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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1051380497139

Date of advice: 31 May 2018

Ruling

Subject: Income tax - assessable income - carrying on a business

Question

Is the Trust considered to be carrying on a business?

Answer

Yes

This ruling applies for the following period:

Year ending 30 June 20xx

The scheme commences on:

1 July 20xx

Relevant facts and circumstances

A Discretionary Trust was established several years ago

A and B are beneficiaries of the Trust.

The Trust entered into a contract of sale for the Management Rights for “C”. The purchase price was $xxx,xxx

“C” is a body corporate and consists of a building complex of XX residential units.

You act as the managing agent for XX units

The Contract of Sale provides for the supply of a going concern

The business assets include;

The Management Rights agreement required the purchase of Unit X from which the business is to be conducted from on site.

The Trust acquired Unit X for $xxx,xxx.

Unit X has a different layout to all other units in the complex. A separate office is attached.

On x November xxxx settlement occurred for the Management Rights and Unit X.

The Trust financed the purchase of the Management Rights through a Bank and Unit X through a separate Home loan.

B is a licensed Real Estate Agent and undertakes the following duties.

Units are advertised for rent by paying an annual subscription and advertised online. An advert is also placed onsite via a board located at the front of the building.

The day to day operations are conducted from the office area attached to Unit X and remotely from A and B’s principle place of residence.

B spends 25-30 hours per week on site being available in the office undertaking administrative/manager duties or elsewhere onsite undertaking caretaker duties. 15-20 hours a week is spent off site attending to banking, mail, purchases or body corporate activities. B has no other outside employment.

A spends 10 hours a week, mostly on the weekends assisting B with lawn mowing/garden maintenance, general repairs and maintenance where necessary. B has fulltime employment elsewhere.

In addition to being the Managing Agent for the rental units, other services provided for a fee include organising and managing minor maintenance work that requires plumbers/electricians and other trades for unit owners.

In conjunction with the Management and Letting rights business, you have a contractual arrangement with the Body Corporate under a Caretaking and Management agreement. The remuneration payable by the Body Corporate is $xx,xxx for the year ending xx June xxxx and is listed as commission received on the income statement.

The Caretaking and Management Agreement states; “you are required to reside, or if the Caretaker is a corporation, ensure that the Caretaker’s Delegate resides in Unit X on site.”

A and B do not reside on site. Unit X is leased to a Night Manager who is an unrelated third party but fulfils the obligations under the agreement. A reduced rate of $xxx is charged per week under a General tenancy agreement.

The Management and Caretaking agreement with the Body Corporate appoints you to act as agent of the body corporate in connection with the management and administration of the common property. The agreement confirms your ability to employ people and to use and manage the common property.

The duties of the Caretaker under the caretaking and management agreement are noted as follows:

Daily

Weekly

Monthly

The services of reality and business brokers were engaged to source and present various options in the search to purchase a Management Rights Business.

Accounting and Taxation advice was sought to establish the most appropriate structure for the purchase of the Management Rights Business.

The business plan objectives are:

A net profit has been consistently produced over numerous years.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 6-5,

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 8-1. and

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 995-1

Reasons for decision

Summary

You are carrying on a business. It is considered that the scale of activity and volume of operations carried on by you is sufficient to be considered as carrying on a business.

Detailed reasoning

Section 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 defines 'business' as 'including any profession, trade, employment, vocation or calling, but not occupation as an employee'.

Taxation Ruling TR 97/11 Income Tax: am I carrying on a business of primary production? provides a guide to indicators that the courts have held to be relevant as to whether or not a person is carrying on a business. In the Commissioner's view, the factors that are considered important in determining the question of business activity are:

TR 97/11 states the indicators must be considered in combination and as a whole and whether a business is being carried on depends on the 'large or general impression gained' (Martin v. FC of T (1953) 90 CLR 470 at 474; 5 AITR 548 at 551) from looking at all the indicators, and whether these factors provide the operations with a 'commercial flavour' ( Ferguson v. FC of T (1979) 37 FLR 310 at 325; 79 ATC 4261 at 4271; (1979) 9 ATR 873 at 884). However, the weighting to be given to each indicator may vary from case to case.

Taxation Ruling IT 2423 - Withholding tax: whether rental income constitutes proceeds of business - permanent establishment - deduction for interest considers the liability to interest withholding tax where a non-resident of Australia borrows moneys from financial institutions outside Australia to purchase properties in Australia from which rental income is derived. The ruling also considers when renting properties constitutes a business for tax purposes.

The conclusion that an individual is carrying on a business of letting property largely depends upon the scale of operations. An individual who derives income from the rent of one or two residential properties would not normally be thought of as carrying on a business. On the other hand if rent was derived from a number of properties or from a block of apartments and management of those properties was handled by the taxpayer it would indicate the existence of a business.

Applying the relevant cases and indicators to your circumstances

In your case there is a significant commercial purpose. You have operated this activity for a number of years and have received a consistent net profit from this activity. The activities you do in relation to the property are similar to activities, of the same kind, as carried on in that line of business by other business operators. You spend a reasonable amount of time in relation to the management of the property and this activity provides the main source of your income. You have also provided your business plan which outlines your objectives. Therefore, considering your facts and circumstances, it is considered that the activity amounts to the carrying on of a business.


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