The
Chairman
(orally):—This
is
an
appeal
by
Shultup
Management
&
Investments
Ltd,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
British
Columbia,
against
a
Notice
of
Reassessment
by
the
Minister
for
the
taxation
year
1962.
The
reassessment
deals
with
the
sale
of
certain
mining
claims
for
the
sum
of
$25,000,
which
amount
was
regarded
by
the
appellant
as
exempt
from
income
tax
under
and
by
virtue
of
the
exemption
provided
by
subsection
83(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
has
been
added
to
its
taxable
income
by
the
Minister.
The
matter
was
heard
at
Vancouver
on
September
21
and
22,
1970
by
J
O
Weldon,
Esquire,
QC,
then
a
member
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
but
judgment
was
not
rendered
by
him
prior
to
his
retirement
from
the
Tax
Review
Board
in
1972.
The
parties
were
given
the
opportunity
of
having
the
case
decided
on
the
transcript
of
the
evidence
and
the
argument
taken
at
the
trial;
of
having
the
transcript
of
evidence
accepted
and
re-arguing
the
appeal;
or
of
having
the
entire
case
reheard
and
re-argued.
The
parties
have
consented
to
the
second
of
these
alternatives;
and,
by
virtue
of
this
agreement,
I
have
read
the
transcript
of
evidence
and
today
heard
argument
on
behalf
of
those
parties.
Notwithstanding
the
voluminous
evidence
and
the
many
ambiguous
sections
of
the
transcript,
the
issue
can
be
broken
down
under
two
headings:
First,
were
the
persons
Zielinski
and/or
Cohen
employed
by
the
appellant
company
to
do
work
contemplated
by
subsection
83(3)
of
the
Act?
Second,
did
the
work
that
Zielinski
and/or
Cohen
did
fit
within
the
definition
of
prospecting,
exploration
or
development,
as
intended
by
Parliament
in
enacting
the
relevant
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
thereby
entitling
the
appellant,
if
it
was
the
person
who
made
the
arrangement
with
the
said
individuals,
to
qualify
for
such
relief?
There
is
no
doubt
that
the
work
done,
first
by
Zielinski
and
second
by
Cohen,
was
done
under
an
employee
relationship
and
not
under
a
grubstaking
arrangement.
In
late
October
1959
Isaac
Shulman
was
the
president
of
and,
along
with
his
wife,
the
owner
of
all
of
the
shares
of
the
appellant
company.
Shulman
caused
Zielinski,
who
was
a
prospector
in
the
general
sense
of
the
word,
to
go
to
the
area
of
Loughborough
Inlet,
an
inlet
on
the
west
coast
of
British
Columbia,
to
investigate
the
site
of
a
previous
mine
and
to
restake
the
area,
doing
whatever
in
his
opinion
was
necessary
to
benefit
Shulman.
Zielinski
went
to
the
specified
location
and
staked
the
area
of
the
old
workings,
and
continued
on
to
stake
a
total
of
14
claims,
during
the
course
of
which
assignment
he
managed
to
personify
the
classical
mind’s-eye
picture
of
a
prospector
chipping
away
at
outcroppings
and
deciding
by
“an
eyeball
assessment”
—
a
talent
gained
through
years
of
experience
—
whether
or
not
a
particular
area
was
worthy
of
staking
and
recording
or
not.
Apparently,
however,
nothing
was
done
with
these
claims
after
they
were
registered
and,
as
the
one-year
period
during
which
work
to
the
amount
of
$100
must
be
done
on
each
claim
was
drawing
to
an
end,
Shulman
called
into
consultation
one
Cohen,
who
was
a
graduate
engineer
and
had
experience
in
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals
in
the
area.
In
order
to
preserve
the
claims,
it
was
possible,
instead
of
doing
the
stipulated
work,
to
pay
the
sum
of
$100
per
claim,
which
would
involve
the
outlay
of
some
$1,400.
It
was
agreed,
or
at
least
suggested
by
Cohen,
that
it
would
be
cheaper
to
restake
the
claims
than
to
pay
the
work
assessment.
Therefore,
for
an
amount
that
turned
out
to
be,
according
to
the
evidence,
some
$750
odd,
he
went
to
the
area,
found
the
old
markings
of
Zielinski,
probed
the
trenching
and
tunneling
area,
and
came
up
with
a
report,
which
was
submitted
to
the
Registrar
of
Mining
Claims
in
the
hope
that
it
would
satisfy
the
work
requirements
of
the
Act.
It
did
not,
but
it
did
satisfy
the
Registrar
in
so
far
as
four
of
the
claims
were
concerned.
This
occurred
in
October
or
early
November
of
1960.
It
was
decided
then
that
the
cheapest
way
to
protect
the
other
claims
was
to
restake
them,
and
Cohen
says
that,
on
November
14,
15
and
16,
he
went
back
to
the
area,
followed
the
lines
of
Zielinski
and,
in
a
matter
of
two
or
three
hours,
he
restaked
certain
claims
—
that
turned
out
to
be
nine
or
ten
in
number
—
did
not
bother
with
some
of
the
claims
that
Zielinski
had
staked
because
in
his
view
they
were
not
going
to
be
productive,
and
staked
others
that,
to
his
trained
mind
and
eye,
showed
a
possible
return
for
future
development.
He
could
not
stake
these
claims
in
the
name
of
Shulman
because
of
the
restriction
contained
in
section
52
of
the
British
Columbia
Mineral
Act,
which
requires
a
year
to
expire
before
claims
can
be
restaked
and
registered
in
the
name
of
any
previous
owner
who
has
lost
title
to
them
for
failure
to
comply
with
the
work
regulations
of
the
said
Act.
The
claims
were
therefore
registered
in
Cohen’s
name
and
an
agreement
was
entered
into
between
Cohen
and
Shulman
which,
in
effect,
was
a
trust
agreement,
indicating
that
Cohen
held
the
claims
in
trust
for
Shultup
Management
&
Investments
Ltd.
By
resolution
of
the
board
of
directors
of
the
appellant
company
executed
on
December
17,
1960,
the
president
was
authorized
to
instruct
Cohen
“to
restake
the
ground
covered
previously”
and,
after
setting
out
a
certain
number
of
claims,
the
resolution
specified
that
the
company
accept
from
Cohen
a
declaration
of
trust
declaring
that
he
was
holding
such
restaked
mineral
claims
on
behalf
of
the
company
and
that
such
declaration
was
to
be
completed
as
soon
as
the
restaked
claims
had
been
recorded.
This,
of
course,
was
all
done
subsequent
to
whatever
work
and
activity
Cohen
had
done
on
the
property.
There
are
many
cases
dealing
with
prospecting
claims
under
section
83
of
the
Act,
and
as
President
Jackett
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
now
Chief
Justice
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada,
has
said,
in
several
of
his
decisions,
it
is
a
very
difficult
section
to
interpret.
That
is
small
solace
for
anyone
who
has
to
interpret
it.
The
only
agreement
in
the
decided
cases
is
that
staking
alone
is
not
sufficient
to
constitute
compliance
with
the
Act.
It
seems
obvious
that
the
purpose
of
the
section,
as
enacted
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada,
was
to
encourage
and
reward
people
who
were
prepared
to
support
investigations
of
the
hidden
mineral
wealth
of
the
various
regions
of
this
country.
It
did
so
by
allowing
any
person
who
paid
for
the
staking
of
these
claims
to
retain,
tax
free,
the
profits
realized
when
transferring
such
claims
to
other
individuals
or
corporations.
As
has
been
said
so
many
times
that
one
tires
of
saying
it,
and
I
am
sure
counsel
tire
of
hearing
it,
that
in
order
to
take
advantage
of
a
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
that
permits
a
taxpayer
to
avoid
the
payment
of
tax
on
what
would
otherwise
be
taxable
income,
he
must
comply
strictly
with
the
exempting
provisions,
and
bring
himself
within
the
confines,
of
the
section
or
subsection
involved.
In
this
case,
all
the
references
by
the
parties
involved
in
what
took
place
are
to
restaking
of
claims,
and
to
the
staking
of
additional
claims
where
first
Zielinski
and
later
Cohen
felt
it
would
be
advantageous.
In
the
case
of
Mondrow
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
2443;
72
DTC
1371,
an
expert
witness
was
called
to
show
how
the
profession,
if
I
may
use
the
term,
of
prospecting
has
changed
over
the
past
fifty
years.
Many
more
highly
sophisticated
scientific
advantages
are
available
to
prospectors
today
than
at
the
turn
of
the
century
and
after.
In
many
instances,
before
leaving
the
relative
serenity
of
the
financial
streets
in
this
country
where
these
deals
are
hatched,
the
promoters
have
predetermined
the
general
area
that
will
be
involved
in
prospecting
or
exploration.
It
is
therefore
not
surprising
that,
in
this
case,
it
was
decided
that
a
good
place
to
start
was
in
an
area
that
had
at
one
time
produced
an
operating
mine.
Zielinski
and
Cohen
are
two
examples
of
the
different
types
of
prospector
that
one
might
encounter:
Zielinski,
with
instructions
to
restake
the
old
workings,
chipping
away
at
out-croppings
and
deciding
that
other
claims
should
also
be
staked;
and
Cohen,
sketching
and
probing
and
determining
by
observation
whether
a
vein
was
petering
out
or
whether
the
visible
ore
might
possibly
be
the
commencement
of
a
vein
stretching
some
distance
below
the
surface.
I
have
no
hesitation
in
saying
that,
in
my
view,
prospecting
or
exploration
was
done,
in
both
instances,
by
the
two
individuals
who
attended
at
the
scene
—
Zielinski
perhaps
being
less
sophisticated
and
Cohen
more
academically
trained,
but
both
experienced
in
field
work.
The
appellant,
in
my
view,
has
overcome
one
aspect
of
the
requirement
of
the
Act
by
satisfying
me
that
“prospecting”
did
take
place,
or
that
“exploration”
did
take
place,
as
envisaged
by
subsection
83(3)
of
the
Act.
When
the
Courts
have
said
that
staking
alone
is
not
sufficient,
they
have
not
meant
that
prospecting
can
take
place
without
staking,
because
staking
is
an
integral
part
of
the
prospecting
operation
and
leads
to
the
registration
and
ownership
of
the
property
to
be
worked.
The
second
requirement
of
subsection
(3)
of
section
83
is
that:
(3)
An
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
included
in
computing
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
person*
who
has,
either
under
an
arrangement
with
the
prospector
made
before
the
prospecting,
exploration
or
development
work
or
as
employer
of
the
prospector,
advanced
money
for,
or
paid
part
or
all
of,
the
expenses
of
prospecting
or
exploring
for
minerals
or
of
developing
a
property
for
minerals,
shall
not
be
included
in
computing
his
income
for
the
year
if
it
is
the
consideration
for
(a)
an
interest
in
a
mining
property
acquired
under
the
arrangement
under
which
hey
made
the
advance
or
paid
the
expenses,
or,
if
the
prospector
was
his
employee,
acquired
by
him
through
the
employee’s
efforts,
.
.
.
Therefore,
to
succeed
on
the
second
requirement
of
subsection
83(3),
the
appellant
company,
in
order
for
it
to
be
exempt,
must
show
that
it
had
an
arrangement
with
Cohen
prior
to
the
performance
of
the
work
or
the
prospecting
(I
can
now
refer
to
it
as
such).
I
disregard
Zielinski
at
this
time
because,
in
the
evidence,
he
indicated
that
he
had
never
heard
of
the
appellant
company.
Cohen,
on
the
other
hand,
was
used
to
dealing
with
individuals
and
corporations
and
seldom
knew
where
the
claims
would
end
up.
There
is
no
mention
whatsoever
of
this
arrangement
in
any
of
the
dealings
of
the
appellant
corporation
until
we
get
to
the
resolution
of
the
board
of
directors,
dated
December
17,
1960,
which
is
respondent’s
Exhibit
2.
This
authorizes,
after
the
event,
the
payment
and
transfer
of
the
mining
claims.
It
is
urged
upon
me
that
Shulman
was
the
agent
of
the
company
and
that
it
was
at
all
times
intended,
as
indicated
by
inference
in
the
evidence,
that
the
shares
would
eventually
end
up
in
one
of
his
many
corporations.
He
was
not
available
to
give
evidence
because,
as
I
recall,
he
was
out
of
the
country,
so
I
cannot
speculate
on
what
his
evidence
would
have
been.
However,
I
am
able
to
draw
inferences,
where
such
inferences
are
based
on
fact
and
not
on
conjecture,
from
the
record
in
the
transcript
of
evidence.
I
have
read
the
evidence
in
great
detail,
and
I
find
nothing
in
the
line
of
fact
that
would
allow
me
to
infer
that
the
appellant
company
was
the
person
who
made
the
arrangement
—
or
the
corporation
that
made
the
arrangement
—
with
Cohen
as
contemplated
by
subsection
83(3).
In
my
view,
to
do
so
would
be
speculative
conjecture
and
not
a
judicial
inference
based
on
the
facts
and,
as
I
said
at
the
outset,
in
order
to
have
the
advantage
that
is
conferred
by
subsection
(3)
of
section
83
of
the
Act,
an
appellant
taxpayer
must
fit
entirely
within
its
requirements.
In
my
view
the
appellant
company
has
failed
on
the
second
aspect
of
the
dual
requirement,
and
therefore
the
appeal
must
fail
and
the
assessment
of
the
Minister
is
reaffirmed.
Appeal
dismissed.