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Citation: 2004TCC393
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Date: 20040608
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Docket: 2003-2518(IT)I
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BETWEEN:
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DON SCHLEGEL,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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____________________________________________________________________
Agent for the Appellant: Mary Jane Schlegel
Counsel for the Respondent: Nicolas Simard
___________________________________________________________________
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Delivered orally from the Bench at
Kitchener, Ontario, on April 29, 2004)
Bowie J.
[1] This case comes down to the
question whether the Disability Tax Credit Certificate that is
Exhibit R-1, must be taken at face value, specifically in respect
of the first question on the fourth page and the answer thereto.
The question put there, under the heading "Life-sustaining
therapy (starting for 2000)", and I quote from the form,
is:
If your patient needs life-sustaining therapy to support a
vital function (see page 1), he or she may qualify for the
disability amount, even if the therapy has alleviated the
condition. Your patient must specifically dedicate the time
needed for this therapy -- at least three times per week, to an
average of at least 14 hours per week (do not include time needed
for travel, medical appointments, or to recuperate after
therapy).
Then the question posed to the medical professional is:
Does your patient meet these conditions for life-sustaining
therapy?
And the alternatives "yes" and "no" are
offered. Dr. Messner has quite clearly chosen "yes" as
the answer to that question. Then below that, and I quote again,
it says:
If yes, please specify the type of therapy:
[2] About two-thirds of one line of
the form are provided for that answer. Dr. Messner,
presumably in an attempt to be more complete than is contemplated
by the Minister in designing the form, has also written on the
bottom line of the box in which the question is posed. He
says:
Patient after bone marrow transplant; requires multiple
essential medications.
At that point he is out of space.
[3] The view that I take of these
forms is that the medical profession has had imposed on it the
obligation to deal with these questions, as they are posed in the
form, and to answer to the best of their ability questions posed
by the Minister. These are based, sometimes fairly accurately and
sometimes less so, on the provisions of the legislation.
[4] The Federal Court of Appeal made
it clear in A.G. of Canada v. MacIsaac et al.[1] that the form is an
essential part, not only of the assessing process, but of the
adjudication process. The Court said that without this form
properly completed by the doctor, and giving answers that satisfy
the legislation, there is no tax credit available. The logical
extension of that proposition is that if a doctor certifies that
the requirements of the Act have been met, and if the
doctor is not called to testify and to defend the answers that he
has given, then I must take the form at face value, at least if
it does not contain a clear inconsistency such that I must
conclude that the doctor made a mistake. I do not propose to pose
an example, but it would have to be quite unambiguous that the
form was internally inconsistent. Otherwise, in my view,
appropriate answers on the form are determinative of the factual
questions raised by the legislation. It is not at all clear to me
that medication cannot, under some circumstances, fall within the
words, "life sustaining therapy". I have no evidence
from an expert before me that would let me reach any conclusion
as to whether in the present case it does or does not fall within
the expression, "life-sustaining therapy". I have the
medical opinion that the legislation mandates, and that is
unchallenged in that the author of it is not here to defend it.
For that reason I propose to allow the appeal for the year
2001.
[5] I am in agreement with Mr. Simard
to this extent; without having claimed the credit in filing the
return for 2002, and without having filed an objection within the
time limited for doing so as a prerequisite to appeal the
Appellant cannot pursue an appeal for that year. The authorities
on this point are numerous and clear.
[6] I must dismiss the 2002 appeal but
the appeal for 2001 is allowed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 8th day of June, 2004.
Bowie J.