Toronto Star

Quick home flipping could pique the interest of the CRA

- Bob Aaron Bob Aaron is a Toronto real estate lawyer and a contributi­ng columnist for the Star. He can be reached at bob@aaron.ca or on Twitter: @bobaaron2

An interestin­g case from the Tax Court of Canada last fall explores the issue of how many times a taxpayer can flip personal residences during a short period of time before the government will tax the profits as income rather than tax-free capital gains.

Rick Hansen, a builder, and his spouse, Tania Weil, sold five houses in the Ottawa area over six years between 2006 and 2012. Their total profit from the sales came to almost $1 million, and the minister of National Revenue reassessed Hansen for the total amount on the basis that it was business income.

Under Canadian law, any profit from the sale of a principal residence is tax-free. When filing his tax returns, Hansen took the position, with advice from his accountant, that the profits were exempt from tax.

In addition to the taxes, Hansen was also assessed penalties for not declaring the income.

Hansen appealed the assessment at a Tax Court of Canada hearing in June 2019.

The court took 14 months to release its decision in September 2020.

Hansen successful­ly argued that reassessme­nts for 2007, ’08 and ’09 were barred by law since too much time had elapsed.

Typically, Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has three years from issuing a notice of assessment to a taxpayer to reassess the tax returns, but the time limit is extended if the government can prove a careless mistake or misreprese­ntation.

Since Hansen had consulted his accountant when filing his returns for 2007, ’08 and ’09, the court found there was no careless mistake or misreprese­ntation. Hansen and his family had actually lived in the three houses sold in 2006, ’07 and ’08, and the court ruled that he was entitled to the principal residence exemption.

In 2011 and 2012, Hansen and his wife bought and sold two more houses.

The final house was sold in 2012, when constructi­on of their current house was completed.

The Tax Court ruled that Hansen dealt with the fourth and fifth houses in a “businessli­ke way,” since the couple planned to move to the sixth one when constructi­on was completed. As a result, the profit from those houses was held to be income, but since Hansen’s wife was a co-owner, he was assessed on half of the net proceeds.

In reading the case, it appears that Canada Revenue took an aggressive approach, including assessing Hansen with his wife’s share of the profits, and calling the couple’s neighbours at trial in an attempt to discredit their testimony.

Writing about this case in the Lawyer’s Daily recently, tax lawyer Anna Malazhavay­a summarizes four takeaways:

1. CRA cannot reassess taxpayers beyond the three-year limitation period if their filing position was reasonable and based on profession­al advice.

2. It seems that receiving incorrect profession­al advice is better than receiving no advice at all.

3. CRA can be very resourcefu­l in efforts to verify evidence. “So, never lie to the CRA,” Malazhavay­a says.

4. Consult a good tax profession­al.

To this advice, I would add the caution that taxpayers who serially buy and sell homes, taking untaxed profit to move on to the next house, will eventually come under the scrutiny of the CRA.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Because an accountant was consulted, an Ottawa-area man was found by tax court to not have made a careless mistake or have misreprese­nted his situation in his tax returns, Bob Aaron writes.
DREAMSTIME Because an accountant was consulted, an Ottawa-area man was found by tax court to not have made a careless mistake or have misreprese­nted his situation in his tax returns, Bob Aaron writes.
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