Fb Duvall Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue HC Auckland CIV 2009-404-1193

Case

[2010] NZHC 281

25 February 2010

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND

AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV 2009-404-1193

UNDER  THE JUDICATURE AMENDMENT ACT

1972

BETWEEN  F B DUVALL LIMITED & ORS Plaintiffs

ANDCOMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE

Defendant

Hearing:         2 December 2009

Appearances:  S R G Judd for plaintiffs

M Ruffin and R J Wallace for defendant

Judgment:      25 February 2010

JUDGMENT OF ALLAN J

In accordance with r 11.5 I direct that the Registrar endorse this judgment

with the delivery time of 3.30 pm on Thursday 25 February 2010

Solicitors:

Ladbrooks, Auckland [email protected]

[email protected]

Meredith Connell, Auckland [email protected]

DUVALL LIMITED & ORS V COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE HC AK CIV 2009-404-1193  25

February 2010

[1]      Duvall Limited (Duvall) has for  many  years  been  engaged  in  litigation

against the Commissioner of  Inland  Revenue  (the  Commissioner). The  dispute concerns the taxation consequences of a scheme devised by Mr J G Russell, aimed principally at the minimisation or avoidance of income tax. In terms of that scheme

a number of companies assigned their net profits to entities controlled by Mr Russell,

in return for the repayment of the sums involved (less remuneration for Mr Russell’s services) in the form of tax free capital.

[2]      Proceedings between the Commissioner and the various companies involved

in the scheme have for the most part been decided in favour of the former.  But after succeeding before the Taxation Review Authority (TRA) in one such proceeding on

an issue concerning GST, the Commissioner later conceded on appeal to this Court that the appeal must be allowed.  The concession was subsequently confirmed in the Court of Appeal.

[3]      The  proceedings  before  the  TRA  concerned  certain  defined  GST  periods. Duvall considers that the Commissioner’s concession in the High Court binds him in respect of all other GST periods affecting Duvall as well.

[4]      In  this  proceeding,  Duvall  (along  with  some  21  other  plaintiffs  claiming  a similar  interest)  initially  pleaded  four  causes  of  action.         It  contends  that  the Commissioner :

a)        acted unlawfully, unfairly and unreasonably in refusing to amend the GST assessments of the plaintiffs so as to bring them into line with the outcome of the proceedings in which the Commissioner had made

a GST concession, and by refusing to accept late objections from the plaintiffs in respect of the assessments;

b)acted unlawfully, unfairly and unreasonably by refusing to issue amended assessments for income tax  following the abandonment by the Commissioner of an argument  that   aspects   of   the   scheme constituted a sham, and by refusing to accept late objections from the

plaintiffs  regarding  the  Commissioner’s  failure  to  issue  amended assessments;

c)        was similarly in default with respect to GST;

d)acted unlawfully, unfairly and unreasonably by refusing to issue new assessments in respect of the plaintiffs’ tax positions in a manner that met the requirements of s 99(4) of the Income Tax Act 1976.

[5]      In  October  2009  the  plaintiffs  filed  and  served  an  amended  statement  of claim;             11  new  plaintiffs  were  added  and  an  additional  fifth  cause  of  action  was included:

(e)       Managed   Fashions   Limited   claims   that   the   Commissioner failed to act lawfully, fairly and reasonably by seeking interest and penalties when no due date for payment had been notified by him.

[6]      The Commissioner now seeks to strike out the first, second and third causes

of action.  He had intended also to seek an order striking out the fifth cause of action, but  on  1  December  2009,  the  day  preceding  the  hearing  in  this  Court,  Managed Fashions Ltd was placed in liquidation.   Counsel were accordingly agreed that that aspect  of  the  Commissioner’s  application  could  not  proceed. Counsel  are  also agreed  that  the  fourth  cause  of  action  (which  the  Commissioner  does  not  seek  to strike out) should be stayed for a period of six months to enable discussions between the parties to proceed.

Strike out principles

[7]      High Court Rule 15.1 (formerly r 186) provides that the Court may order the whole or any part of a statement  of  claim  to  be  struck  out  where  it  discloses no reasonably  arguable  cause of action, or is frivolous or vexatious. The  applicable principles are well established. They were summarised in Attorney-General v Prince

& Gardner [1998] 1 NZLR 262 at 267. The Court will usually assume in favour of a

plaintiff that pleaded facts are true, but  it  is  not  required  to  do  so  if  the  pleaded allegations are entirely speculative or without any identifiable evidential foundation,

or without particulars where appropriate.

[8]      The causes of action concerned  must  be  so  untenable  that  they  cannot possibly succeed.  The jurisdiction of the Court is to be exercised sparingly and only

in  clear  cases  where  the  Court  is  satisfied  that  it  has  the  requisite  material. But where a case is demonstrated to be plainly hopeless the sooner it is brought to an end the  better: Southern  Ocean  Trawlers  Ltd  v  Director  General  of  Agriculture  &Fisheries [1993] 2 NZLR 53 at 63.

[9]      The foregoing principles apply equally to an application to strike out a judicial  review  proceeding:  Southern  Ocean  Trawlers  Ltd. There is a need  for particular caution in exercising the jurisdiction to strike out a pleading where a novel cause of  action is pleaded: Couch v Attorney-General [2008] 3 NZLR 725. But even in such cases the Court must consider the position of the defendants who might

be at risk of being subjected to potential costs, possibly unrecoverable, in defending untenable claims:   Attorney-General v Body Corporate 200200 [2007] 1 NZLR 95 (CA) at [51].

Judicial review in tax cases

[10]     Disputes   between   taxpayers   and   the   Commissioner   are   governed   by   a detailed  statutory  framework.                 Process  requirements,  including  time  limits  for issuing challenges, are set out in Part 8A of the Act.

[11]     The challenge provisions of the Act were recently the subject of an extensive review by the Court of Appeal in Westpac Banking Corporation v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2009] 2 NZLR 99. There, the Court said:

[43] The Tax  Administration  Act  provides  for  a  disputes  procedure  which enables  taxpayers  to  challenge  assessments.  Under  Part  4A,  the  procedure begins prior to assessment, with the Commissioner usually serving a notice of proposed adjustment (NOPA) (s 89B). The taxpayer may reject the NOPA by  filing  a  response  notice  within  a  fixed  period  (s  89G).  Rejecting  the NOPA initiates further dispute resolution steps.

[44] Part 8A of the Tax Administration Act provides for a challenge process under  which  the  taxpayer  may  challenge  an  assessment,  either  before  the Taxation Review Authority or the High Court.

[45] Sitting outside these Parts are ss 109 and 114. Section 109 provides: Except in . . . a challenge under Part 8A –

(a)No disputable decision may be disputed in a court or in any proceedings on any ground whatsoever; and

(b)Every  disputable  decision  and,  where  relevant,  all  of  its particulars are deemed to be, and are to be taken as being, correct in all respects.

[46] As well, s 114 provides:

114.   Validity  of  assessments  —  An assessment  made  by  the

Commissioner is not invalidated –

(a)through a failure to comply with a provision of this Act or another Inland Revenue Act; or

(b)      because   the   assessment   is   made   wholly  or   partially  in compliance with –

(i)a   direction   or   recommendation   made   by   an authorised    officer    on    matters    relating    to    the assessment:

(ii)      a   current   policy   or   practice   approved   by   the Commissioner  that  is  applicable  to  matters  relating to the assessment.

[47]  These provisions have been  described  as  a  code  for  the  resolution  of taxation disputes (Ohms, “Dispute Resolution” in Harris et al, Income Tax in New Zealand  (2004), p 1134)  and  provide  what  might  be  thought  to  be  a particularly inauspicious statutory context for judicial review (that is, outside of the challenge process provided for by the Tax Administration Act).

[12]     Later in the judgment, by way of summary, the Court said at [59]:

[59] We think it appropriate to continue to apply the established principles as

to judicial  review  in  tax  cases. We accept that judicial  review  is  available where what purports to be an assessment is not an assessment. Associated

with this, we accept that judicial review is available in exceptional cases and

thus  may  be  available  in  cases  of  conscious  maladministration  (as  was recognised  in  Futuris).  We  can  reconcile  this  with  ss  109  and  114  on  the basis  that  in  such  cases  (that  is,  no  genuine  assessment  or  conscious maladministration) what is challenged is either not an assessment or, at the least, not the sort of assessment which the legislature had in mind in enacting those  sections.  On  this  basis  we  see  the  availability  of  judicial  review  as depending on the claimant establishing exceptional circumstances of a kind

which results in the amending assessment falling outside the scope of ss 109

and 114 and thereby not engaging those sections.

[13]     The  Court  also  observed  at  [58]  that  the  commencement  of  judicial  review proceedings   in   other   than   exceptional   circumstances   is   an   abuse   of   process: Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Abattis Properties Ltd [2003] NZAR 155 at [24].

[14]     In the even more recent decision of French J in Tannadyce Investments Ltd v CIR  (2009)  24  NZTC  23,499,  the  following  useful  summary  of  the  effect  of  the Westpac decision appears at [39].

[39] These sections and their effect on the availability of judicial review in tax cases has recently been considered by the Court of Appeal in Westpac Banking  Corporation v The Commissioner of Inland  Revenue  (2009)  24

NZTC 23,340; [2009] NZCA 24. The court confirmed the following:—

1. The established principles in relation to applications  for judicial review in tax cases should not be widened.

2. As a general rule, the correctness of a tax assessment can only be challenged  in  challenge  proceedings  under  Part  VIIIA  of  the  Tax Administration Act.

3.  To allow collateral challenge to assessments  through  judicial review can provide  scope  for  gaming  and  diversionary  conduct.  It involves not just delay but diversion of effort and resources.

4. A challenge by way of judicial review is reserved for exceptional circumstances.

5. A challenge by way of judicial review in other than exceptional circumstances is an abuse of process.

6. Circumstances are exceptional for this purpose if they produce a situation in which the assessment can be fairly seen as not within the scope of ss109 and 114 of the Tax Administration Act.

7.  Judicial  review  is  essentially  confined  to  two  circumstances namely assessments that were not truly assessments at all and where there has been conscious maladministration.

[15]     It is to be noted  that  the  Supreme  Court  recently refused  an  application  by

Westpac for leave to appeal against the decision of the Court of Appeal.

[16]     Judicial review in cases such  as  the  present  will  be  available  only  in exceptional circumstances, and in particular where a plaintiff can establish that the case falls outside the scope of ss 109 and 114 of the Tax Administration Act.

The Russell template

[17]     In  order  to  place  the  present  proceeding  in  its  proper  factual  context,  it  is necessary  to  include  a  brief  description  of  the  elements  of  the  scheme  by  which Mr Russell  sought  to  achieve  tax  advantages  for  participant  companies. For  that purpose  I  simply  adopt  with  gratitude  the  summary  provided  by  the  Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Miller v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2001] 3 NZLR 316 at [6].

[6] In order to explain the issues in the appeal, it is necessary to give some more details of the scheme by which  the  profits  of  the  trading  companies were to be converted into capital receipts in the hands of the shareholders. The first step was for  the shareholders to agree to sell their shares to a company controlled by Mr  Russell, the price being left outstanding and secured by a mortgage over the shares. This transaction was not intended to

be a sale in any commercial sense. The vendors declared themselves trustees

of the shares for Mr Russell’s company but remained on the register and they remained directors, continuing to run the company as before. And they had

an option to repurchase the shares when the scheme had run its course. The sale had two purposes, both of which were entirely tax-related. The first was

to make the appellants’ company part of a group of companies controlled by

Mr Russell, some of which had tax losses.  This would enable Mr Russell to take  advantage  of the group  relief  provisions  in  s  191.  The  second  was  to create a debt to the shareholders which could be satisfied out of the profits of their company.

[7] The next step was for the trading company to agree to pay its net profits, half-yearly,  to  the  purchaser  company  controlled  by  Mr  Russell.  This  was called an administration charge. It was income in the hands of the purchaser company,  but  group  relief  under  s  191  was  relied  upon  to  avoid  tax.  In reality the administration charge was partly a conduit for the money which was to be returned to the shareholders, and partly a fee payable to Mr Russell for the use of the scheme. The proportion was calculated by reference to the amount  of  tax  saved.  In  addition,  the  company  paid  a  consultancy  fee representing  5  per  cent  of  the  administration  charge  to  another  Russell company.

[8] The third stage was for the Russell company to pay the shareholders their part of the administration charge. This was designated an instalment of the purchase  price.  The  amount  of  the  purchase  price  was  calculated,  not  by reference to the value of the company but to enable the scheme to mop up a given   number   of   years   of   expected   net   profit.   When   that   had   been accomplished,  the  appellants  could  exercise  their  option  to  repurchase  the company  and   carry  on   as   if   nothing  had   happened.   Alternatively,   as happened in the case of the O’Neils, Mr Russell’s company could agree to buy a release of the option for a sum which would create a sufficient new capital debt to enable the scheme to start up again.

[18]     In essence therefore, a typical Russell template arrangement involved:

a)        a   Russell   controlled   entity   (the   parent   company)   which   would purchase  the  shares  or  business  of  a  profitable  organisation  (the trading company);

b)the payment  at the end  of each  year, by the trading company to the parent company,  of  the  whole  of  the  trading  company’s  surplus (known  as  the  administration  charge)  after  payment  of  a  consulting fee to Commercial Management Ltd, a Russell entity.

Relevant procedural history

[19]     For  present  purposes  it  is  sufficient  to  consider  the  history  of  Duvall’s dealings  with  the  Commissioner.   I  will  touch  upon  the  position  of  the  remaining plaintiffs later in this judgment.

[20]     In May 1990 the Commissioner made an assessment of Duvall for seven GST

periods between 31 August 1987 and 31 August 1990 inclusive.  In November 1990

he issued amended assessments for those seven periods.

[21]     On  31  May  1991  Duvall  filed  amended  returns  for  those  seven  periods, claiming an entitlement to input tax credits but denying liability for output tax.

[22]     On  11  June  1992  the  Commissioner  advised  Duvall  in  writing  that  the amended GST returns were being treated as late objections and that the objections were disallowed.

[23]     On27July1992, Mr Russell, representing Duvall, wrote to the Commissioner requesting that he state a case for consideration by the TRA.   On 28 January 1993, the Commissioner did state a case for the TRA’s determination.  The proceeding  was  heard  by  the  TRA  on  17 March  1993.   Judge  Willy delivered  the TRA’s  decision  on 29 April  1993: Case  Q34 (1993)  15  NZTC  5,159. The TRA held that:

a)        payments made under the Russell template (the administration charge)

for management services were liable for GST;

b)        the payments were not  dividends  and  accordingly  not  exempt  from

GST;

c)        the earlier findings of the TRA in respect of income tax issues and the application of s 99 of the Income Tax Act did not affect the outcome

in respect of GST issues.

[24]     The TRA was asked to state a case for the opinion of the High Court, which it did  on  22  February 1996. Between April 1993 and July 1997,  the  Commissioner undertook detailed investigations in respect of the affairs of Duvall, in consequence

of which he reached the conclusion that the management services concerned did not result from the carrying on of a taxable activity.  Accordingly, when the appeal came

on for hearing before Baragwanath J in  the  High  Court  on  11  July  1997,  the

Commissioner agreed that the appeal ought to be allowed on that ground.

[25]     The High Court judgment is reported as  F  B  Duvall  Ltd  v  CIR  (1997)  18

NZTC  13,470.  The  main  issue  for  the  High  Court  was  the  determination  of  the grounds upon which the appeal should be allowed.

[26]     In the High Court, the Commissioner contended that no services, financial or otherwise, were supplied by the taxpayer and  so  no  GST  liability  arose. Duvall submitted that it was not open to the Commissioner to raise the “no services” argument  (because  it  had  not  been  raised  before  the  TRA)  and, further,  that the services it supplied to its subsidiaries were financial services and therefore exempt from GST. The High Court held that the Commissioner’s contention was open for consideration by the Court, and that there was no reason why the parties should not reverse their position on appeal.  The Court concluded that no services were supplied by the taxpayer in return for the administration charges.

[27]     Following the High Court judgment the Commissioner made zero assessments which, while deducting the wrongly imposed output tax, also rejected

Duvall’s claim for input tax credits. That outcome was challenged by the taxpayer, but the High Court held in two further judgments reported as F B Duvall Ltd v CIR (1999) 19 NZTC 15,039  and F B  Duvall Ltd v  CIR (1999) 19  NZTC 15,515, that both output tax and input tax deductions should be reduced to zero in each period.

[28]     Duvall appealed to the Court of Appeal.  It contended that the Commissioner was not entitled before Baragwanath J to alter the stance previously taken by him on the  output  tax  question,  and  by  that  means  to  open  up  the  question  of  input  tax credits.   The  issue  for  the  Court  of  Appeal  was  whether  the  High  Court  had  had jurisdiction to permit the Commissioner to raise the “no taxability activity” argument in that Court.

[29]         The Court of Appeal’s judgment was delivered on 17 May 2000:  F B Duvall Ltd v CIR (2000) 19 NZTC 15,658.   Duvall succeeded.   The Court of Appeal held that in the High Court, the Commissioner was necessarily confined to the stance he had taken before (and upheld by) the TRA, namely that Duvall was liable for output tax,  having  made  supplies  to  subsidiaries  for  which  it  received  the  administration charges.   The Court of Appeal concluded that the Commissioner’s attempt to assert the opposite, namely that no supplies of services were made by Duvall, was outside the assessment that was in issue before the TRA.  The Court of Appeal held that the High Court had exceeded its jurisdiction in allowing the Commissioner to change his stance;  the  High  Court’s  role  was  confined  simply  to  allowing  the  appeal  by consent.

[30]     The Court of Appeal summarised its conclusions in the following manner:

[28] For these brief reasons we conclude that  the appeal must be allowed, with the result that the orders made in the High Court in the judgment of 9

October  1997  and  in  subsequent  judgments  beyond  the  bare  allowance  by

consent of the appeal against the decision of the TRA, are quashed. In lieu it

is  ordered  that  the  GST  assessments  referred  to  in  the  case  stated  by  the

Commissioner  to  the  TRA  be  amended  by  deleting the  amounts  shown  as payable by way of output tax in respect of administration fees for supplies made  by  Duvall  to  subsidiary  companies.  We  understand  from  discussion with counsel that in that result the Commissioner will recognise the input tax credits and make appropriate refunds without further order. It  will then be for  the  Commissioner  to  determine  whether  he  is  able  to  make  further assessments  in  respect  of  the  input  tax  credits,  notwithstanding  the  prima facie time bar, and, if so, whether he should do so.

[31]     The  Commissioner  was,  in  the  event,  precluded  from  making  a  further assessment in respect of input tax credits however, by reason of the application of the relevant statutory time bar.

[32]     Following the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Duvall asked the Commissioner to make amended GST assessments in accordance with the Court of Appeal judgment. The Commissioner failed to do so. Duvall asked that its request

be referred to the TRA.  The Commissioner duly stated a case on 20 February 2001, but  as  a  preliminary issue  claimed  that  Duvall  was  unable  to  request  a  case  to  be stated, as the objection, if any, made by Duvall had not yet been determined by the Commissioner. Accordingly,  the  questions  for  determination  in  the  case  stated included the following:

a)        Whether  Duvall  had  made  timely  and  competent  objections  to  the assessments made by the Commissioner;

b)        If not, whether Duvall was able to make a late objection to the periods

in question;

c)        Whether  Duvall,  in  the  absence  of  a  determination  regarding  the alleged objections, was able to request a case stated.

[33]     The TRA directed that these jurisdictional questions be the subject of a preliminary hearing, following which it  made  an  interim  decision  on  27  February

2002:  Case V18 (2002) 20 NZTC 10,207; and a final decision on 5 September 2003, reported as Case W25 (2003) 21 NZTC 11,251.

[34]     The TRA held that it had jurisdiction to remedy any shortcomings regarding the  assessments,  including  curing  any  procedural  defects. It  considered  that  the Commissioner was obliged to reassess in accordance with the earlier decision of the Court of Appeal and that Duvall was accordingly not liable for output tax, but that there was no jurisdictional basis to embark upon a consideration of whether Duvall was entitled to corresponding input tax credits.

[35]     At the request of the Commissioner, the TRA stated a case to the High Court. The judgment of Priestley J was delivered on 8 March 2005: CIR v F B Duvall Ltd (2005) 22 NZTC 19,142. The Commissioner’s appeal was allowed. Priestley J held that the TRA had no jurisdiction in respect of the case stated where there had been

no  disallowance  of  an  objection,  the  TRA  having  no  entitlement  to  discharge  the Commissioner’s statutory responsibility to exercise his discretion.  His Honour held that the Commissioner could not be compelled to accept a late objection;  nor did the Commissioner have a statutory duty to reassess prior to accepting a late objection.

[36]     Duvall  appealed  to  the  Court  of  Appeal. The  decision  of  that  Court  was delivered  on  7  April  2006:   F  B Duvall  Ltd  v CIR  (2006)  22  NZTC  19,866.   The Court of Appeal dismissed Duvall’s appeal.   It observed that where an objection is late,  it  must  first  be  accepted  by the  Commissioner.   If  so  accepted,  the  objection must be considered by the Commissioner before a decision is made by him, either to allow or disallow it.  If the decision is to disallow the objection or to allow it only in part, then the taxpayer may require the Commissioner to state a case.  The Court of Appeal  further  noted  that  the  Commissioner  is  not  bound  by  time  limits  when considering whether to allow or disallow a late objection:

[32]   There are no specific time limits on the Commissioner for the consideration of the objection but  the  taxpayer  is  not  deprived of remedy where unreasonable delay occurs. As Priestley J pointed out, judicial review

is available and, in the absence of the TRA having jurisdiction, that would have been the proper course to follow in this case if Duvall considered the

delay to have been unreasonable.

[37]     At the time of the hearing before Priestley J, the Commissioner had made no decision with respect to acceptance or rejection of Duvall’s amended GST returns. But by letter dated 31 May 2005, the Commissioner wrote to Duvall, advising that

he declined to accept as timely Duvall’s objections based on amended GST returns

for the six month periods ended 30 June 1995 and 31 December 1996 respectively.

[38]     On  5  May 2006,  shortly  after  delivery of  the  most  recent  Court  of  Appeal judgment,  the  Commissioner  again  wrote  to  Duvall,  advising  that  he  declined  to accept as timely, Duvall’s late objections in respect of eight six month periods ended between 31 May 1990 and 31 December 1994.

[39]     Mr Russell responded on behalf of Duvall to the later letter, by requesting in writing  on  11  May  2006,  that  the  Commissioner  state  a  case  to  the  TRA.                 The Commissioner took the  view that by reason of  the rejection of  the late  objections, there  were  no  extant  objections  upon  which  to  base  the  stating  of  a  case  for  the determination  of  the  TRA. Duvall  took  no  step  to  pursue  its  request  for  a  case stated;  nor is there evidence of any other step until this proceeding was commenced in March 2009.

First cause of action

[40]     Analysis of the plaintiffs’ pleading is significantly hampered by reason of the paucity of particulars, and the complete absence  of  affidavit  evidence  from  the plaintiffs, whether in support of the application for judicial review, or in opposition

to the Commissioner’s strike out application (save for a late one page affidavit from Mr Russell  which  does  not  address  the  first  cause  of  action). In  their  amended statement of claim the plaintiffs pleaded that:

15.The  defendant  has  failed  and/or  refused  to  exercise  his  statutory powers as alleged at paragraph 4 above to amend the assessments of GST for F B Duvall Ltd and the other plaintiffs to ensure that  the assessments  of  GST for all  plaintiffs and  for  all relevant  tax  years are correct and consistent with the treatment of F B Duvall Ltd for the periods August 1987–August 1990.

16.The  defendant  has  failed  and/or  refused  to  exercise  his  statutory power  to  accept  late  objections  from  the  plaintiffs  as  alleged  at paragraph 5 above to allow the plaintiffs to object to the defendant’s refusal to amend the GST assessments.

17.      By failing to exercise his statutory powers as alleged in paragraphs

15 and 16 above, the defendant has failed to act in accordance with law, fairly and reasonably because;

a.The defendant has failed to adopt a consistent position and has failed to treat all tax periods and taxpayers in the same way   even   though   the   factual   basis   for   the   defendant’s decisions was identical for each period and each taxpayer;

b.The  defendant  has  failed  in  his  statutory  duty  to  use  his powers to  ensure  the  correctness  of  assessments  of tax. If the correct legal position is that GST is not payable on the Administration Charge then the existing assessments of the plaintiffs  that  state  that  GST  is  so  payable  must  not  be correct under tax laws;

c.No reasonable person in the position of the defendant would continue to insist on assessments that are incorrect;

d.No reasonable person in the position of the defendant would fail  to  issue  new  assessments  to  each  of  the  plaintiffs  that correctly assessed  their tax position  in accordance with  his own view as expressed in the F B Duvall case in the High Court and the Court of Appeal;

e.No person in the position of the defendant would submit to the  Courts  in  one  case  that  GST  did  not  arise  on  the Administration  Charge  and  then  maintain  in  his  dealings with the  same  taxpayer  for  different  tax  periods  and in  his dealings with other taxpayers in identical situations that GST did arise;

f.no reasonable person in the position of the defendant would refuse to accept late objections from the plaintiffs when the circumstances that have given rise to the objections did not arise until after the ordinary period for making an objection had   expired   and   were   caused   by   the   defendant’s   own conduct.

WHEREFORE THE PLAINTIFFS CLAIM:

A.       A   declaration   that   the   defendant   has   failed   to   act   in accordance with law, fairly and reasonably;

(i)by refusing to amend  the  GST  assessments  of  the plaintiffs to be consistent with the GST position of F

B Duvall Ltd for the tax periods from August 1987– August 1990;  and/or

(ii)      by   refusing   to   accept   late   objections   from   the plaintiffs  regarding  the  existing  GST  assessments; and/or

B.       An injunction or an order in the nature of mandamus;

(i)requiring   the   defendant   to   amend   the    GST assessments of the plaintiffs to be consistent with the GST position of F B Duvall Ltd for the tax periods from August 1987–August 1990;  and/or

(ii)      requiring  the  defendant  to  accept  late  objections from  the  plaintiffs  in  relation  to  the  existing  GST assessments.

C.       Costs.

[41]     This pleading tends  to  conflate  two  quite  separate  issues. The  first  is  the

Commissioner’s decision to decline to accept a late objection.  The second concerns

the precedent effect of the  Commissioner’s  concession  in  the  proceedings  before

Baragwanath J in the High Court.

Commissioner’s decision to decline to accept late objection

[42]     It is common ground that the Commissioner’s discretionary power to accept a late  objection  in  this  case  arose  under  the  now  repealed  s  33(2)  of  the  Goods  & Services Tax Act 1985.  That subsection read:

(2)No notice of objection given after the time specified in the notice of assessment  or  after  such  extended  time  as  the  Commissioner  may allow under subsection (1) of this section, shall be of any force or effect  unless  the  Commissioner,  in  the  Commissioner’s  discretion, accepts the same and gives notice to the objector accordingly.

[43]     In CIR v Wilson (1996) 17 NZTC 12,512 the Court of Appeal considered the proper approach to be taken to the materially identical provisions of s 30(2) of the Income Tax Act 1976. The Court of Appeal there confirmed that the Commissioner’s discretion was reviewable, but only within relatively narrow parameters.  Richmond P, delivering the judgment of the Court said at 12,520:

While  the  correctness  of  the  assessment  cannot  be  challenged  outside  the statutory  objection  procedures,  the  legitimacy  of  the  process  employed  in making  the  assessment  or  determination  —  here  the  decision  refusing  the late  objection  request  —  is  justiciable  on  traditional  administrative  law grounds.   As in the case of any authority entrusted with statutory powers of decision,   the   Commissioner’s   statutory   powers   must   be   exercised   in accordance  with  explicit  or  implicit  statutory  criteria  and  to  serve  the purposes  of  the  legislation.  In  the  end  it  is  for  the  Court  in  any  review proceedings  to  decide  whether  the  discretionary  decision  has  indeed  been made upon a proper self-direction as to the legal criteria and their application to  factors  material  to  that  decision.  It  is  not  for  the  Court  to  question  the particular  weight  attached  by  the  decision  maker  to  particular  material factors. But in some rare circumstances the outcome of the discretion or its expression may be such that the only proper inference is that the power itself has been misused (Brierley Investments Ltd v Bouzaid [1993] 3 NZLR 655; also reported as Brierley Investments Ltd v C of IR (1993) 15 NZTC 10,212 (CA) ; New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General [1987] 1 NZLR 641;

Padfield v Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food [1968] AC 997; and
R v Inland Revenue Commissioner, ex party Preston [1985] 1 AC 835).

The  imposition  of  time  limits  is  a  central  feature  of  tax  administration  in New Zealand, as in other jurisdictions. It is part of the scheme and policy of the    legislation.    Without    time    constraints,    administrative    chaos    and

uncertainty would ensue. The Commissioner  could not close the books. Taxpayers would not know where they stood. The setting of time limits and other constraints throughout the legislation  recognises  that  the  correctness and the quantification of tax liability is not an absolute value. It is crucial in the making of an assessment. Once the assessment is made, in the absence of

a timely objection the assessment  is  determinative  of  liability.  The  focus then shifts. If a late objection application is made the Commissioner has to

weigh  and  balance  the  relevant  public  policy  considerations  applicable  at that time in the particular circumstances of the case. If particular factors are

material to that  decision then the weight to be given to the various factors and   the   overall   balancing   judgment   fall   within   the   wide   discretion understandably reposed in the Commissioner.

The inquiry under s 30(2) calls for some explanation from the taxpayer of the  failure  to  make  timely  objection  and,  where  there  is  significant  delay involved, the reasons for the failure to make the   application   earlier. Depending on the circumstances, it may be relevant to consider whether the failures or failure were due to inadvertence, negligence, an agent’s action or

a deliberate decision by the taxpayer, as the case may be. Next, the apparent merits of the proposed objection may,  and often will be, a relevant factor.

The correct  ascertaining  of  the  liability  imposed  by  the Act is not at that point the simple yardstick. Otherwise, all late objections would have to be

accepted, however inadequate the explanation for their lateness, if it could be suggested on whatever evidence was then furnished to the Department that the original assessment was incorrect. But the  purpose  of  a  discretionary

relaxing  of  time  limits  is  to  allow  consideration  of  a  challenge  to  the adjustment on the ground that the income tax liability has been overstated.

That is particularly important in a system which attaches so much significance to voluntary compliance by all taxpayers with the Inland Revenue Acts and which, to maintain goodwill, has  to  be  seen  to  be

operating  fairly.  In  some  circumstances  the  inadequacy  of  the  explanation for lateness may make it unnecessary to consider the apparent strength of the proposed  objection.  In  many circumstances,  however,  it  will  be  a  material factor to be weighed.

[44]     Brief   affidavit   evidence   about   the   late   objection   was   given   for   the Commissioner by Mr T I Strang, employed by the Commissioner at Manukau as a Team  Leader  –  Investigations.   Mr Strang explains that the Commissioner did not see  any  point  in  assessing  the  amended  returns,  because  he  stood  by  the  earlier assessments.  The Commissioner is evidently concerned that Duvall ought not to be entitled to claim input credits and refunds, but not be liable for GST output tax.  That circumstance arises only where supplies are zero rated.   Mr Strang points out also that no GST output tax is payable in respect of exempt supplies.

[45]     In response, Mr Judd for Duvall emphasises an argument that Duvall is not presently concerned with questions of input tax credits.   Rather, it seeks to gain the

same output tax advantage for other periods as was conceded by the Commissioner

in the High Court proceedings before Baragwanath J.

[46]     As is plain from the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Wilson, the apparent strength of a late objection may well be a material factor in assessing whether the Commissioner has properly exercised his discretion not to accept it. In that respect, Mr Ruffin for the Commissioner maintains that the merits of the objection are entirely against Duvall. He says that the effect of the 2000 decision of the Court of Appeal must be confined to  the  periods  covered by the GST returns  then  in contention, because Duvall succeeded in that Court on a technicality, which was that the High Court had exceeded its jurisdiction in allowing the Commissioner to change

his stance in determining the appeal as it did.   Accordingly, Mr Ruffin argues, the

2000 decision has no precedent value for other GST periods.

[47]     I am by no means certain that that argument is correct. It did not find favour with the TRA. Mr Strang has explained why the Commissioner has taken the view that a distinction is to be drawn between the GST periods that were in contention in the Court of Appeal and those for other periods. In respect of those periods now in dispute, Mr Strang says that Duvall cannot succeed because the relevant supplies are neither zero rated nor exempt. It appears however that the concession earlier made

by the  Commissioner  in  the  High  Court  and  Court  of  Appeal  was  based  upon  the conclusion  that  Duvall  was  not  carrying  on  a  taxable  activity  at  all. There  is insufficient   material   before   the   Court   on   the   present   application   to   take   the discussion any further.

[48]     I am conscious of course that the effect of cases such as Westpac is to limit the circumstances in which judicial review will be available in tax cases.  Moreover,

as was pointed out in CIR v Abattis Properties Ltd (2002) 20 NZTC 17,805 at [24], issues as to process and validity may be dealt with as part and parcel of challenge proceedings  in  Court  under  Part  A  of  the  Tax  Administration  Act  1994. As constituted,  that  Act  now  incorporates  a  detailed  regime  for  the  disposal  of  late objections.  But that regime does not apply to the present case, which is governed by the repealed s 33(2).

[49]     Because in Wilson the Court of  Appeal expressly confirmed  that  judicial review was available in respect of the Commissioner’s discretion under the subsection, I consider that, notwithstanding the trend of recent authority, Duvall may well  be  entitled  to  maintain  a  cause  of  action  against the Commissioner, but  only insofar  as  it  concerns  the  Commissioner’s  decision  not  to  accept  a  late  objection. How far that carries Duvall remains to be seen.  As is plain from the final paragraph in  the  Court  of  Appeal’s  judgment  in  Wilson,  the  relief  available  to  Duvall,  if successful, would be confined to an order directing the Commissioner to reconsider the late objection.

Commissioner’s refusal to amend plaintiff’s GST assessments

[50]     The  other  limb  of  Duvall’s  first  cause  of  action  seeks  what  is  in  effect substantive relief in respect of the core tax issue.   Duvall claims that by refusing to amend   the   GST   assessments   for   other   periods,   the   Commissioner   has   acted unlawfully,  unfairly  and  unreasonably. Although  as  a  general  principle  such  an allegation  is  properly  the  subject  of  judicial  review  proceedings,  the  claim  in  the present tax context falls foul of the principles discussed in Westpac.   It amounts to nothing   more   than   a   direct   challenge   to   the   ultimate   tax   outcome   of   the Commissioner’s  refusal  to  act  upon  Duvall’s  amended  GST  returns.   As  Westpac makes clear, issues of that type must be determined in properly constituted challenge proceedings.

[51]     Duvall has not made out a tenable case for the resolution of the substance of

its GST dispute with the Commissioner by way of judicial review proceedings.

The remaining plaintiffs

[52]     I turn to the position of the remaining plaintiffs. There is absolutely nothing before the Court from them about the conduct of their GST affairs. Mr Strang has deposed to the current status of the various plaintiffs for GST purposes, but without significant detail.  In some cases no GST evidence at all is available. In other cases

plaintiffs  have  been  deregistered  for  GST  purposes  and  some,  but  not  all,  have objected.  Where there have been objections, some have lapsed.

[53]     The statement of claim contains a simple allegation to the effect that all of the plaintiffs  (not  merely  the  parent  companies)  are  entitled  to  be  treated  for  tax purposes in the same manner as Duvall, because “there was no factual distinction” between Duvall and the remaining plaintiffs for GST purposes.

[54]     On the view I have taken on the  first  cause  of  action,  there  is  a tenable argument that judicial review is available in respect of the Commissioner’s decision not to accept (as distinct from allow) a late objection from Duvall. There is simply

no evidence whatever (nor any relevant allegation) in respect of any other plaintiff about the filing and/or disposal of late objections.   Such claims must be considered

on  a  case  by  case  basis,  supported  by  proper  pleadings  and  evidence. There  is nothing to suggest that at present the remaining plaintiffs are willing or able to do that.

First cause of action:  conclusion

[55]     In  summary,  I  find  that  Duvall  has  a  tenable  argument  for  review  of  the Commissioner’s  decision  not  to  accept  (as  distinct  from  allow)  its  late  objections (made  by  way  of  amended  return),  but  the  relief  available  to  Duvall  must  be confined to an order directing the Commissioner to reconsider the late objections.

[56]     Duvall  is  not  entitled  to  maintain,  by  way  of  judicial  review,  a  claim  in respect of the correctness of the assessment itself.   To that extent the first cause of action is struck out, with leave to amend in order to incorporate that portion of the first cause of action that survives.  The first cause of action is struck out in respect of the remaining plaintiffs in its entirety, but without prejudice to their entitlement to file fresh, properly constituted proceedings that are confined to the procedural issues which have survived in respect of Duvall.

Second cause of action

[57]     Over time, the Commissioner has reconstructed the Russell template arrangements for income tax purposes, in  reliance  on  s  99  of the  Income  Tax  Act

1976.   One  such method of reconstruction became known as  Track C.   This track involved  the  assessment  of  the  administration  charge  as  income  of  each  parent company.     As  appropriate,  it  also  involved  a  determination  that  the  relevant transactions were shams.

[58]     From about February 2007, the Commissioner indicated to the plaintiffs that the  Track  C  assessments  would  be  withdrawn.  That indication was given to the Court of Appeal by counsel for the Commissioner during the hearing of the appeals

in Ron West Motors (Otahuhu) Ltd v  CIR  (2007)  23  NZTC  21,434,  and  Wire

Supplies Ltd & Ors v CIR [2007] 3 NZLR 458.

[59]     The plaintiffs contend that the Commissioner has no power to withdraw  an assessment except by way of  the  issue  of  a  further  or  amended  assessment. It is claimed  that  because there  has  been  no  fresh  assessment  the  “existing  incorrect assessments remain in place” with consequential tax disadvantages to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs plead that the failure of the Commissioner to issue a fresh assessment is unlawful, unfair and unreasonable.   Declarations are sought to that effect, along with an order requiring the defendant to amend the relevant assessments in order to implement  the  withdrawal  of  the  Track  C  assessments,  or  alternatively,  an  order requiring the Commissioner to accept late objections from the plaintiffs.

[60]     The Track C assessments were withdrawn at the latest by letter dated 26 July

2007 from the Commissioner to Mr Russell.  This letter read as follows:

Track C assessments of Companies Controlled by you in 1996

1.        Further to your letter dated 28 June 2007.

2.In the course of the recent Court of Appeal hearing involving Wire Supplies Limited & Others and the Douglas & Henwood Group of cases, counsel for the Commissioner indicated that the Commissioner  would  be  withdrawing  the  Track  C  assessments issued in 1996 in respect of companies controlled by you.

3.        This letter is being sent to you to  formally  notify  you  that  the Commissioner formally withdraws all of those Track C assessments issued in 1996 in relation to companies controlled by you.

4.These are being withdrawn on the basis that the Commissioner does not  consider  that  it  is  appropriate  to  maintain  the  positions  that doctrine of sham was the appropriate basis of adjustment for those assessments.

5.For each of those companies controlled by you, the returns filed by you were all nil assessable income returns.  This letter confirms that

is the existing position.

6.This means that there are no income tax issues for the years covered by those 1996 assessments that give any grounds for a request to be made  for  a  case  stated.    There  is  nothing  to  be  determined  by  a Hearing Authority.

7.Given that this position for each company is as returned by you for these relevant years, there should be no need for any consequential consideration of any other adjustment issues.

8.However  if  you  think  that  such  issues  arise,  could  you  please articulate  and  particularise  them  on  a  company  by  company  basis delivering your request in the first instance to Trevor Strang, Inland Revenue, PO Box 76198, Manukau City, who will manage any such requests.

9.It  is  appreciated  that  you  have  semi-retired  from  your  business operations and have litigation obligations.

10.If there are any consequential issues that arise, these could be dealt with on a managed basis and staggered over a reasonable period of time  to  alleviate  any  burden  on  you  dealing  with  these  matters  on your own.

[61]     It is to be noted in particular that the Commissioner’s view at that time was that,  as  set  out  in  the  income  returns  filed  by  the  companies  under  Mr  Russell’s control, there was no assessable income.

[62]     It is settled law that an assessment is a decision by the Commissioner, quantifying the amount of tax payable by the taxpayer for the period in question: CIR v Canterbury Frozen Meat Co Ltd [1994] 2 NZLR 681 at 690. It must be definitive as to the taxpayer’s liability at the time it is made, and subject to challenge only through the objection process. It is the substance rather than the form of the decision that matters: JD  and  CE  Henson  Partnership  v  CIR [2009] 24 NZTC 23,802. The Commissioner is required to give notice of an assessment to a taxpayer pursuant  to  s  111 of  the  Tax  Administration  Act 1994. But  no particular  form  of

notice  is  prescribed,  and  indeed,  assessments  may  be  found  in  more  than  one document.   In  other  words,  documents  may  be  combined  to  form  an  assessment: Henson at [24].

[63]     Section 6 of the Tax Administration Act provides:

6Responsibility  on  Ministers  and  officials  to  protect  integrity  of tax system

(1)Every Minister and every officer of any government agency having responsibilities  under  this  Act  or  any  other  Act  in  relation  to  the collection  of  taxes  and  other  functions  under  the  Inland  Revenue Acts  are  at  all  times  to  use  their  best  endeavours  to  protect  the integrity of the tax system.

(2)      Without   limiting   its   meaning,   the   integrity   of   the   tax   system includes—

(a)      Taxpayer perceptions of that integrity; and

(b)      The  rights  of  taxpayers  to  have  their  liability  determined fairly, impartially, and according to law; and

(c)      The rights of taxpayers to have their individual affairs kept confidential and treated with no greater or lesser favour than the tax affairs of other taxpayers; and

(d)      The responsibilities of taxpayers to comply with the law; and

(e)The   responsibilities   of   those   administering   the   law   to maintain the confidentiality of the affairs of taxpayers; and

(f)       The responsibilities of those administering the law to do so fairly, impartially, and according to law.

[64]     Mr  Judd  argues  that  in  order  to  fulfil  his  statutory  responsibilities,  the Commissioner is bound to afford each taxpayer certainty by serving on each of the plaintiffs a notice of amended assessment.  Otherwise, the plaintiffs are left in a state of uncertainty as to their precise tax position.

[65]     In  support  of  that  proposition  Mr  Judd  relies  upon  the  observations  of  the Court in CIR v Canterbury Frozen Meat Co Ltd, where at p 689 it was said that an assessment “ … is a judgment by the Commissioner of the amount on which tax is payable and the amount of that tax”.

[66]     Mr  Ruffin  argues  that  the  plaintiffs  know  precisely  where  they  stand;   the Track  C  assessments  having  been  withdrawn  the  Commissioner  reverts  to  his previous assessment.

[67]     I accept Mr Ruffin’s argument that this cause of action must be struck out.  It

is presumably aimed at reviving rights of objection that have lapsed, but it is unsupported  by  authority and in my view untenable. Even  if  the  plaintiffs  were entitled to a  document  explicitly setting out by  way of formal  assessment  the  tax position of each plaintiff following the withdrawal of the Track C assessment (which

I do not accept) the Commissioner’s letter of  26 July 2007  is amply sufficient for that purpose.  It explicitly records that the Commissioner accepts the returns filed by each of the companies concerned, which disclosed no assessable income.

[68]     I am satisfied that the second cause of action must be struck out.

Third cause of action

[69]     Here,  the  plaintiffs  allege  that  the  Commissioner  has  acted  unlawfully, unfairly or unreasonably by failing to amend his assessments of GST in respect of the plaintiffs, in consequence of the withdrawal of the Track C assessments.  Track C formed  part  of  the  Commissioner’s  reconstruction  activities  in  consequence  of  the application of s 99 of the Income Tax Act 1976, which related only to income tax. The Goods and Services  Act 1985 has its own tax  avoidance provision:   s 85.   In other words, Track C and its subsequent withdrawal are irrelevant for GST purposes.

[70]     Mr Judd nevertheless argues that for strike out purposes I must assume that there  may  be  cross-over  implications  for  GST  purposes  as  the   result  of  the Commissioner’s change of stance, but he was unable to put any flesh on the bones of that argument, which I reject.

[71]     The third cause of action must accordingly be struck out.

Conclusion

[72]     The first cause of action is struck out in respect of all plaintiffs insofar as it concerns the substance of the Commissioner’s assessment of the plaintiffs’ taxation liabilities.   It survives however in respect of Duvall only, insofar as it is concerned with the Commissioner’s decision not to accept (as distinct from allow) Duvall’s late GST  objections.    In  consequence  the  first  cause  of  action  will  require  significant repleading.   In respect of the remaining plaintiffs, the first cause of action is struck out  without  prejudice  to  their  entitlement  to  commence  fresh  properly  constituted proceedings that are confined to the procedural issues which have survived in respect of Duvall.

[73]     The  second  and  third  causes  of  action  are  struck  out  in  respect  of  all plaintiffs.

[74]     The fourth cause of action is stayed by consent until 25 August 2010.

[75]     By  reason  of  the  recent  liquidation  of  Managed  Fashions  Ltd,  no  order  is required in respect of the fifth cause of action.

Costs

[76]     Costs are reserved.  Counsel may file memoranda if they are unable to agree.

C J Allan J

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