Gibson,
J.:—There
are
two
issues
for
decision
on
this
appeal
of
The
International
Nickel
Company
of
Canada,
Limited
from
assessments
for
income
tax
for
the
taxation
years
1958,
1959,
1960
and
1961
respectively.
On
the
first
issue,
the
Company
contends
that
its
$6,920,825.74
expenditures
of
a
capital
nature
which
it
incurred
in
establishing
and
building
the
Townsite
of
Thompson
at
its
Thompson
mine
in
northern
Manitoba
were
‘‘development
expenses’
incurred
by
it
in
‘‘searching
for
minerals
in
Canada”
in
those
taxation
years
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
as
such
were
deductible
in
the
respective
years
in
which
they
were
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
income
of
the
Company
for
those
taxation
years.
On
the
second
issue,
the
Company
contends
that
it
can
deduct
the
sum
of
$130,135.80,
paid
in
1961
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
under
The
Mining
Royalty
and
Tax
Act,
1954,
c.
169,
from
its
income
which
was
subject
to
tax
in
that
year,
which
income
came
from
sources
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
elsewhere.
(During
1961
and
for
a
36-month
period
from
June
15,
1961,
the
appellant’s
income
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba
which
was
derived
solely
from
the
operation
of
the
Thompson
mine
at
Thompson,
Manitoba
was
exempt
under
Section
83(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.)
For
this
contention,
the
Company
relies
on
Section
11(1)
(p)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
submits
that
on
a
true
interpretation
of
Section
701
of
the
Regulations
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
relation
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
the
Company
is
entitled
to
this
type
of
deduction.
The
evidence
discloses
that
the
appellant
commenced
prospecting
operations
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba
in
1946
and
following
a
programme
of
prospecting
and
exploration,
made
the
initial
discovery
of
a
major
ore
body
in
the
so-called
Thompson
area
in
early
1956.
The
Thompson
area
is
approximately
400
air
miles
north
of
the
City
of
Winnipeg
and
is
in
about
the
centre
of
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
There
were
no
inhabitants
in
this
area
before
the
appellant
established
the
Townsite.
By
October
1956,
as
a
result
of
a
programme
of
surface
diamond
drilling,
the
Company
had
ascertained
that
there
was
an
important
ore
body
extending
about
314
miles
in
this
area,
that
there
were
15
million
tons
of
indicated
ore,
and
that
if
a
mine
were
established
it
could
support
a
mining,
milling
and
smelting
operation
of
50
million
pounds
of
nickel
per
year.
The
appellant
at
that
time
decided
to
proceed
to
establish
a
mine
in
the
Thompson
area
and
entered
into
negotiations
and
finally
into
an
agreeemnt
with
the
Province
of
Manitoba,
which
Agreement
is
dated
December
3,
1956
concerning
a
number
of
matters,
one
of
which
was
the
construction
and
establishment
of
the
subject
Townsite.
During
the
course
of
these
negotiations,
the
appellant
indicated
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
officials
that
it
contemplated
an
outlay
of
about
$144,000,000
on
this
mining
project.
Between
1957
and
1961,
the
date
upon
which
the
first
nickel
was
produced
at
the
Thompson
mine,
$15,000,000
was
spent
in
a
continued
programme
of
surface
drilling
and
underground
development.
A
development
shaft
and
a
production
shaft
were
sunk
commencing
in
early
1957.
And
by
the
end
of
1960,
the
appellant
had
proven
ore
reserves
of
25
million
tons.
The
development
work
of
diamond
drilling,
construction
of
shafts,
haulageways,
drifts,
cross-cuts
and
raises
during
all
relevant
periods
was
done
for
the
appellant
by
independent
contractors,
and
in
the
main
by
a
company
by
the
name
of
Patrick
Harrison
Limited.
The
appellant,
in
1956,
estimated
that
it
would
have
about
2,400
employees
in
the
production
(or
extraction)
milling,
smelting
and
refining
operations
at
its
Thompson
mine.
It
was
then
estimated
that
the
townsite
population
would
be
8,000
persons;
it
is
more
than
that
in
fact,
now.
At
all
relevant
times,
about
a
little
over
one-half
the
appellant’s
employees
at
the
Thompson
Townsite
were
(and
are
now)
engaged
in
mining
and
a
little
less
than
one-half
were
engaged
in
milling,
smelting
and
refining
operations.
The
balance
making
up
100%
of
the
employees
there,
were
(and
are
now)
administrative
and
supervisory
personnel.
Exhibit
R-1
shows
the
breakdown
of
all
such
employees.
The
appellant,
pursuant
to
the
said
Agreement
of
December
8,
1956,
was
required
by
the
Province
of
Manitoba
to
build
this
Thompson
Townsite
at
its
own
expense.
All
the
roads,
sewers,
schools,
fire
stations,
municipal
buildings
and
other
structures
below
referred
to
were
built
at
the
Thompson
Townsite
by
the
appellant
on
lands
owned
by
the
local
Government
District
or
the
Official
Trustee
of
the
School
District
of
Mystery
Lake,
which
local
Government
District
and
School
District
were
set
up
pursuant
to
enabling
Province
of
Manitoba
legislation.
(See
Exhibit
A-1.)
None
were
constructed
on
lands
owned
by
the
appellant.
The
appellant
was
not
permitted
by
Province
of
Manitoba
legislation
and
the
policy
to
build
a
townsite
and
own
it,
as
it
often
done
in
other
cases
when
mines
are
established
in
remote
areas
such
as
Thompson,
and
where
there
are
no
living
accommodiations
and
other
buildings
providing
necessary
living
amenities,
such
as
schools,
a
hospital
etc.
By
this
Agreement
of
December
3,
1956,
as
stated,
the
appellant
had
to
build
all
these
buildings
and
things
and
hand
them
over
to
the
said
local
Government
District
and
School
Authorities
of
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
As
a
consequence,
the
appellant
at
no
time
could
or
can
now
or
in
the
future,
make
any
deduction
from
its
taxable
income
in
any
taxation
year
for
capital
cost
allowance
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
respect
to
the
capital
cost
of
these
buildings
or
things
at
Thompson
Townsite
not
owned
by
it,
but
built
and
paid
for
by
it.
The
employees
of
the
appellant
who
lived
in
the
Townsite
from
the
commencement
of
the
production
or
extraction
stage
of
the
mining
operations
were
engaged
in
production
(or
extracting)
operations
of
the
appellant
which
includes
bringing
ore
to
the
mill,
and
also
in
milling,
smelting
and
refining
operations
of
the
appellant
and
the
administrative
work
relating
to
the
same.
None
were
engaged
in
prospecting,
exploration
or
development
work.
The
Townsite
was
not
built
and
developed
for
the
purposes
of
the
personnel
who
did
the
said
underground
development
work
for
the
appellant
at
the
Thompson
mine.
As
stated,
the
said
underground
development
work
was
done
by
independent
contractors,
and
none
of
their
personnel
lived
in
the
Townsite.
A
summary
in
a
convenient
form
for
quick
reference
of
much
of
what
has
been
stated
above,
may
be
found
in
the
document
filed
as
Exhibit
A-4
at
this
trial.
It
is
entitled
a
‘‘
Brief
History
of
Manitoba
Exploration
and
Development
of
Thompson
Mine,
Surface
Plants
and
Townsite’’.
As
to
the
first
issue,
the
deductibility
of
the
Thompson
Townsite
expenditures,
the
parties
agree:
1.
That
the
appellant
entered
into
an
Agreement
dated
as
of
December
3,
1956,
with
Her
Majesty
The
Queen
in
Right
of
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
Under
that
Agreement
the
appellant
made
or
incurred
the
following
outlays
or
expenses
during
the
taxation
years
involved
in
this
appeal
in
respect
of
the
townsite
for
which
provision
was
made
in
the
said
Agreement:
|
1958
|
|
1959
|
|
1960
|
|
1961
|
Roads,
lanes
and
|
|
sidewalks
|
$
|
222,287.81
|
$
|
501,441
|
$
|
588.902
|
$
|
246,979
|
Administration
|
|
building
(in
|
|
cludes
assem
|
|
bly
hall,
town
|
|
site
office
and
|
|
fire
|
station)
|
|
—
|
|
317,930
|
|
47,526
|
|
21,459
|
Schools
|
|
—
|
|
269,241
|
|
173,607
|
|
912,770
|
Sewers
and
|
|
water
mains
|
|
Sewer
lines—
|
|
storm
|
|
616,766.46
|
|
569,408
|
|
266,802
|
|
906
|
Sewer
lines—
|
|
sanitary
....
|
|
211,756.82
|
|
243,922
|
|
194,812
|
|
14,084
|
Water
|
lines
|
..
|
|
395,253.65
|
|
504,981
|
|
315,556
|
|
5,190R
|
Sewage
|
lift
|
|
station
|
|
—
|
|
63,634
|
|
—
|
|
—
|
Clearing
and
|
|
Grubbing
|
|
—
|
|
96,670
|
|
3,930
|
|
15,923
|
Parking
lot
|
|
—
|
|
11,150
|
|
9,313
|
|
—
|
|
$1,446,064.74
|
$2,578,377
|
$1,600,453
|
$1,206,931
|
(R—denotes
red
figure)
2.
That
the
aforesaid
amounts
were
outlays
of
capital
or
payments
on
account
of
capital.
3.
That
the
principal
business
of
the
appellant
was
mining
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
As
to
this
first
issue,
the
question
for
decision
is
whether
the
aforesaid
amounts
were
“development
expenses’’
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
(ii)
of
paragraph
(e)
of
subsection
(3)
of
Section
838A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
the
pertinent
taxation
years.
The
relevant
part
of
Section
83A(3)
(0)
(ii)
of
the
Act
reads:
83A.
(3)
.
.
.
A
corporation
whose
principal
business
is
(b)
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals,
may
deduct,
in
computing
its
income
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year,
.
.
.
(c)
the
aggregate
of
such
of
(ii)
the
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada,
as
were
incurred
after
the
calendar
year
1952
and
before
April
11,
1962,
to
the
extent
that
they
were
not
deductible
in
computing
income
for
a
previous
taxation
year,
By
this
provision
of
the
Act,
the
deduction
in
computing
its
income
for
a.
taxation
year
allowed
to
a
mining
corporation
whose
principal
business
is
mining
such
as
the
subject
corporation,
is
confined
to
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
implementing
the
first
three
of
the
four
stages
of
mining
namely,
the
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
stages
and
there
may
not
be
included
in
such
deduction
expenses
incurred
in
implementing
the
fourth
stage
of
mining
which
is
the
production
(or
the
extraction
)
stage;
and
for
prospecting’
’,
exploration
”
or
“
development”
expenses
incurred
to
qualify
as
a
deduction
under
this
provision,
such
expenses
must
be
incurred
in
‘‘searching
for
minerals
in
Canada’’.
No
deduction
is
allowed
for
production
(or
extraction
)
expenses
incurred
by
such
a
corporation
even
though
incurred
‘‘in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada’’.
This
is
of
significance
as
will
appear
later
in
these
Reasons,
because
in
this
case,
it
was
contended
by
the
appellant
and
disputed
by
the
respondent,
firstly,
that
the
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
at
the
subject
Thompson
mine
commenced
with
the
prospecting
and
will
continue
during
the
whole
life
of
the
mine,
that
is,
until
the
last
ore
is
extracted;
and
secondly,
that
“development
expenses’’
within
the
meaning
and
for
the
purpose
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
do
not
have
a
direct
and
specific
searching
aspect
to
them
to
qualify
as
deductible
expenses,
but
instead
a
broader
meaning
should
be
given
to
the
category
of
expenses
which
qualify
as
such
“development
expenses’’
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada
once
it
is
established
that
the
principal
business
of
a
mining
corporation
is
mining,
and
that,
at
a
particular
mine
site
where
‘‘development
expenses’’
are
incurred
by
it,
searching
for
minerals
is
an
essential
aspect
of
such
mining.
In
summary,
the
appellant’s
submission
on
this
first
issue
was
that
on
the
evidence
and
on
a
true
construction
of
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
:
1.
That
Parliament
has
directed
that
a
corporation
whose
principal
business
is
mining
may
deduct
certain
expenses
not
otherwise
deductible
in
computing
its
income,
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals.
These
expenses
identified
as
those
of
prospecting,
exploring
and
developing,
are
not
otherwise
deductible
because
they
are
capital
in
nature
under
income
tax
law
and
do
not
fit
into
any
category
of
deductible
capital
outlay
under
Part
XI
of
the
Regulations,
but
are
closely
related
to
earning
the
corporation’s
income.
2.
That
there
are
two
questions
to
be
answered.
The
first
is
whether
the
cost
to
the
appellant
of
building
the
Thompson
Townsite
was
a
development
expense
in
relation
to
its
mining
business,
and
the
second
was
whether
such
expense
had
been
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals.
3.
That
on
the
first
question,
evidence
was
adduced
by
it
which
adequately
supports
the
proposition
that
townsite
costs
are
development
expenses
in
the
mining
business.
4.
That
all
the
prospecting
and
exploring
and
all
the
underground
tunnelling
and
drilling
is
pointless
and
a
waste
of
time
and
money,
without
miners
to
extract
the
minerals
that
have
been
discovered.
That
when
these
minerals
are
located
in
remote
and
forbidding
areas
it
requires
more
than
the
mere
offer
to
pay
wages
to
attract
the
miners
and
supporting
personnel
to
the
area
to
operate
the
mine
on
an
economic
basis,
That
this
situation
is
characteristic
of
mining
in
Canada.
That
in
some
instances
mining
companies
have
built
the
facilities
necessary
for
the
operation
of
their
mines.
That
in
the
present
case
the
appellant
was
not
able
to
follow
this
practice
because
of
the
policy
of
the
Government
of
Manitoba
against
company
towns,
and
as
a
result,
does
not
own
or
control
the
townsite.
5.
That
development
expenditures
need
not
be
directly
related
to
searching
in
order
to
be
deductible
under
Section
83A(3)of
the
Act.
That
the
phrase
‘‘incurred
.
.
.
in
searching
for
minerals’’
does
not
govern
development
expenses
as
though
the
question
were
‘‘are
these
development
expenses
on
the
townsite
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals?’’.
That
if
that
were
so,
then
the
phrase
“incurred
in
searching
for
minerals’’
would
also
govern
prospecting
and
exploring
and
subparagraph
(ii)
would
read
‘‘The
prospecting
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals,
the
exploration
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals
and
the
development
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals’’.
6.
That
the
search
for
minerals
is
the
common
feature
of
every
aspect
of
a
mining
company’s
operations.
That
it
is
by
no
means
necessary
or
correct
to
limit
searching
to
the
type
of
operation
that
is
described
as
prospecting
or
exploring.
7.
That
“prospecting”
is
a
preliminary
operation
more
in
the
nature
of
searching
for
anomalies
indicating
mineral
deposits
rather
than
specifically
searching
for
minerals.
8.
That
‘‘exploration’’
is
the
more
detailed,
but
still
general,
investigation
of
a
possible
are
body
in
which
its
extent
and
mineral
content
is
more
definitely
determined.
9.
That
considering
the
enormous
areas
of
land
that
must
be
examined
and
the
fact
that
ore
bodies
seldom
offer
conspicuous
surface
indications
of
their
existence,
prospecting
and
exploring,
although
searching,
are
only
the
beginning
of
the
search.
That
the
evidence
shows
that
detailed
searching
for
minerals
not
only
continues
into
the
actual
mining
operation,
but
is
in
the
present
case,
an
essential
aspect
of
the
ultimate
mining
operation.
10.
That
prospecting
and
exploration
are
the
first
steps
taken
towards
searching
in
the
field
of
mining.
They
are
initially
general
and
diffused
operations.
If
a
mineral
deposit
is
located,
the
search
becomes
more
and
more
concentrated
and
intensive
and
leads
to
the
development
operations
required
to
gain
access
to
the
minerals
which
are
believed
to
exist
below
the
ground
and
culminates
in
the
mining
operation
itself.
11.
That
the
statute
refers
to
searching
‘‘for
minerals’
and
not
‘‘for
mineral
deposits’’.
Prospecting
and
exploration
are
generally
understood
terms
and
when
such
activities
are
being
conducted
the
search
is
not
for
minerals
directly
but
for
mineralized
zones
or
areas.
The
mineral
itself
is
the
ultimate
object
of
the
search
and
this
stage
of
the
search
is
conducted
in
the
course
of
the
mining
operations.
12.
That
subparagraph
(ii)
of
subsection
(3)
of
Section
83A
of
the
Act
is
worded
as
it
is,
not
to
define
or
limit
“searching”,
but
to
include
in
the
deductible
expenses
of
the
business
of
mining
certain
stipulated
amounts
otherwise
not
deductible
that
may
be
incurred
at
any
stage
of
the
mining
operation.
15.
That
said
subparagraph
(ii)
must
be
set
in
the
context
of
the
whole
section
and
as
part
of
the
scheme
of
taxing
the
income
of
mining
companies.
14.
That
because
the
word
‘‘searching’’
follows
closely
after
“prospecting
and
exploring’’
it
is
rather
natural
but
by
no
means
necessary
to
limit
searching
to
the
sort
of
operations
that
are
described
as
prospecting
or
exploring.
The
evidence
indicates,
as
stated,
that
prospecting
and
exploring
are
preliminary
operations
more
in
the
nature
of
searching
for
anomalies
or
mineral
deposits
rather
than
specifically
for
minerals.
15.
That
searching
is
a
prevailing
aspect
of
a
mining
company’s
business
at
all
stages
and
that
Parliament
meant
that
all
expenses
incurred
in
that
connection
should
be
deductible.
16.
That
the
statute
has
also
been
interpreted
and
applied
by
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
on
that
basis,
as
is
evidenced
by
the
fact
that
many
of
the
expenditures
on
the
permanent
underground
structure
were
not
directed
to
looking
for
minerals—e.g.
sinking
the
production
shaft
and
driving
the
main
haulageways
(see
Exhibit
A-19),
but
still
the
practice
of
the
Department
has
been
to
allow
these
expenses
without
question.
17.
That
had
the
Department
restricted
the
deductibility
of
underground
development
expenses
to
those
having
a
direct
and
specific
searching
aspect,
the
purpose
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
would
have
been
frustrated.
It
is
evident
that
the
departmental
practice
was
to
allow
these
expenses
as
coming
within
Section
83A.
That
was
done
because
it
was
recognized
that
the
searching
for
minerals
was
the
essential
aspect
of
mining
and
that
development
expenses
in
the
broad
sense
were
incurred
in
this
search.
Contrarywise
and
in
summary,
the
respondent’s
submission
on
this
first
issue
was:
1.
That
the
cost
of
installing
the
services
and
constructing
the
buildings
of
the
Thompson
Townsite
is
not
a
‘
development
expense
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
I
ncome
Tax
Act.
(a)
The
said
cost
is
not
a
‘‘development
expense’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
at
all,
or
in
the
sense
in
which
that
expression
is
used
in
the
mining
industry.
Development
as
that
term
is
used
in
the
mining
industry
connotes
the
operation
following
exploration
and
preceding
production,
of
physically
reaching
and
opening
up
the
ore
body
in
preparation
for
extraction.
It
includes
the
sinking
of
development
shafts,
cross-cutting,
drifting
and
raising.
It
does
not
include
construction
of
a
town-
site
for
the
accommodation
of
persons
who
will
be
engaged
in
extraction,
milling,
smelting
and
refining
operations.
See
Johnson’s
Asbestos
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
212;
[1965]
C.T.C.
165.
(b)
The
said
cost
is,
in
any
event,
not
a
development
expense
‘‘incurred
in
searching
for
minerals’’.
(i)
The
words
‘‘in
searching
for
minerals’’
connote
a
direct
and
immediate
relationship
between
the
“development”
and
the
searching
contemplated
by
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act.
In
other
words,
the
section
permits
a
deduction
not
of
“development
expenses’’
but
of
development
expenses
as
qualified
by
the
words
‘‘in
searching
for
minerals’’.
This
may
be
expressed
in
one
of
two
ways
:
(A)
that
the
development
contemplated
by
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
must
in
itself
involve
searching,
or
(B)
that
the
‘‘searching’’
referred
to
in
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
must
be
a
part
of
the
development
operation.
The
appellant’s
theory
appears
to
be
that
the
Court
may
treat
the
two
parts
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
as
isolated
and
contends
in
effect
that
the
townsite
expenses
are
development
expenses
(even
though
the
construction
of
the
townsite
in
itself
involved
no
searching
for
minerals,
nor
was
it
related
to
any
activity
that
could
be
described
as
‘‘development
in
searching
for
minerals”)
and
seeks
to
satisfy
the
test
imposed
by
the
limiting
words
‘‘in
searching’’
by
alleging
that
the
extraction
operation
in
which
some
of
the
employees
were
to
engage
is
‘‘searching
for
minerals”.
Even
if
this
latter
contention
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
(i.e.
that
persons
engaged
in
extraction
are
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’)
had
merit—the
‘‘searching’’
upon
which
the
appellant
bases
its
case
is—even
if
the
term
searching
were
appropriate—an
incidental
and
minor
part
of
an
efficient
extraction
operation.
(ii)
The
“searching”
contemplated
by
Section
83A
(3)
of
the
Act
is
a
searching
which
forms
part
of
the
development
operation.
It
is
a
searching
that
takes
place
in
the
stage
preceding
extraction
(production).
(e)
Even
if
the
appellant
were
right
in
contending
that:
(i)
The
cost
of
carrying
out
its
obligations
under
the
agreement
with
Manitoba
was
‘‘a
development
expense’’
(even
though
it
involved
no
searching),
and
(ii)
the
underground
extraction
operations
of
extracting
ore
were
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
(even
though
that
‘‘searching’’,
so-called,
formed
no
part
of
development)
the
claim
to
deduct
the
townsite
expenses
should
still
be
denied
because
the
section
must
be
read
together
rather
than
bisected
and
its
component
parts
treated
in
isolation
one
from
the
other.
(d)
The
allegagation
that
the
persons
engaged
in
mining
operations
underground
were
engaged
in
“searching”
is
in
any
event
wrong.
Their
essential
activity
was
the
extraction
of
proven
ore
for
the
most
part
as
well
as,
to
some
degree,
of
‘‘well
indicated”
ore.
The
efficient
extraction
of
ore
may
include
following
down
stringers
or
other
irregularities
running
from
the
main
ore
body.
This
is
an
incidental
part
of
extraction
and
cannot
be
described
as
‘‘searching’’.
Even
if
it
could,
it
would
hardly
justify
the
conclusion
that
the
entire
underground
operation
at
Thompson
took
its
character
from
this
activity.
(e)
Alternatively,
the
cost
of
constructing
the
buildings
and
installing
the
other
services
which
the
appellant
was
obliged
to
pay
for
is
in
no
sense
a
“development
expense
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals’’.
It
was
the
price
paid
or
consideration
given
for
the
extensive
and
important
rights
and
concessions
granted
to
the
appellant
by
Manitoba
under
the
Agreement
of
December
3,
1956.
See
Farmers
Mutual
Petroleums
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
1126;
[1966]
C.T.C.
288.
(f)
If
the
appellant’s
contention
is
correct
that
the
townsite
costs
are
‘‘development
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act,
the
same
reasoning
would
apply
to
the
cost
of
similar
assets
in
a
company
town
owned
by
a
mining
company.
The
result
of
this
would
be
that
a
mining
company
could
treat
all
of
its
capital
outlays
for
plant,
buildings
or
company
towns
owned
by
it
as
development
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals
and
deductible
under
Section
83A
of
the
Act.
On
the
appellant’s
reasoning
there
is
no
difference
in
principle
between
the
costs
of
the
townsite
at
Thompson
which
it
did
not
own
and
the
cost
of
a
company
town
owned
by
it.
Both,
according
to
the
appellant’s
theory,
would
be
development
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals.
The
result
of
the
appellant’s
reasoning
would
be
that
the
cost
of
a
company
town
owned
by
a
mining
company
could
not
be
deducted
under
the
capital
cost
allowance
provisions
of
Section
11(1)
(a)
of
the
Act,
but
only
as
a
development
expense
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada
under
Section
83A
since
under
Section
1102(1)
(a)
of
the
Regulations
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
The
classes
of
property
described
in
this
Part
and
in
Schedule
B
shall
be
deemed
not
to
include
property
(a)
the
cost
of
which
is
deductible
in
computing
the
taxpayer’s
income.
Thus
on
the
appellant’s
contention,
a
mining
company
that
put
up
a
townsite
which
it
owned
could
deduct
the
entire
cost
in
one
year
under
Section
83A
of
the
Act.
It
would
in
fact
be
obliged
to
use
Section
83A
and
if
it
sold
any
of
the
buildings,
it
would
not
be
subject
to
the
recapture
provisions
of
Section
20
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
It
could,
for
example,
having
deducted
the
full
cost
under
Section
838A
of
the
Act
sell
the
townsite
to
a
subsidiary
which
could
then
begin
to
deduct
capital
cost
allowance
on
it.
(g)
Section
83A
of
the
Act
is
not
intended
to
allow
mining
companies
to
write
off
all
capital
expenditures
which
they
incur.
Section
11(1)
(b)
and
Part
XII
of
the
Regulations
(depletion
allowance)
to
the
Income
Tax
Act,
Section
83A
of
the
Act
(prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
in
searching
for
minerals)
and
Section
83
(three
year
exemption)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provide
a
variety
of
exceptional
and
specific
concessions
and
privileges
to
mining
companies
that
are
not
granted
to
other
industries.
Had
Parliament
intended
to
allow
mining
companies
to
deduct
capital
expenditures
of
the
type
in
issue
in
this
case
made
under
agreements
such
as
the
Agreement
of
December
3,
1956
with
Manitoba
it
is
sub-
mitted
that
it
would
have
said
so.
To
extend
Section
83A(3)
(c)
(ii)
of
the
Act
to
allow
the
deduction
of
the
cost
of
putting
in
municipal
services
under
an
agreement
with
the
province
would
be
to
construe
that
section
as
if
it
read:
all
capital
expenditures
incurred
by
a
corporation
whose
principal
business
is
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
which
were
incurred
prior
to
the
date
on
which
the
mine
came
into
production.
If
the
appellant’s
contention
is
right
that
the
expenditures
involved
in
this
case
are
‘‘development
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals”
it
is
difficult
to
conceive
of
any
capital
expenditures
incurred
before
the
mine
comes
into
production
that
would
not
be.
Section
83A
of
the
Act
confers
a
restrictive
right
to
a
deduction
of
a
specific
type
of
expenditure.
Its
obvious
purpose
is
to
allow
the
deduction
of
those
expenses
of
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada
that
form
part
of
the
three
successive
stages
of
prospecting,
exploration
or
development.
Section
83A
of
the
Act
contemplates
no
deduction
of
the
cost
of
a
townsite
which
was
ultimately
to
accommodate
persons
engaged
in
extraction,
milling,
smelting
and
refining.
So
much
for
the
submissions
of
the
parties.
The
question
on
this
first
issue
in
this
case
is,
are
the
expenditures
on
the
Thompson
Townsite
by
the
appellant
of
the
kind
that
Parliament
meant
to
allow
to
be
deducted
as
“development
expenses’’
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
for
the
taxation
years
in
question
under
the
provisions
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Interpreting
what
Parliament
meant
to
include
in
“development
expenses”
under
that
section
of
the
Act
in
a
case
such
as
this,
may
be:
(a)
a
question
of
law
under
the
principle
that
the
construction
of
all
written
documents,
including
statutes,
belongs
to
the
Court
alone
(Taylor
on
Evidence,
paragraph
43,
page
47,
and
Camden
v.
C.I.R.,
[1914]
1
K.B.
641;
Lol)law
Groceterias
Co.
Limited
v.
Toronto,
[1936]
S.C.R.
249
;
Rogers-Majestic
Corporation
Limited
v.
Toronto,
[1943]
S.C.R.
440;
The
Firestone
Tire
and
Rubber
Company
of
Canada,
Limited
v.
Hamilton,
[1955]
8.C.R.
604;
and
Edwards
v.
Bairstow,
[1956]
A.C.
14,
or
(b)
a
question
of
fact
to
be
determined
on
the
evidence
under
the
exception
to
that
principle
illustrated
by
A.-G.
for
the
Isle
of
Man
v.
Moore,
[1938]
3
All
E.R.
263
(see
per
Lord
Wright
at
page
267)
and
applied
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Western
Minerals
Ltd.
et
al.
v.
Gaumont,
[1953]
1
S.C.R.
345.
(Cf.
Crows
Nest
Pass
Coal
Co.
(Ltd.)
v.
The
Queen,
[1961]
S.C.R.
750,
per
Locke,
J.
at
page
752
delivering
the
Judgment
of
the
Court.)
This
is
a
difficult
matter
to
decide
in
this
case.
But
even
if
interpreting
Parliament’s
meaning
of
‘development
expenses’’
under
that
section
of
the
Act
should
be
considered
a
question
of
law
only,
in
any
event,
(and
is
always
the
case
in
matters
such
as
this)
the
question
of
whether
the
appellant’s
expenditures
on
the
Thompson
Townsite
are
of
such
a
nature
or
kind
as
to
fall
within
such
meaning
of
‘‘development
expenses’’
is
a
question
of
fact.
As
a
result,
in
a
case
such
as
this,
it
is
difficult
to
separate
questions
of
law
and
fact
because
evidence
which
will
enable
the
Court
to
put
itself
in
a
position
to
construe
the
words
‘‘
‘
development
expenses’’
in
the
section
of
the
Act
(if
construction
is
a
question
of
fact
to
be
determined
the
evidence)
is
the
same
or
practically
the
same
as
that
which
the
Court
will
use
to
determine
whether
the
words
‘‘development
expenses’’
in
the
section
of
the
Act
cover
the
subject
expenditures
of
the
appellant
on
the
Thompson
Townsite.
But,
that
is
no
reason
for
not
differentiating
between
these
two
separate
matters.
After
careful
consideration,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
both
matters
are
questions
of
fact
in
this
case,
to
be
determined
on
the
evidence.
On
the
issue
of
what
are
such
‘‘development
expenses’’,
the
appellant’s
witness
Harold
M.
Wright
gave
evidence.
Mr.
Wright
is
a
metallurgical
engineer
by
profession,
is
a
registered
professional
engineer
in
the
Province
of
British
Columbia,
a
member
of
the
Canadian
Institute
of
Mining
and
Metallurgy,
the
Institution
of
Mining
and
Metallurgy
in
London,
England
and
the
Australasian
Institute
of
Mining
and
Metallurgy
of
Melbourne,
Australia.
He
has
had
extensive
practical
experience
throughout
Canada,
the
United
States
and
South
America
and
is
President
of
Wright
Engineers
Limited,
Vancouver,
B.C.,
consulting
and
design
engineers
which
Company
has
263
employees.
Mr.
Wright
gave
evidence
that
his
Company’s
work
frequently
involves
‘‘
designing
the
complete
package
.
.
.
for
a
new
mining
project’’.
He
said
that
when:
.
.
.
A
mining
company
finds
a
new
mine
and
asks
initially
that
a
Feasibility
Study
or
a
Production
Plan
Report
be
prepared.
This
is
sometimes
referred
to
as
an
Economic
and
Production
Analysis
in
which
capital
costs
and
operating
costs
at
an
agreed
rate
of
production
are
developed.
An
economic
analysis
based
on
the
study
provides
the
directors
of
the
company
with
information
required
to
make
a
decision
as
to
the
feasibility
of
the
project.
If
the
reports
are
favourable
they
are
then
used
for
banking
purposes
to
raise
the
required
money
or
for
backing
up
a
security
offering
to
the
public.
These
studies
have
to
be
very
complete
and
in
addition
to
including
the
cost
for
putting
the
mine
in
operation
to
produce
so
many
tons
a
day,
they
include
the
costs
for
the
concentrator,
and
the
service
facilities
such
as
water,
power,
telephone,
repair
shops
and
assay
office.
In
remote
or
very
isolated
areas
the
company
will
have
to
arrange
for
housing
for
married
and
single
people
and
for
such
facilities
as
schools,
hospitals,
churches,
supermarkets
and
recreational
facilities,
and
the
studies
will
include
the
costs
for
these
services.
He
also
said
that
he
considered
.
.
.
the
building
of
a
townsite
to
be
a
necessary
development
expense
in
order
to
bring
a
mine
into
production
in
an
isolated
area
such
as
Thompson,
Manitoba.
Speaking
generally,
he
also
said
that:
In
order
to
attract
and
retain
the
services
of
stable
and
qualified
workers
in
isolated
area,
the
mining
company
must
assume
responsibility
for
the
establishment
of
a
townsite
at
the
mine
site
which
has
not
only
good
housing,
but
also
good
schools,
medical
services
and
recreational
facilities.
The
townsite
must
be
such
that
not
only
the
workers
will
be
happy
living
there
but
also
their
wives
and
children.
In
order
to
establish
such
a
townsite,
the
mining
company
must
spend
large
sums
of
money
initially
to
develop
it
by
installing
the
necessary
sewers,
water
works,
power,
etc.
In
addition,
the
company
may
assist
employees
to
purchase
houses,
usually
with
some
repurchase
arrangement
in
the
event
that
an
employee
leaves.
It
must
be
remembered
that
young
married
couples
have
little
capital
of
their
own.
Also,
providing
the
initial
municipal
services
will
keep
the
municipal
taxes
low.
As
to
what,
in
his
opinion,
“development”
meant,
he
stated
as
follows:
From
my
experience
in
the
mining
industry
I
have
become
familiar
with
the
terminology
employed
in
describing
or
referring
to
its
operations
and
the
meanings
given
to
words
and
phrases
used
in
the
industry.
A
reference
to
“development”
in
connection
with
a
mine
extends
to
various
operations
which
must
be
undertaken
in
preparation
for
the
removal
of
ore
from
the
mine.
Without
attempting
an
exhaustive
statement,
development
includes
the
construction
of
the
mine
shaft
and
haulageways,
the
delineation
of
the
ore
body
in
preparation
for
extraction
operations,
and
the
provision
of
living
facilities
and
amenities
for
the
work
force
that
will
be
engaged
in
the
mining
and
subsequent
operations.
His
conclusion
in
respect
to
the
subject
matter,
he
stated
in
these
terms
:
I
have
been
informed
with
regard
to
the
part
played
by
Inco
in
building
and
developing
the
townsite
of
Thompson,
Manitoba,
and
the
costs
incurred
by
it
in
that
connection.
It
is
my
opinion,
based
on
my
experience
aforesaid,
that
the
costs
incurred
by
Inco
in
connection
with
the
townsite
at
Thompson,
Manitoba,
can
be
properly
described
as
development
expenses
and
would
be
so
considered
in
the
ordinary
understanding
of
those
engaged
in
the
mining
industry.
On
cross-examination,
he
said
that
he
would
include
in
some
cases
as
such
‘‘development
expenses’’,
the
cost
of
a
mill,
a
smelter
and
a
refinery,
and
even
the
head
office
of
a
mining
company
distant
many
miles
from
the
mine.
On
the
issue
of
what
are
the
subject
‘‘development
expenses’’,
the
respondent
called
Herbert
H.
Cox,
a
consulting
mining
engineer
who
has
had
extensive
practical
mining
experience
in
Canada
and
who
is
now
a
consultant.
He
disagreed
with
the
view
expressed
by
Mr.
Wright
in
these
words:
The
view
expressed
by
Mr.
Wright
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
word
“development”
in
the
mining
industry
in
my
opinion
is
inconsistent
with
the
meaning
and
use
of
that
word
in
the
mining
industry.
In
my
experience
I
have
never
before
heard
the
word
used
in
the
mining
industry
to
include
such
matters
and
the
meaning
which
he
gives
to
it
is
not
that
given
in
any
dictionary
or
other
publication
in
the
mining
field
which
I
have
examined.
Excerpts
from
dictionaries
and
glossaries
of
mining
terms
containing
definitions
of
“development”
.
.
.
(are
exhibited).
(Witness
produced
excerpts
which
were
filed.)
In
my
opinion
these
definitions
correctly
set
out
the
meaning
of
the
word
development
as
that
term
is
currently
used
in
the
mining
industry.
(Words
in
brackets
are
mine.)
The
following
dictionary
definitions
and
definitions
from
mining
publications
on
this
matter
were
introduced
and
referred
to
in
evidence
(most
of
them
by
the
witness
Cox,
but
some
art
part
of
the
respondent’s
evidence).
Mining
includes
surface
operations,
as
quarrying
in
open
cuts
and
the
working
of
placers,
as
well
as
underground
work.
In
a
given
mineral
deposit,
mining
operations
may
be
divided
into
4
stages:
Prospecting,
or
the
search
for
minerals.
Exploration,
or
the
work
of
exploring
a
mineral
deposit
when
found.
It
is
undertaken
to
gain
knowledge
of
the
size,
shape,
position,
characteristics,
and
value
of
the
deposit.
Development,
or
the
driving
of
openings
to
and
in
a
proved
deposit,
for
mining
and
handling
the
product
economically.
Exploitation
(mining),
or
the
work
of
extracting
the
mineral.
These
terms
are
used
loosely.
It
is
often
difficult
to
distinguish
between
prospecting
and
exploration,
or
between
exploration
and
development,
as
the
different
kinds
of
work
insensibly
shade
into
one
another;
an
arbitrary
differentiation
between
them
is
usually
established
at
a
given
property.
Confusion
also
arises
when
the
terms
are
extended
to
describe
operations
on
a
property
containing
several
orebodies.
In
such
cases,
prospecting
for
new
orebodies
is
a
part
of
exploration.
In
certain
mineral
deposits,
prospecting
and
exploration
are
done
in
one
operation
by
boring;
as
in
the
disseminated
lead
ores
of
S.E.
Mo,
and
in
those
Mesabi
iron
ores
and
gold
placers
that
are
mined
by
open-cut
methods.
(Mining
Engineers
Handbook,
Vol.
1,
Third
Edition,
1941,
Robert
Peele
and
John
A.
Church,
published
by
John
Wiley
&
Sons,
Inc.,
New
York.)
Mine.
.
.
.
3.
The
terms
“mine”
and
“coal
mine”
are
intended
to
signify
any
and
all
parts
of
the
property
of
a
mining
plant,
either
on
the
surface
or
underground,
that
contribute
directly
or
indirectly
to
the
mining
or
handling
of
coal.
(Glossary
of
Geology
and
Related
Sciences,
Second
Edition,
J.
Marvin
Weller,
published
by
American
Geological
Institute,
Washington.
)
DEVELOPMENT.
Opening
up
of
an
ore
body
by
shafts,
drives
and
subsidiary
openings
in
readiness
for
valuation
of
deposit,
estimate
of
its
tonnage,
and
in
due
course
extraction.
(Dictionary
of
Mineral
Technology,
1963,
E.
J.
Pryor,
published
by
Mining
Publications
Ltd.,
Salisbury
House,
London,
England.
)
development.
a.
To
open
up
a
coal
seam
or
ore
body
as
by
sinking
shafts
and
driving
drifts,
as
well
as
installing
the
requisite
equipment.
Nelson.
b.
Work
of
driving
openings
to
and
in
a
proved
ore
body
to
prepare
it
for
mining
and
transporting
the
ore.
Lewis,
p.
20.
c.
The
amount
of
ore
in
a
mine
developed
or
exposed
on
at
least
three
sides.
C.T.D.
d.
S.
Afr.
The
work
done
in
a
mine
to
open
up
the
paying
ground
or
reef
and,
in
particular,
to
form
drives
or
haulages
around
blocks
of
ore
which
are
then
included
under
developed
ore
reserves.
Beerman,
e.
A
geologic
term,
applied
to
those
progressive
changes
in
fossil
genera
and
species
that
have
followed
one
another
during
the
deposition
of
the
strata
of
the
earth.
Fay.
(A
Dictionary
of
Mining,
Mineral,
and
Related
Terms,
Paul
W.
Thrush,
published
by
U.S.
Department
of
the
Interior,
Bureau
of
Mines.
)
Development.
1.
A
geological
term,
applied
to
those
progressive
changes
in
fossil
genera,
and
species,
which
have
followed
one
another
during
the
deposition
of
the
strata
of
the
earth.
(Roberts)
2.
Work
done
in
a
mine
to
open
up
ore
bodies,
as
sinking
shafts
and
driving
levels,
etc.
(Skinner).
Sometimes
used
synonymously
with
“annual
assessment”
work.
(A
Glossary
of
the
Mining
and
Mineral
Industry,
1947,
Albert
II.
Fay,
Bulletin
95,
Department
of
the
Interior,
Bureau
of
Mines,
Washington.
)
Development
(min.).
To
open
up
a
coal
seam
or
orebody
as
by
sinking
shafts
and
driving
drifts,
as
well
as
installing
the
requisite
equipment.
(Dictionary
of
Mining,
1964,
A.
Nelson,
published
by
George
Newnes
Ltd.,
Tower
House,
London,
England.)
Development
is
the
work
of
driving
openings
to
and
in
a
proved
ore
body
to
prepare
it
for
mining
and
transporting
the
ore.
(Elements
of
Mining,
Third
Edition,
1964,
Robert
8S.
Lewis,
Revision
by
George
B.
Clark,
published
by
John
Wiley
&
Sons
Inc.,
New
York.)
DEVELOPMENT—Is
the
underground
work
carried
out
for
the
purpose
of
reaching
and
opening
up
a
mineral
deposit.
It
includes
shaft
sinking,
cross-cutting,
drifting
and
raising.
(Mining
Explained,
1968,
Northern
Miner
Press
Limited,
published
by
Northern
Miner
Press
Limited,
Toronto.
)
The
study
of
the
Carter
Royal
Commission
on
Taxation
in
respect
to
‘‘Taxation
of
the
Mining
Industry
in
Canada’’
was
also
referred
to.
This
study,
in
part,
in
reference
to
“development”
reads
as
follows:
The
decision
to
develop
a
property
marks
the
beginning
of
the
third
stage
in
the
progress
towards
a
producing
mine.
Information
gathered
in
the
prospecting
and
property
examination
stages
will
have
been
analysed
and
estimates
made
of
the
grade,
size
and
characteristics
of
the
orebody
and
of
the
costs
of
transportation
and
treatment.
The
development
stage
may
be
defined
as
the
preparation
of
an
area
believed
to
contain
ore
for
extraction
of
the
ore
in
commercial
quantities.
Activities
include
clearing
and
stripping
the
property,
removed
of
overburden,
constructing
roads
and
railways,
housing,
warehouses
and
power
connections
(possibly
involving
the
construction
of
power
facilities),
shaft-sinking
and
underground
development
(or
open-pit
preparation)
prior
to
extracting
the
ore,
and
installing
a
headframe
and
underground
machinery.
If
the
ore
is
to
be
treated
at
the
mine
site,
activities
also
include
preparation
of
an
area
for,
and
construction
of,
a
mill
and
possibly
a
smelter.
During
this
stage
ore
will
be
extracted
in
the
course
of
underground
work.
While
preliminary
underground
work
is
usually
carried
on
as
much
as
possible
outside
the
mineralized
area,
conditions
sometimes
suggest
that
it
be
carried
on
in
the
orebody
so
that
large
amounts
of
ore
may
be
extracted
in
this
period.
The
High
Court
of
Australia
in
Mount
Isa
Mines
Limited
v.
Federal
Commissioner
of
Taxation
(1954),
92
C.L.R.
483,
in
interpreting
what
‘‘expenditure
on
necessary
plant
and
development
of
the
mining
property’’
should
be
included
as
“development
expenses’’
under
Section
122
of
the
Income
Tax
Assessment
Act
of
Australia
1936-1949,
held
that
all
expenditures,
other
than
expenditures
on
plant
of
a
capital
nature
directly
attributable
to
the
establishment
of
the
mine
and
the
working
of
it
or
to
its
expansion
or
extension
from
time
to
time,
should,
for
the
purposes
of
Section
122,
be
regarded
as
expenditures
on
the
‘‘development’’
of
the
mining
property.
The
facts
of
that
ease
were
that
when
the
first
exploration
shafts
had
been
sunk
in
the
subject
mine,
there
was
only
a
small
townsite
some
distance
from
the
mining
property
and
the
existing
living
facilities
were
totally
inadequate
for
the
reasonable
accommodation
and
living
amenities
of
the
men
employed
by
the
mine.
As
a
result,
the
mining
Company
constructed
houses
for
them,
provided
for
a
water
supply,
electrical
power,
sanitary
services,
medical,
hospital
and
educational
facilities
and
other
attendant
amenities.
The
trial
judge,
Mr.
Justice
Taylor
held
that
in
the
circumstances
of
that
case,
such
expenditures
were
a
necessary
part
of
the
establishment
and
conduct
of
the
mining
undertaking
accordingly
were
entitled
to
be
charged
as
expenditures
incurred
in
the
‘‘development’’
of
the
mining
property
for
the
purpose
of
Section
122
of
the
Australian
Act.
Mr.
Justice
Taylor
said
at
pages
489-90
that
that
section
:
.
.
.
permits
a
person
who
is
carrying
on
mining
operations
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
assessable
income
to
treat
a
wide
class
of
expenditure
of
a
capital
nature
as
deductible
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act
over
a
period
calculated
by
reference
to
the
estimated
life
of
the
mine,
and
it
is
inconceivable
that
the
legislature
intended
to
permit
such
a
deduction
in
the
case
of
capital
expenditure
incurred
on
development,
in
the
sense
of
work
preparatory
to
the
commencement
of
or
ancillary
to
actual
mining
operations,
and
yet
deny
such
a
deduction
in
respect
of
expenditure
of
a
capital
nature
necessarily
incurred
contemporaneously
with
and
directly
in
association
with
mining
operations.
This
consideration
alone
would,
I
think,
dispose
of
any
suggestion
that
the
word
“development”
should
be
understood
in
any
restricted
sense
but
there
is
a
further
contrary
intention
to
be
found
in
the
section.
The
deduction
which
is
permitted
in
respect
of
plant
is
a
deduction
in
relation
to
expenditure
of
a
capital
nature
incurred
on
necessary
plant.
That
is,
on
the
language
of
the
section,
plant
which
is
necessary
for
the
carrying
on
of
the
mining
operations
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
assessable
income.
In
the
case
of
plant
the
allowable
deduction
is
not
subject
to
any
restriction
other
than
that
to
be
found
in
the
wide
words
of
the
section.
Accordingly,
expenditure
on
plant
is
within
the
scope
of
the
section
whether
it
is
necessary
for
the
day-to-day
working
of
the
mine
or
for
developmental
work
in
the
narrowest
sense
and
I
should
think
this
circumstance
throws
some
little
light
on
the
meaning
of
the
word
“development”
as
used
in
the
section.
The
deduction
in
each
ease
is
clearly
intended
to
serve
the
same
purpose
and
it
would
be
out
of
keeping
with
the
general
sense
of
the
section
to
give
a
restricted
meaning
to
the
latter
word
and
thereby
limit
the
range
of
expenditure
on
development
in
respect
of
which
a
deduction
might
be
claimed.
Perhaps,
the
import
of
the
section
is
best
understood
by
regarding
the
use
of
the
word
“development”
as
intended
to
amplify
the
section
and
to
cover
capital
works
not
covered
by
the
word
“plant”.
At
all
events
I
am
satisfied
that
all
other
expenditure
of
a
capital
nature
directly
attributable
to
the
establishment
of
the
mine
and
to
the
working
of
it
or
to
its
expansion
or
extension
from
time
to
time
should,
for
the
purposes
of
the
section,
be
regarded
as
expenditure
on
the
development
of
the
mining
property.
Jackett,
P.
in
Johnson’s
Asbestos
Corporation
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
212;
[1965]
C.T.C.
165,
said
this
at
page
217
[p.
170]
about
the
meaning
of
‘‘development
expenses’’
in
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Act
after
hearing
evidence
in
respect
thereto:
“Development”
of
a
mine,
in
general
terms,
means
to
uncover
the
body
or
area
which
is
to
be
the
subject
matter
of
the
extraction
process.
Development
is
the
preparation
of
the
deposit
or
mining
site
for
actual
mining.
In
the
case
of
asbestos,
it
involves
the
removal
of
the
overburden
and
of
waste
rock.
It
is
of
particular
importance,
in
considering
the
words
of
subparagraph
(ii)
of
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(3)
of
section
83A
to
realize
that
this
process
also
serves,
in
the
case
of
asbestos,
by
exposing’
more
fibre-bearing
rock,
to
give
more
information
as
to
the
extent
of
the
fibre-bearing
rock.
In
other
words,
as
the
words
of
subparagraph
(ii)
imply,
in
the
case
of
asbestos
at
least,
you
may
be
continuing
the
search
for
the
asbestos
right
up
to
the
actual
extraction
process.
As
to
this
first
issue,
in
my
view
there
are
two
questions
to
be
answered
namely,
(1)
whether
the
expenditures
made
by
the
appellant
in
building
the
Thompson
Townsite
in
the
relevant
years
were
‘‘development
expenses’’,
and
(2)
whether
such
expenditures
were
incurred
in
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
in
Canada
in
such
years,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
during
the
relevant
taxation
years.
On
the
evidence
adduced
in
respect
of
the
subject
Thompson
mine,
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
commenced
with
the
prospecting
stage
and
will
continue
until
the
mine
is
completely
exhausted.
On
the
evidence
also,
it
was
established
that
over
50%
of
the
employees
of
the
appellant
who
lived
in
the
Thompson
Townsite
during
these
relevant
taxation
years
were
miners
and
they
were
engaged
in
extracting
minerals
in
the
production
stage
of
mining
the
Thompson
mine
and
at
that
stage
of
mining,
were
engaged
for
a
relatively
small
percentage
of
their
time
in
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’.
This
is
abundantly
clear
from
the
evidence
of
the
appellant’s
mine
geologist
Mr.
Grant
B.
Hambly
and
the
plans
and
photographs
of
the
mine
which
were
put
in.
At
no
time
were
any
of
these
miners
engaged
in
any
work
in
the
development
stage
of
mining
this
Thompson
mine,
and
as
a
consequence
none
were
“searching
for
minerals’’
at
such
development
stage.
The
rest
of
the
employees
of
the
appellant
who
lived
in
the
Thompson
Townsite
during
the
relevant
taxation
years
were
engaged
in
the
milling,
smelting
and
refining
operations
of
the
production
stage
of
mining
this
Thompson
mine
or
were
supervisory
or
official
personnel.
On
the
evidence
also,
a
relative
allocation
of
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellant
to
each
of
the
four
stages
of
mining
was
established.
It
is
sufficient
to
record
such
in
the
manner
following:
Expenses
Incurred
by
the
Appellant
“corporation
whose
principal
business
is
.
.
.
mining
.
.
.
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada’?
During
the
Four
Stages
of
Mining
Namely,
Prospecting,
Exploration,
Development
and
Production
(Extraction)
at
Thompson
Mine
Manitoba
1.
At
prospecting
stage—(not
in
issue).
2.
At
exploration
stage—(not
in
issue).
3.
At
development
stage—
(a)
the
cost
of
underground
installation
expenses
such
as
development
shafts,
haulageways
etc.—(Not
in
issue),
done
in
the
main
by
independent
contractors,
(b)
the
cost
of
the
very
little
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
done.
(There
was
probably
no
‘‘searching
for
minerals”
done
during
most
of
the
time
taken
up
with
development
work,
because
development
work,
in
the
main,
only
indirectly
related
to
‘‘searching
for
minerals”.)
4.
At
production
(or
extraction)
stage—
(a)
the
cost
of
some
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
done
by
miners
of
the
appellant,
but
this
was
relatively
small
in
relation
to
the
cost
of
mining
or
extracting
the
ore
body,
(b)
the
cost
of
constructing
the
mill,
the
smelter
and
the
refinery
and
18
houses
in
the
Townsite
owned
by
the
appellant
for
its
supervisory
and
official
personnel,
(c)
the
cost
of
miners’
wages.
Having
made
such
allocation
of
expenses
to
the
four
stages
of
mining
of
the
Thompson
mine,
the
problem
is
where
to
allocate
the
cost
of
constructing
and
establishing
the
Thompson
Townsite.
No
one
contends
such
cost
should
be
allocated
or
considered
a
prospecting
or
exploration
expense.
The
appellant
contends
such
cost
was
a
‘‘development
expense’’,
whereas
the
respondent
submits
it
was
a
production
expense.
From
the
evidence,
Exhibit
A-4,
which
was
put
in
evidence
by
the
appellant
and
which,
as
stated,
is
entitled
a
“Brief
His-
tory
of
the
Development
of
Thompson
Mine,
Surface
Plant
and
Townsite
”,
the
following
chronology
of
events
is
found
which
is
also
relevant
for
such
a
categorization
:
In
1958
—
The
production
stage
of
the
Thompson
mine
began.
—
The
construction
of
the
mill
buildings
was
completed.
—
The
construction
of
the
smelter
building
was
commenced.
—
Construction
of
the
Townsite
began.
In
1959
—
The
production
stage
of
mining
progressed.
—
The
development
stage
of
mining
also
progressed.
—
Construction
of
the
smelter
buildings
was
completed.
—
Construction
of
the
refinery
was
commenced.
—
Further
construction
of
the
townsite
progressed.
In
1960
—
The
production
stage
of
mining
progressed.
—
Both
the
mill
and
the
smelter
were
in
operation.
—
The
refinery
construction
progressed.
—
The
construction
of
the
Townsite
further
progressed.
In
1961
—
The
production
stage
of
mining
continued.
—
Development
commenced
in
a
new
area
of
the
mine.
—
The
refinery
commenced
operation.
—
The
construction
of
the
Townsite
further
progressed.
BETWEEN
1962
and
1965
—
The
Townsite
was
further
constructed
and
finally
completed
in
1965.
Certain
of
the
evidence,
however,
is
not
relevant
in
categorizing
the
cost
of
constructing
and
establishing
the
Thompson
Townsite
for
the
purpose
of
construing
the
meaning
of
the
words
“development
expenses’’
in
Section
83A(3)
(e)
(ii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
relation
to
the
Thompson
mine.
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
meaning
given
to
those
words
by
the
witness
Wright
is
not
what
Parliament
intended.
His
meaning
is
much
too
wide
and
is
one
which
may
be
acceptable
and
relevant
in
reference
to
the
concept
of
an
overall
development
of
many
projects
being
done
today
which
may
involve
the
establishment
of
a
new
town
but
it
is
not
the
concept
of
development
which
is
applicable
to
the
subject
matter
of
this
case.
In
my
view,
what
Parliament
intended
in
this
subsection
of
the
Act,
was
to
confine
“development
expenses’’
to
those
expenses
which
are
incurred
at
the
development
stage
of
mining
as
understood
by
people
in
the
mining
business
which,
in
my
view,
evidenced
by
the
opinion
of
Mr.
Cox
and
the
dictionary
definitions
and
the
definitions
from
mining
publications
put
in
evidence.
As
a
result,
I
am
of
opinion
that
‘‘development
expenses”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83A(3)
(c)
(ii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
mean
those
expenses
which
are
incurred
in
the
opening
up
of
an
ore
body
by
shafts,
drives
and
subsidiary
openings
for
the
various
purposes
of
subsequent
mining
such
as,
the
valuation
of
deposits,
the
estimate
of
its
tonnage
and
in
due
course,
its
extraction.
This,
in
essence,
is
the
meaning
given
to
development
by
K.
J.
Pryor
in
his
Dictionary
of
Mineral
Technology
above
referred
to.
Predicated
on
such
a
construction
of
those
words,
and
on
a
consideration
of
the
whole
of
the
evidence,
I
am
of
the
view
and
find
as
a
fact,
that
the
appellant’s
expenditures
above
referred
to,
on
the
Thompson
Townsite
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba
are
not
of
such
a
nature
or
kind
as
to
fall
within
such
meaning
of
‘‘development
expenses’’.
I
am
further
of
the
opinion
that,
in
the
main,
they
are
production
expenses
of
the
mining
of
the
Thompson
mine.
I
say
‘‘in
the
main’’,
because
as
some
of
the
evidence
indicates,
there
may
be
a
slight
overlapping
between
the
development
and
the
production
stages
in
the
subject
mine,
but
such
overlapping
is
minimal
in
this
case
and
therefore
immaterial
for
the
purpose
of
these
two
findings
of
fact.
It
is
immaterial
for
other
reasons
also
namely,
because
the
evidence
in
this
ease
shows
that
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
in
the
Thompson
mine
during
the
development
stages
of
its
mining
during
the
relevant
taxation
years
was
also
minimal,
if
any
was
done
at
all;
and
that
it
shows
that
practically
none
of
the
personnel
employed
in
the
development
work
generally,
(including
any
such
‘‘searching
for
minerals’’
in
connection
therewith)
did
live
in
the
townsite;
and
it
shows
that
it
was
never
intended
that
they
live
in
the
townsite
or
enjoy
any
of
its
amenities
(such
as
the
school,
the
hospital
and
so
forth,
which
were
part
of
the
costs
of
the
townsite
to
the
appellant).
The
conclusion
I
reach
is
that
it
is
impossible
to
relate
the
development-work
done
by
the
appellant
at
its
Thompson
mine
“in
searching
for
minerals’’
during
the
relevant
taxation
years
to
the
necessity.
for
the
appellant
building
the
townsite
and
ineurring
the
cost
of
doing
so.
Instead,
the
necessity
for
building
such
a
townsite
and
incurring
the
cost
of
doing
so,
was
to
enable
the
appellant
to
extract
the
ore
at
the
production
stage
of
mining
this
mine
mainly,
and
also
at
the
same
time,
as
supplementary
thereto,
but
to
a
relatively
minor
extent
in
relation
to
extracting
ore,
to
search
for
minerals.
So
much
for
the
determination
of
the
first
issue.
As
to
the
second
issue,
namely,
the
appellant’s
contention
that
it
can
deduct
the
sum
of
$130,135.80
paid
in
1961
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
under
The
Mining
Royalty
and
Tax
Act,
R.S.M.
1954,
c.
169,
from
its
income
which
was
subject
to
tax
in
that
year,
which
income
came
from
sources
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
elsewhere
other
than
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba,
a
determination
of
it
is
dependent
on
the
application
of
Section
11(1)
(p)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
the
facts
of
this
case.
Section
11(1)
(p)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
permits
a
deduction
of
such
amount,
of
mining
taxes
paid
from
the
taxable
income,
as
may
be
allowed
by
regulation
in
respect
to
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
mining
operations.
The
relevant
Regulation
is
701.t
There
is
no
question
that
the
tax
in
the
sum
of
$130,135.80
paid
by
the
appellant
in
1961
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
is
a
mining
tax
within
the
meaning
of
the
language
of
Section
11(1)
(p)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
question
is,
what
amount,
if
any,
is
deductible
on
a
true
application
of
Regulation
701
to
the
facts
of
this
case?
Because
of
the
language
of
Regulation
701,
this
involves
finding
the
components
of
a
fraction.
Mr.
Justice
Cattanach,
as
reported
in
Quemont
Mining
Corporation,
Limited
et
al.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1967]
2
Ex.
C.R.
169
;
[1966]
C.T.C.
570,
found
the
components
of
such
a
fraction
in
three
cases
which
he
tried
together.
In
those
three
cases,
each
of
the
mining
companies
had
income
in
one
Province
only
and
none
of
the
mining
companies
had
any
deduction
or
exemption
from
the
Act,
subsection
(3)
of
section
851
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;
(b)
“mine”
includes
any
work
or
undertaking
in
which
mineral
ore
is
extracted
or
produced,
including
a
quarry;
(c)
“minerals”
include
every
naturally
occurring
inorganic
or
fossilized
organic
substance
which
is
mined,
quarried
or
otherwise
obtained
from
the
earth
at
or
below
its
surface
but
does
not
include
petroleum
or
natural
gas;
(d)
“mineral
ore”
includes
all
unprocessed
minerals
or
mineral
bearing
substances;
(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;
and
(f)
“processing”
as
applied
to
mineral
ores
includes
all
forms
of
beneficiation,
smelting
and
refining,
and
also
transportation
and
distributing
but
does
not
include
any
of
these
operations
that
are
performed
with
respect
to
mineral
ore
before
it
is
removed
from
the
mine.
(3)
Nothing
in
this
section
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
mining
operations.
income
under
Section
83(5)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
So,
in
these
two
respects
at
least,
those
cases
are
different
from
this
case.
In
this
case,
as
before
stated,
for
the
taxation
year
1961,
the
relevant
year
as
to
this
second
issue,
the
appellant
was
exempt
from
taxation
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act
on
all
its
income
from
the
Thompson
mine
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
The
amount
of
this
income
from
the
Thompson
mine
for
the
purpose
of
determining
the
provincial
mining
tax
paid
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
under
The
Mining
Royalty
and
Tax
Act,
R.S.M.
1954,
ce.
169,
is
admitted
and
was
$2,178,929.99.
The
said
sum
of
$130,135.80
is
‘‘the
aggregate
of
(Mining)
taxes
paid
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
in
respect
to
the
(appellant’s)
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
(the
Province
of
Manitoba)
for
the
year’’
1961
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Regulation
701(1)
(a).
(Words
in
brackets
are
mine.)
The
problem
is
to
ascertain
which
sum
is
the
lesser
’
’
namely,
the
said
sum
of
$130,135.80
or
the
answer
from
the
fraction
that
must
be
found
in
determining
what
is
the
sum
in
dollars
of
‘‘that
proportion
of
such
taxes
that
.
.
.
(the
appellant’s)
income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year
is
of
.
.
.
(the
appellant’s)
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
were
so
paid”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Regulation
701(1)
(b).
(Words
in
brackets
are
mine.)
Both
parties
agree
and
I
find
that
the
denominator
of
this
fraction
is
the
sum
of
$2,178,929.99
being
the
amount
of
the
income
earned
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba
by
the
appellant
from
the
Thompson
mine
in
1961
(which,
as
stated,
was
used
as
a
basis
for
computing
the
mining
tax
payable
and
paid
by
the
appellant
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
under
and
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
The
Mining
Royalty
and
Tax
Act,
R.S.M.
1954,
e.
169,
in
that
year
in
the
said
sum
of
$130,135.80).
The
correct
numerator
of
this
fraction
must
next
be
found.
Regulation
701(2)
defines
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations”.
The
appellant
says
that
such
definition
means
something
different
than
a
definition
(of
which
there
is
none)
of
‘‘income
derived
from
mining
operations
in
a
province’’
which
are
the
words
used
in
Regulation
701(1)
(a)
and
also
referred
to
in
Regulation
701(1)
(b)
with
the
exception
that
the
words
‘‘the
province’’
are
used
instead
of
‘‘a
province”.
The
appellant
therefore
says
that
on
a
true
application
of
the
definition
contained
in
Regulation
701(2)
to
the
words
in
Regulation
701
(l)(b),
the
sum
that
should
be
used
as
the
numerator
of
the
fraction
that
must
be
found,
is
the
appellant’s
income
earned
in
1961
outside
the
Province
of
Manitoba
which
is
subject
to
income
tax
levied
by
the
Government
of
Canada.
The
respondent
submits
that
the
numerator
of
this
fraction
is
zero,
in
that
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
income
“derived
from
mining
operations
in
the
province
for
the
year”
within
the
meaning
of
Regulation
701(1)
(b)
in
accordance
with
the
said
definition
contained
in
Regulation
701(2)
(a)
requires
a
computation
in
accordance
with
the
federal
laws
of
income
tax
and
the
results
flowing
therefrom.
I
am
of
the
view
that
in
computing
the
deduction,
if
any,
from
taxable
income
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act
Section
11(1)
(p)
and
Regulation
701,
requires,
in
order
that
this
statutory
provision
and
regulation
may
be
made
to
work
in
relation
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
that
the
computation
be
limited
to
the
income
earned
in
the
particular
Province
in
respect
to
which
a
deduction
from
income
for
mining
tax
paid
is
being
considered,
for
the
purpose
of
finding
the
components
of
the
fraction
in
applying
Regulation
701.
In
other
words,
it
is
not
correct,
in
finding
the
components
of
this
fraction,
to
take
the
income
computed
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act
of
the
appellant
from
all
sources
outside
the
Province
of
Manitoba
to
create
a
bigger
numerator
than
a
denominator
of
the
fraction
required
to
be
found
in
applying
Regulation
701(1).
To
do
otherwise
by
ignoring
the
words
‘‘in
a
province’’
in
the
application
of
the
definition
contained
in
Regulation
701(2)
(a)
of
‘income
derived
from
mining
operations’’
to
the
facts
of
a
particular
case
such
as
this,
would
be
to
reach
a
conclusion
contrary
to
the
obvious
intent
of
both
Regulation
701(1)
(a)
and
Regulation
701(1)(b).
In
my
view,
the
intent
in
reference
to
the
facts
of
this
case,
was
to
permit
a
certain
deduction
in
respect
to
the
mining
tax
(in
some
cases
this
may
be
a
deduction
of
the
total
tax
paid)
paid
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
from
the
income
earned
and
subject
to
tax
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act,
and
derived
from
the
appellant’s
mining
operation
in
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
Such
income
in
1961
earned
and
subject
to
tax
under
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act
in
this
case
was
zero
because
of
the
exemption
from
such
tax
allowed
the
appellant
under
Section
83(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
(See
also
Section
139(la)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.)
The
numerator
component,
therefore,
of
the
fraction
which
must
be
found
in
this
case
in
applying
Régula
toin
701(b)
in
my
view
is
zero.
As
a
result,
the
appellant
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
any
of
$130,135.80
paid
to
the
Province
of
Manitoba
as
mining
tax
in
1961
from
its
other
income
subject
to
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act,
earned
from
sources
outside
the
Province
of
Manitoba
in
that
year.
On
these
two
issues,
therefore,
the
appeal
is
dismissed.
As
there
was
a
third
issue
in
respect
to
which
the
respondent
admitted
the
appellant
was
correct,
and
to
that
extent
the
appellant
succeeds
on
this
appeal,
the
respondent
is
entitled
to
and
may
recover
against
the
appellant
only
two-thirds
of
the
taxable
costs
herein.
On
the
third
issue,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
assessments
are
referred
back
for
the
purpose
of
calculating
the
depletion
allowance
on
the
basis
that
in
computing
the
aggregate
of
the
appellant’s
profits
for
the
purposes
of
Section
1201
of
the
Regulations
the
amounts
referred
to
in
paragraph
11A
of
the
respondent’s
Reply
to
Amended
Notice
of
Appeal
should
not
be
deducted.