Hugessen,
J.A.:
—
This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
Collier,
J.,
of
the
Trial
Division,
allowing
the
taxpayer's
appeal
from
a
decision
of
Sarchuk,
J.,
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
which
had
confirmed
the
Minister's
assessment.
The
sole
issue
for
determination
is
the
deductibility,
for
tax
purposes,
of
certain
payments
made
by
the
taxpayer
to
his
former
wife
in
the
years
1982
and
1983.
Those
payments
were
made
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
a
decree
nisi
of
divorce
pronounced
by
a
local
judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
February
5,
1982.
The
relevant
passages
of
the
decree,
given
on
consent,
read
as
follows:
AND
THIS
COURT
FURTHER
ORDERS,
by
consent,
that
the
Respondent
pay
to
the
Petitioner
the
lump
sum
maintenance
of
ONE
HUNDRED
THIRTY
THOUSAND
($130,000.00)
DOLLARS
and
periodic
maintenance
in
the
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
($115,000.00)
DOLLARS
in
satisfaction
of
all
financial
relief
under
the
Divorce
Act
and
Family
Relations
Act,
payable
in
the
manner
following,
that
is
to
say:
(a)
Transfer
to
her
of
all
that
certain
parcel
or
tract
of
land
and
premises
situate
at
33118
Whidden
Avenue,
Mission,
British
Columbia,
more
particularly
known
and
described
as:
Lot
53,
S.W.
/
Section
28,
Township
17,
Plan
28357,
New
Westminster
District
free
and
clear
of
all
encumbrances,
subject
to
existing
tenancies,
at
a
deemed
value
for
the
purposes
of
this
Action
of
ONE
HUNDRED
THIRTY
THOUSAND
($130,000.00)
DOLLARS;
such
transfer
to
be
completed
by
the
1st
day
of
April,
1982
with
an
adjustment
date
being
the
date
of
transfer;
(b)
Payment
of
the
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
($115,000.00)
DOLLARS
in
consecutive
annual
installments
as
follows:
$25,000.00
on
the
first
day
of
April,
1982
$25,000.00
on
the
first
day
of
January,
1983
$25,000.00
on
the
first
day
of
January,
1984
$25,000.00
on
the
first
day
of
January,
1985
$15,000.00
on
the
first
day
of
January,
1986
together
with
and
in
addition
to
interest
at
the
rate
of
TEN
(10%)
PERCENTUM
per
annum,
on
the
balance
of
the
said
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
($115,000.00)
DOLLARS
from
time
to
time
owing,
such
interest
to
commence
accruing
from
and
inclusive
of
the
1st
day
of
April,
1982,
and
be
computed
half-
yearly,
not
in
advance,
and
become
due
and
payable
annually
with
the
annual
installments
of
principal
as
they
become
due
and
payable.
AND
THIS
COURT
FURTHER
ORDERS,
by
consent,
that
the
respondent
cause
Kapps
Enterprises
Ltd.
to
execute
and
deliver
to
the
Petitioner
a
collateral
mortgage
of
all
its
equity
as
Purchaser
in
and
to
all
that
certain
parcel
or
tract
of
land
and
premises
situate
at
34054
Parr
Avenue,
Mission,
British
Columbia,
more
particularly
known
and
described
as:
Lot
1,
S.E.
/
Section
27,
Township
17,
Plan
34254,
New
Westminster
District
free
and
clear
of
all
financial
encumbrances
(save
and
except
the
title
interest
of
the
unpaid
Vendor)
by
the
1st
day
of
April,
1982,
such
mortgage
to
be
deemed
collateral
security
for
the
payment
of
the
said
sum
of
ONE
HUNDRED
FIFTEEN
THOUSAND
($115,000.00)
DOLLARS
and
interest
to
the
Petitioner
as
hereinbefore
provided.
AND
THIS
COURT
FURTHER
ORDERS,
by
consent,
that
the
Respondent
shall
have
the
privilege
of
prepaying
the
balance
or
any
portion
thereof
owing
under
the
aforesaid
terms
of
payment,
and
collateral
mortgage,
without
notice
or
bonus,
subject
nevertheless
to
the
proviso
that
in
the
event
of
default
of
payment
by
the
respondent
of
the
principal
or
interest
herein
or
any
portion
thereof,
at
the
times
and
in
the
amounts
provided,
then
and
in
every
such
case
the
principal
sum
and
every
portion
thereof
at
the
option
of
the
Mortgagee
shall
forthwith
become
due
and
payable
without
notice;
and
further
subject
to
the
proviso
that
there
shall
be
no
acceleration
of
payment
in
the
event
of
sale.
(Appeal
Book,
at
pages
78
and
79).
The
payments
in
issue
were
said
to
have
been
made
pursuant
to
paragraph
(b)
above.
Prior
to
the
pronouncement
of
the
decree
of
divorce,
the
parties
had
lived
separate
and
apart
for
approximately
four
years,
during
which
time
the
taxpayer
had
paid
to
his
wife
the
sum
of
$600
per
month
as
interim
alimony.
The
relevant
statutory
provision
is
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This
allows
a
taxpayer
to
deduct
from
income:
60.
.
.
.
(b)
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
require[d
to]
make
the
payment
at
the
time
the
payment
was
made
and
throughout
the
remainder
of
the
year.
The
correlative
provision
is
paragraph
56(1)(b),
which
requires
a
taxpayer
to
include
in
income:
56.
(1)
.
.
.
(b)
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.
It
will
be
observed
that
the
two
texts
deal
with
both
alimony
and
other
allowances
payable
on
a
periodic
basis
for
maintenance.
Although
the
French
text
is
somewhat
unclear
on
this
point,
it
is
now
settled
that
the
reference
to
alimony
("pension
alimentaire")
is
limited
to
sums
payable
during
the
currency
of
the
marriage.
Since
the
payments
with
which
we
are
here
concerned
were
made
after
the
pronouncement
of
the
divorce
between
the
parties,
the
issue
is
to
know
whether
they
were
paid
as
an
“allowance
payable
on
a
periodic
basis
for
the
maintenance"
of
the
taxpayer's
former
wife.
The
problem
of
distinguishing
between
periodic
payments
made
as
an
allowance
for
maintenance,
which
are
deductible
for
income
tax
purposes,
and
periodic
payments
made
as
instalments
of
a
lump
or
capital
sum,
which
are
not
so
deductible,
is
one
which
has
given
rise
to
considerable
discussion
and
jurisprudence.
It
is
not
dissimilar,
and
is
indeed
related
to
the
problem,
common
in
income
tax
law,
of
determining
if
sums
of
money
expended
or
received
are
of
an
income
or
of
a
capital
nature.
As
with
that
problem
there
can
be
very
few
hard
and
fast
rules.
On
the
contrary,
the
Court
is
required
to
look
at
all
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
payment
and
to
determine
what,
in
the
light
of
those
circumstances,
is
its
proper
characterisation.
Because
of
the
correlation
between
paragraphs
60(b)
and
56(1)(b),
a
finding
that
a
payment
is
deductible
by
the
payer
will
normally
result
in
its
being
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
recipient.
Conversely,
a
determination
that
a
payment
is
not
so
deductible
will
result
in
the
recipient
having
it
free
of
tax.
The
following
are,
as
it
seems
to
me,
some
of
the
considerations
which
may
properly
be
taken,
into
account
in
making
such
a
determination.
The
list
is
not,
of
course,
intended
to
be
exhaustive.
1.
The
length
of
the
periods
at
which
the
payments
are
made.
Amounts
which
are
paid
weekly
or
monthly
are
fairly
easily
characterised
as
allowances
for
maintenance.
Where
the
payments
are
at
longer
intervals,
the
matter
becomes
less
clear.
While
it
is
not
impossible,
it
would
appear
to
me
to
be
difficult
to
envisage
payments
made
at
intervals
of
greater
than
one
year
as
being
allowances
for
maintenance.
2.
The
amount
of
the
payments
in
relation
to
the
income
and
living
standards
of
both
payer
and
recipient.
Where
a
payment
represents
a
very
substantial
portion
of
a
taxpayer's
income
or
even
exceeds
it,
it
is
difficult
to
view
it
as
being
an
allowance
for
maintenance.
On
the
other
hand,
where
the
payment
is
no
greater
than
might
be
expected
to
be
required
to
maintain
the
recipient's
standard
of
living,
it
is
more
likely
to
qualify
as
such
an
allowance.
3.
Whether
the
payments
are
to
bear
interest
prior
to
their
due
date.
It
is
more
common
to
associate
an
obligation
to
pay
interest
with
a
lump
sum
payable
by
instalments
than
it
is
with
a
true
allowance
for
maintenance.
4.
Whether
the
amounts
envisaged
can
be
paid
by
anticipation
at
the
option
of
the
payer
or
can
be
accelerated
as
a
penalty
at
the
option
of
the
recipient
in
the
event
of
default.
Prepayment
and
acceleration
provisions
are
commonly
associated
with
obligations
to
pay
capital
sums
and
would
not
normally
be
associated
with
an
allowance
for
maintenance.
5.
Whether
the
payments
allow
a
significant
degree
of
capital
accumulation
by
the
recipient.
Clearly
not
every
capital
payment
is
excluded
from
an
allowance
for
maintenance:
common
experience
indicates
that
such
things
as
life
insurance
premiums
and
blended
monthly
mortgage
payments,
while
they
allow
an
accumulation
of
capital
over
time,
are
a
normal
expense
of
living
which
are
paid
from
income
and
can
properly
form
part
of
an
allowance
for
maintenance.
On
the
other
hand,
an
allowance
for
maintenance
should
not
allow
the
accumulation,
over
a
short
period,
of
a
significant
pool
of
capital.
6.
Whether
the
payments
are
stipulated
to
continue
for
an
indefinite
period
or
whether
they
are
for
a
fixed
term.
An
allowance
for
maintenance
will
more
commonly
provide
for
its
continuance
either
for
an
indefinite
period
or
to
some
event
(such
as
the
coming
of
age
of
a
child)
which
will
cause
a
material
change
in
the
needs
of
the
recipient.
Sums
payable
over
a
fixed
term,
on
the
other
hand,
may
be
more
readily
seen
as
being
of
a
capital
nature.
7.
Whether
the
agreed
payments
can
be
assigned
and
whether
the
obligation
to
pay
survives
the
lifetime
of
either
the
payer
or
the
recipient.
An
allowance
for
maintenance
is
normally
personal
to
the
recipient
and
is
therefore
unassignable
and
terminates
at
death.
A
lump
or
capital
sum,
on
the
other
hand,
will
normally
form
part
of
the
estate
of
the
recipient,
is
assignable
and
will
survive
him.
8.
Whether
the
payments
purport
to
release
the
payer
from
any
future
obligations
to
pay
maintenance.
Where
there
is
such
a
release,
it
is
easier
to
view
the
payments
as
being
the
commutation
or
purchase
of
the
capital
price
of
an
allowance
for
maintenance.
Viewing
the
facts
of
the
present
case
in
the
light
of
the
foregoing
criteria,
it
becomes
quickly
apparent
that
most
of
the
indicators
point
strongly
to
the
payments
in
issue
being
instalments
of
a
lump
sum
settlement
and
that
virtually
none
point
the
other
way.
The
payments
are
to
be
made
only
once
a
year.
The
amounts
paid
are
not
only
greatly
in
excess
of
the
prior
alimony
of
$600
per
month
but
also
constitute
a
very
large
proportion
of
the
taxpayer's
declared
income
in
the
two
years
in
question.
Interest
is,
by
the
terms
of
the
decree,
payable
on
the
balance
of
the
total
sum
of
$115,000
from
time
to
time
remaining
due.
The
taxpayer
is
given
a
prepayment
privilege
at
his
option
while,
in
the
event
of
default,
his
former
wife
may
require
the
accelerated
payment
of
the
whole
of
the
balance.
The
total
sum
of
$115,000
represents
a
significant
capital
amount
when
compared
not
only
with
the
taxpayer's
declared
income
but
also
with
the
deemed
value
of
the
real
estate
which
was
also
transferred
as
part
of
the
same
consent
decree.
The
payments
are
to
be
made
over
a
fixed
term
and
are
not
stated
to
be
dependent
upon
the
survival
of
either
the
payer
or
the
recipient.
Finally,
the
payments
are
stated
to
be
“in
satisfaction
of
all
financial
relief
under
the
Divorce
Act
and
Family
Relations
Act"
I
conclude
that
the
sums
here
in
issue
were
not
paid
by
the
taxpayer
as
an
allowance
for
the
maintenance
of
his
former
wife.
Accordingly
they
were
not
deductible
from
the
taxpayer's
income
under
paragraph
60(b)
and
are
taxable
in
his
hands
rather
than
those
of
the
recipient
as
would
be
required
by
paragraph
56(1)(b).
For
these
reasons,
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Trial
Division
and
dismiss
the
taxpayer's
appeal
to
the
Trial
Division
with
costs.
Appeal
allowed.