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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1051474034595

Date of advice: 1 February 2019

Ruling

Subject: GST and bank guarantees

Question

Are you, the Administrators, entitled to an input tax credit (ITC) under section 58-10(1)(b) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) for the acquisition of product from P and O paid for by recourse to Bank Guarantees?

Answer

Yes

Relevant facts and circumstances

The Joint Venture

By way of Deed dated XXYY, several parties formed an unincorporated joint venture (JV) for the purposes of mining, processing and selling D (Former Joint Venture Deed).

The participants in the JV have changed over time.

Under the JV Agreement:

GST registration and GST reporting

The two JV participants, K and G have been registered for GST since 1 July 2000.

The JV has been registered as a GST JV from 1 July 2000 and F is registered as the JV operator of the GST JV. There has been no change in the operator or cancellation of the GST JV.

F remained the joint venture operator (as defined in section 195-1) during the period in which product was purchased under the Sale Agreement.

The Sale Agreement

On XXYY, F in its capacity as manager of the JV, and as agent for each of the participants, entered into a sale agreement with M (the Sale Agreement).

M agreed to sell and make product available for delivery to F for payment calculated in accordance with formulas contained in clause X of the Sale Agreement.

M was required to issue a monthly invoice to F for the quantity of product supplied and F was required to make a payment within 10 business days of receiving the invoice.

In relation to GST, clause X of the Sale Agreement provided:

There were two bank guarantees provided by F through Bank A with each of the beneficiaries being O and P (collectively referred to as the Original Bank Guarantees).

O and P are both registered for GST.

On XXYY, X was appointed as the Administrators of F.

On or around XXYY, the original Bank Guarantees were cancelled and the Administrators took out new bank guarantees in the name of F through Bank B in favour of O and P to secure the ongoing operation of the Sale Agreement (collectively referred to as the Bank Guarantees).

The key terms of the Bank Guarantee between P (Beneficiary) and F (Customer) were:

The Bank Guarantee provided to O was also for the same amount and also on identical terms as the P Bank Guarantee.

The Administrators continued to act in accordance with the terms of the Sale Agreement, including making payments for supplies of product under the Sale Agreement.

The Administrators were served with a notice, dated XXYY, purporting to replace F as operator of the business and appointing Q as the new operator.

There was no formal novation of the Sale Agreement or JV Agreement by F to Q. As a result, F remained the party to the Sale Agreement and the recipient of any supplies made under the Agreement. In addition, P and O had recourse against F and were legally able to enforce F to pay any outstanding debts under the Sale Agreement.

Therefore, F continued to make acquisitions under the Sale Agreement entered into in its capacity as manager of the JV and as agent for and on behalf of the JV participants (even after the purported replacement by Q as the JV operator).

Consequently, the creditors began pursuing outstanding debts with the JV participants. In light of mounting debt under the Sale Agreement, the Bank Guarantees were called upon by P and O (for the amount of $X each) on XXYY and the proceeds were applied towards the debt owed by F (in its capacity as the manager of the JV and as agent on behalf of the participants) for product acquired by F under the Sale Agreement (after its purported replacement as the manager). The Bank Guarantees provided by the Administrators were able to be called by P and O because even though F was purportedly replaced by Q as the JV manager, F continued to make acquisitions under the Sale Agreement and remained liable to pay the invoices for product acquisitions (collectively, referred to as the Outstanding Invoices) because the Sale Agreement was not novated to Q.

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 section 11-5

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 51-35

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 section 58-10

Reasons for decision

Question

Are you, the Administrators, entitled to an input tax credit (ITC) under section 58-10(1)(b) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) for the acquisition of product from P and O pursuant to Bank Guarantees dated XXYYYY and XXYYYY?

Division 58 sets out how to ascribe activities of a representative of an incapacitated entity between the representative and the incapacitated entity for GST purposes. Section 195-1 provides that a representative relevantly includes an administrator and the Corporations Act includes the definition of administrator.

You were appointed as the Administrators of F on XXYY. Therefore you met the section 195-1 definition of representative during the period in which you were appointed in that capacity.

An incapacitated entity is defined in section 195-1 to mean an entity that has a representative. As you were appointed as a representative over the assets of F, the company is an incapacitated entity.

When registering as representatives of F, the Administrators were assigned a unique Client Activity Account (CAC) for GST transactions during the period of their appointment in that capacity.

Subparagraph 58-10(1)(b) provides that a representative of an incapacitated entity ‘is entitled to any input tax credit that the incapacitated entity would, but for this section or section 48-45, be entitled to for a creditable acquisition or a creditable importation’, to the extent that the making of the acquisition to which the GST input tax credit relates is within the scope of the representative’s responsibility or authority for managing the incapacitated entity’s affairs.

F’s entitlement to claim ITCs

Subdivision 51-B considers the consequences of GST joint ventures.

Section 51-35 states:

As the JV is registered as a GST joint venture and F was appointed as the joint venture operator (as defined in section 195-1) at the relevant time, it is necessary to consider whether F made a ‘creditable acquisition’ of product from O and P on behalf of the joint venture participants pursuant to section 51-35.

Under section 11-5, an entity makes a creditable acquisition if:

The meaning of creditable purpose is contained in section 11-15 which states:

Application of section 11-5 to your circumstances

Paragraphs 74, 75, 77, 79 and 80 of GSTR 2006/1 state:

Consequently, as all the requirements of section 11-5 are satisfied, F made creditable acquisitions of product from O and P.

Application of Division 58

As outlined above, section 58-10(1)(b) provides that a representative of an incapacitated entity is entitled to any input tax credit that the incapacitated entity would be entitled to for a creditable acquisition or a creditable importation, to the extent that the making of the acquisition to which the GST input tax credit relates is within the scope of the representative’s responsibility or authority for managing the incapacitated entity’s affairs.

In this case, the Administrators are ‘representatives’ as defined in section 195-1 and the acquisition of product was clearly made in the scope of the Administrator’s responsibility or authority for managing F’s affairs. This is because when the Administrators were appointed over F, they continued to act in accordance with the terms of the Sale Agreement and the acquisitions in question were made during the period of administration.

Therefore, as section 58-10(1)(b) applies, the input tax credit entitlement for the Outstanding Invoices that were paid through the calling of the Bank Guarantees, shifts from F to the Administrators.

The Administrators are therefore entitled to claim input tax credits relating to the creditable acquisitions of product from O and P. To do so, they must possess valid tax invoices from O and P for those supplies.

The CAC account associated with those credits is that assigned to them whilst acting in their capacity as Administrators of F.


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