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Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012438675657

Ruling

Subject: Carrying on a business of property development

Questions and Answers:

1. Will the proposed subdivision of your business property be the carrying on of a business of property development and result in the property becoming trading stock and result in the happening of CGT Event K4?

2. If you realise a capital gain as a result of CGT Event K4 because you commence to hold the property as trading stock, are you able to disregard that capital gain under Subdivision 152-B of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)?

3. If: (a) you subdivide the property and sells the subdivided lots and (b) the sales of the subdivided lots are not completed within the period ending two years after you commence to hold the property as trading stock; will the Commissioner exercise the power under section 152-125(4) of the ITAA 1997 to extend the time limit under section 152-125(1)(b) to such time as you have sufficient net proceeds of sale of developed lots to enable you to make the payments to your shareholders?

This ruling applies for the following period

Year ending 30 June 2013

The scheme commences on

1 July 2012

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are a post-CGT company with two original post-CGT shareholders. Since your registration, over 15 years ago, you have owned post-CGT property used to carry on a business of primary production. There are X houses located on the property which are occupied by the shareholders

Your shareholders are now over 55 years old and you have entered into an agreement with a contractor (project manager) to subdivide your property into residential lots over a number of years.

When you first acquired the property, the shareholders were engaged in working in the business.

The turnover of the business conducted by you has always been less than $2 million. The Company has not yet prepared its financial reports for the financial year ended 30 June 20YY, but its total receipts for the year again were less than $2 million. The Company anticipates that its receipts, for the current financial year, from its business, again will be less than $2 million.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 70-10

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 104-220

Reasons for decision

Trading Stock

Section 70-10 of the ITAA 1997 states trading stock includes:

Taxation Determination TD 92/124 is about circumstances when land is treated as trading stock'. It states land is treated as trading stock for income tax purposes if:

TD 92/124 further explains:

Carrying on a business of property development

Numerous cases have concerned the assessability of profits or proceeds from the sale of land. As a general principle, if the sale of land constitutes a business, or part of a business, then the proceeds will be assessable as ordinary income. On the other hand, if the sale is a mere realisation of the land, the proceeds will be a capital amount.

In the Full High Court case of Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Whitfords Beach Pty. Ltd. 82 ATC 4031 (Whitfords Beach), it was decided the subdivision was done in the course of what was truly a business venture. Here, the taxpayer, in 1954, acquired 1,584 acres of land north of Perth. The land was acquired to secure for the original shareholders of the company access to shacks which they occupied on the beachfront and not for the purpose of profit-making by sale or for any business purpose. On 20th December 1967, all the shares in the taxpayer were bought by three companies which had not previously been shareholders. The three companies bought the shares only to obtain control of the land, and with the intention that the taxpayer would cause the land to be developed, subdivided and sold at a profit. Gibbs CJ concluded:

Not carrying on a business of property development

In the Federal Court case of Casimaty v Federal Commissioner of Taxation 97 ATC 5135 (Casimaty), the legal principles in relation to the subdivision of land were discussed at length. For the purpose of demonstrating of a mere realisation of a capital asset, i.e., not carrying on a business, the Federal Court in Casimaty cited many the legal cases, included those discussed hereafter.

In Hudson's Bay Co v Stevens (1909) 5 TC 424, the appellant, a company, owned large tracts of land in North America. It was held by the Court of Appeal that the proceeds were not profits or gains derived from carrying on a business of dealing in land and were not assessable to income tax, where Cozens- Hardy M.R. said:

In C.H. Rand v The Alberni Land Co Ltd (1920) 7 TC 629, the respondent company was incorporated to acquire, manage and develop, with a view to ultimate sale, certain lands in British Columbia, which were held on trust for various persons interested therein as owners, joint owners or trustees. Shares were allotted to those beneficiaries but not by reference to the value of the lands acquired from them. Working capital was raised by the issue to ordinary shareholders and deferred shares were issued to other persons for services rendered in enhancing the value of the lands. It was held that the surplus arising from the sale of parts of the lands was not the profits of a trade or business and that the function of the company was merely to realize the capital value of the respective interests in the lands held on trust. The court observed:

In discussing Commissioner of Taxes v Melbourne Trust Limited [1914] AC 1001 (Melbourne Trust), where the scheme was regarded as assessable income, the Federal Court in Casimaty said Melbourne Trust was distinguished as not involving:

In The Alabama Coal, Iron, Land and Colonization Co Ltd v Mylam (1936) 11 TC 232, it was said:

In the High Court of Australia case Ruhamah Property Co Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1928) 41 CLR 148, the property owner, desiring to make additional provision for his family, transferred the property to a company in which he and the members of his family held shares. The company collected the rents and profits from the land and paid for repairs to it. After the founder's death, it sold the property. In the joint judgment of four members of the High Court it was observed, at 154:

In the High Court of Australia case Scottish Australian Mining Co. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1950) 9 ATD 135; (1950) 81 CLR 188 (Scottish Australian Mining), a company, formed primarily to carry on the business of coal mining, purchased land for the purpose of its coal mining operations. After those operations ceased the company subdivided the land, built roads and a railway station, made sites available for schools, churches and parks, and sold the subdivided parcels at a considerable profit. It was held that the profits should not be included in the company's assessable income. It is important to observe that the company had carried on coal mining on the land until it was no longer business-like to do so, and that it was not a company formed for the purpose of dealing in land, and that it had not in fact engaged in such a business. (Excerpt from the judgement of Gibbs CJ in Whitfords Beach).

In the Supreme Court (Tasmania) case Roberts v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1981) 12 ATR 191; (1981) 81 ATC 4421, the taxpayers had conducted market gardens on three or four separate parcels of land, including one of slightly over seven acres in Glenorchy ("the McGann land''). In response to a newspaper advertisement, they had offered, in 1969, to sell the McGann land to a building and development company but, when that offer was refused, they decided to subdivide the land themselves. The resultant sales of allotments took place between 1974 and 1976. The taxpayers gave evidence, which Green CJ accepted, that their decision to sell the McGann land had been prompted by the resignation of two employees who had each managed separate parts of the market gardening venture and for whom they had been unable to find satisfactory replacements. In upholding the taxpayers' appeal against their assessment to tax, his Honour, at 4425, took account of the following matters, each of which has a parallel in the circumstances of the taxpayer in Casimaty:

Isolated commercial transactions

Taxation Ruling TR 92/3 is about whether profits on isolated transactions are income. Here, specifically in relation to the disposal of property, paragraph 49(g) states:

Application of law in your case

In your case, we consider your land will not be trading stock because we consider you will not be carrying on a business of property development. As shown, the body of case law about carrying on a business of property development is historically lengthy and large. Some relevant quotes from the body of case law, cited above, which are directly applicable to your situation, include:

The Commissioner's views in TD 92/124 and TR 92/3 accord with the body of law, in highlighting "the acquisition" of land for the purpose of development, subdivision and sale as a criterion for carrying on a business of property development or for a commercial transaction. Unlike the criterion in paragraph 49(g) of TR 92/3, your property had uses other than trade, i.e., for market gardening and private residential. Unlike the criterion in paragraph 49(g) of TR 92/3, your property was not acquired for the purpose of trade but, instead, acquired for the market gardening and private residential.

In summary, you have not acquired new land. Instead, as provided for in the legal cases cited above, your subdivision will simply be the mere realisation of old assets.

As for the scale and complexity of your proposed subdivision, this is not a salient factor. The subdivisions in the High Court cases of Scottish Australian Mining and Whitfords Beach were of large scale and complexity however, in those cases, these were not salient factors in the High Court decisions.

It follows your land will not be trading stock because you will not be carrying on a business. Thus, CGT Event K4 will not happen in your case.


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