TD 2008/29:
Income tax: consolidation: capital gains: do the core consolidation
rules in Division 701 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 modify the
effect of the CGT contract rules if an entity contracts to buy or sell a
CGT asset and the contract settles after the entity becomes, or ceases
to be, a member of a consolidated group?
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Please note that the PDF version is the authorised version of
this ruling. |
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There is a Compendium for this document. TD 2008/29EC |
Preamble
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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, the Commissioner must apply the law
to you in the way set out in the ruling (unless the Commissioner
is satisfied that the ruling is incorrect and disadvantages you,
in which case the law may be applied to you in a way that is
more favourable for you - provided the Commissioner is 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. |
Ruling
1. Yes, but only in the two cases set out in paragraph 3 of this
Determination.
2. Once there has been a change of ownership of a CGT asset, CGT event
A1 generally happens to the entity that owned the asset and entered into
the contract to dispose of it: subsections 104-10(1) and (2) of the Income
Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA
1997). That event happens at the time that entity entered into the
contract: paragraph 104-10(3)(a) of the ITAA 1997. Similarly, the
contract time is when the CGT asset is taken to have been disposed of by
the entity which owned it, and when it is taken to be acquired by the
entity which becomes its owner (see subsection 109-5(2) of the ITAA
1997). These are the 'CGT contract rules'.
3. There are two cases where the core consolidation rules in Division
701 of the ITAA 1997 (such as the single entity, entry history and exit
history rules) produce a different outcome. They are where:
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·
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a contract to buy a CGT asset is entered into by
an entity before it becomes a subsidiary member of a
consolidated group and the contract settles after that time - in
that case, the head company of the consolidated group (not the
subsidiary) is taken to have acquired the asset at the contract
time (entry-buy case); and
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a contract to sell a CGT asset is entered into by
a subsidiary member of a consolidated group and the contract
settles after the subsidiary has left the group - in that case,
CGT event A1 is taken to have happened to the head company (not
the subsidiary) of the consolidated group at the contract time
(exit-sell case).
4. If the head company of a consolidated group makes a capital gain on
the disposal of a CGT asset in an exit-sell case, such a gain may be
duplicated on the disposal of interests in the subsidiary. For example,
it may be duplicated in a capital gain made by the head company (or a
former subsidiary member of the group) on the disposal of membership
interests, which are a direct or indirect membership interest, in the
subsidiary member that entered into the contract to sell the asset. In
such a case, the Commissioner would not disturb a taxpayer's approach of
calculating its net capital gain or net capital loss by disregarding a
capital gain made on the disposal of the membership interests to the
extent it represents a duplication of the gain made by the head company
on the disposal of the asset. The Commissioner views this approach as
being open and consistent with the scheme of the Act.
5. To the extent that the approach in this Determination regarding the
CGT contract rules discussed in paragraph 2 of this Determination (about
CGT event A1) is relevant for other CGT events with a contract rule (for
example, CGT event D1 - subsection 104-35(2) of the ITAA 1997), the
approach should be taken to apply with such modifications as necessary.
Application
6. This Determination does not apply if the entities entering into the
contract are members of the same consolidated group at either the
contract time or the time just after the contract is completed.
Examples
7. The following examples demonstrate the interaction between the CGT
and consolidation rules in a number of straddle contract scenarios.
8. Examples 1 and 2 deal with contracts made by an entity before it
joins a consolidated group that settle after joining where the entity
was not a member of a consolidated group at the contract time (entry
cases).
9. Examples 3 to 5 deal with contracts made by an entity while it is a
subsidiary member of a consolidated group that settle after the entity
has left the group where the entity was not a member of any other
consolidated group at the settlement time (exit cases).
10. Examples 6 and 7 deal with contracts entered into by a member of a
consolidated group where that entity is a member of another consolidated
group at the settlement time (group to group cases).
Example 1: Entry-buy
11. On
16 June 2004, X Co entered into a contract to purchase shares (60%) in B
Co. On 1 July 2004, all of the shares in X Co were purchased by the head
company of a consolidated group and, as a result, X Co joined the group.
No other member of the group held shares in B Co .
12. On
settlement of the contract on 16 August 2004, when X Co was a subsidiary
member of the group, X Co became the owner of the shares in B Co .
13. The
group's head company is taken to have acquired the shares in B Co on 16
June 2004 (that is, the date X Co entered into the contract ).
Example 2: Entry-sell
14. On
22 June 2004, X Co entered into a contract to sell all its shares in B
Co (40%) to Y Co .
15. On
10 July 2004, Head Co acquired all of the shares in X Co which caused X
Co to become a member of Head Co's consolidated group. Y Co is not a
member of the group .
16. On
30 July 2004, the contract settled and X Co ceased to be the owner of
the shares in B Co .
17. CGT
event A1 happens to X Co on 22 June 2004 when it entered into the
contract .
Example 3: Exit-buy
18. On
12 May 2006, M Co, a subsidiary member of a consolidated group, entered
into a contract to purchase land from Y Co who is not a member of the
group .
19. On
20 June 2006, the head company of the group sold all of the shares in M
Co. As a result, M Co leaves the group .
20. On
settlement of the land contract on 12 July 2006, when M Co was not a
member of the group, M Co became the owner of the land .
21. M
Co is taken to have acquired the land on 12 May 2006 (that is, the date
that M Co entered into the contract ).
Example 4: Exit-sell
22. X
Co is a subsidiary member of a consolidated group and the owner of land.
Under the single entity rule, the land is an asset of the group's head
company, Head Co .
23. On
16 June 2006, X Co entered into a contract to sell the land .
24. X
Co leaves the group on 30 June 2006 as a result of Head Co selling all
of its shares in X Co to an individual .
25. The
land contract settled in August 2006 .
26. CGT
event A1 happens to Head Co on 16 June 2006 (the contract time ).
Example 5: Exit-sell: avoidance of
double taxation
27. S
Co is a subsidiary member of a consolidated group and the owner of land.
Under the single entity rule, the land is an asset of the group's head
company, Head Co. The land has a cost base of $ 2
million .
28. On
1 July 2005, S Co entered into a contract to sell the land for $3.5
million and received a deposit of $500,000 .
29. All
of the shares in S Co are sold to a non-resident on 21 August 2005 and,
as a result, S Co leaves the group .
30. The
land contract settles on 30 September 2005 and S Co receives the
remainder of the purchase price being $3 million. CGT event A1 happens
to Head Co on 1 July 2005 and Head Co makes a capital gain of $ 1.5
million which it must take into account in working out its net capital
gain or net capital loss for the income year in which the CGT event is
taken to have happened .
31. The
land is also recognised as an asset of S Co that it takes with it when
it leaves the group (see Taxation Determination TD 2008/31). Head Co
uses the cost base of the land at S Co's leaving time as its terminating
value for the purposes of working out the cost base of the membership
interests in S Co. Assuming S Co holds no other assets, a capital gain
of $ 1.5
million will arise on the sale of the group's membership interests in S
Co which duplicates the capital gain made by Head Co on the land. An
approach by Head Co to disregard the $ 1.5
million capital gain on the disposal of the relevant interests when
calculating its net capital gain or net capital loss for the income year
would not be disturbed .
Example 6: Group to group - buy
32. On
25 March 2005, M Co, a subsidiary member of a consolidated group (the
'target group'), entered into a contract to purchase land .
33. On
20 April 2005, all of the shares in the head company of the target group
were acquired by Z Co, the head company of another consolidated group
(the 'bidder group'). As a result, all of the members of the target
group became members of the bidder group .
34. On
settlement of the land contract on 12 May 2005 M Co became the owner of
the land .
35. Z
Co, the head company of the bidder group, is taken to have acquired the
land on 25 March 2005 (that is, the date that M Co entered into the
contract ).
36. The
outcome would be the same if Z Co had instead acquired all the shares in
M Co so that only M Co became a member of Z Co's bidder group .
Example 7: Group to group - sell
37. Assume
the facts in Example 6, except that M Co (already the owner of the land)
entered into a contract to sell the land .
38. CGT
event A1 happens to the head company of the target group on 25 March
2005 (that is, the date M Co entered into the contract of sale ).
39. The
CGT event does not happen to Z Co, the head company of the bidder group,
because M Co was not a subsidiary member of the bidder group at the
contract time .
Date of effect
40. This Determination applies to years of income commencing both before
and after its date of issue. However, this Determination will not apply
to taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of a
settlement of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of this
Determination (see paragraphs 75 and 76 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/10).
Commissioner of Taxation
17 December 2008
Appendix 1 - Explanation
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This
Appendix is provided as information to help you understand how
the Commissioner's view has been reached. It does not form part
of the binding public ruling. |
Explanation
41. Under the ordinary operation of the CGT contract rules, a CGT asset
is taken to be acquired or disposed of at the contract time by the
entity that entered into the contract. However, when the contract
settles after an entity that is a party to the contract becomes, or
ceases to be, a subsidiary member of a consolidated group (referred to
as a 'straddle contract'), the core rules in Division 701 of the ITAA
1997 must also be considered.
42. The core consolidation rules in Division 701 of the ITAA 1997 (such
as the single entity, entry history and exit history rules) do not
operate in contract cases to change the usual CGT outcome in terms of
whether there has been an acquisition or disposal of an asset and the
timing of the CGT event.
That is, for CGT purposes, there will be taken to be an acquisition or
disposal at the contract time.
43. However, there are two cases where the core consolidation rules do
change the identity of the
entity that is taken to
acquire or dispose of the asset. These are the cases set out in
paragraph 3 of this Determination.
Entry-buy case
44. The first case is where an entity enters into a contract to buy a
CGT asset before it becomes a member of a consolidated group and the
contract settles after the entity has become such a member of the group.
Normally (that is, outside consolidation) the entity would be taken to
have acquired the asset at the contract time. However, as a result of
the single entity rule and entry history rule, the head company is taken
to have acquired the asset at the contract time (see Example 1). This
will be the outcome even if the entity was a member of another
consolidated group at the contract time (see Example 6).
Exit-sell case
45. The second case is where a subsidiary member of a consolidated group
enters into a contract to sell a CGT asset and the contract settles
after the subsidiary has left the group. Normally (that is, outside
consolidation) CGT event A1 would be taken to have happened to the
subsidiary at the time it entered into the contract. However, as the
subsidiary was a member of a consolidated group at that time, the event
is taken to have happened to the group's head company: refer to the
single entity rule in section 701-1 of the ITAA 1997 (see Example 4).
This will be the outcome even if the subsidiary is a member of another
consolidated group at the settlement time (see Example 7).
46. If CGT event A1 was taken to have happened to the subsidiary at the
contract date it would not be possible to tax the subsidiary on any
resulting capital gain and the subsidiary may lose the benefit of any
resulting capital loss. This is because a subsidiary's taxable income is
worked out under section 701-30 of the ITAA 1997 by reference only to
assessable income and deductions that arise in periods during which the
entity is not a member of a consolidated group in an income year. The
CGT event happens when it is a member.
47. As discussed in paragraph 4 of this Determination, where a head
company makes a capital gain in an exit-sell case, that gain may be
duplicated, in whole or in part, when membership interests in the
contracting entity are disposed of. Gain duplication may occur because
the terminating value of the asset is used for the purpose of working
out the cost base of membership interests under the tax cost setting
rules of Division 711 of the ITAA 1997. As a result, a further capital
gain may be made by the head company or a former subsidiary member on
the disposal of membership interests, that are direct or indirect
membership interests, in the subsidiary member that entered into the
contract. In such a case, having regard to the scheme of the Act, the
Commissioner would not disturb a taxpayer's approach of calculating its
net capital gain or net capital loss by disregarding a capital gain made
on the disposal of the membership interests to the extent it represents
a duplication of the gain made by the head company on the disposal of
the asset (see Example 5).
Previous draft:
TD 2008/D9
References
ATO references:
NO 2005/7897
ISSN: 1038-8982
Related Rulings/Determinations:
TD 2008/30
TD 2008/31
TR 2006/10
Subject References:
acquisition of CGT assets
capital gains tax
CGT assets
CGT event A1-disposal of a CGT asset
CGT events
consolidation
consolidation - capital gains tax
consolidation - tax liabilities
head company
joining entity
leaving entity
single entity rule
time of CGT event
Legislative References:
ITAA 1997 104-10(1)
ITAA 1997 104-10(2)
ITAA 1997 104-10(3)(a)
ITAA 1997 104-35(2)
ITAA 1997 109-5(2)
ITAA 1997 Div 701
ITAA 1997 701-1
ITAA 1997 701-30
ITAA 1997 Div 711
TAA 1953
Other References
Consolidation Reference Manual