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Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited v Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCAFC 12 (10 February 2011)
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Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited v Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCAFC 12 (10 February 2011)
Last Updated: 11 February 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited v
Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCAFC 12
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Citation:
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Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited v Commissioner of Taxation [2011]
FCAFC 12
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Appeal from:
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Gerard Cassegrain and Co Pty Limited and Anor and Commissioner of Taxation
[2010] AATA 12
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Parties:
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GERARD CASSEGRAIN & CO PTY LIMITED (ACN 000
342 174) v COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION
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File number:
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NSD 117 of 2010
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Parties:
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CLOS FARMING ESTATES PTY LIMITED (ACN 003 435 256) v COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATION
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File number:
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NSD 118 of 2010
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Judges:
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DOWNES, EDMONDS, GREENWOOD JJ
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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CAPITAL GAINS TAX – lump sum payment
pursuant to deed – interpretation of deed – apportionment of sum
between payees - no error of law by
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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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 Applicants:
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Mr DF Jackson QC with Mr C Bevan
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Solicitor for the Applicants:
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Evangelos Patakas & Associates
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Mr ML Brabazon SC with Mr J Kay-Hoyle
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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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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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CLOS FARMING ESTATES PTY LIMITED (ACN
003 435 256)Applicant/Cross-Respondent
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AND:
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COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATIONRespondent/Cross-Applicant
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DOWNES, EDMONDS, GREENWOOD JJ
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Appeal
and cross appeal dismissed.
- No
order as to costs.
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.
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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 117 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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BETWEEN:
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GERARD CASSEGRAIN & CO PTY LIMITED (ACN 000 342
174) Applicant/Cross-Respondent
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AND:
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COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent/Cross-Applicant
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JUDGES:
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DOWNES, EDMONDS AND GREENWOOD JJ
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DATE OF ORDER:
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10 FEBRUARY 2011
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WHERE MADE:
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SYDNEY
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Appeal
and cross appeal dismissed.
- No
order as to costs.
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 117 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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BETWEEN:
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GERARD CASSEGRAIN & CO PTY LIMITED (ACN 000 342
174) Applicant/Cross-Respondent
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AND:
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COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent/Cross-Applicant
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JUDGES:
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DOWNES, EDMONDS, GREENWOOD JJ
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DATE:
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10 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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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 118 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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BETWEEN:
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CLOS FARMING ESTATES PTY LIMITED (ACN 003 435
256) Applicant/Cross-Respondent
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AND:
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COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent/Cross-Applicant
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JUDGES:
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DOWNES, EDMONDS, GREENWOOD JJ
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DATE:
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10 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- Gerard
Cassegrain and Co Pty Limited (GCC) made an arrangement with the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
to conduct research and
development activities in connection with soil improvement technology known as
“slotting”. The
activities were carried out by a joint venture
company called Cassiro Ltd which was owned by GCC and a CSIRO subsidiary called
Sirotech
Ltd.
- The
joint venture eventually failed as a result of differences between the partners.
The differences were resolved through a Deed
of Settlement and Release made on
27 September 1993 between Cassiro, CSIRO and Sirotech on the one hand and
GCC and its managing
director, Claude Cassegrain, on the other.
- Pursuant
to the Deed the CSIRO parties paid $9.5 million to, or at the direction of, the
Cassegrain parties. Clause 2.2 of
the Deed apportions the $9.5 million as
follows:
2.2 If the condition precedent referred to in Clause 2.1 is satisfied, the
payment of the sum referred to in Clause 2.1 will be
referable:
(a) as to the amount of $8,835,083 – to:
(i) the full and final discharge of any and all liabilities for which any party
to this Deed has or, but for the execution of this
Deed would have had, to pay
costs or damages to any other party to this Deed, whether pursuant to
Proceedings 3062, Proceedings 3095
or otherwise;
and
(ii) the benefit of the various covenants, releases, indemnities and warranties
entered into, given and made by the Cassegrain Parties
under the terms of this
Deed;
(b) as to the amount of $503,667 – to:
(i) the transfer of the GC&Co Technologies (other than GC&Co’s
right, title and interest in slotting machines) as
referred to in Clause 4.2;
and
(ii) procuring the transfer of the Cassiro Technologies (other than
Cassiro’s right, title and interest in slotting machines)
and of the
right, title and interest of Cassiro in certain contracts and the arrangements
as referred to in Clause 4.3;
(c) as to the amount of $155,000 – to:
(i) the transfer of the slotting machine referred to in Part 2 of Schedule F;
and
(ii) procuring the transfer of the slotting machines referred to in Part 1 of
Schedule F,
which transfers are pursuant to Clauses 4.2, 4.3 and 4.4;
and
(d) as to the amount of $6,250 – to the net difference between the value
of:
(i) the goods, wares and merchandise which are transferred to GC&Co as
referred to in Clauses 15.9(a)(ii) and 15.9(a)(iii)
(which are valued in
aggregate at $3,390); and
(ii) the goods, wares and merchandise which are transferred to CSIRO as
referred to in Clause 15.9(b)(i) (which are valued in aggregate
at
$9,640).
- This
case concerns the taxation treatment of the $8,835,083 part of the funds in the
hands of GCC and Clos Farming Estates Pty Limited.
Clos Farming is involved
because GCC transferred losses to it. However, the involvement of Clos does not
impact on the questions
which arise before us.
- The
precise question which arises is what part of the $8.8 million sum was
assessable income to GCC pursuant to the capital gains
tax provisions in Part
IIIA of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth). The Commissioner
contends that the whole is income of GCC, while the taxpayers contend that only
part ($5.25 million out of
the total $9.5 million) is income of GCC.
- The
delay in finalising this matter is partly due to the fact that the decision
before us is the second decision of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal; [2010]
AATA 12. The first decision ([2005] AATA 72; [2005] AATA 72; 58 ATR 1226; (2005) ATC 2038), by
SM Lindsey, was successfully appealed to the Federal Court of Australia ([2007]
FCA 415) where Lindgren J remitted the matter
to the Tribunal for fresh
determination. The new determination was, however, limited to apportionment of
the $8.8 million component.
On the further hearing, DP Block and
SM Frost determined that the income of GCC should be reduced by $1,598,328
and the
income of Clos Farming adjusted appropriately. The matter was remitted
to the Commissioner to issue amended assessments.
- The
Tribunal arrived at its conclusion by determining a total amount of $11,961,947
as the value of the items dealt with under cl. 2.2(a).
The ratio of this
amount to the $8.8 million was 0.738599. The Tribunal then determined
which of the sums making up the $11.9 million
were referrable to
GCC’s account and which to Claude Cassegrain’s account. They
concluded that the amount referrable
to GCC’s account was $9,797,947. To
this amount they applied the ratio they had determined. The resulting amount
was $7,236,753.
It followed, so the Tribunal concluded, that by including the
whole amount the Commissioner had overstated the income referrable
to GCC by
$1,598,328. This was the difference between the $8.8 million included in the
Commissioner’s assessment and the amount
of $7,236,753 which the Tribunal
found to be attributable to GCC.
- The
simple question which arises for us in this appeal “on a question of
law” (s 44(1) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975
(Cth)) is whether any question of law does arise and, if one or more do, whether
there was error in the way the Tribunal dealt with
it. There is an appeal by
GCC and a cross appeal by the Commissioner.
- The
Tribunal went about its task in the following way. First, it determined, in
principle, how the items it must consider should
be divided between
cl. 2.2(a) of the Deed and the other parts of cl. 2.2. In doing this
it rejected the taxpayers’
contention that cl. 2.2(a) did not
“have a role to fulfil for... GCC... But only the costs rights had any
real value for
GCC” (Applicants’ written submission in this appeal
at [47]). The Tribunal then identified the items falling within
cl. 2.2(a). It did this in accordance with a direction given by
Lindgren J, by which it was bound, in the dispository
paragraph of his
reasons, under the heading “Conclusion on the Appeal”. That
paragraph required the Tribunal to:
... acknowledge the distinction between the disposals of amounts consisting
of the releases and surrenders in respect of potential
causes of action on the
one hand, and those consisting of the giving of contractual undertakings on the
other hand; acknowledging
that each of GCC and Claude Cassegrain disposed of
assets of both classes; and determining how much of the sum of $8,835,083 may
reasonably be attributed to the disposals of the assets by
GCC.
- To
ensure that it was fully informed as to the parties’ respective positions
on this matter the Tribunal sought and received,
with the parties’ closing
written submissions, responses to questions seeking identification of releases
and surrenders on
the one hand and contractual undertakings on the other, said
to fall within cl. 2.2(a), with each item being assigned to GCC
or Claude
Cassegrain or both of them. Consistently with its determination of what fell
within cl. 2.2(a) the Tribunal then
identified the assets which it found to
be within cl. 2.2(a) and apportioned them between GCC and Claude Cassegrain
in accordance
with the approach described above.
- Responding
to the parties’ submissions and addressing the material before them the
Tribunal came to the following conclusions:
Releases and Surrenders
- Releases
and surrenders in respect of potential causes of action disposed of by GCC alone
at [41]:
In our view the only release or surrender in respect of potential causes of
action disposed of by GCC alone is... the release and
discharge of CSIRO,
Sinotech and their associates in respect of all the “Cassegrain
Claims” as concern GCC’s interest.
- Releases
and surrenders in respect of potential causes of action disposed of by Claude
Cassegrain alone at [42]:
We agree with the parties that the only release or surrender in respect of
potential causes of action disposed of by Claude Cassegrain
is... the release
and discharge of CSIRO, Sinotech and their Associates in respect of [claims]
referred to in [a letter written by
Claude
Cassegrain].
- Releases
and surrenders in respect of potential causes of action disposed of by GCC and
Claude Cassegrain as beneficial owners as
tenants in common at
[43]:
Neither party identifies any releases or surrenders filling the description.
We agree that there are none.
Contractual Undertakings
1. Contractual undertakings given by GCC alone at
[46]:
Ultimately, the GCC undertakings with which the Tribunal is concerned are those
that are perceived to be of value, and which are
included in the things provided
by the Cassegrain Parties in return for the undissected amount in clause 2.2(a).
The only relevant
such undertakings given by GCC alone are, in our view, the
following:
(a) Not to use, promote or develop (without the consent of CSIRO) any of the
Technologies or Sci-Scan except as permitted under
clause 6.2;
and
(b) To lodge the tax returns of Cassiro in relation to all periods up to the
date of the Deed, and to pay any tax payable.
2. Contractual undertakings given by Claude Cassegrain alone at [47]:
The only contractual undertaking given by Claude Cassegrain alone, which is of
value and which is included in the things provided
by the Cassegrain Parties in
return for the undissected amount in clause 2.2(a), is his undertaking not to
use, promote or develop
(without the consent of CSIRO) any of the Technologies
or Sci-Scan except as permitted under clause 6.2.
- Contractual
undertakings given by GCC and Claude Cassegrain as beneficial owners as joint
tenants at [48]:
Neither party identifies any undertakings fitting this description. We agree
that there are none.
- The
task faced by the Tribunal could never have been an exact one. Section 160ZD(4)
called for a reasonable attribution where consideration
related in part only to
the disposal of a particular asset. The exercise must involve “common
sense” (the taxpayers)
or “judgment and impression” (the
Commissioner). The parties both filed experts’ reports which the Tribunal
found
to be of only limited assistance. None of the experts proceeded in
accordance with the method which the Tribunal found to be preferable.
They
accordingly had to pick and choose from the opinions and assessments of the
experts and make use of the material in accordance
with the Tribunal’s
preferred method.
- The
Tribunal made the following assessments of value at
[65]:
(a) The surrender by GCC of the right to claim damages from the CSIRO Parties or
any of their Associates:
$7,274,000 (Exhibit R6, [4.1]), representing the
amount invested by GCC in the joint venture. This might be regarded as a
“cut
and run” figure, but in the circumstances it is reasonable to
fix upon this amount and no other. We find that GCC was under
significant
financial pressure to end the dispute with CSIRO without delay. In different
circumstances a higher amount may be justified,
but not
here.
(b) The surrender by GCC of the right to claim costs from the CSIRO Parties or
any of their Associates:
$2,503,449 (Exhibit A15,
[9.3.4]).
(c) The surrender by Claude Cassegrain of the right to claim damages from the
CSIRO Parties or any of their Associates:
Defamation - $500,000 (Federal Court judgment at [68],
supported by the opinion of Mr Rares SC, as his Honour then was; see
also
original Tribunal decision at [46]).
(d) The surrender by Claude Cassegrain of the right to claim costs from the
CSIRO Parties or any of their Associates:
$200,000 (Exhibit A15,
[9.3.4]).
(e) The undertaking by GCC to pay Cassiro’s tax:
$20,498 (Exhibit R6, [4.1] and AB1/214, Recital
H).
(f) The undertaking by Claude Cassegrain not to work in the area of any of the
Technologies (the restraint):
Lost income - $1,464,000 (Exhibit A14, Attachment
“A”, but only for the first five years – see also the table
accompanying
the Commissioner’s document “Calculation of after tax
income on Costello’s income projections at 1993 dollar values”).
Although that latter document is a convenient place to find
Mr Costello’s revised figures, we reject the Commissioner’s
contention that the quantification should be done on a post-tax, rather than
pre-tax, basis. All other figures feeding into the
mathematical calculation are
provided before tax, and this component should be quantified in the same way.
- Our
first impression was that the Tribunal carried out a well thought out and
satisfactory process to arrive at their result in difficult
circumstances, where
precision is not possible and minds may differ. It was not apparent to us that
their approach might be affected
with error of law. Whether their opinion of
the preferable method or their assessment of the facts would accord entirely
with ours
is not to the point. The Tribunal was exercising the administrative
power of the Commonwealth in an area of discretionary decision-making
and it is
not relevant that others might have acted differently. That is not to say that
we disagreed with the Tribunal on any matter.
It is simply that our opinion is
not relevant other than on a question of law.
- This
matter is not, however, to be determined by first impressions, but by reference
to the issues raised by the parties and we turn
to those matters.
- The
taxpayers’ first argument is that the Tribunal misconstrued
cl. 2.2(a) of the Deed. It should have proceeded on the
basis that the
items in cl. 2.2(b) specifically identified all that might have been
covered by the references to damages in
cl. 2.2(a) so that there was little
left for cl. 2.2(a). They relied upon the very wide definitions in the
deed of the
items specified in cl. 2.2(b) to seek to make this point good.
They also pointed to the claims made in legal proceedings which
were settled by
the Deed. The argument was put as a question of law because it involved the
construction of cl. 2.2 and, particularly,
the relationship between
sub-clauses (a) and (b).
- We
did not understand the taxpayers to be saying that, as a matter of construction,
nothing could answer the description of liability
for damages to GCC, but,
rather, that after cl. 2.2(b) had done its work, nothing was left. Stated
this way, we doubt that
any question of law is involved. However, we prefer not
to dispose of this aspect of the matter on that basis. We accept that items
specifically identified in cl. 2.2(b) should be assigned exclusively to
that provision. However, we see nothing in the Tribunal’s
decision which
offends against this. Clause 2.2(a) specifically identifies
“... liabilities... to pay... damages...
to any... party.”
That specifically includes GCC as a beneficiary. It is not surprising, contrary
to the submission of the
taxpayers, that there should be substantial damages in
this category. Specifically, cl. 2.2(a)(i) relates to liability to pay
damages whereas cl. 2.2(b) relates to transfers of technology.
Notwithstanding the width of the definitions in the Deed of
the technologies
identified in cl. 2.2(b), an action for damages will be likely to cover a
greater subject matter. The error
of law relied upon cannot be found in the
Tribunal’s analysis of the deed. It has to be inferred from the way they
went about
their task. We do not find any evidence of error of law from that
source. We accordingly find no error of law in the Tribunal’s
construction of cl. 2.2(a).
- We
do not think that the argument that the Tribunal did make an error of law is
assisted by its finding that it was “fanciful
to suggest that the legal
proceedings between GCC and CSIRO, which had been going on for so long at
considerable expense... might
be resolved without the payment of any
consideration by CSIRO to GCC except for a portion of the $503,667 dealt with in
clause 2.2(b)
of the Deed.” On the material before us, we are inclined to
agree with the Tribunal. We see no error of law in the Tribunal
so concluding.
It was urged upon us that the Tribunal must have wrongly understood that the
taxpayers were arguing that costs were
included in cl. 2.2(b) because of
the reference to “considerable expense”. We do not accept that.
The Tribunal
was, no doubt, merely measuring the significance of the damages
claim by the time and expense which had gone into prosecuting it.
So
understood, the sentence supports the Tribunal’s assessment.
- The
taxpayers asserted that the Tribunal also erred in law by assigning the whole of
the $8.8 million to cl. 2.2(a)(i) and assigning
nothing to
cl. 2.2(a)(ii). They asserted that in so doing they ignored
Lindgren J’s direction to “acknowledge
the distinction
between... releases and surrenders... and... contractual undertakings”.
However, the Tribunal carefully carried
out its task in accordance with
Lindgren J’s direction, even asking for specific submissions from the
parties as to what
fell into its components. We have set out above their
careful analysis of the issue and the conclusions they drew. Further, the
assets they identified for apportionment included assets in both categories.
Whether all the assets should be included was a matter
of assessment for the
Tribunal. They paid careful attention to Lindgren J’s direction,
while also recognising and addressing
the fact that Lindgren J’s
direction used expressions somewhat different to those used in the Deed (see
[24] and [39]
of the Tribunal’s Reasons). It is worth observing that the
Tribunal and the parties, in the absence of any appeal from
Lindgren J’s
decision, were bound by the decision and the directions
it contained. This ground must fail.
- The
next major criticism of the Tribunal’s reasons in the taxpayers’
appeal contains two elements. First, it is said
that the Tribunal left a group
of undertakings out of account when it undertook its task under s 160ZD(4).
Secondly, it erred
in the way it approached the valuation of undertakings
– in particular it did not address the importance of the central position
of Mr Cassegrain in attributing undertakings between Mr Cassegrain and
the company. Again, we think these matters really
go to questions of fact, not
law. However, we also find no error in the Tribunal’s treatment of the
matters. The Tribunal’s
findings were well within the discretion
available to it. The taxpayers, in their written submissions, undertook an
extensive analysis
of the provisions of Part IIIA of the 1936 Act,
particularly with reference to the distinction between “the disposal of
existing assets” and “the
assumption of liabilities [which] gave
rise to only notional disposals of assets ‘created’ by the
Act...”. The
taxpayers assert that the Tribunal failed to understand this
distinction and consequently were led into error when they came to the
valuation
exercise. Again, the taxpayers must rely on inference from what the Tribunal
did to find an error of law. Nothing the
Tribunal said disclosed this supposed
error in terms.
- The
Tribunal did address the issue of undertakings. The undertakings left out were
basically valued by the Tribunal at nil. We
see nothing untoward in the process
of selection adopted by the Tribunal. The Tribunal, as it was bound to do,
followed the directions
of Lindgren J in the way it went about its task.
Again, it cannot be criticised for this. Nor can it be criticised for its
process of valuing undertakings. The Tribunal was well aware of the position of
Mr Cassegrain. The fact that the Tribunal
may not have assessed his
position as the taxpayers contended for was not a matter of error.
- When
one analyses what the Tribunal did it appears that the Tribunal simply followed
the directions of Lindgren J. There is
no doubt that the Tribunal’s
task involved separately addressing the releases and surrenders and the
undertakings; the existing
assets and the deemed assets. Lindgren J said
it. The Tribunal said it. The Tribunal acted on it. Lindgren J was well
aware of the different nature of the treatment of the “assets”
because he said at [83]:
These contractual undertakings by GCC on the one hand and by Claude Cassegrain
on the other, as distinct from the releases, and,
unlike the potential claims
the subject of the releases, did not exist before the provisions of the Deed
became binding on the parties
(upon CSIRO’s payment of the Settlement Sum
of $9.5 million). Once the Deed’s provisions became binding on them, each
of GCC and Claude Cassegrain was deemed to have disposed of the choses in action
from its or his said contractual undertakings, and
the CSIRO Parties to have
acquired them, at that time: see ss 160M(6), (6A).
The Tribunal would have been aware of this, if only because they clearly read
Lindgren J’s reasons carefully. Lindgren J
concluded at
[134]:
The Tribunal was required to identify all of the disposals of assets
provided for in the Deed, and to determine how much the sum of $8,835,083 might
be reasonably attributed
to them by GCC (and, it would follow, by the process of
arithmetical subtraction, those disposed of by Claude
Cassegrain).
Lindgren J did not suggest any special method of valuation was required
for the notional assets. The actual error asserted appears
to be that the
assets represented by contractual undertakings needed to be valued differently,
taking into account the extent to
which they might be enforceable. The Tribunal
did address the assets and did so, in part, by addressing whether they were of
value.
This consideration must have addressed enforceability and the special
position of Mr Cassegrain. We are not prepared, in any
event, to infer
that there was such an error to lead to the inference that there was an error of
law. We accordingly do not consider
that the analysis of the difference between
existing and created assets shows any error of law. In any event we consider
that the
appropriate course for the Tribunal was to adopt the course it did in
carrying out Lindgren J’s directions in a careful
manner which
nevertheless involved an examination of principle to ensure that blindly
following the directions did not itself lead
to error.
- Finally,
it is said that the Tribunal adopted a valuation of the right to claim damages
of $7.27 million based on evidence of an
expert witness whose methodology had
been rejected by the Tribunal. The Tribunal had evidence from three experts
none of which was
completely satisfactory. Yet it was burdened with the task of
undertaking the identification, valuation and attribution of the relevant
assets
with the material it had. It is not surprising that it had to draw on evidence
assessed pursuant to a method it did not find
satisfactory. If the valuation
depended on material which was less than perfect for the task, then it only
reflected problems with
the material before it. It is important not to lose
sight of the fact that the exercise required by s 160ZD(4) will involve
a
degree of estimation and inference at the best of times. This case is at the
higher end of that scale. We note that Lindgren J
made the following
observation at [83]:
What I have just said does not signify that a result that attributed the
greater, perhaps by far the greater, part of the sum of
$8,835,083 to the
particular assets disposed of by GCC could not be supported as reasonable.
- The
cross appeal by the Commissioner suffers from similar problems to the appeal in
that it seeks to elevate errors mostly rooted
in facts to errors of law in a
context in which the task at hand is simply not capable of being carried out
with exactitude.
- The
Commissioner criticises the Tribunal’s valuation of the defamation claim
of Mr Cassegrain. The criticism appears
mainly to be a criticism of the
Tribunal’s reasons. They are said to be inadequate. In a jurisdiction
where appellable error
is confined to error of law, resort to an assertion that
the reasons given are inadequate is sometimes a refuge to enable error of
law to
be asserted. The task assigned by s 160ZD(4) inevitably involves judgment
in circumstances where precision is impossible.
There must be few areas of
valuation of rights that are more attended by uncertainty than the valuation of
a claim for defamation.
Detailed reasons leading to a certain figure are more
likely to be unconvincing than a broad assessment such as the Tribunal made
here. We do not think it is necessary to refer to the written and oral evidence
which formed the basis of the Tribunal’s finding.
We do think it amply
justified the Tribunal’s finding and we do think the Tribunal gave
adequate reasons in the context of
the matters it was addressing. We will
observe that the Tribunal’s finding does not appear out of step with
Lindgren J’s
decision in the matter. We also note that the evidence
shows that a second jury returned a verdict of $1.3 million for the plaintiff
Carson (see Carson v John Fairfax and Sons Ltd (1993) 178 CLR 45) who was
the subject of consideration in the expert evidence.
- Next,
the Tribunal is criticised for not expressly addressing and rejecting an
argument that Mr Cassegrain’s undertaking
should not be valued on the
basis that Mr Cassegrain might have had a lucrative career in the absence
of the undertaking. A
sub-part of the argument relied upon the asserted failure
of the Tribunal to address limitations on Mr Cassegrain’s right
to
compete in the absence of the undertakings. In the context of the issues in
this case, as we have described them, we see no error
or inadequacy in the
Tribunal’s reasoning. The Tribunal is required to give its reasons, not
to negative every proposition
put to it, whether accepted or rejected. We think
the Tribunal adequately carried out its task.
- The
final error asserted by the Commissioner is the Tribunal’s omission, when
quantifying the value of restraint imposed upon
Mr Cassegrain not to work
in the area of the various technologies included in the joint venture, to deduct
the amount Mr Cassegrain
would earn. The Tribunal was quite at liberty to
give this no value, which is how it must have approached the matter.
Mr Cassegrain
may not have undertaken other or alternative work or he might
have done it in a way which had no effect on employment he might have
undertaken
which was in addition to employment covered by the restraint.
- The
appeal and cross-appeal must both be dismissed. Rather than dismissing the
appeal and cross-appeal with costs we think that
the appropriate course is to
make no order as to costs.
I certify that the preceding twenty-eight (28)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justices Downes, Edmonds, Greenwood.
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Associate:
Dated: 10 February 2011
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