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Beware the tax nightmare disguised as a gift : CRA SOTW
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Alan Baggett
2013-06-25 13:50:44 UTC
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Beware the tax nightmare disguised as a gift : CRA SOTW

TONY WILSON
Vancouver — Special to The Globe and Mail
PublishedTuesday, Jun. 04 2013, 5:00 AM EDT
Last updatedTuesday, Jun. 04 2013, 9:38 AM EDT

There are countless things to keep in mind when you’re a small-business owner dealing with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). It explains why accountants and tax lawyers are usually so busy advising their clients about the perils of the Income Tax Act and the benefits of remaining on the right side of the CRA.

One of the many perils involves gifts that successful entrepreneurs or other business people might make to family members, say for a first house or a wedding, particularly if – at the time the gift was made – the entrepreneur was offside with the CRA and owed tax.

It is the recipient of the gift who may pay the real price.

Vancouver tax lawyer Jeff Glasner likes to explain the scenario and its ramifications in these terms: Let’s say “Mandy” is raised by her mother because her father abandoned them years before. Whether guilt made him do it or not, Mandy’s father “gifts” her $100,000 for a dream wedding. The problem is, at the time, her father and his unincorporated business owed the CRA money.

Years later, Mr. Glasner says, the ramifications could play out this way: Mandy is pregnant with baby No. 3, her husband has been laid off, and the small business she owns is struggling. A letter comes in the mail from the CRA saying Mandy is now responsible for $100,000 of her father’s tax debts.

Have a nice day.

Why? Her father’s small business was on the rocks when he made the gift, and he owed the CRA a lot of money when he paid for the wedding. It doesn’t matter that she wasn’t aware at the time. It doesn’t mater that she was raised by her mother and had little contact with her father.

Regardless of her knowledge, Mandy became jointly and severally responsible for her father’s tax liabilities the moment she received his gift. To collect on this liability, the CRA may put a lien against her home, garnish her pay cheques and/or freeze and empty her bank accounts.

Section 160 of the Income Tax Act says that upon receiving a gift, a person becomes liable for the tax debts of the related gift giver to the lesser of the amount of the giver’s tax debt and the amount of the gift. Mr. Glasner says there are three primary defences used to argue against an assessment under Section 160. First, Mandy’s father didn’t actually owe the taxes. Second, he owed Mandy money when he gave her the gift, meaning his “gift” was not a gift at all, but a repayment. And third, the gift was not worth as much as the CRA says it was.

Mr. Glasner says there are many activities that small-business owners can get involved in to trigger potential exposure under Section 160. These include but are in no way limited to situations where:

• The tax-debtor husband takes his name off the title of the house he owns jointly with his wife.
• The tax-debtor wife makes mortgage payments on the family home that is solely in the husband’s name.
• The tax-debtor corporation pays a dividend to an individual who on his or her own (or combined with relatives), has a controlling position in the corporation.

Mr. Glasner says these kinds of assessments are very common as the CRA is under increasing pressure to collect unpaid tax debts. As well, there is no time limit to the CRA’s ability to instigate a Section 160 assessment, so an individual may never have the comfort of feeling totally in the clear about a transfer from a family member, even if it happened a long time ago.

Mr. Glasner suggests that when the hypothetical Mandy got the letter in the mail from the CRA, she should have seeked professional advice as soon as possible. This could have at least bought her some time as the process allows a short period for defences to be presented prior to any formal assessments. Mr. Glasner says it’s often during this “pre-assessment” stage that a tax lawyer is in the best position to make the matter go away.

In any event, the possibility of receiving a letter in the mail under Section 160 should be a wake-up call to small business owners who want to give gifts to family members when they have outstanding tax liabilities.
It’s also a wake-up call to recipients when a gift might not be a gift at all, but a tax nightmare.

Tony Wilson is a franchising, licensing and intellectual property lawyer at Boughton Law Corp. in Vancouver, he is an adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University (SFU), and he is the author of two books: Manage Your Online Reputation, and Buying a Franchise in Canada. His opinions do not reflect those of the Law Society of British Columbia, SFU or any other organization.


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Canuck57
2013-06-30 18:50:09 UTC
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Post by Alan Baggett
Beware the tax nightmare disguised as a gift : CRA SOTW
TONY WILSON
Vancouver — Special to The Globe and Mail
PublishedTuesday, Jun. 04 2013, 5:00 AM EDT
Last updatedTuesday, Jun. 04 2013, 9:38 AM EDT
There are countless things to keep in mind when you’re a small-business owner dealing with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). It explains why accountants and tax lawyers are usually so busy advising their clients about the perils of the Income Tax Act and the benefits of remaining on the right side of the CRA.
Yep, so much so it isn't for many worth doing business in Canada. So
complex it is very expensive to deal with it. Part of why retail costs
are high too, as this byzantine tax regime costs a lot to deal with.
Post by Alan Baggett
One of the many perils involves gifts that successful entrepreneurs or other business people might make to family members, say for a first house or a wedding, particularly if – at the time the gift was made – the entrepreneur was offside with the CRA and owed tax.
It is the recipient of the gift who may pay the real price.
Vancouver tax lawyer Jeff Glasner likes to explain the scenario and its ramifications in these terms: Let’s say “Mandy” is raised by her mother because her father abandoned them years before. Whether guilt made him do it or not, Mandy’s father “gifts” her $100,000 for a dream wedding. The problem is, at the time, her father and his unincorporated business owed the CRA money.
Years later, Mr. Glasner says, the ramifications could play out this way: Mandy is pregnant with baby No. 3, her husband has been laid off, and the small business she owns is struggling. A letter comes in the mail from the CRA saying Mandy is now responsible for $100,000 of her father’s tax debts.
Rightfully so too as this is tax evasion. Mafia does this all the time,
very little if any is in Rizzuto's name. The idea is to get the money
in a place CRA can't get it.

In this case, he shifted money to the wedding knowing in time CRA was
going going get it anways.

It is "family" fraud practiced all the time.

Politicians even use it. Get some insider info, have the wife, brother
or parents, even kids invest on the insider tip but because the
politician didn't invest, it looks kosher...unless you look at the
relationships. Get some cash, get family members to pay the bills as if
it isn't in your name, it isn't going to be tracked.

Its why the mafia has family members owning a funeral business, at arms
length they are free to do business without Rizzuto Sr. liabilities.
They even profit buy interning their own.

So in my books, yes, go get the money. Fact is Glasner's tax
criminality setup his own offspring with a tax liability.

Pay up cheats!

But does also highlight the CRA double standard. These people are small
enough and without political connections so easy to prosecute. That is
why Rizzuto "family" businesses operate with impunity. Between judges
on the take and enforcers, they can fix CRA good.

One rule for rich and powerful, another rule for commoners.
--
Liberal-socialism is a great idea so long as the credit is good and
other people pay for it. When the credit runs out and those that pay
for it leave, they can all share having nothing but debt and discontentment.
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