FVK v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue
[2023] NSWCATAD 118
•03 May 2023
Civil and Administrative Tribunal
New South Wales
Medium Neutral Citation: FVK v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2023] NSWCATAD 118 Hearing dates: 14 February 2023 Date of orders: 03 May 2023 Decision date: 03 May 2023 Jurisdiction: Administrative and Equal Opportunity Division Before: J S Currie, Senior Member Decision: (1) Each of the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue’s assessments of land tax in respect of the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years is affirmed.
(2) The decision by the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue to impose interest on the land tax payable by the Applicant by reference to the market rate component is affirmed.
(3) The decision of the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue to refuse to remit the premium component of interest on the land tax payable by the Applicant (“the premium component decision”) is set aside and remitted for reconsideration by the Chief Commissioner for State Revenue in accordance with the following recommendation of the Tribunal.
The Tribunal recommends that the premium component decision be re-considered by reference to the following matters in addition to any others the Chief Commissioner thinks applicable:
(a) FVK’s apparent acceptance, in her email of 11 January 2023 seeking an arrangement for instalment payments and at the hearing, of her liability to pay the full amount of the land tax as assessed;
(b) the extent of cooperation demonstrated by FVK in providing relevant information to the Chief Commissioner to enable the assessments to be made;
(c) the extent to which such cooperation occurred within a reasonable time after relevant requests for information by the Chief Commissioner; and
(d) the extent to which FVK’s failure to pay the assessed land tax on time and in particular, in accordance with the approved instalment plan, might not properly be regarded as an instance of wilful default, having due regard to her diagnosed mental health condition and her misunderstanding of the availability of the principal place of residence exemption.
Catchwords: TAXES AND DUTIES – land tax – liability – exemptions – principal place of residence: Land Tax Management Act 1956 (NSW), section 3 and Schedule 1A, Part 2 – where Applicant regarded subject property as her ongoing principal place of residence and family home – where subject property occupied by tenants for substantial periods and Applicant resided in another property which she owned during relevant tax years
TAXES AND DUTIES – land tax – liability – fairness – no duty on Chief Commissioner to warn of potential liability, advise land values – no discretion in Chief Commissioner to consider fairness in determining liability for land tax otherwise correctly assessed
TAXES AND DUTIES – land tax – interest – imposition of interest comprising market rate component and premium component – criteria for application of premium component – whether criteria satisfied – Chief Commissioner’s refusal to remit the premium component to be reconsidered
Legislation Cited: Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW), ss 9, 58, 63, 65
Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013 (NSW), ss 28, 36(1), 38(4)
Land Tax Management Act 1956 (NSW), Part 3 generally, ss 3, 7, 8, 10(1)(r), 14(1), Schedule 1A Part 2 cl 2
Taxation Administration Act 1996 (NSW), ss 8, 21, 22, 25, 96, 100
Cases Cited: AES Wiring Pty Limited and AKS Distributions Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2012] NSWADT 11
B & L Linings Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (2008) 74 NSWLR 481; [2008] NSWCA 187
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Aldridge (RD) [2003] NSWADTAP 50
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Ferrington (GD) [2004] NSWADTAP 41
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Incise Technologies Pty Ltd [2004] NSWADTAP 19
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Paspaley [2008] NSWCA 184
Commissioner of Taxation v Ryan (2000) 201 CLR 109; [2000] HCA 4
Cornish Investments Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (RD) [2013] NSWADTAP 25
Deans v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2022] NSWCATAD 14
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Dalco (1990) 168 CLR 614; [1990] HCA 3
Gauci v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1975) 135 CLR 81; [1975] HCA 54
Gunasti v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2012] NSWADT 218
Hashim v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2020] NSWCATAD 67
Levitch Design Associates Pty Ltd ATF Levco Unit Trust v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2014] NSWCATAD 215
Monisse v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2022] NSWCATAD 276
Monisse v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2023] NSWCATAP 27
Raissis v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2021] NSWCATAD 99
Shi v Migration Agents Registration Authority (2008) 235 CLR 286; [2008] HCA 31
Strathavon Resort Pty Ltd v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (2017) NSWCATAD 200
Valencia v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2017] NSWCATAD 261
Winston-Smith v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2018] NSWSC 773
Yen-Cheng Chuang v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2009] NSWADT 160
Category: Principal judgment Parties: FVK (Applicant)
Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (Respondent)Representation: Solicitors:
Applicant (self-represented)
Crown Solicitor (Respondent)
File Number(s): 2022/00318421 Publication restriction: Pursuant to s 64(1)(a) of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013 (NSW), publication and/or disclosure of the name of the Applicant is prohibited.
reasons for decision
What is this matter about?
-
This is an administrative review of decisions by the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (the Chief Commissioner or the Respondent) to assess land tax payable by FVK (the Applicant) in respect of a residential property in Putney, Sydney (the Putney property) and to impose interest on the assessed land tax comprising both the market rate and premium components. FVK disputes each of the assessments and (in part) the imposition of interest.
-
The land tax assessments are for the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years.
-
FVK purchased the Putney property in December 1990. FVK also owns a residential property in South West Rocks, New South Wales (the SW Rocks property), which she purchased in early 2018.
-
It is undisputed that:
between 29 January 2018 and about February or March 2022, FVK did not live in the Putney property and that throughout that period, during part of which travel restrictions imposed by health orders issued following the outbreak of Covid-19 were in place, she lived at the SW Rocks property;
the Putney property was for at least a substantial part of that period let to and occupied by tenants under residential tenancy agreements; and
FVK did not resume occupation of the Putney property until about February or March 2022.
-
The Chief Commissioner made two land tax assessments (the Assessments) in respect of the Putney property. On 1 October 2021, he made a land tax assessment in respect of FVK for the 2019, 2020 and 2021 land tax years and on 5 January 2022 he issued such an assessment for the 2022 land tax year. On 8 August 2022, FVK lodged an objection to those assessments, but on 1 September 2022 that objection was disallowed and on that day FVK was notified of the disallowance by email. FVK then sought the present administrative review by filing an Application in this Tribunal, which was received by the Registry on 25 October 2022.
-
FVK’s principal contention is that the Putney property should be exempt from land tax for the relevant years because she maintained it as her principal place of residence, thereby attracting the principal place of residence exemption from land tax (“the principal place of residence exemption”) available under Part 2 of Schedule 1A of the Land Tax Management Act 1956 (NSW) (the LTM Act). The relevant statutory provisions are set out below at [18]-[20].
-
In summary, FVK concedes that she let the Putney property to others during those land tax years and spent a considerable time living in the SW Rocks property. She contends however that the outbreak of the Covid-19 epidemic and the imposition of travel and related restrictions under public health orders prevented her earlier return to the Putney property and that she always regarded the Putney property as “home”, as her principal residence. Additionally, she submits that the Putney property should be regarded as her principal place of residence because of the connection which she and her family members have had to the property as a family home. In that regard, FVK asserts that she has lived at the Putney property since 6 December 1990, brought up her three sons there with her husband, and continued to live there after his death. She says that her stay at the SW Rocks property was of a short term.
-
FVK seeks orders that the Assessments be set aside or varied on the following five grounds; and I shall use the same numbering below when making references to particular grounds:
for the reasons summarised in paragraphs [6] and [7] above, she was entitled, on a correct application of the relevant legislation, to the principal place of residence exemption for each of the land tax years which are challenged, namely the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years.
the Chief Commissioner through Revenue NSW failed to keep New South Wales residents adequately informed about land tax requirements, including the operation of the principal place of residence exemption;
the Chief Commissioner through Revenue NSW acted unfairly in allowing insufficient time between notifying her of the assessed value of her land and requiring her to complete a land tax questionnaire, the completion and lodgment of which was further delayed by her ill-health;
the Chief Commissioner through Revenue NSW also acted unfairly and improperly by communicating inadequately with her about her land tax liability, particularly by providing generic responses and ignoring some of her communications; and
as she put it:
“the legislation guiding Revenue NSW decisions and actions is unreasonable, inflexible and punitive.”
-
Additionally, it is clear from the way FVK has put her case that if I uphold either of the Assessments by finding that the Chief Commissioner’s decision to make the assessment was the correct and preferable one, FVK nevertheless asks that I determine whether the Chief Commissioner’s further decision to impose interest on the due land tax, comprising both the market component and the premium component of interest (effectively, the Chief Commissioner’s refusal to remit such interest), is also the correct and preferable decision.
-
In summary, it falls to me to decide:
whether the Chief Commissioner’s decision to make each Assessment is the correct and preferable one;
if it is, whether his further decision to refuse to remit his imposition of interest with both the market and premium components is the correct and preferable decision; and
what orders should be made. That is, in respect of each of the grounds summarised above, whether I should order that the particular decision be affirmed or set aside, or alternatively make any one or more of the alternative orders available under sections 63(3) and 65(1) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW) (the ADR Act); namely an order to vary the decision, an order to set it aside and make a substituted decision, an order to set it aside and remit it to the decision-maker for reconsideration in accordance with any directions or recommendations I may make, or an order at any stage of the proceedings to remit the decision for reconsideration by the decision-maker.
-
For the reasons which follow, I have decided that:
the Chief Commissioner’s decision to make each of the Assessments is the correct and preferable decision and each Assessment should be confirmed;
the Chief Commissioner’s decision to impose interest comprising the market rate component is the correct and preferable decision and should be affirmed;
the Chief Commissioner’s decision to refuse to remit interest comprising the premium component (“the premium component decision”) should be set aside and remitted to the Chief Commissioner for reconsideration in accordance with my recommendation that in reconsidering the matter, the Chief Commissioner have reference to the following factors in addition to any others he thinks applicable:
FVK’s apparent acceptance, in her email of 11 January 2023 seeking an arrangement for instalment payments and at the hearing, of her liability to pay the full amount of the land tax as assessed;
the extent of cooperation demonstrated by FVK in providing relevant information to the Chief Commissioner to enable the assessments to be made;
the extent to which such cooperation occurred within a reasonable time after relevant requests for information by the Chief Commissioner; and
the extent to which FVK’s failure to pay the assessed land tax on time and in particular, in accordance with the instalment plan, might not properly be regarded as an instance of wilful default, having due regard to her diagnosed mental health condition and her misunderstanding of the availability of the “principal place of residence” exemption.
Jurisdiction, applicable law and the decisions under review
-
Each of the Chief Commissioner’s decisions under review was the subject of an objection by FVK who has brought this application because she is dissatisfied with the Chief Commissioner’s determination of that objection. That being so, the Tribunal has jurisdiction to review the Chief Commissioner’s decision by operation of section 96 of the Taxation Administration Act 1996 (NSW) (the Administration Act), section 9 of the ADR Act, and section 28 of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013 (NSW) (the NCAT Act).
-
Section 96 of the Administration Act permits a taxpayer to apply to this Tribunal for administrative review of a decision by the Chief Commissioner where (amongst other circumstances) the taxpayer is dissatisfied with the Chief Commissioner’s determination of the taxpayer’s objection. The Tribunal has jurisdiction to review the Chief Commissioner’s decision by operation of section 9 of the ADR Act and section 28 of the NCAT Act.
-
Where an application for review by this Tribunal of a decision by the Chief Commissioner is made under section 96, the decision under review by the Tribunal is that decision, namely the decision to issue the land tax assessment or assessments for the land tax years in question. It is not the Chief Commissioner’s decision to disallow the taxpayer’s objection: Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Paspaley [2008] NSWCA 184 at [28]. So, the decisions which the Tribunal is asked to review here comprise the Chief Commissioner’s decision to issue tax assessments for the 2019, 2020 and 2021 land tax years on 1 October 2021 and his separate decision to issue the assessment for the 2022 land year on 5 January 2022. FVK also seeks administrative review of the Chief Commissioner’s refusal to remit the interest which was charged on the tax debt and comprised both the market rate component and the premium component. Those components are described in more detail below at [54].
Onus and standard of proof
-
It is of fundamental importance that under section 100(3) of the Administration Act, in a review of this nature the applicant taxpayer has the onus of proving their case. Accordingly, FVK as the Applicant is required to prove all matters necessary to enable me to determine the issues her favour. That onus rests only on her as the Applicant. There is no onus or obligation on the Chief Commissioner to demonstrate that the assessments are correctly made: Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Dalco (1990) 168 CLR 614; [1990] HCA 3]; Gauci v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1975) 135 CLR 81 at 89 (Mason J); [1975] HCA 54; Levitch Design Associates Pty Ltd ATF Levco Unit Trust v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2014] NSWCATAD 215.
-
The requisite standard of proof is the balance of probabilities: B & L Linings Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (2008) 74 NSWLR 481; [2008] NSWCA 187 at [87], [104] (Allsop P) ; Cornish Investments Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue (RD) [2013] NSWADTAP 25 at [31].
Relevant statutory provisions and taxing provisions
-
The principal provisions relevant to the issues here are contained in the LTM Act.
-
The foundation for the imposition and payment of land tax is set out in Part 3 of that Act. Section 7 provides for the levy and payment of the tax and section 8 specifies the date of land ownership relevant to the levy and charge of the tax. They are in the following terms:
7 Land tax on taxable value of land
Land tax at such rates as may be fixed by any Act is to be levied and paid on the taxable value of all land situated in New South Wales which is owned by taxpayers (other than land which is exempt from taxation under this Act).
8 Date of ownership for purposes of land tax
Land tax shall be charged on land as owned at midnight on the thirty-first day of December immediately preceding the year for which the land tax is levied.
In this section "year" means the period of twelve months commencing on the first day of January.
-
The exemption from land tax liability is established in section 10(1)(r) of the LTM Act and the details of the exemption are set out in Schedule 1A of the Act. Part 2 of that Schedule contains the major machinery provisions. Clause 2 within that Part is, relevantly, in the following terms:
2 Principal place of residence exemption
(1) Land used and occupied by the owner as the principal place of residence of the owner of the land, and for no other purpose, is exempt from taxation under this Act, in respect of the year commencing 1 January 2005 or any succeeding year, if the land is—
(a) a parcel of residential land, or
(b) a strata lot or, subject to this Schedule, land comprised of 2 or more strata lots.
(2) Land is not used and occupied as the principal place of residence of a person unless—
(a) the land, and no other land, has been continuously used and occupied by the person for residential purposes and for no other purposes since 1 July in the year preceding the tax year in which land tax is levied, or
(b) in any other case, the Chief Commissioner is satisfied that the land is used and occupied by the person as the person’s principal place of residence.
(3) If the owner of land is entitled to the exemption conferred by this Schedule, no other person is liable to be assessed for taxation under this Act in respect of the land during the period of the owner’s entitlement to the exemption.
(4) The exemption conferred by this Schedule is referred to as the "principal place of residence exemption".
-
“Principal place of residence” in relation to a person is defined in section 3 of the LTM Act as follows:
"principal place of residence" of a person means the one place of residence that is, among the one or more places of residence of the person within and outside Australia, the principal place of residence of the person.
-
The effect of that definition is clear: a person can have only one principal place of residence in respect of any given land tax year.
Uncontested facts
-
The facts outlined at [1]-[4] above are uncontested. In addition, it does not appear to be disputed that:
FVK was the owner at all relevant times of the SW Rocks property, having purchased it in February 2018;
FVK resided at the SW Rocks property at least between January 2018 and early 2022;
FVK did not reside at the Putney property at any time during that period;
in particular, FVK did not reside in the Putney property as at midnight on each of the following dates: 31 December 2018, 31 December 2019, 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2021.
Each of the assessments is internally correct, in that the calculation in each of them of the quantum of duty which the Chief Commissioner asserts to be payable is not disputed by FVK, although she does dispute the imposition of interest at both the market rate and with the premium component.
Documentary material and submissions
-
The parties provided the following documentary material which I considered.
-
FVK’s documentation consisted of the Application, a copy of the notice dated 1 September 2022 from the Chief Commissioner which advised that FVK’s objection to the assessment of duty had been disallowed and a bundle received by the Registry on 15 December 2022, comprising additional correspondence and submissions between October 2021 and 11 January 2022 with FVK’s handwritten notes.
-
The Chief Commissioner’s documentation consisted of a bundle of documents provided in accordance with section 58 of the ADR Act (the section 58 bundle) which was received on 17 November 2022, a “Tender Bundle” with 4 tabs and the Respondent’s written submissions, both received on 20 January 2023, a bundle of authorities, received on 6 February 2023 and a “Supplementary Tender Bundle”, received on 8 February 2023.
-
In addition, I considered the oral submissions made by or on behalf of each party at the hearing.
The Applicant’s case
-
FVK’s case is that the assessments should be set aside or varied, on the grounds summarised at [8] above and that she was entitled to the principal place of residence exemption for all the land tax years which are the subject of these proceedings.
The Respondent’s case
-
The Chief Commissioner’s case as to FVK’s liability for land tax can be stated succinctly. It is that the Putney property was not exempt from land tax under the principal place of residence exemption for any of the land tax years in question (namely the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years). The Chief Commissioner’s case is that FVK did not use or occupy the property as her principal place of residence as at the relevant taxing date in any of those land tax years, that is, as at midnight on, respectively, 31 December 2018, 31 December 2019, 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2021 and accordingly the decision to make the Assessments was the correct and preferable one, as was his decision to impose and not to remit interest on the assessed land tax comprising both the market rate component and the premium component.
The real issues
-
The following distinct issues arise for decision:
whether the Chief Commissioner’s decision to make the land tax Assessments is the correct and preferable decision. That clearly turns principally on whether the “principal place of residence” exemption from land tax was available to FVK in any of the land tax years under consideration; and
if that decision by the Chief Commissioner is the correct and preferable one, whether his further decision to impose interest comprising both the market rate and premium components and not to remit those interest charges is also the correct and preferable decision.
-
Those issues stand to be determined by assessing FVK’s grounds as well as any other available ground on which the Chief Commissioner’s decisions might be challenged.
Consideration – The Assessments
-
I commence by considering whether the decision to make the Assessments is the correct and preferable decision. I do so by considering below each of FVK’s grounds in the order adopted at [8] above.
Ground 1: Is the Putney property exempt as the principal place of residence?
-
The exemption from land tax liability for a taxpayer’s principal place of residence is established by section 10(1)(r) of the LTM Act. The terms of the exemption are set out in clause 2 of Schedule 1A of that Act and are set out above at [15]-[16]. Clause 2 of that Schedule provides that land used and occupied by land owners as their principal place of residence and for no other purpose is exempt from land tax for any year commencing 1 January 2005, provided that the land is a parcel of residential land, a strata lot or (subject to further provisions) land comprised of two or more strata lots.
-
Significantly, subclause (2) confirms that land will not be regarded as being used and occupied as the taxpayer’s principal place of residence unless:
(a) the land, and no other land, has been continuously used and occupied by the person for residential purposes and for no other purposes since 1 July in the year preceding the tax year in which the land tax is levied, or
(b) in any other case, Chief Commissioner is satisfied that the land is used and occupied by the person as the person’s principal place of residence.
-
However, paragraph (b) does not grant the Chief Commissioner a discretion to treat the subject property as the taxpayer’s principal place of residence: Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Aldridge (RD) [2003] NSWADTAP 50 (“Aldridge”). The result is that the Chief Commissioner does not have an unfettered discretion and he cannot apply the exemption if the factual circumstances of the particular case do not support such a conclusion. In the present case the Chief Commissioner has not indicated any satisfaction as to the matters referred to in paragraph (b).
-
Significantly, the LTM Act does not provide any technical or legal meaning of the expression “principal place of residence”, so the expression has its ordinary meaning: Yen-Cheng Chuang v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2009] NSWADT 160 at [19]-[23]; Raissis v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2021] NSWCATAD 99 (“Raissis”) at [47].
-
The central facts relevant to this issue are clear and uncontested. Those facts and the legal consequences which flow from them can be summarised as follows.
FVK does not dispute that between January 2018 and early 2022 her place of residence was the SW Rocks property. As noted above at [21], the statutory provisions have the effect that a person cannot have more than one principal place of residence in any given land tax year.
FVK did not reside at the Putney property at any time during that period and in particular did not reside at the Putney property as at midnight on 31 December 2018, 31 December 2019, 31 December 2020 or 31 December 2021; those dates being the taxing dates for the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years, respectively.
FVK leased the Putney to various tenants for at least the period January 2018 to November 2021. The relevant law is clear: where an owner of real property leases it to a tenant that constitutes a demise of the property and vests the right of exclusive possession of the property in the tenant, as confirmed in Aldridge at [20]-[21]. That is, in those circumstances the owner has no right of possession of the property for the term of the lease.
As noted above, FVK asserts that she and her family members had and continue to have a strong emotional attachment to the Putney property and have regarded it throughout as “the family home”. She has lived at the property since 6 December 1990, brought up her three sons there with her husband and continued to live there after his death. Although I accept her unchallenged assertions to that effect and can well understand the emotional and family attachment to the property, this case and my decision on it, being a review of an administrative decision to impose land tax, must be based on the relevant revenue laws of New South Wales. Those laws are clear. They allow an exemption from land tax, relevantly, only in respect of a principal place of residence and the requirement of “residence” is not satisfied by emotional and family ties to a property, albeit that they are long-standing and genuine. Actual possession, use and occupation of the property as a residence is what is required in order for the exemption to be attracted: Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Ferrington (GD) [2004] NSWADTAP 41 at [42]; Aldridge at [20]; Raissis; Deans v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2022] NSWCATAD 14 at [33]-[34].
-
It must follow that the principal place of residence exemption is not attracted and that this ground fails.
Ground 2: Alleged ‘failure to warn’ by Chief Commissioner
-
FVK submits that the Chief Commissioner through Revenue NSW failed to keep New South Wales residents adequately informed about land tax requirements, including the operation of the principal place of residence exemption.
-
As was accurately contended on behalf of the Chief Commissioner, whether or not there was an absence of a “warning” of the type alleged, there is nothing at law which imposes upon the Chief Commissioner a legal obligation of any sort to keep citizens, either collectively or individually, advised or ‘warned’ about their potential liability for any form of taxation or duty, including land tax, or to issue notice of any such liability promptly. Accordingly, as might well be expected, nor is there anything at law which makes any remedy available to an “unwarned” taxpayer in such a situation: Commissioner of Taxation v Ryan (2000) 201 CLR 109; [2000] HCA 4 (“Ryan”); Gunasti v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2012] NSWADT 218 (“Gunasti”); Hashim vChief Commissioner of State Revenue [2020] NSWCATAD 67 (“Hashim”); Strathavon Resort Pty Ltd v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2017] NSWCATAD 200 (“Strathavon”); and, more recently, Monisse v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2022] NSWCATAD 276 (“Monisse”). The decision in Monisse was recently upheld on appeal: see Monisse v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2023] NSWCATAP 27.
-
This ground fails.
Ground 3: Unfairness – insufficient time between valuation advice and land tax questionnaire
-
This ground also fails. There is no such duty on the Chief Commissioner. The responsibility for issuing a notice of valuation to land owners in the State lies with the Valuer-General, not the Chief Commissioner, whose responsibilities, far-reaching as they are, do not extend to ensuring that what a taxpayer subjectively considers to be ”a reasonable time” has expired between the delivery of a notice of valuation and the issue of a land tax questionnaire.
Ground 4: Inadequate communications
-
This ground is also not made out. I could find nothing in the course of communication between the Chief Commissioner’s officers and FVK which revealed any unfair, improper or inadequate approach by the Chief Commissioner. But even if there had been evidence of such an approach, that would not of itself provide a proper basis for intervention by this Tribunal on review where, as here, the Chief Commissioner and his staff have been shown to have made the Assessments properly in accordance with the relevant law.
-
I am mindful of the observation by the plurality of the High Court (led by Chief Justice Gleeson) in Ryan at [19] that appeals to general notions of “fairness” or “justice” often (and I would add, often unintentionally):
“… do no more than mask the absence of any foundation in the legislation for the conclusion which is asserted.”
-
That general observation has been followed in many relevant revenue cases in this Tribunal and the Administrative Decisions Tribunal, including Gunasti, Strathavon and Hashim.
Ground 5: Unreasonable, inflexible and punitive nature of the legislation
-
This contention lacks legal substance and must fail. There is no legal obligation on the NSW Parliament to enact, nor on the Chief Commissioner or Revenue officers to administer and enforce, only such revenue legislation as can be demonstrated to be reasonable, flexible and non-punitive.
Correct calculation of the duty
-
No issue was raised as to the accuracy of the Chief Commissioner’s calculation of the amount of land tax payable by FVK; that is, it was uncontested that each of the assessments is internally correct, in that the calculation in each of them of the quantum of duty which the Chief Commissioner asserts to be payable is correct, although FVK does dispute the imposition of interest at both the market rate and the premium component.
Conclusion: Correct decision
-
The question of whether a decision is both correct and preferable must be made by reference to the relevant statute or other law under which the decision-maker purports to make that decision.
-
I must reach my decision on this issue solely on the basis of the settled law. As explained above at [15]-[16], FVK as taxpayer and the Applicant bears the onus of proof to the appropriate standard and the Chief Commissioner does not bear the legal burden of satisfying me that his decision to issue the Assessment is the correct and preferable one. Rather it is for FVK to demonstrate that that is not the correct and preferable decision.
-
For the reasons set out in the paragraphs under the headings above, FVK has not persuaded me that each decision by the Chief Commissioner to make the Assessments is other than the correct decision, made in accordance with the law; that is, the statutory provisions and the relevant case law pursuant to which it was made.
Conclusion: Preferable decision
-
The question of whether a decision is the preferable one must be made by reference to the relevant statute or other law under which the decision-maker acted. The term “preferable” in relation to an administrative decision was addressed in Shi v Migration Agents Registration Authority (2008) 235 CLR 286; [2008] HCA 31 at [140] by Kirby J, where he described it as a term which:
“… is apt to refer to a decision which involves discretionary considerations.”
-
Where the decision under review involves no discretionary considerations, the decision-maker is bound to administer the law in accordance with its terms: Valencia v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2017] NSWCATAD 261.
-
Sections 8(1) and (2) of the Administration Act are in these terms:
8 General power to make assessment
(1) The Chief Commissioner may make an assessment of the tax liability of a taxpayer.
(2) An assessment of tax liability may consist of a determination that there is not a particular tax liability.
-
To the extent that it might be thought that subsection (1) above confers a discretion as to whether or not to make an assessment applicable to duties generally (although such a contention was not raised by FVK), section 14(1) of the LTM Act appears to remove any suggestion of a discretion in respect of land tax, by its use of mandatory language. It is in these terms:
14 Assessments to be made
(1) Subject to this Act and the Taxation Administration Act 1996, the Chief Commissioner shall from the returns and from any other information in the Commissioner’s possession or from one or both of those sources, and whether any return has been furnished or not, cause an assessment to be made of the taxable value of land owned by any taxpayer and of the land tax payable thereon.
(Emphasis added)
-
In short, if, as here, the decision under review is found be the correct one and the Chief Commissioner has no discretion as to whether or not to make it, his decision must also be the preferable one.
-
Even if I have fallen into error in the above analysis and there exists some discretion in the Chief Commissioner as to whether to make an assessment, where the Commissioner does so and that assessment is correct; that is, made in accordance with the statutory provisions and the relevant case law as I have found in respect of the Assessments here, then the decision to make that assessment must also be the preferable one.
-
It follows that each of the decisions to make the Assessments is the correct and preferable decision.
Consideration – imposition of interest with market rate and premium components
-
Part 5 of the Administration Act deals with the imposition of interest and premium tax. In summary, section 21 provides that if a tax default occurs the taxpayer is liable to pay interest on the tax unpaid at an interest rate time to time applying under Division 1 of that Part. By operation of section 22, the interest rate is the sum of the “market rate component” and “the premium component” and sections 22(2) and (3) define those terms, respectively, as follows:
22 Interest rate
(2) The “market rate component” is—
(a) … the Bank Accepted Bill rate rounded down to the second decimal place …, or
(b) the rate specified for the time being by order of the Minister published in the Gazette.
(3) The “premium component” is 8% per annum.
-
Section 25 of the Administration Act is of central importance to this case. It is in the following terms:
25 Remission of interest
The Chief Commissioner may, in such circumstances as the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate, remit the market rate component or the premium component of interest, or both, by any amount.
-
In AES Wiring Pty Limited and AKS Distributions Pty Limited v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2012] NSWADT 11 (“AES Wiring”), it was confirmed that only exceptional circumstances justify the remission of the market component of interest.
-
However, there appears to be no such “exceptional circumstances” hurdle in relation to the remission of the premium component of interest. In Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Incise Technologies Pty Ltd (RD) [2004] NSWADTAP 19 (“Incise Technologies”), the Appeal Panel of the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal noted at [62] that it had not had the benefit of a detailed statement of the considerations relevant to the exercise of the section 25 discretion to remit interest as understood or accepted by the NSW Chief Commissioner, who had not adopted any public guidelines going to the exercise of this discretion, in contrast to the position which obtains in Victoria. That absence of public guidelines as to this significant discretion apparently continues. Certainly no such NSW guidelines were drawn to my attention.
-
In Incise Technologies at [62], the Appeal Panel observed as follows:
“… [T]he [Chief] Commissioner nominated four cumulative criteria for the circumstances where the premium component of interest should be remitted, namely:
(1) all principal tax that [has been assessed and] is owing and not in dispute has been fully paid [at the time of the request for remission of interest];
(2) there has been co-operation by the taxpayer in providing relevant information to the [Chief] Commissioner so as to enable the [Chief] Commissioner to issue assessments;
(3) such cooperation by the taxpayer has occurred prior to any investigation being commenced by the [Chief] Commissioner (voluntary disclosure) or, at the very least, within reasonable time after requests for information have been made by the [Chief] Commissioner – i.e. the taxpayer has taken reasonable care; and
(4) there has been no wilful default by the taxpayer in not paying tax on time.”
-
It appears that those criteria were nominated by the Chief Commissioner in that case as an indication of the sort of criteria which might guide the exercise of discretion.
-
I can see no indication that the four criteria were intended to “cover the field”; that is, to reflect the only circumstances in which the Chief Commissioner would exercise the relevant discretion. Rather it seems that they were accepted as a guide to the sort of circumstances in which the Chief Commission at that time (that is, some 19 years ago) might remit the premium component. The Appeal Panel in Incise Technologies recognised, at [63], that:
“[t]here may also be other circumstances in which it would be appropriate to remit the premium component, such as ... where the Commissioner has in some way contributed to the tax default.”
-
The same four criteria were adopted by the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Winston-Smith v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue [2018] NSWSC 773 per Emmett AJA (as His Honour then was) at [81] where he said:
“Both the Taxpayer and the Commissioner accept that there are four cumulative criteria as to the circumstances in which the premium component of interest should be remitted.”
-
His Honour then set out the four criteria from Incise Technologies in the terms cited above. But there is nothing in His Honour’s judgment to indicate that he regarded those four avenues to remission as exclusive, merely that those particular four criteria were accepted by the parties and then applied by him in reaching his decision on the particular facts of the case before him.
-
In the present case, I do not understand the Chief Commissioner to contend that those four criteria are exclusive; that they are the only matters which can or should be considered when deciding to include the premium component to an imposition of interest.
-
In hearing closing submissions, I noted for the parties’ benefit that the issue of the charging or alternatively remission of interest at the premium rate had not been addressed specifically at the hearing or in written submissions. I understood the solicitor for the Chief Commissioner to respond that the imposition of the premium component was justified in this case because FVK:
had not made out that the land tax which was due had been paid in full,
had not taken reasonable care to comply with her tax obligations; and
had not made any relevant voluntary disclosures prior to the assessments being issued.
-
I did not understand that response on behalf of the Chief Commissioner to include any contention that the four criteria emerging from Incise Technologies are in fact exclusive.
-
I note that the matters raised at [67(2)] and [67(3)] appear to be additional criteria to those considered in that case.
-
For those reasons, I have concluded that the set of factors which should be applied by of the Chief Commissioner in deciding whether to remit the premium component of interest is not a “closed set” which is limited to the four factors considered in Incise Technologies.
-
In my view:
FVK has demonstrated that she co-operated, at least to some extent, in providing relevant information concerning the Assessments to the Chief Commissioner and in most instances that appears to have occurred within a reasonable time after relevant requests for the information by the Chief Commissioner;
she has also provided some acknowledgment of her liability to pay the full amount of the land tax as assessed; for example in her email of 11 January 2023 seeking an arrangement for instalment payments and, at least partially, at the hearing; and
at relevant times she had a mental health condition, namely depression. I accept the uncontested report of FVK’s general practitioner dated 7 December 2022 as reliable evidence of that.
-
The extent to which FVK has failed to pay the assessed land tax on time and in particular in accordance with the appropriate instalment plan needs to be reconsidered on the basis that it might not be regarded as amounting to wilful default, having due regard to her diagnosed mental health condition, her misunderstanding of the availability of the principal place of residence exemption, and her overall financial position at relevant times.
CONCLUSIONS
-
It follows that:
the Chief Commissioner’s assessments of land tax payable by FVK in respect of the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years should be confirmed;
the Chief Commissioner’s decision to impose interest on the land tax charged by reference to the market rate component should be affirmed; and
with respect to the Chief Commissioner’s decision not to remit interest charged by reference to the premium component, the proper course and the one which is most consistent with my obligation to facilitate the just resolution of the real issues in this case (see NCAT Act, section 36(1)) and to act according to good conscience and the substantial merits of the case (see NCAT Act, section 38(4)), is to set aside that decision and remit it for further consideration by the Chief Commissioner in accordance with the recommendations set out in Order 3 below.
-
I therefore make the Orders and recommendations set out below.
ORDERS
-
Each of the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue’s assessments of land tax in respect of the 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 land tax years is affirmed.
-
The decision by the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue to impose interest on the land tax payable by the Applicant by reference to the market rate component is affirmed.
-
The decision of the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue to refuse to remit the premium component of interest on the land tax payable by the Applicant (“the premium component decision”) is set aside and remitted for reconsideration by the Chief Commissioner for State Revenue in accordance with the following recommendation of the Tribunal.
The Tribunal recommends that the premium component decision be re-considered by reference to the following matters in addition to any others the Chief Commissioner thinks applicable:
FVK’s apparent acceptance, in her email of 11 January 2023 seeking an arrangement for instalment payments and at the hearing, of her liability to pay the full amount of the land tax as assessed;
the extent of cooperation demonstrated by FVK in providing relevant information to the Chief Commissioner to enable the assessments to be made;
the extent to which such cooperation occurred within a reasonable time after relevant requests for information by the Chief Commissioner; and
the extent to which FVK’s failure to pay the assessed land tax on time and in particular, in accordance with the approved instalment plan, might not properly be regarded as an instance of wilful default, having due regard to her diagnosed mental health condition and her misunderstanding of the availability of the “principal place of residence” exemption.
***************
I hereby certify that this is a true and accurate record of the reasons for decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal of New South Wales.
Registrar
Decision last updated: 23 May 2023
4
24
4