Section 122.6

Eligible Individual

Cases

Weidenfeld v. The Queen, 2011 DTC 5008 [at 5545], 2010 FCA 333

The taxpayer gave Jewish Family and Children's Services ("the Agency") temporary guardianship of his son in order to address his son's behavioural problems. The Agency placed the son in various foster homes and then a residential treatment centre. In determining that the son was not an eligible dependant during the time spent in the Agency's care, the trial judge found that the son did not reside with the taxpayer for that period.

The Court of Appeal found no palpable or overriding error in the trial judge's findings. The Agency had demonstrable control over the son's place of residence. Pelletier J.A. also remarked at para. 8 that "during his stay at the centre, the son's weekend visits with his father were just that, visits, and were not sufficient to re-establish residence with his father. The same is true of his 2 week stay with his father during his period of suspension from the Centre."

Matt v. The Queen, 2003 DTC 5075 (FCA)

Before referring the application for judicial review back to the Minister for reassessment on the basis that the taxpayer was an eligible individual for the month of August, 1998, Strayer J.A. noted that the definition clearly contemplated that the "eligible individual" may change from time to time and that the Court understood this to mean that there could be only one eligible individual within any given month.

Nelson v. The Queen, 2002 DTC 7578, 2002 FCA 451

The matter was remitted to the Tax Court for redetermination given that the Tax Court Judge had mistakenly found that the mother rather than the applicant had attended Home and School Association meetings, and had given too much weight to a Corollary relief judgement that referred to the primary residence being that of the mother and otherwise essentially just took into account the factors described in Regulation 6302(a) to (g).

The Queen v. Marshall, 96 DTC 6292 (FCA)

S.122.6 contemplates only one parent being an "eligible individual". Accordingly, a judgment of the Tax Court in which it prorated the credit between two persons claiming to be eligible parents, was set aside, with the matter being remitted to the Tax Court for redetermination on the basis that it was the female parent who, on the facts, was the person who primarily fulfilled the responsibility for the care and upbringing of the children of the marriage.

See Also

Agrebi v. The Queen, 2015 DTC 1027 [at 119], 2014 TCC 141

being deported to Tunisia means not normally residing in Canada

The taxpayer had a child in 2002, was deported back to Tunisia in 2004, and returned to Canada in 2010. Jorré found that the taxpayer was ineligible for Canada child tax benefits and GST/HST tax credits for the period he stayed in Tunisia, as he did not normally reside in Canada in that period.

Jhanji v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1120 [at 3294], 2014 TCC 125

son in India "resided with" Canadian taxpayer

The taxpayer and his wife applied from India for immigration visas in 2004, which were granted in 2010. The taxpayer's wife and mother died shortly before his immigration, so he decided to keep his son in the Indian boarding school he attended, in order to avoid disrupting his son's education while establishing himself in Canada.

Based on Charafeddine, Hogan J found that the son resided with the taxpayer, so that the taxpayer eligible for Canada Child Tax Benefits. He stated (at para. 22):

[T]he appellant and [his son] would have been living together during the period at issue were it not for the unforeseen death of the Appellant's wife... . I do not believe that the legislative intent behind the residency requirement was to exclude otherwise eligible families who have had to adapt to unfortunate circumstances.

Dafonseca v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1091 [at 3157], 2014 TCC 88

primary financial contributor was not primary caregiver

The taxpayer's daughter and grandchildren lived in the taxpayer's home. The daughter was a welfare recipient and, although she contributed the portion of that assistance designated by Ontario works as being for rent to the taxpayer as rent, the taxpayer was the primary financial contributor. Nevertheless, Pizzitelli J found that the Minister was correct in finding that the taxpayer's daughter was the primary caregiver of the children, as she supervised their daily activities and educational, hygienic, recreational and medical needs. It was infeasible for the taxpayer to provide a similar degree of care, given her eight hour shifts as a personal caregiver three or four times per week. Therefore, the Minister's retroactive denial of the taxpayer's Canada child tax benefits and national child benefit supplements was correct.

Mitchell v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1082 [at 3097], 2014 TCC 66

interim court order had no weight

VA Miller J found that the taxpayer's claim that his sons resided primarily with him rather than on a near-equal basis with his wife as well founded. She based this conclusion partly on the taxpayer's and his sons' testimony, and a court order retroactive to the beginning of the period in question. An interim court order giving custody to the wife in that period had had no weight, as it was obtained without notice to the taxpayer and did not reflect reality.

Guerrero v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1033 [2691], 2013 TCC 342

slightly less custody, and obligation to pay child support

Favreau J found that the taxpayer was not the parent who primarily fulfils the responsibility for the care and upbringing of his son, as the fact that his ex-wife had custody of the son for more days (four of every seven) and that he had to pay child support "clearly tend[ed] to demonstrate" that she was the one primarily responsible for the son's care and upbringing.

Hrushka v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1254 [at 1430], 2013 TCC 335

court order

Woods J found that the taxpayer was not an eligible individual, given the inclusion in Regulation 6302(h) of court orders as a factor to consider. The taxpayer's separation from his spouse was subject to an interim court order that provided that he had custody of their daughter on Wednesday and Friday afternoons, and on every other weekend - significantly less time than the mother had.

Although the taxpayer was also involved in his daughter's school life and was more frequently able to pick her up on an emergency basis, this was not enough to establish that the mother did not assume primary responsibility for the daughter. Woods J noted that both were dedicated parents, and that this should not be a factor in deciding who is entitled to benefits (para. 25).

Armstrong v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1191 [at 1030], 2013 TCC 238

father primary contributor

The taxpayer's former spouse was the primary caregiver for the taxpayer's daughter and received the resulting Canada Child Tax Benefits. Angers J found that the taxpayer became the primary caregiver when the daughter moved in with him following a falling-out with her mother. Although the mother and the mother's parents continued to see the daughter regularly, the father's contributions (including daily drives to a school in the mother's neighborhood) established that he was the primary contributor.

The taxpayer had neglected to file a return for one of the years in question. Angers J ordered that his s. 122.6 credits be determined once he filed the return.

Boekel v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1120 [at 633], 2013 TCC 132

Woods J found that, although the taxpayer and her former spouse had intended to split custody of their children on a 60/40 basis, the taxpayer in fact had custody closer to 75% of the time. It was therefore clear that she was not a shared-custody parent and was thus entitled to full Canada child tax benefits.

Dexter v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1173 [at 3430], 2012 TCC 176

The taxpayer, who was separated from her husband, claimed Canada child tax benefits in respect of their son. Webb J. found that, in the absence of Minister assumptions of facts regarding the conditions set out in paras. (b) and (f) of the definition of "eligible individual," the taxpayer could benefit from the female parent presumption in para. (f) as long as she could show that her son resided with her at any point during the period in issue (para. 9). Webb J. stated (at para. 14):

It seems to me that whether her son was "in her care for the purposes of the CCTB" is a conclusion of mixed fact and law. ... Section 6302 of the Regulations sets out the various factors that are "to be considered in determining what constitutes care and upbringing of a qualified dependant." The Minister should have assumed the factual components of the test for "care and upbringing" not the conclusion that the child was "not ... in her care" for the purposes of the CCTB or that the child was in the "care" of someone else.

Webb J. only denied the CCTB credits for the times when, according to the taxpayer's own evidence, her son clearly did not reside with her.

C.P.B. v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1148, 2012 TCC 126

The taxpayer was able to prove that she was the sole primary caregiver for one of her children (and therefore the only "eligible individual" for a Canada Child Tax Benefit) but not for the other. The children spent equal time living with the taxpayer and her separated husband on a week-on/week-off basis, which led to a presumption that they shared equally in providing care. The taxpayer's evidence was enough to reverse this presumption for her son with autism, but not for her daughter. Although both children received treatment for behavioural issues, which the father refused to pay for or participate in, the son's treatment was significant and the daughter's less so. On an application of the evidence to the list of factors in Regulation 6302, Rip C.J. found that the taxpayer's "efforts and support, both emotional and financial, to the son eclipsed that of the father."

Vegh v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1131 [at 3160], 2012 TCC 95

The Canadian taxpayer moved to teach English in China, where he met and married his wife and had two children. Boyle J. upheld the Minister's position that the taxpayer was not a Canadian resident for the period in issue and that the taxpayer's claimed Canada Child Tax Benefits should therefore be denied.

The Minister had also raised the female-presumptive rule in para. (f) of the s. 122.6 definition of "eligible dependant" to argue that the taxpayer was not the primary caregiver. The Minister initially took the position that the taxpayer's wife, being a Chinese citizen and therefore not an eligible individual for the purpose of the CCTB, did not have standing to waive the para. (f) presumption. The Minister subsequently abandoned this position. Boyle J. agreed obiter dicta with the Minister that the position had been incorrect (para. 3).

Mesamour v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1164 [at 3353], 2010 TCC 131

The taxpayer cared for a number of refugee children under PRAIDA, a regional assistance program, and the taxpayer applied for the Canada child tax benefits. Favreau J. found that the taxpayer was not an "eligible individual" under s. 122.6 because the taxpayer was not the parent of the children under the extended definition of "parent" in 252(1)(b). While the taxpayer had custody of the children, the children where not wholly dependent on her given that PRAIDA provided financial assistance for housing, optometry and dentistry.

Charafeddine v. The Queen, 2010 DTC 1281 [at 3953], 2010 TCC 417

children's being abducted and held in foreign country by estranged spouse did not disrupt CCTB eligibility

The taxpayer's children were abducted by her husband in Lebannon, and were being held there while the taxpayer tried to effect their return to Canada. At issue was whether the children "resided" in Canada and whether the taxpayer was the one who "primarily [fulfilled] the responsibility for [their] care and upbringing" as per s. 122.6.

Sheridan J. concluded that both criteria were met. Finding that the taxpayer "resided" with her children was appropriate, given that (para. 16):

The legislative objective of putting financial resources in the hands of the parent upon whom the children are dependent for their care and well being must also be respected.

She also stated that "[t]here is something fundamentally flawed with the notion that children wrongfully detained in a foreign country can be 'settled' there" (para. 8). On the same reasoning, the taxpayer was also resident in Canada for the year she spent in Lebannon trying to recover her Children.

The taxpayer was primarily responsible for the children, despite the husband's conduct precluding the taxpayer from caring for the children in any of the ways listed in s. 6302 of the Regulations except for paras. (b) and (h). Sheridan J. ruled that, in the extraordinary circumstances of the case, this was enough to make the taxpayer primarily responsible for the children.

Shared-Custody Parent

See Also

Fortin v. The Queen, 2014 DTC 1164 [at 3572], 2014 CCI 209

43-57 split was near equal

Based on Brady, Lamarre J found that a taxpayer who had custody of his children 43% of the time was caring for them on a near equal basis with his wife.

Hrushka v. The Queen, 2013 DTC 1254 [at 1430], 2013 TCC 335

court order

The taxpayer's separation from his spouse was subject to an interim court order that provided that he had custody of their daughter on Wednesday and Friday afternoons, and on every other weekend - which, on its face, fell significantly short of residing with his daughter on an equal or near equal basis with her mother. Although the taxpayer was also involved in his daughter's school life and was more frequently able to pick her up on an emergency basis, this extra involvement did not bear on residency.

Brady v. The Queen, 2012 DTC 1204 [at 3537], 2012 TCC 240

45-55 split was near equal; obiter dictum that 75-25 split would not be

Campbell J. found that a 55-45 division of child custody between two taxpayers, by time, was "clearly within" what Parliament meant to capture with the words "near equal" (paras. 31-32), and (in obiter dicta) that a 75-25 split would not be (para. 30). The taxpayer's 55% custody of her children in a typical week (with the father taking the balance) therefore made her a shared-custody parent, and she was ordered to repay an overpayment of Canada Child Tax Benefits.