Garon
J.T.C.C.:-
This
is
an
appeal
from
an
income
tax
assessment
dated
August
2,
1988
for
the
1987
taxation
year.
This
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
reduced
the
deduction
eligible
for
contributions
to
a
registered
retirement
savings
plan
(RRSP)
to
$2,197
on
the
basis
of
paragraph
146(5)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-
72,
c.
63)
(the
“Act”).
The
appellant,
on
the
other
hand,
had
claimed
a
deduction
of
$6,500
on
the
basis
of
paragraph
146(5)(b)
of
the
Act.
The
facts
were
not
disputed.
The
appellant
admitted
the
facts
alleged
at
subparagraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
paragraph
5
of
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal.
The
subparagraphs
read
as
follows:
(a)
the
taxpayer
was
employed
by
an
accounting
firm
from
1979
to
August
31,
1987,
at
which
time
he
became
a
partner
in
the
firm;
(b)
from
January
1,
1987
to
August
31,
1987,
the
appellant
paid
$1,304.24
into
his
employer’s
registered
pension
plan
(RPP),
in
which
he
was
an
annuitant;
(c)
the
appellant
claimed
this
amount
as
a
deduction
in
computing
his
employment
income
for
the
1987
taxation
year
under
paragraph
8(1
)(m)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
[Translation.]
It
was
also
admitted
that
the
appellant
paid
as
a
contribution
an
additional
$6,500
in
the
first
60
days
of
the
year
1988
into
a
registered
retirement
savings
plan.
It
is
in
connection
with
this
$6,500
contribution
that
the
appellant
claimed
a
deduction
of
this
same
amount
in
calculating
his
income
for
the
year
1987.
It
is
mentioned
in
the
notice
of
appeal
that
as
of
August
31,
1987,
the
date
upon
which
the
appellant
ceased
to
be
an
employee
of
the
chartered
accountants
company,
he
also
ceased
to
be
an
annuitant
under
the
pension
plan
to
which
he
had
contributed
since
1979.
Some
time
afterwards,
the
appellant
transferred
“the
amounts
accrued
on
his
behalf
to
his
personal
RRSP”,
according
to
what
is
alleged
in
the
notice
of
appeal.
Appellant’s
contentions
In
his
notice
of
appeal,
the
appellant
made
the
following
observations
to
support
his
right
to
deduct
the
amount
of
$6,500
as
a
contribution
to
an
RRSP:
The
appellant
contended
that
in
February
1988,
as
he
was
no
longer
an
annuitant
under
the
plan
and
as
he
could
not
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
the
plan
on
the
premiums
paid
into
it,
contributions
to
the
RRSP
were
made
within
the
limits
provided
in
paragraph
146(5)(b)
of
the
Act.
The
Minister’s
contention
was
that
since
there
were
contributions
to
the
plan
during
the
year,
1.e.,
from
January
to
August
1987,
the
limits
provided
in
146(l)(a)
of
the
Act
should
apply.
The
appellant
claimed
that
the
Minister’s
position
was
without
foundation
for
the
following
reasons:
1.0
Whether
or
not
contributions
were
made
to
an
RPP
is
irrelevant
for
the
purposes
of
applying
paragraph
146(l)(a).
Paragraph
146(l)(a)
applies
if
by
reason
of
employment,
he
was
a
person
who
was
or
might
have
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
an
RPP.
As
of
September
1,
the
appellant
was
not
and
could
not
become
entitled
to
any
benefits
under
an
RPP,
and
in
this
sense,
the
contributions
paid
into
an
RRSP
in
February
of
the
following
year
could
not
be
subject
to
the
provisions
of
paragraph
146(
1
)(a)
of
the
Act,
but
rather
to
paragraph
146(1
)(b)
of
the
Act.
[Translation.]
Respondent's
contentions
In
his
notice
of
confirmation,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
gave
the
following
reasons
in
support
of
his
assessment:
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
studied
the
facts
set
out
in
your
notice(s)
of
objection
and
hereby
confirms
the
contribution
or
contributions
as
established
in
compliance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
for
the
following
reasons:
because
the
deductible
amount
allocated
under
paragraph
8(1
)(m)
for
1987
was
set
at
$1,303.24:
that
as
a
consequence,
your
deduction
for
a
premium
paid
to
a
registered
retirement
savings
plan
was
limited
to
$2,197
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
paragraph
146(5(a)
of
the
Act.
[Translation.]
In
the
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
stated
his
main
contention
as
follows:
(d)
as
a
consequence
of
the
above,
the
maximum
amount
that
the
appellant
could
deduct
as
premiums
paid
into
an
RRSP
for
the
1987
taxation
year
was
$3,500
less
the
contributions
paid
to
his
employer’s
RPP.
Analysis
As
is
clear
from
the
claims
made
by
the
parties,
I
must
determine
from
the
technical
standpoint
whether
paragraph
(a)
or
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
146(5)
applies
in
the
instant
case.
It
is
useful
at
this
point
to
reproduce
the
text
of
the
English
version
of
subsection
146(5)
which
was
applicable
in
the
1987
taxation
year.
Subsection
146(5)
reads
as
follows:
There
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
taxpayer
who
is
an
annuitant
under
a
registered
retirement
savings
plan
or
becomes
an
annuitant
thereunder
within
60
days
after
the
end
of
the
year,
the
aggregate
of
all
amounts
each
of
which
is
the
amount
of
any
premium
paid
by
the
taxpayer
under
the
plan
during
the
year
or
within
60
days
after
the
end
of
the
year
(to
the
extent
that
it
was
neither
deducted
in
computing
his
income
for
a
previous
year
nor
designated
for
the
purposes
of
paragraph
60(j),
(j.l)
or
(1),
not
exceeding
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
(a)
where
the
taxpayer
was
employed
in
the
year
and
(i)
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
a
pension
fund
or
plan
that
provides
for
payment
of
a
pension
to
him
payable
in
whole
or
in
part
out
of
contributions
made
or
to
be
made
to
the
fund
or
plan
or
out
of
or
in
respect
of
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
in
lieu
of
such
contributions
by
a
person
other
than
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
the
taxpayer’s
employment
in
the
year,
(ii)
contributed
an
amount
in
the
year
to
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
of
which
he
was
a
beneficiary,
or
(iii)
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
in
respect
of
whom
a
contribution
was
made
by
an
employer
to
a
deferred
profit
sharing
plan
in
the
year,
an
amount
that,
when
added
to
the
amount,
if
any,
deductible
under
paragraph
8(1
)(m)
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
year,
does
not
exceed
the
lesser
of
$3,500
and
20
per
cent
of
his
earned
income
for
the
year,
or
(b)
in
any
other
case,
the
lesser
of
$7,500
and
20
per
cent
of
his
earned
income
for
that
taxation
year
exceeds
the
amount,
if
any,
deductible
under
subsection
(6)
in
computing
income
for
that
taxation
year.
In
the
final
analysis,
we
must
determine
whether
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
applies
in
the
case
of
the
appellant
for
the
1987
taxation
year,
since
it
is
clear
that
subparagraphs
146(5)(a)(ii)
and
146(5)(a)(iii)
are
inapplicable.
That
paragraph
146(5)(b)
applies
if
all
the
requirements
of
subparagraph
(a)(i)
are
not
met
is
not
in
dispute.
An
analysis
of
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
brings
out
the
following
elements:
1.
the
taxpayer
was
employed
in
the
year
2.
as
a
consequence
thereof
he
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
a
pension
fund
or
plan
3.
this
fund
or
plan
provides
for
payment
of
a
pension
to
this
taxpayer
payable
in
whole
or
in
part
out
of
contributions
made
or
to
be
made
to
the
fund
or
plan
or
out
of
or
in
respect
of
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
in
lieu
of
such
contributions
4.
such
contributions
or
the
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
to
replace
these
contributions
must
come
from
a
person
other
than
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
the
taxpayer’s
employment
in
the
year.
Each
of
the
requirements
of
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
must
therefore
be
examined.
With
respect
to
the
first
requirement,
the
taxpayer
must
have
been
an
employee
at
some
time
during
a
given
year.
This
element
of
this
subparagraph
does
not
require
that
the
taxpayer
had
been
an
employee
for
the
whole
year.
There
were
no
differences
of
opinion
with
respect
to
this
aspect
of
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
by
the
parties.
I
now
move
on
from
the
first
requirement
to
the
third
requirement
of
this
subparagraph.
Among
other
things,
the
pension
plan
must
provide
for
the
payment
of
a
pension
payable
out
of
contributions
made
or
to
be
made
to
the
plan
or
out
of
or
in
respect
of
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
to
this
plan.
There
was
no
discussion
concerning
the
application
of
this
requirement.
The
fourth
component
may
be
simply
stated.
The
taxpayer
must
have
been
the
employee
of
an
employer
who
contributed
or
who
will
contribute
to
the
pension
plan
or
that
the
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
in
lieu
of
such
contributions
must
come
from
a
person
other
than
the
employee
in
question.
The
appellant
rightly
underlined
that
it
is
not
necessary
that
the
employee
himself
had
actually
paid
a
contribution
in
the
year
for
this
requirement
to
apply.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
in
his
argument
referred
on
several
occasions
to
the
fact,
which
appeared
to
him
to
be
significant,
that
the
appellant
had
“contributed”
to
the
pension
plan
in
question.
The
appellant’s
argument
on
this
subject
appears
valid
to
me,
given
that
in
addition
to
the
wording
of
this
fourth
part
of
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i),
the
wording
of
the
last
part
of
paragraph
146(5)(a),
which
states
that
“there
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
taxpay
er...
the
amount,
if
any...
an
amount
that,
when
added
to
the
amount,
if
any,
deductible
under
paragraph
8(1
)(m)
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
year,
does
not
exceed
the
lesser
of
$3,500
and
20
per
cent
of
his
earned
income
for
the
year”.
The
legislator
thus
ruled
that
the
monetary
limit
at
issue
in
paragraph
146(5)(a)
could
apply
even
if
the
employee
had
no
amount
to
deduct
under
paragraph
8(1
)(m)
which
generally
sets
the
maximum
amounts
that
may
be
deducted
as
contributions
to
a
registered
pension
plan,
both
for
current
and
past
employment.
I
now
return
to
the
second
requirement
stated
in
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
relative
to
an
employee,
according
to
which
“as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
a
pension
fund
or
plan”.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
contended
that
to
determine
whether
the
person
was
or
could
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
a
pension
plan
it
was
necessary
to
do
so
from
the
time
the
appellant
was
an
employee.
The
appellant
contends
that
the
issue
should
be
considered
from
the
end
of
the
year
in
question
or
from
the
end
of
the
60
days
following
the
end
of
the
year.
Judge
Bonner
of
this
Court
considered
the
text
of
this
subparagraph
in
Gadsby
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
2274,
85
D.T.C.
566
(T.C.C.)
[appealed
to
the
Federal
Court-Trial
Division,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
441].
To
make
it
easier
to
understand
Judge
Bonner’s
observations,
we
reproduce
the
subparagraph
here:
(a)
where
the
taxpayer
was
employed
in
the
year
and
(i)
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled
to
benefits
under
a
pension
fund
or
plan
that
provides
for
payment
of
a
pension
to
him
payable
in
whole
or
in
part
out
of
contributions
made
or
to
be
made
to
the
fund
or
plan
or
out
of
or
in
respect
of
amounts
credited
or
to
be
credited
in
lieu
of
such
contributions
by
a
person
other
than
the
taxpayer
in
respect
of
the
taxpayer’s
employment
in
the
year,
Judge
Bonner
stated:
As
I
indicated
during
the
hearing
I
have
some
difficulty
in
seeing
how
the
appellant
could
be
described
as
a
person
who
“was
employed
in
the
year
and
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled
to
benefits”
within
subparagraph
(i)
in
circumstances
where
before
the
end
of
the
year
and
indeed
before
the
end
of
the
first
month
of
the
year
he
left
his
job,
received
all
that
he
was
entitled
to
under
the
pension
plan
and
ceased
to
be
a
member
of
the
plan.
The
verb
tenses
in
that
portion
of
subsection
146(5)
indicate
a
change
in
time
where
they
shift
from
the
period
indicated
by
“was
employed”
and
“was
a
person”
to
the
period
in
time
indicated
by
the
words
“who
is”.
As
I
see
it,
the
appellant
may
aptly
be
described
by
the
words
“was
employed
in
the
year
and
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
was
or
might
have
become
entitled”.
He
cannot,
in
my
view,
aptly
be
described
by
the
words
“was
employed
in
the
year
and
as
a
consequence
thereof
was
a
person
who
is
or
may
become
entitled”
after
the
employment
and
membership
in
the
pension
plan
has
ceased.
The
period
of
time
indicated
by
the
words
“who
is”
is,
in
my
view,
that
period
late
in
the
year
during
the
first
60
days
of
the
next
year
when
a
taxpayer
is
endeavouring
to
determine
the
size
of
the
deductible
contribution
which
he
may
make
to
a
RRSP.
An
appeal
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
was
then
allowed
by
Deputy
Prothonotary
Giles
of
this
Court
on
the
basis
of
a
consent
to
judgment
executed
by
counsel
for
the
taxpayer
and
the
government.
Noteworthy
in
this
judgment
is
the
fact
that
the
deduction
of
a
portion
of
the
taxpayer’s
contribution
was
granted
pursuant
to
paragraph
146(5)(a)
and
that
another
portion
of
the
contribution
was
deducted
under
paragraph
60(j)
of
the
Act.
This
decision
by
the
Deputy
Prothonotary
is
not
a
precedent.
In
connection
with
this
subject
see
the
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
Uppal
v.
Canada,
[1987]
3
F.C.
565,
at
page
575.
Judge
Bertrand
Gagnon
of
the
Court
of
Quebec,
in
Higgins
v.
Sous-Ministre
du
Revenu
du
Québec,
[1987]
R.D.F.Q.
184,
follows
the
line
of
reasoning
taken
by
Judge
Bonner
in
Gadsby,
supra.
It
also
appears
to
me
to
be
more
logical
to
examine
the
application
of
this
second
requirement
at
the
time
the
taxpayer’s
entitlement
to
the
deduction
provided
in
subparagraph
146(5)(a)(i)
or
paragraph
146(5)(b)
needs
to
be
determined
for
the
purpose
of
computing
his
income.
It
is
indeed
at
the
end
of
the
year
or
within
the
60
days
following
the
year
end
that
the
taxpayer
may
exercise
his
right
to
one
of
the
deductions
in
these
provisions.
Before
concluding,
I
would
like
to
emphasize
that
the
appellant,
who
appeared
to
me
to
be
a
competent
and
trustworthy
professional,
contended
that
the
assessment
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
under
appeal
runs
counter
to
the
Department
of
National
Revenue’s
policy,
I
presume
at
the
relevant
time.
The
authorities
concerned
will
no
doubt
want
to
verify
the
accuracy
of
this
affirmation,
moved
by
their
concern
for
consistency
in
the
treatment
of
taxpayers
relative
to
a
given
matter.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
at
the
hearing
was
not
able
to
give
a
firm
opinion
on
this
issue.
Needless
to
say,
whether
or
not
this
assessment
is
consistent
with
the
policy
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
at
a
given
time
has
no
impact
on
an
appellant’s
right
to
the
deduction
prescribed
in
paragraph
146(5)(b)
of
the
Act.
For
these
reasons,
the
appeal
is
allowed
and
the
assessment
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
that
the
appellant
is
entitled
to
the
deduction
prescribed
by
paragraph
146(5)(b)
with
respect
to
the
premium
paid
into
an
RRSP.
Appeal
allowed.