RITCHIE,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
reassessment
of
income
tax,
under
date
of
September
21,
1951,
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
in
respect
to
the
1951
taxation
year
of
the
appellant,
which
ended
on
February
28,
1951.
The
relevant
part
of
Section
74,
as
applicable
to
the
1951
taxation
year
of
the
appellant,
reads
as
follows:
“7
4.
(1)
Where
a
corporation
establishes
that
a
mine
was
(b)
an
industrial
mine
certified
by
the
Minister
of
Mines
and
Technical
Surveys
to
have
been
operating
on
mineral
deposits
(other
than
bedded
deposits
such
as
building
stone),
that
came
into
production
of
ore
during
the
calendar
years
1946
to
1954,
inclusive,
income
derived
from
the
operation
of
the
mine
during
the
period
of
thirty-six
months
commencing
with
the
day
on
which
the
mine
came
into
production
(other
than
any
operation
thereof
in
the
year
1946)
shall,
subject
to
prescribed
conditions,
not
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
the
corporation.
(2)
In
this
section,
‘production’
means
production
in
reasonable
commercial
quantities.’’
The
reassessment
made
by
the
Minister
disallowed
the
claim
for
exemption
made
by
the
appellant
under
Section
74.
The
appellant
objected
to
the
reassessment,
but
it
was
confirmed
by
the
Minister
as
having
been
made
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
in
particular
on
the
ground
that
the
taxpayer
did
not
qualify
for
the
exemption.
It
is
common
ground
that
the
mine
with
which
we
are
concerned
was
an
industrial
mineral
mine
and
that
it
was
certified
by
the
Minister
of
Mines
and
Technical
Surveys
as
required
by
clause
(b)
of
Section
74(1).
Unfortunately,
the
actual
certification
had
been
mislaid
and
was
not
available
at
the
hearing
of
the
appeal.
The
mine
is
situate
in
the
township
of
Mattawan
in
the
Province
of
Ontario
and
is
generally
referred
to
as
the
‘‘
Purdy
mine
’
’,
by
reason
of
the
mica
deposits
on
the
property
having
been
discovered
in
the
winter
of
1941-42
by
a
young
prospector
named
Justin
Purdy.
Following
his
1941-42
discovery,
Purdy
with
two
partners
proceeded
to
take
mica
from
surface
outcrops
and
sold
to
dealers
in
Ottawa
and
Hull
the
initial
production
which
appears
to
have
been
in
commercial
quantities.
In
October,
1942,
the
Purdy
claims
were
acquired
by
Inspiration
Mining
and
Development
Company
Limited,
which
incorporated
a
subsidiary
company,
Purdy
Mica
Mines,
Limited,
for
the
purpose
of
developing
the
property.
For
convenience,
this
company
will
be
referred
to
as
44
the
Purdy
company’’.
Production
by
the
Purdy
company,
which
soon
attained
important
volume,
continued
until
April,
1945,
when
mining
was
discontinued
because
consulting
geologists
advised
against
expending
further
moneys
in
a
search
for
commercial
quantities
of
raw
mica
on
the
property
and
the
Purdy
company
was
convinced
its
chief
productivity
dikes
had
been
bottomed
and
were
nearing
exhaustion.
After
April,
1945,
the
only
interest
of
the
Purdy
company
in
the
property
was
from
the
standpoint
of
salvage.
In
1949
James
J.
Kenmey,
a
geologist,
learned
of
the
Purdy
property
from
Paul
McDermott,
a
prospector
who
had
worked
on
the
property
from
1942
until
the
discontinuance
of
mining
operations
in
1945.
Following
procurement
of
an
article
(Exhibit
A)
describing
the
mica
deposits
on
the
Purdy
property
and
written
for
the
American
Institute
of
Mining
and
Metallurgical
Engineers
by
Hugh
S.
Spence,
Kenmey
visited
the
property
in
company
with
McDermott
and
found
the
old
pits
filled
with
water,
all
machinery
removed,
no
structures
of
any
standing
and
the
road
grown
over.
The
property
has
not
been
worked
since
April,
1945.
No
commercial
mica
was
in
sight.
McDermott,
at
the
request
of
Kenmey,
secured
from
the
Purdy
company,
under
date
of
June
14,
1949,
a
letter
lease
(Exhibit
7),
covering
mining
claims
numbered
S-36095,
S-36137
and
S-37975
for
a
term
of
three
years
from
the
date
of
the
letter
and
stipulating
royalty
payments
based
on
the
value
of
production.
The
letter
lease
also
gave
McDermott
an
option
to
purchase
the
mining
claims
for
the
sum
of
$10,000
in
cash
plus
a
ten
per
cent
interest
in
the
new
company
which
McDermott
would
cause
to
be
incorporated
to
own
and
operate
the
claims.
The
royalty
payments
were
to
apply
on
the
purchase
price.
Kenmey
and
McDermott
made
four
or
five
visits
to
the
Purdy
property
during
the
summer
of
1949,
going
over
it
in
the
light
of
the
Spence
article,
and
systematically
inspecting
each
of
the
old
pit
workings.
Mr.
Kenmey’s
objective
was
to
correlate
the
Spence
description
of
the
mica
showings
with
other
geological
reports
written
by
a
Dr.
Harding
(Exhibit
B)
and
a
Dr.
Lang.
The
lease
so
obtained
by
McDermott
was
assigned
to
Kenmey,
who
formed
a
partnership
consisting
of
three
other
parties
and
himself.
From
June,
1949,
until
about
February,
1950,
the
partnership
conducted
exploration
work
by
means
of
trenching
and
obtained
some
production
but
in
less
than
commercial
quantities.
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
early
in
1950
and
subsequently
acquired
ownership
of
the
mine.
Kenmey
became
the
president
of
the
appellant
company.
Following
incorporation
of
the
appellant
company
development
and
exploration
work
on
the
property
was
pressed
more
vigorously.
The
Purdy
company
had
obtained
its
most
important
production
from
a
vein
of
mica
about
ten
feet
in
width
and
about
four
hundred
feet
in
length
which
had
been
worked
to
a
depth
of
around
sixty
feet
from
a
dike
or
pit
designated
as
No.
3
dike.
Examination
of
No.
3
dike
by
Kenmey
and
his
associates
had
not
disclosed
suitable
mica
in
sufficient
quantities
to
constitute
an
economic
operation
but
had
revealed
stringers
of
the
same
pegmatite
bearing
mica
that
the
Purdy
company
had
mined.
The
pegmatite
stringers
leading
off
in
the
wall
rock
of
No.
3
dike
suggested
to
Mr.
Kenmey
that
another
lens
or
concentration
of
mica
might
be
located
to
replace
the
lens
which
had
been
mined
out
by
the
Purdy
company.
Under
Kenmey’s
direction
waste
rock
was
removed
to
a
width
of
from
three
to
five
feet
west
of
the
old
No.
3
dike
and
such
removal
led
to
the
discovery
of
a
new
lens
or
concentration
of
mica
having
a
width
of
about
eight
feet
and
a
length
of
about
seventy-five
feet.
A
new
dike,
named
No.
3
dike
extension,
was
opened
up
by
the
appellant
company
for
the
purpose
of
mining
the
new
discovery.
The
pit
in
No.
3
dike
which
had
been
opened
up
by
the
Purdy
company
was
used
by
the
appellant
company
as
a
base
for
operations
in
No.
3
dike
extension
which
was
mined
to
a
depth
of
about
one
hundred
and
seventy
feet,
a
level
lower
than
the
No.
3
dike
Purdy
company
workings
had
been
carried
to.
Production
of
mica
in
commercial
quantities
from
No.
3
dike
extension
by
the
appellant
company
commenced
on
March
1,
1950,
continued
during
the
remaining
months
of
1950
and
ran
into
1951.
Mr.
Kenmey
testified
that
the
new
find
was
a
different
deposit
of
mica
than
that
worked
by
the
Purdy
company
and
said
the
designation
“No.
3
dike
extension’’
was
used
merely
as
a
matter
of
convenience.
Substantially
all
the
commercial
mica
mined
by
both
the
Purdy
company
and
the
appellant
company
came
from
a
zone
of
mica-bearing
pegmatite
about
1600
feet
in
length
and
400
feet
in
width.
From
90
to
95
per
cent,
or
almost
all
of
the
mica
production
by
the
Purdy
company
came
from
No.
3
dike.
A
like
percentage
of
the
appellant
company
production
came
from
No.
3
dike
extension.
Professor
George
B.
Langford,
the
head
of
the
Department
of
Geological
Sciences
and
professor
of
mining
geology
at
the
University
of
Toronto,
who
was
called
as
an
expert
witness
by
the
respondent,
said
that,
in
his
opinion,
the
mica
lens
in
No.
3
dike
mined
by
the
Purdy
company
and
the
mica
lens
in
No.
3
dike
extension
discovered
and
mined
by
the
appellant
company
were
mineralogically
and
geologically
the
same
and
formed
part
of
the
same
mica
deposit.
In
support
of
its
appeal,
the
appellant
company
advanced
the
following
seven
grounds:
1.
That
Section
74(1)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies
to
the
operation
rather
tran
the
existence
of
a
mine;
2.
That
the
word
‘‘mine’’,
as
used
in
the
context
of
Section
74,
means
‘‘the
excavation
from
which
minerals
are
extracted”
and
does
not
mean
‘‘veins’’
or
‘‘deposits’’
of
minerals
in
the
earth;
3.
That
the
mining
operations
conducted
by
the
Purdy
company
during
the
years
1942
to
1945
ended
in
1945
and
at
no
time
have
been
renewed;
4.
That
the
mine
was
not
in
production
or
in
operation
from
April,
1945,
until
the
mining
claims
were
acquired
by
Kenmey
and
his
associates
and
operated
on
a
commercial
basis
in
1950;
5.
That
mining
operations
by
the
appellant,
as
contemplated
by
Section
74,
brought
the
mine
into
production
in
1950
so
that
the
requirement
of
the
statute
is
satisfied
;
6.
That
for
the
purpose
of
this
appeal
no
prior
mining
operation
on
the
property
has
any
significance
or
relevance
in
the
interpretation
or
application
of
Section
74;
7.
That
Section
74
does
not
state
mining
operations
qualifying
for
the
exemption
conferred
by
it
must
be
a
continuation
of
an
old
operation
or
must
be
a
new
operation.
The
only
requirement
is
that
there
be
a
mine
coming
into
production.
In
respect
to
the
first
and
second
grounds
above
referred
to
it
was
contended
that
the
word
44
mine”,
as
used
in
the
context
of
Section
74,
refers
to
a
place—an
excavation—from
which
minerals
can
be
extracted
and
that
the
only
concern
of
the
action
is
with
the
operation
of
that
place
or
operation.
In
other
words,
it
is
the
activity
constituting
the
operation
of
the
mine,
not
the
mine
itself,
that
yields
the
income
and
it
is
with
such
activity
that
Section
74
is
concerned.
From
that
basis,
it
was
argued
the
words
44
came
into
production’’
refer
to
the
activities
carried
on
in
a
mine
leading
to
the
production
of
minerals,
so
that
the
question
at
issue
in
this
appeal
really
is
whether
the
activities
having
to
do
with
operation
of
the
mine
by
the
appellant
company
resulted
in
mineral
production
in
commercial
quantities
commencing
on
March
1,
1950.
I
am
not
prepared
to
accede
to
that
submission.
The
question
to
be
determined
is
when
the
‘‘mine’’
came
into
production.
The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
describes
‘‘mine’’
as
meaning
‘‘an
excavation
made
in
the
earth
for
the
purpose
of
digging
out
metallic
ores
or
coal,
salt,
precious
stones,
etc.
Also
a
place
yielding
these.’’
Murray’s
Dictionary
describes
‘‘mine’’
as
‘‘an
excavation
made
in
the
earth
for
the
purpose
of
digging
out
metals
or
metallic
ores
or
certain
other
minerals,
as
coal,
salt,
precious
stones.
Also
the
place
from
which
such
minerals
may
be
obtained
by
excavation.
’
’
Halsbury
(Hailsham
Edition),
Volume
22,
at
page
526
states
the
word
‘‘mine’’
may
sometimes
include
not
only
mineral
de-
posits
but
also
so
much
of
the
adjoining
strata,
whether
superjacent
or
subjacent,
as
may
be
necessary
to
remove
for
the
purpose
of
working
the
mineral.
The
Halsbury
conception
of
a
‘‘mine’’
appears
to
best
describe
the
area
covered
by
the
three
mining
claims
acquired
by
the
appellant
company.
In
Spencer
v.
Scurr
(1862),
31
Beaven
334,
Lord
Romley,
Master
of
the
Rolls,
held
that
a
seam
of
coal
discovered
to
be
lying
at
a
depth
of
118
fathoms
below
two
known
seams
of
coal,
and
which
could
only
be
worked
by
means
of
a
new
shaft
made
specially
for
the
purpose
and
at
very
great
expense,
was
part
of
the
original
mine.
In
Elias
v.
Snowdon
(1879),
4
App.
Cas.
454,
Lord
Selborne
said
at
page
466
:
“I
do
not
consider
that
the
sinking
a
new
pit
on
the
same
vein,
or
breaking
ground
in
a
new
place
on
the
same
rock,
is
necessarily
the
opening
of
a
new
mine
or
a
new
quarry.’’
The
wording
of
Section
74(1)
(b)
is
clear.
Its
application
is
solely
to
an
industrial
mine
which
a
corporation
has
established
to
be
an
industrial
mineral
mine
certified
to
have
been
operating
on
mineral
deposits
and
which
came
into
production
of
ore
during
the
calendar
years
1946
to
1954
inclusive.
The
words
‘‘came
into
production”?
refer
to
the
mine
or
mineral
deposits
coming
into
production,
not
to
the
‘‘operation’’
as
distinct
from
the
mine
coming
into
production.
When
Kenmey
and
his
associates
took
over
the
Purdy
property
in
1949
and
the
appellant
acquired
it
in
1950
they
proceeded
to
explore
and
develop
it
from
the
point
at
which
the
Purdy
company
had
ceased
operations.
Exploration
and
development
procedure
and
geological
thinking
were
different
but
I
must
find
that
the
mine
operated
by
the
appellant
is
the
same
mine
which
previously
had
been
operated
and
from
which
mica
had
been
produced
by
the
Purdy
company
during
the
years
1942-1945.
The
appellant,
however,
contends
that
any
prior
operation
of
the
mine
by
the
Purdy
company
or
by
Justin
Purdy
has
no
bearing
on
its
claim
for
exemption
and
that
Section
74
grants
exemption
notwithstanding
the
production
obtained
by
the
prior
operators.
In
support
of
that
contention
stress
was
laid
on
the
wordings
of
similar
exemptions
granted
to
mining
companies
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
to
Section
128(1),
one
of
the
transitional
sections,
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
An
exemption
from
tax,
such
as
conferred
by
Section
74,
first
was
conferred
by
a
1936
amendment
to
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
By
the
addition
of
Section
89
to
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
the
1936
amendment
exempted
from
tax,
for
its
first
three
fiscal
periods,
the
income
of
a
company
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
metalliferous
mine
that
came
into
production
after
May
1,1936,
and
prior
to
January
1,
1940.
The
element
of
‘‘ministerial
discretion”
was
embodied
in
the
legislation
by
authorizing
the
Minister
to
41
determine
which
mines
whether
new
or
old
’
’
qualified
for
the
exemption.
Under
the
1936
legislation,
subject
to
the
Minister
so
determining,
it
would
seem
the
revival
of
production
in
an
old
mine
could
qualify
for
the
exemption.
In
1939
Section
89
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
amended
by
substituting
i
‘1943”
for
“1940”
so
as
to
extend
the
exemption
to
mines
which
came
into
production
after
May
1,
1936,
and
prior
to
January
1,
1948.
The
‘‘new
or
old”
wording
and
the
requirement
of
determination
by
the
Minister
remained.
In
1942
the
exemption
provision
in
respect
to
mines
coming
into
production
after
January
1,
1943,
was
transferred
to
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act.
Paragraph
(g)
was
added
to
Section
7
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act
so
as
to
exempt
from
taxation
under
that
Act
the
profits
of
a
company
derived
from
the
operation
of
any
base
metal
or
strategic
mineral
mine
which
came
into
production
in
the
three
calendar
years
commencing
January
1,
1943.
Again
the
Minister
was
authorized
to
‘‘determine
which
mines
whether
new
or
old’’
qualified
for
the
exemption.
In
1945,
the
exemption
under
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act
was
continued
by
adding
paragraph
(h),
Section
7(h)
so
as
to
extend
the
exemption
to
profits
of
a
company
derived
from
the
operation
of
any
metalliferous
or
industrial
mineral
mine
coming
into
production
on
or
after
January
1,
1946.
No
end
date
was
set
for
the
commencement
of
production
but
the
Minister
again
was
authorized
to
determine
which
mines,
whether
new
or
old,
qualified
for
the
exemption.
In
1946
Section
3(8)
of
chapter
55
of
the
statutes
of
that
year
added
paragraph
(x)
to
Section
4
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
so
revived
the
policy,
under
that
Act,
of
granting
to
mining
companies
exemption
from
taxation
of
income
derived
during
the
first
three
years
of
production
from
a
mine,
whether
new
or
old.
The
exemption
was
subject
to
regulations
and
to
determination
by
the
Minister.
The
commencement
of
production
period
covered
by
this
amendment
was
from
January
1,
1944,
to
December
31,
1949,
but
in
the
case
of
a
base
metal
or
strategic
mineral
mine
was
subject
to
determination
by
the
Minister
that
it
came
into
production
before
January
1,
1946,
and
in
the
case
of
a
metalliferous
or
industrial
mineral
mine
was
subject
to
a
ministerial
determination
that
it
came
into
production
on
or
after
January
1,
1946.
When
the
Income
Tax
Act
first
was
enacted,
in
1948,
it
included
Section
74
in
substantially
the
same
language
as
that
with
which
we
now
have
to
deal
and,
notwithstanding
that
the
statute
applies
only
to
1949
and
subsequent
taxation
years,
dealt
with
commencement
of
production
periods
during
the
calendar
years
1946
to
1949
inclusive.
In
the
1948
enactment
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
the
adjectival
“new
or
old”
classification
of
mine
was,
for
the
first
time,
not
included
in
the
wording
granting
tax
exemption
to
those
mines
which
might
qualify
for
the
exemption.
No
subsequent
amendment
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
has
restored
the
‘‘new
or
old”
wording.
It
was
strongly
urged
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
Section
74(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Section
4(x)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
dovetail
and
that
the
interpretation
of
Section
74(1)
of
the
one
Act
must
be
the
same
as
Section
4(x)
of
the
other
Act.
In
other
words
that
when
Parliament
revised
the
language
granting
the
exemption
it
did
not
intend
to
alter
the
substance
of
the
exemption.
Section
74(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provides
tax
exemption
for
income
derived
from
mines
that
came
into
production
1
‘
during
the
calendar
years
1946
to
1954,
inclusive’’
but
excludes
from
the
36
months’
production
exemption
period
‘‘any
portion
thereof
in
the
year
1946”.
I
cannot
accept
the
submission
that
the
inclusion
in
Section
74(1)
of
production
periods
commencing
in
the
years
1946-1949
means
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
exemption
of
either
‘‘new
or
old’’
mines
as
contained
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
is
carried
forward
into
Section
74(1).
The
interpretation
of
Section
74(1)
must
be
confined
to
the
interpretation
of
the
actual
wording
contained
therein.
The
words
‘‘new
or
old’’
cannot
be
read
in.
Inclusion
of
the
1946-1949
years
in
the
commencement
of
production
periods
permissible
under
Section
74(1)
was,
as
I
see
it,
to
permit
the
continuation
of
tax
exemption
granted
to
metalliferous
or
industrial
mineral
mines
that
came
into
production
after
January
1,
1946,
and
prior
to
January
1,
1949,
and
which
had
been
granted
the
ministerial
certificates
required
under
Section
4(x)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Section
128(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
transitional
section
stressed
by
counsel
for
the
Minister,
reads:
1
‘128.
(1)
A
reference
to
this
Act
or
a
regulation
to
this
Act
or
any
provision
thereof
shall
be
construed,
as
regards
any
transaction,
matter
or
thing
in
a
year
to
which
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
applicable,
to
include
a
reference
to
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
relating
to
the
same
subject
matter.”
If
exemption
periods
of
three
years,
granted
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
to
mines
that
commenced
production
in
1946,
1947
and
1948
ran
into
1949
and
subsequent
taxation
years
the
companies
operating
such
mines
had
the
right
to
invoke
the
protection
of
Section
128(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
but
that
transitional
section,
in
my
opinion,
has
no
application
to
mines
qualifying
for
protection
under
Section
74
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Inclusion
of
the
1946-1948,
inclusive,
period
in
Section
74(1)
is
nothing
more
than
a
provision
relating
to
years
in
which
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
applicable
and
so
must
be
construed
as
including
a
reference
to
Section
4(x)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Section
128(1)
does
not
go
further.
The
section
has
no
application
to
mines
that
came
into
production
in
1949
and
subsequent
taxation
years.
I
am
unable
to
persuade
myself
that
the
words
‘‘new
and
old”
as
included
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
are
mere
surplusage.
The
omission
of
the
descriptive
words
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
to
me,
has
significance.
Under
Section
4(x)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
the
question
of
whether
a
mine,
new
or
old,
came
into
production
so
as
to
qualify
for
tax
exemption
was
a
matter
for
the
Minister,
in
his
discretion,
to
determine.
Under
Section
74
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
no
ministerial
discretion
is
provided
for.
The
question
of
whether
a
‘‘mine’’
came
into
production
on
a
date
that
entitles
income
derived
by
a
company
from
such
production
to
tax
exemption
must
depend
on
the
facts
of
the
particular
case
and
the
application
of
Section
74
to
those
facts.
Wording
contained
in
Section
4(x)
or
in
any
other
section
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
has
no
bearing
on
the
interpretation
of
Section
74,
other
than
to
the
extent
required
by
Section
128(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
respect
to
a
reference
to
a
transaction,
matter
or
thing
in
a
year
to
which
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
applicable.
A
mine
can
be
new
or
it
can
be
old.
A
reference
to
the
date,
on
which
a
mine,
‘‘whether
new
or
old”,
came
into
production
is
wide
enough
to
include
the
date
on
which
there
is
a
revival
of
production
from
an
old
mine
that
has
been
dormant.
A
reference
to
the
date
on
which
a
mine
(without
the
descriptive
adjectives
‘‘new
or
old”)
came
into
production
has,
in
my
opinion,
a
much
narrower
application
and
does
not
include
the
date
on
which
there
is
a
revival
of
production
from
an
old
mine
that
has
been
dormant.
As
I
see
it
the
omission
from
Section
74
of
the
descriptive
words
‘‘new
or
old”
restricts
the
application
of
the
section
to
a
period
of
36
months
commencing
with
the
day
on
which
a
mine,
regardless
of
whether
it
is
new
or
old,
first
came
into
production.
While
the
original
purpose
of
the
exemption
from
income
tax
granted
to
mining
companies
clearly
was
to
encourage
mineral
production
from
new
mines
and
the
revival
of
mineral
production
from
old
mines,
I
must,
with
regret,
for
the
reasons
stated,
hold
that
the
reference
to
‘‘the
day
on
which
the
mine
came
into
production’’
as
contained
in
Section
74
relates
to
the
day
on
which
the
mine
first
came
into
production
and
that
the
mica
mine
operated
by
the
appellant
company
in
1950
first
came
into
production
of
ore
in
reasonable
commercial
quantities
in
the
year
1942,
shortly
after
its
discovery
by
Justin
Purdy.
The
appeal,
therefore,
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.