***
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COURSE 1 TAX HAVENS COURSE - GLOBAL CITIZEN COURSE - BUSINESS INTERNATIONALIZATION COURSE
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COURSE 2 Learn 10 hidden strategies used by elites and multimillionaires to reduce their taxes, and start saving taxes right NOW, even without moving abroad
https://yourinternationaltaxlawyers.net/index.php/course-2
***
■ | for the use of an IP right; | |
■ | for the right to use an IP right; | |
■ | for the use or right to use any other like property or right; | |
■ | for the supply of certain knowledge/information; | |
■ | for assistance furnished to enable the application or enjoyment of an IP right or certain knowledge/information. |
(a) | for the first applicant, during the period from 1-1-1997 to 31-12-2002 and 1-1-2005 to 31-12-2006; and | |
(b) | for the second applicant, during the period from 1-1-2007 to 30-6-2009; be answered "no". |
♦ | IBMA is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of IBM. | |
♦ | At all material times, IBMA acted as IBM's Australian distributor of computer software protected by intellectual property (IP) owned by IBM pursuant to the SLA. | |
♦ | IBMA is a resident. | |
♦ | IBMA does not have a permanent establishment in a foreign country, so that section 128B(2B) of the 1936 Act does not apply. | |
♦ | IBM and World Trade are both non-residents. | |
♦ | To the extent that the Payments are within Article 12 of the Treaty as "royalties", Australia as the country of source is permitted to tax the Payments subject to the exceptions within Article 12. |
(a) | payments or credits of any kind to the extent to which they are consideration for the use of or the right to use any; |
(i) | copyright, patent, design or model, plan, secret formula or process, trademark or other like property or right; | |
(ii) | industrial, commercial or scientific equipment, other than equipment let under a hire purchase agreement; | |
(iii) | motion picture films; or | |
(iv) | films or video tapes for use in connection with television or tapes for use in connection with radio broadcasting. |
(b) | payments or credits of any kind to the extent to which they are consideration for: |
(i) | the supply of scientific, technical, industrial or commercial knowledge or information owned by any person; | |
(ii) | the supply of any assistance of an ancillary and subsidiary nature furnished as a means of enabling the application or enjoyment of knowledge or information referred to in sub-paragraph (b)(i) or of any other property or right to which this Article applies; [Emphasis supplied] |
♦ | the supply of scientific, technical, industrial or commercial knowledge or information; or | |
♦ | the supply of any assistance of an ancillary and subsidiary nature, furnished as a means of enabling: | |
♦ | the application and enjoyment of scientific, technical, industrial or commercial knowledge or information owned by any person; or | |
♦ | the property/rights of Article 12, which relevantly includes the IP rights of Article 12(4)(a)(i). |
♦ | for the use of an IP right; | |
♦ | for the right to use an IP right; | |
♦ | for the use or right to use an other like property or right; | |
♦ | for the supply of certain knowledge/information; | |
♦ | for assistance furnished to enable the application or enjoyment of an IP right or certain knowledge/information. |
♦ | a contract must be construed in accordance with the intent of the contracting parties; | |
♦ | the Court must treat the contract as a whole and interpret every part with reference to the whole, so as to give effect to its general purpose. The Court must assume that the parties intended each clause to have a purpose; | |
♦ | a court will first determine whether the contract is amenable to enforcement based on language plain enough to admit of no ambiguity or need for further edification. Extrinsic evidence is not admissible to create an ambiguity in a written agreement which is complete and clear and unambiguous on its face; | |
♦ | whether ambiguity exists is the exclusive province of the court; | |
♦ | if at the outset the Court finds the contract unambiguous, that will preclude any extrinsic evidence as to meaning or intent; | |
♦ | ambiguity is determined by looking within the four corners of the document and not to outside sources; | |
♦ | a contract or term is ambiguous if reasonable minds could differ as to the meaning or implication of the disputed provision; | |
♦ | recitals furnish a background to determine the meaning and intent of the operative clauses. They may have a material influence in construing the instrument and determining the intent of the parties. If the recitals are clear and the operative part is ambiguous, the recitals govern the construction. If the recitals are ambiguous and the operative part is clear, the operative part must prevail. If both the recitals and the operative part are clear but they are inconsistent with each other, the operative part is to be preferred; | |
♦ | following a judicial determination of ambiguity, a party may introduce extrinsic evidence as to the purpose or object of the contract and the conduct of the parties leading up to the execution of the contract; | |
♦ | if the Court finds ambiguity in a contract, it may, in resolving the ambiguity, consider the post-contractual conduct of the parties. |
♦ | the programming industry has gone through major changes driven by technological progress and this has resulted in a substantial growth of the number and complexity of programs offered to customers; | |
♦ | the rapid changes in customer and technology environments now require maximum flexibility for IBMA to accommodate new and changing business offerings and result in the need for more appropriate and flexible payment terms; | |
♦ | the use, distribution and marketing of programs by IBMA require that the rights granted to IBMA include rights under IBM's patents, trade marks, copyrights, mask work rights, knowledge and technical know-how related thereto and, in addition, rights under the patents, registered designs, registered utility models, trade marks and copyrights of third parties as are necessary for IBMA to use, distribute and market programs; | |
♦ | IBMA desires to reduce its business risks by paying IBM at the time revenue is due to IBMA; | |
♦ | World Trade has previously granted certain rights to IBMA with respect to programs as part of an agreement dated 1 January, 1955. |
♦ | "Programs", which has a broad definition; | |
♦ | "IBM's Patents", which means any and all patents, registered designs, registered utility models and applications filed and therefore having effect in Australia under which IBM has or hereafter shall receive the right to license or sub-license a subsidiary; | |
♦ | "IBM's Copyrights", which means any and all copyrights in or to IBM Programs having effect in Australia in respect of which IBM has or hereafter shall receive the right to license or sub-license a subsidiary; | |
♦ | "[IBMA's] Patents"; | |
♦ | "[IBMA's] Copyrights"; | |
♦ | "Subsidiary"; | |
♦ | "IBM Programs", which means programs protected by IBM's IP rights other than or in addition to IBMA's IP rights which are marketed by IBM or its subsidiaries and which are licensed, authorised or otherwise provided to IBMA pursuant to the SLA (I will adopt the expression IBM Programs as defined in the SLA where relevant in my reasons); | |
♦ | "[IBMA] Programs"; | |
♦ | "IBM's Trademarks", which means all trade marks having effect in Australia now or hereafter owned or registered by IBM; | |
♦ | "IBM's Mask Work Rights", which means all rights now or hereafter owned or registered by IBM for which IBM hereafter shall receive the right to license or sub-license a subsidiary; and | |
♦ | "[IBMA's] Mask Work Rights". |
(I) | IBM shall establish standards for the nature and quality of Programs on which such Trademarks are used, and shall have the right at all times to make or have made any inspections or examinations necessary or desirable to make such standards effective; | |
(lI) | use of such Trademarks shall comply with any standards established by or on behalf of IBM and with any local laws or customs; | |
(llI) | except with the written permission of IBM, the only trademarks to be used in association with IBM Programs, and with Programs protected by [IBMA's] Patents, Mask Works Rights or Copyrights, marketed by [IBMA] shall be IBM's Trademarks; and | |
(IV) | any goodwill generated by the use of IBM's Trademarks shall accrue to the sole benefit of IBM. |
(a) | IBM will obtain such licenses, releases, immunities or other rights under the patents, registered designs, registered utility models, trademarks, mask work rights and copyrights of third parties as are necessary for [IBMA] to use, copy, license, authorize or distribute such Programs. | |
(b) | IBM agrees to indemnify [IBMA] against all costs, claims, demands or damages incurred or suffered by it arising out of any proceedings for infringement of any patents, registered designs, registered utility models, mask works, copyrights and trademarks. | |
(c) | IBM shall assume the payment of all expenses including taxes and fees in connection with the filing and prosecution of any and all applications made by IBM or any Subsidiary for the grant or registration of patents, designs, utility models, trademarks, mask works and copyrights granted on such applications in Australia and in other countries chosen by IBM. |
(a) | In consideration of the rights granted to it herein [IBMA] agrees, insofar as it may lawfully do so, to pay in lawful money of the United States of America to IBM or its designees: |
(I) | a fee of forty per cent (40 per cent) of all revenue, including discounts and other allowances, billed or accrued during each calendar month by [IBMA] for each copy of an IBM Program which [IBMA] authorized, licensed, or distributed to any non-affiliated party; | |
(lI) | a fee of forty per cent (40 per cent) of the unit of one price that [IBMA] would bill a third party for the licensing or authorizing to use IBM Programs for each copy of an IBM Program that [IBMA] uses internally; and |
(b) | Such fees shall become due: |
(I) | for IBM Programs licensed, authorized or distributed, on the day the charges are billed or revenue accrued by [IBMA]; | |
(lI) | for IBM Programs used internally by [IBMA], on the day they are delivered to the internal user for installation. |
(c) | When [IBMA] is requested to provide IBM Program(s) to an affiliated company and [IBMA] elects to do so, upon IBM's request a fee determined by IBM or its designee from time to time shall be included by [IBMA's] charge to the affiliated company, and subsequently remitted to IBM upon collection. | |
(d) | [IBMA] agrees to pay the fees due each month under this [Clause] 6 within five work days of the beginning of the following month at a rate of exchange in effect on the date of payment or in the event of delay, the rate of exchange in effect on the fifth working day. |
♦ | In regard to clause 2(i), the right 'to license and distribute copies' of IBM Programs should be read disjunctively. That is, it is a right to license or distribute copies, the latter not being an IP right. | |
♦ | In regard to clause 2(ii), the right to use IBM Programs in revenue producing activities is not an IP right. | |
♦ | In regard to clause 2(iii), the right to use IBM Programs internally is not an IP right. | |
♦ | In regard to clause 2(iv), the right to make copies is an IP right and was an IP right as at 1987. | |
♦ | In regard to clause 2(v), the right to allow IBMA's customers to use, make copies of and modify IBM Programs is not an IP right. |
♦ | The fourth recital to the SLA acknowledges that that the 'use, distribution and marketing of Programs' by IBMA require that the rights granted to IBMA include rights 'under IBM's Patents, Trademarks, Copyrights, Mask Work Rights… as are necessary for [IBMA] to use, distribute and market Programs'. | |
♦ | This grant of rights is achieved by clauses 2, 3 and 4. Clause 2 contains a grant of a licence 'under IBM's Copyrights, Mask Work Rights, and Patents' to do the things contemplated in sub-clauses (i) to (v). Clause 3 contains a grant of a licence in respect of trade marks and clause 4 contains a grant of a licence that is primarily in respect of confidential information. | |
♦ | The consideration for these grants is specified in clause 6, which requires a percentage of IBMA's revenue be paid over in consideration of the rights granted in the SLA. |
(a) | had a non-exclusive licence to grant licences to end-users of machine readable copies of computer programs furnished to it by IBM or World Trade; | |
(b) | was obliged to pay a royalty equal to 10 per cent of the gross charges, less returns and allowances, by IBMA and its subsidiaries to their customers for the sale, service, lease and installation of such computer programs. |
(a) | IBM funded the total development costs of all internationally licensed software and made available its software products to its non-US affiliates as revenue earning programs which, for the most part, could be licensed to customers in their existing state; | |
(b) | the non-US affiliates (including IBMA) were distributors of the software who added little, if any, value to the software and bore insignificant risks; | |
(c) | IBM decided to achieve this objective by replacing the agreements under which the non-US affiliates (including IBMA) had previously been granted the right to distribute computer programs to their customers with a new standard form SLA under which each non-US affiliate was granted the right to distribute software products in return for a single licence fee equal to 40 per cent of its revenue from the licensing of the software to its customers and equivalent revenue from internal use of the software. |
♦ | use of the IBM trade mark; | |
♦ | indemnity against third party copyright infringement suits; | |
♦ | assurance of the general marketability and serviceability of IBM program products; and | |
♦ | technology and know-how relating to the use, marketing, reproduction and service of the IBM program products. |
***
Contact us and speak with an international tax lawyer: https://yourinternationaltaxlawyers.net
Discover our courses
COURSE 1 TAX HAVENS COURSE - GLOBAL CITIZEN COURSE - BUSINESS INTERNATIONALIZATION COURSE
https://yourinternationaltaxlawyers.net/index.php/course-1
COURSE 2 Learn 10 hidden strategies used by elites and multimillionaires to reduce their taxes, and start saving taxes right NOW, even without moving abroad
https://yourinternationaltaxlawyers.net/index.php/course-2
***