10 August 1990 Ruling 59341 F - Canada-U.S. Income Tax Convention and Partnerships

By services, 18 January, 2022
Official title
Canada-U.S. Income Tax Convention and Partnerships
Language
French
CRA tags
n/a
Document number
Citation name
59341
Severed letter type
d7 import status
Drupal 7 entity type
Node
Drupal 7 entity ID
633622
Extra import data
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"field_release_date_new": "1990-08-10 08:00:00",
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Main text
24(1) 5-9341
  O. Laurikainen
  (613) 957-2129

19(1)

August 10, 1990

Dear Sirs:

Re:  Canada-U.S. Income Tax Convention (1980) (the "Treaty") and Partnerships

This is in response to your letter dated December 22, 1989 wherein you requested the Department's interpretation of certain treaty provisions under a hypothetical set of facts.  The facts you have presented are as follows:

1.     A partnership consists of two U.S. resident corporations.

2.     Each corporation has an equal interest in the partnership.

3.     The partnership property includes the total share capital of a company resident in Canada.

4.     The partnership has no permanent establishment in Canada.

You wish to know which withholding rate set out in paragraph 2 of Article X of the Treaty will apply to dividend paid by the Canadian company to the partnership and whether a gain on the sale of shares of the Canadian company would be exempted from taxation in Canada under Article XIII of the Treaty provided the gain is a gain described in paragraph 4 that Article.

It is our view that the dividends paid to the partnership by the Canadian corporation would be subject to Canadian withholding tax at the reduced rate of 15% set our in paragraph 2(b) of Article X of the Treaty.  The U.S. resident corporations would not qualify for the reduced rate of 10% set out in paragraph 2(a) of Article X of the Treaty because under partnership law an individual partner does not have a fractional right in any particular property which he alone could transfer or assign.  In our view the concept of "partnership property" prevents a partner from treating shares of the Canadian company held by the partnership as its own.  Accordingly, while the two U.S. corporations would collectively own all the shares of the Canadian corporation, it is our view that neither U.S. corporation could point to a specific percentage of the shares held by the partnership for the purposes of paragraph 2(a) of Article X of the Treaty.  In addition, the partnership as a recipient of the dividends would not qualify for the reduced rate under paragraph 2(a) of Article X of the Treaty because neither it nor the partners collectively qualify as a "company" as required by that provision.

In our view any gain or loss from the disposition of the shares in the Canadian corporation by the partnership would be flowed through to the U.S. partners.  Since the partners have collectively alienated the shares, each would be an "alienator" for the purposes us paragraph 4 of Article XIII of the Treaty. Accordingly, provided that the gain is a gain described in that paragraph, it would be taxable only in the United States.

We trust the above is the information you require.

Yours truly,

for DirectorReorganizations and Non-Resident DivisionRulings DirectorateLegislative and Intergovernmental Affairs Branch