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EC decision

Minister of National Revenue v. Duncan Morrison, [1966] CTC 558, 66 DTC 5368

Section 6(1) (j) and its predecessor, Section 3(1) (f) of the Income War Tax Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 97 as enacted by S. of C. 1934, ce. 55, s. 1, have been considered in a number of cases including Ross v. ...
FCTD

Mathelier-Jeanty v. Canada (Attorney General), 2022 FC 1188

He also submits that he had income of more than $5,000 in 2019, as shown by his tax return for that year and the evidence he filed in support of his CERB application. [22] Having carefully considered the evidence in the record, I am not persuaded by the applicant’s arguments. ...
ONSC decision

The Queen v. Harvey P. Lamothe, [1958] CTC 201, [1958] DTC 1057

In about the same year the matter was considered in Canada in respect of the Customs Act by the Exchequer Court of Canada. ...
EC decision

McMahon and Burns Limited v. Minister of National Revenue, [1956] CTC 153, 56 DTC 1092

Considered in its proper light, this decision is not necessarily at variance with the subsequent pronouncement above cited, in Sutton Lumber & Trading Co. ...
EC decision

Harold Ernest Manning v. Minister of National Revenue, [1956] CTC 167, 56 DTC 1099

The claim is made by the respondent under Section 58, subsections (4), (5), (6) and (6A), of The 1948 Income Tax Act, which reads as follows: 58. (1) In this Act, trust or estate means the trustee or the executor, administrator, heir or other legal representative having ownership or control of the trust or estate property. (4) For the purposes of this Part, there may be deducted in computing the income of a trust or estate for a taxation year such part of the amount that would otherwise be its income for the year as was payable in the year to a beneficiary or other person beneficially interested therein or was included in the income of a beneficiary for the year by virtue of subsection (2) of section 60. (5) Such part of the amount that would otherwise be the income of a trust or estate for a taxation year as was payable in the taxation year to a beneficiary or other person beneficially interested therein, shall be included in computing the income of the person to whom it so became payable whether or not in was paid to him in that year and shall not be included in computing his income for a subsequent year in which it was paid. (6) For the purposes of subsections (4) and (5), an amount shall not be considered to have been payable in a taxation year unless it was paid in that year to the person to whom it was payable or he was entitled in that year to enforce payment thereof. (6A) A beneficiary or other person beneficially interested in a trust or estate who is entitled, either contingently or absolutely, to the property of the trust or estate or some part thereof at some future time, may deduct from the amount that would otherwise be his income from the trust or estate by virtue of subsection (5) such part of the amount that would otherwise be deductible from the income of the trust or estate for the year under regulations made under paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section 11 as the trust or estate may determine; and any amount deductible under this section for a taxation year shall be deducted from the amount that the trust or estate would otherwise be able to deduct under regulations made under the said paragraph (a) but shall, for the purpose of section twenty, be deemed to have been allowed to the trust or estate under those regulations in computing its income for the year.” ...
SCC

In the Matter of the Trust Deed of Arthur Sturgis Hardy, [1956] CTC 233, [1956] DTC 1121

’ ’ If he had not considered himself bound (as indeed he was) by the decision of the Court of Appeal in Re Fleck, [1952] O.W.N. 260; [1952] C.T.C. 205, Ferguson, J., before whom the application came, would have found that the money constituted capital in the hands of the trustees and not income but in view of that authority he declared otherwise. ...
EC decision

Okalta Oils Limited v. Minister of National Revenue, [1955] CTC 39, 55 DTC 1029

The appellant’s directors considered it proper to record in their accounts the value of the gross royalty interest in such potential production. ...
EC decision

Minister of National Revenue v. John Pawluk (Sr.), [1955] CTC 369, 55 DTC 1234

What is the line which separates the two classes of cases may be difficult to define, and each case must be considered according to its facts; the question to be determined being— Is the sum of gain that has been made a mere enhancement of value by realising a security, or is it a gain made in an operation of business in carrying out a scheme for profit-making?” ...
EC decision

Roy Otto German v. Minister of National Revenue, [1957] CTC 291, 57 DTC 1216

Had she been illegally deprived of her rights by the registration under The Land Titles Act of a fraudulent disposition made without her consent, a right to damages might have arisen for her under the provisions of the Dower Act, but that situation did not arise, and accordingly the two rights above mentioned are the only ones that need be considered. ...
EC decision

Minister of National Revenue v. Arthur Topham, [1954] CTC 54, 54 DTC 1027

These words cannot be considered as merely surplusage, which would be the result if I were to adopt the submission of the respondent that to merely have filed the returns of the preceding years at any time is a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the section. ...

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