Dubé,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
of
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
confirming
an
assessment
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
which
included
in
the
plaintiff’s
income
for
his
1973
taxation
year
the
sum
of
$77,812.50.
The
basic
issue
to
be
resolved
here
is
whether
a
resident
in
the
United
States
can
be
taxed
in
Canada
with
respect
to
a
stock
option
issued
to
him
while
he
was
employed
in
Canada,
but
not
exercised
until
he
returned
to
the
United
States.
Both
parties
filed
a
statement
of
agreed
facts
identical
to
the
one
placed
before
the
Tax
Review
Board.
The
relevant
facts
are
as
follows:
The
plaintiff
is
an
American
citizen
who
worked
and
resided
in
Canada
from
September
1965
to
March
31,
1971
after
which
date
he
returned
to
the
United
States.
On
October
4,
1967,
by
way
of
an
agreement,
his
employer
The
British
American
Oil
Company
Limited
(“the
Company’’),
a
Canadian
corporation,
gave
him
an
option
to
buy
2,
500
shares
in
the
company
at
$37
/s
per
share.
On
April
1,
1971
he
returned
to
the
United
States
to
work
with
Gulf
Oil
Corporation,
an
“affiliated
company’’
of
his
former
employer.
On
September
26,
1973
he
validly
exercised
his
option
and
purchased
5,000
common
shares
(the
shares
were
split
in
the
interim)
at
a
cost
of
$18.69
per
share.
The
amount
by
which
the
value
on
that
date
of
the
shares
exceeded
the
amount
paid
was
of
$77,812.50.
The
Minister
included
all
of
that
amount
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
his
1971
taxation
year.
The
appellant
reported
only
a
portion
of
that
sum,
or
$43,606.13,
which
he
computed
by
apportioning
the
total
amount
of
$77,812.50
according
to
the
number
of
days
in
which
he
was
employed
in
Canada
over
the
total
number
of
days
between
the
date
when
he
received
the
option
and
the
date
when
he
exercised
it.
He
worked
out
the
calculation
as
follows:
Calculation
of
taxable
portion
of
stock
option
benefit
|
Date
option
granted
|
|
October
4,1967
|
|
Date
option
exercised
|
|
Sept
26,1973
|
|
Date
ceased
to
be
resident
in
Canada
and
returned
to
US
|
April
1,
1971
|
|
Days
between
grant
and
exercise
dates:
|
|
|
Spent
in
Canada
|
1224
|
56.04
|
|
|
Spent
in
US*
|
960
|
43.96
|
|
|
2184
|
100.00
|
|
|
Taxable
portion
of
stock
option
benefit:
|
|
|
.5604
x
77,812.50
=
$43,606.13
|
|
includes
51
days
spent
in
US
on
business
between
October
4,
1967
and
April
1,
1971.
The
option
agreement
carried
these
stipulations:
The
option
is
exercisable
only
after
one
year’s
continuous
employment
with
the
Company,
or
an
affiliated
company.
It
is
exercisable
within
ten
years,
not
thereafter.
In
the
case
of
retirement
it
becomes
exercisable
within
six
months,
not
later.
In
case
of
death
the
option
is
exercisable
within
twelve
months.
In
the
case
of
termination
for
other
reasons,
within
three
months.
Should
the
capital
stock
of
the
Company
be
subdivided
into
a
greater
number
of
shares,
the
optionee
is
entitled
to
purchase
a
proportionately
increased
number
of
shares.
Learned
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
advances
two
alternative
arguments:
Firstly,
there
is
no
provision
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
deems
that
the
plaintiff
performed
any
duties
of
an
office
or
employment
in
Canada
during
his
1973
taxation
year.
Secondly,
if
there
was
a
benefit
received
by
the
plaintiff
by
virtue
of
paragraph
7(1)(a)
of
the
Act,
then
such
benefit
was
of
a
capital
nature
and
therefore
exempt
by
virtue
of
Article
VIII
of
the
Canada-
US
Tax
Convention.
He
contends
that
the
basis
of
taxation
in
Canada
is
comprised
of
two
factors:
residency,
or
activities
carried
on
by
non-residents
within
Canada.
The
plaintiff
being
a
non-resident,
the
charging
provision
would
be
subsection
2(3),
which
reads:
(3)
Where
a
person
who
is
not
taxable
under
subsection
(1)
for
a
taxation
year
(a)
was
employed
in
Canada,
(b)
carried
on
a
business
in
Canada,
or
(c)
disposed
of
a
taxable
Canadian
property,
at
any
time
in
the
year
or
a
previous
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.
He
argues
that
taxing
statutes
must
be
strictly
construed
and
that
tax
is
exigible
only
if
the
words
clearly
indicate
a
change
of
tax
to
the
plaintiff.
For
the
plaintiff
to
be
subject
to
Canadian
tax
in
his
1973
taxation
year
he
must
have
been
employed
in
Canada,
or
deemed
to
have
been
employed
in
Canada,
and
his
taxable
income
must
be
determined
in
accordance
with
Division
D.
Division
D,
titled
“Taxable
Income
Earned
in
Canada
by
Non-
Residents’’
contains
only
the
two
sections
115
and
116.
The
latter
section
is
not
relevant
as
it
deals
with
the
disposition
by
non-residents
of
certain
property.
The
relevant
clause,
subparagraph
115(1)(a)(i)
stipulates
that
a
nonresident’s
taxable
income
is
the
amount
of
his
“incomes
from
the
duties
of
offices
and
employments
performed
by
him
in
Canada’’.
It
reads:
115.(1)
For
the
purposes
of
this
Act,
a
non-resident
person’s
taxable
income
earned
in
Canada
for
a
taxation
year
is
the
amount
of
his
income
for
the
year
that
would
be
determined
under
section
3
if
(a)
he
had
no
income
other
than
(i)
incomes
from
the
duties
of
offices
and
employments
performed
by
him
in
Canada
The
plaintiff
is
not
caught
by
the
provisions
of
that
sub-paragraph
as
he
performed
no
duties
of
offices
and
employments
in
Canada
during
the
1973
taxation
year.
During
that
year
he
worked
in
the
United
States.
The
plaintiff,
however,
concedes
that
under
paragraph
7(1
)(a)
an
employer
who
has
acquired
shares
under
such
an
agreement,
as
his
option,
shall
be
deemed
to
have
received
a
benefit
by
virtue
of
his
employment,
but
he
argues
that
the
paragraph
only
applies
to
the
employee
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
acquired
the
shares.
The
plaintiff
points
out
that
in
1973
he
performed
no
duties
in
Canada.
The
subparagraph
reads:
7.(1)
Where
a
corporation
has
agreed
to
sell
or
issue
shares
of
the
capital
stock
of
the
corporation
or
of
a
corporation
with
which
it
does
not
deal
at
arm’s
length
to
an
employee
of
the
corporation
or
of
a
corporation
with
which
it
does
not
deal
at
arm’s
length,
(a)
if
the
employee
has
acquired
shares
under
the
agreement,
a
benefit
equal
to
the
amount
by
which
the
value
of
the
shares
at
the
time
he
acquired
them
exceeds
the
amount
paid
or
to
be
paid
to
the
corporation
therefor
by
him
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
the
employee
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
acquired
the
shares
He
therefore
concludes
that
Parliament
did
not
specify
that
a
taxpayer
in
his
circumstances
was
deemed
to
have
performed
duties
of
an
office
or
employment
in
Canada,
and
therefore
that
in
calculating
his
taxable
income
pursuant
to
subparagraph
115(1)(a)(i)
no
amount
of
any
benefit
deemed
to
be
received
by
him
pursuant
to
subsection
7(1)(a)
is
to
be
included
in
his
taxable
income.
Learned
counsel,
of
course,
is
not
aware
of
subsection
7(4)
of
the
Act
which
declares
that
subsection
(1)
shall
continue
to
apply
“as
though
the
person
were
still
an
employee
and
as
though
the
employment
were
still
in
existence’’.
He
argues
that
by
virtue
of
subsection
7(4)
the
plaintiff
may
be
deemed
to
have
continued
in
employment,
but
not
in
employment
in
Canada.
In
other
words,
he
says
that
subsection
7(4)
does
not
apply
to
nonresidents.
In
the
year
1973
the
plaintif
was
not
a
resident
in
Canada
and
was
not
employed
in
Canada;
if
he
is
to
be
deemed
so
to
be,
that
can
only
be
effected
by
clear
unambiguous
language.
Subsection
7(4)
reads:
7.(4)
For
greater
certainty
it
is
hereby
declared
that,
where
a
person
to
whom
any
provision
of
subsection
(1)
would
otherwise
apply
has
ceased
to
be
an
employee
before
all
things
have
happened
that
would
make
that
provision
applicable,
subsection
(1)
shall
continue
to
apply
as
though
the
person
were
still
an
employee
and
as
though
the
employment
were
still
in
existence.
As
to
the
calculation
obtained
by
apportioning
the
excess
amount
as
between
days
spent
in
Canada
and
days
spent
in
US
during
the
relevant
period
between
the
grant
of
the
option
and
its
exercise,
we
are
referred
to
subparagraph
115(1)(a)(v).
However,
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
admits
that
his
client
incorrectly
used
the
provisions
of
that
subparagraph
which
do
not
apply
in
his
case:
He
is
not
a
non-resident
person
as
described
in
subsection
115(2).
Unfortunately
for
the
plaintiff,
I
cannot
accept
his
first
proposition.
The
aforementioned
subsection
2(3)
of
the
Act
clearly
applies
to
a
nonresident
who
“was
employed’’
in
Canada
at
any
time
in
the
year,
“or
a
previous
year”.
He
may
be
charged
even
if
he
was
not
employed
in
Canada
in
the
taxation
year.
By
virtue
of
paragraph
7(1)(a)
the
plaintiff
acquired
shares
the
excess
value
of
which
“shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
.
..
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
the
taxation
year
in
which
he
acquired
the
shares”.
And
“for
greater
certainty”
subsection
7(4)
declares
that
7(1)
shall
continue
to
apply
as
though
“he
were
still
an
employee
and
as
though
the
employment
were
still
in
existence”.
The
employment
deemed
to
have
been
continued
is,
of
course,
the
one
he
occupied
in
Canada
at
the
time
the
agreement
was
made.
It
cannot
be
any
subsequent
or
previous
employments.
It
has
to
be
the
employment
which
yielded
the
agreement
and
which
is
deemed
under
subsection
7(4)
to
continue
as
though
it
were
still
in
existence
when
the
profit
was
reaped.
Whether
plaintiff
actually
performed
any
duties
of
an
office
or
employment
in
Canada
during
his
1973
taxation
year
is
immaterial.
In
my
view,
under
the
combined
provisions
of
section
7,
the
non-resident
plaintiff
received
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
Canada,
actually
terminated
in
1971
but
deemed
to
have
been
continued
to
1973,
a
benefit
which
is
taxable
in
that
taxation
year.
Alternatively,
plaintiff
contends
that
if
the
benefit
were
taxable
income
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
section
7,
then
such
benefit
is
of
a
capital
nature
and
therefore
exempt
from
taxation
in
Canada
by
virtue
of
Article
VIII
of
the
Canada-US
Tax
Convention,
which
reads:
Article
VIII
Gains
derived
in
one
of
the
contracting
States
from
the
sale
or
exchange
of
capital
assets
by
a
resident
or
a
corporation
or
other
entity
of
the
other
contracting
States
shall
be
exempt
from
taxation
in
the
former
State,
provided
such
resident
or
corporation
or
other
entity
has
no
permanent
establishment
in
the
former
State.
Plaintiff
submits
that
the
purchase
of
shares
exercised
under
the
option
was
“an
exchange
of
capital
assets”.
He
claims
that
at
common
law
the
stock
option
agreement
was
a
Capital
asset
which
he
exchanged
in
1973
for
shares
in
Gulf
Canada
Limited.
That
submission
is
not
valid.
Plaintiff’s
transaction
was
neither
a
sale
nor
an
exchange
of
capital
assets.
He
acquired
shares
at
a
price
previously
set
under
an
option
and
thus
benefited
from
their
increased
value,
a
benefit
taxable
under
the
Act
as
having
been
made
by
virtue
of
his
employment
in
Canada.
The
mere
fact
that
he
only
exercised
his
option
after
he
had
left
Canada
does
not
transform
the
taxable
benefit
into
something
else.
The
appeal
therefore
must
be
dismissed,
with
costs.