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本帖最后由 3IX37 于 2012-10-1 11:56 编辑
Following my previous post, I feel there is a need to go above and behind to look at what ATO is doing in relation to this Residency issue lately.
Comparing in last 10 or 20 years we hardly saw any resident cases in court, in this year 2012 alone let’s guess how many resident cases we have had in court already? Let me tell you, so far we have Sneddon case, Sully case, Boer case and Elliott case, 4 cases just in one year and more are expected to come.
Some practitioners might say it does not concern them, or it only applies to very few people, or even better this is arguable so there is no need to worry. Those might all be true. But for these so-called random and unimportant cases, ATO has already taken 4 of them into court this year alone. What are these facts telling us? I guess it is called an overlooked issue in practice for a reason.
Let’s look at what happened in these cases mentioned above:
Sneddon case – I have already explained this case in my previous post. Let’s skip it.
Sully case:
Taxpayer is a marine engineer, worked overseas for a company, and he claimed his employment income from overseas should not be taxable in Australia. Commissioner challenged it and won, the tribunal upheld the commissioner’s decision that the taxpayer was Au resident for those years.
Boer case:
Taxpayer is a technician in the oil and gas industry, went offshore working. He contends as he was not an Au resident, his income from overseas should not be taxed. Tribunal again affirmed ATO commissioner’s decision that the taxpayer was Au resident.
Elliott case: (This is very interesting case)
Taxpayer was an airline pilot working for a Hong Kong based company (ABL). For his 06 & 07 returns, he claimed his salary as foreign employment income, which was exempt under previous s.23AG. After the Federal court decision on ABL v FCT 2009, ATO issued amended notices of assessment treating taxpayer’s wages for all those years as assessable incomes.
Taxpayer won his case not by arguing that he was not a resident for those years, but strategically he argued that Commissioner was not entitled to amend his assessment after 2 years the original notices of assessment was issued.
The tribunal upheld the taxpayer’s argument that the amended assessment issued after 2 years were unlawful based on the fact that taxpayer disclosed his foreign income and Commissioner was aware of them from the original returns. The legislation does not require a taxpayer to correctly identify income from a foreign transaction at a correct label on the tax return, but only to identify such income (reg 20 item 5 ITR1936)
Subsequently ATO withdrew its both tax decision TD93/156 concerning whether a refund notice is an assessment and TD2004/24 concerning deemed assessments lodgement of a non-taxable return. This might not be a related event, but one might think ...
References:
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2012/582.html
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2012/574.html
AAT ref: [2012] AATA 428 (E Fice, Senior Member), 9 July 2012, Melbourne.
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