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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1012885934987

Date of advice: 29 September 2015

Ruling

Subject: Income tax exemption

Question 1

Is the Club considered to be exempt from income tax pursuant to item 9.1 of the table in Section 50-45 of the Income Tax Assessment Act (ITAA 1997) as a club established for the encouragement of a game or sport?

Answer

No

This ruling applies for the following periods:

1 July 2014 to 30 June 2017

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2014

Relevant facts and circumstances

The Club has applied for a private ruling on whether the Club is exempt from income tax as a society, association or club established for the encouragement of a game or sport in accordance with section 50-45 of the ITAA 1997.

The objects of the Club are stated in the Rules:

3 Objects

3.1 To provide for members and members' guests a sporting club with all the usual facilities of a club

3.2 To promote, foster, support and encourage the aims and objects of the sporting Club, the Junior Club, or any sporting club, community association, charitable organisation, and sporting, social or cultural activities that may be approved by the management committee of the Club for the benefit of the local or general community

3.3 To foster and promote the game

3.4 To do all such acts, deeds, matters and things and to enter into and make such agreements as are incidental to or conductive to the attainment of the objects of the club or any of them

The Club does not specifically form or enter any teams in competition.

It does provide and operate the venue for the sporting club and Junior sporting club.

The Club undertakes all the maintenance and repairs of the sports grounds, and has funded and constructed improvements to the clubhouse, car parks, seating at playing grounds, field lighting, and dressing sheds. The Clubhouse serves as a "home ground" for the sporting clubs.

The Club rules provide that only ordinary members or honorary life members are allowed to be on the board and management committee. Almost all members on the committee are either past players, coaches, or official for the game.

The Club has licensed premises with a bar and function room.

The majority of the Club's revenue is derived from bar, bistro and gaming activities

Renovations to clubhouse have commenced.

The Club has acquired gaming machines.

The Club has a number of employees trained and employed to operate both the gaming and bistro areas, plus the bar.

The only paid sporting role is a full time Development Officer,

Officeholders of the Club along with volunteers participate in sporting fixtures generally as match officials.

Relevant legislative provisions

Taxation Ruling TR 97/22

Other references (non ATO view)

Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club Limited v. FC of T 90ATC 4215 at 4225; (199) 21 ATR 300

South Sydney Junior Rugby League Club Limited v. FC of T 2006 ATC 2150; [2006] AATA 265

Re Tweed Heads Bowls Club v. FC of T 92 ATC 2087 at 2100

St Marys Rugby League Club Limited v. FC of T 97 ATC 4528; (1997) 36 ATR 281

Terranora Lakes Country Club Limited v. FC of T 93 ATC 4078; (1993) 25 ATR 294

Reasons for decision

Section 50-1 of the ITAA 1997 states: 

The tables referred to in section 50-1 of the ITAA 1997 are contained in sections 50-5 to 50-45 of the ITAA 1997. Item 9.1(c) in the table in section 50-45 of the ITAA 1997 describes a society, association or club established for the encouragement of a game or sport subject to the special condition contained in section 50-70 of the ITAA 1997.

An entity may therefore be exempt from income tax where it is a society, association or club established for the encouragement of a game or sport and it satisfies the special condition in section 50-70.

Society, association or club 

The term society, association or club is not defined in the ITAA 1997. The term is therefore construed according to the ordinary meaning of the words.

Taxation Determination TD 95/56 refers to the definition of 'association' in paragraph 2 and states:

See also Douglas v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation 36 ATR 532; (1997) 77 FCR 112; 97 ATC 4722; Pro-campo Ltd. v. Commr of Land Tax (NSW) 81 ATC 4270; (1981) 12 ATR 26 at 4279 and Theosophical Foundation Pty Ltd v. Commr of Land Tax (NSW) [1966] 67 SR (NSW) at 82:

The members of the Club voluntarily associate together for this common purpose and interest. The Club is considered a 'society, association or club'.

Encouragement of a game or sport:

The Explanatory Memorandum to Taxation Laws Amendment Bill (No. 2) 1990 in the notes on clause 6 states in relation to 'encouragement' and 'game or sport':

The Macquarie Dictionary defines 'encouragement' as '1. the act of encouraging; 2. the state of being encouraged; 3. that which encourages' and defines 'encourage' to include 'stimulation by assistance'. Taxation Ruling TR 97/22 - Income tax: exempt sporting clubs - provides extensive examples of 'encouragement' and 'game or sport'.

The Leagues Club encourages the sport by financially assisting the sporting Club and Junior sporting Club through distributions, maintenance and repairs and constructing improvements.

Established for the encouragement of a game or sport

Taxation Ruling 97/22 Income tax: exempt sporting clubs states that a club's main purpose can only be ascertained after objectively weighing all of the club's features. The presence or absence of a feature may not conclusively determine that the club's main purpose is or is not the encouragement of a game or sport.

A number of cases have considered the position of sporting clubs which also provide social facilities for members.

Lockhart J in the Full Federal Court in Cronulla-Sutherland Leagues Club Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation 90 ATC 4215 (Cronulla) stated at 4226 in relation to the provision in the 1936 Income Tax Assessment Act exempting the income of an entity established for the encouragement of sport:

The Cronulla decision involved a leagues club whose objects included:

The Cronulla leagues club ran a substantial social club for its 13,000 members the profits of which were applied in accordance with these objects to an associated rugby league football club. The football club was entirely dependent upon the leagues club for financial assistance, the provision of facilities (a stadium and two other ovals) and guarantees of expenditure. The club had facilities overlooking the stadium available to the use of football club members on days when the football club played. The leagues club also provided assistance to its associated junior rugby league as well as supporting the sporting activities of its member 'intra clubs'. Lockhart J accepted that the encouragement of sport included financial and other indirect support, but found in relation to the leagues club, at 4227:

Application to the facts

The Club is similar to the Cronulla leagues club in that it provides clubhouses with social facilities including a wedding venue, dining facilities, bars, gaming, and other entertainment for its members It provides funding, ovals and facilities for the two rugby league clubs.

The Club's Rules state that its objects are:

As in Cronulla these objects display two purposes - a sporting purpose and a social purpose.

The Club's financial reports state the principal activities of the Club as the operation of a sporting club. They also indicate that the Club's predominant activity since 20XX to have been so. Revenue from this activity for these years increased mostly from bar and gaming activities and the Club's expenditure has been incurred in the main at generating this revenue including not insignificant amounts allocated to acquiring gaming machines and club house renovations.

The information supplied describes the sporting activity undertaken by some of the Club's members, organising and running matches, acting as match officials on game days, the Club's Management Committee were either players, coaches or officials on other sporting committees prior to being on the Club's management committee. These members also currently assist as match officials on game day. Facilities are provided for the use of the sporting teams. The Club also provides funds to these entities. The Club has advised it has extensive memorabilia, trophies, jerseys, awards and information provided throughout the Clubhouse. However, there are similarities with Cronulla; in 1982 the Cronulla leagues club provided $390,000 in sports funding from a net income of $2.9 million. The Club's financial statements disclose distributions to teams and for field lighting towers in sports funding from a significant net income. In Cronulla the club's directors were also members of its affiliated rugby league club. This was not a formal requirement in Cronulla. The Club likewise has no formal requirement for a member or a director to have or have had any involvement in rugby league or other sport. Only ordinary members and honorary life members have voting rights and are eligible for election to the Club's management committee.

The 'sheer size and intensity' of the social activities in Cronulla were referred to by Hill J in St Marys Rugby League Club Limited v. FC of T 97 ATC 4528 (1997) (St Marys) in comparison to that club. However, in Cronulla, Lockhart J at 4219 noted that size and intensity are not necessarily important:

Other case decisions

South Sydney Junior Rugby League Club Limited v FC of T [2006] AATA 265; 2006 ATC 2150 involved a club which conducted a licensed club in South Sydney, larger than that in Cronulla, the profits of which were applied to junior rugby league and also to a football club competing in a national rugby league competition. The club's objects were:

The AAT found that the club's case was not as strong as was the case for Cronulla-Sutherland which also failed in its attempt to obtain an exemption.

In St Mary's Rugby League Club Limited v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation 97 ATC 4528; 36 ATR 281 (St Mary's), Hill J observed several differences between that football club and the leagues club in Cronulla at 97 ATC 4533 - 34:

Terranora Lakes Country Club Limited v. FC of T 93 ATC 4078; (1993) 25 ATR 294 (Terranora) involved a club whose objects included:

The club had extensive social facilities that were used by the members and a large number of visitors. It owned a clubhouse, playing fields, a sports ground and sporting complex, and it held a controlling interest in a time share resort. In the most recent year reported in the case, 90.3% of the club's income came from poker machines, bar trading and catering but only 16.9% was spent on sporting activities.

The club had approximately 4,000 members, approximately 2,800 of whom were active in the club's sporting sub clubs. However the club also promoted its extensive social activities, attracting approximately 1000 visitors per day. Hill J at 93 ATC 4086 stated:

In Tweed Heads Bowls Club v FC of T 92 ATC 2087 (Tweed Heads), the taxpayer was a bowls club which had one indoor and four outdoor bowling greens. The club participated in and organised a large number of tournaments each year. The club building was substantial and the catering and entertainment facilities were extensive. The membership breakup of the club was 830 bowlers, 170 non-bowlers and 4 life members. The club's main source of revenue was derived from poker machines which were used predominantly by the 400,000 visitors to the club each year. The Tribunal member, Dr P Gerber at 2099 stated:

However in Cronulla the Full Federal Court (one judge dissenting) found that the 'business' of providing social amenities for the leagues club members was the main purpose of the leagues club; not the encouragement of sport.

Conclusion

It is difficult, on the facts provided, to separate the Club's circumstances from those in Cronulla. Both clubs mainly provided social amenities for their members and applied profits from this activity to the encouragement of sport.

In the circumstances of the leagues club in the Cronulla case, the Full Federal Court found that that club's main purpose was not the encouragement of sport but the provision of social amenities for its members. Beaumont J summarised his finding at ATC 4244 as:

Lockhart J in Cronulla at ATC 4226 noted that "established'' involves an examination of the purposes and activities over a number of prior years to support the tax exempt status of the body and that the blend of objects and purposes and powers of the leagues club threw little light upon the question as to whether the club was established for the encouragement of sport.

The social activities of the Club have generated substantial net profits. Significant capital expenditure has been spent on modernising non-sporting club facilities and the only planned capital expenditure is for renovation of the non-sporting club facilities. While the Club has stated that it plans to acquire a second playing field for a sports team to use for training and game days after the renovations for the clubhouse are completed this is only a future possibility. The Club does fund its sporting activities from the profits generated by its clubhouse activities but at a significantly lower rate than in Terranora Lakes Country Club Limited v. FC of T 93 ATC 4078 or St Marys Rugby League Club Limited v FC of T 97 ATC 4528. For example in Terranora, see 93 ATC 4077-4078, the social/non-sporting income in 1989, 1990 and 1991 was $1,104,000, $1,493,000 and $2,178,000 respectively. The amount sporting activities were subsided in 1989, 1990 and 1991 were $1,060,000, $1,101,000 and $1,375, 000 respectively. This amounts to 96%, 74% and 63% of social/non-sporting profits being used in 1989, 1990 and 1991 respectively to fund sport activities. In comparison, in the period 2011 to 2014 the applicant Club only comparatively small amounts of its retained social/non sporting profits to fund sporting activities. In St Marys, see 97 TATC 4533, in 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995 the percentage of non-sporting profits used for funding football was 23%, 35%, 39% and 28% respectively.

Furthermore in the St Marys Rugby League Club Limited (Supra) case it was emphasised that significantly more time and effort was taken to field the rugby league teams than to undertake the social activities. In that case from 1992-1995 the wages spent on rugby league significantly exceeded wages spent on undertaking the social activities.

In comparison the applicant Club has only one employee dedicated to promoting or engaging in sporting activities but has 12 employees engaged to operate the gaming and bistro areas plus the bar.

The participation of the Club's members in the promotion of the game or sport is also quite small. It is recognised that older members may not be able to play the game given its physical demands and it is accepted that the majority of club members are players, ex-players or supporters. However, of the Club's members, there were a significant number of social members and kid's members and a relatively small number of active supporters (ie regularly attend match days as spectators and/or have family members who are players) and players of the sporting teams.

It is considered that the main purpose of the Club is the provision of social amenities for its members.

For the above reasons it is considered that the Club does not satisfy exemption under item 9.1(c) of section 50-45 for the period of this ruling.

Non-profit requirement

Paragraphs 9 and 21 to 23 of TR 97/22 discuss the non-profit requirement. A society, club or association established for the encouragement of a game or sport is non-profit if it is not carried on for the profit or gain of its individual members.

Organisations satisfy the non-profit requirement if their constituent documents prevent them from distributing profits or assets among members while the organisation is functional and on winding up. The organisation's actions must be consistent with this requirement.

The Club Rules prevent distributions to members on winding up, however, the Rules do not contain a suitable non-profit clause to cover the Club while it is operating.

An example of a suitable clause is:

The Club does not satisfy the non-profit requirement.

Special conditions

Section 50-70 of the ITAA 1997 states that an entity covered by item 9.1 is not exempt from income tax unless the entity is not carried on for the profit or gain of its members and:

The Club is a resident of and is located in Australia. The Club carries on its activities, pursues it objectives and incurs its expenditure in Australia and therefore satisfies the special condition in section 50-70 of the ITAA 1997.

CONCLUSION

The Club is not exempt from income tax under section 50-1 of the ITAA 1997 as it does not operate principally for the encouragement of a game or sport.


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