Principal Issues: A corporation was incorporated in 2017. An individual is aged 30 and has been working on a full-time basis in the business of the corporation since its inception. The individual owns 5% (votes and value) of the common shares of the capital stock of the corporation. Whether the individual would be considered to be actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis in her 2020 taxation year in the following situations. Situation 1: the individual will give birth on December 31, 2019, will be on parental leave from January 1 to December 31, 2020 and intends to be back to work on January 1, 2021; Situation 2: the individual will suffer a work accident on January 1, 2020, will be on sick leave until December 31, 2020 and intends to be back to work on January 1, 2021; Situation 3: the individual will suffer a work accident on January 1, 2020, will become permanently disabled and will not be able to work for the rest of 2020 and the subsequent years. But for the accident, the individual would have intended to work full-time in the business of the corporation on a long-term basis.
Position: Situations 1, 2 and 3: no.
Reasons: Situations 1, 2 and 3: The business of the corporation would not constitute an excluded business of the individual for her taxation year 2020, under paragraph (a) of the definition of “excluded business” in subsection 120.4(1) because the individual will not be actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis in the activities of the business for the year (but for a portion of January 1, 2020 in Situations 2 and 3). The same conclusion would apply in Situation 3 for the subsequent taxation years. Whether an individual has been actively engaged in the activities of a business on a «regular, continuous and substantial basis» in a year will depend on the circumstances, including the nature of the individual’s involvement in the business and the nature of the business itself. Whether an individual is actively engaged in a business will generally turn on the time, work and energy that the individual devotes to the business. The more an individual is involved in the management and/or current activities of the business, the more likely it is that the individual will be considered to participate in the business on a regular, continuous and substantial basis. Likewise, the more an individual’s contributions are integral to the success of the business, the more substantial they would be. Furthermore, paragraph 120.4(1.1)(a) deems an individual to be actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis in the activities of a business in a taxation year of the individual if the individual works, on average, 20 hours per week or more in the business during the portion of the taxation year of the individual that the business operates.