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Tagget v Commissioner of Taxation [2010] FCA 25 (2 February 2010)
Last Updated: 3 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Tagget v Commissioner of Taxation [2010]
FCA 25
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Citation:
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Parties:
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PETER TAGGET v THE COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATION
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File number:
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NSD 1771 of 2008
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Judge:
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NICHOLAS J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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TAXATION – Income tax – Applicant
obtained a contingent equitable interest in a parcel of land under a deed in
1998 –
land was transferred to the Applicant in 2005 – Respondent
issued an Assessment to the Applicant at the time of transfer for
the 2006 year
which included as ordinary income the value of land –– whether
derivation of ordinary income occurred when
the Applicant was granted the
contingent equitable interest in the land in 1998, or when the land was
transferred to the Applicant
in 2005 – whether Assessment was excessive
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Held:
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Application dismissed – Applicant derived ordinary income when the
land was transferred to the Applicant in 2005 – value
of the land in 2005
correctly included as ordinary income in Assessment – Assessment not
excessive
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Date of last submissions:
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9 December 2009
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Marsdens Law Group
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Ms M Hirschhorn
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Maddocks Lawyers
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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AND:
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THE COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATIONRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
proceeding be dismissed.
- The
applicant pay the respondent’s costs of the proceeding.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 1771 of 2008
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BETWEEN:
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PETER TAGGET Applicant
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AND:
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THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent
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JUDGE:
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NICHOLAS J
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DATE:
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2 FEBRUARY 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
- The
issue for determination in this proceeding is whether a parcel of land
transferred to the Applicant (Mr Tagget) in September 2005 was ordinary
income derived by him in the tax year ended 30 June 2006.
- On
2 November 1998 Mr Tagget entered into a deed of agreement (the Deed)
pursuant to which Hillpalm Pty Ltd (Hillpalm) undertook to transfer to
him land in a proposed development at Tanglewood or else pay to him a sum of
money representing its market
value.
- Mr
Tagget says that the value of this undertaking at the time he entered into the
Deed was, at most, $450,000 being the market value
of the land at that time and
that this amount should have been included in his assessable income for the tax
year ended 30 June 2006.
- The
Respondent (the Commissioner) says that Mr Tagget did not derive the
relevant income until land was first transferred to Mr Tagget in September 2005.
By this
time the market value of the land transferred to Mr Tagget was
approximately $1.2 million and it is this amount that the Commissioner
says
should be included in his assessable income for the tax year ended 30 June 2006.
- On
27 June 2007 the Respondent issued a Notice of Assessment (the
Assessment) to Mr Tagget for the tax year ended 30 June 2006 assessing Mr
Tagget accordingly. Mr Tagget lodged a Notice of Objection (the Notice
of Objection) which contends, in substance, that an amount of $450,000
should have been included in his assessable income for the tax year ended
30
June 2006 rather than the $1.2 million actually included. Before me is Mr
Tagget’s appeal against the Commissioner’s
objection decision
confirming the Assessment.
FACTS
Background
- Mr
Tagget has been involved in the business of earth moving the whole of his
working life. He lives in Tanglewood, New South Wales
and has been involved in
the Tanglewood Estate since the late 1970s. Tanglewood Estate covers
approximately 1,100 acres of land
overlooking Casuarina Beach, which is about 5
kms south of Kingston in the Tweed Shire of New South Wales.
- In
the late 1970s Mr Tagget started working with Tanglewood Valleys Pty Ltd
(Tanglewood Valleys). Mr Geoff Bell was a director of Tanglewood Valleys
and Mr Tagget came to know him well. Mr Tagget, through his involvement with
Tanglewood Valleys and Mr Bell, became aware that in 1982 development consent
was given by Tweed Shire Council for the development
of part of Tanglewood
Estate. The development consent provided for the construction of 44 lots within
what is known as the Stage
5 development of Tanglewood (the Stage 5
Development).
- In
1983 Mr Tagget started a business named Peter Tagget Earthmoving. He commenced
working with Tanglewood Valleys on earthworks
and road building and became a
civil works contractor and adviser to the company. Between 1983 and 1987 Mr
Tagget performed a large
amount of work including land clearing and levelling,
rubbish removal and landfilling, preparing driveways, laying bitchumen,
installing
water and electricity supply and arranging surveys in relation to the
Stage 5 Development. In 1989 Mr Tagget sold the business of
Peter Tagget
Earthmoving to his brother.
- In
or about 1998, Mr Tagget became aware that Tanglewood Valleys was running into
financial trouble and that the developer was not
going to proceed with the Stage
5 Development. Financiers for the development had entered into possession and
put the Tanglewood
Estate up for sale. In early 1998, Mr Tagget acquired shares
in Hillpalm which made an offer to MLC Lifetime Company Limited (MLC) to
acquire the Tanglewood Estate.
- In
March 1998, Hillpalm and MLC entered into a contract for the sale of Tanglewood
Estate by MLC to Hillpalm for the sum of $2,200,500.
MLC allowed Hillpalm to
enter into early possession of the Tanglewood Estate enabling Hillpalm to
progress the development. In
the meantime, Mr Tagget commenced negotiations
with various parties in an attempt to raise finance for Hillpalm to complete the
purchase.
Those negotiations were unsuccessful. In July 1998 MLC terminated
its contract with Hillpalm and in August 1998 MLC commenced proceedings
against
Hillpalm and Mr Tagget for breach of contract.
- Mr
Tagget then entered into negotiations with Joanne Hambrook and Pat Wilson with a
view to having them take over Hillpalm. On 2
November 1998 the Deed was
executed by Mr Tagget, Hillpalm, Joanne Hambrook and David Williams. Following
execution of the Deed
all shares in Hillpalm were transferred to another company
associated with Ms Hambrook and Mr Williams. Mr Tagget and the other
directors of Hillpalm resigned and Ms Hambrook and Mr Williams were appointed in
their place. Hillpalm paid $2,275,000 to MLC which
transferred the Tanglewood
Estate to Hillpalm by memorandum of transfer dated 20 November 1998.
The Deed of Agreement
- The
recitals of the Deed are brief. They read:
A. Hillpalm intends to acquire the Land.
- Hillpalm
wishes to appoint Tagget to assist with the implementation of the Project.
- The
parties wish to enter into this Deed to record the understanding between
them.
- The
Land is defined in the Schedule as consisting of Lots 154, 155 and 156 in
Deposited Plan 801121, Lot 74 in Deposited Plan 755701
and Lot 151 in Deposited
Plan 630766.
- As
I have mentioned, MLC transferred the Tanglewood Estate to Hillpalm on
20 November 1998, a little more than two weeks after
the Deed was executed.
There is no evidence which indicates what, if any, interest Hillpalm had in the
Land (as defined) at the time
it entered into the Deed. The contract of sale
originally made between MLC and Hillpalm was, as I have also mentioned,
terminated
by MLC in July of 1998.
-
“Project” is defined in the Deed to mean “... the planning,
development, sub-division, marketing and completion
of sale of the
Land.”
- Clauses
2 and 2.2 of the Deed provide as follows:
- Hillpalm
may (at its discretion), appoint Tagget to assist in the management of the
Project and will formalise that appointment by
entering into an Agreement
incorporating such provisions normally associated with an appointment of that
nature including, inter
alia:
(a) a list of services to be provided by Tagget which may include (at the
discretion of Hillpalm), among other things:
(i) general advice and consultation in relation to the implementation of the
Project;
(ii) liaison with relevant authorities in relation to development approvals
and the status of current zonings and development approvals
associated with the
Land;
(iii) arranging and co-ordinating preparation of plans, drawings,
specification surveys, reports and relevant documentation in
relation to the
Project;
(iv) recommending advisors and contractors to assist in the implementation of
the Project;
(v) liaising with marketing consultants to co-ordinate the sale of the Land.
(b) Preparation of management reports in connection with the implementation of
the Project;
(c) Fee arrangements;
(d) Provisions dealing with instructions and requests issued by the principal;
and
(e) termination and default provisions.
2.2 The parties will negotiate in good faith, to incorporate, as part of that
agreement a licence for Tagget to occupy Lot 157 prior
to the transfer of that
land to Tagget in accordance with Hillpalm’s obligations under this
Deed.
- Clauses
3.1 to 3.3 of the Deed provide:
3.1 Hillpalm agrees to transfer to Tagget, for nominal consideration ($10.00)
and free of any encumbrance or charge whatsoever proposed
lot 157 comprising an
area approximately 11.2 hectare and shown in Michelle Survey Group Drawing No.
4440-93A annexed hereto (Lot
157). All survey fees to complete the excision of
Lot 157, Council application fees and costs of compliance with any conditions
of
approval to sub-divide will be paid by Hillpalm. Stamp duty and Titles Office
registration fees in connection with the transfer
will be paid by Tagget.
Hillpalm’s liability under this Clause will be limited to $8,000.00. All
costs of and incidental
to the proposed transfer over and above this amount will
be paid by Tagget who agrees to indemnify Hillpalm in respect thereof.
3.2 The sub-division and transfer of proposed lot 157 is subject to, and will
occur as soon as reasonably practical after, Hillpalm
realises gross sale
proceeds from the sale of all or any part of the Land (including any funds
received from a compulsory acquisition
by any Statutory Authority), in the sum
of $3.2 million. Hillpalm will fully and faithfully account at all times to
Tagget in respect
of the status of the receipt of sale proceeds and will
authorise its accountant to provide such information as may be reasonably
required by Tagget in relation to same at any particular time and from time to
time.
3.3 If for any reason, beyond the control of Hillpalm, approval cannot be
obtained to create a separate and indefeasible title to
Lot 157 and Hillpalm
cannot comply with its obligations under this Clause, Hillpalm will pay to
Tagget a monetary sum equivalent
to the unimproved value of Lot 157 to be agreed
by the parties or failing agreement to be determined by a registered valuer
appointed
by the President for the time being of the Institute of Valuers whose
decision will be final and binding. The costs of the valuation
will be shared by
the parties. Tagget will accept the compensation in full and final satisfaction
of all claims.
- Clauses
6.1 to 6.3 of the Deed provide:
6.1 As soon as reasonably practical after it completes its acquisition of the
Land, Hillpalm will, through its consultants diligently
pursue with the Tweed
Shire Council approval for sub-division of “Stage 5” of the
“Tanglewood Estate” in
accordance with the development consent
issued by Council on 8 March 1982 (as amended) (“the Stage 5 Development
Consent”).
The Stage 5 development consent comprises an approval for the
sub-division of 44 rural residential lots. If Council confirms the
validity of
the Stage 5 development consent achieving a yield of no less than 40 lots,
Hillpalm will do everything reasonably required
to cause the relevant linen plan
of survey to be prepared and sealed by Council as soon as reasonably practical.
If the Linen Plan
of Survey in respect of the Stage 5 Development Consent is
duly sealed by Tweed Shire Council, Hillpalm will cause Lot 157 to be
transferred to Tagget on the earlier of:
(a) the date determined in accordance with Clause 3.2 of this Agreement;
and
(b) 24 months after the Linen Plan in respect of the Stage 5 development
approval is sealed by the Tweed Shire Council and released
to Hillpalm.
Hillpalm's obligation to transfer the Land within 24 months of the release of
the relevant Linen Plan of Survey will only arise
if the Plan of Survey creates
individual titles to 40 lots (capable of onsale by Hillpalm), failing which, the
sub-division and transfer
of Lot 157 will be effected in accordance with Clause
3.2.
6.2 Tagget will, if requested by Hillpalm, enter into an agreement in the nature
of the one contemplated by Clause 2 of this Memorandum
prior to and as a
condition of any transfer of Lot 157 in accordance with the accelerated
timetable contemplated by sub-clause 6.1(b).
6.3 Hillpalm undertakes that it will use all reasonable endeavours to sell the
lots created upon registration of the relevant Linen
Plan in accordance with
best business practices customary for a land subdivision of this
nature.
- Clause
7 of the Deed provides:
- Hillpalm
and the Guarantors have entered this Agreement with Tagget pursuant to a
representation by Tagget that he has experience
and a knowledge of the work
required to be undertaken in order to plan and implement the Project, and Tagget
hereby undertakes that
he will use all reasonable endeavours to assist Hillpalm
in planning and implementing the development and construction of the Project
and
provide all such assistance reasonably required by Hillpalm in respect thereof.
Tagget acknowledges that Hillpalm has relied
on Tagget's representations that he
will, in good faith, assist with the implementation of the
Project.
The dispute between Mr Tagget and Hillpalm
- There
was no written agreement entered into between Mr Tagget and Hillpalm of the kind
contemplated by cl 2 of the Deed. But
it appears that he did perform some
work for Hillpalm. According to Mr Tagget, the work performed by him
included conducting
negotiations for machine hire and contracting of required
labour and supervising the construction of an outdoor arena in what was
known as
the Equestrian Centre. He also said that he supervised the drainage and fixing
of certain damaged levy banks, that he assisted
in fixing a soil problem by
developing a management plan as to which it was necessary for him to liaise with
council and various
environmental scientists. I will not record all that Mr
Tagget says that he did in relation to the Stage 5 Development after he
entered
into the Deed but his evidence indicates that he did many things.
- In
June 1999 Mr Tagget wrote to Hillpalm claiming that it owed him $60,010. He
stated:
I refer to the Deed of Agreement dated November 1998 between myself and your
company.
Clause 2 of this Agreement provides that you will enter into a agreement in
relation to the management by me of the project at
Tanglewood.
To date I have not received the agreement and I have raised this issue with you
previously.
I have assessed my fees in relation to my assistance as being at the rate of
$2,500.00 per week. My costs based upon this fee are
as
follows:
- Mr
Tagget then provided some details of how the $66,010 was calculated. He
continued:
20/11/98 – 25/6/99 – 35 weeks @ $2,500 $77,500.00
Reimbursement as per letter of John Costello dated 15/1/99 $34,910.00
Total $112,410.00
Less Amount paid $ 46,400.00
Amount owing $ 66,010.00
In addition to this fee I have incurred and will continue to incur motor vehicle
expenses which I also seek reimbursement.
In an effort to reach a speedy agreement I would propose the
following:
1. To reduce my weekly fee to $1,000.00
2. That you will register and transfer the subdivision of Lot 157 to me
forthwith.
3. That you will reimburse my motor vehicle running
expenses.
I have adhered to the terms of the agreement.
I note resumption of land has been made by the RTA and note that Council has
approved the subdivision of 41 lots.
Please give your urgent attention to this letter.
- It
is not clear how Hillpalm responded to that letter in the near term but in March
2000 Ms Hambrook wrote to Mr Tagget complaining
about various matters. She
stated:
Since settling the Land acquisition, Hillpalm has experienced many difficulties
in relation to both land and development issues and
in respect of your
performance as Development Consultant and Earthworks Contractor.
- After
referring in vague terms to Mr Tagget’s activities on site which she
asserted were a cause for serious concern, Ms Hambrook
went on to
state:
Hillpalm is in the process of reviewing it's development scheme. It is intended
that all further preparatory works on site be suspended
pending formulation of a
revised plan of development which will comply with Council requirements. It was
anticipated that the Company
would now be in a position to commence Stage 5
development works, but the advice of Council and the Company's Planning and
Engineering
Consultants cast considerable doubt over the feasibility of Stage 5
in it's current approved format.
Stage 5 cannot be considered as an independent proposal and must be reviewed in
the context of the overall Development Scheme. We
will work through these issues
as soon as reasonably practical and we will keep you informed of any significant
developments.
In the meantime, and so there is no misunderstanding, the Company wishes to
clarify:-
- Your
services on site are no longer required and all on site development works will
be suspended pending formulation of a revised
development scheme.
- Hillpalm
does not intend to formalise any appointment with you in terms of the management
of the project, either in terms contemplated
by clause 2 of the Deed of
Agreement or otherwise. In these circumstances the Company cannot consent to a
licence to occupy lot 157
which was only ever to be considered in the event that
the parties were able to reach agreement in respect of your project management
role.
- Hillpalm
does not intend to cause a Transfer of lot 157 other than strictly in accordance
with the terms contemplated by the Deed
of Agreement and at all times subject to
performance of your express and implied obligations under that agreement.
- Mr
Tagget’s solicitor responded to this letter with what is best described as
a request for further particulars of Hillpalm’s
complaints. In her reply
Ms Hambrook declined to elaborate further, merely denying that Hillpalm was in
breach of the Deed and indicating
that any proceedings commenced by Mr Tagget
would be defended.
- In
November 2000 Mr Tagget commenced proceedings in the District Court of New South
Wales. His affidavit refers to Supreme Court
proceedings but in this he is
clearly mistaken. The original Statement of Claim is not in evidence but it
appears from the Further
Amended Statement of Claim which is in evidence that
his original claim was for the liquidated sum of $122,610 in respect of work
done and materials supplied by Mr Tagget at the request of Hillpalm between
November 1998 and March 2000. By the amendments, Mr Tagget
enlarged his
claim substantially to $750,000 in damages inclusive of the liquidated sum. Most
of the total amount claimed was for
general damages for alleged breaches of the
Deed.
- In
his pleading, Mr Tagget alleges various express terms of the Deed founded upon
clauses 2.2, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 6.1 and 6.3. At paragraph
17 of his pleading it is
asserted that:
Pursuant to the Agreement, the First Defendant appointed the Plaintiff and the
Plaintiff performed work and provided materials and
services to the First
Defendant to assist in the management of the Project between 20 November 1998
and about March 2000.
Six different breaches of the
Deed are then pleaded in paragraph 19:
In breach of the Agreement:
(a) the First Defendant failed to negotiate in good faith to incorporate as part
of the Employment Agreement a licence for the Plaintiff
to occupy lot 157 prior
to its transfer to the Plaintiff: and/or
(b) the First Defendant has refused and/or failed to diligently pursue the Tweed
Shire Council for approval for subdivision of Stage
5 of the Tanglewood Estate
in accordance with the development consent issued by Council on 8 March 1982:
and/or
(c) the First Defendant has failed to do everything reasonably required to cause
the relevant linen plan of survey to be prepared
and sealed by Council as soon
as reasonably practicable: and/or
(d) the First Defendant has refused to pay to the Plaintiff the monetary sum
equal to the unimproved value of lot 157: and/or
(e) the First Defendant has refused and/or failed to transfer to the Plaintiff
for a nominal consideration ($10) free of any encumbrance
or charge whatsoever
the proposed Lot 157: and/or
(f) the First Defendant has failed to do things reasonably required to ensure
that the Plaintiff obtained the benefit of the
Deed.
- The
Defence filed by Hillpalm denied that it had breached the Deed. It also
asserted that Mr Tagget’s entitlement to be paid
the liquidated sum was
conditional upon Mr Tagget being appointed under cl 2, something which
Hillpalm denied had occurred.
The deed of release
- In
August 2004 a judgment was entered by consent in favour of Hillpalm with no
order as to costs. This appears to have occurred
pursuant to a Deed of Release
(the Deed of Release) dated 11 March 2004. The recitals state that
the parties had previously entered into the Deed and that they are also party
to
the District Court proceedings commenced by Mr Tagget. They then
state:
It is the parties intention by this Deed to resolve any claims that they might
have against the other and to substitute the rights
and obligations created by
this Deed for any other rights or obligations that the parties might otherwise
have had against each other
whether dealt with in the proceedings or
otherwise.
- Clauses
1 and 2 of the Deed of Release are most relevant. They
provide:
1. In consideration of the obligations created by this
Deed
(i) Hillpalm will undertake its best endeavours at its own expense to obtain
approval from the Tweed Shire Council for the subdivision
of a parcel of land
from Lot 529 in Deposited Plan 1003396, being a parcel of land conforming
generally to the parcel identified
and described as Lot 1 in the McLauchlan
Surveying Plan No. 37342 which comprises Schedule 3 to this Deed ("Lot
1").
(ii) In the event that the subdivision application referred to in (i) is
successful, then Hillpalm will transfer to Tagget, or to
an entity nominated by
Tagget, Lot 1 at the expense of
Tagget.
2. In the event that the subdivision referred to in clause 1(i) of this Deed
is
unable to be effected within a period of six (6) months from the date of this
Deed, then Hillpalm shall within fourteen (14) days
appoint three (3) registered
valuers comprising the persons or firms whose names appear in Schedule 4 to this
Agreement, to produce
a notional valuation of the proposed Lot 1, based on its
current zoning, and shall pay to Tagget within twenty eight (28) days of
the
receipt of the last of those valuations an amount of money equivalent to the
average of the three valuations so obtained.
The land transfer
- The
transfer from Hillpalm to Mr Tagget of what was by this time Lot 1 in Deposited
Plan 1084992 was dated 20 September 2005 and
expressed to be “pursuant to
the Deed of Agreement between Hillpalm and Mr Tagget”. It was registered
on 18 October
2005.
- The
evidence established that Lot 1 in Deposited Plan 1084992 was not precisely the
same as proposed Lot 157. Mr Tagget’s evidence
was that he still ended up
with about 11.2 hectares but that the western boundary for Lot 1 was located
about 40 or 50 metres away
from where it was originally shown to be in the
drawing attached to the Deed which identified proposed Lot 157.
- It
was common ground that the value of proposed Lot 157 was $450,000 as at the date
of the Deed. I should note, however, that the
valuation relied upon by Mr
Taggert related to Lot 1 in DP 1084992 which was, as Mr Tagget’s evidence
established, slightly
different to proposed Lot 157. But since the Commissioner
was content to ignore the distinction between the two parcels of land I
shall do
the same.
- A
special purpose financial report by Grant & Brady, Chartered Accountants,
was prepared for Mr Tagget in respect of the financial
year ended 30 June 2006.
It included a profit and loss report for that year which showed an amount of
$1,200,000 as income. The
relevant entry was described as “Land
Compensation”.
RELEVANT LEGISLATION
- This
proceeding is an appeal by the Applicant under s 14ZZ of the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 (Cth) (the Administration Act). The
appeal is against a “reviewable objection decision” within the
meaning of sub-paragraph (a) of s 14ZZ: see the
definition of that expression in
s 14ZQ of the Administration Act.
- Section 14ZZO
of the Administration Act provides, in substance, that the appellant’s
challenge to the objection decision
is limited to the grounds stated in the
notice of objection unless the Court otherwise orders. It also provides that the
appellant
has the burden of proving that the assessment is excessive.
- Section
6-5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) (the 1997 Act) and
ss 21 and 21A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) (the 1936
Act) are relevant for the purpose of determining Mr Tagget’s income
for the year ended 30 June 2006. These provisions operate concurrently
for
income years following that which ended on 30 June 1998: Commissioner of
Taxation v McNeil [2007] HCA 5; (2007) 229 CLR 656 at [41].
- Section
6-5 of the 1997 Act relevantly provides:
(1) Your assessable income includes income according to ordinary concepts, which
is called ordinary income.
...
(2) If you are an Australian resident, your assessable income includes the
ordinary income you derived directly or indirectly from
all sources, whether in
or out of Australia, during the income year.
...
(4) In working out whether you have derived an amount of ordinary income, and
(if so) when you derived it, you are taken to have
received the amount as soon
as it is applied or dealt with in any way on your behalf or as you
direct.
- Section
21 of the 1936 Act relevantly provides:
(1) Where, upon any transaction, any consideration is paid or given otherwise
than in cash, the money value of that consideration
shall, for the purposes of
this Act, be deemed to have been paid or given.
(2) This section has effect subject to section
21A.
- Section
21A of the 1936 Act relevantly provides:
(1) For the purposes of this Act, in determining the income derived by a
taxpayer, a non cash business benefit that is not convertible
to cash shall be
treated as if it were convertible to cash.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, if a non cash business benefit (whether or not
convertible to cash) is income derived by a
taxpayer:
(a) the benefit shall be brought into account at its arm’s length value
reduced by the recipient’s contribution (if any);
and
(b) if the benefit is not convertible to cash—in determining the
arm’s length value of the benefit, any conditions that
would prevent or
restrict the conversion of the benefit to cash shall be
disregarded.
...
(5) In this section:
arm’s length value, in relation to a non cash business
benefit, means:
(a) the amount that the recipient could reasonably be expected to have been
required to pay to obtain the benefit from the provider
under a transaction
where the parties to the transaction are dealing with each other at arm’s
length in relation to the transaction;
or
(b) if such an amount cannot be practically determined—such amount as the
Commissioner considers reasonable.
income derived by a taxpayer means income derived by a taxpayer in
carrying on a business for the purpose of gaining or producing assessable
income.
non cash business benefit means property or services provided
after 31 August 1988:
(a) wholly or partly in respect of a business relationship;
or
(b) wholly or partly for or in relation directly or indirectly to a business
relationship.
...
- While
I have set out the relevant parts of these provisions of the 1997 Act and the
1936 Act for completeness, I need to refer to
them only briefly when I come to
an argument dealt with by me in para [69] below.
ANALYSIS
The effect of the deed
- Clause 3.1
of the Deed records a conditional undertaking by Hillpalm to transfer proposed
Lot 157 to Mr Tagget for nominal consideration
at a future time. As is clear
from the recitals, Hillpalm had not yet acquired the Land (as defined) from
which proposed Lot 157
was to be created at the time Hillpalm entered into the
Deed. Further, as is clear from cl 3.1, no approval had been obtained
by
that time for the sub-division of the Land or, more specifically, the creation
of proposed Lot 157. By cl 3.2, the sub-division
and transfer of proposed
Lot 157 was subject to Hillpalm realising $3.2 million in gross sale proceeds
from the sale of the Land.
- It
is hard to see how Mr Tagget could have acquired any equitable interest in the
Land prior to it being acquired by Hillpalm. However,
recent authority
establishes that upon acquisition of the Land by Hillpalm, Mr Tagget acquired
what is sometimes referred to as a
“contingent equitable interest”:
Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) [1988] HCA 16; (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 612 per Mason CJ and Dawson
J; Chan v Cresdon Pty Ltd [1989] HCA 63; (1989) 168 CLR 242 at 252-253 per Mason CJ,
Brennan, Deane and McHugh JJ; Stern v McArthur [1988] HCA 51; (1988) 165 CLR 489 at
522-523 per Deane and Dawson JJ.
- It
is not necessary to explore more fully the nature of the interest acquired by Mr
Tagget in the Land or that part of it which was
to make up proposed Lot 157
either at the time Hillpalm entered into the Deed or at the time it acquired the
Land. It may be accepted
that by the time Hillpalm acquired the Land Mr
Tagget’s interest was a contingent equitable interest.
- Clause
6.1 of the Deed deals with the timing of the transfer of proposed Lot 157 to Mr
Tagget pursuant to cl 3.1. It provides
that the transfer shall occur upon
the earlier of “the date determined in accordance with Clause 3.2
...” or “24
months after the Linen Plan in respect of the Stage 5
development approval is sealed by the Tweed Shire Council and released to
Hillpalm”.
As I have mentioned, cl 3.2 provides, relevantly, that the
subdivision is subject to Hillpalm realising gross sale proceeds from
the sale
of the Land in the sum of $3.2 million.
- There
is no evidence that Hillpalm ever achieved gross sales of $3.2 million, nor is
there any evidence that the plan of subdivision
in respect of the Stage 5
Development was approved by Council. So far as the evidence reveals, neither of
the conditions precedent
to the transfer of proposed Lot 157 was ever
satisfied.
- This
brings me to cl 3.3. It is concerned with a situation in which, for reasons
beyond the control of Hillpalm, the approval necessary
to enable Hillpalm to
transfer proposed Lot 157 to Mr Tagget cannot be obtained. In that situation
Hillpalm is required to pay to
Mr Tagget a sum of money equal to the unimproved
value of proposed Lot 157 as agreed or as determined by a registered valuer
appointed
by the President of the Institute of Valuers. Clause 3.3 then
provides that “Tagget will accept the compensation in full and
final
satisfaction of all claims.”
- The
evidence does not really address the question whether the failure to obtain the
relevant approval was beyond the control of Hillpalm.
Assuming such a failure
was beyond its control, it is clear that Mr Tagget was entitled to be paid
compensation in an amount determined
in accordance with cl 3.3 of the Deed.
Even if such a failure was not beyond Hillpalm’s control, it is difficult
to see how
Mr Tagget could be entitled to any lesser sum by way of damages for
breach of contract if the failure was the result of a breach
of Hillpalm’s
obligation under cl 6.1 to do everything that was reasonably required to achieve
that outcome. But in that case
Mr Tagget’s entitlement to damages would
not be restricted by the concluding words of
cl 3.3.
Was the land ordinary income of Mr Tagget in the tax year ended 30 June
2006?
- Counsel
for Mr Tagget submitted that the land received by Mr Tagget never formed part of
Mr Tagget’s ordinary income. His argument
involved three essential steps.
First, cl 3.3 vested in Mr Tagget contractual rights to either acquire
proposed Lot 157 for
nominal consideration or to receive compensation in the
event that proposed Lot 157 never came into existence. Secondly, these
contractual
rights were choses in action that could have been turned to
pecuniary account by Mr Tagget and were, therefore, ordinary income derived
by
him upon entry into the Deed. Thirdly, the receipt of the land by Mr Tagget in
September 2005 was the result of the exercise by
him of the contractual rights
acquired by him upon entry into the Deed and, as such, did not form part of Mr
Tagget’s ordinary
income.
- Counsel
for Mr Tagget relied upon the decision of the House of Lords in Abbott v
Philbin [1960] UKHL 1; [1961] AC 352, arguing that the facts of this case were within the
principles laid down by the majority in that case. He sought to characterise
cl
3.1 not as an option, but as something stronger. I agree that cl 3.1 does
not confer upon Mr Tagget an option to purchase
land. In substance, Hillpalm
agreed to sell and Mr Tagget agreed to buy proposed Lot 157 for nominal
consideration subject to the
conditions set out in the Deed. There was nothing
in the nature of an option about it. But for reasons that I will explain I do
not think it is either meaningful or correct to say that the rights acquired by
Mr Tagget were stronger than the option under consideration
in Abbott v
Philbin. What is important is that Mr Tagget’s entitlement to proposed
Lot 157 or the sum of money payable under cl. 3.1 was in each
case of a
contingent nature. This is a feature which distinguishes the rights granted to
Mr Tagget under the Deed from the option
rights granted to the taxpayer in
Abbott v Philbin.
- In
Abbott v Philbin the taxpayer was granted an option to purchase 2,000
ordinary shares in a company of which he was secretary at the price of 68s.
6d.
per share. The option was granted in October 1954. The price of the option was
£20 and it was expressed to be non-transferable
and to expire after 10
years or on the earlier death or retirement of the taxpayer. In March 1956 when
the market price of the shares
was 82s. per share, the taxpayer exercised the
option in respect of 250 shares. The taxpayer was assessed to income tax under
Schedule
E of the Income Tax Act 1952 (U.K.) in the year 1955-56 on
£166 which constituted the difference between the option price and the
market price of the shares
(with a deduction of a proportionate part of the cost
of the option) as being a perquisite received by him by virtue of his
employment.
The taxpayer appealed the assessment and, by majority, the House of
Lords upheld his appeal.
- The
Income Tax Act 1952 (U.K.) provided that “Tax under Schedule E
shall be annually charged on every person having or exercising an office or
employment
of profit ... in respect of all salaries, fees, wages, perquisites or
profits whatsoever therefrom for the year of assessment ...”.
Viscount
Simonds appears to have decided the case on the basis that the option was
something of value which could be turned to pecuniary
account. His Lordship
said at 365:
My Lords, I cannot entertain any doubt that, when the company granted the option
to the appellant, he acquired something of potential
value. I do not think that
it matters whether it falls into the category of proprietary or contractual
right, or into some dim twilight
that divides those juristic conceptions. We are
concerned with a taxing statute whose language is to be reconciled with the law
of
England and Scotland alike, and the chosen words “perquisite or profit
whatsoever” are as wide and general as they well
could be. I can concede
no relevant limitation of their meaning except in the oft cited words of Lord
Watson in Tennant v. Smith that they denote “something acquired
which the “acquirer becomes possessed of and can dispose of to his
advantage–in
other words, money–or that which can be turned to
“pecuniary account.”
- Similarly,
Lord Radcliffe said at 378-9:
I think that the Revenue are right in saying that a line has to be drawn
somewhere between convertible and non-convertible benefits,
and that somehow we
have to put a general meaning on the not very precise language used in
Tennant v. Smith. What I do not think, however, is that a non-assignable
option to take up freely assignable shares lies on that side of the line
which
contains the untaxable benefits in kind. The option, when paid for, was
thereafter a contractual right enforceable against
the company at any time
during the next 10 years so long as the holder paid the stipulated price and
remained in its service. That
right is, in my opinion, analogous for this
purpose to any other benefit in the form of land, objects of value or legal
rights. It
was not incapable of being turned into money or of being turned to
pecuniary account within the meaning of these phrases in Tennant v. Smith
merely because the option itself was not assignable. What the option did was to
enable the holder at any time, at his choice, to
obtain shares from the company
which would themselves be pieces of property or property rights of value, freely
convertible into
money. Being in that position he could also at any time, at his
choice, sell or raise money on his right to call for the shares,
even though he
could not put anyone he dealt with actually into his own position as option
holder against the company. I think that
the conferring of a right of this kind
as an incident of service is a profit or perquisite which is taxable as such in
the year of
receipt, so long as the right itself can fairly be given a monetary
value, and it is no more relevant for this purpose whether the
option is
exercised or not in that year, than it would be if the advantage received were
in the form of some tangible form of commercial
property.
- His
Lordship also said at 379:
The advantage which arose by the exercise of the option, say £166, was not
a perquisite or profit from the office during the
year of assessment: it was an
advantage which accrued to the appellant as the holder of a legal right which he
had obtained in an
earlier year, and which he exercised as option holder against
the company. The quantum of the benefit, which is the alleged taxable
receipt,
is not in such circumstances the profit of the service: it is the profit of his
exploitation of a valuable right. Of course,
in this case the year of acquiring
the option was only the year immediately preceding the year in which, pro tanto,
it was exercised.
But supposing that he holds the option for, say, nine years
before exercise? The current market value of the company's shares may
have
changed out of all recognition in that time, through retention of profits,
expansion of business, changes in the nature of the
business, even changes in
the market conditions or the current rate of interest or yield. I think that it
would be quite wrong to
tax whatever advantages the option holder may obtain
through the judicious exercise of his option rights in this way as if they were
profits or perquisites from his office arising in the year when he calls the
shares.
- Abbott
v Philbin was followed by Bowen CJ in Eq. in Donaldson v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (1974) 3 ALR 516. His Honour held that convertible
notes which carried the right to purchase shares in Hooker Corporation Limited
were benefits of an income nature in the hands of a taxpayer who was an employee
of that company. The options were the subject of
various conditions including
one which excluded any right to exercise them until after the employee had
remained in the company’s
employment for a specified period.
- His
Honour held that the options to purchase shares granted to the taxpayer were
benefits within what was formerly s 26(e) of
the 1936 Act. For the
taxpayer it was argued that the options were not a benefit that could be enjoyed
by him in the income year
in question. His Honour said at
532-3:
...I find myself in general agreement with the argument advanced by counsel for
Mr Donaldson that the Income Tax Assessment Act is dealing with what
“comes in” to the taxpayer, and, generally, with what is enjoyed or
capable of being enjoyed by
the taxpayer in the income year in question. But
these are generalizations which do not greatly assist in the resolution of the
present
case. I am unable to accept a proposition that the option rights
conferred on Mr Donaldson did not “come in” to him or
were not
enjoyed by him in the year of income. Items rendered assessable income by
s 26(e) have to be regarded according to
their nature, whether they are
meals, use of quarters, or option rights. To say the option rights could not be
exercised in the year
of income is no answer to the application of s 26(e).
Indeed, it is to confuse the enjoyment of the fruit of the rights with the
enjoyment of the rights, a mistake made in argument on behalf of the Crown in
Abbott v Philbin, supra. Again, to say rights are non-transferable is no
answer to the application of s 26(e). Meals which are consumed may be
non-transferable
and yet they are within s 26(e). What is made assessable income
by s 26(e) is the value to the taxpayer of the benefit allowed,
given or
granted to him, that is to say, the rights conferred on him which others lack.
Whether they have any value to him, and what
that value is, are matters to be
determined according to the facts of each particular case, preferably with the
assistance of expert
evidence. But that does not affect the principle that where
such rights are given they are present rights, though exercisable in
the future,
and confer an immediate benefit upon the taxpayer which he enjoys as the owner
of them.
- Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v McArdle (1988) 19 ATR 1901 was also concerned
with the application of what was then s 26(e) of the 1936 Act. Mr McArdle,
the taxpayer, had been granted
options to acquire his employer’s stock
between 1975 and 1980. In 1979 Mr McArdle entered into what was referred to as
a “limited
stock appreciation rights agreement”. The effect of the
agreement was to allow Mr McArdle to receive a cash payment in certain
circumstances in lieu of the stock to which he would be entitled if he exercised
his options. The cash payment would equal the difference
between the value of
the stock and the exercise price of the options. In the year ended 30 June 1982
Mr McArdle received a payment
under the agreement.
- The
Full Court agreed with the trial judge who held that the payment should not have
been included in the taxpayer’s assessable
income. Davies, Gummow and Lee
JJ said at 1909:
His Honour held that the agreement by Delhi International to pay $1,100,000 was
made by Delhi International, not in consequence of
Mr McArdle’s employment
with the Delhi group, but in consequence of and as consideration for the
surrender by Mr McArdle of
his stock options and his limited stock appreciation
rights. ...
We respectfully agree with his Honour that what occurred in the year ended 30
June 1982 was not the grant to Mr McArdle of a valuable
benefit assessable under
the provisions of s 26(e) of the Act but rather the exploitation by him of
rights received in previous
years, the value whereof would have been assessable
under s 26(e) in those years but for the period of
s 26AAC(10).
Had we been of the view that, in the year ended 30 June 1982, Delhi
International granted to Mr McArdle a benefit of value, we would
have thought
that the value was assessable to tax under s 26(e). However, an analysis
of what occurred in the year ended 30
June 1982 shows that what was done was not
the grant by Delhi International to Mr McArdle of a valuable benefit in respect
of, for
or in relation, directly or indirectly, to the services he had rendered
for the Delhi group. Rather, Mr McArdle negotiated with
Delhi International a
means of exploiting the rights which had been granted to him by Delhi
International in prior years.
Before the trial judge and again on appeal, reliance was placed on s 25(1)
of the Act. We need say no more about this matter
than did the trial judge,
namely, that it was a capital receipt, being received as consideration for the
surrender of valuable rights.
The sum was not received by way of a reward for
service and was negotiated as the consideration for the surrender of valuable
rights.
- In
the present case the Deed created various contractual rights including a right
in favour of Mr Tagget to have Hillpalm transfer
proposed Lot 157 to him for
nominal consideration subject to the fulfilment of conditions which would make
that possible. This was
coupled with a right in favour of Mr Tagget to be paid
compensation if, for reasons beyond Hillpalm’s control, the conditions
which would make the transfer of proposed Lot 157 possible could not be
fulfilled. These rights were legal choses in action which
I am prepared to
assume (though there is no evidence to this effect) that Mr Tagget could
have turned to pecuniary account in
the same way the options under consideration
in Abbott v Philbin were held to be capable of being turned to pecuniary
account. But I do not think it follows that the choses in action were ordinary
income of Mr Tagget.
- A
distinction needs to be drawn between an agreement which confers a right upon a
person to obtain property or money and an agreement
in which property or money
is actually vested in him or her. Each of the cases I have referred to was
concerned with a situation
in which the taxpayer was granted share options by
his employer. Moreover, the grant of the options was not conditional or
contingent
in any respect. Of course, the options may not have been exercisable
unless certain conditions were fulfilled; Mr Donaldson,
for example, could
not exercise his options until he had completed specified periods of further
service. But that is quite different
to saying that the grant of the options
was conditional upon Mr Donaldson completing the specified periods of further
service. If
Mr Donaldson’s employer had promised to grant him options on
condition that he completed a period of further service then I
do not consider
that promise would have been a benefit to which s 26(e) would have applied
– at least not until Mr Donaldson
had completed his period of further
service.
- As
the late Professor R W Parsons explains in Income Taxation in Australia
(1985) at para [2.15]:
...Generally where there is a right to some benefit or to property other than
money there cannot be a derivation, whether the taxpayer
is on accruals or cash,
until the benefit or property has come to be vested in the taxpayer. Property
for this purpose may, it seems,
include a chose in action. Thus the taxpayer in
Abbott v. Philbin [1960] UKHL 1; [1961] A.C. 352 and the taxpayer in Donaldson
(1974) 74 A.T.C. 4192 who came to have rights to options over shares were
regarded as having derived those options at the time when a distinct set of
legal
relations constituting the options came into existence. There is, it
seems, a difference for tax purposes between a contractual
right to an issue of
options which will not involve a derivation and the actual issue of options
which will involve a derivation...
- The
learned author returns to the topic in the context of tax accounting. He states
at para [11.59]:
There is a question as to what is an actual receipt where the item receivable is
itself a chose in action. In Abbott v. Philbin [1960] UKHL 1; [1961] A.C. 352 and
Donaldson (1974) 74 A.T.C. 4192, in both of which the taxpayer was,
presumably, on a cash basis in relation to the item, there was held to be a
derivation when options
over shares were issued to him. One must distinguish the
arising of a right to the issue of options, which would not be a derivation,
and
the arising of the rights given by the options when they are issued, which would
be a derivation.
- A
key question posed by Bowen CJ in Eq. in the passage from
Donaldson’s case quoted at para [56] above was whether the option
rights had “come in to the taxpayer” in the year in question.
This
language is reminiscent of what Dixon J (with whom Rich and McTiernan JJ agreed)
said in Commissioner of Taxes (SA) v Executor Trustee and Ageing Co of South
Australia Ltd [1938] HCA 69; (1938) 63 CLR 108 (Carden’s case)
at 155:
Speaking generally, in the assessment of income the object is to discover what
gains have during the period of account come home
to the taxpayer in a realized
or immediately realizable form. Thus, in Thorogood’s Case, where
the question was whether, in a business of buying land and selling it in
subdivision on instalment contracts, future instalments
of purchase money should
be taken into the account of taxable income derived during the accounting
period, the court pronounced decisively
against the inclusion of the present
value of these future payments. Isaacs J. said:“
‘Derived’ is not necessarily actually received, but ordinarily that
is the mode of derivation.”
Substantially the same thing is said in
reference to the words “arising or accruing” by Sir Houldsworth
Shaw and Mr Baker in their work on the Law of Income Tax, and
they place distinction upon the difference between trading and other sources of
income. They say: - “There is an important
distinction between debts due
to a trading company and unpaid in a particular year or period and other income
which is not a trade
receipt. Trading debts due but not yet paid must be
included in arriving at the balance of profits or gains. With regard, however,
to other income there must be something ‘coming in’: that is, for
income tax purposes, receivability without receipt
is nothing” (Law of
Income Tax, p.111).
- In
Barratt v Commissioner of Taxation [1992] FCA 271; (1992) 36 FCR 222 the question that
arose was whether the income of taxpayers, who were medical practitioners
registered under the Medical Practitioners Act 1938 (NSW), should be
computed on a cash or an accruals basis. In finding that an accruals basis was
appropriate, Gummow J (with whom
Northrop and Drummond JJ agreed) said
at 231:
No doubt a debt that is presently recoverable by action generally will be an
amount “derived” in the relevant sense by
the creditor. The creditor
will have a present right to receive the amount in question, something both
earned and quantified, without
the presence of any element of contingency or
defeasibility. At the other end of the scale, where the right of the taxpayer is
contingent,
there will be no derivation before the contingency is satisfied: see
R W Parsons, Income Taxation in Australia (1985), § 11.49. Nor will
there be derivation if the debt is yet to be quantified: see Farnsworth v
Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) [1949] HCA 27; (1949) 78 CLR 504 at 513, per Latham
CJ.
The present case is at neither extreme end of the spectrum. But it is well to
bear in mind that what is being sought is a method
of giving, for each year of
income, a substantially correct reflex of the true income of the taxpayers,
having regard to what Fullagar
J called the truth and reality of the situation:
see Ballarat Brewing Co Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) [1951] HCA 35; (1951) 82
CLR 364 at 369.
- In
Gasparin v Commissioner of Taxation (1994) 50 FCR 73 the Full Court was
concerned with the tax treatment of allotments of land that were the subject of
contracts of sale which were expressed
to be conditional upon registration of a
plan of subdivision. The plan of subdivision was duly registered. It was
nevertheless held
that the allotments of land continued to form part of the
vendor’s trading stock up to the time of settlement of the contracts
of
sale. It was also held that the vendor did not derive income from the sale of
allotments until a debt accrued due from the purchaser,
something which, it was
found, did not occur until settlement. Only then could it be said that
“the vendor finally loses all
dispositive power, and the contingency that
the sale will not proceed to completion disappears” per von Doussa J at 83
(with
whom Jenkinson and Spender JJ agreed). After referring to Gummow
J’s judgment in Barratt’s case, his Honour observed
at 81 that “[t]he element of contingency is an important one”.
And after referring to
the judgments of the High Court in Farnsworth v
Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) [1949] HCA 27; (1949) 78 CLR 504 his Honour explained at
83:
The reason for the proposition stated in the judgments of the High Court that
income is derived when a debt has accrued due, is to
eliminate the element of
contingency and uncertainty in the exercise of determining when income is
derived for the purpose of levying
taxation.
See
also the decision of the Full Court in BHP Billington Petroleum (Bass Strait)
Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2002] FCAFC 433; (2002) 126 FCR 119.
- It
was anticipated at the time of entry into the Deed that it might take some years
before proposed Lot 157 could be transferred
to Mr Tagget: see cl 6.1(b). If for
reasons beyond Hillpalm’s control, such a transfer was not possible then
cl 3.2 would apply
and Mr Tagget would be entitled to compensation equal to the
unimproved value of proposed Lot 157. I think the compensation would
have to be
based upon a valuation as at the date cl 3.3 was engaged as opposed to a
valuation as at the date of the Deed. The significance
of this is that at the
date of the Deed the value of Mr Tagget’s entitlement to either land or
compensation was quite uncertain.
The value of Mr Tagget’s entitlements
would in all probability vary over time in accordance with fluctuations in the
property
market and could never be fixed with any degree of certainty until
either land or compensation was received by him.
- In
my opinion Mr Tagget did not derive income merely by entering into the Deed.
Moreover, nothing in the nature of income could come
in to Mr Tagget under cl
3.1 or cl 3.3 of the Deed until proposed Lot 157 was transferred to him under cl
3.1 or a sum of money became
due to him as a result of an agreement reached or a
valuation struck under cl 3.3. Even then, if Mr Tagget’s income was
computed
on a cash basis (as would seem to be appropriate in his circumstances)
such sum would not be derived by him for tax purposes until
it was received.
- If
proposed Lot 157 had been transferred to Mr Tagget pursuant to cl 3.1, or if he
had instead been paid a sum of money pursuant
to cl 3.3, then the value of
the land, or the sum of money in question, would have been ordinary income
derived by Mr Tagget
when the transfer or payment occurred. That being so, both
parties accepted that the land received by Mr Tagget under the Deed of
Release
would also form part of his ordinary income. This view is supported by the
relevant authorities: see, for example, Federal Commissioner of Taxation v
Dixon [1952] HCA 65; (1952) 86 CLR 540 at 568 and Tinkler v Commissioner of
Taxation (Cth) [1979] FCA 88; (1979) 29 ALR 663 at 666.
- It
was faintly argued by Counsel for Mr Tagget that the land received by him in
September 2005 might not be income according to ordinary
concepts. A related
question touched upon in argument was whether Mr Tagget was carrying on business
at relevant times. If he was
not then s 21A of the 1936 Act would not apply to
him: see the definition of “income derived by a taxpayer” in s
21A(5).
But even if Mr Tagget was not carrying on business, his entitlements
under the Deed were given in return for him agreeing to make
his services
available to Hillpalm: see, in particular, cl 7. I would therefore have no
hesitation in finding that the receipt of
the land was income according to
ordinary concepts. Assuming s 21A of the 1936 Act did not apply to Mr
Tagget, s 21 of the 1936
Act would deem the money value of the land to have been
paid or given to him. In any event, although an application for leave to
raise
an additional ground of objection was foreshadowed, it was not pursued by Mr
Tagget and I accept the submission made by Counsel
for the Commissioner that it
is not open to Mr Tagget to rely on any such argument in this appeal since it
raises a ground of objection
that was not included in the Notice of
Objection.
- The
appeal should be dismissed with costs.
|
I certify that the preceding seventy (70) numbered paragraphs are a true
copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice Nicholas
.
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Associate:
Dated: 2 February 2010
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