Disclaimer This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication.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. You cannot rely on this record in your tax affairs. It is not binding and provides you with no protection (including from any underpaid tax, penalty or interest). In addition, this record is not an authority for the purposes of establishing a reasonably arguable position for you to apply to your own circumstances. For more information on the status of edited versions of private advice and reasons we publish them, see PS LA 2008/4. |
Edited version of your written advice
Authorisation Number: 1013052062580
Date of advice: 13 July 2016
Ruling
Subject: Lump sum payment
Question 1
Is the lump sum payment received from entity A assessable as ordinary income under section 6-5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)?
Answer
Yes.
Question 2
Is the lump sum payment received from entity A included in your assessable income as a capital gain?
Answer
No.
This ruling applies for the following period
Year ended 30 June 2015
The scheme commenced on
1 July 2014
Relevant facts
You are a professional.
Entity A has approached you to work with them.
Under a written agreement between you and entity A you will receive a lump sum payment for:
• providing professional services and
• refrain from providing professional services with a specified area during the restraint period.
During the specified period you are to render services for an agreed number of hours per week.
Entity A provides you with rooms to work in.
You pay entity A, a fee to use of the premises.
Under the agreement you and entity A are not partners and are not in an employer/employee relationship.
Relevant legislative provisions
Income tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 6-5
Income tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 102-5
Income tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 104-35
Income tax Assessment Act 1997 Section 118-20
Reasons for decision
Ordinary assessable income
Subsection 6-5(2) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) provides that the assessable income of an Australian resident includes the ordinary income they derived directly or indirectly from all sources, whether in or out of Australia, during the income year.
The legislation does not provide any specific guidance on what is meant by 'income according to ordinary concepts'. However, a substantial body of case law has evolved to identify various factors that indicate whether an amount is income according to ordinary concepts.
In Scott v Commissioner of Taxation (NSW) (1935) 35 SR (NSW) 215; 3 ATD, Jordan CJ stated:
…the word income is not a term of art, and what forms of receipts are comprehended within it, and what principles are to be applied to ascertain how much of those receipts ought to be treated as income, must be determined in accordance with the ordinary concepts and usages of mankind, except in so far as the statute states or indicates [to the contrary]…
A frequent characteristic of income receipts is an element of periodicity, recurrence or regularity, even if the receipts are not directly attributable to employment or services rendered (FC of T v Dixon (1952) 86 CLR 540 and FC of T v Blake 84 ATC 4661).
However, periodicity, recurrence or regularity is not always essential for an amount to be income. For example, the proceeds of an isolated transaction, even if received as a lump sum, may be income (FC of T v. Myer Emporium Ltd (1987) 163 CLR 199; [1987] HCA 18; 87 ATC 4363), while instalments of a capital sum, even though received regularly from one source, are not income. Equally, an unsolicited lump sum payment which is unlikely to be repeated is generally not income according to ordinary concepts (FC of T v Harris 80 ATC 4238), while lump sum damages will nevertheless be assessable where they are compensation for losses of an income nature only.
Personal earnings from the performance of services, whether as an employee or otherwise, are clearly income even if the services are performed, and/or the rewards received, irregularly.
It is also important to determine the character of the payment in the recipient's hands (Scott v FC of T (1966) 117 CLR 514 at p. 526; Hayes v FC of T (1956) 96 CLR 47 at p. 55; Federal Coke Co. Pty. Ltd. v FC of T (1977) 34 FLR 375 at p. 402 per Brennan J. That does not mean that the motive of the person in making the payment will be irrelevant but it will not be determinative. The test to be applied will be objective rather than subjective (Hayes at p. 55).
Whether a receipt is income must always depend on a consideration of the whole of the circumstances.
In Re Porter: re Transport Workers Union of Australia (1989) 34 IR 179, Gray J held at page 184:
Although the parties are free, as a matter of law, to choose the nature of the contract which they will make between themselves, their own characterisation of that contract will not be conclusive. A court will always look at all of the terms of the contract, to determine its true essence, and will not be bound by the express choice of the parties as to the label to be attached to it. As Mr Black put it in the present case, the parties cannot create something which has every feature of a rooster, but call it a duck and insist that everybody else recognise it as a duck.
Based on the agreement between you and entity A, the payment made to you appears to have been a one-off lump sum payment. Thus, it is necessary to consider whether the payment has the character of income.
Incentive/ inducement payments
Based on case law precedents, incentive/inducement payments paid to taxpayers as lump sums can be assessable income.
Lump sum payments made to two taxpayers to ensure they remained in employment was held to be ordinary assessable income in McLean & Anor v FC of T [1996] FCA 1459; (1996) 32 ATR 647; 96 ATC 4443 (McLean) and Dean & Anor v FC of T (1997) 37 ATR 52; 97 ATC. In the Federal Court decision in McLean, Northrop J stated the following at 96 ATC 4447:
In the present case, the Tribunal held that the retention payments received by the taxpayers constituted income derived by them within paragraph 25(1)(a) of the Assessment Act. In my opinion, the Tribunal was not in error in so concluding. In my opinion all the facts of this case point to the conclusion that the receipt of the retention payments by the taxpayers was related to their activities as employees and as continuing to be employees with the result that in substance and reality the amounts received were the product of the income-earning activity on the part of each taxpayer.
The nature of the payments is made clear by a reference to the contents of the letters written to them by Elders Resources. The payment was made as an inducement to each taxpayer to continue in his employment for a period of at least one year. If the taxpayer voluntarily left his employment, the amount of the payment was reduced but otherwise the payment was for the specified sum. The fact that this was not to be paid on a periodic basis does not detract from the true nature of the receipt of the payment. The continual employment was at the very heart of the receipt of the payment the amount of which was calculated having regard to the salary of the taxpayer. There is no similarity between the facts of this case and those discussed in Dickenson v. FC of T (1957) 11 ATD 157; (1958) 11 ATD 415; (1957-1958) 98 C.L.R. 460.
In Pickford v FC of T 98 ATC 2268; 40 ATR 1078 (Pickford), the taxpayer was an employee of E Ltd who had been granted options to purchase ordinary shares in his employer's parent company pursuant to an employee share scheme. However, the options would lapse immediately if the taxpayer ceased to be an employee of E Ltd.
W Ltd made an offer of employment to the taxpayer which included, a payment of $20,000 as compensation for the potential capital gain that may have been available to the taxpayer in respect of the shares to which he would have been entitled had he remained an employee of E Ltd.
The Commissioner ruled that the payment was assessable as ordinary income, and affirmed this decision at the objection stage.
At the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, DJ Trowse (Member) upheld the Commissioner's decision, stating at page 2271 that:
14. The facts of this matter, when viewed objectively, leave the Tribunal in no doubt that the agreement to pay the $20,000 was an integral part of the offer made by W Ltd and accepted by the applicant. To exclude the $20,000 is to omit one of the main attractions from the overall salary package which, in the Tribunal's opinion, should be regarded as a single bundle of entitlements attaching to the offer of employment with W Ltd.
15. A consideration of all the material including the letter containing the offer (T3) leads the Tribunal to the conclusion that, irrespective of the description furnished to the amount in contention, it represented a straightforward inducement for the applicant to enter the employment of W Ltd. Furthermore, the Tribunal is satisfied that the source of the payment is to be found in the service to be rendered by the applicant to W Ltd and that it was in the nature of a benefit for future service.
Lease inducements, received as part of a business enterprise, have been considered by the Courts on a number of occasions: Paul Montgomery v Commissioner of Taxation [1998] FCA 46, Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth of Australia v the Myer Emporium Limited [1985] FCA 376 and Commissioner of Taxation v Cameron Richard Cooling [1990] FCA 204; 90 ATC 4472; 21 ATR 13, (1990) 22 FCR 42; (1990) 94 ALR 121 (Cooling). In Cooling, Hill J stated:
Where a taxpayer operates from leased premises, the move from one premises to another and the leasing of the premises occupied are acts of the taxpayer in the course of its business activity just as much as the trading activities that give rise more directly to the taxpayer's assessable income.
It is also the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) view that the lump sum retention bonuses paid by the Australian Defence Forces (ADF) in order to encourage serving members to remain within the ADF for a fixed period are assessable as ordinary income (see ATO Interpretative Decision ID 2003/373). Notably, where these ADF members failed to complete the required period of service, they were contractually obliged to repay part of the retention bonus based on the incomplete part of the service.
Application to your circumstances
In your case, it is considered that the character of the payment in your hands was an inducement for you to provide services for a specified period.
As per the decision in Pickford, the payment was an 'integral part' of the Deed, being part of '…a single bundle of entitlements…', and a 'straightforward inducement' to secure your future services for entity over the period of the Deed.
It is acknowledged that the payment was not made to you, as an employee however it is considered that the principles established in these case law decisions in relation to such incentive/inducement payments are equally applicable to your contract.
On that basis, the amount received by you is considered to be assessable as ordinary income under section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997.
It is noted that your Deed contains some restraints. We consider that the restraints are incidental to your activity of performing your services on entity A's premises. Also, the Deed requires you to work a minimum number of hours per week. This would only allow a small opportunity, given the need for rest and recuperation, to take up other work. As such, the clear implication from these circumstances is that the payment was made in relation to you satisfying your principal obligation of performing services rather than any ancillary obligation to not provide services elsewhere. Furthermore, no amount of the payment is specifically allocated to any restraint or in reference to your ability to work or other capital asset.
Isolated transaction
The Commissioner's view on whether profits on isolated transactions are assessable income under ordinary concepts is contained in Taxation Ruling TR 92/3 Income tax: whether profits on isolated transactions are income. Paragraphs 6-8 of the Ruling state:
6. Whether a profit from an isolated transaction is income according to the ordinary concepts and usages of mankind depends very much on the circumstances of the case. However, a profit from an isolated transaction is generally income when both of the following elements are present:
(a) the intention or purpose of the taxpayer in entering into the transaction was to make a profit or gain; and
(b) the transaction was entered into, and the profit was made, in the course of carrying on a business or in carrying out a business operation or commercial transaction.
7. The relevant intention or purpose of the taxpayer (of making a profit or gain) is not the subjective intention or purpose of the taxpayer. Rather, it is the taxpayer's intention or purpose discerned from an objective consideration of the facts and circumstances of the case.
8. It is not necessary that the intention or purpose of profit-making be the sole or dominant intention or purpose for entering into the transaction. It is sufficient if profit-making is a significant purpose.
Thus, in order to determine whether your motive for entering into the transaction was to make a profit it is necessary to consider your intention or purpose from an objective consideration of the facts and circumstances rather than your subjective intention or purpose.
In Commissioner of Taxation v Montgomery [1999] HCA 34, the majority judgement of the High Court held that inducement payments paid to a firm of solicitors to take up a lease were assessable income and not of a capital nature, Gaudron, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ at [118]:
….. The firm used or exploited its capital in the course of carrying on its business, albeit in a transaction properly regarded as singular or extraordinary. And the sums it received from the transactions were not as growth or increment of value in its profit-yielding structure - the receipts came in or were derived for the separate use, benefit and disposal of the firm and its members as they saw fit.
In Cooling, a lump sum payment received by a firm of solicitors as an incentive to relocate to new premises was held by the Full Federal Court to be income according to ordinary concepts. As highlighted in paragraph 50 of TR 92/3:
At 90 ATC 4484; 21 ATR 27 Hill J concluded:
'In my view the transaction entered into by the firm was a commercial transaction; it formed part of the business activity of the firm and a not insignificant purpose of it was the obtaining of a commercial profit by way of the incentive payment.'
Application to your circumstances
It is considered that the principles in the above cases apply to your circumstances as even though you have not entered into a lease for a fixed price, entity A is providing you a place to work.
By entering into the Agreement and receiving a lump sum which is directly related to you deriving income from your services, it is considered that the transaction meets the requirements of paragraph 6 of TR 92/3 as a gain or profit arising from a commercial transaction.
Capital gains
Under subsection 102-5(1) of the ITAA 1997 your assessable income includes your net capital gain (if any) for the income year. A net capital gain is worked out in accordance with the method statement set out in subsection 102-5(1) of the ITAA 1997.
A capital gain or loss arises when a CGT event occurs. A summary of CGT events is set out in section 104-5 of the ITAA 1997.
Section 104-35 of the ITAA 1997 deals with CGT event D1 and states that CGT event D1 happens if you create a contractual right or other legal or equitable right or other legal or equitable right in another entity.
Taxation Ruling TR 95/3 Income tax and capital gains: application of subsections 160M(6) and 160M(7) to restrictive covenants and trade ties sets out the ATO view on the taxation treatment of consideration received for granting restrictive covenants and trade ties. For the purposes of the Ruling, a restrictive covenant is an agreement between two or more parties to refrain from doing some act or thing. Please note that subsections 160M(6) and 160M(7) are now sections 104-35 and 104-155 of the ITAA 1997.
Application to your circumstances
As the payment under the Deed is not solely for the restraints you agreed to both during the period of the Deed and for a period after it ended, it is considered that the principles set out in TR 95/3 do not apply in your case.
The restraints follow as a natural consequence of the positive obligations of you to provide full-time services for entity A for a period and as such, it is considered that no part of the payment made relates specifically to the restraints. That is, the payment is prime facie an inducement paid to you in order to obtain your services for the period.
Even if part of the payment was considered to be in respect of the restraint after the Deed ceased, it is not possible to apportion the amount attributable to that restraint as the payment under the Agreement is a lump sum and there is no evidence that there was any separate bargaining/negotiation regarding that restraint.
Finally, even if the lump sum payment was considered to be assessable as a capital gain arising from CGT event D1, the amount of that capital gain would be reduced to nil under section 118-20 of the ITAA 1997 as a result of the payment also being included in your assessable income under section 6-5 of the ITAA 1997.
As it is considered that there is no capital gain assessable in respect of the lump sum payment, there is no need to address whether you are eligible to access the small business CGT concessions.