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Edited version of private advice
Authorisation Number: 1051992580570
Date of advice: 2 August 2022
Ruling
Subject: Residency
Question
Were you a resident of Australia for the purposes of section 6(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 for the 20XX income year?
Answer
No
This ruling applies for the following period:
Year ended 30 June 20XX
The scheme commences on:
1 July 20XX
Relevant facts and circumstances
Background
You were born in Australia and lived in Australia until you moved overseas.
Your spouse and child moved overseas with you. You have an elderly parent and a sibling living in Australia.
You ceased to be a resident of Australia for income tax purposes in XXXX 20XX.
You moved overseas on a Tier 1 Investor Visa.
You were accompanied by your spouse and child on a Tier 1 Investor Partner and Tier 1 Investor Child visa.
The visas were originally valid until XXXX 20XX; however, the visas were renewed until 20XX when all members of the family were granted indefinite leave to remain overseas.
You, your spouse, and child have lived in an apartment which your spouse purchased.
You continue to live in this apartment and no intention of moving from it while you and the family are living overseas.
You intend to remain overseas for the foreseeable future while you pursue business opportunities in the region.
Australian assets and associations
You had been a company secretary and/or a public officer of several entities in Australia. You have since resigned from all these positions upon your move overseas, and the positions have been replaced by individuals who ordinarily reside in Australia.
Where you had been the sole director, you advised a minimum of two (additional) Australian resident directors were appointed ensuring compliance with the Corporations Act 2001.
You remain involved to a limited extent with several companies, trusts, and partnerships in Australia.
You and your spouse had maintained a Self-managed Superannuation Fund; however, you stated that due to the move, the fund's assets were transferred to an APRA regulated fund and the account is now closed.
The former family home, which is owned by your spouse, remains in 'caretaker mode'.
You undertook several actions upon your departure from the country to end your association with Australia which included:
a. writing to Australian professional service providers to inform them that you were moving overseas.
b. removing your details from the electoral roll.
c. you cancelled your Medicare registration and your medical insurance upon departure.
d. you advised your GP and medical specialists to remove you as a patient.
e. you advised Australia Post that all mail addressed to your Australian residence be redirected to a post office box which is emptied twice a week by professional services firm and any Important Mail is shipped to you overseas; unimportant mail is marked 'Move Overseas' and returned to sender.
f. you advised service providers to liaise with a professional services firm.
You informed your child's school that the family was moving overseas. Upon leaving Australia, you disposed of your properties.
Overseas assets and associations
You invested a certain amount of money to confirm your visa requirements. You appointed an overseas broker to manage your investment visa portfolio.
You work as a consultant to corporations based overseas and made significant investments in overseas corporations through a mixture of loans and equity holdings.
You have completed the following:
a. opened bank accounts.
b. obtained credit cards.
c. obtained Debit cards.
d. registered as a voter.
e. applied for and received confirmation of your entry into the overseas taxation system.
f. appointed a tax agent and lodge overseas tax returns.
g. you have engaged with a lawyer overseas.
h. took out private health insurance for yourself and your family however that health insurance has since been cancelled.
i. you and the family have a dentist overseas.
j. you registered with and have used the services of a doctor.
k. attended a gym and hired a personal trainer.
Your child attended school overseas, and they have subsequently completed their schooling.
Travel to Australia
After departing Australia, you did not come back to the country for the rest of the year ended 30 June 20XX.
For the year ended 30 June 20XX, you had short visits to Australia twice for business, personal and family reasons. For the year ended 30 June 20XX, you visited Australia four times also for personal and family reasons.
You advised in subsequent financial years, that you visited Australia three to five times per year with varying durations.
For the financial year ended 30 June 20XX, you advised you visited Australia twice staying a combined total of X nights. You advised the most recent visit was extended due to your parent-in-law's serious illness and subsequent passing away in July 20XX. You also advised that the COVID 19 pandemic also continued to limit travel.
During the visits you stated you're often accompanied by your spouse and child but advised you had also travelled alone on occasion. You advised that occasionally you visit the former family home to check on its condition and has on occasion stayed there.
You advised you usually stay at your sibling's house, or parent's house, and at a hotel. The most recent trip required 14 days quarantine in a hotel.
You advised that because of your parent's failing health, you may in the future continue to make trips to Australia to see them and the rest of your extended family.
It is also noted that you have arranged for the Australian family members to visit you in Country A.
Relevant legislative provisions
Subsection 6(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
Reasons for decision
Section 995-1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 defines an Australian resident for tax purposes as a person who is a resident of Australia for the purposes of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936).
The terms 'resident' and 'resident of Australia', as applied to an individual, are defined in subsection 6(1) of the ITAA 1936.
The definition contains four tests to ascertain whether an individual taxpayer is a resident of Australia for income tax purposes. These tests are:
• the resides test,
• the domicile test,
• the 183-day test, and
• the Commonwealth superannuation fund test.
The resides test is the primary test for deciding the residency status of an individual. This test considers whether an individual resides in Australia according to the ordinary meaning of the word 'resides'.
Where an individual does not reside in Australia according to ordinary concepts, they will still be an Australian resident if they meet the conditions of one of the other tests (the domicile test, 183-day test and Commonwealth superannuation fund test).
The resides test
The ordinary meaning of the word 'reside', according to the Macquarie Dictionary, 2001, rev. 3rd edition, The Macquarie Library Pty Ltd, NSW, is 'to dwell permanently or for a considerable time; having one's abode for a time', and according to the Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (1987), is 'to dwell permanently, or for a considerable time, to have one's settled or usual abode, to live in or at a particular place'. These definitions have been highlighted in cases as being definitive observations of the meaning of resides (see Viscount LC in Levene v Commissioners of Inland Revenue [1928] AC 217 and Logan J in Stockton v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2019] FCA 1679).
The observations contained in case of Hafza v Director General of Social Security (1985) 6 FCR 444 are also important:
Physical presence and intention will coincide for most of the time. But few people are always at home. Once a person has established a home in a particular place - even involuntarily: see Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Lysaght [1928] AC 234 at 248; and Keil v Keil [1947] VLR 383 - a person does not necessarily cease to be resident there because he or she is physically absent. The test is whether the person has retained a continuity of association with the place - Levene v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1928] AC 217 at 225 and Judd v Judd (1957) 75 WN (NSW) 147 at 149 - together with an intention to return to that place and an attitude that that place remains "home": see Norman v Norman (No 3) (1969) 16 FLR 231 at 235... [W]here the general concept is applicable, it is obvious that, as residence of a place in which a person is not physically present depends upon an intention to return and to continue to treat that place as "home", a change of intention may be decisive of the question whether residence in a particular place has been maintained.
The Commissioner considers the following factors in relation to whether a taxpayer is a resident under the 'resides' test:
• Physical presence
• Intention or purpose of presence
• Family and business/employment ties
• Maintenance and location of assets, and
• Social and living arrangements.
It is important to note that no one single factor is decisive, and the weight given to each factor depends on each individual's circumstances.
Because the ordinary concepts test is whether an individual resides in Australia, the factors focus on the individual's connection to Australia. Having a connection with another country, or being a resident of another country, does not diminish any connection to Australia: Logan J in Pike v Commissioner of Taxation [2019] FCA 2185 at 57 reminds us that 'it is no part of the ordinary meaning of reside in the 1936 Act that there be a "principal" or even "usual" place of residence. ... It is important that ... "resident" not be construed and applied as if there were such adjectival qualifications.' For this reason, the test is not about dominance or exclusivity.
Application to your circumstances
We consider that your circumstances are not consistent with residing in Australia.
This is because:
a. you maintain a family home with your spouse and child overseas and your working arrangements are with overseas entities.
b. upon your departure from Australia, you notified the relevant Australian based authorities that you were leaving the country and similarly contacted the relevant overseas based authorities upon your arrival.
c. you have no intention in returning to Australia permanently however may continue to make trips to see extended family.
d. you have sought and gained permanent residence overseas.
e. Your physical presence in Australia was only for a total of X nights and the conduct of your visit was not consistent with residing in Australia.
Therefore, you are not a resident of Australia under the resides test.
The Domicile test
Under the domicile test, you are a resident of Australia if your domicile is in Australia unless the Commissioner is satisfied that your permanent place of abode is outside Australia.
Domicile
Whether your domicile is in Australia is determined by the Domicile Act 1982 and the common law rules on domicile.
Your domicile is your domicile of origin (usually the domicile of your father at the time of your birth) unless you have a domicile of dependence or have acquired a domicile of choice elsewhere. To acquire a domicile of choice of a particular country you must be lawfully present there and hold the positive intention to make that country you home indefinitely. Your domicile continues until you acquire a different domicile. Whether your domicile has changed depends on an objective consideration of all relevant facts.
Application to your situation
You were born in Australia and continuously resided here until your departure. You, your spouse, and child departed Australia for overseas in 20XX.
You moved overseas on a visa and the visa was used until yourself, your spouse and child gained indefinite leave to remain overseas. You intended to remain overseas indefinitely.
Therefore, it is considered your domicile of choice is overseas, and you are not a resident of Australia under this test.
Permanent place of abode
If you have an Australian domicile, you are an Australian resident unless the Commissioner is satisfied that your permanent place of abode is outside Australia. This is a question of fact to be determined based on all the facts and circumstances of each case.
'Permanent' does not mean everlasting or forever, but it is to be distinguished from temporary or transitory.
The courts have held that the phrase 'permanent place of abode' calls for a consideration of the town or country where a person is located. It does not extend to more than one country, or a region of the world.
The Full Federal Court in Harding v Commissioner of Taxation [2019] FCA 29 held at paragraphs 36 and 40 that key considerations in determining whether a taxpayer has their permanent place of abode outside Australia are:
• whether the taxpayer has definitely abandoned, in a permanent way, living in Australia, and,
• whether the taxpayer is living in a town, city, region or country in a permanent way.
The Commissioner considers the following factors relevant to whether a taxpayer's permanent place of abode is outside Australia:
(a) the intended and actual length of the taxpayer's stay in the overseas country;
(b) whether the taxpayer intended to stay in the overseas country only temporarily and then to move on to another country or to return to Australia at some definite point in time;
(c) whether the taxpayer has established a home (in the sense of dwelling place; a house or other shelter that is the fixed residence of a person, a family, or a household), outside Australia;
(d) whether any residence or place of abode exists in Australia or has been abandoned because of the overseas absence;
(e) the duration and continuity of the taxpayer's presence in the overseas country; and
(f) the durability of association that the person has with a particular place in Australia, i.e. maintaining assets in Australia, informing government departments such as the Department of Social Security that he or she is leaving permanently and that family allowance payments should be stopped, place of education of the taxpayer's children, family ties and so on.
As with the factors under the resides test, no one single factor is decisive, and the weight given to each factor depends on the individual circumstances.
Application to your circumstances
The Commissioner is satisfied that your permanent place of abode is outside Australia. This takes into account that:
• Your spouse purchased an apartment overseas in which you and the family reside.
• You intended to live permanently overseas and your child went to school there.
• You have no definite plans to return to Australia permanently or relocate to any other country.
• You have no intention to return and reside in your family home in Australia despite the property remains in 'caretaker mode'.
• You advised all relevant government, medical places and school for your child of your permanent departure of Australia.
Therefore, you are not a resident of Australia under this test.
183-day test
Where a person is present in Australia for 183 days or more during the year of income the person will be a resident, unless the Commissioner is satisfied that both:
• the person's usual place of abode is outside Australia, and
• the person does not intend to take up residence in Australia.
Application to your circumstances
During the 20XXincome year you advised the most recent visit was extended due to your parent-in-law's serious illness and subsequent passing away in July 20XX. You also advised that the COVID 19 pandemic also continued to limit travel.
You have not been present in Australia for 183 days or more during the 20XX income year. Therefore, you are not a resident under this test
Superannuation test
An individual is a resident of Australia if they are either a member of the superannuation scheme established by deed under the Superannuation Act 1990 or an eligible employee for the purposes of the Superannuation Act 1976, or they are the spouse, or the child under 16, of such a person.
Application to your circumstances
You are not a contributing member of the Public Sector Superannuation Scheme (PSS) or the Commonwealth Superannuation Scheme (CSS) or a spouse of such a person, or a child under 16 of such a person.
Therefore, you are not a resident under this test.
Conclusion
As you do not satisfy any of the four tests of residency, you are not a resident of Australia for income tax purposes for the year ended 30 June 20XX.