
They claim the law contravenes the US-Canada Treaty, which prohibits the exchange of the type of information specified by FATCA. They also allege it contravenes Canada's Constitution Act and Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The court has committed to giving a ruling before September 30, 2015 when the Canada Revenue Agency is scheduled to begin sending FATCA reports to Washington.
If the court overturns the inter-governmental agreement, Canadian banks will have no easy way of complying with the FATCA reporting regime. If they attempt to disclose their US clients' account details direct to the IRS they are likely to be challenged under Canada's privacy legislation. If they do not disclose the information required, they may then be forced to pay the non-compliance penalty specified by FATCA, a 30 per cent withholding tax on all their US-sourced investment income.
However, appeals will certainly follow the first-instance outcome, whatever it is. In the meantime the Canada Revenue Agency will not be able to pass on the banks' FATCA disclosures to the IRS.
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3
Sources
- Financial Post
- Offshore Newsflash
- STEP news story (14 August 2014)
- Canadian Federal Finance Ministry
- Moody
- STEP International News Digest Lead Story August 27, 2015
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Read more at: Tax Times blog