Cases
The Queen v. Tallon, 2015 FCA 156
Before finding that the textual meaning of "medical service" specified in s. 118.2(2)(a) should inform the meaning of that term in ss. 118.2(2)(g) and (h), Ryer JA stated (at para. 34):
A contextual interpretative approach favours a consistent interpretation of that term in each of those provisions. As noted by Fish J. in R. v. Clark, 2005 SCC 2, [2005] S.C.J. No. 4 at para. 51, "Parliament could not have intended that identical words should have different meanings in two consecutive and related provisions of the very same enactment."
Confessions Productions Inc. v. The Queen (BC), 2014 DTC 5069 [at 6961], 2014 BCSC 813
The taxpayer produced a movie in Canada for which it would have qualified for B.C. film tax credits, except that its application therefor was not filed on a timely basis. The federal portion of the credits was allowed because the federal Minister ("MNR") and CRA applied a "deemed" filing date to the necessary documents. However, the same administrators did not apply the deemed filing date to the provincial application.
Davies J allowed the taxpayer's provincial claim. Although differently worded, the applicable federal and provincial provisions were substantively identical. Therefore, it was not open to the CRA officials to deny B.C. credits, as they had allowed the federal credits on the same facts. Davies J stated (at para. 143):
[T]he CRA and MNR effectively approbated and reprobated the same conduct by the Appellant and thereby reached inconsistent decisions by failing to apply the same considerations and deemed facts to both applications.
Lehigh Cement Ltd. v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 5058 [at 6849], 2014 FCA 103, aff'g 2013 DTC 1139 [at 740], 2013 TCC 176
In rejecting the Minister's claim that a specific anti-avoidance provision (s. 95(6)(b), contained in the subdivision i foreign affiliate rules rather than being included with the more general provisions in Part XVI) should be interpreted broadly so that it could be "applied in a variety of circumstances where a taxpayer has engaged in what the Minister considers to be abusive tax planning involving foreign corporations" (para. 62), Stratas JA stated (at para. 64) that this "creates the spectre of similarly-situated taxpayers being treated differently for no objective reason," and (at para. 67):
...I would be loath to interpret paragraph 95(6)(b) in a way that gives the Minister such an unlimited and ill-defined discretion - a standardless sweep - as to whether or not tax is owing, limited only by her view of unacceptability. It would be contrary to fundamental principle. It would also promote inconsistent and arbitrary application, the bane of consistency, predictability and fairness.
See Also
4145356 Canada Limited v. The Queen, 2011 DTC 1171 [at 937], 2011 TCC 220
The taxpayer acquired units in a Delaware limited partnership ("Crown Point"), whose other limited partner ("Altier") and whose general partner were Bank of America subsidiaries and which had elected to be classified as a corporation for purposes of the Code. In light of the right of the taxpayer to require Altier, which was the vendor of the units, to repurchase the units, the taxpayer's purchase of those units was characterized for purposes of the Code as a secured loan, so that the$400 million purchase price for the units was treated as a loan by the taxpayer to Altier, and the partnership distributions made by Crown Point to the taxpayer were treated as deductible interest by Altier. Crown Point had made a loan of $1.6 billion to another Bank of America subsidiary, and paid US corporate income tax on the interest income thereon. The taxpayer included its share of the Crown Point income (essentially this interest income) in computing its income for purposes of the Act, and claimed a foreign tax credit under s. 126(2) based on its share of the Crown Point US corporate tax for the year. The Minister's argued that the taxpayer was ineligible for a s. 126(2) foreign tax credit on the basis that the taxpayer did not itself pay any US income tax.
Webb J. found (at para. 28) that the word "paid" did not require a corresponding liability of the payor to make the payment. Furthermore (at para. 37):
Since the income of the Appellant is its share of the income of Crown Point (from the same sources of income), in determining whether the Appellant paid foreign taxes in relation to this income, the amount of foreign taxes paid by the Appellant should be its share of the foreign taxes paid by Crown Point in relation to that same income, even though Crown Point is a separate legal entity under the laws of Delaware. The Appellant would bear the economic burden of such taxes as such taxes would have to be deducted from the amount that could be distributed to the Appellant.
Bozzer v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 5025 [at 6612], 2010 FC 139, rev'd 2011 DTC 5106 [at 5922], 2011 FCA 186
Shore J. found that he should apply a decision of the Federal Court of Appeal on the meaning of "taxation year" in s. 127(5) even though that section had since been repealed, and then stated (at para. 35):
The Applicant argues that subsection 220(3.1) of the ITA is ambiguous and therefore, it should use the residual presumption in favour of the taxpayer to construe it in favour of the taxpayer. While the residual presumption is a tool at the Court's disposal, the Court takes note of the ruling in Notre-Dame de Bons-Secours [[1994] 3 S.C.R. 3, 50 A.C.W.S. (3d) 541] where the Supreme Court held that the residual presumption is exceptional and should only be used when a court must choose between two valid interpretations. The Supreme Court also cited the case of Symes, [[1993] 4 S.C.R. 695], and held that "[o]nly a reasonable doubt, not resolved by the ordinary rules of interpretation, will be settled by recourse to the residual presumption in favour of the taxpayer" (Notre-Dame de Bon Secours at p. 20).
The Court of Appeal accepted the taxpayer's submission (at para. 12) that subsection 220(3.1) "permits the Minister to exercise his discretion to cancel interest accrued in any taxation year ending within ten years before the taxpayer's application for relief, regardless of when the underlying tax debt arose." Stratas J.A. noted (at para. 18) that, taken in isolation, "interest... payable... in respect of a taxation year" was ambiguous. Furthermore, the interpretation at trial was (para. 36) "contrary to the purpose of subsection 220(3.1): to allow taxpayers to ask for relief against penalties and interest and to allow the Minister to grant such relief where, in his view of the overall fairness of the situation, it is appropriate to do so."