The
Assistant
Chairman:—
Reginald
H
Coates
(the
appellant)
filed
his
income
tax
return
for
the
1975
taxation
year
and
claimed
as
maintenance
payments
the
sum
of
$1,698.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
respon-
dent)
disallowed
that
claim.
After
following
the
procedure
set
forth
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
appellant
appealed
to
this
Board.
In
his
objection,
while
he
referred
to
paragraph
60(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
reference
was
also
made
to
section
60.1
of
the
same
Act.
All
references
are
to
that
Act
after
tax
reform.
The
respondent
confirmed
the
assessment
with
reference
to
paragraph
60(b)
only.
No
reference
was
made
to
section
60.1.
On
appeal
to
this
Board
the
appellant
made
no
reference
to
paragraph
60(b)
as
the
basis
for
his
claim,
and
counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
argue
that,
if
the
appellant
were
not
within
section
60(b),
his
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
While
clearly
indicating
that
she
did
not
accept
my
decision
in
the
case
of
Gordon
A
Bryce
v
MNR,
[1978]
CTC
3144;
78
DTC
1833,
assuming
it
were
correct,
counsel
for
the
respondent’s
basis
for
opposing
the
appeal
was
that
the
appellant
could
not
bring
himself
within
section
60.1.
Literally
there
was
not
an
agreement
as
to
the
facts
of
the
case,
but
there
was
no
dispute
that
the
decree
nisi
with
respect
to
the
marriage
of
the
appellant
with
his
former
wife
was
granted
on
March
11,
1974,
which
contained
the
clause:
And
this
Court
doth
further
order
and
adjudge
that
the
said
Respondent
pay
off,
by
instalments,
the
existing
mortgage
on
the
residential
premises
at
185
Montgomery
Street,
or
any
renewal
of
the
said
mortgage,
it
being
understood
that
the
said
Petitioner
will
co-operate
in
the
arranging
of
renewals
of
the
mortgage
for
the
full
amortized
period,
if
required,
until
further
Order
of
the
Court.
Also,
on
July
16,1974,
there
was
granted
a
decree
absolute
in
the
same
action
which
contained
the
following
clause:
And
this
Court
doth
order
and
adjudge
that
the
said
Respondent
pay
off,
by
instalments,
the
existing
mortgage
on
the
residential
premises
at
185
Montgomery
Street,
or
any
renewal
of
the
said
mortgage,
it
being
understood
that
the
said
Petitioner
will
co-operate
in
the
arranging
of
renewals
of
the
mortgage
for
the
full
amortized
period,
if
required,
until
further
Order
of
the
Court.
The
appellant
stated
that,
immediately
following
the
decree
nisi,
he
made
the
payments
stipulated.
Also
there
was
no
dispute
that
in
the
course
of
the
calendar
year
1975
(and
I
stress
the
year
1975—not
1974)
he
paid
to
CMHC,
which
held
the
mortgage
insofar
as
the
appellant
was
concerned,
the
sum
of
$1,698.
As
the
respondent
established,
for
that
calendar
year
of
the
amount
of
$1,698,
$702.36
applied
to
interest,
$487.61
to
principal,
and
$503.03
to
taxes
(presumably
municipal
taxes).
In
effect
the
appellant
stated
that
he
paid
the
said
amounts
and,
pursuant
to
section
60.1,
he
is
entitled
to
the
deduction.
Those
payments
were
paid
after
July
1974—they
were
paid
in
1975—and
they
were
made,
regardless
of
how
one
looks
at
it,
pursuant
to
an
order
or
judgment
of
a
court
or
a
variation
thereof
for
the
benefit
of
the
spouse
or
former
spouse,
and
so
deductible.
If
one
looked
at
the
amount
claimed,
it
is
not
being
claimed
for
a
period
prior
to
July
1974,
but
only
in
the
calendar
year
1975
and
consequently
after
July
1974.
He
is
not
asking
that
the
enactment
be
retroactive.
If
one
is
going
to
turn
anything
on
the
date
of
the
enactment,
and
rule
out
the
decree
nisi,
then
the
decree
absolute
is
clearly
after
that
date.
After
the
decree
absolute
is
issued,
is
there
a
decree
nisi?
Counsel
for
the
respondent
did
not
make
any
argument
with
respect
of
paragraph
60(b)
and
confined
herself
to
section
60.1
and,
even
if
the
mortgage
and
interest
payments
were
within
section
60.1,
the
payment
for
taxes
was
not.
Counsel’s
position
was
that
the
order
or
variation
thereof
referred
to
in
section
60.1
had
to
be
made
after
May
6,1974,
because
of
the
enacting
provision.
This
amendment
was
made
by
section
31
of
An
Act
to
Amend
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1974-75-76,
c
26.
Section
31
in
its
entirety
reads
as
follows:
31
.(1)
The
said
Act
is
further
amended
by
adding
thereto,
immediately
after
section
60
thereof,
the
following
section:
“60.1
Where,
after
May
6,
1974,
a
decree,
order,
judgment
or
written
agreement
described
in
paragraph
60(b)
or
(c),
or
any
variation
thereof,
has
been
made
providing
for
the
periodic
payment
of
an
amount
by
the
taxpayer
to
or
for
the
benefit
of
his
spouse,
former
spouse
or
children
of
the
marriage
in
the
custody
of
the
spouse
or
former
spouse,
the
amount
or
any
part
thereof,
when
paid,
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
paid
to
and
received
by
the
spouse
or
former
apouse
if
the
taxpayer
was
living
apart
from
the
spouse
or
former
spouse
at
the
time
the
payment
was
received
and
throughout
the
remainder
of
the
year
in
which
the
payment
was
received.”
(2)
This
section
is
applicable
in
respect
of
amounts
paid
after
May
6,
1974.
Counsel
contended
that,
if
section
60.1
referred
to
payments
made
after
May
6,
1974,
regardless
of
when
the
order
or
variation
thereof
was
made,
there
would
have
been
no
need
to
have
subsection
(2)
of
section
31.
The
effect
of
subsection
(2)
is
that
section
60.1
only
applies
to
payments
made
after
May
6,
1974,
with
respect
to
judgments
or
orders
made
after
the
same
date.
Counsel
continued
that
the
judgment
absolute
which
was
issued
after
May
6,
1974,
was
not
a
judgment
requiring
payment
and
was
also
not
a
“variation”
of
the
judgment
nisi
so
as
to
bring
it
within
section
60.1.
Reference
was
made
to
the
Divorce
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
D-8,
especially
section
11,
subsection
13(1)
and
section
16,
which
reads
as
follows:
11.(1)
Upon
granting
a
decree
nisi
of
divorce,
the
court
may,
if
it
thinks
it
fit
and
just
to
do
so
having
regard
to
the
conduct
of
the
parties
and
the
conditions,
means
and
other
circumstances
of
each
of
them,
make
one
or
more
of
the
following
orders,
namely:
(a)
an
order
requiring
the
husband
to
secure
or
to
pay
such
lump
sum
or
periodic
sums
as
the
court
thinks
reasonable
for
the
maintenance
of
(i)
the
wife,
(ii)
the
children
of
the
marriage,
or
(iii)
the
wife
and
the
children
of
the
marriage;
(b)
an
order
requiring
the
wife
to
secure
or
to
pay
such
lump
sum
or
periodic
sums
as
the
court
thinks
reasonable
for
the
maintenance
of
(i)
the
husband,
(ii)
the
children
of
the
marriage,
or
(iii)
the
husband
and
the
children
of
the
marriage;
and
(c)
an
order
providing
for
the
custody,
care
and
upbringing
of
the
children
of
the
marriage.
(2)
An
order
made
pursuant
to
this
section
may
be
varied
from
time
to
time
or
rescinded
by
the
court
that
made
the
order
if
it
thinks
it
fit
and
just
to
do
so
having
regard
to
the
conduct
of
the
parties
since
the
making
of
the
order
or
any
change
in
the
condition,
means
or
other
circumstances
of
either
of
them.
1967-68,
c
24,
s
11.
13.(1)
Every
decree
of
divorce
is
in
the
first
instance
a
decree
nisi
and
no
such
decree
shall
be
made
absolute
until
three
months
have
elapsed
from
the
granting
of
the
decree
and
the
court
is
satisfied
that
every
right
to
appeal
from
the
judgment
granting
the
decree
has
been
exhausted.
16.
Where
a
decree
of
divorce
has
been
made
absolute
under
this
Act,
either
party
to
the
former
marriage
may
marry
again.
1967-68,
c
24,
s
16.
Counsel
contended
that
the
decree
nisi
of
divorce
was
the
decree
which
ordered
payment
and
the
decree
absolute
did
not
vary
that
decree
nisi,
but
rather,
pursuant
to
section
16,
proclaims
the
parties
to
the
decree
nisi
free
to
marry.
Also,
subsection
(2)
of
section
11
already
provides
that
“an
order
made
pursuant
to
this
section
(that
is
a
decree
nisi
of
divorce)
may
be
varied
from
time
to
time
or
rescinded
.
.
There
is
no
suggestion
that
the
“time
to
time”
is
limited
to
the
period
between
the
issuance
of
the
decree
nisi
and
the
decree
absolute.
After
considering
the
submissions
made
by
counsel,
I
am
of
the
view
that
it
is
the
judgment
nisi
which
orders
the
payment
and
that
the
judgment
absolute
is
only
given
to
make
the
parties
to
the
divorce
action
(the
husband
and
wife)
free
to
marry
again.
It
is
not
a
variation
of
the
decree
nisi
and,
were
the
quantum
of
the
payment
to
be
varied,
it
would
be
a
variation
of
the
decree
nisi.
Since
the
decree
nisi
was
prior
to
May
6,1974,
it
was
before
the
amendment
and
not
within
the
ambit
of
the
amendment
and
payments
made
pursuant
to
it
after
the
date
of
the
amendment
are
not
covered
by
the
amendement.
The
result
is,
judgment
will
go
dismissing
the
appeal.
Appeal
dismissed.