue
will
become
more
apparent
from
the
facts.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
in
1955
for
the
purpose
of
exploring
and
developing
certain
copper
mineral
claims
in
the
Highland
Valley
area
of
British
Columbia.
In
the
first
two
years
the
exploratory
and
proving
work
was
done
principally
in
what
the
annual
reports
for
1956
and
1957
refer
to
as
the
lona
and
Jersey
Zones.
It
was,
however,
recog-
nized,
if
not
then,
by
1958
that
there
were
two
ore
bodies
in
the
Jersey
zone;
one
was
named
the
East
Jersey
and
the
other
the
Jersey.
Subsequent
annual
reports
made
the
distinction
between
the
two
zones
and
the
two
ore
bodies.
Financial
arrangements
were
made
with
Japanese
business
interests
and
further
proving
work
was
done.
In
1961
Wright
Engineers
Limited
prepared
a
lengthy
report
entitled
“Production
Plan
and
Economic
Analysis
for
a
3,000
tons
per
day
Plant”.
This
report
described
the
differences
in
the
rock
and
copper
ore
between
Jersey
and
East
Jersey
and
contemplated
the
construction
of
a
3,000
tons
per
day
crusher
or
mill,
with
the
ore
coming
first
from
East
Jersey;
the
report
also
contemplated
a
later
increase
in
plant
capacity
to
make
economically
practical
the
handling
of
ore
from
Jersey.
The
mining
method
was
to
be
open
pit,
and
as
I
read
the
recommendations,
two
pits
were
contemplated,
one
for
East
Jersey
and
another
for
Jersey.
Wright
Engineers
Limited
felt
that
in
the
preparation
of
the
“Jersey
mine
site”
(their
words)
the
main
road
and
facilities
serving
the
East
Jersey
pit
would
be
available
(Exhibit
15,
sec
10-1).
I
digress
to
a
brief
examination
of
the
two
ore
bodies
referred
to
above.
First,
l
am
content
to
adopt
the
description
of
an
ore
body
as
given
by
Dr
Holland,
a
very
well
qualified
and
experienced
geologist,
now
chief
of
the
Mineralogical
Branch
of
the
Department
of
Mines
and
Petroleum
Resources
of
British
Columbia:
an
ore
body
is
a
mass
of
rock
mineralized
with
some
valuable
metallic
mineral
that
can
be
mined
at
a
profit.*
The
uncontradicted
evidence
before
me
is
that
the
East
Jersey
ore
body
was
a
small
vein-type
ore
body
of
three
and
one
half
million
tons
with
a
ratio
of
two
and
one
half
tons
of
waste
to
one
ton
of
ore.
It
was
a
narrow
body
and
the
change
from
ore
to
waste
was
sharp.
The
Jersey
ore
body
was
larger,
1,000
feet
in
depth
and
600-1,000
feet
in
width.
It
was
a
very
fractured
ore
body
with
numerous
faults
similar
to
a
cracked
tea
cup,
with
fine
mineralization
following
the
cracks.
It
was
a
much
lower
grade
deposit
compared
to
East
Jersey.
Dr
Holland
testified
the
structural
control
in
both
ore
bodies
was
in
a
north-south
direction
and
because
Jersey
lay
to
the
west
of
East
Jersey,
there
was,
in
his
words,
no
structural
connection
between
the
two
ore
bodies.
The
distance
between
the
two
was
approximately
1,000
to
1,100
feet.
I
resume
the
narrative.
Because
of
financial
limitations,
the
initial
capacity
of
the
plant,
and
the
higher
grade
of
ore,
East
Jersey
was
brought
into
production
first.
This
was
in
late
1962.
The
appellant
claimed
and
was
granted
by
the
respondent
a
tax
exemption
for
three
years
commencing
December
1,
1962.
The
respondent
made
certain
tentative
reservations
in
its
grant
in
respect
to
the
appellant’s
other
mineral
claims
which
were
not
included
in
this
particular
application.
In
1963
and
1964
and
up
to
February
17,
1965,
all
ore
milled
came
from
East
Jersey.
As
I
have
indicated,
the
ore
was
extracted
by
means
of
the
open
pit
method.
Some
development
work
on
Jersey
was
commenced
in
1964,
that
is,
the
preparatory
work
necessary
for
another
open
pit.
On
February
17,
1965
a
serious
slide
in
East
Jersey
halted
that
operation
permanently
and
Jersey
was
brought
into
production
as
soon
as
possible
thereafter,
although
this
was
earlier
than
contemplated
in
the
Original
plan.
The
closest
horizontal
distance
between
the
Jersey
open
pit
and
the
East
Jersey
open
pit
was
approximately
800
feet.
At
this
stage,
before
dealing
further
with
the
facts,
I
refer
to
certain
decisions
which
have
considered
subsection
83(5):
MNR
v
The
Mac-
Lean
Mining
Company
Limited,
[1970]
SCR
877;
[1970]
CTC
264;
70
DTC
6199,
which
reversed
[1969]
CTC
257;
69
DTC
5185;
Marbridge
Mines
Limited
v
MNR,
[1971]
CTC
442;
71
DTC
5231
(Exch);
Bermah
Mines
Limited
v
MNR,
41
Tax
ABC
359;
66
DTC
519.
In
the
MacLean
case,
mining
had
been
carried
on
at
Buchans,
Newfoundland
for
many
years.
Over
the
years
several
shafts
had
been
sunk
to
mine
different
ore
bodies,
but
all
shafts
were
connected
by
an
underground
haulway
to
the
original
shaft.
The
last
shaft
sunk
was
the
Rothermere
shaft.
In
1950
a
deeper
ore
body
some
3,000
feet
from
the
Rothermere
shaft
was
discovered.
In
order
to
bring
it
into
production,
the
Rothermere
shaft
was
deepened
and
a
tunnel
opened
into
the
new
ore
body
(the
Mac-
Lean
ore
body).
in
the
mining
of
the
MacLean
ore
body,
certain
other
uses
of
the
Rothermere
working
were
made.
Thurlow,
J,
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
held
the
MacLean
workings
to
be
a
distinct
mine
and
the
taxpayer
entitled
to
the
exemption
provided
by
subsection
83(5).
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
reversed
the
decision
and
accepted
the
Minister’s
contention
that
the
MacLean
workings
were
simply
an
extension
of
an
old
or
existing
mine
into
a
new
ore
body
and
not
a
new
mine.
Pigeon,
J,
who
gave
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
said
at
pages
880-882
I
266-267,
6200-6201]:
In
my
view,
the
decisive
consideration
in
favour
of
the
Minister’s
decision
is
that
the
MacLean
orebody
was
not
developed
as
a
separate
mine.
An
essential
step
in
the
process
was
the
deepening
by
some
800
feet
of
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
the
driving
from
that
shaft
of
an
exploratory
heading
some
2,300
feet
underground
towards
the
MacLean
orebody.
The
substantial
expenditure
involved
in
deepening
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
carrying
an
exploratory
heading
over
a
considerable
distance
shows
that
the
use
of
the
Rothermere
workings
was
of
very
substantial
importance
in
that
development.
Such
use
was
also
going
to
be
of
substantial
importance
in
the
actual
working
of
the
MacLean
orebody.
It
appears
that
the
miners
as
a
rule
reach
their
working
places
and
return
to
the
“dry”
that
way.
Compressed
air
for
operating
their
drills
as
well
as
sand
for
filling
the
mined-out
stopes
also
comes
that
way
as
well
as
the
fresh
air
for
ventilation,
the
exhaust
only
being
by
the
MacLean
shaft.
Furthermore,
all
the
water
that
seeps
into
the
MacLean
workings
is
carried
out
that
same
way,
being
pumped
first
from
the
bottom
to
the
tunnel
that
was
built
as
the
exploratory
heading,
flowing
by
gravity
to
the
Rothermere
shaft
due
to
a
slight
grade
that
was
thoughtfully
provided
and
being
finally
pumped
up
the
Rothermere
shaft.
It
may
be
that
the
MacLean
orebody,
being
completely
distinct
from
the
others
and
separated
from
the
nearest
other,
the
Rothermere,
by
a
sub-
stantial
distance
of
over
1,000
feet,
could
have
been
developed
and
operated
as
a
distinct
mine.
In
my
view,
it
is
clear
that
this
is
not
what
happened
in
fact.
This
orebody
was
developed
as
an
integral
part
of
a
mining
operation
including
the
Rothermere.
Not
only
did
its
development
proceed
as
an
expansion
of
that
underground
operation
towards
the
other
orebody
but
it
was
not
designed
to
be
operated
otherwise
than
as
a
unit
with
the
Rothermere.
Some
essential
facilities
without
which
the
MacLean
orebody
cannot
be
worked
at
all
are
provided
by
the
Rothermere
workings,
such
as
ventilation.
On
this
account,
with
respect,
Thurlow
J.
was
in
error
in
saying:
“all
the
elements
necessary
for
a
distinct
mine
appear
to
me
to
be
present”.
There
is
also
the
fact
that
ore
is
not
carried
to
the
surface
until
it
reaches
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
at
the
end
of
an
underground
haulage
way
and
is
then
treated
in
a
common
mill
after
being
mixed
with
the
ore
from
the
other
pits.
However,
these
factors
may
not
be
decisive.
Mining
itself
is
complete
by
the
production
and
hoisting
of
the
ore
and
one
can
well
conceive
of
a
single
mill
serving
several
mines.
The
building
of
an
underground
haulage
way
rather
than
a
surface
road
or
railway
as
means
of
transporting
the
ore
from
a
mine
to
a
common
mill
may
possibly
make
no
difference.
Those
questions
are
therefore
left
open.
What
I
find
decisive
against
the
view
that
the
MacLean
workings
are
a
separate
mine
is
the
fact
that
those
workings
were
developed
from
the
Rothermere
workings
which
were
substantially
altered
for
the
purpose
of
developing
the
MacLean
orebody
and
of
exploiting
it
for
producing
ore.
Some
800
feet
of
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
the
whole
of
the
exploratory
heading
were
dug
for
that
sole
purpose.
Those
parts
of
the
Rothermere
workings
are
really
integral
parts
of
the
MacLean
workings
without
which
the
latter
could
not
be
operated
and
would
not
be
producing
ore.
In
the
Marbridge
case
(supra)
the
appellant
had
acquired
certain
mining
claims
in
the
Township
of
La
Motte,
PQ
and
in
1968
brought
into
production
a
nickel
mine
from
an
ore
body
discovered
in
Lots
9
and
10.
The
appellant
was
granted
a
three-year
tax
exemption.
Later
an
ore
body
was
discovered
on
Lots
12
and
13
and
that
property
was
brought
into
production
in
1965.
The
Minister
refused
an
exemption
for
No
2
mine
on
the
grounds
it
was
part
of
No
1
mine.
The
production
from
both
mines
went
through
the
same
crusher
and
then
was
shipped
elsewhere
for
further
processing.
It
appears
from
the
evidence
the
two
workings
were
not
physically
connected
in
any
way
as
in
the
MacLean
case
(supra),
nor
was
there
any
use
of
the
facilities
of
No
1
mine
in
respect
to
the
working
of
No
2
mine,
except
for
two
minor
accidental
things.
Gibson,
J
held
No
2
mine
was
a
separate
mine
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
83(5).*
The
DTC
headnote
in
the
Bermah
case
accurately,
in
my
view,
summarizes
that
decision
and
I
reproduce
it
here
from
pages
519-529:
In
1918
Company
P
commenced
to
operate
a
gold
and
silver
mine
in
British
Columbia.
In
1936,
when
the
two
upper
levels
of
the
mine
were
apparently
exhausted,
the
pillars
supporting
these
levels
were
blasted
out,
leaving
a
large
hole
filled
with
rock
and
debris
(a
“glory
hole’’).
Mining
of
the
lower-grade
deeper
levels
was
carried
out
sporadically
by
Company
P
until
about
1956
when
all
operations
were
discontinued.
In
September
1959
a
prospector
obtained
a
one-year
lease
on
the
glory
hole
area
from
Company
P,
formed
the
appellant
private
company,
and
assigned
his
lease
to
the
new
company.
Within
a
few
months,
the
appellant
company
discovered
an
extremely
rich
ore
shoot
in
the
wall
of
the
glory
hole,
began
shipping
ore
in
April
1960
and
continued
to
do
so
until
September
1960
when
its
lease
expired,
all
of
which
production
was
in
the
appellant’s
taxation
year
ended
March
31,
1961.
After
the
expiry
of
the
lease,
Company
P
proceeded
to
mine
the
remaining
ore
in
the
new
ore
shoot.
The
appellant
company
claimed
that
its
income
for
the
1961
taxation
year
was
exempt
from
tax
under
section
83(5)
which
exempts
the
income
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
mine
during
the
first
three
years
of
production.
The
Minister
ruled
that
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
the
exemption
because
the
appellant’s
mine
was
the
same
mine
as
that
operated
by
Company
P
and
that
the
mine
came
into
production
in
1918
and
not
in
1960.
Held-.
The
appeal
was
allowed.
The
appellant
company
was
entitled
to
the
exemption
claimed.
The
appellant’s
mine
was
a
different
mine
from
the
mine
operated
by
Company
P.
It
was
clear
from
the
evidence
that
Company
P
had
concluded
years
ago
that
there
was
no
more
ore
in
the
glory
hole
area
and
that
it
had
abandoned
its
property.
There
could
be
no
question
that
what
the
appellant
discovered
and
operated
was
a
“new
mine”,
within
the
terms
of
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
North
Bay
Mica
Co
Ltd
v
MNR
(58
DTC
1151).
All
of
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
1961
taxation
year
was
derived
from
the
operation
of
this
mine
during
its
first
six
months
of
production.
I
was
told
that
in
the
Bermah
case
the
rich
ore
shoot
was
not
more
than
twenty
feet
from
the
old
workings,
but
had
been
hidden
by
a
curtain
or
screen
of
rock.
I
return
now
to
the
evidence
here.
Before
the
closing
of
East
Jersey
the
ore,
as
I
have
said,
was
extracted
by
the
open
pit
method.
In
this
procedure
the
overburden
is
removed
to
uncover
the
ore.
Drilling
and
blasting
of
the
rock
takes
place
and
benches
are
eventually
established.
The
ore
and
waste
are
removed
(in
this
case)
by
truck
on
a
system
of
roads.
The
road
systems
are
important
here.
The
evidence
before
me,
in
my
opinion,
clearly
establishes
that
none
of
the
facilities
or
workings
of
East
Jersey
were
used
in
the
workings
on
Jersey,
except
for
a
minor
portion
of
a
surface
road
(see
Exhibit
14).
East
Jersey
had
its
own
benches,
berms,
road
systems
and
a
power
line.
Jersey
had
and
has
the
same
things,
but
not
connected
with
East
Jersey.
The
techniques
used
in
Jersey
were
different
from
those
in
East
Jersey:
the
benches
were
started
at
40
feet
apart
(later
reduced
to
33
feet)
as
compared
to
30
feet
in
East
Jersey;
the
blasting
patterns
and
explosives
used
were
different
because
of
the
differences
in
the
rock;
sorters
were
used
to
sort
waste
from
ore
in
East
Jersey
because
of
the
sharp
cut-off
rate
there
(sorters
were
not
used
in
Jersey
because
the
cut-off
rate
was
not
nearly
as
sharp).
When
Jersey
ore
was
brought
to
the
expanded
mill,
problems
not
encountered
with
East
Jersey
ore
arose,
which
had
to
be
solved
by
consultants.
I
have
earlier
pointed
out
that
the
mill
had
to
be
expanded
to
make
production
from
Jersey
economically
practical.
The
respondent
contends
the
appellant’s
activities
in
Highland
Valley
must
be
viewed
as
one
integrated
operation,
that
in
looking
at
the
words
“operation
of
a
mine”
as
applied
to
the
facts
here,
one
must
look
at
the
whole
of
the
appellant’s
operations
past
and
present.
Mr
Scollin
relied
on
a
number
of
factors
in
support
of
the
respondent’s
position
that
this
was
one
mining
concern:
(a)
The
appellant’s
plan
for
an
orderly
development
of
its
property
and
the
fact
that
in
many
of
its
annual
reports
it
referred
to
its
Operations
as
if
they
were
one
mine.
It
is
true
that
in
1960
there
was
some
indication
of
ore
between
East
Jersey
and
Jersey
and
the
possibility
of
one
pit
was
considered.
On
further
testing,
this
indication
proved
incorrect.
Mr
Ewanchuk,
a
vice-president
of
the
appellant
and
assistant
to
the
president,
testified
it
was
not
feasible
to
work
these
two
ore
bodies
by
one
pit.
Dr
Holland
said
such
a
method
would
have
invited
bankruptcy.
I
agree
with
those
views.
The
fact
that
at
times
the
appellant
loosely
termed
its
East
Jersey
and
Jersey
Operations
as
a
“mine”,
to
my
mind
is
not
conclusive.
In
the
MacLean
case,
Pigeon,
J
pointed
out
that
the
MacLean
ore
body
could
have
been
operated
as
a
distinct
mine
.
but
it
is
clear
this
is
not
what
happened
in
fact”.
In
my
view,
in
this
case,
regardless
of
the
appellant’s
words
or
descriptions,
what
happened
in
fact
was
the
operation
of
two
distinct
mines.
(b)
In
a
prospectus
dated
September
21,
1965
an
engineer’s
report
by
D
D
Campbell,
indicated
in
his
opinion,
that
further
ore
could
be
obtained
from
East
Jersey
by
a
pit
extension
at
the
south
end
and
a
block
cave
from
the
Jersey
pit.
The
respondent
relies
on
this
report
as
indicating
the
two
workings
were
or
could
be
in
some
way
connected.
Mr
Campbell
did
not
give
evidence
at
the
hearing.
Mr
Ewanchuk
testified
that
further
investigation
has
indicated
the
so-
called
reserves
in
East
Jersey
would
be
uneconomic
to
work
and
the
appellant
has
since
removed
this
ore
from
its
reserves
calculations.
He
expressed
the
view
the
block
cave
method
was
not
economically
feasible.
I
accept
his
evidence
on
these
points.
(c)
The
respondent
points
to
the
fact
that
the
development
of
East
Jersey
and
Jersey
was
financed
pretty
well
at
the
same
time.
East
Jersey
was
a
relatively
small
ore
body
and
it
seems
to
me
those
financing
the
project
would
hesitate
unless
there
was
some
assurance
that
another
productive
ore
body
was
available
in
the
future.
(d)
The
use
of
a
common
crushing
plant
for
ore
from
East
Jersey
and
Jersey.
The
evidence
before
me
is
that
it
is
not
uncommon
for
one
mill
to
crush
the
ore
from
more
than
one
mine
(Dr
Holland).
(e)
The
fact
that
East
Jersey
and
Jersey
are
contiguous
in
a
business
and
geographic
sense.
Mr
Scollin
fairly
conceded
that
bald
measurements
of
distance
between
ore
bodies
are
not
conclusive.
While
these
two
ore
bodies
are
relatively
close,
the
evidence
is
clear
that
from
an
economic
point
of
view
they
had
to
be
worked
separately,
by
two
individual
pits.
I
was
impressed
by
the
evidence
of
Dr
Holland
in
respect
to
questions
put
to
him
regarding
the
Lornex
operation
in
the
Highland
Valley
where
one
open
pit
is
being
prepared.
In
Dr
Holland’s
opinion,
the
Lornex
property
is
one
ore
body
with
areas
of
unmineralized
rock
lying
within
it.
In
fairness
to
Mr
Scollin,
he
contended
that
the
factors
set
out
above
should
not
be
separated
one
from
the
other,
but
should
be
viewed
as
a
whole.
While
I
have
dealt
with
these
matters
seriatim,
I
have
tried
to
view
them
as
a
whole,
but
have
concluded
that
on
the
facts
in
this
case,
there
were
and
are
two
distinct
mines.
I
was
at
first
troubled
by
a
passage
in
the
MacLean
judgment
at
pages
882-883
[268,
6201-6202]
which
I
set
out:
In
order
to
reach
a
different
conclusion,
one
would
have
to
interpret
the
word
“mine”
in
Section
83(5)
as
meaning
“a
portion
of
the
earth
containing
mineral
deposits”.
This
is
not
the
usual
meaning,
the
usual
expression
in
that
sense
being
“orebody”.
It
is
well
known
that
mines
often,
if
not
generally,
include
several
orebodies.
Parliament
cannot
possibly
have
intended
that
a
mining
concern
would
get
the
benefit
of
the
three-year
exemption
whenever
a
new
orebody
was
being
mined.
This
is
an
exception
and
it
must
be
strictly
construed.
In
this
connection,
I
would
refer
to
what
Cartwright,
J
(as
he
then
was)
said
in
North
Bay
Mica
Co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1958]
SCR
597
at
601;
[1958]
CTC
208
at
212:
“For
the
appellant
it
is
contended
that
the
word
‘mine’
as
used
in
clause
(b)
of
Section
74(1)
means
not
‘a
portion
of
the
earth
containing
mineral
deposits’
but
rather
‘a
mining
concern
taken
as
a
whole,
comprising
mineral
deposits,
workings,
equipment
and
machinery,
capable
of
producing
ore’.
Support
for
this
contention
is
sought
in
the
circumstances
that
if
‘mine’
has
the
first
of
the
two
suggested
meanings,
then,
(i)
the
phrase
‘certified
.
.
.
to
have
been
operating
on
mineral
deposits’
is
inapt
as
it
presupposes
an
entity
capable
of
carrying
on
operations;
and
(ii)
the
draftsman
should
have
substituted
for
the
clause
‘that
came
into
production’
the
clause
‘that
was
brought
into
production’.
From
this
the
appellant
goes
on
to
argue
that
the
‘mine’
of
the
appellant
is
one
entirely
different
from
the
‘mine’
of
Purdy
Mica
Mines
Limited.
I
incline
to
the
view
that
this
contention
is
sound;
but,
be
that
as
it
may,
the
facts
appear
to
me
to
bring
the
claim
of
the
appellant
within
the
plain
words
of
the
section.
I
feel
the
reference
to
several
ore
bodies
there
must
be
read
with
the
facts
of
that
case
in
mind.
The
workings
there
were
underground,
not
open
pit,
and
it
was
obviously
feasible,
as
in
fact
was
done,
to
work
the
new
ore
body
by
use
of
some
parts
of
the
facilities
used
to
work
the
other
ore
bodies.
Earlier
in
its
judgment,
the
Court
had
said
the
MacLean
ore
body
might
have
been
developed
as
a
distinct
mine.
I
also
point
out
that
at
the
time
of
the
MacLean
decision,
subsection
83(6)
as
it
then
stood
did
not
have
the
now
additional
words
dealing
with
sylvite
wells.
In
the
case
of
sylvite
deposits,
Parliament
has
expressly
provided
that
if
there
is
more
than
one
well
in
a
sylvite
deposit,
and
if
the
material
is
sent
to
a
single
plant
for
processing,
the
wells
shall
be
deemed
one
mine.
When
that
amendment
was
made
in
1966,
Parliament
apparently
did
not
see
fit
to
include
a
similar
restriction
in
respect
to
mineral
produced
from
two
ore
bodies
in
the
same
general
area.
For
the
reasons
I
have
given,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
assessment
referred
back
to
the
Minister
accordingly.
The
appellant
is
entitled
to
its
costs.