CAMERON,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Income
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated
January
9,
1951,
whereby
the
appellants’
appeals
to
that
Board
from
assessments
to
income
taxes
for
the
years
1946,
1947
and
1948
were
disallowed.
In
its
returns
for
those
years
the
appellant
had
claimed
as
deductions
a
proportion
of
certain
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
exploring
for
minerals,
but
such
deductions
were
disallowed
by
the
respondent
on
the
ground
that
the
chief
business
of
the
appellants
was
not
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
within
the
meaning
of
certain
sections
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
Income
Tax
Act,
to
which
I
shall
now
refer.
For
the
taxation
year
1948
the
following
provisions
enacted
by
Section
16,
subsection
4
of
c.
63
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada,
1947,
were
in
effect
:
"‘A
corporation
whose
chief
business
is
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
is
entitled
to
deduct
from
income,
as
defined
in
the
said
Act,
of
the
year
of
expenditure,
an
amount
equal
to
all
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals
during
the
year
1948
if
the
corporation
files
certified
statements
of
such
expenditures
and
satisfies
the
Minister
that
it
has
been
actively
engaged
in
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals
by
means
of
qualified
persons
and
has
incurred
the
expenditure
for
such
purposes.
’’
For
the
year
1947,
Section
8,
subsection
9,
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
provided
as
follows:
"A
corporation
whose
chief
business
is
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
is
entitled
to
deduct
from
the
aggregate
of
the
taxes
under
this
Act
and
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
1940,
payable
by
it
in
respect
of
the
year
of
expenditure,
twenty
percentum
of
all
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
by
it
in
searching
for
minerals
during
the
year
1947
;
provided
that
no
such
deduction
shall
be
allowed
unless
the
corporation
files
certified
statements
of
expenditures
and
satisfies
the
Minister
that
it
has
been
actively
engaged
in
prospecting
and
exploring
in
Canada
for
minerals
by
means
of
qualified
persons
and
has
incurred
the
said
expenditures
for
such
purposes.”
For
the
taxation
year
1946,
Section
8,
subsection
9
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
differed
in
some
respects
from
the
form
in
which
it
appeared
in
1947.
But
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal
it
is
not
necessary
to
distinguish
them,
it
being
agreed
that
for
each
of
these
years,
as
well
as
for
1948,
the
only
problem
is
to
determine
what
was
the
chief
business
of
the
appellant.
It
is
not
suggested
that
the
facts
warrant
any
distinction
being
drawn
between
any
of
the
years
in
question;
the
appellants
must
succeed
—or
fail—in
all
three
appeals.
The
appellant
is
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
the
American
Metal
Company
Limited,
which
has
its
head
office
in
New
York
City
and
is
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
State
of
Delaware.
The
parent
company
conducts
an
international
business
in
non-ferrous
metals
owning,
operating
and
having
investments
in
mines,
smelters
and
refineries
in
many
countries
and
conducts
exploration
work
throughout
the
world.
The
appellant
company
was
incorporated
by
Dominion
Charter
in
1930,
and
from
that
year
until
1943
its
sole
business
was
that
of
purchasing
metals
in
Canada,
some
portion
of
which
was
sold
in
Canada
and
the
remainder
of
which
was
sold
to
the
parent
company.
Prior
to
1943
the
appellant
company
was
not
concerned
with
exploration
for
minerals
in
Canada.
The
parent
company,
from
time
to
time,
sent
its
mining
engineers
and
geologists
to
Canada,
but
finding
this
somewhat
unsatisfactory,
decided
to
establish
a
Canadian
organization
for
that
purpose.
From
1943
on,
all
exploration
work
was
conducted
by
the
appellant
company.
This
part
of
the
appellant’s
business
was
conducted
from
a
small
office
in
Toronto,
and
was
under
the
direction
of
the
appellant’s
chief
geologist.
The
field
work
consisted
of
the
examination
by
a
geologist
of
promising
mines,
and
also
sending
out
of
small
prospecting
parties
to
explore
certain
areas
for
minerals.
In
1943
the
appellant
company
employed
a
staff
of
15
persons
in
all
on
this
work.
In
1946
it
employed
15
people
in
all.
It
ex-
amined
17
out
of
60
mining
properties
offered
for
its
consideration,
participated
in
one
prospecting
syndicate,
and
expended
a
total
of
$36,128.29
on
this
work.
In
1947
eight
people
were
employed
and
32
mining
properties
were
examined,
the
total
expenditure
being
$34,953.18.
In
1948
only
six
people
were
employed,
27
mining
properties
were
examined,
and
the
company
participated
in
the
prospecting
syndicate
above
mentioned,
the
total
expenditure
being
$40,060.00.
From
these
activities
in
1946,
1947
and
1948
no
income
whatever
resulted.
The
purposes
and
objects
of
the
appellant
company
as
set
out
in
its
charter
are
very
broad,
and
include
the
buying
and
selling
of
all
kinds
of
metals
and
minerals
as
well
as
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals.
Since
its
incorporation
it
appears
to
have
carried
on
no
other
activities.
Prior
to
the
incorporation
of
the
appellant
company,
the
parent
company
had
purchased
the
copper
production
of
International
Nickel
Company
of
Canada,
which
was
then
shipped
to
its
refinery
in
the
United
States.
The
reason
for
the
incorporation
of
the
appellant
company
was
stated
by
its
vice-president
to
be
twofold.
Due
to
the
increased
production
of
copper
by
International
Nickel
Company
it
became
economically
desirable
to
build
a
refinery
in
Canada,
and
this
was
done
in
co-operation
with
two
other
corporations.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
to
hold
the
shares
of
the
parent
company
in
that
refinery,
but
in
1933
or
1934
the
refinery
was
sold
to
International
Nickel
Company.
The
other
purpose
was
to
purchase
the
electrolitic
copper
to
be
produced
by
that
refinery.
Since
1933
the
appellant
has
purchased
the
entire
output
of
refined
copper
from
International
Nickel
Company,
for
which
it
pays
the
resale
price
less
a
sales
discount
of
one
per
cent.
A
portion
of
such
copper
is
then
sold
in
Canada
to
The
Consolidated
Mining
and
Smelting
Corporation,
and
the
United
Kingdom
Minister
of
Supply,
and
on
occasions
to
one
other
Canadian
corporation.
The
rest
is
then
sold
to
the
parent
company
in
the
United
States,
which
re-sells
it
to
the
trade.
In
the
result,
the
appellant
receives
a
profit
on
its
buying
and
selling
of
copper
of
something
less
than
one
per
cent
on
the
price
at
which
the
copper
is
sold
to
the
trade.
Its
business
of
buying
and
selling
minerals
is
a
continuous
operation.
The
following
table
is
indicative
of
the
volume
of
that
portion
of
the
business:
Year
|
No.
of
Sales
Contracts
|
No.
of
Sales
Invoices
|
1946
|
510
|
1344
|
1947
|
390
|
877
|
1948
|
363
|
1061
|
Value
of
Sales
|
Total
Income
Subject
to
Tax
|
(1946)
$14
million
approx.
|
$168,013.14
|
(1947)
$42
million
approx.
|
249,855.57
|
(1948)
In
excess
of
$42
million
|
285,918.68
|
In
1946
the
sale
of
silver
amounted
to
$796,026.48,
and
in
1947
and
1948
to
over
$4
million
in
each
year.
The
value
of
gold
bought
and
sold
is
not
stated.
Zine
to
the
value
of
over
$7
million
was
sold
in
1946
and
over
$171,000
in
1947.
It
is
shown
that
in
the
years
in
question
the
appellant
company
had
no
employees
in
Canada
carrying
on
its
business
of
buying
and
selling
minerals,
all
work
in
connection
therewith
being
conducted
by
and
at
the
expense
of
the
parent
company
in
New
York,
but
on
behalf
of
the
appellant.
Exhibit
A-3
is
a
series
of
documents
indicative
of
a
typical
sale,
as
it
is
carried
out
when
the
appellant
sells
to
the
parent
company.
The
transaction
originates
with
a
sale
by
the
parent
company
to
a
customer,
then
the
parent
company
enters
into
an
agreement
to
buy
from
the
appellant,
and
then
the
appellant
buys
the
required
amount
from
the
International
Nickel
Company.
When
payments
are
made
they
are
in
reverse
sequence.
Exhibit
A-4
is
a
similar
series
of
agreements,
invoices,
shipping
instructions,
credit
notes,
etc.,
relating
to
a
typical
sale
by
the
appellant
to
a
Canadian
customer.
The
evidence
indicates
that
not
more
than
three
employees
would
be
required
to
take
care
of
all
the
work
involved
so
far
as
the
appellant
is
concerned
—an
executive
and
two
assistants.
The
appellant
insofar
as
it
buys
and
sells
minerals
is
in
the
position
of
a
middle
man
with
an
assured
source
of
supply
from
the
International
Nickel
Company
and
Sherrit
Gordon
Mines
Limited,
and
assured
outlets
for
its
purchases
to
one
company
in
the
United
States,
(the
parent
company),
and
to
two
substantial
customers
and
one
smaller
one
in
Canada.
It
has
little,
if
any,
credit
risk,
and
derives
its
income
from
a
small
percentage
on
its
sales.
"‘Chief
business’’
is
not
defined
in
either
of
the
Acts,
and
the
phrase,
so
far
as
I
am
aware,
has
not
been
the
subject
of
judicial
interpretation.
In
my
view
it
is
a
question
of
fact
to
be
determined
by
an
examination
and
comparison
of
all
the
facts
concerning
each
of
the
various
types
of
business
in
which
the
company
is
engaged.
The
main
contention
of
the
appellant
is
that,
as
the
company
engaged
substantially
more
employees
in
its
Exploration
Division
(a
maximum
of
15)
than
were
required
to
carry
on
th:
metal
dealing
activities
(a
maximum
of
3
had
the
work
been
done
in
Canada),
that
is
an
indication
that
there
was
greater
activity
in
the
exploration
business
than
in
the
metal
dealing
business.
That
is,
undoubtedly,
an
element
to
be
taken
into
consideration,
and
there
might
be
cases
in
which
it
was
the
determining
factor.
But
I
do
not
think
that
in
this
case
it
is
at
all
decisive.
Likewise,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
relevant
income
from
the
two
businesses
carried
on
by
a
corporation
is
an
important
element
to
be
considered
in
determining
which
is
the
chief
business,
but
that
it
is
not
the
only
matter
to
be
considered,
and
not
necessarily
the
determining
factor.
I
think,
however,
that
it
is
of
somewhat
greater
importance
than
that
of
the
relative
number
of
employees.
A
business
is
carried
on
for
the
purpose
of
making
a
profit,
and
from
that
point
of
view
at
least
the
more
profitable
operations
of
one
branch
of
a
business
make
that
branch
more
important
than
other
branches
which
are
less
profitable,
at
least
to
the
corporation.
But,
as
I
have
said,
it
is
not
necessarily
decisive.
For
example,
a
mining
corporation
employing
5,000
men
in
its
various
mines
might
make
$5
million
in
profits
over
a
number
of
years.
If
it
be
assumed
that
in
a
subsequent
year
it
also
operated
a
small
trucking
business
which
makes
a
profit
of
$10,000,
but
in
the
same
year,
due
to
international
conditions,
operates
its
mines
with
the
same
number
of
employees,
but
without
making
any
profit
thereon,
then
in
such
a
case
I
do
not
think
it
could
be
said
that
the
mining
business
had
ceased
to
be
its
chief
business.
Now
in
this
case
from
incorporation
of
the
company
until
1943
the
only
business
of
the
appellant
was
that
of
dealing
in
metals.
That
business
has
continued
and
expanded.
It
involves
the
purchase
and
sale
of
metals
aggregating
in
value
well
over
$40
million
per
year
and
in
profits
amounting
to
over
$285,000
in
1948.
Its
operations
are
on
a
huge
scale
and
undoubtedly
fall
within
the
category
of
big
business
as
shown
by
the
number
of
contracts
entered
into
and
the
amount
of
money
involved.
No
income
whatever
was
earned
in
the
other
activity,
that
of
exploration,
and
all
its
expenses
were
provided
for
out
of
the
profits
of
the
metal-dealing
business.
In
my
opinion,
these
facts
quite
clearly
establish
that
the
metal
dealing
business
of
the
company
which,
until
1943
was
its
sole
business,
or
was
at
all
times
after
1943
when
the
exploration
activities
were
also
carried
on,
the
chief
business
of
the
appellant
corporation.
The
exploring
operations,
at
all
times,
were
of
a
relatively
minor
nature
and
could
be
described,
I
think,
merely
as
a
sideline
to
the
main
business
of
the
corporation.
The
chief
business
of
the
appellant
not
being
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals,
the
appellant
is
not
within
the
provisions
of
the
exempting
sections.
For
these
reasons
the
appeals
will
be
dismissed
and
the
assessments
affirmed.
The
respondent
is
also
entitled
to
be
paid
his
costs,
after
taxation.
Judgment
accordingly.