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This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication.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.

You cannot rely on this record in your tax affairs. It is not binding and provides you with no protection (including from any underpaid tax, penalty or interest). In addition, this record is not an authority for the purposes of establishing a reasonably arguable position for you to apply to your own circumstances. For more information on the status of edited versions of private advice and reasons we publish them, see PS LA 2008/4.

Edited version of your private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1012444372896

Ruling

Subject: Roll-over of superannuation benefit

Question

Is the payment made by an employer superannuation scheme (the Scheme) to your client a roll-over superannuation benefit for the purposes of section 306-10 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997?

Answer

No.

This ruling applies for the following period:

Year ended 30 June 2011

The scheme commenced on:

1 July 2010

Relevant facts and circumstances

Your client was a member of an employer superannuation scheme (the Scheme).

In the relevant income year your client ceased employment with the Employer.

Before terminating employment, your client had meetings with a financial advisor (the Advisor) and the advice provided was for your client to roll-over their benefit in the Scheme to a superannuation product.

After your client terminated employment, the Scheme sent your client a letter stating the amount of your client's benefit in the Scheme and the preservation status of the benefit.

In the letter your client was also provided with the following information:

In the letter it was also stated if your client did not return a completed form (Direction Form) to the Scheme by a specified date as to how and where to pay your client's benefit, the Scheme would transfer the total of your client's benefit to a roll-over fund (RF) nominated by the Scheme.

In relation to the RF the Scheme also stated:

Your client deliberately did not fill out the Direction Form as your client wanted the benefit in the Scheme to be rolled-over into the RF.

After some time had elapsed, and your client determined from the Advisor the superannuation benefit had not been transferred to the RF as at that date, your client contacted the Scheme.

Your client was not satisfied with the Scheme's explanation as to why the roll-over had not yet occurred and subsequently provided the Scheme with:

Your client did not seek any advice from the Advisor or any other relevantly qualified professional prior to or during the lodgement of the Direction Form with the Scheme.

The Scheme, subsequent to conversations held with your client and your client providing the Scheme with a Direction Form, Declaration and additional information, transferred your client's benefit in the Scheme to the nominated account, i.e. an account which was held in your client's name.

In the period prior to the transfer, the Scheme asked your client whether your client would like the benefit to go to the ER to which your client said no.

At the time your client's benefit was transferred from the Scheme to the nominated account the Scheme provided your client with a letter (the Letter) which stated:

The Letter also included a 'PAYG payment summary - superannuation lump sum' which shows the payment was made in the relevant income year; the components of the payment and tax withheld.

On the same day that the benefit was made to the nominated account, your client transferred the payment into another account (Account 1) which was also held in your client's name.

Your client states becoming aware of the tax payable on the transfer after the transfer was made and subsequently engaged the services of an accountant (the Accountant).

The Accountant entered into communication with the Scheme on various dates to mainly determine whether:

A regulated superannuation fund (the Fund) was established with the client and a family member as its trustees and members.

Approximately one month after the Fund was established, Account 1 was closed and its balance was transferred to Account 2, an account which is held in the Fund's name.

The statements for the Accounts into which the benefits were transferred have been provided.

As a result of a review the Scheme informed the Accountant that the payment from the Scheme could not be treated as a roll-over taking into account:

Subsequent to the review your client lodged a formal complaint with the Scheme to which the Scheme stated, amongst other matters:

Your client was less than 60 years of age when the benefit was paid.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Division 306

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 306-5

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 306-10

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 995-1(1)

Income Tax Assessment Act Regulations 1997 Regulation 306-10.01

Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 Section 10

Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 Section 42A

Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 Section 47

Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997 Section 8

Reasons for decision

Summary

The payment of your client's lump sum superannuation benefits from the employer superannuation scheme is not a roll-over of superannuation benefits as the payment was not made to a complying superannuation plan but directly to your client.

Detailed reasoning

Division 306 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) sets out the tax treatment of payments made from one superannuation plan to another superannuation plan and of similar payments.

Section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997 states:

A superannuation benefit is a roll-over superannuation benefit if:

(emphasis added)

In your client's case the facts show paragraphs 306-10(a),(b) and (c) are satisfied as:

In view of the above, subparagraph 306-10(d)(i) of the ITAA 1997 is the only remaining relevant condition to determine whether the superannuation lump sum payment (the Payment) made by the Scheme directly to your client's account in the relevant income year is a roll-over superannuation benefit.

Accordingly, it must be demonstrated that the Payment was 'paid to a complying superannuation plan' and in your client's case, as indicated by the facts, whether that plan was a complying superannuation fund.

Complying superannuation fund

Subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 states a:

Further to the meaning of a complying superannuation fund in section 45 of the SISA, it should also be noted that under section 42A a self-managed superannuation fund is a complying superannuation fund when the entity is a resident regulated superannuation fund and does not contravene one or more of the regulatory provisions after the Regulator (that is, the Commissioner of Taxation) takes into account various matters (subsections 42(1A) and 42A(5) of the SISA).

In relation to regulatory provisions this includes, but is not limited to, that:

Superannuation fund

In relation to what constitutes a superannuation fund, subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 states it has the meaning given by section 10 of the SISA, that is:

In the Full High Court decision Mahony v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1967) 41 ALJR 232; (1967) 14 ATD 519 (Mahony) Justice Kitto considered the expression 'provident, benefit or superannuation fund'.

In Mahony, Justice Kitto referred to each of the three terms in the expression separately in his judgment. Justice Kitto said:

Justice Kitto went on to state:

Justice Kitto held that the fund had to exclusively be a provident, benefit or superannuation fund and that inferred a purpose narrower than the purpose of conferring benefits in a completely general sense. This narrower purpose meant that the benefits had to be characterised by some specific future purpose such as the example given by Justice Kitto of a funeral benefit.

Justice Taylor also ruled that the fund had to be established exclusively for the purposes set out in the legislation.

The view that a superannuation fund should be established for the sole purpose of providing superannuation benefits on retirement is also supported in the High Court decision Scott, Associated Provident Funds Ltd & Belvidere Investments Pty Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (No 2) (1966) 40 ALJR 265; (1966) 14 ATD 333; [1966] LB Co's Tax Serv 80; (1966) 10 AITR 290 (Scott). Justice Windeyer said:

... there is no essential single attribute of a superannuation fund established for the benefit of employees except that it must be a fund bona fide devoted as its sole purpose to providing for employees who are participants money benefits (or benefits having a monetary value) upon their reaching a prescribed age.

Accordingly, the Commissioner of Taxation's view is that a fund, to be classified as a superannuation fund, must exclusively provide a narrow range of benefits that are characterised by some specific future purpose, that is, the payment of superannuation benefits upon retirement or death of the individual or as specified under the SIS legislation.

Payment from the Scheme

Prior to your client's termination of employment, and as a result of advice provided to your client from meetings with a financial advisor (the Advisor), it is noted your client intended the Payment to be rolled-over from the Scheme into a superannuation product.

Your client's intention to roll-over the benefits is also supported by your client's initial decision not to provide the Scheme with a Direction Form. As shown in the facts, the Scheme's Trustee advised your client that if it did not receive a completed Direction Form by a specified date, your client's total benefit would be transferred to the Scheme's Rollover Fund (RF).

Despite the above, your client's intentions for a roll-over of the superannuation benefits to either the RF or an alternative superannuation product changed as shown in the following:

In view of the above, your client's actions from the time of the last conversation with the Advisor until the Payment was made to the nominated account show that:

In accordance with your client's instructions the Scheme made the Payment to the account nominated by your client, in this case, an account which was held in your client's name.

From the earlier discussion on what constitutes a complying superannuation fund, it is obvious that your client's nominated account is not a complying superannuation fund as it does not possess the characteristics of a superannuation fund nor is it a regulated fund.

Further, the nominated account is neither an approved deposit fund (ADF) or a retirement savings account (RSA) as defined in section 47 of the SISA and section 8 of the Retirement Savings Accounts Act 1997 respectively.

Accordingly, the Payment made from the Scheme does not satisfy subparagraph 306-10(d)(i) of the ITAA 1997 as the nominated account is not a complying superannuation plan.

It is noted that you make reference to the case Player v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCA 869, 2011 FCA 20-271; [2012] ALMD 3670; [2012] ALMD 4068 (Player's Case) as support that the Payment is a roll-over of superannuation benefits.

Player's Case, an appeal case relating to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal decision in [2011] AATA 35; (2011) 2011 ATC 10-171; [2012] ALMD 3669; (2011) 82 ATR 184, commented on the issue of whether section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997 would be satisfied if a superannuation benefit was not directly paid into a complying superannuation fund.

In Player's Case, a $355,000 superannuation benefit from a complying superannuation fund, which was paid by cheque, was deposited into the taxpayer's bank account whereupon the taxpayer immediately purchased a bank cheque for $355,000 in favour of another complying superannuation fund which accordingly banked the cheque.

The taxpayer did not choose to exercise the roll-over election available to her as the recipient of an ETP but included the taxable amount of the ETP as assessable income in her income tax return for the relevant income year.

Subsequent to an assessment being made for the relevant year, and an excessive contributions notice being made, one of the issues the taxpayer raised was that the $355,000 transaction was a roll-over.

In deciding Player's Case, Justice Edmonds, at paragraph 17, agreed with the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) by stating:

I totally agree with this observation.

Further at paragraphs 22 and 23 in Player's Case, Justice Edmonds stated:

That ground raises a question of law grounded in the Tribunal's reasons at [28] where the Tribunal said:

23. In my view, the Tribunal was correct in so concluding and, in consequence, its reasons for decision disclose no error of law.

The above case, in obiter dictum comments, suggests that a payment which is not made directly from one complying plan to another may still satisfy subparagraph 306-10(d)(i) of the ITAA 1997 in situations where the payment, as a result of an external direction, such as a court order, is paid into a solicitor's trust account and that amount is on-paid into a complying superannuation plan.

However, it is clear from the decisions made by both the AAT and the Federal Court that where a person has both a legal and beneficial interest in the superannuation benefits, section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997 will not apply.

In your client's case the facts show there were no external directions for the benefits to be on-paid and that:

Notwithstanding the above, it should also be noted that in paragraph 22 in Player's Case it was stated that section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997 could not apply if the taxpayer legally and beneficially received the superannuation benefits.

In your client's case, when the Payment was made by the Scheme to the nominated account it was not held in that account for the legal and beneficial interest of the SMSF as:

In view of the above and taking into consideration:

(a) the Payment was made to an Account held in your client's name; and

it is considered that your client was the legal and beneficial owner of the Payment and in view of paragraph 22 in Player's Case, the Payment would not be viewed as a roll-over of superannuation benefits for the purposes of section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997.

Conclusion:

In view of the above, subparagraph 306-10(d)(i) of the ITAA 1997 has not been satisfied as your client's superannuation benefits in the Scheme were paid to your client and not into a complying superannuation plan.

Accordingly, the payment of your client's superannuation benefits which were made by the Scheme to your client is not a roll-over of superannuation benefits for the purposes of section 306-10 of the ITAA 1997.

Further issues for you to consider

It should be noted that the transfer of monies from Account 1, which was held in your client's name, into your client's superannuation fund would represent superannuation contributions to that Fund.

A taxpayer can make non-concessional contributions to a superannuation fund for a financial year up to a particular limit, known as the 'non-concessional contributions cap'. 'Non-concessional contributions' are, broadly, amounts that have not been included in the assessable income of a superannuation plan.

Section 292-85(1) of the ITAA 1997 provides that a taxpayer will have 'excess concessional contributions' for a financial year if the amount of his or her 'non-concessional contributions' for the year exceeds the 'non-concessional contributions cap' for that year. The amount of the excess concessional contributions is the amount by which the non-concessional contributions exceed the cap.

Any non-concessional contributions over the cap is taxed at the rate of 46.5% (subsection 292-80 of the ITAA 1997 and sections 4 and 5 of the Superannuation (Excess Non-concessional Contributions Tax) Act 2006).


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