Introduction
A corporation that is named as a defendant in a lawsuit — whether a breach of contract claim, a professional negligence allegation, or a construction defect dispute — faces both a legal challenge and a set of tax questions that are less frequently discussed: how are the legal costs treated? Is a settlement payment deductible? What about insurance recoveries?
Scenario: Crestwood Design Inc. Is Sued for Project Defects
Crestwood Design Inc. is an Ontario architecture firm operating through a professional corporation. A residential client sues the firm for $180,000 alleging design defects in a renovation project, claiming cost overruns and delay damages. Crestwood's professional liability insurer accepts the claim and assigns a defence lawyer.
Over eighteen months, the matter settles for $95,000. The insurer pays $80,000; Crestwood pays the $15,000 deductible. Total legal fees incurred by Crestwood (costs not covered by insurance): $12,000.
Tax Treatment of Legal Costs
Legal fees incurred to defend a lawsuit that arises from the corporation's business activities are generally deductible under section 18(1)(a) — they are expenses incurred for the purpose of earning income from the business.
The $12,000 in uninsured legal costs paid by Crestwood are deductible as a business expense in the years they were incurred. Legal invoices should be retained as documentation.
The $15,000 deductible paid to the insurer is also a deductible business expense — it is a cost of the litigation that arose from the corporation's professional activities.
Tax Treatment of the Settlement Payment
The deductibility of a settlement payment depends on what the payment represents.
Where the payment compensates the claimant for damages arising from the corporation's professional activities — i.e., the corporation did something wrong and is paying to make the injured party whole — the settlement payment is generally deductible as a business expense. The payment represents the cost of a liability arising from business operations.
Where the payment is a penalty — in a regulatory or criminal context, or a penalty imposed by a court rather than a negotiated settlement — the deductibility is more restricted. Fines and penalties are generally not deductible under section 67.6 of the Income Tax Act.
For Crestwood's $15,000 deductible payment toward a negotiated civil settlement, the amount is deductible as a business expense. The insurer's $80,000 payment is not income to Crestwood (it passes through to the claimant) and does not generate a deductible expense for the insurer's portion — because Crestwood did not pay it.
The Insurance Recovery: Is It Income?
Where an insurer pays on behalf of the corporation, the corporation does not receive cash — the funds go to the claimant directly. This is not income to the corporation.
Where the corporation is reimbursed for legal costs or other expenses previously deducted, the reimbursement is generally income in the year received — to the extent the original expense was deducted. If Crestwood received $12,000 from the insurer reimbursing the legal fees it had already deducted, that $12,000 is income.
Reserves for Ongoing Litigation
A corporation involved in ongoing litigation at fiscal year end may have an uncertain liability — the case is unresolved and the ultimate cost is unknown. Under the Income Tax Act, a reserve for a contingent liability is not generally permitted unless specifically authorised. Corporations cannot deduct a provision for estimated settlement costs until the liability crystallises.
This is an area where accounting treatment (under ASPE, a provision is recorded when a loss is probable and estimable) differs from tax treatment (no deduction until the payment is made or the settlement is agreed). The corporation's financial statements may show a legal provision; the T2 does not deduct it until the payment is made.
When to Speak With a CPA
For corporations involved in significant litigation, a CPA review of the tax treatment of legal costs, the deductibility of any settlement payments, and the correct characterisation of insurance recoveries ensures the corporation's tax return reflects the correct position — both in the year of settlement and in the years legal costs are incurred.