A
W
Prociuk:—The
appellant
corporation,
formerly
known
as
Kalium
Chemicals
Ltd,
appeals
from
the
respondent’s
assessment
dated
January
8,
1975
wherein
non-resident
tax
in
the
sum
of
$4,238.39
together
with
penalty
and
interest
thereon
in
the
sum
of
$1,200.82
was
assessed
and
demanded
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
paragraph
212(1)(d)
and
subsections
214(1),
215(1),
215(6)
and
227(8)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
in
respect
of
the
1972
taxation
year.
The
assessment
is
based
on
the
ground
that
the
appellant
in
the
said
taxation
year
paid
to
ACF
Industries
Incorporated
and
ZIP
Transportation
Company,
Inc
of
the
States
of
New
Jersey
and
Texas
respectively,
United
States
of
America,
money
for
rent
of
rail
equipment
used
in
Canada
but
did
not
withhold
and
remit
to
the
respondent
the
non-resident
tax
as
provided
for
in
the
above-noted
sections
of
the
Act.
The
appellant’s
ground
of
appeal
is
that
the
assessment
is
based
on
fixed
gross
rental
paid
by
it
to
the
above-named
non-residents
whereas
it
ought
to
have
been
calculated
on
the
net
rental
after
it
was
credited
a
Canadian
mileage
allowance
in
the
said
year
by
the
non-resident
lessors.
Briefly
put,
the
issue
here
IS:
on
what
amount
is
the
withholding
tax
exigible?
During
1972
the
appellant,
then
known
as
Kalium
Chemicals
Ltd,
of
Regina,
Saskatchewan,
carried
on
the
business
of
mining,
producing
and
marketing
potash
in
connection
with
which
it
required
the
use
of
railway
cars
to
transport
its
products
both
within
and
outside
Canada.
It
leased
railway
cars
for
this
purpose
from
the
above-named
non-resident
corporations.
In
each
case
it
obligated
itself
to
pay
as
rent
a
fixed
sum
per
car
per
month,
subject
however
to
the
obligation
of
the
respective
lessors
to
collect
any
amounts
due
from
the
railroads
which
also
used
those
cars
and
to
credit
the
said
amounts
to
the
appellant’s
fixed
rental
account,
thus
arriving
at
the
net
amount
of
rent
in
each
case.
The
leases
were
filed
as
Exhibit
A-1
dated
February
8,
1972
in
respect
of
ACF,
and
Exhibit
A-2
dated
November
17,
1971
in
respect
of
ZIP.
Mr
Boomer,
traffic
manager
for
Kalium,
testified
on
behalf
of
the
appellant.
He
stated
that
it
took
two
or
three
months
after
the
year-end
to
determine
the
amount
of
mileage
allowance.
The
appellant
did
not
withhold
or
remit
any
tax
in
respect
of
the
amounts
paid
or
credited
to
ACF
or
ZIP
in
the
said
year.
The
amounts
so
paid
or
credited
were
$1,451.51
to
ACF
and
$2,786.88
to
ZIP.
The
appellant
was
assessed
on
these
sums
and
the
respondent
did
not
take
into
account
the
credits
allowed
by
ACF
or
ZIP
on
account
of
the
use
of
cars.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
the
actual
rent
paid
or
credited
which
is
chargeable
to
tax
under
paragraph
212(1
)(d)
of
the
Act
is
determined
under
the
leases.
It
is
the
fixed
rental
less
certain
credits
and
this,
according
to
said
counsel,
does
not
constitute
a
deduction
prohibited
by
subsection
214(1).
Paragraph
212(1
)(d)
reads
as
follows:
212.
(1)
Every
non-resident
person
shall
pay
an
income
tax
of
25%
on
every
amount
that
a
person
resident
in
Canada
pays
or
credits,
or
is
deemed
by
Part
I
to
pay
or
credit,
to
him
as,
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
(d)
rent,
royalty
or
a
similar
payment,
including,
but
not
so
as
to
restrict
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
any
payment
(i)
for
the
use
of
or
for
the
right
to
use
in
Canada
any
property,
invention,
trade
name,
patent,
trade
mark,
design
or
model,
plan,
secret
formula,
process
or
other
thing
whatever,
(ii)
for
information
concerning
industrial,
commercial
or
scientific
experience
where
the
total
amount
payable
as
consideration
for
such
information
is
dependent
in
whole
or
in
part
upon
(A)
the
use
to
be
made
thereof
or
the
benefit
to
be
derived
therefrom,
(B)
production
or
sales
of
goods
or
services,
or
(C)
profits,
(iii)
for
services
of
an
industrial,
commercial
or
scientific
character
performed
by
a
non-resident
person
where
the
total
amount
payable
as
consideration
for
such
services
is
dependent
in
whole
or
in
part
upon
(A)
the
use
to
be
made
thereof
or
the
benefit
to
be
derived
therefrom,
(B)
production
or
sales
of
goods
or
services,
or
(C)
profits,
but
not
including
a
payment
made
for
services
performed
in
connection
with
the
sale
of
property
or
the
negotiation
of
a
contract,
(iv)
made
pursuant
to
an
agreement
between
a
person
resident
in
Canada
and
a
non-resident
person
under
which
the
non-resident
person
agrees
not
to
use
or
not
to
permit
any
other
person
to
use
any
thing
referred
to
in
subparagraph
(i)
or
any
information
referred
to
in
subparagraph
(ii),
or
(v)
that
was
dependent
upon
the
use
of
or
production
from
property
in
Canada
whether
or
not
it
was
an
instalment
on
the
sale
price
of
the
property,
but
not
including
an
instalment
on
the
sale
price
of
agricultural
land,
but
not
including
(vi)
a
royalty
or
similar
payment
on
or
in
respect
of
a
copyright,
(vii)
a
payment
in
respect
of
the
use
by
a
railway
company
of
railway
rolling
stock
as
defined
in
the
definition
“rolling
stock’’
in
section
2
of
the
Railway
Act,
(viii)
a
payment
made
under
a
bona
fide
cost-sharing
arrangement
under
which
the
person
making
the
payment
shares
on
a
reasonable
basis
with
one
or
more
non-resident
persons
research
and
development
expenses
in
exchange
for
an
interest
in
any
or
all
property
or
other
things
of
value
that
may
result
therefrom,
(ix)
a
rental
payment
for
the
use
of
or
the
right
to
use
outside
Canada
any
corporeal
property,
or
(x)
any
payment
made
to
a
person
with
whom
the
payer
is
dealing
at
arm’s
length,
to
the
extent
that
the
amount
thereof
is
deductible
in
computing
the
income
of
the
payer
under
Part
I
from
a
business
carried
on
by
him
in
a
country
other
than
Canada;
it
should
be
noted
that
subparagraph
212(1
)(d)(vii)
was
amended
and
clauses
(A)
and
(B)
added
by
SC
1974-75-76,
c
26.
Subsection
214(1)
reads
as
follows:
214.
(1)
The
tax
payable
under
section
212
is
payable
on
the
amounts
described
therein
without
any
deduction
from
those
amounts
whatever.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that
the
provisions
of
subsection
214(1)
left
no
room
for
doubt
as
to
the
amount
on
which
tax
is
exigible.
He
also
referred
to
the
provisions
of
subsections
215(1)
and
(6)
which
read
as
follows:
215.
(1)
When
a
person
pays
or
credits
or
is
deemed
to
have
paid
or
credited
an
amount
on
which
an
income
tax
is
payable
under
this
Part,
he
shall,
notwithstanding
any
agreement
or
any
law
to
the
contrary,
deduct
or
withhold
therefrom
the
amount
of
the
tax
and
forthwith
remit
that
amount
to
the
Receiver
General
of
Canada
on
behalf
of
the
non-resident
person
on
account
of
the
tax
and
shall
submit
therewith
a
statement
in
prescribed
form.
(6)
Where
a
person
has
failed
to
deduct
or
withhold
any
amount
as
required
by
this
section
from
an
amount
paid
or
credited
or
deemed
to
have
been
paid
or
credited
to
a
non-resident
person,
that
person
is
liable
to
pay
as
tax
under
this
Part
on
behalf
of
the
non-resident
person
the
whole
of
the
amount
that
should
have
been
deducted
or
withheld,
and
is
entitled
to
deduct
or
withhold.
from
any
amount
paid
or
credited
by
him
to
the
non-resident
person
or
otherwise
recover
from
the
non-resident
person
any
amount
paid
by
him
as
tax
under
this
Part
on
behalf
thereof.
Subsection
215(5)
provides
that
the
Governor
in
Council
may
make
regulations
to
reduce
the
amount
to
be
deducted
or
withheld
but
no
such
step
was
taken
in
this
case.
The
editorial
comment
of
CCH
in
paragraph
26,400
in
respect
of
subsection
214(1),
in
part,
states
as
follows:
“The
tax
of
15%
(or
25%
after
1975)
which
non-residents
are
obliged
to
pay
when
specified
amounts
are
paid
or
credited
to
them
by
residents
of
Canada
is
computed
on
the
gross
amount
so
paid
or
credited
without
deduction.”*
In
National
Trust
Company
Limited,
Trustee
of
the
Sam
Gorman
Estate-Trust
v
MNR,
9
Tax
ABC
386;
54
DTC
33,
where
the
identical
subsection
108(1)
of
the
old
Income
Tax
Act
was
discussed,
the
trust
company
deducted
depletion
from
certain
oil
royalties
before
computing
the
non-resident
withholding
tax.
It
was
held
there
that
no
deduction
could
be
made.
As
difficult
as
the
interpretation
of
the
several
sections
of
the
Act
supra
may
be,
I
am
unable
to
find
any
provision
therein
which
would
permit
me
to
hold
that
the
appellant’s
contention
ought
to
be
given
effect.
As
Jessel,
MR
stated
in
Attorney-General
v
Mutual
Tontine
Westminister
Chambers
Association
Ltd
(1876),
1
Ex
D
469:
If
there
is
nothing
to
modify,
alter
or
qualify
the
language
which
the
statute
contains,
it
must
be
construed
in
the
ordinary
and
natural
meaning
of
the
words
and
sentences.
In
my
view
the
tax
exigible
herein
is
on
the
fixed
amount
of
rental
paid
or
credited
without
any
deductions.
The
lessor
on
whose
behalf
the
tax
is
withheld
is
not
without
remedy
since
in
all
cases
he
may
file
returns
with
the
revenue
department
in
his
own
country
or
in
the
State
where
tax
was
withheld
to
claim
any
adjustment
due
him.
The
appeal
accordingly
is
dismissed.
Appeal
dismissed.