JACKETT,
P.:—These
three
appeals
by
the
same
appellant
from
his
re-assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1963,
1965
and
1966
taxation
years,
respectively,
were
heard
together.
The
appeals
involve
a
number
of
ventures
that
conform
to
a
common
pattern.
In
each
of
them,
(a)
the
appellant
acquired
a
number
of
mining
claims;
(b)
the
appellant
sold
the
mining
claims
to
a
company
that
he
had
caused
to
be
incorporated
for
a
consideration
consisting
of
shares
in
that
company
;
(c)
the
appellant
sold
the
shares
that
he
had
received
(or
most
of
them)
to
a
company
or
companies
the
shares
of
which
belonged
to
him
or
to
members
of
his
family;
(d)
the
appellant,
in
the
course
of
a
business
as
a
“brokerdealer”
that
he
operated
under
the
name
of
Durham
Securities,
carried
on,
on
behalf
of
the
company
or
companies
to
which
he
had
sold
the
shares,
a
campaign
to
sell
those
shares
to
the
public.
The
appeals
raise
a
question
as
to
whether
the
appellant
was
properly
assessed
in
respect
of
the
profits
made
by
him
in
selling
the
shares
in
question
(step
#(c)
supra).
The
appeals
also
raise
a
question
as
to
whether,
if
such
profits
are
taxable,
they
should
be
computed
on
a
‘‘cash’’
basis
or
an
“accrual”
basis.
Finally,
they
raise
a
question
as
to
whether
the
appellant
was
properly
assessed
for
penalty
under
Section
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1963
taxation
year.
I
deal
first
with
the
taxability
of
the
profits.
The
appellant
concedes
that
the
profits
in
question
were
profits
from
adventures
in
the
nature
of
trade
that
fall
within
the
definition
of
“business”
that
has
been
adopted
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
by
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
that
Act.
His
position
is,
however,
that
he
is
entitled
to
take
advantage
of
Section
83(3)
of
that
Act
when
read
with
Section
83(1)
(b)
and
(ec).
Those
provisions
read
as
follows:
83.
(1)
In
this
section
(b)
“mining
property”
means
a
right
to
prospect,
explore
or
mine
for
minerals
or
a
property
the
principal
value
of
which
depends
upon
its
mineral
content,
and
(c)
“prospector”
means
an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
for
minerals
or
develops
a
property
for
minerals
on
behalf
of
himself,
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others
or
as
an
employee.
(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
he
made
the
advance
or
paid
the
expenses,
or
if
the
prospector
was
his
employee,
acquired
by
him
through
the
employee’s
efforts,
or
(b)
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
received
by
him
in
consideration
for
property
described
in
paragraph
(a)
that
he
has
disposed
of
to
the
corporation,
unless
it
is
an
amount
received
by
him
in
the
year
as
or
on
account
of
a
rent,
royalty
or
similar
payment.
The
respondent
denies
that
the
facts
fall
within
Section
83(3)
and
says
that,
even
if
they
do,
Section
83(3)
does
not
apply
by
virtue
of
Section
83(4),
which
reads
as
follows
:
(4)
Paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(2)
and
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(3)
do
not
apply:
(a)
in
the
case
of
a
person
who
disposes
of
the
shares
while
or
after
carrying
on
a
campaign
to
sell
shares
of
the
corporation
to
the
public,
or
(b)
to
shares
acquired
by
the
exercise
of
an
option
to
purchase
shares
received
as
consideration
for
property
described
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(2)
or
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(3).
The
facts
alleged
by
the
appellant
to
bring
him
under
Section
83(3)
are
substantially
the
same
in
the
case
of
each
venture.
He
says,
in
effect,
that
in
each
case
he
made,
with
an
individual*
whose
occupation
was
prospecting
or
exploring
for
minerals,
an
“arrangement”
to
prospect
for
a
certain
kind
of
mineral
in
an
agreed
upon
region
with
a
view
to
finding
suitable
areas
on
which
claims
could
be
staked
for
the
appellant,
and
that,
in
each
case,
he
paid
sums
of
money
to
such
individual
before
such
prospecting
began
so
that
such
individual
would
be
able
to
pay
the
expenses
involved.
He
further
says
in
effect
that,
in
each
case,
the
claims
in
question
were
staked
on
his
behalf
as
a
result
of
advice
from
such
individual
based
on
the
results
of
the
prospecting
under
the
arrangement.
The
contention
of
the
appellant,
as
I
have
thus
summarized
it
in
my
own
words,
has
been
established,
in
my
view,
by
the
evidence
given
by
the
appellant
himself
and
the
evidence
given
by
the
two
individuals
so
employed
by
him.
In
my
view,
the
evidence
so
given
has
not
been
shaken
in
any
of
its
essentials
notwithstanding
searching
cross-examination.
There
are
no
more
discrepancies
or
inconsistencies
in
such
evidence
than,
in
my
view,
one
would
expect
to
find
in
evidence
given
concerning
that
type
of
transaction
years
after
the
event.
The
one
special
feature
of
the
evidence
is
the
cloud
on
the
appellant’s
evidence
created
by
the
discovery
that
at
least
one
of
the
letters
in
his
files
concerning
the
matter
was
not
in
fact
written
until
some
three
years
after
the
time
indicated
by
the
date
that
it
bore.
I
have
given
full
consideration
to
the
doubt
raised
by
this
feature
of
the
evidence
before
finally
reaching
the
finding
of
fact
expressed
in
this
paragraph.
I
had
this
“cloud”
in
mind
throughout
the
evidence.
I
watched
the
witnesses
with
care
and
I
came
to
the
conclusion
that
their
evidence
was
true
in
its
essentials
notwithstanding
some
of
the
unorthodox
practices
that
seem
to
regulate
relations
between
some
prospectors
and
their
sponsors.
That
is
not,
however,
an
end
of
the
matter
as
far
as
Section
83(3)
is
concerned.
There
are
difficulties
in
understanding
what
is
meant
by
some
of
the
language
in
Section
83.
In
the
first
place,
Section
83(1)(c)
defines
a
‘‘prospector’’
to
mean
an
individual
‘‘who
prospects
or
explores
for
minerals
or
develops
a
property
for
minerals
on
behalf
of
himself,
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others
or
as
an
employee’’.
In
this
ease,
the
appellant
arranged
with
the
individuals
in
question
to
prospect
or
explore
for
minerals
with
a
view
to
obtaining
mining
claims
for
himself
alone.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submits
that
the
words
‘‘on
behalf
of
himself,
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others
or
aS
an
employee’’
apply
only
to
the
words
“develops
a
property”
and
have
no
application
to
the
words
‘‘prospects
or
explores
for
minerals’’.
I
cannot
so
read
the
words
used.
On
the
other
hand,
I
do
not
think
that
those
words
have
the
effect
of
excluding
from
the
definition
of
‘‘prospector’’
an
individual
whose
sole
occupation
is
prospecting
or
exploring
for
minerals
as
an
independent
contractor
for
others.
The
definition
clearly
includes,
on
the
one
hand,
an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
on
behalf
of
himself
alone
or
on
behalf
of
himself
and
partners
and,
equally
clearly,
it
includes,
on
the
other
hand,
an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
as
an
employee
of
another
person.
There
seems
to
be
no
reason
why
an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
as
an
independent
contractor
for
others
should
be
excluded
when
both
these
other
classes
are
included.
In
my
view,
properly
appreciated,
as
used
in
this
definition,
the
words
‘‘an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
.
.
.
on
behalf
of
himself’’
includes
an
individual
who
prospects
or
explores
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
out
contracts
or
arrangements
made
by
him
with
third
persons.
From
the
point
of
view
of
his
status
in
the
business
world,
any
person
in
a
service
occupation
may
be
in
business
on
behalf
of
himself
or
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others
even
though
his
actual
work
consists
in
doing
things
to
carry
out
contracts
with
third
persons.
A
shoemaker,
for
example,
is
repairing
shoes
for
his
customers
on
behalf
of
himself
or
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others.
Equally,
as
it
seems
to
me,
an
individual
in
the
business
of
prospecting
may
prospect
or
explore
for
others
on
behalf
of
himself
or
on
behalf
of
himself
and
others.
In
my
view,
therefore,
even
if
the
two
individuals
here
concerned
had
been
restricting
themselves
to
prospecting
or
exploring
as
independent
contractors
for
money
payments,
they
fall
within
the
definition
of
‘‘prospector’’
in
Section
83.
In
fact,
however,
it
would
seem
probable
that,
in
each
case,
a
substantial
part
of
their
activities
consisted
in
prospecting
or
exploring
to
acquire
mining
claims
for
themselves
and,
if
that
is
so,
they
fell
within
the
definition
of
prospector
even
if
my
interpretation
of
the
definition
is
wrong.*
The
other
difficulty
that
I
encounter
in
reading
Section
83(3)
is
the
meaning
to
be
given
to
the
expression
‘‘advanced
money”
in
the
phrase
“advanced
money
for
.
.
.
the
expenses
of
prospecting
or
exploring
for
minerals
.
.
.”
The
only
sense
of
the
verb
“advance”
that
I
find
in
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
that
seems
to
come
close
to
fitting
the
context
is
“II
.
.
.
2.
To
pay
before
due,
and
hence,
to
pay
or
lend
on
security
of
future
reimbursement’’.
This
idea
of
a
payment
before
due,
which
fits
well
the
case
of
an
advance
on
salary
or
even
an
accountable
advance
in
respect
of
travelling
expenses,
seems
to
me
to
be
much
too
restricted
to
accomplish
what
I
see
as
the
object
of
Section
83(3)
when
read
as
a
whole.
It
has,
however,
been
held
that
the
word
‘‘advance’’
is
often
used
to
mean
simply
‘‘pay’’.(see
Words
and
Phrases,
Vol.
I,
page
162).
This
is
probably
such
a
case.
In
any
event,
while
not
as
scientifically
drafted
as
it
might
be,
it
seems
clear
to
me
that
Section
83(3)
is
intended
to
apply
to
any
‘‘arrangement’’
under
which
money
is
paid
to
a
“prospector”
in
advance
of
prospecting
or
development
work
contemplated
by
the
“arrangement”
for
the
purpose
of
putting
the
‘‘prospector’’
in
funds
for
the
“expenses”
involved.
In
other
words
it
is
an
attempt
to
cover
what,
in
the
vernacular
of
the
business,
is
referred
to
as
a
“
grubstaking
”
arrangement.
My
conclusion
is,
therefore,
that
the
facts
fall
within
Section
83(3)
unless
Section
83(4)
applies.
As
all
the
evidence
points
to
the
conclusion
that
there
was
no
“campaign”
to
sell
shares
of
the
corporation
in
question
‘‘to
the
public’’
until
after
the
sales
giving
rise
to
the
profits
that
are
the
subject
of
the
assessments,
I
hold
that
the
re-assessments
under
appeal
were
in
error
in
bringing
such
profits
into
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
years
in
question.
Having
regard
to
that
conclusion,
the
question
as
to
the
proper
way
of
computing
such
profits
does
not
arise.
It
was
conceded
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
during
argument
that
the
appeal
for
the
1963
taxation
year
should
be
allowed,
in
any
event,
so
far
as
the
penalty
assessed
under
Section
56(2)
is
concerned.
The
appeals
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
re-assessments
will
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
profits
in
question
are
subject
to
the
statutory
rule
in
Section
83(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
on
the
basis
that
the
penalty
under
Section
56(2)
should
not
be
assessed
for
the
1963
taxation
year.