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386 1 R.C. de l'É. COUR DE L'ÉCHIQUIER DU CANADA [1968] Toronto BETWEEN : 1967 QUALITY CHEKD DAIRY PROD-' Oct. 18-19 UCTS ASSOCIATION (COOPER- APPELLANT; ATIVE) AND THE MINISTER OF NATIONAL RESPONDENT. REVENUE Income taxWithholding taxFees paid for use of trade marks and "know-how"--Income Tax Act, s. 108(1)(d)(iii)—"Property or other thing"—Onus of proof. Appellant, an American company, provided services to its members in the dairy industry, viz production advice, production seminars, laboratory
1 Ex. C.R. EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA , [1968] 387 analysis of products, preparation of advertising programs and mate- 1967 rials, marketing and sales advice, sales workshops, and permitted them QUALITY to use its certification marks. Appellant was remunerated inter alia by CHEER fees on a sliding scale based on sales and for 1964 was assessed to 15% DAIRY PRon-withholding tax under s. 106(1)'(d) of the Income Tax Act in respect tiers Ass'N. of $397.83 fees received by it from one of its Canadian members. (Co-op.) v. Held, the payment in fees by appellant was in part for "a royalty or sim- MINISTER OF ilar payment" for use in Canada of marks within the meaning of those NATIONAL words in s. 106(1) (d) of the Income Tax Act, which part was less than REVENUE $397.83, but which was part of the payment for a so-called "package deal" which included services referred to in the evidence and the use of the marks and that in respect to the part of the fees that represented services such was not a payment within the ambit of s. 106 (1)(d) of the Act so as to be subject to withholding tax. INCOME TAX APPEAL. S. E. Edwards, Q.C. for appellant. D. G. H. Bowman and J. R. London for respondent. GIBSON J.:—In this appeal under the Income Tax Act the issue is whether or not certain payments made in 1964 to the appellant by a corporation known as Kel-lough Brothers Dairy Limited are subject to a withholding income tax of 15 per cent under section 106(1) (d). The appellant is a State of Wisconsin corporation without share capital, having no offices or place of business in Canada, which at the material time had on its staff certain itinerant personnel experienced and trained in the dairy industry especially in the fluid milk, ice cream and cottage cheese, sour cream, dips and other related products business. In 1964 there were 97 members of the appellant all of whom were independently in business dealing in the said products. Nine of these members were from Canada, and one of them was the said Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited, a corporation with share capital incorporated under the Ontario Corporations Act carrying on business in the Port Arthur-Fort William, Ontario area. At the material time the appellant allowed Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited in common with other members, in consideration of certain "dues", "fees", "mechanical charges" and "assessments" to use its certification mark "Quality Chekd" and its mark including the symbol "Q" with a check mark, application for certification of which has been filed with the Trade Marks Office in Ottawa; and in addition provided services which in brief were: (1)
388 1 R.C. de l'É. COUR DE L'ÉCHIQUIER DU CANADA [1968] 1967 production advice on an ad hoc basis to individual mem- QUALITY bers according to their needs; (2) the holding of produc- CHE$D DAIRY PROD- ton seminars on an annual basis in each district at which IIOTs Ass'N. (Co-op.) sometimes experts outside the staff of the appe llant were included in such things as panel discussions; (3) labora- MINIS . of NATIONAL tory analysis of products; (4) preparation of advertising REVENUE programmes and materials; (5) marketing and sales ad- Gibson J. vice, also on an ad hoc basis; and (6) the holding of sales workshops at which sales people from various member companies attended to exchange ideas and also to share other ideas and suggestions from the staff of the appellant and sometimes outside consultants. The "dues", "fees", "mechanical charges" and "assessments" respectively are adequately described in the bylaws of the appellant Exhibit A-2, the membership agreement Exhibit A-6 and the financial statements of the appellant for the years 1963 and 1964 Exhibit A-14. I make only one comment as to these, namely, that the difference between "dues" and "fees" was that the latter were charged according to size of the business of the member and were on a sliding scale based on sales. This, it was said, enabled there to be a more equitable distribution of the costs of the appellant in providing the services to the members of it. The respondent in its pleading relies, among other things, on the following assumption, (which was amended at trial) as follows, at paragraph 6(a) namely: 6. In making the assessment for the Appellant's taxation year 1964 the Respondent acted on the following assumptions, inter alia: (a) that during the 1964 taxation year Kellough Bros. Dairy Limited paid or credited to the Appellant an amount not less than $397.83 for the use in Canada of the certification mark "Quality Chekd" and the mark applied which included the symbol "Q" with a check mark, of which the Appellant was at all material times the owner; In addition, the respondent pleaded at paragraph 6A as follows, which paragraph also was amended at trial, namely: 6A. The Respondent says in the alternative that if the said sum of $397 83 was not, in its entirety, paid or credited to the Appellant in satisfaction of rent, royalty or similar payment for the use in Canada of the certification marks, it was, to the extent that it was not so paid or credited for the use in Canada of the certification marks, paid or credited on account of or in satisfaction of rent, royalty or similar
1 Ex. C.R. EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA [1968] 389 payment for the use in Canada of know-how and that the said know- 1967 how is "property or . . . other thing" within the meaning of s. 106 QUALITY (1)(d) of the Income Tax Act. CHEKD DAIRY PROD- Fees are the only item of payment involved in this UCTs Ass'N. appeal. (Co-op.) v. The respondent submits these pleadings are supported by M INISTER OF the evidence adduced. NATIONAL REVENUE The appellant, on the other hand, submits that the fees Gibson J. paid in 1964 by Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited to the appellant were not paid for use of the said marks and not for "know-how" in so far as it might be categorized as "property or ... other thing" within the meaning of section 106(1) (d) of the Income Tax Act, but instead were membership fees paid to reimburse the appellant for expenses it incurred for providing (1) the services referred to above, and (2) the use of the marks; and that the excess of monies so collected by the appellant from its members, as the evidence indicated, which were over and above expenses, were returned to them by way of patronage dividends. (As to this see Schedule B-1 of Exhibit A-14). The appellant also submits that the principle of mutuality applies to the monies paid in the matter by Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited to the appellant. Dealing first with this latter submission, I am of opinion that the principle of mutuality has no application in the circumstance disclosed in the evidence of this case, to a payment under section 106(1) (d) of the Act. As to the other issue raised in this case, it is my view that the Minister's assumption in paragraph 6(a) of the Reply is not supported by the evidence, but instead the appellant has shown this to be wrong. Specifically, I find as a fact that during the 1964 taxation year Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited paid or credited to the appellant an amount less than $397.83 for the use in Canada of the certification mark Quality Chekd and the mark including the symbol "Q" with a check mark for which certification had been applied for. In my view, what was paid for by Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited was for a so-called "package deal". This is a colloquial phrase used so often now in business transactions, and in reference to its meaning, I note there is a definition of it in Webster's Third New International Dictionary which reads in part as follows: PACKAGE DEALla: an agreement to accept or pay a lump sum for a correlated group of goods or services (a package deal with
390 1 R.C. de l'É. COUR DE L'ÉCHIQUIER DU CANADA [1968] 1967 all 30 to be leased for four years at a total fee reported somewhat in excess of $1,250,000Wall Street Jour.) ... specif : a contract QUALITY CREED involving such an agreement achieved through collective bargain-DAIRY PROD- ing (union-management committees have reportedly worked out a UCTS ASSN. package deal, with increased fringe benefits ... but no flat wage (Co-or.) increaseTime) b: the goods or services supplied through such an v. MINISTER OF agreement (offers the franchise operator a complete package deal, NATIONAL including ground development, building constructionR. B. REVENUE Andrews) .. . Gibson J. The so-called package deal in this matter for which pay- ment was made was in my view (1) a "royalty or similar payment" for use in Canada of the certification mark and the mark including the symbol "Q" with a check mark for which certification has been applied for; and (2) the "know-how" of the appellant with respect to the services rendered as described above. The only question left for decision therefore is whether or not these services provided by the appellant as disclosed in the evidence constituted "know-how" as pleaded in paragraph 6(a) of the respondent's Reply, and if so, whether "know-how" is "property or ... other thing" within the meaning of section 106(1) (d) of the Income Tax Act. "Know-how" is not a word of art but instead of the vernacular. Again Webster's Third New International Dictionary describes know-how as: KNOW-HOW: practical knowledge of how to do or accomplish something with smoothness and efficiency: ability to get something done with a minimum of wasted effort: accumulated practical skill or expertness (business know-how) (needed the know-how of a good carpenter) (salesmanship know-how) (the know-how involved in producing a play) (developed his bowling know-how) ; esp: technical knowledge, ability, skill, or expertness of this sort (the company needed to use all its ingenuity and know-how to succeed in laying the oil lines). In argument certain English and other cases were cited in which a distinction is made between "know-how" as a capital asset payment for which is a capital receipt and "know-how" as a service, payment for which is income; and also some cases in which the Court did not find it necessary to decide whether or not the particular know-how was a capital asset to enable it to adjudicate on whether a particular receipt was income or capital. These cases were: Handley Page v. Butterworth (H.M. Inspector of Taxes)'; Evans Medical Supplies, Ltd. v. Moriarty (ex. Inspector of Taxes)2; Jeffrey (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Rolls- 1 1 9 T.C. 328. 2 37 T.C. 540.
1 Ex. C.R. EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA [1968] 391 Royce, Ltd. 3 ; English Electric Company Limited v. Mus- 1967 ker4 ; Technical Tape Corporation v. M.N.R. 5; and The QUALIT Y Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. United Aircraft Cor-DAIRYPROD- porations. UCTS ASS'N. (Co-0P.) For the purpose of this case, these cases show that the v. line between asset "know-how" and service "know-how" MINISTER OF NATIONAL is illusory. However, in this case, it is sufficient to find upon REVENUE a consideration of the whole of the evidence, and I do find, Gibson J. that the "know-how" provided by the appellant to Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited should be categorized as services rendered, or at least and in any event not "property" within the meaning of the word as it is employed in section 106(1) (d) (iii) of the Act and also not "other thing" as those words are also so employed there, applying as I do the ejusdem generis rule of construction to it and not the extremely wide dictionary definition of "thing" as may be found, for example, in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary and other dictionaries. In the result, therefore, I find that the payment of fees in 1964 in this matter to the appellant by Kellough Brothers Dairy Limited were in part for "a royalty or similar pay- ment" for the use in Canada of the said certification mark and other mark referred to in the evidence and in the pleadings within the meaning of those words in section 106(1) (d) of the Income Tax Act which part of such pay- ment of fees was less than $397.83 but which was part of the payment for a so-called "packaged deal" which included the services referred to above and the use of the marks and that the part of the fees paid in 1964 which represented payment for the services was not a payment within the ambit of section 106(1) (d) of the Act so as to be subject to a withholding income tax of 15 per cent. As the onus was on the respondent under paragraph 6A of the Reply in the pleadings quoted above to adduce evi- dence of the proper apportionment to be made of this payment between these two matters and he has failed to do so, the appeal is allowed with costs to the appellant and the assessments is vacated. 3 40 T C. 443. 4 (1964) 25 T.R. 129. 5 64 D.T.C. 428. 6 (1943) 68 C.L.R, 525.
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