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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1051354672906

Date of advice: 3 May 2018

Ruling

Subject: CGT-small business concessions-deceased’s estate

Question 1

Will any capital gain or loss be disregarded, when lots a, b and c and the 1/5 interest in lots d, e and f forming part of property W, pass from the estate of P to beneficiary 1?

Answer 1

Yes

Question 2

Will the sale by the executor of the estate of P of the X% interests in lots d, e and f to the beneficiary of the estate of P be exempt from CGT under section 152-80 of the Income Tax Assessment Act (ITAA) 1997?

Answer 2

No, only X% of the interest will be exempt from CGT. The remaining X% interest in lots d, e and f will not meet the requirements of section 152-80 of the ITAA 1997 and will therefore not be exempt from CGT.

This ruling applies for the following periods:

Year ending 30 June 2017

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2016

Relevant facts and circumstances

Q and P purchased a property after 20 September 1985 (property W).

Q and P used the property for the purposes of carrying on a farming business.

Q and P lived away from the property.

The property consisted of X lots.

R, the child of P and Q is over 50 years of age.

R assisted P and Q in operating the farming business.

R entered into a share farming arrangement with P and Q which allowed R to derive income from the property and in return R provided labour and expertise, which allowed P and Q to derive an annual income of around $XX,XXX. This share farming arrangement was not subject to any formal agreement and continued up until a formal lease was entered into.

As part of this share farming arrangement, Q worked in conjunction with R in operating the farming business.

Q passed away in 20XX and Q’s half interest as joint tenant in the property passed to P. P continued to carrying on the farming business with the assistance of R for some time.

R entered into a lease with P to rent the property. In return for the use of the property, R paid annual rent to P.

In 20XX P relocated and lived in a nursing home.

P passed away in 20XX.

For the purposes of this ruling, R is referred throughout this ruling as either R or beneficiary 1 (beneficiary 1). R’s siblings who are beneficiaries of P’s estate are referred to as beneficiaries (beneficiaries).

The beneficiaries entered into an agreement with beneficiary 1, which entitled beneficiary 1 to a 100% ownership interest in lots a,b and c, which beneficiary 1 inherited from the executor of the Estate of P. These lots were valued at $XXX,XXX. The agreement provided that the X% interest that each of R’s siblings held in lots d,e and f would be purchased by beneficiary 1 making a payment of $XXX,XXX to the executor of P’s estate in 20XX. Beneficiary 1 would retain X% of the inherited interest in lots d, e and f. The agreement valued the lots forming part of property as being around $X,XXX,XXX.

P was over 55 years of age at the date of P’s passing.

You have confirmed that the activities conducted by R are considered a small business entity, as R is operating a farming business and the turnover of the business is less than $2,000,000.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 128-20

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 128-50

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 152-10

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 152-80

Reasons for decision

Questions 1 and 2

Summary

Any capital gain the Trustee of P’s Estate makes when lots a, b and c and the X% interest in lots d, e and f passes to R as beneficiary of P’s estate is disregarded.

Reasons for decision

Joint interests

Under section 128-50(2) of the ITAA 1997, a surviving joint tenant is taken to have acquired the deceased joint tenant’s interest in the asset at the date of the deceased’s death.

Asset passing from the legal personal representative or trustee of an estate to the beneficiary

Any capital gain or capital loss made by the legal personal representative (LPR) or trustee on the transfer or ‘passing’ of an asset of the deceased to a beneficiary in the estate is disregarded in accordance with section 128-15(3) of the ITAA 1997.

Section 128-20(1) provides that an asset is taken to have ‘passed’ to the a beneficiary when the beneficiary becomes the owner of the asset in any of the following circumstances:

An asset will pass to a beneficiary of an estate under a ‘deed of arrangement’. This is provided:

Section 128-20(2) provides specifically that an asset will not pass to a beneficiary if the beneficiary acquires it from the LPR under a power of sale. Instead, CGT event A1 will apply to the disposal of the asset by the LPR.

Application to your circumstances

P and Q acquired the property as joint tenants.

In 19XX, Q’s joint interest in the property passed to P at the date of Q’s passing. P became the sole owner of the property, and held 2 separate CGT interests. P held half of P’s interest in the property acquired in 19XX. P’s second interest was Q’s joint interest that passed to P as a tenant in common at the date of Q’s passing.

By will, P bequeathed P’s interest, consisting of a property W and other farming land and cash to P’s children in equal shares. Beneficiary 1 and the other beneficiaries entered into an agreement which allowed property W and the other farms to be distributed in accordance with the will. This agreement provided that beneficiary would inherit lots a, b and c and a X% in lots d, e and f. As lots a, b and c and X% in lots d, e and f passed to beneficiary 1 as a beneficiary under a deed of arrangement, any capital gain is disregarded.

Questions 3

Summary

The X% interests that each of R’s siblings held in lots d, e and f are subject to a power of sale by the executor and do not pass to a beneficiary in accordance with section 128-15(3) of the ITAA 1997.

Any capital gain on the sale of the C% interest in lots d, e and f acquired by P’s estate, representing the joint interests P originally acquired 19XX will be able to be disregarded under section 152-80 of the ITAA 1997.

The X% interest in each of the lots d, e and f representing the joint interest P acquired from Q at the date Q passed away does not satisfy the active asset test and cannot be exempt from CGT under section 152-80 ITAA 1997.

Detailed reasoning

Small Business Concessions

The trustee of a deceased’s estate is eligible to apply the CGT small business concessions to the same extent that the deceased would have been able to just prior to their passing.

Basic conditions

To qualify for the small business CGT concessions, you must satisfy several conditions that are common to all the concessions. These are called the basic conditions.

A capital gain you make may be reduced or disregarded if the following basic conditions are satisfied:

The active asset test is satisfied if:

● the CGT event, and

● when the business ceased, if the business in question ceased in the 12 months before the CGT event (under subparagraph 152-35(2)(b)(ii) of the ITAA 1997 the Commissioner can allow a longer period than 12 months).

15 year small business exemption

Section 152-110 of the ITAA 1997 provides that an individual can disregard any capital gain made on the disposal of an asset if all of the following conditions are satisfied:

Passively held assets

This passively held asset condition allows you to access the concessions for a CGT asset you own where you are not carrying on a business, but that CGT asset is used in the business of your affiliate or an entity connected with you (subsection 152-10(1A) of the ITAA 1997). The following conditions must be satisfied:

Affiliate

Subsection 328-130(1) of the ITAA 1997 defines the meaning of an affiliate as an individual or company that, in relation to their business affairs, acts or could reasonably be expected to act in accordance with your directions or wishes, or in concert with you.

Trusts, partnerships and superannuation funds cannot be your affiliates. However a trust, partnership or superannuation fund may have an affiliate who is an individual or company.

Subsection 328-130(2) of the ITAA 1997 specifically provides that an individual or company is not your affiliate merely because of the nature of the business relationship you and the individual or company share.

A note under subsection 328-130(2) of the ITAA 1997 states that for the small business relief purposes, a spouse or a child under 18 years may also be an affiliate under section 152-47.

The explanatory memorandum to the relevant amending Bill states:

Former subsection 152-25(1) ITAA 97 was not limited to the conduct of the small business CGT affiliate in the use of the CGT asset. Rather, the section was couched in broad terms, and included the relationship between the parties in the conduct of the affiliate’s business generally.

Justice Finkelstein in Papua New Guinea Dockyard Ltd v Adams and Ors (2005) FCA 413 provides the following meaning of acting in concert:

For an entity to act “in accordance with” the instructions or wishes of another entity, there must be a causal connection between the instruction or wish of the other entity and the act taken by the first entity.

An entity is connected with another entity

Subsection 328-125(1) of the ITAA 1997 states that an entity is connected with another entity if either entity controls the other entity, or both entities are controlled by the same third entity.

Generally speaking an entity controls another entity if it owns interests in the other entity that give the right to receive at least 40% of any distribution of income, the control percentage.

Application to your circumstances

The X% interests that each of R’s siblings held in lots d, e and f are subject to a power of sale by the executor and do not pass to a beneficiary in accordance with section 128-15(3) of the ITAA 1997. Therefore, any CGT cannot be disregarded on the transfer of these interests.

The siblings X% interest in lots d, e and f consists of 2 separate CGT interests:

Section 152-80 of the ITAA 1997 allows either the legal personal representative of an estate or the beneficiary to apply the small business CGT concessions in respect of the sale of the deceased’s asset in certain circumstances. Specifically, the following conditions must be met:

The conditions within section 152-80 of the ITAA 1997 must be applied to each of the two separate CGT interests held by the siblings (R’s interest is excluded):

You satisfy all 4 conditions under section 152-80 of the ITAA 1997:

Therefore, any Capital gain on the sale of the X% interest in lots d, e and f acquired by P’s estate, representing the joint interests P originally acquired 19XX will be able to satisfy the 15 year small business concessions. As the interest was held for more than 15 years and P was over 55 years of age, P would have been entitled to access the small business concessions immediately before P’s passing.

b. The X% interest in each lot acquired by P’s estate, representing the joint interest P acquired from Q at the date Q passed away

This interest was owned by P’s estate from the date P acquired it from Q in 20XX until P passed away in 20XX. The interest was owned by the Estate of P for a total of XXX days.

In relation to this X% interest, the deceased would not have met the small business concessions as P would not have been able to satisfy the active asset test.

This is because the CGT asset (X% of interest in lots d, e and f acquired from Q in 20XX) was used passively in a business carried on by the deceased’s affiliate for less than half the time the deceased owned the asset.

The X% interest was acquired by P in 20XX and passively used by R from 20XX to 20XX, as part of a share farming arrangement with the asset owner. During this time P controlled the farming activities that could be carried out on at property W and directed that a share of the income from the farming operations being paid to the asset owner.

More than half the days during which this interest was owned (XXX/XXX total ownership days), it was leased by R. During this time, R was not considered an affiliate of or connected with the asset owner as:

Therefore, the X% interest in lots d, e and f held by P’s Estate that represents the joint interest P acquired from P’s spouse does not satisfy the active asset test and cannot be exempt from CGT under the small business concessions.


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