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Warning-Pre tax profits are the default guideline income for spousal and child support.

We often warn our family clients involved in a BC spousal or child support case that the tax return of a BC self employed spouse does not present an accurate picture of the income that the court will use for determining guideline income for BC child and BC spousal support. Recent cases presume that pre-tax profits are available to pay child support or spousal support from the company the paying spouse owns unless that spouse proves a need to keep profits in the company to advance legitimate company objectives.

In the recent case of Purvis v. Purvis 2009 BCSC 1794 the husband successfully overcame the presumption that pre-tax corporate income will be imputed to a payor when they own or control a company.

This case involved an action by the husband for a review and retroactive variation of a 2002 order for child and spousal support payments. The husband unilaterally decreased the support payments in 2003. The wife claimed that the husband had failed to make accurate financial disclosure for the annual review, which was a term of the Mediated Settlement Agreement incorporated into the 2002 order. She sought payment of outstanding arrears for support and that the husband’s income include pre-tax corporate profits from his holding company. The husband’s 2007 and 2008 income were the years in dispute.

Retained earnings or funds needed to operate?
The husband claimed that for the purpose of tax planning, the company Praetorian Construction Management (Praetorian) paid annual dividends to its shareholders to reduce its retained earnings. The dividends were paid as income to the husband’s holding company Tukcon Holdings Inc. (“Tukcon”). The court examined the pre-tax earnings and the retained earnings for Tukcon, the latter showing a shareholder loan for $730,916 owing from Praetorian. The husband said that Praetorian was not in a position to repay the shareholder’s loan to Tukcon and therefore Tukcon could not pay out the retained earnings balance to its shareholder (the husband).

Application of the law
In applying Section 18 of the Child Support Guidelines the court mentioned Hausmann v. Klukas, 2009 BCCA 32, where it had been held that if there is any evidence of legitimate calls on corporate income for the purpose of continuing the operations of the business the income will not be included in determining annual income thereby not killing the goose who lays the golden egg (Baum v. Baum [1999] B.C.J. No. 3025 B.C.S.C.)). The court in Hausmann (supra) said that where a corporation is owned and controlled by the payor spouse, there is a presumption that pre-tax corporate income will be available to a payor in the absence of evidence to the contrary.

Control of the company
In determining who controlled the holding company, Tukcon, the court found that the husband did not present evidence to reveal the extent to which the previous non-voting shareholder (his ex-common law spouse) was involved in the company pre-2009 and that from 2009 he was Tukcon’s only shareholder. Tukcon was one of the 3 companies who owned Praetorian, for whom the husband was the President and the key employee for obtaining new contracts,

Retained earnings required to continue operations
Applying Hausmann (supra), the court found that the husband had to rebut the presumption. On the evidence submitted by the husband’s accountant, the court found that the amount of $700,000.00 in 2007 was legitimately retained by Tukcon to enable Praetorian to continue operations and was not imputed as income to the husband. However, the evidence did not defeat the presumption that the remaining pre-tax profits for 2008 and the pre-tax profits for 2007 and these amounts were imputed as income to the husband.

Support applied retroactively
On another issue, the court cited case law that supports the proposition that retroactive awards should not reach back farther than three years from the date of notice to the payor parent, unless there is blameworthy conduct on the part of the payor D.B.S. v. S.R.G. 2006 SCC 37. The effect of not disclosing a material change in circumstances (his increased income) resulted in the husband having to pay support retroactively to the date when his circumstances changed in 2003. The wife had the reasonable excuse for not bringing her claims earlier of caring for the children and making attempts to become self-supporting.

It is important you call us for advice if you have a support case involving a shareholder, director, or owner of a company.

JP