Date:20000725
Docket: 1998-6-IT-I
BETWEEN:
IAN D. CROWE,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
(Delivered orally from the Bench at Halifax, Nova Scotia on
July 19, 2000)
Hamlyn, J.T.C.C.
[1] This is in the matter of Ian Crowe and Her Majesty The
Queen by way of a Notice of Appeal to an assessment.
[2] The Appellant deducted $14,774 from his net professional
income. This amount was identified as equivalent to spousal
RRSP.
[3] By Notice of Reassessment the Minister of National Revenue
advised the Appellant that he had been denied the spousal RRSP
deduction claimed against business income for the 1996 taxation
year.
[4] The Appellant filed a Notice of Objection for the 1996
taxation year, and by way of Notice of Confirmation the Minister
confirmed the reassessment.
[5] In his Notice of Appeal the Appellant submitted the
following. In February 1997 he made an application for a spousal
RRSP in the amount of $14,774. He states the amount was not in
excess of his RRSP deduction limit, that his spouse was not of
the opposite sex and he stated the bank did not allow him to
purchase the spousal RRSP because, as he understood it, Revenue
Canada's position was the legislation did not provide for
same sex couple spousal RRSPs. He further stated to the court
this morning: "I claimed it as a business expense, I set it
aside, and let it accumulate independent." But he clearly
emphasized to the court that it was not a business expense, it
was just a place to place the money in the interim.
[6] He also stated clearly that he believes that this whole
exercise, particularly under the Income Tax Act, in
relation to how he was dealt with, is contrary to his basic
rights as a Canadian citizen.
[7] The Minister says that the Appellant did not contribute to
an RRSP in the name of the spouse and that as such disposes of
the issue in terms of how the Tax Court is required to deal with
it. The issue that I have to decide is whether he is entitled to
deduct the amount identified as "Spousal RRSP."
[8] Section 171 of the Income Tax Act outlines what the
Tax Court of Canada can do. And in terms of what the court can
do, its primary requisite is to determine whether the assessment
is correct. And if the assessment is correct, the court must
dismiss the appeal. If the assessment is incorrect, the court may
allow the appeal, vacate the assessment, vary the assessment or
refer the matter back to the Minister for reconsideration and
reassessment.
[9] Subsection 146(5.1) of the Income Tax Act reads as
follows:
Amount of the spousal RRSP premiums deductible. There
may be deducted in computing a taxpayer's income for a
taxation year such amount as the taxpayer claims not exceeding
the lesser of
(a) the total of all amounts each of which is a premium
paid
by the taxpayer after 1990.
In this case the Appellant did not actually pay any RRSP
premiums.
[10] The second part of the section is paragraph
(b):
The amount, if any, by which the taxpayer's RRSP deduction
limit for the year exceeds the amount deducted under subsection
(5) in computing the taxpayer's income for the year.
[11] Therefore, in terms of computation the Appellant did not
actually pay any RRSP contributions. Therefore the lesser of
paragraph 146(5.1)(a) and 146(5.1)(b) is nil,
regardless of the amount under paragraph 146(5.1)(b).
[12] Therefore, in terms of interpretation the Income Tax
Act of Canada in relation to the facts and the assessment in
this matter, the Appellant cannot deduct any amount, and the
appeal is dismissed on that basis.
[13] As an additional comment, after considering all the
matters that have been put to the court, including apparently the
changed legislation in regard to RRSP contributions, I understand
that legislation is not retroactive to the taxation year in
question.
[14] Moreover, the Appellant has made a plea for a remedy on
the basis of fairness. Such a plea is a matter of referral to the
Fairness Committee. This court does not have any jurisdiction to
consider that plea. I do not express any opinion as to any
success one way or the other. I do know that it is not within the
jurisdiction of this court to refer the matter to the Fairness
Committee.
[15] It also appears to me that it is really a matter that is
not so much for the Tax Court, but is possibly a matter that
could have been the subject of litigation between the bank, the
government and the Appellant and that would be found in another
forum, but not this forum.
Dated at Ottawa, Canada, this 18th day of September 2000.
"D. Hamlyn"
J.T.C.C.