Property ownership in US -
Subject: Property ownership in US
Expert: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday January 22, 2008
Time: 01:18 AM -0000
QUESTION:
Married same-sex couple living in Canada buying land in
Florida. What is the best way to title the land to protect the
Canadian in the event of death and minimize taxes in the
event of selling this asset?
david ingram replies:
In spite of a well-organized Gay and Lesbian Community in Florida, neither the State or Federal Governemtns are officially recognizing your status at the moment for tax, inheritance or divorce as i understand it at the moment. I could be corrected by someone mnore up to date.
However, as non-residents of the US, you can NOT file a joint return anyway so the tax rate as individuals filing a 1040NR are the same as a single peson in the US.
Put it in Joint tenancy with right of survivorship.
If you wish to rent the property out, you can NOT do any work on the property. If you are not going to rent it out, you do any and all repairs, remodelling, improvements, etc.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jan 6, 2008.
Rentals in the USA.
QUESTION that came to me from
ASK AN EXPERT at www.jurock.com
We just
purchased property in Spokane Washington( a 4 plex apartments)
We plan on
renting out 3 of the units and keeping one. I was told by the border
crossing inspector,
that I have to hire a rental agency in order to rent out
the apartments.
and I also have to have a property manger full
time..
We will be at our apartment approx 2 times a month..
So we do not
need a property manager.
Do you know if this true,, or please direct me to
the correct person that would be able to help me.
Thanks for your
time.
----------------------------------------------------------
david ingram
replies:
You need a property manager if you do not want the strong
possibility of going to jail for a few days before being deported and then not
allowed back in the USA. For a story about US Immigrations hell for a Holiday
Inn Manager, try
http://apostille.us/news/local_holiday_inn_express_manager_in_jail_on_immigration_charges;_husband_fights_for_her_return.shtml
or how about a married woman's
ordeal in Georgia for a traffic violation at
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=f4f1d2fb-07ae-4560-8f6c-703acf8146fb&k=0
Crossing the
border when you have an ad running to show the premises and saying you are going
down to spend the weekend in your holiday home (i.e lying to the HOMELAND
Security official) could result in seizure of your vehicle and a ban for up to
10 years under their ER (Expedited Removal) process. In other words, it is
more serious to lie to the guard at the border than it is to do the
work.
You 'could' actually show the property for rent, but you can
NOT write out a contract for rent or collect a single rent cheque (check) or
cash for rent in the United States. There is nothing new about this. The
first time I ran into it was in 1972 or 1973.
If you are physically
there, you can NOT cut the grass, shovel the sidewalk, paint or decorate or
repair or fix or remodel or improve or take out the garbage for any part of the
rental property.
You can paint and clean your own unit if it is NEVER
rented or intended to be rented. You can not paint and clean up getting the
property ready for rent so DO NOT make the mistake of thinking you can live in
one, clean it up and remodel it and then rent it out and do the same for another
one and then another one and another one. If you do this and one of your tenants
(who maybe doesn't like you because you evicted them or told them to turn their
strereo down when you happen to be in town or for any other reason) read my
website, (or the uscis website) he or she would find out that you can NOT do
this stuff and could phone the Homeland Security office or write an anonymous
letter and you could be arrested in November 2008 for something you did in
December 2007.
This may seem unreal, but in US terms, working
without a visa is just as serious in law as the spontaneous robbing of a
convenience store and the penalties can be worse. Think of those nightly
news shows with 28 illegal Mexican or Guatamelan citizens being stuffed into
Paddy wagons on the Arizona border. This is not a racist comment but with the
Mexican illegal immigrants, bing rounded up and shipped back across the border
is a way of life with no social stigma. For a nice clean living Canadian,
being thown into an immigration detention cell for taking money for rent is a
devestating experience. In one case, a mother and her son were thrown into jail
for 5 days in Phoenix when she went to Phoenix from White Rock BC. Her
husband owned 18 units and HAD a property manager. Unfortunately, he also
died in the arms of that female property manager and his widow then fired the
property manager and she and her 20 year old son went to Phoenix to collect the
rent and hire another property manager.
The property manager (who knew
the law as everyone in Arizona does) phoned Homeland Security who showed up and
arrested mother and son and threw them into the notorious Phoenix Immigration
hell with some 300 other illegals. To rub salt into the widow's wounds, the
property manager ended up with the property because she was a second mortgage
holder on the property and the property fell into default because of the widow's
cash flow troubles, largely because she could not go to Phoenix to hire another
property manager.
For instance, for 'you', this kind of arrest
could result in imprisonment for a usual five days in a US immigration jail
until you posted $5,000 bail each and then being banished from the US for five
to ten years.
It does not stop there. This type of
conviction would stop you getting on an airplane which stopped in the USA on the
way to Mexico. AND, under new US laws that have been proposed but
not yet actually put in place, the arrest and banning would stop your Nov 6 trip
to Cancun because people in this position will not even be allowed on commercial
airliners that are flying over any part of the US. To get to Cancun, you would
have to fly from Calgary or Vancouver to London England and then back to Mexico
City and 'then' to Cancun and reverse it to get home.
This may be
overkill but 'You' are / were lucky that the inspector gave you the correct
advice BEFORE you put your foot in it.
By the way, for income tax You
ALSO HAVE TO FILE A 1040NR US TAX RETURN WITH A SCHEDULE E AND A SCHEDULE
4562 EACH. Then the same income gets put on Schedule T776 of your
Canadian return. If you have paid tax to the US, you will claim it as a
credit on Canadian forms T2209 and T2036.
David
Ingram's US/Canada Services
US/Canada/Mexico Tax Immigration &
working Visa Specialists
US / Canada Real Estate
Specialists
4466 Prospect Road
North Vancouver,
BC, CANADA, V7N 3L7
Calls accepted from 10 AM to 10 PM 7 days a
week
Res (604) 980-3578 Cell (604) 657-8451
Bus (604)
980-0321 Fax (604) 980-0325
[email protected]
www.centa.com www.david-ingram.com
-------------------------
The
second dealt with making your personal mortgage interest in Canada deductible
and the Overs, Evans, Lipson and Singleton tax cases and
GAAR
David
Ingram's US/Canada Services
Mortgage Interest as a Deduction in 2008 – dealing with GAAR
I first conceived of this method in 1975/76 when a client of mine had a rental duplex and had a tenant who was injured in a car accident. It was at the time of the changeover from private insurance to ICBC and the injured single mother tenant was waiting for an insurance settlement.
My client allowed his tenant to stay in the half duplex for more than a year and to stay afloat him self, he borrowed money to pay the duplex bills. When doing his 1975 tax return, we deducted the interest paid on the loan because the purpose of the loan was clearly to fund the rental duplex.
When he finally got his cheque for more than $5,000 from the tenant, it would have been all over if he had just paid the loan off and we had not thought about it. But my client, bless his soul, phoned and asked if he had to pay off the loan (which was deductible) or could he use the money for another non-deductible purpose.
My answer, after thinking about it for a day or so, was that he could us e the $5,000+ for any purpose he could think of. At the same time, I said this, I was also writing something for the North Shore Credit Union and put my ‘new’ method of making the mortgage interest deductible in this report which they then published as part of an advertisement in the North shore News in (I think) November, 1976.
I expanded it and it was next published by Hancock House Publishers in my Investment Guide in 1979, 1980 and 1985 and 1991 and BC Business magazine in 1979. Sometime in there, the Ontario Dental Association also ran it in their magazine. It then became part of the internet and can be found in the March 1997 and November 2001 newsletters.
I was pretty heavily involved in the Federal Conservative Party (ran for the North Shore Nomination in 19780 and am proud to say that we got mortgage interest as a tax deduction on the 1979 federal Income tax return.
Unfortunately, Joe Clark, the Prime Minister at the time, did not count the number of yes votes and lost a non-confidence motion on Dec 12, 1979, and on Feb 18, 1980, Pierre Trudeau was re-elected as Prime Minister and even though there was a 4-page form and a line on the T-1 General that year, the deduction was killed retroactively by the liberal government and we no longer had this benefit for all without manipulating the paperwork.
In 1981, Fred Snyder was running a series of seminars and teaching my method to a lot of different groups. In one seminar, he taught it to Realtors, McCauley, Nicolls, Maitland and Company and the manager Fraser Smith wrote Fred a letter thanking him for explaining the methods. In 1985, Fraser Smith than published the SMITH MANOUVRE which explains the method in great detail and at the time, VANCITY Savings Credit Union was featured in the book and was very good at setting up the method.
Then on Oct 27, 1988 John Singleton had approximately $300,000 in his lawyer’s capital account. He got permission to take the $300,000 out (it was his but was being used as security in his law practice). He used it to buy a house and then used the house as security to borrow $300,000 which he then put into his capital account; this was all done in one day. Of course, since the money in the account was now borrowed for business purposes, he deducted the interest on his 1988 and 1989 returns and the Tax Department turned him down. He appealed and lost in the Tax Court of Canada but won in the Federal court of Appeals. The CRA appealed to the Supreme Court and in October 2001, the Supreme Court of Canada found in favour of John Singleton in a 5 to 2 decision.
This case has now been quoted and cited in many other
cases. In OVERS 2006 TCC 26, Mr Overs paid back a shareholder-loan, which
would have been included in his income. By doing what he did,
co-incidentally, the interest expense was made deductible.
Mrs Overs borrowed funds
to purchase shares of his holding company at their fair market
value. However, Mr Overs did NOT use a 73(1) rollover as
Lipson did. Therefore, no capital gain was realized but the
attribution rules in section 74(1) worked to transfer the interest expense on
the wife’s borrowed funds -- back to him.
Judge Little turned down
the CRA’s claim that tax benefits arose from this series of transactions.
The taxpayer followed the Income Tax Act in repaying
his loan and transferring the shares to his wife. Justice Little ruled that the
transactions were NOT avoidance transactions and therefore GAAR did not apply.
Judge Little ruled that none of the transactions could be considered “abusive
tax avoidance”.
And Judge Bowman ruled in favour of Evans (2005 TCC
684). Judge Bowman found there were no avoidance transactions
in what could only be described as a super complicated and very sophisticated
series of business restructurings that ended up with a former shareholder
receiving cash by using specific rules in the Act, including
sections 85
(rollovers), 110.6
(capital gains exemption), 112 (tax free inter-corporate dividends), 74.5
(attribution) and ss. 84(3) (deemed dividends).
Judge Bowman assumed
that there ‘were’ avoidance transactions. He then dealt with
them on an individual basis to decide whether the avoidance transactions were
‘abusive’. His final decision was that provisions of the
Income Tax Act operated as intended and there could not be any
abuse.
However, he was not of
the same opinion with the LIPSON Family who lost in Lipson v. The Queen, 2006 TCC 148
Mr Lipson owned a profitable
business and:
- The Lipsons contracted to buy a home in Forest Hills in Toronto
- Mrs Lipson took out a demand loan to buy share in the family business from her husband.
- The shares were transferred to Mrs Lipson as a section 73(1) rollover
- Mr Lipson used the funds to buy the house
- They “both” took out a mortgage on the house to repay the demand loan
Judge Bowman used the Section 245 GAAR
provisions to rule that the Lipson family was guilty of Gross Abuse of the Tax
system. Perhaps, if they had a business reason for the loan
or had not used the Section 73(1) tax free rollover, he would have found in
their favour as he did with the EVANS 2005 DTC 1762 case. In
the LIPSON case the wife’s borrowing did not put income in her hands and it was
unclear who had paid the interest.
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david ingram's US / Canada Services
US / Canada / Mexico tax, Immigration and working Visa Specialists
US / Canada Real Estate Specialists
My Home office is at:
North Vancouver, BC, CANADA, V7N 3L7
Cell (604) 657-8451 -
(604) 980-0321 Fax (604) 980-0325
Calls welcomed from 10 AM to 9 PM 7 days a week Vancouver (LA) time - (please do not fax or phone outside of those hours as this is a home office) expert US Canada Canadian American Mexican Income Tax service help.
$1,700 would be for two people with income from two countries
Catch - up returns for the US where we use the Canadian return as a guide for seven years at a time will be $150 to $500.00 per year depending upon numbers of bank accounts, RRSP's, existence of rental houses, self employment, etc.
Just a guideline not etched in stone.
David Ingram expert income tax service and immigration help and preparation of US Canada Mexico non-resident and cross border returns with rental dividend wages self-employed and royalty foreign tax credits family estate trust trusts income tax convention treaty advice on bankruptcy
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