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TCC

McNeilly v. The King, 2024 TCC 162

McNeilly and tendered those agreements as exhibits. [31] These are all factors that may be considered in the proportionality analysis. [32] [58] I acknowledge that, with any confidentiality order, there will likely be some impact on the open court principle. [33] However, having considered the above factors, I am of the view that the desired confidentiality order represents a relatively minimal intrusion into the principle of court openness, such that it would not have a significant deleterious effect on that principle. [34] (4) Decision [59] Accordingly, I allowed the motion and granted a confidentiality order under section 16.1 of the Rules. ... Liu confirmed that, at her clinic, Mount Sinai Fertility, an intended parent is considered to be a patient. [67] [112] I accept Dr. ... McNeilly was the patient in the context of many of the procedures, tests and other services that she considered, and that were performed by Create or Kiran, but I limit that opinion to a medical or clinical context. ...
TCC

Blackmore v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1213 [at at 1147], 2013 TCC 264, aff'd 2014 DTC 5123 [at 7316], 2014 FCA 210

This is the first time that this Court, or any Canadian court, has considered section 143 of the Income Tax Act (the “ Act ”) ... Chaplains in hospitals, jails, the armed forces and other such organizations are generally considered to minister to congregations.   ... In the 1942 Declaration of Trust document, only the current trustees, not community members generally, were to be considered beneficiaries of the consecrated trust property. ...
TCC

Loblaw Financial Holdings Inc. v. The Queen, 2018 TCC 182, rev'd on s. 95(1) - investment business - (a) (arm's length conduct) grounds 2020 FCA 79, in turn aff'd 2021 SCC 51

For the 2008 and 2010 taxation years, GAAR is not applicable because, while there was a tax benefit (the avoidance of FAPI) and transactions that could reasonably be considered to result in a misuse of the FAPI provisions, the transactions were not avoidance transactions as they could reasonably be considered to be undertaken primarily for bona fide purposes other than to obtain the tax benefit. ... Expanded commercial activities such as leasing and commercial leans may be considered in the future. [23]   On December 20, 1993, Mr. ... Nevertheless, this FA will likely be considered to have an investment business because it trades in mortgages which is not uncommon for U.S. financial institutions. ...
TCC

Cameco Corporation v. The Queen, 2018 TCC 195, aff'd 2020 FCA 112

As to what specific factors were considered with regard to trading profits, Ms.  ... Assie if the HEU Feed Agreement was considered and Mr. Assie responded: No. ... It entails a comparative exercise with what parties dealing at arm’s length would have considered. ...
EC decision

Tuxedo Holding Co. Ltd. v. MNR, 59 DTC 1102, [1959] CTC 172 (Ex Ct)

The University site, while subject to the trust, could not in any sense be considered as part of the trading stock of the company, as the 905 lots undoubtedly were. ... In the Steel Barrel case (supra), the Master of the Rolls considered an argument on behalf of the Crown that if a company acquired stock in consideration of the issue of fully paid up shares to the vendor, such stock for the purpose of ascertaining the company’s profits should be treated as having been acquired for nothing, with the result that when the stock is sold the Revenue is entitled to treat the whole of the purchase money obtained on the sale as a profit. ...
TCC

Produits Forestiers St-Armand Inc. c. La Reine, 2004 DTC 2494, 2003 TCC 696

The cases seem to promote the idea that as long as the repairs were done to preserve or conserve the asset and not to create a new asset then the repairs will be considered current expenses. 36         An expenditure that merely maintains an asset or restores it to its original condition is a deductible current expense.... [53]     Counsel claimed that the decisions regarding classification of expenses related to capital and income were made in a just and reasonable manner based on knowledge and belief of the Appellant and its main advisors. That is why expenses related to asphalting the lot or moving large trucks were considered as current expenses. [54]     Counsel for the Appellant argues that, in the case of the invoice at Tab K, it was for repairs to existing equipment. ...
FCTD

The Queen v. Trade Investments Shopping Centre Ltd., 93 DTC 5486, [1993] 2 CTC 333 (FCTD)

Properties Inc. proceeded to demolish the shopping centre; 14. the total of the proceeds of disposition of $3,000,000 was assigned by the defendant to the land, which had a value of at least $8,000,000, while the value of the building on August 29, 1986 was nil; 15. in its tax return for its 1986 taxation year the defendant considered that all the proceeds of disposition were attributable to the land; 16. the Minister of National Revenue admitted that the allocation of the proceeds of disposition by the defendant was correct, in view of the respective values of the land and building at the time of disposition on August 29, 1986; 17. the Minister of National Revenue also set the fair market value as of December 31, 1971 at $1,804,209 for the land and $1,595,791 for the building, that is the same amounts as those used by the defendant in its tax return for the taxation year at issue; 18. based on the foregoing amounts for the allocation of the proceeds of disposition and the fair market value as of December 31, 1971 the defendant, in its tax return for its 1986 taxation year, reported a final loss on the disposition of the building amounting to $981,240 and a capital gain on the disposition of the land of $1,195,791; 19. relying on subsection 13(21.1) of the Income Tax Act, the Minister of National Revenue disallowed the final loss of $981,240 claimed by the defendant and reduced the taxable capital gain reported by $490,620; 20. on August 30, 1988 the Minister of National Revenue issued a reassessment for the defendant's 1986 taxation year and made the changes mentioned in the preceding paragraph. ... From its point of view the contractual obligation was absolute, and the contractual obligation must be considered and the word "agreement" interpreted from its point of view. ...
FCTD

Doral Holdings Ltd. v. The Queen, 87 DTC 5258, [1987] 1 CTC 398 (FCTD)

It follows that the value of a site, in the regional market, diminishes in direct proportion to the diminishing attractiveness of each factor which is considered so that at the lower end of the range of attractiveness the value of a site for a regional shopping centre will likely approach the value of a site for a local or district shopping centre. ... Tannahill informed us 40 acres of this land were useable and that the land was to be considered as raw land. ...
TCC

Trans World Oil & Gas Ltd. v. The Queen, 95 DTC 260, [1995] 1 CTC 2087 (TCC), briefly aff'd 98 DTC 6060 (FCA)

—For the purpose of subparagraph 95(l)(b)(v) of the Act, the amount prescribed to be the deductible loss of a foreign affiliate of a taxpayer for a taxation year and the five immediately preceding taxation years is the amount, if any, by which the aggregate of (a) the aggregate of all amounts each of which is the amount, if any, for each of the five immediately preceding taxation years of the affiliate during which it was a foreign affiliate of the taxpayer or of a person described in any of subparagraphs 95(2)(f)(iv) to (vii) of the Act, by which (i) the aggregate of the amounts determined under subparagraphs 95(1)(b)(iii) and (iv) of the Act in respect of the affiliate for that preceding year exceeds (ii) the aggregate of the amounts determined under subparagraphs 95(1)(b)(i) and (ii) of the Act in respect of the affiliate for that preceding year, and (b) the amount, if any, by which the aggregate of (i) each amount determined under clause 5907(l)(c)(ii)(A) and subparagraphs 5907(1)(c)(iii) and (iv) in respect of an exempt loss of the affiliate for those years, and (ii) each amount determined under clause 5907(1)(j)(ii)(A) in respect of taxable loss of the affiliate for those years but not including any amount included in the affiliate’s exempt loss for those years exceeds the aggregate of (iii) each amount determined under subparagraphs 5907(1)(b)(ii), (iii), (iv) and (v) in respect of the exempt earnings of the affiliate for those years less such portion of the income or profits tax payable to the government of a country for any of those years by the affiliate as may reasonably be regarded as payable in respect of an amount referred to in subparagraph 5907(1)(b)(iii) or clause (l)(b)(iv)(B), and (iv) each amount determined under clauses 5907(1)(i)(ii)(A) and (C) in respect of the taxable earnings of the affiliate for those years but not including any amount included in the affiliate’s exempt earnings for those years exceeds the aggregate of (c) the aggregate of all amounts each of which is an amount deducted by virtue of subparagraph 95(l)(b)(v) of the Act by the taxpayer or a person described in any of subparagraphs 95(2)(f)(iv) to (vii) of the Act in respect of any of the five immediately preceding taxation years of the affiliate to the extent that such amount relates to a loss for any of those years and assuming that no amount is deductible under that subparagraph for any year until the maximum amount for preceding years has been deducted; and (d) where a payment has been received by the foreign affiliate that may reasonably be considered to relate to a payment described in subsection 5907(1.3) made by another foreign affiliate of the taxpayer in respect of a loss, or any portion thereof, included in computing the amount referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) in respect of the affiliate, the amount of such loss or portion thereof. ... The former admonishes against a "results oriented" approach to statutory interpretation, and the latter disapproves of a "purely mechanical one, focused on the method, the means devised to achieve the goal" and recommends that the approach be "a functional one" and that "the scheme must be considered as a whole, taking into account the intent of the legislation, its object and spirit and what it actually accomplishes". ...
TCC

Emond v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1252 [at at 3719], 2012 TCC 304 (Informal Procedure)

Per Consent the proportionate division of the pension annuity as paid by JCR is considered to be a division of marital property; d.             ... Both the Applicant and the Respondent acknowledge that this aforesaid division is a division of marital property and is not to be considered spousal support by either the Applicant or the Respondent. ...

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