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Spriggs v Commissioner of Taxation; Riddell v Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 22 (18 June 2009)
Last Updated: 19 June 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ
GUMMOW, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
Matter No M92/2008
DAVID RAYMOND SPRIGGS APPELLANT
AND
THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION
OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA RESPONDENT
Matter No M93/2008
MARK RIDDELL APPELLANT
AND
THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION
OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA RESPONDENT
Spriggs v Commissioner of Taxation
Riddell v Commissioner of Taxation
[2009] HCA 22
18 June 2009
M92/2008 & M93/2008
ORDER
- Appeals
allowed.
- Set
aside the orders made in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the orders of the Full Court of
the Federal Court of Australia, made on 22 August
2008 in each appeal, and in
lieu thereof order that the appeals to that Court be dismissed.
On appeal from the Federal Court of Australia
Representation
R Merkel QC with N Orow for the appellants in both matters (instructed by DLA
Phillips Fox)
D H Bloom QC with R A Brett QC and M T Flynn for the respondents in both matters
(instructed by Australian Government Solicitor)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Spriggs v Commissioner of Taxation
Riddell v Commissioner of Taxation
Taxes and duties – Income tax – Deductions – Appellant
taxpayers professional Australian Rules football player
and professional rugby
league player – Each paid fee to manager for negotiating contract to play
with new club – Whether
management fee deductible under Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 (Cth), s 8-1(1) as outgoing "incurred in gaining
or producing" or "necessarily incurred in carrying on a business for the purpose
of gaining or producing" assessable income – Whether each appellant
carrying on business exploiting sporting prowess and associated
celebrity
– Relevance of exclusion from definition of "business" in s 995-1 of
"occupation as an employee" – Relevance
of Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Maddalena (1971) 45 ALJR 426; 2 ATR 541.
Taxes and duties – Income tax – Deductions – Whether
management fee not deductible pursuant to s 8-1(2)(a)
as an "outgoing of
capital, or of a capital nature".
Words and phrases – "business", "incurred in gaining or producing",
"necessarily incurred in carrying on a business", "occupation
as an employee",
"ordinary income", "outgoing of capital".
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth), ss 6-5(1), 8-1,
995-1.
- FRENCH
CJ, GUMMOW, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ. These appeals arise out
of the assessment of income tax made by the
Commissioner of Taxation of the
Commonwealth of Australia ("the Commissioner"), the respondent to each appeal,
in respect of each
of the appellants, Mr David Raymond Spriggs ("Spriggs") and
Mr Mark Riddell ("Riddell"), for the year of income ended 30 June 2005
("the
2005 income year"). Before, during and after the 2005 income year, Spriggs was
a professional Australian Rules football player,
who played for clubs in the
Australian Football Competition, and Riddell was a professional rugby league
player, who played for clubs
in the National Rugby League Competition.
- The
issue in these appeals is whether the appellants were entitled to deductions,
pursuant to s 8-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) ("the
ITAA"), for fees paid by each of them to his respective manager during the 2005
income year ("the management fees").
- The
Commissioner refused to allow deductions for the management fees in assessments
of the appellants' respective liabilities to
income tax in respect of the 2005
income year. Each of the appellants objected to those
assessments[1],
but their objections were disallowed by the Commissioner. The appellants then
appealed from these "objection decisions" to the
Federal Court of
Australia[2].
The primary judge (Gordon J) concluded that the management fees were
deductible, set aside the Commissioner's objection decisions
and substituted
decisions allowing the
deductions[3].
However, the Full Court of the Federal Court (Goldberg, Bennett and
Edmonds JJ) ("the Full Court") unanimously allowed appeals
by the
Commissioner and made orders effectively reinstating the Commissioner's
objection
decisions[4]. It
is from the decision of the Full Court that the appellants now appeal, by
special leave, to this Court. The appeals to this
Court were heard
together.
- For
the reasons which follow, the Full Court was in error to conclude that the
management fees were not deductible. Accordingly,
the appeals to this Court
should be allowed and the orders of the primary judge restored.
The facts
- Both
in the Full
Court[5] and this
Court, it was accepted by the parties that there is no significant
distinguishing feature between the cases of each appellant.
The relevant facts
of each case are as follows.
- Spriggs.
The Australian Football Competition ("the AFL Competition") is the elite
Australian Rules football competition conducted by the
Australian Football
League ("the AFL"), a public company limited by guarantee. At all relevant
times, 16 clubs participated in the
AFL Competition. From 2000 to 2006, Spriggs
played for two of those clubs in succession. In each case, he was contracted to
play
Australian Rules football on a full-time basis pursuant to an AFL Standard
Playing Contract between him, the club and the AFL.
- Each
AFL Standard Playing Contract entered into by Spriggs was a standard contract in
a form prescribed by the AFL and the Australian
Football League Players'
Association Incorporated ("the AFLPA"), modified to include particular
conditions relating to Spriggs.
Each incorporated a Collective Bargaining
Agreement between the AFL and the AFLPA, which will be described in more detail
later in
these
reasons[6].
- As
was agreed in each AFL Standard Playing Contract, the "AFL Player Rules",
determined by the AFL, were binding on both Spriggs,
as a player, and each club
which contracted with him. The AFL Player Rules in effect require that any
person playing in the AFL
Competition be a party to an AFL Standard Playing
Contract. The AFL Player Rules also regulate the conduct of the yearly "AFL
National
Draft", which enables clubs to select players to play for them from a
list of eligible players who have nominated for the Draft.
- In
November 1999, Spriggs was selected by the Geelong Football Club Limited
("Geelong") from the AFL National Draft for that year.
On 7 January 2000, he
entered into a "Representation Agreement" with Connors Sports Management Pty Ltd
("CSM"). The term of the
Representation Agreement was for two years, but it was
extended by agreement between the parties and was in place for the 2005 income
year. The Representation Agreement relevantly provided:
"1. Contract Services:
CSM hereby warrants that a duly accredited player agent will represent, advise,
council [sic] and assist the
player[[7]] in
the negotiation and enforcement of his AFL Standard Playing Contract(s) in the
Australian Football League.
2. Appointment:
CSM will for the full term of this agreement act as the Player's exclusive Agent
throughout Australia in respect of the Player's
activities as a professional AFL
footballer including the players [sic] AFL Contract with his respective Club,
endorsements, merchandising,
appearances and media contracts.
3. CSM's compensation:
If CSM succeeds in negotiating an AFL Standard Playing Contract or contracts
acceptable to the player, CSM shall be paid a fee as
follows:
3% of the Player's total gross earnings for the term of the contract[.]
The player will pay the following fees for marketing and media activities:
20% of the total gross earnings in relation to marketing, and media activities."
- Spriggs
was contracted to Geelong, pursuant to successive AFL Standard Playing
Contracts, for the 2000 to 2004 AFL Competition seasons.
Mr Paul Connors
("Connors") of CSM negotiated terms to be included in all but the first of these
contracts.
- During
the 2004 AFL Competition season, Connors and Spriggs considered that it might be
appropriate for Spriggs to move to another
club in the AFL Competition. Connors
became involved in various negotiations with representatives of a number of
clubs towards that
end.
- On
31 October 2004, Spriggs' then current contract with Geelong came to an end.
Spriggs was thereupon eligible, under the AFL Player
Rules, to nominate for the
AFL National Draft. Following negotiations with representatives of the Sydney
Swans Ltd ("Sydney") and
another club, Connors ultimately agreed on the minimum
terms and conditions that Sydney would meet if they selected Spriggs in the
Draft. On 20 November 2004, Spriggs was selected in the Draft for that year by
Sydney. On 9 December 2004, he entered into an AFL
Standard Playing Contract
for the 2005 and 2006 AFL Competition seasons, consistent with the terms
negotiated by Connors ("Spriggs'
2005/2006 Contract"). Among other things, it
provided for a "Base Payment" for the 2005 AFL Competition season of $70,000.
The
view of the primary judge was that it was a contract of
employment[8].
- On
20 December 2004, CSM issued a tax invoice to Spriggs. Against an amount of
$2,100, the notation on the invoice read: "Management
and promotional services
by CSM for season 2004". This amount was equivalent to 3% of the Base Payment
for the 2005 AFL Competition
season in Spriggs' 2005/2006 Contract. The
conclusion of the primary judge was that the fee was paid by Spriggs to CSM for
negotiating
Spriggs' 2005/2006
Contract[9].
Including GST of $210, the total amount payable was $2,310. It is this fee
which the Commissioner contends is not deductible by
Spriggs in the 2005 income
year.
- At
the end of the 2006 AFL Competition season, Spriggs' 2005/2006 Contract with
Sydney came to an end. He did not subsequently play
with any other club in the
AFL Competition. The Representation Agreement with CSM came to an end.
- Riddell.
The National Rugby League Competition ("the NRL Competition") is the premier
rugby league competition in Australia and New Zealand,
conducted by National
Rugby League Limited ("the NRL"), a public company limited by guarantee.
Sixteen clubs participate in the
NRL Competition. From 1998, Riddell played for
three clubs in the Competition in succession. In each case, he was contracted
to
play rugby league on a full-time basis pursuant to an NRL Playing Contract
between him and his club. There was a Collective Bargaining
Agreement, between
the Rugby League Professionals Association and NRL clubs, which dealt with
industrial issues.
- The
rules and regulations of the NRL Competition, including the "NRL Playing
Contract and Remuneration Rules", are determined by
the NRL. Under the NRL
Playing Contract and Remuneration Rules, any club that participates in the NRL
Competition must ensure that
the club and its players have complied with those
Rules. Under the Rules, any person who wishes to participate as a player in the
NRL Competition must, among other things, be a party to a current NRL Playing
Contract with a club. The NRL Playing Contract is
a standard contract. As was
agreed in each NRL Playing Contract entered into by Riddell, the NRL Playing
Contract and Remuneration
Rules were binding on him.
- On
29 May 1998, Riddell entered into an agreement with International Sports
Management Pty Ltd ("ISM"). He was contracted to play
for the Eastern Suburbs
District Rugby League Football Club Limited for the 1998 to 2000 NRL Competition
seasons. On 27 July 2000,
he entered into an NRL Playing Contract with
St George Illawarra Rugby League Football Club ("St George") for the 2001
NRL Competition
season, and then on 6 June 2001 he entered into an NRL Playing
Contract with St George for the 2002 to 2004 NRL Competition seasons.
- Also
on 6 June 2001, Riddell entered into an agreement with SFX Sports Group
(Australia) Pty Ltd ("SFX"), which had acquired ISM
during the course of 1999.
The term of the agreement was five years, and it was in place during the 2005
income year. The second
recital stated: "The
Player[[10]]
desires to exclusively engage the
Manager[[11]]
to exclusively manage his affairs as hereinafter set out." Pursuant to cl 1,
SFX agreed to provide the following services to Riddell:
"a) Advise the Player in respect of his sporting career.
b) Negotiate playing contracts on behalf of the
Player.
- Negotiate
product endorsements and sponsorship so far as is reasonably
possible.
- Access
and arrange legal, financial, superannuation, taxation, insurance and other
appropriate advices and services at the request
and cost of the Player.
- Develop
and maintain a mutually agreeable communication timetable.
- Provide
such other services and advices as may reasonably be required by the Player."
Pursuant to cl 4(a), SFX was entitled to charge "[t]wenty per cent (20%) of
all gross monies or other considerations paid to
the Player for sponsorship,
media contracts, endorsement for goods and services, advertising or any form of
promotional work and
any subsequent income earned from the above monies."
Pursuant to cl 4(b)(i), SFX was entitled to charge "[s]even percent (7%)
of
all contract monies paid to the Player including bonuses/incentives negotiated
by the Manager."
- Each
of the NRL Playing Contracts entered into by Riddell mentioned above was
negotiated by ISM or SFX. During the 2004 NRL Competition
season, Darryl Mather
("Mather") of SFX unsuccessfully attempted to negotiate a new NRL Playing
Contract for Riddell with representatives
of St George. Riddell was then
granted permission, as required by his contract with St George and the NRL
Playing Contract and Remuneration
Rules, to negotiate with other clubs in the
NRL Competition. Mather negotiated on Riddell's behalf with representatives of
Parramatta
National Rugby League Club Limited ("Parramatta") and another club,
and, ultimately, agreed terms with the representatives of Parramatta.
On 22
June 2004, Riddell entered into an NRL Playing Contract with Parramatta for the
2005 to 2007 NRL Competition seasons ("Riddell's
2005/2007 Contract"). Among
other things, it provided for an annual playing fee of $275,000 for each of
those years. The view of
the primary judge was that it was a contract of
employment[12].
- On
17 November 2004, SFX issued a tax invoice to Riddell. Against an amount of
$19,250, the notation on the invoice read: "2005
Management Fees". This amount
was equivalent to 7% of the annual playing fee under Riddell's 2005/2007
Contract. The conclusion
of the primary judge was that the fee was payment to
SFX for negotiating Riddell's 2005/2007
Contract[13].
Including GST of $1,925, the total amount payable was $21,175. It is this fee
which the Commissioner contends is not deductible
by Riddell in the 2005 income
year.
- As
at 18 July 2007, Riddell was contracted to Parramatta pursuant to an NRL Playing
Contract for the 2007 to 2009 NRL Competition
seasons.
The applicable legislation
- Section 8-1
of the ITAA relevantly provides:
"(1) You can deduct from your assessable income any loss or
outgoing to the extent that:
(a) it is incurred in gaining or producing your assessable income; or
(b) it is necessarily incurred in carrying on a business for the purpose of
gaining or producing your assessable income.
...
(2) However, you cannot deduct a loss or outgoing under this section to the
extent that:
(a) it is a loss or outgoing of capital, or of a capital nature ..."
(original emphasis)
- Section
6-5(1) of the ITAA provides:
"Your assessable income includes income according to ordinary
concepts, which is called ordinary income." (original
emphasis)
- "Business"
is defined in s 995-1 of the ITAA as
follows[14]:
"business includes any profession, trade, employment, vocation or
calling, but does not include occupation as an employee." (original
emphasis)
Decisions of the Federal Court
- The
primary judge. As noted above, the primary judge decided in favour
of each appellant. Her Honour found that each was carrying on a business as a
professional footballer, of which playing for a club was a part, and that the
management fee paid by each was incurred in gaining
or producing income from
that business and carrying on that business. In the light of this finding, her
Honour concluded that the
management fees were deductible under both limbs of
s 8-1(1) of the ITAA.
- In
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Maddalena
("Maddalena")[15],
this Court concluded that Mr Maddalena, a professional part-time rugby league
player, who was also a full-time employee electrician,
was not able to deduct
travel and legal expenses incurred by him in seeking and obtaining a new
employment contract with a club to
play rugby league. The Court held that the
expenses were not incurred in gaining or producing income from that new
employment; rather,
they were "incurred in getting, not in doing, work as an
employee" and therefore came "at a point too soon to be properly regarded
as
incurred in gaining assessable
income"[16].
The primary judge distinguished Maddalena, on the basis that it arose in
an era when the position of professional sportspersons was quite different from
their position in
contemporary times and otherwise on its facts.
- Finally,
following Sun Newspapers Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation ("Sun
Newspapers")[17]
and subsequent
authorities[18],
the primary judge concluded that the management fees were revenue expenses, not
capital expenses, and that s 8-1(2)(a) of the
ITAA did not apply.
- The
Full Court. The Full Court unanimously reversed the primary judge's
decision, primarily by focusing on her Honour's findings of fact that the
management fees were, in each case, paid for the service of negotiating an
employment contract. Despite factual distinctions which
the Full Court
recognised, the Full Court concluded that Maddalena applied to deny
deductibility in respect of the management fees. The Full Court considered that
even if the appellants were carrying
on businesses to the extent of their
various endorsements and media appearances, detailed later in these reasons,
those businesses
were separate from their employment by their respective clubs.
The management fees, paid for the negotiation of a new contract with
the
relevant club, were therefore said not to have been incurred by the appellants
in gaining or producing income from their employment
or carrying on their
respective businesses.
- In
the light of these conclusions, it was not necessary for the Full Court to
consider s 8-1(2)(a) of the ITAA. However, the
Full Court noted that, had
it been necessary, it would have concluded that the management fees were not
capital expenses and that
s 8-1(2)(a) did not apply.
Submissions in this Court
- In
this Court, it was submitted on behalf of the appellants that each had turned
his sporting prowess to account for money and that
each was engaged in
income-producing activity, a business, which encompassed two related streams of
income: "playing income", from
playing Australian Rules football or rugby
league for his respective club, and "non-playing income", derived from
sponsorships, endorsements
and similar or related non-playing activities,
whether carried out in conjunction with the club or independently of it. Thus,
the
management fees were said to be incurred in gaining or producing income from
the appellants' businesses as professional sportsmen.
Neither appellant could
be fairly or completely described as having an "occupation as an employee",
within the exclusion in the
definition of "business" in s 995-1 of the ITAA,
quoted
above[19]. So
much was said to be sufficient for deductibility under either limb of
s 8-1(1) of the ITAA. The appellants argued that
Maddalena was
distinguishable and, if not, should be overruled.
- As
part of the appellants' argument, there was some attempt at clarification or
expansion of two conclusions of the primary judge:
first, that Spriggs'
2005/2006 Contract and Riddell's 2005/2007 Contract ("the playing contracts")
were contracts of employment;
and secondly, that the management fees, paid under
the Representation Agreement with CSM and the agreement with SFX ("the
management
agreements") by Spriggs and Riddell, respectively, were compensation
for negotiating the playing contracts. The appellants argued
that the playing
contracts were not solely contracts of employment, because they contained terms
and conditions upon which the appellants
could turn their sporting prowess and
associated celebrity to account for money from both their playing and
non-playing activities.
The appellants also argued that the management fees
were not paid solely for negotiating the playing contracts, but for all the
services provided by the managers, the successful negotiation of a playing
contract being merely the trigger for payment of the management
fee.
- Finally,
in response to Notices of Contention by the Commissioner contending that the
management fees were capital expenses such
that s 8-1(2)(a) of the ITAA
applied, the appellants argued that the management fees were not capital
expenses because they
were recurrent expenses referable to the process by which
the appellants turned their sporting prowess to account to derive a regular
stream of income.
- The
Commissioner characterised the playing contracts as solely contracts of
employment, and the management fees as fees paid for
the procuring of those
contracts, governed by the long-standing authority of Maddalena. The
Commissioner contested the appellants' characterisations of the playing
contracts and of the management fees, and further submitted
that it was not open
to the appellants to challenge the primary judge's conclusions on those matters,
as they were factual findings
which were not challenged in the Full Court. The
management fees were characterised by the Commissioner as "employee deductions"
and therefore outside s 8-1(1)(b) of the ITAA.
- Finally,
it was contended by the Commissioner that s 8-1(2)(a) of the ITAA operated
to deny the deductions claimed because the
advantage the management fees had
secured were the playing contracts, which were structural assets.
- In
resolving these competing submissions, it is necessary to consider in greater
detail the income-producing activities undertaken
by the appellants.
The appellants' income-producing activities
- Spriggs.
The association of players of Australian Rules football, now named AFLPA,
has existed since 1974. It has been involved in the development
of a Collective
Bargaining Agreement between it and the AFL, containing terms and conditions
incorporated into the AFL Standard Playing
Contract. Thus, it has now been
recognised that playing Australian Rules football in the AFL is work involving
industrial relations
and some need for collective bargaining.
- Evidence
was given at trial to the effect that players in the AFL Competition are
increasingly able to market and promote their own
images and
personalities[20].
The Collective Bargaining Agreement and the AFL Player Rules are consistent with
this.
- Relevantly,
cl 16 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement covers "Additional Services
Agreements", which a player may enter with an
AFL club or a sponsor of an AFL
club as a part of the "promotions/marketing" of that player. Such agreements
are required to be
in writing, to "represent bona fide commercially based
arrangements" and to be lodged with the AFL within 28 days of the date of
signing any agreement. Schedule D of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
contains guidelines for Additional Services Agreements.
- In
addition, cl 20 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement provides that, subject to
certain restrictions, a player may use his own
"Image", which is defined to
include "a Player's name, photograph, likeness, reputation and identity".
Schedule E contains
guidelines for licensing and expressly recognises a
player's entitlement to engage in promotional activity using his Image, with
permission if using AFL property or intellectual property, but otherwise
independently.
- It
can also be noted that the Collective Bargaining Agreement recognises the
position of managers. The evidence was that 90% of
AFL players employed the
services of
managers[21].
- The
AFL Player Rules recognise that players may receive income under their AFL
Standard Playing Contracts and also from other sources.
Thus, the definition in
the AFL Player Rules of "Football Payments" in r 1.1, which must, pursuant to
r 2.2, be notified to
the AFL for a player to be registered to play with a
club in the AFL Competition, is as follows:
"Football Payments: in respect of a Player, any payment, consideration,
advantage or other benefit directly or indirectly given or provided to, or
applied
for the benefit of, the Player or any Associate of the Player and
which:–
(a) relates in any way to, or which is connected with, the Player's past,
present or future services with a Club as a football player,
or any agreement,
arrangement or understanding for the Player to join a Club or to refrain from
joining a Club; or
(b) is so given, provided or applied by a Club, or by any Associate of a Club,
unless the Player, the Club or the Associate of a
Club proves to the
satisfaction of the Investigations Manager that the payment, consideration,
advantage or benefit was paid, given
or provided to the Player, or applied for
the benefit of the Player or any Associate of a Player, in consideration of bona
fide:
(i) employment;
(ii) marketing; or
(iii) other services or
rights
not falling within sub-paragraph (a), rendered by the Player ("Additional
Services")." (original emphasis)
- Pursuant
to rr 2.1, 2.2(v) and 2.3.1, as noted above, all players with AFL clubs are
obliged to enter a contract of service
in a form prescribed from time to time by
the AFL and the AFLPA, that is, an AFL Standard Playing Contract. However,
Australian
Rules football players are no longer tied to a particular club, as
once they
were[22].
There are now elaborate arrangements for transfer, exchange and participation in
the AFL National Draft, which is open to players
who are not listed with a club.
The AFL National Draft operates on the basis that there is a pool of players,
not contracted to clubs,
who are available to clubs in an order determined by
the previous year's results. There is also a "salary cap" mechanism designed
to
ensure that wealthier clubs are not able to contract disproportionate numbers of
the most successful players. Both mechanisms
are intended to achieve the
difficult goal of evening out the competition between the clubs and to make the
results less
predictable[23].
- Each
of the AFL Standard Playing Contracts signed by Spriggs, including Spriggs'
2005/2006 Contract, was a tripartite agreement between
Spriggs, his club and the
AFL. Spriggs' 2005/2006 Contract contained terms and conditions referable to a
contract of service, such
as cl 4.2, by which Spriggs agreed to:
"[f]aithfully, diligently and to the best of his ability, experience and talent,
perform the duties applicable to employees in general
and, without limiting such
duties, the duties of a professional Australian Footballer as set out in this
Contract."
However, as noted above, the Collective Bargaining Agreement was expressly
incorporated into each of the AFL Standard Playing Contracts
signed by Spriggs
(pursuant to cl 2) and, pursuant to cl 10.1, both Spriggs and his club agreed to
be bound by the AFL Player Rules.
Thus, Spriggs' 2005/2006 Contract also
contained terms and conditions referable to promotional activities, including
those carried
out independently of his club. It was, therefore, a contract of
employment, as the primary judge concluded, but it was not solely a
contract of employment. Even if this point was not raised by the appellants in
the Full Court below, as a matter concerning the
legal construction of a
document, it was open to the appellants to raise that construction for the first
time in this
Court[24].
- As
will be further explained in these reasons, the question of whether the
management fees were incurred "in gaining or producing"
the assessable income of
Spriggs turns upon the characterisation of the tripartite arrangement between
Spriggs, his club and the
AFL. The answer to the question is not to be found by
isolating in those arrangements a contract of employment of the player.
- From
2000 to 2006, Spriggs received Football Payments (as defined in the AFL Player
Rules) under his AFL Standard Playing Contracts
and, as a result of negotiations
undertaken by CSM, he also derived income from non-playing activities. These
variously included
appearances at AFL and other promotions, appearances in the
"Men For All Seasons Calendar", an appearance on television on the "Footy
Show",
and the use of his image on playing cards licensed by the AFL.
- During
the 2005 income year, Spriggs' only income from non-playing activities was $641,
from licensing fees paid to Spriggs by the
AFL for the use of his image on
playing cards. His total income for the 2005 income year was $106,869. All but
$215, which was
interest income, was described in Spriggs' income tax return for
the 2005 income year as derived from being a "Professional Sportsperson".
- Riddell.
Save that there is no national draft, the NRL Competition is characterised
by arrangements similar to the AFL Competition. Clubs
operate with a salary cap
and the arrangements permit transfer, exchange and selection of players. As
with the AFL Competition,
there was evidence at trial that a large number of
players in the NRL Competition use managers' services: it was estimated that
95% of the 25 highest paid players at any NRL club are represented by a
manager[25].
- The
NRL Playing Contract and Remuneration Rules recognise that NRL players may
receive income under their NRL Playing Contracts,
from playing rugby league, and
also from other sources. Thus, for the purposes of establishing, in
Pt 8.1, a "Salary Cap",
providing that each club must ensure that the total
aggregate "Remuneration" paid to its players during a season does not exceed
a
particular amount, r 65 defines "Remuneration" to include benefits paid
pursuant to a "Third Party Agreement". Rule 7(1)
defines "Third Party
Agreement" to mean "any contract, agreement or arrangement, whether entered into
by a Club, a Player or some
other person or entity on behalf of a Club or a
Player, whereby Remuneration is paid to, or for the benefit of, a Player by a
Third
Party". Rule 100 provides that such Remuneration will be included for the
purposes of the Salary Cap calculation, unless, among
other things, the
agreement was entered into between the player and the third party at arm's
length from the club. One factor relevant
to that assessment is "[w]hether the
Player is to be promoted by the Third Party as a sportsman independent of his
Club who is associated
with the Third Party as opposed to a Player from his
Club".
- Riddell's
2005/2007 Contract contains provisions referable to a contract of service, such
as cl 1.1, which provides:
"The relationship between the Player and the Club, as evidenced by this
Agreement, is one of employee and employer, for the purposes
of participating in
the NRL Competition ..."
However, it was agreed in cl 3.1(h) that, as noted above, the NRL Playing
Contract and Remuneration Rules were binding on Riddell.
In addition, under
cl 3.2, he was permitted to make public appearances and to contribute to
press, television and radio, provided
the club's consent had been obtained and
no conflict of interest arose. Further, the Contract made provision for dealing
with "Player
Property", defined in cl 29.1 to mean "the name, photograph,
likeness, reputation and identity of the Player". Pursuant to cl 3.3,
Riddell
licensed his Player Property to his club and, pursuant to cl 3.4, Riddell was
entitled to use his Player Property for "commercial
purposes including, but not
limited to, endorsements, advertising, promotions, events and marketing". Thus,
in addition to conditions
referable to a contract of service, Riddell's
2005/2007 Contract also contained provisions covering publicity and sponsorship,
including
independent sponsorships. Like Spriggs' 2005/2006 Contract, Riddell's
2005/2007 Contract was a contract of employment, as found
by the primary judge,
but it was not solely a contract of employment.
- As
with Spriggs, the answer to the question of whether the management fees were
incurred "in gaining or producing" the assessable
income of Riddell is not to be
found by isolating a contract of employment from the arrangements between
Riddell and his club.
- From
1998, Riddell received payments under his NRL Playing Contracts and, as a result
of negotiations undertaken by ISM and SFX,
he also derived income from
"sponsorship, media contracts, endorsement for goods and services, advertising
or any form of promotional
work". These variously included a sponsorship
agreement with Puma Australia Pty Ltd, a licensing agreement with Legends
Genuine
Memorabilia for production of signed lithographs of Riddell, a
sponsorship agreement with Microsoft Pty Ltd, an agreement with Playersinc
Pty
Ltd for production of a Riddell "Action Figurine", and promotional television
and radio appearances.
- During
the 2005 income year, Riddell earned $11,394 from various promotional activities
negotiated by SFX on his behalf, including
a television appearance and various
sponsorships. He received $220,174 under his NRL Playing Contracts with St
George and Parramatta.
All of his income was gained or produced from his
activities as a player in the NRL Competition.
Deductibility under s 8-1(1)(a) of the ITAA
- It
is against this background that the operation of s 8-1(1) of the ITAA falls
to be considered. For that purpose, regard may
be had to the cases decided in
respect of its predecessor
provisions[26],
which were not materially
different[27].
- The
issue, in respect of s 8-1(1)(a), is whether a particular "loss or
outgoing" was "incurred in gaining or producing ... assessable
income". There
was no debate about the appellants' assessable income. It included amounts paid
by their respective clubs for playing
in matches; it also included promotional
or marketing payments for exploiting the celebrity associated with their
sporting prowess.
It was not disputed that these payments were income according
to the concept of "ordinary income" under s 6-5 of the ITAA,
that is,
within "the ordinary concepts and usages of
mankind"[28].
It was also not disputed that the management fees were "outgoings" and were
"incurred". The question which was debated was whether
the management fees were
incurred "in gaining or producing" the appellants' assessable income.
- It
is well settled that incurred "in" gaining or producing means incurred "in the
course of" gaining or producing assessable
income[29]. In
Ronpibon Tin NL v Federal Commissioner of Taxation ("Ronpibon
Tin")[30],
this Court explained:
"it is both sufficient and necessary that the occasion of the loss or outgoing
should be found in whatever is productive of the assessable
income or, if none
be produced, would be expected to produce assessable income."
The essential question, rephrased in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Payne
("Payne")[31],
is: "is the occasion of the outgoing found in whatever is productive of actual
or expected income?" In Federal Commissioner of Taxation v
Day[32],
the majority said:
"That no narrow approach should be taken to the question of what is productive
of a taxpayer's income is confirmed by cases which
acknowledge that account
should be taken of the whole of the operations of the business concerned in
determining questions of deductibility."
(footnote omitted)
- While
s 8-1(1)(a) of the ITAA does not, in terms, refer to the carrying on of a
"business", in considering deductibility under that
provision, it may be "useful
and
necessary"[33]
to consider whether the taxpayer is carrying on a business. This is because the
conduct of a business is one of the ways, according
to the "ordinary concepts
and usages of mankind", in which a person may earn income. Whether a particular
loss or outgoing is deductible
will depend on the way in which the taxpayer
gains or produces their income. Where a taxpayer earns income from a business
which
they operate, a loss or outgoing may be incurred "in the course of"
gaining or producing their income, when the same loss or outgoing
would not be
incurred "in the course of" gaining or producing income from service as an
employee.
- Section
8-1(1)(a) is available both to a taxpayer who earns income as an employee and
also to a taxpayer who earns income from a
business carried on by the
taxpayer[34].
If each of the appellants was engaged in the business of exploiting their
sporting prowess and associated celebrity, as contended
on their behalf, it
becomes necessary to ask whether the management fees were incurred in the course
of gaining or producing their
assessable income from that business. The answer
may be different from that which would apply if the appellants were not
conducting
businesses, but were no more than employees.
- This
distinction was recognised in
Maddalena[35],
where Menzies J, with whom the rest of the Court agreed, said:
"Had the taxpayer claimed as a deduction the expenses of changing from one job
to another as an employee electrician his outlay would
not have been an
allowable deduction. The expenditure would have been incurred in getting, not
in doing, work as an employee. It
would come at a point too soon to be properly
regarded as incurred in gaining assessable income. Nor would the expenditure
have
been an outgoing in carrying on a business. There is a difference of first
importance for present purposes between an electrician
who seeks work as an
employee and an electrician who seeks contracts to do work as a principal. In
the former case the electrician
would not have a business; in the latter he
would. In the latter, therefore, what he spent to obtain contracts to do
electrical
work would be properly regarded as an outgoing of his business.
There is, however, a clear distinction between the two
cases."
The late Professor Parsons made the same
point[36]:
"Whether the applicability of the first limb or the second limb is in question,
the inquiry must be concerned with the connection
between the expense and the
particular process of derivation of income." (emphasis added)
- The
existence of a business is a matter of fact and degree. It will depend on a
number of indicia, which must be considered in combination
and as a whole. No
one factor is necessarily
determinative[37].
Relevant factors include, but are not limited to, the existence of a
profit-making purpose, the scale of activities, the commercial
character of the
transactions, and whether the activities are systematic and organised, often
described as whether the activities
are carried out in a business-like
manner[38].
- Where
it is determined that a taxpayer is conducting a business, the next question
will be the "scope" of that
business[39].
It may be that the taxpayer pursues two separate fields of endeavour, which are
properly described as two separate businesses or
a business and some other
non-business activity. In Payne, the taxpayer conducted a deer farming
business and, quite apart from that business, was employed as a pilot by an
airline: the
two were activities of "unrelated income
derivation"[40].
On the other hand, a taxpayer may pursue separate income-producing
activities as part of a single
business[41].
The question is one of fact, turning upon the degree of connection and
interdependence between the activities. One must consider
"the whole of the
operations of the business concerned in determining questions of
deductibility"[42].
To determine whether a taxpayer is conducting a business and the scope of that
business, as said in a different context, "it is
necessary to make both a wide
survey and an exact scrutiny of the taxpayer's
activities"[43].
- The
appellants relied on the decision of this Court in Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Stone
("Stone")[44]
for the proposition that their activities, including those performed under the
playing contracts, constituted the conduct of a business
of turning their
sporting prowess to account for money. Stone concerned a professional
athlete who received prizes, grants, appearance fees and cash from sponsorship.
The Court concluded that
the athlete's activities constituted the conduct of a
business and that these various receipts constituted income of the business.
The Court recognised that times had changed from the days when "[s]port was the
antithesis of
work"[45] and
when, for a well-known amateur golfer to lend his name for reward to advertise a
commercial product, would be conduct unworthy
of his amateur
status[46].
Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ
said[47]:
"'Professional sport' may be thought to be a phenomenon of the second half of
the twentieth century. It was during that century
that the expression came to
be associated with those who made their principal pursuit the playing of sport
for reward."
Their Honours added that the distinctions between amateur and professional
status "were never
tidy"[48].
- Even
in previous times, in certain contexts, courts had no difficulty in finding that
playing football was work. In 1909, in Walker v The Crystal Palace Football
Club
Ltd[49],
Farwell LJ said:
"It may be sport to the amateur, but to a man who is paid for it and makes his
living thereby it is his work."
In a similar vein, in 1971, this Court stated in Buckley v
Tutty[50]:
"The fact that football is a sport does not mean that a man paid to play
football is not engaged in employment ... The position of
a professional
footballer vis-à-vis his club is that of employer and employee".
- In
this case, the Commissioner did not dispute that the non-playing activities from
which each appellant earned income constituted
a "business". However, the
Commissioner contended that, following Maddalena and in the light of the
exclusion of "occupation as an employee" from the definition of "business" in
s 995-1 of the ITAA, it
was necessary to separate the appellants'
Australian Rules football and rugby league playing activities, which could be
characterised
as employment, from their non-playing activities. On this basis,
the Commissioner argued that the management fees were not incurred
in the course
of earning income as employees, as they were incurred to obtain new employment
contracts, as in Maddalena. Further, it was argued that they were not
incurred in the course of earning income from the non-playing businesses,
because they
were paid to the managers solely for procuring the new employment
contracts, not for any purposes of the businesses, as characterised
by the
Commissioner.
- The
Commissioner's arguments must be rejected.
- It
is possible to obtain and perform an employment contract as part of, and during
the course of, running a business, as is illustrated
by Commissioner of Taxes
(Vict) v
Phillips[51].
In that case, Starke J described how the taxpayer carried on business, in
partnership with his brother, as amusement managers and
directors, and how, as
part of that business, the taxpayer was employed as the governing director of a
company which operated a theatre.
Income under the employment contract was
income of the business and, accordingly, agreed periodic compensation payments
to the taxpayer
for cancellation of the employment contract was income of the
business. For that reason, half of the compensation was to be included
as part
of the taxpayer's assessable income.
- Maddalena
does not oblige the approach for which the Commissioner contended. As noted
above, the Court there expressly considered that different
results as to
deductibility could follow if a taxpayer were conducting a business, as opposed
to being only an employee. The Court
concluded that Mr Maddalena's
contract with the rugby league club was a contract of employment and that
expenses incurred in
procuring that contract were not incurred in the course of
earning income under that contract. In reaching that conclusion, it is
plain
that the Court concluded that Mr Maddalena was not conducting a business.
That is not surprising, given the facts of
the case: his activities as a rugby
league player were part-time; there was no evidence as to any indicia of a
business, a part
of which was Mr Maddalena's employment; in particular, nothing
in the case suggested that Mr Maddalena conducted himself in a business-like
way, for instance by retaining a manager; and movement between clubs was more
difficult and less structured than it is today. This
explains the distinction
drawn by Menzies
J[52]:
"[I]t is common knowledge that because a man is a successful professional he can
earn fees from advertising and other sources which,
of course, form part of his
assessable income. Nothing I say in this judgment bears upon expenditure to
earn such fees. Here it
is the agreement with Newtown that the taxpayer spent
money to secure."
On the facts of Maddalena, there was nothing to suggest that the gaining
of any such advertising and other fees were, together with employment by a club,
part
of a business.
- The
definition of "business" in s 995-1 of the ITAA, set out
above[53], also
does not require the result contended for by the Commissioner. That definition
does not apply in respect of s 8-1(1)(a),
where the statute calls, not for
the identification of a "business" as defined, but rather for the identification
of the means of
gaining or producing
"income"[54].
Moreover, the definition does not state that a contract of employment cannot
form part of a business. What the definition provides
is that a person will not
be taken to be conducting a business merely because the person earns
income under a contract of employment. Something more than that would be
required for there to be a business.
- The
facts here are quite different from those in Maddalena. As noted
above, it is not disputed by the Commissioner that the appellants' non-playing
activities constitute businesses. Having
regard to the indicia of a business
described
above[55],
it is plain that they do. It would be artificial on the facts here to
separate the stream of income from those activities, from the
stream of income
from the appellants' playing contracts with the clubs, as suggested by the
Commissioner. The appellants' promotional
activities, exploiting their
celebrity, were inextricably linked to their respective employments of playing
Australian Rules football
and rugby league.
- Looking
at their activities as a whole, the appellants were engaged in the business of
commercially exploiting their sporting prowess
and associated celebrity for a
limited period. Those businesses were well established before the management
fees were
incurred[56].
Neither of the appellants was exclusively or simply an employee of his club.
They each exploited their sporting prowess and associated
celebrity with
different clubs over the years during which they played in the AFL Competition
and the NRL Competition, respectively.
There was a synergy between playing
activities and non-playing activities, each of which was an income-producing
activity.
- The
conduct of such a business by each of the appellants was anticipated in the
framework provided by the playing contracts and the
various other related
documents described
above[57].
That framework contained numerous provisions governing the appellants' rights to
enter contracts with third parties in order to
exploit their celebrity.
- Furthermore,
each of the appellants conducted the whole of his business in a commercial and
business-like way, in particular by retaining
a manager. The appellants'
managers had duties which included, but went well beyond, the negotiation of
playing contracts. The
obligations imposed by the management agreements
underscore the association between the appellants' playing activities and
promotional
activities.
- Even
assuming that the management fees were paid solely for the service of
negotiating the playing contracts, that service and the
management fees were
productive of both playing income and non-playing income, each flowing from the
business of each appellant of
exploiting his sporting prowess and associated
celebrity.
- There
existed here sufficient connection between the outgoing, the management fees,
and the gaining or producing of assessable income
from the business of
exploiting sporting prowess and associated celebrity, for the management fees to
be deductible under s 8-1(1)(a)
of the ITAA. They were incurred in the course
of gaining or producing income from the appellants' respective businesses.
Deductibility under s 8-1(1)(b) of the ITAA
- The
broad application of s 8-1(1)(a) of the ITAA, including its application to
income derived from a business, means that, on
the facts here, s 8-1(1)(b)
adds little.
- In
Ronpibon Tin, the overlap between the limbs of the predecessor section to
s 8-1(1) of the
ITAA[58], which
often renders the second limb otiose, was
noted[59]. It
was held that a loss or outgoing will be "necessarily incurred in
carrying on" a business if it is "clearly appropriate" or "adapted" for the
carrying on of the
business[60].
Restating the test another way, the loss or outgoing will be "necessarily
incurred" if it is "reasonably capable of being seen
as desirable or appropriate
from the point of view of the pursuit of the business ends of the
business"[61].
- As
noted above, the Commissioner submitted that s 8-1(1)(b) had no application,
because the deductions for the management fees were
"employee deductions".
However, as already explained, the appellants were properly to be considered as
conducting businesses of
turning their sporting prowess and associated celebrity
to account for money. For the reasons already explained, the businesses
included repeatedly performing the services of playing for their respective
clubs under the playing contracts. Section 8-1(1)(b)
is capable of operating in
these circumstances. No inhibition to that conclusion arises from the
definition of "business" in s 995-1,
set out
above[62],
insofar as "occupation as an employee" is excluded from that definition. This
is because, as already explained, that exclusion
requires only that, for there
to be a business, there must be something more than occupation as an employee.
Here, there was.
- In
the light of that conclusion, it is plain that the management fees were
appropriate and adapted for the carrying on of the appellants'
businesses. They
were reasonably capable of being seen as desirable or appropriate, having regard
to the ends of those businesses.
They were necessarily incurred in carrying on
those businesses and were deductible under s 8-1(1)(b) of the ITAA.
Were the management fees capital expenses under s 8-1(2)(a) of the
ITAA?
- In
the light of these conclusions, it is necessary to consider whether
s 8-1(2)(a) of the ITAA, in respect of outgoings of capital
or of a capital
nature, is engaged. As already noted, on this point, the Full Court did not
doubt the conclusion of the primary
judge that that provision was not
engaged.
- The
starting point is the frequently repeated statement of Dixon J in Sun
Newspapers[63]:
"There are, I think, three matters to be considered, (a) the character
of the advantage sought, and in this its lasting qualities may play a part,
(b) the manner in which it is to be used, relied upon or enjoyed, and in
this and under the former head recurrence may play its part,
and (c) the
means adopted to obtain it; that is, by providing a periodical reward or outlay
to cover its use or enjoyment for periods commensurate
with the payment or by
making a final provision or payment so as to secure future use or
enjoyment."
- The
Commissioner contended that, in each case, the playing contract was a structural
asset and that, as the management fee was paid
to procure that playing contract,
it was an outgoing of a capital nature.
- That
argument of the Commissioner must be rejected, even assuming that the management
fees were paid solely for the service of negotiating
the playing contracts.
- As
to the character of the advantage sought, namely the playing contracts, those
contracts were revenue assets. They were not lasting
assets, but were of a
relatively short-term nature and subject to renewal. Each of the appellants
entered into a number of playing
contracts, with different clubs, in the course
of his business.
- As
to the other matters mentioned by Dixon J in Sun Newspapers,
the management fees were a recurrent expenditure, in respect of the playing
contracts, which were revenue assets. The management
fees did not secure a
lasting asset. They were only incurred upon successful negotiation of the
playing contracts. They formed
part of the remuneration to the respective
managers under the management agreements. Those agreements obliged the managers
to provide
services in several related respects, all of which were concerned
with exploiting the appellants' sporting prowess and associated
celebrity on an
ongoing basis.
- For
those reasons, the management fees were not an outgoing of capital or of a
capital nature and s 8-1(2)(a) of the ITAA did not
apply.
Conclusion
- The
management fees paid by each of the appellants were deductible under both
s 8-1(1)(a) and (b) of the ITAA, and they were
revenue expenses which were
not covered by s 8-1(2)(a). The orders of the primary judge should be
restored.
Orders
- The
orders should be to allow the appeals to this Court, set aside the orders in
paragraphs 1 and 2 of the Full Court's orders made
on 22 August 2008 in
each appeal to that Court and, in their place, order that the appeals to that
Court be dismissed. In accordance
with submissions made by the parties, there
should be no order as to the costs of the appeals to this Court, and the orders
of the
Full Court that there be no order as to the costs of each appeal to that
Court should not be disturbed.
[1] Pursuant to s 175A of the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) and Pt IVC, Div 3 of the
Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth).
[2] Pursuant to s 14ZZ and Pt IVC, Div
5 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth).
[3] Spriggs v Federal Commissioner
of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 740; Riddell v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 757.
[4] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Spriggs [2008] FCAFC 150; (2008) 170 FCR 135.
[5] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Spriggs [2008] FCAFC 150; (2008) 170 FCR 135 at 136 [3] per Goldberg, Bennett and
Edmonds JJ.
[6] See [36]-[40].
[7] Defined in the Representation
Agreement to be Spriggs.
[8] Spriggs v Federal Commissioner
of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 740 at 752 [47] per Gordon J.
[9] Spriggs v Federal Commissioner
of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 740 at 751-752 [46] per Gordon J.
[10] Defined in the agreement to be
Riddell.
[11] Defined in the agreement to be
SFX.
[12] Riddell v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 757 at 763 [25], 766 [41] per Gordon
J.
[13] Riddell v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 757 at 765 [39] per Gordon J.
[14] This repeats the definition in
s 6 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) as enacted, which
has remained unamended since.
[15] (1971) 45 ALJR 426; 2 ATR
541.
[16] (1971) 45 ALJR 426 at 427 per
Menzies J, with whom the rest of the Court agreed; 2 ATR 541 at 549.
[17] (1938) 61 CLR 337 at 363 per
Dixon J; [1938] HCA 73.
[18] GP International Pipecoaters
Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1990] HCA 25; (1990) 170 CLR 124 at 137 per
Brennan, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ; [1990] HCA 25; Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v Citylink Melbourne Ltd [2006] HCA 35; (2006) 228 CLR 1 at 43
[147] per Crennan J; [2006] HCA 35.
[19] At [24].
[20] Spriggs v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 740 at 747 [24] per Gordon J.
[21] Spriggs v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 740 at 753 [57] per Gordon J.
[22] As to which, see Foschini v
Victorian Football League, unreported, Supreme Court of Victoria, 15 April
1983. See also Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353; [1971] HCA 71.
[23] Opie and Smith, "The Withering
of Individualism: Professional Team Sports and Employment Law", (1992) 15
University of New South Wales Law Journal 313 at 336, 338.
[24] Suttor v Gundowda Pty
Ltd [1950] HCA 35; (1950) 81 CLR 418 at 438 per Latham CJ, Williams and Fullagar JJ; [1950]
HCA 35, quoting Connecticut Fire Insurance Co v Kavanagh [1892] AC 473 at
480 per Lord Watson.
[25] Riddell v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 68 ATR 757 at 765 [39] per Gordon J.
[26] Section 51(1) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth); s 23(1)(a) of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1922 (Cth).
[27] See, eg, Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v Citylink Melbourne Ltd [2006] HCA 35; (2006) 228 CLR 1 at 30
[90] per Crennan J; Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Day (2008) 236 CLR
163 at 175 [21] per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Kiefel JJ; [2008] HCA 53.
[28] See Scott v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (1935) 35 SR (NSW) 215 at 219 per Jordan CJ, quoted
in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Stone [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR 289 at 294 [8]
per Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ; [2005] HCA 21
("Stone"). See also Australia, House of Representatives, Income Tax
Assessment Bill 1996, Explanatory Memorandum at 40.
[29] Amalgamated Zinc (De
Bavay's) Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1935] HCA 81; (1935) 54 CLR 295 at 303 per
Latham CJ, 309 per Dixon J; [1935] HCA 81; Ronpibon Tin NL v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [1949] HCA 15; (1949) 78 CLR 47 at 56-57 per Latham CJ, Rich,
Dixon, McTiernan and Webb JJ; [1949] HCA 15; Charles Moore & Co (WA) Pty
Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1956] HCA 77; (1956) 95 CLR 344 at 350 per Dixon
CJ, Williams, Webb, Fullagar and Kitto JJ; [1956] HCA 77; Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v Payne [2001] HCA 3; (2001) 202 CLR 93 at 99 [9] per
Gleeson CJ, Kirby and Hayne JJ; [2001] HCA 3; Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Day (2008) 236 CLR 163 at 175 [21] per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and
Kiefel JJ, 192 [69] per Kirby J.
[30] [1949] HCA 15; (1949) 78 CLR 47 at 57 per
Latham CJ, Rich, Dixon, McTiernan and Webb JJ.
[31] [2001] HCA 3; (2001) 202 CLR 93 at 100 [11]
per Gleeson CJ, Kirby and Hayne JJ, noted in Federal Commissioner of Taxation
v Day (2008) 236 CLR 163 at 179 [30] per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Kiefel
JJ.
[32] (2008) 236 CLR 163 at 180 [33]
per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and Kiefel JJ.
[33] Stone [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR
289 at 296 [16] per Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ.
[34] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Green [1950] HCA 20; (1950) 81 CLR 313 at 319 per Latham CJ, McTiernan,
Webb, Fullagar and Kitto JJ; [1950] HCA 20.
[35] (1971) 45 ALJR 426 at 427; 2
ATR 541 at 549-550.
[36] Income Taxation in
Australia, (1985) at 313 [5.33].
[37] Evans v Federal Commissioner
of Taxation [1989] FCA 205; (1989) 20 ATR 922 at 939 per Hill J.
[38] See, eg, Martin v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [1953] HCA 100; (1953) 90 CLR 470 at 473-474 per Webb J, 479, 481
per Williams ACJ, Kitto and Taylor JJ; [1953] HCA 100; Ferguson v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation [1979] FCA 29; (1979) 26 ALR 307 at 311 per Bowen CJ and Franki J;
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Walker (1985) 16 ATR 331 at 334-335
per Ryan J; Evans v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1989] FCA 205; (1989) 20 ATR 922 at
939-943 per Hill J.
[39] See, eg, GP International
Pipecoaters Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1990] HCA 25; (1990) 170 CLR 124 at
138-142 per Brennan, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ.
[40] [2001] HCA 3; (2001) 202 CLR 93 at 101 [14]
per Gleeson CJ, Kirby and Hayne JJ. See also, eg, Westfield Ltd v
Commissioner of Taxation (1991) 28 FCR 333 at 343 per Hill J; Lees &
Leech Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (1997) 73 FCR 136 at 147 per Hill
J. See further Scales v George Thompson & Co Ltd (1927) 13 TC 83 at
88-89 per Rowlatt J.
[41] See, eg, GP International
Pipecoaters Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1990] HCA 25; (1990) 170 CLR 124 at
139-140 per Brennan, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ; Jennings
Industries Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1984] FCA 109; (1984) 2 FCR 273 at 281
per Bowen CJ, Woodward and Fitzgerald JJ; Commissioner of Taxation v Marshall
& Brougham Pty Ltd (1987) 17 FCR 541 at 548 per Bowen CJ;
Memorex Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1987) 77 ALR 299 at
310-311 per Davies and Einfeld JJ, 315 per Pincus J. See also Westpac
Banking Corp v Commissioner of Stamp Duties (2003) 55 ATR 50 at 67-69
[67]-[74] per White J. See further Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Co
v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1925] AC 469 at 474-475 per Lord Dunedin;
North Central Wagon and Finance Co Ltd v Fifield [1953] 1 WLR 610 at
613-614 per Jenkins LJ; (1953) 34 TC 59 at 69-70; Cannon Industries Ltd v
Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) [1966] 1 WLR 580 at 589-590 per
Pennycuick J; [1966] 1 All ER 456 at 463-464.
[42] Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v Day (2008) 236 CLR 163 at 180 [33] per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon and
Kiefel JJ. See also W Nevill & Co Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[1937] HCA 9; (1937) 56 CLR 290 at 301 per Latham CJ; [1937] HCA 9.
[43] Western Gold Mines NL v
Commissioner of Taxation (WA) [1938] HCA 5; (1938) 59 CLR 729 at 740 per Dixon and Evatt
JJ; [1938] HCA 5, quoted in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Montgomery
[1999] HCA 34; (1999) 198 CLR 639 at 663 [69] per Gaudron, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ;
[1999] HCA 34; Stone [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR 289 at 297 [19] per Gleeson CJ,
Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ.
[44] [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR 289.
[45] Opie and Smith, "The Withering
of Individualism: Professional Team Sports and Employment Law", (1992) 15
University of New South Wales Law Journal 313 at 314.
[46] Tolley v J S Fry & Sons
Ltd [1931] UKHL 1; [1931] AC 333.
[47] Stone [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR 289
at 295 [12].
[48] Stone [2005] HCA 21; (2005) 222 CLR 289
at 296 [14].
[49] [1910] 1 KB 87 at 93, a case
under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 (UK).
[50] [1971] HCA 71; (1971) 125 CLR 353 at 372 per
Barwick CJ, McTiernan, Windeyer, Owen and Gibbs JJ.
[51] (1936) 55 CLR 144; [1936] HCA
11. See also Parsons, Income Taxation in Australia, (1985) at 141
[2.429]: "Where ... the question is whether there is a business of performing
services of which a contract is a revenue
asset, the fact that the contract is
an employment contract does not preclude a conclusion that there is a
business."
[52] (1971) 45 ALJR 426 at 427; 2
ATR 541 at 549.
[53] At [24].
[54] See also Parsons, Income
Taxation in Australia, (1985) at 131 [2.393].
[55] At [59].
[56] Considerations of the kind
relevant to a loss or outgoing incurred near the commencement of a business
therefore do not arise:
cf Steele v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
(1999) 197 CLR 459; [1999] HCA 7.
[57] At [36]-[52].
[58] Income Tax Assessment Act
1936 (Cth), s 51(1).
[59] [1949] HCA 15; (1949) 78 CLR 47 at 56 per
Latham CJ, Rich, Dixon, McTiernan and Webb JJ.
[60] [1949] HCA 15; (1949) 78 CLR 47 at 55-56 per
Latham CJ, Rich, Dixon, McTiernan and Webb JJ.
[61] Magna Alloys & Research
Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1980] FCA 150; (1980) 33 ALR 213 at 235 per
Deane and Fisher JJ. See further Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Snowden
& Willson Pty Ltd [1958] HCA 23; (1958) 99 CLR 431 at 437 per Dixon CJ, 443-444 per
Fullagar J; [1958] HCA 23.
[62] At [24].
[63] (1938) 61 CLR 337 at 363 per
Dixon J.
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