CPT CUSTODIAN PTY LTD v COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE (VIC); COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE (VIC) v KARINGAL 2 HOLDINGS PTY LTD
Judges:Gleeson CJ
McHugh J
Gummow J
Callinan J
Heydon J
Court:
Full High Court
MEDIA NEUTRAL CITATION:
[2005] HCA 53
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Gleeson CJ, McHugh, Gummow, Callinan and Heydon JJ: These appeals (and two cross- appeals) were heard together and with appearances by the same counsel. The appeals are brought from orders made by the Victorian Court of Appeal which had heard together six appeals and cross-appeals. The Court of Appeal (Phillips, Buchanan and Eames JJA) delivered the one set of reasons.[1]2. On the same day as it delivered judgment in the present litigation, the Court of Appeal, constituted by the same bench, delivered judgment in Arjon Pty Ltd v Commr of State Revenue (Vic),[6]
The litigation
3. The litigation concerns the application of the taxing provisions of the Act to parcels of land on which stand a number of shopping centres. The shopping centres known as the Glen Shopping Centre at Glen Waverley, the Keilor Downs Plaza at Keilor Downs, the Cranbourne Park Shopping Centre at Cranbourne and the Mildura Centre Plaza at Mildura stand on land the registered proprietors of which are trustees under trust deeds constituting what have been identified as unit trusts.
4. In making the assessments still in contention in this Court, the Commissioner relied upon ownership of issued units in these unit trusts and in unit trusts established on similar terms in which the first trust owns issued units. The Commissioner also relied upon s 44 of the Act. If the circumstances specified in s 44 apply and the Commissioner so determines, two or more related corporations may be taken to be a single corporation for the purposes of the Act. In this way, Karingal was assessed by reason of the holdings of its related corporations, 333 Queen Street Pty Ltd and Centro Properties Ltd.
5. The taxing provisions of the Act do not suggest that there can be only one taxable ``owner'' of land at any one time.[7]
6. Two further points should be made here. The first is that it appears that the units were not in the years of assessment listed securities. No question arises respecting the managed investment schemes provisions introduced by the Managed Investments Act 1998 (Cth).[9]
The Act
7. Sections 6, 8 and 39 of the Act impose at rates specified in the Second Schedule land tax, to be collected as a debt owing to the Crown in right of Victoria by the Commissioner, in respect of the total unimproved value of all land of which the taxpayer is ``the owner'' at midnight on 31 December of the immediately preceding year for which the tax is assessed. Various provisions of the Act[11]
8. Section 51 of the Act subjects ``the owner of any equitable estate or interest in land'' to assessment ``as if the estate or interest so owned by him was legal''. Section 52 obliges trustees to make returns and to be assessed as if beneficially entitled to the trust land. The Court
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of Appeal noted[12]9. Section 3 includes as owner every person who by virtue of the Act ``is deemed to be an owner''. As indicated above, those deeming provisions are not presently relevant. The definition also states that owner ``means'', among other things:
``(a) every person entitled to any land for any estate of freehold in possession.''
Upon that component of the definition the Commissioner relies. It resembles par (a) of the definition of ``owner'' in s 3 of the Land Tax Assessment Act 1910 (Cth) (``the 1910 Act''). This was construed in Glenn v Federal Commissioner of Land Tax[13]
The Court of Appeal
10. In the Court of Appeal, counsel for the taxpayers had, correctly, submitted that, rather than approach the issues by looking broadly at the characteristics of a ``unit trust'', it was necessary to begin with the terms of the relevant trust deeds and the rights, powers, and restrictions for which they provided.[14]
11. The Court of Appeal contrasted the position of a holder of less than all of the units, and in this Court, the Commissioner contends that it erred in doing so. The Court of Appeal held that:[16]
``The holder of some only of the units has no more than those entitlements afforded by the trust deed to a unit holder; they are surely personal property quite different from the realty held by the trustee.''
12. The result was that the Court of Appeal (a) upheld the holding of Nettle J that a unit holder with less than 100 per cent of the total issued units at the relevant date was not the owner of an estate of freehold in possession within the meaning of the statutory definition; and (b) set aside the holding of Nettle J with respect to the ownership of 100 per cent of issued units in a unit trust and instead held that in such a case the statutory definition was satisfied, and that this was so also where the land in question was vested in the trustee of a unit trust in which the first trust held the issued units. This last situation was described in submissions as a ``sub-trust''.
13. The Commissioner and the two taxpayers, Karingal and CPT, challenge the outcome in the Court of Appeal, each to the extent that it was adverse to their interests. As noted above, there are six appeals and two cross-appeals, and there are also two notices of contention. Their resolution should produce a result that the Court of Appeal's holding (a) identified above should be affirmed and holding (b) reversed. The overall result would thus favour the taxpayers.
Statutory construction and the general law
14. Something now should be said respecting the task of statutory construction which was presented to Nettle J and then to the Court of Appeal. There were two steps to be taken. They were correctly identified in the submissions by the taxpayers to the Court of Appeal.[17]
15. In taking those steps, a priori assumptions as to the nature of unit trusts under the general law and principles of equity would not assist and would be apt to mislead. All depends, as Tamberlin and Hely JJ put it in Kent v SS ``Maria Luisa'' (No 2),[18]
16. To approach the case, as both Nettle J and the Court of Appeal appear to have done in response to submissions by the Commissioner, by asking first whether, as was said to be indicated by Costa & Duppe Properties Pty Ltd v Duppe,[22]
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has ``a proprietary interest in each of the assets which comprise the entirety of the trust fund'', and answering it in the affirmative,[23]17. In Schmidt v Rosewood Trust Ltd,[24]
The trust deeds
18. The relevant trust deeds were not in identical form. However, their relevantly salient features appear sufficiently from a consideration of the Keilor Downs Deed (``the Deed'') to which the Court was taken at the hearing of the appeals.
19. At all material times the Trustee of the trusts of the Deed was CPT. The parties to the Deed were CPT and a party defined as ``the Manager'', in which the management of the Fund was vested exclusively (cll 2.5, 16.2). The Fund was vested in the Trustee upon trust for the Unit Holders (cll 2.4, 26.3). Both the Trustee (cl 23.2) and the Manager (cl 23.1) were entitled to fees in significant amounts to be paid out of the Fund, and also to monthly reimbursement from the Fund of their costs, charges and expenses (cl 23.5).
20. The beneficial interest in the Fund was divided into units, each said to confer an equal interest in all property for the time being held by the Trustee upon the trusts of the Deed, but excluding that part of the Fund credited to a distribution account for distribution to unit holders (cl 3.2). But no unit conferred ``any interest in any particular part of the Trust Fund or any investment'' and each unit had ``only such interest in the Trust Fund as a whole as [ was] conferred on a Unit under the provisions contained in [the Deed]'' (cl 3.2).[28]
21. Clause 20 provided for the distribution to unit holders of periodic income entitlements, and cl 15 for the realisation of the Fund upon its determination and distribution of the proceeds among unit holders. In the circumstances detailed in cl 14 the Manager was obliged to repurchase units which would then be cancelled or be available for resale by the Manager.[30]
The Commissioner's submissions
22. Counsel for the Commissioner, with reference to provisions such as those of the Deed just described, submitted in this Court that (i) as a matter of general law, because the trust deeds conferred upon each unit holder fixed and ascertainable rights, in relation to the distribution of income and capital, and not depending upon the exercise of discretion, the trust deeds conferred upon each unit holder an equitable estate or interest in each asset from time to time comprising the trust fund; (ii) no other person or class had any such rights or interests; and (iii) these equitable estates or interests answered the statutory requirement in the definition of ``owner'' of entitlement to land for any estate of freehold in possession.
23. The Commissioner added that the position was no different where there was a sub-trust, with a unit holder holding units in a unit trust, the trustee of which in turn held units in a land-holding trust. Such a position arose in the 1996 and 1997 land tax years with respect to the Keilor Downs Plaza Land and in 1997 with respect to the Cranbourne Park Shopping Centre Land. The Commissioner's submissions
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respecting sub-trusts cannot succeed if the primary propositions (i), (ii) and (iii) fail.24. Propositions (i) and (ii) may be put to one side and attention first given to proposition (iii) which is the critical issue posed by the taxing law itself. It then is necessary to return to Glenn and what was said there respecting the similar definition of ``owner'' in the 1910 Act.
Glenn v Federal Commissioner of Land Tax[31]
25. In that case, Griffith CJ said of an argument for the Revenue that it was:[32]
``based on the assumption that whenever the legal estate in land is vested in a trustee there must be some person other than the trustee entitled to it in equity for an estate of freehold in possession, so that the only question to be answered is who is the owner of that equitable estate. In my opinion, there is a prior inquiry, namely, whether there is any such person. If there is not, the trustee is entitled to the whole estate in possession, both legal and equitable.''
That statement was a prescient rejection of a ``dogma'' that, where ownership is vested in a trustee, equitable ownership must necessarily be vested in someone else because it is an essential attribute of a trust that it confers upon individuals a complex of beneficial legal relations which may be called ownership.[33]
26. In Glenn, Griffith CJ construed the statutory expression ``estate in possession'' as denoting ``an estate of which some person has the present right of enjoyment'', saying that land tax being an annual tax, ``the `owner' of the land is the person who is in the present enjoyment of the fruits which presumably afford the fund from which it is to be paid''.[37]
``In my opinion, therefore, when the equitable rights created by a will, which may be as diverse as the testator thinks fit, are such that the beneficial enjoyment of property by a particular object of his bounty cannot begin until the expiration of a determinate or indeterminate period, there is no present estate in possession in that property in any person other than the trustees of the will. In one sense, perhaps, the persons who are for the time being entitled to share in the fruits of the land may collectively be called the equitable owners, but that point is not material to the present case.''
27. Thereafter, this Court decided that it followed from Glenn that, while ``in one sense'' those between whom a testamentary estate would be appropriated at the end of a stipulated period of accumulation of income were equitable owners of land included in the estate, they were not taxable as owners under the 1910 Act.[39]
28. In the present case, Nettle J, who was upheld on this issue by the Court of Appeal, applied to the definition of ``owner'' in s 3(a) of the Act the reasoning in Glenn. His Honour rejected the submission for the Commissioner, in essence renewed in this Court, that the entitlements of the unit holders made each unit holder an ``owner'' in the relevant sense. His Honour was correct in doing so.
Hallmark of the unit trust?
29. To a significant degree the proposition advanced by the Commissioner and encapsulated in proposition (iii) set out above depended upon what in propositions (i) and (ii) was treated as the hallmark of any unit trust. The alleged hallmark is that, unlike shareholders with respect to the property of the company, unit holders do have beneficial interests in the assets of the trust; no other persons or class of persons has such an interest and, if not with the unit holders, where else rests the beneficial interest?
30. Similar reasoning is manifest in what was said in Duppe[40]
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89(1) of the Transfer of Land Act 1958 (Vic), which was necessary to support a caveat. Brooking J, in answering that question in the affirmative, said:[41]``If there is a proprietary interest in the entirety, there must be a proprietary interest in each of the assets of which the entirety is composed.''
(emphasis added)
31. However, in Gartside, Lord Wilberforce had said:[42]
``It can be accepted that `interest' is capable of a very wide and general meaning. But the wide spectrum that it covers makes it all the more necessary, if precise conclusions are to be founded upon its use, to place it in a setting: Viscount Radcliffe, delivering the Board's judgment in Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Queensland) v Livingston[43]
(1964) 112 CLR 12 at 28-29; [1965] AC 694 at 719. shows how this word has to do duty in several quite different legal contexts to express rights of very different characters and that to transfer a meaning from one context to another may breed confusion.''
In Livingston itself, Viscount Radcliffe had observed that:[44]
``the terminology of our legal system has not produced a sufficient variety of words to represent the various meanings which can be conveyed by the words `interest' and `property'. Thus propositions are advanced or rebutted by the employment of terms that have not in themselves a common basis of definition.''
When Livingston had been before this Court, Fullagar J and Kitto J each had spoken to similar effect.[45]
32. It is unnecessary for the instant appeals to determine whether Duppe correctly decided the requirements in Victoria for a caveatable interest. But what was said there provides, after Gartside and Livingston, and more recently Linter Textiles,[47]
33. However, something must be said here respecting the decision of this Court in Charles v FC of T.[48]
34. The significant conclusions expressed by Dixon CJ, Kitto and Taylor JJ in Charles appear in a passage where, after emphasising that a share in a company confers upon the holder no legal or equitable interest in the assets of the company, they continued:[50]
``But a unit under the trust deed before us confers a proprietary interest in all the property which for the time being is subject to the trust of the deed[51]
; so that the question whether moneys distributed to unit holders under the trust form part of their income or of their capital must be answered by considering the character of those moneys in the hands of the trustees before the distribution is made.'' . Baker vArcher-Shee [1927] AC 844 (emphasis added)
35. The reference by the Court in Charles to the first of the Archer-Shee cases[52]
36. The deed considered in Charles divided the beneficial interest in the trust fund into units (cll 6, 7), and the trustees were bound to make half- yearly distributions to unit holders, in proportion to their respective numbers of units,
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of the ``cash produce'' which had been received by the trustees (cll 13A, 13B).[57]The interest of a unit holder under the Deed
37. On this issue, remarks by Nettle J are in point and conclusive. His Honour said:[58]
``It may well be that the income of the fund as finally constituted and distributed will include all of the rents and profits generated by a particular parcel of land within the fund. But it is distinctly possible that it will not. Each of the deeds gives power to the trustee to provide out of receipts for future and contingent liabilities; to apply receipts in the purchase of any property or business; to invest receipts in authorised investments and to deal with and transpose such investments; and the only right of the unit holder is to a proportionate share of the income of the fund for the year.
The Commissioner contends that the trustees' powers of disposition and transposition make no difference. He submits that insofar as receipts from particular properties may be applied in making payments other than to a unit holder, they must be seen as made on behalf of the unit holder and in that sense as received by the unit holder. He says that it is in principle no different to the case of a simple trust of land with only one beneficiary, under the terms of which the trustee is entitled to apply receipts in the payment of obligations and in the making of provisions in connection with the management of the land. The Commissioner contends that in such a case there can be no doubt that the beneficiary would be liable to tax as `owner'.
But I think there is a difference. In the case of a simple trust of the kind instanced by the Commissioner the entitlement of the trustee to apply part of the receipts in defined ways determines the amount of the income which the beneficiary has a right to receive. Contrastingly, in a case of a complex unit trust of the kind with which I am concerned, the entitlement of the trustee to apply receipts in defined ways informs the nature of the income that the unit holders have a right to receive: not a total of all of the receipts derived from each asset the subject of the fund but rather such if any income as may be derived from the product of the application of gross receipts in various ways.''
(footnotes omitted)
38. The Commissioner referred to s 45 of the Act as essential to his case. Section 45 provides, among other things, for the separate assessment of each ``joint owner'' of land in respect of the individual interest of that owner in the land (s 45(3)). The term ``joint owners'' is so defined in s 3(1) as to identify persons ``who own land jointly or in common, whether as partners or otherwise''. The 1910 Act contained a definition in those terms. It is apparent from the reasoning of Knox CJ in Terry v FC of T,[59]
39. Further, the units are discrete bundles of rights; each unit is not held in joint ownership with the totality of issued units. It appeared to be conceded in argument by the Commissioner that unit holders did not hold any land as joint tenants. However, they were said necessarily to own together the whole of the beneficial ownership which, on the Commissioner's case, must subsist. The Commissioner further submitted that this ownership, however understood, was within the closing words of the definition of ``joint owners'', namely, ``or otherwise''.
40. There are two answers to these submissions. First, the concluding words are no more than part of the phrase ``whether as partners or otherwise'', and do not lessen the requirement for ownership jointly or in common. Secondly, as already demonstrated, the assumption respecting beneficial ownership is misplaced.
The sole owner of all issued units
41 There remains the distinction upon which turned the outcome in the Court of Appeal. The
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distinction was drawn with reference to the reasons in Arjon where Phillips JA stated:[60]``... where the trust deed itself declares that the trust fund as a whole is vested in all the unit holders together and there is but one person holding all the issued units, it seems to me to follow that that sole unit holder must be regarded as in equity entitled to an interest, vested in possession, in all of the trust assets.''
Earlier in his reasons, his Honour had said of the sole unit holder:[61]
``... As the only person beneficially interested in the assets, it also has the power to bring the trust to an end at will and to require the transfer to it of the assets (even if only after satisfying any claim that the trustee might have to reimbursement or recoupment for expenses incurred as trustee).''
This meant that the unit holder of all issued units had more than the accumulation of the rights attaching to each of the units considered severally. In particular, with a reference to Saunders v Vautier,[62]
``... quite apart from the terms of the trust deed, the holder of all of the units will ordinarily have the power to bring the trust to an end and, if it so chooses, appropriate the trust assets to itself.''
42. Karingal and CPT challenge these propositions and deny that the holder of all of the issued units was in a position to bring to an end the relevant unit trusts. The issue of statutory construction concerning the phrase ``entitled to any land for any estate of freehold in possession'' in the definition in the Act of ``owner'' must not be overlooked whilst pursuing any inquiry respecting Saunders v Vautier. The operation of the rule attributed to that case was taken by the Court of Appeal to override the complex stipulations of the Deed respecting its determination. The result was apparently that, because at each relevant 31 December there was an unrealised potential for the holder of all of the issued units to put the trusts to an end, the unit holders were on that date entitled to an estate of freehold in possession within the meaning of the statutory definition.
43. Saunders v Vautier is a case which has given its name to a ``rule'' not explicitly formulated in the case itself, either by Lord Langdale MR (at first instance) or by Lord Cottenham LC (on appeal). In Anglo-Australian law the rule has been seen to embody a ``consent principle'' recently identified by Mummery LJ in Goulding v James[64]
``The principle recognises the rights of beneficiaries, who are sui juris and together absolutely entitled to the trust property, to exercise their proprietary rights to overbear and defeat the intention of a testator or settlor to subject property to the continuing trusts, powers and limitations of a will or trust instrument.''
44. A different view was taken long ago by the United States Supreme Court. In Shelton v King,[65]
``[b]y breaking up the trust, the beneficiaries do not compel the trustees to carry out any part of their office as active trustees; on the contrary, they bring that office to an end.''
(footnote omitted)
45. Whilst the reasoning of the Court of Appeal respecting the special case of the holder of all issued units depended largely upon the rule in Saunders v Vautier, in oral argument in this Court the Commissioner said that, in effect, here the rule was a red herring. The rule was but a corollary of the beneficial ownership for which the Commissioner contended in his earlier submissions; this did not depend upon the exercise of the entitlement to terminate the trust.
46. The submissions respecting the beneficial ownership by each unit holder have been rejected earlier in these reasons. The trusts exemplified in the Deed recognised (cl 29.4)
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that all issued units might be in the one beneficial ownership, but the trusts were drawn in terms conferring individual rights attached to each unit. They were not drawn to provide a single right of a cumulative nature so that the whole differed from the sum of the parts. There could be no such single right unless held jointly or in common, but the Deed was not cast in such terms.[69]47. There is a further consideration. The facts of the present cases do not, in any event, answer the modern formulation of the rule in Saunders v Vautier, stated as follows in Thomas on Powers:[70]
``Under the rule in Saunders v Vautier[71]
(1841) 4 Beav 115 [49 ER 282]; affd (1841) Cr and Ph 240 [41 ER 482]. , an adult beneficiary (or a number of adult beneficiaries acting together) who has (or between them have) an absolute, vested and indefeasible interest in the capital and income of property may at any time require the transfer of the property to him (or them) and may terminate any accumulation.''
Lightman J said in Don King Productions Inc v Warren[72]
48. Notwithstanding these references to beneficiaries, the repositories of the power to override the terms of a trust by bringing to an end its further administration have been variously identified. For example, it has been asked to whom do the trustees owe their duties of administration? Looking at the testamentary trusts considered in Glenn, Isaacs J considered the scope of the duties of the trustees and asked whether the trusts were exclusively for the benefit of the appellants.[73]
``The trustees have prior duties to other legatees having definite interests, and the strict performance of those duties requires the trustees to retain possession of the property, to receive the profits, and to deal with them otherwise than by paying them to the appellants.... It is obvious, therefore, that the principle of Saunders v Vautier[76]
(1841) 4 Beav 115 [49 ER 282]; affd (1841) Cr and Ph 240 [41 ER 482]. cannot apply, for the trusts are not exclusively for the appellants' benefit.''
More recently, in Sir Moses Montefiore Jewish Home v Howell and Co (No 7) Pty Ltd,[77]
49. But that approach to the rule in Saunders v Vautier would not meet the case of the Deed considered in this litigation. In the Deed, the Manager covenanted with the Trustee (cl 23.4) to ensure that there were at all times sufficient readily realisable assets of the Trust available for the Trustee to raise the fees to which the Manager and the Trustee were entitled under cl 23.1 and cl 23.2 respectively. These stipulations made the Trustee and the Manager interested in due administration of the trusts of the Deed, in the sense identified by Kearney J in Moses Montefiore. Put somewhat differently, the unit holders were not the persons in whose favour alone the trust property might be applied by the trustee of the Deed.[78]
50. The classic nineteenth century formulation by the English courts of the rule in Saunders v Vautier did not give consideration to the significance of the right of the trustee under the general law to reimbursement or exoneration for the discharge of liabilities incurred in administration of the trust. In Wharton v Masterman[79]
51. In the present case, the unsatisfied trustees' right of indemnity was expressed as an actual liability in each of the relevant accounts at each 31 December date and rendered applicable the sense of the above words of Lord Davey. Until satisfaction of rights of reimbursement or exoneration, it was
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impossible to say what the trust fund in question was.[83]52. There is a further, and related, point. This is suggested by remarks of Tamberlin and Hely JJ in Kent v SS ``Maria Luisa'' (No 2).[84]
Other issues
53. These conclusions make it unnecessary, given the agreement noted by the Court of Appeal[86]
Orders
54. In appeals M217 and 218, each appeal should be dismissed with costs. In appeals M215 and 216, each appeal should be dismissed with costs and the cross-appeal allowed with costs. On the cross-appeals, there should be consequential orders, including costs orders. The consequential orders are that the orders of the Court of Appeal are set aside and in place thereof the appeal to that Court is dismissed with costs, the cross-appeal to that Court is allowed with costs, and the orders of Nettle J are varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court in respect of amended assessment S 012493235-2 (appeal M215) and S 014593439-2 (appeal M216) is allowed with costs, the amended assessment is set aside and the subject-matter thereof is remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
55. In each of appeals M222 and 223, each appeal should be allowed with costs, the orders of the Court of Appeal set aside, the appeal to the Court of Appeal dismissed with costs, the cross-appeal allowed with costs, and the orders of Nettle J varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court in respect of amended assessment S 020601703-2 (appeal M223) and S 020601711-2 (appeal M222) is allowed with costs, the amended assessment set aside and the subject-matter thereof remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
ORDER
Matter No M222/2004:
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
2. Set aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 16 December 2003 and, in their place, order that:
- (i) the appeal to that Court is dismissed with costs;
- (ii) the cross-appeal to that Court is allowed with costs;
- (iii) the orders of Nettle J made on 29 October 2002 are varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court of Victoria in respect of amended assessment S 020601711-2 is allowed with costs, the amended assessment is set aside, and the subject-matter thereof is remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
Matter No M223/2004:
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
2. Set aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 16 December 2003 and, in their place, order that:
- (i) the appeal to that Court is dismissed with costs;
- (ii) the cross-appeal to that Court is allowed with costs;
- (iii) the orders of Nettle J made on 29 October 2002 are varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court of Victoria in respect of amended assessment S 020601703-2 is allowed with costs, the amended assessment is set aside, and the subject-matter thereof is remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
Matter No M215/2004:
1. Appeal dismissed with costs.
2. Cross-appeal allowed with costs.
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3. Set aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 16 December 2003 and, in their place, order that:- (i) the appeal to that Court is dismissed with costs;
- (ii) the cross-appeal to that Court is allowed with costs;
- (iii) the orders of Nettle J made on 29 October 2002 are varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court of Victoria in respect of amended assessment S 012493235-2 is allowed with costs, the amended assessment is set aside, and the subject-matter thereof is remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
Matter No M216/2004:
1. Appeal dismissed with costs.
2. Cross-appeal allowed with costs.
3. Set aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 16 December 2003 and, in their place, order that:
- (i) the appeal to that Court is dismissed with costs;
- (ii) the cross-appeal to that Court is allowed with costs;
- (iii) the orders of Nettle J made on 29 October 2002 are varied so that the appeal to the Supreme Court of Victoria in respect of amended assessment S 014593439-2 is allowed with costs, the amended assessment is set aside, and the subject-matter thereof is remitted to the Commissioner for reconsideration and determination in accordance with law.
Matter No M217/2004:
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Matter No M218/2004:
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Footnotes
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