I am of the same opinion. I might content myself by saying that, after an examination of the authorities cited by McMillan J., I entirely agree with his opinion, and the reasons which he gave. Here are two documents, prepared by the plaintiff himself. He comes into Court questioning their meaning, and wishing to place upon them a construction different from that which they primâ facie bear. That being his position, upon him is the onus of showing that the contract contained in those documents is not what the documents show upon their face. In my opinion, the plaintiff has failed in sustaining that burden, and, after a patient hearing, I see no reason to come to any other conclusion than that the documents mean just what they say. The parties, then, have made an arrangement, under which, by calling upon the defendant, the plaintiff could buy back the shares which he had sold to the defendant, and which the defendant, nevertheless, was willing to allow him to re-purchase, "when called upon." That, of course, meant that the demand for re-purchase was to be made within a reasonable time. Something like twenty months elapsed after the mine had become payable, during which time the plaintiff lay by, and, in my opinion, he has not sufficiently excused himself for the delay which has taken place, so as to show that his demand was within reason as to time. Even if he had established, as he has not done, a constructive trust, then he would have been rightly met by reasoning similar to that with which the plaintiff was met in the case of Clegg v. Edmondson[8], where we find Turner L.J., using these words - "We have to deal in this case, not with a direct but with a constructive trust, not with property subject merely to the ordinary contingencies by which all property is affected, and maintained at a moderate and scarcely varying expense, but with mining property which is subject to extraordinary contingencies, and which can be rendered productive only by large and uncertain outlay. The authorities, I think, fully warrant us in saying that the rules which govern cases of direct trust, and apply to property of an ordinary character, are not equally applicable to cases of constructive trust, and to property of the description which we have here to deal with. It is said indeed, on the part of the plaintiffs, that these mines had been tried, and that there was no uncertainty attaching to the value of them, but I do not find from the evidence that they had been explored to any such extent as could render their values certain, and, on the contrary, the evidence shows that faults were met with in the workings under the new lease, and the expenses of the workings would of course depend upon the nature and extent of those faults. What expenditure they would occasion, or to what extent they would affect the value of the mines, could not of course be foreseen. If they had led to ruinous expenditure, and had rendered the mines unproductive, nothing would of course have been heard of this claim of the plaintiffs, and there would have been no claim against them. Are they then in justice entitled to reap the benefit when they could not have been made subject to the loss?" And his Lordship continues[9]: - "A mine which a man works is in the nature of a trade carried on by him. It requires his time, care, attention and skill to be bestowed on it, besides the possible expenditure and risk of capital, nor can any degree of science, foresight and examination afford a sure guarantee against sudden losses, disappointments and reverses. In such cases, a man having an adverse claim in equity on the ground of constructive trust should pursue it promptly, and not by empty words merely. He should show himself in good time willing to participate in possible loss as well as profit, not play a game in which he alone risks nothing." The plaintiff, if he has, or ever had, any equitable claim, has not been willing to come into equity to assert it. He has stood aloof while the other party, originally his co-owner in this lease, has been working the property, running all the risk, and, throughout the transaction, taking upon himself the whole of the burden which the plaintiff was never willing to undertake or share in any way whatever. Under these circumstances, that he should come to the Court and make this claim at this late stage is quite out of the question. In my opinion, the learned Judges in the Full Court of this State were perfectly right in the course they took, and this appeal should, therefore, be refused.