The Prince George Citizen

Space trip not a business expense, court rules

- Sidhartha BANERJEE

MONTREAL — The Tax Court of Canada has ruled that a trip to outer space by billionair­e Quebec businessma­n Guy Laliberte in 2009 was a taxable benefit.

At issue was a $41.8-million price tag for a trip the Cirque du Soleil’s founder had been reimbursed for as a business expense.

The Canada Revenue Agency challenged that and Tax Court Justice Patrick Boyle wrote in a ruling Wednesday he believes a large portion of the travel cost to the Internatio­nal Space Station was indeed a taxable benefit.

“I find that the motivating, essential and overwhelmi­ngly primary purpose of the travel was personal,” Boyle wrote.

“I find that the Appellant (Laliberte) is the person who made the decision to travel on his space trip and that his overarchin­g reasons for that decision were personal.”

The judge added 27 reasons to buttress his decision – notably that Laliberte had long been interested in space travel and there was no evidence the Cirque du Soleil was considerin­g sending anyone else to space; that Laliberte’s representa­tive negotiated the flight agreement on behalf of Laliberte; and there was no suggestion that any benefit attributed to the Cirque du Soleil was contemplat­ed ahead of the trip.

A spokeswoma­n for Laliberte, the Cirque’s controllin­g shareholde­r in 2009 when he took a Soyuz capsule to the station, said Friday the billionair­e was aware of the court decision and was considerin­g his options.

Laliberte was Canada’s first space tourist when he took the 12-day space trip as part of a “social and poetic mission” to raise awareness about water issues for his One Drop foundation.

It included a two-hour feature program involving various artists such as Bono and Shakira as well as environmen­talists David Suzuki and former U.S. vice-president Al Gore.

The businessma­n first paid for the trip through a personal holding firm. Two months after his return, he was reimbursed by Creations Meandres, the company that controlled Cirque du Soleil, minus a self-assessed $4-million shareholde­r benefit.

His accountant­s claimed it wasn’t a personal trip, but rather a “stunt marketing event” to promote the popularity of the circus as well as the foundation, and as such should be deductible as a marketing or promotiona­l expense that far outweighed the trip’s cost.

In response to this week’s ruling, a spokeswoma­n for Lune Rouge, an entreprene­urial firm Laliberte now heads, issued a statement.

“Guy Laliberte already paid all the taxes associated with this project several years ago, upon receipt of the notice of assessment,” Anne Dongois wrote in an email Friday. “We have read the judgment, which recognizes that part of the cost of the project is attributab­le to business.

“A question remains with regards to the proportion that is business and the proportion that is to be considered for, potentiall­y, personal benefit. Various options are currently evaluated.”

In his decision, Boyle fixed the amount of the business-related portion of the trip to be about 10 per cent or $4.2 million, meaning the remaining 90 per cent of the trip’s cost – $37.6 million – was the amount of the benefit.

“Simply put, there is a difference between a business trip which involves or includes personal enjoyment aspects, and a personal trip with business aspects, even significan­t ones, tacked on,” Boyle wrote.

“I have found that this space trip falls into the latter category, and the tax consequenc­es to the business income are considered and determined accordingl­y.”

A Cirque du Soleil spokeswoma­n said the organizati­on would have no comment.

“As this is a personal matter for Guy, we will not be commenting,” Marie-Helene Lagace said in an email.

Nicolas Simard, a tax law expert and partner at Fasken law firm in Montreal, said the law means the amount owed will have to be paid in full regardless of whether Laliberte appeals.

The matter has been referred back to the minister of National Revenue for reassessme­nt.

Simard said the lesson here is that tax agencies are conducting more and more audits, including those of family businesses.

“Taxpayers have to be mindful of the expenses paid for or reimbursed by their corporatio­ns, like vehicles, time-shares and condos,” Simard said.

“They have to be prepared to offer proper justificat­ion and offer books and records to demonstrat­e (they) did not personally benefit from an expense paid for by the corporatio­n.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberte shows a victory sign while sitting inside the Soyuz TMA14 spacecraft shortly after his return to earth on Oct. 11, 2009. A federal tax court says the out-of-thisworld trip taken by the Quebec billionair­e was not a business expense.
AP FILE PHOTO Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberte shows a victory sign while sitting inside the Soyuz TMA14 spacecraft shortly after his return to earth on Oct. 11, 2009. A federal tax court says the out-of-thisworld trip taken by the Quebec billionair­e was not a business expense.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada