50 C.L.R.]
OF AUSTRALIA. and/or the ticket-issuing machines in any country, A. Ltd. should make pay- ment to the taxpayer in accordance with a stipulated method of calculation. In 1928 A. Ltd. entered into an agreement in England with an English company for the sale to the latter of the British patent rights covering the totalisator and a ticket-issuing machine, and received payment of the purchase price in England. A. Ltd. thereupon, in accordance with the agreement of 1922, paid to the taxpayer out of the proceeds of the sale the sum of £10,000, which the taxpayer distributed as dividends. The taxpayer objected to the inclusion by the Commissioner of Taxation for New South Wales of this sum in its assess- able income. It was admitted on behalf of the taxpayer that the sum was income, but it was contended that it was not derived from a source in New
Held that the sum of £10,000 was derived directly and wholly from a source in New South Wales within the meaning of sec. 4 of the Income Tax (Manage- ment) Act 1928 (N.S.W.).
Decision of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (Full Court): Premier Automatic Ticket Issuers Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation, (1932) 33 S.R. (N.S.W.) 107, reversed.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
The Commissioner of Taxation for New South Wales assessed the taxpayer, The Premier Automatic Ticket Issuers Ltd., to income tax in respect of the year ended 30th June 1929, and included in the assessment a sum of £10,000 received during the income year by the taxpayer from Automatic Totalisators Ltd. pursuant to an agreement made at Sydney on 16th November 1922. To that agreement there were three parties, namely, Automatic Totalisators Ltd., one Henry Roy Setright, and the taxpayer itself. At the time of the making of the agreement Automatic Totalisators Ltd., a company incor- porated in New South Wales, with its registered office and principal place of business in Sydney, owned patents in Australia and other countries, including Great Britain, in respect of a totalisator machine. The taxpayer was incorporated in 1917 under the law of New South Wales, and had its only place of business in Sydney. It was formed for the purpose of acquiring, and it did acquire, patent rights in respect of a ticket-issuing machine designed for use in conjunction with totalisators, and it was empowered, inter alia, to sell or dispose of any of its patents, licences and concessions. In May 1928, Automatic Totalisators Ltd., in exer- cise of a power conferred by the agreement of November 1922, entered into an agreement in England with an English company for