Cases
Gouveia v. The Queen, 2014 FCA 289
The taxpayer who was the CEO of an income trust and the holder, through a personal holding company of 8.1% of its units, and who provided consulting services through that or a related company, incurred $2.1 million in legal fees in connection with charges brought against him by the OSC (which ultimately were withdrawn) alleging that he and other senior employees had misstated the financial statements and a class action brought against various parties including the taxpayer, which ultimately was settled. Favreau J in the Tax Court found that the fees were not deductible by virtue of s. 18(1)(a) given inter alia that "the need for the appellant to defend himself against the OSC proceedings and the Class Action was separate from his consulting business" (para. 28), and also found (at para. 41) that "deduction of legal fees incurred to preserve the appellant's reputation and capacity to earn future income is prohibited by paragraph 18(1)(b)."
In dismissing the taxpayer's appeal, Dawson JA stated (at para. 4) that no "palpable and overriding error" had been demonstrated respecting the second (s. 18(1)(b)) finding.
The Queen v. Doiron, 2012 DTC 5103 [at 7081], 2012 FCA 71
The taxpayer, a lawyer, received a four-year sentence and was suspended from practising law as a result of his conviction for obstruction of justice in respect of his defence of a client. The trial judge allowed the taxpayer to deduct his legal fees in computing his professional income, on the basis that the expenses arose directly from his law practice.
The Court of Appeal granted the Minister's appeal. The test in Symes is whether the taxpayer incurred the expense for the purpose of gaining or producing income from a business. As the taxpayer's licence to practice law had already been suspended when the expenses were incurred, they could not have been incurred for an income-producing purpose. Noël J.A. stated (at para. 44):
[T]he evidence had to show at the very least that the respondent had a plausible defence against the criminal charges and that, should he win his case, he was likely to regain his licence to practise.
The taxpayer had not introduced any new evidence on whether he was guilty of an offence, so the Court deferred to the finding at trial that he was. It was also immaterial that the taxpayer might resume the practice of law in a subsequent year. Noël J.A. stated (at para. 34):
[T]he deductions allowed under subsection 9(1) and paragraph 18(1)(a) are for expenses incurred for the purpose of gaining income for the year in which they are claimed. The mere fact that the expenses incurred by the respondent could earn him income outside the years at issue does not disallow [sic] them.
Another hurdle to the taxpayer's case was that expenses to protect an enduring asset, such as his licence to practise, are capital outlays (para. 42).
Bolen v. The Queen, 2007 DTC 5559, 2007 FCA 293
The taxpayer earned his living as a prospector by staking claims and obtaining leases and selling them to mining companies for cash and other consideration, often shares of the companies.
Legal fees expended by the taxpayer in securing the return of mining rights from a defaulting mining company were fully deductible rather than eligible capital expenditures given that mining rights were held by the taxpayer in the course of his trade.
Cimolai v. The Queen, 2007 DTC 5019, 2006 FCA 348, aff'd , 2009 DTC 6115, 2006 FCA 348
Legal expenses incurred by the taxpayer, who was employed as a medical practitioner by a hospital, in a defamation action brought against his former professional colleagues and against his employer for suspending him from his employment, were made to protect his professional reputation and hence his capacity for future earnings and, therefore, were capital in nature. Accordingly, his expenses were non-deductible capital expenditures even if they related to his potential non-employment sources of income.
Plattig v. Attorney General of Canada, 2003 DTC 5601 (FCTD)
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in claiming and ultimately being awarded maintenance pursuant to section 57 of the Family Relations Act (Ontario) (at the time of the hearing, section 89) were deductible on the basis of a characterization that they were incurred not to establish the right to maintenance but, instead, to enforce the statutory right to maintenance.
Coté v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5215 (FCTD)
A research program supervised by the taxpayer, who was associated with a Montreal hospital, was found to be a business in itself that was intended to produce exploitable intellectual property. Conversely, the taxpayer was not an employee of the hospital or an associated institute, notwithstanding that research grants were received by him from the institute. Accordingly, legal fees incurred by him when the institute terminated research grants were deductible.
MNR v. Poulin (1996), 204 N.R. 376 (FCA)
In finding that a real estate agent could not deduct legal expenses incurred in defending a suit alleging fraud and misrepresentation while negotiating a real estate transaction, Marceau J.A. indicated (at p. 381) that in order for a payment which is not itself made for the purpose of earning a profit to satisfy s. 18(1)(a), "it must be seen as the unfortunate consequence of a risk that the taxpayer had to take and assume in order to carry on his trade or profession".
Doz v. The Queen, 95 DTC 5585 (FCTD)
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in defending against contempt charges did not have a sufficiently direct connection with an objective of reversing a suspension of his qualification to practise law given that a conviction of the taxpayer for obstruction of justice and counselling perjury might continue to bar him from regaining such qualification. Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in connection with a suit claiming that third parties had misrepresented the quantity of sand and gravel to be extracted from a parcel of land sold to a corporation also were non-deductible because such suit concerned the corporation's business rather than his. However, the taxpayer was able to deduct legal expenses incurred by him in defending against a third party action brought against him given that his principal purpose in doing so was to protect his rental-producing properties from seizure.
Upenieks v. The Queen, 94 DTC 6656 (FCA)
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer (a medical doctor) in bringing an unsuccessful libel suit against the Toronto Star were not deductible given the Tax Court's factual finding that such expenses were incurred for the purpose of maintaining and preserving the taxpayer's professional reputation (which the Tax Court Judge had characterized as a capital asset).
Friedland v. The Queen, 89 DTC 5341 (FCTD)
An individual ("Friedland") carried on his business of economics consulting through a corporation ("SFRA"). When dissatisfied clients brought action against SFRA and Friedland, and the OSC charged Friedland with acting as an unlicensed securities adviser, SFRA incorporated a subsidiary ("Comar") which continued carrying on the consulting business.
All legal fees were paid by Comar, which was entitled to deduct them in full. Because Comar's business depended on providing the services of Friedland to clients, its business would have been adversely affected if the legal proceedings had not been defended, or had been defended unsuccessfully. It accordingly was a sound business decision of Comar to incur the legal expenses.
The Queen v. Jaqer Homes Ltd., 88 DTC 6119, [1988] 1 CTC 215 (FCA)
Legal fees incurred by two companies in successfully defending against a petition, brought by a minority shareholder, to wind the two companies up, were characterized as having as their main "purpose", the preservation of the corporate entities as such, rather than enabling the two companies to continue to earn income, and were non-deductible.
Border Chemical Co. Ltd. v. The Queen, 87 DTC 5391, [1987] 2 CTC 183 (FCTD)
Legal fees paid by the taxpayer for the successful defence of its president against fraud charges brought in connection with alleged activities in which the taxpayer had no direct involvement, were non-deductible. "Unless ... any payment made remotely in the interests of the good name of the company's president and from which the company's reputation might stand to benefit, is an expense in the contemplation of paragraph 18(1)(a), which it clearly is not, the plaintiff cannot succeed."
The Queen v. Lalonde, 84 DTC 6159 (FCTD), aff'd 89 DTC 5286 (FCA)
Legal fees incurred by a doctor in order to dispute a decision not to build a comprehensive school in his immediate area were incurred for the purpose of increasing the revenues of his pharmaceutical business and medical practice, and thus were deductible. (It was accepted that he felt that a new school would increase the population, and thus the potential number of patients, in the area.)
Philp v. The Queen, 83 DTC 5424, [1983] CTC 403 (FCTD)
Legal fees and accounting fees incurred in relation to alimony and divorce arrangements were admitted by the taxpayer to have been incurred not to earn income from a business but to protect and preserve existing capital assets, and thus were not deductible.
The Queen v. Burgess, 81 DTC 5192, [1981] CTC 258 (FCTD)
The right of a wife to support from her husband terminates upon the granting of the decree absolute, in the absence of the granting of a discretionary order for maintenance. Consequently, legal fees which were successfully incurred for the purpose of obtaining an order for maintenance pursuant to s. 11 of the Divorce Act had the effect of creating a right to income (i.e., creating property) rather than enforcing the payment of income to which she already had a right, and thus were not deductible.
BP Oil Ltd. v. The Queen, 80 DTC 6331, [1980] CTC 408 (FCA)
Legal expenses which the appellant incurred in unsuccessfully opposing an application for an injunction prohibiting the operation of its service station because of a defect in its title to the underlying land (due to the presence of a "servitude") "were incurred in order to protect the very existence of the service station" and were not deductible.
The appellant continued to operate a service station after the injunction was issued prohibiting operation of this service station. The Crown successfully argued "that the fees [then] incurred in order to avoid conviction for contempt of court were not paid for the purpose of keeping the service station in operation, but solely in order to avoid appellant being punished."
Neonex International Ltd. v. The Queen, 78 DTC 6339, [1978] CTC 485 (FCA)
Legal fees incurred in connection with an abortive attempt to take over a company were made on capital account.
In the Federal Court, Trial Division (77 DTC 5321) Marceau J noted (at para. 23):
The plaintiff was in the business of making and selling signs, and it was also in the business of supplying funds and management services to its subsidiaries. But the acquisition of the shares of those subsidiaries which were to keep carrying on their own businesses, can only be regarded as a pure investment....
Farmers Mutual Petroleums Ltd. v. MNR, 67 DTC 5277, [1967] CTC 396, [1968] S.C.R. 59
The taxpayer, which had acquired the title to minerals from various Saskatchewan landowners, incurred legal expenses in defending actions by various of the landowners in which it was alleged that the taxpayer had obtained the mineral rights by fraudulent misrepresentation, and incurred further legal expenses in opposing the introduction of special Saskatchewan legislation which would have led to a renegotiation of the purchase contracts. Martland J. held that although the legal expenses arguably were deductible under s. 12(1)(a), they were non-deductible capital expenditures by virtue of s. 12(1)(b). The mineral rights clearly were items of fixed capital to the taxpayer, and it laid out the legal expenses for the purpose of preserving those capital assets. Martland J. noted (at p. 5281) that:
"The Dominion case has established the proposition that legal expense incurred with a view of preserving an asset [or] advantage for the enduring benefit of the trade is a capital expenditure and is not deductible."
British Columbia Power Corp. Ltd. v. MNR, 67 DTC 5258, [1967] CTC 406, [1968] S.C.R. 17
The taxpayer, which owned all of the issued common shares of a public utility company, incurred approximately $1.2 million in legal fees in a successful action to have B.C. statutes, which expropriated its shares of the public utility company, declared ultra vires. It was found that it brought the action in order to preserve its title to the shares, in order that it could dispose of those shares to the Crown at a more favourable price (which in fact occurred). Martland J. found that because "in essence, the main purpose and the result of the litigation was to improve the consideration received for the disposition of a capital asset" (pp. 5263-5264), and in light of the proposition established by the Dominion Natural Gas case that a legal expense incurred to protect a taxpayer's title to a capital asset is a capital expenditure, that the taxpayer's legal expenses were incurred on capital account.
Various costs of communications with the taxpayer's shareholders respecting the expropriation legislation and the litigation were deductible as "the reasonable furnishing of information from time to time to shareholders by a company respecting its affairs is properly a part of the carrying on of the company's business of earning income" (p. 5264, DTC).
Reader's Digest Association (Canada) Ltd. v. MNR, 66 DTC 5416, [1966] CTC 626 (Ex. Ct.)
The taxpayer incurred legal fees in mounting an unsuccessful action to challenge the imposition by the federal government of a 20% excise tax on its revenue from the sale of advertising appearing in the English and French versions of Reader's Digest. Dumoulin J. followed the Premium Iron Ores case in finding these expenses to be deductible.
Premium Iron Ores Ltd. v. MNR, 66 DTC 5280, [1966] CTC 391, [1966] S.C.R. 685
When the taxpayer learned that the American revenue authorities were taking the position that it had a permanent establishment in the U.S., it incurred legal expenses in reaching a position in which any claim to tax income effectively connected to such an alleged permanent establishment could be effectively opposed. Martland J. found in light of the Kellogg and Evans cases that such expenses were deductible because they were made with a view to protecting the income earning capacity of the company, i.e., protecting its "income against encroachment by a third party" (p. 5283).
Meteor Homes Ltd. v. MNR, 61 DTC 1001, [1960] CTC 419 (Ex. Ct.)
A payment made by the taxpayer to one group of shareholders was found to have been made to enable another group of shareholders to obtain absolute control of the taxpayer. Related legal fees accordingly were non-deductible.
Rolland Paper Co. Ltd. v. MNR, 60 DTC 1095, [1960] CTC 158 (Ex. Ct.)
The taxpayer was found guilty of illegal trade practices (conspiring to lessen competition in the fine papers industry) and sentenced to pay fines. In finding that the taxpayer's legal expenses were deductible, Fournier J. stated (p. 1102):
"Believing as I do that the appellant's trade practices in the operations of its business were used and followed for the purpose of earning income from the business, I find that lawful legal fees and costs incurred or made in defending such practices till a final decision on their legality or illegality was reached were made for the purposes of their trade and for the purpose of earning income and were deductible in ascertaining the appellant's taxable income within the meaning of s. 12(1)(a) ..."
Evans v. MNR, 60 DTC 1047, [1960] CTC 69, [1960] S.C.R. 391
The taxpayer incurred legal fees in successfully establishing that for the remainder of her lifetime she was entitled to a 1/3 share of the income from the residue of the estate of her father-in-law. She was not entitled to any part of the capital of the estate. Her legal fees were characterized as "expenses of collecting income to which she was entitled but the payment of which she could not otherwise obtain" (p. 1050), and, accordingly, were deductible. Whereas in the Dominion Natural Gas case, the expenses were incurred in litigation a subject matter of which was an item of fixed capital (a valuable, exclusive perpetual franchise), here the right to receive income was not a capital asset. Cartwright J. also noted (at p. 1050) that the Dominion Natural Gas case had extended the test in British Insulated to include the preserving of an asset or advantage for the enduring benefit of the trade.
Bannerman v. MNR, 59 DTC 1126, [1959] CTC 214, [1959] S.C.R. 562
When the taxpayer discovered that his co-shareholder had been diverting company funds for his own use during the previous few years, he brought a successful judicial application for a winding-up order. His expenses respecting applying for the winding-up order including legal expenses and travelling expenses were non-deductible given that his action to commence the winding-up proceedings was taken in order to remove his co-shareholder from the position he occupied in the company's affairs by reason of his casting vote, and in light of the fact that the receipt by the taxpayer of a deemed dividend was "very unlikely".
MNR v. L. D. Caulk Co. Ltd., 54 DTC 1011, [1954] CTC 28, [1954] S.C.R. 55
The taxpayer successfully defended charges under the Combines Investigation Act that it had combined with others to prevent or unduly lessen the competition in the commercial distribution of dental supplies. Because the taxpayer incurred the associated legal expenses in order to defend its right to employ certain trade practices for the purpose of earning income from its business, those expenses were deductible by it.
MNR v. Kellogg Co. of Canada Ltd., 2 DTC 601, [1943] CTC 1, [1943] S.C.R. 58
The taxpayer successfully defended a suit by the Canadian Shredded Wheat Company claiming that the taxpayer was infringing its registered trademark consisting of the words "Shredded Wheat". The taxpayer's legal expenses were held to fall within the general rule "that in the ordinary course legal expenses are simply current expenditures and deductible as such". Duff C.J. distinguished the Dominion Natural Gas case on the ground that:
"The right upon which the respondents relied was not a right of property, or an exclusive right of any description, but the right (in common with all other members of the public) to describe their goods in the manner in which they were describing them."
MNR v. Dominion Natural Gas Co. Ltd., 1 DTC 499-133, [1940-41] CTC 155, [1941] S.C.R. 19
The taxpayer had continuously supplied the Township of Barton with natural gas under a by-law of that township granting perpetual rights for that purpose. Following the annexation of the Township to the City of Hamilton, the United Company, which had been supplying natural gas to the City of Hamilton, unsuccessfully sought an injunction restraining the taxpayer from supplying natural gas to what now was part of the City of Hamilton.
The legal expenses incurred by the taxpayer were non-deductible. Per Duff C.J., they were not incurred for the production of income but for the purpose of preventing the extinction of the business from which the income was derived (s.6(a) of the Income War Tax Act), and they were capital expenditures because the settlement of the issue gave rise to an enduring benefit within the sense of Lord Cave's language in British Insulated (s.6(b)). However, he noted (at pp. 499-135-6) that "in the ordinary course, it is true, legal expenses are simply current expenditure and deductible as such".
Kerwin J., after noting that the language of s. 6(a) was relatively liberal and comprehensive, found that the expenditures were capital expenditures because they were made "'with a view of preserving an asset or advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade'".
See Also
Mills v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1138 [at 3371], 2014 TCC 153
The taxpayer incurred over $40,000 in legal expenses in an unsuccessful attempt to reduce child support payments made to his ex-wife. Masse DJ stated (at para. 20) that he agreed with the taxpayer "that it is not right that a parent who incurs legal expenses in order to obtain child support is entitled to deduct the legal expenses from income whereas the parent who incurs legal expenses in order to prevent child support from being established or increased or to decrease or terminate child support cannot deduct these legal expenses from income." However, as "the Tax Court of Canada is not a court of equity" (para. 21), the taxpayer's appeal seeking deduction of these expenses was dismissed.
Kondor v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1215 [at 3870], 2014 TCC 303
The taxpayer owned 50% of the shares of a corporation ("DPX") which made heavily leveraged investments. The taxpayer's wife expected to receive $2.1M cash following their separation. Because of the risky nature of DPX's portfolio, borrowing this sum was infeasible. The taxpayer instead incurred legal fees in order to delay the process for reaching a final settlement (which took three and a half years).
Graham J accepted that "the predominant purpose for which Mr. Kondor incurred the legal fees was to protect the value of his shares in DPX" (para. 11). Therefore, the fees were incurred for the purpose of producing income from property.
Nevertheless, Graham J disallowed the taxpayer's deduction of the legal fees because they were incurred to preserve a capital asset, and were therefore on capital account.
Ironside v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1002 [at 2505], 2013 TCC 339
The taxpayer incurred substantial legal fees to defend unsuccessfully against proceedings by the Alberta Securities Commission respecting false or misleading disclosure in the financial statements of a public company for which he was the CFO. He was fined by the ASC and prohibited from trading, and six years later the Alberta Institute of Chartered accountants rescinded his professional designation.
Campbell J found that the taxpayer (who at the time of the ASC investigation earned income from employment and also looked to earning gains from private placements) could not deduct the legal and professional fees in computing income from a business (namely, chartered accountancy as an alleged source of income), as the two were not substantially connected. She stated (at para. 54):
In both Leduc and in the appeals before me, the professional licenses were in no immediate risk at the time the expenses were incurred, despite the possibility that failure to defend the allegations could lead to future disciplinary action that had the potential of removing the professional designations.
And at para. 48:
[T]he Fees ... arose due to his conduct and actions in the capacity of President and director ... [and] were not incurred as a result of his business activities as an accountant.
Lacroix v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1056 [at 2941], 2013 TCC 312
The taxpayer was a shareholder in a corporation ("Canadevim"), and incurred legal fees contesting Canadevim's assignment in bankruptcy, a GST/QST assessment against Canadevim, and a personal tax appeal.
Bédard J found that the taxpayer could not deduct the fees as property expenses under s. 9. The fees could not have been for earning income from the Canadevim shares, as Canadevim was bankrupt. Moreover, they were capital in nature, and therefore not deductible as per s. 18(1)(b).
Patry v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1142 [at 757], 2013 TCC 107
The taxpayer, a physician, sought retribution against an arbitrator who had ruled against her in a medical dispute. The arbitrator successfully sued the taxpayer for what amounted to a "vendetta" to sabotage his professional standing and have him criminally prosecuted, and he was awarded punitive damages.
Hogan J found that the taxpayer's legal fees incurred in the arbitrator's suit were not a business expense, as there was no connection between the relevant legal expenses and the business. He noted in particular that the expenses could not have been incurred to enable the taxpayer to continue her professional practice, given that her practice had continued even though the arbitrator's suit could not have turned out worse for her (para. 37).
Audet v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1208 [at 3556], 2012 TCC 162
The taxpayer sold his shares in a corporation for $300,000 but was only paid $25,000. In subsequent debt restructuring proceedings under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, he personally paid $3000 to his bankruptcy trustee's counsel, who was charged with recovering the $275,000 in unpaid amounts for the shares.
Lamarre J. found that the $3000 payment was a capital outlay rather than a business expense. The payment had been made in order to recover proceeds of disposition of the shares, and those proceeds would have given rise to a capital gain.
The taxpayer's argued that he had a business purpose in incurring his expenses, given that his goal was to avoid bankruptcy and thereby keep his professional title (as a certified general accountant) and thereby preserve his source of income. In light of the above analysis, this argument was irrelevant to the conclusion that the payment was capital in nature.
Sarophim v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1124 [at 3131], 2012 TCC 92
Lamarre J. disallowed the taxpayer's deduction of legal fees connected with defending against an action to vary spousal support orders. Lammare J. found that it is "settled law" that legal fees incurred to prevent or reduce support payments are not made for the purpose of earning income (para. 8).
Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. v. The Queen, 2011 DTC 1163 [at 873], 2011 TCC 213
The taxpayer incurred legal and accounting fees in 1997 and 1998 of approximately $1.9 million in connection with a complicated reorganization of the manner in which it financed its investment in its US subsidiaries. The end result of the reorganization was that it financed that investment through a Luxembourg subsidiary so that cash flow paid out of the US subsidiaries was subject to US withholding tax of 5% and to Luxembourg income tax of 5% - whereas if it had continued to maintain its previous structure, such distributions would have been subject to a 30% US withholding tax rate due to an adverse change in the US tax regime.
In finding that these were capital expenses, Hershfield J noted (at para. 88) that they were paid in order to create an entirely different "pipeline" or structure for maintaining the after-tax cash flow of the taxpayer, noted (at para. 92) that in Imperial Tobacco (and similarly in Kaiser Petroleum) "that an outlay made in the course of a corporate reorganization to achieve an assurance that some end goal will be completed or achieved in a manner that will have value, will be on capital account," and that although the tax benefits of this new structure would last only three years due to impending changes in the US-Luxembourg treaty, this nonetheless represented an enduring benefit because more than the current period was benefited (para. 98).
Trignani v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1153 [at 3301], 2010 TCC 209
The taxpayer incurred legal costs in the course of his 2006 divorce proceedings, which centered around custody of the couple's child. An interim court order on consent in 2001 gave the taxpayer sole interim custody and the spouse 50% access with supervision, and imposed an obligation on the taxpayer to pay $350 in monthly child support to the spouse. Nevertheless, the child in fact stayed with the taxpayer alone because appropriate supervision at the spouse's house was not available.
The Minister disallowed the taxpayer's deduction of legal costs incurred in the taxpayer's unsuccessful claim to receive child support payments, on the grounds that because of the 2001 order the taxpayer had no pre-existing right to child support. Woods J. disagreed at para. 23: "The legislative obligation to support children does not cease with a court order, and especially a court order providing for interim support only." The Minister also argued, but could not establish in evidence, that the taxpayer had abandoned his claim for child support.
Bilodeau v. The Queen, 2008 DTC 2870, 2004 TCC 685
Before going on to find that legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in successfully defending its president from criminal charges laid on the basis of an indecent act allegedly performed by him in the course of his employment were deductible, Lamarre Proulx J. stated (at para. 44):
"In the case of an alleged act that is not inherently linked to work activities, if the person is found guilty, the person has committed an act that is outside the sphere of work. A sexual act is necessarily outside an employee's sphere of activity."
Mackinnon v. The Queen, 2008 DTC 2052, 2007 TCC 658
After noting (at para. 25) the distinction "between fees incurred to affirm a right and those incurred to acquire a right", Angers J. found that legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in connection with recovering an amount equal to the value of her son's RRSP which was wrongfully paid to his estate rather than to her, plus interest thereon, were fully deductible given that these fees were incurred "in order for the appellant to have returned to her that which was rightfully hers after the passing of her son, and they were not incurred for the purpose of acquiring a right" (para. 26).
Loewig v. The Queen, 2006 DTC 3500, 2006 TCC 476
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in order to obtain a court order confirming that the taxpayer no longer was required to make child support payments were not deductible.
Truckbase Corp. v. The Queen, 2006 DTC 2930, 2006 TCC 215
In finding that professional fees incurred by a corporation for the preparation of shareholder agreements were fully deductible with the exception of the portion acknowledged by the taxpayer to be eligible capital expenditures, McArthur J. found that the revised Shareholder Agreements gave rise to a corporate structure that made the business of the corporation more profitable and, respecting an argument that the expenditures were on capital account, indicated (at p. 2934) that he would "liken the redrafting of the Shareholder Agreements as the maintaining of an asset and (at p. 2935) the Shareholder Agreements were "amended to function as originally intended".
Keating v. The Queen, 2005 DTC 743, 2005 TCC 296
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in bringing an oppression action against her estranged husband and his companies for depleting her company of assets were incurred for the purpose of preserving a capital asset, and were not deductible.
Mulja v. The Queen, 2005 DTC 256, 2005 TCC 60
The taxpayer, who was employed by an Indonesian firm for part of 1998 until his employment was terminated, was found to have remained a factual resident of Canada given the significant ties he maintained with Canada.
Leduc v. The Queen, 2005 DTC 250, 2005 TCC 96
$140,000 in legal fees incurred by the taxpayer, a practising solicitor, to defend against sexual abuse charges, were found not to have been incurred for an income-producing purpose and to have their deduction denied by s. 18(1)(h). He would have incurred the expenses irrespective whether or not he was engaged in his profession, and it was not established that successful prosecution of him would have caused him to be disbarred.
BJ Services Co. Canada v. The Queen, 2004 DTC 2032, 2003 TCC 900 (TCC)
After receiving an unsolicited hostile bid from another public company (BJ"), the taxpayer retained legal and accounting advisers (whose fees were admitted to be deductible) and financial advisers, and after it secured a higher bid from another public company ("GLCC"), the first bidder responded with a higher bid, which was accepted, with the result that ultimately all the shares of the taxpayer were acquired by BJ, which merged with it. In finding that the financial advisory fees, together with fees payable by the taxpayer to GLCC (including a "break" fee) were deductible, Campbell J. noted (at p. 2041) that these expenses "not only satisfied a need of the company but were necessitated in dealing with the practicalities of a takeover bid environment", that "it is a basic common sense approach to view maximizing share price as inexplicably interwoven with the business of any company, whether that be public or otherwise" (p. 2042) and that "given the circumstances, the expenses were part of the general overall costs, a corporation must incur to earn income, even though these expenses have no direct link to revenue generating activities but are related to shareholder interests"(p. 2043).
Rona Inc. v. The Queen, 2003 DTC 979, 2003 TCC 121
Professional fees incurred by the taxpayer in seeking to expand its distribution network by making acquisitions (typically through share acquisitions) in order to add franchised stores to its network or acquire corporate stores, were on capital account. In the case of successful acquisitions, the professional fees were added to the costs of acquisition. Where the projects instead were abandoned (including a contemplated takeover bid), the costs nonetheless were capital outlays (which the Minister had treated as eligible capital expenditures).
Continental Lime Ltd. v. The Queen, 99 DTC 1154, Docket: 98-1031-IT-G (TCC)
The taxpayer was the successor by amalgamation to a holding company ("SB Holdings") and its subsidiary ("SB Canada"). When a minority shareholder of SB Canada ("Candou") became bankrupt, SB Holdings purchased those shares from Candou for $6 million, and sold them six years later for $34 million.
The taxpayer incurred legal fees in successfully defending a frivolous action brought by a creditor of Candou alleging that the $6 million purchase price was fraudulently undervalued. In finding that the fees were deductible, McArthur T.C.J. indicated that in defending the suit the taxpayer was not acquiring or preserving an enduring benefit but was protecting its income (the creditor was after money that the taxpayer required to carry on its normal operations and the action had to be defended to protect its profitability and reputation) and that SB Holdings had not committed any deliberate delict.
Coté v. The Queen, 99 DTC 5215 (FCTD)
A research program supervised by the taxpayer, who was associated with a Montreal hospital, was found to be a business in itself that was intended to produce exploitable intellectual property. Conversely, the taxpayer was not an employee of the hospital or an associated institute, notwithstanding that research grants were received by him from the institute. Accordingly, legal fees incurred by him when the institute terminated research grants were deductible.
Kruco Inc. v. The Queen, 98 DTC 1568, Docket: 94-1247-IT-G (TCC)
The taxpayer, which held 32% of the outstanding common shares of another privately owned corporation ("Kruger") brought a statutory oppression remedy against Kruger as a result of Kruger ceasing to pay significant dividends on its shares. In addition to seeking the payment of the special dividend and a resumption of the ordinary dividends, alternative remedies were requested in order to bring additional pressure to bear on Kruger. The action was settled by Kruger agreeing to redeem the taxpayer's common shares for a substantial amount.
In finding that various legal and other fees incurred by the taxpayer in connection with the oppression remedy and various collateral actions were deductible, Archambault T.C.J. noted that the taxpayer's purpose was to receive more income for a relatively short period of time and that in applying for a remedy against oppression, the taxpayer was only exercising its right created by a statute rather than seeking the creation of a new right.
Neeb v. The Queen, 97 DTC 895 (TCC)
Legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in unsuccessfully defending narcotics charges were non-deductible as being of a personal nature (he was not seeking to justify the manner in which he carried on his business but, rather, to keep himself out of jail and to put the Crown to the proof that he carried on the business in question at all).
Graham Construction Engineering (1985) Ltd. v. The Queen, 97 DTC 342 (TCC)
Professional fees incurred in connection with a share reorganization of the taxpayer in which its shareholders transferred their shares to a holding company were found not to be incurred in connection with any activities which formed part of the business by which the taxpayer earned income and were incurred in connection with its dealings with its own shareholders as shareholder. Accordingly such fees were for capital purposes and, as capital expenditures, were to be treated in accordance with a concession of the Minister, as eligible capital expenditures.
Professional fees relating to proposed acquisitions of other corporations that did not proceed also were outlays on capital account.
Boulangerie St-Augustin Inc. v. The Queen, 95 DTC 164 (TCC), briefly aff'd 97 DTC 5012 (FCA)
Legal and accounting fees paid by the taxpayer in connection with the preparation of management circulars, which were sent to shareholders in response to three take-over bids, were fully deductible. The circulars were required to be prepared by section 134 of the Securities Act (Quebec), whose purpose was to ensure that all shareholders were given equal access to adequate information in the course of a take-over bid, and "having to look after one's shareholders is part of the periodic administrative duties of a company doing business" (p. 171). In addition, respecting s. 18(1)(b), the expenditures did not give rise to an identifiable enduring benefit. However, in obiter dicta, Archambault T.C.J. indicated (at p. 174) that if, contrary to the facts in this case, the board had been hostile to the take-over bids and had incurred expenses in order to fight the bids and maintain the status quo, s. 18(1)(b) would have applied.
412237 Ontario Ltd. v. The Queen, 94 DTC 1022 (TCC)
The taxpayer paid legal and accounting fees of $110,844 and $19,940, respectively, incurred by its principal shareholder as a result of his breach of an agreement with the other shareholder of the taxpayer. These amounts were non-deductible given the inability of the taxpayer to establish some connection between the earning of income and the payment of the fees.
Sommers v. The Queen, 93 DTC 1489 (TCC)
Legal expenses incurred by the taxpayer in successfully defending against charges brought under s. 239 arising out of his failure to report commission income from a business of selling electrical generators for a U.S. corporation, were non-deductible. Such expenses could not be characterized as "money spent to defend a normal business activity carried out in the course of business operations or which had been carried out for the purpose of gaining or producing income" (p. 1491). Rather than defending his way of doing business, he was defending a personal decision not to declare the United States income.
Bayer v. MNR, 91 DTC 1035 (TCC)
Legal expenses incurred by the taxpayer in obtaining a court order which reduced the amount of alimony payments which he was required to make to his former wife, were non-deductible. "A spouse enforcing a right to obtain a court order for reducing alimony payments is not enforcing an income producing right, but is enforcing a right to sue to diminish the amount to be paid by virtue of an obligation to pay" (p. 1037).
Pappas Estate v. MNR, 90 DTC 1646 (TCC)
Legal expenses incurred by an estate with an extensive portfolio of investments in connection with obtaining probate; determining the extent of the entitlement of various beneficiaries; managing and supervising the investments; devising and carrying out plans to minimize taxation of the estate, beneficiaries and companies within the group; and investing in liquid assets; were non-deductible.
National Starch and Chemical Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (1990), 93 T.C. 67
The petitioner, whose shares were traded on the NYSE, incurred legal fees of $490,000 and a fee of $2.2 million from Morgan Stanley (primarily for a fairness opinion) in connection with the friendly take-over bid of the petitioner by the Unilever Group pursuant to which shareholders of the petitioner had a choice between receiving cash or exchanging their shares on a rollover basis for shares of a Unilever company. These, and related fees, did not qualify for deduction under s. 162(a) of the Code as being "ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business":
"Petitioner's directors determined that it would be in petitioner's long-term interest to shift ownership of the corporate stock to Unilever. The expenditures in issue were incurred incident to that shift in ownership and, accordingly, lead to a benefit 'which could be expected to produce returns for many years in the future.' E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Co. v. United States, 432 F. 2d 1052, 1059 (3d), Cir. 1970. An expenditure which results in such a benefit is capital in nature."
Belair v. MNR, 89 DTC. 429 (TCC)
Legal and accounting fees which the individual taxpayer incurred in the enforcement of his rights under a shareholders' agreement, which culminated in the receipt by him of deemed dividends on the purchase for cancellation by the corporation of his common shares, were "like expenses incurred to collect rents, royalties or other income from property," and were fully deductible.
Les Laiteries Leclerc Inc. v. MNR, 71 DTC 702, [1971] Tax ABC 1061
Professional fees which were incurred for the purpose of a bond issue which did not take place, and which issue would have been the means of acquiring the assets of a company similar to the taxpayer, were non-deductible. Because the professional fees were to have assisted in acquiring the total assets of another company, they were not operating expenses and instead were paid on account of capital.
C.I.R. v. Carron Co. (1968), 45 T.C. 18 (H.L.)
The day-to-day conduct of the business of the taxpayer was significantly hampered by its 1773 charter, which limited its borrowing powers to £25,000, and contained restrictions on the transfer of shares coupled with stringent qualifications for voting that effectively precluded the management of the company by a salaried official with a status equivalent to that of a managing director. In order to obtain a supplementary royal charter which removed these restrictions on profitable trading, the company first had to pay £88,000 to two of its shareholders in settlement of their opposition to such a change, and then obtained the supplementary charter itself at a cost of £3,107.
The expenditures were deductible. In finding that the expenditures were incurred on income account, Lord Reid stated (p. 68):
"This money was spent to remove antiquated restrictions which were preventing profits from being earned. It created no new asset ... 'The benefit was essentially of a revenue character because the Company became able more easily to finance its day-to-day transactions, and more efficiently to carry on its day-to-day manufacture.'"
Morgan v. Tate & Lyle Ltd., [1955] A.C. 21 (H.L.)
A company engaged in a sugar refining business was entitled to deduct expenses of propaganda campaign directed against the nationalization of the sugar refining business, on the basis that such expenses were "wholly and exclusively laid out or expended for the purposes of the trade" within the meaning of rule 3(a) of the Rules applicable to Schedule D, Cases I and II. Lord Morton stated (p. 39):
"If the assets are seized, the company can no longer carry on the trade which has been carried on by the use of these assets. Thus the money is spent to preserve the very existence of the company's trade."
It was also noted (by Lord Reid at p. 55) that if the proposed nationalization had entailed an acquisition of the shares of the company rather than its assets, the expenditures would have been non-deductible.
Hallstroms Pty Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1946), 8 A.T.D. 190 (H.C.)
The taxpayer reorganized its affairs in order to commence manufacturing and selling a superior type of refridgerator upon the expiry of the patent for that refridgerator that had been granted to the competitor. In finding that legal fees incurred by the taxpayer in opposing a petition by the competitor to extend the life of the patent were deductible, Latham C.J. stated (at p. 191):
"A right enjoyed in common with all persons is not a capital asset of any single person ... . [E]xpenditure in the defence of a right enjoyed in common with all His Majesty's subjects is not expenditure incurred in obtaining anything. It is an outgoing of the business incurred in keeping the business going on the same basis as in the past, without any change in the constituent elements of the profit-yielding structure."
Archibald Thomson, Black and Co. Ltd. v. Batty (1919), 7 T.C. 158 (Ct. of Ses. (2nd Div.))
A company, which after a history of losses had become profitable, was precluded from paying dividends because of a substantial deficit. In order to permit the company to resume the payment of dividends, it incurred legal and other expenses in accomplishing a reduction of the capital of its issued shares. These expenses were found to have not been "made for the purposes of the trade of this Company, but for the purposes of distributing the profits of its trade, after these profits have been earned" (p. 162). Accordingly, the expenses were non-deductible.
Administrative Policy
22 May 2014 Ponoka Liason Meeting Roundtable Q. , 2014-0528451C6
This was a follow-up query on 2012-0437831E5, indicating that voluntary disclosure costs were not deductible, as they were neither incurred to earn income from business or property, nor in relation to an objection or appeal. After confirming this position, CRA stated:
However, where a taxpayer earns income from a business, the cost of making a voluntary disclosure relating to that business may be deductible as a cost of representation pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(cc).
17 October 2014 T.I. 2014-0532121E5 F - Frais professionnels - Divulgation volontaire
Are legal or accounting expenses incurred respecting a voluntary disclosure deductible? Before indicating that fees incurred once CRA indicates that it will reassess generally are deductible under s. 60(o), CRA stated (TaxInterpretations translation):
[P]rofessional fees incurred in this context are not intended to produce income, because the VD instead permits a taxpayer to correct omissions made in the context of dealings with the CRA. Consequently, the deduction of the professional fees incurred in this context is restricted by paragraph 18(1)(a). However…certain of the professional fees incurred in this context which are directly linked to the reporting of property or business income, such as expenses of preparing the tax returns, could be ["pourraient être"] deductible.
See summary under s. 60(o).
16 June 2014 STEP Roundtable Q. , 2014-0523061C6
In a discussion of common audit issues, CRA stated:
In document 2013-047756117 we provided advice on the deductibility of carrying charges (specifically legal and accounting expenses), with respect to an individual's T1 final return and an estate trust return. …
5 December 2012 Memorandum 2012-0451331I7 F - Déductibilité de frais juridiques
Legal expenses incurred by the individual taxpayer when X (likely, a corporation of which the taxpayer was a shareholder, although this is not clear) defaulted, were not deductible. CRA stated (TaxInterpretations translation):
As was decided in Byram and MacCallum, when legal expenses are incurred in order to obtain [sic, as a result of providing?] a guarantee respecting a debt of a corporation, the CRA is of the view that they are deductible as having been for the obtaining of necessary financing for the corporation so that it can continue its operations.
However, in this case, the legal expenses were incurred in order to contest and minimize the taxpayer's responsibility under the contract of guarantee. In such a situation, the legal expenses are not connected to operations which are necessary or incidental to the earning of income from a business of property These expenses instead are incurred in order to establish whether the taxpayer is liabile and not for the producing of income or for the disposition of property (namely, the debt in this case).
Other legal expenses incurred in an action to defend against a demand that the taxpayer assume a debt, with such defence then being abandoned, were non-deductible given the personal nature of the expenses.
27 February 2012 T.I. 2012-0435081E5
Legal and accounting fees associated with a business combination which would have been required to be capitalized under old Canadian GAAP but which, under Accounting Standards for Private Enterprises would be treated (per ASPE 1582.55) as deductible expenses nonetheless would be required to be treated as part of the cost of the capital property acquired.
31 March 2011 Memorandum 2011-0291701I7 -
Expenses incurred by a public corporation with respect to an unsuccessful bid to acquire another public company were capital expenditures on the basis that there was a plan to merge with the target's business and on the basis of "CRA's long-standing position that expenditures incurred in an unsuccessful transaction will be accorded the same treatment as if the transaction had been successfully completed." Such expenses were eligible capital expenditures.
However, expenses incurred by a corporation (i) in respect of a proposed combination with another corporation, and (ii) in responding to an unsolicited takeover bid, were deductible under s. 9. Respecting the first category of expenses, CRA stated:
The proposed XXX combination would appear to have been negotiated in circumstances that are very similar to those considered by the Tax Court in BJ Services, which found that the costs were deductible in computing income under subsection 9(1). While we believe that an argument could be made that these transaction costs were on account of capital as the proposed combination represented a capital transaction relating to the structure in which XXX 's business would be carried on, such an argument is contrary to the decisions in BJ Services and International Colin Energy.
Respecting the second category of expenses, it stated:
Based on established case law, including the decisions in British Columbia Power Corp. Ltd. v. MNR 67 DTC 5258, [1968] S.C.R. 17 and Boulangerie St-Augustin Inc. v. The Queen 95 DTC 164 (TCC); affirmed by 97 DTC 5012 (FCA), the costs incurred by XXX with respect to obtaining professional advice and communicating with its shareholders concerning the XXX and XXX offers would be deductible as current expenses....
20 June 2007 Memorandum 2007-023355
Professional fees (including fees for audit services) incurred by a Canadian-controlled private corporation in connection with a proposal to convert to an income trust that did not proceed, were found to be eligible capital expenditures. CRA noted that the Courts generally have found that "costs incurred for the creation of a business entity, structure or organization, or for the modification of such entity, structure or organization are capital in nature" and that " the purpose of the proposed conversion was to obtain an advantage of an enduring nature, including the elimination of the corporate level of tax and increasing the ability of the business to raise investment capital."
2006 APFF Roundtable Q. 21, 2006-0195981C6
Fees for legal opinions and fairness opinions obtained by a public corporation in connection with a proposed offer to repurchase a portion of its shares would be capital expenditures as such fees would be incurred in connection with a reshaping of the corporation's capital structure.
Similarly, fees paid for a fairness opinion obtained in connection with a proposed amalgamation of a corporation would be considered to be capital expenditures. CRA stated:
[M]erger costs are normally described as capital expenditures because such amounts are not expended as part of the money-earning process. These expenses rather have the effect of enlarging the structure within which the profits are earned, [with] the effect of modifying such structure permanently or in an enduring way. Finally, merger costs can be considered as expenditures made once and for all, with a view to bringing into existence an advantage of enduring benefit for the business of the merging corporations and for the business of the corporation resulting from the merger.
10 May 2004 Memorandum 2003-005362
Professional fees incurred by two corporations in connection with their merger and incurred after they decided to commit to the transaction would be eligible capital expenditures.
6 February 2002 T.I. 2001-010560
Discussion of the deductibility of professional fees incurred respecting advice on issues associated with a takeover or sale, advice on the tax treatment to the shareholders and carrying out any reorganizations necessary to facilitate the takeover. "Where Pubco fights a proposed take-over, the Agency expects that Pubco will make a reasonable allocation of costs between those required to meet its obligations under a Securities Act and/or Business Corporations Act, which are deductible, and those incurred to put a defence mechanism in place, which the Agency views as non-deductible."
4 October 1994 T.I. 5-942142 -
"Legal fees incurred prior to the commencement of a business and those included with amounts paid upon a court settlement relating to a proposed business are not deductible where the proposed business has never commenced.
13 May 1994 TI 940442 (CTO "Deductibility of Legal Fees")
Whether legal fees incurred in opposing efforts by a Medical Association to prevent a physician from practising medicine, as well as legal fees incurred with respect to defending criminal charges, will be deductible will turn on the relationship of the conduct in question to the taxpayer's income earning activities.
29 October 1991 Memorandum (Tax Window, No. 12, p. 13, ¶1557)
Cost incurred in obtaining an advance income tax ruling will be deductible if they relate to a business of the taxpayer and the transactions in question are of an income nature. It is RC's practice to accept the cost of obtaining a ruling as a cost relating to the business even though there may be arguments that the proposed transactions themselves do not relate to a business carried on by the taxpayer.
90 C.R. - Q15
In the determination of business or property income, legal, accounting and other similar expenses are representation, including expenses incurred in preparing and presenting an objection or appeal concerning a federal or provincial assessment, are generally deductible.
89 CR - Q10
"Costs incurred by a corporation in resisting a hostile takeover attempt are ordinarily incurred for the purpose of maintaining the ownership positions of its existing shareholders or the control position of its existing management ... These costs would therefore not be incurred for the purpose of gaining or producing income from a business or property of the corporation and consequently would fail to satisfy the purpose test in paragraph 18(1)(a) and paragraph 14(5)(b)."
81 CR - Q.40
The cost of winding-up a company cannot be said to be laid out to earn income and thus is not deductible either as a current operating expense or as an eligible capital expenditure.
IT-99R5 "Legal and Accounting Fees"
IT-143R3 "Meaning of Eligible Capital Expenditure"
Discussion of legal fees incurred in connection with reorganizations (para. 13), share acquisitions (para. 23).
IT-341R2 "Expenses of Issuing or Selling Shares, Units in a Trust, Interests in a Partnership or Syndicate, and Expenses of Borrowing Money" under "Expenses Incurred in the Course of an Issuance or Sale of Shares, Units or Interests" and under "Expenses Incurred in the Course of Borrowing Money"
Articles
Gabrielle St-Hilaire, "Extinguishing One Controversy While Stoking Another in Nadeau", 14 Canadian Current Tax, Vol. 14, No. 10, July 2004, p. 109.
David W. Smith, "Corporate Restructuring Issues: Public Corporations", 1990 Corporate Management Tax Conference Report, pp. 6:39-6:51
Discussion of deductibility of legal fees incurred in connection with take-over bids.
Commentary
As the two concepts are often addressed in an integrated manner in the jurisprudence, this commentary reviews whether professional fees are capital expenditures (whose deduction is prohibited by s. 18(1)(b)) as well as whether they are incurred for an income-producing purpose (as required by s. 18(1)(a)).
An expenditure incurred for the purpose of acquiring a capital asset or business as a going concern will be a capital expenditure even if the acquisition does not proceed ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Neonex"]Neonex[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-Rona"]Rona[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-Graham"]Graham Construction[/pin]). Following the [pin type="node_head" href="478-Dominion"]Dominion Natural Gas[/pin] case, an expenditure incurred in order to preserve a capital asset generally will be a capital expenditure ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Evans"]Evans[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-BPOil"]BP Oil[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-FarmersMutual"]Farmers[/pin]). Similarly, an expenditure that is incurred in order to increase the proceeds of disposition of a capital asset will generally be a capital expenditure ([pin type="node_head" href="478-BCPower"]BC Power[/pin]). The [pin type="node_head" href="478-Potash"]Potash[/pin] case seems to suggest that legal fees incurred for the purpose of accomplishing a beneficial corporate reorganization will be capital expenditures, even where the benefits of the reorganization will last only three years - although this case seems to be inconsistent with the proposition that if expenditures give rise to intangible benefits that last for less than approximately five years, this tends to support their being on income account ([pin type="node_head" href="539-BPAustralia"]BP Australia[/pin], see also [pin type="node_head" href="408-Canderel"]Canderel[/pin] and [pin type="node_head" href="408-CollegePark"]Toronto College Park[/pin]).
Expenditures incurred to maintain the income generated from a capital asset or another source of income generally will be on income account ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Evans"]Evans[/pin]). Accordingly, profesional fees incurred in order to maintain the right to continue in income-generating trade practices that are alleged to be illegal generally will be deductible ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Rolland"]Rolland[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-LDCaulk"]Caulk[/pin]). Similarly, legal fees incurred in defending practices which are alleged to infringe a trade mark likely will be deductible ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Kellogg"]Kellogg[/pin]). Expenditures incurred in order to avoid increased expenses for an income-generating operation, including (apparently) professional fees incurred to avoid impositions of excise taxes or foreign taxes on a business operation generally will be deductible ([pin type="node_head" href="478-ReadersDigest"]Reader's Digest[/pin], [pin type="node_head" href="478-PremiumIronOre"]Premium Iron Ore[/pin]).
Fees incurred in responding to a takeover bid for a public company so as to enhance shareholder value were found to be fully deductible on the basis that it is a necessary cost of a running a public company to incur investment dealer and other fees in responding to such a bid in accordance with the fiduciary obligations of the target's directors ([pin type="node_head" href="478-BJServices"]BJ Services[/pin], see also [pin type="node_head" href="478-Boulangerie"]Boulangerie[/pin]).
The reasonable costs incurred by a corporation in communicating respecting its affairs to its shareholders are properly a part of the carrying on of its business and, therefore, are deductible ([pin type="node_head" href="478-BCPower"]BC Power[/pin]). Accordingly, costs of preparing an information circular that was statutorily required to be provided to shareholders were deductible ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Boulangerie"]Boulangeire[/pin]).
Legal fees incurred by a corporation in defending a shareholder and director in a civil or criminal action generally will be deductible if losing such cases would have a significant adverse effect on its revenues ([pin type="node_head" href="478-Friedland"]Friedland[/pin]) whereas legal expenses incurred in defending an officer or director will not be so deductible if there is only a remote connection between the action and the corporation's business ([pin type="node_head" href="478-BorderChemical"]Border Chemical[/pin]).