JUDSON,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Fauteux,
Abbott,
Martland
and
Ritchie,
JJ.)
:—We
are
concerned
in
this
appeal
from
a
judg-
ment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
with
the
extent
of
the
permissible
deductions
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
mining
taxes
paid
to
a
province.
These
are
provided
for
under
Section
11(1)
(p)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
As
the
legislation
read
at
the
relevant
period,
the
permissible
amount
was
“such
amount
as
may
be
allowed
by
regulation
in
respect
of
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
mining
or
logging
operations.’’
The
regulation
is
Section
701,
subsection
(1)
of
which
I
now
set
out
in
full:
701.
(1)
In
computing
his
income
for
a
taxation
year,
a
taxpayer
may
deduct,
under
paragraph
(p)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act,
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
the
taxes
paid,
in
respect
of
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year,
(i)
to
the
province,
and
(ii)
to
a
municipality
in
the
province
in
lieu
of
taxes
on
property
or
any
interest
in
property
(other
than
his
residential
property
or
any
interest
therein),
or
(b)
that
proportion
of
such
taxes
that
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
is
of
his
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid.
(2)
In
this
section,
(a)
“income
derived
from
mining
operations”
in
a
province
for
a
taxation
year
by
a
taxpayer
means,
(i)
if
the
taxpayer
has
no
source
of
income
other
than
mining
operations,
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
his
income
for
the
year
if
no
amount
had
been
deducted
in
computing
his
income
under
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act
or
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1100
of
these
Regulations,
or
(ii)
in
any
other
case,
the
amount
that
would
otherwise
be
his
income
for
the
year
if
no
amount
had
been
deducted
in
computing
his
income
under
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act
or
paragraph
(g)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
1100
of
these
Regulations,
minus
the
aggregate
of
(A)
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
other
than
mining,
processing
and
sale
of
mineral
ores,
minerals
and
products
produced
therefrom,
and
(B)
an
amount
equal
to
8%
of
the
original
cost
to
him
of
properties
described
in
Schedule
B
to
these
Regulations
used
by
him
in
the
year
in
the
processing
of
mineral
ores,
minerals
or
products
derived
therefrom,
or,
if
the
amount
so
determined
is
greater
than
65%
of
the
income
remaining
after
deducting
the
amount
determined
under
clause
(A),
65%
of
the
income
so
remaining,
or,
if
the
amount
so
determined
is
less
than
15%
of
the
income
so
remaining,
15%
of
the
income
so
remaining;
(e)
“mining
operations”
means
the
extraction
or
production
of
mineral
ore
from
or
in
any
mine
or
its
transportation
to,
or
over
any
part
of
the
distance
to,
the
point
of
egress
from
the
mine,
including
processing
thereof
prior
to
or
in
the
course
of
such
transportation
but
not
including
any
processing
thereof
after
removal
from
the
mine.
The
significant
point
to
note
in
the
definition
of
""mining
operations’’
is
that
it
restricts
the
meaning
to
extraction
and
excludes
processing
after
removal
from
the
mine.
Ontario
taxes
only
profit
(income)
from
extraction.
Quebec
taxes
both
extraction
and
processing.
In
the
definition
of
income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
there
is
an
exclusion
of
capital
cost
allowance
except
to
the
extent
permitted
by
Regulation
701
(2)
(ii)
(B)
on
properties
used
in
processing.
The
submission
made
by
the
appellant
in
the
Exchequer
Court
and
in
this
Court
was
that
under
this
regulation
it
was
entitled
to
deduct
mining
taxes
paid
to
the
Province
of
Ontario
in
full
and
in
every
case,
and
this
notwithstanding
the
clear
statement
in
the
regulation
that
it
was
the
lesser
of
two
amounts
that
was
to
be
deducted.
The
effect
of
this
submission,
at
least
in
the
Province
of
Ontario,
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
Taxes
paid
to
|
Federally
computed
Mining
Income
|
the
province
|
Federally
computed
Mining
Income
|
The
Minister’s
formula
for
computation
of
allowance
is:
Taxes
paid
to
|
Federally
computed
Mining
Income
|
the
province
|
Provincially
computed
Mining
Income
|
The
Exchequer
Court
has
accepted
the
Minister’s
formula,
as
did
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
when
it
had
the
same
problem.
In
my
opinion,
these
decisions
are
right.
The
result
of
the
application
of
the
first
formula
would
give
the
taxpayer
100
per
cent
deduction
in
every
case.
It
is
simply
multiplying
taxes
paid
to
the
province
by
one.
There
can
be
no
lesser
of
two
sums
if
such
a
formula
is
spelled
out
from
the
regulation.
My
opinion
is
that
deduction
in
full
according
to
the
first
formula
is
contrary
to
the
meaning
and
intent
of
the
regulation.
I
now
turn
to
an
examination
of
Regulation
701(1)
(a),
which
provides
the
first
alternative
:
‘
taxes
paid
in
respect
of
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
to
the
province”
can
only
have
one
meaning—that
is
the
income
referred
to
must
be
computed
under
the
provincial
Mining
Tax
Act.
The
elaborate
definition
of
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
contained
in
Regulation
701(2)
(a)
cannot
be
applied
to
Regulation
701(1)
(a)
without
rendering
the
paragraph
meaningless,
since
no
mining
taxes
are
paid
to
the
province
in
respect
of
income
computed
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Canada)
and
Regulation
701(2)
(a).
The
alternative
deduction
is
provided
by
Regulation
701
(1)
(b)
:
that
proportion
of
such
taxes
that
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
is
of
his
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid.
This
gives
us
a
formula:
Such
taxes
as
in
|
Income
derived
from
mining
operations
|
reg.
701
(1)
(a),
|
in
the
province
|
i.e.,
taxes
paid
|
Income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
|
to
the
province
|
were
so
paid.
|
It
is
common
ground
that
the
elaborate
definition
of
Regulation
701(2)
(a)
applies
to
the
numerator
of
the
fraction
(A)
and
that
it
is
federally
computed
income
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Canada)
and
Regulation
701(2)
(a).
What
is
to
be
done
about
the
denominator
(B),
‘‘Income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid’’?
The
taxes
‘‘so
paid”
were
paid
in
respect
of
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
as
referred
to
in
the
first
alternative
(701(1)
(a))
and
must
and
can
only
refer
to
income
as
computed
under
the
provincial
Mining
Tax
Act
since
it
is
only
in
respect
of
provincially
computed
income
that
taxes
are
paid
to
the
province.
These
words
relate
to
actual
facts
and
events
and
can
only
be
ascertained
by
reference
to
the
provincial
tax
return
which
discloses
an
actual
income
and
an
actual
tax
based
upon
a
provincial
assessment
according
to
provincial
law.
Federally
computed
income
can
have
nothing
to
do
with
the
determination
of
this
denominator.
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
the
Minister’s
formula
as
set
out
above
is
the
correct
one:
Taxes
paid
to
|
Federally
computed
mining
income
|
the
province
|
Provincially
computed
mining
income
|
The
practical
application
of
the
formula
is
illustrated
by
the
assessment
for
the
period
May
1,
1959,
to
December
31,
1959.
For
its
1959
taxation
year
the
company
paid
taxes
in
the
amount
of
$358,290.85
to
the
Provinee
of
Ontario
under
The
Mining
Tax
Act,
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
237.
In
computing
its
income
for
the
eight-month
period
commencing
on
May
1,
1959,
it
allo-
cated,
in
its
income
tax
return
filed
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
sum
of
$231,198.98
of
the
amount
of
$358,290.85
to
that
period
and
sought
to
deduct
that
amount
under
Section
11(1)
(p)
and
Regulation
701
in
computing
its
income
or
loss
for
1959.
The
Minister
allocated
$232,917.55
and
the
parties
have
agreed
to
accept
the
Minister’s
figure.
The
figure
of
$232,917.55
may,
therefore,
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal,
be
treated
as
having
been
paid
in
respect
of
the
eight-month
period
commencing
on
May
1,
1959.
The
appellant’s
profit,
as
computed
under
The
Mining
Tax
Act,
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
237,
was,
for
the
appellant’s
1959
taxation
year,
$3,717,189.55,
and
the
Minister,
on
assessing,
assumed
that
of
that
amount
$2,416,474.24
was
attributable
to
the
eight-month
period
following
April
30,
1959.
The
Minister,
for
the
purposes
of
the
computation
of
the
amount
deductible
under
Section
11(1)
(p)
and
Regulation
701(1)
(b),
calculated
the
appellant’s
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
in
accordance
with
the
Income
Tax
Act
(Canada)
to
be
$2,137.973.46
less
a
“milling
allowance”
(Regulation
701(2)
(b)
(ii)
)
of
$340,837.61,
or
$1,797,135.85.
Thus,
the
basis
of
the
Minister’s
computation
of
the
amount
deductible
by
the
appellant
under
Section
11(1)
(p)
was:
Taxes
paid
to
the
|
Income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
|
Province
of
Ontario
|
the
Province
of
Ontario
as
computed
under
|
in
respect
of
its
in-
|
Section
701(2)
of
the
Regulations
and
the
|
come
derived
from
x
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
mining
operations
in
Income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
the
Province
O
so
paid
to
the
Province
of
Ontario,
com-
Ontario
puted
under
the
Ontario
Mining
Tax
Act
that
is
to
say
:
’9
-
x
*™'
Accordingly,
the
Minister
allowed
as
a
deduction
for
1959
the
sum
of
$173,221.16
rather
than
$231,198.98
claimed
by
the
appellant.
This
assessment
is
right
and
the
appeal
from
it
fails.
There
was
an
assessment
for
the
period
January
1,
1960
to
June
30,
1960,
made
on
the
same
basis.
The
appeal
from
this
assessment
fails.
There
was
also
an
appeal
filed
against
an
assessment
for
the
period
January
30,
1956
to
April
30,
1956.
During
this
period
the
taxpayer
sustained
a
loss
from
its
mining
operations.
The
numerator
in
the
fraction
is
zero.
The
result
is
that
no
amount
is
deductible
under
Section
11(1)
(p)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
this
period.
No
argument
was
submitted
by
the
appellant
against
this.
The
plain
meaning
of
the
regulation
requires
this
construction
and
this
computation.
Any
other
construction
produces
this
anomaly
—
that
the
taxpayer
may
deduct
in
full
the
provincial
taxes
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
regulation
says
that
the
deduction
is
the
lesser
of
two
sums,
the
first
of
which
is
the
taxes
actually
paid,
and
the
second
a
proportion
only
of
these
taxes.
No
rule
of
construction
can
be
applicable
to
produce
such
a
result
and
no
rule
of
construction
is
required
here.
The
words
are
plain
and
are
referable
only
to
provincially
computed
mining
income
and
for
a
very
good
reason.
The
Canadian
tax
authorities
recognized
that
the
tax
basis
for
mining
companies
might
vary
from
province
to
province.
If
the
tax
basis
of
any
province
were
precisely
the
same
as
the
Canadian
tax
basis,
then
a
100
per
cent
deduction
would
be
allowed.
I
know
of
no
such
uniformity.
If
the
provincial
tax
basis
differs
from
the
Canadian
tax
basis,
then
Regulation
701
does
not
permit
a
full
deduction
if
the
provincial
tax
has
been
calculated
in
a
way
more
favourable
to
the
provincial
government
than
is
regarded
as
normal
by
the
federal
Act
and
Regulations.
The
appeal
should
be
dismissed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
affirmed.
THE
Chief
Justice:—The
relevant
provisions
of
the
regulations
made
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148,
as
amended
to
1960,
are
set
out
in
the
reasons
of
my
brothers
Judson
and
Pigeon
which
I
have
had
the
advantage
of
reading.
What
we
have
to
decide
is
the
construction
of
Section
701
of
those
regulations
and
the
question
has
been
narrowed
down
to
the
meaning
of
clause
(b)
of
Section
701(1)
which
reads:
(b)
that
proportion
of
such
taxes
that
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
is
of
his
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid.
It
is
common
ground
that
the
words
“such
taxes”
mean
the
taxes
described
in
Section
701(1)
(a)
and
there
is
no
question
as
to
their
amount;
the
dispute
is
as
to
how
the
proportion
thereof
referred
to
in
clause
(b)
is
to
be
ascertained.
The
formula
contended
for
by
the
respondent
and
accepted
by
Cattanach,
J.
is
:
|
Income
derived
from
mining
|
|
operations
in
the
Province
as
|
Taxes
paid
to
the
Province
|
computed
under
s.
701(2)
of
the
|
Taxes
paid
to
the
Province
|
|
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
|
Regulations,
(i.e.
federally
com
|
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
X
|
|
income
derived
from
mining
|
puted
mining
income)
|
income
derived
from
mining
|
|
operations
in
the
Province
|
Provincially
computed
mining
|
|
income.
|
In
the
formula
contended
for
by
the
appellant
the
multiplicand
is
the
same
and
so
is
the
numerator
of
the
fraction
by
which
it
is
to
be
multiplied.
To
avoid
any
misunderstanding
of
the
appellant’s
position,
I
will
set
out
the
words
of
the
written
memorandum
filed
by
its
counsel
during
the
argument
stating
how
he
contends
that
the
denominator
should
be
described
:
Income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid
(i.e.
the
total
of
the
income
derived
from
mining
operations
and
income
from
processing
and
income
from
other
sources
which
is
taxed)
or
more
precisely
Income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
as
defined
under
Regulation
701
(2)
(a)
+
any
other
income
excluded
by
Regulations
701(2)
(a)
(ii)
(A)
and
(B)
which
is
taxed.
I
agree
with
the
view
of
my
brother
Pigeon
that
under
the
appellant’s
formula
the
fraction
will
not
necessarily
in
the
case
of
every
Province
be
always
one
over
one;
but
in
spite
of
this
the
concluding
words
of
clause
(b)
‘
‘
his
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid”
appear
to
me
to
have
the
meaning
ascribed
to
them
by
the
learned
trial
Judge
and
by
my
brother
Judson.
The
phrase
“income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
used
in
clause
(b)
in
setting
forth
the
numerator
is
defined
in
Section
701(2)
(a)
but
the
word
“income”
used
in
setting
forth
the
denominator
is
not
defined
and
should
be
given
its
ordinary
meaning
having
regard
to
the
context
in
which
it
is
used.
The
terms
‘‘on’’
and
‘‘in
respect
of’’
applied
to
income
which
is
taxed
are
not
terms
of
art
and,
in
my
opinion,
it
would
require
compelling
reasons
to
enable
the
Court
to
hold
that
income
‘‘in
respect
of
which
certain
taxes
were
paid
’
’
was
income
other
than
that
defined
by
the
authority
which
imposed
the
taxes
and
made
by
that
authority
the
basis
with
regard
to
which
the
taxes
were
calculated,
that
is,
in
the
case
at
bar,
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
computed
under
The
Mining
Tax
Act
of
Ontario.
I
can
find
no
adequate
reason
for
departing
from
what
appears
to
me
to
be
the
plain
and
natural
meaning
of
the
concluding
words
of
clause
(b).
I
am
fortified
in
this
conclusion
by
the
view
expressed
by
Kellock,
J.
with
the
concurrence
of
Taschereau,
J.,
and
by
Rand,
J.
in
M.N.R.
v.
Spruce
Falls
Power
&
Paper
Co.
Ltd.,
[1953]
2
S.C.R.
407;
[1953]
C.T.C.
325,
as
to
the
meaning
of
a
phrase
used
in
a
similar
legislative
scheme.
In
that
case
the
fraction
to
be
employed
was
described
as
follows
:
1.
Subject
to
these
regulations
the
amount
that
a
person
may
deduct
from
income
under
paragraph
(w)
of
subsection
one
of
section
five,
is
an
amount
not
exceeding
the
proportion
of
the
total
taxes
therein
mentioned
paid
by
him
to
(a)
the
Government
of
a
Province,
or
(b)
a
municipality
in
lieu
of
taxes
on
property
or
any
interest
in
property
other
than
his
residential
property
or
any
interest
therein
that
the
part
of
his
income
that
is
equal
to
the
amount
of
(c)
income
derived
by
him
from
mining
operations
as
defined
herein,
or
(d)
income
derived
by
him
from
logging
operations
as
defined
herein
is
of
the
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
therein
mentioned
were
so
paid.
It
will
be
observed
that
the
numerator
of
the
fraction
with
which
the
Court
was
there
concerned
was
federally
computed
income
from
logging
operations,
which
corresponds
to
the
numerator
in
the
case
at
bar,
while
the
denominator
was
to
be
“the
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
therein
mentioned
(1.e.
the
taxes
paid
to
the
Province
or
municipality)
were
so
paid”.
It
will
be
observed
how
closely
these
words
correspond
to
those
with
which
we
are
dealing
‘‘income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid
’
\
In
dealing
with
clause
(d)
and
the
words
which
follow
it
Kellock,
J.
said
at
pp.
417
and
418
[p.
337]
:
.
.
.
As
amended,
the
deduction
authorized
was
the
fraction
of
the
provincial
or
municipal
tax
represented
by
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
logging
operations
as
defined
by
the
regulations,
divided
by
the
taxpayer’s
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
mentioned
in
s.
5(1)
(w)
were
paid,
i.e.,
the
total
income
from
logging
as
defined
by
the
provincial
legislation.
and
at
p.
420
[p.
339],
dealing
with
the
same
words,
Rand,
J.
said
:
The
important
words
are
“income
.
.
.
from
logging
operations
as
defined
herein”
that
is,
the
basis
set
up
in
the
regulations.
In
other
words,
if
that
basis
should
produce
only
one-half
of
the
amount
of
income
taxed
by
the
province,
then
only
one-half
of
the
taxes
paid
could
be
deducted
under
(w).
The
Dominion
did
not
intend
to
allow
deduction
on
the
basis
of
larger
income
than
that
produced
by
the
application
of
its
own
formula.
What
is
clear
is
that
the
denominator
of
that
fraction
is
a
figure
determined
not
by
the
Minister
or
any
court
but
by
the
province.
I
do
not
cite
these
passages
as
binding
upon
us;
I
am
prepared
to
assume
that
they
were
spoken
obiter;
their
importance
lies
in
the
fact
that
the
learned
judges
regarded
as
clear
the
meaning
of
the
words
describing
the
denominator.
That
the
question
we
are
called
upon
to
decide
is
not
free
from
difficulty
is
evidenced
by
the
difference
of
opinion
in
this
Court,
but
having
considered
all
the
arguments
advanced
in
support
of
the
appeal
I
find
myself
in
agreement
with
the
conclusion
arrived
at
by
the
learned
trial
Judge
and
would
dispose
of
the
appeal
as
proposed
by
my
brother
Judson.
PIGEON,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Hall
and
Spence,
JJ.)
:—The
only
question
raised
on
this
appeal
is
the
construction
of
Section
701
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
Subsection
(1)
is
as
follows:
701.
(1)
In
computing
his
income
for
a
taxation
year,
a
taxpayer
may
deduct,
under
paragraph
(p)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
Act,
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
the
taxes
paid,
in
respect
of
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year,
(i)
to
the
province,
and
(ii)
to
a
municipality
in
the
province
in
lieu
of
taxes
on
property
or
any
interest
in
property
(other
than
his
residential
property
or
any
interest
therein),
or
(b)
that
proportion
of
such
taxes
that
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
is
of
his
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid.
In
subsection
(2),
the
expression
“mining
operations’’
is
defined
so
as
to
exclude
any
processing
of
mineral
ore
after
removal
from
the
mine;
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations”,
if
the
taxpayer
has
a
source
of
income
other
than
mining
operations
(e.g.
if
he
has
income
from
processing),
is
defined
so
as
to
be
in
effect
the
income
from
mining,
processing
and
sale
of
minerals
and
products
without
any
allowance
for
depletion
or
in
respect
of
capital
cost
but
less
8%
of
the
original
cost
of
the
properties
used
in
the
processing,
this
allowance
not
to
exceed
65%
of
the
income
on
which
it
is
allowed
nor
to
be
less
than
15%
thereof.
It
is
common
ground
that
this
definition
being
in
the
regulations
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
to
be
construed
by
reference
to
that
Act
and
accordingly
the
word
‘‘income’’
means
income
as
defined
therein.
Therefore,
it
is
clear
that
the
numerator
of
the
fraction
of
the
provincial
mining
taxes
that
is
permitted
to
be
deducted
by
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
is
to
be
deter-
mined
and
computed
in
accordance
with
the
federal
definition
of
‘‘income””
for
taxation
purposes.
It
is,
however,
contended
by
the
Minister
that
the
same
word
income
when
used
to
specify
the
denominator
of
the
fraction
is
not
to
be
similarly
construed
but
must
be
taken
to
mean
what
the
provincial
Act
levying
mining
taxes
defines
as
the
basis
of
such
taxation,
that
is
in
effect
what
The
Mining
Tax
Act
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
describes
as
the
“profit”
subject
to
such
taxation.
In
the
Exchequer
Court,
Cattanach,
J.
said
:
In
considering
the
words,
“income
from
mining
operations”
in
the
context
in
which
they
appear
in
Regulation
701(1)
(a),
it
seems
to
me
that
the
clear
and
unequivocal
meaning
of
those
words,
considering
only
that
paragraph,
is
the
income
in
respect
of
which
taxes
were
paid
to
the
Province,
which
of
necessity
must
be
mining
income
calculated
as
required
by
the
Provincial
Statute.
It
follows,
therefore,
that
there
is
a
contrary
intention
as
contemplated
in
Section
34
of
the
Interpretation
Act
and
accordingly
the
definition
of
the
words
in
Regulation
701(2)
(a)
is
not
applicable
to
them
as
used
in
Regulation
701(1)
(a).
With
deference,
I
fail
to
see
any
necessity
for
so
construing
the
regulation.
In
effect,
the
assertion
that
there
is
such
a
necessity
really
means
nothing
else
than
that
such
must
be
the
meaning
because
it
is
assumed
that
this
is
how
it
must
be.
This
is
contrary
to
the
cardinal
rule
of
interpretation
that
one
must
seek
the
meaning
in
the
literal
sense
of
the
words
used
and
not
in
any
supposed
intention.
This
is
also
really
to
deprive
of
any
effect
the
rule
that
the
words
used
in
a
regulation
are
to
be
taken
in
the
meaning
that
they
have
in
the
Act
under
which
it
is
made.
Of
course,
as
with
other
rules
of
construction,
this
is
subject
to
the
well
known
exception
‘‘unless
the
contrary
intention
appears”.
But
this
exception
requires
the
contrary
intention
to
be
manifest
either
by
explicit
words
or
by
necessary
implication.
Explicit
words,
there
are
none
;
nor
is
there
any
implication
to
be
found.
It
was
contended
that
because
the
taxes
sought
to
be
deducted
are
provincial
taxes,
the
‘‘income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid”
must
be
taken
to
refer
to
the
amount
of
money
that
is
the
basis
on
which
those
taxes
are
levied.
Against
this
contention,
it
is
significant
that
(1)
the
first
word
used
to
specify
the
denominator
of
the
fraction,
i.e.
“‘income’’,
is
the
same
as
the
first
word
used
to
specify
the
numerator;
it
is
a
primary
rule
of
legal
construction
that
the
same
word
in
the
same
enactment
is
presumed
to
mean
the
same
thing
;
(2)
the
word
thus
used
is
not
that
which
is
found
in
the
provincial
Act
“profit”
but
that
which
is
used
in
the
federal
Act
‘‘income’’;
(3)
in
the
Act,
where
a
reference
is
intended
to
a
basis
of
taxation
other
than
‘‘income’’
as
therein
defined,
such
as
in
Section
41,
the
word
“profit”
is
used;
(4)
the
word
used
in
the
regulation
to
describe
the
relation
of
the
taxes
on
the
amount
of
money
so
described
is
not
the
preposition
‘‘on’’
regularly
used
in
referring
to
the
basis
of
taxation
but
‘‘in
respect
of’’,
a
locution
that
connotes
a
more
indefinite
relation.
If,
instead
of
presuming
that
the
author
of
the
Regulations
did
not
mean
what
he
said
when
using
the
word
‘‘income’’
in
describing
both
the
numerator
and
the
denominator
of
the
fraction,
it
is
presumed
that
he
did
mean
what
he
said,
namely
“income”
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
on
what
basis
can
one
find
fault
with
the
manner
in
which
he
expressed
himself?
As
against
this,
it
was
contended
that
if
paragraph
(b)
is
so
construed,
the
fraction
will
always
be
unity
because
the
numerator
and
the
denominator
will
always
be
the
same.
As
to
this,
one
must
observe
that
appellant’s
allowance
for
the
computation
of
the
allowance
is
Taxes
paid
to
|
Federally
computed
Mining
Income
|
the
province
|
Federally
computed
Income
in
respect
|
|
of
which
taxes
were
paid
|
The
italicized
words
are
an
essential
part
of
the
formula,
paragraph
(b)
clearly
requires
them
and
whenever
mining
taxes
are
paid
in
respect
of
anything
else
than
federally
computed
mining
income,
they
result
in
the
fraction
being
less
than
unity.
At
the
second
hearing
this
was
conceded
by
counsel
for
the
Minister.
The
effect
of
the
italicized
words
is
that
if
a
province
levies
mining
taxes
on
anything
that
is
excluded
by
the
definition
of
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’—the
numerator
of
the
fraction—this
must
be
included
in
computing
the
‘‘income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
paid”
i.e.
the
denominator.
More
concretely
if,
in
computing
the
numerator
a
processing
allowance
was
deducted
this
will
have
to
be
added
back
in
computing
the
denominator,
if
mining
tax
was
levied
on
profits
that
include
it.
One
must
not
consider
the
effect
of
the
regulation
only
as
it
applies
to
Ontario
mining
taxes.
In
that
province,
mining
taxes
are
not
levied
on
anything
but
the
profit
from
“mining
operations”
as
those
last
words
are
defined
in
the
Regulations,
that
is
they
are
levied
only
on
the
profit
derived
from
the
extraction
of
the
ore
without
further
processing.
Therefore,
the
income
in
respect
of
which
those
taxes
are
paid
includes
nothing
but
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
as
defined
in
the
Regulations.
However,
it
is
not
necessarily
so
in
all
cases.
In
fact,
mining
taxes
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
are
levied
on
a
‘profit”
that
includes
processing.
It
follows
that
for
Quebec
mining
companies,
their
“income
in
respect
of
which’’
those
taxes
are
paid
includes,
if
they
derive
any
profit
from
processing,
something
which
the
definition
of
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
excludes
from
consideration.
Therefore,
in
their
case,
the
fraction
is
less
than
unity.
This
shows
that
the
literal
construction
yields
a
result
that
is
not
only
logical
but
also
consistent
and
gives
effect
to
every
word
used.
I
dare
say
that
even
if
at
the
time
the
Regulations
were
made
no
province
had
been
levying
mining
taxes
on
profits
including
processing,
paragraph
(b)
could
not
properly
have
been
considered
useless.
The
possibility
would
have
remained
of
an
extension
by
one
or
more
provinces
of
their
taxation
of
mining
profits
to
processing
profits.
This
possibility
would
have
been
sufficient
reason
for
a
cautious
draftsman
to
provide
for
such
an
eventuality.
It
must
now
be
considered
that
in
paragraph
(a)
the
expression
used
to
describe
the
taxes
for
which
a
deduction
may
be
allowed
is
‘‘taxes
paid,
in
respect
of
his
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province’’.
Two
things
must
be
noted
in
that
connection.
First,
that
paragraph
(b)
contemplates
a
“proportion
of
such
taxes”.
Those
last
two
words
undoubtedly
mean
‘‘the
taxes
described
in
paragraph
(a)’’.
Therefore,
paragraph
(a)
cannot
be
construed
as:
applicable
only
to
provincial
taxes
levied
on
the
federal
tax
base.
If
so,
there
would
be
no
deduction
whatsoever:
(b)
is
a
fraction
of
(a).
Secondly,
the
same
locution
‘‘in
respect’’
is
used
in
both
(a)
and
(b).
In
the
former,
it
clearly
cannot
refer
to
the
tax
base
because
this
would
make
the
regulation
inapplicable
to
any
existing
taxes.
It
must
therefore
refer
to
the
incidence
of
the
tax,
not
to
the
tax
base,
and,
as
a
matter
of
principle,
it
cannot
have
a
different
meaning
in
(b)
than
in
(a).
It
was
argued
by
counsel
for
the
Minister
that
the
word
‘
lesser
’
’
implies
that
either
of
the
quantities
to
be
compared
may
be
the
greater,
but
if
paragraph
(b)
is
read
as
appellant
contends,
the
‘‘proportion’’
therein
described
can
never
be
greater
than
the
‘‘aggregate’’
mentioned
in
paragraph
(a).
Such
an
inference
is
entirely
unwarranted;
it
is
not
at
all
unusual
in
enactments
to
specify
the
“lesser”
of
two
amounts
even
when
it
is
obvious
that
the
second
can
never
be
larger
than
the
first.
For
instance,
the
following
is
to
be
found
in
subsection
(3)
(e)
of
Section
11
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
.
.
.
there
may
be
deducted
.
.
.
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
.
.
.
(b)
the
amount
determined
under
paragraph
(a)
less
the
amount,
if
any
.
.
.
It
must
now
be
observed
that
Section
702(1)
of
the
Regulations
in
force
at
the
material
time
defines
to
a
certain
extent
the
mining
taxes
that
may
be
deducted
in
computing
income.
This
provision
is
in
the
following
terms
:
702.
(1)
Nothing
contained
in
this
Part
shall
be
construed
as
allowing
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
an
amount
in
respect
of
taxes
imposed
under
a
statute
or
by-law
which
is
not
restricted
to
the
taxation
of
persons
engaged
in
logging
or
mining
operations.
It
must
be
noted
that
this
does
not
restrict
the
deduction
to
taxes
imposed
in
respect
of
“logging
or
mining
operations’’
as
those
words
are
defined,
but
to
taxes
imposed
under
a
statute
or
bylaw
restricted
to
the
taxation
of
persons
engaged
in
’
’
such
operations.
The
result
is
that
as
long
as
none
but
‘
persons
engaged
in
logging
or
mining
operations’’
are
taxed,
the
right
to
the
deduction
arises
even
though
the
incidence
of
the
tax
may
not
be
restricted
to
what
is
defined
as
‘‘logging
or
mining
operations’’,
It
is
obviously
the
difference
between
the
description
of
the
taxes
that
may
be
deducted
and
the
definition
of
the
‘‘income’’
in
respect
of
which
the
deduction
may
be
allowed
that
gave
rise
to
the
necessity
of
providing
for
a
proportion
only
to
be
allowed
if
the
provincial
statute
levies
the
tax
on
a
wider
base.
This
in
no
way
implies
that
the
apportionment
should
be
made
by
reference
to
the
provincially
computed
base
of
taxation.
The
illogical
result
of
this
assumption
is,
in
this
case,
to
allow
a
part
only
of
the
mining
taxes
to
be
deducted
when
there
is
no
reason
for
not
allowing
the
whole.
It
must
now
be
pointed
out
that
the
literal
construction
of
the
regulation
avoids
any
conflict
with
the
Tax
Sharing
Agreement
between
the
Government
of
Canada
and
the
Government
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
dated
April
16,
1957.
This
agreement
includes
an
undertaking
by
the
Government
of
Canada
to
allow
as
a
deduction
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
provincial
taxes
on
“income
derived
from
mining
operations’’;
this
is
defined
substantially
as
in
the
regulation.
Such
an
agreement
is
not
a
treaty
executed
under
prerogative
powers
only.
It
is
a
legally
binding
arrangement
authorized
by
federal
and
provincial
legislation.
Although
the
regulation
is
authorized
by
Income
Tax
Act
provisions
not
specifically
related
to
this
tax
sharing
legislation,
it
is
obvious
that
the
regulation
was
passed
in
order
to
implement
Canada’s
undertaking
under
the
agreement
seeing
that
this
undertaking
expressly
relates
to
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
do
not
doubt
that
it
is
in
pari
materia
and
should
be
considered,
if
necessary,
in
construing
the
regulation
just
as
the
Rome
Convention
was
considered
in
construing
the
Copyright
Amendment
Act
intended
to
implement
it.
(CAPAC
v.
CTV,
[1968]
S.C.R.
676).
However,
seeing
that
the
same
result
is
obtained
without
considering
the
agreement,
it
appears
unnecessary
to
express
a
firm
opinion
on
that
point.
On
the
other
hand,
it
appears
essential
to
give
consideration
to
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
M.N.R.
v.
Spruce
Falls
Power
&
Paper
Co.
Ltd.,
[1953]
2
S.C.R.
407;
[1953]
C.T.C.
325
on
which
both
parties
have
relied.
In
that
case
the
problem
was
as
stated
by
Kellock,
J.
the
following
(at
p.
413
[p.
332]
)
:
The
question
of
construction
which
arises
in
each
case
is
as
to
whether
the
words
fin
respect
of
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
.
.
.
logging
operations”
in
Section
5(1)
(w)
are
limited
to
a
provincial
tax
imposed
specifically
on
such
income,
or
whethet
the
paragraph
contemplates
as
well,
the
deduction
of
a
part
of
a
general
income
tax,
apportioned
on
the
basis
of
the
proportion
which
income
from
logging
bears
to
total
income.
It
was
held,
on
a
consideration
of
the
wording
of
the
Act
together
with
the
Regulations
applicable
to
the
1947
taxation
year
and
the
Dominion-Provincial
Tax
Rental
Agreements
Act
(1947),
that
what
was
contemplated
was
only
(at
p.
414
[p.
340])
‘‘a
provincial
tax
specifically
imposed
on
income
from
logging
or
mining”.
The
applicable
regulations
did
not
include
a
provision
similar
to
Regulation
702(1).
Such
a
provision
appeared
for
the
first
time
in
Regulation
700
passed
on
December
22,
1949,
that
is
after
the
deduction
had
been
claimed
for
the
1947
taxation
year
(James
MacLaren
Co.
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1952]
Ex.
C.R.
68;
[1951]
C.T.C.
358).
In
discussing
the
provision
of
the
applicable
regulations
respecting
the
proportion
of
taxes
deductible,
which
are
not
identical
with
those
applicable
to
this
case,
it
was
said
that
the
denominator
of
the
fraction
was
a
figure
determined
by
the
province.
This
was
undoubtedly
obiter
dictum.
The
Court
did
not
reach
the
question
of
apportionment
in
deciding
the
case
because
it
was
held
that
the
provincial
income
tax
under
consideration
was
not
the
kind
of
tax
contemplated
and,
therefore,
no
part
of
it
was
deductible.
However,
it
is
noteworthy
that
this
conclusion
was
reached
largely
upon
consideration
of
the
language
of
the
Tax
Rental
Agreement.
It
seems
most
unlikely
that
the
same
view
would
have
been
expressed
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
apportionment
formula
if,
as
in
this
case,
such
a
construction
had
run
contrary
to
the
clear
intent
of
the
federal-provincial
arrangement.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
at
the
second
hearing
of
this
case
put
the
Agreement
in
simple
terms,
somewhat
as
this
:
“We
will
allow
a
deduction
of
mining
taxes
paid
to
the
Provinces
subject
to
one
qualification
:
if
a
Province
works
out
a
method
of
computing
income
which
is
so
broad
that
it
enables
the
Province
to
collect
more
taxes
than
we
are
giving
up,
the
deduction
will
not
be
of
all
the
taxes
paid
to
the
Province
but
only
of
that
portion
equivalent
to
what
we
have
given
up.”
In
my
view
that
is
a
fair
statement
of
the
intent
of
the
Federal-Provincial
Agreement
with
respect
to
mining
taxes.
Let
us
now
see
if
in
collecting
mining
taxes
the
Province
of
Ontario
stayed
within
the
ambit
of
what
the
federal
government
had
given
up.
This
is
not
a
specific
percentage
of
income
as
in
some
arrangements
concerning
personal
income
tax.
It
is
in
effect
priority
for
taxes
at
whatever
rate
the
province
chooses
to
levy
on
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
(clause
3.2).
Therefore,
such
taxes
are
allowed
‘‘as
a
deduction
in
computing
income
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
(clause
3.3).
At
that
point
in
the
Agreement,
it
is
perfectly
clear
that
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
has
the
same
meaning
as
the
same
expression
admittedly
has
in
the
regulation.
Then,
if
one
turns
to
the
final
clause
of
the
Agreement,
it
will
be
found
that
this
same
expression
is
the
subject
of
an
elaborate
definition.
Broadly
speaking,
this
definition
proceeds
by
excluding
first
profit
from
sources
‘‘other
than
mining
operations
and
the
processing
and
sale
of
mineral
ore
or
product
produced
therefrom’’.
Then,
because
it
is
not
intended
to
allow
a
deduction
in
respect
of
income
from
processing
but
such
income
is
frequently
not
ascertainable
separately,
provision
is
made
for
an
allowance
of
8%
of
the
cost
of
properties
used
in
the
processing,
subject
to
a
maximum
and
a
minimum.
Did
the
Province
of
Ontario
levy
mining
taxes
by
a
method
enabling
it
to
go
beyond
the
scope
of
the
definition
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’?
It
is
clear
that
it
did
not.
No
mining
tax
was
levied
on
profits
from
sources
other
than
mining
or
processing
ore
and,
in
order
to
avoid
taxing
income
from
processing,
an
allowance
was
made
of
8%
of
the
assets
used
in
the
processing
subject
to
the
specified
minimum
and
maximum.
However,
the
dollar
amount
of
the
‘‘profits’’
on
which
mining
taxes
are
levied
was
greater
than
the
amount
of
the
“income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
because
some
deductions
allowable
in
computing
‘‘income’’
are
not
allowable
in
computing
“profits”
for
mining
tax.
Does
this
mean
that
Ontario
thereby
taxed
profits
other
than
those
which
are
defined
in
the
Agreement
as
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations”?
In
my
view
it
is
clear
that
it
did
not,
the
taxation
was
not
thereby
made
to
fall
upon
income
from
other
sources,
it
was
calculated
differently
but
it
exclusively
fell
upon
the
income
from
mining.
The
mining
taxes
in
question
were
therefore
wholly
paid
in
respect
of
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations”
and
of
no
other
income.
The
appeal
should
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
dated
September
29,
1966
should
be
reversed.
The
appeal
of
the
appellant
to
the
Exchequer
Court
from
an
assessment
for
the
taxation
year
1960
of
Pronto
Uranium
Mines
Limited
(a
predecessor
of
the
appellant)
should
be
allowed
with
costs
and
this
assessment
should
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
re-assessment
in
accordance
with
the
above
reasons.