Section 84.1

Subsection 84.1(1) - Non-arm’s length sale of shares

Cases

Wild v. Canada (Attorney General), 2018 FCA 114

transactions to bump PUC did not abuse s. 84.1 prior to use of such PUC to strip surplus

Mr. Wild stepped up the adjusted cost base of his investment in a small business corporation (PWR) by transferring his PWR common shares to two new Holdcos for him and his wife in exchange for preferred shares of the Holdcos, and electing under s. 85 at the right deemed proceeds amount to use up his capital gains exemption. However, the paid-up capital of those preferred shares was ground down to essentially nil under s. 84.1.

The solution was for PWR to then transfer high basis assets to the Holdcos in consideration for preferred shares of the same class, so that the PUC of the preferred shares held by Mr. Wild personally could be bumped due to the class-averaging rule in s. 89(1).

Dawson JA reversed the finding of the Tax Court that there was an abuse under s. 245(4) that should be remedied by grinding the PUC of Mr. Wild’s preferred shares down to what his starting (nominal) PUC had been. She stated (at para. 32):

Because the tax-free distribution of retained earnings section 84.1 is intended to prevent has not occurred section 84.1 has not, to date, been mis-used or abused.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) surplus-stripping transactions were not subject to GAAR before the surplus had in fact been stripped 377

Fiducie famille Gauthier v. Canada, 2012 FCA 76, aff'g 2011 DTC 1343 [at 1917], 2011 TCC 318

fees borne by transferee were "consideration"

The taxpayer, a family trust, made a non-arm's-length sale of shares to a numbered corporation ("4041763 or "404") for a promissory note of approximately $2.6 million. 404 then immediately sold the shares at arm's length to a third party ("Keolis") for approximately $2.8 million. The lower sale price on the first transfer reflected that it had been determined that 404 would bear the cost of professional fees, relating to the structuring of the sale to Keolis, of $233,786.

Archambault J. affirmed the Minister's position that the amount of these professional fees was "consideration" received by the taxpayer. That amount was therefore added to variable D in s. 84.1(1)(b), resulting in an increase in the dividend deemed to be received by the taxpayer. Archambault J. stated (at para. 16):

I accept the definition of consideration laid down in Currie and referred to by Judge Lamarre in Republic National Bank, above, and the definition in Black's Law Dictionary, according to which "consideration" can encompass "[t]he inducement to a contract... [s]ome right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to one party, or some forbearance, detriment, loss, or responsibility, given, suffered, or undertaken by the other." By agreeing to be billed for the fees related to the sale of the shares in the place of Fiducie, 404 was, in a sense, undertaking Fiducie's responsibility. A benefit therefore accrued to Fiducie.

The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal on the basis that the question of who was responsible for the fees, between the taxpayer and 404, was a question of fact. Noël J.A. stated (at para. 15):

Nothing would have prevented the parties from allocating the fee charges differently if that had been their agreement. However, given the evidence, the onus was on the appellant to show that the reduction of the share price, as explained by the tax professional, was not intended to reflect the fact that 4041763 had made the payment on its behalf. This the appellant has not done.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - General Concepts - Fair Market Value - Shares 258

Canada v. Olsen, 2002 DTC 6770, 2002 FCA 3

reference to s. 186(4) test included related definition

The taxpayer transferred shares of a corporation ("Leader") to corporations controlled by the taxpayer's children and spouses in consideration for promissory notes. Noël J.A. held that, as s. 186(4) provided that a payor corporation is connected with a particular corporation for purposes of Part IV when the former is controlled by the latter, the term "control" could only have the meaning assigned to it by subsection 186(2). Therefore, it followed that the reference to s. 186(4) in s. 84.1(1) included a reference to the notion of control as defined in s. 186(2), with the result that the taxpayer was deemed to receive a dividend based on the fair market value of the promissory notes received by him. (A submission of the Crown that the deemed dividend should be calculated instead on the basis of the fair market value of the transferred shares was rejected. S.84.1(1)(b), which like s. 69(1)(b), only applied where the parties did not deal at arm's length, provided for its own fair market value computation.)

See Also

Crean v Canada (Attorney General), 2019 BCSC 146

share sale for Newco note generated s. 84.1 dividend before its rectification

The executed documents indicated that an individual (Thomas) sold his shares of a corporation (Crean Holdings) to the Newco of his brother (Michael) in consideration for a promissory note of the Newco. When the tax advisor realized this was a mistake giving rise to a deemed dividend under s. 84.1, the parties applied successfully in the B.C. Supreme Court for a rectification order redoing the written agreement to provide that Thomas sold his shares to Michael directly for a promissory note, and that there was an immediate on-sale by Michael of those shares to his Newco in consideration for it assuming the promissory note.

Burke J relied on the terms of an agreement in principle that had been signed before the transactions were implemented which provided for a direct sale from Thomas to Michael and provided that “the transaction will be structured, to the extent possible, so that Tom receives capital gains treatment.” She also accepted the tax advisor’s testimony that, consistent with the agreement in principle, he had been instructed to provide for a direct sale and that the failure of the documents to so provide was an error on his part.

She accordingly found that the two brothers had a “prior definite and ascertainable agreement” to which the rectified written agreement was giving effect (para. 85).

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - General Concepts - Rectification & Rescission a sale agreement rectified to turn it into a 2-step sale that no longer generated a s. 84.1 dividend 325

1245989 Alberta Ltd. v. The Queen, 2017 TCC 51, rev'd sub nom. Wild v. Canada, 2018 FCA 114

the use of class PUC-averaging to bump the PUC of personally-held shares was an abuse of s. 84.1

In order to protect the assets of an Alberta an oil field rental company (“PWR”), whose sole shareholder was Mr. Wild and whose shares of PWR had a fair market value of $2.3 million and nominal adjusted cost base (“ACB”) and paid-up capital (“PUC”), the following transactions occurred:

  1. Mrs. and Mr. Wild respectively incorporated and subscribed $100 for the Class A common shares of two Alberta corporations (“1251” and “1245”).
  2. Mr. Wild exchanged 16.4 of his 110 Class A PWR shares for 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251, giving rise to a capital gain (as a result of a s. 85(1) elected amount greater than the shares’ ACB), for which he used part of his available capital gains exemption. The Class C preferred shares had a nominal PUC under s. 84.1.
  3. PWR transferred Class 8 equipment to 1251 under s. 85 in consideration for 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 (i.e., the same number as in 2), resulting in a bump to the PUC of Mr. Wild’s Class C preferred shares due to PUC averaging.
  4. 1251 redeemed the 348.5 Class C preferred shares of PWR, and PWR purchased for cancellation the 16.4 Class A common shares held by 1251, in each case in consideration for a $348,500 promissory notes, with the two notes then being set off.
  5. There now followed 3 transactions similar to 2 to 4 above, starting with Mr. Wild transferring his remaining 96.3 PWR shares to 1245 for 1989 Class E shares of 1245 giving rise to a capital gain (as a result of a s. 85(1) elected amount greater than the shares’ ACB), for which he used the balance of his available capital gains exemption. The Class E shares had a nominal PUC under s. 84.1.
  6. PWR transferred land and depreciable property to 1245 under s. 85 in consideration for assumed debt and for 1826 Class C preferred shares of 1251, resulting in a bump to the PUC of Mr. Wild’s Class C preferred shares due to PUC averaging.
  7. 1245 redeemed the 1826 Class C preferred shares of PWR, and PWR purchased for cancellation 86 of the 93.6 Class A common shares held by 1245, in each case in consideration for a $1,827,500 promissory note, with the two notes then being set off.
  8. Mr. Wild transferred his 348.5 Class C preferred shares of 1251 (see 2) to 1245 under s. 85 to 1245 in consideration for Class E preferred shares
  9. 1251 redeemed those Class C preferred shares for a $348,500 promissory note.

The Minister applied GAAR to reduce the PUC of the Class E preferred shares (steps 5 and 8) to a nominal amount.

Before confirming this assessment, Lyons J first noted that it had essentially been conceded that the transactions resulting in a PUC bump to Mr. Wild’s shares (steps 3 and 6) were avoidance transactions, and then, turning to the abuse test under s. 245(4), found (at paras 85, 98, 100 and 104):

Combined, subsection 89(1) and section 84.1 deal with the computation of PUC involving the PUC grind where there is a non-arm’s length transfer of shares by an individual from one corporation to another. … Together, these prevent the extraction of corporate surplus tax-free in such circumstances and preclude the return of an amount of capital tax-free in excess of an investor’s original contribution….

[T]he appellants took deliberate steps…to defeat the application of section 84.1 and what it was intended to prevent by misusing [PUC averaging under] subsection 89(1)….

[T]he object, spirit and purpose of section 84.1 is clear. Individual taxpayers should not be allowed to use their capital gains exemption to strip corporate surpluses by entering into non-arm’s length transactions which are similar to those addressed in section 84.1 nor obtain excess PUC tax-free. …

[T]he…transactions…achieved a result (extraction of corporate surplus indirectly and use of his exemption) that section 84.1 was intended to prevent and defeats its underlying rationale and did so by misusing the PUC computation in subsection 89(1) to trigger the share averaging thus artificially inflated the PUC in The Shares held by Mr. Wild without any new capital contribution made by him.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) use of PUC-averaging rule to bump outside PUC was abusive 273
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(5) assessment of PUC without current income effect 34

Poulin v. The Queen, 2016 TCC 154, briefly aff’d sub nomine Turgeon v. The Queen, 2017 FCA 103

sale to employee's Holdco with not upside and no risk for employee was non-arm's length

CRA successfully applied s. 84.1 to a transaction in which one of the two major shareholders of a Quebec CCPC (Mr. Turgeon) agreed to sell some preferred shares of the CCPC to a newly formed Holdco of its controller (“Hélie Holdco”) in consideration for a promissory note bearing interest at 4% and which was to be repaid over a number of years out of dividends or redemption proceeds received by Hélie Holdco from the CCPC. D’Auray J noted that this employee had no risk, and Hélie Holdco had no upside as its only assets and liabilities were the prefs and the note, both with frozen values – so that Hélie Holdco essentially was just an accommodation party. She stated (at para. 101, TI translation):

Hélie Holdco served only to participate in the transaction for the benefit of Mr. Turgeon, thereby permitting him to strip the surplus of [the CCPC] free of tax by virtue of utilizing the capital gains deduction.

At the same time as Mr. Turgeon was arranging this “sale” to Hélie Holdco, he formed a new Holdco to purchase preferred shares of the other major shareholder. D’Auray J found this second transaction to be an arm’s length one (so that s. 84.1 did not apply) even though it occurred on quite similar terms (under advice from a common tax advisor) to the Hélie Holdco one, as they each were advancing their own interests (arranging an exit on advantageous terms, and acquiring control of the CCPC, respectively.)

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) sale to the special-purpose Holdco of an independent employee was essentially a surplus-stripping transaction rather than an arm’s length sale 635

Fiducie Famille Gauthier v. The Queen, 2011 DTC 1343 [at 1917], 2011 TCC 318, aff'd 2012 FCA 76

agreement to bear costs was additional consideration

The taxpayer, a family trust, made a non-arm's-length sale of shares to a numbered corporation for a promissory note of approximately $2.6 million. The numbered corporation then immediately sold the shares at arm's length to a third party ("Keolis") for approximately $2.8 million. The lower sale price on the first transfer reflected that it had been determined that 404 would bear the cost of professional fees, relating to the structuring of the sale to Keolis, of $233,786.

Archambault J. affirmed the Minister's position that the amount of these professional fees was "consideration" received by the taxpayer. That amount was therefore added to variable D in s. 84.1(1)(b), resulting in an increase in the dividend deemed to be received by the taxpayer. Archambault J. stated (at para. 16):

I accept the definition of consideration laid down in Currie and referred to by Judge Lamarre in Republic National Bank, above, and the definition in Black's Law Dictionary, according to which "consideration" can encompass "[t]he inducement to a contract... [s]ome right, interest, profit or benefit accruing to one party, or some forbearance, detriment, loss, or responsibility, given, suffered, or undertaken by the other." By agreeing to be billed for the fees related to the sale of the shares in the place of Fiducie, [the numbered corporation] was, in a sense, undertaking Fiducie's responsibility. A benefit therefore accrued to Fiducie.

Words and Phrases
consideration
Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - General Concepts - Substance 233

Estate of the late Donald Mills v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1301 [at 4078], 2010 TCC 443, aff'd 2011 DTC 5124, 2011 FCA 219

no bad debt deduction

The taxpayer exchanged shares for a promissory note. Under s. 84.1(1)(b), the receipt of the promissory note resulted in a deemed dividend. The issuer of the note defaulted. Sheridan J. cited Terrador Investments (99 DTC 5358) for the proposition that, once the note was deemed to be a dividend paid to the taxpayer, it was no longer a "debt owing." Therefore, the default could not give rise to a bad debt deduction under s. 20(1)(p).

McMullen v. The Queen, 2007 DTC 286, 2007 TCC 16

arm's length: negotiation based on self-interest

The taxpayer and an unrelated individual ("DeBruyn") accomplished a split-up of the business of a corporation ("DEL") of which they were equal common shareholders by transactions under which (i) DeBruyn converted his (Class A) common shares into Class B common shares, (ii) the taxpayer sold his Class A common shares of DEL to a newly-incorporated holding company for DeBruyn's wife ("114") for a purchase price of $150,000, (iii) DEL issued a promissory note to 114 in satisfaction of a $150,000 dividend declared by it on the Class A shares, (iv) 114 as signed the promissory note to the taxpayer in satisfaction of the purchase price for the Class A shares, (v) the taxpayer transferred the promissory note owing to him by DEL to a holding company ("HHCI"), and HHCI purchased assets of the Kingston branch of the business of DEL in consideration for satisfaction of the promissory note.

In finding that the sale of the Class A shares of DEL by the taxpayer to 114 was a transaction between persons dealing with each other at arm's length, Lamarre J. noted (at pp. 292-293) that the actions of the taxpayer and the DeBruyns in negotiating the share sale transaction were governed by their respective perceptions of their own self interest, that "buyer and seller do not act in concert simply because the agreement which they seek to achieve can be expected to benefit both" and that "it cannot be concluded that parties have acted in concert simply because they have used the same financial advisors". Accordingly, s. 84.1 did not apply.

Lloyd v. The Queen, 2002 DTC 1493 (TCC)

Although the taxpayer signed an agreement with a holding company for the sale of shares in a company ("READ") to the holding company, Bowman T.C.J. found that the transaction was not completed, so that there was no disposition for purposes of s. 84.1. Among other things, none of the stipulated consideration was ever paid by the holding company and the directors of READ did not approve the transfer as required by the articles.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - General Concepts - Effective Date taxpayer can attack own transaction as legally ineffective 138
Tax Topics - General Concepts - Tax Avoidance taxapyer can argue legally ineffective transactions 139
Tax Topics - Income Tax Regulations - Schedules - Schedule II - Class 1 - Paragraph 1(q) 70

Administrative Policy

7 October 2022 APFF Roundtable Q. 8, 2022-0942151C6 F - Surplus stripping

incorporating a sub through which a share sale will occur so as to avoid s. 84.1 is not per se GAARable

In order for Brother to avoid the application of s. 84.1 to a sale of his shareholding of Opco (representing ½ of its common shares) to a corporation (“Sister-Holdco”) owned by his Sister, he sells such shares through a newly-incorporated corporation wholly-owned by him (“Brother-Portfolioco”). In particular:

  • He transfers such shares to Brother-Portfolioco at a nominal s. 85(1) agreed amount.
  • Brother-Portfolioco sells those shares to Sister-Holdco for $1 million, so that the resulting capital gain increases its capital dividend account – but with a capital gains reserve being claimed because most of the sales proceeds are deferred.

Would CRA apply s. 245(2) because of the specific creation of Brother-Portfolioco to avoid s. 84.1? CRA responded:

The CRA remains concerned about any form of corporate surplus stripping arrangement and tax planning that is contrary to the integration principle. …

However, in a situation such as the one described, the CRA would not rely on the application of the GAAR solely because of the specific formation of Brother-Portfolioco to proceed with the Sale.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 256 - Subsection 256(5.11) range of factors considered 182
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(2) permissible use of sale through subsidiary to avoid s. 84.1 85

7 October 2021 APFF Financial Strategies and Instruments Roundtable Q. 8, 2021-0899701C6 F - Post-mortem planning - Pipeline

pipeline transaction can be structured to access hard ACB

In order to implement pipeline planning, the estate of an individual ("Estate") generally incorporates a new corporation ("Newco") to which it sells shares of a private corporation ("Target"), with or without a tax rollover, in consideration for shares of Newco (the "Shares") or a note issued by Newco ("Note").Newco will remains in existence for at least one year before being merged with Target to form Amalco, whose assets are gradually used to redeem the Shares or Note.

After indicating that it generally did not have concerns with these transactions being varied by the Estate selling the Target shares to an existing corporation in which it does not hold any shares (the "Existing Corporation") and whose shares may be held by heirs of the deceased, CRA went on to state:

In general, section 84.1 will only apply if the Estate is not dealing at arm's length with Existing Corporation at the time of the transfer of the shares of the capital stock of Target (the "Transfer") and Target and Existing Corporation are connected within the meaning of subsection 186(4) immediately after the Transfer. In addition, the tax consequences under paragraphs 84.1(1)(a) and 84.1(1)(b) will apply only if the shares of the capital stock of Target had an increase in value prior to 1971 or a capital gains deduction was claimed by the individual or a person not dealing at arm's length with the individual in connection with a previous disposition of the shares of the capital stock of Target. In such circumstances, the amount of the increase in the ACB of the Target shares held by the Estate as a result of the application of paragraph 70(5)(a) (the "Increased ACB") will be reduced, as applicable, to the extent of the amounts provided for in subparagraphs 84.1(2)(a), 84.1(2)(a.1)(i) and 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii).

The Estate should generally be able to monetize the modified Increased ACB of Target's capital stock (the "Hard ACB") without being subject to section 84.1 and subsection 245(2).

The application of subsection 245(2) could be considered if the Pipeline Planning is structured to avoid the application of section 84.1 … .

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) a pipeline transaction can use an existing corporation rather than a Newco 187

2021 Ruling 2020-0868661R3 F - Section 84.1 – Leveraged Buyout

s. 84.1 did not apply to a leveraged buyout financed by the target
Background

Holdco (a.k.a. Gesco) holds real estate which it leases to Opco, which carries on an active business in Canada. Mr. X (an investor), Ms. Y and Mr. Z (teh son of Ms. Y) hold the Class A voting participating shares of Holdco, and Ms. Y (who has a position with Opco and is unrelated to Mr. X) also holds Class B non-voting shares and Class F special voting shares.

Proposed transactions
  1. Ms. Y will incorporate Newco and subscribe for Class A voting participating shares.
  2. Holdco will take out a secured loan from its financial institution to make an interest-bearing term loan to Newco.
  3. Mr. X will transfer his Class A shares of Holdco to Newco for the agreed sale price, payable in cash, and will claim the s. 110.6(2.1) deduction. (Representations were submitted that Newco and Mr. X dealt with each other at arm’s length.)
  4. Newco will repay the loan in accordance with its terms.
Ruling

S. 84.1(1) will not apply such that no dividend will be deemed to be received by Mr. X by reason of the transaction in 3 above.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) ruling that buyout was an arm’s length transaction 123

29 November 2016 CTF Roundtable Q. 6, 2016-0669661C6 - 84.1 and the Poulin/Turgeon Case

Poulin is consistent with CRA's previous statements on employee buycos

CRA largely repeated a statement made at the 2016 APFF Roundtable, Q.20 (also in response to the Poulin decision) respecting employee buyco arrangements, that the employee buyco could be established to be an accommodation party and, thus, not dealing at arm’s length with the employee-shareholder vendor, where, for example:

  • the employee-buyco assumes no economic risks;
  • the employee-buyco does not benefit from acquiring the Opco shares;
  • the employee-buyco has no interest other than to enable the employee-shareholder to realize a capital gain and benefit from the capital gains deduction; or
  • the employee-buyco has no role independent of the employee-shareholder or the operating corporation.

CRA went on to state that this position is consistent with its discussion at the 2012 Annual Conference.

7 October 2016 APFF Roundtable Q. 20, 2016-0655831C6 F - Employee Buycos and the Poulin Case

Poulin accepted

CRA accepts the finding in Poulin that the structuring of a sale transaction so that the vendor secured a tax advantage (the capital gains deduction) “does not mean that the parties acted in concert without separate interests.” Respecting the accommodation party aspect of that case, it stated:

Hélie Holdco… incurred no economic risk in participating in the transaction, did not derive any benefit from the purchase of shares, had no interest other than to allow the employee/shareholder to realize a capital gain and benefit from the deduction, and had no function independent of the employee/shareholder or the operating corporation - and, in short, it only participated in the transaction as an accommodation for the benefit of the employee/shareholder.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) Poulin distinction between accommodation parties and tax advantaged arm’s length dealings accepted 188

2 May 2016 External T.I. 2016-0633351E5 F - Descarries Case and Document no. 2015-0610711C6

purpose of 84.1 not restricted to monetization transactions

In rejecting a submission that 2015-0610711C6 had improperly reversed 2005-0134731R3 F on the basis that the purpose of section 84.1 is only “to prevent persons from monetizing their lifetime CGD outside the context of an actual sales transaction occurring on a market basis,” whereas 2015-0610711C6 “involved a taxpayer who, with a view to retiring, embarked on a process of business succession with a family member similar to one that could be undertaken with an arm's length third party…[so] that the purpose of section 84.1 was not circumvented.,” CRA indicated that the purpose of s. 84.1 was stated more broadly in the Explanatory Notes and in Descarries, and added:

[W]e understand your concerns about the application of section 84.1 in the context of an intergenerational transfer of a family business between a parent and children. Nevertheless, the mandate of the Canada Revenue Agency is to administer the Act as drafted… .

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) Descarries not to be construed narrowly 176

24 November 2015 CTF Roundtable Q. 11, 2015-0610711C6 - Impact of the Descarries decision

abuse of s. 84.1 to use basis stepped up under CGD to create a capital loss permitting surplus extraction

In 2005-0134731R3 F, Mr. X realized a capital gain of selling all of the common shares of HOLDCO to his children in consideration for promissory notes, but did not claim the capital gains deduction (“CGD”) under s. 110.6(2.1). On a redemption by HOLDCO of all of the HOLDCO preferred shares owned by Mr. X, which had nominal paid-up capital (“PUC”) and a high adjusted cost base (“ACB”) as a result of a previous crystallisation of the CGD, Mr. X realized a deemed dividend and a capital loss. A portion of the capital loss was applied to offset the capital gain that arose on the earlier sale of the HOLDCO common shares to the children.

Following the Descarries decision (2014 TCC 75) would CRA still issue such a ruling? CRA responded:

In Descarries…the individual shareholders of…OKA… exchanged their OKA shares for shares of another corporation (“NEWCO”), some of which (the “NEWCO V-day Shares”) had low PUC and a high ACB equal to the FMV of the OKA shares on V-Day (December 22, 1971). As a result, the V-Day value of the OKA shares became isolated/crystallized in the ACB of the NEWCO V-day Shares.

The NEWCO V-day Shares were repurchased, giving rise to a deemed dividend to the individual shareholders as well as a capital loss that was applied to offset a capital gain realized earlier in the same series of transactions. ...

The [2005-0134731R3] transactions result in the extraction of corporate surplus as capital gains. Furthermore, such capital gains are offset or reduced by capital losses realized on a disposition of shares whose ACB was increased by the CGD or V-day value.

In these circumstances and based on the Descarries decision, the CGD or the V-day value has been used to enable corporate surplus to be distributed to the shareholders tax-free, in a manner contrary to the object, spirit and purposes of section 84.1.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) contrary to GAAR to use basis stepped up under CGD to create a capital loss permitting surplus extraction 494

2014 Ruling 2014-0526361R3 F - Post Mortem Pipeline

step up of PUC of freeze pref shares for purposes of pipeline transaction

An estate of B, and a spousal trust for which B had been the spouse, which on death acquired (Class F) preference shares of a portfolio investment company (Investmentco) at a stepped-up tax cost, will effectively step-up the paid-up capital of their shareholdings by selling their its preference shares to a Newco for Newco preference shares with a high PUC. After a specified period, Newco will amalgamate with Investmentco, and the estate will start gradually retracting its (high PUC/basis) preference shares.

Ruling respecting non-application of s. 84.1 to the transfer of the preference shares.

See detailed summary under s. 84(2).

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) step up of PUC of freeze pref shares for purposes of pipeline transaction 315

25 November 2012 CTF Roundtable, 2013-0479402C6 - Employee Buycos - comments from CRA Panel

stock option Buyco not at arm's length

Employees of Opco received Opco shares as incentives under an Opco employee share ownership plan ("ESOP"). Under the terms of the ESOP, on retirement or other termination of employment, the employees would be required to dispose of these shares. To facilitate the disposition of such shares on retirement or other termination, Opco incorporates another corporation ("Buyco"), and Buyco purchase the departing employee's Opco shares. CRA stated:

[G]iven the degree of accommodation provided by Buyco to the departing employees and the parties' lack of separate interests, the better view is that the employees and Buyco are generally not dealing at arm's length. This view is consistent with several of our published documents (2007-0243171C6, 2002-0166655, and 2004-0103061E5) as well as the jurisprudence (Petro-Canada v. The Queen (2003 DTC 94) (confirmed by the Federal Court of Appeal (2004 DTC 6329)) and RMM Canadian Enterprises Inc. et al. v. The Queen (97 DTC 302)). Accordingly, in ruling requests on this type of transaction, considered in 2012, we refused to confirm that section 84.1 would not apply to deem employees to receive a dividend from a Buyco on the disposition of their Opco shares.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) stock option share Buyco not at arm's length 202

3 July 2012 External T.I. 2012-0443421E5 F - 84.1 and partnership

use of partnership to avoid s. 84.1 could be attacked through challenge to partnership validity or applying s. 245(1) re circumvention of s. 84.1

A and B are Canadian-resident spouses who have not utilized their capital gains exemption and who each hold 50 Class A shares (the only issued and outstanding shares) of their family farm corporation ("Milkco," a CCPC which has carried on a dairy farming business for 20 years) having an fair market value of $500,000 an adjusted cost base and paid-up capital of $50, and qualifying under s. 110.6(1) as shares of the capital stock of a family farm corporation. They also each hold a 1/2 "interest in a family farm partnership" as defined in s. 110.6(1), namely, in a general partnership (“Grainco”), which has operated a cereal growing farm for three years, with each such 1/2 interest having an ACB of $50.

A and B each roll their shares of Milkco into Grainco for additional partnership interests in Grainco.

Five years later, after the FMV of the interests in Grainco have appreciated to $1.5 million and such interests continue to qualify as interests in a family farm partnership, A (and then B several days later) transfers his or her partnership interest in Grainco to a newly-incorporated corporation (“Holdco,” or "Managementco") - in which each of A and B holds common shares with an ACB of $50) in consideration for a note receivable of $750,000 and claims the capital gains exemption. As Grainco now only has one partner (Holdco), it is dissolved by operation of law (with a view to the application of s. 98(5).)

In noting that s. 245(2) could apply on the basis of an abusive avoidance of s. 84.1, CRA stated:

With respect to the potential application of section 84.1 to the transactions described above, we are of the view that this provision could be applicable, in particular, where, for example, the legal existence of the partnership is not recognized or the partnership acts as agent or nominee for the ownership of shares of the capital stock of a corporation. Thus, if the legal existence of Grainco could be called into question or if the latter acted as an agent of A and B, section 84.1 could apply to the disposition of the shares of the capital stock of Milkco to Holdco. …

[A]s noted in the Explanatory Notes of the Department of Finance, section 84.1 is “an anti-avoidance rule designed to prevent the removal of taxable corporate surplus as a tax-free return of capital through a non-arm’s length transfer of shares by an individual resident in Canada to a corporation.” A scheme that allows an individual to strip a private corporation of its surpluses through a reorganization that would result in indirect holding of its shares through a partnership appears to circumvent the application of section 84.1. …

[A]llowing a taxpayer, other than a corporation, to carry out a reorganization allowing a change in ownership of the shares of a private corporation by transferring them to a partnership in order to subsequently dispose of the partnership's interest to another corporation with which the taxpayer does not deal at arm's length could be a stratagem to strip the surplus of a corporation and circumvent section 84.1.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) s. 245(2) has been applied to the use of a partnership to avoid s. 84.1 536

7 October 2011 Roundtable, 2011-0412121C6 F - Interaction between S. 84.1 and S. 85(2.1)

s. 84.1 can "apply" and thereby prevail over s. 85(2.1) even where there is no s. 84.1 grind

Where shares with a high PUC and low ACB are transferred by an individual under s. 85(1) to Holdco for shares with the same high-low attributes, s. 84.1(1) takes precedence over s. 85(2.1), so that a "grind" of paid-up capital will not occur under the s. 85(2.1) formula given the satisfaction of all the conditions for the application of s. 84.1(1), even though the grind under s. 84.1(1)(a) is nil (i.e., s. 84.1 is still considered to "apply" in that circumstance).

Words and Phrases
apply
Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 85 - Subsection 85(2.1) s. 85(2.1) does not apply where s. 84.1(1) applies even if there is no grind under the s. 84.1(1)(a) formula 166

1 October 2010 External T.I. 2010-0378681E5 F - Déduction pour gain en capital

s. 84.1)1) engaged on sale of Opco to Sonco for note

Would the capital gains deduction be available to an individual who disposes of all of the shares of "Opco") to another corporation ("Sonco") held by the individual’s adult son, in consideration for a 10-year interest-bearing note payable over 10 years/ CRA stated:

[A]ll the conditions for the application of subsection 84.1(1) would be satisfied … [thereby] result[ing] in a dividend rather than a capital gain … .

7 July 2010 External T.I. 2010-0370611E5 F - Purchase of Shares by Subsidiary - Sec. 245

realization by an individual of capital gain by selling shares to the corporation’s Newco sub requires inter alia that any basis created in Newco not be abused

A CRA response at the 2005 APFF Roundtable (2005-0141061C6) dealt with the situation where Mr. X, an arm’s length shareholder owning 20% of the shares of OPCO (a private corporation), accomplished a sale of his shares so as to produce capital gains treatment as a result of OPCO subscribing $200,000 in cash for shares of a Newco (Subco), with Subco then buying the OPCO shares of Mr. X for such cash. CRA confirmed that its position that the individual potentially could realize the capital gain did not depend on there being a s. 87 or 88 merger of Newco and the corporation. The assumption of there being no merger was “aimed at situations that could involve taxpayers who, for example, would be tempted to use tax base created between Opco and Subco in an abusive manner.”

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) position that an individual potentially can realize a capital gain by selling shares to a Newco sub of the corporation for cash does not depend on there being a s. 87 or 88 merger of Newco and the corporation 264

28 August 2008 External T.I. 2008-0287611E5 F - Surplus Stripping

s. 84.1 or GAAR would apply to series of transactions to convert a taxable dividend into proceeds of freeze shares

Regarding a proposed series of transactions whose purpose was to convert a taxable dividend that would otherwise have been paid by Opco into a proceeds of disposition to shareholders of Opco on the sale to a 3rd party of freeze shares of Opco, CRA indicated that this was a dividend stripping arrangement to which all the conditions of either s. 84.1(1) or GAAR would apply.

5 October 2007 APFF Roundtable Q. 10, 2007-0243171C6 F - Surplus Stripping

treatment of Employeeco purchase depends on whether it has a separate economic interest
Scenario (a)

Mr. X, who holds all of Opco, exchanges all of his Opco common shares for retractable preferred shares of Opco. Mr. X then subscribes to 65% of the common shares of Opco, and a newly-incorporated corporation held by key employees (“Employeeco”) subscribes to 35% of the common shares of Opco. Mr. X disposes of 35% of his preferred shares to Employeeco, with Employeeco paying the purchase price by retracting the preferred shares so acquired by it.

Scenario (b)

Employeeco uses funds borrowed from a financial institution to acquire the 35% of the Opco common shares held by Mr. X, with the loan being repaid out of dividends paid out of future profits.

Scenario (c)

Same as (b) except that the purchase price is owing by Employeeco to Mr. X until paid off out of OPco dividends.

Scenario (a)

CRA indicated that (similarly to 2014 APFF Roundtable, Q. 2.4) it did not appear that Employeeco had a separate economic interest in acquiring the Opco preferred shares held by Mr. X, other than to accommodate Mr. X, and that the funds required for this acquisition would invariably come from Opco, which was and would continue to be controlled by Mr. X. Accordingly, it was “very likely that Mr. X and Employeeco would not, factually, be dealing at arm's length in respect of Mr. X's disposition of the Opco preferred shares” so that a dividend would be deemed to be paid by Employeeco to Mr. X under s. 84.1(1)(b). As a secondary position, CRA would consider applying s. 245(2) on a surplus-stripping rationale.

Scenarios (b) and (c)

CRA stated that “nothing would lead us to believe, at first glance, that Mr. X and Employeeco would not be dealing with each other at arm's length’ given that “Employeeco seems to have a separate economic interest in acquiring 35% of the common shares of the capital stock of Opco from Mr. X and such transaction does not seem to have been effected to accommodate Mr. X” so that’s. 84.1(1) would probably not apply. A review of s. 245(2) would require more facts.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) leveraged Employeeco buyout could be an arm’s length transaction 127

12 January 2005 External T.I. 2004-0106161E5 - Application of par. 84.1(1)(b) on a sale of shares

Under transactions in which Mr. A sells a portion of his shares of a family farm corporation ("Farmco") to a newly incorporated subsidiary ("Xco") of an unrelated individual (Mr. X) for a cash consideration of $500,000 which Mr. A then lends to Farmco, with Farmco using the loan proceeds to redeem the Farmco shares held by Xco, would be considered to be non-arm's length transactions that were subject to s. 84.1(1)(b). Such transactions also could be subject to s. 245(2).

7 December 2004 External T.I. 2004-0103061E5 F - Non Arm's Length Sale of Shares-Surpl. Stripping

application of s. 84.1 if company sold to accommodation party, followed by wind-up of that company and payment of purchase price

A professional partnership with three members disposes of all the shares of the services corporation ("Serviceco" - rendering services to the partners and their clients) to a corporation ("Opco") owned by one of the partners for $600,000 and realizes a capital gain of $600,000. Serviceco would then be wound-up into Opco, and Opco would ultimately pay the $600,000 sale price.

CRA indicated that s. 84.1 would apply if the sale was a non-arm’s length transaction, which would be the case if Opco was an accommodation party.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) scheme of Act requires that a corporate distribution be treated as income, regardless of form 138

29 June 2004 External T.I. 2004-0078951E5 F - Non Arm's Length Sale of Shares, Surplus Stripping

s. 84.1 could apply if unrelated purchaser is an accommodation party

An individual ("A") holds preferred shares in a holding corporation ("HOLDCO") with an ACB equaling their FMV of $500,000 as a result of a previous capital gains crystallization transaction, and a nominal PUC. HOLDCO owns an investment portfolio as well as common shares of an operating corporation ("OPCO"). A third party is interested in the OPCO shares. Instead of HOLDCO transferring its portfolio to another corporation and A then selling his shares of HOLDCO to UNRELATEDCO, the following transactions took place.

A disposed of his HOLDCO preferred shares to OPCO in consideration for OPCO shares with the same tax attributes. HOLDCO then redeemed its shares owned by OPCO. Finally, A and HOLDCO disposed of their OPCO shares to the third party. Whether section 84.1 or 245 would apply in the given fact situation.

In the course of making general comments after having indicated that there were insufficient facts, CRA stated:

A could be not dealing at arm's length with UNRELATEDCO with respect to A's disposition of the shares of OPCO … . Section 84.1 could therefore apply in this regard. This could in particular be the case if it turns out that UNRELATEDCO is party to certain transactions that have no real commercial basis, for the sole purpose of accommodating A.

9 January 2004 External T.I. 2003-0037425 - Application of Section 84.1

Also released under document number 2003-00374250.

A farming partnership between a husband and wife transfers its business to a newly-incorporated corporation ("Opco") whose common shares are held by the husband and wife and which issued promissory notes and preferred shares in consideration for the acquired business. Later, the husband and wife transfer their partnership interests in the partnership to a Newco for consideration that includes a note with a principal amount that is in excess of the adjusted cost base of the transferred partnership interest by $500,000 each, and receives redeemable retractable preferred shares for the balance of the consideration.

Respecting whether s. 84.1 would apply to the transfer of the partnership interests, the Agency questioned the validity of the partnership following the transfer of its business to Opco and also indicated that the application of s. 245 to the series of transactions would be considered.

12 June 2003 External T.I. 2003-0019725 F - Sale of Holding' Shares to OPCO

s. 84.1 likely applicable re transaction in which 3 unrelated individuals act in concert to step up shares in Opco
Also released under document number 2003-00197250.

Three unrelated individuals (X, Y and Z), in addition to holding some of the shares of Opco directly, also held Opco shares through their respective holding companies (Holdcos 1, 2 and 3). Their preferred shares of their Holdcos had a high ACB which had been stepped-up through the use of the capital gains deduction (and low PUC) whereas the shares held by the Holdcos in Opco had a low ACB (and low PUC). In order that the individuals could hold high ACB shares in Opco directly, various steps would be implemented including a sale by the individuals of their high-ACB shares of their Holdcos to Opco in consideration for high-ACB preferred shares of Opco. In finding that such exchange likely would be viewed as one between persons not dealing at arm’s length so that s. 84.1 likely would limit the PUC of the shares received on the above exchange, CCRA stated:

[T]he parties … could be acting together in a highly interdependent manner with no separate interest … [and] Opco would have no distinct interest in acquiring shares of Holdco I, Holdco II and Holdco III, other than to accommodate its ultimate shareholders, namely Mr. X, Mr. Y and Ms. Z.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) 3 unrelated individuals likely acting in concert where they act without separate interests to achieve a basis step-up re transactions that are irrelevant to the business of the other party (Opco) 217

26 March 2003 External T.I. 2003-0008645 F - Non-Arm's Length Sale of Shares

no presumption that a transaction between companies owned by couple and nephew, respectively, is not arm’s length

Regarding whether a transaction in which a holding company owned equally by a married couple (Mr. and Ms. B) sold 50% of the common shares of Opco to a corporation wholly-owned by the nephew (Son A) of Mr. B was subject to s. 84.1 on the basis of not being between persons dealing at arm’s length, CCRA stated:

[T]he CCRA does not generally presume that there is an arm's length relationship between the parties in transactions involving uncles and nephews. … However, we are of the view that family ties may be more likely to give rise to the existence of a non-arm's length relationship between particular persons.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) family relationship (e.g., uncle/nephew) are more likely to give rise to NAL transaction 93

28 March 2003 External T.I. 2002-016665

84.1 may apply to partial buyout by Holdco for independent employees

Mr. and Mrs. A, and Mr. and Mrs. B, hold 26%, 12%, 26% and 12%, respectively of the common shares of a small business corporation (“OPc”) and two unrelated individuals (X and Y) each hold 12% of the Opco shares. X and Y incorporate “Xyco,” roll their Opco shares into Xyco and Xyco uses a bank borrowing to fund the purchase of the Opco shaes of Mrs. A and Mrs. B. If Xyco and Opco do not amalgamate, Xyco will service its debt through dividends on its Opco shares.

In indicating that s. 84.1 may apply, CRA stated:

While there may be arm's length bargaining concerning the price to be paid for the shares of Opco, the shareholders appear to be acting in a highly interdependent manner to avoid tax on the transactions. In our view, Xyco may be viewed as merely accommodating the shareholders by structuring the transactions in this manner, since it does not appear to have any independent interest in acquiring the shares of Opco.

4 November 1998 External T.I. 9801695 - WHETHER A PARTNERSHIP IS A TAXPAYER

A partnership that transfers shares will be considered to be a person and a taxpayer for purposes of s. 84.1.

23 December 1993 External T.I. 9326885 F - The Application of Section 84.1 of the Income Tax Act

RC's practice is to apply s. 84.1 where the conditions for its application are present given that its provisions do not give RC any administrative discretion in its application. Accordingly, s. 84.1 will apply where a son of the taxpayer incorporated a holding company which purchased the taxpayer's shares for a promissory note payable over a ten-year period even when it is clear that the purchase price was equal to the fair market value of the shares and the purchased corporation had minimal retained earnings.

1993 A.P.F.F. Round Table Q. 4

It is not relevant to the application of s. 84.1 whether the subject corporation and the purchaser corporation were connected before the disposition in question; i.e., there is no requirement that they become connected.

29 January 1990 T.I. (June 1990 Access Letter, ¶1264)

The sale by Mr. and Mrs. A of all the shares of Holdco to a corporation owned by their daughter and son-in-law in consideration for a promissory note bearing a commercial rate of interest gives rise to a deemed dividend under s. 84.1(1)(b) equal to the amount by which the principal amount of the promissory note exceeds the greater of the paid-up capital of the shares of Holdco and their adjusted cost base.

18 December 1989 T.I. (May 1990 Access Letter, ¶1220)

An estate which acquires shares of a deceased person under a testamentary trust acquires the shares from a person with whom it was not dealing at arm's length.

October 1989 Revenue Canada Round Table - Q.11 (Jan. 90 Access Letter, ¶1075)

s. 84.1 will not apply where an individual taxpayer exchanges common shares of a corporation for preferred shares of the same corporation - because the shares will not be disposed of to another corporation.

18 Aug. 89 T.I. (Jan. 90 Access Letter, ¶1082)

s. 84.1 does not apply to the disposition by an individual of 1/2 of his common shares of Opco to Opco in exchange for preference shares of Opco because the common shares of Opco would not thereby be disposed of to another corporation.

Articles

Anthony Strawson, Timothy P. Kirby, "Vendor Planning for Private Corporations: Select Issues", 2017 Conference Report, (Canadian Tax Foundation), 11:1-28

Use of holding companies to create CDA and s. 84.1, to defer tax on a sale by individual shareholders (pp. 11:19-20)

  • Opco is a CCPC.
  • Opco has an individual shareholder owning 100 class A common shares with an FMV of $10 million and an ACB of $100.
  • The purchaser is willing to pay the full purchase price for Opco shares in cash on closing.

The shareholder incorporates a holding corporation (Newco) and transfers 50 percent [fn 52: The optimal percentage of shares to roll to Newco may be slightly more or less than 50 percent, but 50 percent is used here for simplicity.] of his or her class A common shares with an FMV of $5 million to Newco on a rollover basis. Newco then exchanges its 50 class A common shares for 50 class B common shares (non-voting) on a taxable basis pursuant to subsection 85(1) by electing at an FMV of $5 million. As a result of this transaction, ignoring the nominal ACB, Newco realizes a capital gain in the amount of $5 million and a taxable capital gain of $2.5 million. This results in an increase to Newco’s CDA balance of $2.5 million and an increase to Newco’s RDTOH account of $766,666.67….

The shareholder then sells, in two equal tranches, his or her remaining shares to Newco in exchange for a shareholder loan in the amount of $5 million. [fn 53: To elect for a dividend to be a capital dividend and a dividend to be a taxable dividend, the sale to Newco must occur in two separate tranches so that two separate deemed dividends arise.] Because the requirements of section 84.1 are met on this transfer, Newco is deemed to have paid two dividends to the shareholder of $5 million in aggregate (again ignoring the nominal ACB). Newco then elects for the first dividend to be a capital dividend from Newco’s CDA and the second dividend to be a taxable dividend that is intended to recover Newco’s existing RDTOH balance….

Newco then sells its high ACB shares of Opco to the purchaser with no additional capital gain or loss being realized. The benefit of the application of section 84.1 is that it allows a shareholder to potentially recover the CDA and RDTOH balance through the application of section 84.1, while also increasing the intercorporate cost base of the shares sold to the purchaser.

GAAR analysis of use of s. 84.1 (p. 11:24)

[O]n initial consideration, reliance on a specific anti-avoidance rule to obtain a beneficial tax deferral seems to fall within the scope of abusive tax avoidance because “the outcome defeats the rationale of the provision relied upon.” [ Lipson, 2009 SCC 1, at para. 40]

Nonetheless, the apparent abuse is tempered by the fact that, potentially, marginally greater tax will be payable on the ultimate distribution from Newco than would otherwise be payable if the deferred proceeds are distributed as dividends. Furthermore, the Act contains many provisions that are intended to facilitate tax deferrals, particularly when funds continue to be retained in corporate solution….

David Wilkenfeld, "Section 84.2 Update", Tax for The Owner-Manager, Vol. 2, No. 1, January 2002.

Paragraph 84.1(1)(a)

Administrative Policy

31 August 2005 Internal T.I. 2005-0134831I7 F - Capital Gains Exemption Strip

s. 84.1 did not apply to transferring crystallized preferred shares’ ACB to common shares under s. 40(3.6)(b), with those shares exchanged for high-PUC prefs of new Holdcos for cash redemption

Each of two brothers, who already held some of “their” shares of Opco through their respective holding companies (Holdco 1 or Holdco 2) had, in a capital gains crystallization transaction in which the s. 110.6(2.1) deductions were claimed, transferred further common shares of Opco to Holdco 1 or 2, respectively, in consideration for Class E preferred shares with an ACB equaling their FMV and nominal PUC. Subsequently, each brother disposed of all their shares of Holdco 1 or Holdco 2 to two new respective personal holding companies (Holdco 3 or Holdco 4) in consideration for Class A common shares (having a nominal ACB and PUC in light of a s. 85(1) election) and for Class E preferred shares (also with a nominal PUC, but with a high ACB pursuant to s. 85(1)(g).) Holdco 1 and Holdco 3, and Holdco 2 or Holdco 4, then amalgamated to form Amalco 1, and Amalco 2, respectively (having the same share attributes as Holdco 3 or 4).

Now, each of Amalco 1 and Amalco 2 redeemed its Class E preferred shares (still with nominal PUC and full ACB) owned by the brothers, so that each brother realized a s. 84(3) dividend, and a capital loss that was denied under s. 40(3.6)(a), and added to the ACB of their Class A common shares of their respective Amalco. Each brother then disposed of such common shares to a new respective holding company (Holdco 5 or Holdco 6) in consideration for Class B preferred shares of such new Holdco, and also in consideration for Class A commons shares. By virtue of s. 85(1), elections, the Class B preferred shares had a high ACB pursuant to s. 85(1)(g) and high PUC, and the Class A common shares had nominal ACB (pursuant to s. 85(1)(h)) and nominal PUC. Finally, each of Holdco 5 and Holdco 6 redeem its Class B preferred shares (owned by the respective brother) for cash.

The Directorate stated:

[P]aragraph 84.1(1)(a) would not apply to the disposition by each of Brother 1 and Brother 2 of the Class A shares … of Amalco 1 or Amalco 2 … to reduce the ACB in respect of the Class B preferred shares … of Holdco 5 and Holdco 6 received as consideration. … [F]or the purposes of paragraph 84.1(1)(a), the ACB to Brother 1 or Brother 2 … of the Class A shares of Amalco 1 or Amalco 2, as the case may be, would technically be deemed to be approximately $XXXXXXX. This is because there would technically be no amount each of which is an amount determined after 1984 under subparagraph 40(1)(a)(i) in respect of a previous disposition of a Class A share of the capital stock of Amalco 1 or Amalco 2, as the case may be, or to an earlier disposition of a share for which that Class A share of the capital stock of Amalco 1 or Amalco 2 would have been substituted (i.e., a Class A share of the capital stock of Holdco 3 or Holdco 4, as the case may be, or, having regard to subsection 248(5), a Class A share of the capital stock of Holdco 1 or Holdco 2, or any of the 149 Class A shares of the capital stock of Opco referred to in (1)(c) above).

… [However] in the event that taxpayers apply for advance rulings in respect of a series of proposed transactions similar to the one described above …[we] would … refer such a case to the General Anti-Avoidance Rule ("GAAR") Committee.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) the use of s. 40(3.6)(b) for surplus-stripping purposes would be referred to the GAAR Committee 122
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 40 - Subsection 40(3.6) individuals holding high-ACB/low-PUC prefs and low ACB/PUC common shares preserved that ACB under s. 40(3.6)(b) for surplus-stripping purposes on their prefs’ redemption 91

Paragraph 84.1(1)(b)

Administrative Policy

11 October 2019 APFF Roundtable Q. 1, 2019-0819401C6 F - Interaction between par. 84.1(1)(b) and 129(1(a)

s. 84.1 dividend can generate dividend refund

In 2002-0128955, CRA indicated that a deemed dividend under s. 84.1(1)(b) would not generate a dividend refund (DR). CRA has now stated:

[W]e have come to the conclusion that the position described in the Interpretation no longer represents the position of the CRA. In particular, according a DR to a corporation deemed to have paid a dividend by virtue of paragraph 84.1(1)(b) provides in our view a result that is more compatible with the integration principle enshrined in the Income Tax Act.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 129 - Subsection 129(1) reversal of position that s. 84.1(1)(b) dividends do not generate dividend refunds 144

25 November 2012 Roundtable, 2013-0479401C6 F - Employés et Achat Ltée – commentaires panel ARC

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.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 251 - Subsection 251(1) - Paragraph 251(1)(c) Buyco that is formed by employer to purchases departing employees’ shares is NAL 118

5 October 2012 APFF Roundtable, 2012-0454091C6 F - GRIP and deemed dividend pursuant to 84.1(1)(b)

unnecessary in s. 89(14) for s. 84.1 to have deemed dividend to be paid on shares

Mr and Mrs X hold all the shares of Corporation A and B, respectively (both private corporations). Mr X sells all his shares of Corporation A to Corporation B in consideration for a promissory note, resulting in his receipt of a deemed dividend under s. 84.1(1)(b) that is less than the GRIP of B. In finding that this dividend can be designated under s. 89(14) as an eligible dividend notwithstanding that Mr X does not hold any shares of B, CRA stated (in its summary, with very similar comments in the French body):

Subsection 89(14) and the definition of "eligible dividend" in subsection 89(1) do not refer to dividends paid (or received, as the case may be) "to a shareholder of any class of shares of its capital stock" as provided in subsection 83(2) nor to a dividend paid "on shares of its capital stock" as provided in subsection 129(1). The wording used in the "eligible dividend" provisions is different. Therefore, to be an "eligible dividend" as defined in subsection 89(1) and pursuant to the designation provided for in subsection 89(14), the individual does not have to be a shareholder of any class of shares of the capital stock of the corporation and the deemed dividend paid or received pursuant to paragraph 84.1(1)(b) does not have to be paid by the corporation on shares of its capital stock.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 89 - Subsection 89(14) s. 84.1 deemed dividend paid to an individual could be an eligible dividend notwithstanding him not being a shareholder of the payer 269

30 May 2007 External T.I. 2006-0183851E5 F - Paragraphs 83(2) and 84.1(1)

s. 84.1(1) dividend is payable per s. 84(7) so that s. 83(2) election available

Mr. X transfers high-low preferred shares of Opco 1 to Opco 2 (both held by him and related persons) in consideration for a note, such that he is deemed by s. 84.1(1)(b) to receive a dividend. CRA found, after noting that s. 84(7) deemed the dividend to be payable, that Opco 2 may elect under s. 83(2) for the dividend to be a capital dividend.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 83 - Subsection 83(2) s. 83(2) election can be made on a s. 84.1 deemed dividend 152

Subsection 84.1(2) - Idem [Non-arm’s length sale of shares]

See Also

Emory v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1074 [at 2901], 2010 TCC 71

The taxpayer and another individual ("Chen") owned 27% and 73%, respectively of the shares (being common shares) of a corporation ("Sona"). S. 84.1(1) deemed the taxpayer to receive a dividend when she and Chen transferred their shares of Sona to a corporation ("Ontario Inc.") that was mostly owned by Chen but in which she held 5% of the common shares and for consideration that in her case was paid in cash. This result occurred because the taxpayer was deemed by s. 84.1(2)(b) not to deal at arm's length with Ontario Inc. Woods J. stated (at para. 41) "the fact that the appellant owned a small number of shares in Ontario Inc. has unfortunately resulted in the application of this section."

Administrative Policy

25 July 1994 External T.I. 9407865 - 85(4)

Where a transferor has acquired a subject share from a non-arm's length individual, the amount of any capital gain realized by the non-arm's length individual on the disposition, which is exempt from taxation in Canada by virtue of an exemption contained in a treaty between Canada and another country, will not normally be a capital gain included in s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii).

13 April 1994 External T.I. 9405015 - NON-ARM'S LENGTH SALE OF SHARES

An individual owns all the voting shares of a corporation ("Opco") and shares (including non-voting special shares) of Opco representing approximately 65% of the equity of Opco. A group of 20 arm's length employees own the balance of the non-voting special shares.

Ss.84.1(2)(b) and (e) would apply to deem the employees not to deal at arm's length with a new holding company ("Holdco") to which all the shareholders of Opco transferred their shares in exchange for shareholdings in Holdco which mirrored their shareholdings in Opco notwithstanding that, in fact, only the one individual controlled Opco and Holdco.

30 November 1991 Round Table (4M0462), Q. 10.1 - Non-Arm's Length Relationship and Death (C.T.O. September 1994)

Shares acquired by a taxpayer from his deceased spouse are acquired from a person with whom the taxpayer is not dealing at arm's length and are, therefore, subject to the reduction in adjusted cost base under s. 84.1(2)(a.1).

Paragraph 84.1(2)(a.1)

See Also

Pomerleau c. La Reine, 2016 TCC 228, aff'd 2018 FCA 129

GAAR applied to converting soft ACB (generated from crystallizing the capital gains deduction) into pseudo-hard ACB under s. 53(1)(f.2) for use in extracting surplus

The family Opco was held by a holding company (Groupe Pomerlau Inc.), whose Class F shares were held by the taxpayer, his mother and his three siblings. Their Class F shares had a nominal paid-up capital (“PUC”) and an adjusted cost (“ACB”) that had been stepped up in 1989 through a share exchange transaction which had utilized the capital gains deduction. The following transactions were then implemented.

  1. The taxpayer’s mother gifted a portion of her Class F shares to the taxpayer, which he was deemed under s. 69(1)(c) to acquire at a cost equal to their fair market value (“FMV”) of $0.2 million.
  2. The taxpayer and his sister Gaby then transferred all their Class F shares of Groupe Pomerlau Inc. under s. 85(1) to a holding company of the taxpayer (P Pom Inc.) in consideration for Class G shares with a deemed cost equal to their FMV (of $0.6 million, in the taxpayer’s case) but with a modest PUC, and for Class A shares with nominal ACB and PUC.
  3. Gaby then gifted the Class G shares so received by her (with an FMV of $0.4 million) to the taxpayer (without gain realization) as well as $1 million of Class A shares (thereby realizing a capital gain in that amount).
  4. The taxpayer then retracted all $1 million of his Class G shares of P Pom Inc, thereby realizing a deemed dividend and capital loss of $0.995 million - but with that capital loss being denied under s. 40(3.6) and added to the ACB of his Class A shares of P Pom Inc. under s. 53(1)(f.2).
  5. The taxpayer then transferred all of his Class A shares of P Pom Inc. under s. 85(1) to a new personal holding company (Gestion Pierre Pomerlau Inc.) in consideration for Class A shares having an FMV of $20.4 million and nominal ACB and PUC, and Class C shares with a PUC and FMV of $1.994 million, with the Class C shares immediately being retracted by him.

After noting (at para. 56) that the rollover transfer in 5 above of the taxpayer’s Class A shares to Gestion Pierre Pomerlau Inc. did not result in a reduction of the PUC of the Class C shares received by him, given that the prohibition in s. 84.1(2)(a) and (a.1) from using “soft ACB” did not apply to this transaction, Favreau J went on to agree with the Minister’s position that this transaction’s avoidance of s. 84.1 was abusive (so that a deemed dividend was appropriately assessed under s. 245(2)), stating (at paras. 80, 81, 83, 85, TaxInterpretations translation):

When the taxpayer proceeded with the redemption of the 1,010,328 Class G shares of P Pom Inc., they had a paid-up capital of $15,700 and an adjusted cost base corresponding to their fair market value, namely, $1,010,328. The adjusted cost base of those shares was wholly derived from capital gains deductions claimed by the taxpayer, his mother and his sister under section 110.6 of the Act in their crystallization transaction… .

One of the consequences of this redemption was to generate to the appellant a capital loss of $994,628, which was transferred by the operation of subsection 40(3.6) of the Act to the adjusted cost base of the Class A shares which he held in P Pom Inc. That accomplished, the appellant claims to have thereby transformed that which had been “soft” adjusted cost base into “hard” adjusted cost base not caught by the adjusted cost base reduction provisions of subsection 84.1(2) of the Act. …

This series of transactions permitted the appellant, on the redemption of the Class G shares of Gestion Pierre Pomerlau Inc., to extract as a tax-free return of capital, $994,628 derived from the surplus of his corporation by virtue of utilizing his capital gains deduction and that of his mother and sister. …

But for already having isolated the so-called “soft” adjusted cost base in the Class G shares of P Pom Inc. in order to generate a capital loss from their redemption, with a resulting increase in the adjusted cost base of the Class A shares of P Pom Inc., it would not have been possible to avoid the tax consequences arising under section 84.1 of the Act.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) abusive avoidance of s. 84.1 by converting soft into hard ACB 261

Côté-Létourneau v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1116 [at 3092], 2007 TCC 91

The Court rejected a submission of the taxpayers that shares issued to them by a corporation were not acquired by them: in order for them to acquire shares, there is no need for there to be a corresponding disposition of the shares.

Words and Phrases
acquisition

Administrative Policy

2017 Ruling 2016-0629511R3 - Post-Mortem Planning and Extraction of "Hard ACB"

pipeline transfer of inherited shares for their "hard" ACB (excluding CGD and V-Day step-up by deceased)

CRA ruled on a pipeline involving Opco shares inherited by an individual whose ACB consisted of both “soft” ACB (attributable to V-Day value basis of the deceased and the deceased’s use of the capital gains deduction immediately before death) and “hard” ACB (attributable to the further step-up in the shares’ ACB under s. 70(5).) The proposed transactions entailed the s. 85(1) transfer by him to a Newco of his Opco shares for notes in an amount close to the transferred shares’ hard ACB and preferred shares as to the balance – followed by an amalgamation (or wind-up) of the Opcos over a year later and gradual repayment of the notes on a redacted timetable.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) pipeline transfers of shares with both “soft” and “hard” ACB 663

9 October 2015 APFF Roundtable Q. 14, 2015-0595631C6 F - Indirect Monetization of CGD

individual cannot effectively use the ACB of shares previously stepped-up using the capital gains deduction to create a loss to offset a gain on the sale of common shares

Following Descarries, CRA will no longer issue rulings in which an individual can in effect use shares (e.g., preferred shares) whose ACB was stepped up using the capital gains deduction ("CGD") (by redeeming those shares to create a deemed dividend and a capital loss) to offset or reduce a capital gain on a disposition of his or her common shares. CRA articulates the common thread between Descarries and such a now-GAARable transaction as follows:

Such transactions effectively accomplish a distribution of surplus of a corporation in the form of a capital gain even while such capital gain is reduced by a capital loss sustained from the disposition of shares whose ACB arose from the CGD or from the FMV of such shares on V-Day.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) Descarries not consistent with use of ACB on a previous capital gains crystallizatin to create a capital loss for use on a sale 169

9 October 2015 APFF Roundtable Q. 7, 2015-0595561C6 F - Computation of adjusted cost base and section 84.1

terminal-return capital gains exemption claimed on bequested shares grinds their ACB for s. 84.1 purposes to the family beneficiaries

The capital gains deduction was claimed in the terminal return of an individual (X) for shares which were bequeathed to his son, and the son then transferred these shares to his holding company. The principal issue, respecting whether s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) applied to grind the ACB of his shares (by the amount of this claim) for purposes of the application of s. 84.1 to the share transfer to the holding company, turned on this question: was a deduction under s. 110.6 claimed respecting a previous disposition of the shares by an individual with whom the son did not deal at arm’s length?

In responding affirmatively, CRA stated that "the relation between the parties is to be evaluated at the moment giving rise to the application of section 110.6." Since the disposition giving rise to the capital gain for which the deduction was claimed was deemed by s. 70(5)(a) to have occurred immediately before X’s death (when X obviously was not dealing at arm’s length with his son), the s. 110.6(2.1) claim ground the shares’ ACB for s. 84.1 purposes.

10 August 2015 External T.I. 2015-0602751E5 - Capital gains deduction and section 84.1

statement of purpose and simple examples of s. 84.1 application

The taxpayer and his wife acquire all the shares, qualifying as qualified small business corporation shares, of a corporation (the "Corporation") directly from XX (the "Shareholder") in consideration for a promissory note having a principal amount equal to the fair market value of the acquired shares. They then transfer the shares to their newly-incorporated holding company ("Holdco") and use the funds of Holdco and the Corporation to repay the promissory note. CRA stated:

Section 84.1 of the Act is designed to ensure that a distribution of the retained earnings of the Corporation to you and your wife after the sale that would be taxed as a dividend if it had been paid directly to you remains taxed as a dividend after the transfer of the shares of the Corporation to Holdco (the conditions of application of section 84.1 would seem to be met because you and your wife would not deal at arm's length with Holdco and both Holdco and the Corporation would be connected for purposes of that provision).

…[B]ecause you and your wife would acquire the shares from the Shareholder (i.e. a person with whom you are not dealing at arm's length), subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) of the Act provides that the adjusted cost base, to you and your wife, of the Corporation shares would be reduced by the amount of capital gains deduction claimed under section 110.6… by the Shareholder.

… If instead of selling the shares to you and your wife, the Shareholder had sold the shares of the Corporation to Holdco and received a note, subsection 84.1(1)(b) of the Act might apply to deem the Shareholder to have received a dividend on the disposition of the shares.

6 February 2004 Internal T.I. 2003-0052831I7 F - Application of subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii)

no change to the ACB grind under s. 84.1(2)(a.1) if a loss is subsequently proposed to be carried back to reduce the amount that was claimed under s. 110.6(2.1)

The TSO proposed to assess a deemed dividend arising on the redemption by the taxpayer (“Daughter”) of Class D preferred shares (of “Holdco”) on the basis that s. 84.1(1) had previously applied to reduce the paid-up capital of such shares. In particular, such preferred shares had been issued in exchange for shares (of “Farm”) whose adjusted cost base had been reduced pursuant to s. 84.1(2)(a.1) as a result of the claiming of the s. 110.6(2.1) capital gains deduction. Such deemed dividend would result in a reduction of her proceeds of disposition of her Class D preferred shares, thereby resulting in a capital loss. In response, Daughter proposed that there be a carryback of such capital loss to the year in which such s. 110.6(2.1) deduction had been claimed, so as to reduce such use of the s. 110.6(2.1) deduction, thereby reducing the ACB grind under s. 84.1(2)(a.1) and the PUC grind under s. 84.1(1).

In rejecting this revision, the Directorate stated:

It appears to us that the intended result of Daughter's request to carry back the capital loss incurred in XXXXXXXXXX to the XXXXXXXXXX taxation year would be to change the amount she could report under subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) in computing the ACB of the Farm shares immediately before their disposition to Holdco on XXXXXXXXXX. Changing the amount in this way would, in our view, cause inappropriate results that would be contrary to the tax policy underlying section 84.1. It would also cause a circularity problem in the calculation of the paid-up capital of the Class D shares of Holdco's capital stock and in the calculation of the capital loss sustained by Daughter on the redemption by Holdco of those shares.

Nothing in section 84.1 indicates that the ACB of the relevant shares immediately before their disposition must be recalculated if a capital loss incurred in a year subsequent to the disposition of the relevant shares is carried back to the year of disposition or a preceding year and would have the effect of modifying the capital gains deduction claimed by a taxpayer for the relevant shares. We are of the view that section 84.1 should be interpreted so that such a loss carryback does not affect the computation of the ACB of the relevant shares immediately before their disposition and therefore does not affect either the amount of the paid-up capital reduction computed under paragraph 84.1(1)(a) or the amount of the deemed dividend computed under paragraph 84.1(1)(b) as originally computed.

Finance

2017 CTF Finance Roundtable, Q.9

Finance is struggling with whether it is possible to provide relief for intergenerational transfers of businesses without generating quite substantial losses of tax revenues.

2017 CTF Finance Roundtable, Q.8

There will not be a complete carve-out for pipeline transactions. It is difficult to see how the current results obtained using pipelines do not invoke the same policy concerns that other non-arm’s length transfers do – for example, the inter vivos 84.1 transfers that are more explicitly covered in the changes to s. 84.1(2)(a.1).

However, Finance is considering some form of relief to avoid the double taxation (once on the deceased, and twice on the estate) that could arise, especially where a death occurred before July 18, 2017.

Articles

Joint Committee, "Part D of Tax Planning Using Private Corporations – “Converting Income into Capital Gains” Proposals", 2 October 2017 Joint Committee Submission

Effect of expanded rule on post-mortem transfers (pp. 8-14)

The expanded s. 84.1 rule produces a greater impediment to the transfer of family businesses from one member to another, whether from one generation to another or between siblings (and during lifetime or post‐mortem), with the result that the tax system would favour third‐party sales. For instance, in Example 1 below, the daughter will have a disincentive to retain her common shares of Opco since substantial additional tax will be realized if the preferred shares bequeathed to her are redeemed rather than included in a third-party sale:

Example 1

On death, Mrs. X owned preferred shares in an Opco having a nominal PUC and ACB which she acquired on an estate freeze, with her daughter, who is active in the business, holding the common shares. Under proposed s. 84.1, neither the estate nor daughter is permitted to employ “pipeline” planning to avoid double tax on death, because for purposes of s. 84.1 the ACB to the estate or her will be reduced by the capital gain deemed to be realized by Mrs. X on death. It is possible that the estate could avoid the double tax if the preferred shares are redeemed within one year of death and an s. 164(6) election is made to carry back the capital loss to offset the capital gain realized on death. However, this planning may not be practical:

  • It may not be possible to redeem the shares within the estate’s first taxation year, for example, because of required cooperation of other shareholders or insufficient liquid assets.
  • The estate might be a graduated rate estate.
  • Under draft s. 120.4(4), all or a portion of the capital gain arising on the deemed disposition of shares on death might be recharacterized as a taxable dividend and considered to be “split income.”
  • Various stop loss rules like s. 40(3.6) also may limit the use of a loss carryback, for example, potentially as a result of the estate realizing other capital gains in its first taxation year, or where shares were previously left to a spousal trust or are held in an alter‐ego or joint partner trust.

Effect of expanded rule on inter vivos transfers (pp. 15-17)

Examples 3 (not summarized) and 4 (below) demonstrate the typical situation whereby (i) the current rules somewhat favour a sale of a corporate business to an arm’s length third party rather than to family members, and (ii) the proposed rules would make this tax incentive significantly larger.

Example 4

Bob sells the shares of Opco (having a FMV of $6 million and nominal PUC and ACB) directly to his children, and receives a $6 million promissory note as consideration. The value of Opco mostly is attributable to goodwill. The children subsequently transfer the Opco shares into a new holding company and repay the promissory note to Bob over time using cash flow and the debt capacity of Opco.

Under proposed section 84.1, if the children transfer the Opco shares into a holding company, the children’s ACB for s. 84.1 purposes would be reduced from $6,000,000 to nil because of the capital gain realized by Bob, a non‐arm’s length party. As a result, they would be deemed to receive a taxable dividend on the $6,000,000 ultimately paid to them to fund payments under the promissory note, and pay significantly more tax than on a sale by Bob of Opco directly to a third party.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 246.1 490

Subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii)

Cases

Pomerleau v. Canada, 2018 FCA 129

GAAR applied to converting soft ACB (generated from crystallizing the capital gains deduction) into pseudo-hard ACB under s. 53(1)(f.2) for use in extracting surplus

An individual taxpayer engaged in transactions to extract surplus from a family holding corporation (Groupe Pomerleau Inc.) to the extent that the ACB of his shares and some shares of his sister had previously been stepped-up utilizing the capital gains deduction. Ignoring the significant complicating effect of the transactions with his sister, he transferred his shares under s. 85(1) to a new holdco (“P Pom”) in consideration for Class G shares of P Pom (with a nominal paid-up capital and a deemed cost equaling the “soft” ACB of the transferred shares, and for Class A common shares of P Pom with a nominal PUC and ACB. P Pom then redeemed the Class G shares, resulting in the deemed realization of a dividend and a capital loss equaling most of the amount of the redemption proceeds. Such capital loss was denied under s. 40(3.6) and added to the ACB of his common shares of the corporation under s. 53(1)(f.2). This s. 53(1)(f.2) bump was not caught by s. 84.1(2), so that he could transfer the bumped common shares to a personal holding company (“Holdco”), taking back high PUC shares of Holdco, which he promptly redeemed. In the result, he extracted $2M from the corporate group, of which approximately half corresponded to the deemed dividend received by him, and the other half, corresponding to the “soft” ACB of the shares was received free of tax – even though the PUC and “hard” ACB of the shares was nominal. For a more detailed summary of the facts, see the TCC summary.

The Minister’s assessment of a deemed dividend under s. 245(2) effectively treated the ACB of the shares that were transferred to Holdco as not having been stepped-up under s. 52(1)(f.2). In confirming the decision below to uphold this assessment, Noël CJ stated (at paras. 65, 77, 79 TaxInterpretations translation):

The logic underlying this adjustment [in s. 84.1] rests on the fact, discussed above, that the paid-up capital and the ACB of the shares concerned reflect only the amounts which have been subjected to tax. …

The object and spirit of this provision, or its rationale, is to prevent amounts which have not been subjected to tax to serve in extracting surplus of a corporation free of tax. Subsection 84.1(2) proceeds with this goal in targeting amounts which, while forming part of the ACB of the shares concerned, have not been subjected to tax and have been excluded in the computation of the paid-up capital of new shares. To this end, subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) requires going beyond the ACB of the shares concerned – or of the shares for which they are substituted – and enquiring as to the source of the funds which constituted them in order to ascertain if they were subjected to tax. …

This rationale was circumvented by the plan implemented by the appellant. Of the amount of $1,993,812 that he withdrew, $994,628 represented amounts as to which no income tax had been paid.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) purpose of s. 84.1 was broader than the application of its words 487

Administrative Policy

2021 Ruling 2021-0887301R3 F - Post-mortem pipeline transaction

application of ss. 84.1(1) and (2)(a.1)(ii) to transfer of shares by spousal trust that had received such shares from the testator who had stepped such shares up under s. 110.6(2.1)

Father bequested his shares of an investments holding company (Aco) directly to his surviving wife (Mother) and to a spousal trust (Trust) for her. Following the death of Mother, her estate and Trust were to engage in a pipeline transaction under which:

  • The estate and Trust transfer their Aco shares under s. 85(1) to a Newco of Trust in consideration for Newco preferred shares. Given that the transferred shares include Aco shares which it had previously issued to Father in an exchange where he had utilized the s. 110.6(1) deduction, ss. 84.1(1) and (2)(a.1)(ii) grind the PUC of such Newco shares.
  • After a specified period, Newco amalgamates with Aco, and redeems the preferred shares for notes. In light of the s. 84.1 grind, this generates deemed dividends and associated capital losses which, in the case of the Trust, it will carry back under s. 111(1)(b) to reduce its taxable capital gain realized on Mother’s death.
  • Amalco will repay the notes at no more than a specified rate over the period commencing with their issuance.

CRA rulings included the application of s. 84.1 as described above.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) double pipeline entailing the application of s. 84.1 and s. 88(1)(d) bump 368
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 88 - Subsection 88(1) - Paragraph 88(1)(d.3) application of s. 88(1)(d.3) to pipeline involving shares that had been stepped up under s. 104(4) 141

2021 Ruling 2021-0907591R3 F - Post-mortem Pipeline

promissory notes issued on pipeline limited by previous s. 110.6(2.1) deduction

X died holding all the shares of Holdco (an investment management company). X and a non-arm’s length individual had claimed the s. 110.6(2.1) deduction on predecessor shares.

A proposed post-mortem pipeline entailed the estate redeeming some of its shares so as to use Holdco’s GRIP and to generate a s. 164(6) loss carryback, then transferring its shares to a Newco created by it in consideration for notes whose principal would be subject to the s. 84.1(2)(a.1) limitation having regard to the previous s. 110.6(2.1) claims, and shares as to the balance of the consideration received on a s. 85(1) rollover basis. After the usual redacted delay, Newco and Holdco would be amalgamated and then the notes would be repaid at a redacted quarterly pace.

Amalco would bump investments under s. 88(1)(d) in anticipation of their eventual sale, but not to a specified shareholder, or other person described in s. 88(1)(c)(vi)(B)(I), (II) or (III), as part of the series.

At the appropriate time, the estate would distribute the Amalco shares and the Notes (or the funds derived from their repayment) equally among the heirs – presumably on a s. 107(2) rollout basis in the case of the Amalco shares.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84 - Subsection 84(2) pipeline transactions (coupled with s. 88(1)(d) bump) for which the deceased had claimed a capital gains deduction 365

28 May 2010 External T.I. 2010-0359871E5 F - Déduction pour gain en capital

s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) grind where parent claims s. 110.6(2.1) deduction on bequest to child

Qualified small business corporation shares are disposed of by the taxpayer to a child for FMV proceeds during the taxpayer’s lifetime or on death for deemed FMV proceeds. After noting that the non-arm’s length nature of these transactions did not preclude access to the s. 110.6(2.1) deduction, CRA stated:

… [I]n both of these situations, subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) could apply for the purposes of section 84.1 to reduce the adjusted cost base of the shares acquired by your child.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - 101-110 - Section 110.6 - Subsection 110.6(2.1) deduction available on NAL disposition inter vivos or on death 141

17 March 2005 External T.I. 2005-0118601E5 F - Sale of Shares-Transfer of Family Business

preliminary s. 85(1)(g) exchange transaction for crystallized preferred shares avoided application of s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii)

An individual ("A") wholly-owning Holdco, held Holdco common shares with a nominal FMV, ACB and PUC, and Holdco preferred shares having an FMV of $1M and an ACB of $0.5 million (as a result of a previous capital gains crystallization transaction) and a nominal PUC. Holdco, which wholly-owned Opco, held Opco common shares having a nominal FMV, ACB and PUC, and Opco preferred shares having an FMV and ACB of $1M, and nominal PUC.

A first exchanged all his Holdco preferred shares for new preferred shares having a redemption value of $0.5M and (pursuant to s. 86(1)(g)) a deemed cost of $0.5M and for common shares having an FMV of $0.5M, and cost (pursuant to s. 85(1)(h)) of nil and a nominal PUC. After acquiring A’s Holdco common shares for FMV consideration ($0.5M in notes issued by them to A), A’s children then sold those shares to a Newco formed by them in exchange for a Newco promissory note for $0.5M. Holdco then redeemed its preferred shares held by A for $0.5M (paid with a $0.5M note of Holdco), so that Holdco received a deemed dividend of $0.5M and sustained a capital loss of $0.5M. Opco then redeemed its preferred shares held by Holdco for $0.5M, thereby enabling the repayment of the $0.5M note owing by Holdco to A. Holdco paid dividends to Newco, thereby permitting Newco to repay the notes issued to the children.

CRA indicated that on the disposition by the children to Newco for $0.5M of their common shares of Holdco acquired for $0.5M, the aggregate ACB to them of such shares would not have been reduced pursuant to s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) (before any GAAR application), stating:

[N]o part of the aggregate ACB to the children of the common shares of the capital stock of Holdco would be attributable to the capital gains deduction claimed by A … on the crystallization transactions … [given] that, by the application of paragraph 85(1)(g), the entire amount of the capital gain realized by A and in respect of which he would have claimed a capital gains deduction pursuant to section 110.6 would have been attributed to the preferred shares of the capital stock of Holdco.

CRA went on to indicate that there would have been such a reduction in the aggregate ACB had the preliminary transaction to exchange the Holdco common shares for new preferred shares and commons shares not been implemented, and the shares sold to the children included some of the old preferred shares.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 245 - Subsection 245(4) GAAR could apply where previous capital gains crystallization transaction indirectly generated a capital loss on a pref redemption transaction 445

15 April 2002 External T.I. 2002-0128145 F - 84.1(2)(a.1) of the Act

where old common exchanged for new common shares and prefs with s. 85(1) election equal to the pref FMV, the s. 110.6 deduction will be traced under s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) only to the prefs

Mr. X exchanges all the common shares of Opco (the “old common shares”), which are qualified small business corporation shares and have a $900,000 FMV and nominal ACB and PUC, for new common shares and preferred shares of Opco having an FMV of $400,000 and $500,000, respectively. The agreed amount in an s. 85(1) election equals the FMV of the preferred shares, so that he realizes a capital gain for which he claims the capital gains deduction, and the cost of the preferred shares is $500,000.

Mr. X then disposes of the new common shares to his son (Son X) and realizes a $400,000 capital gain for which he does not claim the capital gains deduction, and disposes of the preferred shares to another non-arm’s length corporation (Cco) for $500,000 in non-share consideration.

Son X transfers his new common shares of Aco to his wholly-owned corporation (Bco) for $400,000 in non-share consideration.

(a) Should only the Aco preferred shares of Mr. X (and not his new Aco common shares) be regarded as shares substituted for the old common shares for purposes of s. 84.1(2)(a.1)?

(b) If “no,” is a dividend deemed to have been paid by Bco to Son X on the drop-down of the new common shares?

(c) Is a dividend deemed to be paid by Cco to Mr. X by s. 84.1(1)(b)?

CCRA indicated that if there was no disposition regarding the “exchange” of old for new common shares, this would signify that $400,000 of the old common shares had been disposed of by Mr. X to Son X, in which event “for the purposes of subparagraph 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii), there would be no shares for which any of the Old Common Shares sold to Son X would have been substituted. On the other hand, the Preferred Shares of the capital stock of Aco would constitute shares substituted for the Old Common Shares of Aco "exchanged" by Mr. X.”

It would follow that there was no reduction to Son X pursuant to s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) and, therefore, no deemed dividend pursuant to s. 84.1(1)(b). Conversely, the ACB to Mr. X of the preferred shares would be reduced by $500,000 pursuant to s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) because the entire ACB to Mr. X of the preferred shares would be attributable to the capital gains deduction – so that there would be a deemed dividend of $500,000 paid by Cco to Mr. X pursuant to s. 84.1(1)(b).

If there instead was a disposition regarding the “exchange” of old for new common shares, then in totality both the new common shares and the preferred shares would have been acquired by Mr. X in substitution for the old common shares. Nonetheless, there would be no reduction pursuant to s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii) regarding the ACB to Son X of the new common shares because all of the capital gain realized under s. 85(1) (for which the capital gains deduction had been claimed) would be treated as attributable to the preferred shares. Accordingly, the only deemed dividend arising in this scenario under s. 84.1(1)(b) would be a deemed dividend of $500,000 paid by Cco to Mr. X.

Paragraph 84.1(2)(b)

Administrative Policy

23 June 2010 Internal T.I. 2010-0368161I7 F - 84.1

s. 84.1(2)(b) inapplicable to individual’s transfer of ½ of Opco to Holdco (owned by 3 unrelated individuals) for note and non-voting pref

Three individuals (A, B, and C) each held 1/3 of the shares of Holdco, and Holdco and another individual, D, each held ½ of the shares of Opco. D transferred D’s Opco shares to Holdco in consideration for a non-voting preferred share and a note. Did s. 84.1(2)(b) deem this to be a non-arm’s length transfer?

Before going on to note that it might be a non-arm’s length transfer as a factual matter, the Directorate stated:

Initially, D (the Taxpayer) and Holdco (the Purchaser) form a group (the Initial Group) which controls Opco (the Subject Corporation).

[Thereafter] … the Purchaser … is controlled by a group of 4 persons consisting of A, B, C and D (the Final Group).

…[I]ndividuals A, B and C do not own shares of the capital stock of Opco immediately before the disposition. Furthermore, paragraph 84.1(2.2)(a) would not apply to deem the shares of the capital stock of Opco owned by Holdco to be owned by individuals A, B, and C.

Consequently, Holdco is not a member of the Final Group. In addition, A, B and C are not members of the Initial Group. Consequently, the deeming provision in paragraph 84.1(2)(b) could not apply … .

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.2) - Paragraph 84.1(2.2)(b) s. 84.1(2.2)(b) group can include a non-voting shareholder 125

7 December 2004 External T.I. 2004-0104321E5 F - Non Arm's Length Sale of Shares

s. 84.1(2)(b) inapplicable where member of control group of Aco sells Aco shares to Bco of which he does not own shares

A was one of eight individuals holding all of the shares (of a single class) of Opco. (Specifically, each of A, B, C and D held 18.75%, and each of E, F, G and H held 6.25%, of the Opco shares.) A, B and C) were the group with de facto control of Opco.. A, B and C formed a group of persons who had legal (de jure) control of Opco.

A sold all of A’s Opco shares to Holdco for non-share consideration equal to the fair market value of the shares disposed of. B, C, D, E, F, G and H held all the Holdco shares (with each of B and C holding 23%, D holding 22%, and each of E, F, G and H holding 8%).

CRA confirmed that s. 84.1(2)(b) did not apply to deem A to not deal at arm's length with Holdco, and went on to note that it was a question of fact whether A did not deal with Holdco as a general matter.

Paragraph 84.1(2)(e)

Administrative Policy

15 February 2023 External T.I. 2022-0953991E5 F - Paragraph 84.1(2)(e) and amalgamation

loss of s. 84.1(2)(e) safe harbour on an amalgamation of the purchaser and subject corporation

S. 84.1(2)(e) as it currently read deemed a taxpayer who had disposed of qualified small business corporation shares or shares of the capital stock of a family farm or fishing corporation (the “subject shares”) to a purchaser corporation to be dealing at arm’s length with it if the purchaser corporation was controlled by one or more children or grandchildren of the taxpayer who were 18 or older and if the purchaser corporation did not dispose of the subject shares within 60 months of their purchase. In addition, s. 84.1(2.3)(a)(i) provided that if, otherwise than by reason of death, the purchaser corporation disposed of the subject shares within 60 months of their purchase, s. 84.1(2)(e) was deemed never to have applied.

CRA stated:

Pursuant to paragraph 87(11)(a), on an amalgamation of a parent and its subsidiary wholly-owned subsidiary, the parent is deemed to have disposed of the shares of its subsidiary immediately before the amalgamation for proceeds equal to the lesser of the paid-up capital in respect of those shares (or the amount determined pursuant to subparagraph 88(1)(d)(i)) and the adjusted cost base to the parent of the shares immediately before the amalgamation.

On the current wording of paragraph 84.1(2)(e), it appears to us that an amalgamation of the Purchaser Corporation and the Subject Corporation, a subsidiary wholly-owned subsidiary of the Purchaser Corporation, within 60 months of the Purchaser Corporation's purchase of the shares of the capital stock of the Subject Corporation would have the effect of rendering paragraph 84.1(2)(e) inapplicable, taking into account subparagraph 84.1(2.3)(a)(i), since there would be a deemed disposition pursuant to paragraph 87(11)(a) of the Subject Shares by the Purchaser Corporation during the relevant period.

CRA considered such loss of the safe harbour to be anomalous, and had notified Finance accordingly.

15 December 2021 External T.I. 2021-0907881E5 - Bill C-208 - Entry into Force

s. 84.1(2)(e) and s. 55(5)(e)(i) amendments apply to dispositions on or after June 29, 2021

Did the amendments to s. 84.1 pursuant to Bill C-208 (did not contain a coming into force provision) apply to dispositions of shares that occurred in the 2021 taxation year but prior to the day of Royal Assent (June 29, 2021)? As a preliminary matter, CRA noted:

It is our understanding that the purpose of the amendments to section 84.1 is to facilitate intergenerational transfers of certain businesses by ensuring that such transfers are not subject to section 84.1. The amendments to section 84.1 contained in Bill C-208 further this purpose by deeming the individual disposing of the subject shares and the purchaser corporation to be dealing at arm’s length if, among other things, the purchaser corporation is controlled by one or more children or grandchildren of the individual who are 18 years of age or older and the subject shares are “qualified small business corporation shares” or “shares of the capital stock of a family farm or fishing corporation” (each as defined in subsection 110.6(1) of the Act).

Turning to the question, CRA noted the presumption in Gustavson Drilling [1977] 1 S.C.R. 271 that “statutes are not to be construed as having retrospective operation unless such a construction is expressly or by necessary implication required by the language,” and found that there was no such “necessary implication” in the Bill, stating in this regard:

[W]e are not aware of any reason why the tax consequences relating to a disposition of subject shares that occurs prior to the coming into force of Bill C-208 and within the 2021 tax year should not be determined with respect to the statutory provisions in force at the time of the disposition.

Accordingly, the amendments “apply only to dispositions that occur on or after … June 29, 2021.”

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Statutory Interpretation - Retroactivity/Retrospectivity no "necessary implication” that amendments applied to dispositions before Royal Assent 225

Articles

Allan Lanthier, "The general anti-avoidance rule and family surplus strips", Canadian Accountant, 12 August 2021

Overview of s. 84.1(2)(e)

  • S. 84.1(2)(e) indicates that an individual selling qualified small business shares or shares of a family farm or fishing corporation to a corporation “controlled” by the individual’s adult children or grandchildren will benefit from capital gains treatment, including the lifetime capital gains exemption, provided that the purchaser corporation does not dispose of the transferred shares for at least 60 months.

Surplus-stripping transaction suggested by s. 84.1(2)(e)

  • The requirement that the children or grandchildren merely have legal control of the purchasing corporation suggests a surplus-stripping transaction in which Mr. A, who owns all the shares (having nominal tax basis and paid-up capital) of a private company carrying on an active business, forms Newco, in which his children invest $100 in preferred shares giving them voting control, with Mr. A then selling his shares to Newco for $1 million in cash and common shares issued by Newco, and claiming the capital gains exemption.

Potential attack suggested by Deans Knight

  • Deans Knight decided that the object, spirit and purpose of s. 111(5) is to restrict the tax losses of a corporation if a person acquires “actual control over the corporation’s actions, whether by way of de jure control or otherwise.”

[I]n light of Deans Knight, the CRA could take the position that, under GAAR, the relevant question is: whose business is it? Do the children have “actual control” over the actions of the family business, or do the parents?

Allan Lanthier, "Tax relief for family business transfers: A legislative fiasco – Part I / Tax relief for family business transfers: A legislative fiasco – Part II", Canadian Accountant, 8 July 2021 (Part I) and 9 July 2021 (Part II)

Overview

  • Bill C-208 generally provides that an individual selling qualified small business shares or shares of a family farm or fishing corporation to a corporation controlled by the individual’s children or grandchildren who are at least 18 years of age will benefit from capital gains treatment rather than a s. 84.1 deemed dividend provided that such purchaser does not dispose of those shares for at least 60 months.

Surplus-stripping potential created by Bill C-208

  • Given that the children or grandchildren are only required to control the purchaser, which must retain the transferred shares for 60 months, this lends itself to "high-octane" surplus strips.

Example of strip

  • Emily transfers her shares of a small business corporation (Petco) with nominal tax basis and paid-up capital to a Newco - in which her daughter owns nominal value special voting shares giving her voting control, and Emily owns the balance of the equity – in consideration for a promissory note, which is repaid over the next five years with intercorporate dividends received by Newco from Petco. Emily continues to operate the business and, through holding most of the equity, to fully benefit from any future earnings and increased value of the business.

GAAR

[I]t is unlikely that the GAAR could have been successfully applied to the type of planning in the Emily example.

Some of the other anomalies

  • The purported numerical formula limitation on the s. 110.6(2) or (2.1) capital gains deduction (based inter alia on the level of the corporation’s taxable capital employed in Canada) in s. 84.1(2.3)(b) is "meaningless" and has no application because it is stated to apply only for the purposes of s. 84.1(2)(e).
  • Furthermore, the math in the formula is wrong – even if it were effective, it would only eliminate the deduction at taxable capital levels of $510 million, not $15 million.
  • There is nothing preventing the children or grandchildren from selling their shares of the purchaser within 60 months, or the subject corporation from selling its business.

PART II

June 30 Press Release

  • The June 30, 2021 announcement (made one day after the passage of Bill C-208) effectively indicated that, sometime later this year, the Bill C-208 relief will be retroactively repealed and yet-to-be-determined new provisions will take effect on January 1, 2022.
  • Something along the following lines should be expected:
  • Section 84.1 of the Act will not apply to a sale of shares of a qualified small business corporation or shares of a farming or fishing corporation, if children or grandchildren of the taxpayer who are at least 18 years of age own shares of the purchaser corporation that give them more than 50 percent of both the votes and value of the purchaser corporation, and the purchaser corporation owns shares of the subject corporation (the family business corporation) that give the purchaser corporation substantially all of the votes and value of the subject corporation.[7]
  • These ownership restrictions must be met at the time of the sale and continuously for a prescribed period of time thereafter – for example, for a period of 36 months.[8] If the restrictions are breached during this period, a deemed dividend would arise on the initial sale.
  • However, a disposition of shares of the purchaser corporation on the death of a child or grandchild should not result in a denial of the new relief.
  • In addition, the new relief will only apply if the purchaser corporation continues to own the shares of the subject corporation for the prescribed period of time, and the subject corporation continues to carry on the family business for that same period.
  • The parent or parents must reduce or eliminate their involvement in the operation and management of the business, and the children or grandchildren must assume that role.[9]
  • To provide some certainty, a bright-line test should deem the children or grandchildren to be operating and managing the business if they work in the business for a prescribed period of time: for example, an average of at least 20 hours per week for at least 40 weeks in any calendar year.[10]
  • The relief should be restricted to smaller corporations. The new rules should therefore not be available on the sale of shares of a subject corporation that, alone or together with associated corporations, had taxable capital of more than $15 million at the end of the taxation year immediately preceding the date of sale.
  • Additional rules in Bill C-208 that require the taxpayer to provide the Minister with an independent assessment of the fair market value of the transferred shares, as well as an affidavit signed by the taxpayer and by a third party attesting to the disposal of the shares, are not required and should also be repealed.
  • Finally, the extended reassessment period under paragraph 152(4)(b) of the Act should apply to reassessments made as a consequence of the sale of family business shares.

Subsection 84.1(2.1)

Administrative Policy

29 May 2018 STEP Roundtable Q. 17, 2018-0744141C6 - S.84.1 and Capital Gains Reserve

the claiming of a capital gains reserve on a s. 84.1 transfer can result in a s 84.1 deemed dividend on a subsequent transfer

S. 84.1(2.1) indicates that for purposes of the adjusted cost base reduction under s. 84.1(2)(a.1)(ii)) respecting a non-arm’s length transfer of shares by a resident individual to a corporation, where a capital gains reserve is claimed under s. 40(1)(a)(iii) by the individual or a non-arm's length individual (herein referred to as the "transferor") and it is possible for the transferor to claim the capital gains exemption (“CGE”), the CGE is deemed to be claimed by the transferor in the maximum amount irrespective of whether it is in fact claimed. Could the application of s. 84.1(2.1) result in a transferor (e.g., a father transferring to his children’s corporation) being deemed to have claimed CGE in the maximum amount where the transferor claims a capital gains reserve under s. 40(1)(a)(iii) but has no intention of claiming the CGE even though there is unused CGE room available?

For example, Father transfers shares of Opco (a small business corporation whose shares are eligible for the CGE) to his children in consideration for a note that is payable over 10 years, claims the capital gains reserve, but does not claim the CGE. The children transfer the Opco shares to a new Holdco in consideration for a note of Holdco, with a view to Opco dividends funding note repayments.

CRA indicated that it is irrelevant to the application of s. 84.1(2.1) that the transferor may have room that he wishes to retain for future use. S. 84.1(2.1) does not look to such plans for using the capital gains exemption, and effectively deems all the available room to be used. In the example, the children are deemed to receive a dividend on their receipt of the Holdco note.

CRA provided three examples illustrating the interrelationship between the s. 84.1(2) ACB adjustment, the amount of CGE actually claimed and the amount of unutilized CGE at the end of the year of the transfer.

Example 1

The non-arm’s length transferor realized a $100,000 capital gain, claimed a $50,000 reserve and claimed a $25,000 CGE while still having $25,000 unclaimed CGE at the year end. Result: the transferor is deemed to have claimed a CGE re the entire $100,000 capital gain.

Example 2

Same as example 1, except that the transferor had no unclaimed CGE at the year end – resulting in the CGE deemed to have been claimed only re $50,000 of the capital gains.

Example 3

Same as Example 1, except that the transferor had $10,000 of unclaimed CGE at the year end – resulting in the CGE deemed to have been claimed only re $70,000 of the capital gains.

28 April 2016 External T.I. 2015-0594461E5 - Subsection 84.1(2.1)

intention to not claim exemption on future recognition of reserve is irrelevant

Does the phrase “the amount in respect of which a deduction under section 110.6 was claimed in respect of the transferor’s gain from the disposition shall be deemed to be” deem a transferor to have claimed a capital gains exemption where a capital gains reserve is taken in respect of the disposition of shares to which section 84.1 applies, even where the transferor does not claim or intend to claim in the future any capital gains exemption in respect of the disposition?

CRA responded:

Subsection 84.1(2.1)…essentially treats the transferor as having claimed, to the extent that the transferor has unused capital gains exemption room in the year in which the disposition took place, a capital gains deduction on the disposition, irrespective of whether such exemption was actually claimed, because the reserve could potentially be eligible for a capital gains exemption when brought into income in the future. … [T]he effect…is to treat a capital gain on a property to be sheltered by the capital gains exemption when there is unused capital gains exemption room in the year of the disposition regardless of whether such capital gains exemption room has been saved to cover a capital gain that could be realized on a disposition of other properties in a subsequent year.

Subsection 84.1(2.2)

Paragraph 84.1(2.2)(b)

Administrative Policy

23 June 2010 Internal T.I. 2010-0368161I7 F - 84.1

s. 84.1(2.2)(b) group can include a non-voting shareholder

Three individuals (A, B, and C) each held 1/3 of the shares of Holdco, and Holdco and another individual, D, each held ½ of the shares of Opco. D transferred D’s Opco shares to Holdco in consideration for a non-voting preferred share and a note. Would D be part of a group of persons described in s. 84.1(2.2)(b)? The Directorate responded:

[S]ince paragraph 84.1(2.2)(b) … refers only to "shares", a person who holds only non-voting shares and another person who holds voting shares may indeed form a group of persons within the meaning of paragraph 84.1(2.2)(b) and for the purposes of applying paragraph 84.1(2)(b). In this regard, we refer you, among others, to the following Technical Interpretations: F9406355 and E9305575.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2) - Paragraph 84.1(2)(b) s. 84.1(2)(b) inapplicable to individual’s transfer of ½ of Opco to Holdco (owned by 3 unrelated individuals) for note and non-voting pref 212

Subsection 84.1(2.3)

Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(a)

Administrative Policy

3 May 2022 CALU Roundtable Q. 3, 2022-0928721C6 - Recent Changes to Section 84.1

disposition is “by reason of death” if a causal link/ if s. 84.1(2.3)(a) applies, s. 84.1 inapplicable if the transaction with the purchaser is not within s. 84.1

The Taxpayer, age 65, retired in the summer of 2021 and thereupon sold and transferred (the “First Disposition”) all the shares (the “Subject Shares”) of his company (“Opco”), which shares were qualified small business corporation shares (having an ACB and PUC of $100,000) to a newly-incorporated wholly-owned corporation (“Purchaser Corporation”) of his adult daughter, Joan (who has been actively engaged in Opco’s business) for their appraised fair market value (FMV) of $2 million.

In the following Scenarios, is the Purchaser Corporation considered to have disposed of the Subject Shares “otherwise than by reason of death,” so that the exception in s. 84.1(2.3)(a) does not apply?

Q.3.1 Taxpayer dies in March 2025 and Joan subsequently causes Purchaser Corporation to sell the Subject Shares to an arm’s length purchaser (ALP) for proceeds of $3 million (ALP Disposition).

Q.3.2 Joan dies in March 2025 and the Taxpayer reacquires the Subject Shares personally from Purchaser Corporation for a cash payment equal to the difference between their $2.5 million appraised FMV and the outstanding promissory note owed by Purchaser Corporation to Taxpayer (Taxpayer Disposition).

CRA indicated that in applying the quoted phrase, it:

would look for a causal link between the death and the subsequent disposition of the shares by the purchaser corporation. For example, the death of an individual may make it impractical or difficult to continue under the current ownership and may precipitate the subsequent sale of the subject shares.

Whether there was such a link for Q.3.1 would require a detailed review. Regarding Q.3.2, CRA stated that it “would be willing to accept that the Taxpayer Disposition was by reason of death with the result that, although Purchaser Corporation disposed of the Subject Shares within 60 months of their purchase, the Taxpayer Disposition will not impact the application of paragraph 84.1(2)(e) of the Act to the First Disposition.”

Regarding both the Q.3.1 and Q.3.2 scenarios, what would be the impact on the tax positions of Taxpayer and Purchaser Corporation in 2021 and 2025 if 84.1(2.3)(a) applied?

Regarding Q.3.1, CRA stated:

Taxpayer and Purchaser Corporation would not be deemed by paragraph 84.1(2)(e) … to be dealing at arm’s length. However, Taxpayer would be deemed, for the purposes of section 84.1 of the Act, to have disposed of the Subject Shares to the person who acquired them from Purchaser Corporation (i.e. ALP). Although the purpose and scope of subparagraph 84.1(2.3)(a)(ii) of the Act is not entirely clear, we are prepared to apply this provision such that, if Taxpayer had disposed of the Subject Shares directly to the subsequent purchaser and section 84.1 of the Act would not have applied to that disposition, the First Disposition will not be subject to section 84.1.

Regarding Q.3.2, CRA stated:

Taxpayer and Purchaser Corporation would not be deemed by paragraph 84.1(2)(e) … to be dealing at arm’s length. However, Taxpayer would be deemed, for the purposes of section 84.1 …, to have disposed of the Subject Shares to the person who acquired them from Purchaser Corporation (himself). … [W]e are prepared to apply this provision such that, if Taxpayer had disposed of the Subject Shares directly to the subsequent purchaser and section 84.1 … would not have applied to that disposition, the First Disposition will not be subject to section 84.1 … . In this case, Taxpayer would be deemed to have disposed of the Subject Shares to himself and, therefore, section 84.1 of the Act would not apply.

Words and Phrases
by reason of death
Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(b) purported s. 84.1(2.3)(b) numerical limitation is meaningless and of no effect 111
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(c) documentary requirements are mandatory 148

Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(b)

Administrative Policy

3 May 2022 CALU Roundtable Q. 3, 2022-0928721C6 - Recent Changes to Section 84.1

purported s. 84.1(2.3)(b) numerical limitation is meaningless and of no effect

S. 84.1(2.3)(b) appears to be targeted at reducing the capital gains deduction calculated under ss. 110.6(2) or (2.1) based on the taxable capital employed in Canada by the corporation, but the rule only applies for purposes of s. 84.1(2)(e) and would therefore not appear to be effective in reducing the capital gains deduction available to any taxpayer. In confirming this interpretation, CRA stated:

[P]aragraph 84.1(2.3)(b) … does not apply for the purposes of section 110.6 … and, therefore, it does not reduce a taxpayer’s capital gains deduction. In addition, paragraph 84.1(2.3)(b) … does not otherwise affect a taxpayer’s ability to rely on the deeming rule in paragraph 84.1(2)(e) … .

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(a) disposition is “by reason of death” if a causal link/ if s. 84.1(2.3)(a) applies, s. 84.1 inapplicable if the transaction with the purchaser is not within s. 84.1 587
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(c) documentary requirements are mandatory 148

Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(c)

Administrative Policy

3 May 2022 CALU Roundtable Q. 3, 2022-0928721C6 - Recent Changes to Section 84.1

documentary requirements are mandatory

S. 84.1(2.3)(c) provides that the taxpayer must provide the Minister with an independent assessment of the FMV of the subject shares and an affidavit signed by the taxpayer and a third party attesting to the disposal of the shares. What are the implications to the taxpayer if the required information is not provided or is deficient?

After noting that it has provided guidance regarding the documentary evidence required by s. 84.1(2.3)(c) at: Affidavits and valuations for the transfer of a small business, family farm or fishing corporation (Bill C-208), CRA stated:

[T]he documentary requirements are integral to the application of paragraph 84.1(2)(e) of the Act. That is, these requirements must be met for paragraph 84.1(2)(e) to apply.

Locations of other summaries Wordcount
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(a) disposition is “by reason of death” if a causal link/ if s. 84.1(2.3)(a) applies, s. 84.1 inapplicable if the transaction with the purchaser is not within s. 84.1 587
Tax Topics - Income Tax Act - Section 84.1 - Subsection 84.1(2.3) - Paragraph 84.1(2.3)(b) purported s. 84.1(2.3)(b) numerical limitation is meaningless and of no effect 111