Dube,
J:—These
are
appeals
from
the
assessments
for
the
taxation
years
1969,
1970.
1971
and
1972
with
reference
to
amounts
received
by
plaintiff’s
spouse
from
Blacktop
Construction
Limited
for
the
sale
of
gravel
extracted
from
her
property.
The
Minister
assumed
the
amounts
to
be
dependent
upon
the
use
of.
or
production
from,
the
property,
thus
taxable
income.
The
plaintiff
claims
that
the
proceeds
Should
be
treated
as
capital
in
nature
and
not
as
income.
The
relevant
facts
are
not
in
dispute.
On
April
8,
1963
the
plaintiff
purchased
a
rural
farm
property
in
the
Township
of
North
Dumfries,
in
the
Regional
Municipality
of
Waterloo,
Ontario,
and
took
up
residence
there
with
his
family.
As
the
township
opened
a
road
through
the
area
in
1964.
gravel
was
discovered
on
the
property
and
small
quantities
were
sold
during
that
period.
At
a
later
date
(the
statement
of
claim
specifies
a
deed
registered
November
9,
1966,
but
plaintiff
recalls
the
date
as
being
‘about
1965”)
plaintiff
conveyed
the
farm
to
his
wife
Laura
Lillian
Lackie
for
about
$80.000
($82,500
in
the
statement
of
claim).
By
a
licensing
agreement
dated
October
1.
1969
between
herself
and
Blacktop
Construction
Ltd.
she
granted
“Blacktop'’
the
sole
and
exclusive
right
and
licence
to
the
gravel
on
the
property
for
the
price
of
20¢
per
ton
removed
therefrom.
The
agreement
is
for
a
period
of
five
years
and
three
months,
commencing
on
October
1,
1969
and
ending
on
December
31,
1974.
Blacktop
agrees
to
remove
a
minimum
quantity
of
50,000
tons
during
the
period
from
October
1.
1969
until
December
31,
1970
and
each
year
thereafter
for
the
duration
of
the
agreement
and
to
pay
a
minimum
sum
of
$10,000
a
year
up
to
a
total
of
$50,000
for
the
entire
term
of
the
lease.
Blacktop
is
to
provide
statements
and
pay
the
minimum
sum
of
$5,000
twice
yearly.
Clauses
3
and
4
of
the
agreement
read
as
follows:
3.
The
Company
shall
remove
from
the
Owner’s
premises
the
minimum
quantity
of
50,000
tons
of
gravel
products
during
the
period
from
October
1,
1969
until
December
31,
1970
and
each
year
thereafter
during
the
balance
of
this
Lease
and
if
the
Company,
does
not
remove
from
the
Owner’s
premises
such
quantities
of
gravel
products,
the
Company
shall
pay
the
Owner
the
difference
in
value
between
the
quantity
actually
removed
and
the
quantity
stipulated
to
be
removed
so
that
during
the
first
period
from
October
1,
1969
until
December
31,
1970
the
Company
shall
pay
the
Owner
the
minimum
sum
of
$10,000.00
and
a
further
minimum
sum
of
$10,000.00
each
year
for
the
balance
of
this
Lease;
provided
that
the
cumulative
value
of
the
quantity
of
gravel
products
actually
removed
at
the
rate
of
$.20
per
ton
during
the
entire
term
of
this
Lease
shall
be
set
off
and
applied
against
the
total
of
$50,000.00
minimum
payments
required
to
be
paid
during
the
entire
term
of
this
Lease.
4.
The
Company
shall
furnish
to
the
Owner
by
August
15,
1970
a
statement
of
the
gravel
products
removed
from
the
Owner’s
premises
during
the
period
October
1,
1969
to
July
31,
1970,
inclusive
and
shall
at
the
same
time
pay
for
such
amount
at
the
said
rate
of
$.20
per
ton
for
the
gravel
products
removed
during
such
period
or,
subject
to
the
preceding
paragraph,
the
minimum
sum
of
$5,000.00,
whichever
is
greater,
and
the
Company
shall
by
January
15,
1971
deliver
a
similar
statement
to
the
Owner
for
the
period
August
1,
1970
to
December
31,
1970
and
at
the
same
time
pay
for
same
or,
subject
to
the
preceding
paragraph,
pay
the
minimum
sum
of
$5,000.00,
whichever
is
greater,
and
thereafter
the
Company
shall
deliver
similar
statements
and
make
similar
payments
twice
yearly
on
the
15th
days
of
August
and
January
for
the
period
January
1st
to
July
31st
and
August
1st
to
December
31st
respectively
for
the
balance
of
the
term
of
this
Lease.
During
the
term
of
the
agreement
Blacktop
in
fact
removed
gravel
for
a
value
of
only
$28,334.31,
but
paid
to
plaintiff’s
wife
the
agreed
minimum
of
$50,000.
An
analysis
of
the
payments
was
filed
at
the
trial
and
is
reproduced
here,
in
condensed
form
for
convenience.
|
Oct
1
to
Dec
31,
1969
|
$
1,764.80
|
$
1,764.80
|
$
2,500.00
|
$
2,500.00
|
|
|
Jan
1
to
July
31,
1970
|
6,380.82
|
8,145.62
|
5,645.62
|
8,145.62
|
$
5,000.00
|
|
Aug
1
to
Dec
31,
1970
|
2,425.36
|
10,570.98
|
2,425.36
|
10,570.98
|
10,000.00
|
|
Jan
1
to
July
31,
1971
|
3,170.80
|
13,741.78
|
5,000.00
|
15,570.98
|
15,000.00
|
|
Aug
1
to
Dec
31,
1971
|
11,061.05
|
24,802.83
|
9,231.85
|
24,802.83
|
20,000.00
|
|
Jan
1
to
July
31,
1972
|
44.00
|
24,846.83
|
197.17
|
25,000.00
|
25,000.00
|
|
Aug
1
to
Dec
31,
1972
|
3,487.48
|
28,334.31'
|
5,000.00
|
30,000.00
|
30,000.00
|
|
Jan
1
to
July
31,
1973
|
—
|
28,334.31
|
5,000.00
|
35,000.00
|
35,000.00
|
|
Aug
1
to
Dec
31,
1973
|
—
|
28,334.31
|
5,000.00
|
40,000.00
|
40,000.00
|
|
Jan
1
to
July
31,
1974
|
—
|
28,334.31
|
5,000.00
|
45,000.00
|
45,000.00
|
|
Aug
1
to
Dec
31,
1974
|
—
|
$28,334.31
|
5,000.00
|
$50,000.00
|
$50,000.00
|
|
$28,334.31
|
|
$50,000.00
|
|
Plaintiff
alleges
that
the
payments
are
capital
in
nature
for
the
following
reasons:
The
existence
of
the
minimum
formula
rendered
the
amounts
not
“dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property’’
as
provided
in
paragraph
12(1)(g)
of
the
(new)
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63.
The
plaintiff
is
not
in
the
business
of
selling
gravel,
he
is
in
fact
engaged
in
a
rigging
and
millrighting
business
in
Kitchener
under
the
corporate
name
of
Lackie
Bros
Ltd.
He
claims,
in
any
event,
that
the
proceeds
should
not
be
taxed
in
his
hands
because
the
proceeds
were
not
“income
from
property”
pursuant
to
subsection
74(1).
The
relevant
sections
from
the
new
Act
read
as
follows:
12.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
as
income
from
a
business
or
property
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
applicable:
(g)
any
amount
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year
that
was
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property
whether
or
not
that
amount
was
an
instalment
of
the
sale
price
of
the
property
(except
that
an
instalment
of
the
sale
price
of
agricultural
land
is
not
included
by
virtue
of
this
paragraph);
74.
(1)
Where
a
person
has,
on
or
after
August
1,
1917,
transferred
property
either
directly
or
indirectly,
by
means
of
a
trust
or
by
any
other
means
whatever
to
his
spouse,
or
to
a
person
who
has
since
become
his
spouse,
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
the
property
or
from
property
substituted
therefor
shall,
during
the
lifetime
of
the
transferor
while
he
is
resident
in
Canada
and
the
transferee
is
his
spouse,
be
deemed
to
be
income
of
the
transferor
and
not
of
the
transferee.
248.
(1)
In
this
Act,
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
“property”
means
property
of
any
kind
whatever
whether
real
or
personal
or
corporeal
or
incorporeal
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
(a)
a
right
of
any
kind
whatever,
a
share
or
a
chose
in
action,
and
(b)
unless
a
contrary
intention
is
evident,
money;
The
above
provisions
would
govern
plaintiff's
1972
taxation
year.
The
corresponding
paragraph
6(1)(j),
subsection
21(1)
and
paragraph
139(1)(e)
were
in
effect
during
the
three
preceding
years.
As
stated
in
Richard
De
Boo
Limited,
Canada
Tax
Service,
volume
l,
p
12-251,
the
purpose
of
paragraph
12(1)(g)
is
“to
reach
out
further
[than
the
general
provisions
of
sections
3
and
8
of
the
Income
Tax
Act]
and
bring
into
income
amounts
that,
though
expressed
as
instalments
of
the
sale
price
of
property,
are
dependent
entirely
on
the
use
of
or
production
from
that
property”.
The
basic
theory
behind
the
provision
was
clearly
expressed
by
Rowlatt,
J
in
Jones
v
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue,
[1920]
1
KB
711
at
714:
So
it
is,
but
there
is
no
law
of
nature
or
any
invariable
principle
that
because
it
can
be
said
that
a
certain
payment
is
consideration
for
the
transfer
of
property
it
must
be
looked
upon
as
price
in
the
character
of
principal.
In
each
case
regard
must
be
had
to
what
the
sum
is.
A
man
may
sell
his
property
for
a
sum
which
is
to
be
paid
in
instalments,
and
when
that
is
the
case
the
payments’to
him
are
not
income:
Foley
v
Fletcher.
Or
a
man
may
sell
his
property
for
an
annuity.
In
that
case
the
Income
Tax
Act
applies.
.
.
.
On
the
other
hand,
a
man
may
sell
his
property
nakedly
for
a
share
of
the
profits
of
the
business.
In
that
case
the
share
of
the
profits
of
the
business
would
be
the
price,
but
it
would
bear
the
character
of
income
in
the
vendor’s
hands.
.
.
.
In
this
case
there
is
no
difficulty
in
seeing
what
was
intended.
The
property
was
sold
for
a
certain
sum,
and
in
addition
the
vendor
took
an
annual
sum
which
was
dependent
upon
the
volume
of
business
done;
that
is
to
say,
he
took
something
which
rose
or
fell
with
the
chances
of
the
business.
When
a
man
does
that
he
takes
an
income;
it
is
in
the
nature
of
income,
and
on
that
ground
I
decide
this
case.
The
decision
in
Smethurst
(H
M
Inspector
of
Taxes)
v
Davy
(1957),
37
TC
593,
is
often
regarded
as
the
foundation
of
Canadian
jurisprudence
in
the
matter
of
taxation
and
use
of
land.
The
taxpayer
in
that
case
was
the
occupier
of
land
with
several
gravel
pits.
She
gave
permission
for
gravel
to
be
excavated
and
received
payments
based
on
the
amount
of
gravel
taken.
She
claimed
that
the
payments
were
made
as
the
purchase
price
on
sales
of
the
gravel.
The
High
Court
held
that
the
payments
were
for
a
right
to
use
the
land
and
fell
within
paragraph
31(1)(d)
of
the
Finance
Act,
1948,
11
&
12
Geo
VI,
c
49.
Under
that
provision,
profits
arising
from
payments
for
any
easement
over
or
right
to
use
any
land
in
the
United
Kingdom
are
taxable.
The
Court
held
that
the
transaction
was
a
profit
a
prendre.
Lord
Evershed,
MR
said
at
page
604
that
“the
digging
of
sand
and
gravel
is
comprehended
within
the
general
formula
‘use
of
land’
”,
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
J
O
Pallett
v
MNR,
22
Tax
ABC
40;
59
DTC
230,
dealt
with
the
appeal
of
a
farmer
who
had
made
an
agreement
to
sell
sand
and
gravel
for
a
total
of
$22,000
in
four
instalments
payable
on
fixed
dates.
The
Board
dismissed
the
appeal
relying
on
the
Smethurst
case
(supra).
It
relied
also
on
M
M
Ross
v
MNR,
[1950]
CTC
169;
4
DTC
775,
an
Exchequer
Court
decision
to
the
effect
that
use
of
property
includes
the
yielding
of
hydrocarbons
from
an
oil
well.
The
Board
said
that
the
steps
taken
toward
moving
the
gravel
constitute
putting
the
land
to
use.
In
MNR
v
Lamon,
[1963]
CTC
68;
63
DTC
1039,
the
Exchequer
Court
held
that
the
amounts
received
by
the
respondent
baker
for
the
sale
of
gravel
were
taxable
under
the
provision
of
paragraph
6(1)(j)
(the
predecessor
of
12(1)(g)).
Cameron,
J
referred
to
the
Smethurst
case
and
said
that
the
respondent,
in
selling
gravel
as
she
did,
embarked
on
a
scheme
for
profit-making
and
engaged
in
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
1963
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dealt
with
an
appeal
quite
similar
to
the
case
at
bar,
Mouat
v
MNR,
32
Tax
ABC
269;
63
DTC
548.
Mouat
discovered
that
his
island
lots,
off
the
coast
of
British
Columbia,
contained
a
valuable
deposit
of
shale
and
entered
into
a
contract
with
Cameron
for
the
removal
of
the
shale
over
a
period
of
20
years
at
a
royalty
payment
of
20¢
per
cubic
yard.
In
addition,
he
was
guaranteed
a
fixed
minimum
payment
of
$5,000
a
year.
At
the
end
of
the
first
year,
hardly
any
shale
had
been
removed
but
the
minimum
$5,000
was
paid.
Fisher,
QC
held
the
amount
taxable.
He
went
as
far
as
to
say
that
“even
the
slightest
use
of
the
right
brings
the
payment
within
the
provisions
of
Section
6(1
)(j)
of
the
Act”.
Another
decision
of
Fisher,
QC
was
referred
to,
but
in
support
of
plaintiff’s
case.
In
Pacific
Pine
Co,
Ltd
v
MNR,
26
Tax
ABC
41;
61
DTC
95,
the
appellant
sold
his
timber
licence
and
the
purchase
price
was
to
be
paid
in
16
quarterly
instalments
to
be
paid
irrespective
of
the
amount
of
timber
cut.
It
was
held
that
the
provisions
of
paragraph
6(1
)(j)
were
not
applicable
“as
the
amounts
received
by
the
taxpayer
were
not
dependent
upon
use
of,
or
production
from,
property”.
In
Morrison
v
MNR,
37
Tax
ABC
164;
65
DTC
25,
another
Tax
Appeal
Board
decision,
it
was
held
that
amounts
received
for
the
sale
of
rocks
to
build
the
Cape
Breton
causeway
were
not
taxable
within
the
meaning
of
6(1)(j)
because
the
farm
did
not
“produce”
the
rock.
If
the
appellant
farmer
“had
conducted
the
blasting
operations
himself
and
sold
the
resulting
production
of
rock,
he
might
possibly
have
been
liable
under
both
Sections
6(1)(j)
and
139(1)(e)
of
the
Act”.
The
latter
provision
defines
“business”
as
including
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade.
In
Randle
v
MNR,
39
Tax
ABC
46;
65
DTC.
507,
the
appellant
received
$2,271
in
full
settlement
for
the
right
of
entry
for
the
removal
of
clay
subsoil
for
road
building
purposes.
It
was
held
that
the
transaction
was
not
‘‘an
adventure
in
trade”
nor
was
the
amount
received
“dependent
on
the
use
of
the
property”.
The
amount
was
entirely
“compensation
for
loss
of
a
capital
asset”.
In
Hoffman
v
MNR,
39
Tax
ABC
220;
65
DTC
617,
the
Board
held
that
the
sale
of
all
of
the
marketable
timber
was
just
the
appellant
farmer’s
first
step
in
making
the
best
realization
of
his
farm
property;
it
was
not
a
transaction
in
the
course
of
business.
Weldon,
QC
provides
a
definition
of
profit
à
prendre
at
pages
230-31
[623]:
From
the
legal
background
to
the
phrase
profit
à
prendre,
quoted
above,
it
is
clear
that
the
expression
should
be
reserved
to
cover
such
typical
Situations
as
the
granting
of
a
continuing
licence
or
right
to
fish
and
to
take
away
the
catch,
to
hunt
and
to
take
away
the
bag,
to
dig
and
to
take
away
the
gravel,
to
cut
and
to
remove
the
timber,
and
so
on.
In
all
of
those
examples,
it
is
readily
discernible
that
the
licence
or
right,
known
as
a
profit
à
prendre,
is
used
to
cover
some
continuing
activity
which
can
be
described
in
no
better
way
than
in
the
pertinent
language
of
Section
6(1)(j)
of
the
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
a
profit
dependent
upon
use
of
or
production
from
property.
A
very
recent
decision
of
the
Board,
Porta-Test
Manufacturing
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1977]
CTC
2279;
77
DTC
222,
deals
with
a
licensing
agreement
including
a
minimum
royalty.
In
1974,
pursuant
to
the
minimum
royalty
payment
provision
of
the
agreement
an
additional
$75,000
was
received
which
the
taxpayer
argued
was
a
capital
gain
realized
in
its
1971
taxation
year
from
the
sale
of
an
exclusive
right.
The
Board
ruled
that
the
agreement
did
not
mention
the
sale
of
an
exclusive
right
for
a
lump
sum.
St-Onge.
QC
said
that
“this
clause
was
not
written
as
a
yardstick
to
fix
the
payment
for
an
exclusive
right,
but
to
promote
the
sale
of
the
appellant’s
product’’.
Learned
counsel
for
plaintiff
claims
that
in
this
last
decision
the
Board
would
have
treated
the
minimum
payment
as
a
capital
gain
had
it
not
considered
it
to
be
a
royalty
to
increase
sales.
In
a
nutshell,
plaintiff
submits
that
payments
received
under
an
agreement
in
writing
for
an
exclusive
right
based
on
a
minimum
formula
should
be
considered
capital
gain
as
they
are
not
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property.
Several
useful
guidelines
emerge
from
the
decisions
above
referred
to.
Where
property
is
sold
for
a
set
sum
to
be
paid,
in
fixed
instalments,
those
payments
are
not
income.
If
it
is
sold
for
a
share
of
the
profits,
the
payments
then
bear
the
character
of
income,
and
so
would
annuities
and
royalties.
If
property
is
sold
for
a
sum
certain,
plus
annual
sums
dependent
on
the
volume
of
business,
those
annual
sums
would
be
income.
But
if
what
is
sold
relates
to
the
use
of
land,
including
excavation
for
gravel.
that
is
a
profit
a
prendre,
thus
taxable
income.
whether
or
not
the
sale
is
considered
to
be
a
“business”
(under
the
provisions
of
the
old
paragraph
139(1)(e)
or
the
new
subsection
248(1)).
Profit
à
prendre
implies
a
continuing
licence,
or
continuous
right
to
use
land;
a
single
final
transaction
transferring
all
the
property
(ie
gravel)
would
not
be
a
profit
a
prendre.
I
should
think
that
if
plaintiff's
spouse
had
sold
all
the
gravel,
whether
the
amount:
agreed
upon
had
been
paid
in
one
lump
sum,
or
by
instalments,
that
would
be
described
as
a
transaction
in
the
nature
of
capital.
(It
is
common
ground
that
she
was
not
in
the
business
of
selling
gravel.)
But
we
are
faced
here
with
the
sale
of
some
gravel
over
a
continuous
period,
the
use
of
land
and
a
profit
a
prendre
over
more
than
five
years.
The
agreement
does
provide
a
minimum
of
$50,000,
but
no
maximum.
Neither
can
it
really
be
said
that
the
agreement
and
the
benefits
derived
therefrom
are
not
dependent
upon
the
volume
of
business:
to
recall
the
words
of
Rowlatt.
J
in
Jones
v
Commissioners
of
Inland
Revenue
(supra),
the
vendor
“took
something
which
rose
or
fell
with
the
chances
of
the
“business”.
True,
the
amounts
could
not
fall
below
a
certain
floor,
but
above
that.
they
could
rise
and
fall,
and
in
fact
did
rise
and
fall
during
the
first
part
of
the
schedule.
Under
the
circumstances,
I
must
confirm
the
assessments
and
dismiss
the
appeals.