News of Note

Debt forgiveness could trigger Ontario CMT

A forgiven amount will increase a corporation’s adjusted net income for Ontario corporate minimum tax purposes (assuming that the forgiven amount is income under GAAP).

Neal Armstrong. Summary of July 2016 External T.I. 2015-0595481E5 under Taxation Act, 2007, s. 54(2)(a).

Older severed letters are being uploaded

We will gradually be going backwards in time and uploading older CRA severed letters. The severed letters that originally were released in the March to September 2012 period are now available. If you want to see how many people have looked at each bundle, you can go to the STATS page.

CRA states that no s. 110(1)(d) or (d.1) deduction is available when an employee stock option is settled through the issuance of shares for its in-the-money value

A Canadian-controlled private corporation issues treasury shares to the employee holder of a stock option (with a fair market value exercise price) equal in value to the in-the-money value of the option. CRA found that as s. 7(1)(b) rather than s. 7(1)(a) applied to this disposition of the employee’s rights, the s. 110(1)(d.1) deduction was not available – and then went on to find that the s. 110(1)(d) deduction was not available for the same reason, stating:

[S]ubparagraph 110(1)(d)(i) will not be satisfied as an employee does not “acquire the share under the agreement”, as required under subparagraph 110(1)(d)(i).

S. 110(1.1) was not discussed.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 3 August 2016 External T.I. 2015-0572381E5 under s. 7(1)(b), s. 110(1)(d) and s. 110(1)(d.1).

Income Tax Severed Letters 12 October 2016

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

Further full-text translations of severed letters are available (2016-10-12 update)

The table below links to this week's new translations of French severed letters. The translations are paywalled in the usual (4-days per week) manner.

Bundle Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2016-10-05 13 May 2016 External T.I. 2016-0635601E5 F - Dépenses de commandite Income Tax Act - Section 18 - Subsection 18(1) - Paragraph 18(1)(l) - Subparagraph 18(1)(l)(i) general overview of deductibility limitations re sponsorship expenses
27 June 2016 External T.I. 2016-0637341E5 F - Partnerships - Negative ACB Income Tax Act - Section 53 - Subsection 53(1) - Paragraph 53(1)(e) - Subparagraph 53(1)(e)(iv) assumption of loan can be contribution, but not retained profits
Income Tax Act - Section 40 - Subsection 40(3.13) retention of partnership profits not a contribution
Income Tax Act - Section 40 - Subsection 40(3.1) loans by LP to partner potentially gave rise to negative ACB gain
Income Tax Act - Section 53 - Subsection 53(2) - Paragraph 53(2)(c) - Subparagraph 53(2)(c)(v) loan advances to a limited partner may give rise to immediate s. 53(2)(c)(v) grind
2016-02-17 8 December 2015 External T.I. 2015-0608781E5 F - Associated corporations - discretionary trust Income Tax Act - Section 256 - Subsection 256(1.3) no double-counting of shares in applying s. 256(1.3) to shares deemed to be owned by minor trust beneficiaries
Income Tax Act - Section 256 - Subsection 256(1.2) - Paragraph 256(1.2)(f) - Subparagraph 256(1.2)(f)(ii) beneficiary includes beneficially entitled/combined application of 256(1.2)(f)(ii) and 256(1.3), but shares attributed only once]
21 December 2015 External T.I. 2015-0617731E5 F - 55(2) and creditor proofing Income Tax Act - Section 55 - Subsection 55(2.1) - Paragraph 55(2.1)(b) Opco dividend to Holdco whose sole purpose is creditor-proofing is subject to s. 55(2)
22 January 2016 External T.I. 2015-0617601E5 F - Pipeline followed by butterfly Income Tax Act - Section 55 - Subsection 55(3.1) - Paragraph 55(3.1)(b) where pipeline transaction followed by split-up butterfly, the opco also is a distributing corporation
Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) pipeline transaction can be coupled with a butterfly split-up

Lamarre ACJ states that judges should only question witnesses after the completion of cross-examination

In a paper, Lamarre ACJ commented on procedures for the questioning of witnesses from the bench:

Some Tax Court judges do intervene in the questioning of witnesses. For instance, when a taxpayer lacks credibility, the judge can ask him or her more questions. However, in such cases, the judge must be cautious to only intervene at the end of the witness's examination and cross-examination. The judge must then offer the parties the opportunity to ask any questions to the witness on the particular points raised by the judge. In specific cases where the taxpayer and his or her witness are credible but there is doubt as to why the minister assessed, more questions can be posed to counsel and witnesses for the Crown.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Lucie Lamarre and Isida Ranxi, "Taxpayer Rights and Voluntary Compliance: The Example of the Canadian Judiciary," Tax Notes International, 3 October 2016, p. 61 under General Concepts – Evidence.

Hall – Tax Court of Canada confirms that the assessment of Part I tax returns does not engage the running of statute-barring for taxes under other Parts

D’Auray J confirmed that a T1-OVP form is technically a return made under a separate part of the Act (Part X.1), so that the assessment of timely filings of regular Part I returns of the taxpayer did not commence the running of the normal reassessment period respecting his required reporting of excess-RRSP contribution tax. Accordingly, the Minister was entitled to assess the tax in 2015 going back to the 2008 year.

After referring to the discretion of the Minister to waive the tax under s. 204.1(4) (or, failing that, to waive interest thereon under s. 220(3.1)), D’Auray J recommended “that the Minister exercise her discretion for the taxation years in issue.”

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Hall v. The Queen, 2016 TCC 221 under s. 152(4) and s. 204.1(4).

On the Agrium/PotashCorp merger, all shareholders would move to a new holdco and s. 85.1 treatment for non-electing shareholders would be busted through a 3-party exchange

In a proposed “merger of equals,” resident taxable shareholders of Agrium and PotashCorp who had validly elected for rollover treatment would transfer their shares under s. 85.1 to a Newco (“New Parent” – whose initial nominal capital would be owned on a 50-50 basis by Agrium and PotashCorp) in exchange for common shares of New Parent. The other shareholders would transfer their Agrium and PotashCorp shares to two new subsidiaries of New Parent (“Agrium AcquisitionCo” and “PotashCorp AcquisitionCo”) in exchange for the delivery to them of New Parent shares (with the two AcquisitionCos simultaneously issuing shares to New Parent as payment for the New Parent share consideration). As a result, the former Agrium and PotashCorp shareholders would hold 48% and 52%, respectively, of New Parent.

All the Agrium and PotashCorp shares acquired by New Parent under the s. 85.1 exchange would be dropped down into Agrium AcquisitionCo and PotashCorp AcquisitionCo, also as part of the above CBCA Arrangement. It is intended that Agrium AcquisitionCo will be amalgamated with Agrium, and PotashCorp AcquisitionCo with PotashCorp.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Joint Agrium/PotashCorp Circular under Mergers & Acquisitions – Mergers – New Holdco.

CRA carries forward many of its published policies on M&P profits

The determination of a corporation’s Canadian manufacturing and processing profits still is relevant for various provincial corporate income tax purposes. CRA’s new Folio on manufacturing and processing does not contain much that is new, carries forward many of the policies from IT-145R (e.g., various flexible approaches to determining the cost of capital or labour in ways that avoid double-counting) and drops some of the more detailed guidance in IT-145R, especially detailed industry-by-industry comments on the delineation of qualified and non-qualified activities.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Folio S4-F15-C1 Manufacturing and Processing under s. 125.1(3) – Canadian manufacturing and processing profits, s. 125.1(3) – manufacturing and processing, Reg. 5200, Reg. 5202- Cost of Labour, Rental Cost, Cost of Capital, Qualified Activities, Sched II, Class 29.

CRA provides expanded comments on business investment loss issues in its new Folio

The new Folio on business investment losses covers more ground than IT-484R2, including:

  • Guidelines on when CRA may accept a request to revoke a s. 50(1) election, e.g., where the taxpayer was not aware of the loss being denied under s. 40(2)(g)(ii) (i.e., no carte blanche).
  • There is an extensive example illustrating the adverse application of s. 50(1.1) to a non-arm’s length person who started carrying on business in a corporation acquired by her from the taxpayer who had claimed an insolvency loss re the corporation.
  • In a somewhat grudging acknowledgement of the case law, CRA states that “while there is no legal requirement that in all cases a taxpayer must exhaust all legal means of collecting on a debt before determining that during the year it had become a bad debt, such a determination will generally fall short if it is evident that collection on the debt is reasonably possible but no proactive steps were taken to collect on it,” and that “the existence of a non-arm’s-length relationship between the creditor and the debtor ... will not prevent the creditor from establishing that a debt has become a bad debt.” (However, CRA still considers that all of a debt must be bad to be written off under s. 50.)
  • Before summarizing some of the s. 40(2)(g)(ii) jurisprudence, CRA states that

The burden of demonstrating a sufficient connection between the taxpayer’s loan to (or the taxpayer’s guarantee of the debts of) the debtor and the potential for income will be much higher in situations where the taxpayer is not a direct shareholder of the debtor.

  • CRA provides an extended example illustrating the s. 39(9) rule (re the previous claiming of the capital gains exemption).

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of S4-F8-C1 ”Business Investment Losses” under s. 50(1), s. 248(1) – small business corporation, s. 50(1.1), s. 50(1)(a), s. 40(2)(g)(ii), s. 39(9) and s. 164(6).

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