Rip,
T.C.J.:—In
this
appeal
from
an
income
tax
assessment
for
1980
Bridges
Brothers
Ltd.,
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Bridges”
or
the
“appellant”),
the
appellant
disputes
the
Minister's
determination
of
the
fair
market
value
of
$100
per
acre
as
at
December
31,
1971,
(“Valuation
Day”)
of
land
it
disposed
of
in
1980.
The
appellant,
in
filing
its
income
tax
return
for
1980,
was
of
the
view
the
Valuation
Day
value
was
$700
per
acre.
The
appellant’s
determination
of
value
is
based
on
the
premise
that
the
highest
and
best
use
in
1971
of
the
subject
property
was
for
a
mine
or
development
related
to
a
mine,
that
is,
as
a
disposal
site
of
wastes
by
mining
operations
on
neighbouring
land.
The
respondent
assessed
on
the
basis
the
highest
and
best
use
in
1971
of
the
subject
property
was
woodland.
The
property
in
question
consisted
of
five
parcels
of
rural
land
located
in
Piskihagen
in
the
Parish
of
St.
George,
Charlotte
County
in
New
Brunswick
and
is
composed
of
2,422.19
acres.
The
property
was
more
or
less
vacant
in
1971
and
is
located
near
Mount
Pleasant
in
the
southwest
corner
of
New
Brunswick,
approximately
55
miles
north
west
of
St.
John
and
approximately
70
miles
south
of
Fredericton.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
in
1964
under
the
laws
of
New
Brunswick,
inter
alia,
to
carry
on
the
business
of
growing
and
selling
blueberries;
the
appellant
acquired
the
blueberry
business,
including
the
subject
land,
from
Cole
V.
Bridges
in
1964.
Mr.
Bridges
had
started
the
blueberry
business
in
the
1920's
and
over
the
years
had
acquired
properties
in
eastern
Main
and
western
New
Brunswick
for
business
purposes.
Today
the
appellant
grows
approximately
45
per
cent
of
all
blueberries
grown
in
New
Brunswick.
The
appellant
is
also
in
the
business
of
selling
pulpwood,
the
sales
of
which
in
at
least
one
year,
1970,
exceeded
the
sales
of
blueberries.
The
parcels
comprising
the
subject
property
were
acquired
by
Cole
V.
Bridges
in
1943
and
1948
with
the
intention
of
making
them
blueberry
land,
for
which
they
were
ideal,
according
to
Cole
Bridges,
the
son
of
Cole
V.
Bridges
and
vice-president
of
the
appellant.
However,
in
1954
there
was
a
discovery
of
a
tin
deposit
on
neighbouring
property
at
Mount
Pleasant
and,
because
of
mineral
prospecting
taking
place,
the
plans
to
grow
blueberries
on
the
subject
property
were
curtailed.
Mr.
R.
C.
Vail,
a
New
Brunswick
land
surveyor,
testified
that
in
1961,
when
he
and
his
father,
also
a
land
surveyor,
were
surveying
property
lines
for
Mount
Pleasant
Mines,
he
observed
holes
for
core
samples
being
dubbed
on
the
small
portion
of
the
subject
property
and
throughout
Mount
Pleasant.
In
1961
Mr.
Vail
was
an
apprentice
surveyor.
The
first
indication
of
the
presence
of
minerals
at
Mount
Pleasant
was
in
1954.
Mining
claims
were
staked
for
Selco
Exploration
Limited,
who
was
undertaking
the
survey,
and
surface
exploration
was
initiated
to
locate
the
source
of
tin
anomalies.
American
Metal
Company
(“American”)
and
Ken-
necot
Copper
Corporation
(“Kennecot”),
as
well
as
numerous
junior
mining
companies,
also
explored
the
area.
American
and
Kennecot
suspended
exploration
in
1954.
Dr.
J.
Riddell,
who
was
actively
involved
in
the
initial
survey,
and
his
associates
subsequently
formed
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
Ltd.
(“Mount
Pleasant
Mines”)
and
with
funds
raised
on
the
stock
market
and
their
own
funds
explored
the
areas
they
believed
held
promise
for
tin,
molybdenum,
copper,
lead
and
zinc.
Their
discovery
of
some
rock
samples
which
assayed
moderate
to
high
in
tin
and
base
metal
sulphites
renewed
Kennecot's
interest
in
the
property;
Kennecot
drilled
several
more
holes
which
intersected
both
tin,
tungsten
and
molybdenum
mineralization.
An
economic
deposit
at
Mount
Pleasant
could
not
be
delineated
at
that
time.
In
the
meantime
some
smaller
mining
companies
continued
to
prospect
the
region.
During
1961
further
exploration
was
carried
out
and
one
major
and
several
smaller
tin
bearing
lodes
were
delineated
in
the
area
by
Dr.
A.A.
Rui-
tenberg,
a
geologist
presently
serving
as
regional
geologist
with
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Natural
Resources
at
Sussex,
New
Brunswick.
He
described
the
geology
of
the
area
as
complex.
His
investigation
was
completed
in
1964.
Dr.
Ruitenberg
testified
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
had
very
limited
financial
resources
and
he
was
forced
to
confine
his
work
to
the
surface
of
the
property,
although
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
did
do
“some”
deep
drilling.
During
the
winter
of
1961-1962
a
600-foot
adit,
a
tunnel
driven
into
the
ground,
was
constructed
by
Mount
Pleasant
Mines.
In
1963,
Dr.
Ruitenberg
determined
that
metallic
minerals
found
at
Mount
Pleasant
included
iron,
arsenic,
lead,
copper,
zinc,
bismuth,
molybdenum,
tungsten,
titanium
and
tin
as
well
as
many
non-metallic
minerals.
By
1966,
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
had
exhausted
their
exploration
funds
and
ceased
activities.
Dr.
Ruitenberg
stated
that
notwithstanding
Mount
Pleasant
Mines'
failure
to
continue
exploration
he
had
great
confidence
in
the
potential
of
the
area,
and
his
confidence
was
confirmed
by
a
paper
delivered
to
the
Conference
of
Canadian
Institute
of
Mining
and
Metallurgy
in
Quebec
City
in
1971
by
Messrs.
I.
S.
Parrish
and
J.
V.
Tully.
(Mr.
Parrish
testified
on
behalf
of
the
appellant.)
Mr.
Clifford
Lawrence,
a
real
estate
appraiser
who
was
called
as
an
expert
witness
by
the
appellant,
states
in
his
appraisal
report
that
in
March
1967
the
Sullivan
Mining
Group
(“Sullivan”),
obtained
an
option
on
the
property
through
an
agreement
between
Sullico
Mines
Ltd.,
Mount
Pleasant
Mines,
and
St.
George
Molybdenite
Mines
Ltd.
Additional
exploration
was
carried
out
and
diamond
drilling
began
again.
Reinterpretation
of
earlier
data
and
deeper
drilling
in
the
spring
of
1969
outlined
very
large
blocks
of
ground
containing
molybdenum,
tungsten
and
bismuth.
The
option
was
exercised
and
in
mid-1969
Brunswick
Tin
Mines
Limited
was
formed
to
further
explore
and
develop
the
Mount
Pleasant
property.
In
1977,
Sullivan
sold
its
interest
in
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
to
Billiton
Canada
Ltd.
(sometimes
referred
to
as
“Billiton”)
who
subsequently
started
mining
the
tungsten
molybdenum
deposits.
Billiton
purchased
the
subject
property
from
the
appellant
in
1980
for
$2,179,970.
Dr.
Ruitenberg
described
the
relationship
of
the
subject
property
to
a
future
mining
operation.
The
property
lies
in
a
broad
valley
and
was
the
logical
site
for
the
mine
tailings,
the
tailings
being
the
waste
material
which
come
out
of
the
mine
mill;
it
consists
of
pulverized
rock
and
some
unextracted
metallic
material.
It
was
estimated
about
400
acres
of
the
Bridges
property
would
be
required
for
storing
the
tailings
for
subsequent
reworking;
additional
land
surrounding
the
tailings
area
would
also
be
required
because
a
tailings
area
does
not
always
work
to
perfection
and
may
cause
pollution.
Mr.
Keith
D.
Phinney,
a
chemical
engineer
specializing
in
industrial
waste
management,
was
called
as
a
witness
by
Bridges.
In
the
1970's
Mr.
Phinney
was
employed
by
Montreal
Engineering
Company.
Mr.
Phinney
first
attended
at
Mount
Pleasant
in
1973
when
Sullivan
engaged
his
employer's
services
in
designing
a
system
to
prevent
hard
mine
water
from
entering
a
brook.
In
1974
Mr.
Phinney
prepared
a
feasibility
report
for
Sullivan
which
recommended
sources
of
potential
water
supply
for
a
mine
and
a
location
for
disposal
of
tailings;
an
environmental
study
of
the
consequences
of
a
mill
at
various
sites
was
also
undertaken.
The
area
of
the
Bridges'
property
was
recommended
since
it
was
low
lying,
closer
to
the
proposed
mill
site,
and
therefore
would
have
the
advantage
of
gravity,
was
more
economical
to
build,
and
would
be
least
damaging
to
the
environment.
A
more
complete
feasibility
study,
including
precise
location
recommendations,
as
opposed
to
the
general
recommendations,
was
undertaken
for
Billiton
in
1979
and
the
general
site
recommended
in
1974
was
confirmed;
the
exact
location
for
the
tailings
was
fixed
at
the
Bridges’
property.
Dr.
Ernest
Hale
was
called
by
the
appellant
as
an
expert
witness.
Dr.
Hale
produced
into
evidence
a
report
containing
his
opinion
as
to
the
value
of
the
Bridges’
property
on
Valuation
Day.
Dr.
Hale
is
not
a
land
appraiser;
he
is
a
geologist
practising
economic
and
mineral
geology.
He
has
worked
as
a
consultant
to
the
United
Nations
and
as
a
mining
consultant.
He
received
a
Doctor
of
Philosophy
degree
from
Queen's
University,
Kingston,
Ontario,
in
1953.
He
has
performed
economic
feasibility
analysis
of
mining
properties.
Until
recently
he
has
advised
young
mining
companies
in
Nova
Scotia
on
underground
and
surface
mining
operations
in
that
province.
Dr.
Hale
qualified
as
an
expert
in
exploration
and
mineral
geology
who
is
retained
by
the
mining
business
to
determine
the
economic
feasibility
of
developing
ore
and
the
cost
of
acquisition
of
surface
rights.
Dr.
Hale
admitted
he
has
no
knowledge
of
accepted
land
valuation
methods
such
as
direct
sales
comparisons,
land
residual
method,
abstraction
method
and
development
method
and
the
appellant’s
counsel
conceded
Dr.
Hale
was
not
a
land
appraiser.
His
report
deals
with
a
method
he
says
would
have
been
used
in
1971
to
determine
the
value
of
the
Bridges’
property;
he
concluded
the
subject
property
had
a
value
of
$700
per
acre
on
December
31,
1971.
He
explained
his
calculation
as
follows:
The
value
of
property
sold
on
1
October,
1980,
by
Bridges
Bros.
Ltd.,
St.
Stephen,
N.B.,
to
Billiton
Canada
Ltd.
of
Toronto,
comprising
2422
acres
was
$900
per
acre.
An
earlier
transaction
involving
the
sale
of
land
by
Bridges
Bros.
to
Mt.
Pleasant
Mines
Ltd.,
a
predecessor
of
Billiton,
had
a
calculated
value
of
$252
per
acre
in
1954
(the
calculation
is
based
on
“present”
worth
in
1954
of
a
rental
of
$120
per
acre
for
25
acres
beginning
that
year
and
continuing
for
15
years
and
an
additional
cash
payment
of
$10,000
for
75
additional
acres
made
in
1969
for
the
outright
purchase
of
the
total
100
acres).
Plotting
the
value
per
acre
for
these
two
transactions,
(and
ignoring
a
specific
case
for
other
specialized
land
use
in
which
$1200/year
for
approximately
10
acres
was
paid
from
1969-1974
to
Bridges),
and
interpolating
between
them
for
the
V-Day
Value
(31
December,
1971)
yields
$700
per
acre.
He
considered
the
$700
V-Day
value
“technically
realistic
considering
the
mining-milling
use
for
which
the
property
is
naturally
appropriate”.
In
cross-examination
Dr.
Hale
admitted
that
if
not
for
the
sale
of
the
land
in
1980
he
would
have
had
a
difficult
time
valuing
the
subject
property
as
at
December
31,
1971.
He
also
acknowledged
that
in
1971
the
tailings
disposal
site
was
not
certain.
Dr.
Hale
stated
that
once
a
mining
company
made
a
decision
to
commence
mining
it
would
acquire
property
necessary
for
wastes,
and
do
so
quickly.
A
mining
company
would
try
to
avoid
expropriation
which
could
take
from
two
to
three
years
to
complete.
Thus
a
mining
company
would
pay
more
for
land
than
its
fair
market
value.
The
real
estate
appraiser
called
upon
to
testify
as
an
expert
witness
for
the
appellant
was
Mr.
Clifford
W.
Lawrence,
currently
president
of
deStecher,
Miller
&
Associates
(1985)
Limited,
real
estate
appraisers
in
Saint
John,
New
Brunswick.
Mr.
Lawrence
is
an
accredited
appraiser
of
the
Appraisal
Institute
of
Canada.
Prior
to
joining
the
predecessor
of
his
present
firm
in
1984,
he
had
worked
as
an
appraiser
with
Canada
Mortgage
and
Housing
Corporation.
In
Mr.
Lawrence's
opinion
the
“market
value
of
the
(Bridges')
property,
as
at
December
31,
1971
is
$1,150,000'',
or
approximately
$475
per
acre.
In
his
appraisal
report
Mr.
Lawrence
defines
fair
market
value
as
“the
highest
price
available
in
an
open
and
unrestricted
market
between
informed
and
prudent
parties,
acting
at
arm's
length
and
under
no
compulsion
to
act,
expressed
in
terms
of
money
or
money's
worth'';
however
for
purposes
of
the
appraisal,
the
fair
market
value
must
be
determined,
he
explains
in
his
report,
in
the
“notional
market",
where
there
may
be
no
contemplation
of
an
open
market
transaction
and
open
market
purchasers
may
not
be
identifiable.
Mr.
Lawrence
quotes
the
Canada
Valuation
Service,
at
page
4-20A:
“For
example,
if
in
1973,
A
sold
his
shares
in
a
closely-
held
corporation,
which
he
owned
on
December
31,
1971,
he
would
have
to
determine
the
notional
fair
market
value
of
those
shares
on
December
31,
1971
to
measure
the
extent
of
his
capital
gain
(or
loss)
on
the
transaction.
This
would
be
a
value
determination
in
the
notional
market.”
Mr.
Lawrence
uses
the
term
“fair
market
value”
in
his
report
as
being
synonymous
with
“intrinsic
value”.
He
refers
to
Canada
Valuation
Service
at
page
4-18
to
explain
the
concept
of
intrinsic
value:
Intrinsic
value
may
be
regarded
as
a
modified
concept
of
market
value,
which
comes
into
play
in
circumstances
where
the
market
value
itself
cannot
be
inferred
from
current
price
quotations.
(See
Bonbright,
Vol.
1,
p.
45:
“More
properly,
it
is
to
be
regarded
as
a
hypothetical
market
value,
since
it
represents
the
market
prices
that
would
prevail
under
conditions
other
than
those
that
actually
exist.”)
Underlying
such
a
concept
is
the
notion
that
an
object
of
wealth
may
have
both
a
market
price
and
a
possibly
different
justified,
or
fair,
price,
which
is
assumed
to
be
a
value
intelligently
estimated
in
the
light
of
all
available
data.
For
example,
stockbrokers
often
speak
of
a
security
as
selling
for
more
or
less
than
its
intrinsic
value.
What
they
mean
is
that
the
current
selling
price
is
not
justified
by
the
prospect
of
future
yield
that
is
assumed
to
govern
the
actions
of
investors
in
their
purchases
and
sales.
The
distinction
between
the
function
of
a
real
estate
appraiser
and
a
real
estate
broker
may
further
clarify
the
term
“intrinsic
value”.
The
former's
task
is
to
submit
an
opinion
on
the
price
at
which
the
property
may
reasonably
be
sold
by
reference
to
its
investment
merits.
The
latter’s
function
is
simply
to
sell
the
property
for
the
highest
possible
price
under
prevailing
conditions.
The
real
estate
appraiser
is
therefore
concerned
with
intrinsic
value
and
the
real
estate
broker
with
market
value.
The
intrinsic
value
of
a
property
represents
not
what
the
property
presently
could
be
sold
for,
but
rather
what,
in
the
appraiser's
judgement,
the
property
would
sell
for
if:
(1)
the
market
were
composed
of
intelligent
individuals;
and
(2)
these
individuals
were
interested
in
buying
and
selling
the
property
only
with
reference
to
its
investment
merits.
In
one
sense
it
may
be
regarded
as
a
notional
(or
hypothetical)
market
value
since
it
represents
the
market
prices
that
would
prevail
under
conditions
other
than
those
that
may
actually
exist.
Mr.
Lawrence
added
that
an
“open
and
unrestricted
market”
includes
special
interest
purchasers
who
will
“invariably
pay
a
higher
price
than
will
purchasers
without
special
interests
in
acquiring”.
The
highest
and
best
use
of
the
subject
property
on
Valuation
Day,
according
to
Mr.
Lawrence,
was
for
a
mine
or
mine
related
development.
In
his
report
Mr.
Lawrence
discusses
four
generally
accepted
methods
of
appraising
or
valuing
land:
the
direct
sales
comparison
method,
the
abstraction
method,
the
anticipated
use
or
development
method
and
the
land
residual
method.
He
found
the
direct
sales
comparison
method,
which
calls
for
appraisal
by
comparing,
weighing
and
relating
sales
of
similar
property
to
the
property
being
appraised,
the
most
relevant
method,
but
where
sufficient
sales
are
not
available,
this
method
must
be
supplemented
with
other
methods;
this
was
the
problem
in
valuing
the
Bridges"
property.
The
distribution
and
allocation
method
involves
the
allocation
of
the
appraised
total
value
of
the
property
between
land
and
improvements;
because
this
valuation
was
concerned
with
vacant
land
only,
this
method
was
not
applied.
The
anticipated
use
or
development
method
was
also
found
not
to
be
appropriate
to
the
valuation
since
this
method
applies
to
undeveloped
land
and
requires
estimating
total
value
as
if
the
land
was
subdivided
and
sold
and
subtracting
the
development
costs,
incentive
costs
and
carrying
charges.
The
method
Mr.
Lawrence
relies
on
in
his
report
to
supplement
the
direct
sales
comparison
method
was
the
land
residual
method.
This
method,
wrote
Mr.
Lawrence,
capitalizes
into
value
the
residual
income
imputable
to
the
land
as
obtained
with
new
improvements
to
the
land
which
represent
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
land.
Applying
this
method,
explained
Mr.
Lawrence,
would
involve
projecting
a
hypothetical
operating
income
onto
the
site
and
estimating
the
income
which
could
be
produced;
from
the
income
is
deducted
the
costs
of
all
of
the
other
agents
in
production
(labour,
management
and
capital)
to
produce
a
residual
income
attributable
to
the
land.
The
income
is
then
capitalized
to
provide
a
present
value
indication
for
the
land.
Mr.
Lawrence
acknowledges
in
his
report
that
while
the
method
is
entirely
appropriate
to
the
valuation
problem
in
a
theoretical
sinse,
practical
application
destroys
any
credibility
of
the
approach.
He
adds
the
sheer
magnitude
of
labour,
management
and
capital
inputs
for
devel-
opment
of
a
mine
render
the
raw
land
input
“infinitesimal”
by
comparison.
However,
he
applied
this
method
to
demonstrate
a
principle
of
this
method’s
approach,
that
is,
that
surplus
income
produced
by
an
enterprise,
having
account
for
all
of
the
agents
in
production,
is
imputable
to
the
land.
In
discussing
the
direct
sales
comparison
approach
Mr.
Lawrence
noted
that
time
comparable
sales
were
not
available
since
the
Mount
Pleasant
mine
used
the
only
operable
tungsten
ore
deposit
in
the
province.
He
considered
at
least
eight
sales
and
for
reasons
which
he
considered
to
be
logic,
insufficient
information
and
size
discarded
four
of
them.
His
first
sale
was
the
disposition
of
the
subject
property
in
1980
for
$900
per
acre,
which
he
considered
to
be
a
fair
market
value
for
mining
purposes
in
1980.
Mr.
Lawrence
testified
that
his
conclusion
as
to
value
“must
be
consistent
that
the
sale
in
1980
happened”.
He
stated
that
the
purchase
of
the
subject
property
in
1980
was
no
less
special
than
any
purchase
would
have
been
in
1971.
He
admitted
in
cross-examination
he
could
not
have
been
certain
in
1971
how
much
of
the
subject
property
would
be
required
for
the
mine,
since
some
of
the
land
within
the
perimeter
of
the
subject
property
is
still
held
by
third
parties.
He
also
acknowledged
he
was
not
aware
of
the
amount
of
land
acquired
by
Billiton
from
the
government
of
New
Brunswick
in
1980,
or
the
price,
since
he
considered
the
sale
not
relevant
to
his
valuation.
His
second
sale
comparison
was
the
sale
on
March
31,
1969,
by
Bridges
of
100
acres
contiguous
to
the
subject
property
to
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
for
$10,000
or
$100
per
acre.
However,
Mr.
Lawrence
did
not
consider
this
as
a
fair
market
value
since
Bridges
had
been
receiving
annual
rent
of
$120
per
acre
($3,000
in
all)
since
1954.
As
well
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
paid
a
Mr.
Frank
Kinney
$1,032
per
acre
for
38.75
acres
of
land
adjacent
to
the
100
acres
in
March
1969.
Therefore,
like
Dr.
Hale,
Mr.
Lawrence
added
$45,000
of
the
rent
payments
to
what
he
described
as
the
“final
instalment”
of
$10,000
for
a
sale
price
of
$55,000
or
$550
per
acre
for
the
100
acres.
Mr.
Lawrence
replied
to
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
although
the
rent
paid
to
Bridges
was
for
the
use
of
25
acres,
the
mining
company
occupied
100
acres;
he
did
not
know
where
he
got
this
information
but
believed
it
originated
“from
various
discussions”.
He
considered
the
$45,000
as
a
balance
of
sale
but
did
not
see
the
actual
deed
or
search
title
to
verify
if
the
lease
was
registered.
Still
applying
the
annual
rent
of
$3,000
for
25
acres
leased
by
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
from
Bridges
(but
assuming
the
occupation
of
100
acres),
Mr.
Lawrence,
in
his
report,
capitalized
the
land
rent
at
eight
per
cent,
which
he
determined
to
be
“equivalent
to
a
purchase
at
$37,500”,
or
$375
per
acre
for
100
acres,
as
at
1954.
Mr.
Lawrence
acknowledged
that
if
the
annual
rent
for
only
25
acres
was
capitalized
at
eight
per
cent,
the
result
would
be
$1,500
per
acre.
A
group
of
sales
he
also
considered
relevant
was
the
assembly
of
lands
totalling
2,461
acres
in
1963
for
the
Belledure
smelter
site
in
New
Brunswick
for
an
aggregate
price
of
$312,690
or
$127.06
per
acre.
Mr.
Lawrence
considered
this
a
rare
example
in
New
Brunswick
of
a
mine
related
purchase
of
strategically
located
lands
from
private
owners,
as
opposed
to
the
Crown
on
whose
lands
most
discoveries
have
been
made
and
which,
in
his
view,
“could
not
be
considered
free
market
transactions”.
Mr.
Lawrence
finally
considered
a
sale
in
1973
to
Shell
Natural
Reserves
of
302
acres
in
Nova
Scotia
for
$203,400
or
$674
per
acre;
this
property
was
adjacent
to
a
tin
mine.
The
information
regarding
this
sale
was
provided
to
Mr.
Lawrence
by
a
Mr.
Goodwin,
a
real
estate
appraiser
in
New
Brunswick
and
the
brother-in-law
of
the
vice-president
of
Bridges.
Mr.
Lawrence
had
not
contacted
the
vendors
to
confirm
the
price.
Mr.
Lawrence
then
applied
his
findings
of
land
values
of
$550
per
acre,
$375
per
acre,
$127.06
per
acre
and
$674
per
acre
and,
ignoring
initially
all
factors
except
time,
made
an
arithmetic
interpolation
of
these
values
to
V-Day
and
found
V-Day
values
of
$633
per
acre,
$724
per
acre,
$494
per
acre
and
$628
per
acre.
He
did
not
find
any
significant
dissimilarities
amongst
the
properties
and
the
subject
property
to
warrant
any
adjustment.
As
far
as
size
was
concerned,
he
was
of
the
view
there
were
insufficient
sales
data
available
on
which
to
have
a
size
adjustment
per
se.
Thus
he
placed
most
reliance
on
the
Belledure
smelter
site
acquisition
because
it
was
“nearly
identical
in
size
to
the
subject”,
and
rounded
off
the
$494
value
to
$500
per
acre
for
an
aggregate
value
of
$1,211,500.
Mr.
Lawrence
also
addressed
himself
to
the
land
residual
approach
of
valuing
property
which,
as
previously
stated,
he
said
is
based
on
the
principle
of
surplus
producitivity:
the
surplus
of
an
enterprise
is
imputable
to
the
land
and,
he
reasoned,
the
value
of
the
land
increases
in
a
direct
proportion
with
the
increase
in
value
of
the
enterprise
as
a
whole.
Thus,
based
on
the
1980
sale
of
the
subject
property
for
$900
per
acre,
Mr.
Lawrence
attempted
to
deduce
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
on
December
31,
1971.
He
made
four
analyses
in
his
report:
a)
the
total
annual
dollar
value
of
mineral
production
in
New
Brunswick
in
millions
of
dollars
for
the
years
1964
through
1983
was
plotted
on
a
graph.
His
values
for
1971
and
1980
were
$107,232,496
and
$374,129,479
respectively.
He
determined
the
relationship
of
these
two
amounts
to
be
28.7
per
cent.
He
concluded
that
given
a
value
of
$900
per
acre
for
the
subject
land
in
1980,
a
comparative
land
value
for
1971
is:
$900
x
0.287
=
$258
per
acre
In
order
to
“smooth
out”
annual
fluctuations
Mr.
Lawrence
computed
a
linear
regression
of
the
figures
on
the
graph
and
found
the
calculated
values
for
1971
and
1980
were
$159,810,000
and
$361,770,000
respectively
or
a
relationship
of
44.2
per
cent.
The
product
of
$900,
being
the
value
per
acre
of
the
land
in
1980,
and
.4472
per
cent,
according
to
Mr.
Lawrence,
yields
a
value
of
$399
per
acre
in
1971;
b)
the
annual
dollar
value
of
metals
in
mineral
production
in
New
Brunswick
in
millions
of
dollars
for
the
years
1964
through
1983
was
also
plotted
on
a
graph
and
relationships
similar
to
that
described
in
the
analysis
of
the
value
of
mineral
production
were
determined.
Mr.
Lawrence
found
a
value
of
$271
per
acre
for
the
land
on
the
actual
values
and
$389
per
acre
on
a
linear
regression.
Mr.
Lawrence
appears
to
have
averaged
the
mineral
production
value
at
$265
per
acre
for
actual
prices
and
$394
per
acre
on
a
linear
regression;
c)
the
world
tungsten
prices
per
short
tin
unit
of
tungsten
trioxide
concentrate
for
the
years
1964
to
1984
inclusive
were
also
plotted
to
arrive
at
values
of
$273
per
acre
on
actual
prices
and
$481
per
acre
applying
a
linear
regression;
d)
similarly
the
consumer
price
indices
for
the
years
1964
through
1984
were
plotted
with
a
result
of
$439
per
acre
on
actual
increases
in
the
index
and
$525
per
acre
applying
the
linear
regression
to
the
increases.
Mr.
Lawrence
wrote
in
his
report
that:
The
linear
regression
technique
is
preferred
since
it
tends
to
eliminate
year
to
year
fluctuations.
It
is
considered
to
more
properly
reflect
the
definition
of
“intrinsic
value”
and
the
“notional
market”
since
both
suggest
a
stable
and
inherent
condition,
not
entirely
subject
to
specific
conditions
from
day
to
day.
However,
it
cannot
be
ignored
that
indications
from
actual
1971
and
1980
indices
are
consistently
lower,
by
15%
and
40%.
The
consumer
price
index
is
the
preferred
indicator
since
it
shows
the
most
consistency
and
is
the
most
widely
accepted
measurement
of
overall
price
inflation.
Again,
however,
it
cannot
be
ignored
that
the
other
two
indices
suggest
lower
values.
It
is
concluded
by
this
approach
that
the
value
of
the
subject
lands
lies
in
the
range
of
$258
to
$525
per
acre.
Whereas
a
single
value
consideration
is
required,
a
rate
of
$425
per
acre
is
selected
for
the
subject
property:
2423
Acres
@
$425
=
$1,029,775.
Mr.
Lawrence
had
determined
a
value
of
$523
per
acre
for
the
2,423
acres
of
the
subject
property,
based
on
the
lease
of
10
acres
of
land
from
Bridges
to
Brunswick
Tin
Mines
Ltd.
at
an
annual
rental
of
$1,200.
He
capitalized
the
annual
rent
at
eight
per
cent,
which
indicates
a
capital
value
of
$1,500
per
acre.
Then,
assuming
not
all
the
acreage
land
had
identical
value,
he
calculated
a
logarithmic
curve
passing
through
various
values
per
acre,
from
$105
to
$1,500.
However
he
stated
that
because
of
the
paucity
of
sales
he
did
not
give
much
weight
to
this
approach
of
valuing
the
land.
Mr.
Lawrence
based
his
valuation
on
the
basis
of
the
land
having
a
notional
value.
Again
he
referred
to
Canada
Valuation
Service:
Since
a
notional
valuation
problem
is
one
where
no
open
market,
arm's
length
sale
is
(or
is
likely
to
be)
consummated
.
.
.
it
is
desirable
that
notional
value
determinations
are
expressed
in
value
ranges.
Since
notional
valuation
conclusions
are
normally
reached
for
a
specific
purpose,
a
value
range
by
itself
will
only
set
parameters
on
the
final
value
determination.
The
final
fair
market
value
will
normally
be
stated
as
a
specific
figure
referable
to
the
purpose
for
which
the
notional
valuation
opinion
was
requested.
In
a
question
from
counsel
for
the
respondent
as
to
whether
mining
is
speculative
or
stable,
Mr.
Lawrence
replied
that
speculation
is
present
in
mining
at
any
time,
but
he
did
not
believe
the
speculation
in
1971
was
any
different
from
1980.
Mr.
Lawrence
states
in
his
report
“a
reconciliation
must
be
made
between
the
two
value
indications,
$1,211,500
($500/acre)
by
the
Direct
Sales
Comparison
Approach
and
$1,029,775
($425/acre)
by
the
Land
Residual
Approach”;
each
of
these
two
conclusions
results
from
a
range
of
value
indications.
The
value
ranges
in
the
direct
sales
comparison
approach
are
from
$500
to
$718
per
acre;
he
selected
a
value
at
the
low
end
of
this
range,
$500
per
acre,
because
the
sales
indicating
higher
values
are
least
comparable
in
size
to
the
subject
property.
The
weakness
of
this
approach,
he
writes,
is
that
abundant
sales
data
were
not
available.
In
respect
of
the
land
residual
approach,
Mr.
Lawrence
says
in
his
report
various
measurements
were
assessed
to
gauge
changes
in
general
economic
conditions
which
would
impact
on
the
mining
industry.
He
states
that
“the
premise
of
the
method
is
that
the
value
of
land
will
increase
as
the
overall
value
of
the
mining
enterprise
increases”.
The
values
ranged
from
$265
to
$525
per
acre
from
which
he
concluded
a
value
of
$425
per
acre
was
appropriate.
He
admits
the
weakness
of
this
approach
is
that
the
costs
of
labour,
capital
and
management
have
not
been
examined.
The
value
determined
by
Mr.
Lawrence,
he
affirms
in
his
report,
is
most
dependent
on
the
direct
sales
approach,
and
in
particular
the
sales
of
land
for
the
Belledure
smelter
in
1963
and
of
the
subject
property
in
1980,
but
he
says
he
recognizes
that
the
land
residual
approach
provides
a
linear
indication.
He
concludes
the
fair
market
value
of
the
subject
property
on
December
31,
1971
was
$1,150,925
or
$475
per
acre.
Mr.
Irwin
Parrish,
an
economic
geologist,
also
testified
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
as
an
expert
witness.
Mr.
Parrish,
who
at
the
time
of
the
trial
resided
in
Colorado,
studied
for
his
undergraduate
degree
at
Brooklyn
College
and
received
his
Masters
Degree
in
Geology
from
Indiana
University.
He
first
worked
with
the
United
States
Geological
Survey
in
Denver
and
then,
starting
in
1958,
worked
in
Canada
as
a
mine
geologist
for
Dome
Mines
in
Porcupine,
Ontario,
Chief
Geologist
for
Contimeau
(sic)
Copper
Mines
in
Quebec
and
Campbell
Red
Lake
Mine
in
Ontario.
During
the
period
from
1969
to
1977
he
worked
for
Sullivan
at
Mount
Pleasant
as
exploration
superintendent.
As
exploration
superintendent
he
devised
and
ran
the
exploration
and
mine
development
program
and
the
assay
office
and
was
in
charge
of
camp
maintenance;
he
was,
in
effect,
in
charge
of
the
entire
technical
and
administrative
functions
for
the
Mount
Pleasant
area.
Sullivan’s
head
office
and
administration
office
were
in
Montreal.
In
1978
Mr.
Parrish
left
Sullivan
and
joined
Derry,
Michener
and
Booth,
which
he
described
as
one
of
Canada’s
major
engineering
consultant
firms;
Mr.
Parrish
works
at
the
firm's
Denver
office.
Mr.
Parrish
specializes
in
mineral
exploration
development,
mineral
property
valuation
and
general
economic
geology.
As
such
he
has
been
retained
by
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
to
determine
the
economic
viability
of
mine
properties
in
Brazil
and
by
the
United
Nations
and
the
government
of
India
to
assist
in
determining
whether
old
mines
in
the
Colago
fields
of
India
may
be
“revitalized".
Mr.
Parrish
acknowledged
he
does
not
claim
expertise
in
valuing
surface
rights
of
properties
except
that
as
a
mine
manager
or
developer
he
knows
what
he
would
pay
for
adjoining
property
“as
buyer".
While
Mr.
Parrish
was
qualified
to
give
expert
evidence
in
his
field
of
expertise,
his
knowledge
of
the
subject
property
and
mining
development
in
the
area
in
1971
was
of
assistance
to
the
court.
Sullivan
took
over
the
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
in
1967.
Sullivan
had
been
actively
exploring
for
copper
in
Quebec
and
New
Brunswick.
Between
1969
and
1974
people
had
been
living
year-round
on
the
mine
property
supporting
the
exploration.
A
road
which
traversed
the
Bridges'
property
was
kept
open
during
the
winter
by
Sullivan,
who
had
installed
culverts
and
built
bridges
for
the
road.
During
1971
there
was
a
minimum
of
25
people
living
on
the
mining
property
and
there
were
more
than
40
persons
living
on
the
property
when
drilling
was
taking
place.
In
the
years
prior
to
1971
Sullivan’s
main
effort
at
Mount
Pleasant
Mines,
was
drilling
into
the
core;
the
results
were
good,
according
to
Mr.
Parrish,
but
Sullivan
wanted
more
data
to
confirm
the
metal
could
be
extracted
from
the
core.
In
1970
an
adit
was
driven
to
the
750-foot
elevation
in
the
west
side
of
the
mountain.
The
purpose
of
the
adit
was
to
extract
several
hundred
tons
of
material
to
be
sent
to
Ottawa
for
testing
of
minerals
in
a
laboratory.
This
was
done.
The
result
of
the
tests
were
favourable,
but
not
definitive
because,
Mr.
Parrish
explained,
the
750-foot
elevation
was
above
the
top
of
the
ore
body.
It
was
therefore
thought
material
from
lower
levels
would
have
to
be
extricated;
the
material
from
lower
levels
had
been
tested
by
drill
holes
and
the
results
showed
molybdenum
tungsten
and
bismuth.
Also,
during
exploration
drilling
in
1970
excellent
values
were
found
in
a
tin
zone
near
the
mountain,
Mr.
Parrish
stated.
He
and
his
associates
called
this
“deep
tin
zone”
and
in
1970
or
1971
he
advised
the
head
office
in
Montreal
not
to
proceed
with
very
expensive
drilling
for
material
from
lower
levels
of
the
ore
body
until
the
deep
tin
zone
was
evaluated.
Mr.
Parrish
estimated
the
cost
of
drilling
to
the
lower
levels
of
the
ore
body
at
a
“minimum
a
thousand
and
some
odd
dollars
per
foot”.
Mr.
Parrish
testified
that
“from
1969
on,
once
the
industry
in
general
became
aware
of
the
type
of
material
we
were
intersecting”,
many
geologists
from
various
mine
companies
visited
the
site.
These
geologists
appeared
to
be
satisfied
with
the
preliminary
results
but
asked
for
quantitative
assays.
Sullivan
also
wanted
quantitative
assays
for
its
own
purpose.
In
1971
an
x-ray
fluorescence
spectrometer
was
brought
to
the
site,
and
a
laboratory
was
set
up
in
St.
Stephens,
New
Brunswick.
For
the
“next
couple
of
years”,
according
to
Mr.
Parrish,
“we
proceeded
to
.
.
.
assay
every
sample,
every
piece
of
drill
core,
every
chip,
every
rock
that
was
taken
from
the
different
tunnels,
we
crusted
them
all,
brought
them
to
town,
where
we
pulverized
them
and
assayed
them
.
.
..”
In
1973
it
was
decided
that
the
tin
zone
was
too
indefinite
to
recommend
its
development
and
Sullivan
decided
to
go
after
the
molybdenum
tungsten.
In
that
year
the
next
decline,
at
the
400-foot
level,
was
started;
this
was
the
main
adit.
Several
thousand
tons
of
ore
were
taken
out
of
the
ore
body
and
were
shipped
to
various
laboratories
and
metallurgical
plants.
Unfortunately,
according
to
Mr.
Parrish,
several
major
events
took
place.
Sullivan’s
main
activity
was
mining
for
copper;
in
1971
the
copper
market
fell
and
remained
low.
The
reduction
in
copper
prices
affected
the
corporation's
earnings
which
limited
the
amount
of
money
it
could
apply
to
the
Mount
Pleasant
mine.
Mr.
Parrish
explained
that
the
existence
of
a
major
ore
body
at
Mount
Pleasant
had
been
confirmed
and
the
find
would
have
required
a
very
large
capital
investment
by
the
company
when
capital
was
limited;
Mr.
Parrish
estimated
that
in
1976
about
$60
million
would
be
required
to
put
the
mine
into
production
in
addition
to
the
$5
million
to
$7
million
spent
prior
to
his
arrival
at
Mount
Pleasant
and
the
$15
million
invested
by
Sullivan
while
he
worked
at
Mount
Pleasant.
“Sullivan”,
he
said,
“did
not
have
that
sort
of
money.”
Sometime
after
the
400-foot
adit
was
built
in
1973
Sullivan
started
looking
for
participants
to
share
its
investment
at
Mount
Pleasant.
It
was
hoped
to
find
a
participant
who
would
supply
capital
and
know-how.
One
of
the
three
corporations
most
interested
in
participating
was
“Billiton”,
a
subsidiary
of
Royal
Dutch
Shell.
“Billiton”
was
a
metal
product
fabricator
and
used
tungsten
in
manufacturing
tungsten
steel.
The
location
of
the
Mount
Pleasant
mine
made
it
ideal
for
loading
and
shipping
minerals
to
Europe.
Negotiations
between
Sullivan
and
the
potential
investors
took
place,
but
no
agreement
was
consummated.
In
1977
Sullivan
decided
to
cease
operations
and,
in
Mr.
Parrish's
words,
“wait
until
one
of
our
suitors
comes
back
to
us”.
Mr.
Parrish
left
Mount
Pleasant
in
1977.
In
1979
Billiton
Canada
Ltd.*
purchased
the
Mount
Pleasant
property
from
Sullivan.
Mr.
Parrish
continued
to
testify
as
to
the
amount
of
Billiton’s
investment
in
the
property:
Billiton
decided
to
go
into
production
and
spend
over
$100
million
to
extract
a
maximum
of
3.66
million
tons
of
tungsten,
according
to
a
report
published
in
1981
by
a
Billiton
geologist
referred
to
by
Mr.
Parrish
as
"Atkinson".
Mr.
Parrish
stated
that
according
to
published
reports
Billiton
actually
invested
$60
million
at
Mount
Pleasant.
Mr.
Parrish
stated
that
the
difference
between
Billiton’s
estimate
of
reserves
of
tungsten
and
his
calculation
of
the
reserves
in
the
Mount
Pleasant
property
in
1971
was
less
than
ten
per
cent.
He
referred
to
the
paper
he
presented
in
1971,
cited
by
Dr.
Ruitenberg,
which
estimated
in
excess
of
30
million
tons
of
tungsten
at
Mount
Pleasant;
however
in
an
internal
corporate
memorandum
he
estimated
nine
million
tons
of
high
grade
reserve.
He
stated
Sullivan
"did
not
go
into
production
in
’71,
because
we
needed
more
capital
and
because
we
weren't
sure
if
the
nine
million
tons
we
had
located
was
the
best
and
richest
and
the
most
exciting
part
of
the
property.
It
really
wasn't
finalized."
Sullivan
realized,
according
to
Mr.
Parrish,
it
owned
a
viable
property:
"We
felt
we
could
make
a
profit,
if
we
could
produce
production,
and
if
there
was
a
profit
to
be
made.”
Mr.
Parrish
related
drilling
during
the
period
from
1969
to
1971
took
place
primarily
in
the
mine
owned
property
but
also
off
the
property.
Sullivan
realized
it
would
have
to
acquire
the
surface
rights
of
other
properties
to
continue
its
drilling
program
since
acquisition
of
property
in
the
long
run,
would
be
less
expensive
than
paying
damages
to
owners
of
the
surface
rights.
Also,
Sullivan
had
recognized
quite
early
in
its
exploratory
work
that
the
mine
would
require
additional
land
for
tailings
and
water.
The
mine
water
at
Mount
Pleasant,
Mr.
Parrish
informed
the
Court,
was
toxic
to
vegetation
and
one
of
the
overriding
reasons
for
the
acquisition
in
1969
of
the
100
acres
of
land
from
Bridges
was
to
avoid
further
damages
caused
to
the
Bridges
property.
Mr.
Parrish
stated
that
Sullivan
had
recognized
the
two
areas
for
the
tailings
and
water
"before
Mr.
Phinney
came
onto
scene",
and
one
of
the
areas
was
the
Bridges
property.
Mr.
Parrish
estimated
that
1,000
acres
would
have
been
required
for
waste
disposal
and
another
100
acres
for
exploration.
Gravel
was
required
for
construction
and
since
there
was
no
gravel
on
the
Mount
Pleasant
property
a
gravel
pit
on
the
Bridges
property
would
have
to
be
acquired.
A
road
right-of-way
across
the
Bridges
property
was
also
necessary.
The
choices
in
1971,
said
Mr.
Parrish,
were
to
purchase
or
expropriate
the
Bridges
property
since
leasing
was
too
expensive;
Sullivan
did
not
want
to
have
the
province
expropriate
since
they
wanted
to
remain
on
good
terms
with
their
neighbours.
Mr.
Parrish
described
the
state
of
public
awareness
of
the
Mount
Pleasant
property
in
1971.
The
mine
received
“lots
of
visitors".
As
a
result
of
Dr.
Ruitenberg’s
speeches
across
the
province
the
local
population
was
aware
of
the
activity,
and
its
nature,
at
Mount
Pleasant.
In
1972,
Canada
hosted
an
international
conference
of
geologists
and
excursions
were
made
to
Mount
Pleasant.
During
1970
and
1971
trade
journals
such
as
“Canadian
Mining”
considered
the
project
"promisising",
according
to
Mr.
Parrish.
"The
Norther
Miner",
a
weekly
newspaper
reporting
on
mining
activity
to
investors,
regularly
published
articles
on
Mount
Pleasant
and
a
story
in
its
March
4,
1971,
edition
described
the
exploratory
results
at
Mount
Pleasant
as
"extremely
encouraging";
in
its
November
18,
1971,
issue
the
newspaper
reported
the
"results
appear
excellent
and
ought
to
go
well
for
the
future
of
this
potential
producer".
In
Mr.
Parrish's
view
the
mineral
exploration
at
Mount
Pleasant
was
viewed
by
knowledgeable
people
as
an
important
and
significant
development.
To
the
extent
stock
market
prices
are
relevant,
Mr.
Parrish
reported
that
in
1967
the
main
holdings
of
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
sold
for
between
11
cents
and
27
cents
a
share;
in
1970
the
low
was
29
cents
and
the
high
was
68
cents;
in
1971
the
low
was
21
cents
and
the
high
was
45
cents.
The
shares
of
Sullivan
traded
at
a
high
of
$9.25
per
share;
in
1970
the
high
was
$8.20
per
share
and
because
of
the
drop
in
copper
prices
the
shares
fell
to
$4.70
per
share.
Mr.
Parrish
corroborated
evidence
by
Dr.
Hale
that
as
a
result
of
dumping
of
tungsten
by
the
Chinese
world
tungsten
prices
fell
and
the
fall
in
prices
caused
Billiton
to
close
the
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
in
1981.
He
also
confirmed
that
a
mining
company
normally
would
pay
three
to
five
times
the
market
value
of
property
for
its
surface
rights.
He
explained
what
would
transpire:
.
.
.
a
mining
company
will
pay
above
the
going
rate
to
avoid
the
difficulties
and
the
inherent
problem
in
trying
to
go
through
expropriation.
Not
to
buy
the
adjoining
ground
leaves
you
open
to
a
damage
suit,
which
is
even
more
quarrelsome.
To
pay
three
to
five
times
would
be
well
within
the
accepted
penalty
to
get
something
done.
If
you
got
a
multi-million
dollar
project
being
held
up,
and
once
the
capital
becomes
available,
it’s
costing
you
money,
because
of
net
present
value
theory.
So
once
the
capital
becomes
available
and
you
decide
to
go
into
production,
you
want
to
do
it
as
quickly
as
possible
and
so
it
held
up
production
because
we
did
not
own
the
land
next
to
it.
We
needed
.
.
.
mostly
for
tailings
disposal,
but
mostly
for
the
gravel,
also
for
egress,
and
also
for
exploration
areas.
It
would
have
been
a
patently
foolish
decision
on
the
manager's
part
...
he
would
have
pushed
for
buying
that
land
and
would
have
paid
.
..
yes,
to
answer
your
question,
yes,
we
would
have
paid
three,
four,
five
times
.
.
.
we
would’ve
paid
.
.
.
what
we
would
have
done
is
not
gotten
a
land
appraisal.
We
would
have
simply
found
out
what
blueberry
land
was
going
for
in
the
area;
what
other
prospective
sellings
would
take,
and
we
would
take
.
.
.
we
would
have
found
out
that
they
were
taking
‘x‘
dollars
and
would
have
approached
the
Bridges’
company
and
said,
‘We
will
give
you
"3x"‘
and
they,
of
course,
would
say
‘No,
we
want
five,
six
or
ten
"x"‘
and
we
would
come
back
with
a
second
offer.
The
second
offer
would
either
be
accepted,
or
we
would
go
to
expropriation.
We
would
not
have
tried
to
haggle
over
what
would
be,
‘1x‘
or
‘2x‘
or
.
.
.
we
would
have
jumped
immediately
to
what
we
thought
felt
was
a
fair
price.
Mr.
Parrish
criticized
Dr.
Hale’s
report
saying
that
as
a
purchaser
of
land
he
does
not
know
the
future
and
could
not
anticipate
in
1971
the
eventual
sale
to
Billiton
for
$900
per
acre.
He
would
have
taken
"recent
sales
and
to
project
them
forward
or
backward,
using
a
discount
of
their
present
value”.
Replying
to
a
question
from
the
bench,
Mr.
Parrish
stated
that
a
mining
company:
.
.
.
Will
not
start
buying
ground
until
you
have
.
.
.
assured
yourself
you
have
the
capital
available
to
put
the
..
.
you
know
how
much
capital
you
need
and
you
have
enough
of
an
ore
body
to
pay
for
it
and
that
capital
is
available
to
you
before
you
go
out
and
take
a
look
at
the
ground
around
you.
He
also
stated
that
a
mining
company
will
want
to
be
satisfied
it
can
earn
enough
operating
profit
to
pay
back
its
capital
cost
within
a
period
of
no
more
than
five
years,
and
preferably
three
years,
before
it
decides
to
enter
production
and
acquire
the
additional
land.
Sullivan,
he
added,
never
had
the
necessary
capital
to
acquire
the
additional
land.
Mr.
William
Harrison
Goodwin,
testified
for
the
appellant.
As
indicated
previously
Mr.
Goodwin
is
a
real
estate
appraiser
in
New
Brunswick;
he
is
married
to
the
sister
of
Mr.
Cole
Bridges’
wife.
He
acknowledged
he
supplied
sales
information
to
Mr.
Lawrence
and
discussed
his
appraisal
with
him.
Mr.
Goodwin
had
indicated
to
Mr.
Lawrence
that
in
his
opinion
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
subject
land
was
for
its
strategic
location
in
relation
to
the
mine.
His
valuation
experience
includes
the
appraisal
of
surface
rights
of
slate
pit
and
gravel
pit
operations
as
well
as
blueberry
lands.
He
stated
that
when
he
performed
an
appraisal
of
property
for
the
Lynx
and
Camflo
mining
companies
in
1974
he
was
advised
it
was
practice
in
the
industry
for
a
mining
company
to
pay
three
to
five
times
the
value
of
property
it
requires.
He
testified
that
the
subject
property
was
ideal
blueberry
land
since
it
was
on
high
elevation
and
within
30
miles
of
sea
water;
the
typical
highest
average
price,
in
1971,
for
blueberry
land
not
yet
in
production
would
have
been
around
$300
per
acre,
according
to
Mr.
Goodwin.
Mr.
Cole
Bridges,
vice-president
of
the
appellant,
testified
on
the
appellant's
behalf.
He
related
that
his
father
started
the
blueberry
business
soon
after
World
War
I
and
over
the
course
of
years
acquired
properties
for
the
business
in
eastern
Maine
and
western
New
Brunswick.
In
1941
one
of
the
properties
in
New
Brunswick
was
expropriated
for
the
army
and
when
the
land
was
returned
by
the
government
it
was
useless
for
blueberry
production
because
of
its
use
by
tanks
and
other
military
vehicles;
in
1943
and
1948
his
father
acquired
lands
constituting
the
subject
land
"with
the
intention
of
making
blueberry
land
out
of
it”.
However,
Mr.
Bridges
said,
"the
miners
moved
in
about
1952
or
'54
and
...
it
became
more
and
more
apparent
over
the
years
that
there
would
be
a
severe
conflict
between
the
mining
interests
and
the
blueberry".
As
the
mining
exploration
progressed
during
the
period
1954
to
1971,
according
to
Mr.
Bridges,
"it
became
obvious
to
us
that
.
.
.
it
didn't
make
much
difference
which
of
the
several
ore
bodies
that
were
discovered
were
utilized,
but
probably,
sooner
or
later,
one
of
the
two
of
them
would
be
and
that
they
would
need
our
land
to
operate
on
.
.
.
it
didn't
take
too
much
foresight
to
know
there
was
an
awful
lot
of
activity
going
on
up
there
..
."
He
added:
"they
were
spending
a
lot
of
money
there
and
they
wouldn't
be
spending
money
there
unless
they
were
pretty
sure
that
they
had
found
something".
Mr.
Bridges
considered
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
property
was
rising
steadily.
Mr.
Bridges
said
that
in
1969
he
knew
the
tailings
dump
would
have
to
be
on
the
north
side
of
Mount
Pleasant,
on
the
appellant’s
land.
In
reply
to
a
question
from
counsel
for
the
appellant,
Mr.
Bridges
stated
the
25
acres
that
were
leased
to
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
were
scattered
lands
and
in
1969
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
desired
to
purchase
100
acres
“to
square
the
lines”.
He
said
the
appellant
did
not
want
to
sell
the
100
acres
but
was
told
by
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
that
its
banker
would
not
advance
funds
unless
it
owned
the
100
acres.
Since
the
mining
companies
in
the
area
were
operating
on
a
shoestring
Bridges
decided
to
sell
the
100
acres
to
“encourage
development
of
the
mine"
since
it
wished
to
sell
the
balance
of
the
land.
Mr.
Bridges
recalled
Bridges
was
being
paid
$3,000
a
year
rent
for
the
25
acres
and
“we
had
to
chase
them"
for
the
rent,
he
was
told
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
could
afford
only
$10,000
more
but
once
they
got
financing
they
would
be
able
to
buy
the
rest
of
the
land
“‘and
pay
a
darn
good
price
for
it”.
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
did
not
obtain
the
financing.
Sullivan
then
came
on
the
scene
and
activity
on
the
mountain
increased.
According
to
Mr.
Bridges,
the
appellant
had
a
valuable
piece
of
property.
“It
was
just
a
matter
of
working
until
the
right
financial
fellows
came
along
and
took
it
up.”
In
1971
he
was
“thinking
in
the
vicinity
of
a
thousand
dollars
an
acre”
for
the
subject
property.
In
the
meantime,
Mr.
Bridges
testified,
“we
just
had
to
kind
of
play
a
waiting
game";
the
appellant
accommodated
the
mining
in-
terests
by
renting
property
for
water
supply
purposes
and
selling
gravel
from
their
pit.
Mr.
Bridges
recounted
his
negotiations
with
Billiton
for
the
subject
property;
a
consultant
with
Billiton
first
approached
Mr.
Bridges
in
1979
offering
$26,000
for
100
acres.
"I
told
them
he
was
crazy.”
Serious
negotiations
took
place
in
1980.
Mr.
Bridges
stated
that
he
wanted
$2,000
an
acre
and
that
Billiton
"realized
they
were
talking
to
somebody
that
knew
what
they
were
talking
about
and
we’re
not
just
farmers
...
we
know
the
minerals
are
there
and
they
had
to
have
our
property
to
develop
it."
The
appellant
and
Billiton
finally
agreed
to
a
purchase
price
of
$900
per
acre,
Billiton’s
initial
offer
in
1980,
said
Mr.
Bridges.
He
agreed
to
this
amount
only
because
he
had
been
pressured
by
the
Minister
of
Natural
Resources
of
New
Brunswick
to
"play
or
else
the
land
would
be
expropriated.
He
thought
he
could
have
sold
the
property
for
about
$1,500
per
acre
if
not
for
government
pressure.
Billiton
also
agreed
to
lease
approximately
500
acres
to
the
appellant
for
one
dollar
a
year
for
fifty
years
and
to
permit
the
appellant
to
keep
the
wood
in
the
subject
property.
It
should
be
noted
that
by
letter
dated
April
23,
1980,
Mr.
Bridges
wrote
to
the
Honourable
J.W.
Bird,
Minister
of
Natural
Resources
of
New
Brunswick
advising
him
that
in
order
"to
proceed
with
the
$80
million
investment
in
a
mine
and
smelter
at
Mt.
Pleasant
they
need
to
obtain
350
acres
of
land
we
own”
and
that
Billiton
made
an
"acceptable"
proposal.
He
advised
the
Minister
that
the
appellant
was
in
the
process
of
clearing
land
for
blueberry
development.
Notwithstanding
the
"fair
offer""
by
Billiton,
Mr.
Bridges
feared
taxes
on
the
sale
of
the
350
acres
would
make
governments
the
principle
beneficiaries
of
the
transaction;
accordingly
he
concluded
the
longterm
financial
benefits
to
the
appellant
‘‘are
better
if
we
proceed
with
our
original
intention""
to
develop
the
land
for
blueberry
production.
His
letter
then
went
on
to
address
several
complaints
the
appellant
had
with
the
provincial
authorities
and
his
own
difficulties
in
obtaining
a
new
hunting
licence
to
replace
a
licence
that
had
been
cancelled.
The
appellant,
in
filing
its
1980
income
tax
return,
calculated
the
capital
gain
on
the
disposition
of
the
subject
land
on
the
basis
its
adjusted
cost
base
was
$700
per
acre.
Mr.
Bridges
also
testified
as
to
the
value
of
blueberry
land
in
1971.
The
appellant,
he
said,
had
paid
"anywhere
from
$50
an
acre
and
up
through
to
$1,500
an
acre
for
land"",
but
the
appellant
paid
$1,500
an
acre
for
a
particular
piece
of
land
because
"we
needed
it
to
complete
the
development"".
He
estimated
that
in
his
view,
were
it
not
for
the
mining
activity,
the
value
of
the
subject
land
in
1971
as
blueberry
land
would
have
been
$300
an
acre.
The
appellant"s
income
tax
returns
for
1970,
1971
and
1974
were
shown
to
him.
The
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant,
as
at
December
31,
1970,
attached
to
its
1970
income
tax
return,
reflected
the
value
of
the
appellant’s
lands
at
$244,976.
The
appellant’s
balance
sheet,
as
at
December
31,
1971,
included
with
its
1971
income
tax
return,
shows
an
aggregate
land
value
of
$778,283.40.
The
balance
sheet
of
the
appellant
as
at
December
31,
1974,
being
part
of
its
1974
income
tax
return,
shows
land
valued
at
$757,042.
Note
1
to
the
appellant’s
financial
statements
for
the
fiscal
period
ending
December
31,
1974,
states
as
follows:
1.
Land
has
been
reported
in
the
financial
statements
as
its
appraised
value
less
depletion.
The
appraisal
was
conducted
by
Mr.
Cole
V.
Bridges
in
1971.
An
analysis
follows:
Land,
at
appraised
value
(less
depletion)
|
$757,042
|
Land,
at
cost
(less
depletion)
|
236,253
|
Excess
of
appraised
value
of
land
over
cost
|
$520,789
|
The
income
tax
returns
of
the
appellant
for
1970
and
1971
include
depletion
schedules
for
the
wood
lots.
The
subject
land
is
included
in
the
schedules.
In
Bridges
Brothers
Ltd.
v.
Forest
Protection
Ltd.,
72
D.L.R.
(3d)
335
at
337;
14
N.B.R.
(2d)
91
at
100,
the
New
Brunswick
Supreme
Court,
Queen's
Bench
Division,
per
Stevenson,
J.,
found
that
the
appellant’s
"landholdings
(both
freehold
and
leasehold)
in
southern
New
Brunswick
aggregate
some
8,000
acres",
of
which
half
to
two-thirds
was
under
cultivation.
Questioned
by
the
respondent's
counsel,
Mr.
Bridges
first
stated
he
did
not
disagree
with
the
description
of
the
land
and
subsequently
stated
the
appellant
"possibly"
owns
8,000
acres
of
land.
When
counsel
for
the
respondent
suggested
to
him
the
respondent's
Valuation
Day
value
of
$100
an
acre
for
the
subject
land
could
be
determined,
in
part,
by
dividing
the
appraised
value
of
all
the
land,
$757,052
by
8,000,
the
number
of
acres,
Mr.
Bridges
explained
the
only
"operating"
blueberry
land
was
then
appraised
and
did
not
include
the
subject
property.
Mr.
Bridges
explained
that
the
purpose
of
the
appraisal
of
the
lands
was
to
obtain
a
loan
from
the
appellant’s
banker
for
its
blueberry
operations;
the
bank
wanted
the
blueberry
land
as
collateral
security
for
the
loan.
I
find
it
unusual
that
a
bank
would
rely
on
an
appraisal
of
land
prepared
by
an
officer
of
a
proposed
borrower
of
funds
as
evidence
of
value
of
the
security
to
be
given
to
the
bank
for
the
loan.
Although
nothing
sinister
ought
to
have
been
inferred
from
the
respondent
counsel's
suggestion
that
the
appraisals
were
made
for
capital
gain
purposes,
Mr.
Bridges
vehemently
and
categorically
denied
that
was
the
reason
for
the
appraisals.
Mr.
David
Stilwell
testified
on
behalf
of
the
respondent
and
was
qualified
as
an
expert.
Mr.
Stilwell
was
first
employed
in
1970
by
the
respondent
as
a
clerk
and
in
1973
started
working
in
real
estate
matters.
In
1975
he
commenced
courses
in
real
estate
appraisal
toward
creditation
to
the
Appraisal
Institute
of
Canada,
which
he
obtained
in
1983.
He
is
presently
employed
by
the
respondent.
In
Mr.
Stilwell’s
view
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
subject
property
on
December
31,
1971
was
as
woodland
property
and
in
his
view
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
on
Valuation
Day
was
$121,110,
or
$50
per
acre.
Mr.
Stilwell
described
the
subject
properties
as
being
located
“‘quite
a
distance"
from
any
populated
areas
and
the
area
of
the
property
had
nothing
but
“miles
and
miles
of
woodland
with
the
only
development
to
speak
of
being
in
Mount
Pleasant
area”.
His
report
states:
It
was
a
known
fact
that
around
1952-1954
there
were
some
mineral
deposits
located
in
the
Mount
Pleasant
area
and
that
numerous
testing
and
geological
surveys
were
carried
out
over
the
years
near
the
subject
area.
However,
after
an
intensive
investigation
it
was
discovered
that
as
a
result
of
all
these
surveys
and
tests,
it
was
still
unclear
as
to
how
much
or
where
this
ore
was
located.
Thus,
there
were
no
plans
for
any
development
in
the
Mount
Pleasant
area
as
of
December
31,
1971
except
for
a
continuation
of
exploration,
the
same
as
what
had
been
going
on
since
1952.
Mr.
Stilwell
testified
that
he
looked
at
the
probability
in
1971
of
a
mine
at
Mount
Pleasant
being
fully
operable
but
did
not
see
any
such
probability,
and
therefore
did
not
consider
the
subject
property
as
mining
property.
In
preparing
his
report
Mr.
Stilwell
reviewed
documents,
including
maps,
at
the
Land
Registry
of
New
Brunswick,
interviewed
various
vendors
and
purchasers
of
properties
and
discussed
mining
activity
in
the
Mount
Pleasant
area
in
1971
with
officials
of
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Natural
Resources.
He
also
visited
the
site.
He
found
that
there
were
land
owners
near
the
mine
in
1971
who
were
still
owners
of
the
land
at
the
time
he
was
preparing
the
report
in
1985.
He
was
informed
mining
could
be
done
underground
without
disturbing
neighboring
lands.
He
testified
he
was
not
convinced
a
mining
company
would
require
the
surface
rights
to
2,400
acres
for
the
mine
site
at
Mount
Pleasant.
Mr.
Stilwell
considered
the
following
methods
of
valuing
real
estate:
direct
sales
comparison,
abstraction,
development
and
land
residual.
He
rejected
the
abstraction
method
for
the
subject
property
because
there
were
no
improvements
on
the
property,
the
development
method
because
the
land
was
not
development
land
and
the
land
residual
method
because
he
could
not
find
evidence
the
land
would
be
developed
or
would
earn
significant
rental
income.
He
did
not
consider
the
notional
market
value
of
the
subject
property
since
he
first
learned
of
it
when
reviewing
Mr.
Lawrence's
report.
Eight
sales
of
properties
having
characteristics
similar
to
the
subject
property,
in
the
view
of
Mr.
Stilwell,
were
analyzed
by
him.
Only
one
sale
was
in
the
area
of
the
subject
property,
the
other
sales
were
in
areas
similar
to
that
of
the
subject
property.
He
treated
the
sale
in
1969
of
100
acres
by
Bridges
to
Mount
Pleasant
Mines
as
land
purchased
for
mining
purposes.
He
considered
the
sale
as
a
"straight
sale”
and
did
not
consider
the
previous
rental
payments
in
the
sale
price.
He
did
not
give
much
weight
to
this
sale
because
“the
property
had
been
used
as
a
digging
and
testing
site
for
a
number
of
years
by
mining
people"
and
the
subject
land
was
not
affected
by
the
diggings
or
surveys.
The
sales
Mr.
Stilwell
considered
ranged
in
size
from
65
acres
to
500
acres
with
prices
ranging
between
$18
and
$100
per
acre,
the
majority
being
in
the
$50
per
acre
range.
These
were
woodland
properties,
four
of
which
were
in
rural
areas,
as
was
the
subject
property,
and
the
others
in
more
populated
areas.
In
cross-examination
Mr.
Stilwell
acknowledged
he
did
not
consider
the
subject
land’s
use
for
blueberry
cultivation
notwithstanding
Bridges
was
in
the
blueberry
business;
his
reason
was
that
in
1971
Bridges’
plans
for
blueberry
production
on
the
subject
property
were
"shelved".
His
report
states
that
"by
1971
some
material”
had
been
outlined
in
the
area
by
Sullivan,
but
he
testified
he
did
not
know
the
exact
amount,
which
Mr.
Parrish
had
indicated
was
30
million
tons.
His
report
also
states
that
since
1952
"there
were
a
lot
of
geological
surveys
that
were
producing
no
significant
results”.
He
also
was
not
aware
that
roads
described
as
"seasonal
roads"
by
provincial
authorities
were
kept
open
by
the
mining
company
during
the
winter
or
that
25
people
were
living
on
mining
property,
working
for
the
mining
interests.
Lastly,
in
so
far
as
Mr.
Stilwell’s
report
is
concerned,
much
of
the
material
used
in
the
report
was
adapted
from
material
published
by
the
Appraisal
Institute
of
Canada,
although
he
did
not
always
give
credit
to
the
author
or
the
Institute.
While
I
do
not
interpret
the
omissions
by
Mr.
Stilwell
as
an
attempt
to
mislead
the
reader,
when
an
appraiser
quotes
from
a
work
of
an
author
he
should
distinguish
clearly
between
the
author's
words
and
his
so
that
there
is
no
confusion
as
to
words
of
a
source
and
his
own
words.
Mr.
Richard
Pother,
a
geologist
and
at
time
of
trial
Assistant
Deputy
Minister
of
Mineral
Resources
in
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Forest,
Land
and
Energy,
was
called
as
a
witness
by
the
respondent.
Mr.
Pother
has
been
associated
with
the
mining
industry
since
1951
and
was
familiar
with
the
Mount
Pleasant
mining
operations;
he
visited
the
site
for
the
first
time
in
the
“early
1960's".
He
was
qualified
to
testify
as
an
expert
witness.
He
explained
that
mineral
rights
and
surface
land
rights
are
two
distinct
rights
and
the
value
of
the
minerals
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
value
of
the
surface.
In
his
experience
surface
rights
do
not
increase
in
value
as
a
result
of
the
presence
of
minerals
underneath
the
ground.
Mr.
Pother
recalled
that
in
the
late
1960's
there
were
some
indications
of
tin
and
tungsten
at
Mount
Pleasant
but
"it
wasn't
until
1974
that
the
results
of
(Sullivan’s)
initial
exploration
were
such
that
they
decided
that
they
should
go
underground
and
have
a
look
and
run
some
further
tests"
to
determine
whether
it
was
economically
feasible
to
separate
the
minerals.
A
mining
company,
Mr.
Pother
testified,
purchases
surface
rights
after
it
has
made
a
decision
to
commence
production.
Mr.
Pothier
also
testified
in
1980
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Natural
Resources
sold
394
hectares
(1018.4
acres)
of
land
to
Billiton
for
$57,000,
approximately
$57
per
acre.
The
transaction
included
an
easement
of
2.4
acres
to
Billiton
to
obtain
water.
This
property,
however,
may
revert
back
to
the
Crown
ten
years
after
Billiton
ceases
its
mining
operations.
Mr.
George
Greer,
Director
of
the
Mineral
Development
Branch
of
the
Mineral
Resources
Division
of
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Forest,
Mines
and
Energy
also
gave
evidence.
Mr.
Greer
recalled
that
in
documentation
submitted
by
Billiton
for
a
licence
to
mine
at
Mount
Pleasant
it
indicated
the
amount
of
land
that
would
be
disturbed,
as
follows:
.
.
roughly
.
..
the
tailings
pond
area
is
around
130
hectares
.
.
.
for
the
mill
site
it
was
20
hectares,
for
the
.
.
.
diversion
pond
34
hectares,
for
the
tailings
pond
130
hectares
and
for
the
water
supply
pipeline
16
hectares,
for
a
total
of
200
hectares",
or
1,194
acres;
Mr.
Greer
indicated
this
was
an
initial
reclamation
plan
and
"it
could
progress
over
the
length
of
the
operation".
Replying
to
a
question
from
counsel
for
the
appellant
Mr.
Greer
admitted
he
did
not
know
the
reason
Billiton
acquired
as
much
land
as
it
did.
He
also
stated
the
mine
had
a
pollution
problem
and
would
not
be
surprised
to
learn
of
environmental
damage.
The
last
witness
was
Mr.
George
K.
Hayward,
a
real
estate
appraiser
and
Chief
of
Real
Estate
Appraisal
with
the
Saint
John
District
Office
of
the
respondent.
He
testified
that
to
his
knowledge,
during
1970
to
1973,
blueberry
land
sold
for
between
$30
and
$100
per
acre;
during
the
past
six
to
seven
years
prices
have
increased
to
$150
to
$250
per
acre.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
facts
in
this
appeal
are
unique
and
therefore
the
appellant’s
valuator,
Mr.
Lawrence,
should
be
allowed
some
innovation
in
his
approach
in
order
to
determine
the
fair
market
value
of
the
Bridges’
property
as
at
December
31,
1971.
He
acknowledged
Dr.
Hale
utilized
hindsight
"to
the
extreme"
and
stated
that
while
Dr.
Hale's
valuation
cannot
be
used
alone
"it
is
helpful"
to
Mr.
Lawrence's
appraisal.
Both
Mr.
Lawrence
and
Dr.
Hale
treated
the
potential
development
of
the
subject
property
as
at
the
end
of
1971
with
excessive
optimism,
as
did
Mr.
Parrish.
There
was
no
evidence
that
as
at
December
31,
1971
the
owners
of
the
mine
had
made
a
decision
to
commence
production;
rather,
the
evidence
was
precisely
the
opposite.
Mr.
Parrish,
who
worked
for
Sullivan
at
the
time,
testified
his
employer
was
a
copper
producer
and
because
of
falling
copper
prices
its
earnings
in
1971
were
adversely
affected.
He
stated
in
no
uncertain
terms
that
to
put
a
mine
at
Mount
Pleasant
into
production
would
require
large
capital
investment
and
the
owner
of
athe
mining
rights
in
1971
did
not
have
the
money
available;
Sullivan
preferred
to
"sit
on
the
property"
rather
than
lose
a
substantial
share
of
the
deposit
to
a
potential
partner.
On
the
other
hand
the
Minister's
appraiser,
Mr.
Stilwell,
did
not
sufficiently
appreciate
the
activity
taking
place
at
Mount
Pleasant
in
1971.
He
was
ignorant
of
the
fact
that
in
1971
Mr.
Parrish
had
presented
a
paper
to
the
industry
estimating
the
deposit
at
Mount
Pleasant
held
30
million
tons
of
tungsten.
This
was
not
an
insignificant
result.
Mr.
Stilwell
was
not
aware
that
the
drill
site
was
inhabited
year-round
by
employees
of
Sullivan
and
that
roads,
although
designated
"seasonal",
were
kept
open
and
maintained
by
Sullivan
throughout
the
year
for
their
exploration
activities.
In
his
view
the
exploration
that
was
taking
place
in
1971
was
no
different
from
that
which
took
place
since
1952.
In
short,
Mr.
Stilwell
considered
the
production
of
the
mine
in
1971
only
a
mere
possibility
and
accordingly
the
use
of
the
subject
land
would
be
identical
to
that
of
contiguous
woodland
properties.
In
Mr.
Lawrence's
view
the
fair
market
value
of
the
Bridges’
property
was
its
intrinsic
value,
that
is,
not
necessarily
the
value
of
the
property
as
may
be
reflected
by
what
it
may
have
sold
for
in
1971
but
its
value
with
reference
to
its
investment
merits
in
1971
which
may
be
influenced
by
market
conditions
other
than
those
which
may
have
actually
existed
in
1971.
To
Mr.
Lawrence's
mind
the
intrinsic
value
of
a
property
was
due
to
the
presence
of
an
ore
body
on
neighbouring
lands
and
so
long
as
the
ore
is
present
the
intrinsic
value
does
not
change;
the
minerals
will
be
extracted
when
the
right
price
can
be
realized,
that
is,
when
conditions
to
produce
a
mine
are
right.
If
I
understand
Mr.
Lawrence
correctly,
his
theory
is
that
even
if
the
minerals
cannot
be
extracted
for
an
untold
number
of
years
the
land
has
value.
The
property
has
potential,
so
to
speak.
Mr.
Lawrence's
position
is
that
the
Bridges'
property
had
what
in
an
expropriation
matter
is
sometimes
referred
to
as
“special
adaptability".
Special
adaptability
has
been
defined
in
Re
Schooley
and
Lake
Erie
&
Nor.
Ry.
(1915),
25
D.L.R.
537
at
541,
as
"[.
.
.]
an
apparent
but
future
use
to
which
the
property
may
be,
but
is
not
now
put,
and
for
which
it
is
particularly
adapted”.
A
distinction
must
be
made
between
special
value
and
special
adaptability.
Special
value
depends
on
the
use
made
by
the
owner
of
a
land
at
the
time
of
the
valuation;
special
adaptability
refers
to
the
possible
or
probable
use
of
the
land,
in
the
future,
other
than
the
use
made
by
the
owner
at
the
time
of
the
valuation
(vide:
G.S.
Challies,
Quelques
problèmes
d'expropriation,
21
R.
du
B.
(165
at
173-175).
In
Vyricherla
v.
The
Revenue
Divisional
Officer,
[1939]
A.C.
302;
[1939]
2
All
E.R.
317,
Lord
Romer
discussed
some
difficulties
arising
with
this
concept
at
312-13
(All
E.R.
321-22):
In
the
case
of
land,
its
value
in
general
can
also
be
measured
by
a
consideration
of
the
prices
that
have
been
obtained
in
the
past
for
land
of
similar
quality
and
in
similar
positions,
and
this
is
what
must
be
meant
in
general
by
"the
market
value"
.
.
.
But
sometimes
it
happens
that
the
land
to
be
valued
possesses
some
unusual,
and
it
may
be,
unique
features,
as
regards
its
position
or
its
potentialities.
In
such
a
case
the
arbitrator
in
determining
its
value
will
have
no
market
value
to
guide
him,
and
he
will
have
to
ascertain
as
best
he
may
from
the
materials
before
him,
what
a
willing
vendor
might
reasonably
expect
to
obtain
from
a
willing
purchaser,
for
the
land
in
that
particular
position
and
with
those
particular
potentialities.
For
it
has
been
established
by
numerous
authorities
that
the
land
is
not
to
be
valued
merely
by
reference
to
the
use
to
which
it
is
being
put
at
the
time
at
which
its
value
has
to
be
determined
.
..
but
also
by
reference
to
the
uses
to
which
it
is
reasonably
capable
of
being
put
in
the
future.
No
authority
indeed
is
required
for
this
proposition.
It
is
a
self-evident
one.
No
one
can
suppose
in
the
case
of
land
which
is
certain,
or
even
likely,
to
be
used
in
the
immediate
or
reasonably
near
future
for
building
purposes,
but
which
at
the
valuation
date
is
waste
land
or
is
being
used
for
agricultural
purposes,
that
the
owner,
however
willing
a
vendor,
will
be
content
to
sell
the
land
for
its
value
as
waste
or
agricultural
land
as
the
case
may
be.
It
is
plain
that,
in
ascertaining
its
value,
the
possibility
of
its
being
used
for
building
purpose
would
have
to
be
taken
into
account.
It
is
equally
plain,
however,
that
the
land
must
not
be
valued
as
though
it
had
already
been
built
upon,
a
proposition
that
is
.
.
.
sometimes
expressed
by
saying
that
it
is
the
possibilities
of
the
land
and
not
its
realized
possibilities
that
must
be
taken
into
consideration.
[Emphasis
added.]
(See
also
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
Lamb
v.
Man.
Hydro-Elec.
Bd.,
[1966]
S.C.R.
229
at
235;
55
D.L.R.
(2d)
654
at
659
and
in
Fraser
v.
The
Queen,
[1963]
S.C.R.
455
at
476-77;
40
D.L.R.
(2d)
707
at
726).
In
the
King
v.
Coleman,
[1926]
Ex.
C.R.
121,
the
major
part
of
the
ground
was
swamp
and
on
a
small
part
of
the
land,
the
owner
had
constructed
a
hotel
and
some
cottages.
The
entire
property
was
expropriated
and
Coleman
sued
for
indemnity
for
potential
value.
He
argued
that
by
spending
$200,000
to
$500,000,
he
could
fill
the
swampy
area
and
build
more
cottages.
The
Court
concluded
that
the
owner
of
the
property
was
not
entitled
to
claim
as
an
element
of
its
market
value
at
the
time
of
expropriation,
some
prospective
value
of
the
property
remote
in
its
character
and
only
realizable
upon
the
expenditure
of
enormous
sums
of
money.
So
long
as
mineral
exploration
is
taking
place
and
no
decision
has
been
made
by
the
owner
of
the
mineral
rights
to
enter
into
production,
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
surface
rights
of
contiguous
lands,
as
in
the
case
at
bar,
cannot
be
for
mine
or
mine
related
development
as
submitted
by
Mr.
Lawrence.
For
the
highest
and
best
use
of
these
lands
to
be
mine
or
mine
related
development
there
must
first
be
a
mine
in
production
or
at
least
the
owners
of
the
mining
rights
ought
to
have
decided
to
begin
production.
Until
the
decision
is
made
to
enter
into
mine
production
there
is
no
probability,
let
alone
certainty,
that
these
contiguous
lands
will
be
required
for
a
mine
or
mine
related
development.
To
accept
Mr.
Lawrence's
theory,
and
extend
it,
would
indicate
as
yet
undiscovered
minerals
have
a
profound
influence
on
current
market
values
of
property.
Mr.
Lawrence
concludes
his
description
of
fair
market
value
in
his
report
by
stating
fair
market
assumes
“that
the
market
includes
special
interest
purchasers
and
that
they
will
invariably
pay
a
higher
price
than
will
purchasers
without
special
interest
in
acquiring".
This
may
be
true
in
circumstances
where
there
is
a
“special
interest
purchaser".
To
Mr.
Lawrence,
in
1971
Sullivan
was
a
potential
special
interest
purchaser
of
the
Bridges
property.
The
evidence
indicates
the
opposite:
Sullivan
in
1971
had
not
indicated
it
wished
to
acquire
the
Bridges'
property
nor
had
it
decided
to
enter
into
mine
production;
further
it
did
not
have
the
financial
means
to
cause
the
mine
to
enter
into
production
even
if
all
of
its
drilling
had
been
completed
and
results
had
been
favourable.
There
is
no
evidence
that
Billiton,
the
eventual
purchaser,
displayed
the
slightest
interest
in
1971
in
acquiring
the
subject
property.
There
was,
in
short,
no
special
interest
purchaser
for
the
Bridges
property
in
1971.
For
a
review
of
the
case
law
of
special
purchaser
see
the
reason
for
judgment
of
Joyal,
J.
in
Dominion
Metal
&
Refining
Works
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
47
at
52-55;
86
D.T.C.
6311
at
6314-16.
I
have
found
the
basis
of
Mr.
Lawrence's
appraisal
to
be
in
error;
it
would
serve
no
worthwhile
purpose
at
this
stage,
therefore,
to
discuss
the
merits
of
his
appraisal.
There
is
no
evidence
to
indicate
that
in
1971
the
highest
and
best
use
of
the
Bridges'
property
was
for
blueberry
production.
In
his
testimony
Mr.
Bridges
emphasized
that
from
1954
on
his
father
did
not
want
to
turn
the
property
to
blueberry
cultivation
because
he
feared
possible
damage
to
the
crop
if
the
mine
would
enter
into
production.
In
his
letter
of
April
23,
1980,
to
the
Minister
of
Natural
Resources,
Mr.
Bridges
advised
the
appellant
was
in
the
process
of
clearing
the
land
for
blueberry
development:
this
was
the
first
occasion
during
the
trial
that
it
was
even
suggested
that
the
appellant
still
had
plans
to
grow
blueberries
in
the
property
and
goes
against
all
other
evidence
heard
during
the
trial.
There
is
not
a
scintilla
of
evidence
that
in
1971
Bridges
had
any
intention
to
devote
the
property
to
blueberry
production.
The
overwhelming
evidence
was
that
the
mere
possibility
of
a
producing
mine
near
the
subject
lands
prevented
blueberry
production
from
being
highest
and
best
use
of
the
lands
in
1971.
Mr.
Stilwell’s
report
contains
errors
of
fact
which
influenced
his
conclusion.
One
cannot
close
one's
eyes
to
facts:
exploration
activities
by
mining
companies
taking
place
in
and
around
a
property,
the
community's
knowledge
of
these
activities
and
the
industry's
awareness
of
a
potential
major
ore
body.
The
presence
of
these
facts
usually
unleashes
optimism,
warranted
or
not,
by
land
owners
whose
lands
may
one
day
be
required
by
the
mine,
if
it
comes
into
production.
The
mine
exploration
activity
on
land
contiguous
to
blueberry
land,
for
example,
may
lower
the
value
of
the
blueberry
land
since
a
blueberry
farmer
may
fear
what
a
mine
may
do
to
his
crop.
However,
it
is
probable
that
the
values
of
the
subject
lands
would
increase
at
least
marginally
as
a
result
of
exploration
activity.
The
subject
lands
had
been
kept
uncultivated
waiting
for
something
to
happen.
They
had
value
as
woodland
plus
an
extra
value
due
to
their
proximity
to
the
potential
producing
mine
and
their
topography
which
the
owner
of
the
mining
rights
may
one
day
require.
Mr.
Stilwell
did
not
consider
the
extra
value.
In
tax
cases
the
onus
is
on
the
appellant
to
refute
the
assessment.
Clearly
here
the
appellant
has
not
met
this
onus.
However
the
appellant
has
shown
errors
committed
by
the
valuator
for
the
respondent
in
making
the
valuation
used
by
the
Minister
in
establishing
the
value
of
the
subject
property
as
at
December
31,
1971.
The
Minister's
valuator
concluded
the
fair
market
value
of
the
subject
property
on
December
31,
1971,
was
$50
per
acre.
The
Minister
reassessed
on
the
basis
the
fair
market
value
of
the
property
was
$100
per
acre,
which
would
take
into
account
the
extra
value
of
the
subject
property
in
addition
to
its
highest
and
best
use
as
woodland.
In
my
view
Mr.
Stilwell’s
errors
are
not
of
sufficient
weight
to
compel
me
to
find
the
subject
property
had
a
value
on
Valuation
Day
in
excess
of
$100
per
acre.
Therefore
the
appeal
will
be
dismissed.
There
is
one
other
matter
on
which
I
wish
to
comment.
Subsection
19(6)
of
the
New
Brunswick
Registry
Act
(R.S.
c.
R-6)
provides
that
no
deed
affecting
the
transfer
of
real
property
shall
be
registered
unless
accompanied
by
an
affidavit
of
the
transfer
by
the
grantee,
his
solicitor
or
agent
setting
forth
the
true
and
actual
consideration
for
which
such
property
was
acquired,
the
names
of
the
parties,
the
location
and
description
of
real
property
and
such
other
information
prescribed
by
regulation.
The
registrar
of
deeds
however
is
not
permitted
to
record
the
affidavit
but
is
to
forward
same
to
the
Minister
of
Municipal
Affairs
who,
if
he
considers
it
in
the
public
interest
to
do
so,
may
furnish
the
information
contained
in
such
affidavit
to
any
Minister
of
the
Crown
in
right
of
New
Brunswick
or
of
Canada
(subsections
19(7)
and
19(8)).
Subsequent
to
the
preparation
of
his
report,
Mr.
Stilwell,
as
an
officer
of
the
Crown
in
the
right
of
Canada,
obtained
an
affidavit
of
consideration
in
respect
of
a
sale
of
the
property
in
New
Brunswick
from
the
New
Brunswick
Department
of
Municipal
Affairs.
Mr.
Nicholson,
counsel
for
the
appellant,
objected
to
the
production
of
the
affidavit
on
the
basis
affidavits
of
consideration
are
privileged
documents
which
ordinarily
the
respondent
may
obtain
but
which
the
appellant
cannot.
In
preparing
an
appraisal
report,
private
appraisers
have
access
to
sales
but
not
to
the
information
contained
in
the
affidavits
of
consideration
while
their
opposite
number
at
Revenue
Canada
have
such
access.
Because
Mr.
Stilwell
did
not
rely
on
the
affidavit
in
preparing
his
report,
I
ruled
that
the
affidavit
not
be
admitted
in
evidence;
at
the
time
of
my
ruling
I
indicated
to
counsel
I
may
wish
to
make
certain
comments
in
respect
of
this
matter
in
my
reasons.
An
affidavit
of
consideration
sets
forth
certain
information
which
may
be
relevant
in
respect
of
a
valuation
matter;
the
facts
contained
therein,
if
revelant,
cannot
be
ignored
and
the
respondent's
appraiser
is
entitled
to
use
the
information
contained
in
the
affidavit
in
preparing
his
report
notwithstanding
an
appraiser
preparing
an
opinion
for
a
taxpayer
may
not
have
access
to
the
affidavit.
Subsection
19(9)
of
the
Registry
Act
provides
that
upon
application
of
any
person
a
Judge
of
the
Court
of
Queen's
Bench
of
New
Brunswick,
if
satisfied
that
the
information
contained
in
any
such
affidavit
may
be
of
use
to
the
applicant
in
the
enforcement
or
protection
of
any
right
of
the
applicant,
may
order
the
Minister
of
Municipal
Affairs
to
furnish
the
applicant
with
the
information
contained
in
the
affidavit.
There
does
not
appear
to
be
any
provision
in
the
Registry
Act
precluding
the
respondent
from
making
available
to
the
taxpayer
the
information
in
the
affidavit
he
relies
on
in
making
a
reassessment
or
which
may
be
of
benefit
to
the
taxpayer
appealing
from
such
a
reassessment;
where
subsection
19(9)
of
the
Registry
Act
cannot
be
used
I
would
commend
a
practice
which
would
encourage
this
provision
of
information
by
the
respondent.
Appeal
dismissed.