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.