News of Note

Abenaim – Tax Court of Canada finds that an amount received by a terminated employee (claiming oppression) exceeding 18 months’ salary was non-taxable

A senior employee who, in the somewhat distant past, had also been a shareholder, received damages following his termination, and pursuant to a court-mediated settlement agreement, that were well in excess of the going rate for compensation in lieu of notice of 18 months, and received a T4 treating the full amount as a taxable retiring allowance. D’Auray J treated the portion of the damages in excess of 18 months’ salary as a non-taxable receipt given her characterization of his claim against his former employer as being grounded principally in oppression as contemplated in the CBCA and her finding that, indeed, he had been oppressed a lot.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Abenaim v. The Queen, 2017 CCI 223 under s. 248(1) – retiring allowance.

Abdalla – Tax Court of Canada finds that a “poorly worded” CRA-drafted waiver nonetheless was good enough to effect a valid waiver of appeal rights when signed

In rejecting taxpayers’ submissions that they had not given valid waivers of their right to appeal, Rossiter CJ quoted the statement in Saskatchewan River Bungalows, [1994] 2 SCR 490 that:

Waiver will be found only where the evidence demonstrates that the party waiving had (1) a full knowledge of rights; and (2) an unequivocal and conscious intention to abandon them.

In finding that this test was satisfied here, he stated that although the waiver letter drafted by CRA was “poorly worded … if read in its entirety … there is a sufficient and adequate explanation in the letter [such] that a person would have full knowledge of the rights being waived.”

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Abdalla v. The Queen, 2017 TCC 222 under s. 169(2.2).

Interest that is denied under the thin cap rules and recharacterized as dividends is still interest for FAPI and LRIP/GRIP purposes

A portion of the interest paid by CanCo to ForCo, which is a controlled foreign affiliate of the Canadian parent of CanCo, is not deductible pursuant to s. 18(4) and is deemed by s. 214(16) to have been paid as a dividend (with CanCo designating under s. 214(16)(b) which particular payment is deemed to be the dividend.)

CRA noted that, as per its preamble, s. 214(16) only applies for Part XIII purposes, so that s. 214(16) would have no effect on CanCo’s LRIP or GRIP balances nor alter the character of the income received by ForCo as interest for foreign accrual property income purposes.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 5 October 2017 Internal T.I. 2015-0614021I7 under s. 214(16).

Income Tax Severed Letters 29 November 2017

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

Greither Estate – B.C. Supreme Court finds that taking back excess boot cannot be rectified under the BCA provision for correcting “corporate” mistakes

A non-resident estate, whose shares of a Canadian company had stepped-up basis under s. 70(5) but had nominal paid-up capital, was advised by a tax lawyer who had forgotten about s. 212.1. After it had been assessed for withholding tax as a result of transferring its shares of the company to a related company for consideration consisting mostly of a promissory note, it applied for relief pursuant to s. 229 of the B.C. Business Corporations Act to correct this “corporate” mistake.

Meyer J noted the somewhat narrow list of types of corrections in s. 229 and found that “the mistake of not completing the Transaction in the most tax effective manner does not … fall within these subsections.” Although he was not asked to provide relief under the general rectification doctrine, he commented on this anyway, stating:

As stated by the majority … in Fairmont Hotels business and individuals should not be allowed to exploit rectification for the purposes of engaging in retroactive tax planning and as stated by the dissent, “allowing parties to rewrite documents and restructure their affairs based solely on a generalized and all-encompassing preference for paying lower taxes is not consistent with the equitable principles that inform rectification.”

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Greither Estate v. Canada (Attorney General), 2017 BCSC 994 under General Concepts – Rectification.

Aubrey Dan Family Trust – Ontario Court of Appeal confirms that a federal form applied for Ontario purposes without any specific reference on its face to that effect

A purported Alberta trust, that wanted more time to make submissions to CRA that it was not resident in Ontario, provided a related waiver on the prescribed (T2029) federal form. When it was ultimately reassessed for Ontario income tax (with the previously assessed Alberta tax being reversed) it unsuccessfully argued that the waiver was invalid because the T2029 form did not refer to the fact that it was a prescribed form for provincial purposes. The Court of Appeal confirmed the finding of Lederman J below that it was sufficient, for the form to “purport” to be an authorized form for these purposes, to bear the CRA insignia without any reference being made to it being the prescribed form for Ontario purposes.

Neal Armstrong Summary of Aubrey Dan Family Trust v. Minister of Finance, 2017 ONCA 875 under Taxation Act, 2007 (Ontario), s. 158.

Five further full-text translations of CRA technical interpretations are available

The table below provides descriptors and links for five French technical interpretation released in April 2014, as fully translated by us.

These (and the other full-text translations covering the last 3 ½ years of CRA releases) are subject to the usual (3 working weeks per month) paywall. Next week is the “open” week for December.

Bundle Date Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2014-04-30 10 March 2014 Internal T.I. 2013-0493971I7 F - Application of section 120.4 Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 103 - Subsection 103(1.1) allocation of income to partner not responsible for expenses
Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 103 - Subsection 103(1) income-splitting partnership terms
Income Tax Act - Section 120.4 - Subsection 120.4(1) - split income - (c) LP income not from property provision or services
27 March 2014 External T.I. 2014-0520941E5 F - Industrial mineral mine and related expenditures Income Tax Act - Section 13 - Subsection 13(7.5) - Paragraph 13(7.5)(b) access road deemed to have been "acquired"
Income Tax Regulations - Schedules - Schedule II - Class 17 access road to quarry was Class 17 property notwithstanding that not owned
Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 1100 - Subsection 1100(1) - Paragraph 1100(1)(g) ordinary meaning of "mineral"
Income Tax Act - Section 18 - Subsection 18(1) - Paragraph 18(1)(b) - Capital Expenditure v. Expense - Start-Up and Close-Down Expenditures expenditures deductible where incurred prior to acquisition decision
26 March 2013 External T.I. 2014-0523251E5 F - Acquisition of control and amalgamation Income Tax Act - Section 249 - Subsection 249(4) double taxation year ends where transactions occur on the closing date before acquisition and amalgamation
Income Tax Act - Section 87 - Subsection 87(2) - Paragraph 87(2)(a) double taxation year ends where transactions occur on the closing date before acquisition and amalgamation
2014-04-23 9 April 2014 External T.I. 2013-0503421E5 F - Transitional reserve Income Tax Act - Section 34.2 - Subsection 34.2(11) transitional adjustment where partnership loss in year 1 followed by 2 profitable years
31 January 2014 External T.I. 2013-0500501E5 F - Indien - Retenues à la source - RPA Other Legislation/Constitution - Federal - Indian Act - Section 87 procedure for adjusting exempt portion of prior years’ RPP pension payments made to Indian

CRA may rule that an election for a listed Target to cease to be a public corporation can be made after Target’s amalgamation

A corporation cannot make an election under (c)(i) of the public corporation definition to cease to be a public corporation (based on now being closely held) while its shares are still listed. This may be problematic if the stock exchange has not confirmed the delisting of Target until following the amalgamation of Target with Buyco (given that Amalco is tainted as a public corporation if a predecessor was so tainted.)

However, CRA generally is prepared to rule that the election can be made after the amalgamation (and after the delisting has occurred) even though at the time of making the election the Target shares no longer exist.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 21 November 2017 CTF Annual Conference Roundtable, Q.12 under s. 89(1) - public corporation - (c)(i).

CRA indicates that the Treaty anti-hybrid rule (Art. 7(b)) applies to dividends paid by a ULC to two LLCs held by U.S. C-Corps

A Canadian-resident unlimited liability company (ULC) pays dividends to its two (disregarded) LLC shareholders, which are each held by a U.S. C-Corp. Are the dividends eligible for Treaty benefits?

CRA indicated that because ULC is fiscally transparent, the payment from ULC of a dividend is viewed as a partnership distribution, so that the same result in the two jurisdictions is not being obtained. Accordingly, the application of the anti-hybrid rule in para. 7(b) of Article IV of the Treaty would apply, so that the LLCs (which in the absence of the 7(b) rule, would qualify under para. 6 of Art. IV for Treaty benefits) would be subject to 25% Canadian withholding tax on the dividends.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 21 November 2017 CTF Annual Conference Roundtable, Q.11 under Treaties – Articles of Treaties - Art. 4.

CRA indicates that it could assess the same cross-border transaction both under GAAR and the PPT

CRA indicated that the GAAR Committee “may offer a useful model” for ensuring consistency of application of the MLI principal-purpose test (“PPT”) within the CRA when the MLI comes into effect. PPT ruling requests will be entertained when this occurs.

Although CRA continues to contemplate the application of GAAR to transactions undertaken primarily to secure a tax benefit accorded by a tax treaty (and has done so), it considers that in appropriate circumstances, the PPT and GAAR could apply as alternative assessing positions.

CRA considers it to be premature to assess how the case law on s. 245(4) will inform the PPT’s application.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 21 November 2017 CTF Annual Conference Roundtable, Q.8 under Treaties - MLI - Art. 7(1).

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