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FCTD (summary)

Coppley Noyes & Randall Ltd. v. The Queen, 91 DTC 5291, [1991] 1 CTC 541 (FCTD), varied on appeal 93 DTC 5196, 5508 (FCA). -- summary under Accounting Principles

Coppley Noyes & Randall Ltd. v. The Queen, 91 DTC 5291, [1991] 1 CTC 541 (FCTD), varied on appeal 93 DTC 5196, 5508 (FCA).-- summary under Accounting Principles Summary Under Tax Topics- General Concepts- Accounting Principles Before going on to affirm the deductibility under s. 20(1)(l) of an allowance for doubtful accounts which the taxpayer had taken for tax and financial statement purposes, Reed J. stated (p. 5297): "... in determining a reserve for doubtful debts, the principal factors that are used for the preparation line.gifl statements, as governed by the generally accepted accounting principles approved by the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants, are applicable, unless: (1) the Income Tax Act expressly requires otherwise or (2) the Income Tax Act implicitly requires otherwise. ...
Decision summary

Engineering Analysis Centre of Excellence Private Limited v. The Commissioner of Income Tax & Anr., Civil Appeal Nos. 8733-8734 of 2018, 2 March 202, Supreme Court of India -- summary under Article 12

The Commissioner of Income Tax & Anr., Civil Appeal Nos. 8733-8734 of 2018, 2 March 202, Supreme Court of India-- summary under Article 12 Summary Under Tax Topics- Treaties- Income Tax Conventions- Article 12 consideration for software paid by Indian resellers was not royalties for Canadian (and other) Treaty purposes At issue were numerous joined appeals involving the application of withholding tax by the Commissioner of consideration paid by residents of India to non-residents under four broad categories of licensing and sale transactions described below and involving the application of 18 income tax conventions (listed at para. 40, and described at para. 41 as being relevantly “substantially similar”) including that with Canada: Category 1: Computer software purchased directly by an end-user, resident in India, from a foreign, non-resident supplier or manufacturer (for example, a non-exclusive licence to use Samsung software on the end-user’s Samsung mobile device, with a prohibition against making the software available to any other person, or copying it other than for backup purposes). ... Nariman J noted (at paras. 47, 52): In all these cases no vestige of copyright is at all transferred, either to the distributor or to the end-user. What is “licensed” by the foreign, non-resident supplier to the distributor and resold to the resident end-user, or directly supplied to the resident end-user, is in fact the sale of a physical object which contains an embedded computer programme, and is therefore, a sale of goods. ... This would be the case regardless of whether the copies being distributed are delivered on tangible media or are distributed electronically (without the distributor having the right to reproduce the software) …. ...
TCC (summary)

Richter & Associates Inc v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 92 -- summary under Illegality

Richter & Associates Inc v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 92-- summary under Illegality Summary Under Tax Topics- General Concepts- Illegality Act applied to what has occurred irrespective of legality In rejecting a submission that the trustee for a bankrupt company was not authorized by the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act to engage in a "litigation support business" of providing assistance to most of the creditors in connection with their action sounding in negligence against company's former auditors, C&L for $800 million in damages, Archambault J stated (at paras. 33-4): [T]he Trustee, acting as agent for the Estate, was legally entitled to carry on the undertaking in question. In any event, I would add that the Act is not to be applied to transactions that ought to have taken place, nor is it to be applied only to transactions that could be legally carried out. ...
Decision summary

W. Nevill & Co. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1937), 4 A.T.D. 187 (HC) -- summary under Contract or Option Cancellation

Nevill & Co. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1937), 4 A.T.D. 187 (HC)-- summary under Contract or Option Cancellation Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 18- Subsection 18(1)- Paragraph 18(1)(b)- Capital Expenditure v. Expense- Contract or Option Cancellation In finding that instalments of a lump sum payment made by the taxpayer to a joint managing director in consideration of his cancelling his employment agreement with the company were expenditures of a capital nature, Dixon J. stated (at p.197) that the lump sum: "... was made for the purpose of organising the staff and as part of the necessary expenses of conducting the business. ...
Decision summary

MacKinlay v. Arthur Young McClelland Moores & Co., [1989] BTC 587 (HL) -- summary under Paragraph 18(1)(h)

Arthur Young McClelland Moores & Co., [1989] BTC 587 (HL)-- summary under Paragraph 18(1)(h) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 18- Subsection 18(1)- Paragraph 18(1)(h) The policy of a firm of accountants was to reimburse its partners for various costs of their moving their residence from one city to another at the request of the executive partnership committee. Lord Oliver stated: "... It is inescapable as it seems to me, that the expenditure, motivated no doubt by the fact of moving house, which in turn was motivated by the desire to put the partner concerned in a better position to further the interests of the firm, was an expenditure serving and necessarily and inherently intended to serve the personal interests of the partner in establishing his private residence for himself and his family and it cannot be said to be exclusively for the purposes of the partnership practice. ...
FCTD (summary)

Coppley Noyes & Randall Ltd. v. The Queen, 91 DTC 5291, [1991] 1 CTC 541 (FCTD), varied on appeal 93 DTC 5196, 5508 (FCA). -- summary under Subsection 10(1)

Coppley Noyes & Randall Ltd. v. The Queen, 91 DTC 5291, [1991] 1 CTC 541 (FCTD), varied on appeal 93 DTC 5196, 5508 (FCA).-- summary under Subsection 10(1) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 10- Subsection 10(1) consistent LIFO use generally is acceptable In commenting on the Anaconda case, Reed J. stated (p. 5298): "... ...
TCC (summary)

A & W TradeMarks Inc. v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 493 (Informal Procedure) -- summary under Subsection 169(1)

A & W TradeMarks Inc. v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 493 (Informal Procedure)-- summary under Subsection 169(1) Summary Under Tax Topics- Excise Tax Act- Section 169- Subsection 169(1) fees incurred in connection with parent’s issuing units, with proceeds used in the registrant’s business, were eligible The appellant, which became a wholly-owned subsidiary of a new income fund (the “Fund”), incurred $78,000 in fees directly to an investment dealer, law firms and a printing company in connection with the IPO of the Fund. The $83M proceeds of the IPO were used by the Fund to subscribe for debt and equity of the appellant which, in turn, used those proceeds to acquire trade marks from another A & W company for licensing back to that company. ...
TCC (summary)

Richter & Associates Inc v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 92 -- summary under Subsection 141.01(2)

Richter & Associates Inc v. The Queen, 2005 TCC 92-- summary under Subsection 141.01(2) Summary Under Tax Topics- Excise Tax Act- Section 141.01- Subsection 141.01(2) allocation between costs incurred by trustee in bankruptcy for bankrupt financial institution to provide litigation services to creditors, and costs incurred in connection with its action qua trustee The trustee in bankruptcy ("Richter") for Castor Holdings Ltd. ... Therefore, the costs of the litigation support services that the Estate enjoyed in prosecuting its own claim against C&L would not qualify for ITCs. However, the portion of the services and properties in question that was acquired for the purpose of prosecuting the claims of the Participating Creditors would be considered to have been acquired in the course of commercial activities. The allocation by the Estate of the use of its inputs between its taxable supplies and its other activities (exempt supplies) appears to me to be a fair and reasonable one and it complies with subsection 141.01(5).... ...
TCC (summary)

Procon Mining & Tunnelling Ltd. v. The Queen, 2022 TCC 71, aff'd 2024 FCA 1 -- summary under Capital Loss v. Loss

Procon Mining & Tunnelling Ltd. v. The Queen, 2022 TCC 71, aff'd 2024 FCA 1-- summary under Capital Loss v. ... Boyle J went on to state (at para. 23): The Appellant maintains that, since its intention at the time of acquisition was to earn business income, the loss at issue was a business loss. [T]his is not the test. ... It is almost antithetical to the correct distinction between the two types of property to say that the property acquired to be held and used to generate revenues from its business, which does not include trading in such property, is not capital property when sold …. ...
Decision summary

285614 Alberta Ltd. and Maplesden v. Burnet, Duckworth & Palmer, [1993] WWR 374, 8 BLR (2d) 280 (Alta. Q.B.) -- summary under Negligence, Fiduciary Duty and Fault

Burnet, Duckworth & Palmer, [1993] WWR 374, 8 BLR (2d) 280 (Alta. ... & Mrs. Maplesden) that Mr. Maplesden finance a home purchase through a loan from one of the operating corporations owned by them, that the home be registered in Mrs. ...

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