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High Court of Australia |
LOGAN DOWNS PTY. LTD. v. QUEENSLAND [1977] HCA 3; (1977) 137 CLR 59
Constitutional Law (Cth)
High Court of Australia
Barwick C.J.(1), Gibbs(2), Stephen(3), Mason(4), Jacobs(5) and Murphy(6) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Constitutional Law (Cth) - Duties of excise - Exclusive power of Commonwealth Parliament - Annual levy on owners of livestock - Validity - Whether tax on ownership or on a step in production - Livestock used for production - The Constitution (63 & 64 Vict. c. 90 - Stock Act, 1915 (Q.), as amended, s. 7.
HEARING
Brisbane, 1976, May 31.DECISION
1977, February 1.
GIBBS J. The present proceedings are brought by the plaintiff, a grazing
company, to challenge the validity of s. 7 of the Stock Act, 1915 (Q.), as
amended, and of certain assessments made and levied thereunder in respect of
certain horses, cattle, sheep and swine owned
by the plaintiff. In each case
the assessment was made at specified rates per head of such stock. The
contention of the plaintiff
is that s. 7 attempts to impose a duty of excise
contrary to s. 90 of the Constitution. In the course of argument before us
counsel for the plaintiff intimated that he did not press the submission that
the assessments
were invalid in so far as they were made in respect of the
horses. (at p61)
2. The words of the first paragraph of s. 7 are as follows:
"The Minister may in respect of each year (and whetherLater paragraphs of the section provide that the amount of any assessment is a debt due to the Crown and recoverable accordingly and that in addition failure to pay the assessment shall be an offence. (at p61)
before or after the commencement of the year in question)
make and levy an assessment, at rates to be fixed by him, on
each and every owner of stock and, subject as hereinafter
provided, each and every such owner shall in each year pay,
in respect of stock owned by him, that assessment."
3. Until 19th April 1973 s. 7 contained a second paragraph which provided
that the rates fixed by the Minister should not exceed the scale set out in
the section,
by which a specified rate per head was fixed respectively in
respect of cattle, horses, cattle and horses together, sheep and swine.
This
paragraph was repealed by the Stock Act and Other Acts Amendment Act, 1973 and
the discretion of the Minister to fix the rate
at which an assessment is made
appears now
to be quite unfettered. However, this remarkable abdication by the
Legislature of its
power to control the imposition of taxation
does not assist
the present challenge. (at p61)
4. The second paragraph of s. 7 was followed by a proviso, which remains in
the section notwithstanding the repeal of the paragraph
itself. This provides
(inter alia) that a person who owns both cattle and horses shall be assessed
by aggregating their numbers,
and that an assessment shall not be payable by
an owner in respect of cattle, or horses, or cattle and horses, or sheep if
the
number thereof owned by him is less than eleven. It further fixes (in
small lump sums) the minimum assessments to be payable respectively
in respect
of eleven or more sheep, or cattle, or horses, or cattle and horses, or in
respect of any swine, owned by one owner.
(at p62)
5. The assessment levied under s. 7 is to be paid into a fund at the Treasury
called the "Stock Fund": s. 6 (5), (1) . The Fund
may be supplemented by
grants made to it out of Consolidated Revenue at a rate not exceeding two
dollars for every dollar paid
into the Fund during the twelve months preceding
the grant in respect of assessments levied and paid under the Act: s. 6 (4) .
The Act provides that the Stock Fund shall (subject to an immaterial
exception) "be applied to the payment of all expenses incurred
by the Governor
in Council or the Minister in the execution of this Act as well as to the
provision of such husbandry services
to the cattle, sheep, and pig industries
and to such other animal industries as the Minister may from time to time
determine":
s. 6 (1). The word "stock" is declared by s. 3 to have the
following meaning unless the context otherwise indicates:
"'Stock' includes horses, cattle, sheep, swine, camels, dogs,However, it was made clear by the paragraph since repealed, and is still true, that s. 7 applies, not to all stock as defined in s. 3, but only to cattle, horses, sheep and swine. Section 5A, which provides for the making of stock returns which s. 7 requires to be used for the making of assessments under that section, uses "stock" in the same limited sense. However, having regard to the context of s. 6 it does not seem possible, as a matter of construction, to limit the words "animal industries" to industries concerned with the stock to which s. 7 refers. The only such stock not expressly mentioned in s. 6 are horses. "Animal" is defined in s. 3 to include a bird, and it would appear that the Stock Fund might be applied to the provision of husbandry services to animal industries other than those concerned with cattle, sheep, swine and horses - for example, to the poultry industry. However, that question is not crucial and I need not finally determine it. It is clear that the expenses incurred in the execution of the Act may have no relation whatever to the stock in respect of which an assessment may be made under s. 7. For example, the expenses may relate to the administration of the provisions regarding boarding kennels (s.26B) or pet shops (s. 26D), which may be of no concern whatever to an owner of sheep or cattle. Similarly, the husbandry services provided out of the Fund may not in fact benefit in any way a particular owner of stock who pays the levy. (at p63)
cats, poultry and goats, and any other animals whatsoever
which the Governor in Council, by Order in Council, from
time to time declares to be stock for the purposes of this Act."
6. The word "owner" is given an extended meaning by the definitions contained
in s. 3 and s. 5A, although the former is wider
in scope than the latter. It
is unnecessary to consider the effect of these definitions in any detail. It
is enough to say that
if the tax is imposed on the agent of or superintendent
or manager for the owner, or upon any person in charge of stock, as well
as
upon the true owner, all that is said hereafter in relation to the position of
an owner in the true sense is equally applicable
to the other persons liable
to the tax. (at p63)
7. There is no doubt that s. 7 imposes a tax. "It is a compulsory exaction of
money by a public authority for public purposes,
enforceable by law, and is
not a payment for services rendered": Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board
(Vict.) [1938] HCA 38; (1938)
60 CLR 263,
at p 276 , cited in Brown's Transport Pty. Ltd. v.
Kropp [1958] HCA 49; (1958) 100 CLR 117, at p 129 . The amount levied
does not purport to be,
and is not in fact, a payment for services rendered to
the person required to
pay it. The Stock Fund is
no doubt applied for purposes
which are beneficial
to farmers and graziers generally,
but no particular service or benefit need
be rendered to any owner of stock
who is required to pay an assessment, and
if, by coincidence,
the person liable to pay an assessment
has been rendered
some service
under the Act, the assessment is not payable because that
service
has been performed, and bears
no necessary relation to the expenditure
incurred in providing that service. In this respect
the case is similar to
Parton v. Milk
Board (Vict.) [1949] HCA 67; (1949) 80 CLR 229, esp
at pp 258-259 and Swift
Australian Co. (Pty.) Ltd. v. Boyd Parkinson [1962]
HCA 41; (1962) 108 CLR 189, esp at pp
200-201 . On the other hand
Harper v. Victoria [1966] HCA 26; (1966) 114 CLR 361 , where
the
fee was regarded as a charge for particular services rendered to the person
required
to pay it,
is distinguishable from the
present case. (at p63)
8. The impost is not only a tax; it is in my opinion a tax on goods, because
the person taxed is charged by reason of, and by
reference to, the fact that
he is the owner of the stock. But that is not enough to make it an excise. Not
every tax on goods is
an excise. For example, a tax on the consumption of
goods is not an excise: Dickenson's Arcade Pty. Ltd. v. Tasmania (1974) 130
CLR 177 . In Bolton v. Madsen [1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 , in the joint judgment of
the Court, it was said (1963) 110 CLR,
at p 271 : "It
is now established that
for
constitutional purposes duties of excise are taxes directly related to
goods imposed
at some step in
their production or distribution
before they
reach the hands of consumers." Their Honours went on to say that "it
is the
criterion
of liability that determines
whether or not a tax is a duty of
excise" (1963) 110 CLR, at p 271 . They adopted
the formulation which
Kitto J.
had made in Dennis
Hotels Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria [1960] HCA 10; (1960) 104 CLR 529, at p 559 ,
namely
that "a tax is not a duty of excise
unless the criterion of liability
is the taking of a
step in a process of bringing goods into
existence or to a
consumable state,
or passing them down the line which reaches from the
earliest stage in production to the point
of receipt by the consumer" (1963)
110 CLR, at p 273 . Since that decision conflicting
opinions have been
expressed as to whether
the criterion of liability under
the statue imposing
the tax, or the practical effect
of the legislation, is determinative of the
question whether the tax is a
duty of excise. I accept the former view,
although as
I endeavoured to explain in Dickenson's Arcade
Pty. Ltd. v.
Tasmania (1974)
130 CLR, at pp 223-224 that does not mean that the
name given
to the tax by the taxing statute, or
the form of the provisions of
that
statue, will be decisive; it is still necessary
to determine the legal effect
of those provisions
according to their proper
construction. Although, as will
appear, this view would
in my opinion conclude the present case in favour
of
the validity of the
statue, it is not necessary to decide the matter on that
ground or to engage in further discussion of the
importance of the criterion
of liability. The difference of opinion that exists
as to the importance of
the criterion of liability
has not extended to the
other statements made in
Bolton v. Madsen [1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 . The description there given
of the
nature of an excise has since
been regarded as authoritative. It would
be
superfluous to multiply authority on this point,
since in Dickenson's Arcade
Pty. Ltd.
v. Tasmania (1974) 130 CLR, at pp 223-224
the majority of the
members of the Court have
so recently treated Bolton v. Madsen as
correctly
explaining the nature of duties
of excise: particularly (1974) 130 CLR, at pp
185, 209, 213, 223, 229-230, 235 and also
(1974) 130 CLR, at p 238 . (at
p64)
9. The passages from the judgment in Bolton v. Madsen [1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264
that have been so approved establish
that to be an excise
the tax must be
imposed at some step in the production
or distribution of goods. The step may
be the production
or manufacture
itself, or it may be something done to make
goods already
in existence fit for sale or consumption, or it may be
the sale
of the
goods or their distribution by other means. But if what is
taxed is not
some step in the process which begins with
the production
of the goods and
ends with their receipt by the consumer
it will not be an excise. If the tax
is imposed by reason
of, or by reference
to, the fact that the taxpayer is the
"producer,
manufacturer, processer, seller or purchaser" of goods the
duty may
be one of
excise (see Brown's Transport Pty. Ltd. v. Kropp (1958)
100 CLR, at
p 129 ). However, mere ownership cannot
properly be described
as the taking of
any step in the production or distribution
of goods, and in the many cases in
which s. 90 of the Constitution has been discussed it has never been held that
a tax imposed on the ownership of goods without more is a duty of excise. (at
p65)
10. It would, I think, be obvious enough that a tax on the ownership of goods
not held for commercial purposes would not be a
duty of excise. For example, a
tax on the domestic furniture owned by the taxpayer would not answer that
description, and if the
tax in Dickenson's Arcade Pty. Ltd. v. Tasmania (1974)
[1974] HCA 9; 130 CLR 177 had been imposed upon the ownership of tobacco
by the consumer
it
would still not have been an excise. Similarly a
tax on the gift of chattels
would not be an excise. Further,
in my opinion
a tax on the ownership of goods
used for the purpose
of the production of articles of commerce, but not
themselves
intended to
be passed on to consumers, would not be an excise. For
example, a tax on plant or tools of trade owned by manufacturers
or their
employees, or on agricultural implements owned by farmers,
would not be an
excise. Such taxes would not affect the goods
taxed
"as the subjects of
manufacture or production or as articles
of commerce", to use the words of
Dixon J. in Matthews v. Chicory
Marketing Board (Vict.) (1938) 60 CLR, at p
304 . Equally, in
my opinion, a tax on the ownership of goods which are
intended to
be sold will not, at least as a general rule, be an excise. If
on
the proper construction of the statue the tax is imposed by reference
to the
ownership and not by reference to any sale or intended
sale or distribution of
the goods, it cannot be said that the tax
is attracted by the taking of any
step to bring the goods into
existence or to move them along the line from
production to consumption,
and such a tax would affect the goods, not as the
subjects
of manufacture or production or as articles of commerce, but simply
as the subjects of ownership. (at p65)
11. It is now necessary to return to consider the nature of the tax imposed
by s. 7 of the Act. A tax is imposed by reference
to the number of stock owned
at 1st January in each year; s. 7 provides that the returns made under s. 5A
shall be used as a basis
for the assessment, and s. 5A (2) requires the return
to show stock kept or depastured on that date. It will thus be seen that a
particular head of stock may be taxed several times (since if a beast is held
for a number of years it will be taxed each year)
or not at all (as when it is
bought after 1st January in one year and sold before 1st January in the next).
Further, the tax is
imposed without any reference to the purpose for which the
stock are kept. The plaintiff's horses were in fact stock horses, but
so far
as the Act is concerned that is irrelevant. The tax is borne by cattle or
swine which are held for the purpose of breeding
as well as by those which are
held to be fattened and prepared for sale. Sheep kept for growing wool bear
the tax equally with
those kept to produce meat. (at p66)
12. A tax on cattle kept for breeding purposes, or on sheep kept for
wool-growing, is not in my opinion an excise. The cattle
or the sheep are not
in themselves at that stage articles of commerce; they are used to produce
what may become articles of commerce
- progeny or wool. The animals themselves
are no more articles of commerce than the milking machine or woolpress owned
and used
by the farmer or grazier. It is true that the cattle or sheep may
become unsuitable for breeding or woolgrowing and may then be
sold - just as
machines may become obsolete and traded in - and they may at that time become
articles of commerce. However, they
have not that character when they are
taxed. Moreover, it is not, in my opinion, possible to say that the tax on the
ownership
of the cattle or sheep is in substance a tax on the progeny or on
the wool. Some reliance in the present case was placed on the
decision in
Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.) [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 . In that case
it was thought possible
by the majority
of the Court to hold that a levy on
producers for every
half-acre of land planted with chicory was a levy on the
production of
chicory. It must, however, be remembered that the legislation
there considered authorized a levy to be made only
on producers and
the levy
in fact was expressed to be on producers (1938) 60
CLR, at pp 282, 284, 288 .
Dixon J. said (1938) 60
CLR, at p 303 :
"The levy made by the Chicory Marketing Board is not
ascertained by direct reference to the quantity or value of the
chicory produced. It is imposed upon a producer, and
presumably under the definition of that word he must
actually obtain some chicory from the crop he has sown
before he satisfies that description. But the basis of his
assessment is not what he garners but what he plants. By
calculating the levy upon the number of half acres which the
producer plants with chicory the board makes it at least
theoretically possible that owing to a failure of his crop the
levy upon him has little or no relation to his actual
production of chicory. But the basis adopted for the levy has
a natural, although not a necessary, relation to the quantity
of the commodity produced." (at p.67)
13. He concluded that the tax was a tax upon production and that it was not
prevented from being a duty of excise because the
basis of assessment was not
strictly that of quantity or value (1938) 60 CLR, at pp 303-304 . That case is
in my opinion distinguishable
from the present where the tax is not imposed on
producers; it falls upon an owner whether or not he intends to use his stock
for
the purpose of production and whether or not anything is actually
produced. And a tax imposed, for example, on all sheep owned has
no natural
relation to the quantity of wool produced, when some of the sheep - perhaps
most or all of them - are kept for purposes
other than the production of wool.
(at p67)
14. Those animals which are kept for the purposes of sale are of course
articles of commerce. However, the tax does not affect
them in that capacity.
They are taxed because they exist, not because any step is taken in their
production or distribution. (at
p67)
15. If the criterion of liability under the Act is decisive it is clear that
the tax is not an excise, for the Act pays not the
slightest regard to the
question whether any step is taken by the taxpayer to bring into existence or
into a consumable state the
stock itself or its products or progeny, or to
pass the stock or its products or progeny down the line in the direction of
consumption.
But even if, contrary to my opinion, regard may be had to the
substantial or practical effect of the legislation, it cannot properly
be said
that the Act has the effect of imposing a tax at some point in the production
or distribution of the stock. The answer
to the contention that the tax is not
an excise is not simply that the Act casts the burden of the imposition on the
owners of
all stock whether the animals are articles of commerce or not, but
that the tax, in its nature and, if that matters, in its practical
effect, is
not a tax on any step taken in the process that begins with the production of
the stock and ends with its sale to the
consumer. (at p67)
16. It would, in my respectful opinion, be going beyond the settled
conception of an excise, and beyond any decision so far given,
to hold that a
tax on the ownership of stock, irrespective of the purpose for which it is
owned or kept, is an excise. The limitation
on the power of the States which
is effected by s. 90 does not extend to legislation of the kind now in
question. (at p67)
17. For these reasons I regard s. 7 of the Act, and the assessments made
under it, as valid. I would allow the demurrer. (at p68)
STEPHEN J. For many years Queensland legislation, the Stock Acts, has
required the owner or person in charge of livestock to furnish
an annual
return of stock and has authorized the making of assessments in respect of
such stock. The proceeds go to a Fund, since
1953 called the Stock Fund, and
are applied in defraying the costs of execution of the legislation and in the
provision of animal
husbandry services. (at p68)
2. The power to make assessments is, by s. 7 of the Act, conferred upon a
designated Minister of the Crown; he may annually "make
and levy an
assessment, at rates to be fixed by him, on each and every owner of stock",
who is to pay that assessment "in respect
of stock owned by him" but subject
to certain qualifications concerned with the fixing of minimum and maximum
rates and of differing
rates for various kinds of stock.
"Stock" is defined in s. 5A (i) of the Acts to mean "any one or more horses,
cattle, sheep, or swine, and includes foals, calves,
lambs and pigs". Although
this sub-section begins with the words "In this section", thereby seeming
narrowly to confine the application
of the definition, the terms of s. 7,
which confers the power of assessment, are, I think, such as to require
"stock", where there
used, to be understood in this defined sense rather than
in the much wider sense given to "stock" by s. 3 of the Acts, where it
is
generally defined as extending to camels and goats and any other animals
declared to be stock, dogs and cats having been so
declared for many years.
(at p68)
3. The plaintiff, a Queensland grazing company, was, in each of the years
1972, 1973 and 1974, assessed under the Acts in respect
of stock owned by it.
It refused to pay the amounts so assessed and contends that the assessments
involve the imposition of duties
of excise contrary to s. 90 of the
Constitution and are accordingly unlawful, the legislation being to that
extent ultra vires. (at p68)
4. The amounts which have been assesed are neither charges for services
rendered or to be rendered nor are they in the nature
of licence fees exacted
as the price of being permitted to engage in a particular business. They are
exactions having the character
of a tax and they are levied upon the plaintiff
as the owner of stock, being computed by reference to the number and type of
stock
which it owns. They are thus directly related to the plaintiff's stock
and are in this sense a tax upon those stock. All this suggests,
consistently
with the authorities in this Court, that the amounts are indeed duties of
excise, as the plaintiff contends. (at p68)
5. However, it is not every tax upon goods which will be an excise. It is not
simply the taxing of goods that distinguishes the
incidence of an excise duty
from that of other taxes; it is rather the taxing of goods during the process
by which they are first
brought into existence and then ultimately pass to the
consumer or user. A tax upon the ownership of goods after that process is
at
an end, the goods having come to the hands of the ultimate user, is no duty of
excise. Once out of the stream of production
and distribution, goods cease to
be apt subject-matter for duties of excise and it is this that accounts for
the character of an
excise as an indirect tax; being imposed upon goods in the
particular way it is, its incidence will tend to be passed on in the
price of
the goods, as they flow along the stream of production and distribution to the
end user. But a tax upon goods which have
reached the hands of the ultimate
consumer will, on the contrary, impose a quite direct form of taxation upon
their owner. The
goods will not pass out of his hands, bearing with them, as a
component of their price, the tax imposed upon them; instead the tax
will lie
where it falls, upon the owner. It will thus lack the quality of a duty of
excise and be a direct tax upon the owner,
the goods only providing the means
of identifying the person to be taxed. (at p69)
6. What then of the livestock in the present case? Are they goods in the
stream of production and distribution so that to tax
them is to impose an
excise, or have they reached the hands of the ultimate consumer so as no
longer to be capable of being the
subject of a duty of excise? Or, again, are
they such as never to become articles of commerce capable of being the
subject-matter
of duties of excise? Livestock, animals domesticated by man and
serving his ends, are not easily fitted into this concept of the
stream of
production and distribution; it is not easy, in relation to them, to answer
the question that naturally arises when the
existence of a duty of excise is
in issue, "What is it which is being taxed, what is the subject of the
excise?". Livestock have
a variety of uses for man. Their flesh and that of
their progeny provide food and in that respect the beasts themselves while
living
may be regarded as articles of commerce in the course of production,
their parts ultimately becoming meat, leather and the like.
Again some
livestock perform work as beasts of burden, as do horses and oxen. Others
produce distinct articles of commerce, such
as milk and wool. Thus when stock,
as here defined, are taxed it cannot be said, without knowing much more of
individual cases,
what, if any, goods it is which, in the stream of production
and distribution, are being subjected to a duty of excise. (at p69)
7. The facts of the present case illustrate the point: during the relevant
years the plaintiff owned large numbers of sheep and
cattle, some pigs and
some stock horses; the cattle were kept for fattening and sale for meat, or
for breeding and only ultimately
for sale for meat; the pigs for fattening for
sale, some sows being used for breeding purposes and only ultimately being
sold for
meat; the sheep were kept for their wool and sooner or later for sale
for meat. The stock horses were for use in working the plaintiff's
properties.
(at p70)
8. The present exaction cannot be an excise so far as it relates to the
plaintiff's stock horses; they are in no sense themselves
goods in the stream
of production and distribution; since they do not appear to be used for
breeding purposes it cannot be argued
that to tax them is to tax, as articles
of commerce, their progeny in the course of production. (at p70)
9. Of the remaining stock all will ultimately be converted into beef, pork,
mutton and all the products of the tannery and fellmongery;
in that sense they
are themselves articles of commerce in the stream of production. The sheep
also occupy another and rather different
position, they are themselves
productive units, producing wool which is an article of commerce; were any of
the plaintiff's cattle
dairy cows, which they are not, the same could no doubt
be said of their milk. To the extent that some of the stock is used for
breeding purposes, the progeny being articles of commerce, such stock may
again be seen as productive units. (at p70)
10. To tax an owner of livestock by reference to his beasts when he grows
them so that he may sell them for their meat and the
other products of their
carcasses, the incidence of the tax being as provided by the present Acts, is
in my view to impose a duty
of excise. The tax has at least a "natural",
although not perhaps always a "necessary", relation to the quantity of the
commodities
produced and is upon an essential step in production (Matthews v.
Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.) [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR
263, at p 303 ).
It directly
affects those commodities while they are in the line which reaches from the
earliest
stage in production
to the point
of receipt by the consumer (Dennis
Hotels Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria, per Kitto J. [1960] HCA 10; (1960) 104 CLR 529, at
p 559 ). It
is a tax directly
related to those commodities and imposed at some step in
their production
before reaching the hands
of consumers (Bolton v. Madsen
[1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264, at p 271 ). (at p70)
11. The fact that, while the plaintiff's sheep fall within the scope of the
tax, many of them are raised primarily for their wool
and not for meat
production, so that they play the role of producers of a commodity rather than
representing a commodity itself
in the course of production, does not, in my
view, prevent the present tax from being, in respect of them, a duty of
excise. If
the sheep's quite secondary role as ultimately yielding meat be
disregarded, a tax directly related to them will nevertheless, in
my view,
answer the description of an excise duty upon their wool. Likewise in the case
of some of the plaintiff's cattle and pigs;
their primary use is for the
purpose of breeding progeny. Once again I see no reason to distinguish the tax
imposed in respect
of such animals from that applicable to those raised
primarily for their meat. In all cases the tax is directly related to the
particular animal and, hence, to the particular commodity, be it meat, wool or
progeny, for the production of which that animal
is being used. (at p71)
12. It is, of course, a peculiarity of the present case that a reading of the
Acts will not disclose upon what articles of commerce,
whether upon meat,
wool, milk, etc., the duty of excise is intended to fall; moreover the
operation of the Acts will not produce
any uniform rate of duty in respect of
any particular commodity, indeed quite the contrary. Thus in a particular year
of assessment
one ewe may lamb, be shorn and then be sold off-shears for its
mutton and will attract the same amount of duty as another ewe which
is merely
shorn and is retained in the flock for the next season. But this eccentricity
of incidence is in itself no sufficient
reason for denying to the tax its
character of an excise. In Western Australia v. Chamberlain Industries Pty.
Ltd. [1970] HCA
5; (1970) 121 CLR
1 legislation which, as Walsh J. pointed out in his
dissenting judgment (1970) 121 CLR, at p 40 , resulted in
very
marked absence
of uniformity in the incidence of duty was nevertheless held by a majority of
this Court to impose duties of
excise.
In Anderson's
Pty. Ltd v. Victoria
[1964] HCA 77; (1964) 111 CLR 353, at p 367 the Chief Justice observed that the fact
that
the duty there in question was
not imposed generally
upon some definable
category or class of goods was not in itself a reason
for denying that the
duty was an
excise. (at p71)
13. This Court's decision in the Chamberlain Industries Case (1970) 121 CLR,
at p 40 also disposes of any suggestion that because
the tax imposed by the
legislation will not in every instance be a duty of excise, for example in the
case of the plaintiff's stock
horses, that should lead to the conclusion that
it is not in any instance void as imposing a duty of excise: see esp. per
Barwick
C.J. (1970) 121 CLR, at p 13 . (at p71)
14. It is for these reasons that I conclude that the demurrer should be
overruled. I would make declarations as sought in par.
2 of the plaintiff's
statement of claim; these declare the assessments made on the plaintiff,
insofar as made in respect of its
cattle, sheep and swine, to be the
imposition of duties of excise, declare s. 7 of the Acts to be, to the like
extent, beyond power, and declare as to each of the three annual assessments
that the plaintiff
is not obliged to pay them insofar as made in respect of
those three categories of stock. (at p72)
MASON J. By s. 7 of the Stocks Acts, 1915 to 1965 (Q.), before they were
amended by the Stock Act and Other Acts Amendment Act, 1973, the Minister
administering the Act was empowered, in respect of each year, to "make and
levy
an assessment, at rates to be fixed by him, on
each and every owner of
stock and, subject as hereinafter provided, each and every
such owner shall in
each year pay, in respect
of stock owned by him, that assessment". The section
then went on in its second paragraph
to provide:
"The rates as fixed by the Minister of an assessment as
aforesaid shall not exceed the following scale, that is to
say;
Description of Stock Rate
(i) Cattle Subject to paragraph (b2) of
(ii) Horses the proviso hereto, a rate
(iii) Cattle and horses of not more than ten cents
together on every head
(iv) Sheep Subject to paragraph (b1) of
the proviso hereto, a rate
of not more than two and one
half cents on every head
(v) Swine Subject to paragraph (b3) of
the proviso hereto, a rate
of not more than two and one
half cents on every head
..." (at p72)
2. By the 1973 amendment the Minister for Primary Industries was designated
as the Minister charged with the administration of
the Act. By the same
amendment the second paragraph of s. 7, which prescribed that the rates as
fixed by the Minister should not
exceed the scale set out above, was repealed.
Certain amendments were made to the proviso in s. 7 which now appears at the
end
of the first paragraph in the section. As amended the proviso reads:
"Provided that -
(a) In every case where one and the same owner owns
both cattle and horses an assessment as aforesaid
shall be deemed to be made and levied on that owner
in respect of those horses and cattle together and the
amount of the assessment payable in respect of those
stock by that owner shall be ascertained by
aggregating the respective numbers of cattle and
horses;
(b) An assessment as aforesaid shall not be payable by an
owner in respect of cattle, or horses, or cattle and
horses, or sheep, if the number thereof owned by him
is less then eleven;
(b1) The minimum assessment payable in respect of eleven
or more sheep owned by any owner shall be $2.
(b2) The minimum assessment payable in respect of eleven
or more cattle, or horses, or cattle and horses owned by
any owner shall be $4.
(b3) The minimum assessment payable in respect of swine
owned by any owner shall be $2.
(c) The Governor in Council may by Order in Council
reduce the rates of or wholly remit any assessment as
aforesaid." (at p.73)
3. The statutory definition of "stock" contained in s. 5A, which is the
relevant definition for present purposes, is in the following
terms:
"'Stock' - means any one or more horses, cattle, sheep, or
swine, and includes foals, calves, lambs, and pigs." (at p.73)
4. Section 5A also defines "owner of stock" in the following terms:
"'Owner of stock' - means the owner, whether jointly or
severally, of stock or the authorised agent of or the
superintendent or manager for the owner of stock or the
person in charge of stock." (at p73)
5. Section 6 makes provision for the establishment of the "Stock
Fund" in the following terms:
"Fund. (1) There shall be established at the Treasury a
fund to be called the 'Stock Fund' which, subject to the
provisions of subsection three of section 6A of this Act, shall
be applied to the payment of all expenses incurred by the
Governor in Council or the Minister in the execution of this
Act as well as to the provision of such husbandry services to
the cattle, sheep, and pig industries and to such other animal
industries as the Minister may from time to time determine.
(2), (3) (Repealed.)
(4) Endowment. The Governor in Council may, in any
year in which he deems it necessary and proper so to do,
make a grant in aid of the Stock Fund out of Consolidated
Revenue (which is hereby appropriated for the purpose) in
such sum as the Governor in Council may approve.
Any such grant when so made shall be at a rate not
exceeding 2 pounds for every $1 paid into the Fund during the
twelve months preceding such grant in respect of
assessments levied and paid under this Act.
(5) All assessments levied and other moneys received and
all penalties recovered under this Act shall be paid into the
Fund." (at p74)
6. The plaintiff company has been assessed to tax under s. 7 in amounts
totalling $4,314.81 in respect of the years commencing
1st January 1972, 1973
and 1974, the assessments being made in respect of horses, cattle, sheep and
swine depasturing on the plaintiff's
three grazing properties in Queensland.
In this connexion the plaintiff seeks a declaration that s. 7 is invalid on
the ground
that it imposes a duty of excise in contravention of s. 90 of the
Constitution and a further declaration that the plaintiff is not under any
liability to pay the amount of the assessments. To the plaintiff's
statement
of claim the defendant has demurred on the ground that s. 7 is valid. (at
p74)
7. The resolution of the issue raised by the plaintiff's claim to relief and
the demurrer turns in my mind upon the decision of
this Court in Matthews v.
Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.) [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 and the extent of the
authority which
it now has when
it is considered in the light of more recent
decisions
such as Dennis Hotels Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria
[1960] HCA 10; (1960) 104 CLR 529 ;
Bolton
v. Madsen [1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 ; Dickenson's Arcade Pty. Ltd v. Tasmania
[1974] HCA
9; (1974) 130 CLR 177 and the principles which underlie these
decisions. (at
p74)
8. In Matthews' Case [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 the Marketing of Primary Products Act
1935 (Vict.) authorized the making
by marketing
boards of levies on producers.
The Chicory Marketing Board appointed under the Act made a levy on producers
of 1 pound
for every
half acre of land planted with
chicory. The tax was
imposed upon the producers of chicory and became payable by reason
of the
planting
of the land, irrespective
of the actual production of the product.
The amount of the tax payable took no account
of the variation
in yield which
did occur
between areas planted with chicory. None the less it was held that
the tax was an excise
because planting
was an essential step
in production and
because the tax was imposed on planting. The consequence was that it was
a tax
on the production
of goods. (at
p74)
9. Dixon J. said (1938) 60 CLR, at p 303 :
"The levy made by the Chicory Marketing Board is not
ascertained by direct reference to the quantity or value of the
chicory produced. It is imposed upon a producer, and
presumably under the definition of that word he must
actually obtain some chicory from the crop he has sown
before he satisfies that description. But the basis of his
assessment is not what he garners but what he plants. By
calculating the levy upon the number of half acres which the
producer plants with chicory the board makes it at least
theoretically possible that owing to a failure of his crop the
levy upon him has little or no relation to his actual
production of chicory. But the basis adopted for the levy has
a natural, although not a necessary, relation to the quantity
of the commodity produced. Although many other factors go
to the determination of the actual quantity of chicory
produced, the area planted is, if not the chief, at all events a
controlling element.... it has placed upon an essential step
in production, namely, planting, an impost computed
quantitatively." (at p75)
10. Matthews' Case [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 was distinguished in Bolton v. Madsen
(1963) 110 CLR, at p 272 , where the
Court referred
to the passage from
the
judgment of Dixon J. in Matthews' Case (1938) 60 CLR, at p 303 which I have
already quoted
and pointed
out that the permit
fee in Bolton v. Madsen (1963)
[1963] HCA 16; 110 CLR 264 itself was such that the tax was independent
of the weight or
quantity
carried and, accordingly, lacked a sufficiently
direct relationship
with production to constitute a tax
on production. Consequently
the permit fee
was not an excise. It may be
safely concluded, then, that the decision in
Matthews'
Case was accepted by the Court
when it came to expound the criterion
of
liability according to which Bolton v. Madsen itself was
actually decided.
See also Anderson's
Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria, per Menzies
J. [1964] HCA 77; (1964) 111 CLR 353,
at p 378 . (at
p75)
11. It will be recalled that in Bolton v. Madsen the Court said (1963) 110
CLR, at p 271 :
"It is not enough that Turner, the owner-carrier, could by aLater it said (1963) 110 CLR, at p 273 :
simple calculation determine the cost to him per bale of
carrying his wool from his station to the wool store for
sale. It is not enough because it is the criterion of liability
that determines whether or not a tax is a duty of excise. The
tax is a duty of excise only when it is imposed directly upon
goods or, to put the same thing in another way, when it
directly affects goods, and to establish no more than that its
imposition has increased the cost of putting goods upon the
market by a calculable amount falls short of establishing the
directness of relation between the tax and the goods that is
the essential characteristic of a duty of excise."
"If there were a law imposing liability to pay fees for permits
to carry a person's own goods upon his own vehicle without
more, it could not be said that the criterion of liability is 'the
taking of a step in a process of bringing goods into existence
or to a consumable state, or passing them down the line
which reaches from the earliest stage in production to the
point of receipt by the consumer', to adopt the formulation
which Kitto J. made in Dennis Hotels Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria
(1960) 104 CLR, at p 559 ." (at p76)
12. If an unqualified and universal operation were to be conceded to these
observations there might conceivably be some basis
for thinking that Matthews'
Case [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 represents an island or Alsatia in the law of s. 90
which should
not be extended.
However, the recent decisions
of the Court in
Dickenson's Arcade Pty. Ltd. v. Tasmania [1974] HCA 9; (1974) 130
CLR 177 and M. G. Kailis
(1962)
Pty. Ltd. v. Western Australia (1974) 130 CLR 245 have clearly
established that
the criterion of liability formulated in Bolton
v. Madsen
[1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 has a limited application and that
a sufficiently direct
relationship between the tax and the goods
may be
established in circumstances
where it is not possible to
demonstrate that the imposition has increased the
cost of goods
to a purchaser
by a calculable amount. In particular this is the
case where it appears that the tax may be characterized on other
grounds as a
tax imposed on production or on an essential step
in production. See Kailis'
Case (1974) 130 CLR 245 where there
was a prohibition against processing
without a
licence, the licence fee payable being calculated
by reference to
the quantity of
materials used in processing in a period ending
before the
commencement of the period for which
the licence is granted. The reason
for
refusing to accord to the criterion of liability
expressed in Bolton v. Madsen
[1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 a universal application
has been expressed elsewhere, but
these
expressions may be traced back to the remarks
which Dixon J. made in
Matthews' Case (1938)
60 CLR, at p 304 :
"If the word 'excise' received a meaning which confined its
application to taxes the relation of which to the commodity
concerned was of some narrow and strictly defined nature,
as, for instance, by an arithmetical relation to quantity, it
would not only miss the principle contained in the use of the
word 'excise,' but it would expose the constitutional provision
made by sec. 90 to evasion by easy subterfuge and the
adoption of unreal distinctions. To be an excise the tax must
be levied 'upon goods,' but those apparently simple words
permit of much flexibility in application. The tax must bear
a close relation to the production or manufacture, the sale or
the consumption of goods and must be of such a nature as to
affect them as the subjects of manufacture or production or
as articles of commerce. But if the substantial effect is to
impose a levy in respect of the commodity the fact that the
basis of assessment is not strictly that of quantity or value
will not prevent the tax falling within the description, duties
of excise." (at p77)
13. Quite apart from what has been decided and what has been said in
Dickenson's Arcade [1974] HCA 9; (1974) 130 CLR 177 and
Kailis (1974)
130 CLR 245 , it
needs to be emphasized that Dennis Hotels [1960] HCA 10; (1960) 104 CLR 529 , Bolton
v.
Madsen [1963] HCA 16; (1963) 110 CLR 264 and for that
matter Dickenson's Arcade (to the
extent to which it related to the
licensing fee) were cases
involving
impositions levied at a
time when goods were in course of sale or
distribution, after the process
of manufacture or production
had been
completed. It has
always been recognized that before these impositions can be
characterized
as an excise a direct relationship
between the tax and
the goods
must be shown. Such a relationship between the tax and the goods
must also
exist, so it is said,
when the tax is levied
at a time when the goods or the
commodity is in course of production, but
it may be said that in such a case
the relationship between
the tax and the goods and therefore the relationship
between the tax
and "home production or manufacture"
is more easily perceived.
The existence of the two classes of case and the ultimate necessity
of
relating the tax to "home production
or manufacture" was
expressed by Kitto J.
in a judgment with which Taylor J. agreed in
Anderson's Pty. Ltd. v. Victoria
(1964)
111 CLR, at p 374 :
"A tax must necessarily be made payable by a person; but
it is not a duty of excise unless the criterion of the person's
liability is the fact that some act of his possesses the quality
of a contribution either to the physical character of goods as
subjects of commerce or to the sequence of events which
results in their being available, as in the hands of a
consumer, to be put to their ultimate purpose. The reason is
that a duty of excise is, at bottom, a burden upon home
production or manufacture. Obviously it is such a burden if
it is payable upon a step in production or manufacture in its
character of such a step. Not so obviously but just as
certainly, it is such a burden if it is payable upon a step in
distribution in its character of such a step; for in that case
from the time the goods come into existence the law makes it
inherent in their nature, as goods requiring distribution in
order to become available to fulfil their purpose, that the tax
shall be paid." (at p77).
14. As I see it, then, the decision in Matthews' Case [1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263
remains unaffected by the more recent
decisions of the
Court. The question
remains whether it governs the instant
case. (at p77)
15. In this case the tax is imposed on the "owner" and "in respect of stock
owned by him". A tax on the ownership of livestock
is a tax on livestock and
at least to the extent that it is a tax on livestock used for their product,
that is, for the production
of meat, milk, wool and other commodities and for
breeding purposes, it is, in my opinion, a tax on production itself for it is
an addition to the cost of production and it has a natural, though not a
necessary, relation to the quantity or value of what is
produced. Although it
cannot be shown that the tax which is imposed at rates which vary as between
different kinds of livestock,
results in a calculable increase in the cost or
value of a particular commodity because the quantity and value of commodities
yielded
by animals fluctuates, influenced as it is by many factors, it is none
the less true to say that the tax has a natural relation
to the quantity or
value of the commodity ultimately produced. This relation is as direct as the
relation which the tax on the
chicory had to the chicory which was ultimately
produced in Matthews' Case. That decision therefore governs the present case.
(at
p78)
16. The tax does not cease to be a tax on ownership because the definition of
"owner of stock" includes persons who are not the
owners of stock, that is,
the agent, superintendent, manager or person in charge of stock. It is enough
that owners of stock are
included and that the Act therefore authorizes the
imposition of a tax on the owner in respect of his ownership of livestock used
for production in the sense explained above. (at p78)
17. The fact that the statutory definition of "stock" in s. 5A includes some
animals, e.g. horses and foals, which are not usually
used or kept for
production, is of no relevance. If the tax otherwise has the character of an
excise in its application to stock
used for production, it does not lose this
character merely because in its application to other animals it may not
constitute an
excise. (at p78)
18. It was pointed out that s. 6 authorizes the application of the stock fund
in payment of the cost of administration of the
Act and in the provision of
husbandry services to the cattle, sheep and pig industries and to such other
animal industries as the
Minister, from time to time, may determine.
Consequently, the Act does not permit the application of revenue raised by the
tax
for the general purpose of consolidated revenue. However, the Marketing of
Primary Products Act contained a somewhat similar provision
which authorized
the application of the moneys raised by means of the imposition of the tax in
the administration of a compulsory
pool for the marketing of chicory and other
connected purposes. None the less the imposition was held to constitute an
excise.
To the same effect was the decision in Parton v. Milk Board (Vict.)
[1949] HCA 67; (1949) 80 CLR 229 . The same conclusion must
be reached here.
(at p79)
19. For these reasons I would overrule the demurrer and declare that s. 7 of
the Act is invalid to the extent to which it authorizes
the imposition of a
tax in respect of stock used for production, and that the plaintiff is under
no liability to pay the assessments
which have been made except in so far as
they relate to horses owned by the plaintiff, these horses, it is admitted,
not being
used for production. (at p79)
JACOBS J. The Stock Act, 1915 (Q.), as amended, requires by s. 5A (2) that
every owner of stock shall within one month after 1st January in each year
make a
return in the form prescribed of the number and description of all
stock kept or depastured in any Local Authority Area upon that
1st January.
Section 5A (1) contains the following definitions.
"Meaning of 'owner of stock' and 'stock'. In this section -"Local Authority" is defined in s. 3 and means broadly any local government body as constituted by various statutes. By s. 6 the "Stock Fund" is established. Its funds are to be applied to the payment of expenses incurred in execution of the Act as well as to the provision of husbandry services. Section 6 (5) provides that "All assessments levied and other moneys received and all penalties recovered under this Act shall be paid into the Fund". By s. 7 the Minister may in respect of each year make and levy an assessment at rates fixed by him on each and every owner of stock and each owner is required in each year in respect of stock owned by him to pay the assessment. Cattle and horses are aggregated in number for purposes of assessment. There are certain minimum numbers and amounts. Sections 8 and following provide for the establishment of dips, experimental stations, quarantine stations, health certificates and restrictions on entry of stock, destruction of uncertified stock, prohibition of movement of infected stock, protected and quarantine areas, destruction of infected stock, muster and destruction of "brumbies", restrictions on travelling stock, notification of diseases and associated matters. There are also provisions regulating artificial insemination, and the keeping of kennels and pet shops. (at p80)
'Owner of stock' - means the owner, whether jointly or
severally, of stock or the authorised agent of or the
superintendent or manager for the owner of stock or the
person in charge of stock; and
'Stock' - means any one or more horses, cattle, sheep, or
swine, and includes foals, calves, lambs, and pigs."
2. The plaintiff at the material times carried on a grazing business on
certain properties in Queensland. It was the owner within
the meaning of s. 5A
of certain horses, cattle, sheep and swine upon those properties and liable
under s. 7 to assessment in respect
of that stock owned by it. The plaintiff
claims that the assessment is a duty of excise and cannot therefore be validly
imposed
by the State of Queensland. (at p80)
3. Although every excise duty is a tax on or in respect of goods, it does not
follow that every tax on or in respect of goods
is an excise duty. Something
more is required. In order that a tax on or in respect of goods can be
characterized as an excise
duty the tax must be imposed at a stage, or in the
course of the movement of the goods as merchandise or commodities from
production
or manufacture to ultimate consumption. I use the latter word to
cover not only physical consumption but also consumption by continuing
use of
chattels privately or in business. As well as the tax being one imposed at a
stage or in the course of the progress of the
goods as commodities from
production or manufacture to ultimate consumption the tax must have a further
characteristic which is
not easy to express in any comprehensive formula. It
needs to be found that "the basis for the levy has a natural, although not
a
necessary, relation to the quantity of the commodity produced" Matthews v.
Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.), per Dixon J. (1938)
60 CLR, at p 303 . This
condition is satisfied if it is found that the levy "has placed upon an
essential step in production ...
an impost calculated quantitatively" (1938)
60 CLR, at p 303 . Later in his judgment Dixon J. expressed the condition by
saying
that the levy "must be of such a nature as to affect" (the goods) "as
the subjects of manufacture or production or as articles of
commerce" (1938)
60 CLR, at p 304 . It is thus necessary to look at the "basis" and "the
nature" of the levy, or as Kitto J. said
in Dennis Hotels Pty. Ltd. v.
Victoria (1960) 104 CLR, at p 559 , at "the criterion of liability". Thus, for
instance, a tax on
the ownership of goods where the goods are part of the
capital equipment of a business carried on by the owner is not a duty of
excise within s. 90. Otherwise Brown's Transport Pty. Ltd. v. Kropp (1958) 100
CLR 117 and no doubt Bolton v. Madsen [1963] HCA
16; (1963) 110
CLR 264 would have been
differently decided; for the vehicles in each case were goods and the licence
fee was
in
each case a tax
on the goods. (at p80)
4. The difficulty of characterization which arises in this case is not only a
difficulty in formulating or applying the meaning
of "excise" but also the
difficulty of characterizing the livestock of a pastoral company. The
livestock of a pastoral company
is not, generally speaking, a commodity in the
course of movement to ultimate consumption. It is the stock of the property,
as
also is the dead stock - the machinery, plant and equipment. Both kinds of
stock will be replaced at the end of their useful working
life. The sheep are
the livestock which provide the wool; the shearing machinery is the dead stock
which enables the wool to be
clipped. It is the wool which proceeds on a
course from production to ultimate consumption. But the position is more
complicated
than that. Some of the sheep will be used for breeding and the
progeny will be used either to replace the livestock of the property
or will
be themselves embarked on the course to ultimate consumption by another or
others. Other breeding sheep will be acquired.
Cattle (other than dairy
cattle) and most other animals likewise fall into different categories. The
fact that, at the end of that
period which the particular economic management
regards as the end of their productive life on the property, the animals are
sold
off does not itself mean that during their productive life they are on
the course between their production or acquisition and ultimate
consumption
any more than it could be so said of the dead stock. Some farmers may choose
to turn over their dead stock frequently;
others may choose to continue it in
use until it can be sold for nothing more than scrap. The same is true of
livestock. (at p81)
5. Nevertheless the nature of a stocked property is such that there will be
on the property at a particular time animals of both
classes, animals which
are part of the stock strictly speaking and animals which are being
"produced", that is to say, grown and
fattened in their course to ultimate
consumption. (at p81)
6. If the levy under s. 7 of the Stock Act, when its operation is examined,
can be characterized in its substance not as a tax
on the animals but as a tax
on their produce
- wool, milk or progeny - then the tax will be an excise
duty. It is not necessary
that the produce be in existence at the time
when
the liability to the tax accrues. That is what I take to have been decided in
Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.)
[1938] HCA 38; (1938) 60 CLR 263 . If in Matthews
v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.)
the tax had been
found to be in substance a
tax on the land
and not, as was found, a tax on the anticipated produce of
that land,
I venture to suggest
that the result would have been different:
as
I think it is different in the present case. I can see nothing
in the Stock
Act,
to suggest that the tax imposed by s. 7 on
the animals is in substance a
tax on their produce. The case is different
from that of
an annual crop. The
planting of such a crop
is the first step in its production - an essential
step as Dixon J. observed
in Matthews
v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.)
(1938)
60 CLR, at p 303 . The fact that the basis of the assessment was not
what
the grower
garnered but what he planted did not change
the nature of the
assessment as an assessment on the anticipated produce.
(at p82)
7. An annual tax on the live stock owned on a particular day, at least so
much as is breeding or wool producing stock, is different.
It no doubt adds a
component to the price at which the produce can be sold if a net profit is to
be gained in the conduct of the
business. But this alone is not sufficient to
make the tax an excise duty. Any tax on capital equipment has that effect. For
a
tax to be a duty of excise it must be in substance a tax on the commodity
produced, and not merely a tax on the equipment, live
or dead, used to produce
the commodity. (at p82)
8. Even though the levy cannot be characterized generally as a tax on the
produce of the stock, the fact remains that some of
the animals were
"commodities" in the sense that they were being grown for sale. It is so
alleged in the Statement of Claim. Is
that sufficient to vitiate the levy in
whole or in part or is it necessary further to examine the basis of the levy
in order to
see whether it selects as a criterion of liability the growing of
those animals for sale or the presence of those animals in their
course of
being grown for sale? In my opinion it is necessary further to examine the
basis of the levy in order to determine the
criterion of liability which has
been selected. (at p82)
9. It does not appear to me that this is a tax on the owner, the basis of
which is that he owns livestock which are commodities
in their course to
ultimate consumption. It is not, generally speaking, possible on any
particular day to say, in respect of all
the progeny, which are "commodities"
and which are part of the stock. It will depend on the "culling" which is a
continuing process,
both on the number culled for age and the number of
progeny required for replacement of those so culled. The tax is one on the
owner, the basis of which is that he owns all his livestock. The fact that
some of those livestock are or may become commodities
is not made the basis of
the liability to pay the tax. Where a tax is imposed on or in respect of goods
by virtue of the ownership
thereof and it does not appear from the legislation
when its operation is examined that the tax is imposed by reference to an
actual
or projected or past course of the goods between their production or
manufacture and their ultimate consumption, then the mere fact
that the goods
may be on that course does not necessarily make the tax a duty of excise.
Particularly is this so when the tax is
imposed indifferently upon goods which
are and goods which are not, or are not in the course of, becoming
commodities. Examination
of the substantial operation of the present
legislation shows that what is imposed is a levy on stock owned, not upon the
basis
that they are commodities but on the basis of ownership, a levy which is
imposed indiscriminately on the stock owned at a particular
day whether or not
particular items of that stock are, or may be, embarked on a course to
ultimate consumption as commodities.
(at p83)
10. I would therefore uphold the demurrer. (at p83)
MURPHY J. In my opinion, the Stock Act, 1915 (Q.), as amended, does not
impose any duty of excise in contravention of s. 90 of the Constitution. (at
p83)
2. It is well known that the State of Queensland has a continual problem with
stock diseases, keeping out exotic diseases (such
as foot and mouth) and
controlling endemic diseases (such as cattle tick and pleuro-pneumonia). The
Stock Acts are the principal
legislative measures against the introduction and
spread of stock disease. They "consolidate and amend the law relating to
Diseases
in Stock". The enactments consolidated begin with the Stock Act, 1915
originally known as the Diseases in Stock Act, 1915. They
enable inspectors to
exercise vigilance to prevent and deal with disease by supervising stock
movements, testing for disease,
quarantine,
treating infected or suspected
animals, as well as other ways. The administration of these defensive
procedures through
the Acts
costs the State millions of dollars each year. (at
p83)
3. Under the Acts, the owner of stock must pay an annual sum levied at a
fixed amount per head of each of various species (above
certain limits) owned
on a particular day (s. 7). All such sums are paid into the Stock Fund (s. 6
(3) ) which, subject to provisions
for payment into the "Stock Diseases
Compensation and Stock Improvement Fund", is applied to
payment of all
expenses incurred in
the execution of the Acts, as well as to the provision of
husbandry services to the cattle,
sheep and pig industries (s. 6 (1) ).
The
Stock Fund may be endowed by a grant in aid of moneys out of Consolidated
Revenue Fund (at a rate not exceeding one
dollar
for every one dollar paid
into the Fund during the previous twelve months in respect of assessment
levied and paid under
this Act).
The levy is thus the financial basis of this
important social legislation. (at p83)
4. The context of the Constitution (particularly s. 93) suggests that duties
of excise which s. 90 forbids a State to impose are taxes on goods produced or
manufactured in the State. In the Stock Acts, the tax is imposed without
regard to production or manufacture of goods. There is no limitation on the
incidence of the tax which justifies a conclusion that
the tax is imposed on
production or manufacture of goods such as meat, wool or milk. If taxes are to
be treated as duties of excise
because they indirectly add to costs of
production or manufacture of goods, are taxes on industrial land and payroll
taxes to be
treated as duties of excise? The tax is imposed (and the rate is
the same) whether or not the stock stays in Queensland. The place
of
production or manufacture (in or out of Queensland) of any goods such as meat,
wool, milk or meat on hoof is immaterial. (at
p84)
5. Duties of excise are the counterpart of duties of customs. Both are taxes
which discriminate between goods according to the
place of production or
manufacture. Duties of customs are taxes upon imported goods. The Constitution
recognizes but prohibits State duties of customs, that is, duties upon goods
imported into the State (ss. 90, 92, 93, 95) and provides that duties of
customs upon goods imported into Australia be uniform. Duties of excise are
taxes upon goods produced
or manufactured locally, that is, within a State in
the case of State duties of excise (also now prohibited; see ss. 90, 93 of the
Constitution) or within Australia in the case of duties of excise imposed by
the Parliament of the Commonwealth. Section 90 thus prevents discrimination by
a State tax between goods manufactured in the State and those of other States.
Sections 51 (1) , 92 and 99 prevent such discrimination by the Commonwealth.
These and (with some qualification) the bounty provisions are directed towards
a national economy in the production and manufacture of goods. (at p84)
6. In general, taxes imposed without regard to the place of production or
manufacture are neither duties of customs nor duties
of excise. The essence of
each duty is the tendency to discriminate between goods locally produced and
other goods. In so far as
the tax in the Stock Acts is said to be on goods
already manufactured or produced (that is, livestock), it does not
discriminate
between local and other production. In so far as it is said to be
on goods to be produced or manufactured, it also does not discriminate
between
animals which might be used for production of meat or wool or other products
within Queensland, and those which might be
used elsewhere in Australia or
overseas. Whether or not Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.) (1938) 60
CLR 263 was correctly
decided, this case is distinguishable if only because in
that case the production of chicory (at least at the primary stage) was
necessarily production within the State. (at p85)
7. Many of the decided cases have widened the constitutional meaning of
"excise" greatly (see the observations of McTiernan J.
in Parton v. Milk Board
(Vict.) (1949) 80 CLR, at p 263 and Fullagar J. in Dennis Hotels Pty. Ltd. v.
Victoria (1960) 104 CLR,
at p 552 ; and see Coper, "The High Court and s. 90
of the Constitution" Federal Law Review, vol. 7 (1976), p. 1). The extension
of the constitutional concept in cases such as Dennis Hotels seems to me
to be
unjustified by the constitutional context or the assumed purpose of s. 90. The
meaning of excise may be elastic but it has
been stretched too far. (at p85)
8. The result is that the Parliaments of the States have been driven to raise
revenue by unnecessarily complex measures (see Matthews
& Jay, Federal Finance
(1972), pp. 317-318). (at p85)
9. Section 90 is expressed to make exclusive the power of the Parliament of
the Commonwealth to impose duties of customs and excise.
It is to
be noted
that the Commonwealth has not for the sixty years during which this levy has
operated (in one form or another)
initiated
any proceeding to invalidate it,
and was not concerned to seek to intervene in these proceedings to complain
that the
levy invaded
the exclusive power of its Parliament. (at p85)
10. The Stock Acts, 1915 to 1965 are within the competence of the Parliament
of Queensland. The demurrer should be upheld. (at
p85)
ORDER
Demurrer overruled with costs.Order that declarations be made in terms of par. 2 of the plaintiff's amended statement of claim.
Defendant to pay plaintiff's costs of the action.
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