The
Chairman:—The
appeal
of
Mr
William
H
C
Milner
is
from
an
assessment
with
respect
to
the
1977
taxation
year.
In
filing
his
income
tax
return
for
1977,
the
appellant
reported
investment
income
from
a
foreign
source
in
the
amount
of
$7,392.54.
By
letter
dated
April
27,
1978,
however,
the
appellant
requested
a
postponement
of
tax
attributable
to
the
said
investment
income
from
foreign
source,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
161(6)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63
as
amended.
In
assessing
the
appellant,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assumed
that
the
investment
income
of
$7,392.54
was
paid
or
credited
to
the
appellant’s
account
with
the
Canadian
Bank
of
Commerce
Trust
Company
(Caribbean)
Limited
(Caribbean
Bank)
and
considered
that
the
appellant
could
have
dealt
with
his
Caribbean
income
as
he
wished,
with
the
exception
of
transferring
it
to
Canada.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
in
the
discretion
given
him
under
subsection
161(6)
of
the
Act,
did
not
grant
the
postponement
of
tax
attributable
to
the
appellant’s
said
income
on
the
ground
that
the
payment
of
the
tax
on
the
appellant’s
Caribbean
income
would
not
impose
extreme
hardship
on
him.
In
his
notice
of
objection,
his
notice
of
appeal
and
at
the
hearing,
the
appellant
presented
two
issues
to
the
Board:
1.
whether
income
from
a
foreign
source
which
cannot
be
transferred
to
Canada
and
over
which
the
appellant
allegedly
has
no
control,
owing
to
the
foreign
country’s
“blocked
currency”
legislation,
should
be
included
in
computing
the
appellant’s
Canadian
income
tax
for
1977;
2.
whether
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
was
justified
in
not
granting
a
postponement
of
tax
on
income
from
a
foreign
source
which
was
not
received
in
Canada.
Summary
of
Facts
The
appellant,
an
insurance
agent,
was
born
in
Kingston,
Jamaica.
In
1973,
he
moved
to
Vancouver,
BC
and
became
a
resident
of
Canada.
At
that
time,
it
is
my
understanding
that
the
appellant
was
allowed
to
bring
to
Canada
some
$10,000
in
Jamaican
currency
but
the
rest
of
the
appellant’s
funds,
amounting
to
$115,000
to
$120,000,
remained
in
Jamaica.
In
the
1977
taxation
year,
the
appellant
reported
investment
income
in
the
amount
of
$7,392.54
arising
from
his
Jamaican
funds.
The
Government
of
Jamaica,
after
publishing
pertinent
guidelines
in
1975
(Exhibits
A-1
and
A-3),
amended
its
exchange
control
regulations
in
January
of
1977,
thereby
prohibiting
capital
or
income
remittances
to
emigrants
from
Jamaica.
The
regulations
provided
that
all
assets
in
Jamaica
were
to
be
held
in
a
blocked
account
by
a
local
authorized
depository
which,
for
the
appellant,
was
The
Canadian
Bank
of
Commerce
Trust
Company
(Caribbean)
Limited
(Caribbean
Bank)
(Exhibit
A-1,
Clause
7).
The
appellant’s
situation
is
set
out
in
a
letter
from
the
Manager
of
the
Caribbean
Bank,
dated
March
11,
1980
which
reads
as
follows:
The
Canadian
Bank
of
Commerce
Trust
Company
(Caribbean)
Limited
121
Harbour
Street
P.O.
Box
43
Kingston,
Jamaica,
West
Indies
Cable
Address:
“Canbanktrust”
our
ref:
ImMcC/pp
11th
March,
1980
Mr
W
H
C
Milner,
6771
Williams
Road,
Richmond,
British
Columbia,
Canada
V7E
1K6
Dear
Mr
Milner,
Re:
Canadian
Income
Tax
As
you
are
aware,
the
local
exchange
control
regulations
were
amended
in
January
1977
(all
foreign-trading
having
earlier
been
suspended
in
December
1976),
prohibiting
all
remittances,
whether
capital
or
income,
to
emigrants
from
Jamaica.
The
regulations
provide
for
all
assets
or
other
funds
in
Jamaica
to
be
held
on
a
blocked
account
by
a
local
authorised
depository
(eg
Commercial
Bank,
Trust
Company,
or
Attorneys-at-Law),
with
transactions,
whether
local
or
foreign,
only
permitted
with
exchange
control
approval.
As
a
special
exception,
an
account
holder
is
allowed
an
amount
not
exceeding
$1,000
for
expenditure
in
Jamaica
in
any
calendar
year
without
the
requirement
of
prior
approval
from
the
Bank
of
Jamaica.
In
general
terms,
however,
the
account
holder
is
unable
to
dispose
of
or
otherwise
deal
with
his
assets
or
funds
without
approval
from
the
Bank
of
Jamaica.
Yours
faithfully,
(Signed)
I
McCulloch,
Manager.
In
considering
the
issue,
there
is
no
dispute
as
to
the
facts
that
the
appellant
is
a
resident
of
Canada,
that
he
is
the
legal
owner
of
substantial
funds
in
Jamaica
which
generate
investment
income
and
which
are
administered
by
the
appellant’s
agent,
Mr
I
McCulloch,
the
manager
of
the
Canadian
Bank
of
Commerce
Trust
Company
(Caribbean)
Limited
where
the
funds
are
deposited
(see
letter
dated
August
29,
1979,
attached
to
notice
of
appeal)
and
that
neither
the
appellant’s
Jamaican
capital
nor
investment
income
can
be
transferred
to
him
in
Canada
because
of
the
exchange
control
regulations.
The
existence
of
exchange
control
regulations
in
Jamaica,
although
they
may
prohibit
the
transfer
of
moneys
out
of
the
country,
cannot,
in
my
opinion,
change
the
nature
of
the
moneys
earned
by
the
appellant
from
his
investments
there.
On
the
basis
of
all
the
facts,
the
amounts
earned
by
the
appellant
in
Jamaica
in
1977
can
only
be
income
to
the
appellant
and
taxable,
pursuant
to
sections
3
and
9
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
The
appellant
cited
in
support
of
his
submissions
the
decision
in
Arichan-
dra
M
Coomaraswamy
v
MNR,
[1979]
CTC
2407;
79
DTC
355.
The
evidence
was
and
my
learned
colleague,
Mr
D
E
Taylor,
in
his
decision,
took
considerable
pains
to
point
out
that
the
appellant
in
that
case
“does
not
have
and
cannot
have
any
access
(on
the
amounts
of
money
which
the
Minister
sought
to
impose)
unless
and
until
he
should
re-establish
himself
as
a
resident
of
Sri
Lanka”.
At
2410
and
358
respectively,
Mr
Taylor
states:
Were
the
appellant
in
this
matter
able
to
spend
the
funds
for
improvements,
even
maintenance,
on
the
rental
property,
invest
it,
use
it
to
support
his
relatives,
or
even
I
suppose
just
give
it
away,
all
in
Sri
Lanka,
but
could
not
transfer
it
to
Canada,
it
would
be
difficult
to
hold
that
the
funds
in
question
did
not
represent
income,
and
the
Minister’s
discretion
might
be
in
order.
In
the
instant
appeal,
the
appellant
had
access
to
his
investment
income
and
had
the
right
to
transact
these
amounts
at
will
which
he,
in
fact,
exercised
regularly
through
his
agent,
Mr
I
McCulloch.
That
there
may
have
been
frustrations
and
delays
in
obtaining
necessary
exchange
control
approval
for
certain
transactions,
as
suggested
in
Mr
McCulloch’s
letter
of
August
29,
1979,
does
not
in
any
way
abrogate
the
appellant’s
legal
right
to
carry
out
whatever
transactions
he
may
wish
with
his
funds,
except
to
transfer
them
out
of
the
country.
I
conclude
therefore
that
the
amount
of
$7,392.54
was
investment
income
to
the
appellant
from
foreign
sources
and
taxable,
pursuant
to
sections
3
and
9
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
As
to
the
appellant’s
second
point,
the
Tax
Review
Board’s
jurisdiction
by
statute
is
to
hear
and
adjudicate
appeals
arising
from
the
Minister’s
assessment
of
income
tax
but
does
not
include
the
payment
or
the
collection
of
taxes
found
to
be
payable
by
the
taxpayer.
The
power
given
to
the
Minister
of
postponing
the
payment
of
taxes
under
the
conditions
set
out
in
subsection
161(6)
of
the
Act
is
discretionary
and
his
decision
in
this
matter
is
administrative
and
not
subject
to
revision
by
this
Board.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
must
be
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.