TR 2006/10: Income tax, fringe
benefits tax and product grants and benefits: Public Rulings
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LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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What this Ruling is about |
1 |
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Previous Rulings |
3 |
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Ruling |
4 |
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The status and binding effect of public rulings |
30 |
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Date of effect |
78 |
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NOT LEGALLY BINDING SECTION: |
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Appendix 1: Detailed contents list |
79 |
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This
publication provides you with the following level of protection:
This publication (excluding appendixes) is a public ruling for
the purposes of the Taxation
Administration Act 1953.
A public ruling is an expression of the Commissioner's opinion
about the way in which a relevant provision applies, or would
apply, to entities generally or to a class of entities in
relation to a particular scheme or a class of schemes.
If you rely on this ruling, we must apply the law to you in the
way set out in the ruling (or in a way that is more favourable
for you if we are satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and
disadvantages you, and we are not prevented from doing so by a
time limit imposed by the law). You will be protected from
having to pay any underpaid tax, penalty or interest in respect
of the matters covered by this ruling if it turns out that it
does not correctly state how the relevant provision applies to
you. |
What this Ruling is about
1. This Ruling outlines the system of public rulings following the
enactment of the Tax
Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005 .
In respect of public rulings, that Act inserted new Divisions 357
(common rules) and 358 (public rulings) into Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953(TAA), the provisions of which are referred
to in this Ruling.
2. The new Divisions implement the Government's response to the
recommendations made in the Report
on Aspects of Income Tax Self Assessment (ROSA
Report). This Ruling considers:
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(i)
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what constitutes a public ruling;
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(ii)
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the types of public rulings the Tax Office
publishes;
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(iii)
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the status and binding effect of public rulings;
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(iv)
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the status and binding effect of formal rulings
which are not public rulings;
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(v)
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the relevance of public rulings to whether a
taxpayer has a reasonably arguable position for the purposes of
certain penalty provisions;
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(vi)
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the withdrawal of public rulings;
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(vii)
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the status of public rulings following a rewrite
of the law;
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(viii)
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the effect of inconsistent rulings; and
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(ix)
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the date of effect of public rulings.
Previous Rulings
3. Taxation Ruling TR 92/1, Taxation Ruling TR 92/20, Taxation Ruling TR
97/16 and Product Grants and Benefits Ruling PGBR 2003/1 were withdrawn
on and from 5 April 2006. To the extent that the Commissioner's views in
those Rulings apply in respect of the new provisions, they have been
incorporated into this Ruling.
Ruling
What constitutes a public ruling?
4. A public ruling is written binding advice, published by the
Commissioner for the information of entities generally, on the way in
which, in the Commissioner's opinion, a relevant provision1 applies
or would apply to entities generally, or a class of entities. A public
ruling will state that it is a public ruling.
5. Under subsection 358-5(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA, a public ruling
may deal with any matter involved in the application of a relevant
provision. Such matters may include matters relating to ultimate
conclusions of fact.
6. In addition to broad statements that anyone may rely on, the
Commissioner may tailor public rulings to a particular class of entities
or limit the scope of the ruling to a particular transaction entered
into by a number of entities (such as class rulings or product rulings2).
A class of entities may be defined by reference to certain
characteristics (for example, being an employee or shareholder of a
particular company, or being a member of a professional association). A
class of entities can also be defined by reference to a particular
behavioural characteristic of the members of that class, such as whether
they are acting reasonably and in good faith. The following example
(taken from the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005) demonstrates how a
public ruling may apply only to certain entities who are acting
reasonably and in good faith.
Example
7. The Commissioner issues an information booklet which is stated to be
a public ruling and to apply to entities who are 'non-business
individual self-preparers who have acted in good faith and reasonably
relied on the ruling'. This public ruling is for an identifiable class
of entities even though the booklet itself contains information relevant
to a broader class. Kerry and Simon are non-business self-preparers.
Kerry, in preparing her own tax return acts in good faith and reasonably
relies on a statement in the public ruling which misstates the law
(although she is unaware that it does so). However, Simon unreasonably
attempts to exploit a typographical error in the booklet which is
obvious to him. Kerry can rely on the ruling but Simon cannot, as Simon
does not fall within the identifiable class of entities to which the
ruling applies.3
8. Note that in the above example Simon had entered into the scheme4 to
which the public ruling applied before the correction of the
typographical error was made. Therefore, if the ruling had applied to
him, the uncorrected version of the booklet would have continued to
apply to him (see paragraph 46 of this Ruling). However, because he acts
unreasonably, Simon does not fall within the identifiable class of
entities to which the ruling applies, and the fact that he had already
entered into the scheme is irrelevant to his ability to rely on the
ruling.
9. The Commissioner may also declare that advice provided generally in
documents such as TaxPack or E-tax is
a public ruling for a specific class of taxpayers only, even though the
information contained in the relevant publication may be relevant to a
broader class.5
10. A single document labelled a public ruling may consist of a number
of separate rulings (that is, a number of opinions on how relevant
provisions apply). Generally a ruling will identify the relevant
provisions. However, in certain publications declared to be public
rulings (for example, TaxPack ),
this is not practical. If the relevant provision is not expressly
identified, it is sufficient if it can be identified by necessary
implication. Furthermore, the Commissioner has the ability to make only
part of a document a public ruling. Therefore, for example, a 'TR
series' ruling (see paragraph 22 of this Ruling) contains a section
labelled as a public ruling, and usually also contains explanatory
material which does not form part of the binding public ruling but
contains information to help the reader understand how the
Commissioner's view has been reached.6
11. Provisions that are relevant to rulings are defined in section
357-55 of Schedule 1 to the TAA. Relevant provisions are provisions of
Acts and regulations administered by the Commissioner that are about any
of the following:
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income tax;
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Medicare levy;
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fringe benefits tax;
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franking tax (that is, franking deficit tax,
over-franking tax and venture capital deficit tax);
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withholding taxes (including non-resident
withholding taxes and mining withholding tax);
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petroleum resource rent tax;
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the administration or collection of the above
taxes;
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·
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product grants or benefits mentioned in section 8
of the Product
Grants and Benefits Administration Act 2000 (including
energy grants, cleaner fuel grants and product stewardship (oil)
benefits) or the administration or payment of the product grants
and benefits, and
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·
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net fuel amount, or the administration,
collection or payment of a net fuel amount.
12. Only provisions of Acts and regulations administered by the
Commissioner are directly covered by section 357-55 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA. Therefore, for example, the Commissioner cannot directly rule on
trust law or the common law relating to the creation of a new trust.
Such matters are outside the scope of the relevant provisions on which
the Commissioner can directly rule.7 However,
the Commissioner may issue a public ruling on, say, the capital gains
tax consequences of the formation of a new trust. In making this ruling,
the Commissioner might form a view that a new trust has or has not been
created at common law for the purpose of coming to a view on the
application of the capital gains tax provisions.8 In
such a case, that ruling would be binding in relation to the application
of the capital gains tax provisions, even though it is premised on a
particular view about whether a new trust has been formed at common law
(which might even turn out to be incorrect). However, the view expressed
about whether a new trust has been created at common law is not, by
itself, a ruling. Therefore it would not be binding on the Commissioner
in a context outside of the application of the capital gains tax
provisions to the particular scheme addressed by the public ruling and
the class of entities, if any, it is expressed to apply to.9
13. The intention of the amendments implementing the ROSA Report is to
enable the Commissioner to make rulings on all the matters and
circumstances in which rulings have previously been made (for example,
the extent of liability to income tax10, or the way in which
a discretion of the Commissioner would be exercised in determining that
liability11). In addition, the Commissioner is authorised to
make a public ruling to cover any aspect of the tax or entitlement
covered by a relevant provision, including the collection and recovery
of the tax, and its administration, or the administration or payment of
a relevant grant or benefit.12
14. The intention to allow rulings to be given in a very wide range of
circumstances has been reflected in the use of the word 'about' in
section 357-55 of Schedule 1 to the TAA, which has a very broad meaning.
The word 'about' is not defined in the ITAA 1936 or ITAA 1997 but takes
its ordinary meaning of 'concerning', 'connected with', 'on the subject
of' or 'relating to.'13
15. Therefore, a provision under which the extent of liability or
entitlement to the listed taxes and entitlements is worked out is a
provision 'about' them, as are provisions that are sufficiently
relevant, or a necessary pre-requisite, to working out the liability or
entitlement.
16. Provisions dealing with penalties for false or misleading
statements, late payment of income tax, or late lodgment of income tax
returns, are examples of provisions about the administration or
collection of income tax. The same applies to provisions dealing with
shortfall interest charge and general interest charge. Similarly,
provisions dealing with, for example, franking credits and debits are
about the administration or collection of franking tax.
17. A ruling will only be a public ruling for the purposes of the public
rulings provisions if it:
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·
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is published;14 and
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·
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states that it is a public ruling.15
18. The Commissioner publishes public rulings by placing them on the Tax
Office website (http://law.ato.gov.au).
19. The Commissioner must also publish a notice of the making of a
public ruling in the Gazette .16 However,
if the Commissioner issues a public ruling but fails to publish a notice
in the Gazette ,
an entity to whom it applies may nevertheless rely on the ruling and it
will bind the Commissioner.17
20. The conclusion in paragraph 19 of this Ruling follows from section
357-90 of Schedule 1 to the TAA, which deals with formal defects. That
section provides that the validity of a ruling is not affected merely by
the fact that a provision relating to the form of the ruling or the
procedure for making it has not been complied with. The purpose of
section 357-90 is illustrated by the 'failure to gazette' example in
paragraph 3.35 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005. It prevents the
Commissioner asserting that a document clearly intended to be a public
ruling is not in fact a public ruling merely because of a procedural or
formal defect.
21. A public ruling in force immediately before 1 January 2006 under
former Part IVAAA of the TAA is treated as if it were a public ruling
under Division 358 of Schedule 1 to the TAA, with effect from the day it
was originally made.18 Therefore
the level of protection applicable to a ruling under the former Part
IVAAA of the TAA will continue to apply to that ruling through Division
358 of Schedule 1 to the TAA. Where inconsistencies arise between two
rulings that were originally made before 1 January 2006, the rules set
out in former sections 170BC to 170BDC and 170BF of the ITAA 1936 will
apply. For more information about inconsistencies refer to paragraphs 52
to 58 of this Ruling.
The types of rulings the Tax Office publishes
Public rulings issued in the formal
rulings series
22. The Tax Office makes known its views about the application of
relevant provisions in a number of ways. For example, the Tax Office
issues formal rulings, grouped in different series, on the application
of relevant provisions at a general level, in the sense that they do not
address particular entity's affairs. These formal rulings include the
series which, for the most part, meet the criteria for binding public
rulings, namely:
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Taxation Rulings series (TR series);
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Taxation Determination series (TD series);
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Class Rulings series (CR series);
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Product Rulings series (PR series); and
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Product Grants and Benefits Rulings series (PGBR
series).
23. In addition, there are other formal rulings issued by the Tax Office
which do not meet the criteria for binding public rulings. Principally,
these are the Income Tax series (IT series) of rulings (that is, formal
rulings issued before 1 July 1992) and most of the Miscellaneous
Taxation series (MT series) issued prior to 1 January 2006. These formal
rulings are not public rulings for the purposes of the public rulings
provisions. However, the Commissioner considers them to be
administratively binding on the Tax Office.
Other types of publications that may
be made into public rulings
24. The Tax Office also expresses its view about relevant provisions
through other publications. These include:
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·
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TaxPack and E-tax ;
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return form guides;
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information booklets;
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media releases;
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speeches of senior officers; and
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practice statements.19
25. To the extent that these publications express the Tax Office's view
about how a relevant provision applies to entities generally or a group
or class of entities, they can be given the status of a public ruling.
26. However, to be a public ruling, the relevant publication must state
that it is a public ruling for the purposes of the public rulings
provisions (see paragraph 17 of this Ruling for more information).
Therefore, a Tax Office publication will not be a public ruling unless
it is stated to be one.
27. Only those parts of the publication which express the Tax Office's
view about how a relevant provision applies will be given the status of
a public ruling. Any other part will not be a public ruling.
28. For example, a publication declared to be a public ruling could set
out the Tax Office's view as to how the debt and equity rules in
Division 974 of the ITAA 1997 apply to companies that issue a particular
type of financial instrument, and also outline the Tax Office's plans to
audit some companies that have issued those instruments. The part of the
publication which states the Tax Office's view as to how Division 974 of
the ITAA 1997 applies would be a public ruling, but that part dealing
with the Tax Office's audit strategy in selecting companies that will be
subject to an audit would not be a public ruling because it does not set
out the Commissioner's opinion on how a relevant provision applies or
would apply to entities.
29. Where no part of the publication concerns the way in which a
'relevant provision' applies to entities generally or class of entities,
no part of it can be a public ruling.
The status and binding effect of public rulings
30. A public ruling binds the Commissioner if the public ruling applies
to the entity and the entity relies on it. An entity relies on a public
ruling by acting (or omitting to act) in accordance with the public
ruling. An example of demonstrating reliance by omitting to act is
omitting to lodge a tax return in the circumstances in which a public
ruling states that a return need not be lodged.20
31. An entity does not need to know of the existence of a public ruling
in order to rely on it. An entity may rely on a public ruling at any
time unless they are prevented by a time limit imposed by a taxation
law, such as an entity's period of review of their assessment.
Furthermore, an entity need not rely on a public ruling at the first
opportunity; rather the opportunity must be taken before being prevented
from doing so by a time limit imposed by a taxation law.21
32. A public ruling applies to an entity if the entity is a member of
the class to whom the public ruling applies and the entity's
circumstances come within the circumstances addressed in the public
ruling. A public ruling applies for the specified period, so long as the
law to which it relates remains in force. As discussed at paragraphs 49
to 51 of this Ruling, where the law is re-enacted or remade, the public
ruling continues to apply. If the law is repealed or amended to have a
different effect, the public ruling ceases to apply.22
33. The reason why a public ruling ceases to apply if the law is amended
to have a different effect is because a public ruling on the way the
Commissioner considers a relevant provision applies or would apply
according to the state of the law as it then exists says nothing about
how a materially altered version of that provision applies. This is the
case irrespective of whether the amendment is to the provision itself or
to another provision which effects a change to the operation of the
original provision (see paragraph 35 of this Ruling for an example of
this).
34. That is not to say that any amendment to (or affecting) a provision
would render a ruling on that provision inoperative. It is only if the
amendment produces an effect which is different from the effect of the
provision prior to the amendment that the public ruling ceases to apply
(and therefore ceases to bind the Commissioner). If the public ruling
given under the original provision would have been the same if the
amendment had been made before the public ruling is given then the
public ruling is still applicable. If the public ruling ceases to apply
because of the amendment then the public ruling cannot be relied on.
35. This point can be illustrated by way of the following example.
Subsection 8-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 provides a deduction for certain
losses or outgoings. However, the operation of subsection 8-1(1) is
directly affected by Division 26 of the ITAA 1997, which sets out some
amounts which cannot be deducted. If a public ruling is made about how
the Commissioner considers subsection 8-1(1) applies to a particular
type of outgoing, and an amendment were later made to Division 26
denying a deduction for such outgoings, then the public ruling can no
longer apply. This is the case even though the wording of subsection
8-1(1) has not itself been changed (rather, the effect of the provision
has been changed or amended by the amendment to Division 26). However,
if the amendment to Division 26 is irrelevant to the issues addressed by
the ruling, the ruling would still apply and would still bind the
Commissioner. This is the case even if the ruling were later shown to
represent an incorrect interpretation of the words of subsection 8-1(1).
36. As mentioned in paragraph 30 of this Ruling, a public ruling will
bind the Commissioner if an entity acts or omits to act in accordance
with the public ruling. The effect of a public ruling binding the
Commissioner is that the Commissioner will not apply the provision in a
way that is inconsistent with the public ruling. Therefore if, for
example, a ruling sets out the circumstances which would ordinarily lead
to the exercise of the Commissioner's discretion in relation to a
relevant provision, the Commissioner will exercise the discretion in a
way that is consistent with the ruling (including by giving appropriate
weight to the factors listed in the ruling as being relevant or
significant). However, the ruling itself would not constitute the
exercise of the discretion, because that requires a separate act by the
Commissioner having regard to all the facts and circumstances of the
particular case. A public ruling which applies in relation to a
particular scheme will not bind the Commissioner if the scheme is not
implemented in the way set out in the public ruling.
37. Where an entity relies on a public ruling that applies to them, the
Commissioner may nevertheless apply a relevant provision of the law as
if the entity had not relied on the public ruling, if doing so would
produce a more favourable result for the entity. The Commissioner has
power to do this provided there is not a relevant time limit in the law
which prevents it. However, the Commissioner is not obliged to consider
whether a more favourable outcome is available for the entity.23 Rather,
the Commissioner may accept an entity's self-assessment without further
investigation.
38. Because the Commissioner may apply an interpretation of the law that
is more favourable to the entity, a public ruling binds the Commissioner
in the following ways if the entity chooses to rely on it:
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·
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To the extent that a public ruling determines a
tax liability, amount or an entitlement (or whether there is a
tax liability, amount or an entitlement) under a relevant
provision, the liability, amount or entitlement must be
determined in accordance with the public ruling. However, if the
Commissioner concludes that the public ruling was wrong, the
Commissioner may adopt the correct position if it is more
favourable than the public ruling.
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·
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To the extent that a public ruling expresses the
Commissioner's opinion on an ultimate conclusion of fact for the
purposes of a relevant provision (such as whether the entity is
a resident), the Commissioner is bound to follow his or her
expressed opinion, or may adopt the correct conclusion if that
is more favourable.
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·
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To the extent that a public ruling deals with
matters of administration, procedure, collection or any other
matter involved in the application of a relevant provision, the
Commissioner must not act inconsistently with the public ruling
to the entity's detriment. However, the Commissioner may adopt
an interpretation that is more favourable where that is the
correct position.24
The status and binding effect of formal rulings which are not public
rulings
39. To the extent that formal rulings or parts thereof are not public
rulings,25 they
are not capable of legally binding the Commissioner as described in
paragraphs 30 to 38 of this Ruling. However, the policy of the Tax
Office is to stand by what is said in a formal ruling and to depart from
a formal ruling only where there are good and substantial reasons to do
so.26
The relevance of public rulings to whether a taxpayer has a
reasonably arguable position for the purposes of certain penalty
provisions
40. Under the penalty provisions in Division 284 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA, a taxpayer may be liable to pay a shortfall penalty. The level of
penalty depends, in part, on whether the taxpayer or their agent treats
a relevant provision as applying to a matter or identical matters in a
particular way that was not reasonably arguable.
41. Section 284-15 of Schedule 1 to the TAA provides that in determining
whether a taxpayer has taken a reasonably arguable position, for the
purposes of the penalty provisions, it is necessary to have regard to
the 'relevant authorities'. A 'public ruling' is included as one of a
number of relevant authorities for this purpose,27none of
which alone is necessarily conclusive.
42. The TAA provides no guidance on the status of formal rulings which
are not public rulings for the purposes of determining if a taxpayer has
taken a reasonably arguable position. However, the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Taxation Laws Amendment (Self Assessment) Bill 1992
states that 'Taxation Rulings issued by the Commissioner prior to the
new arrangements introduced by this Bill may also be considered'.28 The
Tax Office has long accepted this approach and continues to do so.
Withdrawal of a public ruling
43. Where a public ruling does not specify the time at which it ceases
to apply, the ruling will apply until it is withdrawn.29
44. The Commissioner may withdraw a public ruling, either wholly or to
an extent, by publishing a notice of the withdrawal in the Gazette .30 If
the Commissioner fails to publish a notice of withdrawal in the Gazette ,
the public ruling continues to apply until it is effectively withdrawn.
In other words, all formalities must be complied with in order for the
withdrawal of a public ruling to be effective.
45. The withdrawal takes effect from the time specified in the notice.
That time must not be before the time the notice is published.31
46. To the extent that a public ruling is withdrawn, it continues to
apply to schemes to which it applied that had begun to be carried out
before the withdrawal, but does not apply to schemes that begin to be
carried out after the withdrawal.32 A
scheme is taken to have begun if a contract requiring the scheme has
been entered into.33 'Scheme'
is widely defined to mean 'any arrangement', or 'any scheme, plan,
proposal, action, course of action or course of conduct, whether
unilateral or otherwise'.34 An
'arrangement' is defined to mean any arrangement, agreement,
understanding, promise or undertaking, whether express or implied, and
whether or not enforceable (or intended to be enforceable) by legal
proceedings. 35
47. The Commissioner has the flexibility to defer the withdrawal of a
public ruling where it would be inappropriate for a public ruling to be
withdrawn on short notice.36
48. As such, in appropriate circumstances, the Commissioner may leave a
public ruling in force even though there are doubts about the
correctness of the public ruling. When withdrawing a public ruling, the
Commissioner is entitled to have regard to the consequences for entities
of a withdrawal with immediate effect and may therefore delay the date
of withdrawal to minimise the consequences. However, a delayed date for
withdrawal would not generally be appropriate where rulings address tax
avoidance arrangements, or in situations where the former public ruling
is being exploited.
The status of public rulings following a rewrite of the law
49. If the Commissioner has made a public ruling about a relevant
provision and that provision is re-enacted or remade, the public ruling
is taken to be about the re-enacted or remade provision, insofar as the
new law expresses the same ideas as the old law.37 However,
if the law is substantively changed, the part of the public ruling
dealing with the changed law ceases to apply.
50. Therefore, for schemes commencing on or after the date of effect of
the new law, entities can continue to rely on existing legally binding
rulings which deal with the old law if the old law expresses the same
ideas as the new law. If the old law has been replaced by a new law
which does not express the same ideas, then the part of the public
ruling on that old law does not apply in relation to the new law. That
is, that part of the public ruling will not apply to schemes entered
into on or after, or extending beyond, the date of effect of the new
law.
51. In deciding whether the new law expresses the same ideas as the old
law, entities can normally assume there has been no change in those
ideas unless announced otherwise. Ways in which a change may be
announced include:
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·
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the explanatory memorandum, second reading speech
or other relevant extrinsic material relating to a Bill which is
re-enacting or remaking the particular provisions;
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a tribunal or court decision (not under appeal)
which makes it clear that there has been a change in ideas;
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·
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a public announcement by the Tax Office that
there has been a change in ideas - for example, by way of a
Taxation Ruling, Taxation Determination, press release or other
Tax Office publication.
The effect of inconsistent rulings
52. Where there are inconsistent rulings that both apply to the entity,
section 357-75 of Schedule 1 to the TAA sets out rules for determining
which ruling may be relied upon, to the extent of the inconsistency.
Rulings are not inconsistent to the extent to which they apply to
different schemes or to different time periods (such as different income
years).
53. As a general principle, an entity may always choose to rely on a
public ruling that applies to them and may choose to rely on a private
or oral ruling that specifically addresses their circumstances (assuming
it still applies to them and has not, for example, been superseded by a
later ruling: see paragraph 55 of this Ruling). So, if there is an
inconsistency between a later applicable private or oral ruling and an
earlier public ruling, the entity may choose which ruling they wish to
rely on. Similarly if there is an inconsistency between two public
rulings (including this Ruling and, say, one of those rulings mentioned
in paragraph 3 of this Ruling), each of which applies to a particular
entity, the entity may rely on either ruling.
54. However there are special rules which limit the ability to rely on a
private or oral ruling if it is inconsistent in some respect with a
later public ruling.
55. If the private or oral ruling is inconsistent with a later public
ruling, the earlier private or oral ruling is taken not to have been
made if, when the public ruling is made, the following two conditions
are met:
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·
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the income year or other period to which the
rulings relate has not begun; and
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·
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the scheme to which the rulings relate has not
begun to be carried out.
56. This allows the correction of an erroneous private or oral ruling by
the issue of a later public ruling, but only where the entity has not
already entered into the scheme and the relevant income year or
accounting period has not commenced. If the entity has already entered
into the scheme, or the relevant income year or accounting period has
commenced, they may rely on either ruling (see paragraph 53 of this
Ruling)
57. Where there are three or more inconsistent rulings, the rules in
paragraphs 55 and 56 of this Ruling should be applied to each
combination of two rulings in the order in which they are made, to
determine whether any of the rulings are taken not to have been made,
and then to determine which of the remaining rulings the entity can rely
on.
58. These rules to resolve inconsistencies between rulings do not apply
where both the inconsistent rulings were originally made before 1
January 2006. The rules set out in former sections 170BC to 170BDC and
170BF of the ITAA 1936 apply in such a situation.38
Date of effect of public rulings
59. A public ruling binds the Commissioner from the time the public
ruling is published, or from the earlier or later time as specified in
the ruling.39
General guidelines
60. The 'date of effect' guidelines provided in paragraphs 61 to 69 of
this Ruling are not intended to be rigid rules that must be adhered to
without due regard to the effect on the revenue or the extent to which
entities might be disadvantaged. Rather, the guidelines provide a guide
as to the appropriate date of effect provision that might generally be
adopted to ensure consistency in the use of date of effect provisions in
public rulings.
61. At all times these guidelines need to be administered in a
commonsense manner in light of the particular issues dealt with in a
public ruling.
62. It is recognised that there may be situations where, for the proper
administration of the relevant provisions, it will be necessary to
depart from the guidelines. For example, where giving a public ruling
both a past and future application would, on an objective consideration
of all the factors, produce an unfair, absurd, unjustifiable or
impractical result.
63. Generally however, public rulings will have both a past and future
application because they represent the Commissioner's opinion as to what
the correct interpretation of the law has always been.
64. The fact that the Tax Office has not previously publicly stated an
interpretative or administrative policy does not mean a public ruling
should not have a past application. Even if uncertainty existed
previously in an industry, market or among taxation advisers and
taxpayers, a public ruling that issued to clarify this uncertainty is to
have both a past and future application (subject to the exceptions
mentioned in paragraph 62 and 70 of this Ruling).
65. The existence of uncertainty in the interpretation or application of
the taxation laws is a matter that may affect the amount of penalty
imposed. However, the existence of uncertainty does not affect an
entity's liability to pay the primary tax required by law.
66. Public rulings dealing with legislative amendments will usually
apply from the application date of the amending legislation. As the Tax
Office cannot provide interpretative advice on legislation prior to the
legislation receiving Royal Assent, or on regulations prior to their
registration, these public rulings will have both a past and future
application.
67. Public rulings will usually have both a past and future application
even if the issue dealt with in the public ruling is a timing issue, for
example, an issue that relates to the time that certain income is
derived.
68. A public ruling dealing with the criteria in respect of which, or
the method by which, the Commissioner will exercise a discretionary
power can only apply to an exercise of the particular discretion after
the ruling is issued, but may relate to an earlier period.
69. Where a court or tribunal decision which is not subject to an appeal
is more favourable to entities than a previous Tax Office practice, any
new public ruling adopting that decision ordinarily will have both a
past and future application.
Where prior general administrative
practice exists
70. A public ruling that relates to a scheme and that changes the
Commissioner's general administrative practice (or conflicts with a
previous private ruling) cannot apply to a particular entity if:
-
·
-
the change is less favourable to the entity than
the practice or ruling; and
-
·
-
the entity has started to carry out the scheme.40
This means that the interpretation of the relevant provision adopted in
the public ruling does not apply retrospectively to that entity.
71. For example, where a final public ruling takes a position contrary
to that of the draft public ruling, and that draft public ruling
represents the Commissioner's general administrative practice, the final
public ruling cannot apply retrospectively to an entity if it is less
favourable to the entity than the earlier draft public ruling and the
entity has started to carry out the scheme. Paragraph 3.130 of the
Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self
Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005 notes that: 'Where a draft public ruling
represents the Commissioner's only public statement on an issue, the
draft ruling will usually represent the Commissioner's general
administrative practice'.
72. General administrative practice will usually be established by the
Tax Office having consistently communicated to a wide range of entities
on a particular issue. A general administrative practice is usually
adopted for the efficient administration of the taxation system and
would generally be documented in products such as:
-
·
-
Law Administration Practice Statements;
-
·
-
General Administration Law Administration
Practice Statements;
-
·
-
a Tax Office policy document (such as the ATO
Receivables Policy); and
-
·
-
other precedential material.41
73. Importantly though, not all precedential material (such as ATO
Interpretative Decisions (ATO IDs)) indicate a general administrative
practice. An ATO ID will only be accepted by the Tax Office as
representing general administrative practice where the view contained
therein is supported by other evidence of a pattern of Tax Office
treatment of the issue consistent with the view expressed in the ATO ID
(for example, a significant number of private rulings on the same matter
which reach the same conclusion).
74. Other situations where a general administrative practice is not
necessarily established include:
-
·
-
Where there are merely several private rulings on
a matter. However, a significant number of uncontradicted
private rulings on a matter over time will tend to support the
establishment of a general administrative practice.
-
·
-
A bare failure by the Commissioner to take some
action within his or her power. However, a repeated failure to
exercise that power after the issue is drawn to the
Commissioner's attention will tend to support the establishment
of a general administrative practice.
-
·
-
Mere silence or failure to issue a public ruling
on a matter. However, a general administrative practice may be
established where, following the identification of an issue, the
Tax Office has accepted the practice as a basis on which
entities should treat the issue in a range of situations.42
Inter-relationship between rulings,
settlements and audits
75. A public ruling that covers an issue which was part of a settlement
between an entity and the Tax Office will not apply to the entity in
relation to that issue for the taxation years which were the subject of
the settlement. The Tax Office general policy is to state in each public
ruling the extent to which the public ruling will apply to entities who
have agreed to a settlement on the issue with the Tax Office.
76. If after a settlement with an entity a basis of assessment is
followed for future income years, and a new public ruling is issued
which is:
-
·
-
less favourable to the entity than the settlement
terms: the public ruling will apply to the entity for all
transactions, arrangements, agreements, acts or events entered
into, commenced or occurring after the date the public ruling is
issued or any later date specified in the public ruling; or
-
·
-
more favourable to the entity than the settlement
terms: the public ruling will generally have both a past
application (other than in respect of taxation years the subject
of the settlement) and a future application.
77. The date of effect of a public ruling will not be any different for
those entities who are subject to a taxation audit at the time the
public ruling is issued.
Date of effect
78. This Ruling applies from 1 January 2006. However, this Ruling does
not apply to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of
settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of this
Ruling.
Commissioner of Taxation
4 October 2006
Appendix 1 - Detailed contents list
79. The following is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
|
|
Paragraph |
|
What this Ruling is about |
1 |
|
Previous Rulings |
3 |
|
Ruling |
4 |
|
What constitutes a public ruling? |
4 |
|
Example |
7 |
|
The types of rulings the Tax Office publishes |
22 |
|
Public rulings
issued in the formal rulings series |
22 |
|
Other types of
publications that may be made into public rulings |
24 |
|
The status and binding effect of public rulings |
30 |
|
The status and binding effect of formal rulings
which are not public rulings |
39 |
|
The relevance of public rulings to whether a
taxpayer has a reasonably arguable position for the purposes of
certain penalty provisions |
40 |
|
Withdrawal of a public ruling |
43 |
|
The status of public rulings following a rewrite of
the law |
49 |
|
The effect of inconsistent rulings |
52 |
|
Date of effect of public rulings |
59 |
|
General guidelines |
60 |
|
Where prior general
administrative practice exists |
70 |
|
Inter-relationship
between rulings, settlements and audits |
75 |
|
Date of effect |
78 |
|
Appendix 1 - Detailed contents list |
79 |
Footnotes
[1]
See paragraph 11 of this Ruling for more information.
[2]
See paragraph 22 of this Ruling for more information.
[3]
This is based on Example 3.2 in paragraph 3.51 of the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment)
Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[4]
See paragraph 46 of this Ruling for an explanation of what a 'scheme'
is.
[5]
See paragraph 3.51 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws
Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[6]
See paragraph 39 of this Ruling and the rewritten Law Administration
Practice Statement PS LA 2001/4 for more information.
[7]
Subsection 358-5(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[8]
Subsection 358-5(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[9]
Subsection 357-60(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[10]
Former section 14ZAAE of TAA.
[11]
Former section 14ZAAD of TAA.
[12]
Paragraph 3.22 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[13]
The Macquarie Dictionary, 2001, rev. 3rd edn, The Macquarie Library Pty
Ltd, NSW and The Australian Oxford Dictionary, 1999, Oxford University
Press, Melbourne.
[14]
Paragraph 358-5(3)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[15]
Paragraph 358-5(3)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[16]
Subsection 358-5(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[17]
See paragraph 3.35 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws
Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[18]
Item 29, Part 3 of Schedule 2 to the Tax
Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005.
[19]
See PSLA 1998/1 for information about the purpose and content of
practice statements.
[20]
See subsection 357-60(1) of the ITAA 1997.
[21]
See subsection 357-60(2) of the ITAA 1997.
[22]
See note 2 in subsection 357-60(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[23]
Section 357-70 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[24]
See paragraph 3.30 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws
Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[25]
See paragraphs 22 and 23 of this Ruling.
[26]
See the rewritten Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/4 for
more information.
[27]
Paragraph 284-15(3)(d) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[28]
This Explanatory Memorandum refers to the old provision of section 222C
of the ITAA 1936. Section 222C of the ITAA 1936 was replaced with an
equivalent provision in section 284-15 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[29]
Section 358-15 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[30]
Subsections 358-20(1) and 358-20(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[31]
Subsection 358-20(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[32]
Subsection 358-20(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[33]
Subsection 357-80 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[34]
See subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997.
[35]
See Subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997.
[36]
Section 358-20(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[37]
Section 357-85 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[38]
Item 30, Schedule 2 of Tax
Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005.
[39]
Subsection 358-10(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[40]
Subsection 358-10(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
[41]
Paragraph 3.130 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
[42]
Paragraph 3.131 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment
(Improvements to Self Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005.
Previously released in draft form as TR 2006/D6
References
ATO references:
NO 2005/16695
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TR 2006/11
Subject References:
binding public rulings
conflicting rulings
date of effect of public rulings
fringe benefits tax
income tax
income tax rulings
product rulings
public rulings
status of Taxation Rulings
status of public rulings
taxation determinations
taxation rulings
withdrawal of public rulings
Legislative References:
TAA 1953
TAA 1953 Pt IVAAA
TAA 1953 Sch 1 Div 284
TAA 1953 Sch 1 284-15
TAA 1953 Sch 1 284-15(3)(d)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 Div 357
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-55
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-60(1)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-60(2)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-70
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-75
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-85
TAA 1953 Sch 1 357-90
TAA 1953 Sch 1 Div 358
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-5(1)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-5(2)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-5(3)(a)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-5(3)(b)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-5(4)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-10(1)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-10(2)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-15
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-20(1)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-20(2)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-20(3)
TAA 1953 Sch 1 358-20(4)
ITAA 1936 170BC
ITAA 1936 170BDA
ITAA 1936 170BDB
ITAA 1936 170BDC
ITAA 1936 170BF
ITAA 1936 222C
ITAA 1997 8-1(1)
ITAA 1997 Div 26
ITAA 1997 Div 974
ITAA 1997 995-1(1)
Product Grants and Benefits Administration Act 2000 8
Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005
Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2005
Sch 2 Pt 3
Other References
Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Improvements to Self
Assessment) Bill (No. 2) 2005
Explanatory Memorandum to the Taxation Laws Amendment (Self Assessment)
Bill 1992
Report on Aspects of Income Tax Self Assessment
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 1998/1
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2001/4
The Macquarie Dictionary, 2001, rev. 3rd edn, The Macquarie Library Pty
Ltd, NSW
The Australian Oxford Dictionary, 1999, Oxford University Press,
Melbourne