News of Note
CRA revises its memorandum on objections
Points made in a significantly revised version of GST/HST Memorandum 31-0, Objections and Appeals issued back in May 2024 included:
- A notice of assessment can cover multiple reporting periods and, indeed, a “Notice of Assessment generally will cover an entire audit period” (suggesting that a multiplicity of objections need not be filed where CRA shows adjustments on a month-by-month basis attached to a global assessment notice).
- On an objection “the person is informed of discussions held between the appeals officer and the assessing area about the disputed assessment.”
- An objection can result in an “upward reassessment” (e.g., increasing the tax from what was objected to).
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of GST/HST Memorandum 31-0, Objections and Appeals, May 2024 under ETA s. 300(2), s. 301(1.1), s. 301(1.5) and s. 301(3).
CRA has released the final version of the 2024 APFF Roundtable
CRA has published the final versions of the 17 questions and answers of the (regular) 10 October 2024 APFF Roundtable. (The finalized 2024 APFF Financial Strategies and Instruments Roundtable severed letters have already been published.) There were only minor changes from the versions that were made available at the time (including a minor expansion of CRA's discussion of the Foix decision at Q.3 of the Roundtable - which for some reason was renumbered as Q.18 in the severed letter). The discussion of Foix in the written version of the 2024 CTF Annual Roundtable, Q.15 was shorter and blander.
For your convenience, the table below sets out the descriptors and links to the summaries, and translated questions and answers, which we prepared in October.
Doostyar – Federal Court of Appeal indicates that judgments should not be provided to the parties in draft for non-substantive comments
The Tax Court judge sent a draft judgment (disallowing the taxpayers’ appeal) to the parties and asked for their comments on any “typographical, grammatical, punctuation, or [any] similar error[s] or any omissions” and any “comments in respect of the written presentation of…[the] decision”, but not so as to revisit the substance of the decision. The taxpayers then asked the judge to receive and consider further submissions.
After confirming the judge’s refusal of this request (it “smack[ed] as an attempt to appeal to the Tax Court to revisit a decision it had already made”), Stratas JA stated:
It is for the Tax Court alone—not the parties—to vet its judgment and supporting reasons for typographical, grammatical, punctuation and similar errors.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Doostyar v. Canada, 2025 FCA 6 under s. 171(1).
Income Tax Severed Letters 15 January 2025
This morning's release of 17 severed letters from the Income Tax Rulings Directorate is now available for your viewing.
267 O'Connor – Tax Court of Canada finds that damages paid by the vendor under a failed realty sale did not generate ITCs notwithstanding some IP transferred to it
In the settlement of an action against it by a third party (“Starwood”) for a failure of a property sale agreement to Starwood to close, the appellant agreed to pay $450,000 to Starwood and Starwood agreed to provide a release and to hand over all its rezoning application plans and reports (reflecting that between the signing of the purchase agreement and the scheduled closing date, it had taken over the carriage of an OMB appeal regarding the property).
MacPhee J found that the $450,000 payment was, for the most part, compensation to Starwood for expenses incurred by it as a result of the failure of its purchase to close and that although “certain intellectual property was received pursuant to the settlement agreement” he was unable “to determine what portion of the $450,000 the Appellant paid to Starwood was for the assignment of Starwood’s rights, title and interest to Starwood’s rezoning application plans and reports.” S. 182(1) did not apply because the amount was paid by rather than to the supplier under the sale agreement.
Furthermore, the appellant had not satisfied the ITC documentary requirements in that it had not demonstrated that it had the GST registration number of the supplier (Starwood) by the time its return was filed (which “alone [was] fatal to the success of the appeal” and “there [was] not sufficient evidence to determine an amount of consideration to purchase intellectual property, nor the tax paid or payable”. Accordingly, no portion of the $450,000 payment generated an ITC to the appellant.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 267 O'Connor Limited v. The King, 2024 TCC 161 under ETA s. 169(1) and s. 169(4).
Boles – Tax Court of Canada finds that a mistaken judgment that the taxpayers’ activities were a business was not a s. 152(4)(a)(i) misrepresentation
Sommerfeldt J found that the activities of the taxpayers (a couple) in raising, breeding and showing dogs and engaging in dog-show judging were a hobby rather than a business, so that they should not have deducted their substantial losses in computing their income. However, he found that their taking the position in returns which were now statute-barred that they were carrying on a business was not a “misrepresentation” for the purposes of s. 152(4)(a)(i), stating:
[I]n Ver, Justice Bowman indicated that the question of whether an expenditure was made for a business or a personal purpose is a matter of judgment, and not the subject of a misrepresentation within the meaning of subparagraph 152(4)(a)(i) … . I adopt that view, except to the extent that either of the Appellants has acknowledged, or it is patently obvious, that a particular expenditure was incurred for a personal purpose … .
He went on to find that, even if there had been a misrepresentation, there was no neglect or carelessness, given that the taxpayers had “thoughtfully and carefully considered the nature of the Dog Activities, and, in consultation with their accountants, concluded that those activities were a business” – although there was carelessness in deducting those of the expenses which clearly were personal. Accordingly, the assessments for those years were reversed, except with regard to the clearly personal expenses.
The taxpayers were not subject to repeated-failure-to-file penalties under s. 162(2) since there was no evidence that a demand for the relevant returns had been made, nor that the Minister had already assessed a failure-to-file penalty for the relevant prior year’s return.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Boles v. The King, 2024 TCC 167 under s. 152(4)(a)(i), s. 3(a) – business, and s. 162(2).
We have translated 6 more CRA interpretations
We have translated a further 6 CRA interpretations released in March of 2001. Their descriptors and links appear below.
These are additions to our set of 3,059 full-text translations of French-language Technical Interpretation and Roundtable items (plus some ruling letters) of the Income Tax Rulings Directorate, which covers all of the last 23 ¾ years of releases of such items by the Directorate. These translations are subject to our paywall (applicable after the 5th of each month).
CRA finds that charges to a company for a negotiated municipal sewage plant expansion were for a taxable supply
In order to be permitted to expand its processing facility, a company had to negotiate an agreement with the municipality to cover 70% of the costs of an expansion to the municipal sewage treatment plant. CRA found that such charges were consideration for a taxable supply of wastewater treatment services made by the municipality, and that such supply was not an exempted supply of municipal services under ETA s. V-VI-21 as the company failed to satisfy one of the stipulated conditions, namely, that the municipal “service is … one which the owner or occupant has no option but to receive” (presumably meaning that the company always had the “choice” of not proceeding with its expansion or somehow otherwise avoiding the additional sewage discharge).
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 3 July 2024 GST/HST Ruling 242566r under ETA s. V-VI-21.
CRA confirms that an individual can claim unclaimed donations made by her spouse before marriage (going 5 years’ back), including maybe for statute-barred years
CRA confirmed that an individual could claim (in years in which she was married, within the 5-year carryforward period from the year of the donation) the portions of a charitable donation that her husband had made before they had married, but which he had not claimed (perhaps, because of his limited income).
Regarding whether she could open up statute-barred taxation years to make such claims, CRA noted that s. 152(4.2) accorded it the discretionary authority to make a reassessment beyond the normal reassessment period in respect of a taxation year, when requested by an individual in order to determine a refund - and that “[g]enerally, an individual can make a written request in respect of a tax year, within [the stipulated] 10-year time limit, if the individual was not aware of, or missed claiming a deduction or a credit that was available for that year.” It did not make any explicit comment that, deciding after the expiry of the carryforward period to have the spouse claim the unclaimed remnant, amounted to impermissible retroactive tax planning.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 5 September 2024 External T.I. 2024-1022711E5 under s. 118.1(1) – total charitable gifts - (c)(i)(A) and s. 152(4.2).
CRA indicates that a direction letter to change how title is conveyed at closing gives rise to a real estate supply for GST/HST purposes
An individual agreed to purchase a pre-construction condominium unit for personal purposes, and a related individual agreed to purchase a second such unit for rental as a residence. Now, before the closing of the purchases, the two individuals would like to jointly own both units for rental as places of residence for individuals. This would be done by entering into agreements to assign rights and obligations respecting their purchase agreements, or issuing a letter of direction for title to be transferred on this basis.
CRA indicated that:
- a direction of title change is considered to be a supply of real property or an interest in real property and that, generally, there are no exemptions that apply for newly constructed real property;
- the assignment by the purchaser of the agreement is normally considered to be a sale of that first purchaser's interest in the new unit which, pursuant to s. 192.1, would be deemed to be a taxable supply; and
- pursuant to s. 155, there would be deemed FMV consideration for such taxable supplies if the recipient in each case was not a registrant who acquired the property for consumption, use or supply exclusively in the course of commercial activities.
CRA did not discuss what this meant. For instance, it might mean that an amount equal to ½ the value of any embedded deposit plus ½ of any appreciation in the underlying property at the time of the direction or assignment would in each case be subject to GST/HST that would not be creditable to the recipient.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 2 May 2024 GST/HST Interpretation 246050 under ETA s. 123(1) – supply and s. 256.2(3).