News of Note
Cameco loss has not affected CRA’s administration of s. 247(2)
Cameco, which is under appeal, has not affected the CRA operation of its transfer pricing audit program.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Alexandra MacLean, "CRA Audits of Large Corporations - The view from ILBD" under Responses to recent adverse decisions – Cameco, 27 November 27 2018 CTF Annual Conference presentation under s. 247(2).
The ILBD is working on reducing the number of TEBA-induced unsustainable assessments made by field auditors
CRA uses TEBA (“tax earned by audit”) to measure the performance of Tax Services Offices, and different CRA programs, and to decide where to allocate resources. Alexandra MacLean (Director General of the International Large Business Directorate) acknowledged that this has resulted in auditors making assessments that then should be reversed by Appeals. In this regard, she indicated that:
- A priority for the International and Large Business Program is to work on making sustainable reassessments that can be defended on both the letter and spirit of the law.
- CRA is working to better understand the reversal rate at Appeals in dollar terms and by tax issue.
- CRA is also working on trying to provide positive performance assessments for good audit work even where non-compliance is not found.
- Ideally, CRA would move to more of a whole-Agency approach on important tax interpretive issues (apparently, as contrasted with a divergence between positions applied at Audit, and before CRA Appeals with Headquarters input), and publishing more guidance so that taxpayers could know what they were facing at the time of filing their returns, and essentially making a choice to go to litigation if their filing position was contrary to the guidance.
- Having said that, a lot of what CRA does relates to matters where there is substantial interpretive uncertainty. On a recent count, the Federal Court of Appeal reversed four out of eight Tax Court decisions on GAAR. CRA has good resources now for pursuing litigation.
- Pressure on the system respecting interpretive uncertainties might be reduced with more s. 173 referrals to the Tax Court.
The ILBD has finished piloting, and has now made permanent, the Audit Files Resolution Committee, which has a mandate to try and resolve files at the audit stage. It has representation from Justice, Headquarters, the field office involved in the audit and another field office. It considers taxpayer proposals to resolve a material file at the audit stage. The Committee will examine the proposal, and make recommendations in terms of accepting, counter-proposing, or other possible responses.
Neal Armstrong. Alexandra MacLean, "CRA Audits of Large Corporations - The view from ILBD," 27 November 27 2018, 2018 CTF Annual Conference.
Hi-Tech – Tax Court of Canada confirms that the required ITC documentary information can be spread among different supporting documents
Sommerfeldt J dealt with a situation where an audit fee paid in various payments by a GST registrant had problematic documentation. In denying an input tax credit to the registrant on various grounds, he noted that supporting documentation “may be contained collectively in multiple documents” rather than, say in a single invoice.
Respecting the distinction drawn between 3(a)(ii) of the Input Tax Credit Information (GST/HST) Regulations, which requires that where an invoice is issued, it must give the invoice date, and s. 3(a)(iii), which provides that where there is no invoice, the supporting documentation must provide the date on which the GST/HST is paid or payable, he stated (after noting a claim by the registrant that it had not received the invoice):
[I]n order to issue an invoice, not only must the invoice be created, but it must also be sent to the client or customer.
Although not needing to land on this issue, he indicated that there may have been undue delay for purposes of the rule in ETA .s 152(1)(b) (effectively deeming consideration to have become due when its invoicing is unduly delayed) even if the audit firm had “issued” the invoice, given that the invoice date was six months after the completion of the audit work – whereas normally invoices were issued much more promptly.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of International Hi-Tech Industries Inc. v. The Queen, 2018 TCC 240 under Input Tax Credit Information (GST/HST) Regulations, s. 3(a)(ii), s. 169(1) and ETA s. 152(1)(b).
Burton – Federal Court of Australia finds that a foreign tax credit was reduced by ½ when only ½ of a capital gain was brought into income
An Australian-resident individual was taxed at the 15% long-term U.S. capital gains rate on his gains on the disposal of U.S. oil and gas drilling rights. For Australian purposes a 50% discount was applied to the capital gain before imposing tax at a rate of around 45% on it. The Australian foreign tax credit (FITO) provision provided a credit for foreign income tax “if you paid it in respect of an amount that is all or part of an amount included in your assessable income for the year.” The Commissioner successfully took the position that as only half of the U.S. gain had been included in the individual’s income, he was entitled to the FITO for only half of the U.S. tax.
Art. 22(2) of the Australia-U.S. Convention provided that U.S. tax “shall be allowed as a credit against Australian tax payable in respect of the income” but went on to provide that: “Subject to these general principles, the credit shall be in accordance with the provisions and subject to the limitations of the law of Australia as that law may be in force from time to time.”
In finding that Art. 22(2) did not help the taxpayer, McKerracher J stated:
Under Australian law, the only income forming part of the assessable income is 50% of the capital gain on which tax is paid in the US. Where Art 22(2) refers to Australian tax payable in respect of income, the income is only 50% of the capital gain.
Secondly, the word ‘all’ does not appear before the words ‘United States tax paid’ in the first line of Art 22(2). The Article does not suggest that a credit is allowed against Australian tax payable for the whole amount of the US tax paid. … It does not prescribe how much is to be allowed as a credit. The credit is subject to the provisions and limitations of Australian law.
The same issue could arise in Canada but has not given the CRA approach of allowing the U.S. tax on 100% of the gain to be taken into account in computing the Canadian foreign tax credit on the Canadian taxable capital gain (see. e.g., Folio S5-F2-C1, para. 1.89).
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Burton v Commissioner of Taxation [2018] FCA 1857 under s. 126(1) and Treaties – Income Tax Conventions – Art. 24.
Income Tax Severed Letter 5 December 2018
This morning's release of five severed letters from the Income Tax Rulings Directorate is now available for your viewing.
Ryanair – European Court of Justice finds that takeover expenses incurred in order to earn management fees from the target would generate VAT deductions
Ryanair sought to deduct VAT incurred on its expense incurred in a takeover bid on the basis that it intended to earn management fees from the target – even though this intention was not realized since, for competition law reasons, it ultimately was permitted to acquire only a portion of the target’s shares. Article 17(2)(a) of the Sixth Directive provided a deduction for VAT paid respecting goods and services used for the purposes of the taxable person’s taxable transactions.
The ECJ concluded that the claim should be allowed if the exclusive reason for the expenses was in the intended management activity (and that “In the event that the expenditure is attributed in part also to an exempt or non-economic activity, VAT paid on that expenditure may only be deducted in part.”) Before so concluding, the Court stated:
[T]he right to deduct, once it has arisen, is retained even if the intended economic activity was not carried out and, therefore, did not give rise to taxed transactions … . Any other interpretation would be contrary to the principle that VAT should be neutral as regards the tax burden on a business. It would be liable to create, as regards the tax treatment of the same investment activities, unjustified differences between businesses already carrying out taxable transactions and other businesses seeking by investment to commence activities which will in future be a source of taxable transactions.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Ryanair Ltd. v. Revenue Commissioners, [2018] EUECJ C-249/17 (First Chamber) under ETA s. 141.01(2).
Fowler – English Court of Appeal finds that a domestic provision deeming employment income to be from trade rendered it business profits for Treaty purposes
A U.K. domestic income tax provision deemed the diving activities of a South African resident in the North Sea to be the carrying on of a U.K trade, notwithstanding that in fact he was an employee. The majority of the Court of Appeal of England and Wales found that this meant that his earnings were business profits for purposes of Art. 7 of the U.K-South Africa Treaty (rather than employment income under Art. 14) so that they escaped U.K. taxation (as he had no U.K. permanent establishment.)
Both Lord Justices in the majority treated the domestic deeming provision (which merely deemed the underlying activity to be a trading activity rather than explicitly deeming the resulting income to be “profits” of an enterprise) as having effect for Treaty purposes. However, each of the three Lord Justices had a different view of the scope of Art. 3(2) of the Treaty (which, in the standard OECD form, provided that any term not defined in the Treaty “shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the meaning that it has …under the law of [the U.K.]”).
Baker LJ in his concurring reasons stated:
The term "employment" is not defined in the treaty and, under article 3(2), is ascribed the meaning that it has under UK tax law. Under that law … Mr Fowler is deemed not to be in employment but rather carrying on a trade.
Henderson LJ (also in the majority) stated:
My approach does not depend to any significant extent on the provisions of article 3(2) … however, I would accept … that the purpose of article 3(2) is to anchor the provisions of the treaty … to the domestic tax law of the Contracting State which is applying the treaty.
In the course of his dissenting reasons, Lewison LJ stated that Art. 3(2) permitted reference to the common law of England to determine the meaning of “employment,” and further stated:
I cannot extract from [a South African] case the general proposition that a word used in a double tax treaty to describe a particular source of income or gain necessarily encompasses a domestic deeming provision, particularly where the word in question is defined in domestic tax law … .
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Fowler v HM Revenue and Customs [2018] EWCA Civ 2544 under Treaties – Income Tax Conventions – Art. 3(2).
CRA confirms that Class 14.1 “property” need not be property
Class 14.1 depreciable property references “property” of the taxpayer. CRA confirmed that this does not have the effect of disqualifying capital expenditures that did not give rise to property rights (such as legal costs of an aborted acquisition , see 2017-0727041E5). The reason is that s. 13(35) provides that such expenditures incurred for the purpose of gaining or producing income from a business are deemed to be the cost of property that is goodwill, and the s. 248(1) definition of “property” has been amended to clarify that goodwill is property.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 27 November 2018 CTF Roundtable, Q.15 under s. 13(35)(a).
CRA indicates that accrued interest under both ss. 20(14)(a) and (b) is translated at the transfer date spot rate
CRA indicated that where an FX-denominated debt is assigned between interest coupon dates, the amount of the accrued interest translated at the spot rate on the transfer date is what is used both in determining the transferor’s income inclusion under s. 20(14)(a), and the transferee’s deduction under s. 20(14)(b).
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 27 November 2018 CTF Roundtable, Q.14 under s. 261(2)(b).
Over 700 full-text translations of CRA interpretations are available
The table below provides descriptors and links for five Interpretations released in January 2013 (from the 2012 APFF Roundtables), and a Technical Interpretation released last week, all as fully translated by us.
These are additions to our set of 702 full-text translations of French-language Rulings, Roundtable items and Technical Interpretations of the Income Tax Rulings Directorate, which covers the last 5 3/4 years of releases by the Directorate. These translations are subject to the usual (3 working weeks per month) paywall. You are currently in the “open” week for December.