What You Need to Know

The following scenario is a familiar one: A tenant falls into arrears of rent under a commercial lease. The landlord decides not to terminate the lease but rather to exercise its right to distrain (which allows the landlord to seize and sell the tenant's property (excluding its trade fixtures) in the premises). Before distraining, the landlord conducts a search against the tenant and determines that it has no outstanding executions and that its property is not subject to any security interest.  The landlord sells the tenant's property and the sale proceeds are applied to the tenant's arrears of rent.  Several months later, Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) contacts the landlord to advise that the tenant failed to remit amounts withheld from employees for income tax, employment insurance, and Canada pension plan contributions, as well as sales taxes collected from customers.  CRA demands that the landlord remit the proceeds from the sale of the tenant's property to the CRA on account of the amounts owing by the tenant.  Does the landlord have to comply? Likely yes, but if the steps described below are taken, and the CRA does not respond to them, there is a reasonable chance that the proceeds from the sale can be retained by the landlord despite CRA's claim.

 Read the full article here: I've Distrained Against my Tenant's Property. Did I Just do the Canada Revenue Agency A Favour? - January 25-2013

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