A tax opinion has been delivered.
Financing may already be arranged. The reporting treatment may already be settled. The transaction sequence may already be moving toward execution.
The immediate question is whether the filing position is defensible.
How does the structure perform if CRA later tests the facts, assumptions, economics, and record on which the filing position depends?
The planning group, lender, insurer, accountant, and opinion counsel each evaluate a different part of the structure.
| Participant | Implementation mandate | Separate question |
|---|---|---|
| Planning / structuring group | Designs the structure and coordinates implementation | Does the original framing hold if CRA reconstructs the arrangement? |
| Insurance advisor | Implements policy structure and product mechanics | Do the economics support the intended characterization? |
| Lender or financing provider | Structures credit, collateral, and funding mechanics | Do repayment assumptions remain coherent under challenge? |
| Accountant or preparer | Supports reporting treatment and filing consistency | Does the record continue supporting the position under scrutiny? |
| Opinion counsel | Assesses defined tax conclusions within the proposed transaction framework | Do the underlying assumptions survive factual reconstruction and challenge? |
| Internal finance or family office | Coordinates execution, approvals, and liquidity | Has anyone evaluated the structure outside the implementation frame? |
The process often appears integrated while the underlying analysis remains segmented across separate mandates, assumptions, and responsibility boundaries.
A formal tax opinion may conclude that the proposed filing position is “more likely than not” supportable based on stated facts, assumptions, and current law.
Tax opinions generally define the transactions under review, the assumptions supporting the analysis, the legal issues addressed, and the level of comfort provided. Many also acknowledge that CRA may challenge the structure, that the conclusions depend on the accuracy of the assumptions, and that the analysis does not extend to all surrounding financing, insurance, commercial, or regulatory issues.
The opinion evaluates whether the proposed filing position is defensible on the stated facts and assumptions.
CRA later evaluates the same structure through factual reconstruction, economic characterization, and record development.
Tax opinions sometimes contain detailed analysis concerning disclosure hallmarks, reportable transaction rules, financing assumptions, collateral arrangements, side accounts, contingent fee structures, confidentiality restrictions, or protective arrangements tied to future CRA scrutiny.
It does not necessarily establish a separate mandate to evaluate how the structure performs outside the implementation frame itself.
The opinion supporting implementation and the mandate evaluating how the structure performs under CRA challenge are not the same.