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Decision summary
DIT vs. Samsung Heavy Industries Co Ltd, (Supreme Court) CIVIL APPEAL NO. 12183 of 2016 -- summary under Article 5
Samsung Heavy Industries Co Ltd, (Supreme Court) CIVIL APPEAL NO. 12183 of 2016-- summary under Article 5 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 5 a Mumbai liaison office for a domestic construction project was not a PE in India The taxpayer (“Samsung”), a resident of South Korea, was a member of a consortium that was awarded a “turnkey” contract by an Indian company (“ONGC”)) for the fabrication and installation of drilling platforms at an offshore (“Vasai East”) oil project. ... For the purposes of this Convention, the term “permanent establishment” means a fixed place of business through which the business of an enterprise is wholly or partly carried on. … 4. ...
Decision summary
Commissioner of Taxation v Addy, [2020] FCAFC 135, rev'd [2021] HCA 34 -- summary under Article 25
Commissioner of Taxation v Addy, [2020] FCAFC 135, rev'd [2021] HCA 34-- summary under Article 25 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 25 the imposition of flat tax on UK working-holiday visa holders was not imposed solely on the basis of their nationality The taxpayer, who was a British citizen aged 23, came to Australia on a “working visa” for a 20-month stint, during which period she was found by the Court to be a deemed Australian resident (based on her satisfying a 183-day presence test). ... Commentary … warns against “unduly” extending the reach of Art. 24 of the Model Tax Convention (here Art. 25 of the Treaty) to “cover so-called “indirect” discrimination.” ...
TCC (summary)
Landbouwbedrijf Backx B.V. v. The Queen, 2021 TCC 2 -- summary under Article 4
The Queen, 2021 TCC 2-- summary under Article 4 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 4 Dutch legal expert testimony was required in order to establish dual corporate residency- and failure to engage competent authorities When a Netherlands couple immigrated to Canada in 1998 to acquire a dairy farm here, they created a structure under which the farm was held in a partnership which was held by them directly as to 51% and as to 49% through a Netherlands holding company (“B.V.”) of which the wife’s sister (a Netherlands resident) was the sole director. ... He stated (at paras. 101-102): Having reached that conclusion, I will nonetheless briefly address the “Mutual Agreement Procedure” described in Article 25 of the Convention. ...
FCTD (summary)
Levett v. Canada (Attorney General), 2021 FC 295, aff'd 2022 FCA 117 -- summary under Article 27
Canada (Attorney General), 2021 FC 295, aff'd 2022 FCA 117-- summary under Article 27 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 27 CRA had “pursued all reasonable domestic means available” before making an information request under the Swiss Treaty The applicants (two couples and a corporation owned by one of them) brought an application to have CRA requests to the Swiss federal tax administration for information pursuant to Art. 25 of the Canada-Swiss Treaty declared invalid on the grounds that “the CRA did not exhaust all domestic avenues of compliance and did not provide full and frank disclosure to the Swiss authorities” (para. 6). ... Regarding the requirement in s. 2(a) of the Interpretative Protocol to the Treaty that, before sending a request for exchange of information pursuant to Art. 25 of the Convention, the CRA must have pursued “all reasonable means available under its internal taxation procedure to obtain the information” she found (at para. 162) that she was “satisfied that the CRA pursued all reasonable domestic means available” in light of the various roadblocks faced by CRA (e.g., the individual applicants claimed to have no foreign assets and to have no relationship with the corporations named by the AMF). ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
20 February 2003 External T.I. 2002-0143605 - Deductions-US Citizens resident in Canada -- summary under Article 24
20 February 2003 External T.I. 2002-0143605- Deductions-US Citizens resident in Canada-- summary under Article 24 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 24 no 20(12) deduction when Art. ... As a result, the foreign tax credit provided is limited to the lesser of the tax allowed by the Tax Convention and the tax levied by the United States on non-citizens. … Since paragraph 5 of Article XXIV does not contemplate Canada providing tax relief other than that discussed above, it is our view that a subsection 20(12) deduction cannot be taken where paragraph 5 of Article XXIV applies. ...
Conference summary
7 May 2004 IFA Roundtable Q. 1, 2004-0072131C6 - IFA Round Table 2004 Q.1 - 212(13.1)(a) -- summary under Article 11
7 May 2004 IFA Roundtable Q. 1, 2004-0072131C6- IFA Round Table 2004 Q.1- 212(13.1)(a)-- summary under Article 11 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 11 In the context of a "tower" structure, a partnership of which two taxable Canadian corporations are the partners borrows money from a U.S. financial institution in order to acquire an interest in a U.S. limited liability company. ... Convention would apply to deem the interest to arise in Canada and that generally the second sentence of para. 6 of Article XI would not apply to re-source such interest to the U.S. unless the CRA was convinced that (i) investing in the interest in a wholly-owned subsidiary (i.e., the LLC in this case) of the partnership constituted a business carried on by it through a permanent establishment in the U.S. ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
22 June 2012 External T.I. 2011-0416521E5 - Share Options and Taxable Canadian Property -- summary under Article 13
22 June 2012 External T.I. 2011-0416521E5- Share Options and Taxable Canadian Property-- summary under Article 13 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 13 share no longer includes option The definition in Art. XIII of the Canada-US Convention of "real property situated in the other Contracting State" includes, in the case of real property siuated in Canada "a share of the capital stock of a company that is a resident of Canada, the value of whose shares is derived principally from real property situated in Canada;" and Art. ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
18 October 2011 External T.I. 2010-0381951E5 - Existence of permanent establishment in Canada -- summary under Article 5
18 October 2011 External T.I. 2010-0381951E5- Existence of permanent establishment in Canada-- summary under Article 5 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 5 Canadian server as pe CRA indicated that a website cannot be a permanent establishment under Article V of the Canada-U.S. Convention because a website is intangible- however, the server that provides the website can be a physical location if it is fixed in place and business is carried on through that server. ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
27 August 2012 External T.I. 2011-0416181E5 - US internet publisher - CDN resident advertiser -- summary under Subparagraph 212(1)(d)(i)
27 August 2012 External T.I. 2011-0416181E5- US internet publisher- CDN resident advertiser-- summary under Subparagraph 212(1)(d)(i) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 212- Subsection 212(1)- Paragraph 212(1)(d)- Subparagraph 212(1)(d)(i) clicks fees to website A US website publisher, which qualifies for benefits under the Canada-US Income Tax Convention and does not have a server or other permanent establishment in Canada, enters into an arrangement with an independent Canadian-resident promoter (the "Promoter") under which the Promoter will sell advertising space on the website to Canadian advertisers. ... Before going on to consider the application of s. 212(1)(d)(iii)(A) and the provisions of the Convention, CRA found that the fees should be characterized as being for services of the US publisher (as its employees would by uploading the ads to the website and carrying out various maintenance functions), so that no withholding tax would be exigible under s. 212(1)(d)(i). ...
Ruling summary
2011 Ruling 2011-0416891R3 - Fees for Digital Content & Management Services -- summary under Paragraph 212(4)(a)
2011 Ruling 2011-0416891R3- Fees for Digital Content & Management Services-- summary under Paragraph 212(4)(a) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 212- Subsection 212(4)- Paragraph 212(4)(a) management of on-line store A US LLC ("Corporation C"), whose sole member was a US corporation qualifying for benefits under the Canada-US Convention, ran a platform for the provision of "Digital Content" (movies, television shows, music videos, documentaries and similar audio-visual content) which it (and affiliated corporations) were permitted to distribute under content licence agreements with the third-party holders of the copyright. ... XII(3)(a) of the Convention). ...