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Confidential and Deputy Commissioner of Taxation [2000] AATA 8; (2000) 43 ATR 1273; 2000 ATC 129 (13 January 2000)
Last Updated: 11 September 2009
Administrative
Appeals
Tribunal
DECISION AND REASONS FOR DECISION [2000] AATA 8
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No WT1999/73 & 74
TAXATION APPEALS
DIVISION
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)
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Applicants
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And
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Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
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Respondent
DECISION
Date 13 January 2000
Place Perth
...........(Sgd) R D Fayle...............................
Senior
Member
CATCHWORDS
Income tax – Eligible termination payment
– Parents beneficiary of son’s estate – Whether parents
dependent
on son at time of death or when ETP made – Meaning of dependant
– Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, sec 27A, 27AAA(4)
Commissioner for Superannuation v Scott (1987) 71 ALR 408
REASONS FOR DECISION
- Both
applicants requested that this matter be heard in private. The Tribunal is
satisfied that by reason of the sensitive nature
of the evidence that the
identity of the applicants be confidential. Therefore, pursuant to s35 of the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 the Tribunal directs that the
matter be heard in private and that the disclosure of the identity of the
applicants be restricted.
- The
applicant’s son died in a motor vehicle accident on 26 July 1993. The
proceeds of his superannuation fund were paid equally
to his parents (“the
applicants”) during the year of income ended 30 June 1995. The Deputy
Commissioner of Taxation
(“the respondent”) assessed the applicants
on their respective share of the proceeds of the superannuation fund on the
basis that it was an eligible termination payment
(“ETP”)[1]
and not exempt because neither applicant was dependant on the deceased at the
time of his death or at the time of the payment of
the death benefit. The
applicants have objected to that decision which is the matter for review by this
Tribunal.
- The
applicants attended the hearing in the company of their daughter who assisted.
All three gave evidence. Mr Irwin McAleese,
an officer of the Australian
Taxation Office, represented the respondent. Documents filed with the Tribunal
pursuant to s37 of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 were in
evidence. The applicants also provided a prepared statement of evidence
(Exhibit A1) and three relevant income tax returns
(Exhibits A2, A3 and
A4).
- The
issue is whether either or both of the applicants were “dependant”,
as that term is defined in s27A (1), either at the time of the deceased’s
death or at the time of payment of the death benefit. If so, since the amounts
paid
are not “excessive” then they would be excluded from assessment
as an ETP by operation of s27AAA (4).
- It
was not in dispute that the respective amount received by each applicant from
the proceeds of the deceased’s superannuation
policy was an
ETP[2].
THE
EVIDENCE
- The
applicants and their son and daughter were a close family. They helped each
other when able and the need arose. The applicant’s
(“husband” and ”wife”) and their daughter and her
husband purchased a 7-day continental delicatessen shop
in 1989. At the time
the husband was active in his cabinet-making business and the wife conducted a
linen shop business. It was
therefore agreed that their son would assist in the
delicatessen although both applicant’s worked there once their other daily
duties had finished and on week-ends. The delicatessen was very much a family
affair. However, when the husband retired from his
cabinet-making business he
began full-time work in the delicatessen, replacing his son who had been paid
about $250 per week. Nevertheless,
the applicants continued to lend financial
support to their son who was unemployed.
- When
the son was married, his father spent considerable time and effort refurbishing
his home unit owned by their son, where the young
couple lived. When first
married their son was studying part-time and working in the family business as
mentioned. The applicant’s
assisted with his mortgage repayments.
However, the marriage did not last and their son moved back home leaving the
unit vacant whilst
he decided whether to sell. He then began full-time work
with a bread manufacturer as a delivery driver whilst continuing to study
part-time. He also assisted with the family business by relieving his parents
at weekends.
- The
applicants said that they relied on the family assistance in the business, which
was not doing very well and it could not afford
to pay the wages otherwise
necessary. Both their son and daughter worked in the business, without
remuneration. The applicants
maintained that without that help the business
would not have survived and to that extent they were dependent on both children.
Indeed,
their evidence was that after their son’s tragic death they were
not able to carry on the business profitably and it was sold
in 1995.
- The
income tax return for the husband for the year ended 30 June 1994 (Ex. A2) shows
his assessable income to comprise $27,342 from
his cabinet making job and only
$485 from other sources. For the year ended 30 June 1995, the year in question,
his earnings from
the cabinet-making job was $30,199 and income from other
sources (excluding the ETP in question) to be only $483 (T3). It would
appear
that the wife did not file an income tax return for the 1993/94 year as her
earnings were below the threshold and for the
1994/95 year her assessable income
was the ETP in question only (T3). In the 1992/93 year each applicant returned
$1,284 assessable
income from the delicatessen business partnership (Ex. A3
& A4). Whilst that was the only assessable income of the wife, the
husband
also derived $6,494 from his cabinet-making job
(A3).
SUBMISSIONS
- The
applicants contend that they were dependent on their son prior to his death.
This dependency arose because their son had provided
valuable assistance to
their business for no reward, without which the business would not have
survived. In support they pointed
to the fact that the trustees of the
superannuation fund had paid the proceeds to them on the grounds that they were
satisfied that
the applicant’s were dependants of their deceased son.
- Mr
McAleese, for the respondent, submitted that the evidence shows that the
applicants did not depend on their son for financial assistance
at any relevant
time, neither at the time of his untimely death nor at the time when the
superannuation payment was made. He further
submitted that the respondent is
not bound by any decision of the trustees of the superannuation fund, which
would be made in accordance
with the relevant trust deed.
THE
DISCUSSION AND REASONS
- The
definition of “dependant” for the present purposes is found in
s27A(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (“the
Act”):
“dependant” in relation to a
person:
(a) ...
(b) includes:
- (i) another
person who is or was a spouse of the person; and
- (ii) any
child of the person, being a child who has not attained the age of 18
years.
- Clearly,
the applicants must therefore satisfy the ordinary meaning of the word
“dependant” to qualify. The Macquarie
Dictionary defines
“dependant” as:
“1. one who depends on or looks to another for support, favour etc. 2.
a person to whom one contributes all or a major amount
of necessary financial
support.
- The
Act is primarily concerned with commercial and financial matters “... An
Act relating to the imposition, assessment and
collection of tax upon
incomes”[3]. As
such, a question of dependency should be construed within that context. The
relevant question, in this sense, is whether the
applicants were financially
dependent on their son at the relevant time. In Commissioner for
Superannuation v Scott (1987) 71 ALR 408 the Full Federal Court (Fisher,
Spender and Pincus JJ) took the view that dependence may refer to reliance on
another for support,
not only in fact but also in need (414).
- In
the present case there is no suggestion that the applicants were in any sense
financially dependent on the deceased. Indeed, the
evidence is that for almost
all of his life the deceased relied in varying degrees upon the generosity of
the applicants for his
financial support. The Tribunal understands that the
dependence asserted by the applicants is one of physical support helping out
with the running and management of the family business.
- However,
the evidence does not support a conclusion that either applicant relied to any
significant extent on the profits of the family
delicatessen business for their
financial survival. In the years immediately preceding the death of their son
and the years following
up to the time of the payment by the trustees of the
superannuation fund, the applicants’ financial support came primarily
and
principally from the husband’s employment as a cabinet maker. The
son’s participation in the physical running of
the family delicatessen
business was customary for that family and was not a factor which, of itself,
contributed to the financial
support of the
applicants.
DECISION
- For
the reasons and pursuant to s43 (1)(a) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal
Act 1975, the objection decisions under review are affirmed.
I certify that the 17 preceding paragraphs are a true copy of the
reasons for the decision herein of R D Fayle, Senior Member
Signed: ........................................................
Associate
Date/s of Hearing 7 December 1999
Date of Decision January 2000
Counsel for the Applicant In person
Solicitor for Applicant
Counsel for the Respondent Mr I McAleese
Solicitor for the Respondent Australian Taxation Office
[1] The amounts were
assessed pursuant to s27B of the Income Tax Assessment Act
1936.
[2] That is, as
defined in s27A (1) “eligible termination payment” paragraph (ba),
being a payment made to each applicant
from a superannuation fund by reason that
their son was a member of the fund and the payments were made to the applicants
after the
death of their
son.
[3] See the
title of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936.
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