Aurora Developments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation
[2011] FCA 232
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2011-03-18
Before
Mr P, Greenwood J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (22 paragraphs)
BACKGROUND AND ASPECTS OF THE CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES 1 The applicant, Aurora Developments Pty Ltd ("Aurora"), appeals pursuant to s 14ZZ(a)(ii) of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth) (the "Administration Act") from the Commissioner's objection decision concerning an assessment of GST for the period 1 July 2004 to 31 July 2004 and the assessment of penalty pursuant to s 29830 of the Administration Act. By the objection decision of 20 June 2008, the Commissioner disallowed in part an objection against a GST assessment and penalty assessment in relation to the sale of lands by Aurora to three companies controlled by Australand Limited ("Australand"). 2 The central question to be determined in these proceedings is whether Aurora made a taxable supply for the purposes of s 95 of A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (the "GST Act") having regard to whether a relevant supply was GSTfree for the purposes of s 38325 of the GST Act. Section 38325 of the GST Act provides that the supply of a "going concern" is GSTfree if the supply is made for consideration, the recipient is registered in the relevant sense (or required to be registered) and the supplier and the recipient of the supply have agreed in writing that "the supply is of a going concern". A "supply of a going concern" is, by s 38325(2), "a supply under an arrangement under which: (a) the supplier supplies to the recipient all of the things that are necessary for the continued operation of an enterprise; and (b) the supplier carries on, or will carry on the enterprise until the day of the supply (whether or not as part of a larger enterprise carried on by the supplier)". 3 I have given italic and bold emphasis to those aspects of the statutory integers which have engaged argument in the proceeding. Having regard to aspects of the argument, an anterior question arises as to whether Aurora has engaged in a taxable supply at all. However, the questions of fact and law arising in the proceeding are fundamentally addressed to the question of the satisfaction or otherwise by Aurora of the statutory integers comprising s 38325 and, in particular, those matters required to be satisfied under s 38325(2). The resolution of the controversy turns almost entirely on the facts and the examination and construction of the documents. 4 A further question concerns matters of penalty. On 7 November 2006, the respondent issued an administrative penalty assessment to the applicant of $708,008.10 under the Administration Act on the footing that Division 284 of that Act applied for the tax periods the subject of GST assessments. Aurora objected to the assessment under s 29830 of Schedule 1 to the Administration Act and Part IVC of that Act. On 20 June 2008, Aurora received notice of the respondent's decision under s 14ZY of the Administration Act to allow the objection in part. The respondent reduced the penalty assessment by $126,090.85. Aurora has appealed from that decision to this Court under s 14ZZ of the Administration Act. That application is the subject matter of proceedings QUD252 of 2008 which was heard together with the principal proceeding (QUD251 of 2008). 5 The parties have filed a Statement of Agreed Facts (the "the agreed facts"). Aurora relies upon it. The directors of Aurora have been called and crossexamined about aspects of their affidavit evidence and, in particular, the nature of the activities of Aurora, the development approvals obtained, the character of the development it undertook and points along the continuum of that development so as to identify changes to it, those aspects of the development which were abandoned and those aspects which were continued. The directors were crossexamined as to those factual matters rather than as to questions of credit. There is no contention by the respondent that the arrangements recited in the contract at the centre of the proceedings are a sham. Plainly enough, the parties to an agreement cannot, by agreement, determine that a particular supply is GSTfree for the purposes of the GST Act. That is a conclusion which arises as a matter of law having regard to the factual foundation for the operation of the statutory integers properly construed. 6 Aurora contends however that the parties can quite properly agree the content of the enterprise and reach agreement about the things that will be done to carry on the enterprise until the day of supply. Aurora further contends that once the parties have reached agreement about those matters, the agreement or contract governs the matter. Questions in crossexamination directed to the content of the enterprise or the understanding of the directors of Aurora about matters leading up to the distillation of the agreed enterprise in the contract are said by Aurora to be irrelevant and evidence given in answer to such questions is inadmissible as not relevant to the matters in controversy. 7 The Commissioner contends that the context within which the transaction, governed by the contract, occurred, remains relevant to the construction of the contract. Moreover, the question is not simply one of construing the contract but involves the statutory integers to be applied in the operation of s 38325 and whether those integers are satisfied. As explained in these reasons at [166][171], I accept that evidence going to the context of the agreement and each of the integers of s 38325 is relevant in determining whether a GSTfree supply has occurred. 8 Mr Richard Fulcher, an employee of Australand at the relevant time gave evidence and was also crossexamined. Mr Michael Adamson, a lawyer who undertook professional legal work as a member of a law firm on behalf of Aurora and who then became an employee of Aurora gave evidence and was crossexamined. Mr Grant Cameron who undertook and supervised particular earthworks on lands relevant to the proceedings gave evidence and was crossexamined about aspects of the earthworks. 9 On 2 October 2003, Aurora entered into a contract with three entities controlled by Australand namely, Australand Land and Housing No. 5 (Hope Island) Pty Ltd, Australand Land and Housing No. 7 (Hope Island) Pty Ltd; and Australand Land and Housing No. 8 (Hope Island) Pty Ltd. Where relevant, I will refer to the No. 5, No. 7 and No. 8 entities as the "buyer". Otherwise, "Australand" is a reference to Australand Limited and its interest in its dealings with Aurora. 10 The contract is described as a "Contract For Houses and Land" and describes Aurora as the seller and the three Australand entities as the buyer. It provides for the sale by Aurora to Australand of particular "parcels of land shaded on Annexure B" (defined by the contract as the "Land") comprising an area of 9.9722 hectares for a consideration of $28,201,261.18 (see Plans D1, D2 and D3 attached to these reasons). 11 The contract by Annexure A contains 22 Special Conditions which are either in addition to the standard terms or replace some of those terms contained in the standard form contract document adopted by the parties. The parcels of land shaded on Annexure B to the contract are two lots described as Lot 28 and Lot 34. Those two lots are contiguous with a section of a road reserve (in large part undeveloped) called Pendraat Parade which was to be surrendered with Aurora securing a title to the surrendered part through the appropriate processes. That title would then form part of the land to be conveyed to the buyer under the Aurora contract. 12 By Special Condition 4.3, Aurora and Australand agree, subject to Special Conditions 4.4 and 4.5, that any GST as that term is defined by the GST Act imposed on any supply made under the contract (where the consideration is not expressed to be GST inclusive) is to be paid by the buyer at the stipulated rate at the same time as the GST exclusive consideration is payable. However, if GST becomes payable to the Australia Taxation Office ("ATO") by Aurora before the time for payment of the buyer's consideration, the amount of the GST is payable by the buyer to Aurora on demand subject to the issue of a tax invoice by Aurora. 13 By Special Condition 4.4(a), Aurora and the buyer "acknowledge and agree" that the "sale of the Enterprise effected pursuant to this Contract constitutes the supply of a Going Concern that is GST Free" [emphasis added]. By Special Condition 4.4(b), Aurora "acknowledges and warrants that it is currently [that is as at 2 October 2003] carrying on and will continue to carry on the Enterprise until the day of supply [emphasis added]. By Special Condition 4.4(c), Aurora and the buyer acknowledge that "this Contract constitutes an agreement under which the Seller will supply to the Buyer all of the things that are necessary for the continued operation of the Enterprise" [emphasis added]. 14 Special Condition 4.5 is enlivened if for any reason Special Condition 4.4(a) does not apply. In those circumstances, the parties agree that the provisions of Special Condition 4.5 would apply instead of Special Condition 4.3. Special Condition 4.5 deals with the application of the "Margin Scheme". 15 The contract does not recite or expressly provide for, by its threshold operative description, the sale and transfer of an enterprise or a business or a development project. Rather, it addresses an agreement to "sell and buy property". However, within the framework of the GST Special Condition, the parties acknowledge and agree that the contract "effects" the "sale of the Enterprise" and the sale constitutes the supply of a "Going Concern" with the agreed conclusion that the supply is "GST Free". 16 The "Enterprise" contemplated by the contract and thus the parties to it, is defined to mean "the enterprise of the development of the Land and the assets of that enterprise, including the Land, the Development Material and all other items, books, plans, approvals and all ancillary materials". The "Development Material" is thus described as one of the "inclusive" assets of the enterprise and by Special Condition 1.1(c), Development Material means: … all documentation prepared or compiled by or on behalf of the Seller or obtained by it in relation to the development of the Site and in particular, but without limiting the generality of the foregoing the following: • Plans and engineering drawings in respect of the development of the Site; • Any reports, files and materials prepared by and on behalf of the Seller were obtained by it; and • Any computer disks containing copies of the abovementioned plans or documents; • any rights (but no obligations) under existing contracts in respect of the Land. 17 The definition, folding as it does into the definition of "Enterprise", talks of documentation, plans and engineering drawings in relation to the development of the Site and that term means the Land (that is, the Annexure B parcels and the shaded section of Pendraat Parade) and the "Adjoining Land". The Adjoining Land means particular land adjoining the Annexure B land of Aurora. It is defined to mean firstly, part of Pendraat Parade and a section of land on the western side of a canal (to be built (or completed), the precise alignment of which had to be determined) owned by Sickle Avenue Pty Ltd ("Sickle"); and, secondly, part of land also on the western side of the canal owned by Atmeygor Pty Ltd ("Atmeygor") and located north west of the shaded Annexure B land of Aurora. 18 Aurora, Sickle and Atmeygor are companies controlled, in terms of their shareholding, (through particular entities) by Mr John Atkinson and Mr Craig Gore who are the directors of each company. 19 The term "Site" used within the definition of "Development Material" in turn adopted within the definition of "Enterprise" does not include property within the description "Balance Contracts" (at Special Condition 1.1(b)). Those contracts concern the sale of a parcel (or part of a lot) owned by Atkinson Gore Group Pty Ltd ("AGG") to the buyer and the sale of two other particular lots by Atmeygor to the buyer. 20 On 2 October 2003, Atmeygor entered into a contract with the buyer for the sale of those parcels of land owned by it shaded on Annexure B to that contract which consists of a plan showing lots described as Lots 1 and 2 on RP908283 (1.153 hectares) for $4,499,541.58. A further contract was signed on 2 October 2003 with Atmeygor for Lot 3 on RP908283 for $40m. These contracts reflect symmetry with the Aurora contract. The adjoining land, in the case of the first Atmeygor contract mentioned above (Lots 1 and 2), is defined as AGG's land on the western side of the canal (previously described) bearing Lot 177 on the relevant registered plan. The "Balance Contracts" are defined as the Aurora contract, the Atmeygor contract in respect of Lot 3 on the north western side of Aurora's land, and the Sickle contract. The relevant definitions are in the same terms as the Aurora contract. 21 On 2 October 2003, Sickle entered into a contract with the buyer for the sale of its section of land on the western side of the proposed canal (part of Lot 1 on SP149221) for $1,798,732.82 and on 2 October 2003 AGG entered into a sale of its parcel of land to the buyer (Lot 177, RP92299 - 4.0052 hectares) for $15,550,458.42. 22 The lands acquired under these purchase agreements are the aggregated parcels or lots on which Australand proposed to undertake its particular property development project. 23 The Aurora enterprise, at least as defined by the Aurora contract and thus adopted by the parties to it, means the development of the Annexure B land owned by Aurora (and that section of Pendraat Parade to be surrendered and made the subject of a fresh title) and the assets of that enterprise, that is, that development, including however, particular documentation prepared or compiled by or on behalf of Aurora in relation to the Land and the relevant lands of Sickle or Atmeygor being the Adjoining Land falling within the definition of the term Site. The reference in the definition of "Enterprise" to all other items, books, plans, approvals and all ancillary materials must necessarily mean all of those things in relation to "the development of the Land" as that phrase is used in Special Condition 4.2. 24 Having regard to that notion of enterprise, the parties to the contract by Special Conditions 4.4(a), (b) and (c), recited the position they had reached on 2 October 2003 after a period of examination by Australand of the Aurora land and contiguous land owned by Sickle, Atmeygor and AGG, under the terms of an Exclusivity Deed dated 21 July 2003 by recording that they acknowledged and agreed that the contract effected the sale of the "Enterprise" and the sale constituted "the supply of a Going Concern that is GST Free"; Aurora acknowledged and warranted that it was at 2 October 2003 carrying on the enterprise and would continue to carry on the enterprise until "the day of supply"; and the parties acknowledged that the contract constituted an agreement under which Aurora would supply to the buyer all of the things necessary for the continued operation of the enterprise. 25 The phrase "the development of the Land" in the definition of "Enterprise" in the contract and the term "Enterprise" itself, is said by Aurora, to be given content by other provisions of the contract. In particular, Special Condition 6 sets out the works Aurora was to undertake at its cost in relation to such matters as taking all steps necessary to obtain the required approvals for works to be undertaken as described in Annexure C to the contract. Aurora was to procure the commencement of the works as soon as reasonably practicable after the contract date and proceed with those works through suitably qualified contractors. Special Condition 6.1(a), (b), (c) and (d) give content to that matter. Aurora was to provide the buyer with a program for the works prior to commencement and provide updates to the program on a monthly basis (6.1(e)). Aurora was to allow the buyer to inspect the works, keep the buyer fully informed about the works and provide the buyer with test results (6.1(f), (g) and (h)). Aurora was required to take and ensure that the relevant contractor took all necessary action to do the things recited in 6.1(i). Aurora was "fully responsible" for the care of the works and the reinstatement of any loss or damage to the works (6.1(j)). 26 Aurora says that the content of its continuing engagement can also be seen from the remaining provisions of Special Condition 6. Special Condition 6.2 contains a warranty by Aurora that any contractor has all relevant licenses and qualifications to carry out the Annexure C works. By Special Condition 6.4, Aurora warrants that the works when completed will comply with the contract. By Special Condition 6.5, Aurora must ensure that the property (being the "Land") is kept safe, secure, clean and tidy; all fencing, roads, landscaping, footpaths and surfaces adjacent to the property are cleaned up and made good to the buyer's reasonable satisfaction before completion; in carrying out the works all people are to be protected from death or injury; damage to property is to be made good; and the works are not to be varied without the consent of the buyer. By Special Condition 6.8, Aurora is required to rectify any part of the works found to be defective. 27 Annexure C specifies the seller's works to be undertaken by Aurora under Special Condition 6.1. The specification contains 15 categories of work. Aurora contends that a very large part of the works specified in Annexure C represent works Aurora was required to undertake as part of the development approvals it had obtained in connection with the development of the Annexure B Aurora land. The works also related to the land of Sickle, Atmeygor and AGG. Items (ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi) and (vii) of Annexure C are said to be emblematic of that proposition. The certifications required by (xi) and (xii) of Annexure C, the provision of plans of wick drains (Item xiii) and the completion of Pendraat Parade works under Item (xiv) are also said to be consistent with the continuing enterprise activities being undertaken by Aurora in connection with the lands the subject of the Aurora contract. Items (i), (viii), (ix) and (x) are not consistent with activities characterising Aurora's continuing enterprise. Those matters concern the demolition of a sales office and the removal of particular construction works. That work was not required to be undertaken as an element of Aurora's continuing enterprise. 28 The contract, not surprisingly, contemplated that things would happen between the date of contract and a later date being the date of settlement. Most notably those things involved the completion of the Annexure C works subject to the protocols within the contract about completion and the buyer's satisfaction as to completion. Special Condition 6.3 provides that the drawings and specifications and all documentation relating to the works would become the property of the buyer on settlement. By Special Condition 6.6, as a condition of completion, Aurora was required to provide the buyer with "as constructed" drawings of the works, certificates referred to in the drawings and specifications, a costs breakdown, particulars of expenditure, all approvals and evidence satisfactory to the buyer that completion of the works had been achieved. By Special Condition 12, Aurora assigned and set over to the buyer from settlement Aurora's full right, title and interest in and to the Development Material. By Special Condition 12(b), Aurora was required on settlement to deliver "the original of the Development Material and all files, plans, notes and papers relating thereto to the Buyer". 29 The date for settlement of the contract was to be determined by operation of Special Condition 11. Special Condition 11.1(a) provides that settlement will be 60 days from the date Aurora gives the buyer written notice that five things have either occurred or have been satisfied. First, that the relevant titles as contemplated by Special Condition 5 of the contract have issued, including the amalgamation of the Pendraat Parade land with Aurora's land. Secondly, that "Completion of the Works, as provided in special condition 6 has occurred". Thirdly, that the Special Condition as to titles for the "Adjoining Land as recited in the contracts for the Adjoining Land has been satisfied" (that is the Sickle contract and the Atmeygor contract (Lot 3)). Fourthly, that "Completion of the Works, as provided in special condition 6 of the Sickle Avenue Contract has occurred". Fifthly, that "Completion of the Phase 1 Works, as provided for in special condition 6 of the Atmeygor Contract has occurred" (that is, the Lot 3 Atmeygor contract). Special Condition 11.2 provides that if Completion of the Works has not occurred in accordance with Special Condition 6 within 20 months of the contract date [2 October 2003], a particular protocol under Special Condition 11.2(i) to (vii) is to apply. Special Condition 11.4 confers an entitlement on the buyer upon receiving notice from Aurora under Special Condition 11.1 that all of the five events contemplated by 11.1(a) have either occurred or have been satisfied, to nominate a settlement date earlier than the 60 day period from the receipt of Aurora's "written notice". 30 Apart from settlement of the contract being conditional upon matters related to the completion of works contemplated by the Sickle contract and the Atmeygor Lot 3 contract as recited in Special Condition 11, Special Condition 17.1 of the Aurora contract provides that the contract is subject to and conditional upon the buyer entering into contracts to purchase the Adjoining Land on the same day as the (Aurora) contract date and, by 17.2, the Aurora contract is subject to and conditional upon the contemporaneous completion of the contracts for the sale of the Adjoining Land. If the contemporaneous completion of those contracts is not fulfilled, the party not in default is entitled to terminate the Aurora contract. 31 Aurora contends that although it is true that the question to be determined in the present proceeding is whether Aurora, and only Aurora, has made a relevant GSTfree supply by operation of s 38325 of the GST Act, the interdependence between the Aurora contract and the contracts for the Adjoining Land makes the arrangements made with Sickle, Atmeygor and AGG relevant in understanding the context, scope and content of the "activities" conducted by Aurora on its land and the arrangements Aurora made with Australand. 32 Section 95 of the GST Act contemplates the making of a supply (of goods, of services, the creation or grant of any rights, a grant of real property or any form of supply whatsoever - s 910, GST Act) for consideration in the course or furtherance of an enterprise carried on by the supplier and characterises that supply as a taxable supply unless, relevantly, it is a GSTfree supply. Rather than make a supply in the course or furtherance of an enterprise, the supplier might elect to supply an enterprise as a going concern. The supplier might do so by making an arrangement by contract (that might or might not recite all of the elements of the relevant arrangement) under which the going concern is supplied. A supply of a going concern is a supply under an arrangement under which (s 38325(2)): (a) the supplier supplies to the recipient all of the things that are necessary for the continued operation of an enterprise; and (b) the supplier carries on, or will carry on, the enterprise until the day of the supply (whether or not as part of a larger enterprise carried on by the supplier). 33 The Commissioner contends for two threshold matters arising out of s 38325(2). 34 First, s 38325(2) contemplates the making of an arrangement (under which a supply of a going concern occurs) which is necessarily made at a particular moment in time, with a supplier carrying on the enterprise until a later time, described as "the day of the supply". That later day is said to represent a transition date upon which the recipient assumes possession, occupation and control of the enterprise; upon which the supplier supplies to the recipient all of the things necessary for the continued operation of the enterprise; and upon the day on which the supplier ceases carrying on the enterprise upon transfer of possession and control to the recipient. The recipient however, might elect to change the nature of the enterprise or might choose not to continue to undertake the enterprise as supplied. However, the recipient's postsupply choices in that regard cannot be determinative of whether a supplier has made a supply of a going concern. 35 Secondly, s 38325(2) addresses the notion of all of the things that are necessary for the continued operation of an enterprise, and the supplier carrying on the enterprise until the transition date being the day of the supply. It follows, it is said, that in order to make sense of the conjunction of s 38325(2)(a) and (b), the enterprise carried on until the transition day (or supply day) is the same enterprise about which all things necessary for its continued operation are to be supplied. The Commissioner contends that the section is expressly concerned with continuity of supply of something which is an enterprise characterised by a bundle of things to be supplied as a going concern and the continued operation of that thing until a day of supply occurs. In effect, s 38325(a) requires, it is said, the identification of the relevant enterprise and all things necessary for the continued operation of that enterprise (and the supply of those things to the recipient), and s 38325(b) requires the supplier to carry on that enterprise until the day of the supply to the recipient. 36 Consistent with that view, the Commissioner contends that "the day of the supply" is the settlement date under the Aurora contract rather than the date of the contract. The Commissioner further contends that having regard to the terms of the contract and the evidence, the relevant enterprise concluded some time prior to the settlement date and thus Aurora was not carrying on the relevant enterprise at the day of supply. Those contentions require a close examination of the contract and the evidence. 37 Aurora contends that the day of the supply is the date of contract. 38 Aurora also contends that, in any event, if the day of supply is the settlement date, Aurora carried on the relevant enterprise until that day. Aurora also contends that although the Commissioner gives emphasis to the provisions of the contract directed to settlement at a particular time (a maximum of 60 days after written notice predicated upon satisfaction or the occurrence of the five matters mentioned earlier), Aurora continued to discharge obligations under the contract up to the date of settlement which Aurora contends is entirely consistent with Aurora carrying on the relevant enterprise until "the day of the supply". 39 Further, Aurora contends that a dispute as to completion arose and the resolution of that dispute continued until 22 June 2004, a date closely approximating the date of settlement of the Aurora contract, namely, 2 July 2004. Thus, having regard to the contract, the obligations cast upon Aurora and the evidence in relation to the dispute, Aurora contends that it satisfies s 38325(2)(b) even if the "day of the supply" is found to be the settlement date rather than the contract date. 40 Further, Aurora contends that s 38325(2) operates expressly upon the differential language of an enterprise and the enterprise. 41 Aurora contends that it follows that the "arrangement", which Aurora contends is comprehended solely by the contract, must provide for the supplier to supply to the buyer all of the things necessary for the continued operation of an enterprise and not necessarily the enterprise carried on by the supplier at the date of the arrangement. So long as the buyer is supplied with all things necessary to continue the operation of an enterprise, the supplier need not show, it is said, that it has supplied all things necessary for the continued operation of the supplier's enterprise as undertaken by it at the date of the arrangement. 42 The first issue for determination then is the question of what enterprise was Aurora undertaking at the date of the arrangement, that is, the date of the contract. 43 By s 920 of the GST Act, an enterprise might consist of a single activity or a series of activities undertaken in the form of a business or in the form of an adventure or concern in the nature of trade. 44 Aurora contends that the content of the enterprise is to be found in the contract where the parties have defined the enterprise, elaborated by Special Condition 6 and Annexure C, the "Seller's Works", and informed by Special Conditions 12 and 17 (T 224, ln 10; T 226, ln 39). That enterprise is said to be property development of the land (that is, Aurora's land having regard to its relationship with the adjoining land) with a view to realising profit on sale (T 221, ln 23). The content of the enterprise is said to be the collection of activities contained in the contractual description (T 226, lns 2123). The enterprise of "the development of the Land" means, it is said, land development carried on at all material times with a view to achieving the "highest and best use [of the land] and maximising the profit on resale" (T 228, lns 3335; T 232, lns 2530; and T 236, ln 35) rather than land development according to particular approvals or a specific conception of a project that might, and usually does, change throughout the course of a property development. 45 The Commissioner contends that Aurora carries on the business of land development which involves buying up land, developing it in different ways and then selling it. The Aurora land, it is said, was acquired as part of that business undertaking. Aurora, it is said, embarked upon a significant or substantial residential property development as part of its broad business undertaking as a property developer. The particular expression of that development, as it applied to the Aurora land, of residential development, was abandoned in favour of the preparation of the land for an "en globo" sale in the course of or in furtherance of Aurora's business of property development. Aurora made, it is said, improvements to the land in order to secure a better price and in doing so embarked upon an activity of carrying out earthworks to improve the land to make it more attractive for en globo sale so as to attract a greater price for the land (T 251, lns 1434). 46 The Commissioner says that the sale of the land was in furtherance of Aurora's business of land development and thus fell within s 95 of the GST Act as a taxable supply, subject to the question of whether the supply was GSTfree by operation of s 930, Division 38 and s 38325 of the GST Act. The Commissioner contends that Aurora did not supply a going concern because it did not supply its business of land development (that is, the broader enterprise of property development) to the recipient and nor did it supply its particular activity of "the carrying out of earthworks" to the recipient. Moreover, the earthworks ceased, it is said, consistent with the contract, prior to completion and thus Aurora did not carry on the relevant activities comprising the relevant enterprise (as a subset as contemplated by s 38325(2)(b) of its larger enterprise of property or land development), "until the day of the supply". 47 Aurora ceased the earthworks activities, it is said, before settlement, as required by the contract, and thus s 38325(2) is not satisfied. 48 Aurora contends that the Commissioner's initial conception of the enterprise is misconceived. 49 First, it reflects an unnecessarily narrow approach to the concept of enterprise because it confines the scope of the enterprise to the specific and detailed characteristics of "residential development" rather than the broader enterprise of acquisition and development of land with a view to realising profit upon sale. Aurora says that the particular elements of the development proposals are simply one form of expression of the development of the relevant land for profitmaking by sale. 50 Secondly, if the enterprise is characterised as the Commissioner contends and that enterprise ceased, Aurora, it is said, did not make a "taxable supply" for the purposes of s 95 of the GST Act at all. 51 Thirdly, the conception of the enterprise as having migrated to one of "the carrying on of earthworks", is simply artificial and inconsistent with the enterprise reflected in the contract. 52 Fourthly, Aurora contends that it continued to undertake the enterprise of developing the land with a view to realising profit upon sale and that the "Seller's Works" were entirely consistent with that enterprise and, in large part, those works were consistent with and required by the particular approvals Aurora had obtained in relation to its proposed development. 53 Fifthly, for the reasons already mentioned, Aurora contends that it continued to undertake works up to and beyond notice of completion of the works (that is, beyond practical completion) and throughout the period of the controversy (including the performance of the settlement) in relation to whether the relevant "flood level" did or did not include a level including "top soil". Moreover, earthworks, although also related to lands owned by Sickle, Atmeygor and AGG continued until at least 22 June 2003. 54 Sixthly, consulting engineers certified compliance with Special Condition 6 on 28 June 2004 on the cusp of settlement on 2 July 2004. 55 Seventhly, if the day of settlement constitutes "the day of the supply", Aurora says that, having regard to the terms of the contract, it assumed continuity of obligations in relation to the land until settlement which has the legal consequence that Aurora continued to "carry on" the relevant enterprise until the assumption of occupation and control by the buyer on the day of settlement, if the day of settlement constitutes "the day of the supply". 56 The second issue for determination then is the bundle of questions concerning the activities undertaken, whether any of those activities ceased and when; and whether, upon all the evidence and the construction of the contract, Aurora carried on the relevant enterprise, as determined, until the day of the supply, as determined. 57 The third issue concerns the question of whether Aurora supplied to the buyer all of the things necessary for the continued operation of the enterprise as found. 58 The final question is one of penalty which will be addressed in these reasons irrespective of the question of whether Aurora is found to have made a GSTfree supply.