Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

Roland O. Bartlett (Appellant)
v.
Minister of National Revenue (Respondent)
Trial Division, Walsh J.—Montreal, June 2; Ottawa, June 11, 1971.
Income Tax—Sale of mining property by prospector— Consideration on production—Amounts received, whether royalties or similar payments—Whether exempt—Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, s. 83(2), am. 1965, c. 18, s. 19(1).
In 1966 appellant sold the interest which he had acquired in a mining property as a result of prospecting. The consid eration for the sale was 30% of the average smelter returns for each ton of ore extracted from the mine, which amount ed to over $33,000 in 1967 and over $29,000 in 1968.
Held, these sums, although calculated on the basis of production from property, were received by appellant as instalments on the purchase price of a mining property and therefore not as a "royalty or similar payment", and so were exempt from tax by s. 83(2) of the Income Tax Act.
Spooner v. M.N.R. [1928-1934] C.T.C. 171, 184, applied.
INCOME tax appeal.
Bruce Verchere, for appellant.
P. A. Boivin, for respondent.
WALSH J.—The facts in this case are not in dispute. On February 1, 1958, appellant acquired, as a result of his efforts as a prospec tor with one Hutchison, a mining property known as the mining titles and interests in a miner's certificate and development licence number 135725, claim number Two (2), granted by the Department of Natural Resources of the Province of Quebec, for gold and silver only in and on the Northwest half of lot number Five (5), Range Six (6), Southwest, Stratford Town ship, in the County of Wolfe, Province of Quebec (hereinafter referred to as "the mining property"). Appellant and Hutchison had agreed that any consideration received on the sale of the mining property was to be shared between them on the basis of an 80/20 ratio respectively. By an agreement dated October 6, 1966, Hutchison, acting on behalf of appellant and himself, entered into an agreement with Cupra Mines Limited by virtue of which the mining property was sold to it in consideration
of thirty per cent of the average net smelter returns per ton for gold and silver for each ton of ore extracted from the claim, the term "net smelter returns" being defined in the agree ment. As a result of this, appellant received the sums of $33,266.27 and $29,249.06 in 1967 and 1968 respectively from Cupra as consideration for the mining property which had been sold, these amounts representing 80% of the sums paid by Cupra in 1967 and 1968. Appellant did not include these amounts in his 1967 and 1968 income for the reason that he regarded them as being received by him as consideration for the sale of his interest in the mining property and therefore excluded from income by virtue of s. 83(2) of the Income Tax Act. Respondent re assessed and included the amounts on the basis that they were received as or on account of royalties or similar payments depending upon use of or production from property within the meaning of s. 6(1)0) and s. 83(2) of the Income Tax Act.
The only issue between the parties is the interpretation of the agreement in the light of these provisions of the Income Tax Act, which read as follows:
6. (1) Without restricting the generality of section 3, there shall be included in computing the income of a taxpayer for a taxation year
* * *
(j) amounts received by the taxpayer in the year that were dependent upon use of or production from property whether or not they were instalments of the sale price of the property, but instalments of the sale price of agricul tural land shall not be included by virtue of this paragraph;
* * *
83. (2) An amount that would otherwise be included in computing the income of an individual for a taxation year shall not be included in computing his income for the year if it is the consideration for
(a) a mining property or interest therein acquired by him as a result of his efforts as a prospector either alone or with others, or
(b) shares of the capital stock of a corporation received by him in consideration for property described in para graph (a) that he has disposed of to the corporation,
unless it is an amount received by him in the year as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment.
This is, as far as can be ascertained, the first case which has arisen requiring an interpreta tion of s. 83(2) of the Act since it was amended in 1965 so as to add the concluding clause "unless it is an amount received by him in the year as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment" 1965 (Can.), c. 18, s. 19(1). All previous jurisprudence therefore, while of some help in its discussion of the meaning of "rent, royalty or similar payment", is not direct ly in point. In order to appreciate the back ground of this section, however, and its place in the scheme of the Act and, in particular, its relationship to s. 6(1)0), it is of interest to go into the historical origin of these sections. The Supreme Court case of Spooner v. M.N.R. [1928-34] C.T.C. 171, dealt with the sale of property and mines or mineral rights in it to an oil company for a cash consideration upon exe cution of the agreement; together with 25,000 shares of the capital stock of the purchaser, and as further consideration 10 per cent of all petroleum, natural gas and oil produced by the property. This case had to decide whether these royalty payments came within the meaning of the term "income" as defined in s. 3(1) of the Income War Tax Act, 1917, which section no longer exists in the present Income Tax Act. In rendering the judgment of the Court deciding that these payments did not constitute income within the meaning of s. 3(1), Newcombe J. stated at pages 181-82:
It is by the agreement, for the lack of an apt definition, tèrmed a "royalty"; but, whether or not it may appropriate ly be named a royalty or an annuity, the statute does not, in terms, charge either royalties or annuities, as such; and here the appellant has converted the land, which is capital, into money, shares and ten per cent of the stipulated minerals which the company may win. What the appellant will real ize, under the covenant, is, of course, uncertain; although it may be ascertained in the event.
On the other hand, it may be assumed that if the project prove unprofitable, the minerals will not be raised and that
circumstance, as well as the uncertainty of the extent of minerals available, contributes to the speculative character of the appellant's interest; but, nevertheless, the appellant's receipts come from a potential source of capital. The taxa ble commodity is "income", which means, by the definition, annual profit or gain; and for the appellant, there is no question of profit or gain, unless it be as to whether she has made an advantageous sale of her property.
In the Privy Council judgment in the same case [1928-34] C.T.C. 184 at 186 Lord Macmillan said:
The question whether a particular sum received is of the nature of an annual profit or gain or is of a capital nature does not depend upon the language in which the parties have chosen to describe it. It is necessary in each case to examine the circumstances and see what the sum really is, bearing in mind the presumption that "it cannot be taken that the Legislature meant to impose a duty on that which is not profit derived from property, but the price of it" (per Hanworth, M. R., in Perrin v. Dickson [1930] 1 K.B. 107 at p. 119, quoting previous authorities).
And again, at page 187:
But the share which the respondent became entitled to receive of the oil from the land which she had sold to the company was not a royalty in the sense of s. 27, , or in the ordinary sense familiar in the case of mining leases where the lessor stipulates for payment by his lessee of a fixed rate per ton of the mineral won. Here there is no relation of lessor and lessee. The transaction was one of sale and purchase. It may have taken the form which it did because of the uncertainty whether oil would be found by the purchaser or not; as the value of the land depended on this contingency the price, not unnaturally, was made to depend in part on the event.
As a result of this judgment, s. 3(1)(f) of the Income War Tax Act was enacted by S. of C. 1934, c. 55, s. 1, to read as follows:
3. (1) For the purposes of this Act, "income" . .. shall include ...
(j) rents, royalties, annuities or other like periodical receipts which depend upon the production or use of any real or personal property, notwithstanding that the same are payable on account of the use or sale of any such property.
The wording of this section is not identical to that of s. 6(1)() in the current Income Tax Act (supra) but is analogous to it and serves the same purpose.
The interpretation to be given to s. 3(1)(f) was dealt with at length by Cameron J. in the case of Ross v. M.N.R. [1950] C.T.C. 169. That case dealt with a lease agreement for mineral rights including oil and gas with the option to buy for a fixed sum plus a further amount of $60,000 payable out of ten per cent of the production of oil and gas, the said payments in respect of production being referred to in the lease as "royalties". The learned trial judge carefully considered the meaning to be given to the word "royalty" which is not defined in the Act after first stating, at page 174:
I take it to be well settled that the name given to a transaction by the parties concerned does not necessarily
decide the nature of the transaction O.R.C. v. Wesleyan Assurance Society, [1948] 1 All E.R. 555 and 557.)
The dictionary definitions referred to by him, as well as some of the previous jurisprudence and his conclusions, appear on pages 175-76 of his judgment as follows:
In the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition, "royalty" is defined in various ways. Excluding those which have reference to the Sovereign, these definitions include the following: "denoting chiefly rights over minerals"; "A payment made to the landowner by the lessee of a mine in return for the privilege of working it"; "A sum paid to the proprietor of a patented invention for the use of it"; "A payment made to an author, editor, or composer for each copy of a book, piece of music, etc., sold by the publisher, or for the representation of a play."
Other definitions of the word as used in reference to oil, gas and minerals are found in Words and Phrases, Perma nent Edition, Vol. 37, at p. 811, including the following:
(a) "As relates to mining, 'royalty' is a share of the product or profits reserved by the owner for permitting another to use the property."
(b) "`Royalty' in connection with gas and oil leases is a certain percentage of the oil after it is found or so much per gas well developed."
Again, in Webster's New International Dictionary, Second Edition, it is described as "a share of the product or profit (as of a mine, forest, etc.) reserved by the owner for permitting another to use the property."
Some of these definitions would appear to give some support to appellant's argument that a royalty can only be created where there is something reserved out of a demise or grant and payable to an owner. I have, however, been unable to find any decision which says that such is the case, and in one of the definitions which I have given above the meaning is given as a percentage of the oil or gas after it is found, without any reference to any reservation by an owner.
In Mercer v. Attorney General for Ontario, (1882), 5 S.C.R. 538, Henry, J., at p. 66 said: "`Royalties' is of very general import and very comprehensive ... `Royalties' as to mines is well understood in England to be the sums paid to the Sovereign for the right to work the Royal mines of gold and silver; and to the owner of private lands for the right to work mines of the inferior metals, coal, etc." Assuming, however, (but without deciding) and for the purposes of this case only, that to constitute a royalty there must have been some reservation of that royalty in the grant or demise, and assuming also that in this case there was not in form any such reservation (although I am of the opinion that in both form and substance there was such a reservation in the documents read as a whole), that does not conclude the matter. It is sufficient to bring the receipts into tax if they are "like" rents, royalties or annuities, provided, of course, they fulfil the other requirements of the subsection. Royal ties, in reference to mines or wells in all the definitions, are periodical payments either in kind or money which depend upon and vary in amount according to the production or use of the mine or well, and are payable for the right to explore for, bring into production and dispose of the oils or minerals yielded up. All these conditions exist in the present case. Another matter which may not exist is the reservation of rights at the time of the grant and the consequent payment to the appellant as owner of such reserved rights. But even assuming that to be the case it is not sufficient, in my opinion, to prevent the "receipts" here being like or similar to royalties, all other essential requirements being fulfilled. It may well be that the concluding words of the subsection "notwithstanding that the same are payable on account of the use or sale of such property" are sufficient in them selves to do away with any requirement that the receipts must be paid to an owner. At least the appellant was a former owner.
I find, therefore, that the receipts here were like royalties, if not royalties themselves, and therefore they come within the meaning of that part of the subsection.
Dealing with the question that a fixed price was specified in the agreement, following which the payments would cease, he states, at page 179:
It is submitted that as payments to her were limited to the sum of $60,000.00, that by itself establishes that her receipts were part of the purchase price and therefore capital in her hands. That fact might have been of some importance prior to the enactment of subsection (f). But having found that the receipts were either royalties or like royalties, I am unable to find that they ceased to be such merely because they stopped when an agreed maximum amount had been paid.
It must be noted, however, that in this judgment he does not actually make a finding that the payments were royalties despite the fact that this was the term used but rests his judgment finding the payments taxable on the fact that they were, in any event, "like royalties".
This question was again considered in the Supreme Court in M.N.R. v. Wain-Town Gas and Oil Co. [1952] C.T.C. 147. That case dealt with the sale of a franchise to supply gas to a municipality, the sale price agreed on being a percentage of the gross sales of gas by the purchaser set out in the agreement, such pay ments to be made "by way of royalty". It was held, reversing the judgment of the Exchequer Court, with Mr. Justice Locke dissenting, that the payments received were royalties or like periodical receipts depending upon the use of the property within the meaning of s. 3(1)(f). Rand J. in his judgment, after stating that it seemed to be beyond serious doubt that the payments came within the expression "royalties or other like periodical receipts" within the meaning of s. 3(1)W of the Act and that they depended upon the production or use of the property, concluded at pages 154-55:
Are the payments, then, constituting as they do part of the consideration for the sale of the franchise, to be exclud ed from tax as being capital in their nature? In Wilder v. The Minister, a decision of this Court, as yet reported only in [1952] 1 D.L.R. 401; [1951] C.T.C. 304, it was held that an annuity of $1,000.00 a month for the life of the annuitant, which was part of the price for the transfer of a business from an individual to a company, was of a capital nature and not within the definition of "income" in Section 3(1)(b); but under paragraph (f) of the section that ground seems to be expressly met by the language "notwithstanding that the same are payable on account of the use or sale of any such property". Now, the property is the franchise; the royalty is payable on account of the sale of it; and the payment
depends upon its exercise. The paragraph seems to me to be satisfied completely by the terms of the transaction, and I must hold the respondent to come within it.
It must be noted that s. 3(1)W and subsequently s. 6(1)(j) both refer to property generally, and, at the time the above-quoted judgments were rendered, s. 83(2) was not part of the Act. This section, which first appeared in the Income Tax Act in 1952, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, made an exception for an amount that would otherwise have been included if it was the consideration for a mining property or interest therein acquired by the taxpayer as a result of his efforts as a prospector. The section did not at this time have the concluding clause "unless it is an amount received by him in the year as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar pay ment" and without this concluding clause it is clear that for mining property it was intended to, and did, create an exception to the general rule of s. 6(1)0). This section, as it originally read, was dealt with by the Tax Appeal Board in the case of Bolduc v. M.N.R. (1963) 30 Tax A.B.C. 392. In that case the taxpayer entered into an agreement giving an option on his mining property in return for $5,000 on execu tion of the agreement, $5,000 every six months until $40,000 had been paid at which time he would transfer the title, and a royalty of 50 cents per pound on ore extracted when the property was brought into production. In ren dering judgment, rejecting the Minister's con tention that it was s. 6(1)0) that applied, the Chairman, Cecil L. Snyder, Q.C., stated at page 396:
Since the Parliament of Canada saw fit to include Section 83(2) in the Income Tax Act it would seem, particularly from a study of the wording of that section, that payments, received by persons engaged in prospecting for minerals who are successful in staking claims to properties which
yield marketable volumes of ore, are not to be included as taxable income to those persons. The section states "amounts that would otherwise be included in computing the income of an individual shall not be included ...". Had these provisions not been inserted in the Act the argument advanced on behalf of the Minister would no doubt prevail. However, since Section 83(2) specifically exempts from taxation an amount which is the consideration for a taxpay er's interest in a mining property it should be found that the payments received in 1957 and 1958 in consideration of the interest which the appellant retained in the mineral claims are not subject to income tax.
This decision was not appealed and I would agree with it and readily make the same finding in the present case were it not for the subse quent addition to s. 83(2) in 1965 of the con cluding clause "unless it is an amount received by him in the year as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment". It would appear that this amendment was made as a result of the Bolduc decision.
If s. 83(2) is an exception to s. 6(1)0) for the benefit of mining property, the question which must now be decided is whether this concluding clause accomplishes the purpose which appar ently it was intended to, and itself constitutes an exception to s. 83(2) when the amounts paid as consideration are received as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment, so as to bring such payments back within the provisions of the taxing section 6(1)0).
It should be noted that s. 6(1)(j) does not use the terms "rents, royalties, annuities or other like periodical receipts" used in s. 3(1)0) of the Income War Tax Act but instead uses the single word "amounts". Similarly, s. 83(2) uses the words "an amount". However, the 1965 amend ment in excepting from s. 83(2) "an amount" received "as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment" brings us back again to the problem considered in the earlier jurisprudence of whether an amount paid on account of the purchase price of a property should neverthe less be considered as "a rent, royalty or similar payment" when the calculation and payment of it is dependent on the use or production of the
property. It is conceded by respondent that in the present case there is no question of the payments made being in the nature of a rent, so unless they are a "royalty or similar payment" they would not fall within the exception in the concluding clause of s. 83(2). In addition to the definitions of "royalty" in the dictionaries and jurisprudence quoted (supra) some considera tion should be given to the manner in which it is used in the Income Tax Act. Although it is not defined therein, the word "royalty" is used in several sections. Subsections (3) and (4) of s. 17, dealing with non-arm's length payments between residents and non-residents, refer to the payment of a "price, rental, royalty or other payment for use or reproduction of any proper ty". This section certainly implies that the prop erty is retained by the person receiving the payment, since the payment is made for the use of or the reproduction of the property. Section 106(1)(d)(v) reads as follows:
106. (1) Every non-resident person shall pay an income tax of 15% on every amount that a person resident in Canada pays or credits, or is deemed by Part I to pay or credit, to him as, on account or in lieu of payment of, or in satisfaction of,
* * *
(d) rent, royalty or a similar payment, including, but not so as to restrict the generality of the foregoing, any payment
* * *
(v) that was dependent upon the use of or production from property in Canada whether or not it was an instalment on the sale price of the property, but not including an instalment on the sale price of agricul tural land.
This section, which makes taxable such income in Canada of non-resident persons, clearly cor responds to s. 6(1)0) and makes all such royalty payments taxable whether or not they were instalments on the sale price of the property. It is evident that, in order to make an instalment payment on the sale price of a property taxable as income in the hands of the recipient, when such payments would not normally be taxable, special sections of the Act, such as 6(1)(j) or 106(1)(d)(v), are required.
An examination of the wording of s. 83(2) discloses that it refers to "an amount" that is "the consideration for" but it does not specify whether the amount is the consideration for the sale of, rental of, or simply use of the mining property in question. Appellant contends that when the payment is consideration for the sale of the property then the concluding clause does not apply since the amount is not received "as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment" but rather on account of instalments of the purchase price. The fact that no specific amount was fixed for the purchase price but that annual payments will carry on indefinitely and that they are based on the production of the property does not alter this (see quotation from judgment of Cameron J. in the Ross case (supra) at page 179). He contends therefore that the concluding clause applies only when the amounts are received as a consideration for the rental or use of property in which the taxpayer still retains title, in which event the payments are then "as or on account of a rent, royalty or similar payment". In that event he remains the owner of the property and the payments he is receiving are clearly income and should be taxed as such. However, in the event of the sale of mining property acquired by the taxpayer as a result of his efforts as a prospector either alone or with others he would be exempt from taxation on the payments, which for other types of property would be taxed under s. 6(1)(j), even if these payments were deemed to be royalties or similar payments dependent upon the use of or production from the property.
In my view, while the concluding clause of s. 83(2) takes out of this exception amounts paid which are received as royalties or similar pay ments, it does not go so far as to bring back into full application s. 6(1)0) since it does not make such amounts taxable "whether or not they were instalments of the sale price of the proper ty". We are thus, for this particular type of sale, put back in the position which existed before s.
6(1)(j) and its predecessor 3(1)(f) were passed and the Spooner case (supra) would apply.
This would seem to be a more reasonable interpretation of s. 83(2) than it would be to conclude that because the amounts of the annual payments were based on production from the property they must be considered as a "royalty or similar payment" even though the taxpayer had divested himself of all proprietary interests in the property. It also avoids what would otherwise be an apparent injustice to the prospector whom s. 83(2) is intended to favour in that if he sold his property on the basis that he would receive annual payments of a fixed amount (even though the purchaser might well have estimated the amount of these annual pay ments on the basis of what he anticipated the annual production of the property would be) he would be exempt from taxation on such pay ments, whereas, on the other hand, if, instead of the annual payments being in fixed amounts they were based on a percentage of the actual production of the property, which is a reasona ble way of making such an agreement as was pointed out by Lord Macmillan in the passage cited from page 187 of the case of M.N.R. v. Spooner (supra), the prospector would be obliged to pay tax on the sum so received. I find, therefore, that, while the amounts received by the taxpayer in the present case may have been in the nature of "royalties or similar pay ments" they were not received by him as such, but rather as instalments on account of the purchase price of the property, though calculat ed on the basis of production from the property, and that the concluding clause of s. 83(2) does not take him out of the exemption provided in that section of the Act or have the result of making him taxable under s. 6(1)0) since the amounts were received as consideration for the sale of mining property acquired by him as a result of his efforts as a prospector, and not as royalties or similar payments for the use of same.
The appeal is therefore maintained with costs and the re-assessments of appellant's income with respect to his 1967 and 1968 taxation years are referred back to the Minister for re-assessment in order to delete therefrom the sums of $33,266.27 and $29,249.06 added to his income for those years respectively.
Section 27 provided that a non-resident receiving a royalty for anything used or sold in Canada would be deemed to be carrying on business in Canada and to earn a proportionate part of the income derived therefrom.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.