Archive for the ‘Asset Planning’ Category

Lana Li
Friday, April 1st, 2011    Posted by Lana Li (posts)

In companion rulings made February 18, 2011, the Supreme Court of Canada clarified the law relating to property division resulting from the breakdown of a common law relationship: Kerr v Baranow; Vanasse v Séguin, 2011 SCC 10.

The Court first noted that common law partners’ rights were traditionally based on the principles of resulting trust and unjust enrichment.

Under the traditional analysis, a resulting trust can arise in two situations: the gratuitous transfer of property from one partner to the other, or a couple’s joint contribution to the acquisition of property, where title has been registered in the name of only one of them. An unjust enrichment claimant must traditionally establish three distinct elements: an enrichment, a corresponding deprivation, and the absence of a juristic reason for the enrichment.

The Supreme Court rejected common past practice where courts have required the claiming partner to show a direct connection between his or her own financial or other efforts and the acquisition of the property that came to be in the other’s name. It was held that this “fee-for-service” calculation fails to reflect the reality of the lives of many domestic partners and is inconsistent with the inherent flexibility of unjust enrichment and with the courts’ approach to equitable remedies.

The court substituted a more “common sense” analysis for this rigid approach to quantifying compensation, stating at para. 69: “[T]he legal consequences of the breakdown of a domestic relationship should reflect realistically the way people live their lives. It should not impose on them the need to engage in an artificial balance sheet approach which does not reflect the true nature of the relationship”.

The courts should, however, continue to consider if a share of the property should be awarded (using the principle of constructive trust) or whether a monetary award is sufficient. Where a monetary award is to be made, the courts’ “common sense” analysis now requires a consideration of whether or not there was a “joint family venture” to which both partners contributed.
. When examining whether a relationship is a “joint family venture”, the courts are to review the evidence under four broad headings: mutual effort; economic integration; actual intent; and priority of the family. Once the “joint family venture” is established, the courts can then consider the net wealth that has accumulated proportionate to the claimant’s contributions. Thus, there must be a link between contributions and the accumulation of wealth.

In the Kerr case, the plaintiff was unsuccessful in establishing an entitlement to one-half of the wealth accumulated during the relationship. She was not able to show that the defendant had been unjustly enriched at her expense, that their relationship constituted a joint family venture, and that her contributions were linked to the generation of wealth during the relationship.” The parties kept their financial affairs separate.

In the Vanesse case, however, the couple had been working collaboratively towards common goals. They jointly raised children together and acquired wealth together. The court took into account, among other things, their economic integration evinced by a joint bank account and by the property being jointly registered in their names.

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Posted by Lana Li (posts) | Filed under Asset Planning, Family Business |
Robert Ward
Friday, April 23rd, 2010    Posted by Robert Ward (posts)

Q:  I live in Canada and am a Canadian citizen.  If I purchase a property in the United States will I be subject to United States taxes?

A: Yes.  If the US property which you own is rented, you will be subject to US income taxation on the rental income.  Even if you use the US property exclusively as a vacation residence, any US property owned at death will be subject to US estate taxation.

Q: How can I be subject to US income taxation when the expenses I am paying (for example, real property taxes, maintenance and upkeep, and mortgage interest) exceed the rental income I receive?

A: Absent special election, rents received by a person who is not a citizen or resident of the United States are subject to a withholding tax imposed at a 30% rate on the gross rental income (without reduction for otherwise deductible expenses associated with the property).

Q: How can I avoid the 30% withholding tax?

A: The United States revenue laws allow owners of US real estate who are not citizens or residents of the United States to elect to be treated as engaged in a US trade or business.  The election creates an annual obligation to file a US income tax return but allows the non-US investor to compute his or her US income tax liability on a net basis (reducing gross rental income by deductible expenses including depreciation).

Q: If I do not lease or rent my property to others, do I have any US tax obligations?

A: Yes.  If at your death you own US real estate, you will be subject to a US estate tax.

Q: How is the US estate tax different than the tax which I pay to Canada at my death?

A: US estate tax is different in many respects from Canada’s deemed disposition at death tax.  Two of the most important differences are, first, the rates at which US estate taxes are imposed: Federal rates range from 18% to 45%, plus the state in which the property is located may also impose a state estate tax.  Second, US estate taxes are assessed on the entire fair market value of the property.  In contrast, Canada’s deemed disposition at death tax only taxes the gain that would be realized if the property were sold.

Q: I can avoid the taxes that I would otherwise pay to the Canada Revenue Authority at my death simply by leaving the property which I own to my spouse.  Will this avoid US estate taxes, as well?

A: No, unless your spouse is a US citizen.

Q: Are there any strategies which will allow me to avoid US estate taxes?

A: Yes.  However, taking advantage of these strategies requires planning.  In order for that planning to be successful, in many cases it must be undertaken before the US property is purchased.

Q: How can I find out what I should do to avoid US income taxes and US estate taxes?

A: It is imperative that you consult a tax advisor experienced in US tax matters, preferably a lawyer or accountant with a practice based in the United States that advises non-US persons regarding ownership of US real estate.

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