Date: 20101117
Dockets: A-419-09
A-420-09
Citation: 2010 FCA 309
CORAM: NADON
J.A.
SHARLOW
J.A.
STRATAS
J.A.
Docket:
A-419-09
BETWEEN:
ST. MICHAEL TRUST CORP.,
as Trustee of the FUNDY
SETTLEMENT
Appellant
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
Docket: A-420-09
BETWEEN:
ST. MICHAEL TRUST CORP.,
as Trustee of the SUMMERSBY
SETTLEMENT
Appellant
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
SHARLOW J.A.
[1]
St.
Michael Trust Corp., in its capacity as the trustee of the Fundy Settlement and
the Summersby Settlement (the “Trusts”), has been assessed under the Income
Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.) for the 2000 taxation
year. The assessed tax arises from capital gains realized by the Trusts on the
disposition of the shares of two Canadian corporations at a time when,
according to the Crown, the Trusts were resident in Canada. St. Michael Trust
Corp. appealed the assessments to the Tax Court of Canada. The appeals were
dismissed by Justice Woods (2009 TCC 450). St. Michael Trust Corp. now appeals
to this Court. For the reasons that follow, I have concluded that these appeals
should be dismissed with costs.
Relevant
provisions of the Income Tax Act
[2]
Subsection
2(1) of the Income Tax Act imposes tax on the taxable income for a year
of every person who is resident in Canada at any time in the year. By virtue of
the formula in section 3 of the Income Tax Act, taxable income includes
the taxable portion of any capital gain realized in the year. In 2000, the
taxable portion of a capital gain was 2/3.
[3]
By
the combined operation of subsections 2(3) and 115(1) of the Income Tax Act,
a person who is not resident in Canada is outside the scope of subsection 2(1)
but nevertheless is subject to tax on certain Canadian source income, including
the taxable portion of a capital gain realized by the person on the disposition
of property that meets the definition of “taxable Canadian property”, unless
the property also meets the definition of “treaty-protected property” in
subsection 248(1).
[4]
Generally,
property is treaty-protected if a capital gain realized on its disposition is
exempt from Canadian income tax because of an international tax treaty to which
Canada is a party. The exemption operates through subparagraph 110(1)(f)(i)
of the Income Tax Act which provides that, in computing taxable income,
a person is entitled to a deduction equal to any amount that is included in
taxable income but exempt from Canadian tax because of an international tax
treaty.
[5]
For
purposes of the Income Tax Act, a taxpayer may be an individual, a
corporation or a trust. Although a trust is not a person as a matter of law,
the Income Tax Act treats the trust for income tax purposes as though it
were an individual. Conceptually, the trust is embodied in the trustee as the
person who generally has legal title to the trust property, and who has the
powers and discretions granted by the trust documents and the law, concerning
the trust property. It is the trustee who is required on behalf of the trust to
comply with all filing and reporting requirements under the Income Tax Act,
to whom all assessments and other official notifications are sent, who has the
legal status to object to assessments and to appeal, and who is responsible for
paying the tax debts of the trust. That is the result of subsections 104(1) and
(2) of the Income Tax Act, which read in relevant part as follows:
104. (1) In this
Act, a reference to a trust or estate (in this subdivision referred to as a
“trust”) shall, unless the context otherwise requires, be read to include a
reference to the trustee, executor, administrator, liquidator of a
succession, heir or other legal representative having ownership or control of
the trust property …
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104. (1) Dans la
présente loi, la mention d’une fiducie ou d’une succession (appelées «
fiducie » à la présente sous-section) vaut également mention, sauf indication
contraire du contexte, du fiduciaire, de l’exécuteur testamentaire, de
l’administrateur successoral, du liquidateur de succession, de l’héritier ou
d’un autre représentant légal ayant la propriété ou le contrôle des biens de
la fiducie.
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…
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[...]
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(2) A trust
shall, for the purposes of this Act, and without affecting the liability of
the trustee or legal representative for that person’s own income tax, be
deemed to be in respect of the trust property an individual …
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(2)
Pour l’application de la présente loi, et sans que l’assujettissement du
fiduciaire ou des représentants légaux à leur propre impôt sur le revenu en
soit atteint, une fiducie est réputée être un particulier relativement aux
biens de la fiducie …
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[6]
Subsection
94(1) of the Income Tax Act is a special provision relating to trusts
that are not resident in Canada. Broadly speaking, it applies when certain
conditions are met as to the identity of the beneficiaries of the trust (the
“beneficiary test”, paragraph 94(1)(a)) and the manner in which the
trust has acquired property (the “contribution test”, paragraph 94(1)(b)).
Those two provisions read in relevant part as follows:
94. (1) Where,
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94. (1) Lorsque
:
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(a) at any time in a
taxation year of a trust that is not resident in Canada or that, but for
paragraph 94(1)(c), would not be so resident, a person beneficially
interested in the trust (in this section referred to as a “beneficiary”) was
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a) d’une
part, à un moment donné d’une année d’imposition d’une fiducie qui ne réside
pas au Canada, ou qui, sans l’alinéa c), n’y
résiderait pas, une personne ayant un droit de bénéficiaire sur la fiducie
(appelé un « bénéficiaire » au présent article) était :
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(i)
a person resident in Canada, …
and
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(i) une personne résidant au
Canada, …
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(b) at any time in or before
the taxation year of the trust,
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b)
d’autre part, à un moment donné avant la fin de l’année d’imposition de la
fiducie :
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(i)
the trust … has … acquired property, directly or indirectly in any manner
whatever, from
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(i) soit la fiducie
… a acquis des biens, directement ou indirectement, de quelque manière que ce
soit … auprès :
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(A)
a particular person who
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(A) ou bien d’une personne donnée qui remplit les conditions
suivantes :
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(I)
was the beneficiary referred to in paragraph 94(1)(a), was related to
that beneficiary or was the uncle, aunt, nephew or niece of that beneficiary,
…
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(I)
elle était le bénéficiaire visé à l’alinéa a), elle était liée à
ce bénéficiaire ou elle était l’oncle, la tante, le neveu ou la nièce de ce
bénéficiaire, …
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the following rules apply for
that taxation year of the trust: …
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les règles suivantes s’appliquent pour
cette année d’imposition de la fiducie: …
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[7]
It
is undisputed in this case that the beneficiary test is met for both Trusts
because they both have beneficiaries who are resident in Canada.
[8]
There
is a dispute as to whether the contribution test is met in this case. The
contribution test may be satisfied in a number of ways. For the purposes of
this case it is enough to say that it would be met if the Trusts acquired
property, directly or indirectly in any manner whatever, from a Canadian
resident person who is either a beneficiary or a person related to a
beneficiary.
[9]
If
the beneficiary and contribution tests are met, and the trust is a discretionary
trust (as the Trusts are), then paragraph 94(1)(c) deems the trust to be
a person resident in Canada for the purposes of Part I of the Income Tax Act
and certain provisions in Part XIV imposing reporting requirements (sections
233.3 and 233.4). Part I of the Income Tax Act contains the main
charging provisions of the Income Tax Act, including section 2, the
provision that imposes on every person resident in Canada a tax on income from
any source in the world. Paragraph 94(1)(c) reads in relevant part as
follows:
(c) where the amount of
the income or capital of the trust to be distributed at any time to any
beneficiary of the trust depends on the exercise by any person of, or the
failure by any person to exercise, any discretionary power,
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c)
lorsque le montant du revenu ou du capital de la fiducie à attribuer à un
moment donné à un bénéficiaire de la fiducie est fonction de l’exercice ou de
l’absence d’exercice, par une personne, d’un pouvoir discrétionnaire :
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(i) the trust is deemed
for the purposes of this Part and sections 233.3 and 233.4 to be a person
resident in Canada no part of whose taxable income is exempt because of
section 149 from tax under this Part and whose taxable income for the year is
the amount, if any, by which the total of [rules for computing taxable income
omitted] …
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(i) la fiducie est réputée,
pour l’application de la présente partie et des articles 233.3 et 233.4, être
une personne résidant au Canada dont aucune partie du revenu imposable n’est
exonérée, par l’effet de l’article 149, de l’impôt prévu à la présente partie
et dont le revenu imposable pour l’année correspond à l’excédent éventuel de
la somme des montants suivants [règles applicables au calcul du revenu
imposable omises] …
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[10]
The
remainder of paragraph 94(1)(c) sets out special rules for the
computation of the taxable income of a trust to which section 94 applies. The
rules are complex, but for the purposes of this case the parties agree that under
paragraph 94(1)(c), the taxable income of a discretionary trust includes
all income of the trust except income from an active business outside Canada.
[11]
The
assessments under appeal in this case are based in the alternative on the
general anti-avoidance rule in section 245 of the Income Tax Act.
Broadly speaking, subsection 245(2) may apply to justify an assessment,
regardless of any other statutory provision, where a transaction is undertaken
to avoid tax and the transaction is abusive within the meaning of subsection
245(4). Section 245 reads in relevant part as follows:
(2)
Where a transaction is an avoidance transaction, the tax consequences to a
person shall be determined as is reasonable in the circumstances in order to
deny a tax benefit that, but for this section, would result, directly or
indirectly, from that transaction or from a series of transactions that
includes that transaction.
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(2) En cas d’opération
d’évitement, les attributs fiscaux d’une personne doivent être déterminés de
façon raisonnable dans les circonstances de façon à supprimer un avantage
fiscal qui, sans le présent article, découlerait, directement ou
indirectement, de cette opération ou d’une série d’opérations dont cette
opération fait partie.
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(3) An avoidance transaction
means any transaction
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(3) L’opération d’évitement
s’entend :
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(a)
that, but for this section, would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax
benefit, unless the transaction may reasonably be considered to have been
undertaken or arranged primarily for bona fide purposes other than to
obtain the tax benefit; or
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a) soit de l’opération
dont, sans le présent article, découlerait, directement ou indirectement, un
avantage fiscal, sauf s’il est raisonnable de considérer que l’opération est
principalement effectuée pour des objets véritables — l’obtention de
l’avantage fiscal n’étant pas considérée comme un objet véritable;
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(b)
that is part of a series of transactions, which series, but for this section,
would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax benefit, unless the
transaction may reasonably be considered to have been undertaken or arranged
primarily for bona
fide
purposes other than to obtain the tax benefit.
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b) soit de l’opération
qui fait partie d’une série d’opérations dont, sans le présent article,
découlerait, directement ou indirectement, un avantage fiscal, sauf s’il est
raisonnable de considérer que l’opération est principalement effectuée pour
des objets véritables — l’obtention de l’avantage fiscal n’étant pas
considérée comme un objet véritable.
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(4) Subsection (2) applies to a
transaction only if it may reasonably be considered that the transaction
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(4) Le paragraphe (2) ne
s’applique qu’à l’opération dont il est raisonnable de considérer, selon le
cas :
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(a) would, if
this Act were read without reference to this section, result directly or
indirectly in a misuse of the provisions of any one or more of
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a) qu’elle entraînerait,
directement ou indirectement, s’il n’était pas tenu compte du présent
article, un abus dans l’application des dispositions d’un ou de plusieurs des
textes suivants :
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(i)
this Act,
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(i)
la présente loi,
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(ii)
the Income Tax Regulations,
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(ii)
le Règlement de l’impôt sur le revenu,
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(iii)
the Income Tax Application Rules,
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(iii)
les Règles concernant l’application de l’impôt sur le revenu,
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(iv) a tax treaty, or
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(iv)
un traité fiscal,
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(v)
any other enactment that is relevant in computing tax or any other amount
payable by or refundable to a person under this Act or in determining any
amount that is relevant for the purposes of that computation; or
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(v)
tout autre texte législatif qui est utile soit pour le calcul d’un impôt ou
de toute autre somme exigible ou remboursable sous le régime de la présente
loi, soit pour la détermination de toute somme à prendre en compte dans ce
calcul;
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(b)
would result directly or indirectly in an abuse having regard to those
provisions, other than this section, read as a whole.
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b) qu’elle entraînerait,
directement ou indirectement, un abus dans l’application de ces dispositions
compte non tenu du présent article lues dans leur ensemble.
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Relevant
provisions of the Barbados Tax Treaty
[12]
The
Canada-Barbados Income Tax Agreement (1980) (the Barbados Tax Treaty),
formally titled “Agreement between Canada and Barbados for the Avoidance of
Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on
Income and on Capital”, was enacted as a federal law by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c.
44, Part IX. For the purposes of these appeals, the following interpretive
provisions in Article III (General Definitions) of the Barbados Tax Treaty are
relevant:
1. In this Agreement, unless
the context otherwise requires: …
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1. Au sens du présent Accord, à
moins que le contexte n’exige une interprétation différente : …
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(c) the term “person” includes
an individual, an estate, a trust, a company, a partnership and any other
body of persons; …
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c)
le terme « personne » comprend les personnes physiques, les successions
(estates), les fiducies (trusts), les sociétés, les sociétés de personnes
(partnerships) et tous autres groupements de personnes; …
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2. As regards the application
of this Agreement by a Contracting State any term not otherwise defined
shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the meaning which it has
under the laws of that Contracting State relating to the taxes which are the
subject of this Agreement.
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2.
Pour l’application du présent Accord par un État contractant, toute
expression qui n’est pas autrement définie a le sens qui lui est attribué par
la législation dudit État régissant les impôts qui font l’objet du présent
Accord, à moins que le contexte n’exige une interprétation différente.
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[13]
Broadly
speaking, the Barbados Tax Treaty exempts the residents of one of the
contracting states from income taxes imposed by the other on specified income
and gains, subject to numerous conditions. For purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty,
residence is determined under Article IV (Fiscal Domicile), which reads in
relevant part as follows:
1.
For the purposes of this Agreement, the term “resident of a Contracting
State” means any person who, under the laws of that State, is liable to
taxation therein by reason of his domicile, residence, place of management or
any other criterion of a similar nature.
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1.
Au sens du présent Accord, l’expression « résident d’un État contractant »
désigne toute personne qui, en vertu de la législation dudit État, est
assujettie à l’impôt dans cet État en raison de son domicile, de sa
résidence, de son siège de direction ou de tout autre critère de nature
analogue, et les expressions « résident du Canada » et « résident de la
Barbade » ont le sens correspondant.
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…
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…
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3.
Where, by reason of the provisions of paragraph 1 a person other than an
individual is a resident of both Contracting States, then the competent
authorities of the Contracting States shall by mutual agreement endeavour to
settle the question and to determine the mode of application of the Agreement
to such person.
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3. Lorsque, selon la disposition du paragraphe 1,
une personne autre qu’une personne physique est considérée comme résident de
chacun des États contractants, les autorités compétentes des États
contractants s’efforceront d’un commun accord de trancher la question et de
déterminer les modalités d’application du présent Accord à ladite personne.
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[14]
By
virtue of paragraph 4 of Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty a person
(including a trust) that meets the treaty definition of “resident of Barbados”
but not the treaty definition of “resident of Canada” is entitled to an
exemption from Canadian income tax on any capital gain realized on the
disposition of shares of a corporation (subject to exceptions that are not
relevant to this case). Article XIV (Gains from the Alienation of Property)
reads in relevant part as follows:
1. Gains from the alienation of
movable property may be taxed in the Contracting State in which such property
is situated.
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1. Les gains provenant de
l’aliénation de biens immobiliers sont imposables dans l’État contractant où
ces biens sont situés.
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2. Gains from the alienation of
movable property forming part of the business property of a permanent
establishment which an enterprise of a Contracting State has in the other
Contracting State … may be taxed in the other State. …
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2. Les gains provenant de
l’aliénation de biens mobiliers faisant partie de l’actif d’un établissement
stable qu’une entreprise d’un État contractant a dans l’autre État
contractant…sont imposables dans cet autre État. …
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3. (a) Gains from the
alienation of shares of a company, the property of which consists principally
of immovable property situated in a Contracting State, may be taxed in that
State. …
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3.
a) Les gains provenant de l’aliénation d’actions d’une société dont les biens
sont constitués principalement de biens immobiliers situés dans un État
contractant sont imposables dans cet État. …
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4.
Gains from the alienation of any property, other than those mentioned in
paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 may be taxed only in the Contracting State of which the alienator is a
resident.
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4. Les gains provenant de l’aliénation de tous
biens autres que ceux qui sont mentionnés aux paragraphes 1, 2 et 3 ne sont
imposables que dans l’État contractant dont le cédant est un résident.
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Facts
[15]
I
summarize as follows the facts relating to the transactions underlying the
assessments under appeal.
[16]
PMPL
Holdings Inc. (“PMPL”) was incorporated in Canada in 1992 to hold the shares of
two Canadian operating corporations, Progressive Moulded Products Inc. and
Progressive Tools Limited. The PMPL corporate group was originally owned and
controlled by Myron Garron and members of his family. In 1990, Mr. Andrew
Dunin, who is not related to the Garron family, became involved with
Progressive Moulded Products. He was promised the right to earn equity shares
of PMPL, and in fact he contributed substantially to its financial success.
[17]
By
1996, the common shares of PMPL were owned as to 50% by Mr. Dunin and as to 50%
by a Canadian corporation, Garron Holdings Ltd. (“Garron Holdings”). The shares
of Garron Holdings were owned by Myron Garron and his spouse Berna Garron, and
a trust of which Mr. and Mrs. Garron were the trustees and their children and
grandchildren were the beneficiaries. At all material times, Mr. Garron and his
spouse and Mr. Dunin were resident in Canada.
[18]
At
some point early in 1998, a decision was made to change the ownership structure
of PMPL. One objective of that change was to increase Mr. Dunin’s share of PMPL
in continued recognition of his contribution to its financial success. Another
objective was to ensure that no Canadian tax would be payable on any capital
gain that could result from an increase in the value of PMPL after the 1998
reorganization.
[19]
The
tax objective was intended to be achieved by attributing any
post-reorganization increase in the value of PMPL to the common shares of a
newly created corporation held by trusts that would not be resident in Canada but
would, as residents of Barbados, be entitled to the benefit of the exemption
from Canadian tax in paragraph 4 of Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty.
[20] The
plan to restructure the ownership of PMPL required that the existing common
shares of PMPL be cancelled and replaced with three new classes of shares, as
follows:
1000
Class A preference shares – the “Freeze Shares”.
a. The
Freeze Shares would be issued in exchange for the existing common shares. They
would carry voting rights and be redeemable for an amount equal to the fair
market value of the existing common shares immediately before the
reorganization took effect, which at the time the parties agreed was $50
million. The Freeze Shares would not participate in dividends except on
redemption, when dividends would be cumulative between the date of the request
for redemption and the date of redemption.
100
Class B shares – the “Special Value Shares”
b. These
shares would carry no voting rights or dividend entitlement. They would be
retractable (that is, redeemable at the call of the holder) at an amount equal
to 10% of the amount by which the fair market value of all shares of PMPL and
Progressive Marketing, Inc. at the time of retraction exceeded $50 million.
They would be issued to Mr. Dunin or a corporation controlled by him, so that
the economic benefit of the retraction amount of the Special Value Shares would
accrue to Mr. Dunin.
An
unlimited number of Class C shares – the “New Common Shares”
c. These
were ordinary common shares. The economic benefit of the value of PMPL would
accrue to the holders of the New Common Shares, except for the amount
attributable to the retraction value of the Freeze Shares and the Special Value
Shares. The New Common Shares would be issued to corporations controlled by two
trusts resident in Barbados, one established for the benefit of Mr. Garron and
his family, the other for the benefit of Mr. Dunin and his family.
[21]
In
March of 1998, Mr. Dunin caused Dunin Holdings Ltd. (“Dunin Holdings”) to be
incorporated as an Ontario corporation. Mr. Dunin subscribed for the sole
issued common share. On April 1, 1998, Mr. Dunin transferred his common shares
of PMPL to Dunin Holdings in exchange for 499 common shares of Dunin Holdings.
An election was made under subsection 85(1) of the Income Tax Act so
that no capital gain arose on Mr. Dunin’s disposition of the PMPL shares. At
that point, the common shares of PMPL were owned as to 50% by Dunin Holdings
and as to 50% by Garron Holdings.
[22]
On
April 2, 1998, Mr. Paul Ambrose, a resident of Kingstown, St. Vincent and a
long time friend of Mr. Garron, settled two trusts at the request of Mr. Garron
and to accommodate him. One of the trusts was settled for the benefit of Mr.
Garron and his family (the Fundy Settlement, which for ease of reference I will
refer to as the “Garron Trust”). The other trust was settled for the benefit of
Mr. Dunin and his family (the Summersby Settlement, which I will refer to as
the “Dunin Trust”). The Crown has conceded that the Garron Trust and the Dunin
Trust were validly constituted trusts in the sense that the “three certainties”
required for a trust were present.
[23]
The
Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust were each settled with US$100 of Mr. Ambrose’s
own funds, and he signed the trust indentures. Mr. Ambrose provided no input or
instructions as to the content or terms of the trust indentures, but he
reviewed them with a lawyer from St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Agnes E. Cato,
who also witnessed his signature.
[24]
It
was planned that the Garron Trust would acquire the shares of a newly
incorporated Ontario corporation, 1287333 Ontario Ltd. (“New Garron Co”) which
in turn would acquire 800 of the New Common Shares of PMPL. The Dunin Trust
would acquire the shares of another newly incorporated Ontario corporation,
1287325 Ontario Ltd. (“New Dunin Co”), which in turn would acquire 800 of the
New Common Shares of PMPL as well as the 100 Special Value Shares of PMPL. As a
result, the Dunin Trust (and thus Mr. Dunin and his family) would obtain the
benefit of 10% of the increase in the value of PMPL in excess of the redemption
value of the Freeze Shares, while any further increase in the value of PMPL
would be shared equally by the Dunin Trust (benefiting Mr. Dunin and his
family) and the Garron Trust (benefiting Mr. Garron and his family).
[25]
The
terms of the trust indentures that are relevant to these appeals are
substantially the same except for the name of the trust and the identification
of the beneficiaries. It is not necessary to recite all of the terms. A
sufficiently accurate picture of the trust indentures emerges from the
following summary:
a. The
trustee was required to keep the trust property invested until the “Division
Date” (any date chosen by the trustee or 80 years from the date of settlement,
whichever occurred first), subject to the absolute discretion of the trustee to
distribute some or all of the income to one or more beneficiaries, with any
undistributed or unallocated income to be added to the capital.
b. The
trustee had the absolute discretion to encroach on capital to or for the
benefit of one or more of the beneficiaries, even to the extent of using all of
the trust property.
c. On
the division date, the property was to be divided and distributed as follows:
(i)
in
the case of the Garron Trust, equally among the children of Myron and Berna
Garron or their children (subject to certain conditions relating to the age of
the child at the division date); and
(ii)
in
the case of the Dunin Trust, to Mr. Dunin or, if he was not then living, equally
to his children or their children (subject to certain conditions relating to
the age of the child at the division date).
d. The
trustee was precluded from distributing in specie the Class A shares of
New Garron Co (in the case of the Garron Trust) or New Dunin Co (in the case of
the Dunin Trust), but had the power at any time to convert those shares to cash
or other property which could then be distributed in accordance with the
general power of distribution.
e. Except
for the specific prohibition relating to distribution in specie of the
Class A shares of New Garron Co and New Dunin Co, the trustee was given broad
powers to invest and to make payments and distributions in money or other
property of the trust, and the power to retain or sell any property in any
manner and on any terms.
f. The
protector had the absolute discretion to remove a trustee and appoint a new
trustee.
g. The
protector could be removed and a new protector appointed by the majority of
beneficiaries who had attained a specified age.
[26]
As
mentioned above, St. Michael Trust Corp. was the trustee of the Dunin Trust and
the Garron Trust. St. Michael Trust Corp. was incorporated in Barbados and began its operations in 1987. At that time its shares were owned by the Barbados partners of the accounting firm Price Waterhouse, which later merged with Coopers
& Lybrand. After the merger, the Barbados partners of the merged firm,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, became the shareholders of St. Michael Trust Corp.
Justice Woods referred to the Barbados partners of both the merged firm and its
Price Waterhouse predecessor as “PwC-Barbados”, and I will do the same. The
shares of St. Michael Trust Corp. were sold in 2002 and again in 2008, but
those transactions are not relevant to any of the issues raised in this appeal.
[27]
At
all times relevant to this appeal, St. Michael Trust Corp. was licensed as a
trustee under the Financial Institutions Act of Barbados and regulated by the Central Bank of Barbados. It was subject to the Trustees Act of
Barbados. Its sole business activity was the administration of trusts and
acting as a trustee, which it carried on only in Barbados. It had only one
office, which was in Barbados. Its business records and the records of all of
the trusts under its administration were in Barbados. Its board of directors
met in Barbados.
[28]
St.
Michael Trust Corp. contends that at all relevant times, it was a resident of Barbados for purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty. Justice Woods considered it unnecessary
to reach a conclusion on that point and she declined to do so. However, there
can be no doubt that, for the purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty, St. Michael
Trust Corp., in its own right and in relation to its own tax affairs, would be
considered a resident of Barbados and not a resident of Canada. One of the issues raised in this appeal is whether, as a matter of law, the residence of St.
Michael Trust Corp. is necessarily the same as the residence of the Garron
Trust and the Dunin Trust. That point is addressed later in these reasons.
[29]
At
the time of the transactions in issue in this case, the acts of St. Michael
Trust Corp. in its capacity as trustee of the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust
were fulfilled by Mr. Peter Jesson, a tax partner of PwC-Barbados and a
director of St. Michael Trust Corp., and Mr. Jim Knott, the general manager of St.
Michael Trust Corp. They had both retired by the time of the Tax Court hearing,
and neither of them gave evidence.
[30]
From
2003 until the time of the Tax Court hearing, the acts of St. Michael Trust
Corp. in its capacity as trustee of the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust were
performed by Mr. Ian Hutchinson, the president and a director of St. Michael
Trust Corp. Mr. Hutchinson’s background was as an accountant with Coopers &
Lybrand in Barbados. He moved to the trust division of PwC-Barbados in 1999 but
until 2003, his involvement with the Trusts was limited to “investment
recording.” He gave evidence at the Tax Court hearing.
[31]
Mr.
Jesson signed a memorandum dated April 9, 1998 with respect to the Garron Trust
(the Fundy Settlement) that reads as follows:
It is the Trustee’s intention,
with respect to the Fundy Settlement (Trust) [the Garron Trust] as follows:
1.
Investment
Policy
a.
that
the shares of 1287333 Ontario Limited [New Garron Co] be held until such time
as the other shareholders of PMPL Holdings Inc., decide to sell their shares.
At that time we will facilitate the sale of the shares of [New Garron Co];
b.
any
sale proceeds which arise from the sale of the shares of [New Garron Co] (and
any other amounts received by the [Garron Trust] as a consequence of the
realisation of any assets of [New Garron Co] or of any entity in which it has
a direct or indirect interest) will be invested prudently with a view to the
long term preservation of the capital of the [Garron Trust]; and
c.
we
will seek the investment advice of Myron Garron from time to time.
2.
Distribution
Policy
a.
that
during the lifetime of Myron Garron the primary consideration in making
distributions of income and capital should be the best interests of Myron
Garron subject only to his wishes with respect to distributions to other
beneficiaries;
b.
if
Myron Garron should die at a time we continue to hold assets under the terms
of the [Garron Trust], distribution shall be made in view of the best
interests of Myron Garron’s widow during her lifetime, and thereafter the
best interests of his issue, as defined in the [Garron Trust] deed.
|
[32]
Mr.
Jesson also signed a memorandum dated April 29, 1998 with respect to the Dunin
Trust (the Summersby Settlement) which reads as follows:
1.
Investment
Policy
a.
the
shares of 1287325 Ontario Limited [New Dunin Co] should be held until such
time as the other shareholders of PMPL Holdings Inc. decide to sell their
shares. At that time, we, as the trustee, will facilitate the sale of our
shares of [New Dunin Co];
b.
any
sale proceeds which arise from the sale of our shares of [New Dunin Co] (and
any other amounts received by the [Dunin Trust] as a consequence of the
realisation of any assets of [New Dunin Co] or of any entity in which it has
a direct or indirect interest) will be invested prudently with a view to the
long term preservation of the capital of the [Dunin Trust]; and
c.
we,
as trustee, may seek the investment advice of Andrew Dunin, from time to
time.
2.
Distribution
Policy
During
the lifetime of Andrew Dunin, the primary consideration in making
distributions of income and capital should be the best interests of Andrew
Dunin, subject only to his wishes with respect to distributions to other
beneficiaries. If Andrew Dunin should die at a time when we, as trustee,
continue to hold assets under the terms of the [Dunin Trust], distributions
shall be made in view of the best interests of Andrew Dunin’s widow during
her lifetime, and thereafter
the
best interests of his issue (as defined in the Settlement Deed).
3.
Power
to Amend Trust
We, as trustee, will consult
with Andrew Dunin each April (*) to determine whether the provision of
clauses 3.1(e)(iv) or 3.1(f) of the Settlement Deed should be amended to
reflect any amendments which might have been made to the will of Andrew
Dunin.
|
[33]
On
April 2, 1998, Mr. Julian Gill, another friend of Mr. Garron and the person
named as the protector for the Trusts, lent each Trust US$7,190. The terms of
the loans stipulated a 10% rate of interest. The loan to the Dunin Trust was
repayable upon the sale of its shares of New Dunin Co or the receipt of a
dividend from New Dunin Co. The loan to the Garron Trust was repayable upon the
sale of its shares of New Garron Co or the receipt of a dividend from New
Garron Co. The events triggering the Trusts’ obligations to repay the loans
(described below) occurred in August, 2000, and the loans were repaid with
interest at that time.
[34]
On
April 3, 1998, the Garron Trust acquired 1,000 Class A and 1,000 Class B shares
of New Garron Co, and the Dunin Trust acquired 1000 Class A and 1000 Class B
shares of New Dunin Co.
[35]
On
April 6, 1998, the following transactions occurred. The reorganization of the
share capital of PMPL was completed as described above. 1000 Freeze Shares of
PMPL were issued to replace the original common shares owned by Garron Holdings
and Dunin Holdings, so that Garron Holdings and Dunin Holdings each became the
owner of 500 Freeze Shares of PMPL. New Garron Co subscribed for 800 New Common
Shares of PMPL for $80. New Dunin Co subscribed for 100 Special Value Shares of
PMPL for $10 and 800 New Common Shares of PMPL for $80.
[36]
The
value of the common shares of PMPL immediately before the April 6, 1998
reorganization was the subject of conflicting expert opinion in the Tax Court.
For purposes of the reorganization the parties had valued them at $50 million,
based on a valuation opinion they obtained early in 1998. The Minister assumed,
when reassessing the appellants, that the fair market value immediately before
the reorganization was substantially more than $50 million. The Crown’s expert
valued them at $102 million.
[37]
Justice
Woods concluded, for reasons that are well explained, that the Minister’s
assumption had not been rebutted, but she did not consider it necessary to
determine the value. Therefore, for purposes of this appeal, it must be taken
as a fact that the pre-reorganization value was substantially more than $50
million.
[38]
As
a practical matter, that means that the redemption value of the Freeze Shares
was fixed at an amount, $50 million, that was less than their actual value,
resulting in a shift in the value of PMPL from the holders of the Freeze Shares
(Garron Holdings and Dunin Holdings) to the holders of the New Common Shares
(the Trusts). The articles of incorporation of PMPL contain a provision that
would have adjusted the redemption value of the Freeze Shares upon a
determination by a taxing authority or a court that the fair market value of
the Freeze Shares was some amount other than $50 million, but that clause was
never in play because no such determination was made.
[39]
After
the reorganization, the companies owned by PMPL continued to operate,
apparently with substantial success. During the first half of 1999,
negotiations occurred in an attempt to sell PMPL to a Swiss company at Mr.
Dunin’s then estimated value of $400 million, but those negotiations did not
succeed. In approximately June of 1999, Mr. Dunin retained Mr. Timothy W.
Carroll of the Chicago office of Arthur Anderson to find a buyer and manage the
sale. An equity firm based in New York, Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P.,
expressed an interest and, in August of 2000, acquired indirect interests in
PMPL through a Canadian corporation, 1424666 Ontario Ltd. (the “Purchaser”). It
is common ground that the Purchaser dealt at arm’s length with St. Michael
Trust Corp., Mr. Dunin and Mr. Garron.
[40]
It
seems to have been accepted by all parties that in 2000, the value of PMPL was
approximately $532 million. It was intended that the Purchaser would acquire
indirect interests in PMPL for approximately $482 million, and Mr. Dunin and
the Dunin Trust would retain indirect interests in PMPL valued in total at
approximately $50 million.
[41]
This
was achieved through the following transactions. The Garron Trust sold all of
its shares of New Garron Co to the Purchaser for approximately $217 million. The
Dunin Trust sold 907 of its 1000 Class A shares and 907 of its 1000 Class B
shares of New Dunin Co (90.7% of the shares) to the Purchaser for approximately
$240 million. The shareholders of Garron Holdings (which owned 500 Freeze
Shares of PMPL) sold all of their shares of Garron Holdings to the Purchaser
for $25 million. Dunin Holdings exchanged its 500 Freeze Shares of PMPL for
shares of the Canadian parent corporation of the Purchaser valued at $25
million.
[42]
After
these sales were completed, the Purchaser indirectly held substantially all of
PMPL, for which it had paid approximately $482 million. Its indirect interests
in PMPL were represented by all of the shares of Garron Holdings which owned
500 Freeze Shares of PMPL (valued at approximately $25 million), all of the
shares of New Garron Co which owned 800 New Common Shares of PMPL (valued at
approximately $217 million), and 907 Class A and 907 Class B shares of New
Dunin Co which owned the 100 Special Value Shares and 800 New Common Shares of
PMPL (valued at approximately $240 million).
[43]
Mr.
Dunin’s retained indirect interests in PMPL were represented by his continued
ownership of the shares of Dunin Holdings, which owned newly issued shares of
the Purchaser’s parent corporation (valued at approximately $25 million). That
parent corporation in turn owned 500 Freeze Shares of PMPL and a controlling
interest in the Purchaser, which in turn owned or controlled the remaining
shares of PMPL. Mr. Dunin was also a discretionary beneficiary of the Dunin
Trust, which retained a 9.3% equity interest in New Dunin Co valued at
approximately $25 million (represented by 93 Class A and 93 Class B shares of
New Dunin Co, which owned the 100 Special Value Shares and 800 New Common
Shares of PMPL).
[44]
The
sales by the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust of the shares of New Garron Co
and New Dunin Co, respectively, gave rise to the capital gains that are the
subject of the income tax assessments under appeal. Those gains were not subject
to tax in Barbados. Because the shares of New Garron Co and New Dunin Co were acquired
at a nominal cost, the capital gains were determined for Canadian income tax
purposes to be approximately $217 million for the Garron Trust and
approximately $240 million for the Dunin Trust. The capital gain inclusion rate
at the relevant time was 2/3, so that the taxable amounts were approximately
$145 million for the Garron Trust and approximately $160 million for the Dunin
Trust.
[45]
In
addition to the facts summarized above relating to the transactions underlying
the assessments under appeal, Justice Woods concluded that the role of St. Michael Trust Corp. was, by mutual
agreement, more limited than the text of the trust indentures would suggest. Her
findings in this respect are explained fully in paragraphs 189 to 262 of her
reasons. The appellant argues that Justice Woods made a palpable and overriding
error in concluding that the Trusts were controlled and managed by anyone other
than St. Michael Trust Corp. Justice Woods’s specific factual findings on this
issue and her reasons are discussed in the analysis below.
[46]
The
Purchaser, in compliance with section 116 of the Income Tax Act,
withheld from the proceeds of sale approximately $72 million in respect of the
purchase of the shares of New Garron Co from the Garron Trust and approximately
$80 million in respect of the purchase of the shares of New Dunin Co from the
Dunin Trust. The withheld amounts were remitted to the Minister to be credited
to the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust respectively.
[47]
St.
Michael Trust Corp. took the position that, because the Garron Trust and the
Dunin Trust were residents of Barbados for purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty,
their capital gains were exempt from income tax in Canada because of paragraph
4 of Article XIV. In order to claim refunds of the amounts withheld and
remitted by the Purchaser, St. Michael Trust Corp. filed income tax returns for
the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust. The capital gains were disclosed in those
returns and claims for a treaty exemption were asserted.
[48]
The
Minister rejected the claims for exemption and assessed St. Michael Trust Corp.
accordingly. St. Michael Trust Corp. objected to the assessments without
success, and appealed to the Tax Court of Canada again without success. I
summarize as follows the key conclusions reached by Justice Woods:
a. In
determining residence for purposes of the Income Tax Act, the
established test of residence applicable to corporations should be applied, so
that a trust is resident in the country where its central management and
control is exercised. In relation to the Trusts, the essential responsibility
for decision making was intended from the outset to be exercised, and was in
fact exercised, by Mr. Dunin and Mr. Garron, not St. Michael Trust Corp.
Therefore, the central management and control of the Trusts was located in Canada, and the Trusts were resident in Canada.
b. As to
the Crown’s alternative arguments:
i.
the
Trusts were not deemed to be resident in Canada by virtue of section 94 of the Income
Tax Act because the contribution test was not met;
ii.
even
if the Trusts were deemed to be resident in Canada by virtue of section 94, they
could not be considered “residents of Canada” as defined in the Barbados Tax
Treaty because
section 94 does not impose tax liability on a deemed resident trust on the same
comprehensive basis as a trust that is actually resident in Canada (Crown
Forest Industries Ltd. v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 802); and
iii.
the
assessments under appeal cannot be justified by the general anti-avoidance rule.
It is not an abuse of the Barbados Tax Treaty to vest property in a trust with
its residence in Barbados in a manner that avoids the operation of section 94.
Generally, a tax treaty is intended to override the Income Tax Act, and
there is nothing in the statutory context to indicate that the Bahamas Tax
Treaty was not intended to override the Income Tax Act in the
circumstances of this case.
[49]
St.
Michael Trust Corp. now appeals to this Court on the first issue summarized
above. The Crown argues that Justice Woods was correct on the first issue, but
if she was wrong on that issue, she was also wrong in rejecting the Crown’s
alternative arguments.
Issues
[50]
I
summarize as follows the issues raised in these appeals:
a. Residence
under general legal principles: Did Justice Woods err in law or
fact in concluding that, for the purposes of the Income Tax Act, the
Trusts were resident in Canada in 2000? If not, then the appeals cannot
succeed. Otherwise, it will be necessary to consider question (b).
b. Deemed
residence under subsection 94(1):
i.
Did
Justice Woods err in law in concluding that the deemed residence rule in
subsection 94(1) of the Income Tax Act did not apply to the Trusts in
2000? If so, then it will be necessary to consider question (b)(ii). If Justice
Woods made no error on this point, then it will be necessary to consider
question (c).
ii.
If
the Trusts were deemed to be resident in Canada by virtue of subparagraph
94(1), were they nevertheless “residents of Barbados” and not “residents of Canada” for the purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty, and thus entitled to the benefit of
the exemption in paragraph 4 of Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty? If not,
the appeals cannot succeed. If so, it will be necessary to consider question
(c).
c. The
general anti-avoidance rule: If the Trusts were not resident in Canada and were residents of Barbados for purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty, does GAAR
nevertheless justify the assessments under appeal? If so, the appeals cannot
succeed.
[51]
For
the reasons that follow, I have concluded that these appeals should be
dismissed. I agree with Justice Woods that a central management and control
test, as described below, should be applied in determining the residence of the
Trusts. In my view, it was reasonably open to her to conclude on the basis of
the record that for the purposes of the Income Tax Act, the Trusts were
resident in Canada in 2000.
Analysis
Residence
of the Trusts under general legal principles
[52]
Canada,
like many countries, has chosen residence as the principal basis for imposing
income tax. The policy reason for that choice, as explained by Professor Vern
Krishna (The Fundamentals of Canadian Income Tax (10th ed., Toronto: Carswell, 2009), at page 85), is that a person who enjoys the legal, political
and economic benefits of association with Canada should bear the appropriate
share of the costs of association.
[53]
Generally,
the residence of a person is a question of fact, the determination of which
requires consideration of any number of factors that point to or away from an
economic or social link between the person and a particular country. For
example, in the case of an individual, the relevant factors could include
nationality, physical presence, location of the family home, location of
business and social interests, mode of family life, and social connections
through birth or marriage (a more detailed list of specific factors can be
found in Krishna, at pages 88-91). Some specific legal principles for
determining residence may come into play in certain circumstances, but none
that eliminate the need for full consideration of all of the relevant facts.
[54]
As
to the residence of a corporation, it was determined over 100 years ago that in
considering that question, the jurisprudence relating to the residence of an
individual was instructive. In the leading case of De Beers Consolidated
Mines Ltd. v. Howe, [1906] A.C. 455, Lord Loreburn said this (at page 458):
In applying the conception of
residence to a company, we ought, I think, to proceed as nearly as we can
upon the analogy of an individual. A company cannot eat or sleep, but it can
keep house and do business. We ought, therefore, to see where it really keeps
house and does business. An individual may be of foreign nationality, and yet
reside in the United Kingdom. So may a company. Otherwise it might have its
chief seat of management and its centre of trading in England under the protection of English law, and yet escape the appropriate taxation by the simple
expedient of being registered abroad and distributing its dividends abroad.
The decision of Kelly C.B. and Huddleston B. in the Calcutta Jute Mills v.
Nicholson and the Cesena Sulphur Co. v. Nicholson [(1876) 1 Ex D.
428], now thirty years ago, involved the principle that a company resides for
purposes of income tax where its real business is carried on. Those decisions
have been acted upon ever since. I regard that as the true rule, and the real
business is carried on where the central management and control actually
abides.
It remains to be considered
whether the present case falls within that rule. This is a pure question of
fact to be determined, not according to the construction of this or that
regulation or bye-law, but upon a scrutiny of the course of business and
trading.
|
[55]
It
remains the case to this day that, for income tax purposes, the residence of a
corporation is determined primarily by finding the location of the
corporation’s central management and control, which is a question of fact. The
relevant factors include the legal indicia of the place where the corporation’s
management and control should be exercised (as disclosed, for example, by the
corporation’s governing law and constating documents). Where a corporation is
actually managed and controlled by its directors in the manner contemplated by
its governing law, the residence of a corporation usually will be determined as
the place where the corporate directors exercise their management and control
responsibilities.
[56]
However,
that may not be the result if the facts disclose that the corporation is not in
fact managed and controlled as its governing law requires. In that regard it is
relevant to consider the nature of the decision making authority actually
exercised by the directors. If significant management decisions are in fact
taken by a person who is not a director, the place where that person resides or
operates may be determined to be the residence of the corporation. Thus, for
example, if it is established that management and control is exercised in fact
by a shareholder operating out of another country, the corporation may be found
to be resident where the shareholder resides: see Unit Construction Co. Ltd.
v. Bullock, [1960] A.C. 351.
[57]
There
is very little jurisprudence relating to the determination of the residence of
a trust for tax purposes. Justice Woods reviewed the jurisprudence and
concluded, correctly in my view, that there is no case law establishing a
single test for determining the residence of a trust. She also concluded that
“the judge-made test of residence that has been established for corporations
should also apply to trusts, with such modifications as are appropriate”
(reasons, paragraph 162). I agree with her, substantially for the reasons she
gave.
[58]
Some
learned writers on tax matters have expressed the opinion that the residence of
a trust is determined solely by the residence of the trustee, citing cases
where the residence of a trust has been found to be the place where the trustee
resides (or, in one case, in the place where the majority of the trustees
reside, the trust indenture having permitted the majority to act for the trust:
see Trustee of Thibodeau Family Trust v. Canada, [1978] F.C.J. No. 607,
78 DTC 6376 (T.D.)).
[59]
However,
no case has established that the residence of the trustee is an invariable
legal test for the residence of the trust. Nor has any case rejected
conclusively the central management and control test as an appropriate legal
test for the residence of a trust in a situation where it was found, for example,
that someone other than the trustee exercised management and control of the
trust property, or that the trustee resided in one place but exercised the
management and control of the trust property in another place.
[60]
Certain
comments in Thibodeau have sometimes been taken as a rejection of the
corporate test of residence for a trust. In fact the Crown had submitted in
that case that the central management and control test should be applied, and
that submission was rejected. However, the comments that are most often cited
in support of a blanket rejection of the central management and control test
for a trust were made in the context of a narrower submission to the effect
that the trust could have been resident in two places because one trustee lived
in Canada and two lived in Bermuda. What the judge said (at paragraph 22; DTC
page 6385) is this:
As
to the submission that the Court in this case, even it if also finds that the
Trust has a residence in Bermuda, it should find that it has a residence in
Canada in that part of the paramount or supreme authority in relation to the
management of this Trust was carried on in Canada applying by analogy the
principles in the cited cases of determining residence for income tax
purposes of corporations, in my view, such submission is also not valid. The
judicial formula for this respecting a corporation, in my view, cannot apply
to trustees because trustees cannot delegate any of their authority to
co-trustees. A trustee cannot adopt a "policy of masterly inactivity"
as commented upon in Underhill on the Law of Trusts and Trustees, 12th
Edition, page 284; and on the evidence, none of the trustees did adopt such a
policy. Therefore, it is not possible for a trust to have a dual residence
for income tax purposes, and therefore it is not possible to find that part
of the paramount of "superior and directing authority" of a Trust
is and was in two places. In any event, a finding of dual residence of this
Trust is not made in this case.
|
[61]
I
do not read this paragraph as rejecting the proposition that the residence of a
trust can never be determined on the basis of the place where its central
management and control is exercised and must always be determined exclusively
on the basis of the residence of the trustee. However, if that is what the
judge in Thibodeau was saying, then I respectfully disagree.
[62]
By
analogy from DeBeers, supra, the task is to determine where a
trust “keeps house and does business”, i.e. where the powers and discretions of
the trustee are really being exercised. It may well be that in most cases, the
residence of the appointed trustee is a sufficient basis in fact for
determining the residence of the trust. This is the case where the trustee is
given and actually exercises the powers and discretions regarding the
management and control of the trust property, and does so where he resides.
However, a rigid legal test that necessarily ties the residence of a
trust to the residence of the trustee regardless of the facts is, in my view,
not sound in principle because it denies the central theme of the jurisprudence
on the determination of residence for tax purposes, which is that residence
fundamentally is a question of fact. I conclude therefore that where a question
arises as to the residence of a trust for tax purposes, it is appropriate to
undertake a fact driven analysis with a view to determining the place where the
central management and control of the trust is actually exercised.
[63]
St.
Michael Trust Corp. argues that a test of central management and control cannot
be applied to a trust because a trust is a “legal relationship” without a
separate legal personality. I do not accept this argument. It is true that as a
matter of law a trust is not a person, but it is also true that for income tax
purposes, a trust is treated as though it were a person. In my view, it is
consistent with that implicit statutory fiction to recognize that the residence
of a trust may not always be determined by the residence of its trustee.
[64]
St.
Michael Trust Corp. also argues that the residence of the trust must be
determined as the residence of the trustee because section 104 of the Income
Tax Act embodies the trust, as taxpayer, in the person of the trustee. In
my view, that gives section 104 a meaning beyond its words and purpose. Section
104 was enacted to solve the practical problems of tax administration that would
necessarily arise when it was determined that trusts were to be taxed despite
the absence of legal personality. I do not read section 104 as a signal that
Parliament intended that in all cases, the residence of the trust must be the
residence of the trustee.
[65]
Finally,
St. Michael Trust Corp. argues that, even if the residence of the Garron Trust
and the Dunin Trust in 2000 was the place where their central management and
control was exercised at that time, Justice Woods made a palpable and
overriding error in applying that test to the facts. To assess the validity of
that argument, it is necessary to consider the factors that Justice Woods took
into account in locating the central management and control of the Trusts in Canada, where Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin resided.
[66]
Justice
Woods concluded that St. Michael Trust Corp. was not
exercising the main powers and discretions of the trustees under the trust
indentures. Rather its true role was “to execute documents as required, and to
provide incidental administrative services”, and it was not expected to “have
responsibility for decision-making beyond that” (at paragraph 189). Rather than
exercising its powers and discretions under the trust indentures, St. Michael
Trust Corp. would default automatically to the recommendation of Mr. Dunin and
Mr. Garron. This was “understood to be the arrangement from the outset” (at
paragraph 194). She found that it was Mr. Dunin and Mr. Garron “who made the
substantive decisions respecting the Trusts”, not St. Michael Trust Corp. (at
paragraph 252). In reaching these conclusions, Justice Wood relied on a number
of facts which are fully stated in her reasons. I summarize as follows a number
of these facts:
a. Under the terms
of the trust indentures, Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin and their respective spouses
alone could replace the protector, who in turn could replace the
trustee, if the trustee acted against their wishes.
b. The
limited role of St. Michael Trust Corp. was understood by all parties at the
outset. In particular, it was understood that St. Michael Trust Corp. would
have no decision making role in relation to the sale of the Trusts’ interests
in PMPL, the investment of the cash proceeds received on the sale, the making
of distributions to the beneficiaries, and the taking of appropriate action to
minimize the tax burden of the Trusts. It was further understood from the
outset that decisions of that nature would be made by Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin
and implemented by St. Michael Trust Corp. under their direction.
c. The Trusts used
the same investment advisers as the beneficiaries. This allowed the
beneficiaries to deal directly with the Trusts’ financial advisers and directly
control the Trusts’ investment activity without the involvement of St. Michael
Trust Corp.
d. The tax advisers
to Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin were also used for the Trusts and when acting for
the Trusts were directed by Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin.
e. There is no
documentary evidence that St. Michael Trust Corp. took an active role in
managing the Trusts, and the correspondence and other documents introduced by
the Crown indicated that St. Michael Trust Corp. had no involvement in the
affairs of the Trusts except the execution of documents and in administrative,
accounting and tax matters.
f. St. Michael
Trust Corp. was an arm of an accounting firm and thus had significant expertise
in tax and accounting matters, but there is no evidence that it had any
expertise in the management of trust assets.
g. The oral
evidence of Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin did not provide a clear picture of how the
Trusts operated, and was less than full and complete.
h. Mr. Dunin in
particular was disingenuous when he testified that St. Michael Trust Corp.
controlled the Trusts.
i.
Mr.
Dunin attempted to give the impression that he had little interest in what St.
Michael Trust Corp. was actually doing vis-à-vis the Dunin Trust which,
given his economic interest in the Dunin Trust, supports the conclusion that it
was Mr. Dunin himself who was in effective control. The same can be said about
the evidence of Mr. Garron that he had little interest in what St. Michael
Trust Corp. was doing.
j.
Other
individuals who could have shed light on the relevant facts as to the operation
of the Trusts were not called to give evidence. That included the various
advisers who were involved in planning and implementing the relevant
transactions, Mr. Gill who was the protector of both Trusts, Mr. Jesson who was
in charge of St. Michael Trust Corp. when the Trusts were created and the
person who prepared the memoranda of “trustee intentions” quoted above, Mr.
Knott who had the day to day responsibility for the Trusts, Mr. Carroll who was
the lead adviser on the sale of PMPL, and various other individuals who acted
as investment advisers to the Trusts or who were involved in the selection of
investment advisers.
k. The evidence of
Mr. Hutchinson, an officer of St. Michael Trust Corp. who dealt with the
Trusts, was not particularly helpful because of his lack of personal knowledge
of events that occurred before his involvement in 2003. In particular, Mr.
Hutchinson could provide no useful information about the degree of due
diligence undertaken by St. Michael Trust Corp. in relation to any of the relevant
transactions.
l.
Mr.
Hutchinson testified that the directors of St. Michael Trust Corp. were
required to ratify actions proposed to be taken or taken by the Trusts, but
there is no evidence that they had much substantive information about the
transactions, which tends to support the proposition that they knew that the
role of St. Michael Trust Corp. was intended to be limited to administrative
matters.
[67]
Some
of the factors listed above are common characteristics of ordinary trusts and,
considered in isolation, would not be sufficient to locate the management and
control of the Trusts anywhere but the residence of the St. Michael Trust Corp.
For example, the fact that the beneficiaries have the right to appoint a
protector who has the power to replace the St. Michael Trust Corp. as trustee
is a common safeguard in a trust indenture and would not by itself be enough to
find the beneficiaries to be in control of the property of the Trusts. The same
could be said of the fact that St. Michael Trust Corp. and the beneficiaries
employ common advisers, or the fact that the beneficiaries took it on
themselves to advise the St. Michael Trust Corp. and even urged St. Michael
Trust Corp., however strongly, to undertake a particular transaction. Indeed,
the appointment of a trustee with little investment experience in a trust that
requires the property to be invested might not be significant, provided that
the trustee has the power to retain others for advice and, in the end, is the
one making the decisions.
[68]
However,
there is a line to be drawn. On one side of the line are recommendations, even
strong ones, by the beneficiaries to the trustee, leaving the trustee free to
decide how to exercise the powers and discretions under the trust. In that
case, the trustee is still managing and controlling the trust. On the other
side of the line the beneficiaries are really exercising the powers and
discretions under the trusts, managing and controlling the trusts, and
displacing the appointed trustee. As mentioned above, on which side of the
line a case falls is a factual question, requiring consideration of the
evidence in its totality.
[69]
Justice
Woods took into account some normally neutral facts, such as the existence of a
protector and reliance on common advisers, and combined them with a
considerable body of evidence of the surrounding circumstances to conclude that
on the facts of this case, the line was crossed. In my view, it was reasonably
open to her to reach that conclusion.
[70]
Indeed,
what else is to be made of the common understanding of the parties, as found by
Justice Woods, that decisions in relation to the sale of the Trusts’ interests
in PMPL, the investment of the cash proceeds received on the sale, the making
of distributions to the beneficiaries, and the taking of appropriate action to
minimize the tax burden of the Trusts would be made by Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin
and implemented by St. Michael Trust Corp.? What else explains the lack of
documentary or other evidence that St. Michael Trust Corp. took an active role
in assessing any of the important decisions relation to the disposition of the
property of the Trust? What is the explanation for the professed lack of
interest on the part of Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin of the capabilities of St.
Michael Trust Corp. to manage trust assets, except in relation to the work
ordinarily done by someone with accounting and tax expertise? What is the
explanation for the paucity of evidence as to the formation and operation of
the Trusts and the failure to call key witnesses?
[71]
I
conclude that Justice Woods made no error warranting the intervention of this
Court in concluding that, at the relevant time in 2000, and in particular at
the time of the sale of the shares of New Garron Co and New Dunin Co to the
Purchaser, the management and control of the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust
resided in Canada with Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin. It follows that she was
correct to find that the Trusts were resident in Canada when they realized
capital gains on the sale of the shares of New Garron Co and New Dunin Co.
[72]
This
is a sufficient basis upon which to dismiss these appeals. However, as the
alternative arguments were fully argued, I will express an opinion on those as
well.
Deemed residence
of the Trusts under subsection 94(1)
[73]
If,
contrary to the opinion expressed above, the residence of a trust is to be
determined only on the basis of the residence of the trustee, then there can be
no real doubt that the Trusts were resident in Barbados in fact and for the
purposes of the Barbados Tax Treaty. The question then becomes whether section
94 applied to the Trusts in 2000, and if so whether the capital gains in issue
are subject to tax in Canada. That turns on two issues: (1) whether the
contribution test in paragraph 94(1)(b) was met, and (2) whether the
Trusts were entitled to the exemption in paragraph 4 of Article XIV of the
Barbados Tax Treaty.
[74]
The
contribution test was met if the Garron Trust and the Dunin Trust acquired
property, “directly or indirectly in any manner whatever” from a Canadian resident
beneficiary or a person related to that beneficiary. Each of the Trusts had a
Canadian resident beneficiary, Mr. Garron in the case of the Garron Trust, and
Mr. Dunin in the case of the Dunin Trust, and among the players in this case were
two corporations, Garron Holdings and Dunin Holdings, that for income tax
purposes are related to Mr. Garron and Mr. Dunin respectively. Therefore, the
specific questions are whether the Garron Trust acquired property, directly or
indirectly in any manner whatever from Mr. Garron or Garron Holdings, and
whether the Dunin Trust acquired property directly or indirectly in any manner
whatever from Mr. Dunin or Dunin Holdings.
[75]
There
are undoubtedly many ways in which a transfer of property may occur directly or
indirectly in any manner whatever, and there is very little guiding
jurisprudence. However, it is now well established that if the existing common
shares of a corporation worth, say, $100, are exchanged for preference shares
with a value that is fixed at some lesser amount, say, $80, and new common
shares are issued to a new shareholder for nominal consideration, the holders
of the preference shares have indirectly transferred property worth $20 to the
new subscriber (see Canada v. Kieboom
(C.A.), [1992] 3 F.C. 488, at paragraph 21).
[76]
Kieboom
recognizes that the entire value of any corporation is represented by its
shares, which are property. The allocation of the value of a corporation
between shares of different classes is determined by their terms and conditions.
Therefore it is possible to change the value of a class of shares, and to shift
value from one class of shares to another, by changing their terms and
conditions. The hypothetical reorganization described above results in an
indirect transfer of property worth $20 from the holders of the fixed value
preference shares to the new subscriber.
[77]
The
same kind of indirect transfer of property occurred in this case upon the
reorganization of the shares of PMPL. The pre-reorganization value of the
common shares of PMPL was substantially more than $50 million, the redemption
value of the Freeze Shares for which they were exchanged upon the
reorganization. For that reason, the reorganization shifted value from the
holders of the Freeze Shares (Dunin Holdings and Garron Holdings) to the
subscribers for New Common Shares of PMPL, New Dunin Co and New Garron Co. Kieboom
teaches that Dunin Holdings and Garron Holdings transferred property
indirectly to New Dunin Co and New Garron Co respectively.
[78]
However,
the question asked by paragraph 94(1)(b) is whether property was
transferred “directly or indirectly in any manner whatever” to the Dunin Trust
and the Garron Trust, as the sole shareholders of New Dunin Co and New Garron
Co respectively. Justice Woods said no, because this would require “looking
through” New Dunin Co and New Garron Co to find that the Trusts were the
recipients of the transferred property, which would give the phrase “directly
or indirectly in any manner whatever” a meaning that would be unreasonably broad
with unforeseeable and uncertain consequences in other situations.
[79]
I
do not share Justice Woods’ concerns, and I respectfully disagree with her
interpretation of paragraph 94(1)(b). Once it is accepted that an
indirect transfer of the shares of a corporation from Shareholder A to
Shareholder B can be achieved by a corporate reorganization that shifts part of
the value of the corporation from the class of shares owned by Shareholder A to
the class of shares owned by Shareholder B, I see no principled basis for
concluding that the same transaction cannot also be an indirect transfer of
property “in any manner whatever” to the person that owns Shareholder B. This
does not imply any change to the legal principle that the property of a
corporation is not the property of its shareholders. It merely recognizes the
fact that any increase in the wealth of Shareholder B will necessarily increase
the wealth of whoever owns Shareholder B. In the hypothetical corporate
reorganization described above, it does no violence to the language of
paragraph 94(1)(b) to conclude that there has been an indirect transfer
of property “in any manner whatever” from Shareholder A to the owner of
Shareholder B.
[80]
In
my view, Parliament chose the words “directly or indirectly in any manner
whatever” in paragraph 94(1)(b) deliberately to capture every possible
means by which the wealth and income earning potential represented by the
shares of a Canadian corporation can move to a non-resident trust from a
Canadian resident beneficiary of the trust or a person related to that
beneficiary. On any realistic and practical view of the facts of this case, the
New Common Shares of PMPL (bearing with them the value shifted from the old
common shares upon the reorganization of PMPL) were intended to enrich the
Trusts. That was achieved by a series of interrelated and preordained
transactions in which New Garron Co and New Dunin Co were the instruments by
which the Trusts obtained the economic benefit of the New Common Shares of
PMPL, including the portion of the value of those shares that was shifted from
the pre-reorganization common shares. On that basis, I conclude that the
contribution test was met, and therefore subsection 94(1) applied to the
Trusts. It follows that paragraph 94(1)(c) applies to deem the Trusts to be
resident in Canada for the purposes of Part I.
[81]
The
next question is whether the reasoning in Crown Forest compels the
conclusion that the Trusts were entitled to the benefit of the exemption from
Canadian tax in paragraph 4 of Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty. Justice
Woods concluded that the treaty exemption in this case trumps section 94. In my
view, she was correct in so concluding.
[82]
The
treaty definition of residence follows the most common model. I repeat the
definition here for ease of reference:
1. For the purposes of this
Agreement, the term “resident of a Contracting State” means any person who,
under the laws of that State, is liable to taxation therein by reason of his
domicile, residence, place of management or any other criterion of a similar
nature.
|
1.
Au sens du présent Accord, l’expression « résident d’un État contractant »
désigne toute personne qui, en vertu de la législation dudit État, est
assujettie à l’impôt dans cet État en raison de son domicile, de sa
résidence, de son siège de direction ou de tout autre critère de nature
analogue, et les expressions « résident du Canada » et
«
résident de la Barbade » ont le sens correspondant.
|
[83]
Crown Forest teaches
that the common element of the enumerated criteria in the treaty definition of
residence is that each constitutes a basis on which states
generally impose full tax liability on world-wide income. It follows that a
person who is liable to tax in Canada only on income from a source or sources
(source liability), as opposed to its world-wide income from all sources, would
not be considered a resident of that state for treaty purposes. Justice
Iacobucci, writing for the Court in Crown Forest, explained this
point as follows at paragraph 40 (citations omitted):
I
agree with the appellant that the
most similar element among the enumerated criteria is that, standing alone,
they would each constitute a basis on which states generally impose full tax
liability on world-wide income […]. In this respect, the criteria for
determining residence in Article IV, paragraph 1 involve more than simply
being liable to taxation on some portion of income (source liability); they
entail being subject to as comprehensive a tax liability as is imposed by a
state. In the United States and Canada, such comprehensive taxation is
taxation on world-wide income. However, tax liability for the income
effectively connected to a business engaged in the U.S., pursuant to s. 882
of the Internal Revenue Code, amounts simply to source liability.
Consequently, the "engaged in a business in the U.S." criterion is not of a similar nature to the enumerated grounds since it is but a basis
for source taxation.
|
[84]
Substantially
the same point is made more succinctly in the following statement from paragraph
68 of Crown Forest, in which Justice Iacobucci summarized
his conclusions. His third conclusion is as follows:
3.
The parties to the Convention intended only that persons who were resident in
one of the contracting states and liable to tax in one of the contracting
states on their "world-wide income" be considered
"residents" for purposes of the Convention.
|
[85]
These
comments were made in the context of a case in which a Bahamian corporation was
attempting to claim the benefit of an exemption from Canadian tax in the Canada-United States Income Tax Convention (1980) on the basis that its United States tax liability arose because its “place of management” was in the United States. (The definition of residence in that treaty is substantially the same as the
definition of residence in the Barbados Tax Treaty.) The Bahamian corporation
had the status of a foreign corporation for United States income tax purposes,
and was liable to taxation in the United States only on income effectively
connected with the business conducted from its office in the United States (that is, business income earned in the United States).
[86]
Justice
Iacobucci concluded that the fact that the place of management of the Bahamian
corporation was in the United States was not the basis of its United States tax
liability, but only one of the factors in determining whether its business
income was effectively connected with its United States based business. The
Bahamian corporation was taxed in the United States only as a foreign
corporation, on a source basis, and not on its world wide income as it would
have been if it were an American corporation. For that reason, it was not a
resident of the United States for treaty purposes.
[87]
The
deemed residence rule in section 94 does not simply deem a foreign trust to be
a person resident in Canada. It is substantially limited; it deems a foreign
trust to be a person resident in Canada whose taxable income for the year is
the total of its taxable income earned in Canada for the year, plus
“foreign accrual property income” (or FAPI, which essentially consists of
certain investment and other passive income, including capital gains, of a
foreign corporation that are attributed to a Canadian resident shareholder in
certain circumstances). These limitations result in a foreign trust being
deemed to be a person resident in Canada, not for all purposes of Part I
(which would make it liable to tax on all of its income, wherever earned), but
only for the purposes of Part I that are relevant to the determination of its
Canadian source income and its FAPI. As a practical matter, as the parties
agree, that excludes only foreign active business income, but it nevertheless
falls short of displacing the treaty definition of residence.
[88]
It
follows that, if the central management and control test discussed above does
not apply, then the Trusts would be entitled to the benefit of paragraph 4 of
Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty, and would be exempt from Canadian tax
on the capital gain they realized in 2000 on the sale of the shares of New
Garron Co and New Dunin Co.
The
general anti-avoidance rule
[89]
If,
contrary to the opinions expressed above, the residence of a trust is to be
determined only on the basis of the residence of the trustee and therefore the
Trusts are resident in Barbados, but are entitled to the exemption in paragraph
4 of Article XIV of the Barbados Tax Treaty, it would be necessary to consider
whether the assessments under appeal are nevertheless justified by the general
anti-avoidance rule in section 245 of the Income Tax Act. In this Court
as in the Tax Court, that issue turns on whether the series of transactions
that resulted in the Trusts becoming entitled to the treaty exemption in the
face of section 94 is a misuse or abuse of the Barbados Tax Treaty. Justice
Woods said no. I agree.
[90]
If
the residence of the Trusts is to be determined on the basis of the residence
of St. Michael Trust Corp. (which is the premise for the Crown’s argument based
on the general anti-avoidance rule), then the Trusts have not avoided section
94. On the contrary, they have fallen squarely into it. The fact that the
Trusts would also be entitled to a treaty exemption flows from the fact that in
the Barbados Tax Treaty, Canada has agreed not to tax certain capital gains
realized by a person who is a resident of Barbados. If the residence of the
Trusts is Barbados for treaty purposes, the Trusts cannot misuse or abuse the
Barbados Tax Treaty by claiming the exemption.
Conclusion
[91]
I
would dismiss the appeals on the basis that the Trusts are resident in Canada. I would award the Crown one set of costs.
“K. Sharlow”
“I
agree
M. Nadon J.A.”
“I
agree
David Stratas J.A.”