Mogan
T.C.J.
:
From
1967
until
1988,
the
Appellant
resided
in
Canada
and
was
employed
by
Imperial
Oil
Limited.
In
September
1988,
the
Appellant
moved
to
Malaysia
to
take
up
a
new
position
within
the
same
Imperial
Oil/Exxon
corporate
group.
For
the
taxation
years
1989,
1990,
1991
and
1992,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
the
Appellant
on
the
assumption
that
he
was
resident
in
Canada.
The
Appellant
has
appealed
from
those
assessments
on
the
basis
that
he
was
not
resident
in
Canada
during
those
four
years.
The
only
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
Appellant
was
resident
in
Canada
in
all
or
any
one
of
those
years.
At
the
commencement
of
the
hearing,
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
acknowledged
that
the
notice
of
assessment
under
appeal
for
1989
was
issued
after
the
limitation
period
in
subsection
152(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Accordingly,
the
Respondent
admits
that
the
appeal
for
1989
will
have
to
be
allowed
because
the
Minister
does
not
make
any
claim
with
respect
to.
gross
negligence
or
misrepresentation
concerning
that
taxation
year.
The
Appellant
was
born
in
England
in
February
1939.
He
was
educated
in
England
and
acquired
a
degree
in
mechanical
engineering
from
Cambridge
University.
During
his
education,
he
worked
summers
at
Rolls
Royce
and
apprenticed
at
the
Aero
Engines
division
of
Rolls
Royce.
During
the
years
1965
to
1967,
the
Appellant
worked
for
a
corporation
named
Foster
Wheeler
in
the
UK
designing
projects
for
the
petro
chemical
industry.
In
1962,
the
Appellant
married
and
he
and
his
wife
(Dawning)
have
three
sons
born
in
1964,
1966
and
1969.
In
1967,
the
Appellant
and
his
wife
decided
to
move
to
Canada
because
there
would
be
better
opportunities
for
their
children
and
for
himself
as
a
professional
engineer.
Prior
to
1967,
the
Appellant
had
never
been
to
Canada
but
he
found
immediate
employment
with
Imperial
Oil
at
Sarnia,
Ontario,
because
of
his
experience
in
the
UK
designing
projects
for
the
petro
chemical
industry.
This
was
the
beginning
of
a
lifelong
employment
career
between
the
Appellant
and
Imperial
Oil
or
its
parent
company,
Exxon
Corporation.
In
the
course
of
that
employment,
the
Appellant
was
moved
a
number
of
times.
The
Appellant
and
his
family
lived
at
Sarnia
for
approximately
six
years
from
1967
to
1973;
they
lived
in
Calgary
from
1973
to
1975;
and
in
Toronto
from
1975
to
1978.
In
1978,
the
Appellant
was
offered
the
position
of
assistant
manager
at
the
Strathcona
Refinery
at
Edmonton,
Alberta.
He
accepted
that
position
and
remained
in
Edmonton
for
approximately
10
years.
For
the
period
1967
to
1988,
the
Appellant
had
been
an
employee
only
of
Imperial
Oil
Limited
in
Canada.
He
gave
a
brief
description
of
the
Imperial
Oil/Exxon
organization
as
follows.
Exxon
Corporation
is
the
parent
company
located
in
the
USA.
Imperial
Oil
Limited
is
a
wholly
owned
Canadian
subsidiary
of
Exxon
Corporation
operating
all
of
the
Exxon
facilities
in
Canada.
Exxon
Corporation
International
is
another
subsidiary
of
Exxon
Corporation
operating
verything
outside
of
North
America.
In
1988,
the
Appellant
was
offered
the
position
as
deputy
manager
of
the
Exxon
refinery
at
Port
Dickson
in
Malaysia.
He
felt
some
pressure
to
accept
the
position
in
Malaysia
because
it
was
the
policy
of
Exxon
and
Imperial
Oil
to
move
senior
management
employees
about
every
five
or
six
years;
and
he
had
been
in
Edmonton
for
about
10
years.
Therefore,
he
knew
that
he
was
slated
for
a
move
because
in
1988
he
was
only
49
years
of
age
and
a
long
way
from
retirement.
He
had
thought
that
the
most
likely
places
for
a
corporate
move
would
be
to
Toronto,
Ontario
or
Fort
McMurray,
Alberta
and
neither
location
appealed
to
him.
He
therefore
accepted
the
posting
to
Malaysia
even
though
he
had
never
been
to
that
country
and
knew
that
it
was
a
commitment
for
at
least
three
years.
The
job
in
Malaysia
appealed
to
the
Appellant
because
the
manager
at
Port
Dickson
was
Slated
to
retire
in
about
three
years
and
the
Appellant
was
confident
that,
if
he
performed
well
during
those
three
years,
he
would
be
offered
the
job
as
manager
of
the
Port
Dickson
refinery.
It
had
always
been
his
ambition
to
become
the
number
one
man
in
a
significant
Exxon
refinery.
Once
the
Appellant
accepted
the
assignment
in
Malaysia,
he
and
his
wife
had
to
decide
whether
they
would
both
move
there
or
whether
he
would
go
there
and
she
would
remain
in
Edmonton.
She
was
employed
by
the
City
of
Edmonton
as
the
director
of
some
kind
of
senior
citizen’s
service
and
paid
a
salary
of
approximately
$25,000
a
year.
The
Appellant
stated
that
he
and
his
wife
were
having
some
marriage
difficulties
in
1988.
If
he
had
been
offered
only
a
move
in
Canada,
he
would
have
been
content
to
live
alone
in
an
apartment
in
a
distant
city
like
Toronto
or
Fort
McMurray
with
his
wife
remaining
in
Edmonton
because
of
the
marriage
troubles.
It
was
on
that
basis
that
he
was
content
to
go
to
Malaysia
alone.
According
to
the
Appellant,
he
and
his
wife
agreed
that
his
going
to
Malaysia
alone
might
be
the
better
course
of
action
at
least
in
the
short
term.
Once
the
decision
was
made,
the
Appellant
took
all
the
steps
one
would
expect
of
a
person
moving
to
the
other
side
of
the
world
for
three
years.
Exxon
obtained
a
work
permit
for
the
Appellant
in
Malaysia.
He
sold
his
car
in
Alberta.
His
Alberta
health
plan
was
cancelled
and
Exxon
took
out
private
health
insurance
for
him.
He
closed
out
all
of
his
accounts
at
the
Royal
Bank
and
opened
a
savings
account
at
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
because
that
bank
had
a
branch
at
Kuala
Lumpur,
the
capital
of
Malaysia.
He
allowed
his
membership
in
the
Edmonton
Petroleum
Club
to
lapse.
One
of
his
hobbies
was
flying
model
guided
planes
and
he
allowed
his
participation
in
the
Model
Guided
Plane
Association
to
lapse.
His
wife
continued
to
reside
in
the
family
home
at
29
Marlborough
Road,
Edmonton
and,
at
that
time,
their
youngest
son
was
still
living
at
home.
There
was
a
special
arrangement
made
within
the
Exxon/Imperial
Oil
organization
for
the
Appellant’s
compensation.
According
to
Exxon
policy,
the
Appellant
remained
on
the
payroll
of
Imperial
Oil
Canada.
His
new
salary
for
the
new
position
in
Malaysia
was
paid
by
Imperial
Oil
Canada
as
if
the
Appellant
were
remaining
in
Canada
as
a
regular
employee
of
Imperial
Oil.
Also,
any
extra
benefits
like
pensions
were
continued
as
part
of
his
compensation
with
Imperial
Oil.
All
of
these
employment
charges
although
paid
directly
by
Imperial
Oil
Canada
to
the
Appellant
were
crosscharged
by
Imperial
Oil
to
Exxon
Corporation
International
as
the
employer
of
the
Appellant
at
Port
Dickson
in
Malaysia.
In
accordance
with
this
arrangement,
his
salary
was
deposited
by
Imperial
Oil
into
the
Appellant’s
bank
account
in
Edmonton
subject
to
the
fact
that
he
had
a
draw
of
approximately
$5,000
per
month
which
was
paid
to
him
in
cash
in
Malaysia
to
provide
him
with
the
ordinary
costs
of
living.
The
Appellant
moved
from
Canada
to
Malaysia
in
the
last
few
days
of
September
1988.
He
stayed
at
a
hotel
in
Malaysia
for
the
first
few
weeks
and
then
moved
into
a
house
owned
by
Exxon
for
the
use
of
its
refinery
manager.
Apparently,
the
manager
of
the
Port
Dickson
refinery
at
that
time
was
a
native
of
Malaysia
and
preferred
to
live
in
his
own
house
even
though
Exxon
had
owned
this
house
for
a
long
time
and
had
acquired
it
for
the
express
purpose
of
providing
a
residence
for
its
refinery
manager.
Therefore,
the
Appellant
had
the
use
of
the
Exxon
house
immediately
even
though
at
that
time,
he
was
only
assistant
manager.
His
employer
charged
him
rent
for
the
use
of
the
house
at
the
rate
of
approximately
$1,000
per
month
which
was
charged
against
his
salary.
Exhibit
A-8
is
a
bill
of
lading
showing
the
shipment
of
the
Appellant’s
personal
effects
from
Edmonton
to
Malaysia.
This
exhibit
shows
that
he
took
what
appears
to
be
all
of
his
clothes
and
personal
effects
plus
an
airplane
kit
for
model
guided
planes
and
a
radio
control
transmitter
for
his
hobby
of
model
guided
planes.
He
stated
that
once
he
got
to
Malaysia,
he
was
so
busy
that
he
had
no
time
for
what
had
been
his
primary
hobby
in
Edmonton.
He
purchased
a
car
in
Malaysia
and
acquired
a
Malaysian
driver’s
licence,
a
copy
of
which
is
Exhibit
A-11.
He
joined
the
Port
Dickson
yacht
club
which
he
explained
was
not
really
a
yacht
club
at
all
but
mainly
a
social
club
providing
a
number
of
recreational
facilities.
Port
Dickson
is
on
the
west
coast
of
Malaysia
approximately
90
kilometres
Southwest
of
Kuala
Lumpur
on
the
Malaka
Strait.
For
the
1988
taxation
year,
the
Appellant
filed
a
Canadian
income
tax
return
on
the
basis
that
he
was
resident
in
Canada
only
from
January
to
September,
1988.
In
the
Appellant’s
own
words,
he
loved
everything
about
his
assignment
in
Malaysia.
The
Port
Dickson
refinery
was
approximately
25
years
old
and
smaller
than
the
Strathcona
refinery
in
Edmonton.
Its
capacity
in
1988
was
50,000
barrels
per
day
but
it
was
in
fact
producing
only
45,000
barrels.
Just
prior
to
the
Appellant’s
move
to
Malaysia,
Exxon
had
decided
to
modernize
the
Port
Dickson
refinery.
It
was
a
major
part
of
the
Appellant’s
responsibilities
to
supervise
the
upgrading
of
that
refinery.
When
the
Appellant
retired
in
1995,
the
capacity
of
the
Port
Dickson
refinery
was
80,000
barrels
per
day
and
it
was
refining
a
much
higher
quality
of
petroleum
product
than
when
he
arrived
there
in
1988.
When
he
was
assistant
manager
at
the
Strathcona
refinery
in
Edmonton,
he
had
few
responsibilities
outside
of
the
company
but,
in
Malaysia,
he
was
heavily
involved
in
working
with
government
authorities
at
all
levels.
He
stated
that
in
a
third
world
country
like
Malaysia,
senior
government
officials
wanted
to
be
involved
with
the
senior
management
of
large
foreign
corporations
with
substantial
operations
in
the
country.
It
was
in
this
capacity
that
he
dealt
with
senior
members
of
the
Malaysian
Government,
both
in
Port
Dickson
and
in
Kuala
Lumpur.
He
was
required
to
be
in
Kuala
Lumpur
at
least
once
a
week.
He
joined
the
petroleum
club
at
Kuala
Lumpur.
He
opened
a
bank
account
at
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
in
Kuala
Lumpur
and
also
an
account
at
the
Standard
Chartered
Bank
at
Port
Dickson.
Both
were
chequing
accounts.
Also,
he
acquired
two
Malaysian
credit
cards.
There
was
a
medical
clinic
at
Port
Dickson
with
three
family
doctors
and
the
Appellant
said
that
he
would
see
anyone
of
those
three
doctors.
Also,
he
saw
a
dentist
at
regular
intervals
in
Port
Dickson.
During
his
third
year
in
Malaysia,
he
joined
the
Port
Dickson
Golf
Club
in
1991.
In
the
period
1989
through
1992,
the
Appellant
made
only
two
14-day
visits
to
Edmonton
from
September
18
to
October
2,
1990
and
from
October
20
to
November
2,
1992.
While
in
Canada,
the
Appellant
stayed
at
the
family
home
on
Marlborough
Road
in
Edmonton.
During
the
calendar
years
1989
and
1991,
the
Appellant
did
not
come
to
Canada
at
all.
The
Appellant’s
wife
travelled
to
Malaysia
more
frequently.
Specifically,
the
Appellant’s
wife
made
eight
different
trips
to
Malaysia
during
the
years
1989
to
1992
as
indicated
in
the
table
below:
Dates
|
Number
of
Days
|
December
15,
1988
-
January
15,
1989
|
32
|
May
2,
1989
-
May
23,
1989
|
22
|
October
8,
1989
-
October
29,
1989
|
22
|
December
16,
1989
-
January
10,
1990
|
26
|
June
12,
1990
-
June
30,
1990
|
19
|
December
24,
1990
-
January
14,
1991]
|
22
|
September
4,
1991
-
September
19,
1991
|
16
|
December
15,
1991
-
January
6,
1992
|
23
|
The
Appellant’s
wife
stayed
with
the
Appellant
during
her
visits
to
Malaysia.
When
the
Appellant
visited
Canada
in
the
latter
part
of
1992,
he
thought
that
he
and
his
wife
should
either
separate
or
divorce.
In
1991,
she
had
broken
her
ankle
and
although
it
was
healing
well
the
nerve
ends
did
not
join.
Her
foot
could
not
react
well
to
heat
or
cold
and
the
warm
climate
of
Malaysia
was
easier
on
her
foot
than
the
cold
winters
in
Edmonton.
Because
of
his
wife’s
long
rehabilitation
process
from
the
breaking
of
her
ankle
in
1991,
the
Appellant
did
not
press
very
hard
with
his
proposal
that
they
should
separate
or
divorce
in
1992.
The
result
was
that
there
was
no
formal
separation
and
the
marriage
has
continued
up
to
the
present
time.
Exxon
had
a
policy
of
granting
to
each
expatriate
person
working
in
a
foreign
country
a
cash
amount
each
year
equal
to
the
full
economy
fare
from
the
place
of
foreign
posting
(Malaysia)
to
the
home
base
of
the
employee
(Edmonton).
This
amount
was
received
in
cash.
The
Appellant
hardly
ever
used
this
amount
to
fly
back
to
Canada
but
his
wife
usually
used
it
to
fly
out
to
Malaysia.
The
Appellant’s
annual
salary
was
in
the
range
of
$160,000
which
translated
into
a
monthly
amount
of
approximately
$13,000.
Although
this
salary
was
paid
by
Imperial
Oil
in
Edmonton
and
cross-charged
to
Exxon
Corporation
International
(Malaysia)
as
described
above,
there
was
no
income
tax
withheld
at
the
source
because
the
employer
knew
that
the
Appellant
was
working
full-time
outside
Canada.
Accordingly,
on
a
monthly
basis,
he
drew
about
$5,000
cash
in
Malaysia;
$3,000
was
paid
into
an
employee’s
savings
plan;
and
approximately
$5,000
went
into
his
personal
bank
account
in
Edmonton.
His
life
insurance
while
in
Malaysia
was
maintained
by
Imperial
Oil
as
part
of
his
salary
and
benefits
package
but
the
cost
of
that
insurance
was
cross-charged
to
Exxon
Corporation
International
along
with
the
gross
amount
of
his
salary
and
any
other
employee
benefits.
The
Appellant
paid
income
tax
in
Malaysia.
While
he
was
employed
in
Malaysia,
the
Appellant
retained
some
of
his
investments
in
Canada.
He
stated
that
his
wife
had
a
hobby
of
looking
at
“open
houses”
in
the
residential
real
estate
market.
In
the
fall
of
1989,
she
found
a
“show
home”
in
Edmonton
which
she
thought
would
be
a
good
real
estate
investment.
After
discussions
with
her,
they
decided
to
buy
this
together
as
an
investment.
The
transaction
was
closed
in
the
winter
of
1989/1990
and
the
Appellant’s
wife
arranged
to
rent
it
to
a
third
party.
The
only
real
estate
which
he
owned
in
Canada
was
his
one-half
ownership
with
his
wife
in
the
family
home
on
Marlborough
Road
and
in
the
show
home
which
was
purchased
in
the
winter
of
1989/1990.
He
did
not
make
any
real
estate
investments
in
Malaysia
because
he
had
the
use
of
the
employer’s
house
which
was
designated
as
a
residence
for
the
refinery
manager
and
for
which
he
paid
a
monthly
rent
of
approximately
$1,000
as
described
above.
He
maintained
his
registered
retirement
savings
plan
(RRSP)
in
Canada;
a
company
savings
plan;
and
a
few
personal
shares
which
he
held
directly
in
certain
Canadian
public
listed
companies.
He
belonged
to
the
Canadian
Society
of
Mechanical
Engineers
and
also
to
the
Association
of
Professional
Engineers
and
Geologists
of
Alberta.
He
maintained
these
memberships
even
while
living
in
Malaysia
and
he
did
not
acquire
any
similar
professional
memberships
in
Malaysia.
The
person
who
was
the
manager
of
the
Port
Dickson
refinery
in
1988
did
in
fact
retire
in
1991
and
the
Appellant
was
promoted
from
deputy
manager
to
manager.
Therefore,
his
professional
ambition
to
be
number
one
in
a
significant
refinery
was
fulfilled.
In
1990,
Exxon
came
out
with
an
early
retirement
package
available
to
its
senior
management
employees.
In
1991,
the
Appellant
signed
on
accepting
the
early
retirement
package
and
expecting
to
retire
in
the
latter
part
of
1994.
As
events
transpired,
the
Appellant
did
not
retire
until
the
summer
of
1995
at
which
time
his
employment
with
Exxon
terminated.
Upon
the
termination
of
his
employment
in
Malaysia,
the
Appellant
returned
to
Edmonton
and
took
up
residence
again
with
his
wife
in
the
family
home
at
29
Marlborough
Road.
The
Appellant
stated
that
when
he
came
back
to
Edmonton
in
mid-Sep-
tember
1995,
he
and
his
wife
both
tried
to
make
a
go
of
their
marriage.
In
late
1995,
he
started
sending
résumés
to
people
in
Malaysia
hoping
to
find
fresh
employment
there.
In
January
and
February,
1996,
the
Appellant
and
his
wife
went
to
Malaysia
with
the
idea
that
he
would
seek
fresh
employment
and
that
they
might
possibly
both
live
there.
She
came
back
to
Canada
in
February
1996
and
he
went
on
to
Thailand
to
look
for
work.
He
did
actually
have
a
job
in
Thailand
which
lasted
exactly
12
months
from
August
1996
to
July
1997,
but
when
that
job
came
to
an
end
he
came
back
to
Canada.
He
and
his
wife
are
now
working
out
some
plan
of
separation.
When
attempting
to
determine
in
law
the
residence
of
an
individual
for
income
tax
purposes,
the
leading
case
is
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Thomson
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1946]
S.C.R.
209
(S.C.C.).
In
that
decision,
Rand
J.
stated
at
pages
224-225:
For
the
purpose
of
income
tax
legislation,
it
must
be
assumed
that
every
person
has
at
all
times
a
residence.
It
is
not
necessary
to
this
that
he
should
have
a
home
or
a
particular
place
of
abode
or
even
a
shelter.
He
may
sleep
in
the
open.
It
is
important
only
to
ascertain
the
spatial
bounds
within
which
he
spends
his
life
or
to
which
his
ordinary
or
customary
living
is
related....
But
in
the
different
situations
of
so-called
“permanent
residence”,
“temporary
residence”,
“ordinary
residence”,
“principal
residence”
and
the
like,
the
adjectives
do
not
affect
the
fact
that
there
is
in
all
cases
residence;
and
that
quality
is
chiefly
a
matter
of
the
degree
to
which
a
person
in
mind
and
fact
settles
into
or
maintains
or
centralizes
his
ordinary
mode
of
living
with
its
accessories
in
social
relations,
interests
and
conveniences
at
or
in
the
place
in
question.
It
may
be
limited
in
time
from
the
outset,
or
it
may
be
indefinite,
or
so
far
as
it
is
thought
of,
unlimited.
On
the
lower
level,
the
expressions
involving
residence
should
be
distinguished,
as
I
think
they
are
in
ordinary
speech,
from
the
field
of
“stay”
or
“visit”.
Applying
the
above
principle
to
the
Appellant’s
situation
in
1989-1992,
it
is
easy
to
conclude
that
he
was
resident
in
Malaysia.
He
was
employed
there
in
a
senior
managerial
capacity
which
required
his
full-time
attendance
every
day.
He
maintained
a
dwelling
there
in
which
he
slept
on
a
regular
basis,
took
his
meals,
and
kept
his
personal
effects.
He
joined
the
local
yacht
club
which
he
described
as
primarily
a
social
and
recreational
club;
he
opened
bank
accounts
and
obtained
local
credit
cards.
He
also
purchased
a
car
and
obtained
a
Malaysian
driver’s
licence.
Although
the
Appellant
had
strong
connections
with
Canada
because
his
wife
continued
to
live
in
the
family
home
in
Edmonton,
and
he
had
three
adult
sons
living
in
Canada,
the
fact
is
that
he
did
not
come
back
to
Canada
at
all
in
1989
or
1991
and
returned
to
Canada
for
only
14
days
in
each
of
1990
and
1992.
Applying
the
specific
words
of
Rand
J.
in
Thomson
to
the
Appellant’s
situation,
I
find
that
the
Appellant
after
1988
had
settled
into
or
maintained
or
centralized
his
ordinary
mode
of
living
with
its
accessories
and
social
relations,
interests
and
conveniences
in
Malaysia.
The
Respondent
argued
that
the
common-law
test
of
residence
should
not
be
applied
to
the
Appellant
because
his
status
as
a
resident
of
Malaysia
would
have
to
be
determined
by
Malaysian
law.
If
I
were
deciding
the
Appellant’s
status
as
a
resident
of
Malaysia
for
purposes
of
Malaysian
law,
there
would
be
some
merit
to
that
proposition.
I
am
not
applying
Malaysian
law
but
only
Canadian
law
to
determine
firstly
whether
the
Appellant
was
resident
outside
Canada
in
the
relevant
years.
I
reject
the
Respondent’s
argument
that
I
cannot
apply
the
common-law
test
of
residence
as
a
first
step
to
determine
whether
the
Appellant
was
resident
outside
Canada
in
the
relevant
years
in
order
to
clear
the
way
for
a
subsequent
finding
as
to
whether
the
Appellant
in
those
same
years
may
or
may
not
have
been
resident
in
Canada.
In
the
passage
quoted
above,
Rand
J.
stated
“...it
must
be
assumed
that
every
person
has
at
all
times
a
residence”.
During
the
relevant
period,
the
Appellant
had
to
be
resident
in
Canada
or
in
Malaysia
or
perhaps
in
both
countries.
I
decided
to
determine
first
whether
he
was
resident
in
Malaysia
because,
on
the
evidence
before
me,
he
spent
almost
all
of
his
time
in
Malaysia
during
that
period.
Having
found
that
the
Appellant
was
resident
in
Malaysia,
I
am
free
to
determine
whether
he
was
resident
in
Canada
at
the
same
time.
In
R.v.
Reeder
(1975),
75
D.T.C.
5160
(Fed.
T.D.),
the
Federal
Court
Trial
Division
held
that
the
taxpayer
in
that
case
was
resident
in
Canada
in
1972
but
Mr.
Reeder’s
absence
from
Canada
in
1992
was
for
a
period
of
only
246
days
from
March
29
until
December
1,
1972.
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
relied
on
the
Reeder
decision
because
the
trial
judge,
Mahoney
J.,
made
the
following
statement
at
page
5163:
...Throughout,
his
ties
of
whatever
description
have
all
been
with
Canada,
save
only
those
ties,
undertaken
during
the
term
of
his
absence,
which
were
necessary
to
permit
him
and
his
family
to
enjoy
an
acceptable
and
expected
lifestyle
while
in
France.
That
absence
was
temporary
even
though,
strictly
speaking,
indeterminate
in
length.
The
ties
in
France
were
temporarily
undertaken
and
abandoned
on
his
return
to
Canada.
Counsel
for
the
Respondent
argued
that
this
passage
is
an
accurate
description
of
the
Appellant’s
residence
in
Canada
and
his
temporary
ties
with
Malaysia.
In
my
opinion,
the
facts
in
this
appeal
are
easily
distinguished
from
the
facts
in
Reeder.
The
primary
distinction
is
the
Appellant’s
long
absence
from
Canada.
By
December
31,
1992,
the
Appellant
had
been
absent
from
Canada
for
four
years
and
three
months
and
he
continued
to
remain
in
Malaysia
for
an
additional
two
and
one-half
years
after
December
31,
1992.
In
Griffiths
v.
R.
(1978),
78
D.T.C.
6286
(Fed.
T.D.),
a
long-time
resident
of
Canada
decided
to
retire
to
the
British
Virgin
Islands
where
he
lived
on
his
yacht
which
was
registered
in
Canada.
When
deciding
that
Mr.
Griffiths
had
ceased
to
be
resident
in
Canada,
Collier
J.
stated
at
page
6288:
I
see
nothing
incompatible
with
a
severance
of
residence,
but
the
keeping
of
investments
in
this
country.
In
Ferguson
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(1989),
89
D.T.C.
634
(T.C.C.),
the
taxpayer
went
to
Saudi
Arabia
under
a
series
of
one-year
contracts.
His
wife
remained
in
the
family
home
in
Canada
while
Mr.
Ferguson
lived
in
a
compound
in
Saudi
Arabia.
At
vacation
time,
he
would
visit
Canada
or
travel
with
his
wife
in
Europe.
Sarchuk
J.
decided
that
Mr.
Ferguson
was
resident
in
Canada
at
all
relevant
times
because
he
had
not
in
mind
or
in
fact
settled
into
or
maintained
his
ordinary
mode
of
living
with
its
social
relations,
interests
and
conveniences
in
Saudi
Arabia.
I
would
distinguish
this
appeal
from
the
Ferguson
case
because
the
Appellant
went
to
Malaysia
for
a
minimum
period
of
three
years;
he
had
significant
employment
responsibilities
there;
he
hoped
to
stay
on
after
three
years
if
he
became
manager
of
the
Port
Dickson
Refinery;
and
he
became
active
in
the
residential
community
of
Port
Dickson.
A
long
history
of
case
law
teaches
us
that
residence
is
very
different
from
domicile.
A
person
can
be
domiciled
in
a
particular
jurisdiction
without
being
physically
present
there.
In
order
to
be
resident
in
a
particular
jurisdiction,
however,
it
is
usually
necessary
to
be
present
there
at
least
part
of
the
time.
The
Appellant’s
presence
in
Canada
during
the
four
years
1989,
1990,
1991
and
1992
in
terms
of
time
was
minuscule.
In
fact,
he
was
here
for
only
14
days
in
1990
and
for
another
14
days
in
1992.
He
was
not
here
at
all
in
1989
or
1991.
If
as
Rand
J.
observed
in
Thomson,
the
word
residence
is
to
be
distinguished
from
“stay”
or
“visit”,
I
should
think
that
the
time
which
the
Appellant
spent
in
Canada
in
1990
and
1992
is
more
accurately
characterized
as
a
visit
to
Canada
in
each
of
those
years.
I
find
that
the
Appellant
was
not
resident
in
Canada
in
the
years
1989
to
1992.
If
I
should
be
wrong
in
my
conclusion
that
the
Appellant
was
not
resident
in
Canada
during
the
relevant
years,
and
if
he
should
be
resident
in
both
Canada
and
Malaysia,
his
residence
would
then
be
determined
under
the
so-called
“tie-breaker
rules”
of
the
Canada-Malaysia
Income
Tax
Agreement,
1980.
Paragraph
2
of
that
agreement
provides
as
follows:
2.
Where
by
reason
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
1
an
individual
is
a
resident
of
both
Contracting
States,
then
his
status
shall
be
determined
as
follows:
(a)
he
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
resident
of
the
Contracting
State
in
which
he
has
a
permanent
home
available
to
him.
If
he
has
a
permanent
home
available
to
him
in
both
Contracting
States,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
resident
of
the
Contracting
State
with
which
his
personal
and
economic
relations
are
closest
(hereinafter
referred
to
as
his
“centre
of
vital
interests”);
(b)
if
the
Contracting
State
in
which
he
has
his
centre
of
vital
interests
cannot
be
determined,
or
if
he
has
not
a
permanent
home
available
to
him
in
either
Contracting
State,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
resident
of
the
Contracting
State
in
which
he
has
an
habitual
abode;
(c)
if
he
has
an
habitual
abode
in
both
Contracting
States
or
in
neither
of
them,
he
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
resident
of
the
Contracting
State
of
which
he
is
a
national;
(d)
if
he
is
a
national
of
both
Contracting
States
or
of
neither
of
them,
the
competent
authorities
of
the
Contracting
States
shall
settle
the
question
by
mutual
agreement.
Applying
paragraph
2(a)
of
the
tie-breaker
rules,
I
conclude
that
the
Appellant
had
a
permanent
home
available
to
him
both
in
Canada
and
Malaysia
because
he
had
the
family
dwelling
on
Marlborough
Road
in
Edmonton,
and
he
had
the
refinery
manager’s
residence
in
Port
Dickson.
This
would
bring
me
to
the
second
half
of
the
tie-breaker
rule
in
paragraph
2(a)
in
which
he
is
deemed
to
be
resident
in
the
contracting
state
“with
which
his
personal
and
economic
relations
are
closest”.
On
the
facts
of
this
case,
I
find
that
the
Appellant’s
personal
relations
are
closer
to
Malaysia
than
to
Canada.
His
personal
life
was
centred
in
Malaysia.
He
belonged
to
social
clubs
there
and
had
dropped
all
his
affiliation
with
social
clubs
in
Canada.
His
wife
came
to
Malaysia
for
Christmas
in
each
of
the
years
1988,
1989,
1990
and
1991.
In
most
of
those
years,
she
was
accompanied
by
one
or
two
of
their
sons.
Although
his
wife
and
three
adult
sons
remained
in
Canada,
they
were
not
a
big
enough
personal
magnet
to
draw
him
to
Canada
because
he
came
back
to
this
country
only
twice,
in
1990
and
1992
respectively,
for
short
periods
already
described
above.
How
can
I
ignore
the
fact
that
the
Appellant
spent
more
than
300
days
each
year
in
Malaysia?
The
Appellant’s
economic
relations
are
closer
to
Malaysia
than
Canada
because
he
reported
for
work
there
every
day;
he
was
paid
only
for
the
services
he
performed
in
Malaysia;
he
was
the
deputy
manager
(and
after
1991
the
manager)
of
a
substantial
oil
refinery
in
Malaysia;
and
his
lifelong
career
with
Exxon/Imperial
Oil
depended
upon
his
performance
as
a
senior
manager
of
that
refinery.
Therefore,
as
stated
above,
if
I
should
be
wrong
in
my
conclusion
that
the
Appellant
was
not
resident
in
Canada
in
1990-91-92,
then
I
have
no
hesitation
in
finding
that
the
Appellant’s
personal
and
economic
relations
are
closer
to
Malaysia
than
to
Canada
under
the
tie-breaker
rules
in
paragraph
2(a)
of
the
Canada-Malaysia
Income
Tax
Agreement,
1980.
Having
regard
to
the
pattern
of
the
Appellant’s
life
from
and
after
October
1,
1988,
I
find
that
the
Appellant
was
resident
in
Malaysia
throughout
the
four
years
under
appeal,
1989
to
1992,
and
that
he
was
not
resident
in
Canada
in
any
one
of
those
years.
For
the
above
reasons,
the
appeals
are
allowed,
with
costs.
Appeal
allowed.