|    LINE 126 - RENTAL INCOME        NEW FOR 1988 and 1989 and 1990THE OLD RENTAL    SCHEDULE 7 IS GONE. You may use an acceptable substitute but the government has provided a    new SCHEDULE T776 to report Rental Income. This is a two page form    which requires more details of partners in rental operations including Social    Insurance Numbers, percentages, etc. There are still not enough lines for    expenses as the government form omits the prompts for management fees, common    expenses, interest on your furnace loan, etc.    The Capital Cost    Allowance portion has been greatly expanded pointing out the problem which    Revenue Canada has had with taxpayers making incorrect deductions in this    area. The government guide is very good but I believe it errs in favor of the    government.    For instance, this    book gives details of some court cases indicating that fairly major exterior    renovations are expense items. The Gold Bar Developments case reported    on the next page would indicate that replacing windows and furnaces (even if    improved) would be an expense item. However, on page 12 of the 1989 Rental    Income Tax guide, they state that thermopane windows and a new energy furnace    are capital items and may not be expensed. Clearly, it is a matter of opinion    and would be governed by the condition of the old windows and the old furnace    before replacement. However, at this point I would remind the Tax office that    it would be more expensive to replace the old furnace with an `identical' new    one and it would likely cost more to replace old wood-sash windows with    identical windows. In many, if not most cases, it is cheaper to replace old    with new than to replace with original simply because of the cost of labor and    the unavailability of the identical item.         RENTAL INCOMEIf you own or    control property that you rent out to others, even to your own incorporated    company, you must report the rental income and prepare form T776, Statement of    Real Estate Rentals (see example). You must keep detailed records of all money    collected and paid out. Most of the expense items on the rental schedule are    obvious, but you should be able to back them up with receipts. Revenue Canada    now wants to know how many units are available for rent for each property    listed. This applies to residential rentals, so if your rental property is    commercial or industrial, enter zero.         RENTAL EXPENSES        PART DEDUCTIBLE AND FULL DEDUCTIBLEIf an expense    applies to the whole structure, and you use part of that structure personally,    put the expenditure in the `part' deductible column. If the expenditure    applies to the rental area only (as with commissions or advertising for rent    expenses), put the expense in the `full' deductible column. You might, for    instance, have a mortgage on the whole building and the money was used to buy    the building. The interest expense on this mortgage would go in the `part'    deductible column. If you had a second mortgage on the whole property, but the    money was used exclusively to build the rental suite, you would charge "ALL"    the interest to the `full' deductible column. One commonly overlooked    deduction is the interest charge on a credit card when the card has been used    to buy a fridge, stove, carpet, etc., for the rental house.         MORTGAGE INTEREST    (other interest)If there is more    than one mortgage on the house relating to the purchase of the investment    property, be sure to claim the interest on all of them. The interest on any    other money borrowed to purchase the property is also deductible no matter    what was used as security. One difficulty encountered here is that very few    people seem to know how much mortgage interest they have paid in a year, even    though it is usually the largest single expense in the operation of a    property. These people know the amount of the mortgage payment that they make    every month, but that is not the interest figure. We at the CEN-TA GROUP    have seen on several occasions people who were meticulous about making their    mortgage payments on time every month, but whose total amount owing was    increasing. The reason for this is that the payments were wrongly calculated    in the first place, and were not enough to cover the interest. If you do not    understand the compound interest calculations, you must have an amortization    schedule which gives breakdowns of the interest and principal portions of the    mortgage payments. At any rate, make sure you read INTEREST DEDUCTIONS at    Line 221.          MAINTENANCE AND REPAIRSThe big problem    here is, "what is a repair, and what is a capital expense?"        A good explanation was given in 1962 by Mr.    Justice Abbott in the Haddon Hall Realty case. He said, "Among the    tests which may be used in order to determine whether an expenditure is an    income expense or a capital outlay, it has been held that an expenditure made    once and for all with a view to bringing into existence an asset or an    advantage for the enduring benefit is a trade of a capital nature. "           This reasoning was used by Judge Brule of the Tax    Court of Canada. In December 1984, Gold Bar Developments Ltd. lost    their claim for expensing the cost of a new exterior on part of a commercial    building the company owned. Judge Brule ruled that the expense was a major    outlay used to put the property into proper condition, and not one of an    annual or recurring nature. However, in 1987, Gold Bar won their case in    the Federal Court.             However, in 1987, Victorio Pugliese    lost his claim to expense roof repairs and a new furnace. Judge Couture of the    Tax Court of Canada ruled that the furnace was of a capital nature and that    the expensing of $2,700 on the roof seemed to be a replacement rather than a    repair.          In December, 1983, Sydney Harold Healy    lost most of his claim for $130,000 to refurbish a building which he had owned    for thirty-five years. The property was vacant from 1974 to '79 and he spent    considerable sums (over $130,000) in 1977, '78, and '79 bringing the building    up to a sufficient condition that he was able to rent it to the Government of    Ontario as a Court House. Justice Christie of the Tax Court of Canada allowed    $10,000 for paving and $3,687.97 for roofing in 1977, and $370 for an    architect and $1,125 for an engineer in 1979. The rest of the $130,000 was    capitalized as improvements.             And in 1986, Jean Methe    found out the same thing. The taxpayer had expended over $140,000 in 1980 and    '81 refurbishing a building bought for $38,000 in 1980. The taxpayer tried to    write off $65,000 as repairs, and the rest he added to the capital cost of the    building. DNR denied the claim and reduced it to $25,000. Judge Taylor of the    Tax Court of Canada agreed with DNR. I am surprised that Judge Taylor or DNR    allowed as much as they did for repairs. What it does show is that income tax    is a gray area.             WARNING!Where this really    becomes important for most people is when there is a new purchase. At several    real estate courses I have attended, I hear the expert up front tell the class    or attendees that they should buy a junker, fix it up, and rent it. They    always paint glowing reports about all the tax deductions they can expect    because of the expenses. In these cases, ANY SINGLE EXPENSE you KNOW you have    to make when you BUY the property, is NOT deductible at all, (not even one can    of paint). All expenditures, (both money and trade), used to put property into    rentable condition, are of a capital nature, and may be depreciated over the    years.         INSURANCEFew people carry    enough insurance in rental situations. The cost is deductible; buy what you    need. Make SURE that your policy recognizes the rental nature of the house.    Remember that if the house is left empty for more than thirty days, the policy    is invalid. Make sure that you or someone else visits every twenty days or so    if your tenant takes a vacation for a couple of months. Make sure that your    Public Liability is enough. At a convention on Sexual Assault (Feb 28, 1986    - Bayshore Inn, Vancouver), a lawyer from Campbell River, B. C. presented a    paper which indicated that a landlord could be held liable for the damages    suffered by a tenant in a sexual assault if adequate security was not    provided, i.e., proper dead bolt door locks, secure windows, well    lighted entrance ways and parking areas, etc. Also, make sure that you    have business interruption insurance. It is possible to have a $3,000 fire    which is covered by your policy, but while everything is been handled, you    lose $5,000 worth of rent. Some policies will exclude water damage if the    house is not visited `every 24 hours' while the owner is away. Be careful    here. You could have an uninsured house if your tenant goes on a two week    vacation.         DOUBLE WARNING!!Make sure that you    do not get caught in a co-insurance caper. This happens when you buy $40,000    of insurance on a $60,000 building. If there is a $15,000 fire, the insurance    company only pays $10,000 because YOU co-insured yourself for 1/3 of the    damage ($20,000/$60,000). Make sure that you review your insurance on an    annual basis, and KNOW that it is covering the replacement value. Also, keep a    separate rider on your policy to cover any part-time employee's actions while    they are doing something for you. Remember, your tenant `could' be ruled a    part-time employee if he or she was fixing up the unit for a reduced rent.         TRIPLE WARNING!!!     In September, 1988 I spoke at a convention of Mobile Home Park    owners. Some of the other presentations put on were excellent and I picked up    one point which is very important. Make sure when you are buying your policy    that it covers events that happened during the term of the policy, not just    when it was discovered. It would be easy for your current insurance company to    deny a claim that was just put forward for an injury which took place three or    four years ago (i.e., hidden injury or degenerative injury) but when you go    back to the company which insured you at the time, you find out that the    policy only covers you if it was brought to their attention when their policy    was in place. When I approached a lawyer about this, he proceeded to tell me    that the same thing was true of lawyers' insurance. If you suffer damages at    the hand of an insured lawyer, and he is no longer a lawyer (I have on my desk    a list of over forty lawyers in BC who ceased to be lawyers on January 1,    1989), you may have no one to collect from.            As an example: a BC lawyer is (Jan, 1989) currently    serving a jail sentence for fraud). Today, we have been informed that a second    mortgage which was supposedly paid off several years ago had not been    discharged by that lawyer. The mortgagee is demanding $17,000+ to discharge    the mortgage which he says is still in place. The lawyer has no money and is    not practicing. There is no one to sue.             WATERMake sure that you    keep the receipts. (Perrier does not count here.)         OIL, GAS, HEAT, ELECTRICITYIf you are sharing    the unit, i.e., half a duplex, this can get complicated, even down to figuring    out the respective heat loss from the main floor, and the attic, and arriving    at a properly scientific percentage. What you spend is what you get. Do    consider that, if possible, splitting services into two or more meters will    likely SAVE you money in the long run. Rarely does a "heat and light included"    tenant respect the cost.         TELEPHONEThis is rarely a    deduction for rentals. If you spend it, claim it. Just remember, a share of a    single line personal phone rarely qualifies. The judge assumes that    `everybody' should have to pay for their own phone.         TRASH HAULINGThis could be    business, or it could be personal. You know the answer.         CABLEVISIONYou would normally    only have this at `your' expense if it was multiple and you lived on the    premises. This is a good place to deduct the costs of tapes, etc., if you are    supplying a video system.         ADVERTISING - RENTAL COMMISSIONSSelf explanatory!    Make sure that you keep the bills. A photocopy charge for pamphlets put up in    laundry rooms would qualify here.         OTHERThe vista boggles    the imagination. If you do not claim it, it will never be deducted. This could    include collection charges, business license for bed and breakfast, food for    bed and breakfast, an accounting fee, or perhaps a legal fee for drawing up a    lease. Likewise, the common expenses for a condominium corporation would find    a home here.         CCA - CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE -    DEPRECIATION (see Line 135 - business section)Class 3    is any building you have bought since Jan 1, 1982. The rate is 2 1/2% for    first year and 5% afterwards, on a declining balance. Class 3 also applies to    a steel and concrete building bought before Nov 12, 1981. As of June 17, 1987    new buildings will be depreciated at 4%.    Class 6    is any building of frame construction that you owned before Nov 12, 1981. The    depreciation rate is 10%.    Class 31    is a MURB (Multiple Unit Residential Building) of steel and concrete, bought    before November 12 1981, or any MURB bought after that date. The rate is 2    1/2% the first year and 5% afterwards.    Class 32    is a MURB of frame construction bought before Nov 12, 1981.    Class 8    is the catch-all for the fridge, rugs, furniture, and fixtures. The    depreciation rate is 10% in the first year and 20% in subsequent years.    All depreciation    rates are on the declining balance i.e., if there is a $1,000 addition for    class 8, the depreciation in the first year would be 10% of $1,000 or $100,    leaving $900 to depreciate for the next year. Next year, the depreciation    would be $180 (20% of $900) leaving $720 to depreciate the next year.    If the item is    class 3 or 6, no depreciation may be used to create a loss using classes 3, 6    or 8. If the item is class 31 or 32, depreciation may be used to create paper    loss using classes 31, 32 or 8 (see david ingram's Investment Guide for a    great explanation of MURBs and how to let the government and tenant pay for    your pension).         PARTIAL EXPENSESUse when you have    a rental suite, half a duplex, or use part of the rental building for your own    use. You might also use this when you have lived in the building for a couple    of months of the year, and rented it out for the rest of the year. Simply    divide your area into the total area, and take this amount off of the total of    `partly' deductible expenses.         NET INCOME FROM RENTALSPut this amount on    line 126 of the tax return.         PROFIT OR LOSSAfter all that, if    the property loses money, is the loss deductible? The answer is yes, if you    can expect a profit in the future. If you are only renting out to `hold on',    you do not have a legitimate loss, as the following Toronto taxpayer found    out.         In 1986, Ivan Glavanovic    lost his claim for five years of rental losses. He had built a house for sale    in 1975 and was unable to sell it. He therefore rented it out at a loss for    six years. DNR turned down his losses for 1979 and 1980. Judge Tremblay of the    Tax Court of Canada agreed with DNR. He ruled that the rental was not to earn    income but to hold on to the property. The losses were therefore capital in    nature and should be added to the adjusted cost base of the house. It was also    clear that there was no reasonable expectation of profit from the rental.            Also in 1986, Kelvin Lee    found the same thing. He had rented his house on an option to purchase. Judge    Couture of the Tax Court of Canada ruled that the renting while holding had no    expectation of profit and was not deductible.             in 1989, Virginia Maloney    was turned down by Judge Mogan of the Tax Court of Canada. She had rented her    house to her mother. The rent charged was not realistic with regard to the    cost of and the maintenance to keep up the property. Ms Maloney had charged    her mother $100 rent in 1984 with $4,600 of expenses and $1,800 rent in 1985    with $11,000 of expenses. See Special Problems below.             and in 1990, Michel-Guy Huot    was also turned down for a deduction when he rented a house to his parents for    less than market value. Judge Garon of the Tax Court of Canada ruled that the    taxpayer "Had failed to establish that the rental expenses were incurred in    order to earn income." Because of the low rent and the uncertainty of their    stay, there was no "expectation of profit." (See Expectation of Profit Section    at back of book for more information on this subject."             DOUBLE WARNING!!     In September 1986, Louis Vaillancourt    lost his claim for CCA on a class 31 building which was part of a 44 unit    limited liability partnership operation of a motel/hotel deal at a ski resort.    The tax office rejected the claim on the grounds that it was not `residential'    property but a motel room. I agree with them. What is interesting and of    danger to many MURB purchasers is that in giving his decision, Judge Pinard of    the Federal Court Trial Division gave a ruling that no individual apartment    (condo) in a multiple unit building could qualify anyway. This means that    200,000 MURBs sold in Canada are suddenly not tax deductions. It is my    understanding that DNR is going to ignore this ruling in terms of blanket    enforcement, and will only use it when there are obvious attempts to take    advantage of the policy. In particular, they will attack all units at ski or    summer resorts.             SOFT COSTS     And in 1988, Ercole Tertulliani and Clement Cardin   had their    claim for soft costs turned down by Judge Couture of the Tax Court of Canada.    They had purchased condominium units in a building which was not yet    constructed. Clause 16 of the offer to purchase stated "Possession of and    proprietary title to the property shall be transferred to the purchaser only    upon execution of the sales contract". As the sales contract was only executed    after all the monies had been paid, it was impossible for the purchasers to    have spent the soft costs in the course of building their units. As every    `soft cost' deal I have ever seen is structured in a similar manner, it is    logical to assume that any other soft cost deals would fail if they were    challenged by the department.             SPECIAL PROBLEMSCommon situations    that also cause problems are:      (a) rentals to    members of your own family (see Virginia Maloney above)    (b) rentals at    unreasonably low rates to friends, business associates, or employees    (c) rentals of    property where you use all or part of the premises some of the time for    personal use.    In the first case,    (rentals to members of the family such as your mother, father, brother,    sister, son or daughter, or any of the respective in-laws), it is important to    know that usually a loss cannot be created. If a father rents a building to a    son and loses money in the deal, the tax office may not allow the loss because    of the artificially low rent (i.e., renting a $500 per month house to a son    for $100 per month). On the other hand, if the father was renting to the son    at the same rate as to others and a loss was being incurred, the father should    claim the loss as a tax deduction.    With regard to    rentals to business associates or friends, we have a slightly different    problem. If an employer provides a house for an employee at an unreasonably    low rent, the difference between "fair" market value and actual rent charged    should be added to the employee's T4 slip as a taxable benefit.    Renting between    associates is an even trickier question. There have been cases where people    have owned houses which they have rented to each other at below market    rentals. In this way, both get a tax loss on their rental property.    Ministerial discretion on the part of the tax office would seem to defeat    this, but I have never personally seen this particular ruse upset. I do not    recommend it as a practice, but it does seem to work at the present moment.    One disadvantage in some provinces is that the provincial homeowner's grant is    lost on both residences, and this then becomes a form of taxation.    While talking    about rental properties, I think it appropriate that I include some thoughts    on the purchase of real estate for either personal or investment use.    First let's look    at what it really costs to rent.         WHAT IT COSTS TO RENTA pitfall which I    have learned about from my clients concerns the amount of money it costs to    rent accommodation. Have you ever thought about how much it really costs to    rent? I am frequently criticized for telling widows and pensioners to cash in    their bonds, term deposits or GIC's and buy an apartment.    People say,    "David, you don't understand - the pensioner needs the income from the GIC to    live."    Let's look at a 55    year old widow with $100,000 "in the bank" and a $10,000 a year pension.    The widow will be    paying $1,000/year income tax on her pension income and essentially she has no    control over her pension.    If she receives    10% on her GIC (more likely over a five or ten year average than 12%), she    will have $10,000 on top of the $10,000 pension.    Of this $10,000,    about $3,000 will go in tax, leaving the lady $7,000 for rent, or expenses, or    vacations.    With this amount    of money, she is probably living in a $600/month apartment which works out to    $7,200 a year.    At the 30%    marginal tax bracket, it takes $102,856 of capital invested at 10% to produce    $10,285.60 gross interest, on which she pays 30% (about $3,085.60 tax) to have    $7,200 left for rent.    At 20% interest it    takes $52,500 to produce the money for the rent - but at 8% interest,    (remember - the whole country wants to go back to 10% mortgages which means 8%    term deposits), it takes $130,000 to produce that rent.    The accompanying    chart shows what might happen to this lady over the next ten years.    By the year 2000 -    if she has a non-indexed pension - the whole amount plus interest would go to    rent.    She Must Buy Today    or hope to be dead in seven years because her capital will be gone and her    total spending power will be reduced to today's welfare rate of $468/month.    "Today's" welfare    rate in BC is $468 for a single male in British Columbia.    Example - at only    10% inflation, $10,000 today will be worth $3,500 in spending power in ten    years.    At 15% inflation,    $10,000 today will be worth $1,900 in spending power in ten years.    See Chart 1 "Cash    in Bank $100,000".             THIS CONCEPT PREPARED BY DAVID    INGRAM, November 9, 1981I have difficulty    with mathematical concepts and have to fight them out. If there is any reason    I have managed to be able to explain them to people over the years, it is    because of this difficulty.    In the last two    years, the rent on a 3 bedroom townhouse in Brampton has gone from $600 to    $1,000 a month (in spite of rent controls). And people are paying up to $2,000    `key' money (illegally) to get to be a tenant. In 1981, you could not give    those townhouses away and the rent was $325 - $425 a month. In 1981, interest    on Canada Savings Bonds was 19.5% and $25,000 of bonds would pay the rent in    after tax dollars. Today, nine years later, it takes $180,000 of Canada    Savings bonds to pay the rent in after tax dollars on the same townhouse. The    townhouse has gone from $42,000 to $110,000. The same thing has taken place in    Vancouver and is about to take place in Ottawa, Calgary and Edmonton. You can    still find a really nice place to live for $75,000 in Winnipeg, Saskatoon or    Regina. Please do NOT get carried away with the idea that you can live on a    particular amount forever because rents are cheap NOW.    When the interest    rates were extremely high, a very popular theory was to sell the house and    live on the interest. The theory is not as popular at the moment because of    the dramatic drop in interest rates. The following example explains very    clearly the erosion effect inflation and taxes have on your capital.         "Sell House" Live on Interest! Why    This Theory Can Not WorkHigh interest    causes a person to "think" they can sell the equity in their house and live on    the interest plus their salary. I am using a $275,000 house with a $60,000    mortgage as an example. Sell house for $275,000 - $15,000 (commission) -    $60,000 (mortgage) equals $200,000 principal left over. Assume $25,000 salary.    This was written in 1981 and I throw it in for your thought... Remember?    The Marginal tax    rate on interest with $25,000 Salary = 50%.     Amount  Int    Tax On Interest Rent Or Excess Spending    Year Rate Income    To Spend Expenses Power        1981 $200,000 20%    $40,000 $20,000 $20,000 $12,000 $8,000    $20,000 in 1981    dollars.    1982 $200,000 20%    40,000 20,000 20,000 13,200 6,800 $15,122    After first    year rent has gone up $100/month - $1,200/year and at 15% inflation $20,000 =    $15,122 spending power    1983 $200,000 15%    30,000 15,000 15,000 14,000 500 9,862    Interest rate    drops to 15% (remember when that was high?) and you only have $15,000 to    spend. Rent went up to $14,500 and you are just about even - after tax dollar    to new rent. But $15,000 in 1983 $9,862 in 1981 dollars.    1984 $200,000 17%    34,000 17,000 17,000 15,000 1,050 9,719    Interest back up    to 17% (great days again) but rent goes up to $15,950 $9,719.    1985 $200,000 15%    30,000 15,000 15,000 17,545 (2,545) 7,457    Interest back    down to 15%, rent up to $17,545 and we are short $2,545 to just pay the rent -    oh yes - $15,000 = $7,457 of 1981 dollars and $200,000 equity only rings    $99,435 of 1981 dollars.    1986 $200,000 13%    26,000 13,000 13,000 19,299 (6,299) 5,620    Gov't getting    inflation down so you only get 13% - rent still goes up 10% to $19,300 and you    need $525/month to pay rent shortage.    1987 $200,000 10%    20,000 10,000 10,000 21,230 (11,230) 4,523    Government    really getting inflation to the ground - only $11,230 short for rent.    1988 $200,000 11%    22,000 11,000 11,000 23,350 (12,353) 4,443    1989 $200,000 12%    24,000 12,000 12,000 25,685 (13,685) 4,327    1990 $200,000 10%    20,000 10,000 10,000 28,253 (18,253) 3,219        Oh yes, the    $275,000 house would be worth ( $713,270. Oh, I know you think I am wrong -    real estate will not go up - inflation will STOP - and besides you or your    parents lived through the depression.    You know what can    happen (and did in 1929 AND IN 1987). But, while the Stock Market crashed all    over the world, real estate values remained fairly constant for the average    house. REMEMBER, at 11%, electricians, plumbers, and others will be charging    three times as much for their services in ten years. At 7%., they will be    charging twice as much.    Today, in 1991, it is 10 years after I first published the above. Amazingly, in Vancouver, I can already show you $275,000 houses worth $700,000 in the West Side. The big difference is that I can likely get 12% today, so I would have $4,000 more gross to help pay my rent or make up the $400,000 shortage in my net worth. | 
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