THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
re-assessment
of
income
tax
in
respect
of
profits
of
$1,255,144
realized
by
the
appellant
in
its
1963
taxation
year.
The
issue
between
the
parties
in
respect
of
this
amount,
as
stated
in
the
agreed
statement
of
facts,
is
whether
it
was
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
mine
during
the
period
of
36
months
commencing
with
the
day
on
which
the
mine
came
into
production
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83(5)*
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
That
the
income
in
question
was
derived
from
the
operation
of
a
mine
is
not
in
dispute.
What
is
in
dispute
is
whether
the
Maclean
workings
(to
use
what
I
hope
is
a
sufficiently
neutral
expression)
which
came
into
production
as
defined
in
Section
83(6)
on
or
about
January
1,
1963
and
from
which
the
income
was
derived
constitute
a
mine
to
which
the
section
applies
or
whether
these
workings
are
but
part
of
a
mine
which
came
into
production
many
years
earlier
and
are
on
that
account
not
within
the
section.
The
appellant
was
incorporated
in
November
1961
and
is
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Terra
Nova
Properties
Limited.
The
latter
company
has
since
1928
been
the
lessor
to
American
Smelting
and
Refining
Company
(hereafter
referred
to
as
ASARCO)
(or
at
times
its
subsidiary,
Buchans
Mining
Company
Limited)
of
certain
mining
rights
and
minerals
in
a
large
tract
of
land
including
the
area
in
and
about
the
town
of
Buchans
in
the
Province
of
Newfoundland
under
arrangements
for
the
sharing
by
Terra
Nova
Properties
Limited
of
profits
from
the
mining
operations
carried
on
by
ASARCO,
or
its
subsidiary,
on
the
said
land.
Following
its
incorporation
the
appellant,
by
assignment
from
Terra
Nova
Properties
Limited
and
by
agreement
with
that
company
and
ASARCO,
became
entitled
to
the
reversion
in
that
portion
of
the
land
in
which
the
Maclean
workings
are
situate
and
to
the
share
of
the
profits
arising
from
operations
thereon
by
ASARCO
which
would
otherwise
have
accrued
to
Terra
Nova
Properties
Limited.
ASARCO
(or
at
times
its
subsidiary)
has
been
engaged
in
mining
operations
in
and
about
the
town
of
Buchans
since
1928.
In
that
year,
following
extensive
exploratory
work,
it
began
mining
ore,
containing
lead,
zine
and
copper,
to
provide
ore
feed
for
a
mill
of
approximately
385,000
tons
annual
milling
capacity
which
it
had
constructed
the
previous
year
near
a
shaft
which
had
been
sunk
to
extract
the
ore
from
seven
ore
bodies
comprising
a
group
known
as
the
Lucky
Strike
ore
bodies.
These
lay
at
surface
level
and
extended
to
a
depth
of
710
feet
below
the
surface.
The
largest
of
them
had
a
horizontal
length
of
nearly
2,000
feet
and
from
1928
until
1958,
when
the
ore
bodies
were
worked
out,
some
6.7
million
tons
of
ore
were
extracted
from
them.
In
the
meantime
between
1931
and
1935
another
shaft
had
been
sunk
more
than
a
mile
to
the
eastward
of
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
for
the
purpose
of
extracting
similar
ore
from
two
other
large
ore
bodies
known
as
the
Oriental
ore
bodies
which
also
lay
at
surface
level
and
which
extended
to
a
depth
of
some
445
feet.
An
underground
haulage
tunnel
had
also
been
constructed
at
a
depth
of
575
feet
below
the
surface
of
the
ground
for
the
purpose
of
transporting
the
ore
from
the
Oriental
shaft
to
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
where
it
was
raised
to
the
surface
and
fed
to
the
mill.
From
1935
to
1963
some
3.6
million
tons
of
ore
were
mined
from
these
two
ore
bodies.
Between
1943
and
1955
some
209,623
tons
of
ore
were
also
mined
from
three
small
ore
bodies
known
as
the
Old
Buchans
ore
bodies
which
had
been
discovered
as
far
back
as
1905
and
which
lay
at
surface
approximately
one-half
mile
west
of
the
Oriental
shaft.
These
ore
bodies
extended
to
a
depth
of
just
over
220
feet
and
the
material
from
them
was
transported
via
an
underground
tunnel
150
feet
below
the
surface
to
the
Oriental
shaft,
down
that
shaft
to
the
haulage
tunnel
and
thence
by
it
to
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
where
it
was
raised
to
the
surface
and
fed
to
the
mill.
By
1955
these
three
ore
bodies
had
been
worked
out.
In
the
meantime
in
1948
in
the
course
of
an
extensive
exploratory
drilling
program
two
large
ore
bodies
known
as
the
Rother-
mere
ore
bodies
were
discovered
to
the
north-westward
of
the
Lucky
Strike
ore
bodies
at
a
depth
extending
from
740
feet
to
1,700
feet
below
the
surface
of
the
ground.
These
ore
bodies
were
brought
into
production
in
1950
following
the
sinking
of
a
shaft
some
3,000
feet
to
the
north-westward
of
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
and
the
construction
of
an
underground
haulage
tunnel
at
the
585
foot
level
from
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
to
the
Rother-
mere
shaft.
From
1950
to
the
end
of
1963
some
3.9
million
tons
of
ore
were
mined
from
the
Rothermere
ore
bodies
and
transported
via
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
the
haulage
tunnel
to
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
where
they
were
raised
to
the
surface
for
processing
in
the
mill.
The
planned
depth
of
the
Rothermere
shaft
was
originally
1,715
feet
which
would
have
taken
it
to
the
deepest
level
of
the
ore
body.
However,
in
1950
surface
drilling
had
disclosed
the
presence
of
an
even
deeper
ore
body
located
some
3,000
feet
to
the
north-westward
of
the
shaft.
The
shaft
was
thereupon
extended
to
a
depth
of
2,513
feet
and
a
tunnel
was
opened
at
the
2,300
foot
level
to
the
new
ore
body
for
the
purpose
of
carrying
out
further
exploratory
drilling
to
determine
its
size
and
quality.
This
ore
body
has
become
known
as
the
Maclean
ore
body
and
is
the
ore
body
from
the
mining
of
which
the
income
here
in
question
was
derived.
It
is
about
half
a
mile
long,
it
has
a
maximum
width
of
600
feet
and
its
average
thickness
is
40
feet.
It
is
estimated
to
have
contained
some
3.5
million
tons
of
ore
all
lying
at
a
depth
of
from
2,050
to
3,250
feet
below
the
surface
of
the
ground.
Between
1957
and
1960
a
shaft
was
sunk
from
the
surface
of
this
ore
body
to
a
depth
of
3,536
feet
and
a
haulage
tunnel
about
a
mile
long
was
also
constructed
connecting
it
with
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
at
a
depth
of
585
feet
from
the
surface.
Ore
from
this
ore
body
is
raised
by
the
Maclean
shaft
to
the
585
foot
level
and
transported
via
this
tunnel
to
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
where
it
is
raised
to
the
surface
and
milled.
Waste
rock
from
the
operation
is
raised
directly
to
the
surface
at
the
Maclean
shaft
and
stockpiled
there
for
ultimate
removal
by
truck.
Production
of
ore
from
this
ore
body
in
reasonable
commercial
quantities
was
achieved
in
the
latter
part
of
1962
and
some
247,000
tons
of
ore
were
mined
from
it
in
1963,
the
year
in
question
in
these
proceedings.
The
construction
of
the
haulage
tunnel
was
undertaken
for
economic
reasons
concerned
with
the
use
of
the
existing
underground
facilities
at
the
Lucky
Strike
shaft
and
in
preference
to
surface
haulage
which
would
have
involved
difficulties
in
winter
and
greater
expense.
The
Maclean
shaft
was
constructed
at
a
cost
of
$2,250,000
exclusive
of
other
development
costs
incurred
to
bring
the
Mac-
lean
ore
body
into
production.
The
shaft
is
circular
in
shape,
and
is
14
feet
in
diameter.
It
is
fitted
with
hoisting
compartments,
a
manway
compartment
and
spaces
for
pipes,
cables
and
other
equipment.
It
has
openings
for
ten
levels
at
which
ore
is
mined,
has
a
loading
pocket
from
which
the
ore
is
loaded
in
skips
and
hoisted,
a
dump
for
waste
rock
and
pumping
stations
at
three
different
levels.
At
the
surface
there
are
five
or
six
buildings
including
what
is
referred
to
as
a
head
frame
and
a
hoist
house.
Both
the
operation
of
the
Maclean
workings
and
the
systems
for
working
them
are
integrated
with
those
of
the
other
mineral
workings
at
or
near
Buchans
and
with
the
mill
as
part
of
a
single
operation
carried
on
by
ASARCO.
There
is
but
one
man-
agement
and
staff—all
employed
and
directed
by
ASARCO.
The
production
of
ore
from
all
the
workings
is
geared
to
the
capacity
of
the
mill
to
process
it.
While
records
are
kept
as
to
the
quantity
and
quality
of
the
ore
extracted
from
different
workings
it
is
all
fed
to
the
mill
and
no
further
distinction
is
made
between
any
of
it
or
of
its
products.
Sand
for
filling
worked
out
spaces,
compressed
air
to
operate
pneumatic
drills
and
ventilating
air
for
the
Maclean
workings
are
all
supplied
and
conducted
by
systems
which
serve
the
Rothermere
and
Maclean
workings
via
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
the
exploratory
tunnel
previously
referred
to.
Excess
water
from
the
Maclean
workings
is
carried
away
by
the
same
route
to
the
Rothermere
shaft
where
it
is
pumped
to
the
surface.
Miners
working
the
Maclean
deposit
reach
it
via
the
Rothermere
shaft
and
the
same
tunnel,
though
some
personnel
gain
access
by
the
Maclean
shaft.
On
these
facts
the
precise
question
to
be
determined,
as
I
see
it,
is
whether
the
Maclean
workings
constitute
a
mine
within
the
meaning
of
Section
83(5)
of
the
Act.
In
its
context
in
that
section
the
word
‘
mine”
in
my
opinion
has
its
ordinary
meaning
and
this
indeed
was
the
position
taken
by
counsel
for
both
parties,
though
they
differed
in
their
submissions
as
to
the
application
of
the
section
to
the
facts.
However,
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘mine’’
is
not
precise
and
can
vary
widely
according
to
the
context
in
which
it
is
found.
In
its
context
in
Section
83(5)
it
is
obviously
intended
to
embrace
something
the
development
of
which
Parliament
wished
to
encourage
by
granting
a
three-year
exemption
from
income
taxation.
In
North
Bay
Mica
Co.
Lid.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1958]
S.C.R.
957;
[1958]
C.T.C.
208
at
212,
a
somewhat
similar
earlier
section
was
held
to
apply
where
a
mine
had
been
established
at
the
abandoned
and
dismantled
site
of
a
former
mining
operation.
In
that
case
Cartwright,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
speaking
for
the
majority
of
the
Court
said
:
For
the
appellant
it
is
contended
that
the
word
“mine”
as
used
in
clause
(b)
of
Section
74(1)
means
not
“a
portion
of
the
earth
containing
mineral
deposits”
but
rather
“a
mining
concern
taken
as
a
whole,
comprising
mineral
deposits,
workings,
equipment
and
machinery,
capable
of
producing
ore”.
Support
for
this
contention
is
sought
in
the
circumstances
that
if
“mine”
has
the
first
of
the
two
suggested
meanings,
then,
(i)
the
phrase
“certified
.
..
to
have
been
operating
on
mineral
deposits”
is
inapt
as
it
presupposes
an
entity
capable
of
carrying
on
operations;
and
(ii)
the
draftsman
should
have
substituted
for
the
clause
“that
came
into
production”
the
clause
“that
was
brought
into
production”.
From
this
the
appellant
goes
on
to
argue
that
the
“mine”
of
the
appellant
is
one
entirely
different
from
the
“mine”
of
Purdy
Mica
Mines
Limited.
I
incline
to
the
view
that
this
contention
is
sound;
.
.
.
While
some
of
the
wording
referred
to
as
supporting
the
appellant’s
contention
in
that
case
is
not
found
in
the
present
Section
83(5)
and
the
use
in
the
French
language
edition
of
Section
83(5)
of
the
expression
‘‘provenant
de
l’exploitation
d’une
mine”
is
at
least
suggestive
of
the
word
‘‘mine’’
being
used
in
reference
to
the
ore
body
to
be
mined,
neither
party
sought
to
attribute
to
the
word
any
narrower
meaning
than
that
referred
to
in
the
passage
cited,
that
is
to
say,
“a
mining
concern
taken
as
a
whole,
comprising
mineral
deposits,
workings,
equipment
and
machinery,
capable
of
producing
ore’’.
Indeed
the
chief
difference
between
the
parties
seemed
to
me
to
lie
in
that
the
appellant
stressed
the
element
of
capability
of
producing
ore
while
counsel
for
the
Minister
emphasized
his
concept
of
“a
mining
concern
taken
as
a
whole’’.
To
my
mind
the
question
posed
by
the
present
case
is
not
to
be
solved
by
looking
at
the
Buchans’
locality
as
a
whole
and
posing
the
question
whether
there
is
more
than
one
operation
being
carried
on
or
more
than
one
mining
concern
there
or
more
than
one
mine.
The
correct
approach,
as
I
see
it,
is
to
examine
the
facts
relating
to
the
Maclean
workings
themselves
in
the
picture
as
a
whole
while
bearing
in
mind
the
object
of
the
statutory
provisions.
Do
the
Maclean
workings
then
constitute
a
mine
within
the
ordinary
meaning
of
that
term
as
used
in
Section
83(5)
?
There
is,
first,
an
extensive
and
distinct
body
of
ore,
which
originally
contained
enough
material
to
feed
the
mill
at
Buchans
for
about
nine
years,
situate
horizontally
more
than
1,000
feet
from
the
nearest
known
ore
body
and
vertically
more
than
350
feet
deeper
than
it.
Next,
there
are
the
mining
shaft
and
other
extensive
excavations
in
the
ground
made
specifically
for
the
extraction
of
that
particular
body
of
ore.
There
are
present,
as
well,
all
the
necessary
buildings,
tackle,
equipment,
machinery
and
systems,
whether
by
extension
of
existing
systems
or
independently
installed,
to
carry
out
the
mining
of
the
particular
body
of
ore.
There
is
undoubtedly
the
capability
of
producing
ore.
Finally,
the
expenditures
of
capital
required
for
the
installation
of
the
shaft
and
the
other
developments
required
to
bring
this
particular
body
of
ore
into
production
were
made
in
the
course
of
what
I
would
regard
as
a
venture
in
the
pursuit
of
profit
by
the
extraction
of
the
particular
body
of
ore.
This,
together
with
the
subsequent
operation
of
extracting
the
ore,
as
I
see
it,
constitutes
in
itself
a
mining
concern
notwithstanding
its
integration
with
the
larger
and
overall
operation.
The
workings
accordingly
appear
to
me
to
have
all
the
characteristics
of
a
mine
within
the
meaning
of
the
statutory
provision.
Two
further
considerations
which
appear
to
me
to
lend
support
to
this
conclusion
are
(1)
that
the
installation
and
equipment
of
the
Maclean
shaft
suggests
that
the
previously
existing
shafts,
facilities
and
equipment
would
not
have
served
satisfactorily
the
purpose
of
exploiting
the
Maclean
ore
body
if,
indeed,
they
could
have
been
made
to
serve
it
at
all,
and
(2)
that
the
investment
of
capital
and
the
development
of
the
productive
capacity
of
the
Maclean
workings,
which
otherwise
might
or
might
not
have
taken
place,
appear
to
me
to
be
among
the
objects
that
the
exemption
of
the
section
was
designed
to
encourage.
The
Minister’s
contention
was
basically
that
there
is
and
has
been
but
one
mine
at
Buchans
and
that
the
Maclean
workings
are
simply
an
extension
of
an
old
or
existing
mine
into
a
new
ore
body
and
not
a
new
mine
within
the
meaning
of
the
statute.
That
the
Maclean
workings
can
in
a
sense
be
regarded
as
an
extension
of
the
earlier
workings
is,
I
think,
undeniable.
It
depends
on
how
the
matter
is
viewed.
Almost
any
additional
step
by
ASARCO
in
the
development
of
its
undertaking
at
Buchans
might
in
some
sense
be
regarded
as
an
extension
of
its
original
undertaking
there.
I
have
more
difficulty
in
regarding
the
whole
mining
operation
there
as
being
one
of
a
single
mine
but
perhaps
that
too
is
possible.
From
the
point
of
view
of
ASARCO
it
probably
could
be
convenient
to
refer
to
the
whole
mining
and
milling
undertaking
at
Buchans
as
a
mine
when
distinguishing
it
from
a
similar
undertaking
somewhere
else
in
the
world.
In
a
like
context
it
might
be
possible
to
refer
to
the
mining
portion
of
the
operation,
as
well,
as
a
mine
though
I
should
have
thought
the
plural
of
the
word
would
be
more
apt.
Apart
from
such
a
context
one
seeking
a
word
to
characterize
the
mining
operation
at
Buchans
would,
I
think,
almost
certainly
choose
the
plural
for
it
seems
to
me
that
only
in
a
strained
or
particular
sense
would
all
the
various
workings
there
be
referred
to
as
a
“mine”.
Moreover
to
determine
that
workings
are
in
some
sense
an
extension
of
a
previously
established
mine
is
to
my
mind
inconclusive
on
the
question
to
be
answered.
The
expressions
“new
mine’’,
“old
mine’’
or
similar
expressions
are
not
found
in
Section
83(5).
Nor
is
the
word
‘‘extension’’
found
in
the
wording.
The
word
used
is
“mine”
and
the
question
which
it
poses
is
whether
the
facts
disclose
a
mine
to
which
the
section
applies.
There
would,
as
I
see
it,
be
no
difficulty
in
deciding
that
an
extension
of
a
mining
operation
to
a
new
body
of
ore,
found
lying
adjacent
to
a
body
being
worked,
by
using
the
same
excavation,
shaft
and
facilities
for
mining
it
was
not
a
mine
to
which
Section
83(5)
applied.
That
conclusion,
however,
would,
in
my
view,
be
reached
not
because
what
was
being
considered
was
an
extension
of
a
previously
existing
mine
but
because
on
the
facts
as
disclosed
it
could
not
by
itself
be
regarded
as
a
mine
in
the
ordinary
sense
of
the
word.
It
will
no
doubt
in
every
close
situation
become
a
matter
of
fact
and
degree
whether
or
not
what
is
being
considered
is
a
mine
but
to
my
mind
the
example
I
have
put
is
far
different
from
the
present
situation
where
all
the
elements
necessary
for
a
distinct
mine
appear
to
me
to
be
present.
In
my
opinion
the
fact
that
the
mining
and
milling
operation
of
ASARCO
at
Buchans,
or
the
mining
operation
alone
can
be
regarded
in
each
case
as
a
single
operation
is
also
inconclusive.
One
might,
for
example,
say
the
same
of
two
sets
of
workings
ten
miles
apart
with
no
physical
connection
between
them
but
conducted
by
the
same
management
and
staff.
That
it
can
be
said
that
there
is
but
one
operation
is,
no
doubt,
a
fact
to
be
considered
along
with
the
other
facts
and
it
seems
possible
that
the
degree
of
integration
of
the
systems
and
management,
in
a
case
where
the
other
facts
are
inconclusive,
may
even
become
decisive.
But
as
a
fact
bearing
on
the
question
it
appears
to
me
to
pale
in
importance
to
facts
such
as
the
wide
separation
of
ore
bodies
in
distance
and
depth,
the
necessity
for
substantial
separate
facilities
to
extract
the
ore
and
the
need
to
invest
substantial
amounts
of
capital
specifically
for
the
purpose
of
setting
up
the
physical
establishment
required
for
profitable
extraction
of
the
ore.
Counsel
for
the
Minister
also
cited
Spencer
v.
Scurr
(1862),
31
Beav.
334,
and
Cowley
v.
Wellesley
(1866),
33
Beav.
635,
in
support
of
his
submission
that
all
the
workings
at
Buchans
constituted
one
mine.
These
cases,
however,
were
concerned
with
the
question
of
the
right,
as
between
tenant
for
life
and
remainderman,
to
rentals
from
the
exploitation
of
mineral
deposits
and
turn
on
a
principle
which,
as
I
see
it,
has
no
bearing
on
a
question
of
the
kind
involved
in
the
present
case.
I
do
not
therefore
regard
them
as
useful
in
a
case
of
this
kind.
The
appeal
accordingly
succeeds
and
it
will
be
allowed
with
costs.