| September 13, 1989 | |
| International Audits Division | Specialty Rulings Directorate |
| S. Claude Lemelin, Chief | M. Vallée |
| Policy and Research Section | 957-2093 |
| Attention: Clayton Davis | File No. 7-3881 |
Subject: Article 30-3 of the Canada-Netherlands Income Tax Convention (1986) (the "Convention") - Provision for Transitional Relief
This is in reply to your memorandum, dated May 5, 1989, wherein you requested our opinion as to whether a non-resident corporation, which has filed a Canadian income tax return for the first time, is entitled to select a taxation year which will permit exemption from Canadian tax under the "greater relief" rule enacted under article 30 paragraph 3 of the Convention.
A summary of the facts is as follows:
24(1)
We understand that transitional relief would not be available under Article 30 of the Convention if 24(1) was required to report its gain by filing for the 1988 calendar year or for the fiscal period it habitually uses in the Netherlands. You have considered the definition of "fiscal period" at subsection 248(1) of the Act and of "taxation year', at subsection 249(1) of the Act, however, and you are of the opinion that the fiscal period selected 24(1) to file in Canada is acceptable.
Our Comments
Article 13 sub-paragraph 4 (a) of the Convention stipulates that the capital gain realized on the sale of the shards can be taxed in Canada, whereas by virtue of Article XVII of the Canada-Netherlands Income Tax Agreement Act, 1957, (the "Former Convention") such a gain would have been taxable only in the Netherlands. By virtue of paragraph 3 of Article 30 of the Convention, any provisions of the Former Convention that would have afforded any greater relief from tax shall continue to have effect for any taxation year beginning before the entry into force of the Convention. Paragraph 249(1)(a) of the Act defines the taxation year of a corporation as its fiscal period. Subsection 248(1) of the Act defines "fiscal period" as meaning
"The period for which the accounts of the business of the taxpayer have been ordinarily made up and accepted for purposes of assessment under this Act(...)"
The Convention entered into force on August 21, 1987, and 24(1) chose August 1, 1987 as the beginning of its fiscal period.
Provided that it has not filed a tax return in Canada for any previous taxation year, 24(1) had the right to select that date as the start of its fiscal period, and would consequently have had the right to claim the relief provided by the Convention regarding the gain derived from the sale of the shares of its subsidiaries, which gain would otherwise have been included in its income under subsection 115(1) of the Act.
John ClarkChiefCorporate Reorganizations I SectionReorganizations and Non-Resident DivisionSpecialty Rulings DirectorateLegislative and IntergovernmentalAffairs Branch