amount as a dividend to the shareholders who would have been entitled to receive it, and the company shall be liable to pay the tax SQ assessed." Section 105 (1) is in the following terms :-
Where, in relation to any private company, there is an undistributed amount, and any person (not being a company, trustee or partnership) would, otherwise than as a shareholder of the private company, have received a part of that amount if there had been successive distributions of the relative parts of that amount to and by each of any companies, trustees or partnerships interposed between the private company and that person the Commissioner may also, in addition to any other tax assessable under this Division, assess the additional amount of tax, if any, which would in that event have been payable by that person, and the private company shall be liable to pay the tax SO assessed."
I propose first to deal with the objection that the taxes claimed have not been imposed by any valid legislation. This objection depends upon SS. 53 and 55 of the Constitution, upon the terms of SS. 104 and 105 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936-1939, and upon the Income Tax Act 1939.
Section 53 of the Constitution provides :- Proposed laws appropriating revenue or moneys, or imposing taxation, shall not originate in the Senate
The Senate may not amend pro- posed laws imposing taxation, or proposed laws appropriating revenue or moneys for the ordinary annual services of the Government."
Section 54 provides: "The proposed law which appropriates revenue or moneys for the ordinary annual services of the Govern- ment shall deal only with such appropriation."
These provisions relate to proposed laws, that is, to parliamentary Bills. The sections deal with parliamentary procedure. In a strict sense, no proposed law can impose taxation or appropriate revenue. The reference is plainly to Bills which propose to impose taxation or to appropriate revenue. The sections deal with Bills, not with separate clauses of Bills, as appears most plainly from the first sentence of S. 53.
Section 55 contains the following provision "Laws imposing taxation shall deal only with the imposition of taxation, and any provision therein dealing with any other matter shall be of no effect."
This section deals with laws, that is, with statutes, and not with parliamentary Bills. It has the effect of invalidating in a law impos- ing taxation any provision which deals with any other matter than the imposition of taxation.