News of Note

CRA confirms that it is the bare trustee rather than the beneficial owner who has any UHT filing obligations

Regarding the situation where a Canadian corporation held title to a residential property as bare trustee for an individual, CRA indicated that such corporation was the “owner” of the property for UHTA purposes, whereas the individual was not, i.e., the individual was not a person that “could reasonably be considered to be an owner in respect of the residential property based on [the land registry] system” under the definition of owner. Accordingly, the individual had no UHT filing obligations, whereas the corporation did (assuming that it was not an “excluded owner”).

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 4 June 2024 Underused Housing Tax (HST) Ruling 246073 under UHTA, s. 2 – owner.

CRA finds that the merchant rather than the consumer was the recipient of delivery services for goods sold through a platform

Consumers purchased goods from merchants through a platform which acted as facilitator, and as collection agent on behalf of the merchant and delivery drivers.

CRA found on construction of the platform webpage that the delivery driver was making a supply of its delivery service to the merchant, which the merchant used as an input into the supply that it made to the consumer.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 17 July 2024 GST/HST Ruling 219794 under ETA s. 123(1) – recipient.

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 3,053 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).

Bundle Date Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2001-03-30 14 December 2000 Internal T.I. 2000-0057927 F - Bénéfices relatifs à des ressources Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 1204 - Subsection 1204(1) income or loss computed in accordance with the Act, so that book gain excluded
19 October 2000 Internal T.I. 2000-0047267 F - VERSEMENT PENSION PERIODE DETERMINEE Income Tax Act - Section 56.1 - Subsection 56.1(4) - Support Amount monthly amounts paid to Madame might not be support amounts if not paid for her support
2001-03-16 5 March 2001 External T.I. 2000-0047755 F - REP - étudiant à temps partiel Income Tax Act - Section 118.6 - Subsection 118.6(1) - Qualifying Educational Program two part-time programs cannot be consolidated
13 March 2001 External T.I. 2000-0051295 F - Placements admissibles - actions Income Tax Act - Section 7 - Subsection 7(1) - Paragraph 7(1)(c) treatment of transfer of employee convertible shares to RRSP and their exercise and distribution
28 February 2001 External T.I. 2000-0056175 F - RETENUES A LA SOURCE PAR UN SYNDICAT Income Tax Act - Section 153 - Subsection 153(1) - Paragraph 153(1)(a) damages received by a union re unpaid wages of the employer were subject to source deductions when paid by it to the employee, if it received the damages as the employee’s agent
Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 100 - Subsection 100(1) - Remuneration source deductions applicable to payment of remuneration by someone other than the employer
1 March 2001 External T.I. 2001-0071175 F - Don de biens culturels - copropriété Income Tax Act - Section 118.1 - Subsection 118.1(1) - Total Cultural Gifts gift of undivided interest in a cultural property to a designated owner co-owner

Various oddities in the EIFEL rules are discussed

Comments on the EIFEL rules (respecting limitations on leverage) include:

  • The inclusion in eligible group entities of resident corporations or trusts that are related to the taxpayer in the application of the “excluded entity” exemption has the effect of requiring corporate groups controlled by respective siblings to be aware of each other’s affairs.
  • For example, a corporation group controlled by one sibling relying (under para. (b) of the excluded entity definition) on its annual interest and financing expenses being under $1 million would also need to take into account the IFE of the resident corporations in a group controlled by a second sibling.
  • Similarly, if the first sibling group was relying on the para. (c) exclusion, it would be offside if there was relevant participation in the structure of the second sibling’s group by a family trust one of whose related beneficiaries had ceased to be a resident.
  • S. 95(2)(f.11)(ii)(D) provides, respecting s. 95(2)(f)(ii) (but not (i)) amounts included in the relevant affiliate IFE (RAIFE) of a controlled foreign affiliate (CFA) of a Canadian taxpayer for a taxation year, for a denial of such RAIFE amounts otherwise deductible in computing foreign accrual property income (FAPI) in proportion to the of overall denial (if any) computed under s. 18.2(2) – so that deduction of the RAIFE of the CFA is potentially subject to the same proportionate denial as for its Canadian parent in respect of the parent’s IFE.
  • However, the rules do not seem to explicitly provide for situations where a foreign affiliate is a CFA of two or more Canadian taxpayers, each with a different potential denial proportion under s.18.2(2) so that it might be necessary to perform separate FAPI calculations for different Canadian taxpayers with a participating percentage in the same CFA.
  • The election under s. 95(2)(f.11)(ii)(E) - to forego foreign accrual property losss (FAPL) amounts (derived from RAIFE) otherwise realized in a taxation year of a CFA of a Canadian taxpayer in exchange for non-inclusion of an equivalent amount in its RAIFE - can be beneficial where the FAPL for the year has more value in reducing the current year’s RAIFE (and thus IFE of the Canadian parent) than it would in a future or prior year as a FAPL carryforward or carryback.
  • As the election is limited to the lesser of the CFA’s FAPL and RAIFE for the year, there appears to be no ability to elect to forego only a portion of FAPL for the year (i.e., the election is potentially an all or nothing proposition if the FAPL amount is the lesser amount in s. 95(2)(f.11)(ii)(E)(II)).
  • The proposed definition of “exempt interest and financing expenses” (not subject to the EIFEL limitations) references inter alia the expenses that are reasonably attributable to the portion of the borrowing used by the taxpayer for the purpose of acquiring, building or converting a purpose-built residential rental.
  • Since a “purpose-built residential rental” can refer to a part of a mixed-use building, there could be significant uncertainties associated with allocating a financing to such portion of the project.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Larry Nevsky, Brian Kearl and Aaron Chai, “Unexpected EIFEL Issues and Uncertainties,” Draft 2024 CTF Annual Conference paper under s. 18.2(1) – excluded entity, ATI – B (h), RAIFE, exempt interest and financing expenses, s. 95(2)(f.11)(ii)(D), s. 95(2)(f.11)(ii)(E) and s. 18.21(2).

CRA finds that as a partly owned LP of a 1st Nations band did not generate significant economic benefits to the reserve, its Indian employees were not exempted on off-reserve income

CRA found that an arrangement under which a business was carried on through a limited partnership (LP) in which a First Nations band indirectly had a 50.5% limited partnership interest and a non-first Nations corporation (NFNC) had a 48.5% limited partnership interest did not appear to result in “any direct and significant benefits flowing to the reserve from LP’s business activities” given that the business activities were primarily carried on off-reserve, the day-to-day business decisions of LP are made off-reserve by NFNC (although designated major decisions would be taken by the general partner which was 51% owned by the band but based off the reserve), the First Nations employees performed 50% or more of their employment duties off-reserve and at least 48.5% of LP’s profits flowed to NFNC.

Accordingly, the employment income earned off-reserve by the First Nations employees was not situated on a reserve (i.e., not exempted), regardless of where the employees lived and where their employer was regarded as resident.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 3 December 2024 CTF Roundtable, Q.16 under Indian Act, s. 87.

Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation v. Millenium Golden Eagle - Quebec Superior Court orders the rescission of two donations

The Foundation received two donations, each of $70,000, from Millenium in July 2016 and July 2017. These amounts were restituted by the Foundation to Millenium through the delivery to, and cashing (in April 2023) by, the Foundation of a cheque. On application of the Foundation for annulment of the two donations, which Millenium did not answer, and the two impleaded parties (the A.G.C. and ARQ) did not contest, Barin JSC ordered that the two donations were resolved and deemed never to have existed.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation v. Millenium Golden Eagle International (Canada) Inc., File No. 500-17-125795-230 (Quebec Superior Court) under General Concepts - Rectification and Rescission.

CRA finds that the property of an alter ego trust “belonged” to its sole trustee and life beneficiary rather than to the trust

In order for a fee paid to a corporation for the executive producer servicers of an individual employed by the corporation to qualify for the B.C. production services tax credit, there was a requirement (essentially copied from ITA s. 125.4(1) – labour expenditure – (b)(iii) and s. 125.5(1) – Canadian labour expenditure - (b)(iii)) that the shares of the corporation “belong” to a BC-based individual – whereas, here, the shares were held by the individual in his capacity of trustee of an alter ego trust which had been settled by him (to avoid B.C. probate duties) and of which he was the life beneficiary.

In finding that this shareholding satisfied the above “belong to” test, rather than the shares belonging to the trust as suggested by the TSO, Headquarters stated:

[T]he shares … belong to [the individual] and not the Trust for purposes of the tax credit. As a matter of law, a trust does not have an independent legal existence and is a legal relationship. Property to which a trust relationship applies is held by the trustee(s) of a trust in order to fulfil their obligations as trustees. [Here] … [the individual] has legal ownership of the shares in [the individual’s] role as trustee, and beneficial ownership of the shares as the sole beneficiary who is entitled to the income on the shares while [the individual] is alive … .

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 9 July 2024 Internal T.I. 2023-0976691I7 under s. 125.4(1) – labour expenditure – (b)(iii).

CRA confirms that active business income includes income from property that (having regard to Ensite) is held principally for the purpose of producing active business income

The definition “income of the corporation for the year from an active business” in s. 125(7) includes, in para. (a) thereof, the corporation’s income for the year from an active business carried on by it, including any income for the year pertaining to or incident to that business, other than income for the year from a source in Canada that is a property (within the meaning assigned by s. 129(4)). Subpara. (b)(ii) of the definition “income” or “loss” of a corporation for a taxation year from a source that is a property in s. 129(4) does not include the income or loss from any property that is used or held principally for the purpose of gaining or producing income from an active business carried on by it.

In response to a question to this effect, CRA confirmed that, as a result, where a property of a CCPC that is used or held principally for the purpose of gaining or producing income from its active business, any income from that property would qualify as “income of the corporation for the year from an active business”, as defined in s. 125(7). Before so concluding, CRA referred to the Ensite test of whether property was used or held by a corporation in the course of carrying on a business, under which the “property had to be employed and risked in the business to fulfil a requirement which had to be met in order to do business” and that “[i]f the withdrawal of the property would have a decidedly destabilizing effect on the corporate operations, the property would generally be considered to be used in the course of carrying on a business.”

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 3 December 2024 CTF Roundtable, Q.14 under s. 129(4) – “income” or “loss”.

Income Tax Severed Letters 31 December 2024

This morning's release of two severed letters from the Income Tax Rulings Directorate is now available for your viewing.

CRA indicates that a limited partner can almost never claim an ITC in respect of expenses incurred by it in relation to the partnership business

ETA s. 272.1(1) sets out a general rule under which things done by a person as a member of a partnership are deemed to be done by the partnership in the course of the partnership’s activities and not by the person. However, s. 272.1(2)(b) provides that where a partner that is not an individual acquires property or a service for consumption, use or supply in the course of activities of the partnership, but not on the account of the partnership, for purposes of determining an ITC of the member, s. 272.1(1) does not apply to deem the partner not to have acquired the property or service and the partner is deemed to be engaged in those activities of the partnership – so that it may be able to claim an ITC.

CRA provided the following (restrictive) interpretation of the scope of s. 272.1(2)(b) before finding that expenses incurred by a limited partner of a type that were not contemplated under LPA as being ones that were to be incurred by any partner were not eligible for ITCs:

  • In order to satisfy the requirement in s. 272.1(2), the property or service must be intended to be consumed, used or supplied in the course of the activities of the partnership – and, given that the s. 272.1(2) rule is an exception to the general rule in s. 272.1(1), this will generally be the case where the acquisition, importation or bringing in of such property or service by the partner “is a usual act undertaken in the ordinary course of the partnership business such that subsection 272.1(1) would otherwise apply to that partner’s action.”
  • Since the application of s. 272.1(1) would generally be limited to the actions of a general partner, the exception to this rule in s. 272.1(2) would not apply to the actions of a limited partner of a partnership other than in an extraordinary circumstance such as where there is an express agency in writing referenced in the LPA to evidence that the expense of the limited partner was in fact an expense of the partnership.
  • A particular partner cannot decide itself to pay for something: all of the partners would have to agree collectively if particular partnership expenses are to be borne by individual partners, so that CRA would expect a clause in the LPA stating that it is agreed that a partner is expected to incur and pay certain types of expenses - without which it would be difficult to determine whether the expense was an ordinary and necessary business expense of the partnership for consumption, use or supply in the course of the activities of the partnership.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 13 August 2024 GST/HST Interpretation 246538 under s. 272.1(2)(b).

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