Cases
Schofield v. R & C Commrs., [2012] EWCA Civ 927 (CA)
In order to shelter a capital gain which he had realized, the UK taxpayer purchased two options on the FTSE 100 index to be settled in cash: a put option (Option 1"); and a call option ("Option 2") with essentially the same strike price. Several months later (while still in the same tax year) he closed out Option 1 at a loss - and closed out Option 2 at a gain several days later in the next tax year in which he was a non-resident who was not subject to UK tax.
By itself, this arrangement would have resulted in the taxpayer being unhedged between the times of closing out Options 1 and 2. Accordingly, at the same time that he acquired Options 1 and 2, the taxpayer wrote physical-settlement options on British gilts (which, as such, were exempt from UK tax), but with the strike prices based on the FTSE 100 index rather than the value of gilts - so that they effectively were a put option ("Option 3") or a call option ("Option 4") on that index in favour of the (same) counterparty. The taxpayer closed out Options 3 and 4, respectively, at the same time as he closed out Options 1 and 2, respectively.
After quoting from Ramsay (including the statement therein that "the transactions regarded together, and as intended, were from the outset designed to produce neither gain nor loss:...they were self-cancelling"), Chancellor Morritt found that the Ramsay principle applied to the option transactions before him (so that the loss on Option 1 should not be recognized for UK capital gains tax purposes) on the basis of the finding below that "the four options in this case were parts of an overall preordained scheme designed to produce neither a gain nor a loss" (para. 36).
2529-1915 Québec Inc. and Faraggi v. The Queen, 2009 DTC 5012, 2009 FCA 398
Overview of facts. The two individual taxpayers devised a scheme to: generate artificial capital gains of $110 million in some home-grown companies; pay the supposedly resulting capital dividend accounts (CDAs) of $55 million to another company (1915); generate artificial capital losses in the home-grown companies to offset their capital gains; effectively sell negotiated portions of the CDA to 3rd-party purchasers by having them subscribe for preferred shares at a 21% premium to their redemption amount with the shares' redemption amounts effectively being flowed out to the 3rd parties as purported capital dividends; and then pocketing such subscription "premiums" as capital dividends paid out to them. A more detailed summary of the facts is under s. 83(2).
Gains generated on income account. After finding that the daylight loan used in the transactions and the promissory notes issued in the transactions issued in the transactions generating capital gains were not shams, and finding that the share premiums generated by 1915 were business income, Noël JA found that the "gainmaking" shares which were acquired for the purpose of their immediate resale so as to give rise to such gains were acquired on income account, given that "property acquired for resale is held on account of revenue" (para. 73).
Elections were shams. Given that these shares were acquired on income account, the subsidiaries in making capital capital dividend elections to flow out their CDAs to 1915 were making a misrepresentation which rendered such elections shams, and similarly the subsequent capital dividend elections by 1915 also were shams.
The Queen v. Nunn, 2007 DTC 5111, 2006 FCA 403
In finding that the trial Judge has erred in finding that the investment of the taxpayer's RRSP in worthless shares as a result of fraudulent misrepresentation represented a sham, Malone J.A. stated, after citing the Snook v. London & West Riding Investments Ltd. case stated (at p. 5114):
"In other words, the elements of a sham require that the parties to a transaction together have deliberately set out to misrepresent the actual state of affairs to a third party ... ."
Backman v. The Queen, 2001 DTC 5149, 2001 SCC 10
Before going on to find that the taxpayers had not become partners of a putative partnership by virtue of their arrangements because they lacked the requisite intention to carry on business in common, the Court stated (at p. 5154) that "this Court has repeatedly held that a tax motivation does not derogate from the validity of transactions for tax purposes ... . The question at this stage is whether the taxpayer can establish an intention to make a profit, whether or not he was motivated by tax considerations".
Singleton v. The Queen, 2001 DTC 5533, 2001 SCC 61
Major J. stated (at p. o) that:
"The Court in Shell emphasized that taxpayers are entitled to structure their transactions in a manner that reduces taxes ... . The fact that the structures may be complex arrangements does not remove the right to do so."
Ludco Enterprises Ltd. v. The Queen, 2001 DTC 5505, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 1082, 2001 SCC 62
Before going on to find that the taxpayer had effectively generated net deductions by investing in a tax-deferred offshore investment, Iacobucci J. stated (at p. o) that:
"Given that the Income Tax Act has many specific anti-avoidance provisions and rules, it follows that courts should not be quick to embellish the provisions of the Act in response to concerns about tax avoidance when it is open to Parliament to be precise and specific with respect to any mischief to be prevented ... . To do otherwise would be to fail to give appropriate weight to the well-established principle that, absent a provision to the contrary, taxpayers are entitled to arrange their affairs for the sole purpose of achieving a favourable position regarding taxation ... ."
Ledoux v. The Queen, 2000 DTC 6465, Docket: A-813-97 (FCA)
The Court affirmed (at p. 6466) the findings of the trial judge that a series of complex transactions comprising 43 stages that were completed within a few days, whose apparent purpose was to transmute an income-account gain into a capital gain, "did not reflect the actual transactions completed and did not correspond to the actual relationships formed between the parties: in short, it constituted a deception, a subterfuge, a sham".
McEwen Bros. Ltd. v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5326 (FCA)
In finding that a purported partnership agreement was not a sham, Robertson J.A. stated (at p. 5330):
"In short, to qualify as a sham, the taxpayer must say one thing to the Minister, and do another in an attempt to avoid its tax obligations."
Shell Canada Ltd. v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5669, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 622
After referring to arguments, based on decisions in Bronfman Trust and Stubart, that courts should look through transactions that impose tax according to their true economic and commercial effects, McLachlin J. stated (at p. 5677):
"However, this Court has made it clear in more recent decisions that, absent a specific provision to the contrary, it is not the Courts' role to prevent taxpayers from relying on the sophisticated structure of their transactions, arranged in such a way that the particular provisions of the Act are met, on the basis that it would be inequitable to those taxpayers who have not chosen to structure their transactions that way ... ."
She also indicated (at p. 5677) that inquiring into the "economic realities" of a particular situation:
"wrongly invites a rule that where there are two ways to structure a transaction with the same economic effect, the Court must have regard only to the one without tax advantages."
The Queen v. Ferrel, 99 D.TC 5111, Docket: A-746-97 (FCA)
After referring to the statement in Neuman (98 D.TC 6297) that "taxpayers can arrange their affairs in a particular way for the sole purpose of deliberately availing themselves of the tax reduction levies" and noting that this included the use of corporate structures for the sole purpose of avoiding tax, Linden J.A. stated (at p. 5111) that "it follows that other structures, including trusts, may also be used to save tax, as long as proper legal documentation is prepared to accomplish the purpose desired".
Duha Printers (Western) Ltd. v. The Queen, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 795, 98 DTC 6334
In finding that the transactions under consideration had successfully avoided the change-of-control provisions of the Act, Iacobucci C.J. stated (at p. 6350) that "it is well established in the jurisprudence of this Court that no 'business purpose' is required for a transaction to be considered valid under the Income Tax Act, and that a taxpayer is entitled to take advantage of the Act even where a transaction is motivated solely by the minimization of tax".
Continental Bank Leasing Corp. v. The Queen, 96 DTC 6355 (FCA), rev'd 98 DTC 6501 (SCC)
Before finding that the taxpayer had failed to accomplish a tax-motivated plan because it had failed, in law, to establish a partnership with two other parties, Linden J.A. quoted a statement of the Tax Court Judge that "if the legal reality that underlies the ostensible legal relationship is the same as that which appears on the surface, there is no sham", and then stated (at p. 6359):
"Absent the essential component of deceit, the present transaction cannot be considered a sham according to current Canadian law."
The Queen v. Fording Coal. Ltd., 95 DTC 5672 (FCA)
Before finding that former s. 245(1) applied to deny the deduction of resource pools that otherwise would have been available to the taxpayer because of a "seeding transaction" (i.e., a transfer, prior to its acquisition of resource interests, of a minute interest in the property by it to the vendor), Strayer J.A. noted (at p. 5673) that "these were legal transactions which had the effect of transferring and retransferring interests so as to make possible the claim by the respondent for the deductions".
Attorney General of Canada v. Hoefele, 95 DTC 5602 (FCA)
efore finding that a mortgage interest rate subsidy was not a taxable benefit, notwithstanding that other methods of compensating the employee-taxpayer would have been taxable, Linden J.A. stated (at p. 5606):
"Form may not rule, but it does matter. And because form matters, one may structure one's affairs so as to minimize the tax payable on certain transactions. There is nothing wrong with this. Subject to provisions such as section 245, it is neither illegal nor immoral."
The Queen v. Friedberg, 92 DTC 6031 (FCA), rev'd 93 DTC 5507, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 285
Before going on to find that the value of textiles donated to the Royal Ontario Museum did not give rise to a charitable deduction to the taxpayer because the documentation failed to establish that the taxpayer had ever acquired title to the textiles, Linden J.A. stated (at p. 6032):
"In tax law, form matters. A mere subjective intention, here as elsewhere in the tax field, is not by itself sufficient to alter the characterization of a transaction for tax purposes. If a taxpayer arranges its affairs in certain formal ways, enormous tax advantages can be obtained, even though the main reason for these arrangements may be to save tax ... . If a taxpayer fails to take the correct formal steps, however, tax may have to be paid. If this were not so, Revenue Canada and the courts would be engaged in endless exercises to determine the true intentions behind certain transactions."
C&E Commissioners v. Music and Video Exchange Ltd., [1992] BTC 5028 (Q.B.)
Before finding that an arrangement which had been described in the relevant documents as an agency relationship should be respected as such, McCullough J. stated (p. 5030):
"The citizen is entitled to order his affairs in such a way that the tax properly attaching to his dispositions is less than it might otherwise be, however unappreciative the Commissioners of Inland Revenue or the Commissioners of Customs and Excise may be of the result."
Alberta Gas Ethylene Co. Ltd. v. The Queen, 89 DTC 5058 (FCTD), aff'd 90 DT 6419 (FCA)
An argument that a U.S. subsidiary of the taxpayer - which had no business premises, no employees and no function other than to on-lend a loan to the taxpayer - had no independent existence, was rejected.
A.G. Securities v. Vaughan, [1988] 3 WLR 1205 (HL)
The landlord, by separate but identical agreements entered into contemporaneously, granted a young man and his girlfriend the purportedly non-exclusive right to occupy a flat. A joint tenancy was created and the power of the "licensor" to use the rooms or to permit others to use the rooms was a pretence only intended to deprive the applicants of the protection of the Rent Acts.
Craven v. White, [1988] BTC 268 (HL)
Lord Oliver stated:
"As the law currently stands, the essentials emerging from Furniss v. Dawson appear to me to be four in number:
- that the series of transactions was, at the time when the intermediate transaction was entered into it, preordained in order to produce a given result;
- that the transaction had no other purpose than tax mitigation;
- that there was at that time no practical likelihood that the pre-planned events would not take place in the order ordained, so that the intermediate transaction was not even contemplated practically as having an independent life, and
- that the pre-ordained events did in fact take place."
With respect to the transfer of shares to a Manx company in exchange for treasury shares of the Manx company, followed by the sale of the shares by the Manx company to the ultimate purchaser, it was uncertain at the time of the transfer of the shares to the Manx company that the subsequent disposal would occur, and it was only later that negotiations with the ultimate purchaser were resumed. The Ramsay principle accordingly was not applied.
Doncaster v. Smith, [1987] 5 WWR 444 (BCCA)
The receiver-manager of three companies was negligent for realizing recapture and a capital gain on the sale of one of the company's depreciable assets. Since the other two companies had losses, he would have been advised to first amalgamate the three companies.
Consolidated-Bathurst Ltd. v. The Queen, 85 DTC 5120, [1985] 1 CTC 142 (FCTD), aff'd on different grounds, 87 DTC 5001, [1987] 1 CTC 55 (FCA)
A captive Bermudan insurance company was found to be a legal entity distinct from its ultimate Canadian parent, and accordingly interest income and foreign exchange gains of the Bermudan company were found not to be income of the Canadian parent.
The Queen v. Parsons, 84 DTC 6447, [1984] C.T.C 354 (FCA)
It was found by the trial judge that management companies, which two professional engineers ("Parsons" and "Vivian") had incorporated and interposed between themselves and an engineering firm ("Design") of which they had been employees until that time, "(1) had no bona fide business purpose, (2) had, primarily, the purpose of directly reducing their income tax liabilities [and] (3) had, secondarily, an estate planning purpose which ... must be taken to have also been solely motivated by tax and personal, not business, considerations." Nonetheless, it was held that the arrangements were not a sham and were effective for tax purposes because the legal rights and obligations which the parties purported to create, they had succeeded in actually creating.
R. v. Redpath Industries Ltd., 84 DTC 6349, [1984] CTC 483 (Que. S.C.)
Although the operations of a Bermudan company were directed and conducted by its parent companies, the Bermudan company nonetheless was treated as having a separate existence for Canadian tax purposes.
Stubart Investments Ltd. v. The Queen, 84 DTC 6305, [1984] CTC 294, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 536
A transaction should not "be disregarded for tax purposes solely on the basis that it was entered into by a taxpayer without an independent or bona fide business purpose." However, the formal validity of a transaction may be insufficient where giving full effect to the transaction would defeat the object and spirit of an allowance or benefit provision, or go contrary to a legislative intent to restrict the benefit of such provision to rights that had accrued prior to the transaction, or where the relevant provisions of the Act relate to an identified business function.
A transfer by the taxpayer of its flavouring business to an affiliated company with a history of losses (coupled with the agreement of the taxpayer to act as the affiliated company's agent respecting that business) was a legally effective transaction and also was effective for tax purposes.
Furniss v. Dawson, [1984] 2 WLR 226 (HL)
Where a pre-ordained (or pre-contracted) series of transactions contains steps that were inserted without any commercial purpose apart from obtaining a tax advantage, then the inserted steps will be disregarded in determining the end result of the transactions (the end result being what is relevant for fiscal purposes). It is irrelevant whether the series of transactions is "self-cancelling", i.e., designed to return the taxpayer to his original position.
Here, the taxpayers, rather than selling their shares in operating companies directly to a purchaser, instead exchanged those shares on a roll-over basis for shares of a newly-incorporated Isle of Man company ("Greenjacket"). Greenjacket then sold the shares of the operating companies to the purchaser. "If the sale had taken place in 1964 before capital gains tax was introduced, there would have been no Greenjacket." The taxpayers accordingly were to be taxed as if they had disposed of their shares directly to the ultimate purchaser.
The Queen v. Houle, 83 DTC 5430, [1983] CTC 406 (FCTD)
There is no need for a purchase by a private company to be recorded in minutes or other written memoranda in order for such purchase to be effective.
The Queen v. Special Risks Holdings Inc., 83 DTC 5046, [1983] CTC 36 (FCA)
Where there was no allegation of facts in the Queen's Statement of Defence which would establish a sham, lack of valid business purpose, artificial transactions under section 245, tax avoidance under section 246 or dividend stripping under section 247, and where essentially the only matter at issue was who controlled a corporation for an 11-day period, then the Motions Judge was right in striking out the Queen's pleading that "the Plaintiff entered into a scheme described in said paragraphs with the hope and expectation of avoiding tax on the distribution of dividends".
I.R.C. v. Burmah Oil Co. Ltd., [1982] BTC 56 (HL)
A preordained series of transactions that had the apparent result of the taxpayer suffering a loss of almost the whole price that it had paid for shares, did not result in a real loss for tax purposes because it got back virtually all of the money that it had paid.
The Queen v. Malone, 82 DTC 6130, [1982] CTC 145 (FCTD)
It was accepted (before finding against the taxpayer on another ground) that he was in the stockbrokering business on his own account notwithstanding that all his trading activities were effected through a company of which he was an employee.
W.T. Ramsay Ltd. v. l.R.C., [1982] A.C. 300 (HL)
In order to realize a capital loss that could be deducted from a chargeable gain that had been realized by him, the taxpayer bought shares in a newly-formed investment company and, at the same time, made two loans to the company for 20 and 31 years respectively at an 11% interest rate. The following year, the interest rates on the two loans were changed to 22% and 0% respectively, and the low-interest-rate loan was sold to a finance company at its reduced market value. The company was then wound-up, with a loss being realized by the taxpayer on his shares.
Before finding that the taxpayer had not realized a loss on the shares for UK capital gains purposes, Lord Wilberforce stated (at p. 326):
"The capital gains tax was created to operate in the real world, not that of make-belief. As I said in Aberdeen Construction Group Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners [1978] A.C. 885, it is a tax on gains (or I might have added gains less losses), it is not a tax on arithmetical differences. To say that a loss (or gain) which appears to arise at one stage in an indivisible process, and which is intended to be and is cancelled out by a later stage, so that at the end of what was bought as, and planned as, a single continuous operation, there is not such a loss (or gain) as the legislation is dealing with, is in my opinion well and indeed essentially within the judicial function."
Quemet Corp. v. The Queen, 81 DTC 5359, [1981] CTC 472 (FCTD)
The taxpayer knowingly assisted its suppliers to defraud the Department of National Revenue or dispose of stolen property, by paying them in cash. (The payments and sales were purportedly made through an intermediary company, in an attempt to avoid being involved in illegality, but in fact the taxpayer dealt directly with its suppliers.) The cash expenditures for the purchased goods nonetheless were held to be deductible, because they were made for business purposes.
The Queen v. Daly, 81 DTC 5197, [1981] CTC 270 (FCA)
The purported interposition between the taxpayer and his employer of a management corporation was legally ineffective, and thus, also ineffective for tax purposes, because (1) he failed to have his existing employment contract cancelled (or effectively assigned to the management corporation) and, in fact, he later entered into a similar employment contract with the same employer, which contract made no reference to the management corporation, and (2) the dealings between the taxpayer and his employer were consistent only with their being in an employer/employee relationship. [C.R.: 18(1)(a) - "Related Companies"]
Spur Oil Ltd. v. The Queen, 81 DTC 5168, [1981] CTC 336 (FCA)
It was stated that the question of whether a "quotation letter", which the Crown submitted set an artificially high purchase price for oil, was a legally binding contract should be determined without reference to extrinsic evidence as to whether the parties treated themselves as bound by the letter. [See also S.245(1).]
Fraser Companies, Ltd. v. The Queen, 81 DTC 5051, [1981] CTC 61 (FCTD)
"There is no relationship of principal and agent between the shareholders of a company and the company. The fact that the sole shareholder of a company is another company, as is the case here, does not alter that."
Agar v. The Queen, 80 DTC 6311, [1980] CTC 397 (FCTD)
As there was no evidence to support the taxpayer's contention that fees for performing construction work were earned by a company controlled by him rather than in his personal capacity, other than the payments of those fees being deposited in the company's bank account, such fees were treated as income.
The Queen v. Campbell, 80 DTC 6239, [1980] CTC 319, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 256
The fact that the taxpayer surgeon responded to regulations, requiring that OHIP be billed in the name of an individual doctor, by billing for surgical services he had performed as employee of a private hospital owned by him, then assigning those fees to the hospital, did not mean that the hospital was engaged in the illegal practice of medicine. The employment contract between the surgeon and the hospital was not illegal, and the assigned fees had been earned by the hospital, not by him. [C.R.: 18(1)(a) - "Related Companies"]
Feinstein v. The Queen, 79 DTC 5236, [1979] CTC 329 (FCTD)
It was found "that to look at the true situation realistically", the individual taxpayer was acting on behalf of his company when he signed a contract in his own name. Income generated under the contract accordingly was his company's income.
Atinco Paper Products Ltd. v. The Queen, 78 DTC 6387, [1978] CTC 566 (FCA)
After finding that an income-splitting "scheme" was ineffective because two supposed trusts had not been properly established, Urie, J. stated: "it is the duty of the Court to carefully scrutinize everything that a taxpayer has done to ensure that everything which appears to have been done, in fact, has been done in accordance with applicable law."
The Queen v. Esskay Farms Ltd., 76 DTC 6010, [1976] CTC 24 (FCTD)
The taxpayer, wished to sell land to the City of Calgary in consideration for two annual instalments in order to defer a portion of the gain to its second taxation year, but was informed that the City was precluded by statute from purchasing land over a period of years. As a result: the taxpayer sold the land to a trust company for the same purchase price, but payable in two instalments with the second instalment bearing interest at 7.5% per annum, and with a clause in the purchase agreement that the trust company could elect within 60 days of the date of the agreement of sale to void the agreement; and the trust company sold the land to the City for the same purchase price, paid in cash. Title was transferred directly from the taxpayer to the City.
Cattanach J. found that the transactions were not a sham as the intended legal rights of the three parties were exactly those described in the documents. For example, the Trust Company had the use of the money received on its sale to the City for a protracted period, which it could and did turn to profit on its own account.
Cattanach J., after noting that, in fact, the Trust Company did not pay interest until the time it received money on the sale to the City, rather than from the earlier date provided in the agreement, stated (at p. 6016):
"The delay in payment exceeded the estimated date and there is no impediment to the parties not to strictly comply with the agreement in this respect although the benefiting party is entitled to do so and the party detrimentally affected is bound by the agreement."
After noting that the trust company did not record a liability in its book of account to the taxpayer until the time it receiving payment from the City, Cattanach J. stated (at p. 6016):
"I do not think that bookkeeping entries or the lack of an entry can be accepted as contradicting the clear provisions of a written agreement."
Dominion Bridge Co. Ltd. v. The Queen, 75 DTC 5150, [1975] CTC 263, aff'd 77 DTC 5367, [1977] CTC 554 (FCA)
The amounts paid by a wholly-owned Bermudan subsidiary ("Span") for purchases of steel were found to constitute the taxpayer's cost of that steel, rather than the higher price charged by Span to the taxpayer, because Span was a puppet of the taxpayer, and the business of the taxpayer accordingly included the activities or purported activities of Span. A vice-president of the taxpayer "controlled every step of the operations of Span from the purchase price to the selling price of off-shore steel" and in fact was permitted by the Articles of Association of Span to exercise the powers of its board.
Leon v. MNR, 76 DTC 6303, [1976] CTC 541 (FCA)
Fees paid by a company ("Ablan Leon Distributors") to a second company ("Nor-Mar") which was owned by its sole employee ("Leon") in respect of management services that Nor-Mar provided were held to be the income of Leon rather than Nor-Mar. "[I]t is my view that the complete absence of a bona fide business purpose for the interposition of Nor-Mar into the provision of Norman Leon's services to Ablan Leon Distributors is sufficient to stamp that transaction a sham." [C.R.: 18(1)(a) - "Related Companies"]
Simard-Beaudry Inc. v. M.N.R., 74 DTC 6552, [1974] CTC 715 (FCTD)
Before concluding (at p. 6557) that "the purchase by the Appellant by means of an option does not constitute a sham in the legal sense," and after quoting the "excellent definition of a financial sham" in Snook, Addy J stated (at p. 6556):
"[I]n order to determine if a document constitutes a sham or not and for this reason must necessarily attract financial consequences, one must not take an exaggerated view of the motives of the parties for the sole purpose of arriving at an interpretation favourable to the taxing authority."
The Queen v. Kuhl, 74 DTC 6024, [1973] CTC 846 (FCTD)
"The company is not an agent of the owners."
See Also
McLarty v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1162 [at 3556], 2014 TCC 30
The taxpayer, as a member of a joint venture, bought an undivided interest in seismic data for $20,000 cash and an $85,000 limited-recourse promissory note. The Minister limited the taxpayer's deductions in connection with the note portion to the amount of licensing revenues ultimately received. After finding that the expenses connected with the note were reasonable (see summary under s. 67), Favreau J stated (at para. 78):
In my opinion, the Crown cannot apply the doctrine of sham to only a part of a particular transaction while considering another part of the same transaction as being legally valid and effective. For example, I have difficulty with the Crown being permitted to apply the doctrine of sham to only that part of the acquisition by the appellant of an undivided interest in the Seismic Data that was paid for by the appellant's Promissory Note.
Foresbec Inc. v. The Queen, 2002 DTC 1786, Docket: 98-2034-IT-G (TCC), aff'd 2003 DTC 5455, 2002 FCA 186
A consulting contract did not reflect the legal reality of the parties' rights and obligations (it was never contemplated that consulting services would be provided and the payments were to be made irrespective of the level of services to be provided) and, accordingly, the contract was found to be a sham for purposes of the Act.
Lloyd v. The Queen, 2002 DTC 1493, Docket: 2000-1146-IT-G (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.
Bowman A.C.J. stated (at p. 1496):
"If the Minister can attack a transaction in this court or the Federal Court of Appeal on the basis it is legally ineffective or incomplete, so too can the taxpayer. There is no need to wait for a provincial court to set an incomplete or legally and valid transaction aside."
Thibault v. The Queen, 99 DTC 489, Docket: 96-1726-IT-G (TCC)
In addition to selling his shares of a company for $100,000, it was agreed that the company would hire a corporation controlled by the taxpayer as a consultant for a period of five years for $150,000 payable in 60 consecutive equal instalments. Lamarre Proulx TCJ. found that the contract for services in fact gave rise to additional proceeds of disposition notwithstanding a judgment of the Superior Court of Quebec in which was found the contract for services was valid rather than a simulation representing the price for shares.
Eli Lilly & Co. v. Novopharm Ltd. (1998), 161 DLR (4th) 1, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 129
In discussing E.I. De Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Shell Oil Co., 227 U.S.P.Q. 223 (1985), Iacobucci J. stated (at p. 34) that in that case:
"the unlicensed party actually manufactured the licensed article allegedly as the agent of the licensee, only then to 'purchase' the article from the licensee immediately upon its manufacture. This arrangement was characterized by the Delaware Supreme Court as a sham, and rightfully so. The only factor which distinguished it from an overt situation of an unlicensed party's manufacturing a patented article strictly for its own benefit was a series of paper transactions carried out between a subsidiary corporation and its parent for the purpose of obscuring the true character of the arrangement."
Giguère v. MNR, 93 DTC 488 (TCC)
The taxpayer was unsuccessful in his contention that although a contract for providing services to Télé - Métropole Inc. was with himself rather than a corporation of which he was the chief executive, the intention was for the services of the latter to be retained. Accordingly, fees received pursuant to the contract were income of the taxpayer.
Keewatin Tribal Council Inc. v. City of Thompson, [1989] 2 CTC 206 (Man QB)
After noting that it was likely that the only reason for the creation of a trust for an Indian band was the avoidance of municipal taxation, Jewers J. stated (p. 214):
"It is axiomatic in taxation law that one may arrange one's affairs as one sees fit in order to minimize the impact of tax. The Supreme Court of Canada has now made it clear that lack of any business purpose for a transaction is not enough to attract tax that otherwise would not be payable ..."
Constitution Insurance Co. of Canada v. Kosmopoulos (1987), 34 DLR (4th) 208, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 2
The corporate veil can only be lifted where enforcement of the separate entities principle would yield a result flagrantly opposed to justice, convenience or the interests of the Revenue.
Administrative Policy
2001 Canadian Tax Foundation Roundtable Q. , 2001-0092495
Notwithstanding the Wallsten decision, the CCRA will not accept that insurance agents or realtors can transfer their commission income to a corporation if they are legally prohibited from doing so by third parties.
11 October 1991 T.I. (Tax Window, No. 11, p. 17, ¶1523)
Where members of a farming partnership transfer a herd of cattle to a corporation utilizing the s. 85(2) election and have the corporation immediately thereafter sell the herd to an arm's length buyer and utilize the small business deduction, then if the corporation was interposed after negotiations with the purchaser had begun or were completed, Revenue Canada, depending upon the facts, may take the position that the corporation was merely acting as agent for the partnership, or that the arrangement amounted to a sham.
81 C.R. - Q.9
The Daly case was decided on very narrow legal grounds because of deficiencies in the taxpayer's documentation.