Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-2465-75
William Edward Horkins (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Toronto, January 13; Ottawa, January 27, 1976.
Income tax—Calculation of income—Deductions—Wife claiming interim alimony in divorce petition—Plaintiff sub mitting to pay lesser amount—Wife accepting—Whether deductible—Income Tax Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 148, s. I I
(1 )(1),(1a)—Rules of Practice (Ontario) 386.
In response to a motion for interim alimony in a divorce petition filed by his wife, plaintiff submitted to pay $800 per month, a lesser amount than claimed. His wife accepted such payment for five months, never pursuing her application. Plain tiff seeks to deduct this amount from his income as alimony payments under section 11(l)(1) or (la). The Tax Review Board upheld the Minister's disallowance, and plaintiff appealed, contending that his offer of $800 and the acceptance and payment under Ontario Rule 386 amount to "an order of a competent tribunal" or is equivalent to such an order pursuant to section 11(l)(1). The same claim is made with regard to deductibility under section 11(1)(1a).
Held, the appeal is dismissed. Rule 386 provides for an order in three situations only: (1) where default occurs after defend ant has agreed to pay interim alimony; (2) where default occurs after defendant has offered and plaintiff has accepted a lesser sum; and (3) where default occurs after hearing of a motion for interim alimony where plaintiff has refused to accept an amount offered, but the amount has been held to be reasonable. However, a defendant who dutifully pays the amount in these three situations cannot claim a deduction, for there has been no "order". Under section 11(1)(1), the facts, including an oral agreement to separate, the exchange of draft separation agree ments and correspondence, and the acceptance of alimony cheques and general reference to the payments in a letter, cannot be construed as an agreement in writing or a written separation agreement.
INCOME tax appeal. COUNSEL:
H. E. Fulton, Q.C., for plaintiff. M. Bonner for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Campbell, Jarvis, McKenzie & Fulton, Toronto, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
COLLIER J.: In the calculation of his income tax for 1971, the plaintiff sought to deduct from income the sum of $4000' as alimony payments made to his former wife. The plaintiff contends he is entitled to do so by the provisions of paragraph 11(1)(l) or paragraph 11(1)(la) of the Income Tax Act 2 . I set out the two paragraphs:
11. (1) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a), (b) and (h) of subsection (1) of section 12, the following amounts may be deducted in computing the income of a taxpayer for a taxation year:
(1) an amount paid by the taxpayer in the year, pursuant to a decree, order or judgment of a competent tribunal or pursuant to a written agreement, as alimony or other allow ance payable on a periodic basis for the maintenance of the recipient thereof, children of the marriage, or both the recipient and children of the marriage, if he was living apart from, and was separated pursuant to a divorce, judicial separation or written separation agreement from, his spouse or former spouse to whom he was required to make the payment at the time the payment was made and throughout the remainder of the year;
(la) an amount paid by the taxpayer in the year, pursuant to an order of a competent tribunal, as an allowance payable on a periodic basis for the maintenance of the recipient thereof, children of the marriage, or both the recipient and children of the marriage, if he was living apart from his spouse to whom he was required to make the payment at the time the payment was made and throughout the remainder of the year;
The Minister of National Revenue disallowed the deduction. He was upheld by the Tax Review Board. This appeal followed.
As always, the facts are paramount. The plain tiff and his wife were married in 1949. In 1967 or 1968 differences arose. The plaintiff left the matrimonial home. He and his wife did not there after live together at any time relevant to this appeal. Over a lengthy period of time husband and wife tried to reach some agreement on financial, property and other matters. At first these dealings
Initially the plaintiff claimed a total deduction of $6500. The Minister allowed $1000. The balance of $1500 claimed (over the $4000) was not pursued by the taxpayer.
2 R.S.C. 1952 c. 148 and amendments. The equivalent sec tions in the so-called "new Act" are paragraphs 60(b) and (c).
and negotiations were carried out through lawyers. There were many draft written agreements passed back and forth. None were satisfactory, so nothing was agreed or signed. For a time attempts were made, particularly on the part of the plaintiff, directly between husband and wife, to resolve mat ters. This much is clear. The parties were at all times separated and living apart. They were unable to agree on the usual matters following that mutual decision. The plaintiff, at one stage, threat ened to move back into the matrimonial home. Eventually the wife, after pressure of various kinds by the plaintiff, brought divorce proceedings.
The petition was filed in the Supreme Court of Ontario on April 19, 1971. In the claim for relief, the wife asked for interim alimony of $1050 per month for herself, and $200 interim maintenance for the only child of the marriage.
On April 20, 1971, pursuant to the Rules of Court, a motion was launched seeking, among other things, $1000 per month interim alimony for the wife
... from the date of the service of the Petition ... to the trial ....
On June 4, 1971, the plaintiff, in response to the motion, filed a notice of submission in which he
... submits to pay interim corollary relief in the sum of $800.00 monthly for the support and maintenance of the Petitioner and the infant son of the marriage.
The notice of submission was apparently given pursuant to Rule 386 of the Rules of Practice. I set out the relevant portions:
386. (1) In rules 386 to 388 interim alimony shall be deemed in a matrimonial cause to include monies payable by way of alimony or an alimentary pension by either spouse for the maintenance of the other and monies payable for the maintenance of the children of the marriage pending the hear ing and determination of the petition.
(2) In an alimony action or in a matrimonial cause, the defendant may, at any time before being served with notice of motion for interim alimony, give notice in writing that he submits to pay the interim alimony and interim disbursements, as demanded by the plaintiff in the endorsement of the writ or in the petition for divorce, and in that case no motion for interim alimony shall be made until there has been a default in
payment, and in case of default, affidavits being filed verifying the endorsement and notice and thè default, an order for payment of the sum demanded shall be issued on praecipe. [Amended, O. Reg. 285/71, s. 10.1
(3) The defendant may give notice in writing that he submits to pay such less sum as he deems proper and names in his notice.
(4) Where a notice has been so served and the plaintiff accepts the amount therein mentioned as sufficient, the defend ant shall pay thereafter the sum so offered as interim alimony, and no order for interim alimony shall be made until there has been default in payment.
(5) Where a notice has been so served, the plaintiffs interim disbursements may be taxed without order.
(6) Where the plaintiff does not accept the amount offered and upon motion for interim alimony it is found that the sum so offered is reasonable, and the defendant pays to the plaintiff the sum so offered, no order for interim alimony shall be made until there has been default in payment.
The wife was paid by the plaintiff, pursuant to this procedure, five payments of $800 each cover ing the months of June through October 1971. These are the amounts which the plaintiff says he is entitled to deduct in the calculation of his tax for 1971.
The wife accepted those amounts. The only evidence before me as to any qualification in respect of her acceptance is found in a letter between solicitors (Exhibit 5 to the agreed state ment of facts). I set out the letter:
EXHIBIT 5
July 22nd, 1971
Siegal, Fogler, Horkins & Greenglass,
Barristers and Solicitors,
372 Bay Street
Toronto, Ontario
Attention: Harold H. Siegal, Esq. Q.C.
Re: Horkins and Horkins
Dear Mr. Siegal:
Further to our discussion at the conclusion of the cross- examination on July 21st, 1971, I wish to advise you that we have no record of Mrs. Horkins having received a cheque from your client in the amount of $800.00 for the month of July. 1 have attempted to contact Mrs. Horkins by telephone but there was no answer. It is possible that your client may have forward ed a cheque in the amount of $800.00 directly to her. In the event that Mr. Horkins has not forwarded a cheque in the
amount of $800.00 to Mrs. Horkins for the month of July, we would ask that he do so in accordance with our previous discussion and understanding that our acceptance of any such payment is entirely without prejudice to any rights we have to pursue her application for interim alimony.
Yours very truly,
KIMBER, DUBIN, MORPHY & BRUNNER
Per:
The wife in fact did not at any time pursue her application for interim alimony. In my view, by her actions she accepted
... the amount therein mentioned ... [the $800 per month in the notice of submission] ... as sufficient ...
(See Rule 386(4) above.)
The divorce action was heard in October 1971. A decree absolute was pronounced on November 15, 1971. Corollary relief of $1000 per month commencing that date was adjudged.
I revert now to paragraph 11(1)(l) of the Income Tax Act. The plaintiff contends that the offer of $800 per month, the acceptance by the wife, and the payments by him (all pursuant to the procedure set out in Rule 386) amount to an "order of a competent tribunal" or is equivalent to such an order. The same submission is put forward in respect of deductibility under paragraph 11(1)(la).
I have every sympathy for the plaintiff, but I am unable to construe "order" in the paragraphs in question as including what went on here. Without attempting an all-encompassing interpretation, I think "order" contemplates at least some concrete pronouncement, decree, or direction of the tribunal in question. Rule 386, as I see it, provides for an order in three situations only and at three particu lar points in time:
(a) where default in payment is made after the defendant has agreed to pay the interim alimony demanded in the petition. In such a case, a motion for interim alimony setting out the default, is not even necessary. (Rule 386(2).)
(b) where default in payment is made after the defendant has offered and the plaintiff has accepted a lesser sum than demanded in a motion for interim alimony. (Rule 386(4).)
(c) where default in payment is made after the hearing of a motion for interim alimony where the plaintiff has refused to accept the amount offered by the defendant but that amount has been found to be reasonable. (Rule 386(6).)
None of those situations were, to my mind, present in this case. I can see a somewhat incon gruous situation arising. When default occurs in any one of the three circumstances above outlined, an "order" can be obtained against the defaulter. If he then pays pursuant to the order, he could claim the benefit of paragraphs 11(1)(/) or 11(1)(/a), whichever was applicable, provided he fell, as well, within the other requirements of those paragraphs. On the other hand, the defendant who dutifully pays the amounts in the three situations outlined, cannot claim the payments as deductions, because there is no "order".
Incongruity or unfairness in particular cases cannot, unfortunately, change the plain words of the statute. As already indicated, I must reject the plaintiff's submission on this point.
That disposes completely of the plaintiff's posi tion in respect of deductibility under paragraph 11(1)(la).
A further contention was advanced in respect of 11(1)(/). It was submitted the payments were made pursuant to an agreement in writing while the plaintiff was living apart from his wife and while he was separated from her pursuant to a written separation agreement. Counsel urged that the following facts when put all together amounted to a written separation agreement pursuant to which the plaintiff was separated and living apart, and the payments in question were made pursuant to a written agreement:
(a) husband and wife had orally agreed to live separate and apart
(b) written draft separation agreements passed back and forth between their representatives, as
well as correspondence on the same matters directly between the parties'. Those documents and letters, it is said, confirmed in writing the separation and the living apart.
(c) the acceptance of the alimony cheques by the wife for the months in question, and the general reference to the payments in the letter earlier set out (Exhibit 5 to the agreed state ment of facts).
In my opinion, no matter how hard one strains to find in favour of the plaintiff, those facts cannot be held to be an agreement in writing or a written separation agreement (or both). They do not, as I see it, meet the requirements of 11(1)(/).
The appeal must therefore be dismissed. The assessment by the Minister and the decision of the Tax Review Board is affirmed. The defendant is entitled to her costs.
3 None of these documents or letters were, understandably, produced by the plaintiff in evidence. He gave oral testimony that they had at one time existed, and as to their general content.
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