years. Each transfer was registered under the Transfer of Land Act 1893. 1950 (W.A.) and contained a provision against merger. One of the Guilfoyles, Denis, died in 1938 and by a separate transaction in 1951, on the basis that the Guilfoyles were tenants in common, his share was transferred by hi administrator to the taxpayer. The transfer contained no provision against merger but it was registered under the Transfer of Land Act 1893-1950 (W.A.). The taxpayer purported to elect under S. 88 (5) of the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment Act 1936-1956 that the period of the lease unexpired at the date when the premium was paid should be deemed to be two years. In the year ended 30th June 1956 the taxpayer paid by way of annuity to the five Guilfoyles the sum of £3,825, and he claimed to deduct from his assessable income pursuant to S. 88 (1) of such Act one half of that
Held, (1) that S. 88 (1) applies only to a lease of land premises or machinery considered as an entirety or to a consideration payable in connexion therewith;
(2) that S. 88 (1) (a) does not include the case of an owner in fee simple who has got in a lease which he has preserved from merger and S. 88 (1) (b) applies only to the case of a surrender
(3) that the effect of S. 82 of the Transfer of Land Act 1893-1950 (W.A.) was to prevent a merger of the lease when the owner in fee simple took a duly registered transfer;
(4) that accordingly C., as the holder of undivided shares in the lease, was not entitled to deduct under the section a proportion of the payments made by him in respect of those undivided shares.
English Scottish &Australian Bank Ltd. v. Phillips (1937) 57 C.L.R. 302, at pp. 320-325, referred to.
Quaere whether, since the primary estate created by the indenture in 1936 was an estate for life, the estate created fell within the provisions of ss. 83 et seq. of the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment Act.
Parker v. Gravenor (1556) 2 Dy. 150a [73 E.R. 326]; (1556) 1 And. 19 [123 E.R. 331] and Cadee and Oliver's Case (1588) 3 Leo. 153, at p. 154 [74 E.R. 601]
Quaere whether the lessees under the indenture in 1936 took the estate or interest created as joint tenants or tenants in common.
Quaere whether the lease was one of indefinite duration within the meaning of 8. 88 (5) of the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment Act.
Decision of Kitto J.: Cooper v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1957) 97 C.L.R. 397, affirmed.
APPEAL under the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment Act 1936-1956.
Reginald Frederick Cooper appealed pursuant to SS, 187 and 197 of the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment Act 1936-1956 to the High Court of Australia against an assessment of