News of Note

CRA announces that it will tighten the VDP criteria and review its guidelines for negotiated audit settlements

CRA has released the formal response of the federal government dated February 22, 2017 to the 14 recommendations of the House Standing Committee on Finance made on October 26, 2016. Although to some extent this was an exercise in deftly matching platitude with platitude (although even these may be valuable markers of an underlying shift in attitudes), some more specific comments include:

  • Finance will consider whether the current reportable transactions legislation should be expanded.
  • CRA’s review of the voluntary disclosures program, to be completed by March 31, 2017, “will result in some changes to tighten the criteria for acceptance into the program.”
  • CRA will review its guidelines for negotiated audit settlements (which already require settlement “on a principled basis in accordance with legislation”).
  • CRA is auditing 60 of the taxpayers identified through the Panama Papers.
  • The 2017 Budget will include an update on Finance’s review of “tax expenditures” – and no, there was no mention of the ½ capital gains inclusion rate.
  • The authors forgot to respond to the Committee’s recommendation that the federal government “expeditiously implement initiatives aimed at simplifying the income tax system.”

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 22 February 2017 Government Response to the Sixth Report of the Standing Committee on Finance entitled: The Canada Revenue Agency, Tax Avoidance and Tax Evasion: Recommended Actions under s. 220(3.1).

An application of CRA’s transfer-pricing penalty policies should be evaluated rigorously

Comments on the transfer-pricing penalty rules include:

  • It appears unlikely that merely satisfying the documentary requirements in s. 247(4)(a) will provide a safe harbour from the imposition of penalties under s. 247(3).
  • “Regardless whether profit allocations can be used under subsection 247(2) in circumstances where they do not permit the determination of specific terms and conditions in respect of a transaction, it is clear that they can be used as a defence against the application of transfer-pricing penalties.”
  • There is some judicial support for the proposition that where CRA has made s. 247(4) requests for documentation and has expressed no concern with it, this should be a defence against a penalty being imposed in the future on the basis that the same type of documentation is inadequate.
  • TPM-09 to some extent goes beyond what the corresponding OECD Guidelines suggest would be appropriate.
  • Where a taxpayer has made reasonable efforts to determine and use an arm’s length price or allocation in respect of the actual transactions it engaged in, there should be no s. 247(3) penalty if its transactions are deemed to be something different under s. 247(2)(d) recharacterization.

Summaries of comments of Richard Tremblay contained in Brian Mustard, Sam Maruca, Charles Thériault, and Richard Tremblay, "Transfer Pricing: What Are 'Reasonable Efforts,' and When should Penalties Apply?" Canadian Tax Foundation, 2015 Conference Report, 32:1-33 under s. 247(3) and s. 247(4)(a).

Canadian Forest Navigation – Federal Court of Appeal finds that the Tax Court is entitled to give weight to foreign rectification orders

After receiving dividends from Barbados and Cyprus subsidiaries, a Quebec company obtained rectification orders from the applicable Barbados and Cyprus courts declaring that the amounts instead were loans to it. In answer to a Rule 58 question as to whether the Minister was now bound to treat these transfers as loans, Lamarre ACJ had found that the orders did not bind the Minister because they had not been homologated by a Quebec court.

In the Court of Appeal, Boivin JA indicated that the lack of homologation was irrelevant, and then stated:

…[B]oth orders from Barbados and Cyprus are proof that the corporate resolutions have been rectified to authorize the dividend payments and to transform them into indebtedness, no more, no less. …

I cannot agree … that…these foreign orders are dispositive and that the Minister has no choice… but to accept the dividends are actually loans because the orders from Barbados and Cyprus say so.

…[W]hat remains to be determined is the foreign orders’ effect vis-à-vis the Minister…and the weight ascribed to the foreign orders as facts…. These determinations are for the Tax Court judge to make, with a full evidentiary record at his or her disposal. …

On this basis, he concluded that Lamarre ACJ should not have answered the Rule 58 question, and set aside her judgment and dismissed the Rule 58 motion before the Tax Court.

He did not mention Fairmont, which is unsurprising as the issue was the weight to be given to the (foreign) rectification orders rather than whether rectification was available.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Canadian Forest Navigation Co. Ltd. v. The Queen, 2017 FCA 39 under General Concepts – Rectification.

CRA rules that drilling from an abandoned mine qualified as para. (f) CEE

CRA ruled that expenses of drilling from an abandoned mine to delineate a deposit at the pre-feasibility study phase qualified under para. (f) of the Canadian exploration expense definition. Although the ruling letter is heavily redacted, more details are provided in a ruling (2014-0534121R3) on the project at an earlier stage. The two ruling letters, when read together, may imply that CRA accepted that work conducted between the first and second rulings, which consisted mostly of analyzing data from drill holes that were drilled by previous owners of the mine and from drill core assays left by them, in order to arrive at an inferred or indicated resource, qualified as CEE.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 2016 Ruling 2016-0639671R3 under s. 66.1(6) - Canadian exploration expense – para. (f).

Income Tax Severed Letters 22 February 2017

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

Andrews – Tax Court of Canada finds that driving a car is not transporting it for GST purposes

The taxpayer arranged for drivers to drive back to Canada the cars of those who had suffered an incapacitating medical emergency in the U.S. In finding that this did not qualify as a “service of transporting tangible personal property,” so that it was not zero-rated, V.A. Miller J found that this quoted definition required that the property be carried by some mode of transport such as a vehicle, ship or rail car and that merely driving a car did not qualify as transporting it, stating that:

[T]he vehicle cannot be both the personal property and the means of carrying it at the same time.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of Andrews v. The Queen, 2017 TCC 23 under Sched. VI, Pt. VII, s.1(1) – freight transportation service.

Translations of French Severed Letters now go back 18 months

Full-text translations of seven technical interpretations released in French between September 23, 2015 and August 19, 2015 are now available - and are listed and briefly described in the table below.

These (and the other translations covering the last 18 months of CRA releases) are subject to the usual (3 working weeks per month) paywall.

Bundle Date Translated severed letter Summaries under Summary descriptor
2015-09-23 11 August 2015 External T.I. 2015-0592441E5 F - Test wind turbines Income Tax Regulations - Regulation 1219 - Subsection 1219(3) change to GPS coordinates does not affect 2013-0490631E5
2015-09-16 5 June 2015 Internal T.I. 2015-0569061I7 F - Non-interest-bearing loan to a controlled foreign affiliate Income Tax Act - Section 17 - Subsection 17(8.1) - Paragraph 17(8.1)(b) debt owing to CFA parent, which had funded active business assets and was assumed on absorptive merger, qualified under s. 17(8.1)(b)
25 June 2015 External T.I. 2014-0553181E5 F - Graduated rate estate Income Tax Act - Section 248 - Subsection 248(1) - Graduated Rate Estate only an estate, not a testamentary trust, can qualify
25 August 2015 External T.I. 2015-0571271E5 F - Affiliated Trusts under Paragraph 251.1(1)(h) Income Tax Act - Section 251.1 - Subsection 251.1(3) - Contributor deceased settlor of Trust B was an affiliated contributor to her brother, who contributed to Trust A
2015-09-02 18 June 2015 External T.I. 2015-0578071E5 F - Reimbursement of overpayment of QPIP benefits Income Tax Act - Section 60 - Paragraph 60(n) - Subparagraph 60(n)(v.1) no s. 60 deductions if non-resident
Income Tax Act - Section 4 - Subsection 4(2) s. 60 deduction denied for repayment of previous income inclusion
Other Legislation/Constitution - Federal - Financial Administration Act - Subsection 23(2) general criteria for granting remission
2015-08-19 23 June 2015 External T.I. 2015-0571801E5 F - Allocation of Capital Gains to Beneficiaries Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 104 - Subsection 104(21.2) allocation of QSBC gain to a beneficiary added after QSBC disposition
24 June 2015 External T.I. 2015-0565951E5 F - Legatee by particular Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 108 - Subsection 108(1) - Beneficiary legatee by particular title is a beneficiary even if not an heir
Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 104 - Subsection 104(13) allocation of interest income of succession to legatee by particular title

There are still numerous open questions on the taxation of Canadian trusts

Comments on the taxation of trusts resident in Canada include:

  • A CRA indication that a charity is a majority-interest beneficiary of a trust when the trustee has the discretion to make a gift to the charity under the declaration of trust may not be correct, given that “it is unclear whether the charity has the power to compel the administration of the trust, which is generally recognized as a necessary condition for a person to be considered a beneficiary.”
  • Given that the CRA has indicated in other contexts that an s. 84.1(1)(b) deemed dividend is not deemed to be paid on shares, this suggests that ss. 112(3) to (7) would not apply to a capital dividend that is deemed to be paid under s. 84.1(1)(b).
  • S. 107(1)(c), which generally reduces the amount of a loss realized on a disposition of a capital interest in a trust by dividends received under s. 104(19) or (20) could result in double taxation where the beneficiary is a second trust, and the second trust flows out those amounts to its beneficiaries.
  • Although a spousal trust that otherwise would qualify for rollover treatment under s. 70(6) but for having U.S. resident trustees may apply for competent authority relief under Article XXIX B(5) of the Canada-U.S. Treaty, that Article requires that the transfer to the spousal trust be made under a will – which is often a problem because US individuals often use an inter vivos trust to reduce or defer US estate tax.
  • The CRA view that a trust funded with insurance does not qualify as a spousal trust for purposes of s. 70(6) if the terms of the trust were not set out in the will appears to be incorrect: “A pre-existing declaration of trust that is funded and created pursuant to the terms of the taxpayer's will should be treated as having been created under the terms of the taxpayer's will because the trust did not exist before the transfer.”
  • The CRA view that a trust does not qualify as a spousal trust when its terms permit or require the trust to pay life insurance premiums, also is questionable.
  • A fully discretionary trust with resident and non-resident beneficiaries and receiving both dividends from shares of US public corporations and interest from Canadian sources should be able to allocate its dividend income first to its resident beneficiaries so that they can access foreign tax credits under ss. 104(19) and 126(1).

Neal Armstrong. Summaries of Elie Roth, Tim Youdan, Chris Anderson and Kim Brown, Chapter 3: “Taxation of Trusts Resident in Canada,” Canadian Taxation of Trusts, (Canadian Tax Foundation), 2016 including under s. 251.1(4)(d), s. 112(3.2), s. 107(1)(c), Treaties Art. 29B, s. 70(6), 104(19).

Brookfield Asset Management intends to distribute an insurance-company subsidiary as a taxable dividend

Brookfield Asset Management is proposing to transfer subsidiaries, carrying on a Canadian, U.S. and international insurance business, to a newly-incorporated Ontario subsidiary (Trisura Group), and then distribute its shares of Trisura Group to the Brookfield shareholders as a taxable dividend. The Circular indicates that for non-Canadian beneficial shareholders, the Part XIII tax withholding tax obligations “will be satisfied in the ordinary course through arrangements with their broker or other intermediary.” This dividend is expected to occur as a tax-free distribution for Code purposes.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of preliminary prospectus of Trisura Group under Spin-offs & Distributions – Taxable dividends-in-kind - Subsidiary distribution.

CRA rules that 100% of the income and non-capital losses of a pipeline reclamation trust are allocable to the pipeline company

The NEB has been requiring pipeline companies to set up reclamation trusts to be funded by monthly contributions to the trust made by the pipeline companies based on identifiable charges therefor collected from their customers. CRA has provided three quite similar ruling letters indicating that the trust is a qualifying environmental trust, and that the contributions are deductible under s. 20(1)(ss).

The reclamation trust is a discretionary trust whose beneficiaries also include a federal not-for-profit corporation maintaining funds for the reclamation of abandoned pipelines in Canada, a.k.a., the Orphan Pipeline Fund. This concept of “beneficiary” is somewhat illusory as the trust deed specifies that “distributions from the ACo Reclamation Trust to a Beneficiary or a third party are to be made for the sole purpose of discharging the Beneficiary’s Reclamation Obligations.” CRA ruled that the pipeline company’s reasonable share of income or non-capital of the reclamation trust under s. 107.3(1) for purposes of computing its income and taxable income is 100%.

Neal Armstrong. Summary of 2015 Ruling 2015-0619281R3 under s. 211.6(1) - qualifying environmental trust.

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