Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Thorogood

40 CLR 454
1929 - 0916B - HCA

(Judgment by: Isaacs ACJ)

Federal Commissioner of Taxation
v Thorogood

Court:
High Court of Australia

Judges:
Isaacs ACJ
Higgins J
Starke J

Subject References:
Taxation and revenue
Income tax
Sales during year of assessment
Payments by installments over several years
Income "derived"

Legislative References:
Income Tax Assessment Act 1922 (Cth) No 37 - ss 4; ss 13; ss 16(a); ss 19; ss 25; ss 51

Hearing date: PERTH 9 September 1927; 12 September 1927; 16 September 1927;
Judgment date: 16 September 1927

Perth


Judgment by:
Isaacs ACJ

The following written judgments were delivered:

ISAACS A.C.J. This appeal arises under s. 51 (6) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1922-1925, and raises a question of law. The taxpayer carries on the business of buying land, dividing it into allotments, on each of which he builds, and then selling the allotment. The sale is on the terms of a deposit, the balance payable at dates exceeding the year of sale. The method is sometimes by contract only, the taxpayer retaining the title until payment; and sometimes by his mortgaging the land to cover part of the purchase-money and then transferring the land to his purchaser, who takes title subject to the first mortgage and gives a second mortgage for the balance with interest. The facts are only necessary to be stated so far as they raise the question of law. To what I have said I need only add that on inspection of the taxpayer's books of account the Commissioner (or the officer representing him) found, as he claims, that the taxpayer had treated the transactions of the year as completely ascertaining the profit on the year's transactions, notwithstanding considerable portions of the actual payments by the purchasers were not due till afterwards. The Commissioner (or his officer), on the authority, as he supposed, of Commissioner of Taxes (Q.) v Burke [F1] and Perrott v Deputy Federal Commissioner of Taxation [F2] , assessed the taxpayer on the basis appearing by his books of account, and, on objection made, disallowed it. The taxpayer appealed to the Board of Review. On that appeal two opposing views were presented:For the taxpayer it was contended that, whatever the method of accountancy or other collateral circumstances, a taxpayer can always require the Commissioner to assess according to the actual receipts of the year. For the Commissioner it was urged that the authorities referred to laid down, as a rule of law, that if a taxpayer in his books represents the transactions for the year as resulting in a stated profit, the taxpayer is bound by that, unless the Commissioner sees sufficient reason to induce him to relax the situation and permit inquiry into the actual results. The Board was invited to lay down a principle. By a majority the Board declined to do so, and did not accept the extreme view of either side. It was by the majority of the Board dealt with on business lines; the deposit, the first-mortgage money actually received by the taxpayer, and substantially secured to him, being treated as virtually received as purchase-money; while, except so much of the second-mortgage money as he also actually received, the second-mortgage money was excluded from the assessment for the year. The profits were apportioned accordingly. The taxpayer does not appeal: he rests content with the Board's decision. The Commissioner appeals, and again urges the principle of law contended for by him, to which reference has been made.

In my opinion there is no such principle of law. There has been a misunderstanding of the decisions referred to. Burke's Case [F3] , when examined and when the general expressions of the majority of the Court are read with the facts, as must always be done, does not lay down the rigid rule contended for. Par. 8 of the case stated shows that in a prior year assessment had been made and not objected to, including some of the transactions of the year in dispute [F4] . The prior year, therefore, had been accepted by both parties as an integer; and, without disturbing the former assessment and undoing the basis on which it had proceeded, the current year, which the taxpayer had similarly in his books treated as an integer, was properly taken by the Commissioner as correctly showing the result of the transaction recorded. That important fact is absent here, so far as appears. But in any case, Burke's Case [F5] was a decision on overwhelming facts, and not the enunciation of a controlling doctrine of law, depending merely on a method of accountancy. Perrott's Case [F6] , as determined in this Court, merely decided that all the moneys actually received during the year of income were properly taken into account as assessable income. It is irrelevant here. The position, as I view it, is as follows: Primarily income tax is payable for each financial year "upon the taxable income derived directly or indirectly by every taxpayer from sources within Australia during the period of twelve months" ending 30th June of the preceding year (s. 13). "Derived" is not necessarily actually received, but ordinarily that is the mode of derivation. The Commissioner very properly acts on this principle in his order No. 1103, which states: "Wherever possible the Department seeks to tax only the amount of profits received in each year." The Act itself provides for several equivalents. But while the Act is necessarily in general terms, the matters to which it must be applied are multifarious and often complicated. The Commissioner, or rather the many officials who represent him throughout this vast continent, have sometimes no easy or enviable task in performing very responsible and intricate functions covering every variety of enterprise. The primary material on which an assessment has to be made is necessarily the return furnished by the taxpayer himself; and to test its accuracy the first field of investigation is ordinarily the taxpayer's own information and his books and vouchers. No doubt he is free to select his own method of accountancy, but, if by that method there appears to be a greater liability for income tax than his returns disclose, he cannot complain if the Commissioner, in protection of the Public Treasury and in justice to other taxpayers, holds him to his own accounts unless he satisfactorily proves them erroneous. If he does so, the taxpayer should not be penalized for inaccurate book-keeping; but the burden of correction rests upon him, and with more or less weight according to circumstances. The Commissioner may, even with the most open and impartial mind, remain unconvinced; and then the taxpayer may appeal either to the Board or to the Court. But it is so far always a question of fact. And the facts may show, as apparently the Board has found in this case with regard to the first-mortgage money, that money, though not actually received, may in a true business sense reach the taxpayer's pocket, or increase his finances in another way, and be derived by him indirectly if not directly. Or the contrary may appear. The facts may, moreover, assume an aspect, as they did in Burke's Case [F7] , when they practically estop the taxpayer. If, as in that case, as already pointed out, the taxpayer not merely bases his accounts on the footing of segregated years but allows the Commissioner to act on that basis, he cannot fairly require in the succeeding year a partial reversal of the process of assessment. That would often disturb the finances, and operate unjustly to the body of taxpayers, besides introducing confusion into the administration of the Act.

But apart from considerations of that nature, the assessment should depend on the ascertained facts, the responsibility being properly cast on the individual to establish them, and particularly when he seeks to deny the truth of his own business conclusions as evidenced by his books. For dereliction of duty the statute provides penalties, and these, with the burden of proof, but no rigid rule of law, are all that the law requires to compel the due payment of income tax.

In the result, the major proposition for which the Commissioner contended is not supportable: with the consequence that his second contention, namely, that the whole of the second-mortgage money should be included as assessable income, must be determined as pure question of fact. As to that, there is nothing before us to justify a reversal of the Board's determination. Indeed, I may add that, except for the purpose of raising the point of law dealt with, the necessary evidential facts do not appear.

The appeal should be dismissed, and these proceedings remitted to the Board of Review in order that the Board may proceed to make such formal order as it deems proper under sub-s. 4 of s. 51 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1922-1925.