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Ruling

Subject: GST and supply of residential premises under ad development lease

Question 1

Are your supplies of the newly constructed residential premises under a development lease correctly classified as input taxed supplies?

Advice/Answers

Yes

Question 2

Where you are not entitled to input tax credits in relation to the input taxed supplies of the relevant residential premises, can an increasing adjustment under Division 129 of the GST Act be used to repay the over-claimed input tax credit?

Advice/Answers

No

Question 3

If the outcome of question 2 is that each BAS requires amendment, will the Commissioner remit, in part or in full, the general interest charge (GIC) that would otherwise accrue in relation to the input tax credits that have been previously claimed?

Advice/Answer

See Reasons for decision

Relevant facts

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Sections 9-5. 11-5, 129-5, 40-65, 40-75

Reasons for decision

Question 1

Summary

Yes, the supplies of newly constructed residential premises in the relevant development are input taxed in accordance with the decision in Commissioner of Taxation v Gloxinia Investments (Trustee) [2010] FCAFC 46 (the Gloxinia case) and the amended legislation.

Detailed reasoning

The GST treatment of a supply of residential premises is considered under sections 40-65 and 40-70 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act (GST Act). Under those sections, the sale or long term lease of residential premises to be used predominantly for residential accommodation is input taxed to the extent that the premises are not commercial residential premises or new residential premises.

The supplies of residential premises in the development are not supplies of commercial residential premises.

The term 'new residential premises' is defined in subsection 40-75(1) of the GST Act. Of relevance to this case is paragraph 40-75(1)(a) which states:

The relevant supply in this case is a supply of a new land and house package by way of assigning a long term lease made since September 2010. Whilst it is accepted that the supply is a supply of residential premises as defined in the GST Act, the issue is whether the supply is a supply of new residential premises that would not be treated as input taxed under sections 40-65 and 40-70 of the GST Act.

Under paragraph 40-70(1)(a) of the GST Act, we need to consider whether the underlying supply in question (the house and land package) has previously been subject to a long term lease.

Goods and Services Ruling GSTR 2008/2 (issued on 11 May 2008) provided the view of the Tax Office on the supply of newly constructed residential premises under a development lease.

Under this Ruling, it was considered that the government entity merely sells or leases land (not land and the attached development works) to the developer. Therefore, when the developer supplies the completed residential premises by way of sale or long-term lease, it is making supplies of new residential premises, as the premises 'have not previously been sold as residential premises and have not previously been the subject of a long-term lease'. It followed that the supply is a supply of new residential premises and paragraph 40-65(2)(b) of the GST Act applies to make the supply taxable.

However, following the decision in the Gloxinia case handed down by the Federal Court on 24 May 2010, the ATO issued a Decision Impact Statement (DIS) providing the amended view of the Tax Office in relation to this decision.

In the DIS the Commissioner considers, amongst other things, that:

Following the Court decision in the Gloxinia case, the Tax Office confirmed that the correct decision was the input taxed treatment of the supplies, and GSTR 2008/2 was later withdrawn to reflect the Court decision.

Supplies made on or after 27 January 2011

On 21 March 2012, the Tax Law Amendment (2011 Measures No 9) Act 2011 (TLAA) received Royal Assent. Of relevance to this case are the new subsections 40-75(2B) and (2C) that apply to supply of residential premises on or after 27 January 2011 (subject to certain exceptions contained in items 12 and 13 of Schedule 4 to the TLAA).

Transitional provisions

However, some supplies of residential premises after 27 January 2011 will not be subject to the amendments if the conditions contained in items 12 and 13 of Schedule 4 to the TLAA are satisfied.

Item 12 excludes certain 'wholesale supplies' of residential premises made on or after 27 January 2011, from the application of the new law [ss 40-75(2B)] subject to certain conditions being satisfied in relation to the whole sale supply.

You have provided that:

Your supplies of will not be subject to the new law if the condition under Item 12 of Schedule 4 to the TLAA are satisfied. That is, the whole sale supply will be excluded from the application of the new law and the supplies will be considered as have been previously subject to a long term lease. It then follows that paragraph 40-70(2)(b) applies and the supplies are input taxed supply of residential premises.

In your circumstances:

Therefore the requirements of the exception in item 12 are met in these circumstances.

As all of the conditions in Item 12 of Schedule 4 to the TLAA are met, the wholesale supply is not disregard (that is the new section 40-75(2B) does not apply). Therefore, the supplies of residential premises by you in the development are considered input taxed supplies.

Question 3

Summary

As the relevant acquisitions were not creditable acquisitions under section 11-5 of the GST Act in increasing adjustment under Division 129 of the GST Act cannot be used to repaid the over-

The over-claimed ITCs must be repaid by revising the relevant original BASs.

Detailed reasoning

Pursuant to subsection 7-1(2) of the GST Act, entitlements to input tax credit arise on creditable acquisitions.

You have provided during the construction phase it followed the ATO's view in GSTR 2003/3 and GSTR 2008/2)) and treated the acquisitions as creditable and therefore claimed input tax credits on all relevant acquisitions.

Following the decision in the Gloxinia case, the correct treatment of the relevant supply is input taxed rather than taxable.

The acquisitions in question are not creditable acquisitions under Division 11 of the GST Act. You are not entitled to input tax credits for things acquired to make input taxed supplies. As you have claimed input tax credits that it is not entitled to, it is required to repay the over-claimed credits to the Tax Office.

The question is how the return of the over-claimed input tax credit can be done under the GST Act.

Division 129

Section 129-1 of the GST Act, although not an operative provision, provides a short explanation of the Division. It provides that when the extent of creditable purpose is changed by a later event, adjustments may be made.

Goods and services tax ruling GSTR 2000/24 Division 129 - making adjustments for change in extent of creditable purpose explains the Tax Office's view on how to work out an adjustment for an acquisition or importation under Division 129 of the GST Act. In particular, the Ruling explains the circumstances when an adjustment will arise for an acquisition. Paragraph 12 of this ruling states that:

Similarly, paragraph 13 of GSTR 2009/4: new residential premised and adjustments for changes in extent of creditable purpose states that:

The amount of the input tax credit depends on the extent to which the acquisition or importation is for a creditable purpose. In order to claim the correct amount of input tax credits, an entity will need to determine the extent of creditable purpose for its acquisitions and importations on a reasonable basis that reflects its planned use of an acquisition (section 11-15) or importation (section 15-10) in its enterprise relative to the total use.

Divisions 11 and 15 provide that it is the planned extent of creditable purpose for that acquisition or importation which is relevant for claiming input tax credits.

Division 129 provides that after an acquisition or importation is made, the extent to which it is actually applied or used for a creditable purpose may be different from the planned use. This means that the original input tax credit claimed may have been too much or not enough. Adjustments for such changes in the extent of creditable purpose are subject to the provisions of Division 129 of the GST Act.

The word 'apply' is defined in section 129-55 to include:

a. supply of the thing; and

b. consume, dispose of or destroy the thing; and

Both Divisions 11 and 129 operate in respect of a 'thing'. Division 11 determines what input tax credits an entity is entitled to when it acquires a thing. Division 129 determines whether the amount it originally claimed in respect of the acquisition of the thing needs to be altered due to a change in use.

It is considered that 'applied' in step 1 of the method statement in section 129-40 requires the thing to actually be applied to a particular purpose, That is, the actual application of the thing. It compares this with the intention when the entity acquired the thing, or its former application of the thing. The method statement focuses on what the entity has actually done with the thing rather than a continuation of its intention when the entity acquired it.

· What are the consequences of this meaning of 'apply'?

Where an entity acquires a thing for a particular creditable purpose, but uses the thing for a different purpose, the only use relevant for the purposes of the method statement in Division 129 is the actual use of the thing. If the actual use is not for a creditable purpose, applying the method statement will result in an increasing adjustment that will require all of the input tax credits to be repaid in the first adjustment period.

· When does Division 129 apply?

As noted above, Division 129 operates where there is a change in the extent of creditable purpose. Section 129-1, when read in conjunction with section 182-10, requires the extent of creditable purpose to be changed by later events before you need to apply Division 129.

Division 129 only applies where there is a later event that causes the actual use of a thing to be different from the intended or former use of it. The later event could be any application of the thing. In other words, there has to be some active application of the thing, for example, applying residential premises to renting.

For example, a builder who constructs residential premises, with the intention of renting them and then selling the premises as new residential premises, will have both creditable and non creditable purposes in respect of acquisitions made to construct the premises. The builder will therefore be entitled to a proportion of the relevant input tax credits under Division 11. If, however, the premises are not sold during the first adjustment period, the actual use of the property has only been for a non-creditable purpose and the builder will be required to apply Division 129.

In your circumstances:

The correct GST status of the supply is always input taxed, taking into account the change in the view of the Tax Office and the exception in Item 12 of Schedule 4 to the TLAA (the amendment). Therefore, where you acquired things to make residential premises and supply them as input taxed supplies, you did not acquire things for a creditable purpose under paragraph 11-15(2)(a) of the GST Act. It follows that you did not make creditable acquisitions and therefore is not entitled to any input tax credit (at any time) from those acquisitions under Division 11 of the GST Act.

The change in the Tax Office's view and subsequent legislative change is not a later event that changes the application of the things.

In conclusion, under Division 11 of the GST Act, you are not entitled to any input tax credit in relation to acquisitions of things to make the input taxed supplies. Division 129 does not have any application to these acquisitions as explained above.

In order to repay the over-claimed input tax credit, you need to revise its relevant BASs to exclude the incorrectly claimed ITCs.

There are only two ways an entity may correct an error in a tax period other than the tax period of the original BASs:

Under the 'Correcting GST mistakes' rules an entity can make a correction on a later BAS subject to the correction limits. For an entity whose turnover:

As the correction amount is greater than the correction limit, you cannot apply the 'Correcting GST mistakes' rule.

Under subsection 29-20(1) of the GST Act, an adjustment is attributable to the tax period in which the entity becomes aware of the adjustment. However, for this section to apply there must be an adjustment event pursuant to of section 19-10(1) of the GST Act.

An adjustment event is defined in subsection 19-10(1) to mean any event which has the effect of:

The circumstances that you over-claimed input tax credits do not fall into any of the requirements above.

Therefore, you cannot revise the error in any BAS other than the original BASs.

Question 3

Summary

As each business activity statement requires amendment, we have considered your request that all GIC charges in relation to the over-claimed input tax credits be remitted either in full or to the base interest rate.

Detailed reasoning

The following events lead to the input taxed treatment of the supplies in prior to 27 January 2011:

You have advised that:

When the High Court refused the Commissioner's application for special leave to appeal the Federal Court decision (on 1 October 2010), it is appropriate that you reviewed your supplies and input tax credit claims in light of the Court decision.

You have determined that it was not entitled to the input tax credits it claimed earlier for acquisitions made to make the input taxed supplies.

In relation to the supply, you have decided correctly that the supplies should have been treated as input taxed.

Your penalty and GIC remission request is considered in light of section 358 of the TAA, Law Practice Statement PS LA 2008/3 and the ATO's approach to dealing with retrospective law changes.

In reaching a decision we have also considered the following:

In these circumstances it is appropriate for the Commissioner to exercise his discretion in relation to penalties and interest. You have acted in good faith and applied an approach that is fair, reasonable and equitable in view of the circumstances surrounding the case.

Accordingly the ATO has adopted the following approach:

We note that this base GIC rate reflects the Commissioner's lack of access to these funds, rather than any element of punishment.


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