Conceptual aspects of beneficial ownership in the context of property law Saurabh Jain and John Prebble
By: Jain, Saurabh.
Contributor(s): Prebble, John.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: 2018Subject(s): SOCIEDADES | BENEFICIARIO EFECTIVO | FISCALIDAD INTERNACIONAL | TRATADOS INTERNACIONALESOnline resources: Click here to access online In: Bulletin for International Taxation v. 72, n. 10, October 2018, p. 572-577Summary: This article argues that the dominion test cannot logically be transposed to conduit company cases from cases involving interposed entities, which act as agents or nominees. Agents and nominees do not possess dominion over income. They are obliged under property law to pass on income to third parties, namely their principals or mandators, whereas a conduit company has property rights over income by definition. That is, it possesses dominion over its income simply by virtue of being a corporation. It follows that, if dominion is used as a test for determining whether an interposed company is eligible for treaty benefits, it will always qualify regardless of whether it acts as a conduit.Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recursos electrónicos | IEF | IEF | BIT/2018/10-1 (Browse shelf) | Available | BIT/2018/10-1 |
Disponible únicamente en formato electrónico.
Resumen.
This article argues that the dominion test cannot logically be transposed to conduit company cases from cases involving interposed entities, which act as agents or nominees. Agents and nominees do not possess dominion over income. They are obliged under property law to pass on income to third parties, namely their principals or mandators, whereas a conduit company has property rights over income by definition. That is, it possesses dominion over its income simply by virtue of being a corporation. It follows that, if dominion is used as a test for determining whether an interposed company is eligible for treaty benefits, it will always qualify regardless of whether it acts as a conduit.
There are no comments for this item.