Jupson,
J.:—The
appellant,
a
corporation
incorporated
by
special
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada,
owns
and
operates
a
crude
oil
pipe
line
running
from
Redwater,
Alberta,
to
a
point
on
the
international
boundary
south
of
Winnipeg,
and
from
a
point
on
the
international
boundary
near
Sarnia
to
a
point
near
the
City
of
Toronto.
The
connecting
link
is
in
the
United
States
and
is
owned
and
operated
by
Lakehead
Pipe
Line
Company
Inc.,
a
wholly
owned
subsidiary
company
of
the
appellant
incorporated
in
the
State
of
Delaware
and
having
its
main
office
in
Superior,
Wisconsin.
The
appellant
has
no
office
or
place
of
business
or
permanent
establishment
in
the
United
States
and
carries
on
no
business
there.
For
the
purpose
of
construction
of
the
pipe
line
the
appellant
raised
all
the
capital,
the
greater
part
of
which
was
borrowed
from
the
public
who
purchased
bonds
and
debentures.
Lake-
head,
the
United
States
subsidiary,
did
no
independent
financing.
It
borrowed
from
Interprovincial
and
this
Company
took
from
its
subsidiary
interest-bearing
demand
notes
and
bonds.
Interprovincial
also
made
certain
investments
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
pending
the
need
of
these
funds
for
construction
purposes.
Consequently,
in
the
years
1950
to
1954
inclusive,
Interprovincial
received
substantial
payments
of
interest
in
the
United
States
from
its
subsidiary
and
the
Treasury
bills.
It
paid
on
this
interest
a
15
per
cent
withholding
tax
to
the
United
States
and
the
sole
question
in
the
litigation
is
whether
it
is
entitled
under
Section
38(1)
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
to
a
tax
credit
for
this
withholding
tax
for
the
years
1950
to
1952,
and
under
Section
41(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
for
the
years
1953
and
1954.
The
Minister
ruled
that
Interprovincial
was
not
so
entitled.
This
ruling
was
affirmed
on
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
and
Interprovincial
now
appeals
to
this
Court.
There
is
no
difference
in
the
wording
of
the
section
for
these
two
periods
which
can
affect
these
reasons.
The
United
States
tax
credit
was
disallowed
because
the
Minister
ruled
that
Interprovincial
had
no
profit
from
the
receipts
of
interest
from
United
States
sources,
having
paid
interest
on
its
own
borrowings
to
an
amount
equal
to
or
in
excess
of
these
receipts
and
these
interest
payments
having
been
recognized
as
deductible
expenses.
The
right
to
a
tax
credit
was
therefore
made
to
depend
upon
the
existence
of
a
profit
after
setting
off
one
item
against
the
other
and
the
basis
for
the
decision
was
the
interpretation
of
Section
4
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act,
which
provides
as
follows:
“4.
Subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
this
Part,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.”
The
reasoning
is
that
Section
4
compels
one
to
read
the
word
“income”
as
meaning
“profit”
in
Section
38(1)
of
the
Act.
This
is
indicated
very
clearly
in
the
following
paragraph
from
the
reasons
of
the
learned
trial
judge:
By
Section
4
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
however,
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
declared,
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I,
to
be
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year
and,
since
the
source
of
the
interest
in
question
on
which
tax
was
paid
to
the
United
States
was
clearly
either
a
business
or
property
and
no
other
provision
of
Part
I
declares
that
interest
earnings
are
to
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
income
or
taxed
on
any
other
basis,
it
follows,
in
my
opinion,
that
what
is
to
be
regarded
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
the
income
from
such
business
or
property
is
not
the
gross
amount
of
such
interest
for
each
year
but
the
profit
from
such
property
or
business
for
the
year.
If
there
is
no
profit
from
a
business
or
property
for
any
year,
there
is
no
income
therefrom
for
that
year.
Section
38(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
can
thus
afford
a
tax
credit
only
in
a
year
in
which
the
appellant
had
a
profit
for
the
year
from
the
business
or
property
in
the
United
States
from
which
the
interest
in
question
flowed.”
In
my
respectful
opinion,
there
is
error
here
in
stating
that
“‘no
other
provision
of
Part
I
declares
that
interest
earnings
are
to
be
brought
into
the
computation
of
income
or
taxed
on
any
other
basis’’
for
such
a
finding
ignores
the
imperative
provisions
of
Section
6(b)
of
the
Act.
In
my
opinion
it
is
the
payment
of
the
withholding
tax
of
15
per
cent
in
the
United
States
on
this
interest
receipt—not
profit—an
interest
receipt
which
the
taxpayer
is
required
to
bring
into
the
computation
of
income
by
Section
6(b),
which
gives
the
right
to
the
foreign
tax
deduction
under
Section
38(1).
It
is
unnecessary
to
set
out
in
full
the
provisions
of
Section
38(1).
This
section
gives
the
right
to
a
deduction
from
tax
of
the
lesser
of
two
amounts,
namely,
the
foreign
tax
or
an
amount
calculated
according
to
the
formula
in
subparagraph
(b).
There
is
no
question
here
that
the
15
per
cent
withholding
tax
in
the
United
States
is
the
lesser
of
these
two
amounts
and,
consequently,
I
omit
the
complicated
alternative
provisions
and
confine
my
consideration
to
the
meaning
to
be
given
to
the
first
alternative.
Section
38(1),
so
limited,
reads:
4
38.
(1)
A
taxpayer
who
was
a
resident
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
may
deduct
from
the
tax
for
the
year
otherwise
payable
under
this
Part
an
amount
equal
to
the
lesser
of
(a)
the
tax
paid
by
him
to
the
government
of
a
country
other
than
Canada
on
his
income
from
sources
therein
for
the
year.”
The
appellant
is
a
Canadian
company.
It
did
pay
a
19
per
cent
withholding
tax
to
the
United
States
on
income
from
sources
therein.
To
deprive
the
appellant
of
the
right
to
the
tax
deduction
it
is
necessary
to
substitute
for
‘‘on
his
income
from
sources
therein’’
the
words
‘‘on
his
profits
from
sources
therein’’
and
I
do
not
think
that
Section
4
affords
the
statutory
basis
for
such
a
substitution.
First,
Section
4
is
expressly
made
subject
to
the
other
provisions
of
Part
I
of
the
Act.
One
of
these,
affecting
the
matter,
is
Section
6(b),
which
provides:
“6.
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
(b)
amounts
received
in
the
year
or
receivable
in
the
year
(depending
upon
the
method
regularly
followed
by
the
taxpayer
in
computing
his
profit)
as
interest
or
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of
interest;’’
Section
6(b)
imperatively
requires
that
the
whole
of
the
interest
from
United
States
sources
must
be
brought
into
account
in
the
computation
of
income
and
on
the
other
side
of
the
account
there
is
a
deduction
that
must
be
allowed
under
Section
11(1)
(c)
for
interest
on
‘‘borrowed
money
used
for
the
purpose
of
earning
income
from
a
business
or
property’’.
This,
in
fact,
is
what
has
actually
happened.
The
full
interest
receipt
has
been
brought
into
account
and
the
full
interest
payment
has
been
claimed
and
allowed
as
a
deduction
without
allocation,
but,
for
the
purpose
of
denying
the
appellant
the
right
to
the
tax
credit
under
Section
38(1),
a
subsidiary
calculation
has
been
made
within
this
framework
for
the
purpose
of
showing
that
when
the
allocable
expense
is
set
against
the
United
States
interest
receipt,
there
is
no
profit
on
this
branch
of
the
appellant’s
activity
and,
consequently,
no
right
to
a
tax
credit.
I
can
see
no
basis
for
any
allocation
of
the
appellant’s
borrowings
to
its
investment
in
its
subsidiary
for
the
purpose
of
producing
this
result
under
Section
38(1).
The
appellant’s
borrowings
and
the
interest
paid
thereon
were
related
to
the
business
as
a
whole
and
no
part
of
the
borrowings
and
the
interest
paid
thereon
can
be
segregated
and
attributed
to
the
investment
in
the
subsidiary.
The
interest
paid
by
the
appellant
to
its
own
bondholders
was,
under
Section
11(1)
(c),
a
deduction
given
to
the
appellant
for
the
purpose
of
computing
its
income
from
all
sources.
Sections
3
and
4
of
the
Act
do
not
require
a
separate
computation
of
income
from
each
source
for
the
taxpayer
is
subject
to
tax
on
income
from
all
sources.
The
deduction
against
income
given
by
Section
11(1)
(c)
is
attributable
to
all
sources
of
income
and
there
is
no
authority
to
break
it
up
and
relate
various
parts
of
the
deduction
to
various
sources.
For
this
reason
I
do
not
regard
the
interest
paid
and
claimed
and
allowed
as
a
deduction,
as
being
related
to
the
source
of
the
United
States
interest
receipt
in
this
case,
and
consequently
Section
127(1)
(av)
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act,
now
Section
139(1)
(az)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
does
not,
in
my
opinion,
authorize
the
allocation
which
the
Minister
has
made
in
this
ease.
Returning
then
to
Section
38(1),
my
conclusion
is
that
the
appellant
has
paid
a
tax
on
income
to
the
United
States
from
sources
therein
and
that
its
right
to
the
foreign
tax
deduction
cannot
be
destroyed
by
this
unauthorized
and
artificial
attribution
of
an
offsetting
expense
which
tends
to
shoy
that
there
has
been
no
profit
from
the
source.
So
far
I
have
considered
the
source
of
this
income
to
be
property—an
investment
by
the
appellant
in
a
subsidiary
company.
I
think
that
this
is
the
correct
view
of
the
matter
and
I
turn
now
to
a
consideration
of
the
finding
of
the
learned
trial
Judge,
which,
with
respect,
I
also
consider
to
be
erroneous,
that
the
appellant
had
only
one
source
of
income
and
that
from
the
business
of
operating
the
Interprovincial
Pipe
Line.
This
finding
is
expressed
in
the
following
paragraph
:
“The
portion
of
the
Appellant’s
income-producing
process
which
I
think
can
be
regarded
as
carried
on
in
the
United
States
consisted
of
the
holding
of
its
investments
in
Lakehead
and
in
United
States
Treasury
bills
and
the
controlling
of
Lakehead
.
.
.
It
is
not
easy
to
envisage
a
division
of
the
Appellant’s
business
on
such
lines,
but
it
is
clear
that
the
revenues
from
the
Appellant’s
investments
in
Lakehead
and
in
United
States
Treasury
bonds
accrued
to
the
Appellant
in
the
United
States,
and
taking
the
holding
of
these
investments
as
the
portion
of
the
business
carried
on
there
and
the
revenue
from
them
as
the
revenue
from
that
portion
of
the
business,
one
has
a
starting
point
for
the
necessary
computation.??
The
fact
is
that
the
appellant
carried
on
no
business
in
the
United
States.
Had
it
done
so
it
would
have
been
taxed
there
not
on
the
basis
of
a
withholding
tax
of
15
per
cent
on
interest
received
from
sources
in
the
United
States
(Art.
XI
(1)
of
the
Convention)
but
in
respect
of
its
industrial
and
commercial
profits
attributable
to
its
activity
in
the
United
States
and
determined
in
accordance
with
Art.
I
of
the
Convention.
Industrial
and
commercial
profits
do
not
include
interest.
The
business
carried
on
in
the
United
States
was
that
of
Lakehead
and
not
the
appellant,
and
the
fact
that
Lakehead
was
wholly
controlled
by
the
appellant
does
not
make
it
the
appellant’s
business.
The
appellant
is,
therefore,
in
this
anomalous
position.
According
to
the
United
States
view
it
does
not
carry
on
business
and
must
pay
a
withholding
tax
of
15
per
cent
on
interest.
According
to
the
judgment
under
appeal
it
does
carry
on
business
in
the
United
States,
this
business
being
the
controlling
of
Lakehead
and
the
holding
of
investments.
There
are
no
disputed
facts
in
this
case
and
it
is,
in
my
respectful
opinion,
error
to
hold
that
the
activities
of
the
appellant
constitute
the
carrying
on
of
a
business
in
the
United
States
and
to
use
this
finding
as
the
basis
for
an
allocation
of
expense
and
a
refusal
of
the
foreign
tax
deduction
under
Section
38(1).
I
have
no
doubt
that
the
15
per
cent
withholding
tax
was
properly
payable
under
the
laws
of
the
United
States
and
Art.
XI
(1)
of
the
Canada-U.S.
Reciprocal
Tax
Convention
in
respect
of
income
derived
from
sources
in
the
United
States
and
that
this
withholding
tax
is
a
tax
on
income
not
profits.
Article
XI
(1)
reads
as
follows:
(1)
The
rate
of
income
tax
imposed
by
one
of
the
contracting
States,
in
respect
of
Income
derived
from
sources
therein,
upon
individuals
residing
in,
or
corporations
organized
under
the
laws
of,
the
other
contracting
State,
and
not
having
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
former
State,
shall
not
exceed
fifteen
per
cent
for
each
taxable
year.”
Nevertheless,
the
judgment
holds
that
the
appellant’s
income
from
United
States
sources
is
nil
notwithstanding
the
obvious
fact
of
these
large
interest
receipts.
These
are
not
industrial
and
commercial
profits
and,
as
such,
allocable
in
accordance
with
Art.
I
of
the
Convention.
Indeed,
by
Art.
II,
interest
is
expressly
excluded
from
industrial
and
commercial
profits
and
is
left
to
be
dealt
with
on
an
income,
not
a
profits’
basis
by
Art.
XI(1)
above
quoted.
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
the
denial
of
this
foreign
tax
deduction
is
not
only
contrary
to
Section
38(1)
of
the
Act
but
also
offends
Art.
XV
(1)
of
the
Convention,
which
reads:
“
(1)
As
far
as
may
be
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
The
Income
Tax
Act,
Canada
agrees
to
allow
as
a
deduction
from
the
Dominion
income
and
excess
profits
taxes
on
any
income
which
was
derived
from
sources
within
the
United
States
of
America
and
was
there
taxed,
the
appropriate
amount
of
such
taxes
paid
to
the
United
States
of
America.’’
This
interest
receipt
has
been
subject
to
double
taxation
and
the
appropriate
foreign
tax
deduction
has
not
been
allowed.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs
both
here
and
below
and
set
aside
the
re-assessments
complained
of
for
the
years
1950
to
1954
inclusive.
Locke,
J.:—On
the
argument
of
this
appeal
it
was
admitted
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
that
the
moneys
used
for
the
purchase
of
the
bonds
of
its
wholly
owned
subsidiary
Lakehead
Pipe
Line
Company
Inc.
and
the
United
States
Treasury
bills
were
derived
from
the
sale
of
its
own
debentures
in
Canada,
the
interest
upon
which
was
allowed
as
a
business
expense
for
the
taxation
years
in
question
under
the
provisions
of
Section
11(1)
(c)
of
The
1948
Income
Tax
Act
(ec.
52)
and
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
(R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148).
There
remains
accordingly
no
disputed
question
of
fact.
The
question
of
law
is
as
to
the
proper
interpretation
of
Section
127(1)
(av)
of
the
Act
of
1948,
re-enacted
verbatim
as
Section
139(1)
(az)
in
c.
148.
The
undertaking
of
the
appellant
company
as
originally
contemplated
was
the
construction
of
a
pipe
line
for
carriage
of
Canadian
oil
from
various
points
in
the
Provinces
of
Alberta
and
Saskatchewan
to
the
Port
of
Superior,
Wisconsin,
on
Lake
Superior,
from
which
point
it
was
contemplated
that
the
oil
would
be
transported
by
tanker
to
Sarnia
or
other
Canadian
ports.
To
accomplish
this
it
was
necessary
that,
for
a
considerable
distance,
the
line
should
pass
through
the
States
of
Minnesota
and
Wisconsin.
Due,
apparently,
to
the
alien
land
laws
of
these
states,
it
was
not
possible
for
the
appellant
to
acquire
in
its
own
name
the
necessary
rights-of-way
and
properties
in
the
United
States,
and
it
was
for
this
reason
that
it
caused
to
be
incorporated
the
Lakehead
Company,
all
of
the
shares
of
which
at
all
relevant
times
have
been
owned
and
controlled
by
it.
The
Lakehead
Company
has
its
head
office
at
Superior,
Wisconsin,
and,
by
reason
of
its
shareholdings,
its
operations
have
at
all
times
been
subject
to
the
control
and
direction
of
the
appellant:
The
line
was
completed
in
Canada
from
the
Redwater
field
in
Alberta
to
the
American
border
at
Gretna,
Man.
and
continued
from
that
point
through
the
states
mentioned
to
Superior.
At
a
later
date,
for
reasons
explained
in
the
evidence
of
the
witness
Waldon,
the
line
was
extended
from
Superior
to
Sarnia
and
Canadian
oil
has
since
that
time
passed
through
the
line
owned
by
the
Lakehead
Company
to
Sarnia
in
bond.
Paragraph
(av)
of
Section
127(1)
of
the
Act
of
1948,
so
far
as
it
is
necessary
to
consider
it,
read:
‘fa
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business,
employment,
property
or
other
source
of
income
or
from
sources
in
a
particular
place
means
the
taxpayer’s
income
computed
in
accordance
with
this
Act
on
the
assumption
that
he
had
during
the
taxation
year
no
income
except
from
that
source
or
those
sources
of
income
and
was
entitled
to
no
deductions
except
those
related
to
that
source
or
those
sources.’’
and
the
terms
of
paragraph
(az)
of
Section
139(1)
of
c.
148
are
identical.
No
similar
provision
appeared
in
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
(e.
97,
R.S.C.
1927
as
amended).
We
have
not
been
referred
to
any
decided
case
and
I
have
not
been
able
to
discover
any
in
which
this
language
has
been
interpreted
by
the
courts.
The
section
of
which
this
paragraph
forms
part
appears
under
the
sub-heading
‘‘Interpretation’’
in
both
statutes
and
defines
various
terms
that
are
used
in
the
Act.
Section
3
of
both
statutes,
under
the
sub-heading
“Computation
of
Income,
General
Rules’’,
declares
that
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
the
purposes
of
Part
I
of
the
Act
is
his
income
for
the
year
from
all
sources
inside
or
outside
Canada
from,
inter
alia,
all
businesses
and
property.
Section
6
of
both
Acts
provides
that
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year
amounts
received
as
interest
or
on
account
of
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of
or
in
satisfaction
of
interest.
Paragraphs
(av)
of
Section
127(1)
and
(az)
of
Section
139(1)
were
intended,
in
my
opinion,
to
prevent
a
taxpayer
who
might
be
engaged
in
two
separate
businesses
not
related
to
each
other
by
reason
of
their
nature
from
taking
into
account
losses
or
expenses
incurred
in
one
in
computing
the
taxable
income
of
the
other.
By
way
of
illustration,
if
a
person
engages
in
business
as
a
hardware
merchant
in
a
country
town
and,
at
the
same
time,
engages
in
farming
or
ranching,
losses
sustained
or
expenditures
incurred
in
operations
of
the
latter
nature
may
not
be
taken
into
account
in
computing
the
taxable
income
from
the
hardware
business,
and
vice-versa.
The
reason
is
that
these
opérations
are
not
related
one
to
the
other
in
the
sense
intended.
The
taxpayer’s
income
from
the
hardware
business
‘is
to
be
reckoned
as
if
he
had
during
the
taxation
year
no
income
except
from
that
source,
according
to
the
subsection.
If,
on
the
other
hand,
the
merchant’s
business
was
that
of
the
sale
of
produce
and
he
should
operate
a
truck
farm
for
the
purposes
of
obtaining
supplies
for
his
business,
presumably
these
businesses
would
be
considered
to
be
related,
within
the
meaning
of
the
subsection.
As
thus
interpreted,
I
consider
that
the
subsection
has
no
application
to
the
matters
under
consideration
in
this
appeal.
The
learned
trial
judge
has
found
that
the
appellant
had
only
one
business
which
was
of
the
nature
above
stated.
He
has
also
found
that
part
of
the
appellant’s
business
was
carried
on
in
the
United
States
by
reason
of
its
ownership
and
control
of
the
Lakehead
Company
and
the
probability
that
it
carried
moneys
on
deposit
in
the
State
of
Wisconsin,
and
otherwise
engaged
in
business
activities
incidental
to
its
receipt
of
income
from
its
subsidiary.
With
respect,
I
disagree
with
this
finding
but
I
think
it
is
an
irrelevant
consideration
in
determining
the
question
to
be
decided.
The
finding
that
the
appellant
had
but
one
business
is,
in
my
view,
fatal
to
the
contention
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
Minister.
I
find
no
authority
in
either
Act
for
splitting
up
the
income
of
the
business
of
a
taxpayer
into
parts
or
segments
for
the
purpose
of
applying
the
clear
provisions
of
Section
11(1)
(c),
as
has
been
done
in
the
present
case.
In
computing
the
taxable
income,
the
appellant
company,
of
necessity,
brought
into
its
accounts
the
full
amount
of
the
interest
paid
to
it
upon
the
securities
of
its
subsidiary
and
the
United
States
Treasury
notes.
The
allowance
permitted
by
subsection
(l)(a)
of
Section
38
of
the
1948
Act
and
subsection
(l)(a)
of
Section
41
of
c.
148
(which,
while
slightly
amplified,
is
indistinguishable
in
meaning)
is
a
deduction
from
the
tax
payable
for
the
year
in
question.
Accordingly,
as
the
accounts
show,
the
full
amount
received
in
the
United
States
was
entered
as
a
receipt
in
the
appellant’s
accounts
and
the
15%
tax,
which
admittedly
was
properly
levied
by
the
Government
of
the
United
States
and
paid
by
the
appellant
in
that
country,
was
deducted
from
the
tax
otherwise
payable.
The
judgment
appealed
from
has
interpreted
the
word
‘‘income””
in
these
subsections
as
if
it
read
“profit”
and,
admittedly,
if
that
interpretation
is
correct,
no
profit
resulted
to
the
appellant
from
the
receipt
of
these
moneys,
since
the
annual
cost
to
it
of
the
funds
used
in
the
purchase
of
the
securities
exceeded
the
amounts
paid
in
the
United
States.
_[
ean
find
no
support
for
this
interpretation
either
in
Section
4
or
elsewhere
in
either
Act.
The
word
“income”
is
used
rather
loosely
in
both
of
these
statutes.
The
attempt
to
define
“income”
made
in
Section
3(1)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
was
not
repeated
in
either.
Thus,
in
Section
3
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
is
stated
to
include
all
income,
meaning
all
receipts
from,
inter
alia,
all
businesses
and
property.
In
Section
4,
however,
income
from
a
business
is
said
to
be
the
profit
therefrom
for
the
year,
in
this
sense
meaning
the
taxable
income.
The
deductions
allowed
are
not
deductions
from
income
in
the
sense
that
that
expression
is
used
in
Section
3
but
from
the
tax
payable
in
Canada
after
all
of
the
receipts
from
the
business
have
been
brought
into
account,
as
required.
The
interest
payable
by
the
subsidiary
was
a
receipt
classified
as
income
by
Section
3,
necessarily
brought
into
account
by
reason
of
subsection
(b)
of
Section
6.
The
income
of
the
business
in
question
to
be
determined
in
order
to
ascertain
what
is
taxable
is
the
entire
income
of
the
appellant
and
not
that
income
split
up
into
parts
according
to
the
situs
of
the
source
of
that
income.
It
is
income
in
the
sense
of
Section
3
that
is
referred
to
in
Section
127(1)
(av)
and
in
Section
139(1)
(az),
in
my
opinion.
For
these
reasons,
I
would
allow
this
appeal
with
costs
throughout.
It
is
common
ground
that
the
15%
withholding
tax
was
properly
payable
under
the
laws
of
the
United
States
and,
in
view
of
my
conclusion,
based
upon
what
I
consider
to
be
the
proper
interpretation
to
be
placed
upon
these
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
I
express
no
view
as
to
the
bearing
or
the
effect
of
the
Reciprocal
Tax
Convention
made
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
upon
the
matters
in
dispute.
Appeal
allowed.