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Results 5681 - 5690 of 7926 for considered
TCC
Kaupe v. The Queen, docket 2001-654(IT)I (Informal Procedure)
Also, the lack of records or of any sort of paper trail would make it impossible to determine with reasonable accuracy the amounts that could be considered on a broad view of the matter to have been paid. [16] In this connection, I am of the view that the observations made by Judge Mogan of this Court in the case of Cousins v. ...
TCC
106850 Canada Inc. v. The Queen, docket 2001-1784-GST-APP
On or about March 17 th, 2000, the minister granted the extension of time to present an objection, the Notice of objection being considered file at said date under subsection 303(6) ETA. 6. ...
TCC
Janssen Jr. v. The Queen, docket 2000-1084-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
It does not adopt so high a degree as a criminal court, even when it is considering a charge of a criminal nature, but still it does require a degree of probability which is commensurate with the occasion. [33] The only conclusion I can come to is that the Appellant smashed the alarm when he, Wilton and his mother and father were in the stock room to cover up theft that would be considered an outside job rather than an inside job by a person with keys and the code. ...
TCC
Kouros v. The Queen, docket 2000-3155-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
The question is whether the property was or was not a source of income, as that expression is used in section 3 of the Act, in the two years in question, and that, in turn, depends upon whether it can be considered to be a property that had a reasonable prospect of producing rental income. ...
TCC
Beaupré v. The Queen, docket 1999-4762-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
I have previously considered this question in Gagné v. Canada, [2001] T.C.J. ...
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Hennessy v. The Queen, docket 2000-2527-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
(Footnotes omitted) [6] It is on that basis that the payment of $40,000 on November 14, 1997, must be considered. ...
TCC
Smalley v. The Queen, docket 2000-2563-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
.'s approach to the problem in the case above seems very sensible and might be considered in future cases such as this one. ...
TCC
Hollands v. The Queen, docket 2001-1203-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
Paragraph 56.1(4)(b) provides that, for a payment to be considered a support amount, the payment must be receivable under an order made by a competent tribunal, in accordance with the laws of a province. ...
TCC
Morrison v. The Queen, docket 98-2814-IT-G
The Queen, [See Note 2 below] Cullen J. considered the requirements of section 230 and stated as follows: Section 230 of the Act requires taxpayers to keep adequate books and records. ...
TCC
Partridge v. The Queen, docket 2001-590-IT-I (Informal Procedure)
It does not mean efforts to provide one's self with subsistence only, as the appellant contemplates, or an activity that creates some revenue, but not a profit, but at which the taxpayer devotes all of his mental and physical energies. [16] Indeed, in Tonn [3] and Mastri [4] the Federal Court of Appeal considered the personal element of expenses in considering whether the expenses were incurred to produce income from a business or property. ...