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This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication.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: 1013091882060

Date of advice: 22 September 2016

Ruling

Subject: Application of the Division 165 and the margin scheme to supplies of new residential premises

Question

Do the anti-avoidance provisions, Division 165 of the A New Tax System Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (the GST Act) apply to your supplies of residential premises under the margin scheme?

Answer

No

Relevant facts and circumstances

Background

First and second parcel

Third parcel

Fourth parcel

Timeline

Relevant legislative provisions

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

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 Division 165.

Reasons for decision

In this reasoning, unless otherwise stated,

Issue 1

Do the anti-avoidance provisions, Division 165 of the GST Act apply to your supplies of residential premises under the margin scheme?

Summary

The Commissioner considers that given the unique factual circumstances outlined in your ruling request, the dominant purpose or principal effect of the scheme could not be said to be the obtaining of any GST benefit.

Detailed reasoning

Division 165 operates if

Subsection 165-1 (2) provides that it does not matter whether the scheme, or any part of the scheme, was entered into or carried out inside or outside Australia.

Subsection 165-1 (3) provides that a GST benefit that the avoider gets or got from a scheme is not taken, for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), to be attributable to a choice, election, application or agreement of a kind referred to in that paragraph if:

In summary for Division 165 of the GST Act to apply, the following four elements are required:

Scheme

Subsection 165-10(2) exhaustively defines a "scheme" as:

or

We consider that the scheme would, in general terms, consist of a number of steps whereby Parcels were acquire, held and then transferred within the group:

Counterfactuals

The determination of whether a GST benefit can be identified in connection with the scheme requires a comparison between the GST position under the scheme and the GST position under the counterfactual.

You have submitted that any potential counterfactual(s) are limited due to the occupancy condition requiring the ownership of the Parcels to be consolidated. As a result of the necessity to adhere to the occupancy condition, you consider that there are only two potential counterfactuals:

You consider that there are no commercial justifications supporting either of the counterfactuals, and that you do not obtain a tax benefit, as is not reasonable to expect that any of these counterfactuals would have occurred, but for the actual transaction.

GST Benefit

You contend that the intra-group transfers of the parcels will not affect Trust 1's ability to apply the margin scheme in respect of the supply of residential lots as:

We advise that any increase in the MSCB as a result of the intra-group transfers of the parcels potentially results in a GST benefit for you pursuant to paragraph 165-10(1)(a) of the GST Act which provides that a GST benefit includes;

The exclusion

We consider that any GST benefit obtained from the scheme would not be attributable to the making, by any entity, of a choice, election, application or agreement that is expressly provided for by the GST law. The benefit would be attributable to the sequence of steps that make up the relevant scheme.

Conclusion

Division 165 must be considered on a case by case basis to determine whether it would be concluded that the dominant purpose or principal effect of the scheme would be to get a GST benefit. This requires an objective assessment of the scheme against the twelve matters set out in subsection 165-15(1). You have provided significant commercial imperatives in support of the scheme, which include, but are not limited to, the following:

The material provided in support of your ruling request indicates that there are significant commercial reasons for the intra-group transfers of the parcels. The Commissioner considers that given the unique factual circumstances outlined in your ruling request, the dominant purpose or principal effect of the scheme could not be said to be the obtaining of any GST benefit.


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