THURLOW,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
of
income
tax
for
the
year
1957,
the
issue
between
the
parties
being
whether
the
appellant
was
during
that
year
a
foreign
business
corporation
and
thus
entitled
to
exemption
from
taxation
pursuant
to
Section
71
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148.
The
material
part
of
Section
71
is
as
follows:
“(1)
No
tax
is
payable
under
this
Part
upon
the
taxable
income
of
a
corporation
for
a
taxation
year
when
it
was
a
foreign
business
corporation.
(2)
In
this
Part,
a
‘foreign
business
corporation’
is
a
corporation
that
during
the
whole
of
the
taxation
year
in
respect
of
which
the
expression
is
being
applied
(a)
[not
in
issue]
(b)
[not
in
issue]
(c)
complied
with
one
of
the
following
conditions
:
(i)
its
business
operations
were
of
an
industrial,
mining,
commercial,
public
utility
or
public
service
nature
and
were
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada
(except
for
management
and
the
designing,
purchasing
and
transportation
of
goods
if
the
goods
were
not
acquired
for
resale
in
the
course
of
trading
and
were
acquired
for
the
operations
so
carried
on
outside
Canada)
either
directly
or
through
ownership
of
shares
in
or
control
of
subsidiary
or
affiliated
corporations
and
its
prop-
erty,
except
securities
and
bank
deposits,
was
situate
entirely
outside
Canada,
(ii)
it
was
the
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
a
corporation
that
complied
with
the
conditions
in
subparagraph
(i)
and
was
wholly
engaged
in
carrying
on
business
outside
Canada,
or
(iii)
its
busines
was
of
an
investment
or
financial
nature
and
was
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada,
its
shares
had
been
offered
for
public
subscription
or
were
listed
on
a
recognized
stock
exchange
in
Canada
or
elsewhere
and
its
property
(except
bank
deposits
and
shares
of
other
corporations
that
were
entitled
to
exemption
under
this
section)
were
situate
entirely
outside
Canada;
(d)
[not
in
issue]
”?
The
appellant
is
an
Ontario
corporation
incorporated
in
1949,
under
the
name
of
Clevite
Limited,
and
is
a
wholly-owned
subsidiary
of
Clevite
Corporation,
an
Ohio
corporation
with
its
head
office
in
Cleveland.
The
head
office
of
the
appellant
is
at
St.
Thomas,
Ontario,
but
only
one
of
its
directors
lives
in
Canada.
The
others
live
in
the
United
States,
where
all
directors’
meetings
and
shareholders’
meetings
are
normally
held.
Prior
to
1957,
the
appellant
had
carried
on
business
in
Canada
as
a
manufacturer
of
automobile-type
bearings,
principally
engine
bearings,
and
had
acquired
from
its
parent
a
number
of
British
and
European
patents
pertaining
to
bearings
or
bearing
metals.
When
acquired
by
the
appellant,
the
British
patent
was
subject
to
a
licensing
agreement
made
in
1933
by
the
parent
corporation
with
0
&
S
Bearings
Limited,
the
benefit
of
which
was
also
transferred
to
the
appellant.
Under
this
licensing
agreement,
royalties
were
payable
by
the
licensee
and
the
parent
had
agreed
to
supply
the
licensee
with
technical
information,
drawings,
specifications,
and
other
data
to
enable
the
licensee
to
manufacture
and
sell
its
products,
to
supply
the
licensee
with
samples,
duplicates
of
plant
tools,
dies,
fixtures
or
equipment,
and
complete
bushings
or
bearings
or
any
component
part
thereof.
By
an
agreement
made
in
1954,
the
appellant
also
licensed
a
German
company
to
manufacture
and
sell
products
under
its
German
patents.
In
this
agreement,
it
was
recited
that
the
appellant
“for
a
period
of
many
years
has
been
engaged
in
the
development
and
manufacture
of
metal
bearings,
particularly
strip
type
bearings,
and
has
acquired
extensive
technical
information
with
respect
to
such
products
and
their
manufacture”?
and
by
paragraphs
3,
4,
and
6
the
appellant
undertook
to
furnish
the
licensee
with
technical
information
concerning
bearings
then
and
thereafter
manufactured
by
the
appellant
and
its
parent
corporation,
to
assist
the
licensee
in
securing
necessary
metals
and
equipment
to
enable
it
to
manufacture
strip
type
bearings,
and
to
send,
upon
the
licensee’s
request,
competent
technicians
to
the
plant
of
the
licensee
for
the
purpose
of
advising
and
assisting
the
licensee
in
its
bearing
operations,
the
salaries
of
such
technicians
to
be
paid
by
the
appellant.
By
paragraph
7,
it
was
also
agreed
that
the
licensee
might
cause
its
technicians
or
representatives
to
visit
the
plants
of
the
appellant
in
Canada
and
those
of
the
parent
corporation
in
the
United
States
from
time
to
time
for
the
purpose
of
observing,
studying
and
being
trained
in
the
methods,
equipment
and
technique
used
by
the
appellant
in
the
manufacture
of
bearings.
In
1956
the
appellant
sold
to
Paxol
Limited,
later
re-named
The
Clevite
Limited,
a
sister
or
affiliated
corporation,
for
approximately
two
and
a
half
million
dollars,
its
manufacturing
plant
and
Canadian
patents,
together
with
its
other
physical
assets,
and
thereupon
discontinued
its
own
manufacturing
and
selling
operations.
It
retained,
however,
its
British,
German
and
other
foreign
patents
and
the
licensing
agreements
pertaining
thereto.
Subsequently,
in
August,
1957,
the
appellant
was
reorganized
under
the
name
of
Clevite
Development
Limited.
Following
the
agreement
of
1933,
shipments
of
material,
equipment
and
machinery
were
made
from
time
to
time
to
0
&
S
Bearings
Limited
by
the
parent
corporation,
but
there
is
no
clear
evidence
that
any
shipment
pursuant
to
the
contract
was
ever
made
by
the
appellant,
or
that
any
shipment
was
made
by
anyone
in
1957.
It
was,
however,
stated
in
evidence
that
no
shipment
was
made
from
Canada
in
1957.
Nor
is
the
evidence
clear
as
to
what,
if
anything,
was
done
in
1957
under
paragraphs
3
and
4
of
the
German
patent
licence.
A
witness
called
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
stated
that
none
of
the
services
provided
for
in
these
paragraphs
were
performed
in
Canada
in
1957
and
that
what
was
required
to
perform
them
was
done
in
Ohio
or
in
Germany,
but
he
was
unable
to
say
that
anything
had
been
required
in
1957.
He
did,
however,
say
that
personnel
came
from
Germany
two
or
three
times
each
year,
including
1957,
to
visit
the
plant
of
the
parent
corporation
in
Cleveland
pursuant
to
paragraph
7
of
the
agreement
and
that
personnel
of
the
parent
corporation
visited
the
German
plant
two
or
three
times
a
year,
including
1957,
pursuant
to
paragraph
6.
During
1957,
the
appellant’s
assets
in
Canada
consisted
entirely
of
bank
deposits,
a
demand
note
of
The
Clevite
Limited,
dated
October
31,
1956,
for
$2,525,982.34
bearing
interest
at
4
per
cent
per
annum,
given
in
payment
of
the
selling
price
of
the
manufacturing
plant
and
assets,
and
two
short-term
notes
bearing
5
per
cent
interest,
dated
in
November
and
December,
1957.
Besides
the
President,
who
was
resident
in
Canada
and
was
treasurer
of
The
Clevite
Limited,
there
was
one
employee
in
Canada
engaged
on
a
part-time
basis
in
working
on
the
appellant’s
books
and
records,
which
were
kept
in
St.
Thomas,
and
the
President’s
secretary
was
sometimes
used
to
type
letters
in
connection
with
the
appellant’s
affairs.
Neither
in
Cleveland
nor
anywhere
else
was
there
any
other
person
employed
by
the
appellant.
On
these
facts,
it
was
contended
that
for
1957
the
appellant
was
qualified
as
a
foreign
business
corporation
since,
throughout
that
year,
its
business
operations,
namely,
the
holding
of
the
patents
and
licensing
agreements
and
the
performing
of
the
obligations
if
the
licensor
under
these
agreements,
were
of
a
commercial
nature
within
the
meaning
of
clause
(c)
of
Section
71(2),
that
such
business
operations
were
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada,
and
that
the
appellant’s
property
was
situate
outside
Canada
except
for
the
bank
deposits
in
Canada
and
the
three
promissory
notes
which
were
securities
within
the
meaning
of
Section
71(2)
(c)
(i).
It
was
not
suggested
that
the
appellant
could
qualify
under
any
other
part
of
this
subsection.
In
support
of
the
assessment,
counsel
for
the
Minister
submitted
that
Section
71
is
an
exempting
provision
which
is
to
be
strictly
construed
and
that
the
appellant
did
not
qualify
as
a
foreign
business
corporation
within
the
definition
of
Section
71(2),
first
because
its
business
operations
were
not
of
commercial
but
of
a
financial
or
investment
nature,
secondly
because
whatever
the
nature
of
the
appellant’s
business
was,
no
part
of
that
business
was
carried
on
outside
Canada,
and
thirdly
because
the
three
promissory
notes
held
by
the
appellant
in
Canada
were
not
securities
within
the
meaning
of
Section
71(2)
(c)(i).
In
my
opinion,
Section
71
is
an
exempting
provision
and
must
be
strictly
construed.
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corpora-
tion
v.
City
of
Ottawa,
[1935]
S.C.R.
531;
[1935-37]
C.T.C.
95;
Lumbers
v.
M.N.R.,
[1943]
Ex.
C.R.
202;
[1943]
C.T.C.
281.
The
section
in
question
appears
to
me
to
define
and
apply
to
a
narrow
class
of
corporations
which
carry
on
business
operations
outside
Canada
but
to
whom
(but
for
the
exemption)
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
would
apply
on
the
basis
of
their
being
resident
in
Canada.
Clause
(c)
(i)
of
subsection
(2)
is
peculiar.
To
qualify
under
it,
the
corporation’s
business
operations
must
be
first
of
an
industrial,
mining,
commercial,
public
utility
or
public
service
nature
and,
second,
they
must
have
been
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada.
Nowhere,
however,
is
it
expressly
stated
that
the
corporation
must
be
one
that
has
‘‘business
operations’’.
That
feature
is
left
to
be
implied,
as
I
think
it
must
be,
for
I
can
see
no
scope
for
the
application
of
the
section
to
a
corporation
which
is
resident
in
Canada
and
derives
income
from
property
but
engages
in
no
business
operations
anywhere.
Such
a
corporation
could
readily
be
said
to
carry
on
no
business
in
Canada,
but
it
would
not
seem
to
comply
with
the
requirement
that
its
business
operations
be
of
an
industrial,
etc.,
nature
and
that
they
be
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada.
In
the
present
case,
the
scope
of
the
appellant’s
functions
became
so
restricted
following
the
sale
of
its
manufacturing
plant
that
it
becomes
necessary
to
consider,
first,
whether
what
was
left
can
be
regarded
as
a
business
at
all,
as
opposed
to
a
mere
holding
of
property
and
receipt
of
revenue
therefrom.
The
problem
whether
royalties
received
through
holding
and
licensing
patents
and
performing
patent
licensing
agreements
should
be
regarded
as
profits
of
a
trade
was
considered
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
England
in
C.I.R.
v.
De
Soutter
Brothers
Ltd.,
[1946]
1
All
E.R.
58.
There
the
problem
was
twofold;
first,
whether
the
royalty
was
profit
from
the
trade,
and
second,
whether
the
royalty
was
income
from
an
investment
within
the
meaning
of
a
particular
statutory
provision
which
would
conceivably
have
applied
even
though
the
receipts
in
question
were
part
of
the
profits
of
a
trade.
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
said
at
page
61:
“To
my
mind,
it
is
obvious
that
a
patent
in
the
hands
of
a
manufacturer
is
quite
a
different
type
of
property,
both
in
the
business
and
in
the
practical
sense,
to
a
patent
in
the
hands
of
somebody
who
is
a
mere
passive
owner
of
the
monopoly
right.
For
instance,
a
member
of
the
Bar,
who
was
fortunate
enough
to
have
bequeathed
to
him
a
patent,
or
who
had
purchased
a
patent,
the
validity
of
which
had
been
established
by
the
court,
might
continue,
without
any
active
participation
in
manufacturing
himself,
merely
to
exploit
that
monopoly
by
granting
licences.
He
would
then
be
merely
passive;
he
would
be
the
passive
recipient
of
income
from
that
particular
piece
of
property.
In
such
a
ease
it
might
very
well
be,
and
I
strongly
suspect
it
would
be,
held,
if
members
of
the
Bar
were
subject
to
excess
profits
tax,
that
the
income
from
that
patent
could
properly
be
described
as
income
from
an
investment.
But
directly
the
patent
is
held
by
a
manufacturer
of
the
patented
article,
it
seems
to
me
that
the
situation
is
entirely
changed.
When
you
have
a
manufacturer
who
is
exploiting
his
monopoly
right,
not
merely
by
excluding
all
competitors,
but
by
letting
one
competitor
in
on
terms,
to
say
that
the
profits
so
derived
are
profits
from
an
investment
seems
to
me
to
be
a
misuse
of
language.
It
is
contrary
to
what
one
may
call
the
popular
conception
of
the
word
investment’,
which
is
not
a
word
of
art,
but
has
to
be
interpreted
in
a
popular
sense.
The
contrast,
I
venture
to
think,
is
brought
out
exactly
in
the
two
examples
I
have
put.
One
is
that
of
a
private
individual
not
concerned
with
manufacture
at
all,
but
merely
holding
a
patent,
as
he
might
hold
a
copyright
in
a
book,
and
simply
drawing
the
income
from
the
royalties
payable
under
the
copyright.
He
would
merely
be
a
passive
person
drawing
the
income
which
flows
from
that
particular
chose
in
action.
That
is
one
example.
The
other
example
is
the
manufacturer
who
can,
if
he
likes
at
any
moment,
exploit
his
monopoly
in
a
number
of
different
ways—either
by
manufacturing
himself,
or
by
vending
himself,
or
by
allowing
somebody
else
to
manufacture
and
vend
or
manufacture
but
not
vend,
or
to
vend
but
not
manufacture.
The
mere
granting
of
such
licences
does
not
seem
to
me
to
take
the
income
out
of
the
category
of
income
of
the
business.
I
have
said
that
what
I
was
proposing
to
say
on
this
argument
would
dispose
also
of
the
second
argument,
namely,
the
question
whether
the
income
is
profits
of
the
business.
It
will
be
seen
that
the
considerations
which
I
have
mentioned,
if
they
are
right,
answer
that
question
just
as
much
as
they
answer
the
question
whether
or
not
it
is
to
be
regarded
as
income
from
an
investment.’’
At
pages
62-3,
he
also
said:
“I
have
dealt
with
this
question
so
far
without
reference
to
the
special
argument
which
counsel
for
the
respondents
put
forward
in
connection
with
the
particular
agreements
under
which
the
income
is
derived
in
this
case
.
.
.
The
argument
is
this.
The
profits
derived
by
the
company
in
the
present
case
cannot
be
said
to
be
derived
entirely
from
the
mere
ownership
of
the
patents,
but
are
attributable
also
to
certain
other
obligations
which
the
company
undertakes
under
these
agreements.
The
first
agreement
of
June
3,
1937,
recites
the
granting
of
a
sole
and
exclusive
licence,
and
goes
on
to
say
that:
*.
.
..
it
is
witnessed
that
in
consideration
of
the
royalties
hereinafter
reserved
and
of
the
mutual
promises
of
the
parties
hereto,
the
owners
agree
.
.
.’
The
first
paragraph
of
the
undertakings
given
by
the
owners
is:
‘To
grant
to
the
licensee
sole
and
exclusive
licence
and
authority
to
manufacture
and
sell
[in
a
number
of
countries]
the
drills
made
in
accordance
with
the
intentions
of
the
patentees.’
Then
comes
this
obligation
of
the
owners:
‘To
supply
to
the
licensee
drawings
of
the
drills
and
of
any
tools
used
by
them
in
the
manufacture
of
drills
or
component
parts
thereof,
and
to
give
to
the
licensee
information
of
their
manufacturing
methods,
and
to
permit
a
representative
of
the
licensee
to
inspect
the
manufacture
of
the
drills
and
their
component
parts
at
their
works
at
Hendon.’
That
undertaking
could
only
be
given
by
a
company
which
itself
was
manufacturing
in
accordance
with
this
invention.
No
mere
passive
holder
of
the
patent
could
give
an
undertaking
of
that
kind.
Although
it
is
a
type
of
undertaking
extremely
common
in
patent
licences,
it
is
none
the
less
an
undertaking
which
the
owners
of
the
patent
are
giving,
and
can
only
give,
by
virtue
of
the
fact
that
they
are
manufacturing
and
can
give
to
the
licensee
valuable
manufacturing
information
and
experience
which
would
otherwise
not
be
available
to
them.
That
also
brings
out
the
difference
between
exploitation
of
a
patent
in
the
hands
of
a
mere
passive
owner
and
the
exploitation
of
a
patent
in
the
hands
of
a
manufacturer.
The
effect
of
these
agreements
in
these
respects
is
purely
a
matter
of
construction
of
the
agreements.
In
my
opinion,
that
circumstance
alone,
even
if
I
were
wrong
on
the
major
proposition
which
I
discussed
a
moment
ago,
would
be
sufficient
to
justify,
and,
indeed,
compel,
the
court
to
say
that
the
profits
in
question
are
not
income
from
investments,
but
they
are
the
income
of
the
trade
or
business,
and
are
not
excluded
as
being
income
from
investments
under
para.
6
of
the
Schedule.’’
In
Tootal
Co.
Ltd.
v.
C.I.R.,
[1949]
1
All
E.R.
261,
the
question
was
whether
‘income
described
as
royalties
received
by
the
appellant
company
under
three
separate
agreements
relating
to
patent
rights,
and
admittedly
part
of
the
appellant’s
business
profits,
[were]
also”
income
from
investments
‘‘
within
the
meaning
of’’
a
particular
statutory
provision.
Lord
Simonds
said
at
page
264:
“It
is
possible,
as
was
pointed
out
in
the
Desoutter
case
by
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
that
a
particular
kind
of
asset
might
in
the
hands
of
one
trader
be,
and
in
the
hands
of
another
not
be,
an
investment,
though
a
less
likely
form
of
investment
for
any
trader
to
make
than
a
patent
cannot
readily
be
imagined.”
Lord
Normand
said
at
page
266
:
“It
is
conceivable
that
an
ordinary
trading
company
as
well
as
an
individual
might
enjoy
an
income
from
investments
in
the
form
of
royalties
under
patent
licences,
but
it
would
be
a
rare
occurrence,
and
a
company
claiming
to
be
in
the
enjoyment
of
such
an
income
must
satisfy
the
income
tax
commissioners,
or
the
court
on
appeal,
that
it
is
not
merely
a
profit
of
the
business
but
truly
of
the
nature
of
an
income
from
investment.”
Lord
Morton
of
Henryton
said
at
page
267
:
“I
agree
with
the
views
expressed
by
Lord
Greene,
M.R.,
in
Inland
Revenue
Comrs.
v.
Desoutter
Bros.,
Lid.
that
the
word
‘investment’
in
this
context
is
not
a
word
of
art,
and
that
the
question
whether
or
not
a
particular
piece
of
income
is
‘income
received
from
an
investment’
must
be
decided
on
the
faets
of
each
case.
I
think
that
the
question
must
be
approached
from
the
standpoint
of
an
intelligent
man
of
business,
and,
in
my
view,
such
a
man,
being
informed
of
the
facts
set
out
in
paras.
3,
4(a)
and
5
of
the
Stated
Case,
and
being
shown
the
agreement
which
is
exhibit
A,
would
not
think
that
the
royalties
received
under
that
agreement
were
aptly
described
as
‘income
received
from
investments’.
I
think
he
would
rightly
say
that
the
royalties
were
income
received
from
a
commercial
agreement,
conferring
advantages
on
each
of
the
parties
to
it,
and
entered
into
as
a
part
of
the
company’s
business.”
Lord
Macdermott
also
said
at
page
268
:
“My
Lords,
I
do
not
think
any
business
man
would
describe
the
income
so
obtained
as
‘income
received
from
investments’.
He
would
be
bound
to
admit
that
the
purpose
of
the
agreements
was
a
trade
purpose,
but
I
do
not
think
he
would
look
on
this
alone
as
conclusive
against
so
describing
the
income,
and
in
that,
I
apprehend,
he
would
be
right,
having
regard
to
the
decision
of
this
House
in
Gas
Lighting
Improvement
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Comrs.,
[1923]
A.C.
723.
He
would,
no
doubt,
find
difficulty
in
giving
a
precise
definition
of
‘investments’
as
the
word
is
used
in
the
relevant
enactment,
but
I
think
he
would
be
prepared
to
go
the
length
of
saying
something
like
this:
‘If,
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
my
business,
I
make
active
use
of
a
business
asset—be
it
my
factory
building,
a
piece
of
machinery,
a
patent,
or
my
working
capital—that
asset
is
not
an
investment.
Whatever
else
a
business
investment
may
have
to
be,
it
is
an
asset
for
the
time
being
held
intentionally
aloof
from
the
active
work
of
the
business.
It
is
none
the
less
an
asset
of
the
business
and
may
have
great
business
value.
For
instance,
it
may
enable
me
to
survive
bad
times
and
take
advantage
of
good,
or
it
may
help
me
to
control
supplies
or
competition.
And
if
it
produces
income
that
is
income
of
the
business.
But
I
do
not
earn
that
income
by
my
business
efforts.
The
part
I
play
there
is
essentially
passive.
I
cannot,
of
course,
afford
to
neglect
my
investment.
I
may
have
to
preserve
it
and,
on
occasion,
change
its
form,
but
normally
I
just
hold
it
and
receive
what
it
brings
in.”
Following
the
reasoning
of
the
passages
cited
and
having
regard
also
to
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘business’’,
which
is
broader
than
that
of
the
word
‘‘trade’’,
which
in
turn
is
itself
a
very
wide
term,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
in
this
case
the
holding,
licensing
and
performing
of
the
patent
licensing
agreements
can
be
regarded
as
a
business.
Prior
to
the
sale
of
its
manufacturing
plant,
the
appellant
had
a
business
which
included
the
development
and
manufacture
of
bearings,
and
I
should
have
thought
the
holding
and
licensing
of
the
patents
and
the
servicing
of
the
agreements
then
was
clearly
a
part
of
that
business
and
that
the
income
received
therefrom
was
not
merely
income
from
property
but
part
of
the
income
of
the
business.
So
far
as
I
can
tell
from
the
evidence,
this
was
also
a
part
of
the
business
which
might
have
been
carried
on
both
in
Canada
and
elsewhere
for,
even
assuming
that
all
other
obligations
arising
under
the
agreements
would
be
discharged
elsewhere,
the
German
agreement
refers
to
visits
to
be
made
to
the
appellant’s
plant
in
Canada.
Nor
do
I
think
that
the
sale
of
the
plant
and
discontinuance
of
the
appellant’s
manufacturing
operations
would
necessarily
change
the
character
of
the
remain-
der
of
what
had
been
the
appellant’s
business
to
a
mere
matter
of
property
holding.
After
the
sale
of
the
manufacturing
plant,
the
holding
of
the
patents
and
licensing
agreements
and
doing
whatever
was
necessary
to
perform
them
was
all
that
was
left
of
the
appellant’s
business,
but
the
purpose
of
the
agreements
and
of
the
performing
of
them
did
not
change,
and
in
my
view
that
purpose
throughout
was
to
obtain
revenue
in
the
form
of
royalties
by
licensing
the
use
of
the
patented
inventions
and
by
assisting
the
licensees
to
exploit
them
by
doing
the
things
provided
for
in
the
agreements.
This,
I
think,
is
an
enterprise
or
business
and
is
one
of
a
commercial
nature
within
the
meaning
of
‘‘commercial’’
in
Section
71(2)(c)(i).
I
do
not
think
it
should
be
regarded
as
a
mere
property
holding
and
receipt
of
revenue
therefrom,
nor
do
I
think
it
would
be
properly
classed
as
a
business
of
a
financial
or
investment
nature,
as
submitted
by
counsel
for
the
Minister.
Accordingly,
I
think
that
the
appellant
should
be
regarded
as
having
had
a
business
in
1957
and
that
the
royalties
received
by
the
appellant
in
that
year
should
be
regarded
as
income
from
its
business,
rather
than
as
income
from
property.
It
does
not,
however,
necessarily
follow
that
what
the
appellant
did
in
1957,
even
though
capable
of
being
characterized
as
a
business,
amounted
to
‘‘business
operations”,
for
I
think
it
is
readily
conceivable
that
one
may
carry
on
a
commercial
business
and
yet
for
an
appreciable
time
do
no
act
whatever
which
can
be
characterized
as
a
‘‘business
operation’’.
In
using
the
expression
“business
operations”
the
statute
appears
to
me
to
contemplate
something
more
than
a
situation
in
which
nothing
of
an
active
nature
is
done
in
the
material
period
by
the
party
by
whom
the
business
is
carried
on.
In
the
present
case,
the
appellant’s
activities,
if
not
entirely
non-existent,
were
at
a
low
ebb
throughout
1957,
and
the
questions
thus
arise
whether
there
was
anything
at
all
in
what
the
appellant
did
in
1957
which
should
be
regarded
as
‘‘business
operations”
and,
if
so,
whether
such
business
operations
were
carried
on
entirely
outside
Canada.
Now
during
this
period
there
were
no
manufacturing
or
selling
activities
on
the
part
of
the
appellant,
nor
is
there
evidence
of
anything
whatever
being
done
with
respect
to
its
Italian
or
French
patents.
With
respect
to
the
British
patent,
as
previously
mentioned,
there
is
no
clear
evidence
that
anything
was
required
or
done
in
1957
by
either
the
appellant
or
its
parent
to
fulfil
the
licensor’s
obligations
under
the
licensing
agreement.
And
while,
as
between
the
appellant
and
its
parent,
the
appellant
was
under
an
obliga-
tion
to
render
the
services
therein
provided
for,
these
services
when
required
were
in
practice
rendered
by
the
corporation,
and
on
the
evidence
I
see
no
basis
for
a
finding
that
any
of
them
was
ever
carried
out
by
the
appellant.
Moreover,
in
1957,
if
not
in
most
other
years
as
well,
the
appellant’s
obligations
under
the
German
licensing
agreement,
so
far
as
anything
was
required,
were
carried
out
not
by
the
appellant
but
by
the
parent
corporation.
No
charge
was
made
by
the
parent
to
the
appellant
for
such
services,
and
I
do
not
think
it
is
a
fair
conclusion
on
the
facts
that
the
appellant
procured
the
rendering
of
such
services
by
its
parent.
Rather,
I
think
the
correct
inference
is
that
the
appellant
had
nothing
to
do
and
did
nothing
in
1957
in
performance
of
the
agreement
or
to
assist
or
promote
the
business
of
the
licensee,
because
the
parent
went
ahead
and
did
everything
that
the
contract
required
the
appellant
to
do
or
which
was
considered
desirable
or
advantageous.
No
doubt,
if
the
parent
had
not
done
what
was
required,
the
appellant
might
have
been
called
upon
to
perform
its
agreement
or
might
have
regarded
it
as
in
its
interest
to
assist
the
licensees
in
the
ways
referred
to
in
the
agreements,
and
if
this
had
occurred
what
was
done
might
well
have
been
characterized
as
business
operations.
But
the
evidence
leaves
me
unsatisfied
that
the
appellant
at
any
material
times
did
anything
in
performance
of
the
licensor’s
obligations
under
the
agreements
or
that
anything
that
was
done
by
the
parent
corporation
was
done
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
as
its
agent
or
at
its
instance.
It
is
not
established
that
the
parent
corporation
did
not
itself
have
a
contract
with
the
German
licensee
pursuant
to
which
the
services
were
performed,
and,
in
my
opinion,
the
parent
cannot
be
regarded
as
an
affiliated
corporation
under
the
control
of
the
appellant
within
the
meaning
of
Section
71(2)
(c)(i).
In
my
view,
the
situation
during
the
material
time
was
in
some
respects
similar
to
that
referred
to
by
Lord
Macdermott
in
the
passage
cited
above.
The
appellant
may
be
regarded
as
having
had
a
business,
and
the
royalty
income
may
be
regarded
as
income
from
that
business.
But
the
royalties
were
not
earned
by
active
business
efforts
on
the
part
of
the
appellant.
After
the
sale
of
the
manufacturing
plant,
the
role
of
the
appellant
was
essentially
passive.
It
simply
held
the
agreements
and
received
the
income,
doing
nothing
to
perform
the
agreements
or
to
enhance
the
royalties
so
long
as
all
that
was
necessary
for
that
purpose
was
being
effectively
done
by
its
parent.
I
do
not
think
this
falls
within
what
is
meant
by
‘business
operations”
in
Section
71(2)
(¢)
(i),
nor
do
I
think
it
can
be
said
to
follow
from
the
fact
that
nothing
of
an
active
nature
capable
of
being
described
as
a
business
operation
was
done
in
Canada
during
the
material
time,
that
the
appellant’s
‘business
operations’’
were
entirely
carried
on
outside
Canada
within
the
meaning
of
Section
71(2)
(c)(i),
for
the
fact
is
that
during
the
material
time
no
‘‘business
operations”,
as
therein
referred
to,
were
carried
on
by
the
appellant
anywhere.
Apart
from
this
view,
however,
it
appears
to
me
that,
if
in
this
passive
situation
anything
can
be
described
as
“business
operations’’,
the
receipt
of
the
royalties
(a
feature
which
in
more
active
situations
might
well
be
disregarded)
is
as
important
a
part
of
them
as
is
anything
else,
and
it
was
not
disputed
that
the
royalties
were
received
from
the
licensees
by
the
appellant
in
Canada.
In
addition,
the
situation
may,
I
think,
be
viewed
as
one
in
which
the
appellant
had
carried
on
its
business
operations
in
Canada,
and
the
evidence,
while
indicating
that
no
business
operations
took
place
in
Canada
during
the
material
period,
fails
to
establish
that
business
operations
were
carried
on
anywhere
else.
There
is
thus
nothing
to
establish
any
change
in
the
locality
in
which
the
appellant’s
‘‘business
operations’’,
when
it
has
any,
are
carried
on.
I
am,
accordingly,
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
was
not
entitled
to
exemption
as
a
foreign
business
corporation
and
that
its
appeal
fails.
In
view
of
this
conclusion,
it
is
not
necessary
for
me
to
deal
with
the
further
point
as
to
whether
the
promissory
notes
held
by
the
appellant
were
‘‘securities’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
71(2)
(c)(i).
The
appeal
will
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Judgment
accordingly.