News of Note

We have translated 6 more CRA interpretations

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

These are additions to our set of 2,904 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 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
2001-09-28 13 September 2001 External T.I. 2001-0097675 F - COUT INDIQUE REVENUS A RECEVOIR Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Cost Amount - Paragraph (b) cost amount of shares not increased by dividend receivable, and of loan, not increased by accrued interest
30 August 2001 External T.I. 2001-0093645 F - FRAIS IMPUTE A UN REER LORS D'UN RETRAIT Income Tax Act - Section 146 - Subsection 146(8) no annuitant benefit where RRSP bears an admin fee on a withdrawal
23 August 2001 External T.I. 2001-0095015 F - ALLOCATION DE RETRAITE Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Retiring Allowance retiring allowance can be received in instalments and well in advance of planned termination date
18 September 2001 External T.I. 2001-0095265 F - TAXE SUR LE CAPITAL Income Tax Act - Section 181.2 - Subsection 181.2(3) - Paragraph 181.2(3)(c) outstanding cheques are not loans or advances, but they reduce the debts of which they are repayment only to the extent reflected in the balance sheet
General Concepts - Payment & Receipt in Quebec, a cheque is not payment until the debtor’s account is debited
17 August 2001 External T.I. 2001-0095645 F - PRET HYPOTHECAIRE INTERETS Income Tax Act - Section 20 - Subsection 20(1) - Paragraph 20(1)(c) - Subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) administratively splitting a mortgage loan into 2 components does not allow the principal repayments to be allocated first to repayment of the loan’s ineligible portion
29 August 2001 External T.I. 2001-0097485 F - DEDUCTION DE FRAIS DE SURVEILLANCE Income Tax Act - Section 20 - Subsection 20(1) - Paragraph 20(1)(bb) supervisory fees paid to intermediary between portfolio manager and taxpayer were non-deductible

CRA finds that a s. 152(1.4) increased partnership loss determination authorizes an increased partnership unit capital gain for a subsequent statute-barred year

The 2001 to 2010 taxation years of limited partners of a tax shelter limited partnership were reassessed under s. 152(1.7)(b) in accordance with Minutes of Settlement that contemplated increases to their share of partnership deductions claimed under s. 20 (consistent with redeterminations made in respect of the partnership pursuant to s. 152(1.4)). These deductions reduced the ACB of their partnership interests.

1. Was the Minister authorized to assess the limited partners beyond the normal reassessment period for their 2011 taxation year to include any amount in respect of the disposition of their partnership units in 2011, given that no redetermination in respect of the partnership was made for 2011 under s.152(1.4), and 2011 was also not part of the period discussed in the Minutes of Settlement?

2. If such 2011 reassessments were permitted, was the Minister authorized to reassess the entire capital gain, or was the authority under s.152(1.7)(b) only to increase the gain based on the increased losses as redetermined for the 2001 to 2010 taxation years under s. 152(1.4)?

1. The Directorate found that s. 152(1.4) authorizes the Minister to determine the correct ACB per LP unit of a member of LP, as it is an amount that is relevant in determining the taxable income of a member of LP for “any taxation year,” including the year in which the member realizes a taxable capital gain (or deemed taxable capital gain) with respect to their interest in LP.

2. Given that the redetermination issued to the partnership under s. 152(1.4) encompasses a redetermination of the ACB of a partnership interest, and a member’s revised at-risk amount includes the initial capital contributed by the member, the Directorate concluded that the Minister has the authority under s. 152(1.7)(b) to (re)assess the entire taxable capital gain in 2011, calculated in accordance with the Act.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 29 February 2024 Internal T.I. 2024-1003171I7 under s.152(1.7)(b).

CRA finds that guaranteed salary payments received by a US-resident member of a Canadian team while not in Canada were not taxable in Canada

A resident of the US, who had entered into a 6-year employment contract with a Canadian team, suffered a serious injury in the 3rd season but, pursuant to a guaranteed payment clause in his contract, continued to receive full salary for the remaining term of his agreement notwithstanding that he ceased playing for that team – and was released by that team, and hired by a US team in the 5th season.

After finding that the guaranteed payments were employment income to him, the Directorate found that they were not taxable in Canada under s. 115(1)(a)(i), stating that they “did not relate to duties that were performed in Canada during those seasons as he was not physically present to perform these duties.”

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 16 April 2024 Internal T.I. 2023-0964831I7 under s. 115(1)(a)(i).

Centrica – UK Supreme Court finds that professional fees incurred in pursuing a subsidiary sale but before the deal was struck were capital expenditures

The taxpayer, an intermediate UK holding company for subsidiaries in various countries, incurred fees of an accounting firm, Netherlands law firm and an investment banker in connection with the difficult process for accomplishing a share sale of, or an asset sale by, a Netherlands subsidiary (“Oxxio”). In rejecting the position of the taxpayer that such fees incurred between retaining those advisors on the prospective sale and the board meeting over a year later when the sale price to a purchaser was approved were incurred on income rather than capital account, Lady Simler stated (at para. 87):

[T]he clear objective purpose of the Disputed Expenditure was to assist in bringing about the disposal of an identifiable capital asset, namely the Oxxio business, in whatever form that transaction ultimately took. Money expended to achieve a disposal of a capital asset is properly regarded as being of a capital nature. … The fact that there was no certainty that the Oxxio business would be sold does not make the expenditure revenue in nature. … Indeed, expenditure on an abortive capital disposal transaction is capital expenditure nonetheless … .

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Centrica Overseas Holdings Ltd v Commissioners for His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, [2024] UKSC 25 under s. 18(1)(b) – capital expenditure v. expense - asset disposal expenses.

Hill – Tax Court of Canada finds that employment income earned by a band member at a hospital located near the reserve was not exempted

A status Indian, who lived on a reserve and worked at a hospital a 10 minute drive away (on land just outside the reserve) was not exempted on her employment income. Graham J noted that, unlike Folster, there was no real relationship between her work and life on the reserve (e.g., most patients were not from the reserve). The location of the hospital on disputed lands (i.e., which the band might claim) did not have much significance given the absence of such a relationship.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Hill v. The King, 2024 TCC 92 under Indian Act, s. 87.

3533158 Canada – Federal Court finds that CRA was justified in not assessing returns which had ITC claims that had gone stale due to CRA requiring the returns to be refiled

After the taxpayer (“353”) learned from CRA that its US parent had been incorrectly claiming input tax credits (ITCs) that should have been claimed by 353, 353 filed a single global GST/HST return covering the period from August 1, 2012 to August 31, 2016 without allocating the reported items between reporting periods. At the filing time, all the claimed ITCs were within the four-year limitation period in s. 225(4) for claiming ITCs. After being informed by CRA five months later that the global return could not be processed, 353 promptly filed quarterly returns covering the same period. Shortly thereafter, CRA informed 353 that it could not process the returns for the three quarterly reporting periods covering the period up to April 30, 2013 (the “initial three quarters”) because the GST/HST registration of 353 was effective only from December 1, 2014. This registration-date issue was not resolved until over three months later, when CRA changed the effective date of the registration to August 1, 2012.

353 then refiled the returns for the initial three quarters, and CRA then assessed 353’s returns – but apparently not the initial three quarters. It refused to issue refunds for those quarters on the basis that the related (corrected) returns had not been filed within the four-year ITC limitation period under s. 225(4)(b), but processed the refund claims for the other returns.

353 brought a mandamus application before the Federal Court to compel the Minister to grant refunds in respect of the initial three quarters.

Régimbald J found that 353 had failed to establish a clear right to its refund claims. In particular, s. 296(4)(b) precluded the Minister, when assessing, to refund an overpayment of tax (attributable to an ITC) if, on that assessment date, such ITC could not have been claimed on that date in a return. The refund claims for the initial three quarters did not satisfy this test because the ITC claims on which they were based were beyond the four-year limitation period set out in s. 225(4). Régimbald J rejected 353’s submission that s. 296(4) so applied only to ITCs that had never been claimed by the registrant (and only identified by CRA on audit) on the basis inter alia that this would be inconsistent with s. 296(4)(b) referencing ITCs (generally) rather than only “allowable credits”) (re “new” ITCs).

Régimbald J stated:

[U]nder subsection 296(4), if the ITC is still allowable within the limitation period under subsection 225(4) (regardless of whether it was claimed at the time or “discovered” during the assessment), the ITC can be refunded because it remains eligible at the date of the assessment. However, if on the date of the assessment, the ITCs are no longer allowable, then the Minister cannot refund.

The fact that CRA had not assessed the initial three quarters may have precluded 353 from being able to require CRA to allow the ITC claims for those quarters pursuant to s. 296(2) – see Pawlak. Régimbald J essentially found that CRA was justified in not assessing the initial three quarters on the basis that the related ITCs claims were barred by s. 296(4)(b) – but did not discus the “trumping” of this provision by s. 296(2).

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 3533158 Canada Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2024 FC 1090 under ETA s. 296(4)(b), s. 123(1) – registrant, s. 238(1), Interpretation Act, s. 32, Federal Courts Act, s. 18.1(2).

Income Tax Severed Letters 24 July 2024

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

We have translated 6 more CRA interpretations

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

These are additions to our set of 2,898 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 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
2001-10-12 23 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0074885 F - LOCAL DE TRAVAIL A DOMICILE Income Tax Act - Section 8 - Subsection 8(13) - Paragraph 8(13)(a) sales reps who performed most of their duties on the road could not satisfy s. 8(13)(a)(i) or (ii)
2001-09-28 20 September 2001 External T.I. 2001-0070705 F - ETABLISSEMNT DOMESTIQUE AUTONOME Income Tax Act - Section 18 - Subsection 18(12) work premises attached to principal residence with the same municipal address likely were part of the individual’s self-contained domestic establishment
Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Self-Contained Domestic Establishment self-contained domestic establishment is a living unit with restricted access containing a kitchen, bathroom, and sleeping facilities
19 September 2001 External T.I. 2001-0086545 F - IMMEUBLE VENDU A PERTE Income Tax Act - Section 13 - Subsection 13(7) - Paragraph 13(7)(e) - Subparagraph 13(7)(e)(i) s. 110.6(19) election on building could result in subsequent terminal loss
11 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0100245 F - POLICE EXEMPTEE ASSUREUR NON-RESIDENT Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 306 - Subsection 306(1) information required to verify that a policy issued by a non-resident insurer is an exempt policy does not exist
Income Tax Act - Section 128.1 - Subsection 128.1(1) - Paragraph 128.1(1)(b) s. 128.1(1) applicable to life insurance policy of non-resident insurer to a non-resident policyholder’s immigration
2 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0102655 F - T5008 - AGENT DE L'ACHETEUR Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 230 - Subsection 230(2) trader or dealer is not required to file a T5008 re purchases made for clients
Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 230 - Subsection 230(6) purchase made as agent does require filing a T5008
2 October 2001 External T.I. 2001-0100355 F - ALLOCATION DE RETRAITE ET REER Income Tax Act - Section 146 - Subsection 146(5.1) retiring allowance could be contributed both to the RRSP of the contributor’s spouse within the s. 146(5.1) contribution limit and to the contributor’s own RRSP using s. 60(j.1)

CRA indicates that a bare trust has a calendar taxation year end, even if terminated before year end

The property held by a nominee corporation as the trustee of a bare trust is sold early in the year, the proceeds distributed on the termination of the trust, and the nominee then dissolved, also before December 31.

CRA indicated:

  • Pursuant to s. 249(1), the bare trust would have a calendar taxation year for s. 150 purposes, so that its filing deadline for the T3 return would be 90 days after the end of the calendar year (before taking into account the CRA dispensation for bare trusts for their 2023 taxation years).
  • Regarding the dissolved nominee, “[t]he trustee of a trust is responsible for filing a T3 return required under paragraph 150(1)(c), including Schedule 15 (where required by section 204.2 of the Income Tax Regulations), for the taxation year of the trust.”

It is difficult to make sense of the second point, but CRA evidently would want the return filed even with the trustee gone.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 7 May 2024 CALU Roundtable Q. 12, 2024-1005851C6 under s. 249(1)(c).

CRA confirms that AMT carryforward amounts cannot be utilized to reduce TOSI tax

S. 120.2(1) generally provides for the generation of a credit from the carryforward of an AMT amount based on the the extent of the excess of the Part I taxes for relevant subsequent year excluding TOSI taxes (and other amounts) over the AMT amount for that year. CRA confirmed that the effect of this TOSI exclusion in the computation is that if the only reason that there was an excess of Part I taxes over AMT in the subsequent year was because of TOSI tax, no application of the AMT carryforward could occur in that year – even if the reason for the AMT carryforward amount was the realization of TOSI in the earlier year.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 7 May 2024 CALU Roundtable Q. 11, 2024-1005801C6 under s. 120.2(1).

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