Now the facts with respect to the dividends may be briefly stated thus: - The company was formed in 1864 under a deed of settlement, which was afterwards incorporated in a Statute. By clause 64 of the deed of settlement the directors are authorized from time to time to declare out of the profits of the company - whether the profits have been from time to time placed to the reserved fund or not - a dividend or bonus, or a dividend and bonus; but no such dividend or bonus shall be payable except out of such profits. Before the year 1905 a reserve fund had been accumulated by the company, which in that year stood at a larger sum than £20,000. In that year the directors called a general meeting of the company, at which a resolution was passed that £20,000 of the reserve fund should be distributed amongst the members as a dividend, which dividend might be drawn in cash It was part of the scheme under which that dividend was declared that 4,000 new shares of £5 each should be issued, and that the shareholders to whom this dividend was payable should have the option of taking up an aliquot number of the fully paid up new shares of the company. As a matter of fact they all agreed to do so - and naturally, because the shares stood at more than 100% premium. The other £4,900 assessed was part of a sum of £10,000 profits earned by the company or received by the company in the year 1902 or 1903, but which had not been treated as part of the current revenue. That was divided in the form of a bonus in the year 1905. The sum of £20,000 was all earned before 1905. The respondents maintain, first of all, that these are not dividends at all within the meaning of the Act. The word dividend does not really require any interpretation, although there has been on the Statute Book in Queensland a Dividend Duty Act , to which I shall directly refer, in which there was a definition of a dividend. But, when the articles of association of a company provide that the accumulated profits, whether they have been placed to reserve fund or not, may be divided by way of dividend amongst the shareholders, and after that the shareholders by resolution resolve to distribute them, I think it is very hard to say that the amount then distributed is not a dividend. As to the £4,900, there can be no doubt that it was a dividend, called a bonus; but the respondents say, "even if these were dividends, yet this is an Income Tax Act, and the intention of the Act was only to tax income, and this money, although it was in one sense a dividend, and might primâ facie come within the meaning of sub-sec. (iv.) of sec. 7, cannot be brought within the true meaning of that section, because the ruling principle of the Act is to tax income." That is a plausible argument, and possibly if the words were ambiguous it might be capable of acceptation. Before doing so, however, it will be worth while to look a little further. That argument is based upon this: The Income Tax Acts, when they were brought in, were to tax future income. There was no intention to tax any previous income. It was further very unlikely, to begin with, that the legislature in an Act dealing with future income would use such a phrase, "shall be assessed at not less than the amount of the dividend declared by such company," if it intended the money earned in the past would be taxed as future income. That argument is very plausible, and if there were no more in the facts or the law, it might possibly be accepted, but I only say, possibly. I doubt whether it should, if the case falls within the literal meaning of the Statute. If we inquire a little further, we find that this section, which from that point of view looks like an unjust attempt to tax past earnings by calling them future income, was in reality not a clause imposing a new liability, but a clause diminishing existing liability - a clause passed in relief of the company, and not for the purpose of imposing an additional burden upon it. Under the Dividend Duty Act , passed in 1890, a tax of one shilling in the pound was imposed on all dividends declared by a company, no matter from what source they came, or when they were earned. In 1902, when the Income Tax Act was first introduced, an income tax of 6d. in the pound was imposed on the profits of all companies, whether distributed or not. But the Dividend Duty Act 1890 still remained in force, so that there were two taxes - 6d. in the pound on the gross income, and 1/- in the pound on all dividends - but there was a proviso that credit should be given as against the tax on income to the extent of the amount actually paid by way of dividend duty. If none of the profits were distributed the company paid the whole 6d. in the pound, and when they came to be distributed, the company paid 1/- in the pound, so that it might easily and generally did happen that they paid 1/6 in the pound on part of their profits. Then in the year 1904 the legislature repealed the Dividend Duty Act 1890 , and substituted the provision as it now stands, that is to say, the company was to pay 1/- in the pound on all its profits, with a proviso that, "where any of the profits of such company remain undistributed amongst the shareholders then upon such undistributed profits only sixpence in each pound shall be payable as income tax; and should any part of such undistributed profits be afterwards distributed, as dividends, the amount already paid as tax shall be allowed for, in computing the amount of tax payable on such dividend." The result was that, instead of a company being liable to pay 1/6 in the pound, it pays no more than 1/-. It is still, as before, required to pay a tax of 1/- in the pound on all its dividends. That being the change made in the law, a construction, which at first sight seems plausible, becomes highly improbable, and there is no reason why the literal meaning should not be given to the words "that the income subject to the tax ... shall be assessed at not less than the amount of the dividends declared by such company during the year in respect of which the assessment is made." During the year 1905 the dividends declared by this company included those two sums. There were other dividends declared, but in respect of them no question arises. There is no reason why the literal words of the section should not be adopted - there is no escape from it.