
Professionals
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Mara Properties Ltd. (Appellant) v. Her Majesty
the Queen (Respondent)
96 DTC 6309
Supreme Court of Canada
May 21, 1996
(Court File No. 24684.)
Deductions -- Business losses -- Corporate taxpayer a real estate developer
realizing a loss on its disposition of land acquired from its subsidiary on
the winding-up thereof -- Whether such land forming part of taxpayer's trading
inventory -- Whether taxpayer entitled to compute loss on disposition of land
using actual cost thereof to its subsidiary -- Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985,
Chapter 1 (5th Supp.), ss. 9(1), 18(1)(a), 88(1)(a), 88(1)(c); 88(1.1)(e) and
245(1).
In its 1982 tax return, the corporate taxpayer, a real estate developer, reported
a loss arising from the sale of land ("the land") which it had acquired
from one of its subsidiaries, F Ltd., upon the winding-up of the latter. In
computing this loss, the taxpayer had deducted from its proceeds of disposition
of the land the deemed cost thereof under paragraph 88(1)(a)(iii) of the Act.
This figure was the actual cost of the land to F Ltd., which was also a real
estate development company. In allowing the taxpayer's appeal from the Minister's
disallowance of its loss claim, the Tax Court of Canada found that subsection
88(1) of the Act expressly applied, notwithstanding any other provision of the
Act (93 DTC 1449). In the Tax Court's view, therefore, subsection 9(1) and paragraph
18(1)(a) of the Act did not preclude the taxpayer from computing the loss in
issue as it had. In addition, the Tax Court found that, although the transaction
was tax-driven, there was no sham involved, so that the "artificial reduction"
rules of section 245 of the Act (as they were then worded) were also inapplicable.
The Crown's appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal (McDonald, J.A. dissenting)
was allowed (95 DTC 5168). That Court found that the land had not become part
of the taxpayer's inventory, so that the resulting loss on the taxpayer's disposition
thereof was not a deductible business loss. The taxpayer appealed to the Supreme
Court of Canada.
Held: The taxpayer's appeal was allowed. The conclusions reached
by the Tax Court and by McDonald, J.A. of the Federal Court of Appeal were the
correct ones. The land retained its character as inventory in the taxpayer's
hands. The judgment of the Tax Court was restored accordingly.
DOMINION TAX CASES
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