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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1012768409401

Ruling

Subject: Non-arm's length income

Question

Will income derived by a complying superannuation fund (the Fund) from an asset acquired for the benefit of the Fund under an arrangement, including the limited recourse borrowing arrangement (LRBA) described in this ruling, be considered non-arm's length income of the Fund pursuant to subsection 295- 550(5) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)?

Answer

Yes.

This ruling applies for the following period

Income year ending 30 June 2015

The scheme commenced on

1 July 2014

Relevant facts and circumstances

The Fund is a 'complying superannuation fund' as that term is defined in the ITAA 1997 by reference to section 45 of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SISA).

The Fund has two members (the Members) who are over 65 years of age.

The directors of the trustee of the Fund (the Fund Trustee) are the Members.

The Members own a commercial real property (the Property) and propose to grant a legal life interest in the Property to the Fund for a specific period of time that is measured by the life interest factors of both Members jointly.

The value of the life interest has been calculated in accordance with the life interest factors for the Members.

The Fund Trustee intends to borrow money to acquire the life interest (the Asset) for the benefit of the Fund under an LRBA.

The lenders (the Lenders) will be the Members.

A trust (the Holding Trust) will be established and a private company (the Holding Trustee) will be incorporated to hold the Asset on trust for the Fund Trustee.

The draft deed of the Holding Trust provides that:

    • The Holding Trustee will obtain legal title in, and become the registered owner of, the Asset.

    • The Holding Trustee will hold the Asset on trust for the Fund Trustee

    • The Fund Trustee will have a beneficial interest in the Asset and will be absolutely entitled to the Asset.

The loan agreement (the Loan Agreement) made between the Lenders and the Fund Trustee includes the following key features:

    • Interest rate at a rate advertised by a financial institution

    • The loan amount is 70% loan value ratio of the life interest with the balance to be contributed by the Members by way of contributions.

    • The loan is a principal and interest loan over 25 years.

    • The Fund will provide a mortgage over the life interest in the Property to the Lender.

    • The Members will also provide a mortgage over the remainder interest to the Lender.

    • The Members are also prepared to provide a Deed of Consent and Postponement for the remainder interest to be mortgaged and postponed in favour of the Lender.

No personal guarantees or other security are given to the Lenders in relation to repayment of the loan.

The draft mortgage document records the description of the Property. This document states that the Custodian mortgages to the Lenders all of its estate and interest in the Property. The Custodian's only interest in this property is the life interest as created by the Deed Granting Life Estate.

Relevant legislative provisions

Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 Section 273

Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 Former subsection 273(7)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 Former paragraph 273(7)(a)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 Former paragraph 273(7)(b)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 295-545

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 295-545(1)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 295-545(2)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 295-550

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 295-550(1)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsections 295-550(4)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsections 295-550(5)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Paragraph 295-550(5)(a)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Paragraph 295-550(5)(b)

Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 Subsection 995-1(1)

Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993  Section 45

Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993  Section 67A

Taxation Administration Act 1953  Section 357-85 of Schedule 1

Reasons for decision

Summary

Any ordinary or statutory income derived by the Fund as beneficiary of the Holding Trust will be non-arm's length income of the Fund.

Detailed reasoning

Section 295-545 of the ITAA 1997 provides that the taxable income of a complying superannuation fund is split into a non-arm's length component and a low tax rate component. The note to subsection 295-545(1) of the ITAA 1997 explains that a concessional rate of tax applies to the low tax component of the complying superannuation fund's taxable income, while the non-arm's length component is taxed at the highest marginal rate.

According to subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997, the phrase 'non-arm's length component' has the meaning given by section 295-545 of the ITAA 1997. Subsection 295-545(2) of the ITAA 1997 provides that the non-arm's length component for an income year is the entity's non-arm's length income for that year less any deductions to the extent that they are attributable to that income. According to subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997, the phrase 'non-arm's length income' has the meaning given by section 295-550 of the ITAA 1997.

There are various subsections in section 295-550 of the ITAA 1997 under which amounts of ordinary income or statutory income of a complying superannuation fund are non-arm's length income of that fund. Subsections 295-550(4) and (5) of the ITAA 1997 specifically apply to such amounts derived as a beneficiary of a trust.

Subsection 295-550(4) of the ITAA 1997 provides that income derived by the entity as a beneficiary of a trust, other than because of holding a fixed entitlement to the income, is non-arm's length income of the entity.

Subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997 states:

Other income *derived by the entity as a beneficiary of a trust through holding a fixed entitlement to the income of the trust is non-arm's length income of the entity if:

(a) the entity acquired the entitlement under a *scheme, or the income was derived under a scheme, the parties to which were not dealing with each other at *arm's length; and

(b) the amount of the income is more than the amount that the entity might have been expected to derive if those parties had been dealing with each other at arm's length.

Income derived as a beneficiary of a trust

Subsections 295-550(4) and (5) of the ITAA 1997 are relevant to the present case (and not subsection 295-550(1) of the ITAA 1997, which does not apply to amounts derived by a complying superannuation fund in the capacity of beneficiary of a trust) in relation to amounts included in the assessable income of the Fund that are sourced from the Fund Trustee's entitlement as the beneficiary of a trust. Such amounts are, for the purposes of those subsections, 'income derived by the [Fund] as a beneficiary of a trust.' (Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416; SSCASP Holdings Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2013) 211 FCR 332).

Fixed entitlement to income derived as a beneficiary of a trust

In paragraph 102 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/7 Income tax: special income derived by a complying superannuation fund, complying approved deposit fund or pooled superannuation trust in relation to a year of income (TR 2006/7), the Commissioner sets out his view that a complying superannuation fund has a fixed entitlement to a trust distribution 'if the entity's entitlement to the distribution does not depend upon the exercise of the trustee's or any other person's discretion'.

Although that ruling is primarily concerned with the former section 273 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936) - the immediate predecessor of section 295-550 of the ITAA 1997 -it is also taken to be a ruling about section 295-550 of the ITAA 1997 to the extent that it addresses issues in section 295-550 that are the same as were in the former section 273: see paragraphs 1A and 1C of that ruling, and section 357-85 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 which provides that a ruling about a relevant provision (the 'old' provision) that is re-enacted or remade (the 'new' provision) is taken also to be a ruling about the new provision in so far as the new provision expresses the same ideas as the old provision. Indeed, the Commissioner has confirmed in his decision impact statement for The Trustee for the MH Ghali Superannuation Fund and Commissioner of Taxation [2012] AATA 527 that he will continue to apply the view expressed in paragraph 102 of TR 2006/7 for the purposes of subsections 295-550(4) and (5) of the ITAA 1997.

It is clear from the draft Holding Trust deed that the Fund's entitlement to the income of the Holding Trust as the beneficiary of that trust does not depend upon the exercise of the Holding Trustee's, or any other person's, discretion. Accordingly, it is the Commissioner's view that the Fund will derive ordinary or statutory income as a beneficiary of the Holding Trust through the holding of a fixed entitlement to the income of that trust.

Therefore, it is subsection 295-550(5), rather than subsection 295-550(4), of the ITAA 1997 that is to be considered further in the present case. If that view is wrong and instead the Fund derives ordinary or statutory income as a beneficiary of the Holding Trust, other than because of holding a fixed entitlement to the income of that trust, then that income will be non-arm's length income of the Fund pursuant to subsection 295-550(4) of the ITAA 1997.

Scheme

For subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997 to apply, there must be a scheme under which the Fund acquired its fixed entitlement to the income of a trust or under which an amount or amounts of ordinary or statutory income derived by the Fund as a beneficiary of a trust was or were so derived. The term 'scheme' is defined in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 to mean:

(a) any *arrangement; or

(b) any scheme, plan, proposal, action, course of action or course of conduct, whether unilateral or otherwise.

The term 'arrangement' is also defined in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 to mean:

'any arrangement, agreement, understanding, promise or undertaking, whether expressed or implied, and whether or not enforceable (or intended to be enforceable) by legal proceedings'.

The Full Federal Court in Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416 considered the term 'arrangement' as defined for the purposes of former subsection 273(7) of the ITAA 1936 - the immediate predecessor of subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997. That term was defined in the ITAA 1936 in terms almost identical to a combination of the definitions of 'scheme' and 'arrangement' in the ITAA 1997. The court held, at 433-434, that the series of steps undertaken by Mr Allen in directing the trustees of several trusts (including the superannuation fund) led to the results that the superannuation fund received both a fixed interest in the relevant trust estate and the relevant distribution of income from that trust estate. The court also held that each result (that is, the fund's acquisition of its interest in the relevant trust estate and its derivation of income as a beneficiary of that trust) were readily seen to be the consequence of an 'arrangement' to which the various trustees were parties. Further, the court said that was 'clearly so, given that the creation of the structure and the flow of funds was orchestrated in conformity with the legal advice obtained by the taxpayers'.

The Full Federal Court's approach shows that, for the purposes of subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997, the scheme may be identified as including the circumstances under which the Fund:

    • acquired its fixed entitlement to the income of a trust; and/or

    • derived an amount or amounts of ordinary or statutory income as a beneficiary of the trust through holding that entitlement.

Similarly, for the purposes of applying subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997 in the present case, the scheme may be identified as involving the series of steps to be undertaken to give effect to the LRBA in conformity with the requirements of section 67A of the SISA. The scheme includes the establishment and operation of the loan and the Holding Trust. Those steps will result in the Fund acquiring its entitlement to the income of the Holding Trust through which entitlement the Fund will derive ordinary or statutory income as the beneficiary of that trust. Those results are readily seen to be the consequences of the scheme.

As such, it is readily concluded that, for the purposes of paragraph 295-550(5)(a) of the ITAA 1997, the Fund will acquire its fixed entitlement to the income of the Holding Trust under a scheme, and the ordinary or statutory income derived as the beneficiary of the Holding Trust through holding that entitlement will be derived under a scheme.

Parties to scheme not dealing at arm's length

The Commissioner considers that in the present case the parties are not dealing with each other at arm's length in relation to the scheme.

The definition of 'arm's length' in subsection 995-1(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 circumstances.

In Federal Commissioner of Taxation v AXA Asia Pacific Holdings Ltd (2010) 189 FCR 204 at 213 (AXA) Dowsett J summarised propositions which emerge from the numerous cases in which the expression 'not dealing with each other at arm's length' or similar expressions have been considered, as follows:

    • in determining whether parties have dealt with each other at arm's length in a particular transaction, one may have regard to the relationship between them;

    • one must also examine the circumstances of the transaction and the context in which it occurred;

    • one should do so with a view to determining whether or not the parties have conducted the transaction in a way which one would expect of parties dealing at arm's length in such a transaction;

    • relevant factors which may emerge include existing mutual duties, liabilities, obligations, cross-ownership of assets, or identity of interests which might enable either party to influence or control the other, or induce either party to serve a common interest and so modify the terms on which strangers would deal;

    • where the parties are not in an arm's length relationship, one may infer that they did not deal with each other at arm's length, and that the resultant transaction is not at arm's length;

    • however related parties may, in some circumstances, so conduct a dealing as to displace any inference based on the relationship;

    • unrelated parties may, on occasions, deal with each other in such a way that the resultant transaction may not properly be considered to be at arm's length.

In that case Edmonds and Gordon JJ, who did not disapprove of Dowsett J's summary of those propositions, further stated at 231 that:

Any assessment of whether parties were dealing at arm's length involves 'an assessment [of] whether in respect of that dealing they dealt with each other as arm's length parties would normally do, so that the outcome of their dealing is a matter of real bargaining': …

Further, the Full Federal Court in Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416 at 434 held that former paragraph 273(7)(a) of the ITAA 1936 - the immediate predecessor of paragraph 295-550(5)(a) - does not require that the 'dealing' consist only of the actual derivation of the income in question by 'the entity', but that the evident legislative intention of the provisions is to permit regard to be had to the totality of the steps that result in the entity's acquisition of its fixed entitlement to income as beneficiary of a trust and any derivation of ordinary or statutory income by the entity through holding that entitlement.

In this case that means that regard may be had to the establishment and operation of the LRBA (which includes the establishment and operation of the loan and the Holding Trust of which the Fund is the beneficiary).

It is clear that the parties in this case are not in an arm's length relationship. This is because the two individuals involved are:

    • the only members of the Fund;

    • the directors of the Fund Trustee (the borrower); and

    • the Lenders.

But have the parties, in respect of that dealing, dealt with each other as arm's length parties would do, so that the outcome of their dealing is a matter of real bargaining (or put another way, has the inference of non-arm's length dealing between non-arm's length parties that Dowsett J spoke about in AXA has been displaced)?

Assessing the circumstances holistically, the Commissioner considers that the parties are not dealing with each other in relation to the scheme as arm's length parties would do. Aspects which, taken together, the Commissioner considers lead to that conclusion include:

    • The loan term is 25 years. This is a significant period, in particular with reference to the respective ages of the directors of the Fund Trustee/members of the Fund.

    • The acquirable asset is a life estate interest in real property for the joint lives of the Members. In the event that there is a default on the loan due to the Members' deaths, the lender has recourse to nothing as the life interest comes to an end and the right to possession of the property would revert to the estate of the last survivor. In addition, a life tenant cannot create an interest that will exist after the life estate terminates; therefore any mortgage of the life estate would be cancelled upon termination of the life estate. An arm's length lender would not enter into a limited recourse loan over such an asset.

    • Mortgages are intended to help mitigate the lenders risk - in particular another mortgage over a different property (in this case the real property as opposed to the life interest) is meant to ensure that there are additional assets for the lender to access in the event of default.  As the asset being mortgaged (the real property) is the Lenders' own asset this in no way addresses the risk of default - the Lenders are not being granted a charge over anything they do not already own and therefore, in no way addresses the risk of lending the said sum of money.

Based on the above, the Commissioner considers that the requirements of paragraph 295-550(5)(a) of the ITAA 1997 are satisfied.

Amount of income greater than might be expected if dealing at arm's length

The final requirement of subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997, which is set out in paragraph 295-550(5)(b), is that the amount of the ordinary or statutory income (derived by the entity as a beneficiary of a trust through holding a fixed entitlement to the income of the trust) is more than the amount that the entity might have been expected to derive if the parties had been dealing with each other at arm's length.

The Full Federal Court in Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416 at 429 observed, in relation to former paragraph 273(7)(b) of the ITAA 1936 - the immediate predecessor of paragraph 295-550(5)(b) of the ITAA 1997 - that this requires a comparison between a hypothetical arm's length dealing and what actually occurred. The Court also explained at the same page that the 'hypothetical situation' that the 'actual dealing' is to be compared with is that which 'might have been expected to apply if the parties to the arrangement had been dealing at arm's length.'

If the parties to the scheme in this case were dealing with each other at arm's length, the amount of ordinary or statutory income the Fund might be expected to derive as beneficiary of the Holding Trust is nil. It might be expected that an arm's length lender would not lend any capital for the acquisition of this asset on the loan terms that form part of the scheme. Without that loan it might be expected that there would be no investment in the asset through the Holding Trust and so no ordinary or statutory income might be expected to be derived by the Fund as beneficiary of the Holding Trust.

It is no answer to this conclusion to say that the Fund Trustee could have obtained a loan from an arm's length lender on different terms or that the Fund Trustee could have used other means by which to acquire the Asset, as that is not the scheme into which the parties have entered. The comparison contemplated by paragraph 295-550(5)(b) of the ITAA 1997, as explained by the Full Federal Court in Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416, is made between what actually occurred as part of the scheme and what might be expected to have occurred if the parties to the scheme had been dealing with each other at arm's length in relation to the scheme.

The conclusion in this case is analogous to the conclusion of the Full Federal Court in Allen v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2011) 195 FCR 416 at 429 that 'It requires little imagination to see that if the parties to the movement of funds in this case had been at arm's length, there would have been no distribution at all to the Super Fund.'

The Commissioner considers that the final requirement of subsection 295-550(5) of the ITAA 1997 is satisfied. Therefore, any ordinary or statutory income derived by the Fund as beneficiary of the Holding Trust will be non-arm's length income of the Fund.