registered offices and central management and control are in England,
outside the Commonwealth.
3. Such companies carry on business and make profits in Australia but also carry on business and make profits in England and else- where outside the Commonwealth.
t. The appellant, as such shareholder, was paid in England during the financial year ending 30th June 1915 sums of money as dividends on shares owned by him in such companies.
5. The Commissioner has included in the assessment of the appellant for income tax for the financial year 1915-1916 the follow- ing sums, which represent part of the dividends received by the appellant as aforesaid from the said companies From S. Hoffnung &Co. Ltd., £6,222; from the Bank of Australasia, £30: from Farmer &Co. Ltd., £28.
These sums represent that proportion of the total dividends received by the appellant from shares on the London register of each of the said companies respectively which is attributable to the profits derived by each of the said companies from that part of their respective businesses which is carried on in Australia.
6. The appellant claims that the said sums are not part of his taxable income for the purpose of assessment under the said Act; and the Commissioner of Taxation claims that such sums are part of such taxable income, and has SO included the same in such assess-
7. It is admitted that if such sums were rightly included in such assessment then the assessment is correct, but that if such sums were wrongly included in such assessment then the assessment of the appellant's taxable income should be based on the sum of £2,970.
8. On the hearing of the appeal the following question arose, which, in the opinion of this Court, is a question of law, that is to say, whether such sums were rightly or wrongly included in such assessment. This Court doth therefore, SO thinking fit, state this case in writing for the opinion of the High Court upon the said question SO arising in the appeal.
Campbell K.C. (with him Weston), for the appellant. The test