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W amp; A McArthur Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1930] HCA 47; (1930) 45 CLR 1 (15 December 1930)

HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA

W and A McArthur Ltd Appellant; and The Federal Commissioner of Taxation Respondent.

H C of A

15 December 1930

Isaacs C.J., Gavan Duffy, Rich and Starke JJ.

Ham K.C. (with him Russell Martin), for the taxpayer.

Sir Edward Mitchell K.C. (with him C. Gavan Duffy), for the Federal Commissioner of Taxation.

Ham K.C., in reply.

The following written judgments were delivered:—

Dec. 15

Isaacs C.J.

The appellant has appealed to this Court in respect of three assessments by the respondent under the Commonwealth War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918. The assessments relate to profits derived during the financial years ending respectively 30th June 1917, 1918 and 1919. In each case Rich J., before whom all the appeals came as Judge of first instance, stated a case for the opinion of this Court on questions of law. The questions arising under all three appeals are identical, with the exception that in the first case an additional question arises. The questions common to all three appeals are whether each of certain sums is deductible under sec. 15, sub-sec. 4, of the Act referred to as a "sum which has been paid in respect of the profits on account of any war-time profits tax or similar tax imposed in any country outside the Commonwealth." The additional question arising under the first appeal is as to the validity of the relevant notice of assessment dated 6th February 1930.

(1)
It is well to dispose first of the additional question. It is of greater importance as affecting the daily administration of the Commonwealth Income Tax Acts, and perhaps State Acts of the same nature. The notice of assessment of 6th February 1930 purports to be a notice of the amended assessment identified as File No. 1400/135087. The appellant asserts it is a nullity, because, it says, first, that there can be but one assessment for any given year; and next, that, as the original assessment for the year 1916-1917 made on or before 10th October 1919, was cancelled by the Commissioner on 3rd November 1919, there could not subsequently in law be any amendment of the non-existing original assessment. These contentions are said to follow from prior decisions of this Court, namely, Hooper's Case[1] and the Liverpool Insurance Co.'s Case[2]. The first contention is directly opposed to the passage in Hooper's Case relied on. The Commissioner cannot, in respect of any person liable to be taxed, cancel or abandon an assessment so as to leave a legal blank for that year, any more than he can disobey sec. 21 by not making the assessment. He is not only an administrative officer (sec. 6 (1)), without power to abandon revenue justly due. He is invested with very large powers in carrying out his administration, and among the powers are those in sec. 23. That gives him power "at any time" to "make all such alterations in or additions to any assessment as he thinks necessary in order to insure its completeness and accuracy, notwithstanding that war-time profits tax may have been paid in respect of profits included in the assessment." The last words quoted afford an equitable escape from the common law doctrine that voluntary payment of a claim without protest, even though the claim be unenforceable by law, is not to be reopened. Without quoting the rest of sec. 23, it is sufficient to say they enable the Commissioner at all times to do justice both to the Crown and the individual. Sec. 28 makes provision for a taxpayer dissatisfied with his assessment stating his objection to it. The Commissioner is directed to consider the objection, and is empowered to "disallow it, or allow it," either wholly or in part. Disallowance may be referred by the taxpayer to the Court, as in the present instance. But "allowance," like disallowance, is a mere administrative act. The Commissioner is empowered to bind the Treasury by allowance, but there is nothing to prevent him from recalling it, should he see reason to do so. The power to recall it must stand in the same position as the power to recall a disallowance. It would be an extraordinary conclusion to arrive at, that, once he disallows an objection, he cannot allow it. It would be in conflict with the quoted words of sec. 23. Suppose, for instance, a taxpayer claiming a deduction by way of objection, submits to the Commissioner's view that the law does not permit, and so pays the tax claimed. Is it possible, in view of sec. 23, to deny the power, and, indeed, the moral duty of the Commissioner, ex mero motu, if he either alters his view of the law, or if the Court declares it wrong in some other case, to give effect to the true law by allowing the objection formerly disallowed? But, if so, the same thing must be said of the allowance of an objection. There is every reason for giving full effect to the words of sec. 23. There must be an assessment for each year in respect of every business to which the Act applies, be it right or wrong. If right, it must be enforced; if wrong, it must be corrected or declared wrong. Its existence cannot be administratively annihilated, but it may be altered from time to time until the Court finally declares the mutual rights of the Crown and the taxpayer. When that is done, the general principles of law apply to make the contest final and the rights unchallengeable. I cannot agree with the Liverpool Insurance Co.'s Case[3], and hold the appellant's contention now dealt with to be wrong.
(2)
The contentions covering all three cases should, in my opinion, be determined partly in favour of the taxpayer, and partly in favour of the Commissioner. The Commissioner claims the whole sum of £68,914, the benefit of which the taxpayer under the Imperial Act of 1921, sec. 38, received from the English Taxing Authority by way of relief in respect of excess profits duty, should be regarded as in repayment of duty previously paid for English excess profits duty, including Australian war-time profits. That the taxpayer obtained £68,914 by way of relief is undeniable. But the question is whether it was so received that any and what part of it can be considered as sums previously paid as excess profits duty in respect of Australian war-time profits converted into sums not so paid. In my opinion, portion can be so considered, and the remainder cannot. In the first place, the whole of the sum of £68,914 was not in fact or in law paid to the taxpayer. Pars. 26 and 27 of the case stated disclose that for the English annual accounting periods ending respectively 31st January 1920 and 1921, the sum of £21,478 10s., portion of the £68,914, was set off against the excess profits duty payable. The set-off was a statutory requirement (sec. 38 (3) of the Finance Act 1921, and rule 6 of Part IV. of the Second Schedule). As to this part, the taxpayer, in my opinion, fails at the threshold. That sum was never "paid." The balance of the sum of £68,914, namely, £47,435 10s., was applied by the British Treasury as follows:—Portion, namely, £12,042 14s., was applied, and necessarily by mutual consent, to discharge liabilities of the taxpayer other than excess profits duty, and this is equally equivalent to repayment. The residue, £35,392 16s., was paid to the taxpayer in cash on 19th August 1922. Again applying rule 6 of Part IV. of the Schedule of the Act of 1921, the whole sum of £47,435 10s. was a "repayment" to the taxpayer by the Government of the United Kingdom, and necessarily a repayment of excess profit duties paid by the taxpayer.


But there still arises the main question that divides the parties here, namely, has the sum of £47,435 10s., which was unquestionably previously paid to the United Kingdom for excess profit duties, and while remaining unrepaid, unquestionably "paid" within the meaning of the Australian Act, either wholly or as to a proper proportionate part thereof, in respect of all Australian war-time profits within the meaning of sec. 15 (4) of the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act, now, since repayment under the Act of 1921, lost its "paid" character for Australian purposes? As to this, in the first place, I retain the test view I expressed in Murray's Case[4]. Of course, the letter of the statute must be adhered to, that is to say, the true sense of the words as written must not be modified by notions of policy. But one must always read a statutory provision as a whole in order to understand every part. For instance, if under their power to make assessments and collect duty for an accounting period, notwithstanding an appeal pending, the Commissioners of Inland Revenue were to collect £100,000, which was afterwards found judicially to be reducible to £30,000, leading to a repayment of £70,000, could it be said with any show of right or reason that £100,000 had been "paid" within the meaning of the Australian sub-sec. 4 of sec. 15? I am unable to think so. I held in Murray's Case[5] that the same sums paid for excess profit duty, though "paid," were paid under statutory terms, which entitled the payer to recall the payment under certain conditions, and that those conditions having arisen, and his payments having been consequently recalled, the payments had no longer any legal existence. I apply the same reasoning to the sums amounting to £47,435 10s., paid by the taxpayer to the British Government. They were paid on the same two conditions, entitling it to repayment of a certain proportionate amount if either condition had happened.

It was contended on behalf of the Commissioner that, applying my test stated in Murray's Case[6], the converse result ensued. The argument was that the moneys paid under the Act of 1915 were in the present case refunded, not by reason of any condition contained in that Act at the time of payment, but by a subsequent voluntary gift of the British Parliament, founded upon an entirely novel consideration, namely, the fall in value of stock between the last accounting period and 31st August 1921. Careful examination of the Act of 1921 satisfies me that that contention is not sustainable. Part III. of the Finance Act 1921, headed "Excess Profits Duty," was to end the operation of the corresponding part of the Finance (No. 2) Act 1915. Sec. 35 of the Act of 1921 enacts that the duty under the 1915 Act shall be charged, levied and paid, and repayment and set-off of duty shall be allowed for the final accounting period designated by that section as if that period were an accounting period within the meaning of Part III. of the 1915 Act. The final accounting period is marked out, and in the facts of the present case extended from 1st February 1920 to 31st January 1921. Sec. 38 enabled the present taxpayer to claim relief under Part I. of the Second Schedule, and that Part IV. of that Schedule should apply to such a claim. A claim was made under Part I. of the Second Schedule, and allowed at £68,914 already mentioned. It is true that clause 1 provides only that the sum in question "shall be allowed as a deduction in computing the excess profits of the final accounting period or as an addition to any deficiency for that period, as the case may be." As acted on by the British authorities, the excess was applied and in the manner stated, which not only wiped out the duty for that period otherwise payable, but left in addition a "deficiency" (see secs. 35 (5) and 36 (1), "deficiencies or losses") for the final accounting period of £47,435 10s. That is all the new legislation itself expressly did, so far as relevant to this case, with the following exception. In enacting sec. 35 in the terms stated, it left sec. 38 (3) of the Act of 1915 to be applied consistently with the provisions of the 1921 Act referred to. The later Act, by force of clause 1 of Part I. of Schedule 2, by law created in view of the stated facts as to this taxpayer "a loss in his trade or business" of £47,435 10s. in the last accounting period. The taxpayer was by English law entitled to assert and maintain that, and there in strict conformity with the provisional terms on which that sum had, at some time or other, been "paid" to excess profits duty, it was entitled by force of sec. 38 (3) of the 1915 Act to repayment of that sum. If, therefore, that sum represented payments in respect of Australian profits exclusively, and if it had been repaid by apportionment to specific years, which appears to me inconsistent with the English Act, the task here would have been easy. But neither of those conditions is shown to exist. Therefore, says the taxpayer, the Commissioner must fail altogether. I do not agree. Once the fact is established that the sum in question was repaid in respect of the commingled profits (and mainly Australian), I cannot think the law is unable to find a way to do justice to both parties. I would apply the principle enunciated on even more extensive lines by Viscount Haldane for the Judicial Committee in Board v. Board[7], where the learned Lord said: "If the right exists, the presumption is that there is a Court which can enforce it, for if no other mode ... is prescribed, that alone is sufficient to give jurisdiction to the King's Courts of Justice."

In my opinion the sum in question repaid must be proportionately allocated to the English and Australian profits, according to their respective sums, excluding the two last periods.

Next, the sum found thus attributable to the Australian profits, should be allocated to those profits proportionately to their several amounts for the various accounting periods, excluding the two latest periods, to which no portion of the sum paid can possibly attach.

Rich J.

The question for our decision is whether, in the assessment of the taxpayer for war-time profits derived during the years ending 30th June 1917, 1918 and 1919 a deduction should be allowed from the profits of the various accounting periods for sums which, according to the taxpayer, had been paid in respect of the profits, on account of British excess profits duty. Sec. 15 (4) of the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918 provides that a deduction shall be allowed for any sum which has been paid in respect of the profits on account of any war-time profits tax or similar tax imposed in any country outside the Commonwealth. The evident purpose of this provision was to allow as a deduction from the Australian profits of an accounting period sums paid in discharge of a liability to the Treasury of another country necessarily incurred as a result of earning the profits. This view is supported by the decision in Hoffnung's Case[8]. Large sums were in fact paid by the taxpayer to the British Exchequer on account of excess profits duty in respect of profits which included the Australian profits of the various accounting periods. If the facts stopped there, the taxpayer's right to the deductions which it claimed would be incontestable. But the British Legislature passed the Finance Act 1921 (11 & 12 Geo. V. c. 32) two years after the end of the final financial year during which the Australian profits now in question were earned, namely, 30th June 1919 based on two accounting periods of twelve months each, ended 31st January 1920. Part III. of this Act brought to an end the imposition of excess profits duty. It also provided a scheme of relief for taxpayers the value of whose stock in hand taken into account as at the end of the final British accounting period which in this case was 31st January 1921 was greater than the value of similar stock-in-trade ascertained at 31st August 1921 (Finance Act 1921, sec. 38, and Second Schedule, Part I., clause 1). This relief was afforded by a deduction of the difference in stock values in computing the excess profits of the final accounting period. A calculation was directed of the aggregate of the amount paid by way of excess profits duty less any amounts repaid. The taxpayer was given a right to repayment of the amount by which this aggregate so paid less any such amount repaid exceeded the aggregate amount of excess profits less any deficiencies or losses in respect of which the taxpayer was entitled to a repayment or set-off of duty. The appellant availed itself of these provisions, and in respect of accounting periods ending 31st January in each year from 1915 to 1921 an aggregate was calculated of excess profits duty paid or payable exceeding the aggregate amount of the excess profits of those periods and the difference was paid to it. Without the guidance of authority I should have had no doubt that this transaction was irrelevant to the deduction of the amount which had already been paid to the Inland Revenue Commissioners in respect of the Australian profits. But I am bound to follow and apply the decision of this Court in D. & W. Murray's Case[9] so far as it governs the matter. The question, however, is whether the ratio decidendi in D. & W. Murray's Case does govern the matter. The task of ascertaining the ratio decidendi is not rendered easier by the fact that three judgments were delivered assigning divers reasons for the conclusion from which I dissented. The judgment of the present Chief Justice and of Powers J. appears to me to rest rather upon their opinion as to the true nature and effect of sec. 38 of the British Act than upon any special construction placed upon sec. 15 (4) of the Australian Act. They considered that a payment made pursuant to sec. 38 (1) of the British Act was provisional only. This, as I understand, means that no absolute obligation to pay tax was imposed and therefore no absolute payment could be made. It followed that the repayment under sec. 38 (3) was a refund of a conditional payment which therefore never became absolute. Manifestly, if this is the correct interpretation of their Honors' judgment, it can have no application to the entirely different method of relief given by a subsequent British enactment not contemplated by sec. 38 (3) of that of 1915—relief, moreover, which is based upon considerations of policy arising out of new events, and which is measured by losses in stock values between dates long after the close of all relevant accounting periods. The judgment of Higgins J. has given me more difficulty. His Honor adopted the view that in the circumstances of D. & W. Murray's Case[10] a plea of payment must fail, and, therefore, in law it could not be said that excess profits duty had been paid in respect of the profits. I have come to the conclusion that his judgment must mean that the repayment which in Murray's Case was made under sec. 38 (3) of the British Act of 1915 was a restoration to the taxpayer of the very sum extracted from him resulting in a destruction of the liability in respect of which the payment had been made as well as of the payment itself—so that ex post facto it could not be said that the taxpayer by payment had discharged a liability to excess profits duty. If this be the essential ground of his decision, I cannot see that it applies to the relief obtained under the British Act of 1921. That relief consists in adding to the deficiency on the total number of British accounting periods a new loss and enabling the taxpayer to claim for that deficiency. I regard it as an independent right to relief which cannot amount to a restoration of a particular sum paid. The judgment of my brother Starke, which also concurred with the majority, was put upon grounds which perhaps go beyond those of the other three Judges. For the reasons I have given, I have arrived at the conclusion, not without the misgiving which is becoming to a dissentient, that I remain free to give to the provisions of the British Act of 1921 the effect in relation to sec. 15 (4) of the Australian Act, which I consider its true meaning requires.

There is not in this case a restoration of the actual payment made on account of the profits in the periods material to the Australian tax. That payment is not cancelled or reversed. At most, it is taken into account in a general calculation over a period of some seven years with a view of arriving at a credit or debit balance. The object of this account is not to repay the exact tax paid but to recompense the taxpayer for subsequent losses or losses in other periods having regard to the fact that in years of plenty the tax was levied upon the appellant. I therefore think that the appellant is entitled to the deductions in respect of the payments it has made on account of the British excess profits duty without regard to any part of the sum it has received by way of relief under the Finance Act 1921. There is a special question in respect of the final accounting period, that ending 31st January 1920 (and not 1921 as the Chief Justice appears to think), because the sum levied for British excess profits duty in respect of that period was discharged by set-off.

As my opinion upon the main question in this case is not to prevail it is unnecessary for me to pursue this subsidiary question, to which little or no attention was directed in the argument. As I understand that my opinion upon the main question leaves the appellant liable to no tax in any of the three years the subject of the cases stated, it is unnecessary for me to consider the remaining grounds upon which the appellant relies.

The fourth question in the case stated in respect of the financial year 1916-1917 and the first in the cases stated for the financial years 1917-1918, 1918-1919, should be answered No.

I am authorized by my brother Gavan Duffy to state that he concurs in the conclusions at which I have arrived.

Starke J.

Cases have been stated in three appeals brought by the taxpayer against assessments to war-time profits tax in respect of the financial years 1916-1917, 1917-1918, 1918-1919. The taxpayer carried on business as a softgoods merchant, both in England and in Australia, and during its accounting periods of twelve months ending on 31st January in each of the years 1917, 1918 and 1919, it derived profits in that business from sources both within and without Australia. Under the English Finance (No. 2) Act 1915 (5 & 6 Geo. V. c. 89) and amending legislation, excess profits duty was levied on the excess profits arising from the business of the taxpayer in each of its said accounting periods, derived from sources both within and without Australia. And under the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918 of the Commonwealth, war-time profits tax was also levied upon the war-time profits arising from the business of the taxpayer in the financial years above mentioned, derived from sources within Australia. The excess profits duty imposed by the English Finance Act 1915 and its amendments is a war-time profits tax, or a similar tax to that imposed by the War-time Profits Tax Acts of the Commonwealth, and the taxpayer paid excess profits duty under the English Act, in respect of profits from its business, as follows: Accounting period—ending 31st January 1917, £9,969; ending 31st January 1918, £35,285; ending 31st January 1919, £40,611.

The War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918, sec. 15 (4), provides: "Deductions shall not be allowed on account of the liability to pay, or the payment of, war-time profits tax, but a deduction shall be allowed for any sum which has been paid in respect of the profits on account of any war-time profits tax or similar tax imposed in any country outside the Commonwealth." The taxpayer claimed, as a deduction under this section, the sums paid as excess profits duty in respect of the profits from its business derived from sources within Australia. It insisted that, in the natural and literal sense of the word "paid," the sums already mentioned had been paid in respect of the profits under and in pursuance of the English Finance (No. 2) Act 1915, Part III.—"Excess Profits Duty." (Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Dalgety & Co.[11].) But the Commissioner relied upon the decision of this Court in D. & W. Murray Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation[12], which denies that the taxpayer can fasten on the formal act of payment, and say that the word "paid" is thereby once and for all necessarily satisfied, if in point of fact the money has been restored to, or "got back again" by, the taxpayer, and he can "not honestly declare that he was out of pocket by the transaction." The words in inverted commas are observations of Lord Shaw of Dunfermline recorded in the shorthand notes of the argument in the Privy Council on an application for special leave to appeal (unreported) in Murray's Case, but they were not an expression of his opinion: they were simply an exposition of the judgment of this Court. In Murray's Case repayment or refund of the excess profits duty tax was made pursuant to the provisions of the Finance (No. 2) Act 1915, sec. 38. In the present case the repayment of tax was made pursuant to the provisions of the Finance Act 1921 (11 & 12 Geo. V. c. 32). (See secs. 35 and 38, and the Second Schedule, Part I., r. 1; Part IV., rr. 6 and 7.) The relief granted to the taxpayer amounted to the sum of £68,914, but it was in respect of the aggregate amount of excess profits duty paid or assessed (£113,297) for the accounting periods ending on 31st January in the years 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921. Under the Finance Act 1921, this relief is given by way of repayment except in cases where it could be set off against any duty which had been assessed on the taxpayer for any accounting period and remained unpaid. Further, any repayment under the Schedule "shall, for purposes of income tax, be treated as a repayment of duty"—a provision which makes clear the application of sec. 35 of the Finance (No. 2) Act 1915 to the repayment. The relief granted is a repayment or refund of duty, except in the cases mentioned. Once this is clear, then the decision of this Court in Murray's Case[13] governs the matter. The taxpayer cannot rely on the formal act of payment and say that he has "paid" a sum, which has been repaid, refunded and restored to him.

But some practical difficulties arise in calculating the deduction to which the taxpayer is entitled under the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918, sec. 15 (4). The sum of £21,478 10s., part of the sum of £68,914, was set off against the excess profits duty payable for the years ended 31st January 1920 and 31st January 1921, and definitely allocated or appropriated to those years. It cannot, therefore, be treated as a repayment of any sum paid as and for excess profits duty in respect of the years in question in these cases, namely 1916-1917, 1917-1918, and 1918-1919. Again, £12,042 14s., a further part of the sum of £68,914, was set off against liabilities of the taxpayer other than excess profits duty. This was a set-off of cross-demands and the equivalent of payment. By this means, excess profits duty was got back again by or repaid to the taxpayer. This sum of £12,042 14s. must therefore be treated as part of the excess profits duty repaid to the taxpayer, pursuant to the Finance Act 1921. In August 1922 the balance of the sum of £68,914, namely, £35,392 16s., was paid to the taxpayer in cash. Accordingly, there is a lump sum of £47,435 10s., which has been repaid to the taxpayer pursuant to the provisions of the Finance Act 1921. This sum has not been allocated or appropriated to any particular year or years, and represents, therefore, repayments in respect of the accounting periods ending on 31st January in each of the years 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919, for in the period ending on 31st January 1915 there were no excess profits.

In view of these facts, how is the deduction under the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918, sec. 15 (4), to be calculated? The deduction is only of the sum paid for excess profits duty in respect of the profits arising from sources within Australia, and in respect of the profits of the year of assessment (Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. S. Hoffnung & Co.[14]; S. Hoffnung & Co. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation[15]). An apportionment is thus required by the very terms of the Act, and that allowed in Hoffnung's Case was the proportion of the amount of excess profits duty paid which profits from Australian sources bore to the whole of the profits assessed to excess profits duty. The lump sum of £47,435 repaid by the English authorities was, as already mentioned, in respect of accounting periods ending on 31st January in the years 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919. The war-time profits tax was imposed in Australia in September 1917 (Act No. 34 of 1917), but the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act 1917-1918, sec. 2, provides that the Act shall apply to profits of any business arising up to 30th June 1919. The present assessments are in respect of the profits of the financial years 1916-1917, 1917-1918 and 1918-1919. But the accounting periods taken under the English and under the Australian Acts appear to have been the same. The problem is how to allocate or appropriate the repayment or refund of the lump sum of £47,435 over the excess profits duty paid or assessed in respect of the accounting periods which ended on the 31st January in the years 1917, 1918 and 1919. In my opinion, the sum should be distributed ratably over those periods (cf. Commissioner of Stamp Duties (N.S.W.) v. Perpetual Trustee Co. (Saxton's Case)[16] and cases there cited). Thus can be ascertained the amount of excess profits duty paid in each accounting period. Combining this with the methods approved in Hoffnung's Case, the sum which has been paid in respect of the Australian profits on account of excess profits duty can then be calculated for the purposes of sec. 15 (4) of the War-time Profits Tax Assessment Act. The Commissioner appears to have added a deficiency refund of £1,570 to his figures, but the Justice who finally disposes of this appeal will consider how (if at all) this sum should be dealt with in calculating the deduction to which the taxpayer is entitled, and what the amount of the deduction, calculated in accordance with the opinion of this Court, actually is.

The other matters raised by the cases can be disposed of more shortly. In the 1916-1917 assessment, the Commissioner on 3rd November 1919 notified the taxpayer that he withdrew his assessment dated 10th October 1919. But the withdrawal of an assessment did not discharge the taxpayer from the obligation to pay the tax imposed by the War-time Profits Tax Acts, and I can see nothing in the Acts prohibiting the Commissioner from altering his assessment pursuant to sec. 23, or even reassessing the taxpayer. The Liverpool Case[17] cannot, I think, be supported. Further, the Commissioner, in order to ascertain the profits of the taxpayer on which tax ought to be levied, added to the profits, as shown by the taxpayer's Australian books, certain commissions, manufacturers' cash discounts and freight and insurance rebates. This assessment of the Commissioner is supported by the decision of this Court in Commissioner of Taxation of Western Australia v. D. & W. Murray Ltd.[18], and I need do no more on this head than refer to the reasons there given.

The questions stated by the cases should be answered as follows:—As to the case stated in respect of the assessment for the financial year 1916-1917—(1) Yes; (2) Yes; (3) No; (4) Yes: the sum of £47,435 10s.; (5) The sum of £47,435 10s. should be ratably or proportionately deducted from the excess profits duty assessed in respect of the accounting periods which ended on 31st January 1916, 31st January 1917, 31st January 1918 and 31st January 1919; (6) Yes: all of them. Case remitted to a Justice of this Court with the answers aforesaid. Costs of case reserved to Justice who disposes of appeal.

As to each case stated in respect of the assessments for the financial years 1917-1918 and 1918-1919—(1) Yes: the sum of £47,435 10s.; (2) The sum of £47,435 10s. should be ratably or proportionately deducted from the excess profits duty assessed in respect of the accounting periods which ended on 31st January 1916, 31st January 1917, 31st January 1918 and 31st January 1919 respectively; (3) Yes: all of them. Cases remitted to a Justice of this Court with the answers aforesaid. Costs of cases reserved for the Justice who disposes of appeal.

Solicitors for the appellant, Blake & Riggall, for Allen, Allen & Hemsley.

Solicitor for the respondent, W. H. Sharwood, Crown Solicitor for the Commonwealth.

[1] (1926) 37 C.L.R., at pp. 372, 374.

[2] [1927] HCA 18; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 108

[3] [1927] HCA 18; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 108.

[4] (1927) 40 C.L.R., at pp. 152, 153.

[5] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[6] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[7] (1919) A.C. 956, at p. 962.

[8] (1928) 42 C.L.R. 39.

[9] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[10] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[11] (1930) 1 K.B. 1; 46 T.L.R. 349 (H.L.).

[12] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[13] [1927] HCA 51; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 148.

[14] (1928) 42 C.L.R. 39.

[15] [1929] HCA 9; (1929) 42 C.L.R. 155.

[16] [1929] HCA 27; (1929) 43 C.L.R. 247, at p. 266.

[17] [1927] HCA 18; (1927) 40 C.L.R. 108.

[18] [1929] HCA 21; (1929) 42 C.L.R. 332.


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