Guy
Tremblay:—This
case
was
heard
at
Montreal,
Quebec,
on
May
8,
1978
and
November
9,
1978.
1.
Point
at
Issue
The
main
point
is
whether
the
appellant
company
has
its
permanent
establishment
in
Montreal
(Canada)
or
in
the
United
States,
and
consequently
whether
it
has
the
right
to
deduct
“from
the
tax
otherwise
payable’’
“an
amount
equal
to
10%”
of
its
taxable
income
as
provided
in
subsection
124(1)
of
the
new
Income
Tax
Act.
The
whole
amount
of
tax
involved
is
over
$20,000
for
the
1973,
1974
and
1975
taxation
years.
2.
Burden
of
Proof
The
burden
is
on
the
appellant
to
show
that
the
respondent’s
assessments
are
incorrect.
This
burden
of
proof
results
especially
from
several
judicial
decisions,
including
the
judgment
delivered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
R
W
S
Johnston
v
MNR,
[1948]
CTC
195;
3
DTC
1182.
3.
The
Facts
(A)
Permanent
Establishment:
Deduction
124(1)
3.01
The
appellant
carries
on
the
business
of
real
estate
construction
and
management.
3.02
During
the
years
1973,
1974
and
1975,
the
appellant
carried
on
construction
activities
both
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
and
in
the
United
States.
3.03
The
distribution
of
gross
income
attributable
to
Quebec
and
the
United
States
is
as
follows
and
is
not
in
dispute:
|
Quebec
|
%
|
USA
|
USA
|
%
|
Total
|
Total
|
1973
|
$363,374
|
7.9
|
$
|
4,260,986
|
92.1
|
$
|
4,624,360
|
1974
|
526,710
|
4.7
|
10,579,230
|
95.3
|
11,105,940
|
1975
|
623,636
|
4.96
|
11,954,505
|
95.4
|
12,578.141
|
3.04
The
gross
profit
for
the
years
involved
as
declared
in
the
Federal
tax
returns
and
Quebec
tax
returns
is
as
follows:
|
Gross
Sales
|
Cost
of
Goods
|
Gross
Profit
|
1973
|
$
4,190,029
|
$
3,965,505
|
$224,524
|
1974
|
10,377,905
|
10,217,924
|
159,981
|
1975
|
11,953,307
|
11,740,340
|
212,967
|
3.05
The
gross
sales
for
the
same
years
as
declared
in
the
USA
returns
are
as
follows:
|
Gross
Sales
|
Cost
of
Goods
|
Gross
Profit
|
1973
|
$
4,260,936
|
$
4,035,126
|
$225,860
|
1974
|
10,579,230
|
10,389,854
|
189,376
|
1975
|
11,954,505
|
11,739,859
|
214,646
|
3.06
The
president
and
main
shareholder
(98%
of
shares)
of
the
company
is
Mr
Donald
Sternberg.
He
graduated
with
a
Bachelor
of
Science
in
Architecture
from
the
Georgia
Institute
of
Technology
in
Atlanta,
Georgia.
3.07
When
in
the
American
Armed
Forces,
he
was
a
Lieutenant
in
the
Corps
of
Engineers.
Since
his
discharge
in
1956,
he
has
been
working
as
a
construction
manager
and
executive.
3.08
He
is
an
American
citizen.
However,
he
has
been
a
Canadian
resident
since
1965.
3.09
He
is
involved
in
the
day-to-day
operations
of
the
company.
He
is
the
chief
executive
officer
of
the
company.
He
is
the
only
permanent
staff
member
of
the
company.
3.10
The
appellant
company
fancies
itself
an
expert
“in
leisure
activity
facilities,
racetracks,
Jai
Alai
Frontons
on
which
there
are
paramutual
activities,
sports
related
activities
like
baseball,
world’s
fairs,
and
things
of
that
nature”,
(p
9
of
the
May
8,
1978
transcript).
Some
projects
lasted
5
to
6
months
and
others
4
to
5
years
(p
23
of
the
November
9,
1978
transcript).
3.11
The
main
projects
executed
by
the
appellant
company
during
the
years
involved
were:
1973:
Bonita
Springs,
West
Flagler
Dog
Track
in
Miami;
Old
Vulosia
Jai
Alai;
some
sports
service
in
Buffalo;
1974:
The
Travelodge
in
Daytona
Beach;
the
Vagabond
Motel
in
Daytona
Beach;
the
Hyatts
Cove
Motel
in
Daytona
Beach;
the
New
Vulosia
Jai
Alia
in
Daytona
Beach
(the
old
one
burnt
down;
the
appellant
company
was
asked
to
reconstruct
an
entire
facility);
Milespark
Raceway
in
Louisville,
Kentucky,
Bonita
Springs
Dog
Track
in
Florida;
1975:
The
completion
of
the
New
Jai
Alai
project
in
Daytona
Beach,
and
Bridgeport
Jai
Alai
in
Bridgeport,
Connecticut.
3.12
During
the
years
under
appeal,
the
main
office
of
the
appellant
company
was
located
at
1808
Sherbrooke
Street
West
in
Montreal.
This
address
appears
on
the
federal,
provincial
and
USA
income
tax
returns
for
the
years
involved.
The
testimony
of
Mr
Sternberg
was
clear
on
this
point.
However,
in
the
description
of
the
accounting
and
job
cost
system
of
the
appellant
(exhibit
R-1-19)
prepared
in
June
1973
by
the
firm
Fuller,
Jenks,
Landau,
CA,
the
US
office
is
mentioned
three
times.
The
appellant
company
had
the
following
address
in
USA:
PO
Box
1345,
Melbourne,
Florida
32935.
The
company
also
had
a
telephone
number
in
Florida.
It
was
a
telephone
answering
service.
3.13
Morover,
in
the
1973
and
1975
federal
returns
(exhibit
R-1,
p
12
and
p
35)
the
company
answered
“yes”
to
the
following
question:
“Has
the
corporation
a
permanent
establishment
in
more
than
one
jurisdiction?”.
Mr
Stanley
Rosen,
CA,
member
of
the
accounting
firm
whose
services
are
hired
by
the
appellant
company
affirmed
that
the
affirmative
answer
to
the
said
question
means
Quebec
jurisdiction
and
federal
jurisdiction.
On
the
federal
tax
returns,
the
appellant
claimed
10%
of
the
taxable
income
pursuant
to
section
124.
On
the
Quebec
tax
return
for
the
year
1975,
the
appellant
company
claimed
exemption
of
90.82%
of
tax
on
the
basis,
it
seems,
that
90.82%
of
the
revenue
originates
from
another
territory
than
Quebec:
Taxable
income
|
$75,110
|
|
Tax
12%
|
|
$9,013
|
Less
reduction
of
tax
|
90.82%
|
8,186
|
Income
tax
payable
|
|
$
827
|
Moreover,
in
the
United
States
income
tax
returns
of
foreign
corporation,
after
declaring
that
Canada
is
the
foreign
country
under
the
laws
of
which
income
reported
is
subject
to
tax
(exhibit
R-1,
pp
15,
16
and
17),
the
appellant
company
answers
“yes”
to
the
following
questions:
Did
you
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
United
States
at
any
time
during
the
taxable
year
within
the
meaning
of
section
894(b)
and
any
applicable
tax
convention
between
the
United
States
and
a
foreign
country?
the
section
894(b)
reads
as
follows:
Income
affected
by
treaty
(b)
Permanent
establishment
in
United
States.—For
purposes
of
applying
any
exemption
from,
or
reduction
of,
any
tax
provided
by
any
treaty
to
which
the
United
States
is
a
party
with
respect
to
income
which
is
not
effectively
connected
with
the
conduct
of
a
trade
or
business
within
the
United
States,
a
nonresident
alien
individual
or
a
foreign
corporation
shall
be
deemed
not
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
United
States
at
any
time
during
the
taxable
year.
This
subsection
shall
not
apply
in
respect
of
the
tax
computed
under
section
877(b).
The
other
answer
was
“if”
‘yes’:
name
the
foreign
country”.
The
answer
was
Canada.
According
to
Mr
Stanley
Rosen,
CA,
the
motivation
for
those
answers
was
that
.
.
if
we
did
not
do
things
like
this,
we
would
have
to
withhold..
..
All
the
contractors
or
the
builders
in
the
States
would
have
to
withhold
15%
because
the
United
States
Government
wanted
their
pound
of
flesh
too
on
these.
So
we
had
a
problem
and
in
our
discussions
with
Mr
Sternberg,
at
many
times,
we
said
he
should
form
two
companies:
a
US
company
and
a
Canadian
company,
but
he
never
did
want
to
do
this
because
he
said:
‘It’s
a
Canadian
company
even
though
I
am
doing
business
in
the
States’.
So
he
was
paying
more
tax
by
operating
in
this
way
as
one
company.”
(p
123
of
the
November
9,
1978
transcript).
3.14
According
to
Mr
Sternberg,
the
establishment
of
place
of
business
in
USA
was
a
post
office
box
in
Melbourne,
Florida.
One
could
also
contact
the
appellant
company
in
the
USA
in
each
town
where
the
projects
were
located.
The
employee
who
supervised
the
work,
lived
there
with
his
wife
in
the
town
in
an
apartment
as
in
Daytona
Beach,
Florida;
Bridge
Port,
Connecticut;
Spokane,
Washington,
or
in
a
motel
(like
in
Kentucky).
The
appellant
stated
that
the
employee
was
more
effective,
performed
much
better
when
he
was
living
with
his
wife
in
an
apartment
than
when
he
was
alone
living
in
a
motel.
3.15
According
to
Mr
Sternberg,
the
company
is
not
very
well-known
in
the
USA.
The
advertisement
made
by
the
company
in
the
USA
is
the
following:
—
in
the
yellow
pages
of
the
telephone
book;
—on
the
public
sign
placed
on
a
construction
project;
—
in
the
newspapers
for
the
official
openings
when
a
project
is
completed.
According
to
the
witness,
a
contractor
or
a
consultant
is
forced
to
pay
this
advertisement.
3.16
Associated
with
the
office
of
Montreal
during
the
years
involved,
the
appellant
company
had
five
office
personnel
people:
secretary
types,
phone
calling
types,
accounting
types,
estimating
types
and
construction
types.
3.17
Concerning
the
calling
types
employees,
Mr
Sternberg
explained
the
function
(pp
14
and
15
of
transcript
of
May
8,
1978):
Q.
Now,
you
mentioned
calling
types
initially.
I
am
a
calling
type.
What
would
be
my
function
within
the
organization
of
Hegeman-Harris?
A.
I
would
tell
you
what
we
are
bidding
on
a,
or
trying
to
achieve
some
work
in
a
specific
location
and
we
need
reinforcing
steel
suppliers
to
give
us
a
price
for
this
specific
job
and
I
would
say
to
you,
get
a
hold
of
the
phone
book
and
let’s
call
some
reinforcing
steel
suppliers
to
see
what
the
price
of
reinforcing
steel
would
be
on
this
job.
We
would
give
you
a
list
of
all
of
the
sub-trades
involved
and
give
you
a
phone
book
and
ask
you
to
call
whoever
we
needed
and
you
would
call
them
and
ultimately
these
people
would
call
back
and
give
you
prices
on
the
various
aspects
of
the
work.
3.18
Mr
Sternberg
estimated
his
phone
bill
“in
the
neighbourhood
of
6
or
7
thousand
dollars
a
month”.
He
filed
as
exhibit
A-1
the
phone
bill
for
the
month
of
August
1974
totalling
$4,090
(Canadian
phone
bill
$1,798
and
USA
phone
bill
$2,292).
3.19
Concerning
the
functions
of
estimating
type
and
construction
type
the
witness
gave
the
following
explanation
(p
16
of
the
transcript
of
May
8,
1978):
If
you’re
an
estimating
type
you
take
drawings
and
you
prepare
budgets,
take
quantity
surveys
and
prepare
estimates
of
the
cost
of
the
work.
If
you
are
a
construction
type,
you
stay
out
on
the
job
and
supervise
the
work
and
assist
in
the
evaluation
of
bids
from
various
contractors
and
things
of
that
nature.
3.20
In
cross-examination,
Mr
Sternberg
(pp
19
and
20
of
the
November
9,
1978
transcript)
affirmed
that
every
employee
is
hired
on
a
job
basis
and
is
paid
on
a
salary
basis
by
oral
agreement.
It
could
be
terminated
at
will
by
either
party.
He
added:
“In
our
business,
everybody
is
transient;
nobody
has
a
permanent
job.
When
we
have
a
lot
of
work,
we
have
a
lot
of
people
and
when
we
have
no
work,
we
let
everybody
go”.
3.21
The
appellant
company
acted
as
general
contractor
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
but
as
management
consultant
in
the
USA
(p
13
of
the
November
9,
1978
transcript).
The
main
distinction
between
those
two
functions
is
a
question
of
non-liability
on
the
past
of
the
management
consultant
on
the
non-performance
of
the
work
by
any
of
the
sub-contractors.
The
management
consultant
does
not
perform
any
physical
work.
The
Company
owns
no
machinery
in
USA,
nor
uses
of
it
to
perform
its
work.
3.22
The
witness
explained
why
the
appellant
company
does
not
work
as
general
contractor
except
in
the
Province
of
Quebec:
Now,
in
the
public
sector,
I
am
competitive
here,
I
bid
on
as
much
work
as
my
bonding
company
will
allow
me
to
have
and
I
am
either
successful
or
not
successful,
depending
whether
we
get
the
work
or
not;
that
is,
as
a
general
contractor.
I
do
not
work
as
a
general
contractor
very
often
any
place
other
than
in
the
province
of
Quebec.
Q.
Any
reason
for
that,
Mr
Sternberg?
A.
Yes.
There
are
a
couple
of
reasons.
Number
one,
my
bonding
company
doesn't
like
to
see
me
wander
around
the
world
and
then
having
a
fiscal
responsibility
for
bonds
in
Timbuktu
or
wherever
I
end
up.
Q.
But,
surely,
Quebec
is
not
Timbuktu,
Mr
Sternberg?
A.
Well,
the
province
of
Quebec,
I
am
saying.
I
work
within
the
province.
Florida
frightens
Continental
Casualty
..
.
that’s
my
bonding
company
.
.
.
You
say
“Florida”
to
the
bonding
agent
and
he
raises
both
hands
in
the
air.
Q.
Really?
A.
I
don’t
think
that
they
bond
much
for
American
firms
in
Florida
that
particular
insurance
company.
Q.
But,
surely,
there
are
other
bonding
companies
in
the
States?
A.
No.
Bonding
is
a
monopolistic
thing
in
which
6
or
7
insurance
companies
completely
control
the
bonding
market.
They
re-insure
among
themselves,
they
decide
pretty
much
which
contractor
will
work
where
and
how
they
will
allow
the
contractor
to
work.
We
are
on
a
different
subject
here,
but
you
have
no
idea
how
controlled
that
particular
field
is.
The
same
bonding
companies
that
bond
in
Canada,
completely
independent
of
the
United
States
operations,
bond
in
the
United
States,
and
for
me
to
get
a
bond
in
Canada
for
more
than
2
or
3
million
dollars,
it
has
to
go
through
New
York
to
get
permission
even
though
there
is
a
headquarters
in
Toronto
for
the
bonding
company.
(pp
28-1
and
28-2
of
the
transcript
of
November
9,
1978)
3.23
The
appellant
company
was
remunerated
on
the
basis
of
reimbursement
of
cost
(telephone,
travelling,
salary,
etc)
plus
a
nominal
fee
scale.
The
fee
was
3%
on
the
first
two
million
in
a
contract,
2
/2%
on
the
next
two
million
and
then
2%
of
all
subsequent
millions.
3.24
The
company
had
a
temporary
bank
account
in
the
towns
of
the
different
projects.
In
the
description
of
the
accounting
and
job
cost
system
(exhibit
R-1-19
prepared
in
June
1973
by
the
firm
of
accountants
Fuller,
Jenks,
Landau,)
it
is
written
“there
are
14
bank
accounts
existing
of
which
5
are
active.
Cheques
are
both
issued
from
the
Canadian
office
and
the
US
office.”
3.25
Mr
Sternberg
in
cross-examination
(pp
30
to
34
of
the
November
9,
1978
transcript)
after
saying
that
90%
of
the
appellant’s
income
was
generated
in
the
USA
and
10%
in
the
Province
of
Quebec,
affirmed
that
he
spent
60%
of
his
time
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
at
the
appellant’s
office
in
Montreal
and
40%
in
the
USA.
He
explained
that
the
management
work—as
the
one
done
as
management
consultant
in
the
USA—implies
a
certain
amount
of
administrative
activities.
.
.
the
paper
work
gets
sent
to
me
from
the
various
projects
and
I
perform
most
management
functions
here
in
Montreal
.
.
|
He
also
explained
that
the
appellant
has
its
office
in
|
Canada
because
|
.
I
bought
the
company
here”.
|
‘‘I
thought
seriously
of
leaving
Canada.
As
you
know,
I
am
an
American
citizen.
I
don’t
make
a
lot
of
money
here
any
more.
Certain
years
I
do
better
than
other
years,
but
we
like
it
here.
My
wife
and
I
love
Montreal
and
we
regard
it
as
our
home,
and
frankly
economically
it’s
probably
the
worst
thing
we
could
do
for
ourselves,
but
we
still
here
because
we
like
it
here.”
The
witness
explained
also
that
if
90%
of
income
was
generated
in
the
USA,
it
was
because
the
clients
for
the
work
of
the
nature
the
appellant
is
expert
(leisure
facilities,
ractracks,
etc)
can
be
found
rather
in
the
USA
than
in
Canada.
(B)
Foreign
Tax
Credit:
126(2)
3.26
The
written
proceedings
of
the
notice
of
appeal
and
the
reply
to
notice
of
appeal
mentions
a
deduction
relating
to
a
foreign-tax
credit
in
virtue
of
Subsection
126(2).
The
respondent
disallowed
an
amount
of
$598.
At
the
beginning
of
the
hearing
counsels
for
both
parties
advised
the
Board
that
this
problem
would
be
settled
out
of
court.
4.
Law—Precedent
Cases—Comments
4.1
Law
The
legal
sections
involved
in
the
present
case
are
124(1)
of
the
new
Income
Tax
Act
and
regulations
400,
401
and
402
of
the
new
Income
Tax
Act,
which
read
as
follows:
124.
Deduction
from
corporation
tax.
(1)
There
may
be
deducted
from
the
tax
otherwise
payable
by
a
corporation
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
an
amount
equal
to
10%
of
the
corporation’s
taxable
income
earned
in
the
year
in
a
province
other
than
the
Northwest
Territory
or
the
Yukon
Territory.
400.
Taxable
Income
Earned
in
a
Province
by
a
Corporation
(1)
For
the
purpose
of
section
40
(sec
124)
of
the
Act,
a
corporation’s
‘taxable
income
earned
in
the
year
in
a
province’
means
the
aggregate
of
the
taxable
incomes
of
the
corporation
earned
in
the
year
in
each
of
the
provinces,
except
the
Northwest
Territories
and
the
Yukon
Territory.
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Part,
“permanent
establishment”
means
a
fixed
place
of
business
of
the
corporation,
including
an
office,
a
branch,
a
mine,
an
oil
well,
a
farm,
a
timber
land,
a
factory,
a
workshop
or
a
warehouse,
and
(a)
where
the
corporation
does
not
have
any
fixed
place
of
business
it
means
the
principal
place
in
which
the
corporation’s
business
is
conducted;
(b)
where
a
corporation
carries
on
business
through
an
employee
or
agent,
established
in
a
particular
place,
who
has
general
authority
to
contract
for
his
employer
or
principal
or
who
has
a
stock
of
merchandise
owned
by
his
employer
or
principal
from
which
he
regularly
fills
orders
which
he
receives,
the
corporation
shall
be
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place;
(c)
an
insurance
corporation
is
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
each
province
and
country
in
which
the
corporation
is
registered
or
licensed
to
do
business;
(d)
where
a
corporation,
otherwise
having
a
permanent
establishment
in
Canada,
owns
land
in
a
province,
such
land
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
permanent
establishment;
(e)
where
a
corporation
uses
substantial
machinery
or
equipment
in
a
particular
place
at
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
it
shall
be
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place;
(f)
the
fact
that
a
corporation
has
business
dealings
through
a
commission
agent,
broker
or
other
independent
agent
or
maintains
an
office
solely
for
the
purchase
of
merchandise
shall
not
of
itself
be
held
to
mean
that
the
corporation
has
a
permanent
establishment;
and
(g)
the
fact
that
a
corporation
has
a
subsidiary
controlled
corporation
in
a
place
or
a
subsidiary
controlled
corporation
engaged
in
trade
or
business
in
a
place
shall
not
of
itself
be
held
to
mean
that
the
corporation
is
operating
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place.
401.
Computation
of
Taxable
Income
The
amount
of
taxable
income
of
a
corporation
earned
in
a
year
in
a
particular
province
shall
be
determined
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
this
Part.
402.
(1)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
a
corporation
had
a
permanent
establishment
in
a
particular
province
and
had
no
permanent
establishment
outside
that
province,
the
whole
of
its
taxable
income
for
the
year
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
earned
therein.
(2)
Where,
in
a
taxation
year,
a
corporation
had
no
permanent
establishment
in
a
particular
province,
no
part
of
its
taxable
income
for
the
year
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
earned
therein.
(3)
Except
as
otherwise
provided,
where,
in
a
taxation
year,
a
corporation
had
a
permanent
establishment
in
a
particular
province
and
a
permanent
establishment
outside
that
province,
the
amount
of
its
taxable
income
that
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
earned
in
the
year
in
the
province
is
one-half
the
aggregate
of
(a)
that
proportion
of
its
taxable
income
for
the
year
that
the
gross
revenue
for
the
year
reasonably
attributable
to
the
permanent
establishment
in
the
province
is
of
its
total
gross
revenue
for
the
year,
and
(b)
that
proportion
of
its
taxable
income
for
the
year
that
the
aggregate
of
the
salaries
and
wages
paid
in
the
year
by
the
corporation
to
employees
of
the
permanent
establishment
in
the
province
is
of
the
aggregate
of
all
salaries
and
wages
paid
in
the
year
by
the
corporation.
4.2
Precedent
Cases
and
Doctrine
The
parties
cited
the
following
cases
and
articles
of
doctrine:
1.
Estate
of
Harry
A
Miller
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
793;
73
DTC
5583;
2.
Edouard
Reichmann,
1972
TRB
71-836;
3.
No
536
v
MNR,
19
Tax
ABC
408;
58
DTC
417;
4.
No
630
v
MNR,
22
Tax
ABC
91;
59
DTC
300;
5.
Entreprises
Blaton-Aubert
Société
Anonyme
v
MNR,
[1969]
Tax
ABC
68;
69
DTC
121;
[1972]
CTC
609;
73
DTC
5009;
6.
Heskel
S
Abed
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
5;
78
DTC
6007;
7.
American
Wheelabrator
&
Equipment
Corp
v
MNR,
[1951]
Tax
ABC
345;
51
DTC
285;
8.
Consolidated
Premium
Iron
Ores
Ltd
et
al
v
CIR,
57
DTC
1146;
9.
Chicago
Blower
(Canada)
Ltd
v
MNR,
41
Tax
ABC
292;
66
DTC
471;
10.
Enterprise
Foundry
(NB)
v
MNR,
36
Tax
ABC
283;
64
DTC
660;
11.
Gourd)
i
R
Masri
v
MNR,
[1973]
CTC
448;
73
DTC
5367;
12.
MNR
v
Panther
Oil
&
Grease
Ltd,
[1957]
Tax
ABC
56;
57
DTC
494;
[1961]
CTC
363;
61
DTC
1222;
13.
Juda
Rutenberg
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
38;
78
DTC
6016;
14.
Sunbeam
Corporation
(Canada)
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1961]
CTC
45;
61
DTC
1053;
[1962]
CTC
657;
62
DTC
1390;
15.
Tara
Exploration
&
Development
Co
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1970]
CTC
557;
70
DTC
6370;
16.
MNR
v
Tara
Exploration
&
Development
Co
Ltd,
[1972]
CTC
328;
72
DTC
6288;
1/7.
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
v
Robert
Maurice
Sherwood,
[1978]
CTC
713;
78
DIC
6470;
18.
An
article
written
by
Ernest
H
Smith
in
Canadian
Tax
Journal
Vol
XXIV
No
5,
September-October
1976,
p
545:
“Allocating
to
Provinces
the
Taxable
Income
of
Corporations:
How
the
Federal-Provincial
Allocation
Rules
Evolved’’.
4.3
Comments
4.3.1
The
Legal
Problem
At
is
appears
from
the
legal
text
quoted
above,
section
124(1)
of
the
new
Act
says
that
the
deduction
from
the
tax
is
10%
of
the
taxable
income
of
the
corporation
“earned
in
the
year
in
a
province
other
than
the
Northwest
Territory
or
the
Yukon
Territory’’.
Regulation
402(1)
is
to
the
effect
that
where
a
corporation
has
no
permanent
establishment
in
a
particular
province,
no
part
of
its
taxable
income
Shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
earned
therein.
Regulations
402(3)
and
(4)
establish
the
deemed
taxable
income
where
a
corporation
has
a
permanent
establishment
in
a
particular
province
and
a
permanent
establishment
outside
that
province.
As
the
figures
resulting
from
the
computation
of
the
revenue
are
not
in
dispute,
the
points
that
the
Board
has
to
decide
upon
are:
Has
the
appellant
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
Province
of
Quebec?
Has
the
appellant
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
USA?
4.3.2
A
Permanent
Establishment
in
Quebec?
Referring
to
the
definition
of
“permanent
establishment”
quoted
above
in
Regulation
400(2),
it
is
clear
to
the
Board
that
the
appellant
company,
with
the
evidence
adduced,
has
a
permanent
establishment
in
Quebec.
Indeed,
it
is
clearly
proven
that
in
the
years
involved,
it
has
a
fixed
place
of
business,
its
office
in
Montreal,
located
at
1808
Sherbrooke
Street
West
(paragraphs
3.12
and
3.14).
On
that
point,
the
appellant
has
reversed
the
burden
of
proof.
The
evidence
was
not
contradicted.
4.3.3
A
Permanent
Establishment
in
USA?
The
Board
refers
to
paragraphs
400(2)(a),
(b),
(c),
(d),
(e),
(f),
and
(g)
of
the
Regulations
quoted
above
giving
the
definition
of
“Permanent
Establishment”.
4.3.3.1
Subsection
400(2)
(2)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Part,
“permanent
establishment”
means
a
fixed
place
of
business
of
the
corporation,
including
an
office,
a
branch,
a
mine,
an
oil
well,
a
farm,
a
timber
land,
a
factory,
a
workshop
or
a
warehouse.
According
to
the
evidence,
in
1973,1974
and
1975
the
appellant
company
did
not
have
a
fixed
place
of
business
in
the
USA
“including
an
office,
a
branch,
a
mine,
an
oil
well,
a
farm,
a
timber
land,
a
factory,
a
workshop
or
a
warehouse”.
Even
if
the
study
written
by
the
accountants
(exhibit
R-1-19)
refers
to
USA
office,
there
was
no
evidence
to
that
effect.
4.3.3.2
Paragraph
400(2)(a)
(a)
where
the
corporation
does
not
have
any
fixed
place
of
business
it
means
the
principal
place
in
which
the
corporation’s
business
is
conducted.
The
subparagraph
has
no
application
in
the
present
case
because
the
corporation
already
has
a
fixed
place
of
business.
First,
the
Board
thought
it
had
application
because
in
the
USA
the
corporation
had
no
fixed
place
of
business.
However,
in
the
wording
of
subsection
400(2)
and
paragraph
400(2)(a)
there
is
no
reference
to
the
same
territory
for
the
application
of
those
two
legal
sections.
It
is
only
referred
to
a
fixed
place
of
business
of
the
corporation
in
general.
As
the
corporation
has
already
a
fixed
place
of
business
(even
if
it
is
in
Canada)
consequently,
in
the
Board’s
opinion,
paragraph
400(2)(a)
has
no
application
to
determine
a
permanent
establishment
in
the
USA.
4.3.3.3
Paragraph
400(2)(b)
(b)
where
a
corporation
carries
on
business
through
an
employee
or
agent,
established
in
a
particular
place,
who
has
general
authority
to
contract
for
his
employer
or
principal
or
who
has
a
stock
of
merchandise
owned
by
his
employer
or
principal
from
which
he
regularly
fills
orders
which
he
receives,
the
corporation
shall
be
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place.
There
is
nothing
in
the
evidence
which
shows
that
the
superviser
on
the
job
has
the
authority
to
contract
nor
has
stock
of
merchandise.
4.3.3.4
Paragraphs
400(2)(c),
(d)
(c)
an
insurance
corporation
is
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
each
province
and
country
in
which
the
corporation
is
registered
or
licensed
to
do
business;
(d)
where
a
corporation,
otherwise
having
a
permanent
establishment
in
Canada,
owns
land
in
a
province,
such
land
shall
be
deemed
to
be
a
permanent
establishment.
Those
two
legal
dispositions
at
face
value
have
no
application
at
all.
4.3.3.5
Paragraph
400(2)(e)
(e)
where
a
corporation
uses
substantial
machinery
or
equipment
in
a
particular
place
at
any
time
in
a
taxation
year
it
shall
be
deemed
to
have
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place.
The
evidence
is
clear
that
the
company
owns
no
machinery
in
the
USA
nor
uses
it
to
perform
its
work.
As
the
management
consultant,
the
corporation
does
not
perform
any
physicial
work
(paragraph
3.21
of
the
Facts).
4.3.3.6
Paragraph
400(2)(f)
(f)
the
fact
that
a
corporation
has
business
dealings
through
a
commission
agent,
broker
or
other
independent
agent
or
maintains
an
office
solely
for
the
purchase
of
merchandise
shall
not
of
itself
be
held
to
mean
that
the
corporation
has
a
permanent
establishment.
According
to
the
evidence
it
was
not
in
the
nature
of
the
appellant
company
to
deal
through
a
commission
agent,
broker,
etc.
4.3.3.7
Paragraph
400(2)(g)
(g)
the
fact
that
a
corporation
has
a
subsidiary
controlled
corporation
in
a
place
or
a
subsidiary
controlled
corporation
engaged
in
trade
or
business
in
a
place
shall
not
of
itself
be
held
to
mean
that
the
corporation
is
operating
a
permanent
establishment
in
that
place.
The
appellant
company
has
no
subsidiary
in
the
USA.
4.3.4
The
inconsistency
of
the
appellant
in
filing
its
different
returns
Counsel
for
the
respondent
underlined
the
inconsistency
of
the
appellant
in
filing
its
different
income
tax
returns.
On
the
USA
returns,
it
declared
it
had
one
permanent
establishment
in
the
USA
and
one
in
Canada.
On
the
Canadian
Federal
return,
it
declared
it
had
two
permanent
establishments:
this
suggests
to
mean
federal
jurisdiction
and
Quebec
jurisdiction.
On
the
Quebec
tax
return,
the
appellant
claims
90%
of
exemption
in
the
computation
of
tax
and
so
admitting
that
the
revenue
originating
from
the
USA
originates
from
a
permanent
establishmemt
outside
the
province.
The
definition
of
“Permanent
Establishment”
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
the
Province
of
Quebec
is
mutatis
mutandis
the
same
as
the
definition
of
permanent
establishment
in
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act.
The
explanation
given
by
the
accountant
(paragraphs
3.13
and
3.14
of
the
facts)
for
those
different
inconsistent
declarations
has
not
convinced
the
Board
that
it
is
only
a
technical
error.
However,
despite
that
inconsistency
and
the
intention
on
which
it
is
based,
the
evidence
shows,
in
the
Board’s
opinion,
that
in
fact
and
in
law,
there
is
no
permanent
establishment
in
the
USA.
The
Board
examined
the
jurisprudence
cited
above
and
did
not
find
principles
which
applied
in
the
present
case
to
contradict
the
conclusion.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
respondent
for
reassessment
in
accordance
with
the
above
reasons
for
judgment.
Appeal
allowed.