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This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication.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

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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1012925307217

Date of advice: 11 December 2015

Ruling

Subject: CGT other - compensation

Question 1:

Was the compensation payment that you received from the Solicitor received in respect of an underlying asset being your right to seek to receive a capital distribution from or participate in the Estate?

Answer:

No.

This ruling applies for the following period<s>:

2014-15 income year

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2013

Relevant facts and circumstances

Some 20 years ago, the Deceased made the original Will leaving the entire Estate to several relatives and the Executor.

A couple of years ago, the Deceased asked you if you would be willing to be the Executor of the Estate as the Deceased intended to prepare a new Will.

A year later, the Deceased was ill and in hospital and requested the Solicitor to come to the hospital so that a new Will could be drawn up. The Solicitor went to the hospital and prepared hand written notes for the new Will and returned to the office to type it up.

The Solicitor returned to the hospital the next morning with the newly prepared Will for signing, however, the Deceased had died earlier that morning before the new Will could be signed.

The beneficiaries of the original Will submitted it for probate.

You contested the original Will and sued the Solicitor for malpractice for not preparing the replacement Will in a timely manner.

To settle the matter, the Estate of the Deceased paid an amount of compensation to you.

The Solicitor made an out of court payment to you for a further sum of compensation to settle the malpractice claim.

The Deed of Release is to be read with and form part of the description of the scheme for the purpose of this ruling.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Part 3-1 and

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Part 3-3.

Reasons for decision

While these reasons are not part of the private ruling, we provide them to help you to understand how we reached our decision.

Summary

The compensation payment you received from the Solicitor was not received in respect of an underlying asset being your right to seek to receive a capital distribution from or participate in the Estate.

Detailed reasoning

The term 'capital gains tax (CGT) asset' is defined in very broad terms as:

A part of, or an interest in, one of these CGT assets is itself a CGT asset.

The particulars of a situation determine whether the relevant CGT asset is to be construed broadly or narrowly and whether a larger CGT asset is to be split into smaller components or separate CGT assets merged into a larger CGT asset.

Where the issue relates to the seeking or the receipt of compensation, the other issue for consideration is whether or not the compensation will relate to an underlying CGT asset. Thus, the potential outcomes are:

Taxation Ruling TR 95/35 about the capital gains consequences that are applicable to compensation receipts provides some relevant definitions:

Generally, permanent damage can only occur in respect of an asset that you already own. See, for example, paragraph 14 of Taxation Ruling TR 97/3 about compensation received from public authorities.

Your situation

The Deed of Release acknowledges that you had submitted a Statement of Cross-Claim seeking:

The Deed of Release also states:

The Deed of Release thus acknowledges that you were claiming to hold rights against two separate parties in relation to the matters that it was settling, being:

The alleged misdeed by the Solicitor has actually occurred just before or at the time the Deceased passed away. Therefore, this alleged misdeed has occurred before you could have had any rights against the Estate of the Deceased (or against the Executor) as the Estate did not exist as an entity at that time.

As a result, it is difficult to see how the misdeed by the Solicitor could cause there to be a permanent reduction in the value of any rights you had to participate in the Estate before any of those rights had actually crystallised and come into existence.

Further, the possibility of your other right being an underlying asset depends on its exact nature. The Deed of Release would appear to acknowledge that you had the right to seek to participate in the Estate, but it does not acknowledge that you had the right to actually participate in the Estate.

Therefore, it is not possible to conclude that you possessed the right to participate in the Estate given that this was disputed by the Executor of the Estate and that it was never formally confirmed by the Court.

For all of the foregoing reasons, it is considered that the right to seek compensation from the Solicitor is a separate CGT asset from the rights that you had to seek to participate in the Estate.

Please note: if it had been concluded that both rights related to the one CGT asset, it is likely that the compensation from the Solicitor would have constituted additional capital proceeds in relation to its surrender, rather than a payment that reduced the cost base of that right as a continuing asset.

How the capital gains provisions apply to the right to sue

Taxation Ruling TR 95/35 provides guidance on the application of the capital gains provisions apply to a CGT asset being the right to sue or the right to seek compensation at paragraphs 86 to 139 and a summary at paragraphs 167 to 171.

In short:


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