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Ruling

Subject: Subdivision of land

Question

Will the proceeds from the sale of part of your property be assessable under section 6-5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)?

Answer

No.

This ruling applies for the following periods:

1 July 2011 to 30 June 2012

1 July 2012 to 30 June 2013

1 July 2013 to 30 June 2014

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2011

Relevant facts and circumstances

The taxpayer purchased land prior to 20 September 1985. From the date of purchase to the present the land has been farmed.

The taxpayer is now retired and wishes to subdivide the land into a number of blocks. The taxpayer will put in roads and power but will not be adding curbing, and guttering, sewerage or water. The works performed will be contracted out as will the task of selling the blocks to third parties.

The taxpayer did not enter into the original purchase with the intention of making a profit through subdivision but rather for farming purposes. He now wishes to sell the property and gain a reasonable return. It is no longer useable as farming land.

The proposed subdivision has received the approval of council. The land will be developed over several stages. Funding for the development will be effected via cash reserves.

Relevant legislative provisions

Section 6-5 Income Tax Assessment Act 1997

Reasons for decision

Unless otherwise stated, all legislative references in the following Reasons for Decision are to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997.

Summary

The sale of the land represents the mere realisation of real property, carried out in such a way as to secure the best price. Consequently, the profit derived from the sale of the land by the taxpayer is not assessable income under section 6-5.

Detailed reasoning

Section 6-5 includes in your assessable income, where you are an Australian resident, all ordinary income which you derive during an income year. Ordinary income is defined as income according to ordinary concepts.

Ordinary income generally includes income that arises in the ordinary course of a taxpayer's business. However, in certain circumstances proceeds not within the ordinary course of the taxpayer's business may form part of their ordinary income.

In the present case, the sale of land is outside the ordinary course of the activities from which the taxpayer derives income. Whether the proceeds constitute assessable income depends on a number of factors.

The principle has been established that profits arising from isolated business or commercial transactions will be ordinary income if the taxpayer's purpose or intention in entering into the transaction is to make a profit, even though the transaction may not be part of the ordinary activities of the taxpayer's business (FC of T v. Myer Emporium Ltd 1987 163 CLR 199; 87 ATC 4363; 18 ATR 693) (Myer Emporium). 

Taxation Ruling TR 92/3 discusses the application of the principles outlined in the Myer Emporium case and provides guidance in determining whether profits from such transactions are ordinary income and therefore assessable under section 6-5. According to Paragraph 1 of TR 92/3, the term isolated transactions refers to:

Paragraph 8 of the ruling explains that it is not necessary that the intention or purpose of profit-making be the sole or dominant intention or purpose for entering into the transaction. It is sufficient if profit-making is a significant purpose.

Paragraph 15 provides that if a taxpayer makes a profit from a transaction or operation, that profit is income if the transaction or operation is not in the course of the taxpayers business but

Whether a transaction is business or commercial in character will depend on the circumstances of each case.  Casimaty v FC of T 97 ATC 5135; (1997) 37 ATR 358 (Casimaty's case) and McCorkell v FC of T 98 ATC 2199; (1998) 39 ATR 1112 (McCorkell's case) demonstrate that in circumstances where there is an absence of profit making intention when farming land is acquired, the likelihood of any profit made on the eventual sale of land being income according to ordinary concepts is greatly diminished.

However, as mentioned above, profits on the sale of subdivided land can still be income according to ordinary concepts within section 6-5 if the taxpayer's subdivisional activities have become a separate business operation or commercial transaction.

The Commissioner's guidelines in this regard are set out in paragraph 13 of TR 92/3. Paragraph 13 lists the following factors as relevant:

Miscellaneous Taxation Ruling MT 2006/1 discusses inter alia the appropriate treatment of isolated transactions and sales of real property. At paragraph 265 it lists the factors which give an indication that a business or an adventure or concern in the nature of trade is being carried on in respect to property transactions. They are:

The present case can be compared to both Casimaty and McCorkell. In Casimaty, the conclusion was primarily influenced by the fact that the taxpayer acquired and continued to hold his property for use as a residence and the conduct of primary production for more than twenty years. Apart from the activities necessarily undertaken to obtain approval from time to time for subdivision of parts of the property, there was nothing to suggest a change in the purpose or object with which the property was held, namely primary production. In McCorkell, the property had been in the family and used for primary production purposes at least as far back as the taxpayer's birth in 1917.

In the present case, having regard to the length of time that the property has been held and the use to which it has been put throughout the period of ownership, the evidence is consistent with the taxpayer not being in the business of property development. The details of the subdivision are also consistent with a finding that the taxpayer has not entered into the enterprise with the intention of making a profit through isolated transactions.

Having regard to those conclusions, on balance it would seem that the sale of the land represents the mere realisation of real property, carried out in an enterprising way so as to secure the best price. Consequently, the profit derived from the sale of the land by the taxpayer is not assessable income under section 6-5.


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