J
ACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
appellant’s
assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
taxation
years
1961,
1962
and
1963.
The
sole
ground
of
appeal
is
that
the
assessments
are
excessive
by
reason
of
the
inclusion
in
the
computation
of
the
appellant’s
incomes
for
the
years
in
question
of
certain
amounts
that,
according
to
the
appellant,
should
not
have
been
so
included.
The
amounts
that
the
appellant
says
were
wrongly
included
in
computing
its
incomes
are
$16,000
for
1961,
$32,000
for
1962,
and
$183,984
for
1963.
The
facts
upon
which
the
assessments
were
based
are
not
really
in
issue
and
can
be
summarized
briefly.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
on
June
13,
1952,
and
the
primary
object
set
out
in
its
charter
reads
as
follows:
(a)
to
purchase
or
otherwise
acquire,
sell,
lease,
dispose
of
and
otherwise
deal
with
oil,
coal
and
natural
gas
claims,
lands
and
mineral
rights
and
properties
supposed
to
contain
oil,
coal
and
natural
gas
and
undertakings
connected
therewith;
On
September
16,
1952,
the
appellant
acquired,
by
purchase
from
a
company
known
as
Saskatchewan
Land
and
Homestead
Company
Limited
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘Saskatchewan”),
for
a
consideration
of
$17,500,
the
fee
simple
title
to
the
mineral
rights
in
a
substantial
acreage
of
land
in
Western
Canada.
During
the
period
from
1954
to
1963,
the
appellant
entered
into
a
number
of
agreements
(commonly
referred
to
as
oil
leases
or
options
to
lease)
with
oil
companies
who
wished
to
explore
for
oil
in
the
areas
in
question.
Under
each
of
such
agreements,
the
appellant
conferred
on
the
oil
company
the
right,
during
a
special
period,
to
search
for
oil,
and
the
right
to
remove
any
oil
found,
on
terms
that
certain
lump
sums
(called
bonus
payments”)
would
be
paid
by
the
oil
company
to
the
appellant
upon
the
execution
of
the
agreements
(and
that
certain
annual
payments,
called
“delay
rentals’’,
would
be
made
during
any
part
of
the
specified
period
before
the
oil
company
commenced
to
drill
for
oil)
and
that
the
oil
company
would
be
entitled
to
retain
out
of
any
oil
so
removed
871/2
per
cent
for
itself,
and
would
hold
121%
per
cent
for
the
appellant.
It
is
common
ground
that,
at
the
time
that
the
appellant
acquired
the
mineral
rights
from
Saskatchewan,
it
was
the
intention
that
it
would
enter
into
transactions
of
that
character,
if
and
when
it
became
possible
for
it
to
do
so.
The
amounts
in
dispute
are
lump
sum
amounts
received
in
the
years
in
question
under
such
contracts.
If
there
were
no
facts
other
than
the
ones
that
I
have
just
summarized,
there
would
not
appear
to
be
any
real
doubt
that
the
amounts
in
question
were
properly
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
incomes
for
1961,
1962
and
1963,
respectively,
as
being
revenues
from
a
“business”
within
the
extended
meaning
of
that
word
as
defined
by
Section
139(1)
(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Compare
Minerals
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1958]
S.C.R.
490;
[1958]
C.T.C.
236;
Western
Minerals
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
S.C.R.
24;
[1959]
C.T.C.
545;
and
Western
Leaseholds
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1960]
S.C.R.
10;
[1959]
C.T.C.
531.
Having
regard
to
the
conclusion
that
I
have
reached,
I
will
not
deal
with
the
alternative
arguments
that,
even
if
there
was
no
‘‘business’’,
these
payments
would
have
an
income
character
as
being
profits
from
property,*
or
by
virtue
of
Section
6(1)
(j)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
facts
upon
which
the
appellant
relies
for
its
contention
that
the
amounts
in
question
were
not,
properly
considered,
revenues
from
a
business
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
used
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
were
developed
in
some
detail
commencing
with
the
time
when
Saskatchewan
was
incorporated
in
1882.
Those
facts,
insofar
as
I
appreciate
their
significance
for
the
purpose
of
the
appellant’s
contention,
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
(a)
Saskatchewan,
during
its
early
years,
acquired
land
in
Western
Canada
for
resale
under
agreements
of
sale
to
settlers.
(In
fact,
apparently,
much
of
the
land
was
resold,
either
by
Saskatchewan
or
the
mortgage
company,
under
agreements
that
reserved
the
mineral
rights
to
Saskatchewan.
)
(b)
In
the
early
part
of
this
century,
there
were
internal
troubles
in
the
administration
of
Saskatchewan
that
resulted
in
protracted
litigation,
and
such
litigation
effectively
brought
an
end
to
Saskatchewan’s
land
disposition
business.
((3)
By
the
time
the
litigation
came
to
an
end,
the
‘moving
force”
in
the
company
was
a
lawyer
by
the
name
of
A.
B.
Cunningham
who
had
been
acting
for
the
company
in
this
litigation
and
who
had
put
a
great
deal
of
effort
and
money
into
carrying
on
the
litigation.
He
had
also
become
a
substantial
shareholder
in
Saskatchewan.
(d)
The
litigation
also
left
Saskatchewan
with
debts
substantially
in
excess
of
what
could
be
readily
realized
from
its
assets.
(e)
During
the
1920’s
and
1930’s,
as
a
result
of
a
depression
in
the
western
provinces,
Saskatchewan
went
into
default
under
a
mortgage
on
its
lands
and
in
respect
of
its
liability
to
a
bank.
(f)
The
mortgage
company
thereupon
took
over
the
management
of
the
winding-up
of
Saskatchewan’s
affairs;
and
the
shares
of
Cunningham
and
others
in
Saskatchewan
were
assigned
to
the
mortgage
company
and
the
bank.
(g)
A.
B.
Cunningham
died
in
1932
leaving
a
widow
and
eight
children.
His
estate
was
left
to
his
widow,
who
was
executrix
of
his
will,
but
the
estate
did
not
appear
to
be
sufficient.
to
warrant
the
expense
of
probate.
(h)
In
1944,
the
mortgage
company,
having
realized
almost
enough
to
pay
off
its
claim,
the
bank
and
Saskatchewan
agreed
that
the
bank
would
take
over
Saskatchewan’s
remaining
sale
agreements
and
remaining
lands
in
full
satisfaction
of
its
claim.
The
shares
in
Saskatchewan
were
then
returned
to
the
estate
of
A.
B.
Cunningham.
As
a
result,
Saskatchewan
was
left
with
nothing
except
the
mineral
rights
that
had
been
reserved
to
it,
which
were
understood
at
the
time
to
be
of
no
value.
(i)
Saskatchewan
remained,
after
the
1944
arrangement,
for
all
practical
purposes,
dormant,
until
1948,
when
it
became
aware,
as
a
result
of
an
offer
made
to
it
by
an
oil
company,
that
its
mineral
rights
had
some
value.
Its
corporate
affairs
were
then
put
in
order
and
Mrs.
Cunningham
and
two
of
her
sons
were
elected
as
its
officers,
and
took
over
its
active
administration.
(j)
In
June
1948,
Saskatchewan
granted
an
option
to
lease
all
of
its
mineral
rights
of
which
its
management
was
then
aware
to
an
oil
oempany,
and
received,
under
the
option
contract,
in
1948
and
1949,
payments
totalling
$43,085.95.
Eventually,
the
oil
company
took
a
lease
under
that
option.
(k)
While
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
originally
took
the
position
that
the
1948-49
payments
were
income,
eventually
it
conceded
that
they
were
not
taxable
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
(l)
In
or
about
1951,
Saskatchewan
discovered
that
it
owned
mineral
rights
of
which
it
had
not
previously
been
aware,
and
that
it
therefore
still
had
assets
of
value
to
be
disposed
of
although
there
was
not
then
much
activity
in
the
area
where
those
mineral
rights
were.
(m)
At
that
time
(ie.
after
the
discovery
of
the
existence
of
additional
mineral
rights),
as
the
Cunningham
family
saw
it,
there
was
a
potential
succession
duty
problem
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
Mrs.
Cunningham
was
almost
eighty
years
of
age
and
owned
about
85
per
cent
of
Saskatchewan’s
shares,
and
the
fact
that
it
was
impossible
to
make
an
accurate
determination
of
the
value
of
the
mineral
rights.
Her
family,
moreover,
were
anxious
that
she
should
receive
some
of
the
proceeds
from
realization
during
her
lifetime.
The
situation
from
their
point
of
view
was
“further
complicated
by
the
fact
that
the
remaining
15
per
cent
of
Saskatchewan’s
outstanding
shares
were
registered
in
the
names
of
shareholders
most
of
whom
were
deceased
or
untrace-
able’’.
For
those
reasons,
it
was
decided
by
Mrs.
Cunningham
and
her
children
to
incorporate
a
new
company,
all
the
shares
of
which
would
be
owned
by
the
Cunningham
family,
to
acquire
Saskatchewan’s
mineral
rights,
which
were
Saskatchewan’s
only
assets
other
than
cash
and
bonds
at
the
time,
‘‘for
a
cash
consideration
based
upon
appraisal’’.
They
also
decided
that
Saskatchewan
should
then
be
wound
up
and
that
the
interests
of
the
unknown
or
untraceable
shareholders
should
be
paid
to
the
Public
Trustee.
Before
proceeding
with
this
plan,
a
ruling
was
obtained
from
the
Department:
of
National
Revenue
that
the
shareholders
in
Saskatchewan
would
not
be
taxable
on
the
distribution
on
its
winding
up.
(n)
The
appellant
was
incorporated
by
the
Cunningham
family
on
June
13,
1952,
pursuant
to
this
plan
and,
as
already
indicated,
purchased
Saskatchewan’
s
mineral
rights
(including
the
mineral
rights
which
had
already
been
leased
to
an
oil
company
by
Saskatchewan)
for
$17,500.
Saskatchewan
thereupon
distributed
its.
assets
to
its
shareholders
and
surrendered
its
charter.
Mrs.
Cunningham
subscribed
for
preferred
shares
in
the
appellant
in
the
amount
of
$17,500,
which
amount
was
used
by
the
appellant
to
pay
for
the
mineral
rights
purchased
from
Saskatchewan.
Ordinary
shares
were
‘issued
at
$1
per
share
as
follows:
(a)
Mrs.
Cunningham
|
,
|
|
16
shares
|
(b)
Each
of
the
eight
children,
8
shares
or
|
_J_
|
64
shares
|
TOTAL
|
I
|
|
80
shares
|
Certain
other
facts
were
also
established.
In
1954,
the
appellant
agreed
to
lease
to
the
oil
company
with
whom
it
did
business
in
1948
and
1949
the
mineral
rights
that
came
to
its
attention
in
1951
and
received
as
a
result
amounts
of
$36,274.60
and
$15,-
361.09,
which
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
decided
not
to
include
in
its
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
Inocme
Tax
Act.
Eventually,
that
oil
company
abandoned
all
its
rights
in
respect
of
its
leases
from
the
appellant
except
in
respect
of
lands
where
oil
had
been
discovered
‘‘and
the
full
mineral
rights
in
respect
thereof
automatically
reverted
again
to
the
appellant’’.
The
discovery
of
a
new
field
in
1956
resulted
in
the
appellant
being
able
to
grant
further
options
and
leases
in
respect
of
the
“reverted
mineral
rights’’
which
resulted
in
the
lump
sum
payments
now
in
question.
All
told,
in
addition
to
the
lump
sum
payments
to
which
I
have
referred,
the
appellant
has
received
royalty
payments
(ie.
under
its
right
to
1214
per
cent
of
production)
amounting
to
about
$1,500,000,
and
it
has
received
a
depletion
allowance
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
25
per
cent
in
respect
of
such
payments.
Throughout
the
evidence
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
it
has
been
contended
that
the
intention
of
those
who
have
constituted
the
management
of
Saskatchewan
and
the
appellant
since
the
discovery
of
value
in
the
mineral
rights
in
1948
has
been
to
dispose
of
or
liquidate
the
assets
of
the
respective
com-
panies.
In
this
connection,
it
has
been
testified
that
the
only
practical
way
of
disposing
of
oil
rights
in
Western
Canada
during
the
period
in
question
was
to
grant
leases
or
options
of
the
kind
that
I
have
already
described.
I
accept
it
that
the
only
sensible
way
whereby
the
legal
owner
of
mineral
rights
having
a
value
by
reason
of
the
possible
presence
of
oil
have
turned
them
to
advantage,
if
he
were
not
in
a
position
to
explore
and
develop
himself,
was
to
enter
into
such
arrangements.
This
would
appear
to
have
been
the
only
businesslike
course
of
action
for
any
person
owning
such
rights
and
desiring
to
turn
them
to
advantage.
I
have
difficulty,
however,
in
regarding
such
contracts
as
being
dispositions
of
the
mineral
rights
themselves
although
I
recognize
that,
in
the
case
of
a
wasting
asset
such
as
oil,
once
the
lessee
has
exercised
his
rights
by
removing
all
the
oil,
the
mineral
rights
will
have
little
more
than
a
theoretical
value
unless
and
until
some
other
mineral
is
discovered.
The
contention
that
the
intention
of
the
appellant
was
exclusively
that
of
disposing
or
liquidating
the
mineral
rights
was
put
forward
on
the
apparent
assumption
that
there
is
a
doctrine
or
principle
established
by
the
so-called
“disposition”
or
‘liquidation”
cases
that,
where
a
company’s
sole
purpose
in
acquiring
property
is
to
dispose
of
it
or
to
liquidate
it,
it
is
not
taxable
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
on
any
profit
that
it
may
make
in
the
course
of
such
disposition
or
liquidation.
The
cases
relied
upon
by
the
appellant
in
this
connection
are
Hudson’s
Bay
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Stevens,
5
T.C.
424;
C.
H.
Rand
v.
The
Alberni
Land
Company,
Limited,
(1920),
7
T.C.
629;
Commissioner
of
Taxes
v.
British
Australian
Wool
Realization
Association,
Limited,
[1931]
A.C.
224;
Glasgow
Heritable
Trust
Ltd.
v.
C.
I.
R.
(1954),
35
T.C.
196.
In
my
view,
none
of
these
cases
have
any
application
to
the
facts
of
this
case
which,
as
I
understand
them
from
this
point
of
view,
do
not
differ
in
principle
from
the
facts
under
consideration
in
Balstone
Farms
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
38
(Supreme
Court
of
Canada).
The
only
principle
involved
in
the
problem
that
I
have
to
decide,
as
I
understand
it,
is
that,
by
virtue
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
a
taxpayer
is
taxable
on
any
profit
for
a
year
from
a
business.
The
so-called
disposition
or
liquidation
cases
do
not
establish
any
different
principle.
They
are
merely
cases
where
it
was
found
as
a
fact
that
the
taxpayer
was
not
carrying
on
a
business.
The
problem
I
have
to
solve
is
therefore
merely
a
question
as
to
whether
the
amounts
in
question
are
revenues
from
a
business.
As
I
have
said,
what
was
decided
in
each
of
the
cases
on
which
the
appellant
relies
is
that
the
company
there
involved
did
not
receive
the
amounts
in
dispute
as
profits
from
a
business.
In
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
case,
a
great
exploration
company
was
held
not
to
be
carrying
on
a
business
when
it
was
disposing
of
the
lands
it
had
received
in
place
of
those
received
by
it
by
way
of
a
grant
from
the
Crown
as
an
incentive
to
its
exploration
of
unknown
lands.
In
the
Rand
case,
a
company
was
employed
as
“machinery”
by
private
landowners
to
properly
realize
the
capital
of
their
property
‘‘under
the
peculiar
circumstances
of
their
divided
title”.
In
the
British
Australian
Wool
case,
the
company
received
the
property
in
question
under
a
scheme
pursuant
to
which
it
was
to
dispose
of
the
property
and
distribute
the
proceeds
to
specified
parties.
In
the
Glasgow
Heritable
Trust
case,
real
property
acquired
by
a
partnership
for
resale
in
the
course
of
a
business
became
unmarketable
by
reason
of
new
legislation
so
that
the
business
came
to
an
end
and
there
was
no
alternative
but
to
hold
the
property
and
salvage
as
much
as
possible
by
disposing
of
it
as
and
when
that
became
possible.*
The
company
in
question
was
incorporated
in
that
case
as
machinery
for
this
long-run
salvage
operation.
As
pointed
out
by
Judson,
J.
in
Balstone
Farms
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.
(supra)
at
page
41
:
‘‘In
none
of
these
realization
cases
was
there
an
out
and
out
transfer
by
former
owners
for
a
cash
consideration.’’
On
the
one
hand,
in
the
Hudson’s
Bay
Company
ease,
there
was
a
mere
realization
by
the
owner
of
property
and
there
was
not
“a
sale
in
execution
of
a
profit-making
enterprise,
either
adventure’,
or
‘trade’,
or
business’”.!
On
the
other
hand,
in
the
other
cases,
the
property
was
put
into
the
hands
of
the
company
in
question
for
the
benefit
of
the
former
owners
or
persons
nominated
by
them.
The
appellant’s
acquisition
is
not
at
all
similar
to
any
of
such
eases.
The
appellant
bought
the
property
in
question
for
a
price
based
on
an
appraised
value
which,
for
present
purposes,
I
must
assume
was
a
fair
price
because
one
purpose
of
the
transaction
was
to
bring
to
an
end
the
very
real
interest
that
the
15
per
cent
minority
shareholders
in
Saskatchewan
had
in
the
possible
increase
in
the
value
of
what
Saskatchewan
sold
to
the
appellant.
It
is
quite
clear
that
the
appellant
was
not
to
dispose
of,
or
liquidate,
the
property
for
the
benefit
of
Saskatchewan,
which
was
to
be
wound
up,
or
for
the
benefit
of
Saskatchewan’s
share-
holders,
15
per
cent
of
whom
were
to
have
no
interest
in
the
proceeds
of
the
disposition
of
the
property
by
the
appellant,
but
were
to
accept
their
share
of
the
$17,500
in
lieu
of
what
their
interest
in
the
disposition
of
the
property
might
have
been
if
Saskatchewan
had
retained
it.
Indeed,
the
appellant
acquired
the
property
in
question,
as
every
trader
acquires
his
stock
in
trade,
in
the
hope
that
it
might
realize
from
it
more
than
it
paid
for
it,
but
knowing
that
the
proceeds
of
realization
might
possibly
be
less
than
that
amount.
Any
amount
it
might
realize
in
excess
of
what
it
paid
was
to
go,
in
the
ordinary
course
of
corporate
operations
—
by
way
of
dividends
or
on
winding
up
—
to
its
shareholders
—
that
is,
the
members
of
the
Cunningham
family
—~—
and
would
not
benefit
any
other
person,
and
in
particular
would
not
benefit
any
of
the
15
per
cent
minority
shareholders
in
Saskatchewan.
I
cannot
distinguish
the
acquisition
of
the
property
in
question
by
the
appellant
and
its
subsequent
turning
of
that
property
to
its
advantage
from
what
happened
in
Minerals
Lid.
v.
M.N.R.,
Western
Minerals
Lid.
v.
M.N.R.,
and
Western
Leaseholds
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
to
which
cases
I
have
already
referred.
I
refer
to
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Western
Leaseholds
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
per
Locke,
J.
at
pages
21-2
[542],
where
he
used
language
that
applies
equally
to
this
case
when
he
said:
In
Anderson
Logging
Company
v.
The
King,
Duff,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
said
that
if
the
transaction
in
question
belongs
to
a
class
of
profit-making
operations
contemplated
by
the
Memorandum
of
Association,
prima
facie
at
all
events
the
profit
derived
from
it
is
a
profit
derived
from
the
business
of
the
company.
That
presumption
may,
of
course,
be
negatived
by
the
evidence
as
was
done
in
the
case
of
Sutton
Lumber
&
Trading
Company
v.
M.N.R.
In
the
present
case,
however,
the
evidence,
far
from
negativing
the
presumption,
appears
to
me
to
support
it.
I
have
come
to
a
conclusion
against
the
appellant
on
the
main
branch
of
the
appeal.
In
the
alternative,
the
appellant
contended
that,
if
the
amounts
in
dispute
were
properly
included
in
the
computation
of
its
income
for
the
years
in
question,
it
was
entitled
to
a
deduction
in
the
same
years
of
some
part
of
the
price
of
$17,500
that
it
paid
for
the
mineral
rights.
No
suggestion
was
made
as
to
what
part
of
that
price
should
be
allowed
as
a
deduction
for
any
particular
year
or
as
to
what
principle
should
be
applied
in
determining
the
amount
of
each
deduction.
This
is
not
a
case
of
buying
stock-in-trade
and
selling
it.
The
principles
applicable
to
such
a
case
are
well
settled.
See
M.N.R.
v.
Irwin,
[1964]
S.C.R.
662;
[1964]
C.T.C.
362.
In
this
case,
the
appellant
at
no
time
sold
what
it
purchased.
If
it
had,
it
would
have
been
entitled
to
deduct
the
cost
to
it
of
what
it
sold
even
though
it
were
difficult
to
work
out
the
actual
allowance.
Compare
British
South
Africa
Co.
v.
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax,
[1946]
A.C.
62.
However,
this
is
not
such
a
case.
What
the
appellant
did
in
this
case
was
grant
certain
"‘leases’’
of
its
mineral
rights
that
did
not
differ
in
character
from
the
mineral
lease
under
consideration
in
Berk-
heiser
v.
Berkheiser,
[1957]
S.C.R.
887.
It
never
parted
with
title
to
its
mineral
rights.
Nothing
is
deductible
in
such
a
case.
Compare
Alianza
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Bell,
[1906]
A.C.
18.
Just
as
nothing
is
deductible
from
ordinary
rentals
of
real
property
in
respect
of
the
cost
of
the
simple
title
to
the
property
that
has
been
leased,
so
nothing
is
deductible
here
from
the
payments
(that
are
of
the
same
character
as
ordinary
rental
payments
according
to
the
Berkheiser
decision)
in
respect
of
the
cost
of
the
fee
simple
title
to
the
mineral
rights.
It
is
because
there
is
no
deduction
for
cost
in
such
a
ease
that
a
depletion
allowance
is
granted
in
respect
of
the
oil
actually
removed
from
the
land.
In
this
case,
the
appellant
has
been
allowed
such
a
depletion
allowance
equal
to
25
per
cent
of
over
a
million
and
one-half
dollars
in
royalties,
being
the
121
per
cent
of
production
received
by
it.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.