Search - 报销 发票日期 消费日期不一致
Results 12701 - 12710 of 13535 for 报销 发票日期 消费日期不一致
TCC
Teck-Bullmoose Coal Inc. v. R., [1997] 1 CTC 2603
.: — The Appellant appeals from the determination of loss made by the Minister of National Revenue (the “Minister”) with respect to its taxation year ending September 29, 1983 whereby the Minister denied the Appellant the right to deduct its share of road construction costs totalling $5,746,359, which share the Appellant included in the calculation of its Canadian exploration expense (“CEE”). ... If you look down in the southwest corner, you can see that there is from time to time paralleling the solid line- the new road — a broken line. ...
TCC
Clair C. Stewart v. Her Majesty the Queen, [1996] 3 CTC 2793, 96 DTC 1836
.: — This is an appeal from an assessment of income tax for the Appellant’s 1989 taxation year. ... The point is that the Appellant took title and swore the statutory declaration following the receipt of advice from a lawyer who, at least now, is of the view that a bare trustee might be "... a person referred to in section 105 of the Landlord and Tenant Act’. ...
TCC
John R. Singleton v. Her Majesty the Queen, [1996] 3 CTC 2873
.: — These appeals from assessments for 1988 and 1989 involve a question of the deductibility of $3,688.52 and $27,915.46 in interest on a loan of $300,000.00. ... The borrowing, the distribution of money to one partner, the repayment of the amount by the partner to replenish his momentarily depleted share of the capital account and the purchase of a house — all were conterminous and interdependent. ...
TCC
Pradeepan v. R., [1997] 2 CTC 2015
The losses claimed for the three years under appeal, without any consideration of capital cost allowance, are: 1989 $ 5,388 1990 $11,238 1991 $ 8,411 A further significant loss seems to have been incurred in 1992, with a break-even point being reached in 1993, the year in which the Appellant bought out his partners’ interest. ...
TCC
Lott v. R., [1998] 1 CTC 2869
The losses of the business, as shown in the statements prepared by the accountant, the portions of them arising from costs associated with the residence, and the portions arising from operations, [1] are as follows: YEAR LOSS RESIDENCE OPERATIONS 1992 $7,299 $3,462 $3,837 1993 $6,910 $7,387 $ 477 profit 1994 $4,670 $4,292 $ 378 It is not disputed by the Crown that the business was operated on the basis of an equal partnership. ...
TCC
Geropoulos v. R., [1998] 3 CTC 2384
Minister of National Revenue^ [11] as follows: … The text writers give us some insight as to why there was a change in dealing with active business income and investment income, and how this came about. ... It was something that we thought would be a valuable asset which would at that point have cost us nothing. ^ [16] His testimony was not contradicted or questioned in any material aspect. ...
TCC
Akhtar v. R., [1998] 3 CTC 2888
The relevant portion of paragraph 20(1)(/) reads as follow: (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs 18(1)(a), (6) and (/i), in computing a taxpayer’s income for a taxation year from a business or property, there may be deducted such of the following amounts as are wholly applicable to that source or such part of the following amounts as may reasonably be regarded as applicable thereto: (/) a reserve determined as the total of (i) a reasonable amount in respect of doubtful debts that have been included in computing the income of the taxpayer for that year or a preceding year, and (ii) an amount in respect of doubtful loans or lending assets of a taxpayer who was an insurer or whose ordinary business included the lending of money, made or acquired by the taxpayer in the ordinary course of the taxpayer’s business of insurance or the lending of money, equal to the total of In order to deduct a reserve for doubtful debts, the appellant must show on a balance of probabilities that the debts in issue arose from loans made in the ordinary course of a business operated by her and that part of her ordinary business includes the lending of money. ... Tara Exploration & Development Co. (1970), 70 D.T.C. 6370 (Can. Ex. ...
TCC
Pollak v. R., [1999] 2 CTC 2225
. — (1) For the purposes of paragraph (g) of the definition “eligible individual” in section 122.6 of the Act, the presumption referred to in paragraph (f) of that definition does not apply in the circumstances where (a) the female parent of the qualified dependant declares in writing to the Minister of National Health and Welfare that the male parent, with whom she resides, is the parent of the qualified dependant who primarily fulfils the responsibility for the care and upbringing of each of the qualified dependants who reside with both parents; (b) the female parent is a qualified dependant of an eligible individual and each of them files a notice with the Minister of National Health and Welfare under subsection 122.62(1) of the Act in respect of the same qualified dependant; (c) there is more than one female parent of the qualified dependant who resides with the qualified dependant and each female parent files a notice with the Minister of National Health and Welfare under subsection 122.62(1) of the Act in respect of the qualified dependant; or (d) more than one notice is filed with the Minister of National Health and Welfare under subsection 122.62(1) of the Act in respect of the same qualified dependant who resides with each of the persons filing the notices where such persons live at different locations. (2) For greater certainty, a person who files a notice referred to in paragraph (1)(b), (c) or (d) includes a person who is not required under subsection 122.62(3) of the Act to file such a notice and a person for whom the requirement to file such a notice has been waived by the Minister of National Health and Welfare under subsection 122.62(5) of the Act. 6302. — For the purposes of paragraph (h) of the definition “eligible individual” in section 122.6 of the Act, the following factors are to be considered in determining what constitutes care and upbringing of a qualified dependant: (a) the supervision of the daily activities and needs of the qualified dependant; (b) the maintenance of a secure environment in which the qualified dependant resides; (c) the arrangement of, and transportation to, medical care at regular intervals and as required for the qualified dependant resides; (d) the arrangement of, participation in, and transportation to, educational, recreational, athletic or similar activities in respect of the qualified dependant; (e) the attendance to the needs of the qualified dependant when the qualified dependant is ill or otherwise in need of the attendance of another person; (f) the attendance to the hygienic needs of the qualified dependant on a regular basis; (g) the provision, generally, of guidance and companionship to the qualified dependant; and (h) the existence of a court order in respect of the qualified dependant that is valid in the jurisdiction in which the qualified dependant resides. ...
TCC
Dr. Dextor Ator, Appellant v. The Minister of National Revenue, Respondent, [1999] 2 CTC 2369, 99 DTC 427
Dexter Ator, (having social insurance no. [... I) is an individual resident in the City of Saskatoon, in the Province of Saskatchewan. 2. ... Counsel concluded that these oppression provisions provide the remedy of an aggrieved shareholder — for example, a shareholder who did not receive dividends in the priority established by the Articles. ...
TCC
Corriveau v. R., [1999] 2 CTC 2580
Corriveau was having serious financial problems, he loaned him — through advances ranging from $50 to $1,000 — a total of $10,000 in 1988 and 1989 and $6,000 in 1990. ...