CENTRAL BAYSIDE DIVISION OF GENERAL PRACTICE LTD v COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE (VIC)

Members:
Nettle J

Tribunal:
Supreme Court of Victoria

MEDIA NEUTRAL CITATION: [2003] VSC 285

Decision date: 15 August 2003

Nettle J

This is an application for leave to appeal from a decision of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal made on 22 November 2002. By its decision the Tribunal upheld the determination of the Commissioner of State Revenue dated 14 December 2001 that the Central Bayside Division of General Practice Ltd (``the Division'') is not exempt from pay-roll tax. The question before the Tribunal was whether wages paid by the Division come within the exemption provided in s. 10(1)(bb) of the Pay-roll Tax Act 1971.[1] Wages paid or payable ``by a charitable body (other than a school or educational institution or an instrumentality of the State) to a person during a period in respect of which the body satisfies the Commissioner that the person is engaged exclusively in work of the body of a charitable nature''. The Tribunal found that the Division is a body which ``plainly... exists for purposes beneficial to the community'' but that the Division was ``too close to being an arm of government or a part of bureaucracy... to be an organisation whose objects come within the concept of charity revealed by the Preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth''.

2. The principal ground of the application for leave is that the Tribunal erred in law in holding that a body which plainly exists for purposes beneficial to the community is to be denied the status of a charitable body by reason that its work consists in large part of providing services to the community at the expense of the Commonwealth Government as part of the National Health Care Scheme. The Division contends that the fact of Commonwealth Government funding and specification of the services which it provides is simply not to the point. The hearing of the application has been treated as the hearing of the appeal.

Question of Law?

3. The Commissioner contends that the question of whether the Division is a charitable body is simply a question of fact. The Commissioner submits that the judgment of Phillips JA In S v Crimes Compensation Commission[2] [1998] 1 VR 83 at 89 is authority for that view. The Commissioner says it follows that there is no basis for an appeal. I do not accept that view.

4. The question in S v Crimes Compensation Commission was whether a claimant for compensation under s. 16 of the Criminal Injuries Compensation Act 1983 satisfied the relevant statutory description. That description was ``victim'' and ``victim'' was defined in words, used in their ordinary sense, as a ``person... injured by the criminal act of another person''. Phillips JA held that the question of whether the claimant's particular circumstances satisfied that description was essentially a question of fact. His Honour did not hold that the question of whether a body comes within a particular statutory description is always a question of fact.

5. When a statute uses words according to their ordinary meaning and it is reasonably open to hold that the facts of the case fall within those words, the question of whether they do or do not is ordinarily a question of fact.[3] Collector of Customs v Pozzolanic (1993) 43 FCR 280 at 289 ; Collector of Customs v Agfa-Gavaert Limited 96 ATC 5240 at 5244; (1995-1996) 186 CLR 389 at 395 That is the sort of question with which Phillips JA was concerned in S v Crimes Compensation Tribunal and, with respect, that is why his Honour described the question as he did. But it is different when a statutory description is in terms that are not used in their ordinary meaning. A long line of revenue cases shows that the question of whether something or someone comes within such a description involves a question of law.[4] See, for example, Hayes v FC of T (1956) 11 ATD 68 at 70; (1956) 96 CLR 47 at 51 ; the cases collected by and the observations of Hill J in FC of T v JD Roberts 92 ATC 4380 at 4384-4385; (1992) 37 FCR 246 at 252 ; Royal Australasian College of Surgeons v FC of T (1943) 7 ATD 289 at 297; (1943) 68 CLR 436 at 448 , per Starke J; Alice Springs Town Council v Mpweteyerre Aboriginal Corporation (1997) 115 NTR 25 at 32 per Mildren J That is the case under s. 10(1)(bb) of the Pay-roll Tax. It is directed to charitable institutions in the legal sense of that term and that is different to the sense in which the idea of charity is generally understood. The question of whether the Division is a charitable institution within the meaning of s. 10(1)(bb) of the Act involves a question of law and in my opinion it is one of general or public importance in the sense which is relevant to appeal.[5] Secretary to Department of Premier and Cabinet v Hulls [1999] 3 VR 331

The Tribunal's Reasons

6. In the opinion of the Tribunal, the evidence established that:

``The Division is a non profit company limited by guarantee comprised of primary and associate members. General Membership is available to any general practitioner practising in the Central Bayside area who supports the objects of the


ATC 4837

company and associated membership is available to any other person who supports the objects of the company. Membership is free and none of the members stand to gain anything in the winding up of the Division...''

and that:

``... the applicant company is plainly one that exists for purposes beneficial to the community. Its ultimate object is to improve the delivery of health care. It is just not open to the Tribunal to find, either by reference to the constituent documents of the applicant, or by reference to what it does, that its main purpose is to protect and advance the interests of its members. To the extent that GPs who are member of the Division derive benefits from that membership, I do not think there is any basis for suggesting that any such benefits are other than ancillary or incidental to the fulfilment of the object of the applicant company.''

but that:

``... the services provided by the (Division) by itself and its members are provided in substance at the expense of the Federal Government and, most importantly, as an integrated part of a scheme of national health management presided over by the Federal Government... it is not just an ally of government but an essential part of it... an organisation (which is)... an integrated part of a national scheme regulated by the Federal Government to provide for the delivery of health care...''

with the result that:

``the (Division) is too close to being an arm of government or a part of bureaucracy... to be an organisation whose objects come within the concept of charity revealed by the Preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth.''

7. As can be seen, the principal features of the Tribunal's reasons are a finding that the Division exists for purposes beneficial to the community and the conclusion that the degree of government involvement is such as to deprive the Division of a charitable status to which otherwise it might be entitled. I propose to deal with each of those matters separately.

(i) Purposes beneficial to the community

8. The Commissioner does not dispute that it was open to the Tribunal to hold that the Division is one that exists for purposes beneficial to the community and that it is not its main purpose to protect and advance the interests of its members. Accordingly, I approach the application for leave to appeal on that basis. I may say, however, that it is not immediately apparent to me why the concession was made.

9. The objects of the Division stated in its Constitution, are:

``(a) improving communication between general practitioners and other areas of the health care system;

(b) more effectively integrating general practice with other elements of the health care system;

(c) enabling general practitioners to contribute to health planning;

(d) providing better access to available and appropriate general practitioner services for patients, and reducing inappropriate duplication of services;

(e) meeting the special (and localised) health needs of groups (such as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and those with non- English speaking backgrounds) and people with chronic conditions, particularly where these needs are not adequately addressed by the current health system;

(f) advancing general practice, and the health and well-being of general practitioners;

(g) enhancing educational and professional development opportunities for general practitioners and undergraduates;

(h) increasing general practitioner focus on illness prevention and health promotion; and

(i) improving the effectiveness and efficiency of health services at the local level.''

10. According, however, to the Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care publication, General Practice in Australia: 2000, which was in evidence before the Tribunal:

11. Rogers and Veale's observations about the funding of services to GPs as compared to the provision of services to patients appear also to accord with the way in which the Division has focused its activities and hence spent its funding. As appears in the Division's 2002 Annual Activity Report, which was also in evidence before the Tribunal:

12. A similar impression is conveyed by the Core Funding Agreement between the Division and the Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care, which was also in evidence before the Tribunal, and which provides for the Division to conduct the Programs of Activity described in the Division's extended Strategic Plan for the period to which the agreement relates, and in accordance with annual business plans to be submitted to and approved by the Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care. The Agreement has the effect that all of those programs are funded by the Department on an ``outcomes basis'' to a level determined each year in accordance with activities undertaken. In the result, the Division derives virtually the whole of its revenue under the Core Funding Agreement and other specific government grants of the kind mentioned in the Division's 2002 Annual Report. In an affidavit sworn by Steve Sant, who is the chief executive officer of the Division, it was explained that in the year of income ended 30 June 2002 the total income of the Division was $1,087,813 of which $1,006,997 or 92.6% came from grants and of that 43% came from outcomes based funding with the remainder from specific project grants.

13. Based upon that information, my impression of the Division is one of an organisation of which the activities are directed principally to serve the interests of its membership, by the provision of continuing professional education and specialist development, accreditation resources and practice development with a particular emphasis on information management and technology development, albeit with the result of thereby developing and enhancing the standard of patient care provided by members. I have difficulty equating that sort of organisation to a charitable body.

14. No doubt a non-profit body which has as its principal object the care of the sick may readily be conceived of as a charitable body. Equally, a body which exists for the promotion of medical science[15] Using that term in the broadest sense that conventional medicine would allow. may be regarded as a charitable body[16] See, for example, In re Royal College of Surgeons of England [1899] 1 QB 871 at 883 even if a consequence of its activities is that its membership will benefit.[17] Commrs of Inland Revenue v Forrest (1890) 15 QBD 334 at p. 351 and 354 But on one view of the facts - and it is a view which is expressed in the Division's annual report - the provision of services to GPs is the key role of the Division; its program and project activities also involve provision of services to ``our members''; and a significant aspect of its activities is comprised of an accreditation program designed to enable members ``to fulfil requirements for practice incentive payments''. On that basis, it appears to me at least arguable that the Division is not a charitable body, because in some substantial part it exits to promote the interests of its membership.[18] cf. Society of Writers to the Signet v Commrs of Inland Revenue 14 Court Sess. Cas. 4th Series, 34; Reg v Institution of Civil Engineers 5 QBD 48; NZ Society of Accountants v Commr of Inland Revenue [1986] NZLR 147 (CA) at 156-157, per Somers J

(ii) Arm of Government

15. I turn, however, to the question of whether the Tribunal erred in the view that the Division is so much akin to an arm of government as to be beyond the concept of a charity. According to the Tribunal's reasons for decision, the considerations which led to that conclusion were:

``- As it presently stands, the applicant is an association of GPs designed to deliver improvements to their practice. I agree that the co-operative analogy in not complete, but the comparison is I think instructive.

- The GPs do in the ordinary course provide their services for a fee.

- The services provided by the applicant are intended for the general community and not the needy part of it.

- The applicant is, as we have seen, almost totally dependent on the government for funding.

- The applicant is not just part of a scheme of regulation by government but it is part of a national scheme - all of Australia is, I was told, covered by a (d)ivision like this. It was I think for this reason that Mr Sant said


ATC 4842

that they were at risk of being seen as an arm of government.

The evidence on this issue was thin and it did not feature much in submissions, but the proposition the applicant has to face is that it is not just an ally of government but an essential part of it. It is one thing for the Salvation Army to be an integral part of our provision for the relief of poverty; it is another thing for an organisation to be an integrated part of a nation al scheme regulated by the Federal Government to provide for the delivery of health care. The issue is one of degree but n my view the applicant is too close to being an arm of government... to be an organisation whose objects come within the concept of charity revealed by the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth.''

16. The Division attacks that reasoning as an unwarranted application to the law of charitable bodies of notions of government participation which are concerned with the different and only distantly by related question of whether an organisation qualifies as a public benevolent institution. It argues that the conception of public benevolent bodies is considerably narrower than that of charitable bodies[19] Perpetual Trustee Co v FC of T (1931) 45 CLR 224 at 231-234 and that whatever may be the significance of governmental involvement to the question of whether an organisation qualifies as one of the former, it is of no significance to the question of whether the Division qualifies as one of the latter. The Division says that in the law as it relates to charitable bodies it is clear that the source of an organisation's funds is irrelevant to the organisation's status as a charitable body[20] Robinson v Stuart (1891) 12 LR (NSW) Eq 47, 49-50; Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd v Shelley (1921) 21 SR 426 at 441; Jacobs, Law of Trusts in Australia , 6th Ed at [1004] and that there is nothing in authority or logic which dictates that some governmental involvement in the affairs of an organisation should deprive it of the status of a charitable body to which otherwise it may be entitled.[21] Northern Land Council v Commr of Taxes (NT) 2002 ATC 5117 at 5122 [24]; [2002] NTCA 11 at [24] The Division submits that the only question of relevance is whether the body exists for purposes which are within the spirit and intendment of the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth,[22] Incorporated Council of Law Reporting (Qld) v FC of T 71 ATC 4206 at 4210; (1967-1971) 125 CLR 659 at 666-667 ; Brisbane City Council v Attorney General [1979] AC 411 (PC) at 422 and it is contends that the purposes of the Division are plainly within that description.

17. The conception of a public benevolent body is certainly narrower than the idea of a charitable body.[23] Chesterman v FC of T [1926] AC 128(PC) at 132; Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd v FC of T supra; Ambulance Service of New South Wales v DFC of T 2002 ATC 4681 ; [2002] FCA 1023 ; 50 ATR 496 at 487-500 ; aff'd on appeal 2003 ATC 4674 ; [2003] FCAFC 161 It accords with modern notions of public charity and hence, as it was put by Allsop J at first instance in the Ambulance Service case:[24] 2002 ATC at 4689; 50 ATR at 505

``... the benevolent or charitable element of the phrase is for the relief of suffering or misery. This characteristic of a 'benevolent institution' is likely to evoke sympathy, and, concomitantly, generosity from well- disposed people. In those circumstances, the revenue exemptions, such as s 78 of the ITAA 1936,can be seen as intended to encourage such well-disposed people to give to such objects...''

18. Benevolence in this sense ``... carries with it the idea of benevolence towards persons in need of benevolence however manifested. Benevolence in this sense... (is) quite a different concept from benevolence exercised at large and for the benefit of the community as a whole even if such benevolence results in relief of or reduction in poverty and distress.''[25] Australian Council of Social Services Inc & Anor v Commr of Pay-roll Tax (NSW) 85 ATC 4235 at 4242; (1985) 1 NSWLR 567 at 575 It imports an underlying conception of charity in the sense of gratuity as a fundamental foundation, although it is not restricted to the relief of poverty. It carries with it the idea of benevolence towards persons in need of benevolence, however manifested, because the relief of suffering, distress or misfortune is also a characteristic of a benevolent institution.[26] Commr of Pay-roll Tax (Vic) v Cairnmiller Institute 92 ATC 4307 at 4309; [1992] VR 706 at 709 It involves notions of kindness or the rendering of assistance voluntarily to those who, for one reason or another, are in need of help and who cannot help themselves.[27] Mines Rescue Board (NSW) v FC of T 2000 ATC 4580 at 4584; (2000) 101 FCR 91 at 95 , per Hely J; aff'd on appeal 2000 ATC 4191 ; (2000) 101 FCR 279; Ambulance Service of New South Wales v DFC of T , supra at ATC at 4695 [61]; FCA [61] And in those respects it is quite different to the concept of benevolence exercised at large and for the benefit of the community as a whole, even if such benevolence results in relief of or reduction in poverty and distress.[28] ACOSS Case supra at ATC at 4242; NSWLR 575

19. Because that is so it has been held in a succession of cases[29] ACOSS Case ; Metropolitan Fire Brigades Board Case ; Mines Rescue Board Case ; Ambulance Service Case that a body which is constituted, funded and controlled by government and performing functions on behalf of government (which is to say functions that for many years have been regarded as the responsibility of government) is not a public benevolent body. The view which has been taken, although sometimes differently expressed, is that something is incapable of constituting a public benevolent body unless it is or is in the nature of a public charity, in the demotic sense, and that whatever may be their advantages to society generally and to individual members of society in particular, bodies which are funded and controlled by, and


ATC 4843

doing the work of government are not within that ken.[30] Compare the somewhat different formulation in the judgment of the Full Federal Court in the Ambulance Service case, 2003 ATC 4674 at 4685 [40]; [2003] FCAFC 161 at [40]

20. The Division is correct that the law applying to charitable bodies is different. It does not demand the same degree of benevolence as is required of a public benevolent institution. As explained by Barwick CJ in Incorporated Council of Law Reporting:[31] supra at p. 669

``... it must be considered whether that benefit is charitable in the Elizabethan sense. Out of certain of the instances given in the preamble to the Act of 1601 a broad concept emerges of the kind of object of public utility which will satisfy the quality of charity. Any notion that that concept is of an eleemosynary nature is seen to be untenable by some of those very instances themselves, e.g. the repair of bridges, havens, causeways, seabanks and high-ways and the setting out of soldiers. Further, these instances seem to regard the provision of some of the indispensables of a settled community as charitable. The ability to move from place to place and to do so without let of river and streams, protection of the land from the ravage of eth sea, security against enemies, are fundamentals of the society seen to be within the concept of charitable public benefit as much as assistance to the needy and as education of the generations. Consistently with the spirit and width of this concept of charity the promotion of agriculture is seen to be charitable...On occasions, a benefit of that kind to a section of the public less than the whole community by the trust or purpose may be enough: but, as I mentioned before, I am not here concerned with such a case.''

(Emphasis added)

The word ``eleemosynary'' is used in that passage in the broad sense of something calculated to relieve any sort of suffering, distress or misfortune. It is the same sense in which it tends to have been used in the public benevolent institution cases to which the judgment directs comparison. Consequently, such requirement as there may be to demonstrate benevolence in the law relating to charitable bodies is very much less demanding than in the case of public benevolent institutions.

21. The Commissioner argues that some of the observations of Dixon J in Hobart Savings Bank and Launceston Bank for Savings v FC of T lead to a different view. In that case Dixon J said that:

``The well known classification of Sir Samuel Romilly and Lord Macnaghten affords a guide but not a definition. `The method employed by the Court,' said Chitty J in In re Foveaux `is to consider the enumeration of charities in the Statute of Elizabeth, bearing in mind that the enumeration is not exhaustive. Institutions whose objects are analogous to those mentioned in the statute are admitted to be charities; and, again, institutions which are analogous to those already admitted by reported decisions are held to be charities. The pursuit of these analogies obviously requires caution and circumspection. After all, the best that can be done is to consider each case as it arises, upon its own special circumstances.' This is a safe but unenlightening conclusion. But the Courts seem now to have ventured from its dark security so far as to risk the modest generality that when, from motives which are altruistic, benevolent or philanthropic, purposes are put in execution for the benefit of the community, or of a considerable section or class, which do in fact tend to the amelioration of mind, manner or morals, or the relief of misfortune and are of a nature allowed by law and consonant with the received notions of morality, then these objects will be considered `charitable' the occasion for determining what purposes are charitable has, of course, arisen in the administration of the law of property. But once the view is adopted that the word `charitable' has itself a legal meaning there seems little difficulty in transferring it from the description of the purposes to which property is devoted, and understanding it as a description of the object for which and institution exists.''

[32] (1930) 43 CLR 364 at 374-375 (Emphasis added)

According to the Commissioner, the emphasised passage implies that the law applicable to charitable bodies imports a substantial requirement of altruism, benevolence or philanthropy, even if it is not the same as that which is applicable to public benevolent institutions.

22. I do not accept that argument. When Dixon J spoke in terms of altruism, benevolence or philanthropic motives I consider that he intended no more than an elucidation of some


ATC 4844

of the circumstances in which charity has been held to exist. To conclude otherwise requires one to ignore a number of the cases which are referred to with apparent approval in the judgment and indeed the observation made later in the judgment itself, that:

``In the end, however, that question must depend upon the nature of the purpose which, in existing conditions, such an institution serves. In the conditions which obtained in 1862 Cockburn CJ and, apparently, the other Judges, considered that they (savings banks) did not tend to the relief of social disabilities or the promotion of thrift to such a degree as the legal conception of a charity requires.''

[33] ibid at 383

23. The Commissioner also argues that the observations of Dixon J In Roman Catholic Archbishop v Lawlor[34] (1934) 51 CLR 1 at 33, citing Bowman's Case [1917] AC at 42, per Lord Parker support the existence of a requirement of benevolence. In that case the High Court divided equally on the question of whether a gift to the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne ``as a nucleus to establish a Catholic daily newspaper'' could be supported as a gift for charitable purposes. In his judgment, which was that the gift was not for a charitable purpose, Dixon J noted that religious uses or purposes, using those terms in their natural unrestricted meaning, include purposes which may or may not be charitable and thus while the prima facie rule supplies a presumption which, if no contrary intention appears in the trust instrument, operates to confine the religious purpose within the boundaries of legal charity:

```The abolition of religious tests, the disestablishment of the Church, the secularization of education, the alteration of the law touching religion or marriage, or the observation of Sabbath, are purely political objects. Equity has always refused to recognize such objects as charitable'... (thus) the object of a denomination may extend to purposes which, although pious, philanthropic, or benevolent, may not be charitable.''

24. The Commissioner submits that Dixon J's reference in that passage to purposes which are pious, philanthropic, or benevolent supports the view that the legal conception of a charitable body has as its discrimen objects of piety, philanthropy or benevolence (so that in the absence of one or the other of them a body should not be regarded as charitable) and further, at the level of principle, that that which informs the denial of charitable status to bodies established for political purposes should be seen also to result in the denial of charitable status to bodies established and funded under the aegis of government to perform functions customarily performed by government.

25. I do not accept the first part of that submission, for it seems to me that Dixon J was doing no more in Lawlor than in Hobart Bank Savings Bank than identifying some of the considerations which have led to the recognition of organisations as charitable bodies. I am, however, attracted to the second part of the submission, because I consider that the level of government involvement in a body and in the funding of its activities may be relevant to the body's status as a charity. The Commissioner's argument perhaps assumes too much as to the existence of an underlying and informing principle.[35] cf, Bradshaw, The Law of Charitable Trusts in Australia , at 28-29 But there is no absence of authority that one is to look to the decided cases and reason by analogy, albeit with caution and circumspection, to the conclusion of whether a body comes within the spirit and intendment of the Statute.[36] Hobart Bank Savings Bank Case , supra

26. In my opinion it is not opposed to logic or common sense to reason from the exclusion of political purposes from the mantle of charity to the possibility that bodies of the kind examined in the public benefit cases are also beyond the spirit and intendment of the Statute. I am to some extent confirmed in that view by the conclusion of Dean J in In re Cain[37] [1950] VLR 382 at 385 that a gift for carrying on the ordinary activities of a government department pursuant to a statute is not a gift for charitable purposes, even if the activities are such that if carried on by private persons they would be charitable. Such activities are simply part of the government of the country.

27. In Alice Springs Town Council v Mpweteyerre Aboriginal Corporation the Northern Territory Court of Appeal held that corporate bodies providing housing for Aboriginals were charities despite the fact that they were incorporated pursuant to the Aboriginal Councils and Associations Act 1976 (Cth) and despite the fact that they were indirectly funded by the Commonwealth to provide for housing health and environmental programs to relieve the poverty, sickness, destitution, distress, suffering and misfortune of Aboriginal people. Mildren J who delivered the


ATC 4845

leading judgment distinguished the Metropolitan Fire Brigades Case on the basis that it was concerned with the question of public benevolent institutions, and thus with public charity in the demotic sense, and also that the case was distinguishable:

``... on the further ground that, irrespective of the associations' sources of funds, they could not be characterised as agencies or government. In this case no ministerial control could be exercised over any of the associations, either by virtue of the Acts under which they are constituted, or by the provisions of the constitutions. The mere fact that the associations are indirectly government funded does not deprive them of the character of being charities. I do not consider that the argument that the associations are merely carrying out the functions of government can be sustained.''

[38] Supra at p. 41

28. It has been submitted that the same logic applies to the Division. Although its funding comes directly from the Commonwealth, and not via some sort of semi-government aid agency like the Aboriginal Council, the Division has control over its funding (in the sense that the Division is not obliged to apply for the grants upon which it is at present reliant) and the Commonwealth has no control over the Division's activities (except to the extent that Division chooses to agree with the Commonwealth that it will undertake programs which are approved by the Commonwealth).

29. There is some force in that submission. Despite the close connection between the Division and the Commonwealth, the constitution of the Division leaves no room to doubt that the Division is not a department or other instrumentality of government; it is in the Division's own hands as to whether it will seek government funding and thus subject itself to the requirements which condition the grant; and, come what may, the Commonwealth has no greater control over the affairs of the Division than the power of the purse.

30. It is to be remembered, however, that the question of whether an organisation is a charitable body for the purposes of s. 10(1)(bb) of the Pay-roll Tax Act is in the end as much dependent upon what the organisation does in fact as it is upon what the organisation's constituent documents permit it to do. Pay-roll tax, like income tax, is a periodic tax and therefore the exemptions for which s. 10(1) of the Pay-roll Tax Act provide are, like the exemptions for which s. 23(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Com) used to provide, concerned with the status of the taxpayer during the relevant period. Consequently, the question to be asked under s. 10(1)(bb) of the Pay-roll Tax Act is whether the Division is a charitable body during the relevant period, and in order to answer that question one must look to the main purposes of the body[39] Congregational Union of New South Wales v Thistlethwaite (1952) 87 CLR 315 at 442 ; Stratton v Simpson (1970) 125 CLR 138 at 160 during the relevant period.

31. To ascertain the main purposes in that period the material facts and circumstances which should be examined include the body's constitution, its activities, its history and its control.[40] Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club Ltd v FC of T 90 ATC 4215 at 4224-4225; (1990) 23 FCR 82 at 94-96 , per Lockhart J and at ATC 4242; FCR 115, per Beaumont J For the reasons already expressed, the practical reality of the Division's activities, history and control, in my view, is that of an organisation formed under the aegis of the Commonwealth's 1992 general practice initiative to carry out government sponsored health care programs as part of the Commonwealth national health care strategy. On that basis the Division appears plainly to be distinguishable from the Alice Springs Town Council.

32. Furthermore, the question of whether the Division is more closely to be compared to the Metropolitan Fire Brigades Board or to the Alice Springs Town Council is but one consideration among many in the determination of whether the Division's activities are within the spirit and intendment of the Statute. In the long run the question of whether a body is to be regarded as a charitable institution is a matter of judgment[41] per Barwick CJ, 125 CLR at 627 and in this country that is a question to be approached without any predisposition to the view that a body is charitable simply because it may be beneficial to the community and of general public utility.[42] Brisbane City Council v Attorney General (Q) supra at p. 422 I know of no case and none has been cited in which a body analogous to the Division has been held to be a charity.

33. Having regard to the constitution, activities, history and control of the Division, and in particular, to the extent to which the Division's activities of providing services to its members are funded and thereby controlled by the Commonwealth, I am not persuaded that the Division is sufficiently analogous to any recognised charity or is otherwise to be regarded as within the equity of the Statute.


ATC 4846

34. In the Tribunal's reasons for decision it was noted that the Tribunal had some misgivings about the conclusion that the Division was not a charitable body, and that one of the considerations which contributed to the uncertainty was that the Tribunal found it hard to see why the law should deny charitable status to an institution such as the Division while granting charitable status to an institution formed ``to deliver a product to assist lawyers''. The Tribunal supposed that members of the medical profession might see the outcome as ``just another case of the arrogance of the lawyers producing a result that would be anathema (to the common man)''.

35. I do not share the Tribunal's misgivings. The reference to the institution formed to deliver a product to assist lawyers is of course a reference to the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting Case and I venture the view that the reason why the law grants charitable status to such an institution, just as it has and may continue to grant charitable status to institutions formed to promote the study or advancement of medicine or one of its specialist branches,[43] In re Royal College of Surgeons of England supra is because such organisations are conceived to elicit information and speculation of value to the profession at large and of advantage to all who may be interested in its learning and that they thereby promote and add to the sum of human knowledge in a way which is of benefit to all society.[44] Commrs of Inland Revenue v Forrest supra at p. 351; Incorporated Council of Law Reporting at p. 669 The same is not true of institutions like the Division, no matter how beneficial they may be to society or to a significant section of it. They are in essence like law societies and bar councils, to which charitable status is denied.

36. It is of course another question whether organisations like the Division are any less deserving of the fiscal advantages of charitable status than many other organisations which have been held entitled to enjoy it. But that is not a question for the Tribunal or the court to decide. The Act prescribes a test which invokes the spirit and intendment of the Statute, and the Act must be given effect.

Conclusion

37. In my opinion, the Tribunal did not err in upholding the Commissioner's determination. I grant leave to appeal but order that the appeal be dismissed.


Footnotes

[1] Wages paid or payable ``by a charitable body (other than a school or educational institution or an instrumentality of the State) to a person during a period in respect of which the body satisfies the Commissioner that the person is engaged exclusively in work of the body of a charitable nature''.
[2] [1998] 1 VR 83 at 89
[3] Collector of Customs v Pozzolanic (1993) 43 FCR 280 at 289 ; Collector of Customs v Agfa-Gavaert Limited 96 ATC 5240 at 5244; (1995-1996) 186 CLR 389 at 395
[4] See, for example, Hayes v FC of T (1956) 11 ATD 68 at 70; (1956) 96 CLR 47 at 51 ; the cases collected by and the observations of Hill J in FC of T v JD Roberts 92 ATC 4380 at 4384-4385; (1992) 37 FCR 246 at 252 ; Royal Australasian College of Surgeons v FC of T (1943) 7 ATD 289 at 297; (1943) 68 CLR 436 at 448 , per Starke J; Alice Springs Town Council v Mpweteyerre Aboriginal Corporation (1997) 115 NTR 25 at 32 per Mildren J
[5] Secretary to Department of Premier and Cabinet v Hulls [1999] 3 VR 331
[6] Report at p. 12
[7] ibid at p. 13
[8] ibid at p. 14
[9] ibid at p. 16
[10] ibid at p. 17
[11] ibid at p. 18
[12] ibid at p. 19
[13] ibid at p. 20
[14] ibid at p. 21
[15] Using that term in the broadest sense that conventional medicine would allow.
[16] See, for example, In re Royal College of Surgeons of England [1899] 1 QB 871 at 883
[17] Commrs of Inland Revenue v Forrest (1890) 15 QBD 334 at p. 351 and 354
[18] cf. Society of Writers to the Signet v Commrs of Inland Revenue 14 Court Sess. Cas. 4th Series, 34; Reg v Institution of Civil Engineers 5 QBD 48; NZ Society of Accountants v Commr of Inland Revenue [1986] NZLR 147 (CA) at 156-157, per Somers J
[19] Perpetual Trustee Co v FC of T (1931) 45 CLR 224 at 231-234
[20] Robinson v Stuart (1891) 12 LR (NSW) Eq 47, 49-50; Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd v Shelley (1921) 21 SR 426 at 441; Jacobs, Law of Trusts in Australia , 6th Ed at [1004]
[21] Northern Land Council v Commr of Taxes (NT) 2002 ATC 5117 at 5122 [24]; [2002] NTCA 11 at [24]
[22] Incorporated Council of Law Reporting (Qld) v FC of T 71 ATC 4206 at 4210; (1967-1971) 125 CLR 659 at 666-667 ; Brisbane City Council v Attorney General [1979] AC 411 (PC) at 422
[23] Chesterman v FC of T [1926] AC 128(PC) at 132; Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd v FC of T supra; Ambulance Service of New South Wales v DFC of T 2002 ATC 4681 ; [2002] FCA 1023 ; 50 ATR 496 at 487-500 ; aff'd on appeal 2003 ATC 4674 ; [2003] FCAFC 161
[24] 2002 ATC at 4689; 50 ATR at 505
[25] Australian Council of Social Services Inc & Anor v Commr of Pay-roll Tax (NSW) 85 ATC 4235 at 4242; (1985) 1 NSWLR 567 at 575
[26] Commr of Pay-roll Tax (Vic) v Cairnmiller Institute 92 ATC 4307 at 4309; [1992] VR 706 at 709
[27] Mines Rescue Board (NSW) v FC of T 2000 ATC 4580 at 4584; (2000) 101 FCR 91 at 95 , per Hely J; aff'd on appeal 2000 ATC 4191 ; (2000) 101 FCR 279; Ambulance Service of New South Wales v DFC of T , supra at ATC at 4695 [61]; FCA [61]
[28] ACOSS Case supra at ATC at 4242; NSWLR 575
[29] ACOSS Case ; Metropolitan Fire Brigades Board Case ; Mines Rescue Board Case ; Ambulance Service Case
[30] Compare the somewhat different formulation in the judgment of the Full Federal Court in the Ambulance Service case, 2003 ATC 4674 at 4685 [40]; [2003] FCAFC 161 at [40]
[31] supra at p. 669
[32] (1930) 43 CLR 364 at 374-375
[33] ibid at 383
[34] (1934) 51 CLR 1 at 33, citing Bowman's Case [1917] AC at 42, per Lord Parker
[35] cf, Bradshaw, The Law of Charitable Trusts in Australia , at 28-29
[36] Hobart Bank Savings Bank Case , supra
[37] [1950] VLR 382 at 385
[38] Supra at p. 41
[39] Congregational Union of New South Wales v Thistlethwaite (1952) 87 CLR 315 at 442 ; Stratton v Simpson (1970) 125 CLR 138 at 160
[40] Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club Ltd v FC of T 90 ATC 4215 at 4224-4225; (1990) 23 FCR 82 at 94-96 , per Lockhart J and at ATC 4242; FCR 115, per Beaumont J
[41] per Barwick CJ, 125 CLR at 627
[42] Brisbane City Council v Attorney General (Q) supra at p. 422
[43] In re Royal College of Surgeons of England supra
[44] Commrs of Inland Revenue v Forrest supra at p. 351; Incorporated Council of Law Reporting at p. 669

 

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