consideration for the sale the new company was to allot to the appellant company or its nominees 200,000 fully paid shares of 10s. and to pay it £50,000 in cash. The agreement was expressed as a sale of the mining leases and not of the option in other words, it proceeded on the footing that the appellant company would exercise the option and then transfer its right to the leases, as distinguished from assigning the option before its exercise to the new company. In fact notice exercising the option had been given by the appellant company on 22nd September 1933, that is, four days before the date of the agreement of sale. The election con- ferred by the option to pay the purchase price in cash or shares was made in favour of the cash consideration, and, accordingly, the appellant company became bound to pay the vendor of the gold- mining leases £50,000 in cash. Triton Gold Mines No Liability provided this sum in the cash consideration of £50,000 which it, as the new company, undertook to pay in addition to allotting 200,000 of its 10s. shares fully paid. It thus worked out that what the appellant company really obtained on the sale of the gold-mining leases and the mining reservation consisted in fully paid-up shares.
The account by which the commissioner has calculated the profit upon which he has levied dividend duty treats the gross receipts as £150,000 but allows the £50,000 payable on the exercise of the option as a deduction. It also allows further deductions representing expenditure and a special statutory concession. But the result is that the shares, put down as £100,000, less the expenditure and the special statutory deduction, are made the subject of the duty.
The appellant company has not converted these shares into money but has held them as an investment, and it does not appear on what basis they are brought into the account at their face value.
Dwyer J., who heard the company's appeal from the assessment of the commissioner, formed the conclusion that it had never been the company's intention to acquire the mine and work it as a going concern, but that it obtained the option for the purpose of testing the mining leases and then, if satisfied, of acquiring them, developing them and disposing of them. This view of the facts led him to hold that the profit was dutiable.