McDonald v Deputy Federal Commissioner of Land Tax (NSW)
[1915] HCA 54
•3 September 1915
CityoJ
StJixvry
& n
20 C.L.R.] OF AUSTRALIA.
231
actually o'ot the solicitor wlio acted for the trustee to draw up H' C. o f A.
. ® ̂
1915.
the assignments,
For these reasons I agree with the view that this appeal
h o w d e n
V.
should be dismissed.
Cock .
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor, for the appellant, J. IF. Dixon.
Solicitors, for the respondents, Morgan cfc Fy fe.
B. L.
Sec.,Dcpl°f
reoc'u* .
Socwl
k ' i i ?
NotFoB
Noklcnon
Common-
AmoSo Pty IVestem uuui
General, Ltd (Hot)
.
Cemmisnentr
CoftimiJBonc
waM (IW) 42FCR51
H IG H COURT OF AUSTRALIA .]
McDo n a l d ...................................................... appellant -,
AND
THE DEPUTY FEDERAL COMMISSIONER'!
OF LAND TAX FOR NEW SOUTH [
R e s p o n d e n t .
W A L E S ...................................................... ''
ON A P P E A L FROM T H E S U P R E M E COURT
OF
N E W SO UTH
WALES.
Land T a x—Ansesumtnl o f unimproved vaLiie— Ta.^torai property— Standard o f value
H . C. o f A.
—Improvements— Water bore— Proof of presence of water— Vahie of land—
1915.
Evidence— Price given on sale— Price ofered— Land T a x Assessment A c t 1910-
_'
1911 {No. 22 o/1910-.Vo. 12o/'1911), sec. ,T
Sydney ,
I d ascertaining the improved value of pastoral land for the purpose of tlie
L and T a x Assessment A ct 1910-1911 the value of land which, situated as '
S e p t. 3.
the land in question is, would carry one sheep to the acre may properly be
Isaacs, Powers
taken as the standard of value.
and Rich JJ.
The existence of a w ater bore which has been constructed by a public T rust on land adjoining a pastoral property , and from which p a r t of the property may be watered, is not an im provement appertain ing to the property the value of which may be deducted from the improved value in order to arrive a t the unimproved value.
232 HIGH COURT
[1915.
H. C. OF A. The added value which the proof by means of a bore of the presence of w ater below the surface of the land gives to th a t land is no t an improvement on or appertain ing to the land, and, therefore, the value of the improvement McD onalda tt r ibu tab le to a w ater bore on the land is w'hat a t the da te of the assessment
1915.
V .
D e p u t y it would cost in time and money to sink the bore.
F e d e r a l
Co m m is
In ascertaining the value of land for the purposes of the L and T a x Assess
s io n e r OP ment A c t 1910-1911 the price paid for the part icu lar land, or for similar land,
L and T ax
on a concluded contract is admissible as evidence of such value, bu t the price
(N.S.W).
offered for the particular land, or the price which the owner has offered to
accept, not followed by a concluded contract, is not so admissible.
H arris v. M unicipal Council o f Sydney , lO S .R . (N .S .W .), 860, approved.
Decision of the Supreme C ourt of New South Wales {Ferguson J .) ,
affirmed.
A p p e a l from the Supreme Court of New SoutJi Wales.
On the assessment of John McDonald in re.spect of a certain pastoral property called “ Mungie Bundle,” near Moree in New South Wales, as of 30th June 1910, for tlie purposes of the L and Tax Assessment Act 1910-1911, the Deputy Federal Commis sioner of Land Tax for New South Wale.s transmitted to the Supreme Court of New South Wales an objection that the assess ment was excessive. The objection was heard by Ferguson J., wlio reduced the assessment from approximately £2 2s. 6d. per acre to £2 per acre, McDonald h a v i n g claimed that it should be reduced to approximately £1 7s. 6d. per acre, and he ordered each party to bear his own costs.
From that decision McDonald now appealed to the High
Court.
Campbell K.C. (with liim Harper), for the appellant.
Sliand K.C. (with him Pike), for the respondent.
During argument reference was made to H arris v. M unicipal Council o f Sydney (1); Mersey Docks v. Liverpool (2); Cart wright \ . Sculcoates Union (S)', Spencer v. The Commonwealth (4); H arris v. M inister fo r Public Works (N.S.W.) (5); Cliquot’s Champagne (6).
Cur. adv. vult.
(1) 10 S.R. (N .S .W .), 860.(4) 5 C .L .R ., 418.
(2) L.R. 9 Q.B., 84.(5) 14 C .L .R ., 721.
(3) (1900) A.C., 150.
(6) 3 Wall., 114.
20 C.L.R.] OF AUSTRALIA.
2S3
H. C. OF A.
Tlie judgment of tlie C o u e t , which was read b}? ISAACS J., was as follows:—
jn i5 .
This is an appeal from the decision of Ferguson J. given under sec. 46 of the Land Tax Assessment Act 1910-1911 on appeal
M cD o n a l d
V.
D e p u t y F e d e r a l
from the Commissioner’s assessment.
Co m m is
The property assessed is a sheep station called, as a whole, “ Mungie Bundle,” near Moree.
sio n e r OF
| L and T ax |
It consists of over 74,000 acres,
(N.S.W.)
and has been regarded by the witnesses as divisible internally for
Sept. S.
the purpose of considering its varied characteristics, into four areas—two areas fronting the Gwydir River and the two others further back. The two river frontages comprise about 28,000 acres; the first of the back areas consists of about 17,000 acres, and the second back area about 29,000 acres.
The taxpayer returned the unimproved value at approximately £ 1 7.S. fid. per acre; the Commissioner as.sessed it at approximately
£2 2s. fid., and the learned Judge reduced that to £2.
The first objection argued was this. Ferguson J. adopted a rate of £3 5s. an acre as the standard improved value of land situated as the land in question is, provided it carries one sheep
to the acre.
The objection raised to this was twofold.
First, it was contended that such a standard cannot legiti- matelj^ be taken as a guide, but only as a test or check as to whether some other guide leads to the correct result. I t is impossible to see why such a standard is not a proper guide. The carrjdng capacity of a station, when its improved value is sought for in the first place, is essential as a starting point. But when that is ascertained, the next step must inevitably be to find what price land of that actual capacity, due partly to nature and partly to human effort, would fetch per acre. This the learned Judge has done, and has concluded that the land of this station, the whole 74,000 acres, situated as it is, if it were capable of carrying all round one sheep to the acre, could be .sold to a willing buyer for £3 5s. an acre.
There was abundant evidence to sustain this finding. Mr. Crane, the chief witness for the appellant, fixed for the three first areas—amounting in all to about 45,000 acres—an improved value of £3 fis. 8d. on a basis of one sheep to the acre, but thought their respective carrying capacities were one sheep to one acre, one sheep to one and a half acres, and one sheep to one and
VOL. XX.
16
234 HIGH COURT
[1915.
H.C. OF A.a quarter acres. Tlie fourth area he thouglit, on the basis of one
| 1915. | sheep to tlie acre, would be worth £3 3s., but that its actual |
M cD onald
capacity was one sheep to one and a half acres. The total
V .
improved value he made £2 10s. per acre.
The Court did not
D e p u t y
F e d ek a l entirely agree with the estimate by Mr. Crane of the carrying
Com m is
capacity of the land, but thought that, taking it all round, it
s io n e r OF
L an d
T ax
(N.S.W.)carried one sheep to an acre and a quarter — a conclusion
that the appellant admittedly cannot ask this Court to alter. Fergufion J. therefore made the improved value £2 12s., or 2s. more than Mr. Crane. The £3 5s. is obviously an all round figure also, and, if it is not exact, the error is in appellant’s favour. The higher price as stated is £3 6s. 8d., the lower price is £3 3s., and the average—supposing the two classes were equal in area—is £3 4s. lOd. But the area of the better class, on Mr. Crane’s evidence, is 44,000 acres, leaving only 29,000 acres of the lower value land. Consequently £3 5s. is not ungenerous to the appellant.
Then it was urged that the Judge had overlooked the distinc tion between wool-growing and fattening country, and that Mr. Crane’s higher price was based on fattening country. But the truth is that Mr. Crane fixed £3 6s. 8d. in respect of the three first areas because of two circumstances, fattening capacity and situation, and thought that whatever was wanting in one respect was made up for in the other.
That objection therefore fails. regarding as an “ improvement” the value of which must be deducted from the total improved value, the existence of a Trust undertaking established by the Government under Act No. 41 of 1897. I t is entirely extraneous to the property, but, from the Trust bore, water is procurable for watering part of the station. There is no doubt in one sense the existence of such an opportunity improves the property by making the possible income from it greater, just as a new railway station close at hand would, or a new invention for clipping sheep, or a rain making device. But it is not an “ improvement ” within the meaning of the Act, which is .something “ thereon or appertain ing thereto.” The “ improvements” contemplated by the Act are
20 C.L.R.] OF AUSTRALIA.
235
such as ai'e in the strict legal sense “ appurtenant ” to tlie pro
H. C. OF A.
1915.
perty and incident to its ownership.
This cannot be said of the
mere legal and actual possibility to obtain water from the Trust.
McD onald
V.
The fact and degree of that possibility,and the cost of sati.sfjdng D e p u t y
F e d e r a l Com m is
it, are elements in determining the value of tlie land as unim
proved land, because tliat, as one of the surrounding circums io n e r o r
L and T ax stances, has become one of its characteristics, though an acquired
(N.S.W.)
one. It was also strenuously pressed that the value of th e “ bore ” in Barrett’s paddock as an improvement was to be measured not only by what it would have cost in 1910 to sink that bore, but also by the additional certainty of water which its presence gives. The additional certainty is not an improvement. Before the bore was sunk, no doubt the uncertainty of the presence of water left the land at a lower value; and when the presence of water was demonstrated the value of the land was increased. But in 1910 a buyer would have the knowledge that w^ater was procurable, and the presence of water below the soil is a natural feature ; it is part of the land unimproved, though the feature was previously unknown. Knowledge of a natural quality of the land does not make the quality artificial, and consequently, as the value is to be taken as at the date of valuation, the only “ improvement ” within the meaning of the Act, relevant to this point, was the bore itself; and its value for taxation purposes is what it would cost in time and money to sink it.
The third objection was that the learned Judge erred in estimating the value of improvements of ring-barking and clear ing and w'ater bores. He said that he thought the appellant’s witnesses had been influenced too much by the increased carry ing capacity they gave to the land and too little by the question of initial cost.
I t is quite true that the Act defines “ value of improvements ” in these terms: “ the added value which the improvements give to the land at the date of valuation irrespective of the cost of the improvements.”
The “ cost ” there means what the improvements did in fact cost the owner. He may have been fortunate in getting them at a specially low cost, or unfortunate in having had to pay an abnormally high sum. But the material fact is that there they
236 HIGH COURT
[1915.
H.C. or A.are, whate\ er they originally co.st; and the question is how much
| 1915. | their presence adds to the natural value of the land. And in |
M cD onaldascertaining tliat, the cost of replacing them if they were then
V.
D e p u t y annihilated is a most material factor for a prospective buyer to
F e d e r a l consider in determining what he would give for the land, and, if
Com m is
| for a buyer, so for the Court. I t may not be the only factor, of |
s io n e r
OF
L an d T ax course, but it is one necessary factor.
Burgess, one of the appel
(N .S.W.)
lant’s witnesses, and his station manager, disregards this entirely, and looks at the value of these improvements only from tlie standpoint of what additional income they produce. A railwaj' engine without a boiler would produce no income; but the added value of a boiler, which may be procured immediately at a given price, is not the yearly income otherwise lost, but the cost of installing the boiler.
There is no error of principle in what Fergunun J. did, but it is a question of whether the value put by him on these improve ments is supported by the evidence.
Mr. Crane and Mr. Cramsie certainly put values far higher than those taken by the Judge. There is clear evidence to sup port the finding in the testimonj^ of Ewers and Moore. Ewers proceeds to arrive at the improved value of the land by first finding from certain sales an average which he takes as the unimproved value of this land. If that be correct, of course the task is ended. But in order to state the improved value, prob ably for checking purposes, as witnesses frequently do in these cases. Ewers went on to appraise the improvements. As to the fencing, tanks, and wells, and bores, and drains, he assumed a buyer, and in effect a,sked himself what it would cost a buyer of the property unimproved in 1911 to replace the.se improve ments in the condition of structure and effectivene.ss in which they then were. Having fixed that sum, he went on to add interest on their cost, for six months during which they would be in course of construction, and added that to the cost. But he also took interest on the cost of the land itself for the same period and added that to the sum for improvements, to which it does not really belong. But even so, and assuming in favour of the appellant that that last interest ŵ as properly so added, his estimate is within the amount allowed by the Judge.
20 C.L.R.] OF AUSTRALIA.
237
H. C. OF A.
Moore’s evidence i.s admittedly within that ainonnt also, and no error of principle is urged against it, beyond the general one
1915.
that constantly pervaded the whole argument, namely, that the
M cD onald
V .
original cost of improvements to the owner must in some way D e p u t y
F e d e r a l Com m is
form an element in calculating their value, although the Act
e.vpressly excludes it.s io n e r OP
L and T ax
This objection therefore fails also.
(N.S.W,)
The next ground relates to the rejection of a letter written by Morton for McDonald to Ormond in 1908, offering to sell the property at a price.
Apart from the distance of time—three years—it is plain that the mere fact of a .statement by an owner to a stranger that he would be willing to sell at a given figure, and that the offer was not accepted, for some reason undisclosed, is no evidence of what the Statute requires, namely, the price which a willing buyer wmuld give, supposing the seller announced reasonable conditions. At most, it is evidence of the owner’s bond fide belief at that time as to the value of his land. Nor is the refusal of the person to whom the offer was made to accept it, even if specifically on the ground of excessive amount, any more than an expression of his opinion on the point. Along with the Ormond incident there was added another which, though not mentioned in the grounds of appeal, has been allowed, by consent, to be urged, namely, a verbal agreement by one McClarty to purcha.se the land from the appellant at a figure wliich, it is said, was in fact below the value fixed by the Judge. McClarty inspected, named the price he was willing to give, and the appellant accepted the offer. But McClarty withdrew before
the contract was reduced to wi’iting, he refusing to sign.
And
so the matter ended.
No binding contract was made.
Both these transactions stand separate from everything else as the authority to Morton was expiessly limited to an offer to Ormond, and McClarty was a principal. There is evidence, apart from them, that McDonald had put his property into the hands of agents for sale without result, but that was all before the trial Court, and no question now arises as to the effect to be given to that fact. Nothing, therefore, said with respect to the Ormond and McClarty incidents has any relation to the genei'al
238 HIGH COURT
[1915.
H. C. OF A.
failure to .sell. Those incidents are separate and independent
1915.events, and must stand on their own footing.
M cD onald
Mr. Campbell was, of course, pressed with the case Harris v.
V.
D e p u t y M unicipal Council o f Sydney (1), which decides that evidence of
F e d e r a l an offer to purchase land in the vicinity of the plaintiff’s land
Co m m is
is not admissible as evidence of the value of the plaintiff’s land
s io n e r OF
L a n d
| T ax itself, The case gives no reasons beyond the weight of authority, mostly American. On the hearing of this case | Ferguson J., in a passage relied on by Mr. Campbell, who was within his rights in asking us to hold differently from the view taken by the Court in H arris’s Case said :— “The fact that £1,000 has been offered for a piece of land and refused, is no less relevant to the question whether its value is less than £1,000 than if the offer had been accepted, but I followed the uniform practice of the Court in rejecting the evidence.” This was pre.ssed as a personal indication of opinion, coerced onlj^ by the authority of the fixed practice. Learned counsel also relied on the quotation of the learned Chief Justice of this Court in Harris v. Minister for Public Works (i\r..8. ff’.) (2) on the subject of relevancy. The pa.ssage quoted from the judgment of Ferguson J. presents in a terse and vivid form the problem raised by the objection now under consideration. |
(N .S.W.)
We have to search for principles. On what principle is the act or opinion of a third person, manifested on some former occasion, respecting the value of other land, not on oath, not in presence of the parties, the opinion not capable of being tested by cross-examination, admissible at all to affect adversel}' one of the parties to the litigation ?
The answer is found in the principle that the rules of evidence followed by the Courts have been adopted for the better further ance of justice, and are moulded so as to attain that object in the best possible manner.
I t sometimes happens that facts unconnected with the facts directly in issue are valuable aids as indicating, though indirectly, the truth as to the central facts to be ascertained. To exclude them utterly and absolutely would defeat justice. And yet,
(1) 10 S.R. (N .S .W .), 860. (2)
U C .L .R ., 721, a t p. 725.
20 C.L.R.J OF AUSTRALIA.
239
tliere is not between them and the central facts the visible
H. C. OF A.
1915.
connection which would make them direct evidence.
The law makes exceptions, where justice is best served by doing so.
McD onald
V.
And, where the value of a given piece of land is in
D e pu t y
F e u e r .al Com m is
issue, it is the constant practice to admit evidence of actual sales
of similar land where they may be regarded as tin-owing light on s io n e r OF
L and T ax
the value of the subject land.
(N.S.W.)
As to whether any particular sale can be so regarded must, in the tirst instance, be determined by the primary tribunal, and this is subject to review.
In the Metropolitan Asylum District v. H ill (I) Lord Watson says;—“ In order to entitle him to give such evidence, he must, in the first instance, satisfy the Court that the collateral fact which he proposes to prove will, when established, be capable of art'ording a reasonable presumption or inference as to the matter in dispute.” But if it is so regarded, then by a process of com parison, and elimination, the common factor may be elicited, and a means afforded for arriving at a just conclusion.
I t is true that from a logical standpoint, a bond fide offer of £1,000 is just as good evidence the moment before acceptance as the moment after. Why, then, should one be received, and the
other rejected ?
The answer is found in the same principle,
namely, the better service to justice on the whole.
When the matter has reached the point of a concluded con tract, there has been a definite concrete fact established, which not only evidences value, but to some extent helps to create or modify it. Where an owner has actually parted with his land for a fixed sum and a buyer has parted with his money for the land, a clear event has arisen, which, based on the ordinary instincts and impulses of human nature, indicates a consensus of opinion between two adverse parties in the community respecting the value of similar lands. Some advantage to justice is therefore manifestly possible from considering it, and the law presumes that up to that point the disadvantages of having to undertake the collateral inquiries as to conipari.son do not outweigh the possible advantages.
But if the negotiations do not end in a concluded bargain, the
(1) 47 L.T.. 29, a t p. .9.5.
240 HIGH COURT
[1915.
H. C. or A.
Held is at once open to a multitude of other considerations before
1915.
the same point of opinion is reached.
Excursions into the realm
of collateral circumstances would be endless.
They would so add
McD onald
V.
D e pu t y
to the cost, delay and uncertainty of litigation as on the. whole to
F e d e r a l render a great disservice to the cause of justice. The Court might
Com m is
have to inquire whether the owner or the other party really ter
s io n e r
OF
L a n d
T ax
(N.S.W.)minated the negotiations, and, if so, for what reason. Had either
of the parties discovered the true worth of the property or been misinformed by some means as to its real value ? Did the owner mistrust the ability of the purchaser, or did the latter find an adverse claimant to the property, or did his circumstances change, or was there a personal quarrel ? Or did he learn of a still better bargain ? Or, again, was the offer a sham on either .side,
or both sides ?
Such inquiries would render litigation intoler
able, and defeat the purpose for which they were permitted.
Consequently, though the logical relevance may be the same when once the fact of a real firm offer is reached, whether it be accepted or not, yet to reach that point in the latter case is prac tically in .such a different position in relation to the true func tion and aim of Courts of Justice, as to be placed legally in a different position also. The exception in favour of the indirect evidence ends where it fails to serve with advantage, and the line of demai’cation is drawn at actual contract. This is in accord with the vast weight of authority, and finds support in text-books such as Best on Evidence (secs. 92 and 93); Wigmove (secs. 443 444), and Halsbiory’s Laws of England (vol. xiii., par. 625).
This objection therefore also fails. exclusion from evidence of three actual contracts of .sale of improved land in the vicinity.
The result of the discussion was this ;—The appellant, wlien before Ferguson J., inter alia relied, in order to establish the value of his land, on a line of inve.stigation ba.sed on .sales of other lands. He selected certain of those .sales, those of large extent, which he considered more nearly comparable with liis own, and his witnesses built their conclusions on these in the first instance. During this ease he introduced three others, and closed
241
20 C.L.R.]
OF AUSTRALIA.
H . C. OF A.
his case.
Tlie Crown witnesses in turn selected three other con
1015.
tracts as the basis of their opinion.
The appellant then, by way
of rebutting case, insisted on selecting a further number of con
MoD onjvld
V.
tracts that he had laid aside in the tirst instance, and he so
D e pu t y F e d er a l
insisted for the purpose of vitiating the results of the Crown COMMIS -
witnesses. The learned Judge determined that this was not
.mONEE OF L and T ax
strictly evidence in reply, and he was right. He alsq declined to
(N.S.W.)
exercise his discretion in allowing the new evidence, and there is no legal ground for saying his discretion was not properly exercised. There is a further answer to this objection. Even supposing an error had been made in rejecting the rebuttal contracts, the result could not have been affected. They pertained entirely to the one line of investigation. There was an alterna tive line, wholly distinct, which started with the improved value of the subject property, and worked down to its unimproved value by deducting the added value of its own improvements. The learned Judge discarded the first line, because he preferred the other as a system, and so the actual results .shown by the
first became altogether immaterial.
.
The last objection was as to the costs, each party having been left to bear his own. Clearly that cannot be disturbed in such a case as this.
This appeal must be dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors, for the appellant, Minter, Simpson & Co.
Solicitor, for the respondent, Gordon H. Castle, Crown
Solicitor for the Commonwealth.
B. L.
88
0
0