News of Note

CRA applies its policy that a s. 104(19) designation is effective on December 31 to Pt. IV tax and terminal return inclusions

A Canadian resident personal trust receives a dividend from ACo, and distributes the dividend to B Co (a beneficiary) to which A Co is connected – but they cease to be connected corporations by December 31 of that year. CRA indicated that the connected-corporation Pt. IV tax exemption did not apply to the dividend received by B Co since the s. 104(19) designation is considered to be effective only at the end of the trust’s taxation year – at which time they were no longer connected.

A follow-up point: if a beneficiary receives an amount that is designated as a taxable dividend, but that individual dies during the year, that dividend nonetheless is included in the individual’s terminal return (even though the death occurred before the December 31 effective date of the dividend designation) given that the taxation year of an individual (even of a deceased individual) is the calendar year and there “is no provision in the Act that shortens a taxpayer’s taxation year in his or her year of death so as to cause it to end as at the taxpayer’s date of death.” Thus, the requirement in s. 104(13) - that the dividend be income from a trust whose taxation year did not end before that of the individual - is satisfied.

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.11 under s. 186(1)(a) and s. 104(13).

CRA states that the forgivable loan portion of a CEBA loan is a s. 12(1)(x)(iv) receipt

The Canada Emergency Business Account (“CEBA”) program provides interest-free loans of up to $40,000 to small businesses and not-for-profit organizations to fund their expenses. Repaying the balance of the loan on or before December 31, 2022 results in loan forgiveness of 25%. CRA indicated that:

  • The forgivable portion of the loan is recognized as an income inclusion under s. 12(1)(x)(iv) as a “forgivable loan …in respect of...an outlay or expense”.
  • That amount may effectively offset under s. 12(2.2) against the amount of the related expenses.
  • In the year of repayment of 75% of the loan, there are no further tax consequences.
  • A taxpayer not qualifying for the 25% forgiveness who settles the loan for 100% of the principal may generally claim a deduction under s. 20(1)(hh) equalling the previous s. 12(1)(x) inclusion – even where the taxpayer made the s. 12(2.2) election.

This interpretation may be portable to forgivable loans received by indebted landlords under the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance Program (the “CECRA”) program.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 10 November 2020 External T.I. 2020-0861461E5 under s. 12(1)(x)(iv).

CRA rules that the negative repo spread on a reverse repo was not interest

In a traditional “reverse repo” (the term, as contrasted with “repo,” that is used where the transaction is viewed from the perspective of the purchaser rather than the seller), the securities such as bonds are purchased for $X in cash and agreed to be repurchased by the seller at a later date at a somewhat higher price. This positive spread represents what economically is interest that the purchaser is earning on its cash. But what if the reverse repo occurs in a negative interest rate environment, so that the bond is repurchased by the seller at a “negative repo spread” (i.e., the repurchase price is lower than $X)?

CRA ruled that “[t]he negative repo spread … will not be considered to be interest or an amount paid or credited as, on account or in lieu of, or in satisfaction of interest for the purposes of paragraph 212(1)(b).” In its (less than prolix) reasons provided in its summary, it stated that “the agreements are purchase and sale agreements to which subsection 260(2) does not apply.” The notion appears to be that the form of the transactions (a sale and repurchase) will not be recharacterized. CRA might also have said (but did not) that negative interest is not interest.

This ruling interested the parties because they were affiliates. In particular, the purchaser (presumably, a resident) might have been concerned that the negative interest that in effect was paid by it to its non-arm’s length and non-resident counterparty might be subject to Part XIII tax.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 2019 Ruling 2018-0776381R3 under s. 212(1)(b).

CRA states that investing carried on with the proceeds of sale of a business in which the spousal shareholders had been engaged full time generally would generate TOSI on resulting dividends

After a husband and wife’s corporation (in whose business they had worked full time for 5 years) has sold its business and reinvested the proceeds, they receive dividends out of the resulting investment income generated. Assuming that the exception for “excluded shares” did not apply, would the dividends be split income, because the definition of “excluded business” could no longer be met because the business had ceased?

CRA noted that the corporation’s investment activities might be a new business that is a related business, but stated that, in such case:

[T]he excluded business exception would not apply to husband and/or wife if such individual is not considered to be actively engaged in that investment business on a regular, continuous and substantial basis either during the particular taxation year or in any five prior taxation years. Consequently, the taxable dividends will be split income subject to TOSI unless another excluded amount exception applies.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.10 under s. 120.4(1) – split income.

Income Tax Severed Letters 2 December 2020

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

CRA indicates that a specified individual splitting full-time work amongst multiple corporations might meet the excluded business activity test on less than 4 hours per week per corporation

A husband and wife collectively work full-time for various of their companies but work no more than an average of 4 hours per week in the business of each company.

CRA found that “[s]ince neither spouse works more than 4 hours in any business carried on by any of the particular corporations they own, the requirements of the bright line test in paragraph 120.4(1.1)(a) would not be met and, as such, it remains a question of fact as to whether either spouse would otherwise be considered to be actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis in the activities of each such business on the basis of the limited number of hours worked.” However, CRA went on to indicate that “useful” guidance was to be garnered from 2019-0799901C6, which indicated:

[A] husband and wife could both be considered to be actively engaged in the activities of a particular business carried on by their corporation on a regular, continuous and substantial basis for a particular year where the particular business did not require any other workers and only required them to spend on average 5 hours each per week in that business.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.9 under s. 120.4(1) – excluded business.

CRA confirms that charitable credits do not reduce an individual’s TOSI

CRA confirmed that the tax on split income cannot be reduced by s. 118.3 charitable credits. This could be a concern where, for example, a specified individual’s income was mostly split income in the form of a taxable capital gain arising on a sale whose proceeds were gifted to the charity.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.8 under s. 120.4(3).

CRA confirms that TOSI does not apply to rental properties held by individual co-owners

CRA confirmed that generally “split income … include[s] amounts that are included in a specified individual’s income in respect of a corporation, partnership or a trust … [and] does not include amounts that are included in the income of a specified individual as a result of the direct ownership of real property.” Accordingly, the tax on split income would not apply to rental income earned on rental properties held by related individuals in co-ownership, or taxable capital gains realized on the properties’ disposition.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.7 under s. 120.4(1) – split income.

CRA illustrates the generation of a loss to a capital beneficiary attributable to an eligible offset amount

CRA ran through two simple numerical examples showing the somewhat contrived operation of the rules in ss. 107(2)(a) and (c), and 107(1)(a) in computing a beneficiary’s capital gain or loss on receiving a distribution of shares from the personal trust in satisfaction of the beneficiary’s capital interest. The shares had an ACB of $100,000, the beneficiary did not have an (actual) cost for that capital interest, and there was a $20,000 liability respecting of the shares satisfying the “eligible offset” definition.

CRA noted that s. 107(1)(a) deemed the ACB of the capital interest to be the $100,000 cost amount of the distributed shares for capital gains purposes, so that there was no capital gain (i.e., the deemed $80,000 proceeds of disposition of the capital interest under s. 107(2)(c), being the excess of the $100,000 cost amount of the distributed property, being their deemed cost to the beneficiary, over the $20,000 eligible offset amount) – whereas, for capital loss purposes, the ACB of the capital loss was determined as nil on ordinary principles, so that there also was no loss.

In a variant of this example, the beneficiary’s interest was previously acquired at an actual cost of $100,000, so that there is a $20,000 capital loss on the beneficiary’s capital interest, reflecting the excess of the ACB over the 107(2)(c) proceeds of disposition of $80,000.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 26 November 2020 STEP Roundtable, Q.6 under s. 107(1)(a).

We have translated 5 more CRA Interpretations

We have published 5 further translations of CRA interpretation released in October and September, 2009. Their descriptors and links appear below.

These are additions to our set of 1,331 full-text translations of French-language Roundtable items and Technical Interpretations of the Income Tax Rulings Directorate, which covers all of the last 11 ¼ years of releases of Interpretations by the Directorate. These translations are subject to the usual (3 working weeks per month) paywall.

Bundle Date Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2009-10-16 30 September 2009 External T.I. 2009-0317641E5 F - Attribution de revenu Income Tax Act - Section 75 - Subsection 75(2) issuance of shares at FMV is not a transfer of property to which s. 75(2) can apply
Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 104 - Subsection 104(6) - Paragraph 104(6)(b) discretionary trust could distribute, and deduct under s. 104(6), a dividend received by it to a corporate beneficiary incorporated after the dividend’s receipt
2009-10-09 30 September 2009 External T.I. 2009-0340061E5 F - FERR au profit de l'époux ou du conjoint de fait Income Tax Act - Section 146 - Subsection 146(1) - Spousal or Common-Law Partner Plan a RRIF receiving a transfer from a spousal or common-law partner RRSP is rendered a spousal or common-law partner plan
2009-10-02 16 September 2009 External T.I. 2008-0295951E5 F - Article XVI de la Convention Canada-É.U Treaties - Income Tax Conventions - Article 16 $15,000 gross receipts exclusion under Art. XVI(1) of US Convention is inapplicable where the income is earned by the artist’s corporation
2009-09-25 8 September 2009 External T.I. 2008-0299771E5 F - Gain on Disposition of Debt Income Tax Act - Section 43 - Subsection 43(1) partial repayment of low-ACB debt generates a capital gain
Income Tax Act - Section 9 - Computation of Profit partial repayment of low-cost debt generates business income if held on income account
17 September 2009 External T.I. 2009-0310251E5 F - Interaction between sections 89 and 55 Income Tax Act - Section 89 - Subsection 89(1) - Capital Dividend Account - Paragraph (a) addition to CDA from redemption engaging s. 55(2) occurs at redemption time

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