Date: 19980521
Docket: 97-2972-IT-I
BETWEEN:
DIANE DUFTON,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Bowman, J.T.C.C.
[1] These appeals are from assessments for the 1994 and 1995
taxation years.
[2] By these assessments the Minister of National Revenue has
disallowed a claim by the appellant under section 63 of the
Income Tax Act of child care expenses.
[3] Ms. Dufton in the years in question was employed by the
Department of National Revenue as a supervisor in the Customs
Branch of that department. She worked at the border, on the
Canadian side, but lived with her husband in Blaine, Washington,
where they owned a house. Her husband, who has both Canadian and
U.S. citizenship, works in the United States. She moved to the
United States in 1986.
[4] Their first child was born in 1993. When the appellant
returned to work she placed her child with a person who lived
near her residence in Blaine, and paid amounts to her for doing
so. There does not appear to be any issue as to the amounts.
[5] Ms. Dufton is paid a salary by the Government of Canada in
respect of her employment in Canada. Accordingly, she is taxed as
a non-resident by Canada under subsection 2(3) and subparagraph
115(1)(a)(i).
[6] She files a Canadian income tax return and claims the
taxes that she pays to Canada as a credit against the taxes paid
to the U.S. when she and her husband file a joint U.S.
return.
[7] The claim for child care expenses paid was denied
substantially because of the definition of child care expenses in
subsection 63(3) that the child care services be provided in
Canada and that they be provided by a resident of Canada. That
condition simply is not met here.
[8] Ms. Dufton also contends that she falls within subsection
63(4) which reads:
(4) Commuter’s child care expense — Where
in a taxation year a person resides in Canada near the boundary
between Canada and the United States and while so resident incurs
expenses for child care services that would be child care
expenses if
(a) the definition “child care expense” in
subsection (3) were read without reference to the words “in
Canada”, and
(b) the reference in paragraph (b) of the definition
“child care expense” in subsection (3) to
“resident of Canada” were read as
“person”,
those expenses (other than expenses paid for a child’s
attendance at a boarding school or camp outside Canada) shall be
deemed to be child care expenses for the purpose of this section
if the child care services are provided at a place that is closer
to the person’s principal place of residence by a
reasonably accessible route, having regard to the circumstances,
than any place in Canada where such child care services are
available and, in respect of those expenses, subsection (1) shall
be read without reference to the words “and contains, where
the payee is an individual, that individual’s Social
Insurance Number”.
[9] To come within this provision she would have to
“reside in Canada near the boundary...” I do not
think that “reside in Canada” means the same thing as
be “a resident of Canada”. Reside means simply to
live in Canada. Whether one is resident in Canada is a far more
complex determination, depending upon many factors (see Fisher
v. The Queen, 95 DTC 840). I do not think that it can be said
that Ms. Dufton “resided” in Canada, considering that
her home and her husband and family were in the United
States.
[10] She pointed to a number of factors that might indicate
that she is resident in Canada — such as her bank accounts,
credit cards, employment insurance, pensions and family ties, but
the predominant fact is that her husband, her home and her child
are all in the United States. Even if she could establish that
she was resident in both Canada and the United States, the first
of the so-called “tie-breaker rules” in paragraph
2(a) of Article IV of the Canada-U.S. Income Tax
Convention (1980) would apply because she would be deemed to:
...be a resident of the Contracting State in which [s]he has a
permanent home available to [her].
[11] This would be the United States.
[12] I mentioned in the course of argument Article XIX of the
Canada-U.S. Income Tax Convention (1980) which reserves to Canada
the exclusive right to tax salaries paid to Canadian citizens in
respect of government services. However, this provision is of
little assistance to the appellant considering that she claims a
credit in the United States in respect of her Canadian taxes. Of
perhaps greater importance is the fact that to the extent that
Canada’s disallowance of the child care expenses increases
her Canadian tax, there should be a corresponding increase in the
credit against U.S. taxes that she is entitled to claim. This is
a matter that she should ask her U.S. tax advisors to
consider.
[13] It is unfortunate that she seems to fall between the
cracks of the legislation, but the wording of section 63 is
reasonably clear.
[14] The appeals are therefore dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 21st day of May 1998.
"D.G.H. Bowman"
J.T.C.C.