A. (Resch v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation 1 ). Thus, even if it
be conceded that the timber sold in this case was a capital asset, that fact does not necessarily mean that the proceeds of the sale are not taxable. The question for decision is whether the proceeds of the sale of the timber, though representing the price of a capital asset, were an "amount received as or by way of royalty."
The word royalty" in S. 26 is plainly not used in the sense of jura C.J. regalia. The Act refers to royalties received by subjects, and not to
the regal rights of the Crown.
The word "royalty" is most commonly used in connection with agreements for the use of patents or copyrights and in relation to minerals. In the case of patents a royalty is usually a fixed sum paid in respect of each article manufactured under a licence to manufacture a patented article. Similarly the publisher of a work may agree to pay the author royalties in respect of each copy of the work sold. See Encyclopaedia of the Laws of England, 2nd ed., vol. 11, pp. 327, 328, sub. "royalty"; Stroud, Judicial Dictionary, 2nd ed. (1903), vol. 2, p. 1772, "royalties" in its "secondary senses." In the case of mineral leases, a rent is reserved by the lease and frequently royalties are also made payable, being sums calculated in relation to "the quantity of minerals gotten" (Attorney-General of Ontario v. Mercer 2 )-in such a case the royalties represent "that part of the reddendum which is variable." As to the various forms of mining royalties, see Hals- bury's Laws of England, 2nd ed., vol. 22, pp. 602 and 603. Royalty is defined in Wharton's Law Lexicon, 14th ed. (1938), as follows: "Royalty, payment to a patentee by agreement on every article made according to his patent; or to an author by a publisher on every copy of his book sold; or to the owner of minerals for the right of working the same on every ton or other weight raised." In the case of mining royalties, the person who pays the royalty acquires the property in the minerals which he gets.
Use of the term "royalty" is not, however, limited to patents, copyrights and minerals. The term has been used to describe pay- ments for removing furnace slag from land (Shingler v. P. Williams &Sons 3 and to payments for flax cut (Akers v. Commissioner of Taxes (N.Z.) 4 ) the person paying the royalties becoming the owner of the slag or of the flax. In Kauri Timber Co. Ltd. v. Commis- sioner of Taxes (N.Z.) 5, there is a reference to timber royalties
1(1942) 66 C.L.R. 198.
2(1883) 8 App. Cas. 767, at p. 777.
3(1933) 17 Tax Cas. 574.
4(1926) G.L.R. (N.Z.) 259.
5(1913) A.C. 771.