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Ruling

Subject: GST and settlement payment

Questions:

What are the GST implications for the Australian company (you) in regard to the settlement payment you received under a Settlement Deed?

As you only received an email telling you of the amount to be paid to you, do you need to generate a recipient created tax invoice (RCTI) for this payment?

Advice:

The settlement payment that you received under the Settlement Deed does not constitute consideration for a taxable supply that you have made and therefore will not be subject to the goods and services tax (GST).

No, you do not need to generate an RCTI for the settlement payment you have received as you have not received any supply under the Settlement Deed.

Relevant facts:

You are an Australian company that carries on enterprise in Australia and are registered for the GST.

You with other Australian businesses (the Group Members) who were victims of the alleged behaviour by another Australian company (AusCo) started a court action against AusCo with the assistance of an Australian law firm in order to claim damages and other relief.

A Settlement Deed was made where AusCo agreed to settle the claims sought by the Group Members and the law firm on the terms set out in the Settlement Deed. The Law firm was appointed to be the fund administrator for the Settlement Reserve fund as per arrangement in the Settlement Deed.

The Settlement Deed provided the following:

Upon court approval of the settlement and payments made:

the Group Members hereby release AusCo and their related bodies corporate and all past or present officers or employees from all claims, causes of action and demands, including without limitation all damages, interest, legal and administrative costs and disbursements present and future relating to or arising out of matters the subject of the Proceeding; and

Upon the finalisation of the Settlement Scheme, the Group Members' solicitors will move the court for orders:

· dismissing the proceeding with no order as to cost; and

· barring all Group Members from making or pursuing any claim arising out of the subject matter of the Proceeding.

You have received an email from the law firm advising you of the final assessed value of your claim.

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-10;

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-15.and

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 29-70(3).

Reasons for decisions

Question 1

GST is payable on a taxable supply. Under section 9-5 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) you make a taxable supply if:

However, the supply is not a taxable supply to the extent that it is GST-free or input taxed.

You make a taxable supply if all the requirements in section 9-5 of the GST Act are satisfied.

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2001/4 GST consequences of court orders and out-of-court settlement (available at www.ato.gov.au) provides guidance on court and out-of-court settlements.

One of the requirements that must be considered in determining whether a particular supply is a taxable supply is whether there is a supply for consideration. Paragraph 21 of GSTR 2001/4 sets out the fundamental criteria that must be satisfied for there to be a 'supply for consideration', namely:

Paragraphs 51 to 54 of GSTR 2001/4 state:

Sometimes, where a dispute involves counter claims, the terms of the settlement may provide for each party to release the other from such claims and obligations.

Where court proceedings have commenced, the filing of a notice of discontinuance pursuant to the relevant court rules may also be required to ensure the court is advised that a particular action will not proceed.

We consider that these conditions of settlement can create supplies for GST purposes. The supplies may be characterised as:

We refer to supplies of these kinds as 'discontinuance supplies'. However, whether a discontinuance supply would be a taxable supply would then depend on the requirements of section 9-5 of the GST Act being met in relation to that supply.

Under the Settlement Deed the Group Members release AusCo and their related bodies corporate and all past or present officers or employees from all claims, causes of action and demands, including without limitation all damages, interest, legal and administrative costs and disbursements present and future relating to or arising out of matters the subject of the Proceeding. Further upon finalisation of the Settlement Scheme, all Group Members are barred from making or pursuing any claim arising out of the subject matter of the Proceeding.

Accordingly, the above condition in the Settlement Deed constitutes a supply for the purposes of the GST Act, and is referred to as a discontinuance supply. The next step is to determine if the settlement payment you receive was made in response to a supply.

In relation to discontinuance supply, paragraphs 106 to 109 of GSTR 2001/4 state:

Furthermore, paragraphs 73, 110 and 111 of GSTR 2001/4 state:

On the basis of the facts provided, a sufficient nexus cannot be established between the discontinuance supply and the settlement payment. The settlement payment under the agreement is therefore considered to be in response to the damages claim rather than the discontinuance supply. Furthermore as per paragraphs 73,110 and 111 of GSTR 2001/4, the settlement payment made in response to a court or out of court settlement will not constitute, by itself, consideration for a supply made by you.

Accordingly, the settlement payment does not represent consideration for a discontinuance supply under the terms of settlement, or any supply underpinning the damages claim.

As one of the requirements for a taxable supply under section 9-5 of the GST Act is not satisfied, you are not making a taxable supply in relation to the settlement payment received. The settlement payment is not subject to GST and therefore you are not required to remit GST to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) on the settlement payment.

Question 2

Subsection 29-70(3) of the GST Act provides that an RCTI is a tax invoice belonging to a class of tax invoices that the Commissioner has determined in writing may be issued by the recipient of a taxable supply.

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2000/10 outlines the circumstances in which a recipient can issue RCTIs. An entity can issue RCTIs if the Commissioner has determined in writing that the nature of the industry in which the entity operates warrants the use of RCTIs and all the requirements in that determination are satisfied.

From the facts given, you have not received any supply under the Settlement Deed and therefore do not need to issue an RCTI.

Further since the settlement payment is not subject to GST you are not required to issue a tax invoice.


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