You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Federal Court of Australia >>
2011 >>
[2011] FCA 13
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Olesen v Eddy [2011] FCA 13 (14 January 2011)
Last Updated: 24 January 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Olesen v Eddy [2011] FCA 13
|
Citation:
|
Olesen v Eddy [2011] FCA 13
|
|
|
|
Parties:
|
NEIL OLESEN IN HIS CAPACITY AS THE DEPUTY
COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION (SUPERANNUATION) v ANTHONY WADE EDDY
|
|
|
|
File number:
|
SAD 87 of 2010
|
|
|
|
Judge:
|
MANSFIELD J
|
|
|
|
Date of judgment:
|
|
|
|
|
Catchwords:
|
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – power of Court to order periodical
payments as part of order imposing civil penalty
|
|
|
|
Legislation:
|
|
|
|
|
Cases cited:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Date of last submissions:
|
23 December 2010
|
|
|
|
Place:
|
Adelaide
|
|
|
|
Division:
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
|
|
|
Category:
|
Catchwords
|
|
|
|
Number of paragraphs:
|
35
|
|
|
Counsel for the Applicant:
|
|
|
|
|
Solicitor for the Applicant:
|
Australian Government Solicitor
|
|
|
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
A Macdonald
|
|
|
|
Solicitor for the Respondent:
|
Belperio Clark
|
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NEIL OLESEN IN HIS CAPACITY AS THE DEPUTY
COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION (SUPERANNUATION)Applicant
|
|
AND:
|
ANTHONY WADE
EDDYRespondent
|
|
|
|
|
DATE OF ORDER:
|
|
|
WHERE MADE:
|
|
THE COURT DECLARES THAT:
- The
respondent as trustee of the A Eddy Superannuation Fund (the Fund) caused the
Fund to:
(a) allow the respondent unauthorised early access in the
year ended 30 June 2006 of an amount of $59,650 from the Fund contrary to
the
governing rules of the Fund;
(b) allow the respondent unauthorised early access in the year ended 30 June
2007 of an amount of $6,003.60 from the Fund contrary
to the governing rules of
the Fund;
(c) allow the respondent unauthorised early access in the year ended 30 June
2008 of an amount of $5,866.63 from the Fund contrary
to the governing rules of
the Fund; and
(d) allow the respondent unauthorised early access in the year ended 30 June
2009 of an amount of $4,050.11 from the Fund contrary
to the governing rules of
the Fund
and thereby contravened:
(i) section 62(1) of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993
(Cth) (the Act) by failing to ensure that the Fund was maintained for one or
more of the purposes set out in s 62(1), instead maintaining the Fund as a
source of unauthorised early access for the respondent’s withdrawals
thereby benefiting
himself; and
(ii) section 65(1) of the Act by using the resources of the Fund and giving
financial assistance to the respondent who is member of the Fund.
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
respondent pay to the Commonwealth of Australia a monetary penalty in the sum of
$15,000.
- The
respondent pay the applicant’s costs of and incidental to the application,
fixed in the sum of $5,000.
- The
respondent pay the monetary penalty and fixed costs over two (2) years by fifty
two (52) weekly instalments of $192.31, the first
instalment to be paid on or
before 31 January 2011.
- Upon
default in the payment of any one instalment, the balance then remaining becomes
immediately due and payable.
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
|
|
|
SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
SAD 87 of 2010
|
|
BETWEEN:
|
NEIL OLESEN IN HIS CAPACITY AS THE DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION
(SUPERANNUATION) Applicant
|
|
AND:
|
ANTHONY WADE EDDY Respondent
|
|
JUDGE:
|
MANSFIELD J
|
|
DATE:
|
14 JANUARY 2011
|
|
PLACE:
|
ADELAIDE
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
- The
applicant as delegate of the Commissioner of Taxation seeks that a civil penalty
be imposed on the respondent pursuant to s 197(1) of the Superannuation
Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (Cth) (the Act) for contraventions of ss
62(1) and 65(1) of the Act.
- The
respondent was at all material times since about 18 May 2005 a trustee of the
A Eddy Superannuation Fund (the Fund), which
was a regulated superannuation
fund within the meaning of s 19 of the Act.
- The
parties agreed upon the facts, by a Statement of Agreed Facts dated 29 September
2010. I am prepared to act upon the agreed
facts. On that basis, it is clear
that the respondent secured the unauthorised early release of the Fund’s
superannuation
benefits, and so contravened ss 62(1) and 65(1) of the Act in
relation to the Fund. Each of those sub-sections is a “civil penalty
provision” under s 193 of the Act.
- Accordingly,
it is clear that appropriate declaratory orders should be made: s 196 of the
Act.
- The
applicant further contends that the contraventions of the Act are serious and
that the Court should order that the respondent
pay a monetary penalty to the
Commonwealth in respect of the contraventions pursuant to s 196(3) of the Act.
The submissions of the parties have largely focused on the appropriate monetary
penalty. In the course of the hearing,
the question arose as to the
respondent’s capacity to pay a significant monetary penalty, having regard
to his personal circumstances.
Subsequent to the hearing, the parties jointly
presented a further written submission as to the appropriate monetary penalty in
the circumstances, and the terms upon which it is to be paid. It is the
responsibility of the Court to determine the appropriate
civil penalty.
However, the Court has power to give effect to, and generally should give effect
to, such an agreement provided it
is satisfied that the penalty agreed upon is
within the range of an appropriate penalty in all the circumstances: NW
Frozen Foods Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [1996] FCA 1134; (1996)
71 FCR 285; Secretary, Department of Health and Ageing v Pagasa Australia Pty
Ltd [2008] FCA 1545 at [33]- [38]. I respectfully adopt the observations of
Flick J in those paragraphs.
THE FACTS
- The
following findings are based on the Statement of Agreed Facts and the
uncontroverted affidavits of the respondent of 28 October
2010 and 7 December
2010 and of Raymond Rivieri dated 19 November 2010. Mr Rivieri is an officer of
the applicant.
- The
respondent procured the establishment of the Fund on or about 18 May 2005. It
is in conventional terms for a superannuation
fund, including that its trustees
covenanted to comply with all relevant statutory provisions including the Act.
The fund, as noted,
was a superannuation fund under s 10(1) of the Act and a
regulated superannuation fund under s 19 of the Act. Its primary purpose was
the provision of old age pensions. The trustees (including the respondent)
notified the Commissioner
of Taxation under s 19(4) that the Act was to apply to
the Fund.
- The
Fund since 18 May 2005 was a “self-managed superannuation fund”
within the meaning of s 17A(2) of the Act. Its only member was the respondent.
The respondent and his brother were the two trustees. Neither trustee received
any remuneration from the Fund for services provided to it.
- By
1 July 2005, two superannuation funds, Statewide Superannuation Trust and
Australian Retirement Fund had made two rollover payments
to the Fund, totalling
$56,082 initially held by Superannuation Accounting Services Pty Ltd (SAS) on
its behalf. After payment of
some disbursements or fees totalling $2,400:
- on
19 July 2005, the balance of $53,682 was paid by SAS to a Commonwealth Bank
account opened by the respondent as a trustee of the
Fund; and
- on
22 July 2005, that account was closed and $48,182 was transferred to another
Commonwealth Bank account in the name of the trustees
of the Fund, and the
balance of $5,500 was appropriated by the respondent for his personal use and
benefit.
- Between
21 September 2005 and 26 September 2008, further employer superannuation
contributions were made to the Fund, totalling $21,616,
into the second bank
account. Over that time, the respondent by 130 separate and relatively small
transactions withdrew funds from
that account progressively for his personal
benefit and use. The account was closed on 30 July 2009, with a small overdrawn
debit
of $23. In the financial years ending 30 June 2006, 30 June 2007, 30 June
2008 and 30 June 2009, the withdrawals by the respondent
totalled $59,650,
$6003, $5867 and $4050 respectively. The total of those amounts is
$75,570.
- None
of the payments procured by the respondent were authorised by the governing
rules of the Fund, or by the Act.
- The
auditor of the Fund discerned the improper withdrawals from the Fund when the
audit to 30 June 2006 was completed. The unauthorised
withdrawals during that
year were reported to the auditor as loans to the respondent. They represented
about 98% of the assets of
the Fund. The auditor duly reported those
contraventions to the Commissioner. The respondent was notified by the
Commissioner by
letter of 21 January 2008 that he was immediately to rectify the
contraventions. He was similarly notified by the auditor on 14 February
2008. He did not take action to do so. He has still not replenished the Fund
at all.
- The
benefit of $59,650 improperly received by the respondent in the financial year
ended 30 June 2006 has, by notice of 1 August
2008, been included in the
respondent’s assessable income for that tax
year.
THE CONTRAVENTIONS
- Section
62(1) of the Act requires each trustee of a regulated superannuation fund to
ensure that the fund is maintained, either solely for one
or more of the
specified “core purposes”, or for one or more of the core purposes
and one or more of specified “ancillary
purposes”. The making of
payments to one of the members, not otherwise entitled to payment out of the
Fund (for example, by
reason of having reached retirement age), is not such a
purpose.
- The
making of the payments referred to above, to or for the personal benefit and use
of the respondent, deprived the Fund totally
of its principal asset and caused
the Fund not to be maintained for the core purposes. The respondent as trustee
instead caused
the Fund to be maintained as a source of unauthorised early
access by the respondent’s withdrawals. That purpose is not in
accordance
with the governing rules of the Fund. That conduct contravened the obligation
on the respondent as a trustee of the Fund,
imposed by s 62(1)(a) of the Act, to
ensure that the Fund was maintained for one of the core purposes. Furthermore,
s 65(1)(b)(i) of the Act prohibits a trustee of a regulated superannuation
fund from giving any financial assistance using the resources of the
Fund to a
member of the fund. (The exceptions in sub-sections (2) and (3) are
inapplicable.) Contrary to that provision, the withdrawals
described above
constituted financial assistance to the respondent, in the form of monies used
to meet the financial commitments
of the respondent’s everyday
living.
- The
Act provides for taxation benefits to trustees of superannuation funds and its
members to encourage prudent provision by Australians
for their retirement. It
is appropriate that the Court should give effect to that policy purpose:
Raelene Vivian, suing in her capacity as the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
(Superannuation) v Fitzgeralds [2007] FCA 1602 (Fitzgeralds) per
Logan J at [25]. The respondent’s conduct has, in respect of the Fund,
totally thwarted that purpose. As Logan J said
at [26], the particular benefit
conferred by the Act on those who wish to make provision for their retirement
through a self-managed
superannuation fund is a privilege that should not be
abused.
- As
Logan J concluded in Fitzgeralds at [27], in my view this is a case in
which the making of civil penalty orders is appropriate and, indeed,
necessary.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- The
following principles relating to the fixing of civil penalties under s 196
emerge from the authorities mentioned below.
(a) Those that take
advantage of the utilisation of a self-managed superannuation fund have a
responsibility to manage that fund in
accordance with the terms of the Deed and
the legislation: Fitzgeralds at [30].
(b) A civil penalty for contravention of that obligation needs to be
sufficiently high to deter contravention by others, but not so
high as to be
oppressive: Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority v Holloway [2000] FCA 1245; (2000)
45 ATR 278 (Holloway) per Mansfield J at [12].
(c) General deterrence is a very significant factor: Holloway at [11];
Fitzgeralds at [29]; other objectives include denunciation and
punishment: Australian Prudential Regulation Authority v Derstepanian
[2005] FCA 1121; (2005) 60 ATR 518 (Derstepanian) per Weinberg J at [26].
Contravening conduct under the Act may be difficult to detect and its
investigation can be complex and
expensive; Holloway at [21];
Fitzgeralds at [29].
(d) The total penalty must not exceed what is proper having regard to the
conduct of the person in respect of all the contraventions:
Holloway at
[19]; Fitzgeralds at [31]-[33].
(e) Relevant factors in determining an appropriate civil penalty include:
(i) the nature and extent of the contravening conduct;
(ii) the amount of any loss or damage caused;
(iii) the size of the organisation;
(iv) the deliberateness or otherwise of the contravention(s);
(v) the period over which the contravention(s) extended;
(vi) the degree of cooperation of the person concerned, either in the
investigation or the subsequent hearing;
(vii) the past record of the person;
(viii) the person’s financial position;
(ix) any amounts already paid by way of compensation or legal costs; and
(x) contrition.
(see generally, Derstepanian at [30]-[37]: Holloway at
[11]-[12]; [32]; Fitzgeralds at [35] and [43].)
DETERMINATION OF CIVIL PENALTY
- The
maximum penalty for any contravention of ss 62(1) and 65(1)(b)(i) of the Act is
$220,000: s 196(3), read with s 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth).
- I
accept the applicant’s contention that the contraventions are serious
within the meaning of s 196(4) so as to warrant the
imposition of a civil
penalty. The object of the Act is relevantly to make provision for the prudent
management of regulated superannuation
funds. By reference to that object,
Logan J in Fitzgeralds at [41] and [42] explained the statutory
requirement of regulated superannuation funds:
That, though, is what one might term an immediate object. The long-term object
envisaged by the Parliament, to my mind, is to encourage
Australians that they
must make provision for their retirement, and to do that by the conferring of
taxation benefits in return for
responsible management of funds. In
Holloway’s case, to which I have made reference, Mansfield J made
reference to this in relation to the in-house asset
rule.
“Submission by a superannuation fund to be a regulated superannuation fund
under the Act carries with it eligibility for concessional
taxation treatment.
Each of the relevant superannuation funds by their trustees elected to become
regulated superannuation funds
... Part 8 of the Act sets out rules about the
level of in-house assets .... . Its intent is clearly to ensure that the
investments of a regulated
superannuation fund should not be exposed to the
vagaries of the business of the
employer-sponsor.”
In the same way, the provisions of section 62 and section 65 can be seen to have
a role to play in ensuring that the assets of a
fund are indeed available for
the members as and when they become eligible in terms of the governing deed, as
opposed to being prematurely
accessed for unauthorised
purposes.
- Accordingly,
the “purpose” requirements of s 62 and the prohibition in s 65
against the giving of financial assistance
to members are integral to the
regulatory scheme. Especially where, as here, the principal asset of a fund is
disposed of other
than in accordance with the governing rules of the Fund,
removing it totally as a source for the benefits which a superannuation
fund is
intended to provide, the contravention must be regarded as serious.
- The
contraventions were neither trifling nor insignificant. They were deliberate.
They involve sizeable amounts and deprived the
Fund of its total assets. They
extended over a period of years. On any view, they were serious.
- The
respondent as trustee of the Fund commenced his contraventions at the very first
step of the self-management process –
the opening of the Fund’s
Commonwealth Bank account on 21 July 2005. The respondent withheld for his own
personal benefit
and use $5,500 from the assets of his Fund (the rollover
payments) when opening the Fund bank account. Thereafter, he simply took
the
assets of the Fund from time to time as if they were his own.
- I
have considered the respective submissions of the parties. Inevitably, one
seeks an explanation for the contravening conduct.
- The
respondent has a good personal history. He is 47 years of age. He was brought
up and educated to Year 10 level in Broken Hill.
He then came to Adelaide at
the age of 15 under a type of football sponsorship as he was a good sportsman.
He played football for
some four years or so. He has been in continuous
employment since he came to Adelaide, with a variety of employers as a chef and
more recently in management in the businesses of food catering or supplies. He
has held his present position as the business development
and quality control
manager of an export fruit and vegetable providore since August 2008.
- He
is divorced. He has two children, now aged about 10 and 8. The birth of his
second child involved complications, and his wife
consequently suffered severe
post-natal depression requiring prolonged hospitalisation. The relationship
became strained, and he
and his wife were divorced in 2004. His wife was given
custody of the children. I accept that in the period 2002 to 2004 he was
under
considerable strain, dealing with his wife’s illness, largely caring for
his children, and with a full-time and demanding
job. He sought psychological
help during that period.
- When
the Fund was established, the respondent was under financial pressure. He was
meeting the mortgage on the matrimonial home
(in which he was living) and paying
child support. He says he simply did not have enough to live on. Although he
did not establish
the Fund with the intention of using it as a financial
resource, the coincidence of its establishment and his financial pressures
presented too much of a temptation. The first misappropriation of $5,500 was to
repay a debt to his wife. Thereafter, the various
withdrawals were to meet
relatively minor bills or liabilities, or to meet his daily living
expenses.
- In
the period from 2005, he also started drinking heavily and gambling. He says
this was partly due to loneliness, and his gambling
was in search of a big win
to relieve his financial pressures. He acknowledges that he had a gambling
addiction, and that is confirmed
by the psychotherapist now treating him.
Fortunately, he now has a new relationship and he has stopped his heavy drinking
and has
not gambled for two years or so. The view of both his psychologist and
his psychotherapist is that he has a good prognosis. It
is, in my view, very
unlikely that he would contravene the Act again.
- The
respondent’s financial position is just comfortable. He has a good
income, but it is committed to mortgage payments, child
support payments and
school fees, debt repayments (including the tax debt following the reassessment
of his taxable income for the
year ended 30 June 2006 and other regular
outgoings). His only significant asset is his home, which is heavily mortgaged.
When his
commitment to school fees ends, he intends to replenish the Fund.
- I
accept his explanation of the circumstances in which he came to contravene the
Act. I also accept that he is genuinely remorseful
for what he did.
- Each
case must be determined on its own facts. The case that is more closely
analogous to the present facts than others is Fitzgeralds. In that case,
civil penalties of $20,000 and $10,000 on the first and second respondents
respectively were imposed where the trustees
had misapplied in the order of
$148,000 from a self-managed fund to settle a claim by a liquidator against them
in respect of a company
formerly controlled by them. In a different context,
but still under the Act, two other cases have considered the civil penalty
provisions. In Holloway, a penalty of $40,000 was imposed on the company
and $12,000 on the individual as a result of a wrongful application of $130,000
from a self-managed fund; the total penalty for multiple breaches involving a
large number of funds advised by the respondents in
that case was $222,000 for
the company and $35,000 for the individual. In Derstepanian an agreed
penalty of $100,000 was endorsed by the Court, in circumstances where the
trustees of a superannuation fund with 17 members
(including themselves)
effectively misapplied in the order of $160,000 for the use of themselves and a
company they controlled, but
had subsequently paid compensation in the sum of
approximately $226,000.
- In
this matter, in addition to the matters personally concerning the respondent, I
take into account the following:
(a) while there were 160
contraventions by the respondent of the Act by the multiple withdrawals, bearing
in mind the totality principle
the various contraventions may properly be seen
as one contravening course of conduct, albeit over a substantial period of time,
for which the respondent should be liable to a single maximum penalty of
$220,000 (see as to a single act of misbehaviour being characterised
as a
contravention under more than one provision: Fitzgeralds at [33];
Derstepanian at [31]);
(b) the respondent was first advised on 21 January 2008 that the auditor of
the Fund had reported contraventions of the Fund for the
financial year ended 30
June 2006 and that he was required to rectify the contraventions immediately;
but he continued with his contraventions
until 2 February 2009 at which time the
total assets of the Fund had been withdrawn by the respondent;
(c) the respondent benefited personally from the contraventions, by using the
proceeds of the Fund for his own benefit and use, to
meet everyday living
expenses and the amounts have not been repaid to the Fund;
(d) the contraventions were deliberate and of a serious kind, involving a
complete departure from the respondent’s obligations
as a trustee of the
Fund;
(e) the contraventions had the effect of depriving the Fund of the totality
of its assets, thereby impairing the Act’s objective
that people build
their own retirement savings rather than rely on social security benefits;
(f) the respondent also sought to benefit from the availability of
concessional tax treatment as a result of operating the Fund, which
the
legislation confers in return for compliance with the Act (although I observe
that the purpose of imposing a penalty is not to
recover any amount of tax which
ought to have been assessed);
(g) otherwise, no third parties suffered loss as a result of the
contraventions as the respondent was not acting as trustees of other
persons’ retirement savings;
(h) the respondent has cooperated in the proceeding by agreeing the major
facts constituting the contraventions.
- I
have reached the view that the agreed proposed penalty is within the range of an
appropriate penalty in the circumstances discussed
above. It is not useful to
indicate whether it is the precise monetary penalty which I would have imposed.
I indicate, however,
that it is the combination of the proposed monetary penalty
and the terms of payment agreed between the parties which enables me
readily to
conclude that the proposed monetary penalty is an acceptable one.
- I
accept the joint submission of the parties that the Court has the power and
discretion to order a penalty by way of instalment
payments, based upon the
terms of s 196(3) of the Act. The parties have submitted, and I accept for the
purposes of this matter,
that the conferral of the power to order the penalty
carries with it an implied consequential power enabling the Court to make an
order enabling periodic payments. A similar capacity is assumed to have existed
when imposing pecuniary penalties under s 76(1) of the Trade Practices Act
1974 (Cth), where orders have often been made for instalment payments. Two
Full Court Federal Court examples are Schneider Electric (Australia) Pty Ltd
v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2003] FCAFC 2; (2003) 127 FCR 170 at [7]
and [35] and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v High Adventure
Pty Limited [2005] FCAFC 247 at [10]- [11]. An order for instalment payments
is appropriate in circumstances of financial hardship: Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission v Dataline.Net.Au Pty Ltd (in liquidation) and
Others [2007] FCAFC 146; (2007) 161 FCR 513 at [38].
- Accordingly,
in addition to the declaratory orders sought, I will impose a monetary penalty
of $15,000 to be paid in weekly instalments
of $192.31, with the first
instalment to be paid on or before 31 January 2011. In addition, I order the
respondent to pay the applicant’s
costs of and incidental to the
application which, by agreement, I fix at $5000. It is to be paid on the same
basis, so that the
total sum payable of $20,000 will be paid over a period of
two years by 104 weekly instalments of $192.31, with the first instalment
to be
paid on or before 31 January 2011.
I certify that the preceding thirty-five (35)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Mansfield.
|
Associate:
Dated: 14 January 2011
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2011/13.html