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This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication. It should not be regarded as indicative of the ATO's current views. The law may have changed since original publication, and views in the edited version may also be affected by subsequent precedents and new approaches to the application of the law.

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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012248075174

Ruling

Subject: Restrictions on refunds of overpaid GST

Question 1

Will the Commissioner exercise his discretion under section 105-65 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 to refund the incorrectly remitted goods and services tax (GST) by you for your supplies?

Answer

No. The Commissioner will not exercise the discretion pursuant to section 105-65 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (section 105-65) to refund you the overpaid GST as you have not provided sufficient evidence to support that you have absorbed the overpaid GST.

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are registered for GST.

You hold an annual event (Event). Your supply of admission (the ticket) to the Event has been treated as a taxable supply for a long period of time.

In determining the GST treatment of the supply of the tickets, you relied on the calculation of the cost of supply (as required under sub paragraph 38-250(2)(b)(ii)) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) in a spreadsheet. The calculation indicated that the supply of the tickets was a taxable supply.

Post the Event and upon review of the spreadsheet, you have realised that several large items of Event expenditure have been excluded from the calculation in the spreadsheet of the cost of supply.

Had those expenditures been included in the spreadsheet the calculation would have indicated that the supply would have been GST-free and no GST would have been remitted to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).

You have incorrectly remitted the overpaid GST to the ATO in your Business activity statement (BAS).

Price setting process

You determine the price of tickets at least several months prior to the Event.

You use the actual data for the previous year's Event as the basis to produce a budget. The actual data for the last event was used to prepare the current budget. Historical data is not subject to material change and can be used as a reliable standard.

You then account for any anomalies that occurred during the prior Event year and adjust for these. Event expenditure is then incorporated into the budget using a pro-forma Profit and Loss statement with a budget net position for the Event determined as a result of the process.

At no point during the budgetary process which leads to ticket prices for an upcoming Event being determined is any analysis of the GST treatment of admissions undertaken. Any analysis of the GST treatment of supplies takes place later in the year.

The Event historically runs at a net loss, you regaining some of this net loss through holding other activities. The Event Executive undertakes analysis of all expenditure and will reduce expenditure to assure that the net loss position of the Event is manageable.

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999

Division 9

Division 11

Division 38 - Subparagraph 38-250(2)(b)(ii)

Taxation Administration Act 1953

Divisions 3 and 3A of Part IIB

Section 105-65 of Schedule 1

Reasons for decision

Under the general rules the Commissioner is required to give a refund or apply that amount in accordance with the running balance account provisions in Divisions 3 and 3A of Part IIB of the Taxation Administration Act 1953.

However, the requirement to give a refund of overpaid GST is subject to section 105-65 which modifies the general rules so that the Commissioner need not give a refund or apply that amount if an entity overpaid its net amount or an amount of GST where the requirements of section 105-65 are satisfied.

Subsection 105-65(1) states:

Note: * asterisk denotes a defined term in the Act

Whether subsection 105-65(1) applies to your circumstances

The restriction of refunds of overpaid GST under section 105-65 will apply if all three of the following conditions are present:

Miscellaneous Tax Ruling MT 2010/1, which was issued on 15 December 2010, provides the view of the Commissioner on the application of section 105-65.

Paragraph 20 of MT 2010/1 explains the meaning of 'overpaid'. It states:

Paragraph 21 of MT 2010/1 explains the meaning of 'treated' as taxable supply. It states:

In your circumstances section 105-65 applies because:

As no GST was payable on those supplies, the amount legally payable was nil and you have overpaid a GST amount in relation to those supplies.

You have provided that you have not and will not reimburse the recipients of the overpaid GST amounts.

Arithmetic error

You have suggested that the error in the spreadsheet was similar to an arithmetic, or reporting error as discussed in the example in paragraph 128(d) of MT 2010/1.

We consider that this is not the case. The error in the example was caused by a miscalculation of the GST payable by the supplier who had dealt correctly with the recipient. The consequence of the error in the example was that the supplier remitted more GST than legally required but the recipient did not pay any excess GST.

In accordance with the decision in International All Sports v Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCA 824, the Commissioner now administers section 105-65 on the basis that section 105-65 does not apply where the overpayment of GST is caused by a miscalculation of the amount of GST payable rather than a mischaracterisation of a supply as taxable.

In your circumstances, the error resulted in you mischaracterising the supply as taxable and so section 105-65 does apply to restrict the refund.

Exercise of the discretion

As section 105-65 applies, the Commissioner has no obligation to pay a refund that would otherwise be payable under section 8AAZLF of the TAA.

However, it is the ATO view that the Commissioner has a discretion in certain limited circumstances to pay a refund even though the conditions in paragraphs 105-65(1)(a), (b) and (c) are satisfied:

Paragraphs 116 and 117 of MT 2010/1 provide that:

This view is supported by the decision in Luxottica Retail Australia Pty Ltd v FC of T 2010 ATC 10-119 at 57 where the AAT referred to 'residual discretion':

As to paragraph (c), and accepting of course that subparagraph (ii) cannot apply, it is a fact that the customer has not been "reimbursed" to the extent of the overpayment. The question then becomes whether, in these circumstances, the residual discretion to pay the refund to the Applicant should be exercised. We think it should.

Paragraph 128 of MT 2010/1 provides some guiding principles to consider when exercising the discretion. It states:

In a business to business transaction it is generally not enough simply to show that the supplier refunded the immediate business recipient. A supplier must be able to prove that an unregistered end consumer is the one ultimately compensated.

Where the registered recipient is unable to claim input tax credits or is only allowed to partially claim input tax credits, then, before the Commissioner would pay a refund to the supplier, the supplier would have to refund the registered recipient and the registered recipient would have to show it either did not pass the foreseeable cost (that is denied input tax credits) to the next recipient or that they have also refunded that amount to the next recipient and the entity that ultimately has borne the cost is compensated.

Of relevance to your circumstances is that the Commissioner must have regard to the subject matter, scope and purpose of section 105-65. This is explained in paragraph 127 of MT 2010/1 that states:

The Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Law Amendment (2008 Measures No 3) Act (which introduced the current version of section 105-65) adds further:

It follows from the above that it is important when exercising the discretion to determine who has borne the burden of the GST. That is, whether a supplier has passed on the GST to the recipients regardless of whether the supply will generate a profit or loss situation. Generally when a price of a taxable supply is set or agreed to, GST is included in the price.

In determining who has borne the burden of the GST, the Commissioner takes into consideration the factors outlined in Avon Products Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (2006) HCA 29 (Avon). It is considered that the guidance provided by Avon about who bears the burden of the indirect tax impost applies equally in the GST context given the similarity in the sales tax and GST regimes in that respect. In that case the High Court stated, at paragraphs 9 and 12:

This means that the presumption is that the cost of any GST liability is a foreseeable cost that will be passed on as part of the cost recovery and pricing structure of the supplier. It is for the supplier to prove that the GST has not been passed on.

While there may not be a general presumption that 'not for profit' entities will set prices so as to recover costs, each case must be assessed on its merits to determine if the GST has been passed on to the recipients. It is still appropriate to approach the question with reference to your conduct in setting prices based upon your knowledge at the relevant time, including a belief that the GST which later proves to have been an overpayment is a real cost.

You are carrying on an enterprise that includes the annual staging of the Event. To maintain viability, you conduct your enterprise in a business like manner and would do so with a view to making a surplus. In the current financial year you made a surplus and also the previous financial year.

At the time of the budget preparation, the budget outcome (in relation to the ticket price) determines the GST status of the supply for the Event later that year. At the budget preparation time, the outcome of the calculation indicated that the supplies of the ticket would be taxable and GST would be remitted to the ATO and you would have received only the net amount of the proceeds of the supplies.

While it is accepted that you make the supplies of the ticket below cost for the purposes of section 38-250 of the GST Act, it does not follow that the price does not include a GST component.

Further, that GST is not explicitly considered at the time of the price setting by the supplier is not normally sufficient to show that GST has not been passed on, nor that pricing to a market price means that the supplier has necessarily borne the cost of the GST at the time of pricing or thereafter. In the latter case it would be necessary to show that you are pricing to a market where there is no GST in competitive supplies and you have not done so.

Similarly, we do not consider that merely retaining the same ticket price as for the last years Event is sufficient evidence to support a view that the supplier absorbed the cost of GST, particularly where the earlier year event's ticket had been treated as taxable.

It is for you to present evidence to show that, either by circumstance or conscious decision, the price that was set did not include GST and you have not been able to do so. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the Commissioner considers that the process used to arrive at the price would have taken into account the belief that GST was payable and was a real cost of carrying on the enterprise. It is not necessary to this conclusion that the person/people who made the price decision explicitly considered GST, as they made the decision in the context of the budget and other financial information that took account of the GST that had been payable and was believed to still be payable.

In your circumstances, where the supplies of the tickets had been treated as taxable for a long period of time, it is reasonable to conclude that the price set each year did include a GST component and that this would have been the belief of the responsible officers of the Event. This conclusion is further supported by the fact that you consciously considered the GST treatment of the ticket over a long period of time, had treated them as taxable, and had remitted the GST to the ATO.

The Commissioner is of the view that the GST was passed on to recipients (as intended by the GST regime) and so to allow a refund in this case would result in a windfall gain to you. In these circumstances, the Commissioner will not exercise the discretion to allow a refund.


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