CASE Z6

Members:
P Gerber DP

Tribunal:
Administrative Appeals Tribunal

Decision date: 2 January 1992

Dr P Gerber (Deputy President)

This application involves the review of the decision by the respondent to disallow the applicant's objection against a Notice of Assessment issued on 12 March 1990 in respect of the year ended 30 June 1989.

2. The issues, as I see them, are as follows:

3. The hearing proceeded on the following Statement of Agreed Facts:

4. During argument, it was common ground that the applicant's eligible taxable income was nil for each of the years ending 30 June 1985-1988.

5. I will deal with each of the issues seriatim:

6. Division 16A of the Act was inserted by Act No. 138 of 1987 and applies to the 1986/87 and all subsequent years of income.

7. Sections 158K(1)-(4) of the Act provide:

8. Section 158D is headed, ```YEAR OF INCOME' INCLUDES A PRE- COMMENCEMENT YEAR OF INCOME'', and provides:

``A reference in this Division to a year of income includes a reference to a year of income that commenced before the commencement of this Division.''

9. The applicant submits that the wording of sec 158D is clear and unambiguous and that it is therefore open to him to treat as his first year of income a year of income prior to the commencement of Division 16A in its present form.

10. The respondent, on the other hand, submits that sec 158D, when read with sec 158K, only enables reference to be had to the four years of income immediately preceding the year of income ended 30 June 1987, that is, the years of income ended 30 June 1983-1986. Mr Gibb of learned Counsel for the respondent submitted that when one has regard to the structure of the Division as a whole, it is clear that sec 158D is merely directed to the fact that the income averaging arrangements under this new Division 16A first apply to assessments for the 1986/87 year of income. If it were not there, then, so he submitted, it would not be permissible to calculate average income for Division 16A purposes based on the income of the previous four years. So that looking at sec 158D as a section in a Division of this character, having of necessity a starting point to be applied, the section merely facilitates that process. He derived further support for that proposition from the terms of secs 158K(3) and (4), that is, that the terms of those sections indicated that averaging in a given year of income was based on the eligible taxable incomes of up to the four years of income immediately preceding that given year of income.

11. Mr Gibb further submitted that the entire structure of those two sections indicated that the Division was intended to operate by creating for each year of income for which it was sought to invoke the averaging provisions, an averaging ``series'' of up to the four immediately preceding years, so that there would be one ``first year of income'' for each of these ``series''. Thus, the expression ``the first year of income'' was said not to be inconsistent with the view that there can be more than one ``first year of income'' in respect of any taxpayer, and that the expression ``the first year of income'' did not support the applicant's submission that the use of such an expression indicated that there is only one ``first year of income'', which, of course, could be many years prior to the income year now in dispute.

12. With the utmost respect to Mr Gibb, his ``Group Theory'' leaves me unpersuaded, if only because the inclusion of secs 158K(3)(e) and (4)(e) seem to me to be contrary to a ``series'' interpretation of secs 158K(3) and (4) but rather suggest a continuous working life of ``years of income'', with only one ``first year of income'' rather than a whole series or groups of years of income, each with its own ``first year of income''.

13. Whilst the new provisions, designed to relieve the burden which would otherwise have been imposed on artists, composers, etc could have been expressed with greater clarity, I am satisfied that for the purposes of Division 16A of the Act, a taxpayer's ``first year of income'' may indeed be earlier than four years prior to the commencement of the Division, that is, earlier than 1983. In short, it needs more than Mr Gibb's plausibility to persuade me to depart from the plain meaning of the words used. Had Parliament intended to apply Mr Gibb's Group Theory, it would not have been beyond the wit of the Parliamentary draftsman to so express it.

14. In order to determine under which of sec 158K(3) or sec 158K(4) the applicant's average eligible taxable income for the 1989 year of income should be calculated, it is necessary to determine whether or not the applicant was an original non-resident taxpayer as defined in sec 158K(2). Thus, central to the resolution of the issue before me is the determination of the applicant's first year of income , i.e. the first year of income in which he was a qualifying


ATC 131

resident taxpayer
and his eligible taxable income exceeded $2,500. Section 158E provides:

``For the purposes of this Division, a taxpayer is a qualifying resident taxpayer in relation to a year of income if, and only if, the taxpayer is a resident at any time during the year of income.''

15. Since the agreed facts go no further than to state ``that the applicant became a resident of Australia not later than during the year of income ended 30 June 1973'', it is not possible for me to determine the applicant's first year of income. This casus omissus is therefore remitted back to the parties in the hope that, if they accept the above exposition of the law as correct, the tax question can be satisfactorily resolved. I give the parties Liberty to Apply should that hope prove abortive.


 

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