Begg v Commissioner of Inland Revenue HC Auckland CIV 2007-485-2129

Case

[2008] NZHC 2199

28 February 2008

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND

WELLINGTON REGISTRY

CIV-2007-485-2129

IN THE MATTER OF     the Estate and Gift Duties Act 1968 and the

Tax Administration Act 1994

BETWEEN  MARION ELIZABETH BEGG JOHN HINMAN JACKSON NANCY JOSEPHINE JACKSON Plaintiffs

ANDTHE COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE

Defendant

Hearing:         20 February 2008

Counsel:         I R Millard QC and J Donovan for plaintiffs

H W Ebersohn and H Lee for defendant

Judgment:      28 February 2008

JUDGMENT OF DOBSON J

Introduction

[1]      These  proceedings  challenge  the  stance  adopted  by  the  defendant  (“the Commissioner”) towards deeds purporting to make intra-family gifts, but deferring payment of the cash amounts involved until the sale of the donor’s last home or, in certain circumstances, on the donor’s death.

[2]      The two sets of  plaintiffs  originally  commenced  challenges  to  disputable decisions of the Commissioner in the Taxation Review Authority and, by consent,

the proceedings were consolidated and transferred to this Court.

BEGG & ORS V THE COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE HC WN CIV-2007-485-2129  28 February

2008

[3]      An  agreed  statement  of  facts  annexed  the  two  forms  of  Deed  of  Gift  and Declaration of Trust which I take to be variations on a form produced by the Public Trust for clients of that organisation.  In the first case, Mr and Mrs Jackson, by Deed dated 28 November 2001, recorded their wish to each make a gift of $27,000 to their four children as tenants in common in equal shares.

[4]      Clause 2 of the operative provisions of the Deed provided:

2.The   Recipients   accept   these   two   gifts   of   $27,000   on   these conditions:

(a)      Each  gift  takes  effect  immediately  but  will  not  be  paid immediately.

(b)Each gift  will be paid from the proceeds of the  sale of the home, at the first point of time when either:

(i)       Both the Donors have died; or

(ii)      The  Donors  sell  (or  that  one  of  them  who  is  then living sells) the home without buying a replacement home within three months; or

(iii)     The  Donors  sell  (or  that  one  of  them  who  is  then living  sells)  a  replacement  home  without  buying  a further replacement home within three months.

(c)      From the time each gift takes effect it will be vested in the Recipients and will constitute an interest-free debt owed by that Donor to the Recipients.

(d)Ownership of the home (or any replacement home purchased by  the  Donor  or  the  surviving  Donor)  will  remain  in  the name of the Donors (or the surviving Donor) who will hold it as trustees or trustee for the Recipients and the Donors or Donor to the extent of their respective interests from time to time, including (where one of the Donors has died) the full amount previously gifted under this Deed by that Donor.

(e)      If the Recipients (or any of them) ever request either Donor

to do so, the Donors  or  surviving  Donor  will  give  the

Recipients a valid mortgage in a form able to be registered over the title to the home, to secure the amount from time to time owing under the provisions of this Deed.

[5]      There were slight differences in the terms  of  Mrs  Begg’s  Deed  dated

20 February 2002 made in favour of her three children, in that the gift is to be paid from the proceeds of sale of the Donor’s existing home, if sold during her lifetime without buying a replacement home within three months, or from the Donor’s estate.

Clause 2(d) of her Deed was simplified because of the absence of any requirements

to provide for the situation after one of the Donors had died.

[6]      The terms of the deeds facilitate subsequent gifts merely by completion of a schedule to the original deed, and could accordingly be used to advance the “gifting” over time of potentially all equity that the donors had in their respective properties.

In  both  the  present  cases,  there  had  been  a  number  of  subsequent,  annual  gifts  of $5,000.

[7]      I  was  informed  that  these  are  examples  of  a  substantially larger  number  of such deeds entered into by clients of the Public Trust.  The apparent purpose of such arrangements  is  to  enable  the  donors  to  reduce  the  extent  of  assets  they  have  to acknowledge ownership of, such as was a real issue at least in 2001 and 2002, when asset-testing  applied  to  subsidised  residential  care.   If  effective,  such  deeds  would enable  the  donors  to  reduce  the  extent  of  their  assets  by  the  extent  of  these commitments to pay family members sums out of the equity of their homes, at later points in time.

[8]      The donors have not provided mortgages which could be required of them by clause 2(e) of the deeds.  I understand that the current equity in each of their homes would be sufficient to pay the gifts provided for.   I was advised by Mr Millard QC for the plaintiffs that the initial gifts of $27,000 were at a level that would have to be advised to Work and Income, but that subsequent provisions for $5,000 were below the level that required any disclosure in the context of declarations as to assets.  Such declarations, at least in the context of Government support for residential care for the elderly, had greater significance at the time of these deeds, than is presently the case.

[9]      The Commissioner’s stance is that the promises to make gifts arise out of future property, and did not constitute gifts at the time the deeds were executed, for the purposes of the Estate and Gift Duties Act 1968 (“the Act”). The structure of such arrangements are designed to avoid any actual gift duty liability  arising  - $27,000 per donor per annum conforms with the present upper limit of gifts which do not incur any actual gift duty liability, but the Commissioner’s  concern  is  that, unless the point is clarified, donors under such arrangements will unwittingly incur a liability to gift duty when they perfect the combined commitments of the initial gifts, plus gifts made in subsequent years, to the extent that that results in one payment for

more  than  the  $27,000 maximum exemption from gift  duty. The Commissioner considers that principles of voluntary compliance require him to take the stance now,

to avoid public disquiet over apparent unfairness later, when the “perfecting” of such arrangements  would  constitute  assessable  gifts,  contrary  to  the  expectation  of  the donors involved.

[10]     For the Commissioner, Mr Ebersohn advised that  he  was  not  aware  of  any other concern over the use of such deeds.   In particular, the Crown Law Office had

no  instructions  to  challenge  the  deeds  because  of  concerns,  such  as  by  Work  and Income  or  the  Ministry  of  Health,  that  such  arrangements  constituted  a  device  to avoid the intended effect of asset-testing, provided for in schemes such as the state subsidy for elderly residential care.

Relevant provisions of the Act

[11]     The relevant portion of the definition of a dutiable gift in s 63 is as follows:

(1)      Subject to this Act, a dutiable gift shall include and consist of –

(a)All  the  property,  wherever  situated,  comprised  in  any  gift made  by  any  donor  to  any  donee,  where  the  donor  is domiciled in New Zealand at the date of the gift, or is a body corporate incorporated in New Zealand: …

[12]     Then s 64 addresses when voluntary contracts will be deemed to be gifts:

(1)A disposition of property made in performance or satisfaction of a voluntary contract shall be deemed to be a gift, whether the contract

or disposition was made before or after the commencement of this
Act.

(2)      A   voluntary   contract,   whether   made   before   or    after   the commencement  of  this  Act,  shall  not  in itself constitute  a  gift,  but shall become or be deemed to have become a gift so soon and so far as it has attached to and affected the legal or equitable title to any property to which it relates.

[13]     The definition of “disposition of property” in s 2(1) is as follows:

Disposition   of   property   means   any   conveyance,   transfer,   assignment, settlement, delivery, payment, or other alienation of property, whether at law or in equity; and without limiting the generality of the foregoing provisions of this definition, includes –

(b)      The creation of a trust. …

The definition of “voluntary contract” in s 2(2) is as follows:

…means any contract entered into, whether with or without an instrument in writing, without fully adequate consideration in money or money’s worth:

Provided  that  where  the  consideration  in  money  or  money’s  worth  is inadequate, the contract shall be deemed to be voluntary to the extent of that inadequacy only.

[14]     The  plaintiffs  argued  that  the  notion  of  “attach[ing]  to  and  affect[ing]  the legal or equitable title to any property to which it relates…” in s 64(2) turns largely on common law and equitable decisions on gifting.

[15]     On  the  basis  of  classic  authorities  from  the  1860s,  the  plaintiffs  submitted that gifts may be made in two ways.   First, by transferring legal ownership, which requires the donor to do everything necessary in order to transfer the property, and render the settlement binding on him.   Secondly, to declare a trust in respect of the property being gifted, so that it is either transferred to trustees for this purpose, or declared to thereafter be held by the donor, subject to a trust for that purpose (see Milroy v Lord (1862) 4 DeG F&J 264 at 274; 45 ER 1185, and Richards v Delbridge (1874) LR 18 Eq 11).

[16]     The plaintiffs argued that the terms of the deeds were effective to make the gifts by both these means.

[17]     The primary  argument  for  the  Commissioner  was  that  the  deeds  relate  to future property, not yet in existence, and therefore not capable of being the subject of

a  present  gift  for  the  purposes  of  the  Act.  Although there were overlaps in these arguments about the inability to deal with future property preventing a gift by either

of the recognised legal or equitable means, they had greater cogency as an argument against the deeds operating to effect any transfer or settlement of legal interests.

[18]     There  was  a  range  of  additional  points  raised  against  these  deeds  effecting gifts for the purposes of the Act, and I shall deal with those later in the judgment.

[19]     The case most heavily relied on for the plaintiffs was that of Perry v Commissioner of Stamps (1913) 32 NZLR 1194 where the positions were opposite to those in issue here, in that the Commissioner sought to characterise a very similar

transaction to those involved in the present proceedings as assessable for gift duty, whereas the taxpayer denied that it had been effected to an extent that rendered the arrangement assessable for gift duty.

[20]     That  case  was  decided  under  the  Death  Duties  Act  1909,  s 39  of  which defined “disposition of property” in a somewhat different way to the 1968 Act.  The relevant parts of s 39 provided:

39.      In this Act the term “disposition of property” means –

(a)any  conveyance,  transfer,  assignment,  settlement,  delivery, payment, or other alienation of property, whether at  law or in equity:

(b)      the creation of a trust…

[21]     It can be seen that in this earlier Act, what has become the principal element

of the definition, with inclusive examples set out thereafter, was simply the discrete definition  in  (a)  of  what  might  constitute  a  disposition,  without  the  linking  words “…and, without limiting the generality of the foregoing provisions of this definition includes  -…”.   The  definition  in  the  earlier  Act  had  the  activity  of  “creation  of  a trust” as a separate, stand-alone activity that qualified as a disposition of property.

[22]     The deed in Perry purported to assign to trustees the sum of £25,000 to issue out of and be charged on specified land. The settlor covenanted to pay the £25,000

to the trustees out of proceeds of sale, provided the sale netted sufficient after other commitments were met.  During her lifetime, the settlor had discretion as to when the sale would occur, and after her death the trustees were to determine the timing of

a  sale. The  settlor  appointed  the  trustees  as  her  attorney  to  execute  a  mortgage securing  the  sum  of  £25,000  against  the  land. No  such  mortgage  had  been completed.

[23]     The only ground advanced for the Commissioner in Perry was that there had been a settlement or alienation of property in terms of s 39(a).   A full Court of five Judges of the then Supreme Court all rejected this contention.   It was held that the gift  was  incomplete  until  the  mortgage  had  been  executed,  and  accordingly  the settlement  did  not  operate  as  an  alienation  of  property  within  s 39(a)  (Stout  CJ, p 1201, Edwards J, 1206, Sim J, 1211).

[24]     However, without  it  being argued,  all  Judges  were  prepared  to  characterise the terms of the deed as an  effectual  creation  of  a  trust  with  regard  to  the  sum  of £25,000, bringing it within s 39(b) of the 1909 Act.  Justice Edwards treated the law as stated by Jessel MR in Richards, citing from a passage in the earlier case in the following terms:

A man may transfer his property, without valuable consideration, in one of two ways: he may either do such acts as amount in law to a conveyance or assignment of the property, and thus completely divest himself of the legal ownership, in which case the person who by those acts acquires the property takes it beneficially or on trust, as the case may be; or the legal owner of the property may, by one or other of the modes amounting to a valid declaration

of  trust,  constitute himself  a trustee,  and,  without  an  actual  transfer  of  the legal  title,  may  so  deal  with  the  property  as  to  deprive  himself  of  the beneficial ownership, and declare that he will hold it from that time forward on trust for the other person.  It is true he need not use the words “I declare myself a trustee,” but he must do something which is equivalent to it, and use expressions which have that meaning; for, however anxious a Court may be  to  carry  out  a  man’s  intention,  it  is  not  at  liberty  to  construe  words otherwise than according to their proper meaning.

[25]     On this basis, Edwards J reasoned that the settlor had created herself a trustee

of the lands, upon the trusts reflecting the commitments she made in the deed.  Sim J found  that  if  she  sold  the  land  and  did  not  pay  £25,000  to  the  trustees,  then  they could sue to recover that sum.   Similarly, after her death, the trustees could call on her executors to perform.   On this reasoning, the  trust  created  by the  terms  of  the deed could be enforced when those later circumstances occurred.

[26]     Both aspects of the reasoning in Perry are relevant in present circumstances.

In terms of the steps necessary to transfer legal ownership, where it is contended that

a gift of money has been made, then the steps required before it could be perfected rendered it incomplete in the conveyancing sense.  Mr Ebersohn accepted that if the mortgages provided for were executed in the present case, then that would have the donors  completing  all  steps  they could,  and  a  disposition  would  occur.   Until  that time,  however,  the  gift  has  not  been  perfected. It  relates  to  property  not  yet  in existence, but a form of which would be created by the execution of a mortgage.

[27]     The law on gifting is consistent in requiring completion of the steps to  be taken by a donor.  So, according to the nature of the property gifted, the donor has to have done everything required to transfer the property.   It is also relevant that such

an incomplete gift may be revoked at any time – see eg Laws of New Zealand, Gifts,

para 63, which observes that there is nothing dishonest on the part of an intending donor who chooses to change his or her mind any time before the gift is complete.

[28]     Cases   cited   in   argument   included   Williams   v   Commissioner   of   Inland Revenue  [1965] NZLR 395. In that case, a deed of assignment provided that an assignor assigned by way of gift, for religious purposes, the first £500 of the net income that would accrue to the assignor from a family trust each year for a defined period. The Commissioner denied that the assignment was effective, and had assessed the assignor as liable for income tax upon the income. The judgment of Turner J in the Court of Appeal included the following:

But  while  equity  will  recognise  a  voluntary  assignment  of  an  existing equitable  interest,  it  will  refuse  to  recognise  in  favour  of  a  volunteer  an assignment of an interest, either legal or equitable, not existing at the date of the  assignment,  but  to arise in the future.   Not  yet  existing,  such  property cannot  be  owned,  and  what  may  not  be  owned  may  not  be  effectively assigned: Holroyd v Marshall (1862) 10 HLC 191, 210; 11 ER 999, 1006 per Lord Westbury LC. If, not effectively assigned, it is made the subject of an agreement to assign it, such an agreement may be good in equity, and become effective upon the property coming into existence (ibid, 211; 1007) but if, and only if, the agreement is made for consideration (as in Spratt v Commissioner  of  Inland  Revenue  [1964] NZLR 272), for equity will not assist a volunteer: In re Ellenborough, Towry Law v Burne [1903] 1 Ch 697.

[29]     The reasoning in Williams found “the first £500 of net income” to be future income, there being uncertainty as to whether the trust would produce that amount in any given year.   It was found that the assignor could have assigned entitlement to a portion of his right to income – say the first 25% - but that the different assignment of a set amount which might not arise in any year was an assignment of money that was not presently owned by the assignor.

[30]     The  Commissioner also relied on the  judgment  of  Windeyer  J  in  the  High

Court of Australia decision of Norman v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1963)

109 CLR 9, at 24:

As  it  is  impossible  for  anyone  to  own  something  that  does  not  exist,  it  is impossible  for  anyone  to  make  a  present  gift  of  such  a  thing  to  another person, however sure he may be that it will come into existence and will then be his to give.  He can, of course, promise that when the thing is his he will make it over to the intended donee.  But in the meantime he may change his mind and when the time comes refuse to carry out his promise, even though it were by deed.  A court of law could not compel him to perform it.  A court of equity would not.

[31]     Both of these decisions refer to the requirements for a gift, as effected either

at law or in equity.   They certainly support the requirement for completion by the donor  of  everything  possible  to  effect  a  transfer  in  respect  of  the  property  gifted. However, they may not apply in the same way to the proposition in respect of the second mode of creating a gift, namely by the establishment of a trust in respect of the gifted property.

[32]     Reverting then to the reasoning in Perry on the second mode of gifting, namely by creating a trust which would qualify as a disposition of property for the purposes of s 63. The  relevant  clauses  in  the  present  deed  are  cast  in  terms  that conform  with  the  judgment  in  Perry,  in  that  they  explicitly  acknowledge  that  the property  out  of  which  the  gifts  will  be  paid  is  henceforth  held  on  trust  for  the respective interests of donor and recipient.

[33]     I do not accept the Commissioner’s argument that this is ineffectual because

of the reservation of an interest in the property by the donors.   That  is  implicit  in Perry, because the commitment was for less than the present and projected value of the  land.     Also,  it  did  not  lack  effect  because  of  the  prospect  that  the  gift  might ultimately fail if the property did not realise sufficient to make the payment.   There might  nonetheless  be  a  trust  in  respect  of  the  existing  property,  which  reflected obligations assumed, and to be discharged in circumstances that would arise later.

[34]     However, Mr Ebersohn argued that the definition of “disposition of property” has changed in a material way.  The form of the definition in the 1909 Act survived through  a  number  of  re-enactments,  including  the  1955  Act,  and  the  current  form was used for the first time in the present, 1968, Act.   The argument is that for the creation of a trust to qualify as a disposition of property, it no longer stands on its own where it would be analysed by reference to general law of trusts as to what is effectual  to  create  a  trust.     Rather,  it  is  argued  for  the  Commissioner  that  the requirements  are  qualified  by  having  to  constitute  activity  that  comes  within  the principal aspect of the definition.  Accordingly, on this argument it would have to be the creation of a trust that involved a conveyance, transfer, assignment, settlement, delivery, payment or other alienation of property.

[35]     This approach to the interpretation of the expression “disposition of property”

is a conventional one.   Where the draftsman uses “includes”, the specific examples

that  follow  are  to  be  taken  as  examples  of  the  activity  in  the  definition  that  has preceded  such  examples.  The  words  “without  limiting  the   generality  of  the foregoing provisions…” recognises that the list of instances is non-exhaustive, and that other modes of conveyance, transfer, etc not coming within the sub-set identified may also qualify.

[36]     The contrary argument is that any activity coming within the types set out in the  lettered  sub-paragraphs  will,  simply  by  virtue  of  such  inclusion,  constitute sufficient activity to be treated as  a conveyance, or one of the alternatives, for the purposes of the primary element of the definition.  This would give a primacy to that list  of  examples  creating a  potential  inconsistency between  them  and  the  principal element of the definition.   I accordingly accept the approach to interpretation urged for the Commissioner.

[37]     This leads to the question whether the terms of the deed purporting to create a trust do constitute a “…settlement…of property…in equity”.   Mr Ebersohn argues there has not been any such settlement.  I am inclined to agree with Mr Millard that the trusts created by clauses 2(d) of the deeds do settle the homes on the donors as trustees, for the respective rights and interests of the recipients to the extent of the accumulated gifts under the deeds, and of the donors as to the balance (after taking into account any other indebtedness charged against the properties).

[38]     The next consequence of the “creation of a trust” now being a sub-set of the principal definition of “disposition of property” is that there has to be a coincidence between the disposition constituting a gift, and the subject matter of the property in respect  of  which  there  has  been  a  settlement  of  legal  or  equitable  interests.   This requirement  is  implicit  in  the  definition  of  “disposition  of  property”  itself.  It  is supported  by the  temporal  focus,  and  requirement  for  the  conduct  to  attach  to  the gifted property that is inherent in ss 63(1)(a) and 64(2).  Under the former section, a dutiable gift consists of all the property comprised in any gift made by any donor to any donee where the donor is domiciled in New Zealand at the date of the gift.  That contemplates the subject matter being identifiable  and  in  existence  so  as  to  be  the subject of the gift.   The latter section provides that concluding a voluntary contract (such as these deeds are) does not itself constitute a gift, but becomes  a  gift when and  to  the  extent  that  it  attaches  to  the  property  to  which  the  gift  relates.  That

contemplates that creation of an  equitable interest by the second possible  mode  of gifting will “attach” to the gifted property, in this case, cash.   Section 64(2) would apply,  for  instance,  if  the  donor  had  a  $100,000  term  deposit  and  wished  to  gift $27,000 of it.  She or he could declare that they henceforth held the deposit subject to a trust to pay the donee $27,000 on maturity of the deposit.

[39]     Here, the subject matter of the trusts is the homes, but they are not the subject

of  the  gifts. Rather,  consistently  with  the  offers  to  secure  the  promise  of  legal transfer  of  cash  at  a  later  date  by mortgage,  the  subject  matter  of  the  trust  is  real property, out of which it is proposed the gift might later be paid.

[40]         I am conscious that this is a narrow  basis  on  which  to  distinguish  Perry,  a decision of a very strong Court.   It appears the decision has been relied on in only three later cases, and then only on the negative finding as to the incomplete nature of the gift for the purposes of effecting a transfer of legal interests: see Commissioner of Stamps v Erskine [1916] GLR 641, Commissioner of Stamps v Halliday [1922] GLR 196 and Taylor v Commissioner of Stamps [1923] GLR 701.

[41]     In Perry, there is a sense that the Court considered the matter had not been adequately argued. The judgments all determine the case in favour of the Commissioner on a provision in the section that was not argued at all. It is easy to infer that their Honours were concerned at a transaction, the structure of which could lead to avoidance of duty in situations where it should be payable. Mr Millard did accept that if the gifts did only relate to future property, then there could not be a disposition in respect of them. However, he argued that the present situation is the same as in Perry, and that the Court there was not concerned at any lack of capacity to  create  a  trust  because  the  property  to  which  it  related  was  not  in  existence. However, the more material point is that the Court in Perry was not concerned at any mismatch between the existing property that was made the subject of the trust, and the  cash  sum  which  the  donor  committed  to  paying  at  an  undefined  point  in  the future.  If I am correct in treating the scheme of the 1968 Act as requiring conformity between the subject matter of the trust, and the property gifted, then this is a point that simply did not arise in Perry.

[42]     That requirement for conformity does not extend to absolute matching. Rather, the trust has to be declared in relation  to  existing property,  some  or  all  of

which is to constitute the gift, and be held on trust for the donee.   As instanced, it could be $27,000 out of  a  $100,000  deposit,  or  a  quarter  share  of  a  block  of  land declared to be held on trust. The necessary connection is broken when the property vested in the trust is different to the subject matter of the gift and is subjected to the trust  only to  provide  the  source  of  a  later  payment  when  it  is  anticipated  that  the property will  be  transformed,  and  produce  sufficient  to  honour  the  promise  to  the donee.

[43]     The  form  of  relief  sought  in  each  of  the  Notices  of  Claim  filed  in  the Taxation   Review   Authority   was   to   uphold   the   taxpayers’   challenges   to   the Commissioner’s  disputable  decision  that  the  terms  of  the  deeds  did  not  constitute gifts  for  the  purposes  of  the  Act. For  the  reasons  outlined,  I  would  uphold  the Commissioner’s decisions.  Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ challenges to those decisions are declined.

Costs

[44]     The Commissioner is entitled to costs, according to scale, on a 2B basis.  He

is also entitled to disbursements which, if necessary, are to be fixed by the Registrar.

Dobson J

Solicitors:

Public Trust, Lower Hutt for plaintiffs
Crown Law Office, Wellington for defendant

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