Bowman
J.T.C.C.:-This
appeal
is
from
an
assessment
for
the
appellant’s
1985
taxation
year.
The
basic
issue
is
this:
can
the
appellant,
who,
in
1985,
owned
a
U.S.
resident-controlled
foreign
affiliate
that
earned
foreign
accrual
property
income
(’’FAPI")
offset
that
income
with
active
business
losses
incurred
by
the
affiliate
in
the
U.S.
in
1980
at
a
time
when
the
affiliate
was
not
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
the
appellant
but
rather
of
the
appellant’s
controlling
shareholder,
an
individual?
The
facts
are
not
disputed
and
are
set
out
in
an
agreed
statement,
as
follows:
The
appellant
and
respondent
by
their
respective
counsel
do
hereby
agree
and
admit
that
the
facts
recited
below
are
the
facts
upon
which
this
Court
can
rely
and
base
its
decision.
A.
Statement
of
facts
1.
The
appellant
is
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
for
the
purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
having
a
fiscal
year-end
of
December
31
in
each
year.
2.
Mr.
Joe
Phillips
("Phillips"),
an
individual
resident
in
Canada
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act,
was
the
controlling
shareholder
of
the
appellant
in
its
1980
to
1985
taxation
years,
inclusive.
3.
Trans
World
Oil
&
Gas
Ltd.
("Trans
World
U.S.")
was
a
corporation
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
state
of
Montana
and
resident
in
the
U.S.
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act.
The
fiscal
year-end
of
Trans
World
U.S.
is
April
30
in
each
year.
4.
Phillips
owned
all
of
the
issued
and
outstanding
voting
shares
of
Trans
World
U.S.
prior
to
its
1980
taxation
year
and
subsequently
until
January
2,
1985.
5.
Prior
to
and
during
its
1980
taxation
year,
Trans
World
U.S.
carried
on
an
active
business
of
exploring
for
oil
and
natural
gas
in
the
U.S.
6.
During
its
1980
taxation
year,
Trans
World
U.S.
incurred
a
net
loss
of
U.S.
$795,086
(Cdn.
$1,068,436.57)
from
the
said
active
business
of
exploring
for
oil
and
natural
gas
carried
on
by
it
in
the
U.S.
7,
On
or
about
May
1,
1984,
Phillips
subscribed
for
90,000
shares
of
the
common
stock
of
Trans
World
U.S.
for
a
total
consideration
of
U.S.
$7,560,900
(or
Cdn.
$9,711,990).
8.
The
proceeds
of
the
said
share
subscription
were
deposited
by
Trans
World
U.S.
in
term
deposits
with
banks
in
the
U.S.
9.
On
or
about
January
2,
1985,
Phillips
sold
all
of
his
shares
in
Trans
World
U.S.
to
the
appellant
for
Cdn.
$9,811,899,
Trans
World
U.S.
thereby
became
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
the
appellant
and
was
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
and
a
‘controlled
foreign
affiliate"
of
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
95(1
)(a)
of
the
Act
on
April
30,
1985.
10.
During
its
1985
taxation
year
ending
on
April
30,
1985,
the
sole
income
of
Trans
World
U.S.
was
interest
in
the
amount
of
Cdn.
$998,810
(U.S.
$743,289)
earned
on
the
aforesaid
term
deposits
with
banks
in
the
U.S.
Apart
from
earning
that
interest
it
carried
no
other
activities
that
were
calculated
to
produce
income.
11.
In
computing
its
income
for
the
purposes
of
the
U.S.
Internal
Revenue
Code
for
its
fiscal
period
ending
April
30,
1985,
Trans
World
U.S.
applied
U.S.
$733,241
of
its
total
of
U.S.
$820,178
of
its
prior
years’
net
losses,
including
part
of
its
1980
net
loss,
to
reduce
to
nil
its
taxable
income
and
taxes
payable
for
U.S.
federal
income
tax
purposes.
12.
By
notice
of
reassessment
dated
November
9,
1990,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
reassessed
the
appellant
in
respect
of
its
1985
taxation
year
by
including
the
amount
of
$998,810
in
the
calculation
of
the
appellant’s
income
in
reliance
on
subsection
91(1)
and
subparagraph
95(l)(b)(i)
of
the
Act
on
the
basis
that
the
interest
income
of
Trans
World
U.S.
for
its
fiscal
period
ended
April
30,
1985
was
foreign
accrual
property
income
("FAPI”)
of
Trans
World
U.S.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
did
not
apply
the
prior
years’
net
losses
of
Trans
World
U.S.
to
reduce
the
interest
income
otherwise
included
in
the
calculation
of
FAPI
of
Trans
World
U.S.
on
the
basis
that
subparagraph
95(l)(b)(v)
and
Regulation
5903
did
not
apply
to
the
prior
years’
net
losses
of
Trans
World
U.S.
By
the
aforesaid
notice
of
reassessment,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
also
allowed
as
a
deduction
the
amount
of
$217,132
on
account
of
withholding
taxes
paid
to
the
U.S.
Government
on
dividends
paid
by
Trans
World
U.S.
to
the
appellant
in
its
1985
taxation
year
resulting
in
a
net
increase
in
taxable
income
of
$781,678
to
the
appellant.
13.
The
parties
are
in
agreement
that
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal
the
said
interest
income
earned
by
Trans
World
U.S.
in
its
1985
taxation
year
was
FAPI
of
the
appellant
in
the
1985
taxation
year,
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
91(1),
subparagraph
95(l)(b)(i)
and
paragraph
95(1
)(d)
of
the
Act,
and
that
the
sole
issue
to
be
decided
by
this
Honourable
Court
is
whether
the
losses
incurred
by
Trans
World
U.S.
in
its
1980
taxation
year
are
deductible
in
computing
the
said
FAPI.
From
this
the
following
points
are
of
particular
pertinence:
A.
When
Trans
World
U.S.
incurred
active
business
losses
of
$795,086
U.S.
in
1980
it
was
not
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
the
appellant
but
rather
of
Mr.
Joe
Phillips,
the
appellant’s
controlling
shareholder.
B.
When
Trans
World
U.S.
earned
the
FAPI
of
U.S.
$743,289
(Cdn.
$998,810)
it
was
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
the
appellant.
These
are
the
only
two
facts
that
are
of
significance
to
this
issue.
In
the
1985
taxation
year
of
Trans
World
U.S.
it
paid
a
dividend
of
U.S.
$731,140
(Cdn.
$998,810)
to
the
appellant
but
that
fact
is
relevant
only
to
the
second
issue
which
I
shall
discuss
later.
I
do
not
propose
to
review
in
detail
the
somewhat
complex
regime
relating
to
non-resident
corporations
and
their
Canadian
shareholders,
foreign
affiliates,
controlled
foreign
affiliates
and
FAPI.
These
provisions
are
no
doubt
familiar
to
anyone
who
is
interested
in
reading
these
reasons.
It
is
sufficient
to
say
that
Trans
World
U.S.
was
until
January
2,
1985,
a
foreign
affiliate
and
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
Mr.
Phillips
within
the
meaning
of
paragraphs
95(1
)(d)
and
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
a
foreign
affiliate
and
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
the
appellant
thereafter.
The
FAPI
earned
by
Trans
World
U.S.
was
to
be
included
in
1985
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
under
subsection
91(1).
The
question
is
how
much
was
it—$998,810
or
zero?
This
depends
upon
whether
the
active
business
losses
incurred
by
Trans
World
U.S.
in
1980,
when
it
was
a
controlled
foreign
affiliate
of
Mr.
Phillips,
can
be
used
to
reduce
the
FAPI
earned
in
1985.
"Foreign
accrual
property
income"
is
defined
in
paragraph
95(1
)(b).
Insofar
as
that
definition
is
relevant
to
this
appeal,
it
reads
as
follows:
"foreign
accrual
property
income"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer,
for
any
taxation
year
of
the
affiliate,
means
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
aggregate
of
(i)
the
affiliate’s
incomes
for
the
year
from
property
and
businesses
other
than
active
businesses...
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
(v)
the
amount
prescribed
to
be
the
deductible
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
the
year
and
the
five
immediately
preceding
taxation
years.
The
amount
prescribed
to
be
the
deductible
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer
is
defined
in
subsection
5903(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations.
Although
only
a
small
portion
of
that
definition
is
applicable,
I
shall
set
it
out
in
full
because
it
is
from
that
provision,
among
others,
that
one
must
draw
an
inference
as
to
the
intention
of
the
drafter
of
the
regulations.
5903.(1)
Deductible
loss.—For
the
purpose
of
subparagraph
95(l)(b)(v)
of
the
Act,
the
amount
prescribed
to
be
the
deductible
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
and
the
five
immediately
preceding
taxation
years
is
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
aggregate
of
(a)
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
the
amount,
if
any,
for
each
of
the
five
immediately
preceding
taxation
years
of
the
affiliate
during
which
it
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
taxpayer
or
of
a
person
described
in
any
of
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)
of
the
Act,
by
which
(i)
the
aggregate
of
the
amounts
determined
under
subparagraphs
95(
1
)(b)(iii)
and
(iv)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
the
affiliate
for
that
preceding
year
exceeds
(ii)
the
aggregate
of
the
amounts
determined
under
subparagraphs
95(
1
)(b)(i)
and
(ii)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
the
affiliate
for
that
preceding
year,
and
(b)
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
aggregate
of
(i)
each
amount
determined
under
clause
5907(l)(c)(ii)(A)
and
subparagraphs
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
and
(iv)
in
respect
of
an
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years,
and
(ii)
each
amount
determined
under
clause
5907(1
)(j)(ii)(A)
in
respect
of
taxable
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years
but
not
including
any
amount
included
in
the
affiliate’s
exempt
loss
for
those
years
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
(iii)
each
amount
determined
under
subparagraphs
5907(1
)(b)(ii),
(iii),
(iv)
and
(v)
in
respect
of
the
exempt
earnings
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years
less
such
portion
of
the
income
or
profits
tax
payable
to
the
government
of
a
country
for
any
of
those
years
by
the
affiliate
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
payable
in
respect
of
an
amount
referred
to
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(b)(iii)
or
clause
(l)(b)(iv)(B),
and
(iv)
each
amount
determined
under
clauses
5907(
1
)(i)(ii)(A)
and
(C)
in
respect
of
the
taxable
earnings
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years
but
not
including
any
amount
included
in
the
affiliate’s
exempt
earnings
for
those
years
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
(c)
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
an
amount
deducted
by
virtue
of
subparagraph
95(l)(b)(v)
of
the
Act
by
the
taxpayer
or
a
person
described
in
any
of
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
any
of
the
five
immediately
preceding
taxation
years
of
the
affiliate
to
the
extent
that
such
amount
relates
to
a
loss
for
any
of
those
years
and
assuming
that
no
amount
is
deductible
under
that
subparagraph
for
any
year
until
the
maximum
amount
for
preceding
years
has
been
deducted;
and
(d)
where
a
payment
has
been
received
by
the
foreign
affiliate
that
may
reasonably
be
considered
to
relate
to
a
payment
described
in
subsection
5907(1.3)
made
by
another
foreign
affiliate
of
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
a
loss,
or
any
portion
thereof,
included
in
computing
the
amount
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
or
(b)
in
respect
of
the
affiliate,
the
amount
of
such
loss
or
portion
thereof.
For
the
purposes
of
this
appeal
the
only
applicable
portion
is
subparagraph
5903(1
)(b)(i),
that
is
to
say,
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
in
respect
of
an
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years.
"Exempt
loss"
is
defined
in
paragraph
5907(1
)(c)
of
the
regulations
as
follows:
(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Part
and
sections
95
and
113
of
the
Act,
(c)
"exempt
loss”
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation
for
a
taxation
year
of
the
affiliate
is
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
(i)
the
amount
by
which
the
capital
losses
of
the
affiliate
for
the
year
exceed
the
aggregate
of
(A)
the
amount
of
the
allowable
capital
losses
for
the
year
referred
to
in
subparagraph
95(
1
)(b)(iv)
of
the
Act,
(B)
the
amount
of
the
allowable
capital
losses
for
the
year
referred
to
in
clauses
(g)(iii)(A)
and
(g)(iv)(C),
and
(C)
such
portion
of
any
income
or
profits
tax
refunded
by
the
government
of
a
country
for
the
year
to
the
affiliate
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
tax
refunded
in
respect
of
the
amount
by
which
the
capital
losses
of
the
affiliate
for
the
year
exceed
the
aggregate
of
the
amounts
referred
to
in
clauses
(A)
and
(B),
(ii)
for
its
1975
or
any
preceding
taxation
year,
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
(A)
the
affiliate’s
net
loss
for
the
year
from
an
active
business
carried
on
by
it
in
a
country,
or
(B)
the
amount,
if
any,
for
the
year
by
which
(I)
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
95(
1
)(b)(iii)
of
the
Act
for
that
year
exceeds
(II)
the
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
95(
1
)(b)(i)
of
the
Act
for
that
year,
(iii)
for
the
1976
or
any
subsequent
taxation
year
where
the
affiliate
is
resident
in
a
country
listed
in
subsection
(11),
each
amount
that
is
the
affiliate’s
net
loss
for
the
year
from
an
active
business
carried
on
by
it
in
Canada
or
in
a
country
listed
in
subsection
(11),
or
(iv)
for
the
1976
or
any
subsequent
taxation
year,
each
amount
that
is
included
in
the
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate
by
virtue
of
subsection
(10).
Again,
the
only
provision
that
has
any
application
in
this
case
is
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii).
Trans
World
U.S.
was
resident
in
and
carried
on
business
in
the
U.S.,
which
was
listed
in
subsection
5907(11),
and
its
loss
in
1980
was
from
an
active
business
carried
on
there.
’’Net
loss”
is
defined
in
part
as
follows
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(g)(i):
(g)
"net
loss"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation
for
a
taxation
year
of
the
affiliate
(i)
from
an
active
business
carried
on
by
it
in
a
country
is
the
amount
of
its
loss
for
the
year
from
that
active
business
carried
on
in
that
country
minus
such
portion
of
any
income
or
profits
tax
refunded
by
the
government
of
a
country
for
the
year
to
the
affiliate
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
tax
refunded
in
respect
of
such
loss.
’’Loss”
is
defined
in
paragraph
5907(1)(e):
(e)
"loss"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer
resident
in
Canada
for
a
taxation
year
of
the
affiliate
from
an
active
business
carried
on
by
it
in
a
country
is
the
amount
of
its
loss
for
the
year
from
that
active
business
carried
on
in
that
country
computed
by
applying
the
provisions
of
subparagraph
(a)(i)
respecting
the
computation
of
earnings
from
that
active
business
carried
on
in
that
country,
mutatis
mutandis.
In
construing
these
rather
complex
provisions
it
is
well
to
bear
in
mind
that
the
right
to
carry
losses
forward
or
back
from
one
taxation
year
to
another
does
not
exist
independently
of
the
statute
and
regulations.
There
is
no
room
for
any
assumption
of
an
inherent
right
based
on
general
principles
or
on
the
overall
scheme
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Moreover,
subdivision
(i)
of
Division
B
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Part
LIX
of
the
Regulations
form
a
self-contained
code
relating
to
non-resident
corporations
and
trusts
and
their
resident
shareholders
or
beneficiaries.
Accordingly,
the
extrapolation
of
rules
relating
to
the
treatment
of
losses
of
domestic
corporations
is
not
a
reliable
guide
to
the
interpretation
of
the
FAPI
provisions.
The
appellant’s
contention,
briefly,
is
that
the
1980
active
business
loss
of
Trans
World
U.S.
is
a
loss
referred
to
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii).
This
contention
is
based
first
upon
certain
inferences
that
he
invites
me
to
draw
concerning
the
scheme
of
the
Act
as
it
relates
to
domestic
corporations.
As
stated
above
I
do
not
find
such
comparisons
helpful.
Second,
he
points
out
that
there
are
to
be
included
in
the
computation
of
the
"deductible
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer"
for
a
year
or
the
five
preceding
years
under
paragraph
5903(1
)(a)
essentially
the
affiliates’
property
and
non-active
business
losses
and
allowable
capital
losses
accrued
after
1975,
net
of
property
and
non-active
business
income
and
taxable
capital
gains
accrued
after
1975.
The
significance
of
this
item
is
that
the
calculation
of
the
amounts
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
5903(1
)(a)
is
for
years
"during
which
it
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
taxpayer
or
of
a
person
described
in
any
of
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)"
(essentially
non-arm’s
length
persons
and
predecessor
corporations).
Each
counsel
seeks
to
draw
an
inference
favourable
to
his
case
from
the
presence
of
the
emphasized
words
in
paragraph
5903(1
)(a)
and
their
absence
from
paragraph
5903(1
)(b).
For
the
appellant
it
is
said
that
those
words
in
paragraph
5903(1
)(a)
are
words
of
limitation
and
their
absence
from
paragraph
5903(1
)(b)
indicates
that
no
such
restriction
applies
to
a
calculation
under
the
latter
paragraph.
For
the
respondent
it
is
said
that
had
the
drafter
intended
to
extend
the
calculation
under
paragraph
5903(1
)(b)
to
years
in
which
the
affiliate
was
not
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
Canadian
taxpayer
but
of
a
related
person
it
would
have
said
so
as
it
did
in
paragraph
5903(l)(a).
The
appellant’s
contention
therefore
boils
down
to
two
propositions:
1.
Property
losses,
non-active
business
income
losses
and
capital
losses
for
the
preceding
five
years
can
be
used
to
reduce
FAPI
only
if
those
losses
were
incurred
while
the
affiliate
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
taxpayer
or,
effectively,
a
person
related
to
the
taxpayer
or
a
predecessor
corporation.
2.
All
active
business
losses
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
Canadian
resident
incurred
in
the
preceding
five
years
can
be
used
to
reduce
FAPI
of
that
affiliate
even
if
the
non-resident
company
was
not
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
taxpayer
when
the
active
business
losses
were
incurred.
The
appellant
contends
that
nothing
in
paragraph
95(1
)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
or
paragraphs
5903(1
)(b)
and
5907(1
)(c)
of
the
Regulations
requires
that
the
active
business
losses
have
been
incurred
when
the
affiliate
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
corporate
taxpayer
in
respect
of
which
the
FAPI
is
being
calculated.
The
respondent
takes
no
exception
to
the
first
proposition
but
in
response
to
the
second
says
that
the
net
loss
referred
to
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
must
be
the
net
loss
incurred.
while
the
affiliate
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
corporate
taxpayer
in
respect
of
which
the
computation
of
FAPI
is
being
made
and
not
of
an
unrelated
third
party
or
even
of
a
person
related
to
the
Canadian
taxpayer.
The
respondent’s
position
is
essentially
that
in
the
calculation
of
the
prescribed
"deductible
loss"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
under
subsection
5903(1)
one
of
the
elements
to
be
taken
into
account
is
an
amount
determined
under
a
portion
of
the
definition
of
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate,
specifically
an
amount
determined
under
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
"in
respect
of
an
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years".
That
determination
must,
according
to
the
respondent,
be
made
in
the
context
of
a
definition
of
the
"exempt
loss"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation.
From
this
the
respondent
concludes
not
only
that
the
only
type
of
foreign
affiliate
of
a
taxpayer
that
can
have
an
exempt
loss
is
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation
but
also
that
it
must
have
been,
in
each
year
during
which
the
component
of
exempt
loss
that
is
relevant
to
the
determination
of
a
deductible
loss
is
to
be
calculated,
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
corporation
in
respect
of
which
the
FAPI
is
being
calculated.
This
contention
is
based
upon
a
number
of
provisions
of
the
regulations.
First,
counsel
points
out
that
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
appears
as
an
ingredient
of
a
definition
of
"exempt
loss"
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation.
Accordingly,
he
reasons,
there
can
be
no
exempt
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
for
a
taxation
year
of
the
affiliate
unless
it
is
an
affiliate
of
a
corporation
in
the
taxation
year
or
years
referred
to
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii).
Second,
he
observes
that
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
requires
a
determination
of
the
affiliate’s
"net
loss"
for
the
year
from
an
active
business
carried
on
in
Canada
or
a
listed
country.
"Net
loss"
is
defined
in
subparagraph
5907(1
)(g)(i),
so
far
as
is
relevant
to
this
appeal,
only
as
the
net
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation.
Third,
he
refers
to
the
fact
that
in
the
definition
of
deductible
loss
in
subparagraph
5903(1
)(b)(i)
the
amounts
to
be
calculated
under
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iii)
must
be
determined
"in
respect
of
an
exempt
loss".
To
these
contentions
the
appellant
responds
that
in
1985
Trans
World
U.S.
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation,
the
appellant,
and
the
words
"of
a
corporation"
in
the
definition
of
exempt
loss
and
of
net
loss
do
not
imply
that
when
the
active
business
loss
was
incurred
the
affiliate
had
to
be
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
corporation
of
which
it
was
an
affiliate
in
1985,
or
indeed
of
any
corporation.
Moreover,
he
contends
that
in
applying
the
definition
of
"net
loss"
one
must
determine
the
affiliate’s
loss
and
the
definition
of
"loss"
is
a
definition
of
the
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
"of
a
taxpayer",
that
is
to
say,
of
an
individual
or
a
corporation.
Further,
he
asserts
that
the
respondent’s
position
would
lead
to
an
absurdity
in
that
it
would
mean
that
if
an
individual
taxpayer
owned
a
foreign
affiliate
both
when
it
was
resident
in
a
listed
country
and
incurred
losses
from
an
active
business
carried
on
in
that
country
and
also
when
it
earned
passive
income
in
a
subsequent
taxation
year,
he
or
she
could
not,
in
determining
the
FAPI
taxable
under
subsection
91(1),
offset
the.
passive
income
with
the
prior
years
active
business
losses.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
acknowledges
that
this
is
the
result,
but
counters
with
the
observation
that
the
appellant’s
position
leads
to
the
anomalous
conclusion
that
a
person
who
acquired
a
foreign
affiliate
with
accumulated
active
business
losses
could
use
them
to
offset
passive
income
earned
in
a
subsequent
year
even
though
the
foreign
affiliate
incurred
those
losses
at
a
time
when
it
was
nobody’s
foreign
affiliate
or
the
foreign
affiliate
of
a
complete
stranger.
This,
he
warns,
could
give
rise
to
an
active
trade
in
the
shares
of
foreign
companies
with
accumulated
active
business
losses.
There
is
much
technical
merit
in
the
contentions
of
both
counsel,
who
advanced
their
respective
positions
with
skill
and
thoroughness.
There
is
room,
I
believe,
even
in
construing
a
provision
of
such
complexity
as
Part
LIX
of
the
Regulations,
for
applying
general
principles
of
statutory
interpretation.
These
are,
generally,
that
the
words
of
an
Act
are
to
be
read
in
their
entire
context
and
in
their
grammatical
and
ordinary
sense
harmoniously
with
the
scheme
of
the
Act,
the
object
of
the
Act
and
the
intention
of
Parliament
and
that
in
case
of
doubt,
where
that
doubt
cannot
be
resolved
by
recourse
to
the
scheme
of
the
legislation,
it
should
be
resolved
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer.
I
see
no
reason
for
not
applying
these
principles
to
the
construction
of
a
regulation.
We
have,
as
well,
two
recent
decisions
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
Tennant
v.
Canada,
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
113,
and
Canada
v.
Swantje,
[1994]
1
C.T.C.
2559.
The
former
admonishes
against
a
"results
oriented"
approach
to
statutory
interpretation,
and
the
latter
disapproves
of
a
"purely
mechanical
one,
focused
on
the
method,
the
means
devised
to
achieve
the
goal"
and
recommends
that
the
approach
be
"a
functional
one"
and
that
"the
scheme
must
be
considered
as
a
whole,
taking
into
account
the
intent
of
the
legislation,
its
object
and
spirit
and
what
it
actually
accomplishes".
In
summary
then,
if
the
words
of
the
legislation
are
clear
and
unambiguous
and
admit
of
but
one
interpretation
one
need
look
no
further.
If
they
are
not
and
are
susceptible
of
more
than
one
interpretation
one
must
look
to
the
scheme
of
the
Act
and
its
object
and
spirit.
It
is
only
when
recourse
to
all
of
the
other
tools
of
statutory
interpretation
fails
to
yield
a
clear
answer
that
one
is
entitled
to
invoke
the
principle
that
in
case
of
ambiguity
the
benefit
of
the
doubt
must
go
to
the
taxpayer.
As
Fauteux
C.J.
said
in
Ville
de
Montréal
v.
ILGWU
Center
et
al.,
[1974]
S.C.R.
59,
24
D.L.R.
(3d)
694,
at
page
66
(D.L.R.
699):
The
legislator
is
presumed
to
mean
what
he
says;
and
there
is
no
need
to
resort
to
interpretation
when
the
wording
is
clear....
Two
separate
questions
are
involved
in
the
analysis
required
here:
A.
Must
the
foreign
affiliate
that
sustains
the
active
business
losses
in
the
prior
years
have
been
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation
in
the
years
when
it
sustained
the
losses?
B.
If
so,
must
it
be
a
foreign
affiliate
of
the
same
corporation
in
respect
of
which
the
FAPI
is
to
be
determined
in
a
subsequent
year?
An
affirmative
answer
to
either
question
will
sustain
the
respondent’s
position.
While
I
accept
the
appellant’s
contention
that
anomalies
may
result
from
the
respondent’s
interpretation
I
believe
that
that
interpretation
is
more
consonant
with
the
overall
scheme
of
the
Act
and
regulations
as
they
relate
to
FAPI.
As
to
the
first
question,
there
are
many
indications
in
Part
LIX
of
the
Regulations
that
it
was
intended
to
restrict
the
application
of
prior
years’
active
business
losses
to
those
incurred
while
the
foreign
affiliate
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporate
taxpayer.
I
have
in
mind,
for
example,
the
words
"in
respect
of
an
exempt
loss
of
the
affiliate
for
those
years"
in
subparagraph
5903(1
)(b)(i).
Since
an
"exempt
loss"
appears
to
be
a
computation
that
is
relevant
only
to
an
affiliate
of
a
corporate
taxpayer
it
is
I
think
a
fair
inference
that
there
can
be
no
exempt
loss
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
an
individual.
A
further
indication
is
found
in
paragraph
5903(1
)(b),
where
calculations
under
subparagraph
5907(1
)(c)(iv)
and
clause
5907(l)(j)(A)
are
required.
Neither
of
these
provisions
is
directly
applicable
here,
but
both
of
them
require
calculations
that
can
be
made
only
in
the
case
of
a
foreign
affiliate
of
a
corporation.
The
inference
that
one
is
disposed
to
draw
from
this
somewhat
labyrinthine
legislation
is
that,
in
the
various
calculations
that
must
be
made
for
different
purposes,
certain
of
them
can
be
made
in
respect
of
all
taxpayers
who
own
shares
of
foreign
affiliates
and
some
can
be
made
only
in
respect
of
the
corporate
shareholders
of
foreign
affiliates.
In
construing
provisions
of
such
specificity
as
Part
LIX
of
the
Regulations
it
must
be
assumed
that
the
authors
meant
what
they
said
and
that
the
differentiations
made
had
a
purpose
and
were
intentional.
Inherent
in
the
scheme
of
subdivision
(i)
of
Part
B
of
the
Act
and
Part
LIX
of
the
Regulations
is
that
many
provisions
apply
only
to
corporate
shareholders
of
foreign
affiliates
of
corporations
resident
in
Canada
whereas
some
apply
also
to
individual
shareholders.
To
ignore
these
distinctions
would
be
to
drive
a
coach
and
four
through
the
entire
regime.
Even
if
there
are
lacunae
or
anomalies
—and
there
may
well
be-it
is
not
the
function
of
this
Court,
by
reading
words
into
or
out
of
the
regulations,
to
attempt
to
fill
the
former
or
correct
the
latter.
As
Chief
Justice
Isaac
said
in
Hawboldt
Hydraulics
Inc.
(Trustee
of)
v.
Canada,
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
336.
"These
[established
principles
of
statutory
interpretation]
are
not
invitations
to
Courts
to
ignore
other
well-established
rules
of
construction,
such
as
that
which
requires
courts
to
construe
statutes
so
as
‘to
ascribe
some
meaning
to
each
word
used
by
the
legislature’
Atco
v.
Calgary
Power,
[1982]
2
S.C.R.
557,
140
D.L.R.
(3d)
193,
at
page
569
(S.C.R.)".
As
to
the
second
question,
I
regard
the
presence
in
paragraphs
5903(1
)(a)
and
(c)
of
the
words
"or
a
person
described
in
any
of
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)"
and
their
absence
from
paragraph
5903(1
)(b)
as
an
indication
that
makers
of
the
regulation
did
not
intend
to
extend
the
treatment
of
prior
years’
active
business
losses
of
an
affiliate
to
losses
incurred
when
it
was
a
foreign
affiliate
of
persons
described
in
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)
of
the
Act
(or
of
anyone
else,
for
that
matter).
Had
it
been
intended
to
do
so
the
regulation
would
have
said
so.
The
alternative
construction
is
not,
I
acknowledge,
without
merit.
It
is,
in
summary,
that
where
one
provision
(paragraph
5903(1
)(a))
specifically
refers
to
a
broader
group
of
possible
owners
of
a
foreign
affiliate,
1.e.,
persons
mentioned
in
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)
(which
could
of
course
include
individuals
such
as
Mr.
Phillips)
it
should
be
inferred
that
it
was
not
intended
similarly
to
limit
the
group
where
no
such
group
is
mentioned.
One
must
be
wary
of
the
indiscriminate
use
of
Latin
maxims
such
as
expressio
unius
est
exclusio
alterius.
I
doubt
that
it
is
really
an
appropriate
guide
in
this
case
to
the
interpretation
of
this
provision.
It
would
apply
if
all
that
I
had
to
construe
were
paragraph
5903(1
)(a).
The
unius
would
be
the
persons
mentioned
in
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii),
and
the
alterius
would
be
everyone
else.
I
question
the
correctness
of
applying
it
to
a
different
provision,
paragraph
5903(1
)(b),
where
no
mention
is
made
of
any
owner
of
the
foreign
affiliate,
even
the
very
taxpayer
in
respect
of
which
the
FAPI
is
being
computed.
Yet
I
do
not
believe
it
is
reasonable
to
conclude
from
the
absence
from
paragraph
5903(1
)(b)
of
the
words
"or
of
a
person
described
in
subparagraphs
95(2)(f)(iv)
to
(vii)"
that
it
was
intended
to
broaden
the
group
of
potential
owners
to
everyone
in
the
world.
In
a
provision
whose
purpose
is
the
computation
of
the
amount
of
passive
income
(FAPI)
that
is
to
be
taxed
in
a
Canadian
resident’s
hands
it
would
be
surprising
if
a
taxpayer,
although
limited
to
offsetting
"passive"
income
earned
in
the
year
with
passive
losses
sustained
in
prior
years
only
where
those
passive
losses
were
incurred
while
the
foreign
affiliate
was
owned
by
the
taxpayer,
a
non-arm’s
length
person
or
a
predecessor
corporation,
yet
would
nonetheless
have
an
unlimited
right
to
deduct
prior
years’
active
business
losses
incurred
when
a
wholly
unrelated
third
party
owned
the
foreign
affiliate.
That
appears
to
me
to
be
inconsistent
with
the
very
object
that
the
FAPI
rules
were
designed
to
accomplish.
The
object
behind
the
FAPI
rules
was
to
discourage
Canadians
from
parking
investments
in
offshore
companies
(usually
tax
havens),
or,
if
they
did,
at
least
to
require
them
to
pay
taxes
currently
on
the
income
so
generated.
That
object
would
be
defeated
if
a
Canadian
resident
were
permitted
to
acquire
from
a
third
party
a
company,
resident
in
a
listed
country,
with
accumulated
active
business
losses
and
use
those
losses
to
offset
both
the
income
taxable
in
that
country
and
the
passive
income
taxed
under
subsection
91(1).
While
this
result
may
seem
a
little
harsh
in
the
case
of
Mr.
Phillips
or
the
appellant
considering
that
ultimate
control
never
changed
throughout
the
entire
period
it
is
a
result
that
is
in
my
opinion
the
only
one
that
is
consistent
with
the
regime
that
the
Act
and
regulations
are
seeking
to
govern.
Accordingly,
I
would
answer
in
the
affirmative
the
two
questions
which
I
posed
earlier
in
this
analysis.
It
is
unfortunate
that
the
relatively
simple
concept
involved
in
this
case
had
not
been
expressed
with
a
degree
of
clarity
that
would
have
obviated
the
necessity
of
bringing
the
matter
to
court.
If
my
interpretation
is
wrong,
and
the
deductible
loss
of
Trans
World
U.S.
includes
the
losses
incurred
in
1980,
it
makes
no
difference
in
any
event
to
the
appellant’s
taxable
income.
To
the
notice
of
assessment
of
the
appellant
for
1985
was
attached
a
schedule
outlining
the
basis
of
the
increase
to
taxable
income.
It
read
as
follows:
The
assessment
was
premised
on
the
assumption
that
the
FAPI
of
the
controlled
foreign
affiliate
was
$998,810
under
subsection
91(1).
A
dividend
of
the
same
amount
was
paid
in
the
year
and
was
included
in
income
under
section
90.
Since
the
dividend
was
paid
out
of
taxable
surplus
an
amount
equal
to
the
amount
required
by
subsection
91
(
1
)
to
be
included
in
respect
of
the
share
was
deducted
in
computing
the
appellant’s
income
under
subsection
91(5).
The
result
of
this
calculation
is
that
the
FAPI
is
taxed
only
once,
under
subsection
91(1),
and
not
a
second
time
when
it
is
paid
to
the
Canadian
resident
shareholder
as
a
dividend.
In
addition
the
Minister,
in
assessing,
allowed
a
further
deduction
under
section
113
of
$217,132,
being
the
amount
of
the
withholding
tax
paid
of
$99,881
multiplied
by
the
relevant
tax
factor
as
defined
in
subsection
95(1).
For
1985
this
factor
was
1/.46.
If
the
appellant
were
correct
in
its
contention
that
the
1980
losses
reduced
the
FAPI
in
1985
to
nil,
so
that
no
amount
was
to
be
included
in
its
income
under
subsection
91(1),
the
dividend
paid
in
1985
would
still
have
been
included
in
its
income
under
section
90,
but
no
amount
would
have
been
deductible
under
subsection
91(5).
Accordingly,
the
appellant’s
taxable
income
and
the
amount
of
tax
assessed
for
1985
would
have
been
the
same.
This
alternative
contention
was
raised
in
a
most
peculiar
way
by
the
respondent.
After
agreeing
that
the
sole
issue
before
the
Court
was:
...whether
the
losses
incurred
by
Trans
World
U.S.
in
its
1980
taxation
year
are
deductible
in
computing
the
said
FAPI
counsel
for
the
respondent
brought
a
motion
on
the
eve
of
trial,
supported
by
a
lengthy
affidavit,
to
dismiss
the
appeal
on
the
grounds
that:
...the
Court
has
no
jurisdiction
over
the
subject
matter
of
the
appeal...
or
alternatively
to
amend
its
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
to
raise
the
same
jurisdictional
question.
The
appellant
consented
to
the
amendment
and
the
motion
to
dismiss
for
want
of
jurisdiction
proceeded
at
trial.
As
I
understand
the
rationale
behind
the
motion,
it
is
that
since
the
respondent
has
come
up
with
an
alternative
ground
for
upholding
the
correctness
of
the
amount
assessed,
this
Court,
in
some
way
that
I
have
been
unable
to
fathom,
loses
jurisdiction
over
the
subject
matter
of
the
appeal.
The
kindest
thing
to
do
with
this
forlorn
and
ill-conceived
notion
is
to
cast
it
adrift
and
let
it
founder
on
its
own.
This
Court
obviously
has
jurisdiction
to
hear
the
appeal,
and
to
entertain
arguments
as
to
alternative
bases
for
supporting
the
assessment,
just
as
it
has
the
obligation
to
redefine
badly
defined
issues
and
to
determine
the
correctness
in
law
of
the
assessment,
irrespective
of
the
manner
in
which
the
issues
are
raised.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs,
except
for
the
costs
relating
to
the
motion
to
dismiss
for
want
of
jurisdiction.
Appeal
dismissed.