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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1013035049330

Date of advice: 5 July 2016

Ruling

Subject: GST and Margin Scheme

Question 1

Can the entity, on behalf of Government, apply Item 4 of the table in subsection 75-10(3) when it supplies subdivided land (the Land) which was previously granted to another entity under a rural lease?

Answer

Yes, provided there were no improvements on the land as at 1 July 2000. The entity, on behalf of Government, can apply Item 4 of the table in subsection 75-10(3) when it supplies the Land which was previously granted to another entity under a rural lease.

Relevant facts and circumstances

The Land currently comprises of a number of blocks. The land is located in Australia.

The entity has the following functions:

The Land is managed by the entity on behalf of the Commonwealth of Australia.

The land is currently the subject of rural leases and you have provided copies of the rural leases.

Under the Proposed Supplies of the land:

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 9-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Division 75

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 75-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 75-5(1)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 75-5(2)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 75-5(3)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Subsection 75-10(3)

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Section 75-11

Reasons for decision

In this reasoning:

Question

Can the entity on behalf of Government, apply item 4 of the table in subsection 75-10(3) when it supplies subdivided land (the Land) which was previously granted to another entity under a rural lease?

Summary

Based on the entity's circumstances as discussed below, we consider that the Commonwealth has continuously held an interest with a sufficient connection to the new residential leases to be issued for the subdivided lots. This is because, not until a new residential lease for a subdivided lot is granted will the Commonwealth dispose of its maximum interest in that lot. It follows that at the time of issuing the new residential leases, the Commonwealth would have 'held' the interest in the land since before 1 July 2000 for the purposes of Item 4. Accordingly, the entity can apply Item 4 of the table in subsection 75-10(3) when it supplies the Land which was previously granted to a third party under a rural lease if there were no improvements on the land as at 1 July 2000.

Detailed reasoning

Subsection 75-5(1) provides that the margin scheme applies in working out the amount of GST on a taxable supply of real property that you make by:

if you and the recipient of the supply have agreed in writing that the margin scheme is to apply.

However, subsection 75-5(2) provides that the margin scheme does not apply if you acquired the entire freehold interest, stratum unit or long term lease through a supply that was ineligible for the margin scheme.

Where the requirements prescribed under the margin scheme provisions apply to a supply of real property, the GST on the sale of that land will be calculated as 1/11th of the relevant margin.

In your case, you have confirmed the following:

You consider that the requirements outlined in section 75-5 are met and the entity is entitled to apply the margin scheme to calculate the GST on the proposed supplies to end purchasers (lessees). For the purposes of this ruling request, we have accepted this assertion.

Under subsection 75-10(2), the margin for the supply is the difference between the consideration for the supply and the consideration for the acquisition of the real property unless subsection 75-10(3) or section 75-11 applies.

Subsection 75-10(3) provides that if:

the margin for the supply is the amount by which the consideration for the supply exceeds that valuation of the interest, unit or lease.

Item 4 in the table in subsection 75-10(3) reads as follows:

Use of valuations to work out margins

Item

When valuations may be used

Days when valuations are to be made

4

The supplier is the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory and has held the interest, unit or lease since before 1 July 2000, and there were no improvements on the land or premises in question at 1 July 2000

The day on which the *taxable supply takes place

In your case, the entity is supplying the land on behalf of the Commonwealth.

The blocks of land (from which the subdivided lots will be carved out) are held under rural leases.

For the purposes of this ruling, the issue to be determined is whether or not, at the time of issuing new residential leases for the subdivided lots after the current rural leases are terminated, the Commonwealth would have held the interest in these blocks of land since before 1 July 2000. You have asked the Commissioner not to rule on the issue of whether or not there were improvements on the land at 1 July 2000.

A strict interpretation of Item 4 would mean that it is the lease that is subject to the relevant supply that must have been held since before 1 July 2000. The entity will be supplying residential leases which will be created on the day that they are supplied, that is, after 1 July 2000.

However, the literal, restrictive interpretation was rejected by the Full Court of the Federal Court in Brady King Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2008] FCAFC 118. The Court held that the interest, unit or lease does not have to be a strict identity in juridical terms between what is acquired/held and what is supplied.

In that case, the taxpayer developed an office building into apartments. It entered into a contract to purchase the building on ddmmyy. It completed the purchase on ddmmyy and registered it on ddmmyy. It then built and sold the apartments. The issue was whether the taxpayer had 'held' or 'acquired' its interest before 1 July 2000 for the purposes of items 1 or 3:

The Court stated that it was sufficient that the uncompleted contract was 'the genesis or source of the [taxpayer's] interest in the stratum unit it supplied.' Therefore, the Full Court held in Brady King that there was a sufficient connection between the taxpayer's interest in an unconditional uncompleted contract to purchase an office building held since before 1 July 2000 and the strata units that were created after settlement.

From the above discussion about the Brady King case, it follows that it is possible for the Commonwealth to have held the interest in the land since before 1 July 2000 for the purposes of Item 4 even if the new residential leases to be issued will be created on a day after that date. This will be the case if, despite the fact that the land has been subject to the rural leases, the Commonwealth has continuously held an interest with sufficient connection to the interest to be supplied under the residential leases.

In the context of the land in question, the relevant interest will be 'held' until such time as the Commonwealth makes a supply of land under a lease which disposes of the maximum interest the Commonwealth is able to dispose of. This occurs under a residential Lease. Supply of land by way of lease which does not transfer this full interest does not disrupt the Commonwealth's holding of the relevant interest.

The extent of the interest supplied by the Commonwealth under a lease is determined by the terms and conditions of the lease and the relevant provisions in the relevant legislation.

Most of the rural leases provided do contain different terms and conditions from the standard residential lease and rural leases have additional legislative requirements. Contrary to a residential lease, the Commonwealth retains a level of control over the relevant property under a rural lease, relevantly:

Therefore it is accepted that these rural leases do not provide the same interest to the lessee as a residential lease and do not represent the maximum interest that the Commonwealth is able to supply. As a result, these rural leases do not disrupt the 'held' requirement in Item 4.


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