JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
assessments
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
1965
and
1966
taxation
years,
in
which
the
question
is
whether
the
respondent
erred
in
assessing
the
appellant,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Ontario,
on
the
basis
that
it
had
a
taxable
income
for
those
years
by
reason
of
profits
that
it
made
on
a
purchase
of
shares
in
Gortdrum
Mines
Limited
and
the
resale
of
those
shares
partly
in
the
1965
taxation
year
and
partly
in
the
1966
taxation
year.
There
is
no
dispute
as
to
whether
the
appellant
made
the
profits
in
question
or
as
to
the
amounts
thereof.
The
first
problem
to
be
solved
is
whether,
looking
only
at
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
profits
in
question
are
subject
to
tax.
To
resolve
this
problem,
the
following
questions
must
be
answered:
(a)
Were
the
profits
in
question
profits
from
a
“business”
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
used
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
the
respondent
contends,
or
were
they
profits
from
realization
of
an
investment
of
a
capital
nature,
as
the
appellant
contends,
and
(b)
Is
the
appellant
subject
to
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
respect
of
the
two
years
in
question,
either
(i)
because
the
appellant
was
resident
in
Canada
in
those
years
so
as
to
have
been
taxable
under
Part
I
by
virtue
of
Section
2(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
the
respondent
contends,
and
the
appellant
disputes,
or
(ii)
because
the
appellant
‘‘carried
on
business,in
Canada”
in
those
years
so
as
to
be
taxable
under
Part
I
by
virtue
of
Section
2(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
the
respondent
contends
and
the
appellant
disputes.
If
the
answers
to
these
questions
are
such
that
the
assessments
could
be
supported
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
if
that
Act
were
the
only
law
involved,
the
further
problem
will
have
to
be
solved
as
to
whether
the
profits
in
question
are
‘‘not
subject
to
Canadian
tax’’
by
virtue
of
paragraph
1
of
Article
III
of
the
agreement
between
Canada
and
Ireland
that
is
set
out
in
the
Schedule
to
the
Canada-Ireland
Income
Tax
Agreement
Act,
1955
(S.C.
1955,
ce.
10)
read
with
the
provisions
of
that
statute.
I
turn
first
to
the
question
whether
the
profits
in
question
were
profits
from
a
“business”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
139
(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads:
(e)
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
If
they
were
profits
from
a
‘‘business’’
then
they
are,
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
part
of
the
appellant’s
“income”,
for
the
respective
years
in
which
they
were
made,
by
virtue
of
Section
3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads:
3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
During
the
years
in
question,
the
appellant’s
sole
business
was
that
of
exploring
for
minerals
in
Southern
Ireland
and
it
had
raised
capital
on
the
Canadian
market
for
this
purpose,
some
of
which
in
1964
had
not
yet
been
put
to
work
in
that
business.
The
profits
in
question
were
made
by
the
appellant
by
using
some
of
that
capital
to
acquire
shares
in
a
company
(Gortdrum)
that
had
just
been
incorporated
to
develop
an
Irish
mining
property
adjoining
its
own
mining
properties*
and
by
selling
such
shares
at
a
profit.
During
the
argument,
two
facts
stood
out
in
my
view,
on
the
evidence,
viz.:
(a)
because
the
appellant
and
Gortdrum
had
interlocking
directorates,
the
appellant
was
in
a
position
to
know
that
the
shares
that
it
was.
purchasing
were
a
good
speculation,
and
(b)
the
money
used:
was
money
that
the
appellant,
had
acquired
for
use
in
its
mining
business
and
it
could
not
have
intended
to
retain
the
shares
for
more
than
a
very
short.
time.
When
questioned
by.
the
Court
about
the
latter
fact,
counsel
for
the
appellant
did
not
press
his
submission
that
the
purchase
was
an
investment
of
a
capital
nature
and
not
‘‘a
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade’’.
Having
regard
to
the
view
that
I
had
tentatively
formed
that,
on
the
facts,
the
profits
were
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
within
the
sense
of
that
phrase
as
established
by
a
long
line
of
decisions
and
the
fact
that
counsel
for
the
appellant
did
not
press
his
argument
to
the
contrary,
I
informed
counsel
for
the
respondent
that
I
did
not
require
argument
from
them
on
that
question.*
Unfortunately,
I
did
not
have
in
mind,
in
connection
with
the
facts
of
this
case,
until
I
camé
to
prepare
these
reasons
for
judgment,
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Irrigation
Industries
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1962]
S.CR.
346;
[1962]
C.T.C.
215.
The
distinction,
if
there
be
one,
between
the
facts
of
this
case
and
the
facts
of
the
Irrigation
Industries
case,
in
so
far
as
the
question
of
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
is
concerned,
is
not
obvious.
Unless,
therefore,
I
am
shown
some
valid
reasons
why
I
am
not
bound
to
follow
that
decision,
I
must
hold
that
there
is
no
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
here.
On
the
other
hand,
having
told
counsel
for
the
respondent
that.
they
‘were
not
required
to
address
the
Court
on
that
question,
I
cannot
decide
the
question
against
the
respondent
without
re-opening
the
argument
for
the
purpose
of
giving;
‘them
an
opportunity
of
showing
why
this
Court
is
not
bound
to
apply.
the
Irrigation
Industries
decision
(supra)
to
the
facts
of
this
case.
However,
as
will
hereafter
appear,
the
outcome
of
the
appeal
will
be
the
same
no
matter
how
I
decide
the
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
question.
It
is
unnecessary,
therefore,
for
me
to
put
the
parties
to
the
expense
of
a
second
argument.
My
discussion
of
the
questions
remaining
to
be
decided
will
proceed
on
the
basis
that
I
have
decided
that
there
was
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade,
but
it
must
be
understood
that
I
am
making
no
finding
on
that
point.
The
next
two
questions
are
raised
by
Section
2
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
provision
by
which
the
income
tax
described
by
Part
I
of
the
Act
is
imposed
or,
in
other
words,
the
charging
section.
Section
2.
reads
as
follow
:
2.
(1)
An
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter.
required
upon
the
taxable
income
for
each
taxation
year
of
every
person
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year.
(2)
Where
a
person
who
is
not.
taxable
under
subsection
(1)
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
was
employed
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year,
or
(b)
carried
on
business
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year,
an
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
his
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
the
year
determined
in
accordance
with
Division
D.
(3)
The
taxable
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
is
his
income
for
the
year
minus
the
deductions
permitted
by
Division
C.
Obviously,
unless
the.
appellant
falls
under
subsection
(1)
or
subsection
(2)
of
Section
2
for
the
taxation
years
in
question,
it
is
not
subject
to
income
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
does
not
have
to
rely
on
any
special
exemption
by
virtue
of
the
agreement
between:
Canada
and
Ireland.
With
reference
to
Section
2(1),
I
find
as
a.
fact
that,
during
the
taxation
years
in
question,
“the
central
management
‘and
control’’
of
the
appellant
was
in
Ireland
and
was
not
in
Canada.
The
general
manager
and
other
active
officers
of
the
company
were
resident
in
Ireland
and
had
their
offices
there.
The
directors
and
corporate
officers
of
the
company
lived
there
or
in
Northern
Ireland.
Ireland
was
the
seat
of
the
actual
management
and
control
and
I
cannot
distinguish
the
case
in
principle
from
the
decision
in
The
King
v.
British
Columbia
Electric
Railway
Company,
Limited,
[1945]
Ex.
C.R.
82,
per
Thorson,
P.
at
86
et
seq.-,
[1945]
C.T.C.
162,
that
the
defendant
there
was
resident
in
Canada,
which
decision
is
reinforced
by
the
views
expressed
in
the
Judicial
Committee
in
the
same
case
([1946]
A.C.
221,
per
Viscount
Simon
at
537-38;
[1946]
C.T.C.
224).
It
is
true
that
the
appellant
in
this
case
had
some
business
affairs
in
Canada,
and,
to
that
extent,
the
facts
in
this
case
differ
from
the
facts
in
the
British
Columbia
Electric
case.
The
material
fact
is,
however,
the
same,
in
my
view.
Notwithstanding
that,
in
consequence
of
its
Ontario
incorporation,
it
had
a
‘head
office’’
in
Toronto
together
with
corporate
books,
etc.,
and
held
certain
corporate
meetings.
there,
notwithstanding
that,
through
an
arrangement
with
an
associated
company,
it
received
and
made
payments
in
Canada
and
had
a
bank
account
in
Canada,
notwithstanding
that
its
directors
and
officers
came
to
Canada
on
occasion
on
the
business
of
the
appellant
and
of
other
companies
in
which
they
were
interested,
notwithstanding
that
it
raised
its
capital
in
Canada
and
used
the
services
of
a
Canadian
solicitor
and
Canadian
auditors,
and
notwithstanding
that
it
embarked
on
certain
business
adventures
in
Canada,
the
evidence
in
my
view
establishes
that
the
‘‘central
management
and
control’’
of
the
appellant
was
in
Ireland
and
was
neither
in
Canada
nor
divided
between
Canada
and
Ireland.*
T‘ue
final
question,
in
so
far
as
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
concerned,
is
whether
the
appellant
‘‘carried
on
business’’
in
Canada
in
the
taxation
years
in
question
so
as
to
be
taxable
by
virtue
of
Section
2(2)
of
that
Act.
To
appreciate
the
problem
that
is
raised,
Section
2(2)
should
be
read
with
Section
3
and
Section
31(1)
in
the
light
of
Section
139(1)(e).
Those
provisions
read
as
follows
:
2.
(2)
Where
a
person
who
is
not
taxable
under
subsection
(1)
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
was
employed
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year,
or
(b)
carried
on
business
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year,
an
income
tax
shall
be
paid
as
hereinafter
required
upon
his
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
the
year
determined
in
accordance
with
Division
D.
3.
The
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
and,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
includes
income
for
the
year
from
all
(a)
businesses,
(b)
property,
and
(c)
offices
and
employments.
31.
(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
a
non-resident
person’s
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
a
taxation
year
is
(a)
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
duties
performed
by
him
in
Canada
and
all
businesses
carried
on
by
him
in
Canada,
minus
(b)
the
aggregate
of
such
of
the
deductions
from
income
permitted
for
determining
taxable
income
as
may
reasonably
be
considered
wholly
applicable
and
of
such
part
of
any
other
of
the
said
deductions
as
may
reasonably
be
considered
applicable.
139.
(1)
In
this
Act,
(e)
“business”
includes
a
profession,
calling,
trade,
manufacture
or
undertaking
of
any
kind
whatsoever
and
includes
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
but
does
not
include
an
office
or
employment;
For
the
purpose
of
this
discussion,
I
assume
that
the
purchase
and
sale
of
Gortdrum
shares
was
an
‘‘adventure
.
.
.
in
the
nature
of
trade’’
so
as
to
be
a
‘‘business’’
within
the
meaning
established
by
Section
139(1)
(e).
It
follows
that
profits
therefrom
must
be
included,
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
in
computing
the
appellant’s
‘‘income’’,
for
each
of
the
years
in
which
such
profits
were
made.
For
the
purpose
of
the
question
that
arises
concerning
Section
2(2),
I
make
two
further
findings
of
fact,
namely
:
1.
The
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
from
which
the
profits
in
question
arose
took
place
in
Canada.
The
shares
were
bought
in
Canada
by
a
broker
acting
for
the
appellant
and
were
sold
in
Canada
by
a
broker
acting
for
the
appellant.
This,
in
my
opinion,
establishes
that
the
‘‘adventure’’
was
in
Canada
even
though
the
appellant
was
a
corporation
resident
outside
Canada.
(In
my
opinion,
the
fact
that
the
officer
of
the
appellant
who
communicated
the
appellant’s
instructions
to
the
broker
came
to
Canada
to
do
so
is
irrelevant.
)
2.
Thé
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
by
which
the
appellant
made
the
profits
in
question
did
not
in
itself
constitute
‘‘carrying
on
business
in
Canada’’,
within
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
words
‘‘carrying
on
business’’
and
was
not
‘a
part
of
a
larger
activity
that
falls
within
those
words.
It
was
an
isolated
transaction
and
it
was
not
a
part
of
the
“business”
for
which
the
appellant
had
raised
its
capital
or
that
it
was
actually
carrying
on.*
On
these
facts,
the
question
arises
as
to
whether
Section
139(1)
(e)
operates,
not
only
to
enlarge
the
definition
of
income
in
Section
3
to
include
profits
from
certain
adventures,
but
also
to
enlarge
the
‘concept
of
“carrying
on
business”
in
the
charging
section
to
make
non-residents
subject
to
Canadian
income
tax
when
they
have
not
actually
been
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
but
have
had
only
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
consisting
of
an
isolated
purchase
and
sale
transaction
that
was
carried
out
in
Canada
through
brokers.
As
far
as
I
can
recall,
the
statutory
definition
of
‘business
that
operates
to
make
it
include
an
“
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade”
has
heretofore
been
used
freely
to
expand
the
profits
in
respect
of
which
a
person
resident
in
Canada
‘is
taxable
but.
has
never
heretofore
been
used
to
apply
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
non-resident
persons
who
do
not,
in
fact,
carry
on
business
in
Canada.
In
so
far
as
it
is
used
for
the
purpose
of
expanding
the
profits
in
respect
of
which
residents
of
Canada
are
taxable,
it
does
no
more
than
that
which
its
predecessor
statute,
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
did.
See
Section
9(1)
(a)
and
(d)
and
9(2)*
which
taxed
persons
residing
or
resident
in
Canada
or
carrying
on
business
in
‘Canada
on
“income”,
which
was
defined
by
Section
3(1)f
to
mean
the
“annual
net
profit
or
gain’’
from
specified
sources.such
as
a
‘‘business’’
and
to
include
inter
alia
“the
annual
profit
or
gain
from
any
other
source’
While
there
was
‘no
special
reference
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
to
an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
and
there
was
no
statutory
definition
in
the
Act
of
the
word
‘‘business’’
to
the
same
effect
as
Section
139(1)
(e),
nevertheless
a
profit
from.an
adventure
or
concern
in
the
nature
of
trade
was
treated
as
‘‘a
profit
or
gain
from
any
other
source’’
within
those
words
in
Section
3
so
that
a
Canadian
resident
was
taxed
in
respect
of
such
profits.
It
follows
that
if,
by
virtue
of
Section
139(1)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
a
non-resident
person
who
has
made
a
profit
from
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
in
Canada
is
to
be
deemed
to
have
carried
on
business
in
Canada”
for
the
purpose
of
the
charging
provision
in
Section
2(2)
of
that
Act,
that
statutory
definition
will
have
gone
beyond
making
explicit
the
scope
of
the
income”
in
respect
of
which
residents
were
taxable
under
the
old
law
and
will
have
brought
within
the
charging
provisions
of
the
new
law
a
group
of
non-resident
persons
who
were
not
previously
subject
to
Canadian
income
tax
law.
Nevertheless,
if,
properly
understood,
the
statute
has
the
effect
of
casting
its
net
over
a
group
of
non-resident
persons
who
would
not
have
been
subject
to
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
effect
must
be
given
to
it.
Having
revealed
the
possibly
irrelevant
background
against
which
I
see
the
matter,
I
turn
to
the
problem
of
statutory
interpretation
involved,
which
is.
Whether
Section
2(2)
can
be
read
as.
requiring
an
income
tax
to
be
paid,
not
only
upon
the
taxable
income
of
a
non-resident
person
who
actually
‘
carried
on
business
in
Canada”
in
a
taxation
year,
but
also
on
the
taxable
income
of
a
non-resident
person
who
carried
on’’
an
“adventure
.
.
.
in
the
nature
of
trade’’
in
Canada
in
a
taxation
year.
In
other
words,
does
Section
139(1)
(e)
permit
the
substitution
of
the
words
‘‘adventure
.
.
.
in
the
nature
of
trade’’
for
the
word
business”
in
Section
2(2)
as
well
as
in
Section
3?
In
considering
this
question,
it
is
worthy
of
note
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
contain
a
provision
that
provides
that,
where
a
non-resident
person
does
certain
things
in
Canada,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
carrying
on
business
in
Canada”.
See
Section
139(7)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
139.
(7)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
a
non-resident
person
(a)
produced,
grew,
mined,
created,
manufactured,
fabricated,
improved,
packed,
preserved
or
constructed,
in
whole
or
in
part,
anything
in
Canada
whether
or
not
he
exported
that
thing
without
selling
it
prior
to
exportation,
or
(b)
solicited
orders
or
offered
anything
for
sale
in
Canada
through
an
agent
or
servant
whether
the
contract
or
transaction
was
to
be
completed
inside
or
outside
Canada
or
partly
in
and
partly
outside
Canada,
he
shall
be
deemed,
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
to
have
been
carrying
on
business
in
Canada
in
the
year.
It
has
never
been
suggested
to
my
knowledge
that
an
isolated
purchase
and
sale
falls
within
this
subsection.
With
great
doubt
as
to
the
correctness
of
my
conclusion,
I
am
of
opinion
that
Section
139(1)
(e)
does
not
operate
to
make
a
non-resident
person
subject
to
Canadian
income
tax
in
respect
of
a
profit
from
an
adventure
that
otherwise
does
not
amount
to,
and
is
not
part
of,
a
“business”.
With
considerable
hesitation,
I
have
concluded
that
the
better
view
is
that
the
words
“carried
on’’
are
not
words
that
can
aptly
be
used
with
the
word
‘‘adventure’’.
To
carry
on
something
involves
continuity
of
time
or
operations
such
as
is
involved
in
the
ordinary
sense
of
a
“business”.
An
adventure
is
an
isolated
happening.
One
has
an
adventure
as
opposed
to
carrying
on
a
business.
My
conclusion
is,
therefore,
that
the
appeal
succeeds
on
the
ground
that
the
appellant
does
not
fall
within
the
charging
section
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Inasmuch
as
I
have
reached
my
conclusion
concerning
the
proper
interpretation
of
Section
2(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
with
considerable
doubt,
I
deem
it
proper
that
I
should
also
reach
a
conclusion
as
to
the
effect
of
the
Canada-Ireland
Income
Tax
Agreement
Act,
1955
in
the
circumstances
of
this
appeal
on
the
assumption
that
the
appellant
is
subject
to
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
respect
of
the
profits
in
question.
The
appellant’s
claim
for
exemption
under
the
Canada-Ireland
Income
Tax
Agreement
Act,
1955
is
based
on
Article
III
of
the
Canada-Ireland
Agreement
set
out
in
the
Schedule
to
that
statute,
which
article
operates
to
cut
down
the
operation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
by
virtue
of
Section
3
of
the
1955
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
3.
In
the
event
of
any
inconsistency
between
the
provisions
of
this
Act,
or
the
Agreement,
and
the
operation
of
any
other
law,
the
provisions
of
this
Act
and
the
Agreement
prevail
to
the
extent
of
the
inconsistency.
Paragraph
1
of
Article
III
of
the
Agreement,
upon
which
the
appellant
relies,
reads
as
follows:
1.
The
industrial
or
commercial
profits
of
an
Irish
enterprise
shall
not
be
subject
to
Canadian
tax
unless
the
enterprise
is
engaged
in
trade
or
business
in
Canada
through
a
permanent
establishment
situated
therein.
If
it
is
so
engaged,
tax
may
be
imposed
on
those
profits
by
Canada,
but
only
on
so
much
of
them
as
is
attributable
to
that
permanent
establishment.
The
expression
“Irish
enterprise”
in
Article
III
has
a
meaning
that
must
be
found
by
referring
to
Article
II,
paragraph
1(g),
Which
reads,
in
part:
(g)
The
terms
“Irish
enterprise”
and
“Canadian
enterprise”
mean
respectively
an
industrial
or
commercial
enterprise
or
undertaking
carried
on
by
a
resident
of
Ireland,
and
an
industrial
or
commercial
enterprise
or
undertaking
carried
on
by
a
resident
of
Canada;
.
.
.
and
to
Article
II,
paragraph
1(e),
which
reads,
in
part:
(e)
The
terms
“resident
of
Ireland”
and
“resident
of
Canada”
mean
respectively
any
person
who
is
resident
in
Ireland
for
the
purposes
of
Irish
tax
and
not
resident
in
Canada
for
the
purposes
of
Canadian
tax
and
any
person
who
is
resident
in
Canada
for
the
purposes
of
Canadian
tax
and
not.
resident
in
Ireland
for
the
purposes
of
Irish
tax;
a
company
shall
be
regarded
as
resident
in
Ireland
if
its
business
is
managed
and
controlled
in
Ireland
and
as
resident
in
Canada
if
its
business
is
managed
and
controlled
in
Canada.
A
problem
of
interpretation
arises.
in
applying
paragraphs
(e)
and
(g)
of
Article
II
to
determine
what
the
first
sentence
of
paragraph
1
of
Article
III
means
in
relation
to
a
“company”.
The
following
steps
are
involve
:
(a)
by
virtue
of
the
second
part
of
paragraph
(e),
a
“company”
is
resident
in
Ireland
“if
its
business
is
managed
and
controlled:in
Ireland’’
and
is
resident
in
Canada
‘‘if
its
business
is
managed
and
controlled
in
Canada’’;
and,
as
a
matter
of
deduction,
it
is
not
resident
in
one
of
those
countries
if
its
business
1S
not
managed
and
controlled
:
n
such
country
:
7
(b)
applying
step
#a
to
the
first
part
of
paragraph
(e),
a
“company”
is
a
“resident
of
Ireland”
if
its
business
is
managed
and
controlled
in
Ireland
and
is
not
managed
and
controlled
in
Canada
;
(e)
applying
step
#b
to
paragraph
(g).
the
term
‘‘Irish
enterprise”,
Where
a
company
is
concerned,
means
“an
industrial
or
commercial
enterprise
or
undertaking’’
carried
on
by
a
company
whose
business
is
managed
or
controlled
in
Ireland
and
is
not
managed
or
controlled
in
Canada;
;
(d)
applying
step
#c
to
the
first
sentence
of
paragraph
1
of
Article
III,
we
find
that
the
rule
laid
down
thereby
is,
in
effect,
in
so
far
as
it
is
applicable
to
the
facts
of
this
appeal,
as
follows:
The
.
.
.
commercial
profits
of
a
commercial
enterprise
or
undertaking
carried
on
by
a
company
whose
business
is
managed
or
controlled
in
Ireland
and
is
not
managed
or
controlled
in
Canada
shall
not
be
subject
to
Canadian
tax
unless
the
enterprise
or
undertaking
is
engaged
in
business
in
Canada
through
a
permanent
establishment
situated
therein.
The
first
question
to
be
decided
to
solve
the
question
whether
the
appellant
has
a
defence
by
virtue
of
the
Canada-Ireland
Agreement
is
whether
the
words
prior
to
the
unless”
clause
are
applicable
to
the
facts
as
they
have
been
placed
before
the
Court.
If,
as
I
assume
for
the
purposes
of
this
part
of
my
judgment,
the
words
carry
on’’
an
adventure
in
the
nature
of
trade
are
apt
to
include
the
appellant’s
share
transactions
in
Canada,
it
follows
that
the
words
in
Article
III,
“commercial
enterprise
or
undertaking
carried
on”
by
a
company
are
apt
to
include
those
transactions.
The
respondent
does
not
challenge
this.
What
the
respondent
says
with
reference
to
the
words
in
Article
III
prior
to
the
word
‘‘unless’’
is
that,
if
the
appellant
was
resident
in
Ireland
at
the
relevant
time,
it
was
also
resident
in
Canada,
and,
therefore,
was
not
a
“resident
of
Ireland”
within
paragraph
(e)
of
Article
II.
I
agree
that
that
result
would
follow
if
I
found
the
facts
to
be
as
the
respondent
contends,
but
I
do
not
so
find
the
facts.
For
the
reasons
already
given
in
connection
with
Section
2(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
find
that
the
appellant’
s
business
was,
at
the
relevant
time,
managed
and
controlled
in
Ireland
and
was
not
managed
and
controlled
in
Canada.
It
follows
that
the
profits
in
question
are
not
subject
to
Canadian
tax
unless,
applying
the
words
of
paragraph
1
of
Article
III
commencing
with
the
word
‘‘unless’’,
the
‘‘enterprise
or
undertaking”
carried
on
by
the
appellant
is
engaged
in
trade
or
business
in
Canada
through
a
‘‘permanent
establishment”
situated
in
Canada
and
the
profits
in
question
are
‘‘attributable
to
that
permanent
establishment’’.
The
respondent
contends
that
the
words
of
paragraph
1
of
Article
III
beginning
with
“unless’
’
apply
to
the
profits
in
question.
The
expression
‘‘permanent
establishment’’
in
Article
III
has
a
meaning
that
must
be
found
by
referring
to
Article
II,
paragraph
1(h),
which
reads:
(h)
The
term
“permanent
establishment”
when
used
with
respect
to
an
enterprise
of
one
of
the
territories,
means
a
branch
or
other
fixed
place
of
business,
but
does
not
include
an
agency
unless
the
agent
has,
and
habitually
exercises,
a
general
authority
to
negotiate
and
conclude
contracts
on
behalf
of
the
enterprise
or
has
a
stock
of
merchandise
from
which
he
regularly
fills
orders
on
its
behalf.
In
this
connection—
(i)
An
enterprise
of
one
of
the
territories
shall
not
be
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
other
territory
merely
because
it
carries
on
business
dealings
in
that
other
territory
through
a
bona
fide
broker
or
general
commission
agent
acting
in
the
ordinary
course
of
his
business
as
such;
(ii)
The
fact
that
an
enterprise
of
one
of
the
territories
maintains
in
the
other
territory
a
fixed
place
of
business
exclusively
for
the
purchase
of.
goods
or
merchandise
shall
not
of
itself
constitute
that
fixed
place
of
business
a
permanent
establishment
of
the
enterprise;
(iii)
The
fact
that
a
company
which
is
a
resident
of
one
of
the
territories
has
a
subsidiary
company
which
is
a
resident
of
the
other
territory
or
which
carries
on
a
trade
or
business
in
that
other
territory
(whether
through
a
permanent
establishment
or
otherwise)
shall
not
of
itself
constitute
that
subsidiary
company
a
permanent
establishment
of
its
parent
company.*
I
find
as
a
fact
that
the
appellant
had
a
“permanent”
arrangement
with
a
related
company
for
the
use
of
space
and
employees
of
the
related
company
in
Ontario
to
meet
the
requirements
of
the
Ontario
company
laws
and
had
a
bank
account
in
Toronto
which
was
used
to
receive
and
make
payments
in
Canada
through
services
provided
by
the
related
company.
In
one
sense,
the
appellant
was
engaged
“
in
.
.
.
business
in
Canada
’
’
through
this
arrangement.
It
was
complying
with
the
statutory
requirements
for
its
continued
existence
as
a
corporation.
It
certainly
was
collecting
and
paying
money
received
from
share
issues
and
related
to
adventures.
It
might
even
have
been
using
this
arrangement
to
raise
money
on
the
Toronto
market,
although
I
do
not
think
that
this
has
been
established.
I
am
not
satisfied,
however,
that
the
appellant
was
‘‘engaged
in
trade
or
business
in
Canada
through
a
permanent
establishment
situated
therein”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
paragraph
1
of
Article
III.
I
am
of
the
view
that
those
words
refer
to
an
‘‘establishment’’
in
Canada
where
there
are
persons
with
authority
to
carry
on
some
part
of
the
taxpayer’s
money-making
activities.
In
any
event,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
profits
in
question
here
are
not
‘‘attributable’’
to
the
‘‘permanent’’
arrangement
that
the
appellant
had
in
Canada.
Those
profits
arose
from
a
purchase
and
sales
that
were
made
as
a
result
of
decisions
taken
by
persons
whose
permanent
situs
was
in
Ireland
where
they
embodied
the
management
and
control
of
the
appellant
and
those
persons
did
not
become
part
of
the
‘‘permanent’’
arrangement
in
Canada
merely
because
some
of
them
were
in
Canada
when
some
of
the
decisions
were
made
and
the
brokers
were
instructed.
For
the
above
reasons,
the
appeal
will
be
allowed
with
costs
and
the
assessments
appealed
from
will
be
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
profits
in
question
are
not
subject
to
tax
under
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.