Citation: 2005TCC334
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Date: 20050513
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Docket: 2004-3941(IT)I
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BETWEEN:
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SANDRA CARLSEN,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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____________________________________________________________________
For the Appellant: The Appellant herself
Counsel for the Respondent: Fiona Mendoza
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered
orally from the Bench at
Vancouver, British Columbia, on February 24, 2005)
McArthur J.
[1] This appeal is from a determination
by the Minister by National Revenue that the Appellant was not entitled to the
Child Tax Benefit paid to her for the four-month period August, September,
October and November, 2003 on the basis that she was, in those four months, not
an eligible individual within the meaning of section 122.6 of the Income Tax
Act in respect of her three infant children, Ian, Michael and Emily, in
that she was not during that time the person who primarily fulfilled the
responsibility for the care and upbringing of those children.
[2] Both the Appellant’s former
husband, whom I shall refer to as Mr. Carlsen, and the Appellant
testified. I found them both honest and honourable. I believe them to be
responsible parents who put the interest of their children first in their
lives. They shared custody of the three children pursuant to an Order and the Appellant
had access to the children commencing August 17, 2003 until August 20, 2003 and
continuing on each successive Sunday to Wednesday. The parties adhered to this
schedule almost rigidly. They appeared to have cooperated for the benefit of
their children in a mature way.
[3] Mr. Carlsen had access to
the children when the Appellant did not and in fact, he had access for one day per
week more than the Appellant. The Minister concluded that for the months of
July 2003 and June 2004 of the 2002 base taxation year, the Appellant primarily
fulfilled the responsibility for the care and upbringing of the children for
the purpose of the Child Tax Benefit, and for the period August 2003 to May
2004, Mr. Carlsen primarily fulfilled the responsibility for the care and
upbringing of the children for the purposes of claiming the benefit.
[4] In Canada v. Marshall,
Justice Stone stated:
… the Act contemplates only one parent
being an "eligible individual" for the purpose of allowing the
benefits. It makes no provision for prorating between two who claim to be
eligible parents. Only Parliament can provide for a prorating of benefits but
it has not done so.
Also, the following is taken
from the decision in Matte v. Canada,
where Justice Strayer of the Federal Court of Appeal stated:
It is important to note that this
definition clearly contemplates that the "eligible individual" may
change from time to time, as long as at the relevant time he or she is
primarily fulfilling the responsibility of a caregiver. This is indicated by
the words "at any time means a person who at that time …" in the
opening words of the definition.
The formula for calculating the
amount of benefits payable is found in subsection 122.6(1) of the Act
and it is based on the deemed repayment of a notional overpayment of
taxes. That overpayment, according to paragraph 122.6(1)(i) is
deemed to have arisen during a month where the person to be paid the benefit
was an eligible individual at the beginning of the month. Justice Strayer went
on to state:
We understand this to mean that the
minimum benefit period is one month and that a month of benefits is to be paid
to whoever was the eligible individual at the beginning of the month: that is, to
the person who was primarily fulfilling the responsibility for the care and
upbringing of the child or children at that time.
[5] I would be remiss in not
stating that I found the counsel for the Respondent to be fair in her appraisal
of the facts. In her opinion, what tipped the scales in favour of Mr. Carlsen was
not the fact that he had custody one day per week more than the Appellant, but
she relied on the reasoning of Justice Lamarre Proulx in Robitaille v. The
Queen
where she stated:
According to the long-standing rules
of evidence in tax litigation, in order to obtain a reversal of this
determination, the burden is on the Appellant to show that she was the one who
primarily fulfilled the responsibility for the care of the qualified dependent
children. Her testimony was that the responsibility was shared equally. In
light of the lack of evidence and the fact that the Court is bound by the
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal, … , which states that only one parent may
be an eligible individual,the
Minister's determination must be affirmed.
[6] Notwithstanding the above, the Minister had in effect divided benefits
equally, six months to the Appellant and six months to Mr. Carlsen. I see no
reason to interfere with that arrangement and find that the Appellant was
entitled to the benefit for the months of August and September 2003 only.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 13th day
of May, 2005.
McArthur
J.