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Category: Cases

Case law update

Posted on: September 26, 2020 Last updated on: October 2, 2020 Written by: John Loukidelis
The following are my notes on a case law update from Sal Mirandola given at an OBA taxation law presentation on September 22, 2020 (“Advising your clients amidst financial uncertainty: Summer 2020 tax developments”) For the paper, see ~\Knowledge\Seminar materials\2020…
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Shareholder agreements and de jure control

Posted on: September 15, 2015 Last updated on: September 15, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
Will a shareholder agreement that permits a minority shareholder to elect the majority of the corporation’s board confer control on the minority shareholder? The Tax Court in Kruger Wayagamack Inc. v R, 2015 TCC 90, said not if the minority…
Continue reading “Shareholder agreements and de jure control”…

Alberta trust vindicated

Posted on: September 15, 2015 Last updated on: September 15, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
What does it take to make an Alberta trust “work” in light of Fundy Settlement v Canada, 2012 SCC 14? From Colin Poon, “Interprovincial Tax Planning Using Trusts Upheld”, Canadian Tax Focus 5:3 (August 2015) re Discovery Trust v Canada…
Continue reading “Alberta trust vindicated”…

SCC dismisses Guindon appeal

Posted on: July 31, 2015 Last updated on: July 31, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis

The Supreme Court has dismissed the taxpayer’s appeal in Guindon v R, 2015 SCC 41.

Continue reading “SCC dismisses Guindon appeal”…

Variation not retroactive

Posted on: June 23, 2015 Last updated on: June 23, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
One of the beneficiaries of a 1995 trust, the settlor’s daughter-in-law, died unexpectedly in 2009. The settlor’s son was also a beneficiary of the trust but only for capital. He purported to begin taking income in 2009 anyway. The settlor…
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GAAP working papers

Posted on: June 10, 2015 Last updated on: June 10, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
BP Canada Energy Company, for its audited financial statements under GAAP, had to “calculate reserves to account for contingent tax liabilities. Those calculations include an estimate of the liability BP would face if the Minister were to challenge…
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Spousal rollover denied

Posted on: May 4, 2015 Last updated on: May 4, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
In Murphy Estate v R, 2015 TCC 8, the Tax Court denied the spousal rollover where a consent order issued in the family law context seemed to provide for the transfer of the RRSP to the spouse from the children…
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Claming ABILs

Posted on: May 4, 2015 Last updated on: May 5, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
A husband who is an employee but not a shareholder of Opco cannot claim an ABIL for amounts loaned interest-free to Opco (even though his wife is the sole shareholder of Opco). The husband’s employment income does not mean that…
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Refund not refunded

Posted on: April 3, 2015 Last updated on: January 27, 2016 Written by: John Loukidelis
What happens when a corporation fails to claim refundable tax in a timely manner? Does the amount not refunded reduce RDTOH anyway (per the CRA)? Not according to the Court in Presidential MSH Corporation v R, 2015 TCC 61. (See…
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Currency swaps

Posted on: February 25, 2015 Last updated on: February 25, 2015 Written by: John Loukidelis
Craig Burley has written a good short post on George Weston Limited v R, 2015 TCC 42, a case argued for the taxpayer by my old friend from law school days, Sal Mirandola.
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Directors of a dissolved corporation

In 2008, I wrote an article for the Hamilton Law Association Journal that, among other things, addressed the status of directors of a corporation that has been dissolved. I referred to Leger v R, 2007 TCC 322, which held that,…
Continue reading “Directors of a dissolved corporation”…

DAC Investment

The authors discuss R v DAC Investment Holdings Inc., 2026 FCA 35, rev’g 2024 TCC 63. They conclude that, in a GAAR analysis, an overly-broad characterization of a provision or a mere description of its effect will not correctly express its object, spirit and purpose…
Continue reading “DAC Investment”…

Limits on CRA demands for information

In Canada (National Revenue) v Cohen, 2025 FC 2012, the Court dismissed a Crown application for a compliance order because the taxpayer had demonstrated, on a balance of probabilities, that he had done everything reasonably possible to obtain the documents…
Continue reading “Limits on CRA demands for information”…

Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren

The bump under ITA paragraph 88(1)(d) could be denied if a “specified shareholder” receives bumped property unless the shareholder was also a “specified person” as defined in paragraph 88(1)(c.2). Grandchildren who receive bumped property could taint the bump if they…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren”…

Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance

Bump room is determined by the ACB of the target corporation’s shares minus the net tax cost of the underlying assets and the amounts in ITA subparagraph 88(1)(d)(i.1), which include taxable dividends and capital dividends. Accordingly, a target corporation that…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance”…

Recent Posts

Directors of a dissolved corporation

In 2008, I wrote an article for the Hamilton Law Association Journal that, among other things, addressed the status of directors of a corporation that has been dissolved. I referred to Leger v R, 2007 TCC 322, which held that,…
Continue reading “Directors of a dissolved corporation”…

DAC Investment

The authors discuss R v DAC Investment Holdings Inc., 2026 FCA 35, rev’g 2024 TCC 63. They conclude that, in a GAAR analysis, an overly-broad characterization of a provision or a mere description of its effect will not correctly express its object, spirit and purpose…
Continue reading “DAC Investment”…

Limits on CRA demands for information

In Canada (National Revenue) v Cohen, 2025 FC 2012, the Court dismissed a Crown application for a compliance order because the taxpayer had demonstrated, on a balance of probabilities, that he had done everything reasonably possible to obtain the documents…
Continue reading “Limits on CRA demands for information”…

Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren

The bump under ITA paragraph 88(1)(d) could be denied if a “specified shareholder” receives bumped property unless the shareholder was also a “specified person” as defined in paragraph 88(1)(c.2). Grandchildren who receive bumped property could taint the bump if they…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren”…

Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance

Bump room is determined by the ACB of the target corporation’s shares minus the net tax cost of the underlying assets and the amounts in ITA subparagraph 88(1)(d)(i.1), which include taxable dividends and capital dividends. Accordingly, a target corporation that…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance”…

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Archives

Categories

Recent Posts

Directors of a dissolved corporation

In 2008, I wrote an article for the Hamilton Law Association Journal that, among other things, addressed the status of directors of a corporation that has been dissolved. I referred to Leger v R, 2007 TCC 322, which held that,…
Continue reading “Directors of a dissolved corporation”…

DAC Investment

The authors discuss R v DAC Investment Holdings Inc., 2026 FCA 35, rev’g 2024 TCC 63. They conclude that, in a GAAR analysis, an overly-broad characterization of a provision or a mere description of its effect will not correctly express its object, spirit and purpose…
Continue reading “DAC Investment”…

Limits on CRA demands for information

In Canada (National Revenue) v Cohen, 2025 FC 2012, the Court dismissed a Crown application for a compliance order because the taxpayer had demonstrated, on a balance of probabilities, that he had done everything reasonably possible to obtain the documents…
Continue reading “Limits on CRA demands for information”…

Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren

The bump under ITA paragraph 88(1)(d) could be denied if a “specified shareholder” receives bumped property unless the shareholder was also a “specified person” as defined in paragraph 88(1)(c.2). Grandchildren who receive bumped property could taint the bump if they…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and grandchildren”…

Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance

Bump room is determined by the ACB of the target corporation’s shares minus the net tax cost of the underlying assets and the amounts in ITA subparagraph 88(1)(d)(i.1), which include taxable dividends and capital dividends. Accordingly, a target corporation that…
Continue reading “Post-mortem bumps and capital dividends paid from life insurance”…

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