REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Russell J.
I. Introduction:
[1]
The Appellant appeals the denial by the
Respondent’s Minister of National Revenue (Minister) of the Appellant’s claim
for dependent and child tax credits per paragraphs 118(1)(b) and (b.1)
of the Income Tax Act (Canada) (Act), both in
respect of a child of the Appellant, in computing the Appellant’s tax payable for the 2013 taxation year.
[2]
As a preliminary matter, the Appellant applied
to have her identification in this appeal amended to reflect her new gender-affirming
legal name, Macey-Anne Cook. The application was granted, on consent. Accordingly
the name of the Appellant is amended to be, “Macey-Anne Cook”.
II. Facts:
[3]
The Appellant testified. No other witnesses were
called for the Appellant and the Respondent called no witnesses. The pertinent
facts are that the Appellant fathered a son, M.C., born in August, 2006 to the
Appellant’s then wife. In 2009 the parents’ marital relationship broke down. In
2010 the parents formally separated and subsequently divorced. At all material
times they lived separately in Edmonton, with the Appellant maintaining the
marital home and sharing custody of the child with the child’s mother. On
December 2, 2010 the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench issued a Divorce Judgment
and Corollary Relief Order, granting the two parents joint custody of the
child, with the child’s primary residence to be with the ex-wife in Edmonton.
The Order provided also that the Appellant pay $331 monthly to the ex-wife to
support the child. The Order did not require the ex-wife to pay any support
amounts.
[4]
In or about June 2013 the ex-wife moved from
Edmonton to Drayton Valley - approximately 150 kilometres distant from the
child’s friends and school in Edmonton. The Appellant and ex-wife then agreed
between themselves that the child’s primary residence would change to be with
the Appellant at the Appellant’s Edmonton home and that with this change of
primary residence the support amounts being paid by the Appellant to the
ex-wife would cease.
[5]
Somewhat more than a year later, on August 1,
2014 the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench issued an Interim Without Prejudice
Consent Order that basically reflected this 2013 agreement between the two
parents. It provided that neither parent was required to make support payments
for the child, in view of the change in primary parenting. The Consent Order
stated that the Appellant’s residence had been the child’s primary residence
since September 2013. The Consent Order also provided that neither party owed
any arrears of support to the other and any existing arrears in child support per
the December 2, 2010 Order were vacated forthwith, and also that all expenses
of the child would be borne by the Appellant, subject to proposed sharing
between the parents of anticipated expenses of $1,000 or more. Lastly the
Consent Order provided that the Appellant, “… shall be
entitled to claim the child from 2014 onward for tax purposes until there is a
change in primary residential parenting.”
[6]
The Appellant testified that she had a “verbal agreement” prior to 2013 with the ex-wife that
instead of making monthly support payments to the ex-wife, the Appellant would
pay all expenses for the child, and also that the Appellant would reimburse the
ex-wife for any expenses she incurred for the child. The Appellant testified also
that despite what was stated in the December 2, 2010 Order, the child’s primary
residence prior to commencement of 2013 had been with the Appellant and not the
child’s mother.
[7]
On December 29, 2014 the Minister reassessed to
deny the claimed child and dependent amounts. A notice of objection was filed. The
Minister on March 10, 2017 confirmed the reassessment on the basis of
subsection 118(5) of the Act and the view that the December 2, 2010 Order had,
throughout the 2013, taxation year, required the Appellant to pay support to
the ex-wife in 2013 in respect of the child. Retroactive forgiveness per
the 2014 Consent Order of any 2013 support arrears did affect the result.
III.
Issue:
[8]
The issue is whether the Minister erred in
denying the Appellant’s 2013 taxation year claim for section 118 tax credits per
paragraphs 118(1)(b) and (b.1) of the Act, for respectively a child under 17
and an eligible dependent.
IV.
Parties’ Positions:
[9]
The Appellant submits that she was eligible for
“dependent” and “child” tax credits in the Appellant’s 2013 year as the child had
lived with the Appellant since prior to 2013, and likewise prior to 2013 the
two parents had agreed to cessation of the support payments provided by the
December 2, 2010 Order. Further, the August 1, 2014 Consent Order vacated any arrears
of support payments per the December 2, 2010 Order. The Appellant submits
that as retroactively there was not liability to make
support payments in 2013, and the Appellant did not make support payments in
2013 anyway, so the subsection 118(5) exception does not apply and the
Appellant should be allowed the sought section 118 tax credits. The Appellant
cites Barthels v. The Queen, 2002 CarswellNat
1088 [TCC Inf] for the proposition that subsequent forgiveness of support
payment arrears would qualify the Appellant for the denied tax credits.
[10]
The Respondent’s position is that in accordance
with the December 2, 2010 Order the Appellant was required to make support
payments in the 2013 taxation year. Accordingly, per subsection 118(5)
the Minister was correct in denying the Appellant’s claim for the child support
related tax credits. The fact that in the following year of 2014 an Order
forgave arrears including arrrears from 2013 is irrelevant in light of the
pertinent statutory wording. Also the Respondent does not accept that no
support payments were made for any of the early months of 2013, and this
further confirms the applicability of subsection 118(5).
V. Analysis:
[11]
In this matter the Appellant has claimed
dependent and child deductions for the 2013 taxation year per
subsections 118(1)(b) and (b.1) of the Act. The issue is whether the exception
in subsection 118(5) prohibits such deductions. Subsection 118(5) states:
(5) No
amount may be deducted under subsection (1) in computing an individual’s tax
payable under this Part for a taxation year in respect of a person where the
individual is required to pay a support amount (within the meaning assigned by
subsection 56.1(4)) to the individual’s spouse or common-law partner or former
spouse or common-law partner in respect of the person and the individual
(a) lives
separate and apart from the spouse or common-law partner or former spouse or
common-law partner throughout the year because of the breakdown of their
marriage or common-law partnership; or
(b) claims
a deduction for the year because of section 60 in respect of a support amount
paid to the spouse or common-law partner or former spouse or common-law
partner.
[12]
It is clear that the December 2, 2010 Order
required the Appellant to make monthly support payments to the ex-wife in
respect of the child. That Order remained in effect from December 2, 2010 throughout
all of 2011, 2012 and 2013 and until issuance August 1, 2014 of the Consent
Order which forgave any arrears in respect of the support payments provided by
the December 2, 2010 Order. However in 2013, within the April to September
period, the ex-wife decided to move to Drayton Valley and subsequently did so.
The child either already had been primarily living with his father, the
Appellant, with the Appellant picking up all child expenses in lieu of
paying the monthly support amounts, or the child commenced to do so in 2013
with his mother’s impending or actual move to Drayton Valley.
[13]
Also in connection with subsection 118(5) there
seems no issue between the parties that the support payments required by the
December 2, 2010 Order would each constitute a subsection 56.1(4) defined “support
amount”. That definition reads:
support amount means an amount payable or receivable as an allowance on a
periodic basis for the maintenance of the recipient, children of the recipient
or both the recipient and children of the recipient, if the recipient has
discretion as to the use of the amount, and
(a) the
recipient is the spouse or common-law partner or former spouse or common-law
partner of the payer, the recipient and payer are living separate and apart
because of the breakdown of their marriage or common-law partnership and the
amount is receivable under an order of a competent tribunal or under a written
agreement; or
(b) the
payer is a legal parent of a child of the recipient and the amount is
receivable under an order made by a competent tribunal in accordance with the
laws of a province.
[14]
The support payments specified in the December
2, 2010 Order readily seem to come within the ambit of this definition, noting
particularly clause (b) thereof.
[15]
There are in general two lines of authority
respecting application of subsection 118(5) in circumstances akin to herein
where, while a court order existed during the applicable taxation year
requiring periodic payment of support amounts, non-payment of such amounts was retroactively
excused by a subsequent Order.
[16]
One line reflects a purely textual approach, not
affected by any retroactive change of circumstances applying to the pertinent
taxation year. That is the interpretative basis herein espoused by the
Respondent. This line of authority includes the Tax Court decision of Lavoie, 2001-564(IT)I, wherein the taxpayer had ceased compliance with a
court order for support payments to be made by him to his ex-wife for two
infant children given into the ex-wife’s custody pursuant to that court order; when
subsequently one of the children went to live with her father, the taxpayer. Nevertheless,
as the court order specifying the support payments remained in effect until
altered by a further order in the ensuing taxation year (note that the reasons
for judgment do not state that the subsequent order also specified cancellation
of support arrears), Lamarre, J. as she then was concluded in favour of the
Minister that the subsection 118(5) exception still applied.
[17]
Also, in Dubis,
2010 TCC 121, Sheridan, J. considered a substantively similar situation - save
with the added dimension that the subsequent court order did cancel all support
arrears. The Court nevertheless upheld the respondent Minister’s application of
the subsection 118(5) exception, thus disallowing the taxpayer’s appeal. The
same conclusion was reached by Sarchuk, J. in Young, TCC 2002-1673(IT)I.
[18]
The other line of authority in these cases
recognizes as relevant a subsequent order cancelling support arrears arising in
the context of a de facto shift of a child’s
primary residence to that of the taxpayer parent who had been ordered to make
support payments. In Barthels, supra, Hershfield
TCJ considered that subsequent cancellation of support arrears where a
custodial child had moved to the claimant parent’s residence did neutralize the
original requirement to pay support amounts. His primary consideration was
fairness - allowing the subsection 118(1) deductions where there had been de
facto change of ordered primary residency of the child, with accompanying
parental agreement to cease ordered support payments, pending a confirmatory
order vacating support arrears. Barthels has been
followed in Antalya, 2005 TCC 31; Giroux, 2012 TCC 284 and Abiola, 2013 TCC
115.
[19]
My preference as to these two lines of authority
is that represented by Barthels. However there remains a further hurdle
for the Appellant here. Can the subsection 118(1) deductions be prorated in
view of any support payments made by the Appellant for the first several months
of the pertinent taxation year? This raises a factual issue. Here, did the
Appellant pay support to the ex-wife for any of the early months of the Appellant’s
2013 taxation year?
[20]
The Appellant testified to not having paid
support amounts at all in 2013. However that appears to be contradicted by the
Appellant’s notice of appeal which at paragraphs 14 and 15 read:
14. The Child moved in with the Appellant on a
permanent basis in April 2013, at the time that the Appellant’s Ex-Wife moved
to Drayton Valley.
15. Upon an oral agreement made between and the
Appellant and the Appellant’s Ex-Wife (the “Interim Agreement”), the Support
Payments were discontinued as the Child now resided with the Appellant.
[21]
Further the August 1, 2014 Consent Order states (page
1, paragraph 2)
The Applicant
Father has had the primary residence of the child, by an interim agreement
between the parties, since September 2013…
[22]
As well, Ex. A-1 being the Appellant’s notice of
objection showing Appeals Division received stamp date of July 15, 2015,
includes the statement,
…[the ex-wife] moved from Edmonton Alberta to Drayton Valley Alberta
in June of 2013. Previous to this date the child … was living primerely [sic]
with equal time with both parents one week on and one week off and all expenses
related to the upbringing of [the child] were payed [sic] for by [the
Appellant]. When [the ex-wife] moved 150 kms away from Edmonton, [the child] remained
fulltime with [the Appellant]. There no [sic] child support paid to [the
ex-wife] and no child support was received from [the ex-wife].
[23]
This extract implies that support had been paid
by the Appellant until the child began to live with the Appellant fulltime
after the ex-wife had moved to Drayton Valley.
[24]
In support of his position at the hearing, the
Appellant filed on consent certain school and day-care statements suggestive
that in the 2013 and 2014 years the Appellant was paying all the child’s monthly
day-care and school charges. However, that is not particularly indicative as to
whether or not the Appellant was making support payments. Also, a letter from
one Kevin C. Kozmech (Exhibit A-5) dated August 12, 2014 addressed to Canada
Revenue Agency filed on consent, states that Mr. Kozmech’s client, the Appellant,
has had the child “living solely and fulltime”
with the Appellant since September 2012. However, there is no statement as to
payment or non-payment of the monthly support amount per the December 2,
2010 Order. And of course the weight to be attached to this letter is slight at
best, given that the author did not appear at the hearing to testify.
[25]
On the basis of all the foregoing I am inclined
to the view that monthly payment of support amounts as provided by the December
2, 2010 Order did continue to be paid for some period of months in 2013,
approximately until the ex-wife moved to Drayton Valley in that year, sometime
between April and September.
[26]
Having reached this factual conclusion, the
question is whether there can be proration of the tax credits, where arguably
subsection 118(5) applies for an entire taxation year even if only one or a few
monthly support payments were made in that year. In this regard I concur with
the decision of this Court in Young, supra,
per Sarchuk, J., that no statutory language used in or in connection
with subsection 118(1) indicates that the deductions may be prorated for a
taxation year, noting in contrast with other provisions in the Act by which
Parliament has explicitly provided for proration.
[27]
A similar conclusion was reached in Giroux, supra. The Court there found that
the subsection 118(1) deductions could not be shared for the same 2008 taxation
year, and since the appellant was required to pay support for part of that
year, only the former spouse could claim the credit for that year. At
paragraphs 27 and 28 in Giroux:
[27] As for 2008, the situation is not the same. The former spouse was
entitled to claim the credits set out in paragraphs 118(1)(b) and (b.1),
since she was the custodial parent and supported the child G until November 1,
2008. The father took over that role starting on that date.
[28] Given that, under paragraph 118(4)(b), only one parent can
claim the credits described in paragraphs 118(1)(b) and (b.1) in
a taxation year, subsection 118(5) of the ITA prevents the parent who is
required to pay support from claiming the credit. This was also ruled on
in Sherrer v. Canada, [1998] T.C.J. No. 62 (QL), which confirmed
that these credits could not be shared between two parents for the same
taxation year, and that the parent who had to pay support during the year was
the one who could not claim the credits under paragraphs 118(1)(b) and (b.1).
[28]
Therefore, in respect of the 2013 taxation year,
which is the only year at issue in this matter, I will uphold the Minister’s
appealed reassessment. The appeal is accordingly dismissed, albeit without
costs.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 26th day of September 2017.
“B. Russell”