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Technical Interpretation - Internal summary
29 March 2021 Internal T.I. 2020-0865791I7 - CEWS - eligible remuneration -- summary under Payment & Receipt
29 March 2021 Internal T.I. 2020-0865791I7- CEWS- eligible remuneration-- summary under Payment & Receipt Summary Under Tax Topics- General Concepts- Payment & Receipt remuneration not considered to be paid by journal entry The CEWS (wage subsidy) is generated based on the amounts of “eligible remuneration paid to the eligible employee.” ...
Ruling summary
2023 Ruling 2023-0973911R3 - Loss Consolidation Ruling -- summary under Payment & Receipt
2023 Ruling 2023-0973911R3- Loss Consolidation Ruling-- summary under Payment & Receipt Summary Under Tax Topics- General Concepts- Payment & Receipt daylight loan circled 4 times CRA ruled on a triangular loss-shifting transaction between Lossco and its subsidiary, Profitco, under which Lossco used a daylight loan to make an interest-bearing loan (pursuant to the “IB Note”) to Profitco, who subscribed for preferred shares of its sister, “Numberco,” who made a non-interest-bearing loan to Lossco. ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
10 April 2024 External T.I. 2021-0919231E5 - Foreign tax allocation to a partner -- summary under Payment & Receipt
10 April 2024 External T.I. 2021-0919231E5- Foreign tax allocation to a partner-- summary under Payment & Receipt Summary Under Tax Topics- General Concepts- Payment & Receipt payment by partnership of withholding tax treated as a distribution to its partners Regarding the allocation of foreign tax by a partnership to a partner, CRA stated: If the partnership pays the foreign tax on behalf of the partner or the foreign tax is withheld on behalf of the partner in accordance with foreign law from the foreign income paid to the partnership, such amount would be considered [for purposes of s. 53(2)(c)(v)] to be received by the partner on account or in lieu of payment of, or in satisfaction of, a distribution of the partner’s share of the partnership profits or partnership capital. ...
Conference summary
14 May 2015 CLHIA Roundtable, 2015-0573841C6 - 2015 CLHIA Roundtable Winding-up and ACB -- summary under Subsection 148(7)
14 May 2015 CLHIA Roundtable, 2015-0573841C6- 2015 CLHIA Roundtable Winding-up and ACB-- summary under Subsection 148(7) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 148- Subsection 148(7) s. 69(5) generally prevails over s. 148(7) At the 2005 CALU Roundtable (2005-0116631C6), the CRA indicated that s. 69(5) would likely take precedence over s. 148(7) on the wind-up of a corporation under s. 88(2), so that a distributed interest in a life insurance policy would be disposed of at fair market value rather than cash surrender value. In confirming that this position "remains unchanged," CRA stated: [T]he general rule is that where two provisions in the same statute conflict, the more specific provision should take precedence. … While we would generally expect subsection 69(5) to take precedence over subsection 148(7)… this approach is subject to a review of the particular facts and circumstances of an actual case…. ...
Conference summary
14 May 2015 CLHIA Roundtable, 2015-0573841C6 - 2015 CLHIA Roundtable Winding-up and ACB -- summary under Subsection 69(5)
14 May 2015 CLHIA Roundtable, 2015-0573841C6- 2015 CLHIA Roundtable Winding-up and ACB-- summary under Subsection 69(5) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 69- Subsection 69(5) s. 69(5) generally prevails over s. 148(7) At the 2005 CALU Roundtable (2005-0116631C6), the CRA indicated that s. 69(5) would likely take precedence over s. 148(7) on the wind-up of a corporation under s. 88(2), so that a distributed interest in a life insurance policy would be disposed of at fair market value rather than cash surrender value. In confirming that this position "remains unchanged," CRA stated: [T]he general rule is that where two provisions in the same statute conflict, the more specific provision should take precedence. … While we would generally expect subsection 69(5) to take precedence over subsection 148(7)… this approach is subject to a review of the particular facts and circumstances of an actual case…. ...
Technical Interpretation - External summary
13 November 2014 External T.I. 2014-0535041E5 F - Bien de remplacement Location d'immeubles -- summary under Paragraph 44(5)(a.1)
13 November 2014 External T.I. 2014-0535041E5 F- Bien de remplacement Location d'immeubles-- summary under Paragraph 44(5)(a.1) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 44- Subsection 44(5)- Paragraph 44(5)(a.1) rental property use before and after satisfies test A couple who co-owned various rental properties received insurance proceeds on the complete destruction of one of the properties, and purchased chalets in a resort area for rental use. ... CRA responded (TaxInterpretations translation): Even though the physical characteristics of the new properties would not be identical to those of the previous properties, the properties appear to be of the same nature (rental properties) and to be put to the same use (rental). … [T]he use made by the taxpayers of the new properties can be considered as an identical or similar use as they made of the previous property, for purposes of paragraph 44(5)(a.1). ...
Technical Interpretation - Internal summary
6 March 2015 Internal T.I. 2014-0549761I7 - Internally generated goodwill & excluded property -- summary under Subsection 149(10)
6 March 2015 Internal T.I. 2014-0549761I7- Internally generated goodwill & excluded property-- summary under Subsection 149(10) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 149- Subsection 149(10) unpurchased goodwill is taken into account Before going on to indicate that internally generated goodwill is considered in determining whether shares of a foreign affiliate of a corporation resident in Canada qualify as "excluded property" of another foreign affiliate of the corporation, CRA noted that in 9319777 and in 2002-0126653 "this Directorate took the position that internally generated goodwill was property of the taxpayer immediately prior to the transition time such that it was deemed to be disposed of, and reacquired, by the taxpayer for an amount equal to its fair market value." See summary under s. 95(1) – excluded property. ...
Technical Interpretation - Internal summary
6 March 2015 Internal T.I. 2014-0549761I7 - Internally generated goodwill & excluded property -- summary under Small Business Corporation
6 March 2015 Internal T.I. 2014-0549761I7- Internally generated goodwill & excluded property-- summary under Small Business Corporation Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 248- Subsection 248(1)- Small Business Corporation unpurchased goodwill is taken into account Before going on to indicate that internally generated goodwill is considered in determining whether shares of a foreign affiliate of a corporation resident in Canada qualify as "excluded property" of another foreign affiliate of the corporation, CRA stated: [T]he "all or substantially all" test will normally be satisfied if assets representing at least 90 percent of the fair market value of the assets of the corporation are used in an active business carried on by it. ... See summary under s. 95(1) – excluded property. ...
Conference summary
25 November 2012 Roundtable, 2013-0479401C6 F - Employés et Achat Ltée commentaires panel ARC -- summary under Paragraph 84.1(1)(b)
25 November 2012 Roundtable, 2013-0479401C6 F- Employés et Achat Ltée commentaires panel ARC-- summary under Paragraph 84.1(1)(b) Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 84.1- Subsection 84.1(1)- Paragraph 84.1(1)(b) generally a deemed dividend on repurchase of departing employees’ shares by employer-funded Buyco In order to facilitate the disposition of shares of departing employees who had purchased their shares under an employee share ownership plan, Opco forms and injects funds into a new company (Buyco), which uses those funds to purchase the employee’s Opco shares. In finding that there generally would be a resulting deemed dividend under s. 84.1, CRA stated: Given the nature of the arrangements offered to resigning employees by Buyco and the absence of separate interests of the participating parties, it is logical to consider that employees and Buyco are generally not dealing at arm's length. … As a result, for advance ruling requests considered in 2012, we refused to confirm that resigning employees would not be deemed, under section 84.1, to have received a dividend from Buyco on the disposition of their Opco shares. ...
Conference summary
26 November 2013 Annual CTF Roundtable, 2013-0509061C6 - Part XIII Tax & Standard Convertible Debentures -- summary under Participating debt interest
26 November 2013 Annual CTF Roundtable, 2013-0509061C6- Part XIII Tax & Standard Convertible Debentures-- summary under Participating debt interest Summary Under Tax Topics- Income Tax Act- Section 212- Subsection 212(3)- Participating debt interest interest and premium on standard convertible debenture not participating [R]egular periodic interest payments made by public corporations pursuant to the terms and conditions of standard convertible debentures do not generally constitute "participating debt interest"…. [T]he deemed payment of interest on standard convertible debentures under subsection 214(7) of the ITA that arises because of a transfer or assignment of standard convertible debentures by a non-resident person to a person resident in Canada (including the issuer of the debenture), does not generally constitute "participating debt interest". … CRA is not inclined at this time to take the position that standard convertible debentures would in general constitute "excluded debt obligations" pursuant to paragraph 214(8)(c) of the ITA. ...