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QUESTION 1(150 minutes - 80 marks) Mr. Tim Scott is a professional engineer who began working as an administrator for NETCO Company, a large public

QUESTION 1(150 minutes - 80 marks)

Mr. Tim Scott is a professional engineer who began working as an administrator for NETCO Company, a large public company, in 2018 at a remote location in the province of Saskatchewan.

In January 2019, Mr. Scott was transferred to a new office located in Toronto, Ontario as part of a career advancement plan. He was forced to quickly sell his old residence and suffered a loss of $25,000 as a result. The new residence he bought in Toronto cost him $200,000 more than the price he could obtain from the sale of his old residence, and it was at least 40km closer to his new work place. Mr. Scott paid total moving costs of $50,000 to move to Toronto. To compensate Mr. Scott for the extra costs associated with the sudden move, the Company accepted to reimburse him the entire loss on the sale of his old residence as well as the entire moving expenses. The Company paid him the amount of $75,000 on December 1, 2019. On the advice of their accountant, no tax was withheld by the Company on that payment.

As a result of the move, Mr. Scott got rid of a number of personal assets he had stored for many years at his old residence. The relevant information for the assets sold in 2019 is the following:

SellingProceedsCostExpensesHome furniture$1,500$2,000$0Garden tools$950$850$0Coin Collection$13,000$20,000$500Sculpture$11,000$7,000$500Antique Clock$17,000$8,000$500

Other Information:

1. For the year 2019, Mr. Scott's regular salary was a gross of $100,000. The following amounts were withheld from his gross salary during 2019:

Federal Income Tax$15,000.00Employment Insurance Premiums$860.00Canada Pension Plan Contributions$2,749.00Registered Pension Plan Contributions$10,000.00Charitable contributions (Centraide)$1,000.00Professional Dues$1,200.00

2. Mr. Scott is a member of his employer's money purchase (defined contribution) Registered Pension Plan ("RPP"). For 2019, his employer made a $20,000 matching contribution to the RPP on his behalf.

3. During 2019, Mr. Scott was provided with an automobile that was acquired by the Company at a cost of $150,000 including all taxes. Total operating costs were $0.50 per km (or $25,000) for the year, all paid by the Company. The car was available to Mr. Scott the entire year except that during a 2-month period while he was in hospital as a result of a water-skiing accident he decided it was safer to leave the car at the Company's secured parking area instead of leaving it unattended at home. He drove the car a total of 50,000 kms during the year, of which 10,000 kms were personal. He reimbursed the Company $0.10 per km (or $1,000) for his personal use of the car.

4. On February 1, 2019, Mr. Scott received an amount of $50,000 playing the 6/49 lottery. He bought himself a boat for $25,000 and decided to contribute the remaining $25,000 to his RRSP account. Mr. Scott wants to deduct the maximum amount possible in 2019 for this RRSP contribution. Upon review of his tax records, you identified that at the end of 2018 Mr. Scott had $16,000 of Unused RRSP Deduction Room available for carryover to 2019, and no undeducted RRSP contributions at that time. Mr. Scott's Earned Income for 2018 was $100,000 and his pension adjustment for 2018 was $15,000.

5. Mr. Scott has for many years owned shares in Lemon Motors Company ("Lemon"), which are traded on the Toronto stock market. On July 31, 2019, Lemon paid an eligible dividend of $3.025 per share to Mr. Scott on all shares owned as of July 30, 2019. Below is a history of all his purchases and sales of shares in Lemon up until January 1, 2019:

Purchase, June 20142,000 shares @ $24 per sharePurchase, March 20155,000 shares @ $10 per shareSale, December 20161,000 shares @ $30 per sharePurchase, March 20173,000 shares @ $35 per shareSale, December 20181,000 shares @ $45 per share

6. On December 1, 2019, Mr. Scott decided to sell 4,000 shares he held in Lemon at $55 per share.He paid a 1% commission to his broker on this sale ($0.55/share).

7. Mr. Scott is a 50% owner in a restaurant in Saskatchewan. During 2019, the restaurant was partially ravaged by a kitchen fire forcing the restaurant to close its doors for 9 months. Because the accident was caused by a negligent employee, the insurance company refused to pay for any of the damages. The restaurant owners have not yet decided if they will sue the negligent employee. For the fiscal period ended December 31, 2019, the business suffered an extraordinary loss for tax purposes of $150,000 50% of which was allocated to Mr. Scott.

8. Mr. Scott is 43 years old and has been living with Barbara (58 years old) for over 3 years now and her 20-year old son John.Barbara is self-employed and had Net Income of only $13,000 for 2019.

9. John is legally blind since birth. In 2019, he was a full time university student for 8 months of the year and didn't work but received social assistance payments of $11,800 from the provincial government for the entire year.Mr. Scott paid for John's tuition of $8,000 for 2019 and, in return, John agreed to transfer him the maximum tax credit possible.

10. Mr. Scott also paid for the following medical expenses in 2019:

Prescriptions drugs for Mr. Scott$3,465.00Medical specialists for John$10,490.00Prescription glasses for Barbara$875.00Liposuction for Mr. Scott$2,463.00Dentist for John$3,300.00Dentist for Barbara$1,325.00

Required:

A. Calculate the maximum RRSP deduction Mr. Scott can take for 2019 and determine if the $25,000 RRSP contribution made in February 2019 results for Mr. Scott in any penalties to be paid for 2019. (10 marks)

B. Calculate Mr. Scott's minimum Net Income for Tax Purposes using the ITA 3 rules and format for the year 2019, as well as his Taxable Income for the year 2019.(50 marks)

C. Calculate Mr. Scott's minimum Net Federal Tax Payable (or refund) for the year 2019.Ignore any provincial tax and provincial credits.(20 marks)

In all cases, explain your answer, including detailed calculations, and provide reasons for omitting or excluding any item mentioned in the question.Ignore all GST/HST considerations.Assume all applicable elections were made and applicable forms and certificates are filed with CRA.You can use the following tax rates for 2019 to calculate federal tax payable:

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