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The impact of this case on ATO policy is discussed in Decision Impact Statement: Macoun v Commissioner of Taxation (S100/2015).
MACOUN v FC of T
Judges:French CJ
Bell J
Gageler J
Nettle J
Gordon J
Court:
Full High Court
MEDIA NEUTRAL CITATION:
[2015] HCA 44
French CJ, Bell, Gageler, Nettle and Gordon JJ
Introduction
1. Section 6(1)(d)(i) of the International Organisations (Privileges and Immunities) Act 1963 (Cth) ("the IOPI Act") and reg 8(1) of the Specialized Agencies (Privileges and Immunities) Regulations (Cth) ("the SAPI Regulations") confer upon a person who holds an office in an international organisation to which the IOPI Act applies[1]
2. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development ("the IBRD"), part of the World Bank, is an international organisation to which the IOPI Act applies. The appellant, Mr Macoun, a former sanitary engineer with the IBRD, received monthly pension payments from a Retirement Fund established under the IBRD's Staff Retirement Plan ("the SRP") in the 2009 and 2010 income years, when he no longer held an office in the IBRD. The respondent ("the Commissioner") sought to include the monthly pension payments in Mr Macoun's assessable income for the 2009 and 2010 income years[2]
3. The issue was whether that part of the monthly pension payments which was otherwise liable to tax under s 27H of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) ("the ITAA 1936") became exempt income under s 6-20(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) ("the ITAA 1997") by reason of the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations.
4. Three questions were raised on appeal.
5. First, do s 6(1)(d)(i) and the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act and reg 8(1) of the SAPI Regulations together confer a taxation exemption in respect of that part of the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received from the Retirement Fund at a time when he had ceased to hold an office in the IBRD? The answer is no.
6. Second, do those monthly pension payments fall outside the phrase "salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act? The answer is yes.
7. Third, does the Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the Specialized Agencies[3]
8. The second and third of these questions are raised by a notice of contention filed by the Commissioner out of time. The Commissioner should be given leave to raise those questions.
9. These reasons will consider the facts, the decisions below, the statutory framework and the Conventions and then turn to consider each question.
Facts
10. The facts are not in dispute.
11. Between 1992 and 2007, Mr Macoun worked overseas as a sanitary engineer for the IBRD. During his employment with the IBRD, Mr Macoun participated in the SRP[5]
12. Participation in the SRP was optional for employees under the age of 62 on fixed term appointments[8]
13. The SRP required the IBRD to make contributions to fund the liabilities of the SRP that were not funded by the participants' contributions[12]
14. A participant ceased to participate in the SRP upon termination of their service[15]
15. The early retirement pension became effective on the normal retirement date unless the retired participant elected to receive monthly pension payments from the date of their retirement, calculated in accordance with formulae in the SRP[18]
"All pensions … shall be payable at one-twelfth the annual rate, prorated for fractions of months, at the end of each calendar month beginning with the month in which they become effective".
16. The pension did not become "effective" until the participant became a "retired participant"[19]
17. In the 2009 income year, Mr Macoun received pension payments from the Retirement Fund of A$131,302 and, in the 2010 income year, he received pension payments from the Retirement Fund of A$134,970. He originally lodged returns for those income years that included as assessable income the pension payments received in each of those years. He subsequently lodged requests to amend those returns to exclude the pension payments as assessable income. The Commissioner refused those requests and issued amended assessments which included the monthly pension payments in Mr Macoun's assessable income for the 2009 and 2010 income years.
18. Mr Macoun objected against the amended assessments. The Commissioner disallowed the objection.
Earlier decisions
19. Mr Macoun sought review of the Commissioner's decision in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal ("the AAT"). The AAT set aside the decision under review and substituted the decision that the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received in the 2009 and 2010 income years did not form part of his assessable income and were exempt from Australian income tax[21]
20. The Commissioner appealed to the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia. The Full Court allowed the appeal, set aside the decision of the AAT and affirmed the Commissioner's decision[22]
21. Edmonds and Nicholas JJ held that reg 8(1) of the SAPI Regulations confined the privileges specified in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act to persons holding an office in a specialized agency and that Mr Macoun did not hold an office in the IBRD (a specialized agency) in the 2009 and 2010 income years. As a result, the privilege conferred by Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act was not available to Mr Macoun in respect of the monthly pension payments received by him in the 2009 and 2010 income years, "even if such payments continued to be 'emoluments' to which he became entitled while holding office in the IBRD"[23]
22. The third member of the Full Court, Perram J, also allowed the appeal. His Honour agreed[24]
Statutory framework and the Conventions
23. This appeal is concerned with the proper construction of the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations. They have a post-World War II genesis. Their legislative history may be summarised as follows.
Legislative history
24. The International Organizations (Privileges and Immunities) Act 1948 (Cth) ("the 1948 Act") (and the regulations made under it) conferred privileges and immunities on officials of the United Nations ("the UN") in accordance with the Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations[26]
25. Article V of the UN Convention is entitled "Officials". Sections 18 and 20 in that Article relevantly provide:
- "18. Officials of the United Nations shall:
- (a) be immune from legal process in respect of words spoken or written and all acts performed by them in their official capacity;
- (b) be exempt from taxation on the salaries and emoluments paid to them by the United Nations;
- …
- 20. Privileges and immunities are granted to officials in the interests of the United Nations and not for the personal benefit of the individuals themselves. The Secretary-General shall have the right and the duty to waive the immunity of any official in any case where, in his opinion, the immunity would impede the course of justice and can be waived without prejudice to the interests of the United Nations. …"
26. In 1961, the regulations made under the 1948 Act were expanded to confer juridical personality and legal capacity on international organisations including the IBRD[27]
27. In 1962, Australia sought to accede[28]
28. The Agencies Convention relevantly provided in Art VI:
- "18. Each specialized agency will specify the categories of officials to which the provisions of this article and of article VIII shall apply. It shall communicate them to the Governments of all States parties to this Convention in respect of that agency and to the Secretary-General of the United Nations. The names of the officials included in these categories shall from time to time be made known to the above-mentioned Governments.
- 19. Officials of the specialized agencies shall:
- (a) Be immune from legal process in respect of words spoken or written and all acts performed by them in their official capacity;
- (b) Enjoy the same exemptions from taxation in respect of the salaries and emoluments paid to them by the specialized agencies and on the same conditions as are enjoyed by officials of the United Nations;
- …
- 22. Privileges and immunities are granted to officials in the interests of the specialized agencies only and not for personal benefit of the individuals themselves. Each specialized agency shall have the right and the duty to waive the immunity of any official in any case where, in its opinion, the immunity would impede the course of justice and can be waived without prejudice to the interests of the specialized agency."
29. The Agencies Convention was attached as a schedule to the 1962 Regulations. The privileges and immunities in the Agencies Convention were given force of law in Australia by operation of reg 4(1). However, reg 4(3) of the 1962 Regulations provided that reg 4(1) did not apply to the extent that any Act or regulation (other than the 1948 Act or regulations made under it) "makes provision in relation to privileges and immunities of a Specialized Agency or a person in relation to whom the Convention applies".
30. As at 1962, s 23(y) of the ITAA 1936[32]
- "23. The following income shall be exempt from income tax:-
- …
- (y) the official salary and emoluments of an official of a prescribed organization of which Australia and one or more other countries are members, to the prescribed extent and subject to the prescribed conditions".
31. At the time when the 1962 Regulations (including reg 4(3)) came into force, reg 4AB(2)(c)[33]
32. Therefore, by reason of s 23(y) of the ITAA 1936, reg 4AB of the ITAA 1936 Regulations and reg 4(3) of the 1962 Regulations, the tax exemption applicable to IBRD officials in respect of official salaries and emoluments derived from s 23(y) and not from the 1962 Regulations.
33. In 1963, the IOPI Act was enacted. It repealed the 1948 Act but by s 2(2) continued in force any regulations that had been made under the 1948 Act and which were still in force at the time of the enactment of the IOPI Act.
34. The IOPI Act, as enacted, contained schedules providing for categories of privileges and immunities that could be conferred by regulations on persons, including officers and former officers of international organisations. The 1962 Regulations, s 23(y) of the ITAA 1936 and reg 4AB of the ITAA 1936 Regulations continued in force.
35. The 1962 Regulations were repealed in 1986[34]
36. That accession was significant. Australia's international obligations could no longer be satisfied by continued adherence to the scheme introduced in 1962. If payments were properly characterised as salaries or emoluments of a person holding a relevant office, they should be exempt from tax even if the person was an Australian resident rendering the service in Australia. From 24 April 1986, being the date when the 1962 Regulations (including reg 4(3)) were repealed and the SAPI Regulations came into force, the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations together conferred a tax exemption for the salaries and emoluments received from prescribed international organisations by current officers of those organisations, wherever the service was rendered. Without reg 4(3) of the 1962 Regulations, the limited exemption afforded by s 23(y) of the ITAA 1936 and reg 4AB of the ITAA 1936 Regulations no longer operated to exclude the broader exemption consistent with Australia's obligations under the Agencies Convention.
37. Accordingly, s 23(y) of the ITAA 1936 and reg 4AB of the ITAA 1936 Regulations were repealed in 1988[36]
Relevant provisions of the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations
38. What then do the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations provide? Section 6(1)(d) of the IOPI Act provides the mechanism by which privileges may be conferred on officers of international organisations and is in the following terms:
- "(1) Subject to this section, the regulations may, either without restriction or to the extent or subject to the conditions prescribed by the regulations:
- …
- (d) confer:
- (i) upon a person who holds an office in an international organisation to which this Act applies (not being an office prescribed by the regulations to be a high office) all or any of the privileges and immunities specified in Part I of the Fourth Schedule; and
- (ii) upon a person who has ceased to hold such an office the immunities specified in Part II of the Fourth Schedule". (emphasis added)
39. Regulation 8 of the SAPI Regulations[37]
" Privileges and immunities of officers (other than high officers) of Specialized Agencies
- (1) Subject to subregulation (2), a person who holds an office in a Specialized Agency, other than a person who holds, or is performing the duties of, an office specified in Column 3 of an item in the Schedule[38]
The relevant office specified in Column 3 of Item 6 in the Schedule to which attention is directed by reg 8(1) and (3) is the President of the IBRD, an office never held by Mr Macoun. , has the privileges and immunities specified in Part I of the Fourth Schedule to the [IOPI] Act.- (2) A person to whom subregulation (1) applies does not have the right to export furniture and effects free of duties when leaving Australia on the termination of his or her functions in relation to a Specialized Agency.
- (3) A person who has ceased to hold an office in a Specialized Agency, other than an office specified in Column 3 of an item in the Schedule, has the immunities specified in Part II of the Fourth Schedule to the [IOPI] Act." (emphasis added)
40. The Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act is in two parts and provides:
"Part I
Privileges and Immunities of Officer (other than High Officer) of International Organisation
- 1. Immunity from suit and from other legal process in respect of acts and things done in his capacity as such an officer.
- 2. Exemption from taxation on salaries and emoluments received from the organisation.
- 3. Exemption (including exemption of a spouse and any dependent relatives) from the application of laws relating to immigration and the registration of aliens.
- 4. Exemption from the obligation to perform national service.
- 5. Exemption from currency or exchange restrictions to such extent as is accorded to an official, of comparable rank, forming part of a diplomatic mission.
- 6. The like repatriation facilities (including repatriation facilities for a spouse and any dependent relatives) in time of international crisis as are accorded to a diplomatic agent.
- 7. The right to import furniture and effects free of duties when first taking up a post in Australia and to export furniture and effects free of duties when leaving Australia on the termination of his functions.
Part II
Immunities of Former Officer (other than High Officer) of International Organisation
Immunity from suit and from other legal process in respect of acts and things done in his capacity as such an officer." (emphasis added)
41. The IOPI Act applies to "international organisations" that are declared by the SAPI Regulations to be ones to which the IOPI Act applies[39]
42. How do the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations interact with the ITAA 1997? The answer is found in s 6-20(1) of the ITAA 1997, which provides that an amount of ordinary income or statutory income is "exempt income" if it is made exempt from income tax by a provision of the ITAA 1997 or another Commonwealth law. Pension payments from a foreign fund would ordinarily be taxed as assessable income, unless a relevant exemption applied[41]
43. It is against that background that the three questions on appeal are to be determined.
Analysis - Question 1
44. The first question is - do s 6(1)(d)(i) and the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act and reg 8(1) of the SAPI Regulations together confer a taxation exemption in respect of that part of the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received from the Retirement Fund at a time when he had ceased to hold an office in the IBRD? The answer, as has already been indicated, is no.
45. A number of matters should be noted at the outset.
46. First, s 6(1)(d) of the IOPI Act and reg 8 of the SAPI Regulations distinguish between a person who holds an office in an international organisation and a person who has ceased to hold such an office. A person who holds an office is given the "privileges and immunities" specified in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act. A person who has ceased to hold such an office is given the "immunities" specified in Pt II of the Fourth Schedule. A clear distinction is drawn between a person who holds an office and a person who has ceased to hold such an office. That distinction cannot be ignored.
47. Second, although the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act forms part of the IOPI Act, it is only given operative effect by force of the SAPI Regulations. Section 6(1)(d)(ii) of the IOPI Act makes clear that regulations made under the IOPI Act cannot confer any of the "privileges" specified in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule upon a person who has ceased to hold a relevant office. The SAPI Regulations cannot confer upon a person who has ceased to hold a relevant office the privilege of "[e]xemption from taxation on salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" because that privilege is in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule but not replicated in Pt II.
48. Third, the conclusion that the privilege of "[e]xemption from taxation on salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule is limited to "a person who holds an office" in a specialized agency is supported by the fact that the other privileges and immunities listed in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule relate, by their nature, to the period in which a person holds an office.
49. These textual matters confirm that in seeking to identify whether a privilege or immunity is applicable under the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations, there are two important questions - what is the office, in what organisation, in relation to which the claim is made; and does the person currently hold (in the case of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule), or did the person formerly hold (in the case of Pt II of the Fourth Schedule), that office. In this appeal, Mr Macoun at one time held a relevant office but in the relevant income years he no longer held that office. As a result, Pt I of the Fourth Schedule does not apply to him.
50. Fourth, the relevant exemption in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule is "from taxation on salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" (emphasis added). The text of the exemption is important. It is focused on receipt of the salaries and emoluments, and it is focused on their receipt from the organisation. The focus on receipt - in an exemption which applies only to officers currently holding office and which is not replicated in relation to officers who have ceased to hold office - points to the relevant consideration being receipt during the course of employment, rather than the entitlement arising during the course of employment.
51. This fourth matter establishes that, factually, Mr Macoun faces two additional hurdles. He did not receive the monthly pension payments whilst he was an officer of the IBRD and he did not receive the monthly pension payments from the IBRD (rather he received them from the Retirement Fund established under the SRP, which is separate from the IBRD[42]
52. The fact that Mr Macoun cannot satisfy these two conditions to enable him to avail himself of the privilege of taxation exemption in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule is a complete answer to the view expressed by the AAT that the monthly pension payments were an emolument "arising from an office or employment" or which "crystallised during the course of … employment"[43]
53. As the Commissioner submitted, the grant of the privilege in the form of taxation exemption contained in Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act depends on the status of the grantee as the office holder as and when the relevant amount is received. That distinction is reinforced by the text of the immunity for former officers in Pt II of the Fourth Schedule, which is limited to "[i]mmunity from suit and from other legal process in respect of acts and things done in his [or her] capacity as such an officer". The immunity has two limitations. It is limited to immunity from suit and other legal process and, significantly, in respect only of acts and things done as an officer. It does not extend to acts and things done after the person ceases to be an officer.
54. That construction is consistent with the statutory purpose or purposes of the IOPI Act. The IOPI Act sets the upper limits of the privileges and immunities which might be conferred by the regulations by reference to identified organisations and identified capacities of persons engaged in the work of those organisations[44]
Mr Macoun's pension was not a vested right
55. Contrary to Mr Macoun's submissions, his right to receive the pension was not a vested right which existed when he was an office holder[48]
56. On the other hand, whilst he was an officer of the IBRD, Mr Macoun had the right, indeed the obligation, to be a participant in the SRP and to contribute 7 per cent of his gross remuneration to the SRP. The IBRD was obliged to fund the balance of the SRP[54]
Accidents of timing
57. Mr Macoun submitted that if the question posed by the exemption in the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations was answered simply by an enquiry as to the timing of the receipt of salary or emolument, any payment of salary or emolument after the officer ceased to hold an office (but which was undoubtedly salary or emolument earned before the officer ceased to hold an office) would be taxable. Mr Macoun submitted that this "anomaly" weighed against the interpretation of the IOPI Act adopted in these reasons and by the Full Court.
58. These "accidents of timing" were said by Mr Macoun to be inconsistent with the view that, on the proper construction of the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations, that part of the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received from the Retirement Fund that did not reflect a return of his contributions to the SRP in the 2009 and 2010 income years did not attract the privilege of exemption from taxation.
59. That contention should be rejected for at least two reasons. First, it proceeds from a false premise. The privileges and immunities granted to an officer are granted "in the interests of the specialized agencies only and not for personal benefit of the individuals themselves"[55]
60. For those reasons, that part of the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received under the Retirement Fund that did not reflect a return of Mr Macoun's contributions to the SRP in the 2009 and 2010 income years does not attract the privilege of exemption from taxation under the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations.
Analysis - Question 2
61. The second question is - do the monthly pension payments Mr Macoun received at a time when he no longer held an office in the IBRD fall outside the phrase "salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act? For the reasons set out in relation to question 1, the answer is yes. Mr Macoun did not receive the monthly pension payments whilst he was an officer of the IBRD and he did not receive the monthly pension payments from the IBRD.
62. There is, though, another reason why those monthly pension payments fall outside the phrase "salaries and emoluments received from the organisation" in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act. The monthly pension payments do not fall within the phrase "salaries and emoluments".
63. A distinction may be drawn between each of the terms "pension", "salary" and "emolument". This issue was addressed in Nette v Howarth[58]
64. In the present appeal, Mr Macoun relied upon a finding by the AAT that his monthly pension payments were an emolument[62]
65. The phrase "salaries and emoluments" in Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act recognises that the payments which an international organisation may make to a person who holds an office may be of a variety of characters. It is apparent that "emolument", appearing as it does in the phrase "salaries and emoluments", is intended to capture a broader range of additional benefits than "salaries". However, in the context of Item 2 of Pt I of the Fourth Schedule to the IOPI Act and the SAPI Regulations, that phrase is subject to the two conditions referred to earlier - the emolument must be received whilst the person is an officer of a specialized agency and the emolument must be received from the specialized agency. A monthly pension payment does not, and cannot, satisfy those conditions. Indeed, adapting the language of Rich J in Nette v Howarth, monthly pension payments are not "advantages in money or money's-worth which flow from occupation of an office or the like"[66]
Analysis - Question 3
66. The third question - does the Agencies Convention properly construed in accordance with the principles under the Vienna Convention require Australia not to tax Mr Macoun's monthly pension payments - was not the subject of detailed submissions and debate before the AAT and the Full Court below, but was discussed by Perram J in the Federal Court[68]
67. It was common ground that the Court should seek to construe the IOPI Act in a manner which accords with Australia's international obligations if such a construction is open[69]
68. What then are Australia's international obligations?
69. The applicable principles of construction are not in dispute. The meaning of the Agencies Convention is to be construed according to the rules of construction in the Vienna Convention[70]
70. Article 31(2) of the Vienna Convention states:
"The context for the purpose of the interpretation of a treaty shall comprise, in addition to the text, including its preamble and annexes:
- (a) any agreement relating to the treaty which was made between all the parties in connexion with the conclusion of the treaty;
- (b) any instrument which was made by one or more parties in connexion with the conclusion of the treaty and accepted by the other parties as an instrument related to the treaty."
71. Article 31(3) provides that, together with the context, the following is also to be considered:
- "(a) any subsequent agreement between the parties regarding the interpretation of the treaty or the application of its provisions;
- (b) any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation;
- (c) any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties."
72. Finally, reference should be made to Art 32 of the Vienna Convention, which provides that recourse may be had to supplementary means of interpretation, including the preparatory work of the treaty and the circumstances of its conclusion, in order to confirm the meaning resulting from the application of Art 31 or to determine the meaning when the interpretation according to Art 31 is ambiguous or obscure or leads to a result that is manifestly absurd or unreasonable.
73. What then is the proper construction of the Agencies Convention arising from the application of the Vienna Convention?
74. It is necessary to turn first to the words of the Agencies Convention. Section 19(b) of the Agencies Convention provides that "[o]fficials" of specialized agencies shall "[e]njoy the same exemptions from taxation in respect of the salaries and emoluments paid to them by the specialized agencies and on the same conditions as are enjoyed by officials of the United Nations". Section 18 provides that specialized agencies will specify the categories of officials to which Art VI (which contains Sections 18 and 19) applies and from time to time make known to the governments of all State parties to the Agencies Convention the names of the officials to be included in these categories.
75. On the ordinary meaning of the words, the Agencies Convention does not prohibit States distinguishing between officers and former officers and does not prohibit a State taxing a pension received by a former officer of a specialized agency. That construction is consistent with both State practice and the preparatory works. Although these materials were not debated before the AAT or the Full Court, they assist in the interpretation of the Agencies Convention.
76. The starting point in understanding the context of the text, object and purpose of the Agencies Convention is the UN Convention. Its terms have been addressed earlier[71]
"The Sub-Committee on privileges and immunities examined another proposal submitted by the Advisory Group of Experts on administrative and budgetary matters, made with a view to exempting all members of the staff of the Organization from taxation on retirement benefits and exempting their beneficiaries from taxation on death benefits, either in the form of a lump sum or benefits paid by the Organizations to widows and orphans. The Sub-Committee decided, without prejudice to this question being taken up and considered separately at a later stage, that a provision to this effect should not be included in the general Convention."
77. As the Commissioner submitted, this confirms the UN Convention was drafted on the basis that the phrase "salaries and emoluments" did not extend to retirement or death benefits.
78. Next, the preparatory works in relation to the Agencies Convention must be considered. Its terms have been addressed earlier[73]
"The majority of the Sub-Committee considered that the position of officials of the Specialized Agencies with regard to this matter should be the same as that of officials of the United Nations and therefore they adopted the following text:
- '(b) Officials of the Specialized Agencies shall enjoy the same exemption from taxation in respect of the salaries and emoluments paid to them by the Specialized Agencies and on the same conditions as is enjoyed by officials of the United Nations.'
The effect of this text is to make whatever system is in force in respect of officials of the United Nations automatically be applicable to officials of the Specialized Agencies."
79. As seen earlier, the officials of the UN were not to get an exemption from taxation on their pensions. In each preparatory work, the taxation exemption was not extended to pensions.
80. Next, the State practice of parties to the Agencies Convention in dealing with exemption from taxation for periodic pensions must be considered. The State practice is not consistent. The position adopted by the UN may be illustrated by reference to Powell v Secretary-General of the United Nations[76]
81. A similar view was reached in later decisions of courts in France and the Netherlands[80]
82. For present purposes, it is sufficient to record, as is the fact, that there is still no generally accepted State practice with regard to the exemption of retirement pensions from taxation[83]
Orders
83. The appeal should be dismissed. The parties agreed that there should be no order as to costs.
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