Date: 20001005
Docket: 1999-4153-IT-I
BETWEEN:
WENDY BARBARA SOL,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Sarchuk J.T.C.C.
[1]
This is the appeal of Wendy Barbara Sol from an assessment of tax
with respect to her 1997 taxation year. In computing income for
that year, the Appellant claimed other deductions as follows:
Withdrawal of Excess Funds from
Retirement savings plan
("RRSP")
$2,010.29
Legal
Fees
2,165.54
Total
$4,175.83
In assessing the Appellant for that taxation year, the
Minister of National Revenue (the Minister) disallowed the claim
for other deductions in the amount of $4,175.83. At the
commencement of the hearing, counsel for the Respondent advised
the Court that the Minister now concedes that the Appellant is
entitled to a deduction in respect of a refund of undeducted
excess contributions to her registered retirement saving plan
(RRSP) in the amount of $2,010.29 pursuant to subsection 146(8.2)
of the Income Tax Act (the Act).
Facts
[2]
On January 18, 1994, a Judgment of the Manitoba Queen's Bench
(Family Division) ordered the Appellant's former spouse,
Douglas Robert Budyk (Budyk), to pay child support to the
Appellant in respect of two children of the marriage.
Subsequently, the Income Tax Act provisions regarding the
tax treatment of child support were amended with the result that
child support payments would no longer be included in the
recipient's income nor deductible to the payer. With specific
regard to orders or agreements made before May 1997, the previous
inclusion/deduction provision generally applies but the amended
system applies where, inter alia, the agreement or order
was varied or another order or agreement was made after April 30,
1997 which changed the amount of child support provided in the
original order or agreement.[1] In 1997, motions were made by Budyk and by the
Appellant to vary the support order granted by Mr. Justice
Carr.
[3]
According to the Appellant, it became necessary for her to
petition the Court because her former spouse amongst other
things, refused to voluntarily supply the financial information
that was required in order to bring the child support payments
under the Federal Child Support Guidelines. The Appellant's
application was successful and as a consequence of the variation
of the order, the maintenance paid for the support of the
children by Budyk was increased from $800 per month to $978 per
month.[2] The
variation had the further effect of bringing the Appellant within
the scope of the amended provisions of
paragraph 56(1)(b).
[4]
It is the Appellant's position that the legal expenses were
deductible because they were incurred in the course of a legal
proceeding undertaken to enforce an existing order for child
maintenance by bringing it into line with the recently enacted
Federal Child Support Guidelines.
[5]
The Minister's position is that the legal fees were incurred
for the purpose of obtaining an order to vary a previous judgment
dated January 18, 1994 under which the Appellant's former
spouse, Budyk, was ordered to pay child support in respect of two
children of the marriage. The Respondent further contends that
the Appellant's application to vary was designed to ensure
that the child support payments would no longer be subject to
income tax in her hands. Thus, according to the Respondent, no
portion of the legal fees were incurred in respect of enforcing
the payment of child support nor were they incurred for the
purpose of gaining or producing income from business or property
but were on account of capital.
Conclusion
[6]
The issue is whether the legal fees claimed were incurred for the
purpose of gaining or producing income from a property pursuant
to paragraph 18(1)(a) of the Act. There is no
dispute that a maintenance right is a property within the meaning
of subsection 248(1) of the Act.[3] I turn then to the question whether
legal expenses incurred to obtain or increase the amount of child
support payments are deductible. In Wakeman v. Canada,[4]
O'Connor J. observed that both the Family Law Act of
Ontario and the Divorce Act make it clear that every
parent has an obligation to provide support for his or her child
and that an order made under section 15 of the Divorce Act
requires that that obligation be apportioned between the spouses
according to their relative abilities to contribute. He then made
the following comments:
The obligation borne by parents to support children was described
in the Supreme Court of Canada in Richardson v.
Richardson, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 857 at page 869:
|
|
The legal basis of child maintenance is the parents'
mutual obligation to support their children according to
their need. That obligation should be borne by the parents
in proportion to their respective incomes and ability to
pay: ... The duration of the obligation of support varies
with the provisions of each provincial statute. ... Child
maintenance, like access, is the right of the child:
...
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thus, it is clear that by law, at least in Ontario, parents have
a duty to support their children and this duty is not
extinguished by a divorce. Thus a suit by a custodial mother
against the divorced father for child support does not create the
right to the child support but rather simply establishes the
amount based on the conditions set forth in the statutes. As the
Court stated in Burgess, supra, at page 5194:
|
|
The question which next arises is what was the
circumstance which gave rise to the defendant's right
to maintenance, (1) was it a right which arose upon the
defendant's marriage as contended by her counsel, or
(2) was it a right which arose upon the order absolute
granted by the High Court of Ontario as contended by
counsel for the plaintiff.
|
|
|
|
Put yet another way, did the judgment of the High Court
of Ontario create the right to maintenance or was that
judgment merely a continuation and quantification of a
right to maintenance already vested in the defendant.
|
|
Counsel for the Minister referred to certain cases holding
that legal expenses incurred to increase alimony were not
deductible because they created a new right which was capital in
nature. In the present case the maintenance amount for the
children was in fact slightly increased by the final order dated
August 24, 1993 over the amount fixed for child maintenance in a
previous interim order. In my opinion, however, the cases cited
are not applicable. They did not distinguish between maintenance
for the wife and maintenance for the child. As mentioned, the
maintenance right of children is created by law.
It is true that the right created by law is a property right of
the child. However the custodial mother is the one who receives
the maintenance amount for the child or children and must include
that amount in her income. Consequently the legal expenses
incurred to quantify the maintenance may be deducted by the
custodial mother.
[8] I
note that subsection 36(1) of the Family Maintenance Act,
R.S.M. 1977 c-56, s. 4 provides that "each parent of a child
has the obligation, subject to the Child and Family Services
Act, to provide reasonably for the child's support,
maintenance and education whether or not the child is in that
parent's custody". As was the case in McColl v.
Canada,[5] the children's right to maintenance existed
prior to the divorce and continued to exist thereafter. Although
the Appellant receives the amounts payable by her former spouse
for the children these amounts are dedicated to the support,
maintenance and education of the children and are not for the
Appellant's benefit. Accordingly any expenses incurred by her
to quantify this amount may be deducted by the Appellant.
[9] I
am also unable to accept the Respondent's position that the
legal expenses were not incurred by the Appellant for the purpose
of gaining or producing income from a property but rather arose
as a result of her desire to increase her disposable income by
virtue of not being required to pay taxes on the amounts of the
child support payments. The reduction in the amount of income tax
this Appellant may be required to pay may well have formed part
of the motivation for the Appellant's petition. Nonetheless,
the amounts awarded by the Court in the variation order are
specifically for the support of the children.
[10] I am
unable to find any principle upon which this appeal may be
distinguished from Wakeman, supra.[6] Accordingly, the appeal is allowed
and the Appellant is entitled to deduct in computing her income
for the 1997 taxation year the amount of $4,175.83.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 5th day of October, 2000.
"A.A. Sarchuk"
J.T.C.C.
[1]
S.C. 1997, c. 25, s. 8 and 10.
[2]
Exhibit A-1 - The relevant provisions of the variation order
dated December 10, 1997 read as follows:
2. THIS COURT ORDERS pursuant to the Divorce Act
(1985) that:
(a) paragraph
1(iii) of the said Judgment pronounced on the 18th day of
January, 1994 be deleted and the following substituted:
1(iii):
(a) the
Petitioner, DOUGLAS ROBERT BUDYK pay to the Respondent, WENDY
BARBARA SOL for the support of the children Chad Matthew Budyk,
born March 21, 1978 and Melissa Kathleen Budyk born December
28, 1979:
(i) pursuant
to paragraph 3(1)(a) and 2(a) of the Federal
Child Support Guidelines and in accordance with the Manitoba
Table, the sum of $978.00 per month, payable in equal
instalments of $489.00 each on the 1st and 15th day of each and
every month commencing September 1, 1997, with credit being
given to the Petitioner, DOUGLAS ROBERT BUDYK, for any child
support payments he has made since September 1, 1997;
(ii) pursuant to
subsection 7 of the Federal Child Support Guidelines, one-half
(50%) of the children's special expense, being university
tuition and book and supply expenses, as follows:
(A) the
children's net university tuition for the school year
1997-1998 and for book and supply expenses already paid by the
Respondent, WENDY BARBARA SOL, is $5,973.28. The Petitioner,
DOUGLAS ROBERT BUDYK, shall pay to the Respondent, WENDY
BARBARA SOL, his one-half contribution, being $2,986.64 by
January 15, 1998; ...
[3]
The Queen v. Burgess, 81 DTC 5192 (F.C.T.D.).
[4]
[1996] 3 C.T.C. 2165 (T.C.C.).
[5]
[2000] T.C.J. No. 335.
[6]
See also the decisions in McColl v. The Queen, [2000]
T.C.J. No. 335 and St. Laurent v. The Queen, [1999]
1 C.T.C. 2478. (Although these two cases are not directly on
point the approach taken in both decisions is consistent with
the ratio in Wakeman.