Vinelight Nominees Limited v Commissioner of Inland Revenue

Case

[2012] NZHC 3306

7 December 2012

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV-2011-404-5457 [2012] NZHC 3306

UNDER  the Income Tax Act 1994 and the Tax

Administration Act 1994

IN THE MATTER OF     an appeal from a decision of the Taxation

Review Authority dated 5 August 2010

BETWEEN  VINELIGHT NOMINEES LIMITED First Appellant

ANDWEYAND INVESTMENTS LIMITED Second Appellant

ANDTHE COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE

Respondent

Hearing:         28 and 29 February 2012

Appearances: M T Lennard for Appellants

J H Coleman for Respondent

Judgment:      7 December 2012

JUDGMENT OF PETERS J

This judgment was delivered by Justice Peters on 7 December 2012 at 4 pm pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules

Registrar/Deputy Registrar

Date: ...................................

Solicitors:           Chapman Tripp, Auckland

[email protected] / [email protected]

Crown Law, Wellington:  [email protected]

Counsel:            M T Lennard, Wellington:  [email protected]

J H Coleman, Wellington:  [email protected]

VINELIGHT NOMINEES LIMITED V COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE HC AK CIV-2011-404-

5457 [7 December 2012]

Introduction ............................................................................................................... [1] Issues ......................................................................................................................... [7] Approach to appeal ................................................................................................... [9] Background ............................................................................................................. [13]

Issue 1 – Was Weyand resident in New Zealand between March 1999 and

October 2003? ........................................................................................................ [42] Issue 2 – Was VNL liable to deduct RWT? ............................................................ [72]

Section NF 2(4)(b)(ii) Income Tax Act 1994 and section 138G Tax Administration

Act 1994 .............................................................................................................. [77] Is VNL relieved of  liability by s NF 5(1) Income Tax Act 1994? ....................... [83] Sections 99 and 108 Tax Administration Act 1994 ............................................. [98] Issue 3 – Assessment of non-resident withholding tax/tax avoidance agreement [108] Section NG 2(1)(b) Income Tax Act 1994 ......................................................... [110] Arrangement...................................................................................................... [115] Tax avoidance ................................................................................................... [117] Tax avoidance arrangement.............................................................................. [118] Merely incidental .............................................................................................. [131] Powers to counteract......................................................................................... [133] Issue 4 – Penalties ................................................................................................. [140] Result .................................................................................................................... [155]

Introduction

[1]      The Appellants appeal against a decision of the Taxation Review Authority

(“Authority”) dated 5 August 2011.1

[2]      The issues before the Authority and on appeal arise from payments of interest that Vinelight Nominees Limited, in its capacity as trustee of the Vinelight Trust, made to Weyand Investments Limited (“VNL”, “the Trust” and “Weyand” respectively) between March 1999 and February 2005.   The Trust paid Approved Issuer Levy (“AIL”) at 2 per cent in respect of each payment.  The Commissioner of Inland Revenue (“Commissioner”) maintains that VNL and Weyand should have returned substantially more than 2 per cent of those payments.

[3]      The Commissioner has assessed: (a)     VNL:

(i)For resident withholding tax (“RWT”) at 30 per cent in respect of  the  periods  ended  31  March  1999,  31  October  2000,

31 December 2001, 31 October 2002 and 31 December 2002.

(ii)      For non-resident withholding tax (“NRWT”) at 15 per cent in

respect  of the periods  ended  31  October 2003,  31  January

2005 and 28 February 2005.  The Commissioner accepts that Weyand was not resident in New Zealand from October 2003 onwards.

(b)      Weyand for income tax at 30 per cent in respect of the years ended

31 March 1999 to 31 March 2003 inclusive.

1 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC 15,177 (1-011).

[4]      At  the  time  of  assessment,  the  Commissioner  also  imposed  “shortfall penalties” of 100 per cent (“penalties”) on each Appellant on the basis that each had taken “an abusive tax position”.2   The Commissioner then reduced these penalties to

50  per  cent  of  the  tax  shortfall  on  account  of  the Appellants’ record  of  prior compliance.3

[5]      The Appellants challenged the assessments and imposition of penalties before the Authority.   The Authority upheld the assessments but allowed the Appellants’ challenge to the penalties.

[6]      The Appellants appeal the Authority’s decision upholding the assessments and the Commissioner cross appeals the Authority’s decision disallowing the penalties.

Issues

[7]      The issues which arise are as follows:

(a)       Was Weyand resident in New Zealand for income tax purposes from

31 March 1999 and October 2003 inclusive?

(b)If so, was VNL liable to deduct RWT from its payments to Weyand during this period?

(c)      For periods in which Weyand was not resident in New Zealand, did the circumstances in which VNL paid AIL constitute a tax avoidance arrangement  that  was  void  against  the  Commissioner  pursuant  to s BG 1   Income   Tax   Act   1994   (“Act”)   and,   if   so,   does   the Commissioner have power to counteract such advantage as was obtained?

(d)      Were the Appellants liable for the penalties?

2 Tax Administration Act 1994, s 141D.

3 Ibid, s 141FB.

[8]      The  Authority   answered   the   first   three   questions   in   favour   of   the

Commissioner and the fourth in favour of the Appellants.

Approach to appeal

[9]      This  appeal  is  a  general  appeal  and  so  the  approach  outlined  by  the Supreme Court in Austin, Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting Lodestar applies.4    I adopt Wylie J’s summary of that approach in Russell v Commissioner of Inland Revenue Department, as follows:5

a)the appellant bears the onus of satisfying the appeal court that it should differ from the decision under appeal;

b)it is only if the appellate court considers that the appealed decision is wrong that it is justified in interfering with it;

c)the  appeal  court  has  the  responsibility  of  arriving  at  its  own assessment on the merits of the case;

d)no deference is required beyond the customary caution appropriate where the first instance fact finder had a particular advantage such as technical expertise or an opportunity to assess the credibility of witnesses;

e)the appellate Judge is entitled to use the reasons of the first instance decision-maker to assist him or her in reaching his or her own conclusions, but the weight the Judge places on them is a matter for the Court.

(footnotes omitted)

[10]    The evidence before the Authority, and subsequently before this Court, comprised some 2,500 pages of documentary evidence.   The Authority heard oral evidence,   in   chief   and   in   cross   examination,   on   various   days   between December 2009 and December 2010.  The Authority’s decision is 72 pages long, and is  fully  reasoned  with  extensive  reference  to  the  evidence  and  to  the  parties’

submissions.

4 Austin, Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting Lodestar [2007] NZSC 103, [2008] 2 NZLR 141.

5 Russell v Commissioner of Inland Revenue Department (2010) 24 NZTC 24,463 (HC) at [69].

[11]     In reaching my decision I have considered the evidence to which I have been referred   by   the   parties,   which   essentially   comprised   the   contemporaneous documents, and parts of the briefs of evidence and the transcript of the oral evidence.

[12]     In addition, counsel supplied to the Court copies of the relevant provisions as they stood at the material time.   Counsel advise that any amendments to the provisions during the period in dispute are immaterial to the issues that fall to be decided.

Background

[13]     This case concerns Mr Rodney Chin and Mrs Sandra Chin (“Mr and Mrs

Chin”) and various Chin family entities.

[14]     Mr and Mrs Chin lived in New Zealand from 1949 to 1973, in Hong Kong from 1973 to 1989, and in New Zealand from late 1989 onwards.

[15]     Weyand was one of Mr and Mrs Chin’s entities.   It was incorporated in Hong Kong in 1982.  At all material times prior to 1997, Mr and Mrs Chin were directors and shareholders of Weyand.

[16]     Vinelight  Investments  Limited  (“VIL”)  was  another  Chin  family  entity. Mr and Mrs Chin incorporated VIL in New Zealand in 1990.   The shares in VIL were held by Mr and Mrs Chin and their three children, Ross, Paul and Joanna (collectively “the children”).  From 1989, Mr and Mrs Chin lived in Auckland.  At various times their children lived in Hong Kong and  Mr and Mrs Chin visited Hong Kong from time to time.

[17]     By late 1996, VIL held the shares in several subsidiary companies, some or all of which held investments in real property.  Those subsidiaries were or included Iron Vinelight Properties Limited, Golden Vinelight Properties Limited, Mirimar Development (New Zealand) Limited and Mirimar Development (Albany) Limited.

[18]     In 1989 Mr and Mrs Chin made advances to Weyand.  Weyand in turn made

an advance to VIL in or about 1990.   Weyand’s advance to VIL was replaced by

equity when VIL issued redeemable preference shares to Weyand in 1991.   VIL redeemed these shares in November 1996, following which VIL was indebted to Weyand for more than $3 million (“debt”).6

[19]     In 1996, Mr Chin consulted Ernst & Young (“EY”), Auckland for accounting and tax advice.  EY devised a plan to allow income earned in New Zealand by VIL and its subsidiaries and another Chin family company, 195 Khyber Pass Rd Limited (“195 Khyber Pass”), to be paid to Weyand, subject only to payment of AIL at

2 per cent of such payment.

[20]     I set out below the principal components of the plan.  It is common ground that some documents were backdated, so that the date that appears on the face of the document  cannot  necessarily be  taken  as  the  date  on  which  the  document  was executed.

Settlement of the Trust

[21]     The  first  step  that  was  undertaken  was  for  Mr  Chin  to  settle  the Trust. Mr Chin executed a deed of trust in October 1996.  Subsequently EY discovered that the form of deed Mr Chin had executed (which had been prepared by solicitors) included  provisions  inconsistent  with  the  end  sought  to  be  achieved,  in  that  it included Mr and Mrs Chin and the children as beneficiaries.   Mr Chin executed another deed of trust remedying these defects in November 1996.

[22]     VNL was the sole trustee of the Trust.  VNL acted at all material times in its

capacity as trustee of the Trust.  Mr and Mrs Chin were VNL’s sole directors.

Transfer of shares

[23]     Secondly, on or about 2 May 1997 Mr and Mrs Chin executed transfers of their shares in Weyand to the children as transferees.  Ross, Paul and Joanna were

living in Hong Kong at the time and after the transfer they held all the shares

6 All sums are in New Zealand dollars unless otherwise stated.

in Weyand.    Ross,  Paul  and  Joanna  were  also  appointed  directors  of  Weyand on 2 May 1997,  so  that  at  all  material  times  thereafter Weyand’s  directors  were Mr and Mrs Chin, Ross, Paul and Joanna.

[24]     By letter dated 9 July 1997 to Mr Chin, EY advised that Mr and Mrs Chin should re-negotiate the transfer of their shareholding in Weyand to the children, as the earlier sale had been at an undervalue and potentially was subject to gift duty. New documents to transfer the shares were prepared in December 1997 and executed after that time, although they were dated 2 May 1997.

VNL’s assumption of liability

[25]     The third step was to have VNL assume liability for VIL’s debt to Weyand.

Two documents were executed.

[26]     The first was a Deed of Acknowledgment of Debt between VNL and Weyand. This Deed is dated 2 May 1997 but the document was not prepared until after December  1997.    The  recitals  to  the  Deed  record  that  Weyand  had  advanced

$3,097,800 to VNL by way of loan and, in the body of the Deed, VNL acknowledges that it is indebted to Weyand in that sum.  There was no such advance from Weyand to  VNL,  only  from  Weyand  to  VIL.    The  terms  of  the  Deed  also  record  that Weyand’s advance was repayable on demand and that, subject to demand being made, VNL would pay interest annually on 31 March, at an agreed rate.

[27]  The second document was a Deed of Assignment of Debts and Acknowledgment  of  Debts  between  VIL,  195  Khyber  Pass,  VNL,  Weyand  and Mr Chin on behalf of the Chin family.  This Deed is dated 18 December 1998 and it appears likely it was executed on or near this date.

[28]     The recitals to the Deed record that VIL was indebted to Weyand in the sum of $1,822,320; that VIL had advanced $3,202,674 to 195 Khyber Pass; that VIL had agreed to assign to VNL its advance to 195 Khyber Pass in consideration of VNL assuming liability for VIL’s debt to Weyand; and that 195 Khyber Pass and Weyand consented to the assignments.  The provisions in the body of the Deed include VNL’s

acknowledgement that, as at the Date of Settlement (defined as 15 October 1997 or any  other  agreed  date),  it  was  indebted  to  Weyand  in  the  sum  of  $1,822,320, repayable on  demand  and  that,  pending  repayment, VNL would  pay interest  to Weyand on the debt at 16.5 per cent per annum if interest were demanded prior to the 31 March following Weyand’s balance date.7   VNL also undertook that it would pay AIL at the rate of 2 per cent of such interest payments.

[29]     The differing sums in the Deeds, that is $3 million in one, and $1.8 million in the other was a consequence of repayments that VIL had made to Weyand.

Approved issuer regime

[30]     The fourth step comprised putting the Trust in a position to take advantage of the approved issuer regime under the Stamp and Cheque Duties Act 1971 (“SACD”). The AIL regime was introduced on 1 August 1999 to “relax the NRWT regime as it applied to interest income of non-residents”.8    A resident would apply to the Commissioner, first for registration as an approved issuer and, secondly, for registration of a debt owed by the approved issuer to a non-resident.

[31]     In  March  1998  the Trust,  through  EY,  applied  to  the  Commissioner  for approved issuer status and the Commissioner granted that status.  In March 1999 the Trust, again through EY, applied to the Commissioner for registration of the debt to Weyand as a “registered security”.  This registration too was granted.  On the face of it, this permitted the Trust or VNL to pay AIL at 2 per cent on interest payments to Weyand and did not require the deduction of NRWT at 15 per cent of the payment.

[32]     The  case  and  appeal  proceeded  on  the  basis  that  VNL’s  assumption  of liability  to  Weyand  was  eligible  for  registration  as  a  registered  security  under Part 6B SACD.  I mention that because Part 6B SACD allows the Commissioner to

register a transaction “involving money lent to” an approved issuer.  On registration,

7 Weyand’s balance date was 31 December. Weyand altered it to 31 March with effect from

15 August 2002. See Common Bundle of Documents dated 9 November 2011, Volume 4 at 1020.

8 Taxation Policy Business Tax Policy 1991, Hon Ruth Richardson and Hon Wyatt Creech, 30 July

1991 at 8.

the transaction is a “registered security” for the purposes of Part 6B SACD and AIL is to be computed in respect of such security at the rate of 2 per cent of any interest payment.9   The Commissioner has not suggested that VNL’s assumption of liability to repay VIL’s debt to Weyand was ineligible for registration as a registered security, even though the transaction did not involve money lent to VNL but rather money lent to VIL, which VNL undertook to repay.

Demand of interest

[33]     The fifth step was to enable income to the Trust to be paid to Weyand.  This income derived from interest and/or management fees paid to VNL by Chin family companies.

[34]     Weyand  demanded  that  VNL  pay  interest  on  the  debt  at  16.5 per  cent per annum.   The interest rate was fixed at that rate to ensure that the majority of income to the Trust would be paid to Weyand as interest, as to which see [59] below.

[35]     The first demand was made by letter from Weyand to VNL.  This letter was dated 31 March 1998 but drafted and executed after that date, as to which see [58] below.  Thereafter Weyand made similar demands for interest until 2005, when the loan was repaid.

[36]     VNL made its first interest payment to Weyand’s account in March 1999, following which Weyand declared a dividend to shareholders.  In subsequent years, VNL did not transfer funds to Weyand but rather credited the sum due as interest to Weyand’s account in VNL’s financial records.

[37]     On or about 1 April 2001, Weyand and VNL agreed to reduce the interest rate payable on the debt from 16.5 per cent per annum to 10 per cent per annum.  VNL

made subsequent payments to Weyand at that rate.

9 Stamp and Cheque Duties Act 1971, ss 86J and 86F.

[38]     VNL complied with the requirements of the AIL regime as to when payments of AIL should be made and returns filed.

Summary of parties’ positions

[39]     The Commissioner’s case was that Weyand was resident in New Zealand until October 2003 and that RWT was due in respect of payments of interest to that date.   The Appellants’ case was that, on the facts, Weyand was not resident in New Zealand during that period and that, even if it were, VNL was not liable to deduct RWT. The Authority upheld the Commissioner’s position.

[40]     Turning to the period after October 2003, the Commissioner accepted that Weyand was by then a non-resident.  However, although on the face of it VNL was entitled to pay AIL of 2 per cent of its interest payments, in fact the steps by which VNL  had   become   so   entitled   was   a   tax   avoidance   arrangement,   and   the Commissioner was entitled to counteract the advantage gained.   The Appellants denied  that  there  was  a  tax  avoidance  arrangement.    The Authority upheld  the Commissioner’s position on this issue also.

[41]     Lastly, and as I have said, the Commissioner had imposed the penalties.  The

Authority disallowed these.

Issue 1  – Was Weyand  resident in  New  Zealand  between  March  1999  and

October 2003?

[42]     The first issue is whether Weyand was resident in New Zealand within the meaning of the Act between 31 March 1999 and October 2003 (“relevant period”). VNL could be liable to deduct RWT from its interest payments to Weyand only if Weyand was resident.

[43]     The Appellants’ case is that Weyand was not resident in New Zealand prior to

31 March 1999 and that it remained non-resident thereafter.

Section OE 2(1)

[44]     The issue as to Weyand’s residency is governed by s OE 2(1) of the Act, which reads as follows:

OE 2    Determination of residence of company

(1)       A company is resident in New Zealand within the meaning of this

Act if—

(a)      It is incorporated in New Zealand; or

(b)      It has its head office in New Zealand; or

(c)      It has its centre of management in New Zealand; or

(d)       Control  of  the  company  by  its  directors,  acting  in  their capacity as directors, is exercised in New Zealand, whether or not decision-making by directors is confined to New Zealand.

Authority’s determination as to residency

[45]     The Authority determined that Weyand was resident because its centre of management  was  in  New  Zealand.10      The  relevant  passages  of  the Authority’s decision are as follows:11

[224]    I have endeavoured to set out much of the detail put to me.  In my view  it  shows  that  the  central  management  of  WIL  took  place  in New Zealand by [Mr and Mrs Chin], and not in Hong Kong.

...

[235]    Having stood back and absorbed the detailed submissions for each side,  I find  that,  at  all  material  times,  the  disputants  were  managed  by [Mr  Chin]  from  New  Zealand.    It  is  clear  to  me  that  the  centre  of management  was  in  New  Zealand.   Also  Mrs  [Chin]  attended  to  much routine administration under [Mr Chin’s] direction without needing to understand matters.   It is arguable whether [Mr Chin] also controlled the directorate  of  WIL  and  its  decisions.    To  a  large  degree,  he  was  the controlling mind of the disputants.  There was not a great deal needing to be done at material times and, apart from giving instructions to the accountants and heeding and implementing their rather aggressive tax advice, nothing

10 Income Tax Act 1994, s OE 2(1)(c).

11 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011).

controversial to the family was undertaken.  The adult children were busy professionals who respected their parents and their acumen and so were content to implement [Mr Chin’s] suggestions.   However, they are all intelligent and sensible and could not be regarded as controlled by [Mr Chin] except, perhaps, to some degree by default.   They left it to [Mr Chin] to obtain and implement specialist tax advice.

[236]    Accordingly, I find that WIL was a New Zealand tax resident at all material times ...

Ground of appeal

[46]     On appeal the Appellants submit that the finding that Weyand’s centre of management was in New Zealand was based on a “misapplication of the settled law to the facts as found by the Authority”.12

[47]    At [47] of its decision, the Authority held that a company’s centre of management was where the “day to day management at an administrative day to day level”  takes  place.     In  reaching  its  decision  that  Weyand  was  resident  in New Zealand, the Authority took into account that Mr Chin, in New Zealand, had attended to numerous matters for Weyand.   These included the control and management of preparation of Weyand’s financial statements; the control and management of Weyand’s communications with  the Inland Revenue Department (“IRD”) after March 2004; the fact that Mr Chin was the contact point for Weyand’s communications  with  Wong  Lam  Leung  &  Kwok,  the  firm  of  accountants  in Hong Kong which attended to preparing Weyand’s tax returns to the Hong Kong IRD; the fact that Mr Chin sought advice from and gave instructions to EY; and that Mr Chin executed  documents  for  Weyand  recording  the  terms  of  its  loan  to Jireh Wakefield Limited   (“JWL”)  in  early  2003.     JWL  was  incorporated  in New Zealand and its purpose was to carry out a joint venture between the Chin family interests and another investor.

[48]     The Appellants  submit  that  the Authority  erred  in  its  conclusion  that  a

company’s  centre  of  management  is  where  its  “day  to  day  management  at  an

administrative day to day level” takes place.  The Appellants’ case is that this error

12 Appellants’ submissions dated 13 February 2012 at [20].

led the Authority to accept that (in the Appellants’ words) minor, trivial administrative  tasks  carried  out  in  New  Zealand  were  sufficient  to  establish New Zealand residence.13

[49]     The Appellants submit that a company’s centre of management is the place where its “superior management” takes place. The Appellants’ case is that after 1998

Weyand engaged in few activities, with such superior management as there was taking place in Hong Kong.   If routine, administrative tasks are to be taken into account, the Appellants submit that many companies would be held to be managed by their  employees  or  by their  accountants.    The Appellants  contend  that  their submission,  as  to  the  acts  that  constitute  management  for   the  purpose  of s OE 2(1)(c),  is  in  accordance  with  De Beers  Consolidated  Mines  Ltd  v  Howe

(Surveyor of Taxes),14 New Zealand Forest Products Finance NV v Commissioner of

Inland Revenue15 and Wood v Holden.16   In reply, the Appellants also made a further submission that, in this case, VNL made the final interest payment assessed for RWT in December 2002 and so events after that date are irrelevant to the  enquiry as to the location of Weyand’s centre of management.

[50]     The Appellants submit that there were three acts of superior management within the relevant period, and that each was undertaken in Hong Kong.  These were Weyand’s declaration of a dividend to shareholders, Weyand’s agreement to reduce the interest rate that it charged on the debt, and matters relating to Weyand’s loan to JWL.  I note that loan was made in early 2003, which is outside the December 2002 time frame that the Appellants submit is relevant.

[51]     The  Commissioner  supports  the  conclusion  that  the  Authority  reached, namely that a company’s centre of management is located where its day to day administrative management occurs.  The Commissioner submits that, on the facts of

this case, Weyand was resident in New Zealand during the relevant period.  In fact,

13 Ibid, at [30].

14 De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd v Howe (Surveyor of Taxes) [1906] AC 455 (HL).

15 New Zealand Forest Products Finance NV v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [1995] 2 NZLR 357 (HC).

16 Wood v Holden [2006] 1 WLR 1393 (EWCA).

the Commissioner pointed to several matters, additional to those referred to by the

Authority, as reinforcing the Authority’s conclusion.

[52]     The Commissioner also submits that Weyand was resident not only pursuant to s OE 2(1)(c) but also pursuant to s OE 2(1)(d).  It is not clear from the decision whether the Authority reached a decision on whether Weyand was resident on the basis of s OE 2(1)(d).  In any event, the Commissioner submits that Weyand was so resident and the Appellants submit that it was not.   Given the view I take of the application of s OE 2(1)(c), it is unnecessary for me to consider s OE 2(1)(d).

Discussion

[53]     I am satisfied that Weyand had its centre of management in New Zealand during the relevant period.  That is so whether the centre of management is where a company’s administrative, day-to-day management is undertaken or whether it is where its superior management is undertaken, and whether in this particular case one includes or excludes from consideration acts that took place after December 2002.

[54]     For that reason, it is unnecessary for me to determine what acts should and should not be taken into account in determining the location of a company’s centre of management.

[55]     The enquiry as to where a company’s centre of management is located is factual and is to be considered by reference to the nature of the company’s business and activities.17     In De Beers the House of Lords said that a company’s place of residence is “a pure question of fact to be determined upon a scrutiny of the course of business and trading”.

[56]     Weyand was a privately held company, incorporated in Hong Kong.  During the relevant period, the company participated in the tax planning arrangements that

EY proposed.  Mr Chin, in Auckland, instructed EY regarding the affairs of various

17 De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd v Howe (Surveyor of Taxes) [1906] AC 455 (HL); and

New Zealand Forest Products Finance NV v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [1995] 2 NZLR 357 (HC).

companies including Weyand.  There is no evidence that Mr Chin consulted anyone outside New Zealand in making the decision to engage EY to advise Weyand, or on Weyand’s implementation of EY’s advice as it affected Weyand.

[57]     The arrangements proposed in EY’s advice required Weyand to agree that VNL,  rather  than VIL,  should  be  liable  for  repayment  of Weyand’s  sole  asset, namely the debt.  It was on the instructions of Mr Chin in Auckland that EY prepared the two Deeds that Weyand executed, referred to in [26] and [27] above, those Deeds purporting to effect a substitution of VNL as the debtor.  Weyand executed the Deeds in New Zealand by Mr and Mrs Chin, two of its directors.

[58]     Weyand’s demand of interest on the debt was also made by Mr Chin, in Auckland on Weyand’s behalf, by letter dated 31 March 1998.  The demand could not  have  been  made  prior  to  December  1998  because  that  was  when  EY first prepared the draft letter of demand.18

[59]     Weyand’s demand for interest was addressed to VNL at Mr Chin’s residential address in Auckland.  The making of the demand followed a letter dated 5 October

1998 from EY to Mr Chin in Auckland, in which EY advised as follows:19

... the majority of the [the Trust’s] income remaining after distributions to the beneficiaries will be paid to [Weyand] by way of interest subject to approved issuer levy at the rate of 2 %.  Given the interest income is not taxed in Hong Kong this provides tax savings exceeding $NZ40,000 in the current year. This directly benefits your children as shareholders in Weyand ...

As highlighted at the beginning of this facsimile, we recommend [the Trust] pays interest of $NZ137,813 on the loan from Weyand of $NZ1,822,320. This interest is calculated at the rate of 16.5% for 5.5 months.

Approved issuer levy of $NZ2,756 (being 2% of $NZ137,813) will be payable by the 20th of the month following the month of payment.  To ensure the AIL liability is not triggered as at 31 March 1998 we will treat the interest cost as a general accrual on [the Trust’s] accounts.

...

18 Common Bundle of Documents dated 9 November 2011, Volume 6 at 1733.

19 Ibid, Volume 2 at 586.

[60]     An  undated  EY  file  note  records  that  EY  subsequently  discussed  with Mr Chin their letter of 5 October 1998 and he agreed with its contents.20   There is no evidence that Mr Chin discussed the letter with anyone outside New Zealand.

[61]     I now come to Weyand’s reduction of the interest rate to 10 per cent per annum, with effect from 1 April 2001.  The Appellants submit that this reduction is indicative of Weyand’s centre of management being in Hong Kong.

[62]     The evidence is that on or about 5 March 2002, Mr Chin faxed Joanna and Paul a draft agreement recording the reduction.  This was preceded by a fax from Mr Chin to a New Zealand adviser, Mr Alan Lau,21 in which Mr Chin stated:

Re – Adjustment of Interest between [the Trust] and [Weyand].

Faxed please find the original Deed of Debt which item/clause 4 describes that interest will be paid at a rate agreed by the parties.

In view of the above may be a letter of agreement between [the Trust] and

Weyand to set new interest at 10% will be adequate for A/C purposes.

[63]     Mr Chin’s accompanying fax, also dated 5 March 2002, to Joanna and Paul

was as follows:22

Dear Paul and Joanna

Faxed herewith is a letter agreement to change the interest rate set some

5 years ago (16.5% PA) to a more realistic rate of 10% PA.  This move is necessary in order not to attract query from Inland Revenue Dept.

The draft should be looked at by Joanna and change as necessary before Paul type it out.

Both of you are director of Weyand Investments so you could sign before send letter back to me so that we could use it for the 2001 to 2002 financial year accounting.

...

[64]     Counsel for the Commissioner submitted that it was telling that Mr Chin had pointed out to Joanna and Paul in this fax that they were directors of Weyand.  The

20 Ibid, Volume 3 at 609.

21 Ibid, Volume 4 at 983.
22 Ibid, Volume 11 at 2785.

Appellants emphasised that the Authority had accepted that Joanna and Paul might have declined to sign the agreement.

[65]     I do not consider it particularly significant that Joanna and Paul might have declined to agree to the reduction in the rate of interest.  What is significant is that the advice that a reduction was desirable and ought to be made came from Mr Chin in New Zealand.

[66]     Another matter on which the Appellants rely is Weyand’s declaration of a dividend  to  shareholders  following  VNL’s  first  interest  payment  to  Weyand’s Hong Kong bank account in March 1999.   The Appellants’ case is that Weyand’s directors decided that Weyand should declare a dividend whilst all were present in Hong Kong in February or March 1999.   The Appellants also contend that the resolution declaring the dividend was signed in Hong Kong and they submit that declaration was an act of central management, as well as being an act of control by the company’s directors.  The Commissioner’s submission, which I accept, is that the declaration of a dividend was effected by Weyand’s board of directors, and so more relevant to the issue of where the directors of the company exercised control, that is s OE 2(1)(d), rather than being an act of central management.   That said,  I am satisfied that the circumstances in which the dividend was declared (assuming they took place in Hong Kong) would lend some support to the Appellants’ contention.

[67]     Another relevant matter is evidence of how Weyand ensured that it met its compliance obligations in New Zealand and Hong Kong.  Compliance comprised the preparation of financial statements in New Zealand and the filing of tax returns in Hong Kong.   The Appellants characterise these tasks as routine.   My view is that ensuring   the   company’s   compliance   with   its   regulatory   obligations   was   a management function.  The Authority found that Mr Chin attended to these matters in New Zealand.

[68]     The Appellants  also  rely  upon  matters  relating  to  Weyand’s  advance  of

$2 million  to  JWL in  January  2003.    To  make  the  advance  Weyand  borrowed approximately $1.27 million from the children.

[69]     The Appellants submit that Weyand’s borrowing from the children and its advance  to  JWL is  evidence  that  Weyand’s  centre  of  management  was  not  in New Zealand, the relevant resolutions having being passed outside New Zealand. On the other hand, the Commissioner relied on Mr Chin having signed, for Weyand, the documents recording the loan that Weyand made to JWL and his having done so in New Zealand.

[70]     There is no doubt that Weyand’s decisions to borrow from the children and to lend were significant and the Authority accepted that Weyand would not have made the loan to JWL if the children had not wished that it should do so.

[71]     However, this one transaction, even if taken with the other matters on which the Appellants rely, is not in my view sufficient to establish that the Authority erred in concluding that Weyand’s centre of management was in New Zealand and that the company was resident accordingly.  On the contrary, I am satisfied that Weyand was so resident.

Issue 2 – Was VNL liable to deduct RWT?

[72]     If this Court upholds the Authority’s finding as to Weyand’s residency, as it

has, the Appellants submit that VNL was not liable to deduct RWT. [73]      The Appellants make three submissions.

[74]     The first submission is that VNL was not liable to deduct RWT because it did not satisfy the criteria in s NF 2 of the Act and particularly s NF 2(4)(b)(ii) which, in this case, requires that VNL made the interest payments “wholly or partly in the course of or furtherance of a taxable activity”,23 as that phrase is defined in s OB 1 of the Act.

[75]     The second submission is that VNL is relieved of liability to account for

RWT by s NF 5(1) of the Act.

23 Income Tax Act 1994, s NF 2(4)(b)(ii).

[76]     The third submission is that the Commissioner’s assessment of VNL for

RWT is time barred in  respect of any payment of  interest up  to and including

31 December 2001.24

Section NF 2(4)(b)(ii) Income Tax Act 1994 and section 138G Tax Administration
Act 1994

[77]     Regarding the first submission in [74] above, s NF 2(4) of the Act reads as follows:

NF 2    Liability to pay resident withholding tax

(1A)     A person  is  liable  to  pay  to  the  Commissioner,  in  relation  to  a payment  that  is  or  includes  resident  withholding  income,  a  tax (called resident withholding tax) of an amount given by subsection (1) or (1B) if—

(a)       the person makes the payment and is required to make a deduction of resident withholding tax from the payment:

(b)       the person is an RWT proxy for the payer of the resident withholding  income,  the  recipient  of  the  resident withholding income, and the resident withholding income.

(1AB)  A  person  who  makes  a  payment  that  is  or  includes  resident withholding income must deduct resident withholding tax from the payment if the person is not excluded by the rest of this section from liability to make the deduction.

...

(4)       A person shall be liable to deduct resident withholding tax from any payment of resident withholding income only if—

(a)      ... and

(b)      Either—

(i)       ...

(ii)      That payment is made wholly or partly in the course of or furtherance of a taxable activity, whether that person is acting in the capacity of agent or trustee for any other person or persons, or otherwise; or

...

24 Tax Administration Act 1994, ss 99 and 108.

[78]     The Commissioner disputes this submission and also submits that it is not open to the Appellants to challenge VNL’s liability to deduct RWT by virtue of s 138G Tax Administration Act 1994 (“TAA”), which reads as follows:

138G   Effect of disclosure notice: exclusion of evidence

(1)       Unless subsection (2) applies, if the Commissioner issues a disclosure notice to a disputant, and the disputant challenges the disputable decision, the Commissioner and the disputant may raise in the challenge only—

(a)       The facts and evidence, and the issues arising from them; and

(b)      The propositions of law,—

that  are  disclosed  in  the  Commissioner’s  statement  of position and in the disputant’s statement of position.

(2)       A hearing  authority  may,  on  application  by  a  party  to  a challenge to a disputable decision, allow the applicant to raise in the challenge new facts and evidence, and new propositions of law, and new issues, if satisfied that—

(a)       The applicant could not, at the time of delivery of the applicant’s statement of position, have, with due diligence, discovered those facts or evidence; or discerned those propositions of law or issues; and

(b)       Having regard to the provisions of section 89A and the conduct of the parties, the hearing authority considers that the admission of those facts or evidence or the raising of those propositions of law or issues is necessary to avoid manifest injustice to the Commissioner or the disputant.

(3)       For the purposes of subsection (1), a statement of position includes any additional information that the Commissioner and the disputant agree (under section 89M(13)) to add to the statement of position.

[79]     The Authority considered that VNL had not previously disclosed the issue it sought to raise regarding s NF 2(4)(b)(ii) but determined the issue of VNL’s liability

to deduct on the merits.25

25 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011) at [238].

[80]     There is no express reference to the “taxable activity” issue in the parties’ statements of position.    The Appellants submit that it is implicit in the Commissioner’s statements of position regarding each of VNL and Weyand that the Commissioner contended VNL was liable to deduct RWT under s NF 2.   On that basis, the Appellants submit that s NF 2 was put in issue, including the issue of whether VNL was liable to deduct under s NF 2(4)(b)(ii).

[81]     I consider that the effect of s 138G(1) is to prevent the Appellants taking any point under s NF 2(4)(b)(ii).   The purpose of s 138G TAA is to ensure that the disputes process is “focused on and by the terms upon which the dispute is raised and responded to”.26    If the Appellants proposed to contest their liability to deduct RWT because the criteria in s NF 2(4)(b)(ii) were not satisfied, then the issue had to be raised, there needed to be disclosure of the basis on which it was contended there

was no such liability and the Appellants had to disclose the facts and evidence on which they proposed to rely.   On the Appellants’ submission it would be open to VNL to  contend  that  it  was  not  required  to  deduct  because  any  of  the  many requirements of s NF 2(4) were not met.

[82]     The issue not having been disclosed, it was not open to the Appellants to make submissions as to that issue at first instance and they may not pursue the matter on appeal.

Is VNL relieved of liability by s NF 5(1) Income Tax Act 1994?

[83]     Regarding the second submission, in [75] above, the Appellants submit that VNL is not liable to pay any amount by way of RWT by virtue of s NF 5(1) of the Act. The Authority rejected this submission.

[84]     Section NF 5 reads as follows:

26 Ben Nevis Forestry Ventures Limited v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2008] NZSC 115, [2009]

2 NZLR 289 at [153].

NF 5    Non-resident   withholding   tax   deducted   in   substitution   for resident withholding tax

(1)       No person shall be liable to pay any amount to the Commissioner by virtue of any of the provisions of the RWT rules where, in relation to any payment or (in any case where that person is acting as agent or trustee for another person) receipt, that person—

(a)       On  reasonable  grounds  and  having  made  all  reasonable inquiries, concluded that that payment or receipt constituted non-resident   withholding   income   as   being   an   amount derived by a person not resident in New Zealand and was for that reason not resident withholding income; and

(b)       Complied with all the obligations on the part of that person which would have been applicable under this Act or the Tax Administration Act 1994 had that payment or receipt constituted non-resident withholding income.

(2)       Where any person has, by virtue of the application of this section, been relieved from liability under the RWT rules, for the purposes only of determining any liability of that person under the RWT rules, the payment or (in any case where that person is acting in relation to that receipt as agent or trustee for any other person) receipt in question shall be deemed to be derived by a person not resident in New Zealand.

[85]     Accordingly, to be relieved of liability to pay RWT, the person concerned must satisfy each of s NF 5(1)(a) and (b).

[86]     The Authority held that VNL had not satisfied s NF 5(1)(a) because it had not made “all reasonable inquiries” and had not concluded “on reasonable grounds” that its payments to Weyand were non-resident withholding income because Weyand was not resident in New Zealand.27

[87]     The Authority also determined that VNL had not satisfied s NF 5(1)(b) in respect of its payment of interest to Weyand in March 1999 because, at the time of the payment, the IRD had not registered VNL’s debt to Weyand as a “registered security” for the purposes of SACD.   The Authority held that, in the absence of

registration by the date of payment, Weyand could not satisfy s NF 5(1)(b).28

27 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011) at [283].

28 Ibid, at [281]

[88]     The Appellants submit that the Authority erred in its conclusion on both matters.

[89]     Given the conclusion that I have reached as to s NF 5(1)(a), it is unnecessary for me to address the submissions made as to s NF 5(1)(b).

Section NF 5(1)(a)

[90]     The Appellants submitted, first, that VNL had all the factual information required to decide whether Weyand was resident because Mr and Mrs Chin were directors of both VNL and Weyand. Accordingly, VNL could be taken to have made all reasonable inquiries as to the facts going to whether Weyand was resident.  The Authority accepted this submission and so do I.

[91]     Secondly,  the  Appellants  submitted  that  VNL  had  made  all  reasonable inquiries regarding the legal issues which might affect whether Weyand was resident. The gist of this submission was that contemporaneous documents showed that EY had considered, and had discussed with Mr Chin, the proposal that VNL should pay AIL in respect of its interest payments to Weyand and that it was a prerequisite to such a proposal that Weyand be a non-resident.   Accordingly, the Appellants submitted that VNL had made all reasonable inquiries as to the legal issues which might arise and there was little more that VNL could have done to satisfy itself on

the issue.  The Authority did not accept this submission.29   The Authority’s view was

that VNL could not have made all reasonable inquiries in the absence of advice from EY on the precise issue of whether or not Weyand was resident in New Zealand.  No such advice was taken until mid 2003.30

[92]     The Appellants also submitted that VNL had concluded that Weyand was not resident and that conclusion was reached on reasonable grounds, particularly given

that, on their view of it, there is a reasonable argument that Weyand was not resident

29 Ibid, at [283].

30 Ibid, at [286].

between 1999 and 2003.   The Authority did not accept that VNL had reasonable grounds on which to conclude Weyand was non-resident.31

[93]     On appeal, the Appellants contend that the lack of advice from EY prior to mid 2003, on whether or not Weyand was resident, was not critical as “it is obvious from  all  the  circumstances,  including  [correspondence  passing  between  EY and Mr Chin],  that  EY,  as  Vinelight’s  advisers  at  the  material  times  both  knew  the relevant factual background and considered that Weyand was non-resident”.

Discussion

[94]     To satisfy the requirements of s NF 5(1)(a), the liable person must establish: (a)       That it concluded that its payment or receipt constituted non-resident

withholding income because it was derived by a person not resident in

New Zealand.

(b)      That it reached that conclusion after making all reasonable inquiries.

Presumably  those  inquiries  would  be  particularly  directed  to  the recipient of the payment.

(c)       That it reached that conclusion on reasonable grounds.

[95]     I am satisfied that VNL, by its actions, must be taken to have concluded that its payment to Weyand constituted non-resident withholding income because it was derived by a person not resident in New Zealand.

[96]     I also accept the Appellants’ submission that VNL can be taken to have made all reasonable inquiries.  VNL would have been in possession of all facts relevant to an assessment of whether Weyand was or was not resident, given that Mr Chin was a director of both VNL and Weyand.  For myself, I am not sure that VNL was required

to take advice from EY.

31 Ibid, at [283].

[97]     I am not satisfied, however, that the conclusion referred to above was reached on reasonable grounds.  It appears to me that VNL did no more than proceed with a course of action that EY had devised, in the hope or on the assumption that Weyand was  non-resident.    In  my view,  such a hope  or assumption  does  not  constitute reasonable grounds for a conclusion and I do not consider that the requirements of s NF 5(1)(a) are satisfied in this case.

Sections 99 and 108 Tax Administration Act 1994

[98]     The third submission to be considered is whether, as the Appellants say, the Commissioner’s assessment of VNL for RWT is time barred for periods before and including 31 December 2001.   This submission is based on s 99(2) TAA which incorporates s 108 TAA. The Authority rejected this submission.

[99]     The relevant provisions read as follows:32

99       Assessment of Resident Withholding Tax Deductions

(1)       The Commissioner may make an assessment of any amount that, in the Commissioner’s opinion, any person is liable to account for or pay to the Commissioner under the RWT rules, and any person who is so assessed shall be liable to pay the amount so assessed, except so far as the person establishes in proceedings challenging the assessment that the assessment is excessive or that the person is not liable to account for or pay the amount so assessed.

(2)       Sections 108 to 111, 113, and 114 shall apply, so far as may be, with respect  to  every  assessment  made  under  subsection  (1)  of  this section, as if—

(a)       The  term  “income  tax  for  any  year”  in  section  108(1) included an amount assessed under subsection (1) of this section and the term “gross income” in section 108(2) included an amount of resident withholding income; and

(b)       The term “taxpayer” in sections 109, 111, and 113 included a person who is assessed or is liable to be assessed under subsection (1) of this section; and

(c)       The term “tax already assessed” in section 113 included an amount already assessed under subsection (1) of this section.

32 Section 108 was amended in the period subject to dispute. The parties have agreed that the amendments made do not bear on the matters in issue.

(3)       An assessment made under this section shall be subject to challenge in the same manner as an assessment of income tax imposed under section BB 1 of the Income Tax Act 1994, and Parts VII and VIIIA of this Act shall apply accordingly.

108Time  bar  for  amendment  of  assessment  of  taxable  income, income tax liability and tax payable under Income Tax Act 1994

(1)      Except as specified in this section or in section 108B, if—

(a)       a  taxpayer  provides  a  tax  return  and  is  assessed  for  the taxable income of the taxpayer and the income tax liability of the taxpayer and the tax payable by the taxpayer; and

(b)       4 years have passed from the end of income year in which the taxpayer provides the tax return,—

the Commissioner may not alter the assessment so as to increase the amount assessed.

(1A)     Unless subsection (2)   or section 108B applies, the Commissioner must not issue an income statement under Part IIIA if 4 years have passed since the end of the income year that follows the income year to which the income statement would apply.

(2)      If the Commissioner is of the opinion that a tax return provided by a taxpayer—

(a)      Is fraudulent or wilfully misleading; or

(b)       Does  not  mention  gross  income  which  is  of  a  particular nature  or  was  derived  from  a  particular  source,  and  in respect of which a tax return is required to be provided,—

the Commissioner may alter the assessment at any time so as to increase its amount.

(3)      This section overrides every other provision of this Act, and any other rule or law, that limits the Commissioner's right to amend assessments.

(4)     Subsection (1) applies to all returns filed on or after 1 April 1997.

[100]   There is an obvious difficulty with s 99(2)(a), because s 108(1) does not include the words “income tax for any year”.   These words were deleted from s 108(1) on 1 October 1996,33 but that is not significant given the view I take of this

issue.

33 Tax Administration Amendment (No 2) Act 1996, s 29.

[101]   The Appellants submit that, when applied in the context of s 99, s 108(1) precludes an assessment for the periods to which I have referred, because VNL furnished an AIL return, made an assessment of the levy payable, and four years had passed from the end of the tax year in which it had done so.  They also submitted that to apply s 108(1) with that effect would accord with the general policy of tax law,  namely  that  non-disclosure  of  information  is  treated  adversely  whereas

mischaracterisation is not.34   The Appellants submit that an AIL return provides the

Commissioner with all of the financial information that would be required for the Commissioner to assess for RWT or NRWT.  Also the three regimes – RWT, NRWT and AIL – are distinct.  One only of three returns can be filed.  The Appellants say that s 108(1) applies in the context of s 99(1) if the liable party has filed “a return of interest paid”, and not only a return of resident withholding income.

[102]   The Commissioner’s submission was that, for the purposes of s 99, the phrase “provides an income tax return” in s 108(1)(a) must be read as “provides an RWT return”, so  that the time bar in s 108(1) applies only if an RWT return has been filed and not if an AIL return has been filed.  The Commissioner’s submission was that AIL returns are different from RWT returns in form and in substance.  AIL is levied under the SACD and the reporting requirements under that Act are separate and distinct from those under the tax statutes.  Also there is an implicit assertion in an AIL return that the recipient of the payment is a non-resident.   An RWT return acknowledges that the recipient of the payment is a resident.

[103]   I consider that s 108(1)(a) is to be read as substituting the phrase “RWT

return” for “income tax return” when applied in the context of s 99.

[104]   First, I accept the Commissioner’s submission that an RWT return is different

in form and substance from an AIL return.

[105]   Secondly, s 99 falls within Part 6 of the TAA.   Part 6 contains provisions which,  amongst  other  things,  confer  power  on  the  Commissioner  to  assess  for

different types of tax.  Section 108 is not applied as a matter of course but only in

34 Cross v Commissioner of Inland Revenue (1987) 9 NZTC 6,101 (CA).

particular instances.  For instance, s 100, which allows the Commissioner to assess for NRWT, does not incorporate s 108.  Accordingly, Parliament must be taken to have drawn distinctions as to when it was appropriate to provide for a time bar.

[106]   In my view, these matters suggest that Parliament intended that an RWT return, and not some other form of return, must have been filed if the Commissioner is to be subject to the time bar in s 108(1) when seeking to assess for RWT.

[107]   Accordingly, I am satisfied that the Commissioner’s assessments of RWT up

to and including December 2001 were not made out of time.

Issue   3   -   Assessment   of   non-resident   withholding   tax/tax   avoidance arrangement

[108]   The next issue which arises is whether there was a tax avoidance arrangement in respect of VNL’s payments to Weyand of interest accruing after October 2003 (“post October 2003 period”).

[109]   VNL paid AIL at 2 per cent of such payments.  The Commissioner accepts that Weyand was not resident in New Zealand after October 2003 but has assessed on the basis that there was a liability to return NRWT at 15 per cent.

Section NG 2(1)(b) Income Tax Act 1994

[110]   Payments of interest to a non-resident constitute non-resident withholding income.35    Section NG 2 imposes NRWT on such income, although the tax is zero rated in the circumstances of s NG 2(1)(b)(i), that provision being material in this case.  If the NRWT that is due is zero rated pursuant to s NG 2(1)(b)(i), the approved

issuer must pay AIL, as VNL did in this case.

35 Income Tax Act 1994, s NG 1(2)(b).

[111]   The relevant parts of s NG 2 are:

NG 2    Non-resident withholding tax imposed

(1)      Every person who derives non-resident withholding income shall be liable to pay non-resident withholding tax upon that income—

...

(b)       At the rate of zero percent of so much of that non-resident withholding income as consists of—

(i)        Interest ... paid by an approved issuer in respect of a registered security and derived by a person who is not an associated person of the approved issuer; or

...

(c)       At  the  rate  of  15%  of  so  much  of  that  non-resident withholding income as consists of non-resident withholding income to which neither ... paragraph (b) applies.

[112]   It is common ground that the requirements of s NG 2(1)(b)(i) were satisfied during the period after October 2003.  VNL or the Trust was an approved issuer, the debt to Weyand was a registered security and Weyand was not an associated person of the Trust.36

[113]   Despite that, the Commissioner’s position is that the circumstances in which the Appellants came to meet the requirements of s NG 2(1)(b)(i) constituted a tax avoidance arrangement within the meaning of the Act, that the arrangement was void against the Commissioner and that the  Commissioner was entitled to assess for NRWT, as he did.  The Authority agreed with the Commissioner on all matters. The Appellants submit that the Authority erred in doing so.

Statutory provisions

[114]   The relevant statutory provisions are s BG 1 which is to the effect that a tax avoidance arrangement is void as against the Commissioner for, in this case, NRWT

36 Persons are associated for the purposes of s NG 2(1)(b)(i) in the circumstances set out in s OD 7(1) of the Income Tax Act 1994. It is common ground that Weyand and VNL, in its capacity as trustee of the Trust, were not associated within that provision.

purposes37 and the definitions of “arrangement”, “tax avoidance” and “tax avoidance arrangement” in s OB 1. These provisions read as follows:

BG 1    Avoidance

(1)       A tax avoidance arrangement is void as against the Commissioner for income tax purposes.

(2)       The Commissioner, in accordance with Part G (Avoidance and Non- Market Transactions), may counteract a tax advantage obtained by a person from or under a tax avoidance arrangement.

...

OB 1    Definitions

...

Arrangement means any contract, agreement, plan, or understanding (whether enforceable or unenforceable), including all steps and transactions by which it is carried into effect:

...

Tax avoidance, in sections BG 1 ... includes–

(a)       Directly or indirectly altering the incidence of any income tax:

(b)       Directly  or  indirectly  relieving  any  person  from  liability  to  pay income tax:

(c)       Directly or indirectly avoiding, reducing, or postponing any liability to income tax:

...

Tax avoidance arrangement means an arrangement, whether entered into by the person affected by the arrangement or by another person, that directly or indirectly–

(a)       Has tax avoidance as its purpose or effect; or

(b)       Has tax avoidance as one of its purposes or effects, whether or not any  other  purpose  or  effect  is  referable  to  ordinary  business  or family dealings, if the purpose or effect is not merely incidental.

37 Income Tax Act 1994, s NG 17(2).

Arrangement

[115]   There is no dispute that there was an arrangement within the definition in s OB 1, although there is some dispute as to the steps that made up that arrangement. The Commissioner’s case, which the Authority accepted, is that the arrangement included the following:

(a)      The steps taken to ensure that the party liable to Weyand on the debt was not associated with Weyand for the purposes of s NG 2(1)(b)(i). To this end the Trust was settled on terms that avoided association with Weyand.

(b)The incorporation of VNL as trustee of the Trust, VNL at all material times being under the control of Mr and Mrs Chin.

(c)       The Trust’s registration as an approved issuer for the purposes of

Part 6B SACD.

(d)      VNL’s assumption of liability for repayment of the debt.

(e)       The registration of Weyand’s advance as a registered security for the

purposes of Part 6B SACD.

(f)       Weyand charging and VNL paying interest on the debt.

[116]   The Appellants’ case is that the arrangement was the agreement by which (d) above was achieved.   I do not accept that submission.   Each step was required to achieve the outcome that was sought and, in my view, constituted the arrangement.

Tax avoidance

[117]   It is also common ground that the arrangement, directly or indirectly, avoided liability for NRWT.

Tax avoidance arrangement

[118]   What is not common ground is whether the arrangement was a tax avoidance arrangement, that is whether the arrangement.

[119]   In Ben Nevis Forestry Ventures Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue38   the Supreme Court addressed the issue of when the use of a specific provision, such as s NG 2(1)(b)(i), will constitute a tax avoidance arrangement and be void against the Commissioner.  In such a case, the Court said that:

[107]    ...  a  further  question  arises  based  on  the  taxpayer’s  use  of  the specific provision viewed in the light of the arrangement as a whole. If, when viewed in that light, it is apparent that the taxpayer has used the specific provision, and thereby altered the incidence of income tax, in a way which cannot have been within the contemplation and purpose of Parliament when  it enacted the provision, the arrangement  will  be  a tax avoidance arrangement.

...

[120]   Accordingly,  the  arrangement  by  which  the  parties  used  s NG 2(1)(b)(i) constitutes a tax avoidance arrangement if they have used the provision in a way which cannot have been within the contemplation and purpose of Parliament when it enacted the provision.

[121]   If it were so used, a second issue arises, namely whether the tax avoidance purpose or effect of the arrangement was “merely incidental”.  The arrangement is not a tax avoidance arrangement if the tax avoidance purpose or effect was merely incidental.

[122]   The Authority described the contemplation and purpose of Parliament when enacting the AIL regime as follows:39

[316]    The policy behind the AIL regime was to reduce the cost of overseas borrowing to New Zealand borrowers and was aimed at lenders who would typically only lend to New Zealand businesses if they were compensated for

38 Ben Nevis Forestry Ventures Limited v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2008] NZSC 115, [2009]

2 NZLR 289.

39 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011).

any withholding taxes which had to be paid: see Taxation Policy – Business Tax Policy 1991 30 July 1991.  The policy paper continued on to state that, when the issuer and the non-resident holder of the security are associated parties, NRWT will continue to apply to the payment of interest. It was clearly not intended that associated parties be able to access the AIL regime.

[317]    The purpose of association rules is basically to identify common control and common ownership. Where there is that level of common control or ownership, then the concession is not intended to be available because it can be inferred, in that situation, the lending to the New Zealand borrower would have occurred in any case. There is no need to provide the same incentive sought by genuine third-party lenders. Parliament does not intend to extend the incentive where that arms-length aspect is missing, particularly, when the loan is already in place and, by necessary implication, was made in the knowledge that full NRWT would have to be paid.

[123]   The Appellants agree with the description the Authority gave in [316] but submit that the Authority went too far when it said in [317] that the purpose of association rules is to “identify common control and common ownership”.   The Appellants’ submission is that Parliament chose to define the concept of association for the purposes of s NG 2(1)(b)(i) as it did and that the inference to be drawn is that Parliament  made  a  deliberate  decision  to  limit  association  to  those  defined categories.

[124]   I am satisfied that the Authority identified the policy behind the AIL regime in [316] of its decision.  I am also satisfied that the Appellants’ use of s NG 2(1)(b)(i) could not have been within Parliament’s contemplation and purpose when it enacted the provision.

[125]   First, this was not a new loan from Weyand to a non-associated party.  The loan was existing.

[126]   Secondly, Weyand had not demanded interest of VIL at any time whilst VIL

was liable for the debt.

[127]   Thirdly, it was envisaged the Trust would be in receipt of income.

[128]   Fourthly, the whole purpose of the arrangement was to ensure that VNL

would not pay income tax on income that it received and paid to Weyand as interest,

subject only to payment of AIL at 2 per cent.  An EY internal memorandum dated

8 October 1998 makes this express and states:40

1) Per the diagram below, our objective is to mitigate the NZ group’s tax by shifting all profit up to the trust (VT) and paying it out by way of interest subject to AIL.

...

[129]   I am satisfied that Parliament did not contemplate that the AIL regime would be used for such a purpose.

[130]   The following statements of the majority in Ben Nevis are apposite:

[108]    The general anti-avoidance provision does not confine the Court as to the matters which may be taken into account when considering whether a tax avoidance arrangement exists. Hence the Commissioner and the courts may address a number of relevant factors, the significance of which will depend on the particular facts. The manner in which the arrangement is carried out will often be an important consideration. So will the role of all relevant parties and any relationship they may have with the taxpayer. The economic and commercial effect of documents and transactions may also be significant. Other features that may be relevant include the duration of the arrangement and the nature and extent of the financial consequences that it will have for the taxpayer. As indicated, it will often be the combination of various elements in the arrangement which is significant. A classic indicator of a use that is outside Parliamentary contemplation is the structuring of an arrangement so that the taxpayer gains the benefit of the specific provision in an artificial or contrived way. It is not within Parliament’s purpose for specific provisions to be used in that manner.

(emphasis added)

Merely incidental

[131]   The Appellants’ next submission was to the effect that, if the arrangement had tax avoidance as one of its purposes or effects, that purpose or effect was merely incidental.   I do not accept that submission.   If tax avoidance was not the sole

purpose of the arrangement, I am satisfied that it was the predominant one.

40 Common Bundle of Documents dated 9 November 2011, Volume 2 at 591.

[132]   Accordingly,  in  my  view,  the  Authority  was  correct  to  hold  that  the arrangement was a tax avoidance arrangement and void against the Commissioner accordingly.

Powers to counteract

[133]   The Appellants submit that, if there were tax avoidance, the Commissioner was not able to exercise a reconstruction power in respect of that avoidance.

[134]   The Commissioner has imposed an additional 13 per cent tax on the interest payments in respect of the period after October 2003, in addition to the 2 per cent AIL paid at the time.  The Appellants’ case is that s GB 1 of the Act, which confers power to reconstruct, is confined and does not allow the Commissioner to do as he has.  Section GB 1 reads as follows:

GB 1    Agreements purporting to alter incidence of tax to be void

(1)      Where an arrangement is void in accordance with section BG 1, the amounts of gross income, allowable deductions and available net losses included in calculating the taxable income of any person affected by that arrangement may be adjusted by the Commissioner in the manner the Commissioner thinks appropriate, so as to counteract any tax advantage obtained by that person from or under that arrangement, and, without limiting the generality of this subsection, the Commissioner may have regard to—

(a)       Such amounts of gross income, allowable deductions and available net losses as, in the Commissioner’s opinion, that person would have, or might be expected to have, or would in all likelihood have, had if that arrangement had not been made or entered into; or

(b)       Such amounts of gross income and allowable deductions as, in the Commissioner’s opinion, that person would have had if that person had been allowed the benefit of all amounts of gross income, or of such part of the gross income as the Commissioner considers proper, derived by any other person or persons as a result of that arrangement.

...

[135]   The  Appellants  submit  that  the  Commissioner’s  power  to  counteract  is

limited to adjusting amounts of gross income, allowable deductions and available net

losses included in calculation the taxable income of any person affected by the arrangement.

[136]   The Commissioner disputes this submission.  The Commissioner’s position is that s GB 1 allows the Commissioner to counteract the tax advantage derived in the manner the Commissioner thinks appropriate.  In addition, the Commissioner takes the same preliminary point as he did regarding the Appellants’ argument pursuant to s NF 2(4)(b)(ii), namely that the Appellants are seeking to raise an argument and proposition of law that they did not raise in their statements of position.

[137]   Although the Commissioner raised this objection before the Authority, the matter was not addressed in the decision.  I am satisfied that s 138G TAA precludes the Appellants from raising this issue.  The extent to which VNL raised this issue in its statement of position was to say that, if it were a party to a tax avoidance arrangement, an issue arose as to the adjustment if any that should be made as a

result.41   In my view that falls short of what s 138G TAA requires.

[138]   In addition, in its statement of position VNL says “The reconstruction powers in s GB 1 are exercisable against any person to remove the tax advantage obtained by that person”.42    This statement indicates an acceptance that the Commissioner’s powers under s GB 1 allow the Commissioner to counteract any tax advantage, and not purely by adjusting the specific items to which I have already referred.

[139]   I accept the Commissioner’s submission that the Appellants are seeking to raise a matter not disclosed in their statement  of position and that s 138G TAA precludes them from doing so.

Issue 4 – Penalties

[140]   The Commissioner may impose penalties in respect of a shortfall, which is the difference between the tax that should have been paid and the amount paid in

fact.  The assumption as to Weyand’s residency and the tax avoidance arrangement

41 Statement of Position of Vinelight Nominees Limited at [3.2].

42 Ibid, at [46.3].

have given rise to shortfalls in two respects.  The first is the difference between the

2 per cent AIL rate and the RWT rate of 30 per cent for payments prior to October

2003.  The second part is the difference between AIL and NRWT at 15 per cent in relation to the post October 2003 period.

[141]   The  Commissioner  may  impose  penalties  in  respect  of  a  shortfall  for  a number of reasons.   In this case, the Commissioner imposed penalties because he considered the Appellants had taken an abusive tax position.

[142]   The Authority  approached  the  matter  by  examining  both  the Appellants’ position in regard to residency and the tax avoidance arrangement.  The Authority appears to have treated the whole matter as a single “tax position” for the purpose of imposing  penalties.43    The  Authority  upheld  the  Appellants’  challenge  to  the penalties because it was not satisfied that the Appellants had taken an abusive tax position.44

[143]   There is no dispute that the Appellants are liable to pay the penalties to which I have referred if they took an abusive tax position.    An abusive tax position is defined in s 141D(7) TAA as follows:

141D   Abusive tax position

...

(7)      For the purposes of this Part …, an abusive tax position means a tax position that,—

(a)      is an unacceptable tax position at the time at which the tax position is taken; and

(b)      viewed objectively, the taxpayer takes—

(i)        in respect, or as a consequence, of an arrangement that is entered into with a dominant purpose of avoiding tax, whether directly or indirectly; or

43 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011) at [348] and [352].

44 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011) at [351].

(ii)      where   the   tax   position   does   not   relate   to   an arrangement described in subparagraph (i), with a dominant purpose of avoiding tax, whether directly or indirectly.

[144]   Section 3(1) TAA defines tax position as follows:

tax position means a position or approach with regard to tax … under one or more tax laws, including without limitation a position or approach with regard to—

(a)       A liability for an amount of tax, or the payment of an amount of tax: (b)       An  obligation  to  deduct  or  withhold  an  amount  of  tax,  or  the

deduction or withholding of an amount of tax:

...

[145]   Section 141B(1) TAA sets out the circumstances in which a taxpayer takes an unacceptable tax position, as follows:

141B    Unacceptable tax position

(1)       A taxpayer takes an unacceptable tax position if, viewed objectively, the tax position fails to meet the standard of being about as likely as not to be correct.

(5)       For  the  purposes  of  this  section,  the  question  whether  any  tax position is acceptable or unacceptable shall be determined as at the time at which the taxpayer takes the taxpayer’s tax position.

(6)       The time at which a taxpayer takes a tax position for a return period is—

(a)       the time at which the taxpayer provides the return containing the taxpayer’s tax position, if the taxpayer provides a tax return for the return period:

(b)       the  due  date  for  providing  the  tax  return  for  the  return period, if the taxpayer does not provide a tax return for the return period.

(7)       The matters that must be considered in determining whether the taxpayer has taken an unacceptable tax position include—

(a)       The actual or potential application to the tax position of all the tax laws that are relevant (including specific or general anti-avoidance provisions); and

(b)       Decisions of a court or a Taxation Review Authority on the interpretation  of  tax  laws  that  are  relevant  (unless  the

decision was issued up to one month before the taxpayer

takes the taxpayer’s tax position).

[146]   There was and is no dispute that the Appellants took a “tax position”.  The issue before the Authority was, first, whether they had taken an unacceptable tax position  and,  secondly,  whether  they had  done  so  for  the  dominant  purpose  of avoiding  tax.    A finding  in  favour  of  the  Commissioner  on  both  matters  was necessary to a finding that the Appellants had taken an abusive tax position and therefore to their liability for an abusive tax penalty.

[147]   On appeal, the Commissioner submits that the Authority erred in its finding because it considered the tax position that the Appellants had taken subjectively, rather than objectively, as s 141B (1) TAA requires. The Authority said:45

[351]    It seems to me that [Mr Chin] (and his family) were entitled to think, from the professional advice received, that the relevant tax returns and manoeuvres were, at least, as likely as not to be correct.  I am conscious that is a subjective approach and the criterion in s.141B(1) is “viewed objectively”.      Nevertheless,   in   the   particular   context   of   this   quite complicated case, I think that [Mr Chin] said structures seem compliant until deeply analysed.  Perhaps, I am stretching the point but, although I find the position unacceptable, I do not find that the disputant actually took any unacceptable tax position as defined.

[148]   I accept that this paragraph suggests that the Authority did not consider the tax position that each of VNL and Weyand took wholly objectively.

[149]   In Ben Nevis, the majority said that the standard of objectively being “about as likely as not to be correct” did not require that the tax position had a 50 per cent prospect of success, but that the merits of the argument supporting the taxpayer’s interpretation must be “substantial”;46 that the stipulation of an objective test meant that the taxpayer’s belief that the position taken was correct, or not unacceptable, is

irrelevant; and that whether a taxpayer’s interpretation meets the standard in any case

45 V Trust v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2011] NZTRA 7; Case 11/2011 (2011) 25 NZTC

15,177 (1-011).

46 Ben Nevis Forestry Ventures Limited v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2008] NZSC 115; (2009)

24 NZTC 23,188 at [184].

comes  down  to  a  judgment  of  the  weight  of  the  arguments  that  support  that

taxpayer’s position and the application of the law to the relevant facts.47

[150] Viewed objectively, I am satisfied that each tax position taken was an unacceptable tax position.

[151]   In  so  far  as  concerns  the  argument  that  Weyand  was  not  resident  in New Zealand prior to October 2003, I consider it clear that Weyand was resident because its centre of management was in New Zealand.  I have already stated that I do  not  consider  VNL  had  reasonable  grounds  to  conclude  that  Weyand  was non-resident and I consider that applies equally to Weyand.  I do not consider that the arguments to the contrary, that is those suggesting that RWT should not be paid, have substantial merit.

[152]   I also do not consider that the arguments that VNL and Weyand were not parties to a tax avoidance arrangement or that tax avoidance was a merely incidental purpose or effect have substantial merit.  On the contrary, the matters to which I have referred put the matter beyond doubt.

[153]   For these reasons I consider the Appellants took an unacceptable tax position. I am also satisfied that s 141D(7)(b) is met.

[154]   Accordingly, I allow the Commissioner’s cross appeal.

Result

[155]   I dismiss the appeal and allow the cross appeal.   The parties may submit memoranda on costs if they are unable to agree.

..................................................................

M Peters J

47 Ibid, at [183] – [185].