Citation: 2008 TCC 460
Date: 20080812
Docket: 2007-823(IT)I
BETWEEN:
CHRISTINE DUBOIS,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
[OFFICIAL ENGLISH
TRANSLATION]
AMENDED REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Rip C.J.
[1]
Christine Dubois is
appealing from the decisions of the Minister of National Revenue
("the Minister") refusing to grant her the Canada Child Tax
Benefit that she claimed under section 122.6 of the Income Tax Act
("the Act") for the 2003 in 2004 base years. At the hearing, the
Appellant acknowledged that the calculation with respect to the 2003 base year
was no longer in dispute.
[2]
Ms. Dubois was
married to Michel Cyr, from whom she separated in June 2001. They
have two children: Ken, born August 3, 1989, and Kevin, born April 6, 1987.
[3]
The Appellant claimed the
Canada Child Tax Benefit for each of the children. With respect to 2004,
counsel for the Appellant narrowed the issue to two periods. For Kevin, the
period in issue is from March 2004 to July 2004, when he was 17 years old;
and for Ken, the period in issue is from August 2004 to November 2004, when he
was 15 years old.
[4]
The Minister relied on
the assumption that Kevin lived with his father from March 15 to July 30, 2004,
and that Ken lived with his father from August 31 to November
15, 2004, and has been residing with him since March 15, 2005.
[5]
Ms. Dubois and
Mr. Cyr both testified. Their testimony was of the "he said, she
said" variety. The testimony of both witnesses was significantly
influenced by the emotions elicited by the breakdown of the marriage, and their
credibility was affected as a result. Consequently, the decision in the
case at bar will turn on an evaluation of the probabilities as to which of the
two accounts is truthful.
[6]
Ms. Dubois
testified that Ken lived with her during the aforementioned period and that he
went to his father's residence for holidays and at other times, but that he normally
stayed there only for the day and returned to sleep at her residence. He sometimes
slept at Mr. Cyr's house, but in such cases, he returned to his mother's
residence no later than 7:30 a.m. the following day.
[7]
Ken had trouble at
school and was in a special class. He was on vacation in August, but attended
school in September 2004 and the subsequent months.
[8]
Ms. Dubois said
that she drove Ken to hockey tournaments, that she attended his training
sessions and games, and that she covered the hockey-related expenses. She said
that Mr. Cyr did not participate in the boys' hockey activities because he
did not like to do so. She, however, "loved" watching her
children play hockey. Ms. Dubois claimed that she both looked after, and
covered, the hockey equipment purchases. She followed Kevin and Ken's
hockey from their first year to their last. She said that she was always
available for their hockey activities. When the children were at their father's
residence for a day on which they had a hockey game, he drove them to
Ms. Dubois' residence and she took them to the game. She said that Mr. Cyr
only began to attend the hockey games when Ken had started to live at his
residence permanently.
[9]
According to Ms. Dubois,
Kevin stopped attending school after March 2004. He had the occasional
temporary job, but was never employed full time. Like Ken, Kevin travelled back
and forth between his mother's residence and his father's. However, his
personal effects were at his mother's residence.
[10]
Kevin stopped attending
school before finishing primary school. His mother says that she home-schooled
him, but probably not beyond the primary-school level. According to Ms. Dubois,
Mr. Cyr did not look after the children's education, though he did sign
Ken's report cards because Ken preferred to show them to his father than to his
mother. Ms. Dubois said that he feared the consequences of her seeing a
bad report card.
[11]
Ms. Dubois
purchased the children's clothing. She testified that if Mr. Cyr purchased
clothing for the children, it was never brought to her residence. Indeed, the
children returned with the clothing that they had when they left her residence.
She stated that there was nothing new in their suitcases.
[12]
Ms. Dubois said
that she also took the children to their doctors' appointments. She said that
she did not know whether Mr. Cyr also took them to the doctor. However, she
acknowledged that if one of the children had been injured or had fallen ill
while they were at their father's, he would have taken them to the hospital.
[13]
In a document sent to
the tax authorities, Ms. Dubois discussed the periods, from 2002 onward, during
which the two children lived with her. With respect to Ken, for the period from
April to November 2004, she stated that, from mid-April to mid-May, and in
September and October till mid-November, Ken was [TRANSLATION] "on
vacation at his father's", but not for an extended period.
She explained that the days spent at his father's residence were not
interrupted, and that the months specified were not full months, but days
within those months. There were details missing with respect to the children's
visits to their father's residence. She did not think that she had to
provide the details for each day. She implied that there were months
during which Ken's visits to his father's consisted of leaving his mother's
residence in the morning and returning there in the evening, or spending the
night with Mr. Cyr and returning the following morning. For the months that
were not described, Ms. Dubois said that both children might have visited their
father, albeit for a shorter period. She was not certain. I find that the
impreciseness in her testimony pertains to the period of time that the children
spent at their father's residence. However, there remains uncertainty with
regard to the manner in which the visits were organized in the months that were
not listed. The situation was the same for Kevin, except that, according
to Ms. Dubois, he may have spent two or three days at a time at his
father's residence.
[14]
Mr. Cyr's name,
address and telephone number are stated on Ken's report cards for the 2003 and
2004 years, There is no reference to Ms. Dubois, and she cannot recall
why.
[15]
Ms. Dubois acknowledged
that when the children were at Mr. Cyr's residence, he fed them food that he
had purchased.
[16]
In October 2004, Mr. Cyr
applied to the Superior Court for custody of the children and child support. Ms.
Dubois contested the application. A draft consent to judgment stated that Kevin
had lived with Ms. Dubois from October 20, 2004, to February 9, 2005,
and that Ken had lived with her from December 18, 2004, to February 9, 2005, but
that the children lived with their father after that. Accordingly, the draft
consent to judgment provided that Ms. Dubois would pay Mr. Cyr a monthly
allowance for the children. Mr. Cyr signed the consent, but
Ms. Dubois did not do so, because the children had come back to live with
her [TRANSLATION] "full time". At the time that the children came
back to her residence to live, Ken was still a minor.
[17]
Counsel for the
Respondent questioned Ms. Dubois about the draft consent to judgment, and,
in particular, about the dates on which the children lived with her. According
to the draft consent, Kevin lived with her from October 20, 2004, to
February 9, 2005. However, the period in issue for Kevin is March 15, 2004, to
July 30, 2004. Counsel submitted that the dates set out in the draft
consent to judgment are not relevant with respect to the two children.
[18]
Mr. Cyr testified
that the children lived with him during the periods in issue. In fact, he
testified that the children had lived with him on a full-time basis from 2002
to 2004. The children's school records state his name and address as the name
and address of the contact parent. However, for the 2004-2005 school year, Mr. Cyr
signed a registration form at the school, on behalf of Ken, stating that Ken's
primary residence was with Ms. Dubois. Mr. Cyr said that he had remarried,
and that his wife looked after Kevin. Kevin had a room in Mr. Cyr's house
and kept his CDs, radio and clothing there. Mr. Cyr said that he spent
roughly $350 on clothing for the children each spring.
[19]
Mr. Cyr said that
he changed the address to his in 2002, but it was only in 2004 that his address
was entered on the school registration form (not as the primary residence but
as an alternate address). However, the Appellant's address is on the various
hospital cards. Although Mr. Cyr asserted that he often went to the
hospital with the children when they got injured, he did not seem to be aware
of the existence of any hospital cards for the children.
[20]
Mr. Cyr also stated
that Ken did not miss many days of school. He then stated that he had made
several calls to explain why Ken was absent from school. He added that, because
he began work at 7 a.m., his new wife called the school as well.
The record of Ken's absences for the period from September 13, 2004, to
January 11, 2005, was adduced in evidence and discloses that Ken was
absent no fewer than 24 days.
[21]
Mr. Cyr denied the
assertion that he did not attend the children's hockey tournaments when Ms.
Dubois was unable to do so. He said that he attended a few tournaments. He
said that he had purchased skates, hockey sticks, equipment and clothing.
[22]
The Respondent tendered
two letters in evidence through Mr. Cyr. The letters were written by his wife.
One of them was signed by Kevin, and the other was signed by Ken. Ms. Cyr, Ken and
Kevin were not called as witnesses to establish the truth of these letters. The
letters, signed by the two children, emphasize the fact that they lived with
their father. Mr. Cyr stated that the children actually wrote the letters
themselves, and that his new wife copied everything over to ensure that there
would be as few mistakes as possible. The children then allegedly signed the
letters.
[23]
Earlier, Mr. Cyr said
that he was the one who had the children write letters explaining where and
with whom they had been living. He said that the children then simply signed
them.
[24]
The older child, Kevin,
did not finish primary school, and his brother Ken was in a special class when
he left school. This raises the question whether the two children were able to
understand the letters that they signed, and no evidence was adduced in this
regard. Mr. Cyr's testimony contains several inconsistencies with respect to
the children's address. The principal residence listed on Ken's school
registration form, signed by Mr. Cyr, is that of the Appellant, not Mr.
Cyr.
[25]
Considering the
evidence about the children's level of education and the appearance of their
respective signatures, I am not satisfied that either of them could read the
letters, or at any rate, understand their contents. Counsel for the Respondent
should not have attempted to tender these letters in evidence without making
available to the Court, as witnesses, all the people who had a role in
producing each of the letters. The letters are merely documents prepared for a
self-serving purpose. They prove nothing.
[26]
Apart from a bill for
Ken's school fees, Mr. Cyr had no invoices in his possession. He did not
have the originals of the aforementioned letters written by the children
either. It should also be noted that when the Minister asked him for evidence
in support of his Canada Child Tax Benefit application, Mr. Cyr did not
send in the receipts substantiating the expenses that he incurred. He says
that his counsel instead advised him to have the children write a letter
instead.
[27]
In my view, the finding
that should be made is that Mr. Cyr's testimony is weaker than the Appellant's.
However, as stated above, the Appellant did not answer certain questions,
including the question about the way things were organized during the months
when the children were not on vacation with their father. Nonetheless, on
the whole, the Appellant's testimony seemed more credible.
[28]
Consequently, the appeal from the
decision concerning the 2003 base year is allowed, with costs, and the matter is referred back
to the Minister of National Revenue for redetermination on the basis that the
Appellant is entitled to the Canada Child
Tax Benefit under section 122.6 of the Act. The appeal from the decision concerning the 2004
base year is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 10th day
of February 2009.
"Gerald J. Rip"
Translation certified true
on this 29th day of July 2010.
Daniela Possamai, Translator