Bowman
J.T.C.C.:
—
These
appeals
are
from
assessments
for
the
appellant’s
1992
and
1993
taxation
years.
The
issues
are,
for
1992,
the
deductibility
of
$4,000.00
claimed
by
the
appellant
as
child
care
expenses
and,
for
1992
and
1993,
the
inclusion
of
$1,954.00
and
$12,314.00
in
the
appellant’s
income
of
maintenance
payments.
The
appellant
was
divorced
from
Calvin
Conrad
Hammond
on
March
1,
1985.
By
a
Consent
Order
dated
March
14,
1989
in
the
Court
of
Queen’s
Bench
of
Alberta.
Calvin
Conrad
Hammond
was
to
pay
to
the
appellant
$400.00
per
month
for
the
maintenance
for
the
infant
children
of
the
marriage.
The
appellant’s
ex-husband
did
not
behave
responsibly
with
respect
to
his
obligation
to
pay
maintenance.
He
was
delinquent
in
his
payments
and
ultimately
she
was
obliged
to
enlist
the
assistance
of
the
Family
Maintenance
Enforcement
Program
of
British
Columbia.
By
dint
of
assiduous
efforts
the
Family
Maintenance
Enforcement
Program
succeeded
in
recovering
a
portion
of
the
amounts
owing
by
Mr.
Hammond
-
$1,954.00
in
1992
and
$12,389.00
in
1993.
On
May
4,
1993
he
paid
$8,504.14.
The
total
of
$14,343
received
in
the
two
years
is
approximately
the
same
as
the
$14,400
that
he
was
obliged
to
pay
under
the
order
of
March
14,
1989
over
the
three
years
1991,
1992
and
1993.
The
question
is
whether
these
amounts
must
be
included
in
the
income
of
the
appellant
under
paragraphs
56(1
)(b)
or
(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
an
amount
received
by
her
in
the
year
pursuant
to
a
decree
order
or
judgment
of
a
competent
tribunal
as
an
...allowance
payable
on
a
periodic
basis.
It
is
unfortunate,
considering
that
the
appellant
received
the
maintenance
payments
owing
to
her
in
irregular
amounts
and
late,
but
this
does
not
in
my
view
alter
the
fact
that
the
amounts
represented
her
former
husband’s
obligation
under
the
order
of
March
14,
1989.
In
Minister
of
National
Revenue
v.
Armstrong,
[1956]
S.C.R.
446,
[1956]
C.T.C.
93,
56
D.T.C.
1044,
the
divorce
decree
provided
for
a
monthly
payment
of
alimony
of
$100.00.
After
two
years,
the
former
spouse
agreed
to
a
lump
sum
payment
of
$4,000.00
in
full
settlement
of
all
amounts
payable
in
the
future.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held
that
the
amount
of
the
settlement
was
not
payable
pursuant
to
the
divorce
decree
but
was,
rather,
paid
to
obtain
a
release
from
the
divorce
decree.
This
case,
however,
appears
to
be
governed
by
R.
v.
Sills,
(sub
nom.
R.
v.
Sills
(formerly
La
Brash))
[1985]
1
C.T.C.
49,
85
D.T.C.
5096
(F.C.A.)
and
not
by
Armstrong.
In
Sills,
the
former
spouses
entered
into
a
written
separation
agreement
providing
for
monthly
alimony
and
maintenance
payments.
In
fact,
the
former
husband
paid
three
lump
sums
at
random
times.
They
were
not
in
the
amounts
agreed
or
at
the
times
stipulated
in
the
agreement.
The
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
they
were
nonetheless
received
as
alimony
or
other
allowance
“payable
on
a
periodic
basis”.
Heald
J.
stated,
at
page
52
(D.T.C.
5098):
Some
of
the
money
was
payable
to
the
Respondent
as
alimony,
the
remainder
was
payable
to
her
as
maintenance
for
the
dependant
children.
All
of
it
was
payable
on
a
monthly
basis
as
stipulated
in
the
separation
agreement.
Where
the
Trial
judge
erred,
in
my
view,
was
in
not
having
due
regard
to
the
use
of
the
word
“payable”
in
the
subsection.
So
long
as
the
agreement
provides
that
the
monies
are
payable
on
a
periodic
basis,
the
requirement
of
the
subsection
is
met.
The
payments
do
not
change
in
character
merely
because
they
are
not
made
on
time.
The
learned
Tax
Review
Board
member
made
the
same
error,
in
my
view,
when
he
said
that
the
amounts
to
be
included
in
income
“must
be
received
exactly
according
to
the
terms
of
the
agreement”.
The
subsection
does
not
say
that.
If
the
learned
Tax
Review
Board
member
and
the
learned
Trial
Judge
are
right,
then
any
monthly
payment
made
to
the
Respondent
on
the
second
day
of
the
month
for
which
it
is
due,
for
example,
would
not
be
taxable
in
the
hands
of
the
Respondent.
This
is
surely
not
a
reasonable
or
a
proper
interpretation
of
the
subsection.
To
the
same
effect
see
Soldera
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
2097,
91
D.T.C.
987
(T.C.C.).
In
the
present
case,
I
have
concluded
that
the
payments
from
the
appellant’s
former
husband
that
she
obtained
through
the
Family
Maintenance
Enforcement
Program
continued
be
taxable
under
paragraphs
56(1
)(b)
and
(c).
The
second
issue
is
the
deductibility
of
child
care
expenses
under
section
63.
In
1992,
the
appellant
claimed
child
care
expenses
in
the
amount
of
4,000.00
in
respect
of
her
three
infant
children.
All
of
the
conditions
to
ieductibility
were
present
except
for
one
—
she
did
not
file
with
the
Minister
receipts
issued
by
the
care-givers
containing
those
persons’
social
insurance
numbers.
At
trial
she
submitted
the
names
of
a
number
of
persons
whom
she
paid
to
care
for
her
children,
as
well
as
the
amounts
paid.
She
testified
that
she
paid
them
$20
per
day
per
child.
Although
I
have
little
doubt
that
she
spent
at
least
the
$4,000.00
that
she
claimed
and
probably
more,
I
am
satisfied
that
she
has
proved
$2,950.00.
She
testified
that
she
endeavored
to
obtain
receipts
and
social
insurance
numbers
but
the
payees
whom
she
could
find
refused
to
give
them
to
her,
and
others
had
moved
away
and
could
not
be
located.
The
question
is
whether
the
words
in
section
63:
and
the
payment
of
which
is
proven
by
filing
with
the
Minister
one
or
more
receipts
each
of
which
was
issued
by
the
payee
and
contains,
where
the
payee
is
an
individual,
that
individual’s
social
insurance
number
are
a
mandatory
condition
precedent
to
deductibility
or
merely
an
administrative
direction,
non-compliance
with
which
is
not
fatal
to
deductibility
where,
as
here,
the
taxpayer
is
able
to
establish
that
the
payments
have
been
made.
Put
differently,
are
they
imperative
or
directory?
There
are
at
the
court’s
disposal
a
vast
array
of
interpretive
tools:
the
teleological
approach,
the
words-in-total
context
approach,
the
functional,
non-mechanical
approach,
object
and
spirit,
scheme
of
the
act,
plain
words
and
the
avoidance
of
absurdity
principle,
to
mention
only
a
few.
The
question
cannot
be
answered
in
a
vacuum.
One
must
endeavour
to
answer
it
within
the
context
of
a
larger
question:
was
it
the
intent
of
Parliament
to
give
the
child
care
expenditure
deduction
only
to
those
parents
who
can
arrange
for
child
care
by
persons
who
are
willing
to
give
receipts
with
their
social
insurance
numbers,
and
to
deny
it
to
those
who,
for
financial
or
other
reasons
beyond
their
control
cannot
do
so.
If
this
is
indeed
the
intent
it
follows
that
parents
may
in
many
cases
be
forced
to
choose
between
a
care
giver
who
will
issue
a
receipt
and
one
who
is
the
most
suitable
one
to
take
care
of
their
children.
Hamlyn
J.
of
this
court
in
Barclay
v.
R.,
(sub
nom.
Barclay
v.
Canada),
[1995]
1
C.T.C.
2345(D)
(T.C.C.)
and
Mr.
A.W.
Prociuk,
Q.C.
in
the
Tax
Review
Board
in
Grodski
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1978]
C.T.C.
2340,
78
D.T.C.
1273
were
faced
with
essentially
the
same
situation
as
on
this
case.
Hamlyn
J.
dismissed
the
appeal
whereas
Mr.
Prociuk
allowed
it.
The
problem
stems
from
an
attempt
by
the
government
to
achieve
two
incompatible
goals
—
to
allow
parents
to
deduct
child
care
expenses
in
appropriate
cases
—
a
commendable
social
objective
-
and
to
protect
the
revenue
by
ensuring
that
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
can
find,
and
tax,
the
payees
and
not
be
faced
with
fraudulent
or
inflated
claims
—
a
purely
fiscal
objective.
As
a
practical
matter,
what
the
government
in
this
instance
gives
with
one
hand
it
takes
away
with
the
other.
It
does
not
require
much
imagination
to
realize
that
persons
who
receive
payment
in
cash
for
taking
care
of
children
may
very
well
not
include
those
amounts
in
income.
For
this
reason,
they
will
refuse
to
give
receipts
or
provide
their
social
insurance
numbers,
or,
if
they
do,
they
will
demand
higher
fees
because
they
know
that
they
will
be
taxed.
Thus,
persons
who
need
the
deduction
for
child
care
expenses
must
in
many
cases
choose
between
non-deductibility
or
the
payment
of
higher
fees.
Affluent
parents
who
can
afford
to
send
their
children
to
more
expensive
caregivers
who
issue
receipts
will
benefit
from
the
deduction.
Lower
income
groups
or,
as
in
this
case,
single
parents
in
more
straitened
circumstances,
must
make
do
with
caregivers
who
expect
to
be
paid
cash
and
will
not
issue
receipts
or
give
their
social
insurance
numbers
.
Nor
is
it
necessarily
a
matter
of
economics.
The
most
appropriate
caregiver
may
be
one
who
will
not
issue
a
receipt.
It
would
seem
therefore
that
where
a
court
is
faced
with
two
interpretations,
one
of
which
achieves
one
goal
and
the
other
of
which
achieves
a
goal
that
is
incompatible
with
the
first
goal,
it
must
choose
one
that
best
achieves
the
predominant
objective
of
the
legislation,
or,
as
Cartwright
J.
(as
he
then
was)
stated
in
Highway
Sawmills
Ltd.
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1966]
S.C.R.
384,
[1966]
C.T.C.
150,
66
D.T.C.
5116,
at
pages
157-58
(D.T.C.
5120):
it
may
be
of
assistance
to
consider
which
of
two
constructions
contended
for
brings
about
a
result
which
conforms
to
the
apparent
scheme
of
the
legislation.
To
say
that
the
failure
to
file
receipts
with
the
payees’
social
insurance
numbers
even
where
it
has
been
established
beyond
a
shadow
of
a
doubt
that
the
expenses
were
paid,
results
in
non-deductibility
under
section
63
would
be
to
adopt
a
“purely
mechanical”
rather
than
a
“functional”
approach.
In
Swantje
v.
R.,
(sub
nom.
Swantje
v.
Canada)
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
382,
(sub
nom.
R.
v.
Swantje)
94
D.T.C.
6633
(F.C.A.),
affirmed
[1996]
1
S.C.R.
73,
[1996]
1
C.T.C.
355,
96
D.T.C.
6310,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
said,
at
page
384:
The
approach
adopted
by
the
learned
judge
was
a
purely
mechanical
one,
focussed
on
the
method,
the
means
devised
to
achieve
the
goal.
The
proper
approach
must
be
a
functional
one,
and
the
scheme
must
be
considered
as
a
whole,
taking
into
account
the
intent
of
the
legislation,
its
object
and
spirit
and
what
it
actually
accomplishes
(Stubart
Investments
Ltd.
v.
R.,
[1984]
1
S.C.R.
536,
[1984]
C.T.C.
294,
84
D.T.C.
6305).
What
Part
1.2
of
the
Act,
completed
by
paragraph
60(w),
realizes
is
the
repayment
of
social
benefits
by
taxpayers
who,
because
of
their
higher
incomes,
have
a
lesser
need
of
them.
The
overriding
object
of
section
63
is
to
permit
the
deduction
of
child
care
expenses,
not
to
assist
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
collect
tax
from
baby-
sitters.
To
focus
on
the
method,
the
means,
to
achieve
the
goal....
is
to
ignore
the
principle
stated
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
and
to
ignore
the
telos
encompassed
in
the
teleological
approach.
In
Dib
v.
R.,
[1996]
1
C.T.C.
2342
(T.C.C.),
the
taxpayer
failed
to
file
a
prescribed
form.
It
was
held
that
this
was
not
fatal
to
her
claim
under
section
146.01,
because
it
would
make
the
object
of
the
law
subordinate
to
form.
At
page
2346
the
following
appears:
Given
the
remedial
nature
of
section
146.01,
and
the
object
that
it
obviously
seeks
to
attain,
I
would
regard
Mrs.
Dib’s
failure
to
file
the
prescribed
form
as
at
most
imperfect
compliance
as
opposed
to
non-compliance
with
the
Act.
Indeed,
as
I
have
observed
above,
it
was
impossible
for
her
to
comply
with
the
provision
that
her
request
to
the
bank
be
in
prescribed
form.
See
Elance
Steel
Fabricating
v.
Falk
Bros.
Industries
Ltd.,
[1989]
2
S.C.R.
778
at
pages
782-83.
The
distinction
was
also
discussed
at
some
length
by
Lederman
J.
in
Thomas
v.
Hickey
(1995)
22
O.R.
(3d)
331
(Gen.
Div.)
at
pages
339-41.
To
deny
deductibility
on
the
basis
of
a
purely
mechanical
interpretation
would
lead
to
an
absurdity
(Victoria
(City)
v.
Bishop
of
Vancouver
Island,
[1921]
2
A.C.
384,
59
D.L.R.
399
(B.C.P.C.)).
One
cannot
of
course
ignore
the
words
of
section
63
quoted
above.
They
must
be
given
some
effect,
as
Isaac
C.J.
said
in
Hawboldt
Hydraulics
(Canada)
Inc.
(Trustee
of)
v.
Canada,
(sub
nom.
Hawboldt
Hydraulics
Inc.
Estate
(Trustee
of)
v.
Canada)
[1994]
2
C.T.C.
336,
(sub
nom.
R.
v.
Hawboldt
Hydraulics
(Canada)
Inc.)
94
D.T.C.
6541
(F.C.A.),
at
page
342
(D.T.C.
6546):
But
these
principles
are
not
invitations
to
Courts
toignore
other
well-
acceptedrulesof
construction,
such
as
that
which
requires
Courts
to
construe
statutes
so
as
“to
ascribe
some
meaning
to
each
word
used
by
the
legislature,”
Atco
v.
Calgary
Power
Ltd.,
[1982]
1
S.C.R.
557
at
569.
Nonetheless,
their
effect
must
be
interpreted
in
a
manner
that
is
consonant
with
the
object
of
the
legislation.
To
mechanically
treat
the
filing
of
receipts
with
social
insurance
numbers
as
an
inflexible
condition
precedent
to
deductibility
defeats
the
predominant
objective
of
the
legislation.
There
is
much
jurisprudence
in
Canada,
the
United
Kingdom
and
the
United
States
in
which
the
question
whether
provisions
in
a
statute
are
directory
or
imperative
has
been
considered.
Black’s
Law
Dictionary
defines
“directory”
as
follows:
Directory,
adj.
A
provision
in
a
statute,
rule
of
procedure,
or
the
like,
which
is
a
mere
direction
or
instruction
of
no
obligatory
force,
and
involving
no
invalidating
consequence
for
its
disregard,
as
opposed
to
an
imperative
or
mandatory
provision,
which
must
be
followed.
The
general
rule
is
that
the
prescriptions
of
a
statute
relating
to
the
performance
of
a
public
duty
are
so
far
directory
that,
though
neglect
of
them
may
be
punishable,
yet
it
does
not
affect
the
validity
of
the
acts
done
under
them,
as
in
the
case
of
a
statute
requiring
an
officer
to
prepare
and
deliver
a
document
to
another
officer
on
or
before
a
certain
day.
A
“directory”
provision
in
a
statute
is
one,
the
observance
of
which
is
not
necessary
to
the
validity
of
the
proceeding
to
which
it
relates;
one
which
leaves
it
optional
with
the
department
or
officer
to
which
it
is
addressed
to
obey
or
not
as
he
may
see
fit.
Generally,
statutory
provisions
which
do
not
relate
to
the
essence
of
the
thing
to
be
done,
and
as
to
which
compliance
is
matter
of
convenience
rather
than
substance
are
“directory,”
while
provisions
which
relate
to
essence
of
thing
to
be
done,
that
is,
matters
of
substance,
are
“mandatory.”
Rodgers
v.
Meredith,
274
Ala.
179,
146
So.
2d
308,
310.
Under
a
general
classification,
statutes
are
either
“mandatory”
or
“directory,”
and,
if
mandatory,
they
prescribe,
in
addition
to
requiring
the
doing
of
the
things
specified,
the
result
that
will
follow
if
they
are
not
done,
whereas,
if
directory,
their
terms
are
limited
to
what
is
required
to
be
done.
A
statute
is
mandatory
when
the
provision
of
the
statute
is
the
essence
of
the
thing
required
to
be
done;
otherwise,
when
it
relates
to
form
and
manner,
and
where
an
act
is
incident,
or
after
jurisdiction
acquired,
it
is
directory
merely.
The
first
paragraph
of
the
above
entry
is
identical
to
that
in
Jowitt’s
Dictionary
of
English
Law,
(2nd
Ed.).
I
believe
that
these
passages
correctly
state
the
law
of
Canada
as
well.
Maxwell
on
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
12th
Edition,
discusses
the
matter
at
pages
314-315:
The
first
such
question
is:
when
a
statute
requires
that
something
shall
be
done,
or
done
in
a
particular
manner
or
form,
without
expressly
declaring
what
shall
be
the
consequence
of
non-
compliance,
is
the
requirement
to
be
regarded
as
imperative
(or
mandatory)
or
merely
as
directory
(or
permissive)?
In
some
cases,
the
conditions
or
forms
prescribed
by
the
statute
have
been
regarded
as
essential
to
the
act
or
thing
regulated
by
it,
and
their
omission
has
been
held
fatal
to
its
validity.
In
others,
such
prescriptions
have
been
considered
as
merely
directory,
the
neglect
of
them
involving
nothing
more
than
liability
to
a
penalty,
if
any
were
imposed,
for
breach
of
the
enactment.
“An
absolute
enactment
must
be
obeyed
or
fulfilled
exactly,
but
it
is
sufficient
if
a
directory
enactment
be
obeyed
or
fulfilled
substantially.”
It
is
impossible
to
lay
down
any
general
rule
for
determining
whether
a
provision
is
imperative
or
directory.
“No
universal
rule,”
said
Lord
Campbell
L.C.,
“can
be
laid
down
for
the
construction
of
statutes,
as
to
whether
mandatory
enactments
shall
be
considered
directory
only
or
obligatory
with
an
implied
nullification
for
disobedience.
It
is
the
duty
of
Courts
of
Justice
to
try
to
get
at
the
real
intention
of
the
Legislature
by
carefully
attending
to
the
whole
scope
of
the
statute
to
be
construed.”
And
Lord
Penzance
said:
“I
believe,
as
far
as
any
rule
is
concerned,
you
cannot
safely
go
further
than
that
in
each
case
you
must
look
to
the
subject-matter;
consider
the
importance
of
the
provision
that
has
been
disregarded,
and
the
relation
of
that
provision
to
the
general
object
intended
to
be
secured
by
the
Act;
and
upon
a
review
of
the
case
in
that
aspect
decide
whether
the
matter
is
what
is
called
imperative
or
only
directory.”
The
essence
of
section
63
is
the
deduction
of
child
care
expenses,
not
the
collection
of
tax
from
babysitters.
The
language
of
the
provision
does
not
support
the
view
that
the
filing
of
receipts
is
mandatory.
For
one
thing,
the
word
“shall”
is
not
used
.
Rather
it
describes
a
method
of
proof,
which
is
clearly
formal,
evidentiary
and
procedural.
Indeed,
one
may
usefully
compare
the
words
in
section
63
with
those
in
subsection
118.1(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
which
reads:
(2)
—
A
gift
shall
not
be
included
in
the
total
charitable
gifts,
total
Crown
gifts
or
total
cultural
gifts
of
an
individual
unless
the
making
of
the
gift
is
proven
by
filing
with
the
Minister
a
receipttherefor
that
contains
prescribed
information.
The
requirement
in
subsection
118.1(2)
is
clearly
imperative.
Had
Parliament
intended
that
the
same
effect
be
given
to
the
words
in
section
63
it
was
quite
capable
of
saying
so.
I
think
that
the
words
in
section
63
requiring
the
filing
of
receipts
with
the
payee’s
social
insurance
numbers
are
directory
rather
than
imperative,
and
that
the
failure
to
do
so
is
not
fatal
to
deductibility.
This
conclusion
is
consistent
with
the
wording
of
the
Act
and
its
object.
The
appeal
from
the
assessment
for
1992
is
allowed
and
the
assessment
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
to
allow
the
deduction
of
$2,950.00
as
child
care
expenses
under
section
63.
The
appeal
from
the
assessment
for
1993
is
dismissed.
There
will
be
no
order
for
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.