Search - considered
Results 7311 - 7320 of 7926 for considered
TCC
Lin v. The Queen, 2020 TCC 26
Therefore, the auditors considered the alternate assessment through various indirect verification methods to audit the restaurant. ... Seasonal trends were considered. [70] Additionally, since there were no internal controls in place to ensure all transactions were entered into the POS system, it was concluded that the risk of circumvention was high. ...
TCC
Wood v. The Queen, 2020 TCC 87
Wood can succeed either by establishing on a balance of probabilities new facts, not considered by the Minister, showing that the unreported income was not taxable, or by demonstrating that the Minister’s assumptions of fact are wrong. [41] There is also a second way to challenge a net worth assessment (or an assessment made using the deposit method), namely, to show that it is somehow inherently flawed. ... Ganesh could be considered as a loan from SG Marketing to cover the work Mr. ...
TCC
Swift v. The Queen, 2020 TCC 115
Swift stated that he too considered the house at 2708 Digby Place to be a nice home and an adequate home. ... While all of the above factors have been considered by the courts, it is the last one, the question of motive or intention[,] which has been most developed. ...
TCC
1089391 Ontario Inc. v. The Queen, 2020 TCC 129
In this regard, those two assessments were somewhat similar to those that were considered by the Court in Zdzieblowska. [26] [28] Two of the documents provided by the parties to the Court after the hearing of this Appeal indicated that, in 2012 and 2013, the Minister was, apparently on a quarterly basis, assessing net tax payable by the Appellant. ... However, for the sake of completeness, a few additional statutory provisions are considered below. (1) Paragraph 221(2)(b) of the ETA [47] This situation began inauspiciously when the Vendor used a standard-form Agreement of Purchase and Sale and closing procedures that contemplated that the purchaser of a condominium unit would be an individual, [40] rather than a corporation. ...
TCC
Goldman v. The Queen, 2021 TCC 13
Malone and considered fundamental in common law Canada, (1) the language of the alleged settlor must be imperative; (2) the subject-matter or trust property must be certain, (3) the objects of the trust must be certain. ... I can conceive of no other reason why the Court would have considered it unnecessary to determine whether beneficial ownership had been transferred. ...
TCC
Nonis v. The Queen, 2021 TCC 31
The Respondent argues that, while the general principle is that non-residents are taxable only on their Canadian-source income and that employment income is usually considered to be sourced where the employment is exercised or performed, Parliament in no way meant to restrict the Minister’s taxing authority to duties performed in Canada alone. [18] Parliament’s intent is first evident at subsection 2(3) of the Act where the reference to “a previous year” brings amounts of income listed at section 115 of the Act under the taxing provisions of Part I without those amounts having been earned from employment in Canada or received on account of Canadian service employment income earned in a previous year. ... The relevant factor to be considered is whether the remuneration is attributable to duties performed in Canada. ...
TCC
O’neill Motors Ltd. v. R., [1996] 1 CTC 2714
With reference to the fact that most of the cases considered by the Supreme Court and the Federal Court and other courts throughout Canada had to do with criminal proceedings, I can see no reason to limit the operation of the Charter to such proceedings. 3. ... Three possible approaches may be considered where evidence is obtained in circumstances denying or infringing a subject’s Charter rights: (i) that subsection 24(1) by itself permits the exclusion of such evidence, irrespective of subsection 24(2), if it is just and appropriate to do so (This is the approach rejected by Le Dain J.); (ii) that subsection 24(2) is the only authority available for the exclusion of evidence, provided that its admission would bring the administration of justice into disrepute, and irrespective of the test in subsection 24(1), whether the exclusion is appropriate and just within the meaning of that subsection; (iii) that the exclusion of evidence is one of the remedies available under subsection 24(1) if it is just and appropriate to do so but only if its admission would bring the administration of justice into disrepute within the meaning of subsection 24(2). ...
TCC
Duha Printers (Western) Limited v. Her Majesty the Queen, [1995] 1 CTC 2481, 95 DTC 828
Hutchinson J. of the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench considered the Imperial General Properties case in Harvard International Resources Ltd. v. ... With such facts before an assessor it is not too difficult to appreciate the reason for the assessment and perhaps these facts may be considered again in another forum. ...
TCC
Alteco Inc. v. Her Majesty the Queen (Informal Procedure), [1993] 2 CTC 2087
., [1969] C.T.C. 633, 69 D.T.C. 5429 the issue was whether the terms of a will affecting shares of a company owned by the estate could be considered in the determination of control. ... Sheppard, D.J. found that the terms of the will affecting the estate could not be considered and that the Articles of Association of M & R were the determining factor. ...
TCC
Société Immobilière SSQ Inc. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1993] 1 CTC 2029, [1992] 1 CTC 2622
It was in fact considered that the share of the interests which the appellant acquired in the Rockland project in 1982 constituted an interest in the framework of an ordinary co-ownership. ... What we held was an ordinary co-ownership, and, in the financial statements, that co-ownership was considered, from the point of view of assets, as a joint venture, and it was...the sums thus disbursed to cover the construction costs of the project were presented as an investment in a joint venture. ...