THE STATE OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA & ANOR v THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA & ANOR
Judges:Mason CJ
Brennan J
Deane J
Dawson J
Toohey J
Gaudron J
McHugh J
Court:
Full High Court
Mason CJ, Deane, Toohey and Gaudron JJ
The plaintiffs, the State of South Australia and the South Australian Superannuation Fund Investment Trust (``SASFIT''), commenced an action in this Court seeking declarations (a) that SASFIT is ``a State'' for the purposes of s. 114 of the Constitution; (b) that the plaintiffs are not liable to pay income tax on income received into or on account of the South Australian Superannuation Fund (``the Fund'') or on net capital gains made by the Fund for the period from 1 July 1988 to 19 October 1989 by reason of s. 114 of the Constitution and s. 271 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) (``the Act''); and (c) that the plaintiffs are not liable to pay income tax in respect of income received into or on account of the Fund and net capital gains made by the Fund after 19 October 1989.
By their defence the defendants, the Commonwealth of Australia and the Commissioner of Taxation, assert that SASFIT is not the State of South Australia, that the Fund is not property of the State and that the relevant
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laws, the Taxation Laws Amendment Act (No. 2) 1989 (Cth) and the Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation) Act 1989 (Cth), do not operate so as to impose a tax on property of any kind belonging to the State of South Australia.Pursuant to s. 18 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) Mason C.J. stated a case for the consideration of the Full Court. The case reserved the following questions for the opinion of the Full Court:
- 1. (a) Prior to 19 October 1989 was SASFIT; and
- (b) is SASFIT now
- the State of South Australia within the meaning of s. 114 of the Constitution?
- 2. (a) Prior to 19 October 1989 was property held on account of the Fund; and
- (b) is property now held on account of the Fund
- ``property of any kind belonging to a State'' within the meaning of s. 114 of the Constitution?
- 3. Is SASFIT exempt from paying income tax on income received into or on account of the Fund or net capital gains made by the Fund for the period 1 July 1988 to 19 October 1989 by reason of s. 114 of the Constitution and s. 271 of the Act?
- 4. Is SASFIT exempt from paying income tax on income received into or on account of the Fund or net capital gains made by the Fund after 19 October 1989 by reason of s. 114 of the Constitution and s. 271 of the Act?
At the hearing of the stated case the defendants did not offer argument on questions 1 and 2, accepting that SASFIT is relevantly the State of South Australia and that the assets of the Fund are property of the State for the purposes of s. 114 of the Constitution. As the answers to the stated case no longer depend on whether SASFIT was the State of South Australia within the meaning of s. 114 of the Constitution both prior to and after 19 October 1989, it is unnecessary to explore the differences between the Superannuation Act 1988 (S.A.) and that Act as amended in 1989, which were thought to be material to the issues raised by questions 1 and 2. As the differences are no longer material, questions 3 and 4 will attract the same answer. Furthermore, the parties have agreed that it will be sufficient if the answers to questions 3 and 4 in the stated case are confined to income derived by way of interest on money lent and capital gains made by the Fund. It follows that we need refer only to the facts recited in the stated case which are relevant to those answers.
SASFIT was continued in existence and was incorporated by s. 6 of the Superannuation Act 1988 . That Act came into operation on 1 July 1988 and repealed the Superannuation Act 1974 (S.A.). The Superannuation Act 1988 makes provision for the payment of superannuation benefits to South Australian statutory officers and public sector employees. The statutory scheme established the Fund into which contributors' contributions are paid either directly or indirectly.
At all material times the assets of the Fund comprised:
- (a) the interest held by SASFIT on account of the Fund in investments such as government securities, loans secured by government guarantee, company debentures and notes;
- (b) the interest in land and buildings held by SASFIT on account of the Fund;
- (c) the interest held by SASFIT on account of the Fund in shares listed on a stock exchange;
- (d) the interest held by SASFIT on account of the Fund in convertible notes in companies listed on a stock exchange;
- (e) the interest held by SASFIT on account of the Fund in loans to and shares in unlisted companies and units and interests in trusts;
- (f) money invested by SASFIT on the short- term money market;
- (g) rights and interests in respect of assets such as share options held by SASFIT on account of the Fund; and
- (h) any amount standing to the credit of the account kept pursuant to s. 21 of the Public Finance and Audit Act 1987 (S.A.).
Income derived by the Fund on its assets includes interest earned on money loaned by SASFIT in respect of the Fund in the manner set out in the preceding paragraph. Rather than deal individually with the various kinds of income derived by SASFIT from the above investments, it was agreed in the course of argument that the appropriate course is for the Court to confine itself at this stage to a
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consideration of the position in relation to income consisting of such interest.From time to time there are paid into the Fund receipts which include ``capital gains'', in the sense in which that phrase is used in the Act, in respect of assets of the Fund. The capital gains are derived from the sale of interests in real and personal property of SASFIT in respect of the Fund, including shares, securities, units held in unit trusts and interests held in trusts, joint ventures, leases and other arrangements.
Pursuant to Pt IX of the Act, comprising ss. 267-315, which was inserted in 1989 by the Taxation Laws Amendment Act (No. 2) and amended by the Taxation Laws Amendment (Superannuation) Act , liability for taxes was imposed upon certain income, receipts and net capital gains by superannuation funds, with effect from 1 July 1988. The Commissioner of Taxation claims that the Fund is a superannuation fund to which Pt IX applies and that SASFIT is therefore liable to pay tax on the taxable income of the Fund. The plaintiffs claim that, by virtue of s. 114 of the Constitution and s. 271 of the Act, the Commonwealth has no power to impose such a tax upon SASFIT and the Commissioner of Taxation has no power to assess the amounts as being taxable.
It is common ground that, but for s. 114 and s. 271, SASFIT is liable to lodge a return of income and is liable to pay tax on the taxable income of the Fund. SASFIT accepts that it is a ``complying superannuation fund'' as that expression is defined by s. 267(1) of the Act. The trustee of a complying superannuation fund is liable to pay tax on the taxable income of the fund of the year of income.
[1]
The provisions of Pt IX were drafted with an eye to the possibility that the provisions of the Part might infringe the prohibition in s. 114 of the Constitution by imposing a tax on property of a State. Section 271 deals with that situation. Sub-section (1) provides:
``It is the intention of the Parliament that if, but for this section, this Part would have the effect that a law imposing taxation would impose tax on property of any kind belonging to a State within the meaning of section 114 of the Constitution, this Part shall not have that effect.''
Section 114 of the Constitution
The immunity from the imposition of taxation which is conferred by s. 114 on the Commonwealth and the States, though confined to taxes on property, is expressed in wide terms. The immunity extends to ``
any
tax on property of
any
kind'' (emphasis added) belonging to the Commonwealth or to a State, as the case may be. The immunity thereby conferred might appear, on its face, to travel beyond a freedom from those forms or classes of taxation described as a ``tax on property'' or a ``property tax'' and to exempt the property of the Commonwealth or a State from any form of tax. No doubt there are policy reasons which would support that broad interpretation of s. 114. Such a broad interpretation would protect the operations of each government within the federal framework and in this way contribute to harmonious intergovernmental relationships. The Supreme Court of Canada has given just such an interpretation to the rather similar provisions of s. 125 of the
British North America Act 1867
.
[4]
However, in the course of judicial decisions beginning in 1904, this Court has not adopted that broad reading of the section. Instead, the Court has treated the section as conferring an immunity from a tax on property in its strict sense, that is, from ``taxation imposed upon property
qua
property'',
[5]
True it is that
King
C.J. in
Superannuation Fund Investment Trust v. Commr of Stamps (S.A.) (No. 2)
[7]
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determining whether a particular tax is a ``tax upon property'' for the purposes of s. 114.It has often been pointed out that the description ``tax on property'' is elliptical in that property does not pay taxes; individuals do.
[9]
Recognising this,
O'Connor
J. in the
Steel Rails Case
said
[10]
Accordingly, a tax is properly characterised, for the purposes of s. 114, as a ``tax on property'' if, and only if, it is imposed upon a taxpayer by reference to a relationship between the taxpayer and the relevant property and the relationship is such that the tax represents a tax on the ownership or holding of the property in question.
[12]
The need to interpret the section in the context of other provisions of the Constitution, particularly the legislative powers possessed by the Parliament under s. 51(i) and (ii), as well as s. 90, played a large part in the adoption of the strict view of the immunity conferred by the section.
[14]
In the evolution of the interpretation of s. 114 it came to be recognised that a distinction should be drawn between a tax on property and a tax on transactions, a distinction which was applied in the
Steel Rails Case
itself, where customs duty levied on the importation by a State of steel rails was held to be a customs duty on the movement of goods rather than a tax on property. Although the distinction between a tax on property and a tax on transactions has continued to be a very important factor in the interpretation and application of the section, it has been acknowledged that a tax framed as a tax on transactions may nevertheless in some circumstances amount to a tax on property, that is, a tax on the ownership or holding of property.
[17]
In that case,
Mason
,
Brennan
and
Deane
JJ. expressed an obiter dicta view that ``a tax on the possession or use of property would constitute a tax on the ownership of that property''.
[18]
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properly be characterised as a ``tax on property'' for the purposes of s. 114. On the other hand, a tax imposed upon the use or occupation of land by the owner would be a ``tax on property'' for the purposes of s. 114 for the reason that it is tantamount to a tax upon the ownership or holding of the relevant land. [20]Is a tax on income a tax on property?
The plaintiffs' contention that a tax on income is a tax on property is not without some force. The contention is expressed in two ways: first, that the tax is imposed on items of revenue or income which themselves constitute property so that a tax on income is, without more, a direct tax on property; and, secondly, that a tax on income in the form of interest is in substance a tax on the property (the capital) which produces the income. This second way of putting the argument represented the main thrust of the plaintiffs' case. The need to establish, in conformity with the authorities culminating in The First Fringe Benefits Tax Case , that the tax is a tax on the ownership or holding of property by the State made it virtually inevitable that the argument would be presented in this way. In essence, the plaintiffs' argument is that income tax is a tax on the taxpayer's ownership of property because it taxes the fruits of that property.
At first glance, authority in both the United States and Canada appears to provide some support for the first way in which the plaintiffs put the argument. Thus, in
Nowegijick
, the Supreme Court of Canada held that a tax on income is in reality a tax on property itself, on the footing that money or any other thing of value acquired as gain or profit from capital or labour is property.
[21]
However, the question at issue in
Nowegijick
did not concern s. 125 of the
British North America Act
; the question was whether the tax imposed by the
Income Tax Act 1970
(Can.) imposed a tax ``in respect of... any'' of the ``personal property'' of an Indian within the meaning of s. 87(b) of the
Indian Act
. The
Income Tax Act
imposed tax on the taxable income of a taxpayer, the expression ``taxable income'' being defined by s. 2(2) as the income of a taxpayer less permitted deductions. The liability was imposed at the point of receipt of the salary. The taxpayer argued that a person's ``taxable income'' is not ``personal property'' and is no more than a ``concept'' that results from a number of operations. The Court rejected that argument on the ground that it was ``too fine a distinction''.
[23]
In Australia, under the Act, income tax is imposed ``upon the taxable income derived during the year of income'' by the taxpayer.
[24]
The fact that income is a generic term and the fact that both the assessable and the taxable income of a taxpayer are concepts, not descriptions of property which belongs to the taxpayer, support the view that income tax is not a tax on the ownership or holding of property as contemplated by s. 114. Moreover, the Act focuses its attention upon the derivation of income by the taxpayer, not upon the ownership or holding of property. The notion of derivation of income is a complex one
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involving, as it does, considerations divorced from the ownership and holding of property. As Dixon J. observed in Commissioner of Taxes (S.A.) v. Executor Trustee & Agency Co. of S.A. Ltd . (`` Carden's Case ''): [30]``Income, profits and gains are conceptions of the world of affairs and particularly of business.... [I]n nearly every department of enterprise and employment the course of affairs and the practice of business have developed methods of estimating or computing in terms of money the result over an interval of time produced by the operations of business, by the work of the individual, or by the use of capital. The practice of these methods of computation and the general recognition of the principles upon which they proceed are responsible in a great measure for the conceptions of income, profit and gain and, therefore, may be said to enter into the determination or definition of the subject which the legislature has undertaken to tax.''
In conformity with this view of income, the courts have placed reliance upon the conceptions of business and the principles and practices of commercial accountancy in order to arrive at an assessment of income, the object being ``to discover what gains have during the period of account come home to the taxpayer in a realised or immediately realisable form''.
[31]
In particular, the courts look to these conceptions, principles and practices in deciding whether income has been ``derived'' by a taxpayer. ``Derived'' is the equivalent of ``arising'' or ``accruing'',
[32]
Viewed in the light of these general considerations, the income tax (excluding capital gains tax) imposed by the Act on income produced by property belonging to the taxpayer cannot be characterised generally as a tax on the ownership or holding of that property. Income tax generally cannot be characterised as a tax of that kind. However, it is conceivable that the particular relationship between a type of income and the property which produces it might be such that the income tax imposed by the Act on taxable income calculated by reference to that type of income is, for relevant purposes, a tax on the property. Accordingly, it is desirable to examine rather more closely the impact of the tax on interest payments forming part of the assessable income of a taxpayer.
The relationship between income tax and interest on money lent
Interest on money lent is in substance a payment received for the use by a borrower of the lender's money. Though interest is income or profit derived from the principal sum lent to the borrower, it is a debt separate from the principal sum and may be recovered as such, as the common indebitatus count for interest shows.
[35]
In the ultimate analysis the tax is imposed not upon the ownership or holding of property belonging to the taxpayer but upon gains of a revenue kind in the form of interest on money lent derived by the taxpayer in the relevant period, the derivation being ascertained by reference to the conceptions, principles and practices already mentioned. Granted that the taxpayer comes under a liability because he or she derives income which can be identified with a chose in action of which he or she is the owner or holder, nevertheless the true character of the tax is, as its name implies, that of income tax rather than a tax on the ownership or holding of property. The derivation of income
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by a taxpayer is a subject relevantly different from the ownership or holding of property.Capital gains
The effective exemption of superannuation funds from liability to pay capital gains tax ended as from 1 July 1988, coinciding with the ending of the exemption of superannuation funds from liability to pay income tax. Thereafter superannuation funds became liable to pay capital gains tax under Pt IIIA of the Act.
[37]
The cost base of an asset to a taxpayer is defined by s. 160ZH(1) so as to include the cost of acquisition, incidental costs of acquisition and disposal, and certain expenditure of a capital nature on the asset. The indexed cost base of an asset to a taxpayer is defined by s. 160ZH(2) so as to refer to the items of cost identified in s. 160ZH(1) on the footing that the items of cost are indexed in accordance with the provisions of s. 160ZJ. That section provides for indexation according to the index numbers, published quarterly by the Australian Statistician, in the period elapsing between the incurring of the relevant cost and the date of disposal of the asset by the taxpayer. Provision is also made for the ascertainment of a reduced cost base of an asset to a taxpayer,
[41]
What emerges from the outline set out above is that capital gains tax is imposed on the disposal or deemed disposal of an asset owned by a taxpayer, the tax being effectively imposed upon the net capital gain which accrues to the taxpayer. By reason of the provisions relating to the ascertainment of the indexed cost base of the asset to the taxpayer, the amount of the net capital gain will depend upon the length of time for which the taxpayer has held the asset because it is generally necessary to take into account the index numbers published quarterly in that period in computing the indexed cost base.
True it is that the capital gains tax is not levied on the proceeds of sale of an asset. But the net capital gains which represent part of the proceeds of sale fall into assessable income. And the reason for the imposition of the tax is the exercise by the taxpayer of the right of disposition, a right central to the concept of ownership of property. Furthermore, the capital gains tax imposed by the Act generally has the additional element already mentioned, namely, that the amount of the capital gain is computed by reference to the length of time during which the taxpayer has been the owner of the asset. Viewed in this light, the tax is a tax on the ownership or holding of property belonging to the taxpayer.
In the result we would answer the questions asked in the stated case as follows:
- 1. (a) Not necessary to answer.
- (b) Not necessary to answer.
- 2. (a) Not necessary to answer.
- (b) Not necessary to answer.
- (b) Not necessary to answer.
- 3. As to income tax on interest derived from money lent - no. As to income tax on net capital gains - yes.
- 4. As to income tax on interest derived from money lent - no. As to income tax on net capital gains - yes.
Footnotes
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