2013-0496461E5 Non-resident donor
Please note that the following document, although believed to be correct at the time of issue, may not represent the current position of the CRA. Prenez note que ce document, bien qu'exact au moment émis, peut ne pas représenter la position actuelle de l'ARC.
Principal Issues: Whether a non-resident who elects under subsection 118.1(6) in respect of a donation of taxable Canadian property is required to file a Canadian tax return in the year of the donation.
Position: Yes.
Reasons: In order for the taxpayer to designate an amount in respect of the gift for purposes of the 118.1(6) election, the amount must be designated in the individual’s income tax return for the year in which the gift is made.
Author:
Basso, Denise
Section:
118.1(5.4) and (6), 116, 248(1)
XXXXXXXXXX
2013-049646
Denise Basso
416 973-0032
July 8, 2015
Dear XXXXXXXXXX:
Re: Non-resident donor electing under subsection 118.1(6)
We are writing in response to your letter dated June 5, 2013, in which you ask whether a non-resident individual who donates undeveloped land located in Canada to a prescribed donee, within the meaning of that term as set out in section 3504 of the Income Tax Regulations, or to a registered charity, within the meaning of that term as used in the definition of “qualified donee” in subsection 149.1(1) of the Income Tax Act (the “Act”), would be required to file a Canadian tax return if they designate an amount under subsection 118.1(6) in respect of the resulting disposition, such that no Part I tax is payable in Canada by the non-resident. Although not clear from your letter, we have assumed for these purposes that the land is considered capital property of the non-resident individual.
Our Comments
This technical interpretation provides general comments about the provisions of the Act and related legislation (where referenced). It does not confirm the income tax treatment of a particular situation involving a specific taxpayer but is intended to assist you in making that determination. The income tax treatment of particular transactions proposed by a specific taxpayer will only be confirmed by this Directorate in the context of an advance income tax ruling request submitted in the manner set out in Information Circular IC 70-6R6, Advance Income Tax Rulings and Technical Interpretations.
Under subsection 116(1) and/or subsection 116(3) of the Act, every non-resident person who disposes of taxable Canadian property (“TCP”) must, unless the property is described in subsection 116(5.2) or is “excluded property” as defined in subsection 116(6), notify the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”) of the disposition, and provide certain prescribed information by no later than 10 days after the disposition. Undeveloped land situated in Canada meets paragraph (a) of the definition of “taxable Canadian property” in subsection 248(1), and is not property described in subsection 116(5.2) or “excluded property” as defined in subsection 116(6) of the Act.
For purposes of the notification and information required under subsection 116(1), subsection 116(5.1) provides that when a non-resident person disposes of TCP by way of gift inter vivos or to a person with whom the non-resident person was not dealing at arm’s length for no proceeds of disposition, or for proceeds of disposition less than the fair market value of the property at the time the non-resident disposes of it, the proceeds of disposition means the fair market value of the property immediately before the disposition.
Further information in respect of this process, including the use of Form T2062, Request by a Non-Resident of Canada for a Certificate of Compliance Related to the Disposition of Taxable Canadian Property to provide the information required by subsection 116(1), is available through the CRA website at http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tx/nnrsdnts/cmmn/dsp/menu-eng.html.
Where the non-resident individual intends to make a designation under subsection 118.1(6) in respect of the disposition of taxable Canadian property, in addition to filing Form T2062 with the CRA in accordance with subsection 116(1), the individual should provide a statement indicating the intention to make a designation under subsection 118.1(6) in the year of disposition stating the amount to be so designated, together with a letter from the charity or prescribed donee confirming an undertaking that the property is to be donated by the non-resident.
Further to this process, the CRA will issue a T2064, Certificate – Proposed Disposition of Property by a Non-Resident of Canada (“Certificate of Compliance”) to the non-resident where the conditions of subsection 116(1) are met, and where the required payment on account of tax or acceptable security is provided. In circumstances such as you have described, where no Part I tax would be assessed as a result of the taxpayer’s subsection 118.1(6) designation, no payment or security would be required.
In your letter, you referred to paragraph 59 of Information Circular IC72-17R6, Procedures concerning the disposition of taxable Canadian property by non‑residents of Canada – Section 116, which states that a non-resident vendor may not be obligated to file a Canadian tax return where certain criteria are satisfied, one of which is that the non-resident has no Part I tax payable for the year. You have asked whether this relief would be available in the circumstances described, where the amount of Part I tax payable is contingent on the designation of an amount pursuant to subsection 118.1(6) in the non-resident’s tax return for the year of the disposition. In this regard, it is important to note that the supporting information provided to the CRA by a non-resident individual in conjunction with the T2062 filing process does not eliminate the non-resident individual’s obligation to in fact make the designation under subsection 118.1(6). Such designation can only be made by attaching it to a return of income filed by the taxpayer for the year in which the disposition is made. In this respect, in the absence of the designation, subparagraph 69(1)(b)(ii) of the Act would apply to deem the proceeds of disposition of the property to the non-resident individual to be equal to the fair market value of the property for the purpose of computing the taxpayer’s taxable capital gain.
Therefore, in situations where the amount of Part I tax resulting from the disposition of TCP by a non-resident individual is dependent upon an amount designated by the individual in a tax return for the year of the gift pursuant to subsection 118.1(6), the individual is required to produce a tax return in order to support intention that was indicated in the taxpayer’s Form T2062. In the absence of a duly-filed designation resulting in no Part I tax payable by the non-resident individual, such tax would be otherwise assessed in respect of the disposition of property.
We trust our comments are of assistance.
Yours truly,
Olli Laurikainen, CPA, CA
Manager
for Division Director
International Division
Income Tax Rulings Directorate
Legislative Policy and Regulatory Affairs Branch
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