Tremblay,
J.T.C.C.:—This
appeal
was
heard
on
June
15,
1993,
in
Montréal,
Quebec.
1.
Point
at
issue
The
point
at
issue
is
whether
the
appellant
was
entitled,
in
computing
her
income
for
the
1989
taxation
year,
to
include
only
the
sum
of
$7,816.26,
not
the
total
of
$16,265
received
as
alimony
under
a
Quebec
Superior
Court
judgment
permitting
her
to
live
in
the
matrimonial
home.
According
to
the
appellant,
this
judgment
also
provided
that
she
would
pay
the
mortgage,
tax
and
heating
costs
and
all
expenses
related
to
her
home.
However,
these
expenses
totalling
$8,438.74
were
not,
according
to
her,
fully
at
her
disposal
[sic]
and
should
not
therefore
be
considered
as
a
taxable
allowance.
Furthermore,
according
to
the
appellant,
by
paying
these
various
expenses
herself,
she
had
to
pay
an
“allowance”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
According
to
the
respondent,
the
entire
amount
of
$16,265
constitutes
an
allowance
and
therefore
a
taxable
income.
The
respondent
relied
on
subsection
56(12)
of
the
Act.
2.
Burden
of
proof
In
cases
where
the
facts
are
disputed,
the
burden
of
proof
is
on
the
appellant
taxpayer
concerning
the
facts.
The
facts
were
not
disputed
in
the
instant
case.
3.
Facts
3.01
The
relevant
facts
are
described
at
subparagraphs
(a),
(b)
and
(c)
of
paragraph
7
of
the
respondent's
reply
to
the
notice
of
appeal
and
in
paragraph
3
of
the
appellant’s
notice
of
appeal.
7.
In
making
the
reassessment
respecting
the
appellant’s
1989
taxation
year,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
took
tor
granted
inter
alia
the
following
facts:
(a)
In
a
judgment
on
a
motion
for
interim
relief
dated
February
14,
1984,
Mr.
Justice
Claude
Benoît
of
the
Quebec
Superior
Court
approved
certain
clauses
of
a
consent
signed
by
the
appellant
and
her
husband,
Mr.
Alain
Péloquin,
on
that
same
date;
[admitted]
(b)
The
said
judgment
approved
inter
alia
paragraph
2
of
the
said
consent
providing
for
the
payment
by
Mr.
Alain
Péloquin
of
alimony
of
$255
per
week
for
the
appellant
and
the
two
children,
the
said
alimony
to
be
indexed
each
year
on
the
anniversary
date
of
the
judgment,
the
whole
pursuant
to
section
638
of
the
Civil
Code;
[admitted]
(c)
Pursuant
to
this
judgment,
the
appellant
received
alimony
totalling
$16,265
in
1989.
.
.
.
[admitted]
[Translation.]
Subparagraph
(d)
was
obviously
denied
since
it
concerns
the
point
at
issue.
It
reads
as
follows:
(d)
The
whole
amount
received
by
the
appellant
as
alimony
in
1989,
that
is
$16,265,
constituted
taxable
income
and
should
therefore
have
been
included
in
the
appellant’s
income
for
that
year.
.
.
.
[Translation.]
3.02
Clauses
2
and
5
of
the
judgment
here
in
question
read
as
follows:
2.
The
respondent
agrees
to
pay
for
the
plaintiff
and
her
two
children
alimony
of
$255
a
week
payable
in
advance
on
the
fifteenth
of
each
month
at
the
plaintiff's
home,
the
said
alimony
to
be
indexed
each
year
on
the
anniversary
date
of
the
judgment,
the
whole
pursuant
to
section
638
of
the
Civil
Code;
5.
The
plaintiff
will
pay
the
mortgage,
tax
and
heating
costs
and
all
expenses
relating
to
her
home
as
long
as
she
shall
live
in
the
matrimonial
home.
[Translation.]
4.
Act—case
law—analysis
4.01
Act
The
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
which
the
parties
referred
are
paragraph
56(1)(b),
subsection
56(12)
and
paragraph
60(b),
which
are
cited
below.
4.02
Case
Law
The
Court
reviewed
the
following
cases:
1.
Gagnon
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
1
S.C.R.
264,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
410,
86
D.T.C.
6179;
2.
Byers
v.
M.N.R.,
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
2146,
85
D.T.C.
129
(T.C.C.);
3.
Tremblay
v.
Canada,
[1993]
2
C.T.C.
2184
(T.C.C.);
4,
Assafv.
Canada,
January
29,
1992
(unreported)
(T.C.C.);
5.
Brooke
v.
M.N.R.,
[1980]
C.T.C.
2857,
80
D.T.C.
1754
(T.R.B.).
4.03
Analysis
4.03.1
The
appellant's
two
arguments
were
as
follows.
1.
The
appellant
did
not
have
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
money
received
as
alimony.
Clause
5
of
the
Quebec
Superior
Court
judgment
(3.02)
is
clear
that
the
expenses
related
to
the
house
lived
in
and
belonging
to
her
former
husband
would
have
to
be
paid
by
the
appellant
as
long
as
she
lived
there.
2.
The
appellant’s
second
argument
was
that
the
expenses
paid
constituted
a
deductible
allowance
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Act.
4.03.2
With
respect
to
the
first
argument,
consideration
must
be
given
to
paragraph
5
6(1
)(b)
of
the
Act
which
reads
as
follows:
56.
Amounts
to
be
included
in
income
for
year.
(1)
Without
restricting
the
generality
of
section
3,
there
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
for
a
taxation
year,
(b)
Alimony.—any
amount
received
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year,
pursuant
to
a
decree,
order
or
judgment
of
a
competent
tribunal
or
pursuant
to
a
written
agreement,
as
alimony
or
other
allowance
payable
on
a
periodic
basis
for
the
maintenance
of
the
recipient
thereof,
children
of
the
marriage,
or
both
the
recipient
and
children
of
the
marriage,
if
the
recipient
was
living
apart
from,
and
was
separated
pursuant
to
a
divorce,
judicial
separation
or
written
separation
agreement
from,
the
spouse
or
former
spouse
required
to
make
the
payment
at
the
time
the
payment
was
received
and
throughout
the
remainder
of
the
year.
.
.
.
4.03.2(1)
The
only
condition
of
paragraph
56(1)(b)
that
could
prevent
this
section
from
not
[sic]
applying
concerns
the
question
whether
the
total
sum
received
by
the
appellant
as
alimony
constituted
an
allowance
under
paragraph
56(1
)(b).
The
term
"allowance"
is
defined
at
subsection
56(12).
This
subsection
56(12),
recently
studied
in
Tremblay,
supra,
rendered
on
September
29,
1992,
was
added
by
subsection
34(6)
of
chapter
55
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1988.
Subsection
34(6)
reads
as
follows:
34
(6)
Section
56
of
the
said
Act
is
further
amended
by
adding
thereto,
immediately
after
subsection
(11)
thereof,
the
following
subsection:
(12)
Subject
to
subsections
56.1(2)
and
60.1(2),
for
the
purposes
of
paragraphs
(1)(b),
(c)
and
(c.1)
(hereinafter
in
this
subsection
referred
to
as
the
“former
paragraphs”)
and
60(b),
(c)
and
(c.1)
(hereinafter
in
this
subsection
referred
to
as
the
“latter
paragraphs"),
"allowance"
does
not
include
any
amount
that
is
received
by
a
person,
referred
to
in
the
former
paragraphs
as
"the
taxpayer"
and
in
the
latter
paragraphs
as
"the
recipient",
unless
that
person
has
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
amount.
It
is
subsection
12
of
the
same
section
34
of
chapter
55
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada,
1988
which
addresses
the
application
of
the
aforementioned
subsection
6.
Subsection
34(12)
provides
as
follows:
34
(12)
Subsection
(6)
is
applicable,
with
respect
to
decrees,
orders,
judgments
and
written
agreements
made
or
entered
into
before
March
28,
1986
or
after
1987,
to
the
1986
and
subsequent
taxation
years,
except
that,
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years,
subsection
56(12)
of
the
said
Act,
as
enacted
by
subsection
(6),
shall
be
read
as
follows:
56
(12)
Subject
to
subsections
56.1(2)
and
60.1(2),
for
the
purposes
of
paragraphs
(1)(b),
(c)
and
(c.1),
“allowance”
does
not
include
any
amount
that
is
received
by
a
person
referred
to
in
those
paragraphs
as
“the
taxpayer"
unless
that
person
has
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
amount.
Since
the
judgment
on
a
motion
for
interim
relief
ordering
payment
of
alimony
for
the
appellant's
benefit
is
dated
February
14,
1984,
it
follows
that
subsection
6
of
the
amending
Act
applies,
given
that
the
judgment
falls
within
one
of
the
two
periods
concerned
in
subsection
34(12)
of
chapter
55
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada,
1988
(one
of
the
two
periods
contemplated
by
this
last
subsection
having
to
be
prior
to
March
28,
1986).
4.03.2(2)
It
is
interesting
on
this
point
to
examine
paragraphs
6,
7
and
8
of
the
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-118R3
entitled
Alimony
and
Maintenance,
dated
December
21,
1990:
MEANING
OF
ALLOWANCE
6.
For
the
purposes
of
paragraphs
60(b),
(c)
and
(c.1).
.
.
an
allowance
is
a
specified
sum
of
money
which
has
been
established
in
advance
of
payment
by
the
court
or
the
parties
as
being
the
required
payment
to
be
made
by
the
payer
to
a
spouse,
former
spouse
or
former
common-law
partner
for
the
maintenance
of
the
recipient,
or
a
child
of
the
recipient
or
both.
A
key
factor
in
determining
whether
a
payment
is
an
allowance
is
whether
the
recipient
has
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
amount.
.
.
.
Discretion
as
to
the
Use
of
the
Amount
7.
Prior
to
March
28,
1986—Prior
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
decision
in
Gagnon,
supra,
payments
made
to
a
recipient
for
“earmarked
expenses"
(i.e.,
where
the
recipient
has
no
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
payments)
were
not
considered
to
be
allowances
and
thus
were
not
deductible
by
the
payer.
.
.
.
This
is
referred
to
as
the
pre-Gagnon
definition
of
allowance.
March
28,
1986—December
31,
1987—The
Gagnon
decision
had
the
effect
of
broadening
the
meaning
of
allowance
to
encompass
amounts
for
particular
items
which
the
recipient
could
dispose
of
for
his
or
her
benefit,
notwithstanding
restrictions
imposed
as
to
the
manner
of
disposing
of
them
("Gagnon
definition
of
allowance").
For
example,
the
Gagnon
decision
allowed
amounts
paid
directly
to
the
recipient
for
mortgage
payments,
property
taxes,
utilities,
medical
expenses,
etc.
to
be
deductible
to
the
payer
as
an
allowance
that
was
otherwise
deductible
under
paragraph
60(b),
(c)
or
(c.1).
The
Gagnon
definition
of
allowance
applies
to
court
orders
or
written
agreements
entered
into
or
last
amended
after
the
time
of
this
decision
(March
27,
1986)
and
before
1988.
For
1988
and
Subsequent
Years—Subsection
56(12)
specifically
provides
that
for
court
orders
or
written
agreements
entered
into
after
1987
the
pre-Gagnon
definition
of
allowance
will
apply.
8.
Subsection
56(12)
provides
special
rules
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years
to
payments
made
pursuant
to
orders
made
before
the
Gagnon
decision.
For
these
payments,
the
Gagnon
definition
of
allowance
applies,
entitling
the
payer
to
claim
a
deduction
of
the
maintenance
type
payments
discussed
in
6
above
under
paragraph
60(b),
(c)
or
(c.1).
However,
a
corresponding
amount
is
not
required
to
be
included
in
the
income
of
the
recipient
under
paragraph
56(1)(b),
(c)
or
(c.1)
for
the
1986
and
1987
taxation
years.
4.03.2(3)
Judge
Dussault
has
addressed
subsection
56(12)
in
his
volume,
L'impôt
sur
le
revenu
au
Canada
(Editions
Revue
de
droit,
Université
de
Sherbrooke,
1990).
I
take
the
liberty
of
citing
the
following
passage
at
page
5-65:
The
sum
received
must
constitute
alimony
or
an
allowance
payable
on
a
periodic
basis
and
not
a
reimbursement
of
expenses.
Subsection
56(12)
recently
passed
establishes
that
an
amount
received
by
a
person
does
not
constitute
an
allowance
for
the
purposes
of
the
relevant
paragraphs
of
sections
56
and
60
unless
that
person
has
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
that
amount.
This
definition
nullifies
the
effect
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
judgment
rendered
on
March
28,
1986
in
Gagnon,
supra,
in
which
it
was
established
that
a
sum
constitutes
an
allowance
provided
the
recipient
can
dispose
of
it
completely
for
his
or
her
benefit,
notwithstanding
restrictions
imposed
as
to
the
manner
of
disposing
of
it
and
benefitting
from
it.
Subsection
56(12)
restores
the
concept
of
an
allowance
as
defined
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
R.
v.
Pascoe,
[1975]
C.T.C.
656,
75
D.T.C.
5427.
The
new
definition
of
subsection
56(12)
I.T.A.
applies
for
the
1986
and
subsequent
taxation
years
in
respect
of
decrees,
orders
and
judgments
rendered
and
written
agreements
entered
into
before
March
28,
1986
or
after
1987,
except
that,
for
1986
and
1987,
it
applies
only
for
the
purposes
of
paragraphs
56(1
)(b),
(c)
and
(c.1),
that
is
solely
for
the
purpose
of
computing
the
recipient's
income.
[Translation.]
4.03.2(4)
It
is
quite
clear
that
the
definition
of
the
word
"allowance"
given
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Gagnon
[4.02(1)]
cannot
be
referred
to
in
the
instant
case.
It
is
"the
pre-Gagnon
definition”
that
must
be
referred
to,
as
indicated
in
paragraph
7
of
Interpretation
Bulletin
IT-118R3
cited
above.
Even
if
the
adequate
definition
of
the
word
"allowance"
were
applied,
however,
the
appellant
could
not
be
given
judgment
on
the
ground
that
she
did
not
have
discretion
as
to
the
use
of
the
sum
received
as
alimony.
The
case
law
must
be
consulted
on
this
point.
In
Assaf
[4.02(4)]
delivered
on
January
29,
1992,
it
was
found
that
a
sum
paid
under
an
agreement
"to
defray
part
of
the
cost
of
the
children's
university
education"
did
not
constitute
an
allowance
under
subsection
56(12).
Although
the
Court
came
to
this
conclusion,
Judge
Garon
made
the
following
remarks
on
the
interpretation
of
this
last
subsection:
In
interpreting
subsection
56(12)
it
should
be
noted
that,
for
amounts
received
for
example
by
a
spouse
or
former
spouse
to
be
an
allowance
within
the
meaning
of
this
subsection,
it
does
not
matter
that
the
person
paying
the
alimony
does
not
control
or
attempt
to
control
the
use
of
the
money
in
question.
However,
the
judgment
or
agreement,
as
the
case
may
be,
must
not
specify
the
use
to
be
made
of
these
amounts.
If
there
is
such
an
indication,
it
follows
that
if
the
spouse
or
former
spouse
receiving
the
money
in
question
does
not
use
it
in
the
way
specified
in
the
judgment
or
agreement,
he
or
she
will
be
failing
to
perform
the
obligation
contained
in
the
judgment
or
agreement.
It
is
in
this
sense
that
the
recipient
of
the
amounts
in
question
does
not
legally
have
discretion
as
to
their
use
under
subsection
56(12).
4.03.2(5)
Lastly,
let
us
emphasize
Brooke
[4.02(5)],
in
which
the
arguments
of
the
alimony
recipient,
who
was
responsible
for
paying
the
expenses
related
to
the
matrimonial
home,
were
similar
to
those
of
the
appellant.
In
that
case,
the
taxpayer
had
deducted
half
of
the
house
maintenance
costs
from
her
income,
and
in
the
written
separation
agreement
between
the
parties
the
following
provision
was
made:
[T]he
wife
would
be
entitled
to
remain
in
sole
occupancy
of
the
former
matrimonial
home
presently
registered
in
the
name
of
the
husband
alone
so
long
as
the
wife
was
entitled
to
maintenance
or
until
the
youngest
child
attained
the
age
of
eighteen
years
whichever
would
occur
first.
So
long
as
the
wife
was
in
occupancy
of
the
home,
she
would
be
entirely
responsible
for
payments
of
mortgage,
principal
and
interest,
municipal
realty
taxes,
and
routine
maintenance,
but
the
husband
would
be
responsible
for
any
major
repairs.
.
.
.
The
Court
dismissed
the
taxpayer's
appeal,
finding
that
these
were
personal
expenses
and
that
no
provision
of
the
Act
authorized
such
a
deduction.
The
same
reasoning
must
be
adopted
in
the
instant
case,
which
settles
the
matter
of
the
appellant’s
first
argument.
4.03.3
In
her
second
argument,
the
appellant
contended
that
she
was
entitled
to
deduct
from
the
total
sum
of
$16,265
[included
in
income
under
paragraph
56(1
)(b)]
the
expenses
related
to
her
house
because
those
expenses
totalling
$8,438.74
had
to
be
considered
as
an
“allowance”
under
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Act.
It
is
difficult
to
accept
this
argument
as
well.
For
an
amount
to
be
deductible
under
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Act,
the
said
amount
must,
among
other
conditions,
be
payable
pursuant
to
a
judgment
to
the
payer’s
spouse
or
former
spouse.
This
conclusion
is
inferred
from
the
very
text
of
paragraph
60(b),
which
read
as
follows
for
the
1989
taxation
year:
(b)
Alimony
payments—an
amount
paid
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year,
pursuant
to
a
decree,
order
or
judgment
of
a
competent
tribunal
or
pursuant
to
a
written
agreement,
as
alimony
or
other
allowance
payable
on
a
periodic
basis
for
the
maintenance
of
the
recipient
thereof,
children
of
the
marriage,
or
both
the
recipient
and
children
of
the
marriage,
if
he
was
living
apart
from,
and
was
separated
pursuant
to
a
divorce,
judicial
separation
or
written
separation
agreement
from,
his
spouse
or
former
spouse
to
whom
he
was
required
to
make
the
payment
at
the
time
the
payment
was
made
and
throughout
the
remainder
of
the
year.
[Emphasis
added.]
As
it
is
clear
that
the
payments
provided
under
clause
5
of
the
separation
judgment
were
not
payable
under
the
said
judgment
to
the
spouse
or
former
spouse
of
the
appellant,
the
latter
may
not
deduct
them
under
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Act.
Lastly,
even
if,
by
some
legal
reasoning,
this
expense
[sic]
had
to
be
considered
an
“allowance”,
it
would
also
in
turn
have
to
be
included
in
the
income
of
the
former
spouse,
the
very
one
who
paid
the
alimony.
It
is
hard
to
believe
that
this
type
of
situation
is
among
the
objects
sought
by
the
Act's
provisions
governing
alimony.
5.
Conclusion
The
appeal
is
dismissed
for
the
above
reasons.
Appeal
dismissed.