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This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication.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: 1051506225091

Date of advice: 15 April 2019

Ruling

Subject: Sale of shares - Division 7A and Part IVA

Question 1

Would any deemed dividend to the Taxpayer pursuant to subsection 109C(1)(a) of the ITAA 1936 not be treated as a dividend as a result of the operation of section 109J of the ITAA 1936?

Answer

Yes

Question 2

Will the loan from Family Member Co 2 to Family Member Co 1 and subsequent payment to the Taxpayer give rise to a deemed dividend to the Taxpayer under section 109T of the ITAA 1936?

Answer

No

Question 3

Will section 109C of the ITAA 1936 apply to treat as dividends a payment made to the Taxpayer under the guarantee provided by Parent Co in the event that Parent Co is called upon to do so?

Answer

No

Question 4

Will the Commissioner confirm that the sale of shares in Parent Co by the Taxpayer is not part of a scheme to which the provisions of section 177E of the ITAA 1936 apply?

Answer

Yes

Question 5

Will the Commissioner confirm that the sale of shares in Parent Co by the Taxpayer is not part of a scheme to which the provisions of section 177F of the ITAA 1936 apply?

Answer

Yes

This ruling applies for the following period:

1 July 2018 to 1 July 2025

The scheme commences on:

1 July 2018

Relevant facts and circumstances

The corporate group consists of Parent Co and its subsidiaries.

Prior to the proposed transaction, the shareholding of Parent Co is as follows:

The shareholdings of the Taxpayer and Family Member in Parent Co were acquired prior to 20 September 1985.

The shares in Family Member Co 1 are held by the Trustee Co, as trustee for both the Taxpayer Trust and the Family Member Trust. The Taxpayer is an eligible beneficiary of Taxpayer Trust. Family Member is the sole shareholder and director of Trustee Co.

The assets of Parent Co and its subsidiaries consist of assets that:

A taxable gain will arise when CGT event K6 happens upon the Taxpayer disposing of her shares to Family Member Co.

Parent Co has paid dividends to the Taxpayer in the past, but not in recent years.

The Taxpayer has had minimal involvement in the business to date.

The Taxpayer has granted an option to Family Member to acquire all of the shares held by the Taxpayer in Parent Co, on the Taxpayer’s death. Family Member has granted a put option to the Taxpayer requiring Family Member’s estate to buy all of the Taxpayer’s shares in Parent Co in the event of the Family Member’s death. If the options are exercised, the Deed requires that the price payable for the Taxpayer’s shares is the market value of the shares at the date of death.

Proposed sale of the Taxpayer’s interests in Parent Co to Family Member Co 1

The Taxpayer has now agreed to sell their shares in Parent Co to Family Member Co, rather than waiting for events which will enable the options to acquire the Taxpayer’s shares to be exercised.

Reasons for the proposed sale

The Taxpayer has provided a number of reasons for the proposed sale.

Nature of dealing between the Taxpayer and Family Member in respect of the proposed sale

The Taxpayer has separately engaged advisers who are independent from those advising Family Member. Offers and counteroffers were made over a period of more than 12 months.

Proposed terms of sale

It is proposed that the consideration will be paid by Family Member Co 1 to the Taxpayer as follows:

The Taxpayer will have a right to claim on a guarantee provided by Parent Co in respect of the instalment payments.

Effective upon completion, the Taxpayer will have no further rights or obligations in respect of the options granted.

Funding of repayment of loan to Family Member Co 1 and future instalments

The repayment to Family Member Co 2 of the loan to Family Member Co 1 will be funded by dividends from Parent Co.

The instalment payments of the purchase price payable by Family Member Co 1 to the Taxpayer will be funded by dividends from Parent Co.

Dividends paid by Parent Co will be paid to all shareholders, including Family Member, in proportion to their shareholding.

To the extent that Parent Co is unable to pay dividends to fund the future instalments, Family Member Co 1 will borrow from Family Member Co 2 (or other entities controlled by Family Member from time to time) the amounts due.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936)

Section 109C

Section 109J

Section 109T

Section 109V

Section 109Y

Section 177A

Section 177C

Section 177CB

Section 177D

Section 177E

Section 177F

Section 318

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)

Section 995-1

Reasons for decision

Question 1

The deemed dividend to the Taxpayer pursuant to subsection 109C(1)(a) of the ITAA 1936 will not be treated as a dividend as a result of the operation of section 109J of the ITAA 1936.

Detailed reasoning

Paragraph 109C(1)(a) in Division 7A of the ITAA 1936 treats an amount paid by a private company to an entity, being a shareholder or shareholder’s associate, as a dividend paid by the company.

Is there a payment for the purposes of subsection 109C(1)?

A payment to an entity for the purposes of Division 7A is defined in subsection 109C(3) as follows:

The consideration payable by Family Member Co 1 for the shares in Parent Co, comprising both the cash sum upon settlement and the subsequent instalment payments, will be payments to the Taxpayer within the meaning of paragraph 109C(3)(a).

Is the Taxpayer an associate of Trustee Co as trustee for both the Taxpayer and Family Member Trusts?

In order for Division 7A to apply, the payment must be made when the Taxpayer is either a shareholder or an associate of a shareholder of Family Member Co 1, the company making the payment. The shareholder of Family Member Co 1 is Trustee Co as trustee for the Taxpayer and Family Member Trusts. In order for Division 7A to apply, the Taxpayer must be an associate of Trustee Co.

The meaning of ‘associate’ is defined in section 318 of the ITAA 1936. Relevantly, subsection 318(3) provides that associates of a trustee may be:

As the Taxpayer is named as a potential beneficiary of the Taxpayer Trust (being one of the trusts of which Trustee Co is a trustee), they will be an entity that benefits under the trust within the meaning of paragraph 318(3)(a). Accordingly, the Taxpayer will be an associate of Trustee Co for the purposes of paragraph 109C(1)(a).

Prima facie, a deemed dividend arises to the Taxpayer pursuant to subsection 109C(1) of the ITAA 1936.

What is the amount taken to be paid, prima facie, as a dividend under section 109C?

Subsection 109C(2) provides that the dividend taken to be paid is equal to the amount paid, subject to the distributable surplus calculated in accordance with section 109Y.

However, the application of subsection 109C(2) is subject to the provisions of Subdivision D which deal with payments and loans that are not treated as dividends.

Are the payments made to the Taxpayer by Family Member Co 1 payments discharging pecuniary obligations and, therefore, not treated as dividends pursuant to section 109J of the ITAA 1936?

Section 109J provides an exception to a deemed dividend arising under Division 7A for payments of genuine debts. To the extent that the payments made to the Taxpayer

Family Member Co 1 will not be taken under section 109C to pay dividends to the Taxpayer.

On the facts, it is established that Family Member Co 1 will have an obligation to pay the Taxpayer the total consideration payable in respect of their shares in Parent Co.

Were the Taxpayer and Family Member Co 1 dealing at arm’s length for the purposes of paragraph 109J(b)?

The definition of “arm’s length” in section 995-1 of the ITAA 1997 provides that "in determining whether parties deal at arm's length, consider any connection between them and any other relevant circumstance." In the absence of any guidance in the statutory definition on the character and manner of dealings considered to be at arm’s length, it is necessary to have regard to the principles established in the case law with regard to the concept of “arm’s length dealing”.

The meaning of the expression “dealing with each other at arm’s length” was considered by the Federal Court in Trustee for the Estate of the Late A W Furse No 5 Will Trust v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1990) 21 ATR 1123 in the context of determining whether an amount was excluded from “excepted trust income” for the purposes of Division 6AA, as a result of being derived from non-arm’s length transactions. Hill J held that the issue of whether parties were dealing at arm’s length was not to be determined by reference to the relationship between the parties, but rather the quality of the dealing between them, observing as follows, at 1132:

Similarly, in considering the meaning of the expression in the context of the former paragraph 160ZH(9)(c) that provided for the substitution of the consideration paid in a non-arm’s length transaction with the market value of an asset in calculating the cost base of an asset Lee J in Granby Pty Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1995) 30 ATR 400, at 402-404, was of the view that:

Whilst the Taxpayer and Family Member may not be parties at arm’s length by reason of their family relationship, the non-arm’s length nature of their relationship is not determinative of the issue of whether the particular dealing was at arm’s length.

The Commissioner considers that that the following circumstances surrounding the transaction support a conclusion that the Taxpayer and Family Member Co 1 acted in their own interests and severally and independently in forming their bargain:

There are no circumstances surrounding the transaction to indicate that either party exerted personal influence or control over the other party, or that no independent will had been exercised by one of the parties in the formation of the transaction.

As the Commissioner considers that the Taxpayer and Family Member are dealing with each other at arm’s length, it follows that the cash sum and instalment payments agreed upon by the parties as consideration payable for the Parent Co shares represent the consideration payable by parties dealing with each other at arm’s length and the payments are not, therefore, more than the arm’s length amount.

Accordingly, section 109J of the ITAA 1936 will operate to exclude the payments made by Family Member Co 1 to the Taxpayer from being treated as dividends under subsection 109C(1) of the ITAA 1936.

Question 2

The loan from Family Member Co 2 to Family Member Co 1 and subsequent payment to the Taxpayer will not give rise to a deemed dividend to the Taxpayer under section 109T of the ITAA 1936.

Detailed reasoning

Subdivision E in Division 7A of the ITAA 1936 comprises the rules applicable to interposed entities. Those rules treat payments and loans through interposed entities as giving rise to direct payments and loans under Subdivision B from a private company to a shareholder (or their associate) which are then taken to be dividends.

Subsection 109T(1) provides that the Division operates as if a private company makes a payment or loan to an entity as described in section 109V if:

Is there an amount that Family Member Co 2 is taken to have paid the Taxpayer that was paid through one or more interposed entities for the purposes of section 109V of the ITAA 1936?

Subsection 109V(1) provides that a private company is taken to have paid an amount determined by the Commissioner to a target entity when the target entity has been paid an amount by an interposed entity. In determining the amount of the payment under subsection 109V(2), the Commissioner must take account of:

Under the proposed arrangement, Family Member Co 2 will borrow the cash sum amount under its existing banking facility and an interest bearing loan of that amount will be advanced by Family Member Co 2 to Family Member Co 1. Family Member Co 1 will use those funds to make an initial cash sum payment upon settlement, with the payment representing part of the purchase price for the Taxpayer’s Parent Co shares.

Paragraph 2 of Taxation Determination TD 2011/16 Income tax: Division 7A - payments and loans through interposed entities - factors the Commissioner will take into account in determining the amount of any deemed payment or notional loan arising under section 109T of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 sets out the relevant factors that the Commissioner will consider in determining the amount of any deemed payment under section 109T, as follows:

The Commissioner is of the view that the amount that will be advanced by Family Member Co 2 as a loan to Family Member Co 1 and, in turn, paid by Family Member Co 1 to the Taxpayer represents consideration payable to the target entity (being the Taxpayer) by Family Member Co 1 (being the interposed entity) for the Taxpayer’s shares in Parent Co. Under the proposed arrangement, there will be a genuine disposal of the Taxpayer’s Parent Co shares that will give rise to a capital gain when CGT event K6 happens. In this regard, the Commissioner does not regard the proposed arrangement as being one which properly falls for consideration under Subdivision E of Division 7A.

Further, for the reasons stated above in the detailed reasoning for Question 1, the Commissioner considers that Family Member and the Taxpayer will be dealing with each other at arm’s length, and therefore, the consideration payable agreed upon by the parties will be the arm’s length consideration.

Accordingly, the amount of the payment taken to be made by Family Member Co 2 to the Taxpayer under section 109V will be nil.

Section 109T(1) will not treat the payment made by Family Member Co 2 to the Taxpayer through an interposed entity (being Family Member Co 1) as giving rise to a payment under Subdivision B from Family Member Co 2 to the Taxpayer which is then deemed to be a dividend, for the following reasons:

Question 3

Section 109C of the ITAA 1936 will not apply to treat a payment made to the Taxpayer under the guarantee provided by Parent Co in the event that Parent Co is called upon to do so, as a result of the operation of section 109J of the ITAA 1936.

Detailed reasoning

The Taxpayer will have a right to claim on a guarantee provided by Parent Co in respect of the performance by Family Member Co 1 of its obligations to pay the instalment payments. In the event that Parent Co is called upon to make payments of those amounts to the Taxpayer, those amounts will be payments to the Taxpayer within the meaning of paragraph 109C(3)(a).

The Taxpayer will cease to be a shareholder of Parent Co upon completion. However, the Taxpayer will be an associate of both of Parent Co’s shareholders post-completion (Family Member and Family Member Co 1) based on the following:

Prima facie, a deemed dividend arises to the Taxpayer pursuant to subsection 109C(1) of the ITAA 1936 when a payment is made by Parent Co to the Taxpayer under the guarantee because they are an associate of both of the shareholders in Parent Co. Under subsection 109C(2), the dividend taken to be paid is equal to the amount paid, subject to the distributable surplus of Parent Co calculated in accordance with section 109Y of the ITAA 1936.

Are the payments made to the Taxpayer payments discharging pecuniary obligations and, therefore, not treated as dividends pursuant to section 109J of the ITAA 1936?

Section 109J provides an exception to a deemed dividend arising under Division 7A for payments of genuine debts. To the extent that the payments made to the Taxpayer

Parent Co will not be taken under section 109C to pay dividends to the Taxpayer.

On the facts, it is established that Family Member Co 1 will have an obligation to pay the Taxpayer the total consideration amount in respect of their shares in Parent Co. Parent Co has provided to the Taxpayer a guarantee in respect of Family Member Co 1’s obligations to make the deferred instalment payments.

The guarantee involves rights of subrogation which enable Parent Co to be reimbursed by Family Member Co 1 in the event that Parent Co is called upon to make payments owed by Family Member Co. Insofar as Parent Co’s liability under the guarantee is as a principal debtor, any payment that Parent Co makes pursuant to the guarantee will be a payment to discharge an obligation of Parent Co to pay money to the Taxpayer.

Based on the reasons stated in the detailed reasoning in relation to Question 1, the Commissioner considers that the total consideration for the sale was negotiated at arm’s length. Therefore, payments made pursuant to the guarantee provided by Parent Co will represent an arm’s length amount.

Accordingly, section 109J of the ITAA 1936 will operate to exclude the payments made by Parent Co to the Taxpayer from being treated as dividends under subsection 109C(1) of the ITAA 1936.

Question 4

The sale of shares in Parent Co by the Taxpayer is not part of a scheme to which the provisions of section 177E of the ITAA 1936 apply.

Detailed reasoning

Section 177E was enacted as a General Anti-Avoidance Rule in Part IVA that applies specifically to dividend stripping arrangements. Where section 177E operates, it deems the scheme to be one to which Part IVA applies (paragraph 177E(1)(e)) and deems the taxpayer to have obtained a tax benefit, being the non-inclusion in assessable income of the amount that would have been included if the company had paid the dividend described by paragraph 177E(1)(c) (paragraphs 177E(1)(f) and (g)).

In order for section 177E to apply, the following requirements must be satisfied:

The Commissioner is of the view that there was no scheme by way of or in the nature of dividend stripping or having substantially the effect of a scheme by way of or in the nature of a dividend stripping for the purposes of paragraph 177E(1)(a).

The leading case concerning the meaning of ‘scheme by way of or in the nature of dividend stripping’ in sub-paragraph 177E(1)(a)(i) is FCT v. Consolidated Press Holdings (2001) 207 CLR 235 (‘Consolidated Press Holdings’). The Full Federal Court in Commissioner of Taxation v. Consolidated Press Holdings Ltd (1999) 91 FCR 524 (‘Consolidated Press Holdings FFC’), at 561, referred to Gibbs J’s summation of the central characteristics of a dividend stripping scheme in Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) v. Patcorp Investments Ltd (1976) 140 CLR 247 as follows:

The characteristics that may be present in the proposed arrangement include:

In addition to the central characteristics identified in the case law, the Full Federal Court in Consolidated Press Holdings also considered, at 570, that only a scheme which has the requisite tax avoidance purpose will be a scheme by way of or in the nature of dividend stripping:

The Commissioner considers that the proposed arrangement will not be entered into for the dominant purpose of avoiding tax.

In the absence of a dominant purpose of avoiding tax, the proposed scheme will not be a scheme by way of or in the nature of dividend stripping or a scheme having substantially the effect of a scheme by way of or in the nature of dividend stripping for the purposes of paragraph 177E(1)(a). Accordingly, the proposed arrangement will not give rise to a scheme to which section 177E applies.

Question 5

The sale of shares in Parent Co by the Taxpayer will not be part of a scheme to which the provisions of section 177F of the ITAA 1936 apply.

Detailed reasoning

Part IVA gives the Commissioner the power to cancel a 'tax benefit' that has been obtained, or would, but for section 177F, be obtained, by a taxpayer in connection with a scheme to which Part IVA applies.

The Commissioner may only exercise the power in subsection 177F(1) if the requirements of Part IVA are satisfied. Part IVA requires that

Each of the requirements of Part IVA are considered in further detail in the following paragraphs.

Will there be a scheme within the meaning of section 177A of the ITAA 1936 in connection with which a tax benefit would have been obtained?

“Scheme” is defined broadly in section 177A to mean

It is considered that the transactions under the proposed sale of the Taxpayer’s interests in Parent Co to Family Member Co 1 (being the sale of the Taxpayer’s interests in Parent Co, the on-lending of part of the purchase price by Family Member Co 2 to Family Member Co 1 to pay the Taxpayer and the funding of the subsequent instalment payments from the profits of Parent Co) comprise a scheme within the meaning of section 177A.

Will there be a tax benefit within the meaning of section 177C that was or would, but for subsection 177F(1), have been obtained?

Broadly, subsection 177C(1) of the ITAA 1936 defines six kinds of tax benefit:

In determining whether a tax benefit within the meaning of subsection 177C(1) has been obtained in connection with a scheme, it is necessary to refer to section 177CB of the ITAA 1936.

In deciding whether a tax effect (being one of the tax benefits identified in subsection 177C(1)) would have occurred, or might reasonably be expected to have occurred, if the scheme had not been entered into or carried out, section 177CB provides two different bases for identifying tax benefits.

Subsection 177CB(2) requires that

Insofar as the scheme comprises the sale of the Taxpayer’s shares (amongst other steps), there would be no tax effect for the purposes of subsection 177CB(2) if the Taxpayer continued to hold their shares. Accordingly, no tax benefit would arise for the purposes of section 177C under this approach.

The alternative approach to determining tax benefit is contained in subsections 177CB(3) and (4).

Subsection 177CB(3) requires that

In determining for the purposes of subsection (3) whether a postulate is a reasonable alternative to entering into or carrying out a scheme, subsection 177CB(4) requires that

The Commissioner considers the substance of the scheme to be the transfer of the Taxpayer’s shareholding in Parent Co to Family Member Co 1, being an entity controlled by Family Member. The Commissioner does not consider there to be any reasonable alternative to entering into or carrying out the scheme.

In the absence of any postulate that is a reasonable alternative to entering into or carrying out the scheme, no tax benefit would arise for the purposes of section 177C under this approach.

As the Taxpayer will not obtain, or will not but for section 177F obtain, a tax benefit within the meaning of subsection 177C(1) in connection with the scheme, the proposed arrangement will not be part of a scheme to which the provisions of section 177F of the ITAA 1936 apply.


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