It is our standard practice when incorporating a professional corporation (a PC) to prepare an employment contract between the professional and the PC. Continue reading
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It is our standard practice when incorporating a professional corporation (a PC) to prepare an employment contract between the professional and the PC. Continue reading
The Canada Not-for-profit Corporations Act, SC 2009, c 23, is slated to come into force as of October 17, 2011, which means that corporations currently governed by the Canada Corporations Act will need to make the transition to the new statute by October 17, 2014. The Industry Canada website has a good transition guide that seems designed to warm the cockles of a tax lawyer’s heart (“Step 1, Step 2, Step 3″).
For the purposes of section 160 of the Income Tax Act, it does not matter whether the transferor or transferee knows that the transferor owes tax at the time of the transfer. What they intend to accomplish by making the transfer is irrelevant as well. In both cases, section 160 will apply, if its other conditions are satisfied. But what about the case where the transferor purports to transfer property to the transferee without her knowledge or consent. In Leclair v Canada, 2011 TCC 323 the court held that section 160 did not apply in those circumstances. Continue reading
If you teach at a private school, and the school offers your children discounted tuition as part of your compensation package, what is the value of the benefit that must be included in your income for the purposes of the Income Tax Act? In Spence v. The Queen, 2010 TCC 455, the Tax Court felt bound to conclude that the benefit should be measured as the difference between the cost to the school of providing the education and the discounted tuition. The Federal Court of Appeal has overturned this decision on the basis that the value of the benefit—the amount to be included in the employee’s income for tax purposes—should be the fair market value of the benefit conferred less the tuition actually paid, where the fair market value is measured by what parents who aren’t teachers would pay to send their kids to the school. See Canada v. Spence, 2011 FCA 200.
When the patriarch or matriarch of a family decides to implement a freeze it is quite common for him or her to insist that the gift of the growth shares be excluded from net family property for the purposes of the Family Law Act (Ontario). Are such exclusions effective? McNamee v McNamee, 2011 ONCA 533, illustrates well why lawyers must emphasize to clients that the answer is still a definite “maybe”. Continue reading
Some practitioners have suggested that it might be possible to use a non-share corporation to own a family cottage. Query, however, whether the CRA would assess a benefit to a member of a corporation who used its cottage and didn’t pay fair market value rent for the privilege. CRA technical interpretation 2011-0397881E5 dated June 23, 2011, suggests that it might.
CanLII is a resource that I’ve watched grow with a great deal of interest. I use it almost every day for one reason or another, not least as a reference for posts to this blog.
I just noticed some handy little hacks that the CanLII developers seem to have added recently. Case headers now include buttons allowing users to link to a case on Twitter or LinkedIn, and the longer links can be shortened using a url shortener that is CanLII-specific, which would seem to address some of the problems with shorteners generally. See, for example, the case at http://canlii.ca/s/sx1j.
For those of us who defend director liability cases, R v Buckingham, 2011 FCA 142, is a must-read. Continue reading
A friend of mine was going through his father’s papers and found some old tax returns. He passed one along to me—a 1948 T1 Short—with his permission to post it here, which I am doing with names and addresses redacted. 1948: A year when “short” meant short.
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: the procedural rules for tax disputes are strict: they do not leave room for what is “fair”. In Hess v. R, 2011 TCC 387, the taxpayer, it might have been argued, filed an objection to a notice of assessment issued in 2003. The CRA, however, reassessed the taxpayer for the same year in 2006, and the taxpayer took no action in respect of the subsequent reassessment until 2009. Justice Woods responded to the fairness argument as follows: Continue reading