Citation:
2017 TCC 51
Date: 20170331
Docket: 2013-3907(IT)G
BETWEEN:
1245989
ALBERTA LTD.,
Appellant,
and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent,
Docket:
2013-3912(IT)G
AND BETWEEN:
PERRY
WILD,
Appellant,
and
HER
MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Lyons J.
I. Introduction
[1]
The Minister of National Revenue made determinations
regarding the 2007 taxation year of Perry Wild and the 2008 taxation year of 1245989 Alberta Ltd. (“1245”). The Minister applied the General Anti-Avoidance Rule (the “GAAR”) in section 245 of the Income Tax Act (the “Act”)[1] to deny the increase in the paid-up-capital (“PUC”) from $110 to
$595,264 (“tax benefit”) of Mr. Wild’s 2,337.5 Class E preferred shares of 1245
(“The Shares”) arising from transactions described below.
The appeals were heard on common evidence.
[2]
Mr. Wild, P.W. Rentals
Ltd. (“PWR”), Shilo Wild, Mr. Wild’s spouse, 1251237 Alberta Ltd. (“1251”) and
1245 are non-arm’s length parties. To protect PWR’s assets, the Wilds
implemented a corporate reorganization. Amidst that series of transactions, the
appellants engaged in avoidance transactions which resulted in the tax benefit.
The avoidance transactions included transfers of Mr. Wild’s PWR Class A
common shares (“PWR shares”) and subsequently transfers of PWR assets to the
numbered companies in exchange for Mr. Wild and then PWR each receiving preferred
shares of both 1251 (“Class C”) and 1245 (“Class E”) (collectively, Class C and
Class E are the “Same Class”). He used his capital gains exemption against
the capital gains from the disposition of his shares. The companies used corporate
deductions against deemed dividends.
[3]
The respondent contends that
the overall result of the appellants’ transactions was to circumvent the
effects of the application of section 84.1 of the Act in a manner
that frustrate or defeat its object, spirit and purpose by misusing subsection
89(1) in computing PUC resulting in share averaging on the issuance of the Same
Class of shares to himself and then to PWR (“relevant provisions”). Alternatively,
the transactions achieved an outcome that the relevant provisions were meant
to prevent and/or defeat their underlying rationale. Consequently, the avoidance
transactions resulted directly or indirectly in a misuse and abuse of the
relevant provisions within the meaning of subsection 245(4) of the Act.
[4]
The appellants assert the
central purpose of the reorganization was a non‑tax asset protection of PWR’s assets enabling PWR to transfer its assets
to the two numbered companies and the assets would be leased back to PWR. The
appellants concede the existence of the “tax benefit” and the “avoidance transactions”
within the meaning of subsections 245(1) and 245(3), respectively, but deny there
was abusive tax avoidance within the meaning of subsection 245(4) of the Act.
They contend the relevant provisions were applied and operated to their
intended effect. Subsection 89(1) involves basic math and section 84.1 was not
circumvented.
II. Issue
[5]
The appeal turns on whether the avoidance
transactions misused and abused, within the meaning of subsection 245(4) of the
Act, the relevant provisions so as to permit the
Minister to apply the GAAR to deny the tax benefit by reducing the PUC to $110 of The Shares Mr. Wild held in 1245.
[6]
The parties filed a Statement of Agreed Facts
(“SoAF”), Exhibit A-1. It reads:
STATEMENT
OF AGREED FACTS
The parties,
through their respective solicitors, agree, for the purpose of this appeal
only, and any appeal therefrom, that the following facts are true and that the
documents contained in the joint book of documents are accurate copies of
authentic documents. The parties are free to make submissions with respect to,
and are not to be taken as agreeing to, the degree of relevance or weight to be
attributed to these facts and documents.
The parties are
free to seek to introduce additional facts in evidence at trial, however, such
facts may not be inconsistent with the facts herein, unless the parties agree.
This agreement
shall not bind the parties in any other action.
1. P.W.
Rentals Ltd. (“PWR”) is an Alberta corporation.
2. PWR is an oil field rental company that
supplies portable accommodations, commonly referred to as well site trailers,
to the oil field sector.
3. On March 1, 2003, Perry Wild and Shilo
Wild each purchased 100 common shares of PWR from treasury.
4. At all
material times, Shilo Wild was Perry Wild’s spouse.
5. On March 2, 2003, PWR redeemed the 100
common shares held by Shilo Wild with the result that at all material times
Perry Wild was the sole shareholder of PWR.
6. As of January 1, 2004 Perry Wild owned 110
Class A common shares of PWR with a fair market value (“FMV”) of $2,337,500, an
ACB of $110 and a paid-up capital (“PUC”) of $110.
7. In an effort to protect the assets of PWR,
Perry and Shilo Wild implemented the corporate reorganization described below.
8. 1245989 Alberta Ltd. (“1245”) was
incorporated in Alberta on May 30, 2006 and on that date Perry Wild purchased
100 Class A common shares of 1245 for $100.
9. 1251237 Alberta Ltd. (“1251”) was
incorporated in Alberta on June 22, 2006 and on that date Shilo Wild purchased
100 Class A common shares of 1251 for $100.
1st
transfers: from Perry Wild and PWR to 1251
10. On June 1, 2007, Wild transferred 16.4
Class A common shares of PWR to 1251 for 348.5 Class C preferred shares of
1251, pursuant to s. 85 of the Act, as follows:
a.
the FMV of the 16.4 Class A common shares of PWR transferred by Perry Wild was
$348,500 and their ACB and PUC was $16.40;
b.
the redemption amount of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 was $1,000
per share or $348,500;
c.
Perry Wild and 1251 elected for Perry Wild’s proceeds of disposition (“POD”)
of the 16.4 Class A common shares of PWR, his ACB of the Class C preferred
shares of 1251 and 1251’s ACB in respect of the 16.4 Class A common shares of
PWR to be $129,000;
d.
Perry Wild reported a capital gain of $128,984 on the transfer of the 16.4
Class A common shares of PWR and claimed the capital gains exemption in the
same amount pursuant to s. 110.6 of the Act with the result that no tax was
payable on the gain, and
e.
the PUC of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 that Perry Wild received
in consideration for the 16.4 common shares of PWR was reduced to $16.40 (the
PUC of the transferred PWR shares) by operation of s. 84.1 of the Act.
11. On June 2, 2007, PWR transferred Class 8 equipment to 1251
for 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 pursuant to s. 85 of the Act, as
follows:
a. the
FMV of the Class 8 equipment transferred by PWR was $348,500 and its
undepreciated capital cost was $256,279;
b. the
redemption amount of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 was $1,000 per
share or $348,500;
c.
PWR and 1251 elected for PWR’s POD and 1251’s ACB in respect of the Class 8
equipment transferred to be $256,279; and
d. the
ACB and the PUC of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 received by PWR
were both $256,279, the elected amount, by operation of sections 85(1) and
85(2.1) of the Act.
12. Because Perry Wild had caused 1251 to issue Class C
preferred shares to him on the rollover of the 16.4 common shares of PWR and
then to issue the same class of shares to PWR on the rollover of the Class 8
equipment, the PUC of Perry Wild’s 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 was
increased to $128,148 and PUC of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251
received by PWR was reduced to a like amount as a result of subsection 89(1).
1st
corporate offsetting transactions
13. On June 3, 2007, 1251 redeemed the 348.5 Class C preferred
shares owned by PWR and issued a promissory note of $348,500 in favour of PWR.
14. On June 4, 2007, PWR purchased/redeemed the 16.4 Class A
common shares of PWR owned by 1251 and issued a promissory note of $348,500 in
favour of 1251.
15. On June 5, 2007, PWR and 1251 offset their respective
$348,500 promissory notes against each other.
2nd
transfers: from Perry Wild and PWR to 1245
16. On June 6, 2007, Perry Wild transferred the remaining 93.6
Class A common shares he held in PWR to 1245 for 1,989 Class E preferred shares
of 1245 pursuant to s. 85 of the Act, as follows:
a. the
FMV of the 93.6 Class A common shares of PWR transferred by Perry Wild was
$1,989,000 and their ACB and PUC were $93.60;
b.
the redemption amount of the 1,989 Class E preferred shares of 1245 issued to
Perry Wild was $1,000 per share or $1,989,000;
c.
Perry Wild and 1245 elected for his POD of his shares of PWR, the ACB of the
Class E preferred shares of 1245 he received and 1245’s ACB in respect of the
93.6 Class A common shares of PWR to be $621,000;
d.
Perry Wild reported a capital gain of $620,906 on the transfer of the 93.6
Class A common shares of PWR and claimed the capital gains exemption pursuant
to s. 110.6 of the Act with the result that no tax was payable on the gain, and
e.
the PUC of the 1,989 Class E preferred shares of 1245 that Perry Wild received
on the transfer was reduced to $93.6 (the PUC of the transferred PWR shares) by
operation of s. 84.1 of the Act.
17. On June 7, 2007 PWR transferred land and depreciable
property to 1245 for the assumption of $613,738 of PWR debt and 1,826.242 Class
E preferred shares of 1245 pursuant to s. 85 of the Act, as follows:
a.
the FMV of the land and depreciable property transferred by PWR was $2,439,980
and its cumulative undepreciated capital cost was $1,509,652;
b. the
redemption amount of the 1,826.242 Class E preferred shares of 1245 was $1,000
per share or $1,826,242;
c. PWR
and 1245 elected that PWR’s POD and 1245’s ACB in respect of the land and
depreciable property was $1,509,652; and
d. the
ACB and PUC of the 1,826.242 Class E preferred shares of 1245 that PWR received
in consideration for the land and depreciable property of PWR became $895,914
by operation of sections 85(1) and 85(2.1) of the Act.
18. Because Perry Wild caused 1245 to issue Class E preferred
shares to himself and to PWR, the PUC of Perry Wild’s 1,989 Class E preferred
shares of 1245 was increased to $467,115.62 and the PUC of the 1,826.242 Class
E preferred shares of 1245 received by PWR was reduced to a like amount as a
result of subsection 89(1).
2nd corporate offsetting transactions
19. On June 8, 2007, 1245
redeemed the 1,826.242 Class E preferred shares owned by PWR and issued a
promissory note of $1,826,242 in favour of PWR.
20. On June 9, 2007, PWR purchased/redeemed 86 of the 93.6
Class A common shares of PWR owned by 1245 and issued a promissory note of
$1,827,500 in favour of 1245.
21. On June 10, 2007, PWR and 1245 offset their respective
promissory notes against each other; an outstanding balance of $1,258 remained
payable to 1245 by PWR;
22. On June 11, 2007, Perry Wild transferred the 348.5 Class C
preferred shares of 1251 he obtained, as set out in subparagraph 10 above, to
1245 for 348.5 Class E preferred shares of 1245, pursuant to s. 85 of the Act,
as follows:
a.
the FMV of the 348.5 Class C preferred shares transferred by Perry Wild was
$348,500, their ACB was $129,000 and their PUC was $128,148;
b. the
redemption amount of the Class E preferred shares of 1245 that Perry Wild
received was $1,000 per share;
c. Perry
Wild and 1245 elected for Wild’s POD and 1245’s ACB in respect of the 348.5
Class C preferred shares of 1251 to be $129,000; and
d. the
PUC and ACB of the 348.5 Class E preferred shares of 1245 that Perry Wild
received was $128,148.
23. On June 12, 2007, 1251 purchased/redeemed the 348.5 Class
C preferred shares of 1251 owned by 1245 and issued a promissory note of
$348,500 in favour of 1245.
24. On June 13, 2007 PWR split its 7.6 Class A common shares
at a ratio of 13.158 to 1, resulting in 1245 owning 100 Class A common shares
of PWR now held by 1245.
25. As of June 13, 2007 Perry Wild owned 2,337.5 Class E
preferred shares of 1245 with a FMV of $2,337,500, an ACB of $750,000 and PUC
of $595,264.
26. Perry Wild did not make any other capital contributions to
PWR, 1251 or 1245 from January 1, 2004 to June 13, 2007.
27. The foregoing transactions constituted a series of
transactions, which series did result directly or indirectly in a tax benefit.
28. The following transactions were avoidance transactions as
that term is defined in subsection 245(3) of the Act:
a. utilizing
s. 85 of the Act, on June 1, 2007 Perry Wild transferred 16.4 common shares of
PWR to 1251 for 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 as described in
paragraph 10 hereof; and
b.
utilizing s. 85 of the Act, on June 2, 2007, PWR at the direction of Perry
Wild, transferred class 8 equipment to 1251 for 348.5 Class C preferred shares
of 1251 as described in paragraph 11 and 12 hereof.
29. The following transactions were also avoidance
transactions as that term is defined in subsection 245(3) of the Act:
a. utilizing
s. 85 of the Act, on June 6, 2007 Perry Wild transferred 93.6 common shares of
PWR to 1245 for 1,989 Class E preferred shares of 1245 as described in paragraph
16 hereof; and
b.
utilizing s. 85 of the Act, on June 7, 2007 Perry Wild transferred land,
depreciable properties and debt of PWR to 1245 for 1,826.2420 Class E preferred
shares of 1245 as described in paragraphs 17 and 18 hereof.
[7]
The undisputed facts are stated in the above
SoAF. To provide some factual context, a brief overview of certain features is
necessary here.
[8]
Having sought advice from tax planners, the Wilds
implemented, as directed by Mr. Wild, a corporate reorganization to protect
PWR’s assets and entered into a series of transactions with PWR, 1245 and 1251
as non-arm’s length parties. The series, including
avoidance transactions, began upon incorporation of
1245 in May 2006 and ended on June 13, 2007.[2]
The series resulted directly or indirectly in the tax benefit.
[9]
As part of that series, avoidance
transactions, described in paragraphs 10, 11, 12, 16, 17,
18, 28 and 29 of the SoAF (“avoidance transactions”), were undertaken in 2007 by
the appellants that resulted directly or indirectly in
the tax benefit.[3] The
avoidance transactions included the rollover of a portion
of his PWR shares to 1251 on June 1 and the remaining portion of Mr. Wild’s PWR
shares to 1245 on June 6 in exchange for Class C shares of 1251 and Class E shares
of 1245. The avoidance transactions also included the rollover of most of PWR’s
assets to the related numbered companies on June 2 and June 7 in exchange for PWR
receiving the Same Class of shares Mr. Wild had already received from each of
the numbered companies.[4]
[10]
Together, the June 1 and June 2 avoidance
transactions with the application of subsection 89(1), triggered the share
averaging within the Class C shares on June 2 that resulted in PUC:
(a) increases to Mr. Wild’s Class
C shares;
(b) decreases to PWR’s Class C shares; and
(c) PUC in the same amount for each of Mr. Wild and PWR.
[11]
Similar avoidance transactions were repeated on
June 6 and June 7 that triggered the averaging on June 7 resulting in the PUC
increase for Mr. Wild and corresponding decrease for PWR in their respective
Class E shares.
[12]
The proceeds of disposition
of Mr. Wild’s PWR shares and the numbered companies’ adjusted cost base (“ACB”)
of property they received are equal to the amount elected by Mr. Wild and the
numbered companies which resulted in capital gains against which his capital
gains exemption was applied. On the cross‑redemption of the shares (of
PWR owned by the numbered companies and vice versa), deemed dividends arose
under subsection 84(3) and section 112 deductions were applied without tax
consequences.
[13]
Before the series, Mr. Wild owned the PWR shares
with an ACB of $110 and PUC of $110. After the series he owned The Shares in
1245 which had an ACB of $750,000 and PUC of $595,264 and most of PWR’s assets
were owned by 1251 and 1245. The same fair market value (“FMV”) of $2,337,500 was maintained before
and after the series.
[14]
At the hearing, each party filed read-ins from
examinations for discovery of the opposing party; the respondent provided
clarification of read-ins of her nominee. The
respondent’s nominee agreed that there was nothing untoward in utilizing section
85 rollovers in the avoidance transactions. The respondent’s concerns are that
the PUC grind in section 84.1 was counteracted by the averaging effect of the
PUC because of the issuance of the Same Class of shares to Mr. Wild and then to
PWR in a certain manner and sequence which created an artificial PUC increase
in The Shares. Had the numbered companies issued a different class of shares to
each of them, there would be no tax benefit to Mr. Wild.[5]
[15]
All references that follow to provisions are to
the Act unless otherwise specified.
IV. Parties’ positions
Respondent
[16]
The respondent contends the appellants circumvented
the effects of section 84.1, a specific anti-avoidance surplus stripping rule,
by misusing the PUC calculation in subsection 89(1) that triggered the share averaging
effect within the Same Class of shares. Alternatively, the avoidance transactions
are abusive as they achieved an outcome that the relevant provisions were meant
to prevent and/or defeat their underlying rationale. Utilizing the PUC calculation in subsection 89(1) is not in itself
abusive, however, the manner in which it was used frustrated or defeated the
object, spirit or purpose of the relevant provisions.
[17]
The respondent argued that applying the relevant
provisions, as interpreted, to the facts to determine whether the avoidance
transactions fall within or frustrate the underlying rationale shifts the focus
to the overall result of the series which result in the tax benefit. This was
accomplished by issuing the Same Class of shares to himself and then to PWR
without any new injection of capital from him to PWR or 1245, shuffling the existing
assets from PWR to 1251 and 1245 in a non-arm’s length arrangement and then
applying his capital gains exemption and the corporate deductions with no tax
consequences whilst maintaining the FMV of $2.3 million (from PWR to 1245).
[18]
According to the respondent, section 84.1 and the
PUC scheme of the Act would be rendered meaningless if subsection 89(1)
can be misused to artificially inflate PUC in shares, through share
manipulation, as here.
Appellants
[19]
The appellants’ position is the reorganization was for
an asset protection objective to obviate risk. PWR would “spin out” its assets
to the numbered companies and subsequently lease those assets to PWR. Amidst
the reorganization, Mr. Wild engaged in the avoidance transactions to obtain
the tax benefit. Subsection 89(1) is a formulaic provision involving the
application of basic math in the computation of PUC and is not susceptible to
abuse.[6]
[20]
The respondent’s approach, the appellants argued,
is that section 84.1 has been abused not because it was avoided or circumvented
but because the overall purpose of the transactions was a general surplus strip
and she seeks to imbue section 84.1, indirectly, with such
powers to offset allowable deductions under sections 110.6 and 112.
[21]
The appellants suggest the respondent’s position is
misguided as it focuses on only half of the avoidance transactions, the share averaging
effect, ignores the corresponding decrease in PUC, is silent on section 112 and
advances a pre-Canada Trustco Mortgage Co. v Canada[7] position. The tax results are the consequence of the application of the relevant (and
other) provisions that operated as intended and within the purposes of those
provisions such that the avoidance transactions did not
abuse any provisions of the Act.
A. The GAAR Test
[22]
In determining whether the GAAR applies, the
Supreme Court of Canada in Canada Trustco instructs that the following
three‑step test is to be applied:
17 The application of the GAAR involves three steps. The first step is
to determine whether there is a “tax benefit” arising from a “transaction”
under s. 245(1) and (2). The second step is to determine whether the
transaction is an avoidance transaction under s. 245(3), in the sense of not
being “arranged primarily for bona fide purposes other than to obtain
the tax benefit”. The third step is to determine whether the avoidance
transaction is abusive under s. 245(4). …[8]
[23]
This test was reiterated by
the same Court in Lipson v The Queen[9] and Copthorne Holdings Ltd. v Canada.[10]
[24]
The appellants have the burden of refuting the
first two steps and the Minister has the burden of persuasion under the third
step to establish abusive tax avoidance.
[25]
The appellants concede Mr. Wild obtained the tax
benefit.[11]
However, in oral argument, they suggested the section
112 deduction is the provision associated with the tax benefit because it offsets gains and is the only reason the “PUC
shift” works. The
respondent countered she is not - nor would not - argue that
section 112 was abused as it worked exactly as it should. Rather, she contends subsection 89(1) is the source of the tax benefit because he directed and obtained the PUC increases, involving non-arm’s length parties, through
the issuance of the Same Class of shares to him and then PWR sequentially and
in a certain manner that triggered the share averaging.
[26]
The Act integrates corporate and shareholder
taxes on business income by imputing corporate taxes to shareholders at the
personal level. The goal is to defer taxation of corporate
surplus until it is distributed as a dividend to the individual shareholder. Section 112 provides a corporate deduction to facilitate the movement of corporate funds (inter-corporate
dividends) between corporations to prevent distributions
from being taxed at every level of the corporate structure.[12]
[27]
Issuing the Same Class of shares to PWR on June 2
(Class C) and June 7 (Class E) that had previously been issued to Mr. Wild,
triggered the share averaging in each instance in computing PUC under subsection
89(1). If the Same Class of shares had not been issued
to PWR, there would have been no averaging and no tax benefit. It is not alleged that section 112 has been abused nor is it referenced in subsection 89(1) and the
appellants’ own written submissions acknowledge subsection 89(1) was relied on
for the source of the tax benefit. Consequently, I find that subsection 89(1)
is associated with the tax benefit that the appellants relied on which
incorporates section 84.1 as part of the PUC computation and scheme.
[28]
Although the appellants concede the existence of
the avoidance transactions within the meaning of subsection 245(3), they then claimed
that these amounted to “bare” tax avoidance. Having made that concession, in my
view, no further consideration is necessary as to the second step.
[29]
As to the third step, a two-stage abuse analysis
is required to establish whether the avoidance transactions abused the relevant
provisions. Firstly, interpreting the relevant provisions of the Act to
determine the object, spirit or purpose and, secondly, determining whether the
avoidance transactions fall within or frustrate the purpose of the relevant
provisions.
[30]
In Canada Trustco, it
was noted that while subsection 245(4) provides for “misuse” and “abuse”, these
two determinations are not separate inquiries.[13]
In the reasons to follow, the term “abuse” will be used as embracing both
terms.
[31]
Various principles will be
outlined before conducting the abuse analysis under the third step.
B. Principles
of abusive tax avoidance
[32]
The framework for a GAAR analysis was enunciated in
Canada Trustco and reiterated in Lipson and Copthorne (the “trilogy”). Principles in determining whether an avoidance transaction results in abuse for the
purpose of subsection 245(4) are found at paragraphs 44 to 62 in Canada
Trustco; many of the principles are highlighted below.
[33]
In Copthorne, it was noted that “[t]axpayers are entitled to select courses of action or enter into
transactions that will minimize their tax liability”. In Canada Trustco, the Court stated:
61. A proper
approach to the wording of the provisions of the Income Tax Act together
with the relevant factual context of a given case achieve balance between the
need to address abusive tax avoidance while preserving certainty,
predictability and fairness in tax law so that taxpayers may manage their
affairs accordingly. Parliament intends taxpayers to take full advantage of the
provisions of the Act that confer tax benefits. Parliament did not intend the
GAAR to undermine this basic tenet of tax law.
[34]
Tax planning per se is not abusive for the
purposes of subsection 245(4).[14]
[35]
As noted in Lipson, “… a taxpayer will not
be denied a tax benefit resulting from an avoidance transaction unless that
transaction directly or indirectly results in the abuse and misuse of the
provisions of the Act …” Hence, an avoidance transaction will be found
to be abusive within the meaning of subsection 245(4) if “it cannot be
reasonably concluded that a tax benefit would be consistent with the object,
spirit or purpose of the provisions relied upon by the taxpayer.” Abusive tax
avoidance will be established if the transaction frustrates or defeats those
provisions.[15]
[36]
The interpretive approach in a GAAR analysis is
referred to in the trilogy of decisions and described in Copthorne as:
70 The object,
spirit or purpose can be identified by applying the same interpretive approach
employed by this Court in all questions of statutory interpretation - a
"unified textual, contextual and purposive approach" (Trustco,
at para. 47; Lipson v. Canada, 2009 SCC 1, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 3, at para.
26). While the approach is the same as in all statutory interpretation, the
analysis seeks to determine a different aspect of the statute than in other
cases. In a traditional statutory interpretation approach the court applies the
textual, contextual and purposive analysis to determine what the words of the
statute mean. In a GAAR analysis the textual, contextual and purposive analysis
is employed to determine the object, spirit or purpose of a provision. Here the
meaning of the words of the statute may be clear enough. The search is for the
rationale that underlies the words that may not be captured by the bare meaning
of the words themselves. However, determining the rationale of the relevant
provisions of the Act should not be conflated with a value judgment of what is
right or wrong nor with theories about what tax law ought to be or ought to do.
[37]
In a GAAR analysis, a textual, contextual and purposive interpretation is to be employed to
determine the object, spirit or purpose of the relevant provision relied on for
the tax benefit to ascertain the underlying rationale of the relevant provision
having regard to the scheme of the Act and permissible extrinsic aids.[16]
[38]
The GAAR can only be applied to deny a tax benefit
when the abusive nature of the transaction is clear. If
not, the benefit goes to the taxpayer.[17]
[39]
In Copthorne, the Court indicated there is
no general principle against a corporate reorganization and states:
121 …Where corporate
reorganization takes place, the GAAR does not apply unless there is an
avoidance transaction that is found to constitute an abuse. Even where
corporate reorganization takes place for a tax reason, the GAAR may still not
apply. It is only when a reorganization is primarily for a tax purpose and
is done in a manner found to circumvent a provision of the Income Tax
Act that it may be found to abuse that provision. And it is only where
there is a finding of abuse that the corporate reorganization may be caught by
the GAAR.
C. Analysis
[40]
In oral argument, appellants’ counsel debated that there
are two types of abuse. First, where a taxpayer relied on a provision to
provide a tax benefit and the provision was abused. Second, where a specific anti-avoidance
rule is circumvented. He argued that
as the Minister could not demonstrate that any provision ‘relied upon’ by the
appellants was abused, the Minister must demonstrate that a specific tax
avoidance provision has been ‘circumvented’ but could not do so.[18] He explained:
… there's really two general headings of abuse, two types of abuse, and
I'll get to the quote by the Supreme Court of Canada momentarily.
There's abuse where you are improperly relying on provisions of the Act
to gain a tax benefit, that’s one heading. So you look to the provisions that
provide the tax benefit. And the Supreme Court of Canada says that’s the first
and most important thing, where did the tax benefit come from? And you
ascertain whether they've been abused. There's another category and that is
where you've actually circumvented ‑‑ and I'm being very careful with these words ‑‑ circumvented the operation of a specific anti-avoidance provision.
You've circumvented it. In other words, you've avoided a tax avoidance – anti‑tax avoidance provision.[19]
[41]
Respondent counsel responded that under the Canada Trustco analysis, there are three heads
and “… the court needs to find that the abusive
transaction falls within one of those three things and it may overlap. There
may be two parts of these three tests that are held to be seen in the
transactions and result in abusive tax avoidance.”[20]
[42]
The trilogy of decisions instructs that there are
three types of abusive tax avoidance. Enunciated in Canada Trustco, the
Court states:
45 This analysis
will lead to a finding of abusive tax avoidance when a taxpayer relies on
specific provisions of the Income Tax Act in order to achieve an outcome
that those provisions seek to prevent. As well, abusive tax avoidance will
occur when a transaction defeats the underlying rationale of the provisions
that are relied upon. An abuse may also result from an arrangement that
circumvents the application of certain provisions, such as specific
anti-avoidance rules, in a manner that frustrates or defeats the object, spirit
or purpose of those provisions. …
[43]
Additionally, in Lipson and Copthorne, in
referring to the three types of abuse, the Court added that “One or more of these possibilities may apply in a given case.” and “These considerations are not independent of one
another and may overlap.”, respectively.[21]
[44]
In Copthorne, the Court found the
transaction circumvented the parenthetical words in subsection 87(3) upon
amalgamation of two entities and ultimately concluded the sale of shares
circumvented those words and in the context of the series of which it was a
part, achieved a result the section was intended to prevent, and therefore,
defeated its underlying rationale.[22]
[45]
Essentially, “While the focus must be on the
transaction, where it is part of a series, it must be viewed in the context of
the series to enable the court to determine whether abusive tax avoidance has
occurred.” such that “… whether a transaction is abusive will only become
apparent when it is considered in the context of the series of which it is a
part and the overall result that is achieved.”[23]
The central question is whether the transactions were consistent with the
purpose of the relevant provisions.[24]
[46]
In the present case, the Minister alleges that
subsection 89(1) and section 84.1 were abused.
1. Interpretation of relevant provisions to determine their object,
spirit or purpose
[47]
With those principles in mind, I turn to the third step of the GAAR abuse analysis. The first stage begins with a textual,
contextual and purposive analysis to determine the object, spirit or purpose of
the relevant provisions that were relied upon for the tax benefit before
determining whether the impugned transactions constitute abusive tax avoidance.[25]
Subsection 89(1)
[48]
PUC is determined under subsection 89(1) which contains
the definition of PUC. The relevant portion reads as follows:
89.(1) … “paid-up
capital” at any particular time means,
(a) in respect of a share of any class of the capital
stock of a corporation, an amount equal to the paid-up capital at that time, in
respect of the class of shares of the capital stock of the corporation to which
that share belongs, divided by the number of issued shares of that class
outstanding at that time
(b) in
respect of a class of shares of the capital stock of a corporation,
…
(iii) where the
particular time is after March 31, 1977, an amount equal to the paid-up capital
in respect of that class of shares at the particular time, computed without
reference to the provisions of this Act except subsections 51(3) and 66.3(2)
and (4), sections 84.1 and 84.2, subsections 85(2.1), 85.1(2.1), 86(2.1), 87(3)
and (9), 128.1(2) and (3), 138(11.7), 139.1(6) and (7), 192(4.1) and 194(4.1)
and section 212.1.
Text
[49]
The text indicates that in determining PUC, it is initially calculated in
reference to the capital stock (i.e., stated capital) of a corporation in
respect of a class of shares (or series).[26]
The stated capital may then be adjusted by the provisions listed in
subparagraph 89(1)(b)(iii) if the conditions are met. In discussing the text, in Copthorne, the Court states:
75 This definition
is unusual. It does not provide an express positive definition. Instead, it
states that PUC shall be calculated initially “without reference to the
provisions of this Act”. In practice this means that the PUC calculation begins
with reference to the stated capital of a class of shares, determined under
corporate law. This is explained in para. 2 of the Income Tax Interpretation
Bulletin IT-463R2 “Paid-up Capital” (September 8, 1995):
Since subparagraph (b)(iii) of the
definition of “paid-up capital” provides that the amount of the paid-up capital
of a class of shares is initially determined without reference to the
provisions of the Income Tax Act, the calculation is based on the
relevant corporate law rather than tax law. The amount calculated under
corporate law is usually referred to as the “stated capital” of the class of
shares.
[50]
Subsection 89(1) defines
PUC by reference to a share or all shares in respect of the class of the
capital stock of the corporation determined under the relevant corporate law.[27] The PUC calculation
incorporates the presumption that shareholders within the class are to be
treated equally.[28]
Determination of the PUC of shares of the class is calculated by dividing the PUC of the class by the number of shares issued in
that class. Therefore, all shareholders of the class have the same PUC
regardless of the capital contribution made by each shareholder of that class.[29]
Context
[51]
In a contextual analysis, other relevant provisions
that are grouped or work together are to be examined to give effect to a
“plausible and coherent plan” and permissible extrinsic aids to understand the
context of the provision at issue.[30]
[52]
Interpretation of specific provisions cannot be
separated from contextual considerations arising from other provisions of the Act
which functions as a coherent whole with respect to the particular statutory
scheme engaged by the transactions. The PUC scheme of the Act
is part of the Act’s approach to taxation of corporate
distributions. Subsection 89(1) is highlighted in Copthorne as
incorporating other provisions that can reduce PUC (“PUC grind”) of the shares
of a corporation in computing PUC as part of that scheme.
[53]
The calculation of PUC of the class can diverge
from the stated capital of that class because of such reductions that can be
made for tax purposes pursuant to the provisions listed in subparagraph 89(1)(b)(iii).
That subparagraph includes sections 84.1 and 212.1, applicable to non-arm’s
length situations if the requisite conditions are met, and subsection 85(2.1); these
are anti-avoidance provisions. Subsection 87(3) is also included in the
subparagraph and prevents the inflation of PUC on amalgamation; this was the
key provision under consideration in Copthorne.
Purpose
[54]
Parliament amended the definition of PUC in 1977.
It chose corporate law principles to govern the computation of PUC to represent
the funds invested in a company by a shareholder. The amount invested could be
returned as a tax-free return of capital because the PUC was contributed from
after-tax funds but any amount paid to a shareholder that exceeds PUC would be
taxed as a dividend.[31]
[55]
I agree with the respondent that the purpose of the
subsection 89(1) is to mirror the corporate law concept of
stated capital, subject to the provisions listed in the Act that may
subsequently make adjustments, to ensure that the PUC, calculated and averaged
within the class, accurately represents and is restricted to the funds invested
in the shares of the corporation by its shareholders.
Section 84.1
[56]
The relevant part of section
84.1, again listed in paragraph 89(l)(b)(iii), reads:
84.1 (1) Where after May 22, 1985 a taxpayer resident in Canada
(other than a corporation) disposes of shares that are capital property of the
taxpayer (in this section referred to as the “subject shares”) of any class of
the capital stock of a corporation resident in Canada (in this section referred
to as the “subject corporation”) to another corporation (in this section
referred to as the “purchaser corporation”) with which the taxpayer does not
deal at arm’s length and, immediately after the disposition, the subject
corporation would be connected (within the meaning assigned by subsection
186(4) if the references therein to “payer corporation” and to “particular
corporation” were read as “subject corporation” and “purchaser corporation”
respectively) with the purchaser corporation,
(a) where
shares (in this section referred to as the “new shares”) of the purchaser
corporation have been issued as consideration for the subject shares, in
computing the paid-up capital, at any particular time after the issue of the
new shares, in respect of any particular class of shares of the capital stock
of the purchaser corporation, there shall be deducted an amount determined by
the formula
(A
- B) × C/A
where
A is the increase, if any, determined without
reference to this section as it applies to the acquisition of the subject
shares, in the paid-up capital in respect of all shares of the capital stock of
the purchaser corporation as a result of the issue of the new shares,
B is the amount, if any, by which the greater of
(i) the
paid-up capital, immediately before the disposition, in respect of the subject
shares, and
(ii) subject
to paragraphs 84.1(2)(a) and 84.1(2)(a.1), the adjusted cost base to the
taxpayer, immediately before the disposition, of the subject shares,
exceeds
the fair market value, immediately after the disposition, of any consideration
(other than the new shares) received by the taxpayer from the purchaser
corporation for the subject shares, and
C is
the increase, if any, determined without reference to this section as it
applies to the acquisition of the subject shares, in the paid-up capital in
respect of the particular class of shares as a result of the issue of the new
shares; …
Text
[57]
From a textual review,
section 84.1 applies to a non-arm’s length transfer of shares of one Canadian
corporation to another corporation by an individual (resident in Canada, Mr.
Wild) and the companies are connected immediately after the disposition of
shares. It prevents the PUC of the newly-acquired shares (1251 and 1245) from
exceeding the PUC of the subject shares (PWR) through the increase in PUC as a
result of issuing new shares that would otherwise occur without reference to
section 84.1. Where the conditions in section 84.1 are met, the PUC grind
occurs to the shares issued by the purchaser corporation (1251 and 1245) to the
amount of the PUC of the shares of the subject corporation (PWR).[32]
Context
[58]
In the 1977 amendments, Parliament introduced
sections 84.1 and 212.1, applicable to non-arm’s length transactions, because
of concerns about corporate distributions.
[59]
Section 84.1 is contained in Subdivision (h) of
Division B, Part I which includes the computation of PUC and the taxation of
corporations residing in Canada and their shareholders.
[60]
In Copthorne, the PUC grind provisions, listed in
subparagraph 89(1)(b)(iii) as part of the PUC scheme, are described
mostly as intending to prevent the preservation of PUC in situations where bare
reliance of stated capital would not achieve Parliament’s intended purpose: allowing
tax-paid investment only as a return of capital without income inclusion. The
Court notes:
95 Section 89(1) incorporates
by reference provisions which reduce the PUC of the shares of a corporation.
They are colloquially referred to as “grinds”. For example, ss. 84.1 and 212.1 both grind PUC in non-arm's length
transactions. These sections have been described as “anti-avoidance”
provisions aimed at “dividend stripping” (Collins & Aikman Products Co. v. The Queen, 2009 TCC 299, 2009 D.T.C.
1179, at paras. 55 and 105, aff'd 2010 FCA 251, [2011] 1 C.T.C. 250) because
such non-arm's length transactions may provide an opportunity for corporations to return funds in excess of the initial investment made
with tax-paid funds to a shareholder as a non-taxable return of capital, rather
than as a taxable dividend.
96 The existence of
such grinds is an indication that the subsections enumerated in s. 89(1) are
mostly intended to prevent the preservation of PUC in instances where bare
reliance on stated capital would not achieve Parliament's intended tax purpose
of allowing only for a return of tax-paid investment without inclusion in
income. …
[61]
Generally, sections 84, 84.1 and 212.1 and
subsection 85(2.1) are designed to tax shareholders on any distributions of corporate
surpluses. Albeit each provision involves different scenarios, the common
textual thread is the aim to prevent a corporation from having its surpluses
stripped.
[62]
Subsection 84(3) is a
deeming provision that deals with amounts paid on share redemption; it applied
in the present case. Illustrating the interplay of subsection 89(1) in the
context of the PUC scheme, subsection 84(3) takes the
PUC, determined under subsection 89(1), including adjustments required by
subsection 87(3), and deems an amount paid in excess of the resulting PUC a
dividend received by a shareholder and subject to tax. If payment on such redemption
is less or equivalent to PUC, it is a non-taxable return of capital. Subsections
84(2) and (4) to (9) similarly deem dividends in various situations, restricted
to Canadian residents, to ensure that corporate distributions are not
capitalized to stated capital for distribution to a shareholder as a tax-free
return of capital beyond the amount invested.
[63]
Section 212.1 provides for a PUC grind of shares
issued by a purchaser corporation (or a deemed dividend) if the conditions are
met. Since section 212.1 applies to a non-resident person who disposes of
shares of a corporation resident in Canada to another such corporation, it is
not relevant in these appeals. Notably, the 1985 amendments to section 84.1
were fashioned after section 212.1.
[64]
Subsection 85(2.1) applies where shares are issued on a transfer of property; paragraph
85(2.1)(a) will grind the PUC of the shares issued
by the purchaser corporation if the
conditions are satisfied. This also
applied to transfers of PWR’s assets and limited PUC. There
is no alleged abuse of this
subsection but the appellants referred to it in their submissions. Briefly, subsection 85(2.1) only applies where
subsections 85(1) or 85(2) have applied in respect of a disposition of property
and to dispositions of property where sections 84.1 or 212.1 do not apply. Contextually, subsection 85(2.1) was introduced effective after November 1985, and is consequential to the introduction of the provisions relating to the
capital gains exemption. The purpose is described as preventing
the removal of taxable corporate surpluses as a tax-free return of capital thus
limits the amount of PUC of the shares issued on a transfer of property.[33]
Purpose
[65]
The purpose of section 84.1, the respondent
argued, is to prevent the removal or conversion of taxable corporate surplus
into a potential tax-free return of capital by way of non-arm’s length sale of
shares by an individual shareholder resident in Canada from one corporation to
another thereby preventing an increase in PUC.
[66]
The Department of Finance Technical Notes of May
1991 indicates:
Section 84.1 is
an anti-avoidance rule designed to prevent the removal of taxable corporate
surplus as a tax-free return of capital through a non-arm’s length transfer of
shares by an individual resident in Canada to a corporation.[34]
[67]
In the decision of Descarries
v Canada,[35] Justice Hogan states “… that the object, spirit or purpose of section
84.1 of the Act is to prevent taxpayers from performing transactions
whose goal is to strip a corporation of its surpluses tax‑free through
the use of a tax-exempt margin or a capital gain exemption.” He observes that his
view is consistent with that of the Minister of Finance upon introducing the
proposed amendments to section 84.1 in 1985 during the introduction of the new
capital gains exemption provisions. Paragraph 54 of Justice Hogan’s decision elaborates
on this further and is attached as Appendix I to these reasons.
Conclusion - object, spirit or purpose
[68]
I conclude that the object, spirit or purpose of:
(a) subsection 89(1) is designed to compute PUC equally of shares within a
class with reference to corporate law principles, subject to applicable adjustments
listed in paragraph 89(1)(b)(iii), that represents the amount invested
in the company shares by its shareholders; and (b) section
84.1, an anti-avoidance rule, is to prevent the removal of taxable corporate
surplus as a tax-free return of capital through the use of the capital gains
exemption (or tax-exempt margin), where there is a non‑arm’s length
transfer of shares by an individual resident in Canada from one corporation to
another and PUC in excess of the amount invested cannot be withdrawn tax free.
2. Did
the avoidance transactions defeat or frustrate the object, spirit or purpose of
the relevant provisions?
[69]
This second stage of the abuse analysis is to examine
the factual context to determine whether the avoidance transactions defeated or
frustrated the object, spirit or purpose of the relevant provisions relied on
by the appellants.
[70]
Mr. and Mrs. Wild owned the newly-incorporated
companies 1245 and 1251, respectively. PWR, owned by Mr. Wild, rented equipment
to the oil industry. He sought advice from tax planners to protect PWR’s assets
for an asset protection objective. The Wilds implemented the reorganization with the series of transactions commencing on the
incorporation of 1245 in May 2006 and ending on June 13, 2007. The appellants
characterized this as a PUC shift to spin out PWR’s assets
into 1251 and 1245. Ultimately,
most of PWR’s assets were transferred to the numbered companies and later were
leased back to PWR. Amidst the series, the appellants entered into the
following avoidance transactions.
June 1 - Mr. Wild transferred his 16.4 PWR shares to 1251 for 348.5 Class C
shares issued by 1251 to him
[71]
Under the PUC computation pursuant to subsection
89(1), where an asset with a high FMV, the 16.4 PWR shares, is transferred to a
company, 1251, the stated capital of 1251 goes up to $129,000.
[72]
Since the section 84.1 conditions were met, it applied
to grind the PUC of the Class C (1251) shares issued to him to $1 per share.
Accordingly, Mr. Wild received the Class C shares with a PUC of $16.40.
June 2 - PWR transferred assets to 1251 for 348.5 Class C shares issued by
1251 to PWR
[73]
This avoidance transaction involved the transfer by
PWR of some of its assets to 1251 in consideration for Class
C shares PWR received; the assets had a FMV of $348,500 and an undepreciated
capital cost (“UCC”) of $256,279. The consideration received by PWR was the
Class C shares with a redemption amount of $1,000 per share totalling $348,500.
The elected amount for PWR’s proceeds of disposition and 1251’s ACB was $256,279.
[74]
Subsection 85(2.1) applied
to grind the PUC of the Class C shares to $256,279 (limits the amount that may
be distributed as a tax-free return of capital to prevent surplus stripping).
[75]
Subsequently, the PUC of his Class C shares
increased (from $16.40 to $128,148) and PWR’s Class C shares decreased (from
$256,279 to $128,148) because of the averaging effect under subsection 89(1)
which requires shareholders to have the same PUC; the PUC of the shares issued
is adjusted to the same amount of $128,148 for each of Mr. Wild and PWR.[36]
[76]
Later, the PWR shares owned by 1251 and the Class C
shares owned by PWR were redeemed, causing a deemed dividend to arise under
subsection 84(3) and a section 112 deduction was claimed with no tax payable by
PWR or 1251.
June 6 - Mr. Wild transferred his remaining
93.6 PWR shares to 1245 for 1,989 Class E shares issued by 1245 to him
[77]
In this avoidance transaction, section 84.1 applied
to grind down the PUC of the shares received by Mr. Wild in exchange for his
remaining PWR shares. Again, under the PUC computation, where assets with a
high FMV, the 93.6 PWR shares, are transferred to 1245, the stated capital of 1245
goes up. Here, the stated capital would have been $621,000. However, section
84.1 applied to restrict the PUC and reduced the Class E shares.
June 7 - PWR transferred land, depreciable property and debt to 1245 for
1,826.242 Class E shares issued by 1245 to PWR
[78]
This last avoidance transaction follows similar steps
to the June 2, 2007 transaction as it relates to Class E. Specifically, PWR transferred land, depreciable property and debt to
1245 for share consideration. The FMV of the land and the depreciable property
was $2,439,980, having a UCC of $1,509,652. The consideration received was the
assumption of debt and Class E shares with a redemption value of $1,000 per
share, totalling $1,826,242. Subsection 85(2.1) applied to the transaction to
reduce the PUC of the share to $895,914; the amount that could be distributed
as a tax-free return of capital was limited to $895,914.
[79]
Again, the PUC of his Class E shares increased (from
$93.60 to $467,115) and PWR’s Class E shares decreased (from $895,914 to
$467,115) under the averaging effect under subsection 89(1); they end up with
the same PUC.
[80]
Following this step, there was a cross-redemption
of the shares of 1245 and PWR; this resulted in a deemed dividend under
subsection 84(3) and a section 112 deduction was claimed with no tax payable by
PWR or 1245.
[81]
The final step in the reorganization was to
exchange the Class C for Class E shares using a section 85 rollover.[37] This results in Mr. Wild
owning The Shares of 1245 (2,337.5 Class E shares) with a PUC of $595,264, representing
the consolidation of the two PUC increases.
[82]
The appellants argued that subsection
89(1) is a formulaic mechanism with the limited purpose of computing PUC to
average shares within a class based on corporate law and is not susceptible to
abuse nor does it specify when circumstances are abusive. The purported “abuse” was the choice to issue the Same Class of shares to each of Mr. Wild and later PWR that
culminated in the tax benefit. Share averaging applied as it should so that Mr. Wild and PWR had the same PUC for the
Same Class of shares. They suggest
the respondent was unable to establish that the object,
spirit and purpose of subsection 89(1) has been abused or frustrated by the
transactions and this amounts to legislative-gap filling.
[83]
Clearly, computing PUC according to the mechanism
under subsection 89(1) is not in and of itself abusive. I disagree, however,
that the subsection is not susceptible to abuse. Although the appellants
referred to Canada Trustco principles, their basic
math argument and general approach seemed to focus on the literal text of
subsection 89(1) in isolation from the PUC scheme. The trilogy of decisions inform that whilst the
text is to be considered, the
heart of the analysis lies in the contextual and purposive interpretation of
the provision in issue to find meaning that harmonizes the wording, object,
spirit and provisions of the Act.[38] Reliance on the text
without regard to the underlying rationale is misplaced even though it might be
possible in some cases that the rationale would be no broader than the text
itself.[39]
[84]
The appellants further argued that section 84.1
applied to grind the PUC therefore was not circumvented because “no one walked
around” the section and the respondent is unable to show in what manner the
object, spirit or purpose of section 84.1 was abused.
[85]
Combined, subsection 89(1)
and section 84.1 deal with the computation of PUC involving the PUC grind where
there is a non-arm’s length transfer of shares by an individual from one
corporation to another. The definition of PUC in subsection 89(1) relies on
stated capital as a base for the PUC calculation, with subsequent adjustments,
as part of the PUC scheme of the Act. Together, these prevent the extraction
of corporate surplus tax-free in such circumstances and preclude the return of
an amount of capital tax-free in excess of an investor’s original contribution as
noted in Copthorne and consistent with the PUC scheme.
[86]
In Desmarais v Canada, after describing the purpose of section 84.1 is
to prevent a tax-free return of corporate surplus through a non-arm’s length
transfer of shares by an individual, Justice Archambault concluded that Mr.
Desmarais had stripped surpluses of an operating company.[40]
[87]
Similarly, in Descarries, another decision relied on by the respondent, Justice Hogan also describes that section 84.1 was enacted to
prevent corporate surpluses being distributed tax-free through non‑arm’s
length transfers of shares and when individual taxpayers attempt to use their
capital gains exemption.[41] He notes section 84.1 operates in the
following context and if applicable causes a PUC grind of the shares issued by
the purchaser corporation:
a)
a taxpayer resident in Canada (transferor),
other than a corporation, disposes of shares (the subject shares) of a
corporation resident in Canada (the subject corporation);
b) the subject shares are capital property to the taxpayer;
c)
the taxpayer transfers the subject shares to a
corporation (purchaser corporation) with which the taxpayer does not deal at
arm’s length; and
d) the subject corporation is connected to the purchaser corporation
immediately after the disposition.
[88]
Justice Hogan found that
there were three transactions that permitted the
appellants to indirectly distribute part of Oka’s business surpluses tax-free which
abused section 84.1 because the
appellants’ tax advisor had designed a complex tax plan specifically to
frustrate the object, spirit or purpose of that provision.[42] The conclusion reached and key features in the
Descarries decision are set out on Appendix II to these reasons. The parties in the present appeals draw different
conclusions from the Descarries decision.
[89]
The respondent argued that while the avoidance
transactions implemented in the present case are different in design, they were
carried out with the same purpose or result in mind; the objective was to allow
Mr. Wild to use his capital gains exemption in a manner that allows him to
receive corporate distributions as tax-free return of capital rather than
taxable dividends and in excess of the capital contribution he made. This was
done in a manner that circumvents the effects of and/or defeats the application
of section 84.1 and frustrates its underlying rationale as a specific anti‑avoidance
provision designed to prevent the result achieved by misusing subsection 89(1)
that triggered the share averaging.
[90]
The appellants argued that the transactions
considered by Justice Hogan in Descarries were carried out in a surplus-stripping context.[43] They argued that this is not the context in
which the transactions challenged by the Minister were carried out in the present
case and observe that the Minister accepts that the reorganization was carried out
to protect PWR’s assets. Finally, the appellants contend that Justice Hogan
found that GAAR applied in the Descarries decision because the appellants
had used their tax-free V-Day Value to offset a transitory capital gain that
was generated for the sole purpose of allowing Descarries to receive
tax-free returns of capital. There is no such direct or indirect link between
the use by Mr. Wild of his capital gains exemption and the increase in the PUC
of The Shares of 1245.
[91]
I disagree with the appellants’ analysis of the Descarries
case. There are similarities between the avoidance transactions in the present
case and those considered in Descarries that allow me to conclude that
the avoidance transactions in the present case were, like Descarries,
designed and implemented in a surplus-stripping context involving a complex
plan. In my analysis, I have considered the interrelationship of the
transaction steps, the combined tax effects of the avoidance transactions,
section 84.1, a specific anti-avoidance rule that is relevant to the matter at
hand, the context in which the avoidance transactions were implemented and the
overall result.
[92]
The ”key features” of the transactions in the
present case can be succinctly stated as follows:
1.
On
June 1, 2007, Mr. Wild exchanged his (16.4) PWR shares for (348.5) Class C
shares of 1251.
This transaction gives
rise to a capital gain. He uses his capital gains exemption with the result
that no tax is paid. This is a key feature of the tax plan. A tax-free return
of capital is possible if the avoidance transactions achieve both a tax-free
increase in the ACB and PUC of the shares. Both occurred.
2.
On
June 2, 2007, PWR transferred some assets to 1251 in consideration for Class C
shares of 1251.
This transaction
results in an increase in the PUC of the shares held by Mr. Wild by virtue of
the averaging effect of subsection 89(1). The ACB and the PUC of the shares of Mr.
Wild must be increased without immediate tax consequences for him in order that
Mr. Wild may benefit from tax-free returns of capital.
Notably, PWR did not
give up a valuable tax attribute (PUC of shares) by accepting shares that have
a PUC per share less than their ACB. The subsequent redemption of these shares
creates a larger tax-free intercorporate dividend. Mr. Wild, however, benefits
from this feature of the tax plan.
3. On June 6, 2007, Mr. Wild transferred his remaining 96.3 PWR shares
to 1245 for Class E shares of 1245. On June 7, 2007, PWR transferred its
remaining assets to 1245 also for Class E shares. These transactions creates
the same tax results for Mr. Wild as those described relating to 1251.
[93]
Responses at the
examination for discovery of Mr. Wild to questions put to him relating to the
assets and issuance of the Same Class of shares were lacking. Excerpts of some
of the read-ins are attached as Appendix III to these reasons. When asked “Why
were these assets in particular transferred” to 1251, he said that was under
the direction of the tax planner. When asked how the election amount (between
him and 1251 for $129,000) was determined, he said he did not know as his tax
planners decided that. Other responses surrounding the issuance of the Same
Class of shares were that he did not know or assumed the tax planners did, or
they “possibly” knew or they “directed” or “decided” a certain action to take
place.
[94]
No plausible explanation was offered as to why
he directed and PWR chose to accept the Same Class of shares previously issued
to Mr. Wild. Had the Same Class
of shares not been issued to PWR in the manner it did and after the Same Class
had already been issued to Mr. Wild the previous day, there would have been no share
averaging on June 2 and 7 and no increases in PUC for Mr. Wild.
[95]
PUC is computed at the corporate level, however,
PUC is relevant to a shareholder on redemption or cancellation of shares or in a
non-arm’s length sale of shares under section 84.1. A
shareholder would typically demand a separate class of shares to avoid a potential
negative impact on share value caused by averaging within a class.[44] Usually, a shareholder wants
to retain the full PUC value because a corporation can return the PUC in the
amount of the initial investment tax-free to a shareholder as it was made with
after tax funds. Yet, here the decision was to issue the Same Class on two
occasions triggering the share averaging under subsection 89(1).[45]
[96]
The strategy directed by Mr. Wild, facilitated by indifferent non-arm’s
length parties (two of which were newly-created companies), resulted in a five thousand-fold increase in his PUC even though no
new capital had been contributed by him to PWR nor 1245. To allow the increase
in PUC, would enable payment, without liability for tax by Mr. Wild, of an
amount in excess of his initial investment of $110. The overall result made it possible for Mr. Wild to indirectly
withdraw part of PWR’s corporate earnings tax-free by using his capital gains
exemption to offset a capital gain created as a direct effect of a non-arm’s
length share for share exchange. PWR’s existing assets were merely shuffled from one corporate entity
to another, leased back to PWR and a FMV of approximately $2.3 million was
maintained with no tax consequences. I find that the
key features of the appellants’ tax plan were carried out solely with surplus
stripping in mind. The key features were not required for the alleged
asset-protection objective. Based
on the evidence, I find that the reorganization was
primarily for the purpose of conveying the tax benefit to Mr. Wild.
[97]
The avoidance transactions achieved an outcome,
and in the context of the series of which those were part, that section 84.1
was intended to prevent (individual shareholders in a non-arm’s length share
for share exchange convert corporate distributions, that would otherwise be
taxed as dividends, into exempt returns of capital by utilizing the capital
gains exemption) and defeated its underlying rationale - and the underlying
rationale of subsection 89(1) - by misusing the PUC
calculation that triggered the share averaging effect.
[98]
It is clear from the key
features of the plan the appellants took deliberate steps, in the context of
the series, to defeat the application of section 84.1 and what it was intended
to prevent by misusing
subsection 89(1), and did so in a manner that defeats the object, spirit and purpose of section 84.1 and subsection 89(1). I am of the opinion that the avoidance transactions were applied in
an abusive fashion.
[99]
The tax planners that designed the avoidance
transactions in the present case relied on different provisions to achieve the
desired surplus-stripping results. Albeit the route taken is different than
that in Descarries, the result is the same. But for the application of
the GAAR, the tax plan succeeded in achieving tax results that section 84.1 was
enacted to prevent and defeats its underlying rationale.
[100]
While section 84.1 does not apply to prevent the
tax results achieved by the avoidance transactions in the present case because of
the appellants’ particular strategy and sequencing, the object, spirit and purpose
of section 84.1 is clear. Individual taxpayers should not be allowed to use
their capital gains exemption to strip corporate surpluses by entering into
non-arm’s length transactions which are similar to those addressed in section
84.1 nor obtain excess PUC tax-free.
[101]
Legislation cannot be drafted that captures all
eventualities and particular strategies. In adopting GAAR, Parliament recognized
that specific anti-avoidance rules such as section 84.1 often proved to be
ineffective in curtailing tax avoidance arrangements considered by Parliament
to be abusive. Too many routes may be taken by the ingenuity of tax planners to
be blocked by specific anti-avoidance rules such as section 84.1. GAAR was
adopted to block abusive arrangements, amongst other things, and to close the
gaps that sophisticated tax plans seek to exploit as here. The essence of which
is captured as follows:
Subsection 245(4)
of the Act sets out the most significant limitation on the GAAR. As the
Technical Notes explain, where a taxpayer carries out a transaction primarily
to use the Act’s specific rules to obtain a tax benefit not intended by
those rules or by the Act when read as a whole, the GAAR should apply.
The Notes go on to state that “this would be the case even though the strict
words of the relevant specific provisions may support the tax result sought by
the taxpayer. Thus, where applicable, section 245 will override other
provisions of the Act since, otherwise, its object and purpose would be
defeated”. Moreover, a transaction that does not amount to a misuse of any
specific provision may still be deemed abusive having regard to the Act
as a whole.[46]
(Footnotes omitted)
[102]
In Lipson, Justice LeBel, for the
majority, observes that GAAR is a residual rule aimed at addressing the
complexity of situations which “fall outside the scope” of specific
anti-avoidance rules.[47]
[103]
Before concluding, I respectfully disagree that
the decision of Nadeau v Canada[48]
assists the respondent and that it is “almost identical to what took place
here”. Nadeau predates Canada Trustco, therefore the Court did
not have the benefit of the GAAR analysis framework. There was an injection of
a $460,000 loan, backed by a guarantee, and interest was paid on the loan.
Also, there was no transfer of assets as in the present case. Finally, a
statement was made in Nadeau about a general anti-surplus stripping
policy but the respondent confirmed that that position is not being advanced in
the present case.
[104]
I conclude that the reorganization was undertaken
primarily to obtain the tax benefit. I also conclude that key features of the non-arm’s
length avoidance transactions, as part of and in the context of the series,
achieved a result (extraction of corporate surplus indirectly and use of his
exemption) that section 84.1 was intended to prevent and defeats its underlying
rationale and did so by misusing the PUC computation in subsection 89(1) to
trigger the share averaging thus artificially inflated the PUC in The Shares
held by Mr. Wild without any new capital contribution made by him. Therefore,
the transactions were undertaken in a manner that defeats the object, spirit
and purpose of section 84.1 and 89(1) of the Act and were abusive
avoidance transactions within the meaning of subsection 245(4).
V. Conclusion
[105]
The Minister has persuaded me
that the appellants engaged in abusive tax avoidance. For
the foregoing reasons, I
conclude that the above avoidance transactions were
abusive within the meaning of subsection 245(4) of the Act thus defeated the object, purpose and spirit of section 84.1 and
subsection 89(1) of the Act. The Minister properly applied the GAAR to deny the tax benefit.
[106]
The appeals for Mr. Wild’s 2007 taxation year
and 1245’s 2008 taxation year are dismissed.
[107]
One set of costs is awarded to the respondent.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 31st day of March 2017.
“K. Lyons”