AAT's decision and reasons summarised
3 The AAT outlined the relevant background facts as follows. The appellant is a citizen of Vanuatu. In 2012 he was convicted in Australia of conspiring with another accountant, the late Owen T Daniel, and others to defraud the Commonwealth/dishonestly cause a loss to the Commonwealth between 1997 and 2006. He is currently serving a term of imprisonment.
4 The Commissioner assessed the appellant to Australian income tax for the income years 1997 to 2006 inclusively. The assessments were default assessments under s 167 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) (the ITAA 1936). The assessments were based on the Commissioner's opinion that, although the appellant was not a resident of Australia during those years, he had derived Australian-sourced income. Under s 6-5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) (the ITAA 1997), a taxpayer's assessable income includes income according to ordinary concepts, which is called ordinary income. Section 6-5(3) relevantly provided:
(3) If you are a foreign resident, your assessable income includes:
(a) the *ordinary income you *derived directly or indirectly from all *Australian sources during the income year; and
…
(The asterisked terms are defined terms.)
"Australian source" was defined in s 995-1 as follows:
*ordinary income or *statutory income has an Australian source if, and only if, it is *derived from a source in Australia for the purposes of [the ITAA 1936].
(The asterisked terms are defined terms).
5 The Australian-sourced income which the Commissioner considered that the appellant had earned related to dealings which the appellant had had with Mr Daniel and his clients and related transactions. The notices of assessment for the 2001 to 2006 years included administrative penalties at a rate of 75 per cent.
6 The appellant lodged objections against the default assessments. He was partly successful in respect of some of the relevant years but, in other years, the Commissioner increased his taxable income by reference to other amounts which the Commissioner considered to represent the appellant's Australian-sourced income. Amended assessments ultimately issued.
7 The appellant sought a review by the AAT of the objection decisions.
8 One of the primary issues raised in the review was whether the appellant was a resident of Australia during the relevant years. The AAT found that he was not. That finding is not challenged in the appeal and nothing more needs to be said about it.
9 The second primary issue related to how much, if any, of the appellant's income during the relevant years was from Australian sources. This issue needed to be determined in considering whether the appellant had discharged his burden under s 14ZZK of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth) (the TA Act) of proving that the assessments were excessive.
10 At the relevant time, s 14ZZK provided:
14ZZK Grounds of objection and burden of proof
On an application for review of a reviewable objection decision:
(a) the applicant is, unless the Tribunal orders otherwise, limited to the grounds stated in the taxation objection to which the decision relates; and
(b) the applicant has the burden of proving that:
(i) if the taxation decision concerned is an assessment (other than a franking assessment) - the assessment is excessive; or
(ii) if the taxation decision concerned is a franking assessment - the assessment is incorrect; or
(iii) in any other case - the taxation decision concerned should not have been made or should have been made differently.
11 The AAT noted that the relevant provisions of the ITAA 1936 and the ITAA 1997 relating to income from Australian sources were substantially similar.
12 The AAT's reasoning in support of its conclusion that the appellant failed to discharge the burden imposed by s 14ZZK of the TA Act may be summarised as follows.
13 The AAT outlined the Commissioner's methodology in assessing the appellant's Australian-sourced income for the relevant years. The methodology began with the fact that the appellant attended meetings in Australia with clients of Owen T Daniel & Co (OTD), usually at OTD's business premises. Mr Daniel would introduce the appellant to a client and the appellant would provide certain information, which the Commissioner characterised as "tax consultancy services" concerning "offshore opportunities". Any clients who were interested in taking advantage of such "offshore opportunities" would then send money to either Vanuatu or New Zealand for the implementation of an offshore arrangement, which included the incorporation of a company in Vanuatu. That money - less a fee or commission - would often find its way back to the client or related entity in Australia. In some instances, the money transferred overseas from Australia was directed to a New Zealand bank account in the name of International Finance Trust Company Limited (IFTC), which was based in Vanuatu and in respect of which the appellant was both a director and shareholder. It might also be noted at this point that the appellant was a partner of a Vanuatu-based chartered accountancy practice, known as Moore Stephens/PKF (PKF), and earned fees for professional services provided in Vanuatu by PKF, which fees predominantly related to preparing annual financial statements for Vanuatu international corporations.
14 The Commissioner's methodology involved calculating the net amount involved in the arrangements, being the sum of money sent overseas by clients who wished to implement an "offshore opportunity", less the sums returned to Australia - and to assess that entire amount as the appellant's Australian-sourced income. As the AAT noted at [62], this methodology operated notwithstanding that the payments were not made to the appellant personally, but to various companies, including IFTC, which the Commissioner considered were owned and controlled by, or otherwise connected with, the appellant. The Commissioner considered that the income was properly attributed to the appellant as income earned by him in Australia from tax consultancy services that he provided. The AAT stated that the Commissioner basically adhered to this methodology in defending the appeals but that the Commissioner also considered that there were "very likely additional amounts that might be included" in the appellant's Australian-sourced income for the relevant years. This was significant to the question whether the appellant had shown the amended assessments to be excessive (see [63]).
15 The AAT then analysed various cases relating to both a taxpayer's burden under s 14ZZK of the TA Act and relevant provisions relating to the source of an item of income. On the former matter, the AAT quoted extensively from the first instance decision of Pagone J in Commissioner of Taxation v Rigoli [2013] FCA 784 (Rigoli) (which was upheld on appeal in Rigoli v Commissioner of Taxation [2014] FCAFC 29; (2014) 141 ALD 529). Justice Pagone held that a taxpayer who seeks to establish that a s 167 assessment based upon the asset betterment method of calculation is excessive had to positively prove his or her "actual taxable income" and demonstrate that the amount of money for which tax is levied by the assessment exceeds the actual substantive liability of the taxpayer (citing Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Dalco [1990] HCA 3; (1990) 168 CLR 164 (Dalco) at 623-625 and Trautwein v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1936] HCA 77; (1936) 56 CLR 63 (Trautwein) at 88).
16 Paragraph 10 of Pagone J's reasons for judgment in Rigoli was one of the passages upon which the AAT relied:
A taxpayer seeking to challenge an assessment under s 167 will not succeed merely by proving error by the Commissioner: George v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1952] HCA 21; (1952) 86 CLR 183; Dalco. The task for the taxpayer on objection is not to prove that the Commissioner erred but to prove, albeit on the balance of probabilities (see Ma v Commissioner of Taxation [1992] FCA 359; (1992) 37 FCR 225), the correct amount upon which tax should be levied. The subject matter of challenge to an assessment under s 167 of the 1936 Act is "the amount" upon which the Commissioner has determined tax ought to be levied. The subject matter of challenge in such cases is not to the individual elements of assessable income and deductions which together would have made up taxable income to the assessment if it had been made under s 166.
17 The AAT concluded at [73] that the authorities established:
… that to prove the Commissioner's assessments excessive, Mr Agius must prove what his actual taxable income was in each of the relevant years. That requires him not only to identify those categories of income (if any) that generated Australian-sourced income, but also to prove that there were no others that did so. Having done that, he must satisfy me as to the quantum of income attributable to those Australian-source categories. The sum of all such amounts would equal his "actual taxable income".
(Emphasis added.)
18 On the issue of determining the "source" of an item of income, the AAT referred to the High Court's decisions in both Nathan v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1918] HCA 45; (1918) 25 CLR 183 (Nathan) at 189-190 and Federal Commissioner of Taxation v French [1957] HCA 73; (1957) 98 CLR 398 (French) at 417 per Kitto J. The AAT expressed its conclusion on this matter at [76]:
The focus is not on the origin of the money but on the activity, event or thing which led to its receipt in other words, the question is not "Where did the money come from?" but "Where was the income earned?".
(Emphasis added.)
19 The AAT noted the appellant's acceptance that his share in PKF's Vanuatu practice together with the director's fees he received from IFTC were income but he maintained that none of it had an Australian source. The AAT found at [80] that the appellant's income also included the dividends he received from IFTC.
20 The AAT then summarised in [81] of its reasons for decision the appellant's submissions concerning the issue of source. Because of their significance in the appeal, it is desirable to set out [81] in its entirety:
In relation to the issue of source, and in amplification of his position summarised at [78] and [79] above, Mr Agius submits that:
(a) IFTC is a Vanuatu trust company that is registered to carry on business in Vanuatu, and the director's fees derived by Mr Agius did not have an Australian source;
(b) fees paid to IFTC by the Australian participants were for professional services rendered in Vanuatu in relation to the incorporation, registration and administration of Vanuatu international corporations, and did not have an Australian source, and accordingly, no part of the dividends paid by IFTC were paid out of profits having an Australian source for the purposes of s 44(1)(b) of the ITAA 1936;
(c) Moore Stephens/PKF is a Vanuatu-based chartered accountancy practice that carried on business in Vanuatu and earned fees for professional services provided in Vanuatu (predominantly for preparing the annual financial statements of the Vanuatu international corporations);
(d) fees paid to Moore Stephens/PKF were paid for professional services rendered in Vanuatu to the Vanuatu international corporations, and did not have an Australian source, and accordingly, no part of the partnership's net income was attributable to sources in Australia and no part of Mr Agius' "partner salary" or his share of the partnership profits was assessable;
(e) the insurance companies carried on business in Vanuatu, and premiums earned by the insurance companies did not have an Australian source, and any payments by the insurance companies to Moore Stephens/PKF for services, or distributions made to IFTC, by the insurance companies did not have an Australian source.
21 The AAT then noted that the appellant provided detailed worksheets which purported to establish his actual taxable income (noting the burden which he carried under s 14ZZK of the TA Act). The worksheets were predicated on an assumption (which was contrary to the appellant's primary contention that income earned by IFTC and PKF was not Australian-sourced income) that there was Australian-sourced fee income of IFTC and PKF. The worksheets also used invoices issued by IFTC or PKF in respect of the 19 identified Australian clients who participated in the "offshore arrangements".
22 The AAT emphasised that one of the assumptions underpinning the appellant's worksheets was that the only income of PKF that was Australian-sourced was represented by the fees charged in respect of the offshore arrangements relating to those 19 Australian participants. The AAT described this in [86] as "an unsafe assumption" for two reasons.
23 The first reason was that, while the AAT accepted the appellant's claim that there were no services performed by him in Australia relating to the affairs of IFTC or PKF which were undertaken on his own account, the appellant's explanation to prospective clients of how the offshore arrangements operated "was an essential and significant step, in what became the impugned tax avoidance schemes" and the fees relating to the appellant's activities were the fees of either IFTC or PKF ([88]).
24 The AAT then noted that, in his witness statement prepared for the AAT proceeding, the appellant referred to the fact that he had been appointed receiver and administrator of various companies by Westpac, which appointments required him to make many trips to Australia for discussions with potential buyers of relevant businesses. The AAT noted that the appellant provided no greater level of specificity about these activities and that he was cross-examined about some aspects of them.
25 The AAT concluded at [93]:
The generation of fees by a Vanuatu-based partnership, where the work to which those fees relate is performed in Australia, in my view undoubtedly constitutes the derivation of income with an Australian source. The difficulty for Mr Agius, and the evident gap in his worksheets, is that there has been no attempt to quantify the proportion of Moore Stephens/PKF's fees that this Australian-sourced income represents.
26 The AAT found that Watson v Commissioner of Taxation 1930 HCA 28; [1930] 44 CLR 94 (Watson) was distinguishable on the basis that the taxpayer there was paid a set fee for producing a result, whereas here remuneration was paid on an hourly charge-out rate for the work actually done. Reference was also made by the AAT at [95] to s 92(1)(b) of the ITAA 1936, which provided that the assessable income of a partner in a partnership includes:
… so much of the individual interest of the partner in the net income of the partnership of the year of income as is attributable to a period when the partner was not a resident and is also attributable to sources in Australia.
27 The AAT noted at [96] that it was not possible to quantify the relevant amount because the appellant had failed to provide comprehensive information about the proportion of PKF's net income which was attributable to Australian sources.
28 The second reason given by the AAT as to why the appellant's worksheets were not decisive related to its finding that the appellant failed to establish that the income was confined to the 19 identified Australian participants. The AAT noted the appellant's evidence that his meetings in Australia were usually, but not always, with clients of OTD: he was sometimes asked by other accountancy firms in Sydney to discuss "offshore opportunities" for their clients. The AAT stated in [98] that it inferred from the appellant's evidence given under cross-examination that similar structures were put in place in respect of those other clients, which would have included some involvement on the part of IFTC or PKF and the payment to them of fees on the same basis as the arrangement with OTD's clients. The AAT noted at [98] that these fees had not been identified and their quantum had not been included as an integer in any of the worksheet calculations.
29 Finally, the AAT noted at [99] that there was at least one additional category of income derived by the appellant through either PKF or IFTC and which had an Australian source. It related to the activities of a firm of chartered accountants based on the Sunshine Coast known as MSAN Woodward, which had been owned by either PKF or IFTC since about 2001. The AAT found at [99] that:
There is no evidence as to the earnings of the firm (largely, if not exclusively, one must assume, sourced in Australia) or the extent to which its profits, if any, were distributed to either of the Vanuatu entities and ultimately to the persons, including Mr Agius, who controlled them. Mr Agius has failed to exclude the very strong likelihood that there is a further category of income derived by him and having an Australian source.