account of fraud, no assessment for income tax shall be reopened by the commissioner in respect of any return made more than three years last pr ced- ing the opening."
For each of the years from. 1st July 1929 to 30th June 1935, C., a medical practitioner who practised in South Australia, returned as his gross income for State taxation purposes from his medical practice actual receipts in each year, omitting book debts. The Commissioner of Taxes issued assessments for those years on the basis of the returns. C. died on 15th November 1935. The commissioner made an assessment to income tax on his executor in respect of the period from 1st July 1935 to 15th November 1935 and, relying on sec. 84 (1) of the Taxation Act, included in the assessment all outstanding book debts. Further, in case sec. 84 did not apply, the commissioner issued amended assessments in respect of the years 1933-1934 and 1934-1935, including therein fees earned by C. but not actually returned during the relevant period.
(1) By Rich, Dixon and McTiernan JJ. (Latham C.J. dissenting), that, upon the assumption that the deceased should have been taxed upon his earnings, sec. 84 of the Act did not operate either of its own force or by reason of the application of sec. 42 or sec. 43 to authorize the inclusion of unpaid fees earned before 1st July 1935 in an assessment upon the executor in respect of the period from 1st July 1935 to the date of the death of C.
(2) By Rich, Dixon and McTiernan JJ. (Latham C.J. dissenting), that the commissioner had no authority to issue amended assessments for the years ending 30th June 1934 and 30th June 1935 including therein fees earned but unpaid during the relevant periods, (a) as to the year ending 30th June 1934, because even if earnings was the proper basis of assessment, sec. 42 did not operate, since the period was more than twelve months prior to 1st July pre- ceding C.'s decease, and C. had not failed to furnish a return in respect of that period, and also because the commissioner was barred from reopening the assessment by sec. 87, and (b) as to the year ending 30th June 1935, because the receipts basis was properly adopted by the commissioner for the assess- ment and, that basis having been adopted, there was no foundation for an
Held, further, that it was open to the commissioner to adopt the earnings basis in order to ascertain the intermediate income of the deceased earned between the end of the last financial year and the date of his death.
When there is nothing analogous to a stock of vendible articles to be acquired or produced and carried by a taxpayer, where outstandings on the expenditure side do not correspond to, and are not naturally connected with, the out- standings on the earnings side, and where there is no fund of circulating capital from which income or profit must be detached for actual enjoyment, but where, on the contrary, the receipts represent in substance a reward for professional skill and personal work to which the expenditure on the other side contributes in only a minor or subsidiary degree, the receipts basis forms a fair and appro- priate basis for estimating professional income for the purpose of the Taxation