Cattanach,
J.:—These
are
appeals
from
the
assessments
of
the
appellant
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
its
1950,
1951
and
1952
taxation
years.
At
the
outset
of
the
hearing
of
these
appeals,
counsel
for
the
respondent
requested
that
paragraph
8
of
the
respondent’s
reply
to
the
Notice
of
Appeal
respecting
the
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1950
taxation
year
be
deleted
since
he
did
not
propose
to
argue
or
rely
on
the
defence
raised
thereby.
Accordingly
I
ordered
that
the
said
paragraph
8
be
stricken
from
the
reply.
By
agreement
between
the
parties
the
appellant
withdrew
its
claim
for
depletion
allowances
in
respect
of
a
mine
under
Section
11(1)
(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
Section
1202
of
the
Regulations
thereunder,
for
its
1951
and
1952
taxation
years.
The
appellant’s
Notices
of
Appeal
for
the
1951
and
1952
taxation
years
and
the
respondent’s
Replies
thereto
were
amended
accordingly.
The:
Minister
conceded
at
the
hearing
that
he
had
been
in
error
in
deducting
certain
amounts
of
interest
paid
on
borrowed
capital
for
the
purpose
of
computing
profit
as
a
base
for
determining
depletion
allowance
and
consented
to
judgment
that
the
appeal
from
the
assessment
of
the
respondent
for
its
1952
taxation
year
be
allowed
and
that
the
matter
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
in
order
that
the
profit
be
re-calculated
and
the
amount
of
the
depletion
allowance
to
which
the
appellant
is
entitled
be
redetermined.
The
remaining
issues
in
the
true
appeals
are
of
the
same
general
character,
although
the
amounts
differ
and
there
are
differences
in
circumstances.
Each
issue
involves
a
consideration
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
of
the
Statutes
of
1949
(Second
Session),
€.
25,
which
reads
as
follows:
“
(4)
A
corporation
whose
chief
business
is
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
may
deduct,
in
computing
its
income
for
the
purpose
of
the
said
Act
for
the
year
of
expenditure,
an
amount
equal
to
all
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
by
it,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
searching
for
minerals
during
the
calendar
years
1950
to
1952,
inclusive,
if
the
corporation
files
certified
statements
of
such
expenditures
and
satisfies
the
Minister
that
it
has
been
actively
engaged
in
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals
by
means
of
qualified
persons
and
has
incurred
the
expenditures
for
such
purposes.’
(This
subsection
was
replaced
for
1952
by
a
new
subsection,
which
is
not
materially
different
for
present
purposes
and
need
not
be
reproduced
at
this
point.
See
Section
34
of
c.
29
of
1952.)
The
remaining
issues
also
involve
consideration
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
enacted
by
Section
22(1)
of
Statutes
of
Canada
1955,
c.
54,
reading
as
follows:
“83A.
(7)
For
the
purposes
of
this
section
and
section
53
of
chapter
25
of
the
statutes
of
1949
(Second
Session),
it
is
hereby
declared
that
expenses
incurred
by
a
corporation,
association,
partnership
or
syndicate
on
or
in
respect
of
exploring
or
drilling
for
petroleum
or
natural
gas
in
Canada
or
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada
do
not
and
never
did
include
expenses
so
incurred
by
that
corporation,
association,
partnership
or
syndicate
pursuant
to
an
agreement
under
which
it
undertook
to
incur
those
expenses
in
consideration
for
(a)
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
that
owned
or
controlled
the
mineral
rights,
(b)
an
option
to
purchase
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
that
owned
or
controlled
the
mineral
rights,
or
(c)
a
right
to
purchase
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
that
was
to
be
formed
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
or
controlling
the
mineral
rights.”
The
appellant
is
a
corporation
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
with
its
head
office
in
the
City
of
Toronto
in
that
province
and
during
the
taxation
years
in
question
the
chief
business
of
the
appellant
was
that
of
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals.
During
those
years,
it
was
actively
engaged
in
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals
by
means
of
qualified
persons
and
incurred
expenses
for
such
purposes.
With
reference
to
only
two
of
the
amounts
in
dispute,
of
which
there
are
twelve,
did
the
respondent
argue
that
the
expenditures
did
not
satisfy
all
the
requirements
contained
in
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
The
two
items
in
respect
of
which
the
respondent
contends
that
the
requirements
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53,
read
by
itself,
have
not
been
satisfied,
are
the
items
covering
expenses
amounting
to
$247,243.88
in
1951
and
to
$56,047.26
in
1952.
The
respondent’s
submission
in
this
connection
is
based
upon
a
plea
that
the
expenses
were
incurred
by
the
appellant
for
and
on
behalf
of
Gullbridge
Mines
Limited
and
not
on
its
own
behalf
and
that
the
appellant
was
reimbursed
therefor.’’
Reliance
was
placed
on
the
decision
of
Cameron,
J.
in
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
Ex.
C.R.
66;
[1955]
C.T.C.
39.
Before
considering
the
first
of
these
twelve
amounts,
it
should
be
noted
that
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
declares,
in
effect,
inter
alia,
that
expenses
of
the
kind
described
in
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
that
have
been
incurred
by
a
corporation
‘‘do
not
and
never
did”
fall
within
the
beneficial
provisions
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
if
they
are
expenses
incurred
by
the
corporation
pursuant
to
an
agreement
(a)
under
which
the
corporation
‘‘undertook
to
incur
those
expenses’’,
and
(b)
under
which
the
consideration
for
such
undertaking
belongs
to
one
of
the
classes
of
things
described
in
paragraph
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
It
follows
that
the
respondent
could
only
have
validly
disallowed
an
expense
which
otherwise
was
entitled
to
the
beneficial
provisions
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
(a)
if
that
expense
was
incurred
by
the
corporation
pursuant
to
an
undertaking
in
an
agreement,
and
(b)
if
the
consideration
for
the
undertaking
fell
within
one
of
the
classes
described
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
If
it
appears,
in
connection
with
any
one
of
the
amounts
in
issue,
that
one
of
these
two
requirements
is
not
met,
the
respondent
erred
in
ruling
that
the
amount
did
not
fall
within
the
provisions
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
by
virtue
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
The
first
amount
in
issue
is
an
amount
of
$10,512.05
that
was
expended
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
properties
which
are
the
subject
matter
of
an
agreement
entered
into
by
the
appellant
with
Newfoundland
Gull
Lake
Mines
Limited
on
August
17,
1950.
(That
company
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Gull
Lake”
and
that
agreement
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
‘‘
Gull
Lake
agreement’’.)
The
principal
features
of
that
agreement
are
as
follows:
(a)
the
appellant
agreed
to
pay
to
Gull
Lake
$2,500
in
consideration
for
which
Gull
Lake
granted
to
the
appellant
an
exclusive
right
or
option
to
purchase
certain
mining
claims
;
(b)
the
parties
agreed
that
the
appellant
should
have
a
right
for
a
period
of
sixty
days
to
make
an
examination
of
such
mining
claims
;
(c)
it
was
agreed
that
as
long
as
the
option
granted
to
the
appellant
remained
in
force
the
appellant
would
be
entitled
to
exclusive
possession
of
the
mining
claim;
(d)
it
was
agreed
that,
‘‘if
on
or
before
the
sixty
day
period’’,
the
appellant
should
notify
Gull
Lake
that
it
wished
to
proceed
with
the
agreement,
the
appellant
would
cause
a
new
company
to
be
incorporated
;
(e)
it
was
agreed
that,
upon
the
incorporation
of
the
new
company,
Gull
Lake
and
the
appellant
would
transfer
the
mining
claims
to
the
new
company
and,
as
consideration
for
the
transfer,
the
new
company
would
allot
to
Gull
Lake
500,000
of
its
Class
“A”
shares
and
would
allot
to
the
appellant
such
number
of
its
Class
“B”
shares
as
could
be
purchased,
at
five
cents
per
share,
by
a
payment
equal
to
$2,500
plus
the
amount
that
the
appellant
had
expended
in
connection
with
the
examination
of
the
mining
claim
;
and
(f)
it
was
agreed
that,
forthwith
after
the
incorporation
of
the
new
company,
the
parties
would
cause
the
new
company
to
enter
into
an
agreement
with
the
appellant
under
which
the
appellant
would
subscribe
for
shares
in
the
new
company
on
a
specified
basis
and
the
new
company
would
grant
to
the
appellant
an
exclusive
right
or
option
to
purchase
a
specified
number
of
its
Class
“B”
shares.
The
sum
of
$10,512.05,
being
the
first
of
the
amounts
in
issue,
is
the
amount
of
expenses
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
exploration
work
on
the
claims
which
are
the
subject
matter
of
the
Gull
Lake
agreement
after
the
agreement
came
into
force
and
before
the
incorporation
of
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
agreement.
The
first
question
is
whether
these
expenses
in
the
amount
of
$10,512.05
were
incurred
by
the
appellant
“‘pursuant
to
an
agreement
under
which
it
undertook
to
incur
those
expenses’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
.
.
The
only
agreement
which
was
in
force
at
the
time
the
expenditures
in
question
were
made
and
which
has
any
relevance
to
the
expenditures
is
the
Gull
Lake
agreement
of
August
17,
1950
and
the
only
provisions
in
that
agreement
relating
to
the
expenditures
are
paragraphs
2,
3
and
5
thereof,
which
read
as
follows
:
“2.
Forthwith
upon
this
agreement
being
approved
by
the
shareholders
of
Gull
Lake
as
hereinafter
provided,
Falconbridge
shall
have
the
right
for
a
period
of
sixty
(60)
days
thereafter
to
make
an
examination
of
the
said
mining
claims
by
its
engineers
in
the
usual
manner
in
which
mining
properties
are
examined,
with
the
right
to
take
and
remove
such
quantities
of
ore
as
may
be
required
for
assay
and
sampling
purposes.
3.
It
is
understood
and
agreed
that
this
is
an
option
only
and
nothing
herein
contained
shall
be
deemed
to
obligate
or
bind
Falconbridge
to
cause
such
examination
to
be
made,
to
expend
any
moneys
or
to
perform
any
other
act
other.
than
the
payment
of
any
moneys
required
to
be
paid
by
Falconbridge
under
the
provisions
of
Clause
1
hereof.
5.
Gull
Lake
covenants
and
agrees
that
so
long
as
the
option
hereby
granted
remains
in
force
Falconbridge
shall
be
entitled
to
exclusive
possession
of
the
said
mining
claims
as
and
from
the
date
of
the
approval
of
this
agreement
by
the
shareholders
of
Gull
Lake
as
hereinafter
provided.”
In
my
view,
this
was
not
an
agreement
by
which
the
appellant
“undertook”
to
incur
the
expenses
in
question
if
the
word
“undertook”,
as
used
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A,
implies,
as
I
think
it
does,
a
legal
liability
enforceable
by
legal
action.
The
word
‘‘undertook’’
or
‘‘undertake’’
has
various
senses
depending
upon
the
context
in
which
it
is
used.
If
it
be
said
that
a
businessman
“undertook”
a
particular
business
operation,
the
word
“undertook”
indicates
only
that
he
embarked
upon
that
operation.
If
it
be
said
that
a
solicitor
gave
an
‘‘
undertaking
’
to
another
solicitor,
one
does
not
think
primarily
in
terms
of
an
obligation
enforceable
by
action
in
the
Court.
Where,
however,
a
statutory
provision
speaks,
as
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
does,
of
an
agreement
under
which
a
corporation
“undertook”
to
incur
expenses,
there
is
no
doubt
in
my
mind
that
the
statute
is
speaking
of
a
legally
enforceable
agreement
to
incur
those
expenses.
Such
conclusion
is
reinforced
by
the
presence
of
the
words
‘‘in
consideration
for
.
.
.”
It
seems
clear
to
me
that
the
respondent’s
argument
is
in
effect
that
the
Court
should
read
the
words
“pursuant
to
an
agreement
under
which
it
undertook
to
incur
those
expenses’’,
where
those
words
appear
in
subsection
(7
),
as
though
they
read
‘
as
authorized
by
an
agreement
under
which
it
was
authorized
to
incur
those
expenses’’
or
‘‘as
contemplated
by
an
agreement
which
contemplated
that
it
would
incur
those
expenses”.
For
the
above
reasons,
I
am
of
the
view
that
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
does
not
apply
to
the
amount
of
$10,512.05,
which
is
the
first
of
the
twelve
amounts
in
dispute.
It
is
unnecessary,
therefore,
to
deal
with
the
appellant’s
further
argument
that,
in
any
event,
the
expenditures
were
not
incurred
in
consideration
of
one
of
the
classes
of
matters
described
in
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
The
second
of
the
amounts
in
dispute
is
an
amount
of
$4,953.73
being
the
amount
of
expenditures
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
the
1950
taxation
year
after
the
incorporation
of
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
Gull
Lake
agreement
of
August
17,
1950.
This
new
company
was
incorporated
with
the
name
of
Gullbridge
Mines
Limited
on
November
14,
1950
and
the
expenditures
in
question
were
incurred
between
that
date
and
the
end
of
that
year.
It
would
appear
that
these
expenditures
were
not
made
pursuant
to,
or
contemplated
by,
any
agreement.
What
I
have
said
with
reference
to
the
first
item
therefore
applies
with
even
greater
force
to
the
second
item*.
The
third
amount
in
dispute
is
an
amount
of
$247,243.88
which
is
an
amount
of
expenditures
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
the
properties
which
were
the
subject
matter
of
the
Gull
Lake
agreement
of
August
17,
1950
after
those
properties
had
been
transferred
to
Gullbridge
Mines
Limited,
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
August
17,
1950
agreement,
and
after
the
appellant
had
entered
into
an
agreement
with
that
new
company
as
contemplated
by
the
original
agreement.
The
appellant
entered
into
the
agreement
with
the
new
company
on
December
27,
1950.
(That
agreement
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
“Gullbridge
agreement’’
and
the
new
company
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Gullbridge’’.)
The
principal
features
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement
are
as
follows
:
(a)
the
appellant
subscribed
for
shares
in
the
new
company
in
the
total
amount
of
$15,000.05;
(b)
Gullbridge
granted
to
the
appellant
an
option
t
to
purchase
all
or
any
part
of
2,059,638
of
its
Class
‘‘B’’
shares
in
accordance
with
a
schedule
under
which
a
specified
number
of
shares
could
be
purchased
at
a
specified
price
on
or
before
a
specified
date
and,
if
that
option
were
exercised,
a
further
number
of
shares
could
be
purchased
before
a
specified
date
at
a
specified
price
and,
if
that
option
were
exercised,
a
further
number
of
shares
could
be
purchased
before
a
specified
date
at
a
specified
price,
and
so
on.
There
were,
in
effect,
seven
separate
options
totalling
2,059,638
shares,
each
option
being
conditional
upon
the
appellant
having
exercised
all
previous
options.
Against
the
background
of
this
scheme
of
options,
is
to
be
read
paragraph
4
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement,
the
paragraph
of
that
agreement
under
which
the
appellant
incurred
these
expenses
in
the
amount
of
$247,243.88.
Paragraph
4
reads
as
follows:
“4.
The
parties
hereto
agree
that
instead
of
the
Optionee
taking
up
and
paying
for
shares
the
Optionee
may
expend
the
moneys
required
to
keep
this
option
in
force
on
diamond
drilling
and
on
other
exploration,
development
and
mining
work
on
the
said
mining
claims
and
the
Optionor
hereby
grants
to
the
Optionee
the
exclusive
right
to
take
immediate
possession
of
the
said
mining
claims
and
as
long
as
this
agreement
remains
in
force,
the
exclusive
right
by
its
servants,
agents
and
workmen
to
carry
on
thereon
and
thereunder
such
exploration,
development
and
mining
work
as
the
Optionee
shall
think
fit
and
to
take
and
remove
therefrom
such
quantity
of
ore
and
minerals
as
it
may
deem
necessary
or
advisable
for
assay
and
test
purposes
and
the
Optionee
shall
be
reimbursed
for
all
expenditures
made
by
it
on
behalf
of
the
Optionor,
such
reimbursement
being
in
the
form
of
shares
of
the
Optionor
issued
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
this
agreement.”
This
item
of
$247,248.88
represents
expenditures
that
the
respondent
contends
were
not
incurred
by
the
appellant
on
its
own
behalf.
The
respondent
contends
therefore
that
this
amount
does
not
qualify
under
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
In
considering
whether
or
not
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
has
application
to
expenditures
of
the
kind
that
are
represented
by
this
third
item
in
the
sum
of
$247,243.88,
it
is
important
to
consider
the
ambit
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
In
the
first
place,
it
is
to
be
noted
that
the
expenses
referred
to
in
subsection
(4)
are
what
might
be
referred
to
as
“pre-production”
expenses
and
are
therefore
expenses
of
a
capital
nature
which
would
not
ordinarily
be
deductible
in
the
computation
of
income.
In
the
second
place,
it
is
to
be
noted
that
there
is
no
requirement
in
subsection
(4)
that
the
taxpayer
by
whom
the
expenses
are
incurred
shall
have
incurred
them
for
exploration
on
his
own
property.
Having
regard
to
the
obvious
objective
of
the
legislation
to
induce
companies
to
extend
their
exploration
programmes,
there
would
appear
to
be
no
reason
for
imposing
such
a
limitation.
In
the
third
place,
it
is
to
be
noted
that
there
is
no
requirement
that
the
taxpayer
claiming
the
deduction
shall
not
have
benefitted
directly
or
indirectly
from
incurring
the
expenses.
Presumably,
if
the
exploration
expenses
were
incurred
in
relation
to
the
taxpayer’s
own
property,
and
if
the
results
have
been
fruitful,
the
capital
value
of
his
property
will
have
gone
up
substantially
as
a
result
of
the
expenditures,
but,
nevertheless,
subsection
(4)
appears
to
authorize
their
deduction.
By
the
same
token,
if
an
exploration
company
carries
on
in
an
exploration
programme
on
property
belonging
to
somebody
else
under
an
agreement
whereby,
in
the
event
of
the
programme
having
proved
to
be
fruitful,
the
exploration
company
is
to
have
certain
rights
in
the
future
in
respect
of
the
property
—
e.g.,
the
right
to
be
a
partner
in
the
operation
of
the
property
or
the
right
to
purchase
the
property
on
specified
terms—he
would
nevertheless
appear
to
be
entitled
to
make
the
deductions
contemplated
by
subsection
(4).
That
this
is
the
effect
of
subsection
(4),
when
read
by
itself,
appears
to
be
confirmed
by
the
declaratory
provision
contained
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
which
expressly
removes
from
the
operation
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
expenses
incurred
under
an
agreement
pursuant
to
an
undertaking
in
consideration
for
certain
types
of
rights
specified
therein.
On
the
other
hand,
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
does
require
that
the
expenditures
must
have
been
“incurred”
by
the
taxpayer
before
the
taxpayer
can
deduct
them
under
that
subsection.
I
think
it
must
follow
from
this
that
the
expenditures
must
have
been
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
on
its
own
account—that.
is,
as
a
principal
and
not
merely
as
an
agent
or
a
contractor
for
somebody
else.
Compare
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
supra.
Superficially,
it
might
seem
that
there
is
little,
if
any,
difference
between
(a)
an
arrangement
under
which
an
exploration
company
agrees
to
carry
on
an
exploration
programme
on
property
belonging
to
somebody
else
as
agent
or
contractor
on
behalf
of
the
owner,
and
(b)
an
arrangement
under
which
an
exploration
company
agrees
with
the
owner
of
property,
for
a
consideration,
to
carry
on
an
exploration
programme
on
its
own
behalf
on
property
belonging
to
somebody
else.
Practically,
there
might,
depending
on
the
terms
of
the
agreements,
be
little
or
no
difference.
Legally,
however,
there
are
two
quite
different
arrangements.
In
the
first,
the
exploration
company
does
what
it
does
as
agent
of
the
owner
of
the
property.
Compare
Montreal
v.
Montreal
Locomotive
Works,
[1947]
1
D.L.R.
161
per
Lord
Wright
at
pp.
162-3
and
pages
167-8.
In
the
second,
the
exploration
programme
is
its
own,
and
in
relation
to
third
parties,
it
alone
is
responsible.
Expenses
incurred
in
carrying
out
the
programme
under
the
first
kind
of
arrangement
would
be
incurred
by
the
owner
of
the
property
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
while
expenses
incurred
in
carrying
out
the
programme
under
the
second
kind
of
arrangement
would
be
incurred
by
the
exploration
company
for
the
purposes
of
that
subsection.
Without
reviewing
the
various
tests
as
to
when
a
programme
is
being
carried
on
as
a
contractor
on
behalf
of
a
principal
and
when
it
is
being
carried
on
as
a
principal
on
his
own
behalf—compare
Montreal
v.
Montreal
Locomotive,
supra,
at
p.
169
—
for
the
purposes
of
this
case,
it
is
sufficient
to
say
that
in
my
view
an
exploration
company
cannot
be
said
to
be
carrying
on
such
a
programme
on
its
own
behalf
when
it
is
carrying
it
on
under
a
contract
under
which
it
is
to
be
reimbursed
for
the
total
expenses
of
the
programme
as
such
or
under
which
it
carries
on
the
programme
as
a
means
of
obtaining
a
credit
for
the
amount
of
the
expenses
against
an
amount
which
it
would
otherwise
have
to
pay
in
cash.
One
view
of
paragraph
4
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement
might
be
that
the
appellant
had,
as
an
alternative
to
exercising
its
option
to
take
up
shares
in
Gullbridge
at
any
of
the
various
stages
of
the
option
schedule,
the
right,
on
its
own
behalf,
to
carry
on
diamond
drilling
and
other
operations
on
the
Gullbridge
property,
and
that,
to
the
extent
that
it
so
expended
money,
it
would
not
have
to
take
up
shares
in
order
to
keep
the
balance
of
the
option
schedule
in
force.
On
this
view
of
the
matter,
paragraph
4
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement
would
appear
to
contemplate
thé
possibility
that
the
appellant
would
prefer
to
carry
on
the
exploration
on
its
own
behalf
and
at
its
own
expense
rather
than
subscribe
to
Gullbridge’s
capital
so
that
the
exploration
could
be
carried
on
behalf
of
Gullbridge
and
at
Gullbridge’s
expense,
On
this
view
of
the
matter,
also,
the
concluding
words
of
paragraph
4,
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement
whereby
it
was
provided
that
the
appellant
should
be
reimbursed
‘‘for
all
expenditures
made
by
it
on
behalf
of
the
optionor’’,
could
not
conceivably
have
any
application
to
amounts
that
would
be
expended
by
the
appellant
on
its
own
behalf.
As
I
understood
the
appellant’s
argument,
however,
the
appellant
took
the
position
that
the
concluding
words
of
paragraph
4
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement,
did
not
apply
in
respect
of
the
exploration
work
carried
on
by
the
appellant
under
the
first
part
of
that
paragraph
but
that
the
expenses
so
incurred
were
nevertheless
to
be
credited
against.
the
purchase
price
of
shares
that
the
appellant
was
to
receive
under
paragraph
2
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement
as
though
it
had
exercised
the
option
in
the
ordinary
way.
I
further
understood
that
the
appellant
did
receive
shares
in
respect
of
all
the
work
carried
on
by
the
appellant
under
paragraph
4
of
the
Gullbridge
agreement.*
That
being
so,
the
appellant
appears
to
have
taken
the
position,
at
the
time
that
it
took
the
shares
and
during
the
course
of
the
argument
of
this
appeal,
that
the
work
done
by
it
under
paragraph
4
was
done
as
a
mode
of
paying
for
shares
that
it
was
acquiring
from
Gullbridge.
If
the
work
was
done
by
the
appellant
for
Gullbridge
in
lieu
of
making
a
cash
payment
to
Gullbridge,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
expenses
of
doing
the
work
cannot
be
regarded
as
having
been
“incurred”
by
the
appellant
so
as
to
come
within
the
words
“incurred
by
it’’
in
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
For
this
reason,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
this
third
item
of
$247,243.88
was
properly
disallowed
by
the
Minister
as
not
falling
within
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
The
fourth
item
in
dispute
is
the
sum
of
$56,047.26
incurred
in
the
1952
taxation
year
in
respect
of
the
properties
that
had
been
transferred
to
Gullbridge.
What
has
been
said
with
reference
to
the
third
item
of
$247,243.88
applies
equally
with
respect
to
this
item
of
$56,047.26.
The
fifth
item
is
an
amount
of
$20,485.41
incurred
by
the
appellant
in
respect
of
exploration
expenses
on
properties
which
were
the
subject
matter
of
an
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
Rambler
Mines
Limited
dated
October
21,
1950,
(That
company
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
“Rambler”
and
the
agreement
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
‘‘Rambler
agreement’’.)
This
agreement
is,
for
all
practical
purposes,
of
the
same
general
character
as
the
Gull
Lake
agreement
of
August
17,
1950
and
no
useful
purpose
would
be
served
by
making
the
same
examination
of
it
as
has
been
made
of
the
Gull
Lake
agreement.
Certain
special
features
of
the
Rambler
agreement
will
be
referred
to
as
they
become
relevant.
The
amount
of
$20,485.41
represents
exploration
expenses
incurred
in
1950
on
mining
properties
which
are
the
subject
matter
of
the
Rambler
agreement
before
a
new
company
contemplated
by
the
Rambler
agreement
had
been
incorporated.
What
I
have
said.
with
reference
to
the
first
item
in
dispute
applies,
with
necessary
changes.
concerning
details,
to
this
fifth
item
of
$20,485.41.
The
sixth
item
is
an
amount
of
$15,125.57
being
the
exploration
expenses
incurred
on
the
Rambler
properties
in
1951
before
any
agreement
was
made
with
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
Rambler
agreement.
What
has
been
said
with
reference
to
the
second
items
in
dispute
applies
equally
to
this
sixth
item
of
$15,125.57.
The
seventh
item
is
an
amount
of
$13,765.73
being
an
amount
expended
during
the
year
1951
by
the
appellant
under
an
agreement
entered
into
on
February
16,
1951
between
the
appellant
and
Rambridge
Mines
Limited,
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
Rambler
agreement.
(The
new
company
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
‘‘Rambridge’’
and
the
agreement
with
it
is
hereinafter
referred
to
as
the
“Rambridge
agreement’’.)
By
paragraph
2
of
the
Rambridge
agreement,
the
appellant
undertook
to
make
expenditures
in
respect
of
exploration
in
certain
defined
amounts
or,
alternatively,
to
advance
such
amounts
to
Rambridge
for
its
corporate
purposes.
While
the
appellant
could
have
satisfied
this
obligation
by
making
advances
to
Rambridge
instead
of
expending
the
money
on
exploration
work,
nevertheless,
I
have
difficulty
escaping
the
view
that
these
expenditures
were
made
pursuant
to
an
agreement
under
which
the
appellant
undertook
to
incur
those
expenses
within
the
meaning
of
the
corresponding
words
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
I
doubt
that
it
was
any
the
less
an
undertaking
because
the
liability
could
be
avoided
under
the
terms
of
the
agreement
by
electing
to
do
something
else.
Clearly,
it
is
not
any
the
less
a
legal
obligation
because,
by
virtue
of
a
provision
in
the
agreement,
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
bring
its
obligations
to
an
end
by
giving
thirty
days’
notice.
I
need
come
to
no
firm
conclusion
on
the
question
discussed
in
the
immediately
preceding
paragraph
as
I
have
not
been
able
to
satisfy
myself
that
the
consideration
for
such
undertaking
to
incur
expenses,
if
it
was
an
undertaking,
was
something
that
falls
within
one
of
the
classes
described
in
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
subsection
(7).
An
examination
of
the
Rambridge
agreement
itself
does
not
disclose
that
the
appellant
was
to
receive
any
consideration
in
the
form
of
‘‘
shares
”
or
‘
‘
an
option
’
’
to
purchase
shares
or
‘‘a
right’’
to
purchase
shares.
(Compare
the
wording
of
paragraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.)
However,
it
must
be
recognized
that
the
real
bargain
was
made
at
the
time
that
the
Rambler
agreement
was
entered
into.
It
was
provided
by
the
Rambler
agreement
that,
if
the
appellant
gave
notice
of
its
desire
to
proceed
with
that
agreement,
a
new
company
would
be
formed
which
new
company
would
acquire
the
mining
claims
that
were
the
subject
matter
of
the
Rambler
agreement
and,
in
consideration
therefor,
the
new
company
would
issue
its
shares,
40
per
cent
to
Rambler
and
60
per
cent
to
the
appellant.
The
Rambler
agreement
provided,
however,
that
such
shares
would
not
be
available
to
the
appellant
unless
and
until
it
performed
what
it
was
to
agree
to
do
by
an
agreement
which
it
was
to
enter
into
with
the
new
company.
The
net
effect
was
that
the
appellant
would,
by
such
agreement
with
the
new
company,
agree
to
carry
out
the
exploration
work
in
question.
Undoubtedly,
therefore,
the
real
consideration
for
its
agreeing
to
incur
the
exploration
expenses
on
the
mining
claims
that
were
to
be
placed
in
the
hands
of
the
new
company
was
the
agreement
that
it
would
receive
60
per
cent
of
the
shares
of
the
new
company.
The
consideration
was
therefore
‘‘shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
that
was
to
be
formed
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
or
controlling
the
mineral
rights’’
and
was
not
‘‘a
right
to
purchase’’
such
shares
within
paragraph
(c)
of
subsection
(7)
or
‘‘shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation
that
owned
or
controlled
the
mineral
rights’’
within
paragraph
(a).
A
comparison
of
the
words
of
paragraph
(a)
and
the
words
of
paragraph
(c)
in
subsection
(7)
shows,
in
my
view,
that
the
statute
makes
a
contrast,
which
cannot
be
ignored,
between
(a)
a
corporation
that
owned
or
controlled
the
mineral
rights,
and
(b)
a
corporation
that
was
to
be
formed
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
or
controlling
the
mineral
rights,
and
between
(c)
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation,
and
(d)
a
right
to
purchase
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
a
corporation.
For
the
purposes
of
the
Rambler
agreement,
Rambler
was
the
corporation
that
owned
the
mineral
rights
within
paragraph
(a)
and
the
company
to
be
incorporated,
which
turned
out
to
be
Rambridge,
was
the
corporation
that
was
to
be
formed
for
the
purpose
of
acquiring
the
mineral
rights.
The
consideration
was
‘“shares’’
in
Rambridge
not
‘‘shares’’
in
Rambler
and
not
a
“right
to
purchase
shares’’
in
Rambridge.
Where
under
an
agreement
shares
are
the
consideration,
the
person
who
makes
the
expenditure
is
entitled
to
the
shares
by
virtue
of
the
agreement.
When
the
consideration,
under
an
agreement,
is
a
“right”
to
purchase,
he
acquires
the
‘‘right’’
by
virtue
of
the
agreement
and
he
must
exercise
his
right
to
purchase
by
some
form
of
notice
or
election
and
must
pay
a
purchase
price.
The
difference
between
a
‘‘share’’
and
a
‘‘right’’
to
purchase
a
share
is
fundamental
and
is
one
that
is
made
by
every
person
involved
in
company
finance.
Here
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
‘‘shares’’
in
Rambridge
and
that
is
a
consideration
that
did
not
fall
under
paragraph
(a)
or
(c)
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A.
I
therefore
conclude
that
this
seventh
item
of
$13,765.73
does
not
fall
within
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
and
that
the
appellant
should
have
been
allowed
to
deduct
it
under
subsection
(4)
of
Section
95.
The
eighth
item
in
dispute
is
the
sum
of
$13,677.68
being
an
amount
expended
by
the
appellant
in
1952
on
the
Rambler
prop-
erty.
This
amount
is
in
exactly
the
same
position
as
the
seventh
item
and
what
I
have
said
with
reference
to
the
seventh
item
therefore
applies
equally
to
this
eighth
item.
The
ninth
item
in
dispute
is
an
amount
of
$6,991.89
expended
in
respect
of
certain
mining
properties
that
were
the
subject
matter
of
an
agreement
between
the
appellant
and
Jawtam
Key
Gold
Zones
(Rambler)
Limited
dated
June
16,
1952,
which
amount
is,
for
practical
purposes,
in
the
same
position
from
the
point
of
view
of
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
as
the
first
item
in
dispute,
and
the
remarks
that
I
have
made
with
reference
to
the
first
item
may
be
taken
as
applicable
thereto
mutatis
mutandis.
The
tenth
item
is
an
amount
of
$6,221
and
is
also
an
amount
expended
on
the
properties
referred
to
in
the
Jawtam
agreement.
This
amount
differs
only
from
the
ninth
amount
in
that
the
appellant’s
‘‘option
to
purchase’’
the
properties
in
question
was,
under
the
agreement,
conditioned
upon
its
making
the
expenditures
in
question.
The
appellant
was,
however,
under
no
legal
obligation
to
make
the
expenditures
and
the
remarks
that
I
made
with
reference
to
the
first
item
may
be
taken
as
applicable
also
to
the
tenth
item
mutatis
mutandis.
The
eleventh
item
in
dispute
is
an
amount
of
$15,063.77
expended
pursuant
to
an
agreement.
entered
into
on
March
27,
1951
by
the
appellant
with
Stanmore
Mining
and
Smelting
Limited
and
a
number
of
other
persons
each
of
whom
owned
mineral
claims
in
the
same
area.
Under
this
agreement,
each
of
the
persons
owning
mineral
claims
agreed
to
transfer
those
claims
to
a
company
to
be
formed
for
specified
amounts
of
shares
in
that
company.
Paragraph
5
of
the
agreement
reads
as
follows:
“5.
Faleonbridge
shall
be
entitled
to
act
as
sole
managers
of
the
Company’s
property
for
a
minimum
period
of
three
years.
to
decide
the
policy
of
exploration
and
development
and
be
entitled
to
receive
shares
for
the
first
Ten
Thousand
($10,000.00)
Dollars
advanced
to
the
new
Company
at
ten
(10^)
cents
per
share
and
to
receive
for
the
next
Forty
Thousand
($40,000.00)
Dollars
shares
at
twenty-five
(25^)
cents
per
share
and
thereafter
to
receive
for
further
advances
shares
at
such
price
or
prices
as
may
from
time
to
time
be
decided
by
‘the
directors
and
Faleonbridge
agrees
to
expend
the
aforesaid
total
of
Fifty
Thousand
($50,000.00)
Dollars
for
the
purposes
of
the
Company
and
on
exploration
work
to
be
commenced
as
soon
as
weather
conditions
permit
and
to
continue
the
same
until
the
whole
of
the
said
sum
of
$50,000.00
is
expended,
and
thereafter
to
expend
such
further
sums
as
in
its
judgment
is
considered
justified.
As
for
such
moneys
as
are
expended
in
addition
to
the
said
Fifty
Thousand
($50,000.00)
Dollars,
the
same
shall
be
offered
pro
rata
to
the
shareholders
in
the
proposed
company,
provided,
however,
that
in
the
event
of
any
of
such
shareholders
not
purchasing
and
paying
for
such
shares
then
the
same
shall
be
offered
to
Falconbridge,
its
nominee
or
nominees,
for
the
same
price
and
on
the
same
terms,
prior
to
seeking
sale
to
any
other
person
or
persons,
firm
or
corporation.”
The
appellant
and
the
respondent
each
put
its
case
in
respect
of
this
item
on
the
basis
that,
if
it
were
not
for
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A,
amounts
expended
by
the
appellant
pursuant
to
paragraph
(5)
would
have
been
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53
as
enacted
by
Section
34
of
the
Statutes
of
1952,
e.
29,
which
subsection
is
applicable
to
the
year
1952.
That
subsection
reads
as
follows
:
‘
‘
(4)
A
corporation
whose
principal
business
is
mining
or
exploring
for
minerals
may
deduct,
in
computing
its
income
for
the
purpose
of
The
Income
Tax
Act
for
a
taxation
year,
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
the
prospecting,
exploration
and
development
expenses
incurred
by
it,
directly
or
indirectly,
in
searching
for
minerals
in
Canada,
(i)
during
the
taxation
year,
and
(ii)
during
previous
taxation
years,
to
the
extent
that
they
were
not
deductible
in
computing
income
for
a
previous
taxation
year,
or
(b)
of
that
aggregate
an
amount
equal
to
its
income
for
the
taxation
year
(i)
if
no
deduction
were
allowed
under
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
11
of
the
said
Act,
and
(ii)
if
no
deduction
were
allowed
under
this
subsection,
minus
the
deduction
allowed
by
section
27
of
the
said
Act,
if
the
corporation
has
filed
certified
statements
of
such
expenditures
and
has
satisfied
the
Minister
that
it
has
been
actively
engaged
in
prospecting
and
exploring
for
minerals
in
Canada
by
means
of
qualified
persons
and
has
incurred
the
expenditures
for
such
purposes.??
The
appellant
conceded
that
the
first
$50,000
expended
under
paragraph
5
of
the
Stanmore
agreement
fell
within
the
declaratory
provision
contained
in
subsection
(7)
of
Section
83A
but
contended
that
the
remaining
$15,063.77,
the
eleventh
item
in
dispute,
did
not
fall
within
the
said
subsection
(7).
The
respondent
took
the
position
that
the
$15,063.77
item
also
fell
within
the
declaratory
provision
in
subsection
(7).
To
determine
the
issue
so
raised
requires
a
careful
consideration
of
paragraph
5
of
the
Stanmore
agreement,
which
paragraph
appears
to
leave
some
things
to
the
imagination.
As
a
result
of
the
best
consideration
that
I
have
been
able
to
give
to
paragraph
5,
I
have
been
constrained
to
the
view
that
amounts
expended
by
the
appellant
under
that
paragraph
cannot
be
regarded
as
amounts
expended
by
it
on
its
own
behalf
and
cannot,
therefore,
be
regarded
as
expenses
incurred
by
it’’
within
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
This
brings
me
to
the
result
contended
for
by
the
respondent
by
different
reasoning
than
that
upon
which
the
respondent
relied.
The
following
are
the
various
stages
by
which
I
came
to
the
view
that
I
hold
as
to
the
effect
of
paragraph
5
of
the
Stanmore
agreement
:
(1)
Paragraph
5
first
provides
that
‘‘Falconbridge
shall
be
entitled
to
act
as
sole
managers
of
the
Company’s
property
.
.
.
to
decide
the
policy
of
exploration
and
development
.
.
.”
It
follows
that
whatever
Falconbridge,
i.e.,
the
appellant,
did
in
its
role
of
“managers
of
the
Company’s
property’’
it
did
as
agent
of
the
company—i.e.,
the
new
company
contemplated
by
the
agreement—and
not
on
its
own
behalf.
(2)
The
next
provision
in
the
agreement
is
that
“Falconbridge
shall
.
.
.
be
entitled
to
receive
shares
for
the
first
Ten
Thousand
.
.
.
Dollars
advanced
to
the
new
Company
at
ten
.
.
.
cents
per
share
and
to
receive
for
the
next
Forty
Thousand
.
.
.
Dollars
shares
at
twenty-five
.
.
.
cents
per
share
and
thereafter
to
receive
for
further
advances
shares
at
such
price
or
prices
as
may
from
time
to
time
be
decided
.
.
.’’
It
is
a
necessary
implication
of
this
part
of
the
paragraph
that
Falconbridge
is
to
make
‘
advances
’
’
to
the
new
company
and
is
entitled
to
receive
shares
for
those
advances.
It
may
be
that
what
was
contemplated
was
“advances”
in
the
ordinary
sense
of
loaning
money
or
it
may
have
been
contemplated
that
the
“advances”
would
be
monies
expended
by
the
appellant
on
behalf
of
the
new
company.
I
cannot
escape
the
conclusion,
however,
that
paragraph
5
contemplated
the
appellant
putting
up
money
to
be
used
by
the
new
company
and
that
Falconbridge
was
to
be
entitled
to
receive
shares
in
consideration
for
such
money.
(3)
The
next
relevant
part
of
paragraph
5
reads:
“Falconbridge
agrees:
to
expend
the
aforesaid
total
of
Fifty
Thousand
...
Dollars
for
the
purposes
of
the
Company
and
on
exploration
work
.
.
.
and
thereafter
to
expend
such
further
sums
as
in
its
judgment
is
considered
justified”.
When
the
appellant
agreed
to
expend
money
which
it
was
to
put
into
the
company’s
coffers
or
at
the
company’s
disposal
and
for
which
it
was
to
receive
shares,
and
when
the
appellant
had
already
been
authorized
to
•*i."
act
as
‘‘sole
managers
of
the
Company’s
property’’,
to
me,
the
result
is
inescapable
that
the
appellant
was
agreeing
to
make
such
expenditures
of
the
company’s
money
in
its
capacity
as
manager
of
the
company’s
property
and
that
any
expenditure
made
pursuant
to
such
agreement
was
an
expenditure
of
the
new
company
and
cannot
therefore
be
regarded
as
an
expenditure
incurred
by
the
appellant
for
the
purposes
of
subsection
(4)
of
Section
53.
In
the
result,
therefore,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
Minister
did
not
err
in
disallowing
the
appellant’s
claim
in
respect
of
this
eleventh
item
of
$15,063.77.
The
twelfth
item
in
dispute
is
the
sum
of
$3,603.14
being
an
amount
expended
on
mining
claims
which
are
the
subject
matter
of
an
agreement
entered
into
on
July
29,
1952
between
the
appellant
and
John
Stanley
Brodie
and
Trevor
Wyman
Page.
I
see
no
relevant
difference
between
the
factors
determining
the
character
of
these
expenditures
for
present
purposes
and
those
determining
the
character
of
the
expenditures
making
up
the
first
item
in
dispute,
and
what
I
have
said
with
reference
to
the
first
item
may
therefore
be
taken
as
applying
mutatis
mutandis
to
the
twelfth
item.
At
the
conclusion
of
the
trial
I
allowed
certain
amendments
to
the
pleadings,
the
effect
of
which
was
to
allow
the
Minister
to
contend
that
the
deductibility
of
three
items
should
be
dealt
with
by
the
judgment
of
this
Court
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
Minister
had,
by
notification
under
subsection
(3)
of
Section
58
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
agreed
to
allow
their
deduction.
It
was
understood
at
the
time
that
I
allowed
these
amendments
to
the
pleadings
that
the
question
as
to
whether
the
Court
has
jurisdiction
on
an
appeal
by
the
taxpayer
to
disallow
deductions
that
the
Minister
had
previously
allowed,
would
have
to
be
determined
before
the
Minister
could
succeed
in
respect
of
these
items.
As,
in
the
result,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
three
items
in
question
are
deductible,
it
is
not
necessary
for
me
to
deal
with
this
question
of
jurisdiction.
The
result
is
therefore
that
the
appellant
succeeds
in
respect
of
the
first
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$10,512.05;
the
second
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$4,953.73;
the
fifth
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$20,485.41;
the
sixth
amount
in.
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$15,125.57;
the
seventh
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$13,765.73;
the
eighth
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum.
of
$13,677.68;
the
ninth
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$6,991.89
;
the
tenth
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$6,221.00;
and
the
twelfth
amount
in
dispute
in
the
sum
of
$3,603.14.
The
appeals
will
therefore
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
will
be
referred
back
to
the
Minister
for
an
adjustment
of
the
figures
in
accordance
with
the
conclusions
set
out
in
this
paragraph
and
in
the
fourth
paragraph
of
this
judgment.