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Edited version of private advice

Authorisation Number: 1012667474511

Ruling

Subject: Land subdivision - complex unit trust - revenue account

Question:

Will the lot sales of subdivision land by you (the 'Landholding Entity') be treated as capital receipts?

Answer:

No.

This ruling applies for the following periods:

Year ending 30 June 2015

Year ending 30 June 2016

Year ending 30 June 2017

Year ending 30 June 2018

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2014

Relevant facts and circumstances

You are a unit trust with various individual, family trust and corporate unit holders, who become unit holders at various times in correlation to new purchases of land.

Initially, you bought parcels of rural zoned loaned that abutted newly zone and developed residential areas. The relevant land purchase contracts included deferent settlement periods of up the three years and provisions giving some subdivided blocks to vendors.

You entered into numerous option agreements to purchase neighbouring land in the event you were able to sell the land you had already purchased. However, attempts of sale did succeed (which occurred just prior to the Global Financial Crisis).

In your tax returns and financial statements, you declared you were a business entity, earning some business (rather than rental) income and holding various land holdings as 'inventories'. You expensed (rather than capitalised) the interest paid on those properties that did not earn rental income.

You derived rent from rental properties that were in varying states of disrepair and did not invest in improving or repairing them.

You more recently sold one of your land holdings due to difficulties with the neighbour who bought it, which included a first right of refusal in the sale contract if the buyer decided to sell.

Even more recently, a new large investor took up units in your unit trust, whose finance was used to purchase a relatively costly land holding that was subdividable into residential lots, after which you entered into a proposed development and subdivision proposal with a developer, who would receive a fixed percentage of the gross sales.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 6-5

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 102-5

Reasons for decision

Detailed reasoning

Income tax treatment

Profits from a land sub-division can be treated in at least three ways for taxation purposes:

(1) As capital gains under Part 3-1 and Part 3-3 of the ITAA 1997, from the mere realisation of a capital asset.

(2) As ordinary income under section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997, as a result of carrying on a business of property development, involving the sale of land as trading stock.

(3) As ordinary income under section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997, as a result of an isolated commercial transaction entered into by a non-business taxpayer or outside the ordinary course of business of a taxpayer carrying on a business.

Mere realisation

The mere realisation of a capital asset was described in Commissioner of Taxes v Melbourne Trust Limited [1914] AC 1001 as "liquidating or realising the old assets". In The Alabama Coal, Iron, Land and Colonization Co Ltd v Mylam (1926) 11 TC 232, a commercial transaction was distinguished from a mere realisation as "there must be something in the nature of buying at any rate, and not merely selling, which is mere turning your property into money''.

In the High Court of Australia case of Federal Commissioner of Taxation v NF Williams 72 ATC 4188; (1972) 127 CLR 226, Gibbs J explained mere realisation of land as follows:

In the Federal Court of Australia case of Casimaty v Federal Commissioner of Taxation 97 ATC 5135, at 97 ATC 5152, Ryan J described a salient characteristic of the mere realisation of land as follows:

In distinguishing mere realisation from a commercial transaction, Justice Ryan further said:

Business transactions & isolated (commercial) transactions

The term 'business' ordinarily refers to trade engaged in on a regular or continuous basis. Whereas an isolated (one-off) commercial transaction does not amount to a business but has the characteristics of a 'business deal'.

Taxation Determination TD 92/124, which is about circumstances when land is treated as trading stock, states land is treated as trading stock for income tax purposes if it is held for the purpose of resale and business activity which involves dealing in land has commenced. It further states:

The nature of 'business activity' is explained in detail in Taxation Ruling TR 97/11, where the key indicators of a business are: (i) repetition and regularity of the activities; and (ii) organisation in a businesslike manner, which includes whether the activity is carried on in a similar manner to that of the ordinary trade in that line of business. The indicator of the volume of the operations and the amount of capital employed also assumes weighting, dependent on the circumstances.

Taxation Ruling TR 92/3 explains, for an isolated commercial transaction to occur, it is usually necessary the taxpayer has the purpose of profit-making at the time of acquiring the property and that the property has no use other than as the subject of trade (paragraphs 9 and 49(g)). Paragraph 49 of TR 92/3 states:

In the Full High Court of Australia 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. Essentially, the reason for this was three companies bought the shares in the company (on 20th December 1967) only to obtain control of the land, with the intention that the taxpayer would cause the land to be developed, subdivided and sold at a profit. Gibbs CJ concluded:

In the Federal Court of Australia case of Crow v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1988) 19 ATR 1565; (1988) 88 ATC 4620 (Crow's Case), the taxpayer had been a builder but purchased in 1962 a farm property ("Waterloo Farm'') of 390 acres, which remained the taxpayer's home and principal farming property (although on 24 June 1964 the taxpayer submitted to the local municipal council a plan of subdivision of the farm into 38 lots which was approved by the council on 10 July 1964 but the taxpayer did not proceed with the subdivision). Shortly afterwards, he took a lease with an option to purchase of another property ("the Clifton land'') of 556 acres about five kilometres away from Waterloo Farm. In 1968, he obtained approval of a plan of subdivision of part of the Clifton land and sold off various portions of that land between 1968 and 1980 after which none of it remained in his ownership. In the meantime, the taxpayer had purchased another property of 62 acres (`"the Cremorne property'') which adjoined Waterloo Farm. He subdivided and sold off about half of the Cremorne property, consolidating and retaining the rest with Waterloo Farm. In 1972, the taxpayer acquired yet another property ("Rokeby'') part of which was sold off under threat of compulsory acquisition, to the Tasmanian Housing Department. In 1973, another property ("Acton Park'') adjoining Rokeby was acquired, subdivided and sold off in its entirety between 1978 and 1981 and, in 1975, the taxpayer exercised an option to purchase part of another tract of land at Mount Rumney which he also subdivided and sold off during 1981. His Honour concluded that the taxpayer's subdivisional activities amounted to carrying on the business of land development. A salient factor here was there was a series of repeated acquisitions of separate parcels of land.

In the Federal Court of Australia case of Stevenson v Federal Commissioner of Taxation 91 ATC 4476; (1991) 29 FCR 282 (Stevenson), it was decided farmer that held his farmland for many years was carrying on a business due to his active personal involvement in the planning, financing, undertaking and selling of the subdivision of his farmland.

In the Federal Court of Australia case of Casimaty v Federal Commissioner of Taxation 97 ATC 5135, reference was made to Turner v Last (HM Inspector of Taxes) (1965) 42 TC 517, per Cross J at 522-523. In that case the court upheld the taxpayer's assessment to tax of profits on the sale of farming land despite the taxpayer's contention that the whole of the land had been purchased with the intention of farming, on the ground that the inference that the taxpayer in fact intended to resell the land at a profit could reasonably be drawn from evidence that the taxpayer's financial position before the purchase would not allow him to hold the land indefinitely, that the land had a development potential and that the taxpayer had bought the land for more than its agricultural value.

Land purchased for development

Taxation Determination TD 92/126, TD 92/127 and TD 92/128 each provide if land is acquired for development, subdivision and sale and, after some initial development or no development of the project, the land is subsequently sold, the sale will be treated on revenue account.

Application of law in your case

In your case, we consider the sale of land will fall on revenue account for the following reasons:

In conclusion: (i) the nature of the multiple entities undertaking the operation; (ii) the multiplicity, timing and complexity of the various purchase and sale transactions; and (iii) the multiple option to purchase agreements result in the strong impression and conclusion that the Landholding Entity is engaged in business dealings in respect to land that are taxable on revenue (rather than capital) account.


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