Décary,
J.A.:—The
appellant
is
challenging
a
judgment
of
Cullen,
J.
rendered
on
May
11,
1989.
A
that
time
the
trial
judge,
as
requested
by
the
respondent,
vacated
notices
of
reassessment
by
which
the
minister
of
National
Revenue
had,
first,
disallowed
deductions
which
the
respondent
was
claiming
for
the
salary
she
paid
to
her
nanny
and
which
she
regarded
as
a
business
expense
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act"),
and
second,
substituted
for
those
deductions
the
ones
authorized
by
section
63
of
the
Act
for
"child
care
expenses".
The
notices
of
reassessment
cover
four
taxation
years.
Depending
on
whether
the
respondent
can
avail
herself
of
the
provisions
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act,
the
amount
of
the
eligible
deductions
will
be
$10,075,
$11,200,
$13,173
and
$13,359
instead
of
$1,000,
$2,000,
$2,000
and
$4,000
for
the
1982,
1983,
1984
and
1985
taxation
years
respectively.
A
brief
review
of
the
relevant
facts
is
necessary.
Facts
and
Evidence
(a)
Respondent's
situation
The
respondent
has
been
married
since
1969.
She
was
admitted
to
the
Ontario
Bar
in
1978
and
practised
as
a
lawyer
by
herself
in
Toronto
before
going
into
a
firm
with
two
colleagues
in
1980,
which
she
did
not
leave
until
Marc
1988.
Her
practice
consisted
mostly
of
litigation,
primarily
in
labour
law.
She
developed
relations
with
her
clients
that
were
such
as
to
make
it
difficult
for
her
to
delegate
her
work
to
her
colleagues
in
any
way.
Few
days
went
by
without
her
having
to
go
to
court
and
her
practice
sometimes
required
her
to
travel
outside
Toronto.
As
a
general
rule
she
left
her
house
at
8:30
a.m.
and
returned
at
about
6:30
p.m.,
and
would
even
do
two
to
three
hours'
work
in
the
evenings.
She
could
not
have
practised
her
profession
from
her
home,
neither
could
she
have
done
so
on
a
part-time
basis
or
intermittently.
Her
husband
is
a
salaried
employee
whose
income
for
the
period
at
issue
was
about
the
same
as
her
own.
When
the
couple
decided
to
have
children,
it
was
agreed
that
if
it
became
necessary
for
one
of
them
to
remain
at
home
to
look
after
the
children
it
would
be
the
respondent
that
would
give
up
her
job,
rather
than
her
husband.
Their
first
daughter
was
born
on
November
26,
1981.
The
respondent
explored
the
possibility
of
obtaining
authorized
day-care
services,
but
such
services
were
almost
non-existent
for
very
young
children,
did
not
offer
any
flexibility
after
6:00
p.m.
without
paying
a
considerable
financial
premium
and
were
not
available
when
a
child
was
ill.
In
short,
the
only
solution
consistent
with
the
practice
of
the
respondent's
profession
was
to
hire
the
services
of
a
nanny.
The
respondent
accordingly
hired
a
Miss
Simpson.
She
came
to
the
house
at
8:30
a.m.
and
did
not
leave
until
6:30
p.m.,
when
one
of
the
parents
returned.
She
looked
after
the
child
exclusively
from
Monday
to
Friday,
and
did
no
housework,
laundry
or
shopping
except
in
connection
with
the
child's
needs.
Miss
Simpson
also
looked
after
a
second
child,
born
on
June
12,
1985.
The
respondent
and
her
husband
agreed
that
Miss
Simpson's
salary
would
be
paid
from
the
respondent's
income
rather
than
from
her
husband's
or
from
the
couple's
combined
income.
This,
the
respondent
said,
was
a
"family
decision"
based
on
the
fact
that
in
practice
it
was
the
respondent
who
was
ultimately
responsible
for
looking
after
the
house
and
caring
for
the
children.
The
respondent
said
they
were
jointly
responsible
but
most
of
the
burden
fell
onto
her.
The
respondent
deducted
tax
withholdings
from
the
salary
she
paid
Miss
Simpson
as
well
as
contributions
to
the
pension
and
unemployment
insurance
plans,
and
gave
her
T-4
forms
every
year.
In
her
own
tax
returns
the
respondent
then
deducted
as
a
business
expense
the
salary
she
paid
her
nanny.
It
is
worth
noting
at
this
stage
that
this
expense
was
treated
not
as
an
expense
of
the
firm
but
as
the
respondent's
personal
expense.
This
approach
was
suggested
by
accountants
for
the
firm
and
applied
both
to
the
nanny's
salary
and,
for
example,
to
automobile
expenses
incurred
individually
by
each
of
the
partners.
After
accepting
the
deductions
as
claimed
for
the
1982
and
1983
taxation
years,
Revenue
Canada
changed
its
mind
and,
by
notices
of
reassessment
elated
December
9,
1985
and
November
7,
1986
told
the
respondent
that
she
would
have
to
be
content
with
the
deductions
allowed
by
section
63
of
the
Act
(“child
care
expenses"),
that
is
$1,000
for
1982
(only
one
child,
deduction
allowed
$1,000
per
child),
$2,000
for
each
of
1983
and
1984
(one
child,
deduction
allowed
raised
to
$2,000
per
child).
In
the
opinion
of
Revenue
Canada,
the
salary
paid
to
the
nanny
was
not
an
expense
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
to
earn
business
income
(which
would
be
deductible
under
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act,
but
an
expense
in
the
nature
of
personal
or
living
expenses
(which
are
not
deductible
under
paragraph
18(1)(b)
).
(b)
Situation
of
professional
women
in
labour
market
Relying
on
the
sworn
statement
and
testimony
of
an
expert
in
sociology,
Dr.
Pat
Armstrong,
the
respondent
submitted
evidence
of
a
major
social
development
which
she
expected
to
make
use
of
in
her
interpretation
both
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
section
15
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
(the
Charter).
Essentially,
that
evidence
was
that
when
women
moved
into
the
labour
market
in
the
1970s
this
radically
altered
the
landscape
and
the
way
in
which
business
was
conducted;
that
women
who
have
young
children
have
no
choice
if
they
want
to
work,
and
they
do,
but
to
make
use
of
day-care
services;
that
women
bear
by
far
the
greatest
burden
of
caring
for
children,
even
when
they
work
away
from
home;
that
women
who
are
self-employed
incur
additional
problems
when
the
time
comes
to
have
their
children
looked
after,
in
particular
because
their
working
hours
are
unpredictable,
they
find
it
very
hard
to
be
away
from
their
work
when
a
problem
arises
involving
the
children,
and
if
they
are
to
go
on
operating
their
businesses
they
have
greater
need
of
day-care
services
which
are
reliable
and
responsible
in
all
respects
and
at
all
times.
At
the
risk
of
simplifying
Dr.
Armstrong's
testimony,
it
seems
advisable
to
set
out
what
the
trial
judge
concluded
from
this:
Armstrong’s
evidence
supports
the
notion
that
the
availability
of
child
care
increases
productivity
by
enhancing
the
peace
of
mind
of
employees.
Enhancing
productivity
is
something
that
is
totally
in
keeping
with
well
established
business
practices.
Moreover,
Armstrong's
evidence
indicates
that
the
absence
of
child
care
is
a
barrier
to
women's
participation
in
the
economy,
in
terms
of
paid
work
and
income-generating
work
and
therefore
lowering
the
barrier
by
arriving
at
a
satisfactory
means
of
dealing
with
the
cost
of
child
care,
would
make
good
business
sense.
(judgment,
page
15)
.
.
.
women
bear
by
far
the
largest
burden
of
child
care
.
.
.
(judgment,
page
26)
Armstrong's
evidence
seems
to
indicate
that
something
is
"wrong"
and
that
according
to
government
reports,
the
present
system
is
not
delivering
child
care
in
sufficient
quantities
for
Canadian
women.
The
cost
of
child
care
takes
up
a
considerable
portion
of
women's
income
(approximately
one-fifth)
and
is
considered
a
high
price
item.
As
a
high
price
item
it
constitutes
a
barrier
to
women's
access
to
the
economy.
(judgment,
page
30)
(c)
Fiscal
history
of
child
care
expenses
In
1966,
the
“Report
of
the
Royal
Commission
on
Taxation”
(the
"Carter
Report")
expressly
recommended
that
"Such
things
as
commuting
expenses,
the
costs
of
child
care,
and
recreational
club
memberships
should
be
explicitly
denied
as
deductions
from
income"
and
favoured
instead
the
granting
of
tax
credits
to
mothers
working
outside
the
home.
In
1969,
the
“Proposals
for
Tax
Reform"
(the
White
Paper)
moved
away
from
this
recommendation
and
proposed
the
following:
2.7
We
propose
to
permit
deduction
of
the
child
care
expenses
that
face
many
working
parents
today.
The
problem
of
adequately
caring
for
children
when
both
parents
are
working,
or
when
there
is
only
one
parent
in
the
family
and
he
or
she
is
working,
is
both
a
personal
and
a
social
one.
We
consider
it
desirable
on
social
as
well
as
economic
grounds
to
permit
a
tax
deduction
for
child
care
expenses,
under
carefully
controlled
terms,
in
addition
to
the
general
deduction
for
children.
In
1972,
as
part
of
a
major
tax
reform,
Parliament
accepted
the
proposals
contained
in
the
White
Paper
and
adopted
section
63
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
That
section
allowed
a
woman,
and
in
certain
well-defined
cases
a
man,
to
deduct
child
care
expenses
of
$500
per
child
from
their
income,
with
a
maximum
of
$2,000
per
family,
and
made
this
deduction
subject
to
a
considerable
number
of
conditions.
In
1976,
section
63
was
amended.
The
deduction
allowed
per
child
rose
from
$500
to
$1,000,
and
the
total
allowable
per
family
rose
from
$2,000
to
$4,000.
In
1983,
section
63
was
again
amended.
The
deduction
allowed
per
child
rose
from
$1,000
to
$2,000,
and
the
total
allowed
per
family
rose
from
$4,000
to
$8,000.
Additionally,
to
correct
what
the
Canadian
Human
Rights
Tribunal
had
found
to
be
discriminatory,
Parliament
allowed
men
the
same
right
to
claim
deductions
as
it
had
granted
to
women.
In
his
budget
speech
on
April
19,
1983
Hon.
Marc
Lalonde,
Minister
of
Finance,
said
that
this
amendment
was
one
of
four
measures
designed
to
assist
lower-income
families,
working
parents
and
others
in
need
and
in
the
"Budget
Papers”
tabled
by
the
Minister
at
that
time,
there
is
the
following:
Through
the
Family
Allowance
program,
the
child
tax
credit,
the
child
tax
exemption,
and
the
child
care
expense
deduction,
the
federal
government
provides
a
comprehensive
system
of
child
benefits.
[Emphasis
added.]
Finally,
in
1988,
section
63
was
one
again
amended.
The
deduction
allowed
per
child
rose
from
$2,000
to
$4,000
for
children
six
years
and
under,
and
the
total
of
$8,000
allowed
per
family
was
dropped.
In
his
budget
speech
on
February
10,
1988,
the
Minister
of
Finance
noted
that
this
amendment
and
several
others
had
been
made
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
give
effect
in
tax
legislation
to
the
new
government
policy
on
child
care,
announced
by
the
Minister
of
National
Health
and
Welfare
in
December
1987.
(d)
Government
policies
on
child
care
expenses
Certain
ministerial
statements
made
in
the
debates
on
budget
or
on
other
measures
are
worth
examining.
On
April
21,
1983
Hon.
Monique
Bégin,
Minister
of
National
Health
and
Welfare,
said
the
following
in
the
budget
debate:
One
of
the
areas
that
has
brought
forth
a
great
deal
of
discussion
is
the
child
care
expense
deduction.
The
growing
consensus
.
.
.
is
that
the
current
child
care
expense
deduction
is
totally
inadequate
.
.
.
The
Government
has
responded
through
the
budget,
and
I
am
pleased
about
that.
This
measure
is
an
excellent
one.
I
realize
it
does
not
cover
the
entire
cost
of
child
care,
but
it
has
never
been
the
policy
of
this
Government
to
subsidize
the
total
cost
of
child
care.
Our
objective
is
to
support
the
family
in
its
role
of
bringing
up
children
in
a
society
where
all
family
partners
are
working.
[Emphasis
added.]
On
February
12,
1988
Hon.
Michael
Wilson,
Minister
of
Finance,
in
answer
to
an
Opposition
M.P.
who
charged
that
he
was
not
doing
enough
for
child
care,
said:
.
.
.
the
program
put
forward
on
behalf
of
the
Government
by
the
Minister
of
National
Health
and
Welfare
is
a
much
more
balanced
program
and
provides
a
much
broader
response
to
the
needs
of
Canadian
working
women
and
other
women
than
would
the
more
narrow
approach
which
the
Hon.
Member
would
follow.
(e)
Reports
and
Royal
Commissions
Governments
both
federal
and
provincial
have
explored
the
problems
connected
with
child
care
and
have
looked
at
a
range
of
solutions,
including
direct
grants,
tax
deductions,
tax
credits
and
grant[s]
to
private
and
public
day-care
centers.
The
parties
referred
in
this
connection
to
the
"Report
of
the
Task
Force
on
Child
Care",
prepared
in
1986
for
Status
of
Women
Canada
and
to
certain
background
papers;
to
the
Report
by
the
National
Council
of
Welfare,
titled
“Child
Care:
A
Better
Alternative”,
prepared
in
December
1988;
to
the
"Study
of
Wages
and
Employment
Conditions
of
Domestics
and
their
Employers",
prepared
in
1985
by
the
Ontario
Ministry
of
Labour;
and
to
the
Report
of
the
Task
Force
on
Immigration
Practices
and
Procedures,
titled
"Domestic
Workers
on
Employment
Authorizations".
Arguments
of
Parties
In
their
simplest
form,
the
parties’
arguments
may
be
summarized
as
follows:
Respondent:
—child
care
expenses,
inasmuch
as
the
concept
of
a
business
expense
is
given
a
modern
interpretation,
are
actually
incurred
by
he
taxpayer
"for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
from
a
business”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act
and
are
not
“personal
or
living
expenses"
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(h);
—the
existence
of
a
statutory
deduction
for
child
care
expenses
in
section
63
of
the
Act
does
not
in
any
way
alter
the
taxpayer's
right
to
rely
on
paragraph
18(1)(a);
—any
other
interpretation
would
mean
that
the
inability
of
a
self-employed
taxpayer
to
claim
a
deduction
for
all
the
expenses
reasonably
incurred
for
child
care
would
be
a
kind
of
discrimination
prohibited
by
the
Charter,
and
the
courts
cannot
interpret
legislation
so
as
to
make
it
contrary
to
the
Charter;
Appellant:
—child
care
expenses
are
not
business
expenses,
but
personal
or
living
expenses;
—in
section
63
of
the
Act
Parliament
dealt
expressly
with
the
question
of
child
care
expenses;
—it
is
not
for
the
courts
to
question
the
validity
of
the
socio-economic
policies
adopted
by
governments;
—as
the
Charter
confers
no
right
to
deduct
child
care
expenses,
it
is
in
no
way
a
breach
of
the
Charter
to
interpret
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
not
authorizing
this
deduction
as
a
business
expense.
Judgment
A
Quo
The
trial
judge
first
recognized
that
"Prior
to
1972,
child
care
expenses
were
treated
as
non-deductible
personal
expenses
for
income
tax
purposes".
On
paragraph
18(1)(a),
the
trial
judge
said
that
in
his
opinion
that
in
his
opinion
that
paragraph
should
be
interpreted
"in
view
of
the
social
and
economic
realities
of
the
times"
and
that
he
was
not
bound
“
a
cluster
of
cases
decided
in
the
1950s
and
1960s
based
on
the
reasoning
of
a
decision
made
in
1891”.
He
found
that
the
respondent
"exercised
good
business
and
commercial
judgment
in
deciding
to
dedicate
part
of
her
resources
from
the
law
practice
to
the
provision
of
child
care"
and
that
this
decision
by
the
respondent
“was
acceptable
according
to
business
principles
which
include
the
development
of
intellectual
capital,
the
improvement
of
productivity,
the
provision
of
services
to
clients
and
making
available
the
resource
which
she
sells,
namely
her
time".
He
noted,
referring
to
the
testimony
of
Dr.
Armstrong,
that
"the
absence
of
child
care
is
a
barrier
to
women's
participation
in
the
economy,
in
terms
of
paid
work
and
income-generating
work
and
therefore
lowering
the
barrier
by
arriving
at
a
satisfactory
means
of
dealin
with
the
costs
of
child
care
would
make
good
business
sense".
He
concluded
that
"it
can
be
said
that
there
is
a
causal
relationship
between
the
dedication
of
resources
generated
in
her
practice
to
child
care
and
the
generation
of
those
resources”.
On
section
63,
the
trial
judge,
based
on
an
admission
made
by
counsel
for
the
appellant,
concluded
“that
if
the
nanny
expense
is
a
proper
business
expense
pursuant
to
sections
3,
9
and
18
of
the
Act,
then
section
63
cannot
prevent
it
from
being
allowed
as
such".
Finally,
rather
than
stopping
there,
as
he
might
have
done,
the
trial
judge
considered
the
argument
based
on
the
Charter
and
concluded,
with
respect
to
taxation
subsequent
to
April
17,
1985,
that
"an
interpretation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
which
ignores
the
realities
that
women
bear
a
major
responsibility
for
child
rearing
and
that
the
costs
of
child
care
are
a
major
barrier
to
women's
participation,
would
itself
violate
section
15
of
the
Charter".
Subsection
9(1),
paragraphs
18(1)(a)
and
(h)
and
section
63
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
According
to
subsection
9(1)
of
the
Act,
9.
(1)
.
.
.
a
taxpayer's
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property
is
his
profit
therefrom
for
the
year.
According
to
paragraphs
18(1)(a)
and
(h)
of
the
Act:
18.
(1)
In
computing
the
income
of
a
taxpayer
from
a
business
or
a
property
no
deduction
shall
be
made
in
respect
of
(a)
an
outlay
or
expense
except
to
the
extent
that
it
was
made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
or
producing
income
from
the
business
or
property;
(h)
personal
or
living
expenses
of
the
taxpayer
except
travelling
expenses
(including
the
entire
amount
expended
for
meals
and
lodging)
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
while
away
from
home
in
the
course
of
carrying
on
his
business
.
.
.
As
the
trial
judge
noted,
the
determination
of
profit
and
the
question
of
whether
an
expenditure
is
a
proper
business
expense
to
be
included
in
the
calculation
of
profit
are
questions
of
law.
As
a
general
rule,
in
determining
whether
an
expense
can
be
deducted,
the
Court
first
decides
whether
the
calculation
of
profit
was
made
in
accordance
with
ordinary
business
principles
and
the
well-established
principles
of
current
business
practice.
If
not,
the
Court
does
not
have
to
go
any
further.
If
it
was,
the
Court
must
then
consider
whether
the
expense
was
"made
or
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income
from
a
business.
.
.
,".
In
the
case
at
the
bar,
I
will
reverse
the
usual
order.
I
will
deal
first
with
paragraph
18(1)(a)
and
only
consider
subsection
9(1)
if
I
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
expense
is
not
prohibited
by
that
paragraph.
At
the
nearing
counsel
for
the
parties
went
to
great
lengths
to
persuade
the
Court
to
adopt
their
own
interpretations
of
the
expression
"for
the
purpose
of"
("en
vue
de”)
to
be
found
in
paragraph
18(1)(a).
While
the
respondent
invited
the
Court
to
give
an
interpretation
that
takes
into
account
contemporary
reality
in
the
business
world,
and
in
particular
the
specific
problems
of
child
care
faced
by
women
in
business,
the
appellant
suggested
a
new
concept
which
the
trial
judge
described
as
the
"business
or
revenue-producing
circle":
expenses
incurred
within
the
revenue-producing
circle
are
properly
speaking
deductible,
but
those
incurred
by
the
taxpayer
simply
to
approach
the
circle
are
not.
The
appellant
relied
in
particular
on
the
recent
judgement
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
Mattabi
Mines
Ltd.
v.
Ont.
(Min.
of
Revenue),
[1988]
2
S.C.R.
175;
[1988]
2
C.T.C
294
in
which
Wilson,
J.
said
the
following
for
the
Court
at
301
(S.C.R.
189):
"The
only.
thing
that
matters
is
that
the
expenditures
were
a
legitimate
expense
made
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business
with
the
intention
that
the
company
could
generate
a
taxable
income
sometime
in
the
future"
[emphasis
added]
and
confirmed
for
all
practical
purposes
the
interpretation
given
by
the
federal
government
itself
in
an
Interpretation
Bulletin
dated
April
26,
1982,
on
paragraph
18(1)(a)
at
page
301
(S.C.R.
189-90):
I
find
support
for
this
conclusion
in
the
federal
government's
Interpretation
Bulletin
dealing
with
paragraph
18(1)(a).
An
Interpretation
Bulletin
does
not,
of
course,
have
the
binding
effect
of
law
(I
discuss
this
later)
but
such
Bulletins
do
have
persuasive
force
in
the
event
of
ambiguity.
The
federal
government's
Bulletin
IT-487,
April
26,
1982,
entitled
"General
Limitation
on
Deduction
of
Outlays
or
Expenses”,
states
in
part:
(b)
”.
.
.
for
the
purpose
.
.
.".
It
is
not
necessary
to
show
that
the
income
actually
resulted
from
the
particular
outlay
or
expenditure
itself.
It
is
sufficient
that
the
outlay
or
expense
was
a
part
of
the
income-earning
process.)
I
reject
at
the
outset
the
respondent's
argument
that
the
existence
of
a
legal
obligation
to
care
for
children
is
a
reason
for
treating
child
care
expenses
as
a
business
expense.
The
legal
obligation
in
the
case
at
bar—which
I
stress
is
imposed
equally
on
both
spouses
and
is
in
any
case
a
natural
obligation—is
imposed
on
the
parents
as
parents,
and
follows
them
wherever
they
may
be,
whether
they
are
absent
on
business,
pleasure
or
for
any
other
reason.
The
law
does
not
impose
an
obligation
on
the
respondent
to
look
after
her
children
because
she
is
operating
a
business.
Mattabi
Mines,
supra,
lends
support
to
the
appellant's
argument
that
the
words
"for
the
purpose
of"
("en
vue
de")
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act
should
be
interpreted
as
meaning
"in
the
process
of
earning
("pendant
le
processus
de
gain"),
and
that
the
deductible
expenses
should
be
incurred
"in
the
ordinary
course
of
business"
("dans
le
cours
ordinaire
des
affaires").
However,
that
judgment
did
not
deal
with
the
question
of
child
care
or
discuss
the
possibility
of
extending
the
traditional
concept
of
a
business
expense
in
light
of
the
new
social
reality
referred
to
by
the
respondent
and
I
would
hesitate
to
regard
Wilson,
J.'s
remarks
as
precluding
respondent's
contentions.
Like
the
trial
judge
and
like
the
respondent,
I
consider
the
judicial
interpretation
is
not
cast
in
stone
and
must
be
sufficiently
flexible
and
sensitive
to
adapt
to
changing
circumstances.
I
have
no
problem
with
the
idea
that
business
tax
law
has
developed
in
a
context
in
which
women
had
no
place,
and
I
have
no
hesitation
in
saying
that
concepts
should
be
extended
by
the
courts
in
order
to
take
into
account
the
presence
of
women
in
the
business
world,
and
in
the
labour
market,
provided
that
these
concepts
have
been
developed
in
relation
to
these
circumstances
which
have
since
changed
or
that
the
legislature
has
not
itself
adapted
its
legislation
to
these
new
realities.
But
the
concept
of
a
business
expense
has
been
developed
exclusively
in
relation
to
the
commercial
needs
of
the
business,
without
any
regard
to
the
particular
of
those
in
charge
of
the
business,
and
I
have
difficulty
in
seeing
how
a
change
in
the
particular
needs
of
these
persons
could
justify
modifying
an
interpretation
which
has
nothing
to
do
with
these
needs.
Having
said
that,
I
consider
that
the
case
at
bar
does
not
require
a
conclusion
on
this
point
for
the
simple
reason
that
Parliament
has
itself
already
amended
the
Income
Tax
Act
to
provide
for
the
specific
situation
relied
on
by
the
respondent.
In
1972,
by
adopting
section
63
which
in
subparagraph
(3)(a)(i)
authorizes
the
deduction
of
child
care
expenses
“to
enable
the
taxpayer,
or
the
supporting
person
of
the
child
for
the
year,
who
resided
with
the
child
at
the
time
the
expense
was
incurred,
(A)
to
perform
the
duties
of
an
office
or
employment
(B)
to
carry
on
a
business
either
alone
or
as
a
partner
actively
engaged
in
the
business
.
.
.
”
[emphasis
added],
Parliament
has
expressly
covered
self-
employed
parents
as
well
as
salaried
parents.
(I
use
the
word
"parent"
to
simplify
the
discussion;
it
is
understood
that
section
63
deals
more
generally
with
an
individual
providing
the
support
for
a
child
and
residing
with
the
child
at
the
time
the
expense
was
incurred.)
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
respondent
incurred
the
child
care
expenses
to
enable
her
"to
carry
on
a
business
.
.
.
as
a
partner
actively
engaged
in
a
business”.
Had
section
63
been
drafted
to
apply
specifically
to
the
respondent's
case,
it
would
not
have
been
drafted
otherwise.
That
is
not
all.
The
expression
"earned
income"
in
paragraph
(3)(b)
is
defined
as
“the
aggregate
of
(i)
all
salaries,
wages
and
other
remuneration
.
.
.
received
.
.
.
by
virtue
of
offices
and
employments
.
.
.
and
.
.
.
(iii)
his
incomes
from
all
businesses
carried
on
either
alone
or
as
a
partner
actively
engaged
in
the
business"
(my
emphasis).
The
respondent's
"earned
income"
in
the
case
at
bar
is
the
income
she
derived
from
her
partnership,
and
it
is
that
income
which
is
covered
by
section
63.
The
intent
of
Parliament,
referred
to
above,
and
the
fact
that
self-employed
mothers
were
covered
by
the
very
wording
of
the
new
legislation
just
as
much
as
salaried
mothers,
are
so
clear
that
I
was
surprised
to
read
in
paragraph
60
of
the
respondent's
submission:
"Further,
there
is
no
indication
either
in
the
debates
or
in
the
permissive
wording
of
section
63
itself
that,
in
enacting
this
provision
designed
to
redress
the
inferior
economic
position
of
women
who
were
by
and
large
employees
in
the
labour
market,
the
Legislature
intended
to
preclude
self-employed
women
from
deducting
reasonable
costs
of
child
care
expenses
incurred
for
the
purpose
of
gaining
income".
Whatever
may
have
been
the
admission
made
at
trial
by
counsel
for
the
appellant
on
a
point
of
law—which
certainly
cannot
bind
the
Court,
and
which
counsel
hastened
to
withdraw
in
this
Court—it
is
not
possible
to
interpret
paragraph
18(1)(a)
of
the
Act
without
reference
to
reference
to
section
63.
As
Prof.
Faye
Woodman
notes
in
her
article
mentioned
above,
at
page
377,
"surely
the
existence
of
section
63
is
very
important,
if
not
determinative,
in
the
interpretation
of
sections
9
and
18”.
Section
63
is
really
a
code
in
itself,
complete
and
independent,
and
it
does
not
matter
in
the
circumstances
whether
it
was
inserted
in
one
subdivision
of
the
Act
rather
than
another,
as
by
its
very
wording,
which
is
clear
and
not
open
to
question,
it
covers
apparent
carrying
on
a
business
and
income
earned
by
the
parent
from
the
operation
of
a
business.
Section
63
was
adopted
in
1972,
and
thus
at
a
time
when
according
to
the
testimony
of
Dr.
Armstrong
herself
(transcript,
page
217),
an
important
social
change
was
occurring
and
the
entry
of
women
of
child-bearing
age
into
the
labour
market.
That
section
has
been
amended
three
times,
in
1976,
1983
and
1988.
In
light
of
the
evidence
presented
of
Parliament's
intent,
it
is
difficult
not
to
see
this
section
as
“liberalization”
which,
for
obvious
monetary
reasons,
the
respondent
would
have
preferred
to
see
take
the
form
of
a
deduction
for
business
expenses
rather
than
a
deduction
for
parental
expenses,
a
new
deduction
which
is
generally
applicable
and
limited
to
specific
amounts,
applying
to
all
parents
whatever
the
nature
of
their
work,
whatever
their
income
and
whatever
their
sex.
I
therefore
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
respondent's
particular
situation
is,
literally
and
fundamentally,
one
of
those
which
Parliament
clearly
had
in
mind
when
it
adopted
and
then
amended
section
63.
As
I
have
already
said,
I
do
not
in
so
doing
disregard
the
possibility
of
applying
a
contemporary
approach
to
the
interpretation
of
tax
legislation;
I
am
simply
saying
that
in
the
case
at
bar
Parliament
in
1972
adapted
the
Act
to
contemporary
reality
when
it
established
a
system
favouring
salaried
mothers
and
self-employed
mothers.
As
I
have
decided
that
in
the
case
at
bar
child
care
expenses
are
not
a
business
expense
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
18(1)(a),
but
a
parental
expense
within
the
meaning
of
section
63,
I
do
not
nave
to
determine
whether
they
have
been
correctly
taken
into
account
in
determining
the
"profit"
of
the
business
within
the
meaning
of
subsection
9(1).
Section
15
of
Charter
Although
in
a
notice
of
a
constitutional
question
the
respondent
indicated
her
intent
to
challenge
the
constitutionality
of
ss.
18
and
63
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
her
counsel
admitted
at
the
hearing
that
notice
was
only
pro
forma
and
she
was
not
challenging
the
constitutionality
of
those
two
sections
as
such.
Her
argument
based
on
the
Charter
derives
not
from
the
actual
wording
of
those
two
provisions
but
from
the
interpretation
this
Court
would
give
them
if
by
chance
it
held—as
I
have
just
decided—that
child
care
expenses
incurred
by
a
parent
are
not
business
expenses.
In
support
of
this
proposition,
the
respondent
cited
the
following
extract
from
the
opinions
of
Lamer,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
and
L’Heureux-Dubé,
J.
in,
respectively,
Slaight
Communications
Inc.
v.
Davidson,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
1038
at
1078
and
Hills
v.
Canada
(A.G.),
[1988]
1
S.C.R.
513
at
558.
Although
this
Court
must
not
add
anything
to
legislation
or
delete
anything
from
it
in
order
to
make
it
consistent
with
the
Charter,
there
is
not
doubt
in
my
mind
that
it
should
also
not
interpret
legislation
that
is
open
to
more
than
one
interpretation
so
as
to
make
it
inconsistent
with
the
Charter.
.
.
(Lamer,
J.)
Appellant,
while
not
relying
on
any
specific
provision
of
the
Charter,
nevertheless
urged
that
preference
be
given
to
Charter
values
in
the
interpretation
of
a
statute,
namely
freedom
of
association.
I
agree
that
the
values
embodied
in
the
Charter
must
be
given
preference
over
an
interpretation
which
would
run
contrary
to
them
.
.
.
(L'Heureux-Dube,
J.)
I
do
not
think
that
by
these
statements
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
intended
to
say
that
legislation
should
be
minutely
examined
to
determine
whether,
by
an
extreme
interpretation,
it
might
not
be
possible
to
implicate
the
Charter
directly
or
indirectly.
Strictly
speaking,
any
legislation
is
an
invasion
of
a
right,
and
in
the
field
of
taxation
in
particular,
everything
or
nearly
everything
can
be
immediately
or
remotely
connected
in
some
way
to
the
concept
of
equality.
On
the
question
of
economic
rights
and
section
15,
I
adopt
these
observation
of
Hugessen,
J.A.
in
Smith,
Kline
&
French
Laboratories
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1987]
2
F.C.
259;
24
D.L.R.
(4th)
321
at
367-71:
The
rights
which
[section
15]
guarantees
are
not
based
on
any
concept
of
strict,
numerical
equality
amongst
all
human
beings.
If
they
were,
virtually
all
legislation,
whose
function
it
is,
after
all,
to
define,
distinguish
and
make
categories,
would
be
in
prima
facie
breach
of
section
15
and
would
require
justification
under
section
1.
This
would
be
to
turn
the
exception
into
the
rule.
Since
courts
would
be
obliged
to
look
for
and
find
section
1
justification
for
most
legislation,
the
alternative
being
anarchy,
there
is
a
real
risk
of
paradox:
the
broader
the
reach
given
to
section
15
the
more
likely
it
is
that
it
will
oe
deprived
of
any
real
content.
While
the
generalisation
will
no
doubt
require
refinement,
it
would
seem
to
me
that,
since
the
Charter's
primary
focus
is
upon
personal
rights,
liberties
and
freedoms,
categories
whose
main
impact
is
elsewhere,
such
as
on
property
and
economic
rights,
will
be
less
subject
to
scrutiny.
To
succeed,
plaintiffs
have
to
urge,
as
they
do,
that
section
15
guarantees
absolute
equality
to
every
individual
in
every
conceivable
circumstance
and
that
every
possible
distinction
that
can
result
in
one
receiving
a
benefit
or
incurring
a
disadvantage
which
is
not
enjoyed
or
suffered
by
all
can
only
be
justified,
if
at
all,
under
section
1
.
.
.As
I
have
attempted
to
indicate,
that
view
seems
to
me
to
be
untenable.
which
are
essentially
the
same
as
those
of
La
Forest,
Wilson
and
Macintyre,
JJ.
in
Andrews
v.
Law
Society
of
British
Columbia,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
143;
56
D.L.R.
(4th)
1:
That
having
been
said,
I
am
convinced
that
it
was
never
intended
in
enacting
section
15
that
it
become
a
tool
for
the
wholesale
subjection
to
judicial
scrutiny
of
variegated
legislative
choices
in
no
way
infringing
on
values
fundamental
to
a
free
and
democratic
society.
Like
my
colleague,
I
am
not
prepared
to
accept
that
all
legislative
classifications
must
be
rationally
supportable
before
the
courts.
Much
economic
and
social
policy-making
is
simply
beyond
the
institutional
competence
of
the
courts:
their
role
is
to
protect
against
incursions
on
fundamental
values,
not
to
second
guess
policy
decisions.
(La
Forest,
J.,
at
914)
If
every
distinction
between
individuals
and
groups
gave
rise
to
a
violation
of
section
15,
then
this
standard
might
well
be
too
stringent
for
application
in
all
cases
and
might
deny
the
community
at
large
the
benefit
associated
with
sound
and
desirable
social
and
economic
legislation.
(Wilson,
J.,
at
154)
It
is
not
every
distinction
or
differentiation
in
treatment
at
law
which
will
transgress
the
equality
guarantees
of
section
15
of
the
Charter.
It
is,
of
course,
obvious
that
legislatures
may—and
to
govern
effectively
must—treat
different
individuals
and
groups
in
different
ways.
Indeed,
such
distinctions
are
one
of
the
main
preoccupations
of
legislatures.
The
classifying
of
individuals
and
groups,
the
making
of
different
provisions
respecting
such
groups,
the
application
of
different
rules,
regulations,
requirements
and
qualifications
to
different
persons
is
necessary
for
the
governance
of
modern
society.
(Macintyre,
J.,
at
168-69)
At
bottom,
the
approach
put
forward
by
the
respondent
risks
trivializing
the
Charter.
As
Galligan,
J.
of
the
Ontario
High
Court
of
Justice
concluded
in
Ontario
Public
Service
Employees
Union
v.
National
Citizens
Coalition
Inc.,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
59;
87
D.T.C
5270
at
5272;
aff'd
by
Ontario
Court
of
Appeal
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
163;
90
D.T.C.
6326,
The
argument
advanced
with
respect
to
section
15(1)
is
that
the
circumstances
disclosed
in
paragraphs
10
and
11
of
the
statement
of
claim
show
that
certain
taxpayers
could
be
disentitled
to
equal
benefit
of
the
tax
laws.
I
have
some
difficulty
in
understanding
how
tax
laws
can
be
said
to
bestow
benefits
on
taxpayers.
But,
having
said
that,
it
is
clear
that
some
taxpayers
are
entitled
to
certain
deductions
from
their
income
while
others
are
not.
The
Income
Tax
Act
is
full
of
examples
where
one
taxpayer
for
certain
reasons
has
certain
deductions
which
another
taxpayer
does
not
have.
Also,
certain
taxpayers
are
called
upon
to
pay
more
taxes
than
others.
Some
taxpayers
are
called
upon
to
pay
taxes
at
a
higher
rate
than
others.
The
Charter,
as
it
has
been
said
in
many,
many
cases,
too
numerous
to
mention,
is
an
important
piece
of
legislation
which
constitutionally
protects
important
rights
and
freedoms
of
people
who
live
in
this
country.
/t
seems
to
me
that
it
comes
very
close
to
trivializing
that
very
important
constitutional
law,
if
it
is
used
to
get
into
the
weighing
and
balancing
of
the
nuts
and
bolts
of
taxing
statutes.
[Emphasis
added.]
Accepting
the
respondent's
arguments
would
be
to
fall
into
the
trap
of
overshooting
against
which
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
has
constantly
warned
the
courts.
As
Dickson,
C.J.,
dissenting,
noted
in
Public
Service
Alliance
of
Canada
v.
Canada,
[1987]
1
S.C.R.
424,
at
442:
In
my
opinion,
courts
must
exercise
considerable
caution
when
confronted
with
difficult
questions
of
economic
policy.
It
is
not
our
judicial
role
to
assess
the
effectiveness
or
wisdom
of
various
government
strategies
for
solving
pressing
economic
problems.
The
question
how
best
to
combat
inflation
has
perplexed
economists
for
several
generations.
It
would
be
highly
undesirable
for
the
courts
to
attempt
to
pronounce
on
the
relative
importance
of
various
suggested
causes
of
inflation,
such
as
the
expansion
of
the
money
supply,
fiscal
deficits,
foreign
inflation,
or
the
built-in
inflationary
expectations
of
individual
economic
actors.
A
high
degree
of
deference
ought
properly
to
be
accorded
to
the
government's
choice
of
strategy
in
combatting
this
complex
problem.
Due
deference
must
be
paid
as
well
to
the
symbolic
leadership
role
of
government.
Many
government
initiatives,
especially
in
the
economic
sphere,
necessarily
involve
a
large
inspirational
or
psychological
component
which
must
not
be
undervalued.
The
role
of
the
judiciary
in
such
situations
lies
primarily
in
ensuring
that
the
selected
legislative
strategy
is
fairly
implemented
with
as
little
interference
as
is
reasonably
possible
with
the
rights
and
freedoms
guaranteed
by
the
Charter.
The
respondent
more
or
less
submitted
that
if
a
situation
of
social
or
economic
inequality
is
not
redressed
by
the
legislature
in
a
given
statute,
the
courts
should
interpret
that
statute
so
as
to
redress
the
inequality,
otherwise
the
interpretation
of
the
statute
would
be
contrary
to
the
Charter
and
the
statute
would
itself
become
contrary
to
the
Charter,
in
its
application
if
not
in
its
actual
wording.
With
all
due
respect,
I
feel
this
would
be
giving
the
courts
a
function
which
the
Charter
has
not
given
them
and
imposing
on
legislatures
a
burden
which
the
Charter,
far
from
imposing
it
on
them,
has
been
careful
to
avoid.
The
Charter
imposes
on
legislatures
no
obligation
to
redress
all
social
or
economic
inequalities.
Rather,
in
subsection
15(2),
it
allows
them
to
adopt
"any
law,
program
or
activity
that
has
as
its
object
the
amelioration
of
conditions
of
disadvantaged
individuals
or
groups”.
It
seems
obvious
to
me
that
what
legislators
have
a
power
to
do
they
do
not
have
a
duty
to
do.
The
respondent's
proposition
appears
to
mean,
for
all
practical
purposes,
that
through
the
right
to
equality
recognized
in
section
15
the
Charter
guarantees
individuals
every
right,
whether
or
not
included
in
those
expressly
defined
in
the
Charter.
For
example,
in
the
case
at
bar,
though
the
right
to
work
and
the
right
to
be
in
a
position
to
work
are
not
recognized
by
the
Charter,
an
individual—on
these
facts
a
woman,
a
parent,
but
it
could
be
anyone
who
can
make
use
of
the
provisions
of
section
15—could
under
cover
of
section
15
require
legislatures
to
adopt
measures
enabling
him
or
her
to
work
and
be
in
a
position
to
work.
That
is
not
the
effect
of
section
15.
In
my
opinion,
no
one
could
have
required
Parliament
to
adopt
section
63
and
allow
a
parent
to
deduct
child
care
costs.
Parliament
adopted
section
63
in
the
enlightened
exercise
of
its
discretion,
and
I
do
not
see
on
what
basis
a
particular
group
of
professional
women
or
parents,
benefiting
from
the
deduction
allowed
by
that
section,
could
require
that
the
section
be
amended
by
the
legislature
or
interpreted
by
the
courts
so
as
to
give
the
group
the
right
to
take
a
further
deduction.
It
is
the
same
as
saying
that
when
a
social
promotion
program
is
adopted
pursuant
to
subsection
15(2),
Parliament
must
adopt
as
many
sub-programs
as
there
are
sub-groups
and
the
courts
must
determine
which
sub-program
best
corresponds
to
which
sub-group.
The
situation
would
of
course
be
different
if
in
section
63
Parliament
had
provided
that
only
women
would
be
entitled
to
deduct
child
care
costs.
I
note
in
this
regard
that
it
is
precisely
because
in
its
original
version
section
63
applied
to
all
women
but
only
to
some
men
that,
in
1983,
Parliament
was
obliged
to
give
identical
treatment
to
both.
I
also
note
that
in
the
case
at
bar
the
respondent,
who
is
in
some
measure
claiming
privileged
treatment
for
professional
women
and
parents,
does
not
argue
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
would
create
unlawful
discrimination
between
professional
and
salaried
taxpayers
if
her
argument
was
allowed.
As
Prof.
Faye
Woodman
argues,
Certainly,
in
the
Canadian
context,
one
of
the
problems
with
Symes
is
that
the
“judicial
interpretation”
of
sections
9
and
18
will
affect
other
classifications,
i.e.
employed
and
self-employed.
But
even
accepting
that
this
result
is
appropriate,
the
question
still
remaining
to
be
answered
is
whether
it
is
salutary
from
a
tax
policy
perspective.
The
answer
is
a
resounding
no.
Under
this
new
regime,
the
richer
the
taxpayer,
the
more
her
child
care
expenses
will
be
subsidized
by
other
Canadian
taxpayers.
The
poorer
the
taxpayer,
the
less
she
will
receive.
The
poorest
will
receive
nothing.
By
adopting
section
63
and
deciding
to
create
a
new
type
of
personal
deduction
for
parents
applying
to
child
care
expenses,
Parliament
made
a
politic
social
and
economic
choice.
On
the
evidence
presented,
that
choice
favours
women
more
than
men,
and
the
respondent
has
no
complaint
about
this.
I
do
not
see
how
a
provision
which
favours
all
women
could
directly
or
indirectly
infringe
the
right
of
women
to
equality,
and
I
am
not
prepared
to
concede
that
professional
women
make
up
a
disadvantaged
group
against
whom
a
form
of
discrimination
recognized
by
section
15
has
been
perpetrated
by
the
adopting
of
section
63,
or
would
be
perpetrated
by
this
Court's
refusal
to
interpret
paragraph
18(1)(a)
so
as
to
give
a
self-employed
mother
an
additional
deduction
for
a
business
expense;
and
even
if
there
were
discrimination
within
the
meaning
of
section
15,
I
consider
in
light
of
the
ample
evidence
of
justification
submitted
to
the
Court
that
it
is
not
the
function
of
this
Court
to
substitute
its
choice
for
the
one
made
by
Parliament,
with
full
knowledge
of
the
options
proposed
and
in
keeping
with
an
overall
policy
of
assisting
the
family.
The
Court
is
here
being
asked
not
only
to
fish
in
the
most
troubled
socioeconomic
waters,
but
also
to
swim
against
the
tide
of
a
solution
expressly
adopted
by
Parliament
in
preference
to
that
proposed
by
the
respondent.
The
Charter,
the
taxpayers
and
the
legal
system
would
be
badly
served
by
acceding
to
such
a
request.
Disposition
of
Case
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
restore
the
notices
of
assessment
issued
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
with
costs
to
the
appellant
at
trial
and
on
appeal.
Crown's
appeal
allowed.