CHEVRON AUSTRALIA HOLDINGS PTY LTD v FC of T

Judges: Allsop CJ
Perram J

Pagone J

Court:
Full Federal Court, New South Wales

MEDIA NEUTRAL CITATION: [2017] FCAFC 62

Judgment date: 21 April 2017

Pagone J

99. Chevron Australia Holdings Pty Ltd ( " CAHPL " ) challenges assessments made by the Commissioner pursuant to Division 13 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) ( " the 1936 Act " ) in five income tax years from 2004 to 2008 (inclusive), and those made by the Commissioner pursuant to Division 815 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) ( " the 1997 Act " ) in three of those five years, namely for the 2006 to 2008 years (inclusive). The assessments relate to interest paid by CAHPL to Chevron Texaco Funding Corporation ( " CFC " ) under an agreement between them dated 6 June 2003 styled " Credit Facility Agreement " . Each of the assessments in question was in substance made upon the basis that the interest paid by CAHPL, an Australian company, to its United States subsidiary, CFC, was greater than it would have been under an arm ' s length dealing between independent parties.

100. The purpose of the Credit Facility Agreement between parent and subsidiary was to effect an internal refinancing of an Australian currency debt of Chevron Australia Pty Ltd ( " Chevron Australia " ) and to fund CAHPL ' s acquisition of Texaco Australia Pty Ltd ( " TAPL " ). CAHPL was established as the Australian holding company of the Chevron Group of Companies following the merger between Chevron Corporation ( " CVX " ), its ultimate United States parent company, and Texaco Inc. CFC was established in the group as a United States subsidiary of CAHPL for CFC to lend funds to its Australian parent at about 9 % interest from money raised by CFC from the issue of commercial paper in the United States at a rate of about 1.2 % . In June 2002 the shares in Chevron Australia and TAPL were transferred to CAHPL and were found by the learned trial judge to represent over 99.8 % of the value of CAHPL. The TAPL shares were acquired by CAHPL for a consideration found by his Honour to be at fair value of AUD $ 1.529 billion from a temporary interest free loan from the transferor, namely Getty Mining International Inc ( " Getty " ). Chevron Australia had owed CAHPL AUD $ 1.9 billion before the transfer of its shares by Getty to CAHPL on a loan from Chevron Capital Corporation ( " CCC " ) following a return of capital to its then shareholder. The learned trial judge accepted that on 6 June 2003 CAHPL drew the Australian dollar equivalent of US $ 1.45 billion under the Credit Facility Agreement and that on 26 August 2003 CAHPL drew the Australian dollar equivalent of US $ 1 billion under the Credit Facility Agreement.

101. In each of the income years in question CAHPL claimed tax deductions in Australia for the interest it paid to CFC, and returned as income the dividends it received from CFC as non-assessable non-exempt income pursuant to s 23AJ of the 1936 Act. The Commissioner described in written submissions the evidence accepted by the learned trial judge as being to the effect that the internal funding arrangements put in place resulted in CAHPL increasing its untaxed dividends from CFC as CAHPL ' s interest payments to CFC increased whilst CFC would make significant profits from borrowing at 1.2 % and on-lending at 9 % which would not be taxed either in the United States or in Australia. The economic effects of the internal financing structure put in place, in other words, included CAHPL ' s Australian taxable income being reduced by the deductions it claimed for the interest payments it made to its United States subsidiary and the receipt by CAHPL of non-taxable income from dividends CFC was able to declare to CAHPL from the interest CFC had derived from CAHPL.

102. The Commissioner ' s assessments were not made under the anti-avoidance provisions in Part IVA of the 1936 Act but in reliance upon transfer pricing provisions on the basis that the consideration paid by CAHPL to CFC for property acquired from CFC (namely, from the loan), exceeded the arm ' s length consideration that might reasonably have been expected in an agreement between independent


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parties acting at arm ' s length. Anti-avoidance provisions are directed to cancel tax benefits otherwise obtained by the regular application of revenue laws where obtaining the tax benefit was the dominant purpose of the scheme by which the tax benefit was obtained. Transfer pricing provisions, in contrast, give effect to a fiscal policy that the domestic revenue base is not to be eroded by the cost of cross-border acquisitions between related parties upon consideration which exceeds the arm ' s length price expected to be incurred between independent parties dealing with each other at arm ' s length in respect of the acquisition. That fiscal policy departs from the usual principle which is applicable to the taxation of a domestic transaction that " it is not for the Court or the Commissioner to say how much a taxpayer ought to spend in obtaining his income, but only how much he has spent " :
Ronpibon Tin NL and Tongkah Compound NL v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1949) 78 CLR 47 at 60;
Cecil Bros Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1964) 111 CLR 430 .

103. On 20 May 2010 the Commissioner issued amended assessments to CAHPL for each of the five years of income from 2004 to 2008 upon determinations dated 30 April 2010 under Division 13 of the 1936 Act. On 26 October 2012 the Commissioner issued amended assessments to CAHPL for the 2006 to 2008 tax years based upon determinations under Division 815 of the 1997 Act. CAHPL challenged the determinations upon which the assessments were made. The Division 13 assessments were challenged on the basis that the person who made them lacked authority to do so. The determinations made under Division 815 were challenged on the basis that the relevant provisions in the legislation were beyond the parliament ' s constitutional power and also on the basis that the determination under Division 815 could not effectively have been made because of the existence of the earlier determinations which had been made under Division 13.

104. The Division 13 determinations dated 30 April 2010 had been made by Mr Gavin Roberts, an officer in the Large Business and International line of the Australian Taxation Office, acting in the name of Ms Cheryl-Lea Field, an Acting Deputy Commissioner of Taxation. The Commissioner conceded that Mr Roberts did not have the authority to make the Division 13 determinations, but contended that the fact of his lack of authority did not discharge the taxpayer ' s burden of proving the assessments to be excessive. His Honour correctly upheld the amended assessments which the Commissioner had issued on 20 May 2010 based upon the determination which had been made by Mr Roberts notwithstanding his lack of authority.

105. A taxpayer ' s burden of proving that an assessment is excessive is not discharged by showing that in some respect the Commissioner erred: see
Commissioner of Taxation v Dalco (1990) 168 CLR 614 ;
Gashi v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2013) 209 FCR 301 ;
Rigoli v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2014) 96 ATR 19 ;
Rigoli v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [ 2016 ] FCAFC 38 . Section 175 of the 1936 Act protects the validity of an assessment from challenge by reason that a provision has not been complied with. Section 175 of the 1936 Act provides:

175 Validity of assessment

The validity of any assessment shall not be affected by reason that any of the provisions of this Act have not been complied with.

Section 177(1) of the 1936 Act excluded also from challenge the due making of an assessment in these proceedings upon the production of a document contemplated by that provision. Section 177(1) provided:

177 Evidence

(1) The production of a notice of assessment, or of a document under the hand of the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, or a Deputy Commissioner, purporting to be a copy of a notice of assessment, shall be conclusive evidence of the due making of the assessment and, except in proceedings under Part IVC of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 on a review or appeal relating to the assessment, that the amount and all the particulars of the assessment are correct.

Section 177(1) had been substituted between the time of the oral hearing at first instance and the time of the determination of the appeal by s 350-10 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth) ( " the Administration Act " ) but its provisions were to


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the same effect as s 177(1) of the 1936 Act. Section 350-10(1) to Schedule 1 of the Administration Act provides:


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Section 350-10 enacted in a rewritten form the provisions previously found in s 177(1) and is not to be taken to be different just because different forms of words are used: see 1997 Act, s 1 - 3(2). Where s 177(1) had previously excluded from challenge in Part IVC proceedings " the due making of the assessment " , s 350-10 subsequently excludes from challenge in Part IVC proceedings whether " the assessment was properly made " .

106. A significant issue, however, unexpectedly arose during the hearing of the appeal about whether either s 177(1) of the 1936 Act or s 350-10 of the Administration Act applied. The issue arose because s 177(1) of the 1936 Act had been in force at the time of hearing of the proceeding at first instance but had been repealed by the time of the oral hearing of the appeal, however, s 350-10 of the Administration Act had not yet become operative and was not to come into force until 1 April 2017. In the circumstances CAHPL sought, and on 14 March 2017 was granted, leave to rely upon the absence of s 177(1) or s 350-10 at the time of hearing of the appeal to challenge the assessments made in reliance upon the Division 13 determinations. It was not possible for the Court, however, to determine the appeal before 1 April 2017 when s 350-10 came into effect and accordingly the decision is to be made on the basis that s 350-10 is part of the law to be applied to decide the rights of the parties on the appeal: see
Victorian Stevedoring & General Contracting Company Pty Ltd v Dignan Informant (1931) 46 CLR 73 , 107;
Western Australia v Ward (2002) 213 CLR 1 , 87 [ 70 ] , 261 - 2 [ 612 ] - [ 613 ] .

107. The assessments issued by the Commissioner on 20 May 2010 depend upon the making of determinations under Division 13 of the 1936 Act. On 30 April 2010 Mr Roberts made determinations in the following form:

DETERMINATIONS MADE PURSUANT TO SUB-SECTION 136AD(3) OF THE INCOME TAX ASSESSMENT ACT 1936 ( " THE ACT " )

I, Cheryl-Lea Field, Acting Deputy Commissioner of Taxation, Large Business and International, in the exercise of the powers and functions delegated to me by the Commissioner of Taxation:

  • 1. find that, for the purposes of paragraph 136AD(3)(a) of the Act, Chevron Holdings Pty Ltd has acquired property under an international agreement;
  • 2. am satisfied for the purposes of paragraph 136AD(3)(b) of the Act, that having regard to
    • (a) the connection between any 2 or more parties to the international agreement; and
    • (b) to (sic) the other relevant circumstances,

    that the parties to the international agreement or any 2 or more of those parties were not dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition;

  • 3. find that, for the purposes of paragraph 136AD(3)(c) of the Act, Chevron Holdings Pty Ltd gave or agreed to give consideration in respect of the acquisition and the amount of that consideration (that is, $ 162,854,342) exceeded the arms (sic) length consideration in respect of the acquisition (that is, $ 91,048,496); and
  • 4. determine, for the purposes of paragraph 136AD(3)(d) of the Act, that subsection 136AD(3) should apply in relation to Chevron Holdings Pty Ltd in relation to the acquisition.

It follows from the above that, for all purposes of the application of the Act in relation to Chevron Holdings Pty Ltd, consideration equal to the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the acquisition shall be deemed to be the consideration given or agreed to be given by Chevron Holdings Pty Ltd in respect of the acquisition.

Dated the 30th day of April 2010:

Cheryl-Lea Field [ Signature of Gavin Roberts ] p.p Gavin Roberts

Cheryl-Lea Field

Acting Deputy Commissioner of Taxation

Large Business and International

It was submitted for CAHPL that these determinations did not support the assessments made because they were not valid determinations. In
WR Carpenter Holdings Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2006) 63 ATR 577 Lindgren J had said at [ 144 ] that


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" the fact itself of the making of [ a ] determination goes to the substantive liability to tax " which was open to be challenged by a taxpayer in Part IVC proceedings. The trial judge in the present appeal concluded, however, that determinations had been made albeit by a person lacking authority to have done so, but that the lack of authority did not make them a nullity and was insufficient to establish the assessments to be excessive.

108. His Honour was correct in concluding that Mr Roberts ' lack of authority to make the determinations did not establish the assessments to be excessive. Provisions such as s 175, together with the former s 177(1) of the 1936 Act and s 350-10 of the Administration Act, assume procedural invalidity in the making of an assessment but prevent a challenge upon that basis. The combined objective of those provisions is to ensure that a taxpayer may challenge the correctness of " the amounts and particulars of the assessments " but not the procedural errors of the Commissioner. It is the substance of the amount of an assessment which a taxpayer may challenge rather than whether the Commissioner erred in the administrative process by which the assessments were made. Determinations under Division 13 were made in this case, albeit that they were made by a person lacking authority to make them. That absence of authority was a non-compliance by the Commissioner with a provision of the 1936 Act which by reason of s 175 of the Act does not affect the validity of the assessment, and was excluded from review in Part IVC proceedings as falling within the " due making " of the assessment (within the meaning of s 177(1) of the 1936 Act) and within whether the assessment " was properly made " (within the meaning of s 350-10 of Schedule 1 to the Administration Act). Mr Roberts ' lack of authority was similar to the defect considered by
George v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1952) 86 CLR 183 of an assessment being made by the Commissioner after the wrong officer had formed a view required to be formed before issuing an assessment under s 167 of the Act. In George it was said at 206 that s 177 excluded from challenge " the question whether the right officer ha [ d ] applied his mind to the question whether " the taxpayer ' s returns were satisfactory in an assessment made under s 167 which had authorised the making of an assessment if the Commissioner was not satisfied with the taxpayer ' s return.

109. The object of the provisions found in ss 175, 177, and now s 350-10, is to remove the Commissioner ' s procedural irregularity from challenge in Part IVC proceedings and to ensure that the taxpayer ' s challenge to an assessment is directed to those substantive integers upon which liability depends. A taxpayer is entitled to establish the absence of facts the existence of which may be necessary for the substantive liability to arise under an assessment. Thus, for example, the taxpayer in
McAndrew v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1956) 98 CLR 263 was able to challenge the excessiveness of an assessment by establishing that the conditions required by s 170(2) had not been fulfilled. The conditions in s 170(2) upon which the assessment depended in McAndrew were not procedural. The assessing power authorised by s 170 in McAndrew ' s case depended upon the existence of objective facts about which the Commissioner needed to be satisfied. The issue sought to be challenged was not whether the Commissioner was satisfied, or had erred in some internal process by which the Commissioner had become satisfied, but whether there were in existence the objective facts upon which the power depended irrespective of the Commissioner. The taxpayer was able to challenge in McAndrew the objective facts upon which the Commissioner ' s state of satisfaction depended in contrast to whether the Commissioner ' s state of satisfaction had regularly been reached.

110. In
WR Carpenter Holdings Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) (2007) 161 FCR 1 the Full Court explained the difference between matters going to the substantive liability of a taxpayer, which are able to be challenged by a taxpayer in Part IVC proceedings, and matters of procedural invalidity which are protected from challenge. The Full Court said at [ 43 ] :


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Before we turn to examine some of the authorities, we would make the general observation that, in our view, the answers to the questions posed by this appeal lie in the analysis of the language of Div 13 in the light of s 177(1) itself rather than an intermediate classification of provisions as turning on the Commissioner ' s state of mind or otherwise. This is not to suggest that a distinction of the kind drawn by his Honour below between " state of mind " cases and " determination " cases is neither valid nor appropriate, but arguably it does not fully explain why s 177(1) does not prevent examination of the due formation by the Commissioner of his state of mind or satisfaction, whereas it does prevent examination of the due making by the Commissioner of his determination. In our view, the explanation is to be found in the fact that the first goes to substantive liability whereas the second is merely procedural. Where Parliament intended that the criteria for liability should include the due formation by the Commissioner of his state of mind, opinion or judgment, either in lieu of objective criteria, or as an addition to incomplete objective criteria, s 177(1) has never denied the ability of a taxpayer to examine the due formation of that state of mind on judicial review grounds. But where Parliament has exhaustively set out the criteria for liability by reference to objective matters, but has made the application of those criteria dependent upon a step being taken by the Commissioner, the step is procedural in the sense that it is not a step which forms part of the criteria for liability. The due making of such a determination is not subject to examination on judicial review grounds.

In the present case the validity of the determinations made by Mr Roberts is a matter going to the procedure which CAHPL is not able to challenge in Part IVC proceedings but CAHPL may challenge the basis of the determination upon which the assessment depends: see also
Commissioner of Taxation v Dalco (1990) 168 CLR 614 at 622;
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v AusNet Transmission Group Pty Ltd (2015) 231 FCR 59 at [ 23 ] - [ 24 ] , [ 32 ] - [ 33 ] , [ 67 ] - [ 68 ] , [ 152 ] - [ 154 ] .

111. It may be convenient to consider next the substantive question concerning the application of Division 13 for the five years in dispute. The determinations made by Mr Roberts on 30 April 2010 relied upon s 136AD(3) of the 1936 Act which provided:

(3) Where:

  • (a) a taxpayer has acquired property under an international agreement;
  • (b) the Commissioner, having regard to any connection between any 2 or more of the parties to the agreement or to any other relevant circumstances, is satisfied that the parties to the agreement, or any 2 or more of those parties, were not dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition;
  • (c) the taxpayer gave or agreed to give consideration in respect of the acquisition and the amount of that consideration exceeded the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the acquisition; and
  • (d) the Commissioner determines that this subsection should apply in relation to the taxpayer in relation to the acquisition;

then, for all purposes of the application of this Act in relation to the taxpayer, consideration equal to the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the acquisition shall be deemed to be the consideration given or agreed to be given by the taxpayer in respect of the acquisition.

The meaning of s 136AD(3) depends in part upon the definitions found in s 136AA which provided:

(1) In this Division, unless the contrary intention appears:

acquire includes:

  • (a) acquire by way of purchase, exchange, lease, hire or hire-purchase; and
  • (b) obtain, gain or receive.

agreement means any agreement, arrangement, transaction, understanding or scheme, whether formal or informal, whether express or implied and whether or


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not enforceable, or intended to be enforceable, by legal proceedings.

property includes:

  • (a) a chose in action;
  • (b) any estate, interest, right or power, whether at law or in equity, in or over property;
  • (c) any right to receive income; and
  • (d) services.

services includes any rights, benefits, privileges or facilities and, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, includes the rights, benefits, privileges or facilities that are, or are to be, provided, granted or conferred under:

  • (a) an agreement for or in relation to:
    • (i) the performance of work (including work of a professional nature);
    • (ii) the provision of, or the use or enjoyment of facilities for, amusement, entertainment, recreation or instruction;
    • (iii) the conferring of rights, benefits or privileges for which consideration is payable in the form of a royalty, tribute, levy or similar exaction; or
    • (iv) the carriage, storage or packaging of any property or the doing of any other act in relation to property;
  • (b) an agreement of insurance;
  • (c) an agreement between a banker and a customer of the banker entered into in the course of the carrying on by the banker of the business of banking; or
  • (d) an agreement for or in relation to the lending of moneys.

(3) In this Division, unless the contrary intention appears:

  • (a) a reference to the supply or acquisition of property includes a reference to agreeing to supply or acquire property;
  • (b) a reference to consideration includes a reference to property supplied or acquired as consideration and a reference to the amount of any such consideration is a reference to the value of the property;
  • (c) a reference to the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the supply of property is a reference to the consideration that might reasonably be expected to have been received or receivable as consideration in respect of the supply if the property had been supplied under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the supply;
  • (d) a reference to the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the acquisition of property is a reference to the consideration that might reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given in respect of the acquisition if the property had been acquired under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition; and
  • (e) a reference to the supply or acquisition of property under an agreement includes a reference to the supply or acquisition of property in connection with an agreement.

In general terms it may be said that Division 13 applies to substitute an arm ' s length price for the consideration given in respect of property acquired by a taxpayer in a non-arm ' s length dealing under an international agreement. Its provisions are not made to depend upon considerations of tax avoidance but, as mentioned, reflect a fiscal policy that parties who are not dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to an acquisition under an international agreement should be treated for domestic taxing purposes as if the consideration in respect of the acquisition equalled the arm ' s length consideration that might reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given as consideration if the property had been acquired under an agreement between parties who were independent and were dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition. Division 13 does not strike down all non-arm ' s length dealings and it has no effect unless the consideration given in a non-arm ' s length dealing in a cross-border agreement is greater than that which might


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reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other in respect of the acquisition. The provision cannot apply, in other words, to a wholly domestic non-arm ' s length dealing within a group of companies or to a cross-border transaction which does not have the fiscal effect caused by greater consideration being given than might reasonably be expected to be given in an arm ' s length dealing between independent parties. Nor does Division 13 necessarily apply to non-arm ' s length transactions between arm ' s length parties. That is because the objective of Division 13 is directed to international acquisitions which have the effect of reducing the tax payable in Australia by non-arm ' s length dealings between non-arm ' s length parties.

112. The construction of Division 13 is not without difficulty despite what might appear to be its deceptive simplicity. The object to be achieved by Division 13 seems clear enough in general terms but its application requires application of its actual terms rather than what might have been an unexpressed intention. An important step in that application is the correct identification of the property that was acquired by a taxpayer. The correct identification of the property is necessary because it serves as the reference point (a) by which to identify the consideration actually given or agreed to be given by the taxpayer and (b) by which to identify the consideration that may reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given if the property had been acquired in the hypothetical agreement posed by s 136AA(3).

113. The first condition to the application of s 136AD(3) in the present case required consideration of whether CAHPL acquired property under an international agreement. There was no dispute about the Credit Facility Agreement being an international agreement within the meaning of ss 136AD(3)(a) and 136AA, but there was disagreement about the correct identification of the property acquired. The Commissioner emphasised the acquisition of money by CAHPL when advanced by CFC. CAHPL, in contrast, emphasised the acquisition of an unsecured facility pursuant to the terms of the Credit Facility Agreement. CAHPL ' s case was that Division 13 required the pricing of an unsecured loan like that which it obtained pursuant to the Credit Facility Agreement. The Commissioner, in contrast, contended that the application of Division 13 required an inquiry into what consideration might reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given by CAHPL in an arm ' s length dealing for the acquisition of the amount of money obtained from CFC.

114. Section 136AD(3)(a) called for the identification in this case of the property that had been acquired " under " the Credit Facility Agreement. The trial judge found at [ 73 ] that the property acquired by CAHPL under the international agreement " was the rights or benefits granted or conferred under that Credit Facility, including the sums lent " . What CAHPL acquired under the Credit Facility Agreement must include, as his Honour found, all of the rights and benefits granted or conferred under the agreement including, but not limited to, the amounts received by way of loan: see also
McGain v Commissioner of Taxation (1965) 112 CLR 523 , 528;
Macquarie Finance Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2004) 57 ATR 115 , [ 47 ] ;
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Radilo Enterprises Pty Ltd (1997) 72 FCR 300 at 313.

115. A fundamental point of difference between CAHPL and the Commissioner turned on whether the unsecured nature of the loan between CAHPL and CFC was to be regarded as a benefit, right, privilege or facility (and therefore part of the definition of the property acquired) or was only to be taken into account in determining the consideration (and therefore relevant in comparing the consideration given by CAHPL with the hypothetical consideration that might reasonably be expected to be given or agreed to be given in respect of the acquisition under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition). The difference between the submissions arose in part from the breadth of, and interrelationship between, the definitions of " property " , " acquire " , and " services " in s 136AA. The definitions of those words are intended to have wide application. Property is defined to include services, and services is defined broadly to include any rights, benefits, privilege or facilities under an agreement for or in relation to the lending of money, and the ability


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to use funds without security, guarantee or charge may be spoken about loosely as a right, privilege, benefit or facility, but the absence of security, guarantee or other charge is more aptly seen as part of the consideration or price paid for the right, privilege, benefit or facility rather than as a right, privilege, benefit or facility itself. The relevant rights, benefits, privileges or facilities provided, or to be provided, to CAHPL under the Credit Facility Agreement in relation to the lending of money was the use of the funds advanced by way of loan and not the consideration paid or given for the use of the funds by way of loan.

116. The Credit Facility Agreement conferred no rights upon CAHPL until CFC, in its absolute discretion, made advances. Section 3.1 of the Credit Facility Agreement provided that CFC thereby agreed in " its sole discretion to make advances from time to time to CAHPL in the aggregate equivalent in Australian dollars to US $ 2.5 billion " . Section 3.2 provided that CFC had no commitment to make any advances and was correspondingly not entitled to any commitment fee in respect of the agreement. By s 3.3, however, CAHPL promised to pay on the maturity date the principal of each advance made to it, and to pay to CFC any interest on the unpaid principal amount of each advance made to it for the period commencing on the date of such advance and continuing until the maturity date for such advance at the applicable interest rate for such advance. " Advance " was defined by s 1.1 to mean " each lending " to CAHPL pursuant to s 3.1 and 4.1 of the agreement. " Maturity date " was defined with respect to each advance to mean 30 June 2008 (although that date was subsequently extended) and the applicable interest rate was defined to mean " a rate equal to one-month AUD-LIBOR-BBA as determined with respect to each interest period plus 4.14 % per annum " . Section 4.1 provided for the giving of notice by CAHPL to CFC of each request for an advance.

117. CAHPL gave its subsidiary no security for the loan but the absence of security for what CAHPL got is not something that was " acquired " by CAHPL " under " the Credit Facility Agreement. It is true that the terms upon which CAHPL obtained the loan did not require CAHPL to give security but to say that is to make a statement about what CAHPL gave or agreed to give for the loan rather than about the property it acquired. The consideration given by CAHPL for the rights, benefits, privileges or facilities to use the funds it acquired under the Credit Facility Agreement is not to be confused with the consideration it gave. The lack of security was an absence in the consideration it was required to give for the funds it received rather than part of what it obtained and his Honour was correct to identify the property as he did.

118. The next two tasks to be undertaken for the application of Division 13 required, first, the identification of the consideration actually given or agreed to have been given by CAHPL in respect of the loan of US $ 2.5 billion and secondly, the identification of the consideration that might reasonably be expected to have been given or agreed to be given in respect of the acquisition of a loan of US $ 2.5 billion if that loan had been acquired under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition.

119. The comparison required to be undertaken by s 136AD(3) is of the consideration for the property actually acquired with the arm ' s length consideration (as defined) of a hypothetical agreement. His Honour correctly explained at [ 76 ] that this required the hypothetical agreement for acquisition to be depersonalised " so as to make it, hypothetically, between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length, but not so as to alter the property acquired " . Care must be taken in that task not to lose sight of the objective of Division 13, and of the assumption upon which its application is based, namely that there is something able to be compared. The basal assumption of transfer pricing provisions is that non-arm ' s length parties have selected a non-arm ' s length consideration for the acquisition of property which had a higher arm ' s length consideration than if the dealing had been between them as independent parties dealing at arm ' s length. That may proceed from a view of a paradigm case of transfer pricing arrangements in which there are identifiable arm ' s length dealings for property of the type whose arm ' s length consideration is to be determined. The model upon which s 136AD(3)


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is based presupposes, in other words, that there exists a comparable agreement able to be compared with the actual agreement under which the consideration for the comparable agreement was not affected (a) by the parties not being independent from each other and (b) by not having dealt with each other at arm ' s length in respect of the acquisition. The hypothetical agreement contemplated by the definition of arm ' s length consideration in s 136AA(3)(d) does not compel one of the parties necessarily to be the taxpayer (see
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v SNF (Australia) Pty Ltd (2011) 193 FCR 149 , [ 9 ] , [ 97 ] - [ 102 ] ).

120. CAHPL ' s case was that the statutory direction that the arm ' s length consideration be compared with its actual consideration required its loan to be priced. In other words that what had to be priced was a loan without security or covenants to be given by a commercial lender to a borrower such as CAHPL. CAHPL accepted what had been said in SNF at [ 99 ] about excluding the particular attributes of the actual parties in determining the arm ' s length consideration, but submitted that in the case of a loan " the characteristics of the borrower will affect the pricing of the loan " and, therefore, that it was " impossible to exclude all the attributes of the borrowing party in question " .

121. Section 136AD(3), unlike s 136AD(4), presupposes, and can only operate, where it is possible and practical to ascertain an arm ' s length consideration for the supply or acquisition in question. Accordingly, s 136AD(3) may not apply to some non-arm ' s length supplies or acquisitions. It is, of course, neither necessary nor desirable to express a concluded view about the matter, but it may be helpful to note that it is not difficult to imagine property (such as, perhaps, a license to use certain intellectual property rights, internally generated know how or central management corporate services or finance) to which s 136AD(3) might not, but to which s 136AD(4) might, apply. The significance in the difference between the operation of s 136AD(3) and s 136AD(4), however, lies in the role in the former of the assumption that there is an arm ' s length consideration objectively able to be ascertained for the acquisition of the property in question. Central to the application of s 136AD(3) is, therefore, the factual ascertainment of an arm ' s length consideration by reference to the standard of reasonable expectation upon a hypothesis of an agreement made between them as independent parties dealing at arm ' s length.

122. CAHPL did not contend that there was no arm ' s length consideration upon which s 136AD(3) could operate. Its case was, rather, that the arm ' s length consideration was that which, or less than that which, it gave or agreed to give by way of consideration for the loan it obtained from CFC without security or covenants in light of its credit worthiness from the perspective of a commercial lender looking at a hypothetical borrower with CAHPL ' s characteristics. That case was submitted to require pricing the loan it obtained on those terms and upon the hypothesis of CAHPL ' s credit worthiness.

123. In that regard CAHPL relied upon the expert reports of Mr Gross and Mr Martin who gave evidence about the evaluation process undertaken by commercial lenders in assessing credit and in pricing loans. Mr Gross had been the head of Global Investment Banking at the Bank of America between 1998 and 2002, the group managing director of Huron Consulting Group, Chicago, between 2003 and 2006, and a partner at Sandhurst Capital Partners focusing on consulting and advising private equity and hedge funds between 2006 and the time of giving evidence. Mr Martin was the Chief Executive Officer of Anawan Cliffs Capital Management and Advisory LLC with over 20 years ' experience in the global leveraged finance industry. From April 2010 to January 2013 he had served as the co-head of Global Leveraged and Acquisition Finance at Morgan Stanley & Co in New York.

124. Much of the evidence of Mr Gross and Mr Martin was to the effect that a loan such as that obtained by CAHPL would not have been available to a hypothetical company with CAHPL ' s credit worthiness as a standalone company. The evidence found by his Honour was that the borrowing by CAHPL would not have been sustainable if obtained from an independent party. Both Mr Gross and Mr Martin determined CAHPL ' s credit worthiness from a commercial lender ' s perspective by looking at CAHPL ' s characteristics and at the average credit spreads


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for a category of debt known as institutional term loan B for borrowers with a corresponding level of credit worthiness to that which they had each determined for CAHPL. Mr Gross concluded that in his experience " most term loans extended to B + rated borrowers [ were ] secured " and that the typical loan facility arrangements had " tight loan covenants " . Mr Martin rated CAHPL as a weak BB borrower and discounted the prospect that a bank would participate in lending to a company with the credit worthiness of CAHPL. As a standalone company, severed from the financial strength of its ultimate parent and corporate group, CAHPL could not secure a loan for an amount equivalent to $ US2.5 billion at the rate obtained by its subsidiary with the backing of the ultimate parent.

125. The burden of this evidence was directed to a construction of the definition of arm ' s length consideration as requiring a hypothetical agreement between " independent parties " . CAHPL focused upon the words " independent parties dealing at arm ' s length " in the definition as requiring a comparison between the actual agreement between the parties in question with a hypothetical agreement between other independent parties rather than a comparison between the actual agreement with what the parties might reasonably be expected to have given as consideration if their hypothetical agreement had not lacked independence and had been at arm ' s length. On CAHPL ' s construction it was submitted that the application of s 136AD(3) required pricing a hypothetical loan which a hypothetical CAHPL could obtain from a hypothetical independent party on the assumption that the hypothetical CAHPL had the attributes of the actual CAHPL but was otherwise independent. However, to apply s 136AD(3) in that way, would be unrealistic and contrary to its purpose.

126. There is, as his Honour observed at [ 501 ] , some difficulty in the application of the hypothesis required by s 136AD. Section 136AD(3) requires, and depends upon, the ascertainment of an arm ' s length consideration. The arm ' s length consideration to be ascertained for the purposes of s 136AD(3) is to be determined by reference to the two criteria found in s 136AA(3)(d); namely, (a) that the arm ' s length consideration meets the objective standard of being that which might reasonably be expected in relation to the acquisition, and (b) that the standard of reasonable expectation be determined upon the hypothetical basis that the property had been acquired under an agreement in which the parties were independent and were dealing at arm ' s length with each other in relation to the acquisition. The focus of the inquiry called for by these provisions is an alternative agreement from the one actually entered into where the alternative agreement was made by the parties upon the assumptions that they were independent and dealing at arm ' s length. In that regard it may be useful to note in passing that the nexus between the consideration and the acquisition is expressed by reference to the words " in respect of " rather than the word " for " and that the agreement in the hypothetical is described by reference to the indefinite article " an " , indicating that the hypothetical in the comparison may be different from the actual agreement with which it is to be compared. The provisions do not require the construction of an abstract hypothetical agreement between abstract independent parties. The hypothesis in the definition of arm ' s length dealing is of an agreement which was not affected by the lack of independence and the lack of arm ' s length dealing. The task of ascertaining the arm ' s length consideration is, therefore, fundamentally a factual inquiry into what might reasonably be expected if the actual agreement had been unaffected by the lack of independence and the lack of arm ' s length dealing.

127. The standard of reasonable expectation found in the words " might reasonably be expected " in s 136AA(3)(d) calls for a prediction based upon evidence. In
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Peabody (1994) 181 CLR 359 the High Court said at 385:

A reasonable expectation requires more than a possibility. It involves a prediction as to events which would have taken place if the relevant scheme had not been entered into or carried out and the prediction must be sufficiently reliable for it to be regarded as reasonable.


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The prediction contemplated by Division 13, like that contemplated by s 177C of the 1936 Act, involves an evaluative prediction of events and transactions that did not take place but the prediction must be based upon evidence and, where appropriate, upon admissible, probative and reliable expert opinion: see
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Futuris Corporation Ltd (2012) 205 FCR 274 at [ 79 ] - [ 81 ] ; see also
Peabody v Commissioner of Taxation (1993) 40 FCR 531 , [ 39 ] (Hill J).

128. The need to posit a hypothetical acquisition under an agreement for the purpose of evaluating it by reference to the standard of reasonable expectation requires a consideration of the evidence to determine a reliably comparable agreement to that which was actually entered into. That, as his Honour said at [ 499 ] required the hypothetical to remain close to the actual loan. The function of the hypothesis is to identify a reliable substitute consideration for the actual consideration which was given or agreed to be given, and the reliability of the substitute consideration depends upon the hypothetical agreement being sufficiently like the actual agreement. Thus, as his Honour held, the purchaser in this case need not be a hypothetical standalone company (see [ 79 ] ) and was to be an oil and gas exploration and production subsidiary (see [ 80 ] ). The characteristics of the purchaser must be such as meaningfully to inform an inquiry into whether the consideration actually given under the agreement exceeded the arm ' s length consideration under the hypothetical agreement; or, to use the words of the learned trial judge at [ 80 ] , in the hypothesis the independent parties are to have the characteristics relevant to the pricing of the loan " to enable the hypothesis to work " . The actual characteristics of the taxpayer must, therefore, ordinarily serve as the basis in the comparable agreement. That does not mean that all of the taxpayer ' s characteristics are necessarily to be taken into account. The decision in SNF is an illustration of a feature of the taxpayer (namely that of having a history of incurring losses) being held not to be relevant to determining the arm ' s length price of an arm ' s length acquisition. In some cases the consideration that might reasonably be expected to be given in an agreement in which the parties were independent and dealing at arm ' s length may be found in comparable dealings in an open market. What may readily be ascertained as the consideration in an open market for the property in question may supply the answer to the question but in each case the inquiry called for is a factual inquiry into the consideration that might reasonably be expected to be given in an agreement which did not lack independence between the parties and in which they dealt with each other at arm ' s length.

129. The policy assumption in the provisions to which the inquiry is directed is that the actual taxpayer in question would have given less consideration for what it obtained but for the lack of independence and the lack of arm ' s length dealing. In each case the focus of inquiry must be to identify a reliable comparable agreement to the actual agreement by the actual taxpayer for the legislative assumption to have meaningful operation. The provisions of Division 13 are intended to operate in the context of real world alternative reasonable expectations of agreements between parties and not in artificial constructs. The comparable agreement may, therefore, usually assume an acquisition by the taxpayer of the property actually acquired under an agreement having the characteristics of the agreement as entered into but otherwise hypothesised to be between them as independent parties dealing with each other at arm ' s length in relation to that acquisition. The purchaser (or in this case the borrower) may therefore, as his Honour considered at [ 79 ] , be a company like CAHPL which is a member of a group, but where the consideration in respect of the acquisition identified in the hypothetical agreement is not distorted by the lack of independence between the parties or by a lack of arm ' s length dealings in relation to the acquisition.

130. The prediction of what might reasonably be expected is not to be undertaken upon the hypothesis submitted on behalf of CAHPL that it was not a member of the Chevron group or, in the language sometimes used in this context, as if it were an orphan. To do so would distort the application of Division 13 and fundamentally undermine its purpose of substituting as a comparable a real world arm ' s length consideration that consideration which could predictably have been agreed


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between them on the hypothesis that they had been independent and dealing at arm ' s length. The ultimate object of the task required by Division 13 is to ensure that what is deemed as the consideration by s 136AD(3) is the reliably predicted amount which CAHPL might reasonably be expected to give or to have given by way of consideration rather than a hypothetical consideration without reliable foundation in the facts or reality of the circumstances of the taxpayer in question. That, if it be relevant, is consistent with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations: see I [ 1.20 ] , [ 1.27 ] and [ 1.31 ] .

131. In this case the property to be considered in the hypothetical agreement was a loan of US $ 2.5 billion for a term of years. What CAHPL obtained were the rights, benefits, privileges and facilities of a loan of US $ 2.5 billion in accordance with the Credit Facility Agreement for a number of years for a consideration which did not require it to give security. His Honour found at [ 87 ] that an independent borrower like CAHPL dealing at arm ' s length would have given security and operational and financial covenants to acquire the loan obtained by CAHPL. At [ 87 ] his Honour said:

If the property had been acquired under an agreement between independent parties dealing at arm ' s length with each other, I find that the borrower would have given such security and operational and financial covenants and the interest rate, as a consequence, would have been lower. The limited scope of the consideration given or agreed to be given by CAHPL resulted in the consideration which CAHPL did give, the promise to pay the interest rate, exceeding the arm ' s length consideration in respect of the acquisition.

There is no reason to depart from that conclusion. It is not to the point that CAHPL, if it were a standalone company, had a risk rating on a scale approximately equal to BB + loans. It can be accepted, as was submitted for CAHPL, that its credit profile was critical to the pricing of loans available in the market in question but the credit profile of the " hypothetical CAHPL " is not the inquiry required by s 136AD(3). The inquiry was not to determine the price of a loan which CAHPL obtained from CFC, nor to price a loan like that loan which CAHPL (with its credit worthiness) might have been able to obtain, as an independent arm ' s length party to such a loan, but to make a prediction about what might reasonably be expected to be given or agreed to be given under a hypothetical agreement if the parties had been independent and were dealing at arm ' s length in relation to the acquisition.

132. The evidence before, and found by, his Honour amply supported his Honour ' s prediction of the reasonable expectation of a borrowing by CAHPL being supported by security. Its subsidiary, CFC, had borrowed on the market by issuing its commercial paper with a guarantee from its ultimate American parent. It was Chevron policy that CVX in California ultimately decided all matters concerning internal restructures including the extent to which subsidiaries were financed by debt or equity. The policies of Chevron were that no external financing could take place unless Treasury or CVX, or another department of CVX, approved of the borrowing. An objective of the group was to obtain the lowest cost of funding to the group for external borrowing. Ms Taherian accepted in cross-examination that the plan included that money would be raised at an interest rate that was close to US LIBOR and then lent to CAHPL at a higher rate of interest. Ms Taherian had been employed by CVX and its subsidiaries in the United States between 1996 and 2010 as director of international financing in the Treasury group although she had been a relatively junior employee from 2001 to 2005.

133. An alternative submission made by CAHPL, however, does have some force. The alternative submission was that the hypothetical acquisition would need to assume that CAHPL had paid a fee to its parent for the provision of security on the hypothetical loan. CFC actually raised funds in this case through a commercial paper program with the benefit of a guarantee from its ultimate United States parent which had a AA credit rating. CAHPL did not enjoy that credit rating and could not have borrowed US $ 2.5 billion on comparable terms to its parent without a guarantee supported by its parent. CFC did not pay a fee to the ultimate


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United States parent for the benefit of the guarantee but there is force in the proposition that a cross-border guarantee by the United States parent for the benefit of its Australian subsidiary to raise funds in the United States market with the benefit of a guarantee from the United States parent might have attracted a fee from CAHPL to CVX. The OECD guidelines contemplate that a cross-border guarantee by a parent to a subsidiary may require the payment of an arm ' s length guarantee fee. The payment of such a fee might not be part of the consideration payable by CAHPL to the lender but the meaning given to " arm ' s length consideration " in s 136AA(3)(d) is not confined to the consideration moving only between the parties to the transaction. What may constitute " consideration " for the hypothetical in s 136AD(3) (as defined by s 136AA(3)(d)) is not to be construed narrowly and includes that given by the acquiring party so as to move the agreement whether that be in money or in money ' s worth:
Archibald Howie Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) (1948) 77 CLR 143 at 152;
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Dick Smith Electronics Holdings Pty Ltd (2005) 221 CLR 496 at [ 71 ] - [ 72 ] ;
Commissioner of State Revenue (Vic) v Lend Lease Development Pty Ltd (2014) 254 CLR 142 at [ 43 ] , [ 49 ] - [ 51 ] . The definition is broad enough to encompass all consideration relevantly given by the party receiving the property in respect of the acquisition whether paid to the transferor of the property or to a third party such as, in this case, hypothetically to the parent company upon the hypothesis of the payment of a fee. In this case, however, there was insufficient evidence on the case as conducted to warrant the conclusion that a fee might reasonably have been expected to have been paid by CAHPL as part of the consideration that CAHPL might give in respect of the hypothetical loan.

134. It is unnecessary to deal in much detail in this case with the difference between the parties concerning the proper currency of the hypothetical agreement to be compared with the actual agreement. CAHPL submitted that the hypothetical agreement was to be denominated in Australian currency as provided by the Credit Facility Agreement and, incidentally, as the Commissioner had assessed. The evidence, however, was capable of supporting a different reasonable expectation because the funds lent by CFC to CAHPL were wholly sourced from the issue of commercial paper in the United States denominated in United States dollars. Furthermore, all of the funds raised by CFC by the issue of commercial paper were applied in the United States for the United States needs of the Chevron group: the loan between CFC and CAHPL was only an internal transaction. His Honour at [ 583 ] accepted, however, that the terms of the hypothetical agreement might have been expected to be in Australian currency. In that regard his Honour accepted CAHPL ' s submission that its borrowings in Australian currency would avoid or limit foreign currency gains and losses. His Honour had also said at [ 302 ] , as was clearly the case, that the actual loan was in Australian dollars: see also [ 102 ] , [ 105 ] , [ 106 ] , [ 113 ] , [ 115 ] and [ 116 ] . There is no reason to depart from those findings and from his Honour ' s conclusion that the hypothetical agreement might reasonably have been expected to be in Australian currency.

135. A separate challenge to the assessments in relation to the 2006 to 2008 years which was considered by his Honour was to the effect that any determination which had been made under Division 13 of the 1936 Act ceased to be operative once the 2002 amended assessments were made under Division 815-A of the 1997 Act for those years. The subsequent assessments which had been made by the Commissioner in reliance upon Division 815-A of the 1997 Act were also challenged both on technical grounds and also on the basis of constitutional invalidity. It may be desirable to consider the impact on the assessments based on Division 13 of the assessments made in reliance upon subdivision 815 after first considering its terms and the challenge to the constitutional validity of its provisions.

136. The amended assessments issued by the Commissioner on 26 October 2012 in respect of each of the 2006 to 2008 tax years relied upon determinations made under s 815-30 of the 1997 Act. Division 815-A was enacted in 2012 by Act Number 115 of 2012 but was made to apply retrospectively to income years starting on or after 1 July 2004. It was subsequently replaced by subdivision 815-B to 815-D for


ATC 19642

income years commencing on or after 29 June 2013.

137. Section 815-10 permitted the Commissioner in the years in question to make a determination mentioned in subsection 815-30(1) for the purpose of negating a " transfer pricing benefit " within the meaning of s 815-15. On 24 October 2012 the Commissioner made determinations under s 815-30 for each of the three years of income ended 31 December 2005 to 31 December 2007, being the 2006 to 2008 income tax years (inclusive). The determinations for each year were in the same form as that for the year ended 31 December 2005, namely:

Determination made pursuant to section 815-30 of Division 815 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

I, Annette Chooi, Deputy Commissioner, Large Business and International, in the exercise of the powers and functions delegated to me by the Commissioner of Taxation, determine under paragraph 815-30(1)(a) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) that the taxable income of Chevron Australia Holdings Pty Ltd … ( " the taxpayer " ) be increased by the amount of $ 149,639,013 for the year ended 31 December 2005 (in lieu of the year of income ended 30 June 2006).

I further determine under paragraph 815-30(2)(b) of the ITAA 1997, that the amount of the increase is attributable to a decrease of $ 149,639,013 in interest deductions of the taxpayer in the year ended 31 December 2005 (in lieu of the year of income ended 30 June 2006).

The determinations in this form were to the effect of a determination under s 815-30(1)(a) of an amount by which the taxable income of CAHPL was increased and a further determination under s 815-30(2)(b) attributing the increase of the previous determination to a decrease in the interest deductions available to CAHPL in the relevant year of income.

138. The power of the Commissioner to make the determinations in s 815-30 was for the purpose of negating a transfer pricing benefit obtained by an entity. Section 815-15(1) relevantly set out the conditions to determine whether CAHPL had obtained a transfer pricing benefit. Section 815-15(1) provided:

815-15 When an entity gets a transfer pricing benefit

Transfer pricing benefit - associated enterprises

(1) An entity gets a transfer pricing benefit if:

  • (a) the entity is an Australian resident; and
  • (b) the requirements in the * associated enterprises article for the application of that article to the entity are met; and
  • (c) an amount of profits which, but for the conditions mentioned in the article, might have been expected to accrue to the entity, has, by reason of those conditions, not so accrued; and
  • (d) had that amount of profits so accrued to the entity:
    • (i) the amount of the taxable income of the entity for an income year would be greater than its actual amount; or
    • (ii) the amount of a tax loss of the entity for an income year would be less than its actual amount; or
    • (iii) the amount of a * net capital loss of the entity for an income year would be less than its actual amount.

    The amount of the transfer pricing benefit is the difference between the amounts mentioned in subparagraph (d)(i), (ii) or (iii) (as the case requires).

For present purposes there was no dispute that CAHPL was an Australian resident coming within the first requirement in s 815-15(1) but the parties disputed whether the conditions in (b) and (c) were satisfied with the consequential effect for the condition in s 815-15(1)(d).

139. Division 815 was enacted in 2012 but was made to apply retrospectively to income years starting on or after 1 July 2004. The Explanatory Memorandum accompanying the Bill in 2012 expressed the view that the retrospective enactment was justified, at least in part, by giving effect to what was said to be a long held view of the ATO which had been brought into doubt by the decision of SNF. CAHPL challenged the constitutional validity of Division 815 in its retrospective application.

140.


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CAHPL accepted that the Commonwealth parliament had power to enact tax legislation with some retrospective effect: see also
R v Kidman (1915) 20 CLR 425 ;
Polyukhovich v Commonwealth (1991) 172 CLR 501 . It was contended, however, that the enactment of Division 815-A with retrospective effect was beyond the constitutional power of the Commonwealth because it imposed an arbitrary and incontestable tax. In its written submissions, and also in the notice of a constitutional matter given under s 78B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth), it was submitted that:

The requirement that a tax not be arbitrary goes to both its criteria of application (which must satisfy the dual requirement of being ascertainable and sufficiently general in nature) and the manner of application of those criteria. Further, in terms of contestability, the question of present concern is not the availability of the judicial power of the Commonwealth to determine the dispute. This submission is not concerned with the spectre of the Legislature deciding its own competence (see MacCormick at 639-640) or with encroachment upon Chapter III. Contestability is employed in the sense of a taxpayer knowing the criteria for liability in the tax year in question.

CAHPL relied also upon an observation made extra judicially by Gordon J in " The Commonwealth ' s Taxing Power and Its Limits - Are We There Yet? " (2013) 36 Melbourne University Law Review 1037 where her Honour said at 1061-2:

If the Commonwealth ' s position is the taxpayer should order their affairs subject to the Commonwealth ' s overriding right to subsequently enact retrospective legislation at a time and of a kind of its choosing, then it will inevitably face scrutiny. And if that ' s not the stated position of the Commonwealth, but the practical outcome of it, in passing retrospective legislation, the resulting legislation will inevitably face scrutiny.

The particular vice relied upon by CAHPL was that the retrospective effect of Division 815 was such that in the years in question it was not aware, and could not have been aware, of the criteria that would many years later become those for liability under Division 815 in the earlier years. In the 2007 to 2008 years the taxpayers did not know, and could not know, that they would come to be taxed in those years by reference to the criteria of the legislation enacted in 2012. It was also submitted that the criteria of liability were not ascertainable because whether or not an entity got a transfer pricing benefit within the meaning of s 815-15(1) was to be determined by reference to the documents covered by s 815-20 (to the extent relevant) which included the OECD guidelines. That was so because s 815-20 required considering the effect of subdivision 815 by reference to, amongst other documents, the OECD Model Tax Convention on Income and Capital and the Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations.

141. It has long been accepted in Australia that the parliament may legislate to validate retrospectively the imposition of taxation before the passage of supporting legislation: see
The Colonial Sugar Refining Co Ltd v Irving [ 1903 ] St R Qd 261 , 76;
Suntory (Aust) Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2009) 177 FCR 140 . The ability of the parliament to enact laws with retrospective effect has been affirmed in the context of tax legislation: see
Mutual Pools & Staff Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1994) 179 CLR 155 , 167 - 8, 209, 217 - 218.

142. In
MacCormick v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1984) 158 CLR 622 and
Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v Truhold Benefit Pty Ltd (1985) 158 CLR 678 the High Court upheld the constitutional validity of prospective assessments based upon an existing liability arising from past events. The fact that the taxpayer upon whom the liability arose in MacCormick was not able to challenge an earlier liability was not found to make the tax either arbitrary or incontestable. The majority said at 639 - 642:

The exactions in question answer the usual description of a tax. They are compulsory. They are to raise money for governmental purposes. They do not constitute payment for services rendered: see Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board (Vict.) , per Latham C.J.; Leake v. Commissioner of


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State Taxation
, per Dwyer J. They are not penalties since the liability to pay the exactions does not arise from any failure to discharge antecedent obligations on the part of the persons upon whom the exactions fall: see R. v. Barger (57), per Isaacs J. They are not arbitrary. Liability is imposed by reference to criteria which are sufficiently general in their application and which mark out the objects and subject-matter of the tax: see Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Hipsleys Ltd (58).

A further submission was made by the plaintiffs that recoupment tax under the relevant legislation is an incontestable tax and for this reason is beyond the power of the Parliament. Recognition is to be found in the cases of the doctrine that the incontestability of a tax may go to its validity. The principle which lies behind the doctrine is a more general one of elementary constitutional law. It is simply that the legislature cannot determine conclusively for itself its power to enact legislation by putting beyond examination compliance with the constitutional limits upon that power. As was pointed out in Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v. Hankin (59), the point is " that which was so much discussed in Australian Communist Party v. The Commonwealth (60), and which is sometimes expressed by saying that ' a stream cannot rise higher than its source ' . " In the latter case, Fullagar J. put the matter clearly when he said (61):

" The validity of a law or of an administrative act done under a law cannot be made to depend on the opinion of the law-maker, or the person who is to do the act, that the law or the consequence of the act is within the constitutional power upon which the law in question itself depends for its validity. A power to make laws with respect to lighthouses does not authorize the making of a law with respect to anything which is, in the opinion of the law-maker, a lighthouse. A power to make a proclamation carrying legal consequences with respect to a lighthouse is one thing: a power to make a similar proclamation with respect to anything which in the opinion of the Governor-General is a lighthouse is another thing. "

In other words, where, as is ordinarily the case under the Commonwealth Constitution, the validity of the law depends upon its characterization as a law with respect to a particular subject matter by reference to the criteria which the law itself fixes for its operation, the law cannot be so characterized · if, in effect, it goes on to provide that it will have that operation regardless of whether those criteria are, in truth, satisfied.

The particular doctrine in relation to taxation was expressed by Dixon C.J. in Deputy Federal Commissioner of Taxation v.Brown (62), in these terms:

" Although there is no judicial decision to that effect, it has, I think, been generally assumed that under the Constitution liability for tax cannot be imposed upon the subject without leaving open to him some judicial process by which he may show that in truth he was not taxable or not taxable in the sum assessed, that is to say that an administrative assessment could not be made absolutely conclusive upon him if no recourse to the judicial power were allowed. "

See also per Williams J (63).

For an impost to satisfy the description of a tax it must be possible to differentiate it from an arbitrary exaction and this can only be done by reference to the criteria by which liability to pay the tax is imposed. Not only must it be possible to point to the criteria themselves, but it must be possible to show that the way in which they are applied does not involve the imposition of liability in an arbitrary or capricious manner. In Giris Pty. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (64) Kitto J. pointed out that the expression " incontestable tax " in the sense in which it is used in Hankin and Brown " refers to a tax provided for by a law which, while making the taxpayer ' s liability depend upon specified criteria, purports to deny him all right to resist an assessment by


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proving in the courts that the criteria of liability were not satisfied in his case " . The purported tax is thereby converted to an impost which is made payable regardless of whether the circumstances of the case satisfy the criteria relied upon for characterization of the impost as a tax and for characterization of the law which imposes it as a law with respect to taxation. Such an incontestable impost is not a tax in the constitutional sense and a law imposing such an impost is not a law with respect to taxation within s. 51 (ii). It is in this sense that an incontestable tax is invalid.

However, the liability which the legislation imposes to pay recoupment tax is not incontestable in this sense. One of the criteria of liability for recoupment tax is a pre-existing, unpaid liability on the part of a target company to pay company tax. The fact that a person not liable to pay company tax but liable to pay a different tax in the form of recoupment tax has a limited right or no right at all to contest the liability of the relevant target company for company tax is not to the point. It is the existence of the overdue company tax which is one of the criteria of liability for recoupment tax and that existence is established once an assessment of company tax is made and any objection has been finalized for the period for objecting has expired and the tax remains unpaid at the relevant time. Liability to pay recoupment tax does not arise until these events have occurred and it arises only upon the assessment of those persons to whom the legislation applies. The assessment of those persons is open to the ordinary processes of review and appeal. This is because the 1982 Assessment Act incorporates the relevant parts of the Income Tax Assessment Act relating to the assessment and collection of tax, including review and appeal.

It would not be to the point if no right to contest the liability of a target company to pay company tax were given to those persons liable to pay recoupment tax upon the basis of the overdue company tax. The limited rights given to those persons to contest the liability of the company are, from the point of view of legality, gratuitous. If in a particular case the provisions have the effect that a person liable to pay the recoupment tax is unable to contest the liability of the target company, and the assessment of that liability was in fact incorrect, the result will be plainly unjust, but it will not mean that the recoupment tax is incontestable. Of course, it was not argued, nor could it be argued, that company tax is itself an incontestable tax. Liability to pay that tax arises upon the assessment of a company pursuant to the provisions of the Income Tax Assessment Act and in relation to that assessment the ordinary processes of review and appeal are open. Once those processes are complete or the time for taking them has expired, the existence of the company tax may be proved by recourse to s. 177(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act which provides that production of a notice of assessment shall be conclusive evidence of the due making of the assessment and that the amount and all the particulars of the assessment are correct. That section does not, of course, apply in proceedings on appeal against the assessment of the company tax. The existence of that section does not make company tax incontestable nor was it suggested that it does.

(Footnotes omitted.)

In Truhold the majority observed at 686 that a tax is nonetheless a tax even though it may operate harshly upon those affected or upon those who might not have been in existence at the time of the transaction and who were made liable to pay recoupment tax.

143. The majority in
Roy Morgan Research v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 244 CLR 97 endorsed what had been said in MacCormick and, at 111 [ 39 ] , referred to what had been said in
Deputy Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Brown (1958) 100 CLR 32 by Dixon CJ at 40, and explained that for an impost to satisfy the description of a tax " it must be possible to differentiate it from an arbitrary exaction " which " could only be done by reference to the criteria by which liability to pay the tax is imposed " . In MacCormick it was said that it must not only be possible to point to


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the criteria themselves, but also to show that the way in which they are applied does not involve the imposition of liability in an arbitrary or capricious manner. In Roy Morgan the majority explained that these passages, sourced from what had been said in Brown , established that compliance with the Constitution required that liability for tax not be imposed without leaving open to the taxpayer some judicial process by which the taxpayer may show that in truth the tax was exigible or not exigible in the sum assessed: see 111, [ 39 ] .

144. Division 815-A does not impose an arbitrary or incontestable tax in the sense contemplated by the authorities. It can be accepted for present purposes, as was submitted by CAHPL, that in the years in which CAHPL has been assessed under Division 815-A it could not have been aware of the criteria of liability in respect of those years which came only to be imposed by the subsequent enactment, with retrospective application, of Division 815-A. That circumstance, however, is inherent in the nature of retrospective legislation except, perhaps, in a practical sense of legislation purportedly validating acts taken in anticipation of legislation announced to be enacted. That a person may not be aware at an earlier point in time what the criteria of liability may subsequently be made to apply to that earlier point in time does not make the legislation arbitrary or incontestable in the sense considered in Brown , MacCormick , and Roy Morgan . The absence of an awareness as at the end of the year of liability of the criteria that would subsequently be adopted for the liability was relevantly present on the facts in MacCormick in which the liability of the taxpayers for recoupment tax was based upon the existence of unpaid tax from a previous year.

145. The criteria of liability under Division 815 is found in s 815-15(1) (quoted above) which sets out four criteria to determine whether an entity gets a transfer pricing benefit for the purposes of the application of Division 815. The first requires a factual determination about whether the entity is an Australian resident. The second involves the construction of an international instrument to determine whether the requirements of the associated enterprise article for the application of that article to the entity have been met. In this case that required consideration of Article 9 of the Convention between the Government of Australia and the Government of the United States of America for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with respect to Taxes on Income (6 August 1982) ATS 16 Article 9 (entered into force 31 October 1983) ( " United States Convention " ): see s 815-20(5). In that context s 815-20 draws attention to certain documents for the purpose of interpretation of a provision of the international tax agreement in question to the extent that the documents are relevant. Section 815-20(1) applies an objective standard by reference to which regard is to be had to the documents referred to in s 815-20(2) with recourse to those documents only if relevant. Section 815-20 provided:

815-20 Cross-border transfer pricing guidance

(1) For the purpose of determining the effect this Subdivision has in relation to an entity:

  • (a) work out whether an entity gets a * transfer pricing benefit consistently with the documents covered by this section, to the extent the documents are relevant; and
  • (b) interpret a provision of an * international tax agreement consistently with those documents, to the extent they are relevant.

(2) The documents covered by this section are as follows:

  • (a) the Model Tax Convention on Income and on Capital, and its Commentaries, as adopted by the Council of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and last amended on 22 July 2010;
  • (b) the Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations, as approved by that Council and last amended on 22 July 2010;
  • (c) a document, or part of a document, prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.

(3) However, a document, or a part of a document, mentioned in paragraph (2)(a) or


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(b) is not covered by this section if the regulations so prescribe.

(4) Regulations made for the purposes of paragraph (2)(c) or subsection (3) may prescribe different documents or parts of documents for different circumstances.

[ … ]

The direction in s 820-20(1) to consider the documents referred in s 820-20(2) does not modify or alter the operative provisions in s 815-15 but is a direction given in aid of interpretation of the operative provision. That direction is for the purpose of interpretation, and applies only to the extent relevant, and does not render uncertain the criterion by which Division 815-15 is to apply. Section 815-20 would be severable if its effect were otherwise. The third requirement in s 815-15(1) depends upon a factual inquiry to determine (a) the amount of profits which have accrued and a prediction about what might have been expected to accrue but for the conditions mentioned in the relevant article applicable to the entity.

146. It was next submitted for CAHPL that assessments could not be made under Division 815 where there existed determinations under Division 13. The issue as raised before the trial judge of the relationship between Division 13 of the 1936 Act and Division 815 of the 1997 Act was described by his Honour at [ 29 ] that CAHPL ' s case had been that the Division 13 assessments ceased to be operative once the 2012 amended assessments had been made under Division 815. His Honour rejected that submission and accepted at [ 588 ] that the Commissioner could defend the assessments on an alternative basis. CAHPL challenged this conclusion on appeal and submitted that it was based upon an erroneous identification of what was said to be " the true inquiry; namely, whether as a matter of statutory construction, a Subdivision 815-A determination can be made where an assessment to give effect to a determination under Division 13 against the same taxpayer in the same year and in precisely the same amount has been made " .

147. CAHPL ' s submission at first instance, as correctly recorded by his Honour at [ 586 ] , and as maintained on appeal, was that there could be no " transfer pricing benefit " within the meaning of s 815-15 of the 1997 Act because s 136AD(3) operated to deem the consideration for the loan to CAHPL to be the consideration given by the taxpayer " for all purposes of the application of this Act in relation to the taxpayer " . The reference in this provision to " this Act " included a reference both to the 1936 Act and to the 1997 Act as well as to the relevant provisions of the Administration Act. The argument for CAHPL was, therefore, that the deeming effect of s 136AD(3) excluded the possibility of any amount being included by subsequent inclusion of a transfer pricing benefit under Division 815.

148. It is true that the Commissioner made inconsistent determinations and gave effect to them by amended assessments but there was before the Court only one liability upon an assessment as amended. The appeals by CAHPL to this Court under s 14ZZ(1)(a)(ii) of the Administration Act was of the Commissioner ' s objection decision made under s 14ZY on CAHPL ' s objection. The objection was made under s 175A of the 1936 Act which gave CAHPL an entitlement to object against an assessment in the manner set out in Part IVC of the Administration Act. In
Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) v S Hoffnung & Co Limited (1928) 42 CLR 39 Isaacs J explained at 54 that the separate processes of assessment and amendment of an assessment did not produce two assessments saying:

An " alteration or addition " is not something extraneous to a standing assessment. When an alteration or addition is made the assessment henceforth exists as altered or added to, and not as previously existing plus independent alteration or addition.

[ see also
Commissioner of Taxation v Stokes (1996) 72 FCR 160 at 169 ] .

The issue for determination in the objection decision before the Court was whether the assessment was excessive and the Commissioner was able to defend the liability imposed by the assessment upon alternative bases which may be inconsistent: see
Commissioner of Taxation v Australia and New Zealand Savings Bank Limited (1994) 181 CLR 466 ;
Cadbury-Fry-Pascall (1944) 70 CLR 362 ; see also
Hepples v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1992) 173 CLR 492 . It is not uncommon to find different provisions being simultaneously operative to impose liability. Section 815-40 itself recognised this in providing against the possibility of double taxation and by contemplating the simultaneous operation of s 136AB of the 1936 Act and Division 815 of the 1997 Act. Neither provision is excluded from concurrent operation to supporting one liability imposed by an assessment.


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149. CAHPL pointed to s 14ZZR in support of the submission that the assessments based upon Division 815 could not be made because they had been made at the time when s 14ZZR continued to give effect to the assessments which had been made based upon the Division 13 determinations. Section 14ZZR does not, however, have the effect of preventing the Commissioner from relying upon determinations in the alternative as he has done in this proceeding. Section 14ZZR provided:

The fact that an appeal is pending in relation to a taxation decision does not in the meantime interfere with, or affect, the decision and any tax, additional tax or other amount may be recovered as if no appeal were pending.

Section 14ZZR preserves the Commissioner ' s ability to recover tax or additional tax pending an appeal by providing that the pending of an appeal under Part IVC of the Administration Act " does not in the meantime interfere with, or affect, the decision " from which the taxpayer may have objected and lodged an appeal. The efficacy of an assessment pending an appeal, however, does not prevent the existence of an alternative basis upon which the decision may be defended by the Commissioner in the appeal by alternative determinations.

150. The need to consider the substantive application of Division 815 arises, as his Honour observed at [ 526 ] , only in the alternative however it may be desirable to consider the issues raised in the appeal in deference to the arguments and his Honour ' s reasons. The explanatory memorandum accompanying the amendments effected by Division 815 explained that the measures were introduced following the decision in SNF in which it was considered, amongst other matters, that the Commissioner could not directly apply the provisions of the relevant treaty as an alternative basis for transfer pricing adjustments without domestic Australian legislation. Paragraph 1.15 of the explanatory memorandum explained that the amendments contained in Division 815 were intended to ensure that treaty transfer pricing rules might apply by operation of Division 815, alternatively to the operation of Division 13, if the law did not permit that as it stood.

151. The legislative mechanism to impose liability under Division 815, as set out above, depended in this case upon CAHPL getting a " transfer pricing benefit " within the meaning of s 815-15(1). The first requirement was satisfied by CAHPL being an Australian resident. The second requirement depended upon whether the requirements in the " associated enterprises article " for the application of that article to CAHPL had been met. Section 815-15(5) supplied the meaning of " associated enterprise article " which, in the present case, was Article 9 of the Convention between the Government of Australia and the Government of the United States of America for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with respect to Taxes on Income ( " the United States Convention " ) which entered into force on 31 October 1983. Article 9(1) of the United States Convention provided:

Article 9

Associated enterprises

(1) Where:

  • (a) an enterprise of one of the Contracting States participates directly or indirectly in the management, control or capital of an enterprise of the other Contracting State; or
  • (b) the same persons participate directly or indirectly in the management, control or capital of an enterprise of one of the Contracting States and an enterprise of the other Contracting State,

and in either case conditions operate between the two enterprises in their commercial or financial relations which differ from those which might be expected to operate between independent enterprises


ATC 19649

dealing wholly independently with one another, then any profits which, but for those conditions, might have been expected to accrue to one of the enterprises, but, by reason of those conditions, have not so accrued, may be included in the profits of that enterprise and taxed accordingly.

(2) Where profits on which an enterprise of one of the Contracting States has been charged to tax in that State are also included, by virtue of paragraph (1), in the profits of an enterprise of the other Contracting State and taxed accordingly, and the profits so included are profits which might have been expected to have accrued to that enterprise of the other State if the conditions operative between the enterprises had been those which might have been expected to have operated between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another, then the first-mentioned State shall make an appropriate adjustment to the amount of tax charged on those profits in the first-mentioned State. In determining such an adjustment, due regard shall be had to the other provisions of this Convention and the competent authorities of the Contracting States shall if necessary consult each other.

(3) Nothing in this Article shall affect the application of any law of a Contracting State relating to the determination of the tax liability of a person, including determinations in cases where the information available to the competent authority of that State is inadequate to determine the income to be attributed to an enterprise, provided that, on the basis of the available information, the determination of that tax liability is consistent with the principles stated in this Article.

The requirements in Article 9(1) which needed to be met for its application in the present case directed attention to the relationship and conditions existing between two enterprises in their commercial or financial relations to determine whether " conditions operate [ d ] " between them in their commercial or financial relations which differed from those which might be expected to operate between " independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another " . Section 815-15(1)(b) will be satisfied if those conditions are met.

152. The learned trial judge found that there were conditions operating between CAHPL and another enterprise which operated between them in their commercial or financial relations which differed from those which might be expected to operate between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another. At [ 582 ] his Honour said:

In relation to this issue, the respondent submitted there were some eleven conditions which differed from those which might be expected to operate between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another. These included: that CAHPL owned CFC and they both had a common parent, CVX; CVX Treasury decided how much debt and at what interest rate CAHPL should borrow from CFC; there was no bargaining or negotiation between CAHPL and CFC; the terms and conditions of the Credit Facility Agreement, including the terms in respect of the interest rate charged, the duration and the currency of the loan and the absence of covenants; the sole reason for CFC ' s incorporation, and the purpose of its commercial paper program, was to raise funds solely to on-lend to its parent CAHPL; that the credit profiles of CFC and CAHPL could be controlled by decisions made by CVX; that CFC profited from lending to CAHPL at a high interest rate; and the higher the interest-bearing loan from CFC and the higher the interest rate, the more profit CAHPL stood to make.

It was submitted on appeal for CAHPL that his Honour erred in the identification of the conditions operating between CAHPL and CFC in their commercial or financial relations. It was submitted that his Honour erred in construing the conditions requirement of s 815-15 by rejecting CAHPL ' s distinction between " commercial and financial relations " and the " conditions " operating in respect of those relations, and that his Honour erred by not excluding common ownership as a condition operating between CAHPL and CFC in their commercial and financial relations.

153.


ATC 19650

The interpretation to be given to Article 9(1) in its application in s 815-15(1)(b) must be in accordance with the rules of interpretation applicable to a treaty provision: see
Thiel v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1990) 171 CLR 338 . Article 9(1) was described in SNF at 109 as attempting " to address at a high level of generality the problems thrown up by transfer pricing by providing for pricing as if the transaction had been between independent parties " . The purpose of Article 9(1), as explained in SNF , and its function through the operation of s 815-15(1)(b), is to identify those conditions existing between enterprises in two countries affecting their financial or commercial relations. The identification of those conditions permits a broad and wide ranging inquiry into the relations existing between the enterprises concerned. There is not excluded from that inquiry the relationship existing between the parties such as parent or subsidiary. The factual inquiry of the conditions operating between the enterprises which needs to be undertaken is unconfined by the terms of Article 9(1), or by the terms of s 815-15(1)(b), by any circumstance other than that there be identified those conditions which bear relevantly and probatively upon whether they operate between the relevant enterprises " in their commercial or financial relations which differ from those which might be expected to operate between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another " . His Honour was, therefore, permitted to take into consideration, as conditions, the relations between CAHPL and CFC, and of other members of the Chevron group, notwithstanding that they were also identified as preconditions in (a) and (b) in Article 9(1). Article 9(1) identified two preconditions to its application but it did exclude the preconditions, or any of the matters relevant to those preconditions, from being relevant also to an inquiry into whether the matters within those preconditions (namely the relations existing between the relevant enterprises) were part of the conditions operating in the way contemplated by Article 9(1). In broad terms the structure of Article 9(1) may be seen in part to call for an inquiry into whether the circumstances in (a) and (b) give rise to the conditions " operating " which differ from those which might be expected to " operate " between independent parties. The relations existing between the enterprises are apt to be conditions that potentially operate upon the dealings between, and which bear upon, the inquiry into whether there are conditions operative of the kind contemplated. The matters identified by his Honour at [ 582 ] may fairly be said to be conditions which existed between CAHPL and CFC which operated between them which differed from those that might be expected to operate between independent parties dealing wholly independently with one another in respect of the loan.

154. The third condition in s 815-15(1)(c) was that an amount of profits had not accrued which might have been expected to accrue to CAHPL but for the conditions mentioned in the Article. His Honour found that this condition was satisfied; that is, that an amount of profits did not accrue to CAHPL that might have been expected to accrue to CAHPL but for the conditions mentioned in Article 9(1). At [ 614 ] his Honour said:

Having rejected the applicant ' s submissions, primarily submissions as to the proper construction of Art 9 and of Subdiv 815-A, and having considered at [ 505 ] - [ 524 ] above the evidence of the applicant ' s main witnesses, I find that the requirements in the * associated enterprises article for the application of that article to CAHPL are met. I also accept the respondent ' s submission identifying conditions, set out at [ 582 ] above. I find that but for the conditions operating between CAHPL and CFC which differ from those which might be expected to operate between independent parties dealing wholly independently with one another an amount of profits might be expected to have accrued but has not so accrued. It follows that the applicant has failed to show that the assessments under the ITAA 1997 were excessive. As I have said, my consideration of these matters is in the alternative to my conclusion as to the assessments made under Div 13 of the ITAA 1936.USD

CAHPL submitted that his Honour erred in this conclusion in part by reason of the construction of s 815-15 considered and


ATC 19651

rejected above. CAHPL also submitted, however, that his Honour erred in concluding that the profits requirement in s 815-15(1)(b) was satisfied by denying the necessity for a causative relationship between the conditions and the non-accrual of profits, and by not taking into account the fact that CAHPL received dividends from distributions made by CFC.

155. Section 815-15(1)(c) contemplated a relationship between the non-accrual of profits and the conditions mentioned in Article 9 by reference to a " but for " test. The determination of factual causation by reference to a " but for " test has been said to require the determination of whether something was " a necessary condition " of the " occurrence " : see
Wallace v Kam (2013) 250 CLR 375 at 383, [ 16 ] ;
Strong v Woolworths Limited (2012) 246 CLR 182 at 191, [ 20 ] ;
March v E & MH Stramare Pty Ltd (1991) 171 CLR 506 at 515 - 6. In this case the inquiry about the existence of such a causative relationship (in that sense) required an evaluative judgement about whether the conditions mentioned in Article 9(1) were necessary conditions for the non-accrual of profits which might have been expected to accrue. The function of the condition in s 815-15(1)(c) is to determine those profits which had been excluded from assessability and is the legislative equivalent of the words found in Article 9(1), namely, that profit " but for those conditions, might have been expected to accrue to one of the enterprises, but by reason of those conditions, have not so accrued " . Article 9 goes on to provide that the contracting state, in this case Australia, may provide for the inclusion, and for taxation of the domestic enterprise, on those profits which had not accrued by reason of the conditions found to be operating between the enterprises that had differed from those that might be expected to operate between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another.

156. The evaluative judgment required by Article 9 required comparing the conditions which operated between CAHPL and CFC with those expected to operate between " independent enterprises " but that did not require his Honour to compare CAHPL and CFC with a wholly standalone company. The purpose of the comparison is to determine whether profits have not accrued for tax in a jurisdiction which " might have been expected to accrue " but for the condition found to operate. His Honour was correct to reject CAHPL ' s contention that an " independent " company within Article 9 was a company which stood alone with no corporate affiliations. At [ 604 ] his Honour said:

While I accept the applicant ' s submission that one must consider the conditions that one might expect to see between a lender and a borrower who are independent, and are dealing wholly independently with one another, which is the language of Art 9, it by no means follows that where, as here, the entities in question are sister companies, also to be eliminated is the relationship between each of them and their common parent on the basis that, otherwise, it could not be said that the lender and borrower were independent or were dealing independently. In my opinion, independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with one another may still be subsidiaries and may still have subsidiaries even if the enterprises are independent of each other. I therefore accept the respondent ' s submission insofar as he contended that there was no legislative warrant for ignoring affiliation between a hypothesised party to a transaction and other members of that party ' s group of companies. At the factual level, at [ 606 ] below, I have accepted the applicant ' s submission as to implied parental support.

The comparison which Article 9 required to be undertaken is akin to that contemplated by Division 13. The object was to determine whether conditions actually prevailing between the relevant enterprises differed from those which might be expected to operate if they had been independent and had been dealing wholly independently with each other. The hypothetical in that exercise is undertaken for the purpose of determining whether the dealing which actually occurred might have been expected to occur on different terms. That will generally require that the parties in the hypothetical will generally have the characteristics and attributes of the actual enterprises in question. The comparison required by Article 9 is expected to be undertaken in a practical business setting of


ATC 19652

potential transactions able to be entered into and which are to be used as a basis for a reliable hypothesis upon probative material. Ultimately the question was that of determining whether profits might have been expected to accrue to CAHPL if the transaction it entered into with CFC had been entered into where the conditions which operated between CAHPL and CFC did not operate, that is, where CAHPL and CFC had been dealing with each other wholly independently. The hypothetical thus required hypothesising circumstances in a dealing between an enterprise like CAHPL and an enterprise like CFC where, however, the conditions operating between them were between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with each other. That is not to say that Division 815A, or Article 9(1), strikes down intracompany dealings which are not at arm ' s length, because neither Division 815A nor Article 9(1) operates unless the relevant transaction causes (in the relevant sense) the non-accrual of an amount of profits in a contracting state in which it would have accrued if the transaction had been at arm ' s length between independent parties. The fiscal policy which Division 815 and Article 9 express is not directed to intracompany non-arm ' s length dealings but only to those intracompany non-arm ' s length dealings which have a fiscal effect of reducing the tax that would otherwise have been expected to accrue in a contracting state. His Honour was correct to assume on the evidence that what might be expected to operate between independent enterprises dealing wholly independently with each other was a loan by CAHPL with security provided by its parent at a lower interest rate.

157. CAHPL next submitted that s 815-15(c) had not been satisfied because there was no amount of profits which had not accrued. In that regard CAHPL drew attention to the fact that it had received dividends from CFC albeit that they were non-assessable non-exempt income under s 23AJ of the 1936 Act. It was also submitted by CAHPL that the Commissioner may erroneously have considered the word profits in Article 9(1) to mean taxable income rather than to have been used in a more generic sense. Section 3(2) of the International Tax Agreements Act 1953 (Cth) provides:

For the purposes of this Act and the Assessment Act, a reference in an agreement to profits of an activity or business shall, in relation to Australian tax, be read, where the context so permits, as a reference to taxable income derived from that activity or business.

This provision applies also to the United States Convention but it does not result in the conclusion that the word " profits " appearing in s 815-15(1)(c) or in Article 9 is to be read so as to confine the inquiry required by s 815-15(1)(c) or Article 9.

158. His Honour was correct at [ 611 ] - [ 614 ] to reject CAHPL ' s submission that there had been no profits which had not accrued within the meaning of s 815-15(1)(c) or Article 9(1). Section 815-15(1)(c) postulates that a consequence of the presence of the conditions in Article 9 was that " an amount of profits " which might have been expected to accrue did not accrue. The word " profits " in the provision and in Article 9 is used in a more generic sense than " taxable income " . The focus of the provision is the tax effect of a dealing not the overall income of a taxpayer. The specific focus in s 815-15(1)(c) is whether " an amount " of profits had not accrued, just as the focus of Article 9(1) is whether " any profits " had not accrued. There is no basis in the text of the provisions or in the policy they express to equate the profits referred to with the taxable income of the taxpayer. The fact that CAHPL received dividend income may be relevant in evaluating what might be expected to accrue in the particular facts in question but it does not result in the conclusion that there was no amount of profits which did not accrue by reason of the conditions mentioned in Article 9 for the purposes of s 815-15(1)(c). The condition was satisfied by reason of an amount of profits not accruing but for the conditions mentioned in Article 9.

159. The appeal should be dismissed.

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1. The appeal be dismissed with costs.

Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 .


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