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Multiflex Pty Ltd v The Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCA 789 (13 July 2011)
Last Updated: 19 July 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Multiflex Pty Ltd v The Commissioner of
Taxation [2011] FCA 789
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Citation:
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Parties:
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MULTIFLEX PTY LTD (ACN 137 111 598) v THE
COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
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File number:
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VID 446 of 2011
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Judge:
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DODDS-STREETON J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Application
for expedited hearing
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Cases cited:
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Blackrock Asset Management Australia Services
Ltd v Waked [2011] FCA 272 discussed British American Tobacco
Australia v Secretary, Department of Health and Ageing [2011] FCA 718
discussed
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Date of publication of reasons:
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15 July 2011
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Date of last submissions:
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13 July 2011
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Place:
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Melbourne
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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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Mills Oakley
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Mr M Flynn
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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MULTIFLEX PTY LTD (ACN 137 111
598)Applicant
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AND:
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THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION OF THE
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIARespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
applicant file and serve its application and amended statement of claim by 19
July 2011.
- The
respondent file and serve a defence to the applicant’s amended statement
of claim by 26 July 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve any further affidavit upon which it intends to rely at
the trial on or before 13 July 2011.
- The
respondent file and serve any affidavit upon which he intends to rely at the
trial on or before 1 August 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve any affidavit in reply upon which it intends to rely at
the trial on or before 8 August 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve an outline of submissions on or before 8 August
2011.
- The
respondent file and serve an outline of submissions on or before 15 August
2011.
- The
proceeding be listed for hearing on 19 August 2011 on a one day estimate.
- The
costs of the scheduling conference be costs in the appeal.
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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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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VID 446 of 2011
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BETWEEN:
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MULTIFLEX PTY LTD (ACN 137 111 598) Applicant
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AND:
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THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
AUSTRALIA Respondent
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JUDGE:
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DODDS-STREETON J
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DATE:
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13 JULY 2011
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- On
13 July 2011, I ordered that:
- The
applicant file and serve its application and amended statement of claim by 19
July 2011.
- The
respondent file and serve a defence to the applicant’s amended statement
of claim by 26 July 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve any further affidavit upon which it intends to rely at
the trial on or before 13 July 2011.
- The
respondent file and serve any affidavit upon which he intends to rely at the
trial on or before 1 August 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve any affidavit in reply upon which it intends to rely at
the trial on or before 8 August 2011.
- The
applicant file and serve an outline of submissions on or before 8 August
2011.
- The
respondent file and serve an outline of submissions on or before 15 August
2011.
- The
proceeding be listed for hearing on 19 August 2011 on a one day estimate.
- The
costs of the scheduling conference be costs in the appeal.
- My
reasons for making those orders are set out below.
- The
applicant, Multiflex Pty Ltd (“Multiflex”), by a notice of motion
dated 14 June 2011, sought orders for an expedited
hearing as follows:
- The
proceeding be expedited such that the scheduling conference currently listed to
be conducted before the Honourable Justice Gordon
be conducted within 7 days of
the date of this order on a date to be notified;
- The
proceeding be listed at the scheduling conference for hearing within
21 days with an estimate of 1 to 2 days.
- Costs
be reserved.
- The
application was supported by the affidavit of Tanu Ghosh sworn
24 June 2011.
- On
6 July 2011, I made orders by consent that the scheduling conference be
conducted within seven days and that the determination
of orders 2 and 3 of the
notice of motion be heard on the same date. The matter was listed for a
scheduling conference on 13 July
2011.
- The
proceeding was not yet set down for hearing.
- As
appeared from the affidavit of Mr Ghosh and the statement of claim and
application dated 24 May 2011, Multiflex is a buyer and
seller of
information and communication technology products, such as mobile phones and
iPads. It operates on small margins between
the purchase and sale price, and
has a small profit margin. In 2010, the cost of its purchase of products was
$18.8 million, and
the proceeds of sale was $19.9 million.
- Multiflex
alleged that in about August 2010, it had accumulated GST input tax credits, and
the Commissioner of Taxation (“COT”),
although obliged to refund the
GST amounts, advised that Multiflex would be audited and the GST amounts
withheld. Subsequently,
in December 2010, the refund was made.
- Multiflex
alleged, however, that as at May 2011, it was now entitled to a further $835,000
in refunds relating to tax periods outside
the advised audit period, which the
COT was not entitled to withhold, even if the audit period were extended.
- Multiflex
alleged that the COT’s refusal to pay the GST refund is a decision under
s 3 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth)
(“ADJR Act”) and Multiflex is a person aggrieved. It alleged that
the decision to withhold the refund was an improper
exercise of power, without a
proper basis, ultra vires and contrary to law. Multiflex was
accordingly entitled to relief under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903
(Cth), a review under the ADJR Act, an order that the decision be quashed, and
relief in debt and damages.
- The
COT, by a Notice of Objection to Competency dated 8 June 2011, alleged that the
decision was not one to which the ADJR Act applied.
- Mr
Ghosh, the sole director and CEO of Multiflex, deposed to its high volume but
low margin business, which involved the export of
products to Singapore. Its
sales were GST free, but its purchases were creditable acquisitions.
- Mr
Ghosh deposed that Multiflex was now entitled to $835,000 in refundable GST for
the January-March 2011 period.
- He
deposed that the Australian Tax Office (“ATO”) initially advised
Multiflex of an audit for the periods July and August
2010 but subsequently
advised that the audit would be expanded to the period May 2009 to November
2010, and was now expected to be
completed by 4 August 2011. The ATO initially
withheld GST refunds but then released them with an apology, affirming that it
would
process its future BAS on a normal basis.
- Mr
Ghosh deposed that in late February 2011, however, the ATO again ceased
releasing Multiflex’s GST refunds and advised that
the situation would
remain in place until the audit and investigations of Multiflex were completed.
Although the standard time for
paying GST refunds was 14 days, the Multiflex
refunds had now been withheld for much longer. The ATO had not clearly stated
the
reasons for withholding the refunds or given a legitimate explanation for so
doing.
- Mr
Ghosh deposed that due to the continuing withholding of the refunds, the
solvency of the Multiflex business was in jeopardy and
its essential working
capital and ability to operate as a going concern were crippled. It received
delivery of products only on
the basis of advance payments and owed
$US2.2 million to a related company, Mercantile Pacific Asia Pte Ltd
(“MPA”).
Stock would not be delivered unless the advance payments
were made. Multiflex’s sourcing agreement would be terminated and
it
would be forced into liquidation. In the circumstances, Multiflex could barely
meet its legal fees, salaries and other expenses.
It relied on a high volume of
stock in order to be profitable, and without receiving the GST refund in a
timely manner, would not
be able to trade for longer than two months without an
immediate release of funds.
- Mr
Ghosh deposed that in April 2011, the ATO refused Multiflex’s proposal to
release the GST refunds in relation to Multiflex’s
acquisitions from its
largest suppliers. In March 2011, the ATO advised that Multiflex’s GST
refunds would be withheld until
Mr Narula, the controller of MPA, attended
for interview from Singapore. Further, the audit had been expanded. Multiflex
therefore
sought an expeditious hearing, as its financial future was at
stake.
PRINCIPLES RELEVANT TO EXPEDITION
- In
Blackrock Asset Management Australia Services Ltd v Waked [2011] FCA 272,
Perram J ordered an expedited trial on liability only on the application of
the respondents who, as former employees of the applicants,
were alleged to have
breached, inter alia, statutory duties, non-solicitation clauses and
various other contractual terms.
- His
Honour considered that while the separation of liability from quantum entailed
considerable risks which were otherwise unacceptable,
there was evidence that
litigation was stifling the respondent’s business. In an imperfect
situation, the risks of potential
problems from the split outweighed the likely
prejudice to the respondents if the trial were not heard in a short period of
time.
- His
Honour stated at [17] and [18]:
Mr Moses SC submitted that there was no evidence that if the trial was not
expedited the corporate respondent, VinvA, would become
insolvent, would suffer
a major financial difficulty, nor, so he submitted, was there any evidence that
the personal respondents
would not be able to put food on their tables if the
case did not proceed in an expedited manner. I accept that, of course.
However,
in terms of obtaining an order for expedition, I do not think that the
respondents are required to go so far as to prove utter penury
or total ruin
before they are entitled to obtain such an order.
Plainly, these proceedings are affecting the respondents’ business
activities in a way which is not trivial. In doing the
best that one can in
what is clearly a far from ideal situation, it seems to me that the interests of
justice favour expedition over
yielding to the potential difficulties which may
arise from the separation of the issues. For that reason, in my opinion, the
matter
should be expedited and there should be a separation of the issue of
liability from quantum. I will simply stand the matter over
for directions to
facilitate the making of appropriate
orders.
- In
British American Tobacco Australia v Secretary, Department of Health and
Ageing [2011] FCA 718, North J ordered an expedited appeal from the
decision of the AAT denying the applicant access to certain legal advice about
Australia’s
compliance with international obligations in relation to plain
packaging of tobacco products, which it allegedly required in order
to
participate in public debate about plain packaging.
- The
applicant required the advice before the end of a consultation period as it
would otherwise be valueless or of diminished value.
The application was
unopposed.
- North J
stated at [7]:
Whilst the lack of opposition by the respondent to the application for
expedition is a matter of relevance and some significance
to the court, at the
heart of this application is a necessity for the court to balance the
consequences of refusing an order for
expedition against the effect on other
litigants waiting in the appeal lists. If the order is not made, the appeal
would come on
in the ordinary course in the November sittings of the
court.
- His
Honour noted that the appeal was currently listed for November 2011, and the
applicant would suffer only a small detriment if
the ordinary course were
maintained.
- His
Honour nevertheless concluded at [10] and
[11]:
Whilst the applicant’s reason for advancing the case in the appeal list is
not strong, and the result of advancing it will
be to disadvantage other appeals
in the list, consideration should be given to the fact that part of the right
which the applicant
seeks to assert will disappear forever if the expedition is
not accorded to it. In other words, the balance is slightly tipped in
favour of
the applicant as a result of the submission of Mr Myers that the right to
utilise the legal advice, if the court decides
in favour of the applicant, is
one which should be taken into consideration in favour of the applicant.
Save for one issue therefore, the court will order that the appeal be accorded
such expedition as the court can afford it. Freely
interpreted and without
treading on the toes of those who set the lists, it is expected, but cannot be
guaranteed, that this will
mean the case will obtain a hearing in or about the
August appeal sittings.
DISCUSSION
- In
the present case, the respondent did not oppose the expedition of the hearing
provided that, in circumstances where Multiflex
had already filed one lengthy
affidavit and would shortly file further material, the respondent had an
adequate opportunity to prepare
responsive material. The respondent submitted
that the COT was withholding the Multiflex GST refunds due to the investigation
of
a possible large scale fraud involving many different suppliers of mobile
telephones and other electronic products. It would therefore
be necessary to
obtain affidavits from one or more of the COT’s officers who were auditing
Multiflex to explain the steps taken
to investigate the company and its chain of
supplies, and why further investigations were required.
- I
was satisfied that the expedition of the hearing was justified in circumstances
where the subject matter of the litigation was
the taxpayer’s entitlement
to a refund, the prompt payment of which was vital to its continued business
operations and solvency.
The respondent’s audit, apparently advanced
as the justification for the withholding of the refund, has been in progress for
some time (approximately nine months) and may be of uncertain duration. In the
ordinary course, the proceeding might not be set
down for trial for some months,
at least, which would be likely to entail significant and perhaps irreparable
prejudice to the applicant.
The case for expedition was thus considerably
stronger than in the authorities referred to above. Further, while expedition
necessarily
has an impact on other cases in the list, in the present case, it
entailed no prejudice to the respondent. The Court had an available
date for an
expedited hearing, 19 August 2011, which would permit the respondent adequate
time to prepare its response.
I certify that the preceding twenty-seven (27)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Dodds-Streeton.
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Associate:
Dated: 13 July 2011
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