News of Note

GST/HST Severed Letters January-February 2024

This afternoon's release of 11 severed letters from the Excise and GST/HST Rulings Directorate (identified by them as their January and February 2024 release) is now available for your viewing.

PepsiCo – Full Federal Court of Australia finds that concentrate purchases by an Australian soft drink bottler could not be recharacterized as trademark royalties for withholding tax purposes

A U.S. company (PepsiCo) entered into an “exclusive bottling appointment” (“EBA”) with an independent Australian bottling company (the “Bottler”). PepsiCo agreed in the EBA to sell, or cause a related entity to sell, beverage concentrate to the Bottler, for bottling and sale, and granted the Bottler the right to use the Pepsi and Mountain Dew trademarks in this regard. In fact, the concentrate was sold by an Australian company in the PepsiCo group (the “Seller“) to the Bottler. There was a similar arrangement for the licensed bottling and sale by the Bottler of Gatorade pursuant to an EBA with another U.S. company in the Pepsi group (“SVC”).

Perram and Jackman JJ found that, since as a matter of contractual interpretation, all of the amounts paid by the Bottler to the Seller were consideration for the sold concentrate, none of such payments could be treated as a trademark royalty that was subject to Australian withholding tax. Furthermore, none of the concentrate selling price was owed to either US company, so that such payments were not derived by a non-resident of Australia. Accordingly, the Commissioner’s assessment of Australian withholding tax on a portion of the consideration was reversed. These conclusions arose under the domestic withholding tax provision, so that no reference was required to the terms of the Australia-US tax treaty.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of PepsiCo, Inc v Commissioner of Taxation [2024] FCAFC 86 under Treaties – Income Tax Conventions – Art. 12.

GST/HST Severed Letters December 2023

This afternoon's release of 25 severed letters from the Excise and GST/HST Rulings Directorate (identified by them as their December 2023 release) is now available for your viewing.

Income Tax Severed Letters 26 June 2024

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

CRA confirms no change to its administrative practice of not charging interest or penalties for insufficient instalment payments by trusts

CRA indicated that its release of two new forms - the T3 INNS3, Trust Instalment Voucher and the T3AO, Trust Amount Owing Remittance Voucher – does not signify any change to its current administrative practice of not charging interest or penalties for insufficient instalment payments by trusts.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 4 June 2024 STEP Roundtable, Q.14 under s. 156(1).

CRA indicates that a Canadian payer must withhold on rent paid to a s. 94 deemed resident trust

Regarding the application of Part XIII to a non-resident trust that is deemed to be resident in Canada pursuant to s. 94 and which owns a Canadian rental property, CRA indicated that such trust is not subject to Part XIII tax on amounts paid or credited to it, but is not considered to be resident in Canada for the purposes of determining the liability of a person other than the trust to withhold and remit under s. 215 – so that there is still a requirement for the Canadian tenant(s) to withhold and remit Part XIII tax on the rent paid by them. Per s. 94(3)(g), to the extent that the amount on which the Part XIII tax is paid has been included in computing the trust’s income, the withholding amount is deemed to have been paid on account of the trust tax under Part I for the particular taxation year.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 4 June 2024 STEP Roundtable, Q.13 under s. 94(3)(a)(viii) and s. 94(3)(a)(ii).

CRA finds that s. 13(7)(e)(ii) applies to a cross-border non-arm’s length gift of a foreign building

A resident individual received a gift of (or alternatively, an inheritance of) a foreign rental property from a non-resident relative. The building component had a cost to the non-resident of $1.0 million and a current FMV of $1.4 million.

Regarding the gift, CRA noted that although s. 69(1)(c) deemed the building’s cost to the resident to be its FMV of $1.4 million, the ½ step-up rule in s. 13(7)(e)(ii) reduced its capital cost to $1.2 million, so that the starting UCC of the building would also be that amount.

S. 13(7)(e)(ii) does not apply where the transfer is as a consequence of the death of the transferor. Accordingly, the cost to the resident of the building on its inheritance would be the full $1.4 million.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 4 June 2024 STEP Roundtable, Q.12 under s. 13(7)(e)(ii).

CRA explains the credit for US estate taxes under Art XXIX-B(6)(a) of the Canada-US treaty

A Canadian resident who was not a U.S. citizen was subject on death to U.S. estate tax on U.S. situs property, namely, US real property and shares of a U.S. public corporation – and also realized a gain pursuant to ITA s. 70(5). Could the executor claim a credit in Canada respecting the U.S. estate tax paid where:

(i) the value of the deceased’s entire gross estate was equal to, or lower than, U.S. $1.2 million; or

(ii) such value exceeded U.S. $1.2 million?

CRA indicated that in the first scenario, the executor could claim a tax credit in accordance with Art XXIX-B(6)(a)(i) of the Canada-US treaty for the US estate tax paid on the US realty against the Canadian federal tax otherwise payable on the gain from the deemed disposition of the US realty. In particular, such gain was deemed to arise in the US, so that Art XXIX-B(6)(a)(i) could be accessed. Not so for the gain on the US shares.

Regarding the second scenario, the executor could claim a credit also in relation to the gain from the deemed disposition of the US shares against the Canadian capital gains tax, given that Art XXIX-B(6)(a)(ii) referenced any income, profits or gains of the individual from property situated in the U.S. - and the postamble to Art. XXIX-B(6) stated that property is situated within the U.S. if it is so treated for U.S. estate tax purposes.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 4 June 2024 STEP Roundtable, Q.11 under Treaties – Income Tax Conventions – Art. 29B.

KM Strike – Federal Court of Canada finds potential merit in taxpayers’ position that being victims of fraud of their own officer could open up old taxation years

In 2023, three companies requested that CRA reassess their 2012 to 2019 returns on the basis that the capital gains reported by one of the companies (Strike) had been overstated due to fraud perpetrated by an officer of Strike and (in the case of the other two companies) on the basis that the management fees charged by them to Strike had been overstated due to Strike’s falsified records. Other than Strike’s income tax return for the 2017 taxation year, CRA (in the “Decisions”) rejected those requests on the basis that the applicants had exceeded the relevant limitation period under (as applicable) either ITA s. 152 or ETA s. 298.

After some unanswered letters to CRA, on May 24, 2024, the applicants filed these motions for extensions of time to file applications for judicial review of the Decisions.

Before granting the applications, Southcott J noted that the Crown had an "arguable position" that the above provisions required that the reassessment be based on misrepresentation or fraud that was that of the taxpayer. He also noted that the evidence did not demonstrate a reasonable explanation for the delay in commencing an application for judicial review. However, he nonetheless granted the applications given that the applicants’ arguments appeared to have some merit. He stated that he found “compelling the Applicants’ position … that CRA appears to have considered the relevant statutory authority to have been sufficient to authorize a reassessment of Strike’s income tax return for the 2017 taxation year (a year in which the Applicants submit the reassessment was favourable to CRA).“

Neal Armstrong. Summary of KM Strike Management Inc v. Canada (Attorney General), 2024 FC 947 under Federal Courts Act, s. 18.1(2).

We have translated 6 more CRA interpretations

We have translated a further 6 CRA interpretations released in October of 2001. Their descriptors and links appear below.

These are additions to our set of 2,872 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 22 2/3 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
2001-10-26 16 November 2001 Internal T.I. 2001-0097587 F - COPRODUCTION-DROIT D'AUTEUR Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Disposition licence to UK co-producer of rights, as copyright co-owner, to exploit its co-ownership rights outside Canada but with the licence back of those rights by the UK partnership licensee of the UK co-producer, did not constitute a copyright disposition
Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 1106 - Subsection 1106(12) description of ruling letter regarding licensing of copyright by qualified corporation to UK co-producer and licence back
16 November 2001 Internal T.I. 2001-0099927 F - INTERETS PAYES SUR PRET POUR ORDINATEUR Income Tax Act - Section 118.62 interest on loan for the purchase of a microcomputer obtained under the loan guarantee program of the Aide financière aux études did not qualify
29 October 2001 External T.I. 2000-005230A F - INDEMNITE DE TEMPS DE TRANSPORT Income Tax Act - Section 6 - Subsection 6(6) - Paragraph 6(6)(b) s. 6(6)(b) exception does not apply to compensation for travel time
30 October 2001 External T.I. 2000-0052765 F - CAISSE D'ENTRAIDE DE DIOCESE Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Superannuation or Pension Benefit amounts voluntarily paid to improve the retirement income of priests who did not have 35 years of service was pension income to them
Income Tax Act - Section 6 - Subsection 6(1) - Paragraph 6(1)(a) reimbursements of priests’ dental expenses out of gift fund, and one-off gifts, were not taxable benefits
29 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0075565 F - FRAIS DE SEJOUR ET ALLOCATIONS POUR REPAS Income Tax Act - Section 6 - Subsection 6(6) - Paragraph 6(6)(a) meaning of “temporary nature” and distance test
Income Tax Act - Section 6 - Subsection 6(1) - Paragraph 6(1)(b) meal allowance paid to employees working at least 3 hours of overtime, on an infrequent basis, may be non-taxable
2001-10-12 30 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0100555 F - PERTE ET REER Income Tax Act - Section 40 - Subsection 40(3.3) suspended loss rule did not apply to sale by individual’s corporation to that individual’s RRSP
Income Tax Act - Section 251.1 - Subsection 251.1(1) - Paragraph 251.1(1)(g) an RRSP was not affiliated with its annuitant prior to s. 251.1(1)(g)

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