Held, by Rich, Starke, Dixon and McTiernan JJ. (Gavan Duffy C.J. and Evatt J. dissenting), that the provisions of sec. 103 (1) (b) of the Stamp Duties Act 1920-1924 (N.S.W.) which, for the payment of death duty, purported to authorize the inclusion in the dutiable estate of a person, dying resident and domiciled out of New South Wales, of shares held by him in a company incor- porated out of and having no share register within that State, but which carried on the business of mining within the State, were in excess of the powers of the Legislature of New South Wales.
Per Rich, Dixon and McTiernan JJ.: A shareholder has no property legal or equitable in the assets of the company.
By the provisions of sec. 140 (1) of the Stamp Duties Act 1920-1931 (N.S.W.) no refund of death duty shall be made in respect of any property wrongly included in the dutiable estate of a deceased person "by reason of any mistake in the construction of this Act."
Held, by Rich, Starke, Dixon and McTiernan JJ., that the inclusion by the Commissioner of certain shares in the dutiable estate of a deceased person upon the erroneous supposition that sec. 103 (1) (b) of the Stamp Duties Act 1920-1924 was valid was due not to a mistake in the construction of the Act, but to a mistake as to the extent of the legislative power.
An action may be brought under sec. 140 (3) of the Stamp Duties Act 1920- 1931 (N.S.W.) irrespective of whether it has been proved to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the property in question had been wrongly included in the dutiable estate of the deceased person.
So held by Rich, Starke, Dixon and McTiernan JJ. Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, (1930) 30 S.R. (N.S.W.) 100, disapproved.
Decision of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (Full Court): Millar V. Commissioner of Stamp Duties, (1932) 33 S.R. (N.S.W.) 157, reversed.
APPEALS from the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
Fanny Beatrice Millar and the Trustees and Executors and Agency Co. Ltd., the executrix and executor of the will of Edwin Franks minerals as defined in the Mining Act
the Court under section one hundred 1906 in New South Wales, or of treating
and twenty-four) no refund shall be any such minerals, or the business of
made in respect of any property pastoral or agricultural production or
wrongly included in the dutiable estate timber-getting in New South Wales."
Sec. 140 of the Stamp Duties Act
any mistake in the construction of this 1920-1931 (N.S.W.) provides (1)
(3) Any claim for a Where it is proved to the satisfaction
refund of duty SO paid in excess may of the Commissioner that any property
be enforced by action or suit against has been wrongly included in the
the Commissioner in his official name dutiable estate of a deceased person
as nominal defendant on behalf of the the death duty paid in respect of such
Crown in any Court of competent juris- property shall be repaid by him, but
diction and not otherwise." (except in accordance with an order of