THE APPLICANT'S CASE CONCERNING PRIMARY TAX
16 I return to the applicant's first affidavit. Its first exhibit was a spreadsheet prepared by Mr Roos which listed each deposit in the applicant's domestic bank accounts which Ms Roos contended had been included by the Commissioner in his assessable income, together with the size and date of the deposit and, where applicable, reproducing the bank's description of it. There were about 74 entries listed commencing in 2006 and ending in 2013. Strangely, six of these were not deposits but appeared to be withdrawals. Of the other deposits, about 62% (or 46) of them, were illuminated by the single word "deposit". The balance, contained additional words of description inserted by the bank, such as "Deposit ETRADE" or "Deposit Greenday Corp" or "Deposit Johnston R S-PAC." Against each entry in the spreadsheet had been inserted a code starting with "A1" and ending in "P1".
17 In his affidavit, the applicant sought to interrogate each deposit and explain what he thought each was. A good deal, 14 in total, or in aggregate about $516,686, the applicant could not explain at all. Of the balance, a great part of what the applicant said I ruled as inadmissible, or indicated that I would give the content little weight, and for that purpose gave limited leave in such cases for the applicant to lead further evidence in chief orally to determine whether there might be any basis for what had been asserted. For the most part there was only the applicant's assertion about the reason for a deposit. No executed written agreements, such as loan contracts, were exhibited. No receipts or invoices were produced into evidence. No personal books of account were proffered that might have assisted the applicant in proving his case. Indeed, it would appear that he kept no books of account at all (save in the case of Healthtec and Greenday and Dominion Investments (WA) Pty Ltd ("Dominion"), a company owned and controlled by the applicant - as to which, see below).
18 Ten entries, in aggregate about $563,560, were said to be internal bank transfers. Save in one case, I refused to admit into evidence those paragraphs of the applicant's first affidavit in which this assertion was made on the ground that the applicant was speculating or seeking to adduce conclusory inadmissible lay opinion evidence. Paragraph [22(a)] of his affidavit illustrates this vice. It reads:
I refer to Transaction A1, being a deposit of $20,000 into my WBC Investment Property Loan Account on 10 July 2006. Given the timing and the rounded amount of this deposit, I believe that this deposit is an internal bank transfer. Accordingly, I have identified this transaction as a Category 5 deposit.
19 I find, by the expressions used in this paragraph and others like it, that the applicant had no actual knowledge of what this deposit was about, but was instead seeking to draw inferences about its possible provenance from the timing of the deposit and its rounded amount. His resulting opinion was not admissible as lay evidence. The one exception in this category was the transaction known as "A6" being an alleged internal transfer of $243,650.12 made on 3 November 2006. The Commissioner did not object to the admissibility of the paragraph in the applicant's affidavit concerning this deposit. In that paragraph, the applicant deposed that this was a one-off transfer of "personal funds" into another bank account of his. He exhibited in support of that statement, a letter written to him by Westpac Banking Corporation ("Westpac") on 3 November 2006. The letter related to the opening of a new account and under the heading "Payments" the letter recorded the following:
As directed, we made the following payments on the day we opened your loan account:
….
Surplus to [a bank account number is identified] $243,650.12.
20 This letter does not support the contention that this was an internal bank transfer and not a derivation of assessable income. It simply is evidence of a transfer of funds. Where those funds came from is unclear to me. In cross-examination it also became clear that the applicant had no real personal recollection of this deposit. Having given evidence that internal transfers were made in or around the third week of each month, he was questioned about the timing of this deposit and gave the following answers:
Now, Mr Bosanac, 3 November 2006 wasn't anywhere near the third week of the month, was it?---No, but this may not have been a top up of the facility being out of order. This may have been an amount that has been identified by Mr Roos across the actual statements.
Well, Mr Bosanac, your evidence, on oath, is that you have identified documents that you have treated as internal transfers by firstly the - the approximate time that you got your phone call from the bank telling you your accounts were out of order, which you have indicated was about the third week of each month, and you would there and then authorise them to do the transfer?---Yes.
That's the one basis on which you have assisted your recollection?---Yes.
And plainly 3 November 2006 was not in the third week of any month. Do you accept that?---Yes, I do, but if you read the actual statement, it actually delineates the reason for the - for it coming from one account to the other.
You have also indicated, on oath, in the last sentence in the paragraph that I just took you to of your affidavit, that the internal transfers "....were always rounded amounts".
Was this a rounded amount?---This is - from what my reading is here, Mr Roos has identified this as the actual opening of the bridging finance.
Well, it's not what Mr Roos has identified, it's your evidence - - -?---He would have - - -- how you - - -?--- - - - shown this in the bank statements to me and then we would have, together, put it into the necessary category.
21 When the applicant gave the answer - "[t]his may have been an amount that has been identified by Mr Roos across the actual statements" - it became clear that the applicant was largely relying on the work of Mr Roos to reconstruct his bank account and had no independent recollection of this transfer which "may have" been identified by Mr Roos. I am, therefore, not satisfied that this was not an amount of assessable income.
22 Ten deposits, in aggregate about $749,216, were said to relate to share transactions. The applicant did not dispute that the gains made from the sale of shares were taxable; he did, however, contend that that gains made were on capital account. I refused to admit into evidence five paragraphs directed at five of these deposits. They again constituted inadmissible lay opinion evidence or in some cases were inadmissible hearsay. I rejected as inadmissible hearsay, evidence said to support the existence of another two transactions. I admitted into evidence two further paragraphs said to evidence two deposits, as it appeared from the language used that the applicant might have actual knowledge of what they were about. Three further deposits were the subject of paragraphs against which the Commissioner made no objection. However, in each case, the details of the transaction were very thin. An example is [22(e)] of the first affidavit, which reads:
I refer to Transaction A5, being a deposit of $15,100 into my WBC Investment Property Loan Account on 24 October 2006 described as "Deposit Tolhurst Noall". I have identified this transaction as funds received from Tolhurst Noall, a stockbroking firm that I used for share transactions during the relevant period (2006 to 2013), as a result of the sale of shares. I have made enquiries with Patersons Securities Limited (Patersons), the stockbroking [sic] that incorporated Tolhurst Noall in or around 2009, and they have informed me that they do not have any records available relating to this share transaction, given the elapse of time. I can say with certainty that the only reason that a deposit would be paid into my personal bank account by Tolhurst Noall would be as a result of share transactions. Accordingly, I have identified this transaction as a Category 4 deposit. Annexed to this affidavit and marked "VB-4" is a copy of an email from myself to Mason King dated 1 November 2016, a stockbroker currently employed by CPS Capital who now, due to a number of brokers consolidating into one firm being CPS Capital, holds my records from Tolhurst Noall. My email requests information regarding the relevant contact at Patersons and shows Mr King's response of the same date.
23 Notably, nothing is said in this paragraph to demonstrate whether the shares sold were held on capital or revenue account. No further evidence was led in chief to demonstrate the basis for the applicant's belief set out above. Exhibit "VB-4" to the applicant's first affidavit was no more than an email, sent well after the year in dispute, which shed no light on the nature of the deposit other than to confirm that the applicant had an account at Tolhurst Noall. Paragraph [24(e)] of the applicant's affidavit which I also admitted into evidence, was to similar effect.
24 The conclusion I reached from these deposits, is that if they evidenced gains made from the sale of shares, then the applicant had nonetheless not discharged his onus of proof of showing that the shares were held on capital account (and thus eligible for the capital gains tax discount available for individuals). I otherwise infer, by reason of the scale and regularity of the gains made from trading in shares, that the applicant was in a business, of some form, of share trading.
25 In his closing written submissions, the applicant complained that he had only been given notice that he was obliged to prove that gains made from the sale of shares were, as he contended, on capital account, at the trial when I raised this issue with his counsel. He submitted that I had wrongly not given him general leave to lead evidence orally and in chief on this topic (as to which, see below). These complaints are without merit. Leave was not given because the case had proceeded on the basis that evidence in chief was to be given by affidavit, and because the Commissioner would have been exposed to the prejudice of new evidence without the ability to have it properly tested. Moreover, the applicant, represented by counsel, should have known that part of the discharge of his onus in this case included proving that shares were held on capital account. In that respect, the Commissioner's appeal statement, filed 2 September 2016, made it clear under the heading "Contentions" that the "onus of proof" rested "in all matters" on the applicant. No complaint was ever made about this paragraph. Nor did the applicant suggest in closing that this issue had been conceded by the Commissioner. Further, I had expressly raised this issue with the applicant at a directions hearing on 1 March 2018. No fresh evidence, save for a small bundle (which I will return to) was thereafter adduced in relation to this issue, even though the applicant led new evidence on other issues.
26 It is perhaps appropriate at this point to record that, in opening, and again in his closing written submissions, the applicant pressed a general submission that he should have been given leave to lead evidence on all topics orally, including the capital account issue referred to above. He relied on s 47(6) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) for that contention. That provision provides:
Subject to this section and section 47A and without prejudice to any other law that would, if this subsection had not been enacted, expressly permit any testimony to be otherwise given, testimony at the trial of causes shall be given orally in court.
27 Leaving aside the fact that the applicant had himself filed affidavits in 2016 and in 2017, and had been content to allow evidence in chief to be adduced by way of affidavit until the first day of the trial, that submission is misconceived. Section 47(6) commences with the words "[s]ubject to this section". Section 47(3) provides:
The Court or a Judge may at any time, for sufficient reason and on such conditions (if any) as the Court or Judge thinks necessary in the interests of justice, direct or allow proof by affidavit at the trial of a cause to such extent as the Court or Judge thinks fit.
28 Section 47(6) is thus subordinate to s 47(3). Orders for the filing of affidavits to be relied on at trial in this proceeding were first made by this Court on 22 September 2016. This submission is rejected.
29 The next category of deposit was described by the applicant as "reimbursements of business expenses". In aggregate, it amounted to about $20,483. An example of these may be found at [22(j)] of the applicant's first affidavit, which reads:
I refer to Transaction A10, being a deposit of $9,050.96 into my WBC Investment Property Loan Account on 5 January 2007. Given the amount of this deposit, I believe that this deposit is a reimbursement for business expenses personally incurred as a result of Greenday providing consultancy services. Accordingly, I have identified this transaction as a Category 6 deposit.
30 There were nine deposits said to be of this kind and nine paragraphs, expressed in similar terms, addressing each said deposit. In each case, I refused to admit the paragraphs into evidence as they comprised either speculation or inadmissible lay opinion evidence. Even if I had admitted them into evidence, I would have given them no weight.
31 The next category of deposits were said by the applicant to be receipts of monies to buy shares for third parties. I accept, in general terms, the applicant's contention that, from time to time, he received monies to arrange for share placements on behalf of third parties. Whether these funds were received beneficially or were impressed with some form of trust, was neither the subject of evidence or submission. However, whether the identified deposits constituted the receipt of such monies is another matter. There were 10 paragraphs in the applicant's first affidavit which addressed 10 such alleged deposits, in aggregate about $445,200, (on one view a further $18,000 should be included in this category). I declined to admit into evidence four of these paragraphs. For example, I rejected [24(l)] of the applicant's first affidavit, which reads:
I refer to Transaction C12, being a deposit of $15,000 into my WBC Rocket Home Loan Account on 11 January 2008. I have identified this transaction as being a Category 1 deposit. Although I cannot say with certainty the reason that I received the funds because of the elapse of time, given the surrounding transactions in January and February 2008 described above in paragraph 24(k) and below in paragraph 24(p) and 24(q), I am extremely confident that this deposit was also for the placement of shares, likely in SBN Medical Billing.
32 Notwithstanding the confidence with which this was expressed, it nonetheless was inadmissible lay opinion evidence. I rejected [24(m)], [24(n)] and [28] for the same reason. I admitted into evidence the remaining paragraphs addressing this category and again gave the applicant leave to lead evidence in chief orally to establish a basis for the assertions he had made. An example is at [22(r)] which reads:
I refer to Transaction A18, being a deposit of $57,000 into my WBC Classic Plus Account on 13 March 2007 described as "Deposit Leasing Brisbane Regalquest Invest". I have identified this deposit as being a deposit relation [sic] to a business contact sending money for shares investment, being a Category 1 deposit
No further oral evidence in chief was adduced about this deposit. Another example is at [24(k)] which reads:
I refer to Transaction C11, being a deposit of $5,000 into my WBC Rocket Home Loan Account on 2 January 2008 described as "Deposit Paul Paul SBN Medical". I have identified this transaction as being a Category 1 deposit. These funds were received from Paul Lambrecht, a business contact of mine, for the placement of shares in SBN Medical Billing.
33 In examination in chief, I disallowed a question from counsel for the applicant which asked why the deposits should not be treated "as income". The following exchange then took place:
MR FICKLING: Well can you explain to the best of your - from your knowledge what that is?---It's very clear to me Mr Lambrecht has identified the SBN placement that was being conducted at the time as - and why he sent the money to my account which would have then either been a reimbursement because I put the money up previously for him or it would have then been forwarded onto the company because I would have had my bank details available for him to send it to me along with a - a number of other people that have been identified around the same period that have done this.
HIS HONOUR: Mr Bosanac, when you say "would have", is that because you don't actually have a present recollection of this particular matter?---No, I absolutely remember Mr Lambrecht sending funds to me - - -
Yes?--- - - - and that the SBN delineation on that balance - on that actual statement says to me why he's - he - there's a few people that have been smart enough to actually put the company's ticket code from the ASX against why they've sent me the money so I can absolutely identify that.
But is that because you're interpreting the document or because you know it?---I'm interpreting it from the bank statement.
[my emphasis]
34 The foregoing passage illustrates the danger of accepting unsubstantiated and uncorroborated assertion. It reveals that the applicant's suggested knowledge of this transaction was really his attempt to interpret the spreadsheet and draw an inference from the contents of the description given to the transaction by his bank. A similar observation may be made about the answers given in chief about [24(p)]. That paragraph states:
I refer to Transaction C16, being a deposit of $5,000 into my WBC Rocket Home Loan Account on 1 February 2008. I have identified this transaction as being a Category 1 deposit. These funds were received from Mr Lambrecht for the placement of further shares in SBN Medical Billing (in addition to those purchased upon receipt of funds on 2 January 2008 as described above in paragraph 24(k)).
35 In examination in chief, the following exchange took place:
Okay. And if we continue on to paragraph P. Why do you say that this transaction was also from Mr Lambrecht?---First of all the dates correspond directly to when Ashok also took his position up. And I - I would suggest that this is for SBN at the same time because possibly Ashok or one of Paul's other clients who would have been taking up part of the position fell short and Paul took up the balance.
36 This answer, if anything, detracts from whatever probative force [24(p)] might have had, if any. The same may be said about the deposit addressed by [24(q)]. In oral examination it became clear that the witness' knowledge of this deposit rose no higher than a "belief" about what it might have been. Whilst in examination in chief, the applicant professed a stronger memory about the deposit described in his first affidavit at [24(o)]. But what he remembered was "ASHOK investing in SBN", as distinct from what this deposit was about. Finally, no further evidence in chief was adduced in relation to another deposit described at [33(b)]. But, in cross-examination about that paragraph, the applicant admitted that, following the preparation and swearing of his first affidavit, this sum was identified by him as income. No attempt was made to correct this error in either his second or third affidavit, even though the size of the sum was significant, namely $300,000.
37 It follows that I reject each explanation for the deposits described in this category.
38 The next category concerns the receipt of $13,000 for the disposal of a car in 2007 to the brother of Mr Thompson, the applicant's former accountant. I am satisfied that this is the correct explanation for this deposit. It is corroborated by an affidavit sworn by Mr Thompson on 2 December 2016.
39 The final category concerned alleged repayments of monies said to have been advanced by the applicant to third parties. There were around 12 such alleged repayments. They varied greatly in size from $2,500 to $982,500. In total, the deposits amounted to about $2,150,316. In almost all cases, the loans were not documented. In a few cases, unexecuted copies of loan agreements were adduced into evidence. No copies of any executed loan contracts were ever produced. I admitted into evidence most of the contents of all the paragraphs of the applicant's first affidavit that related to these alleged loans. Again, the content of these paragraphs was very thin and without more evidence, would not be sufficient to prove the existence of any debtor/creditor relationship. I gave leave for evidence to be adduced orally in chief to establish a potential basis for the repeated assertions of the applicant that he had "advanced" monies. In most cases the evidence elicited did not go beyond the original bare assertion that a loan had existed. For example, [23(a)] relevantly read:
I refer to Transaction B1, being a deposit of $79,560 into my WBC Investment Property Loan Account on 25 October 2007. I have identified this transaction as repayment of funds loaned to Dominion, being a Category 3 deposit. These funds were transferred from the Dominion transactions account, account number [account number identified] (Dominion Transactions Account), to repay funds that I had personally advanced to Dominion so that Dominion could purchase shares.
40 In oral examination in chief, Mr Fickling, counsel for the applicant, properly observed that the Court was not going to get anything beyond assertion in relation to these so-called loans. That same conclusion applies to what was asserted by the applicant as "advances" in [24(r)], [24(s)] and [24(u)] of this first affidavit. One alleged loan, in the sum of $2,500, was different because it was said to have been advanced to Mr Cross, a former business partner. The applicant, other than identifying it, gave no evidence about this alleged loan, but instead referred to evidence given by Mr Cross on this subject. However, I ruled that part of the affidavit of Mr Cross inadmissible, as it was speculation or lay opinion evidence.
41 No other meaningful evidence was adduced in examination in chief in relation to the deposits said to be loans as described at [23(b)], [23(c)] and [23(d)].
42 Paragraph [27] was in these terms:
I refer to Transaction E1, being a deposit of $103,149.32 into my WBC Investment Property Loan Account on 13 July 2007 described as "Healthtec Growth Quipoz loan Repayment". I have identified this transaction as repayment of funds advanced to Quizpoz [sic] Limited (Quipoz), being a Category 2 deposit. These funds were received from Quizpoz [sic] for repayment of a loan that I had advanced to the company pending the completion of a capital raising. Annexed to this affidavit and marked "VB-13" is a copy of a bank statement of HealthTec Growth Partners Pty Ltd (subsequently re-named to Greenday Corporate Pty Ltd), account number 566036694, for the period from 7 July 2007 to 13 July 2007, which shows a debit transaction of $103,149.32 on 13 July described as "Quipoz Loan Repay". I am also aware that Kevin Fell, former Chief Operating Officer of Quipoz, has provided evidence on affidavit concerning the payment.
43 I address Mr Fell's evidence below. Exhibit "VB-13", referenced in [27], did not corroborate the assertion that funds had been advanced by the applicant to Quipoz Limited. The exhibit is a Healthtec bank statement. But Healthtec's role in relation to this alleged loan was never explained. In examination in chief, the applicant said he had been repaid "indirectly." No such statement was made, however, in the applicant's affidavit and answers given in the witness box rose no higher than assertion. I am not satisfied, on this evidence, that the alleged loan existed.
44 The deposits described at [29] and [31(d)] were the subject of a narrowly cast concession by the Commissioner, discussed below. No evidence in chief was led orally about these deposits. Paragraph [29] contained another assertion about an alleged advance of funds in 2008, sought to be corroborated by two documents created in 2015 and 2016. Those documents could not evidence that alleged 2008 loan. I make the same finding for similar reasons about the deposit described at [31(d)], which relies on the same documents for corroboration.
45 In relation to the largest alleged loan in the sum of $982,500, more time was spent seeking to adduce evidence in chief from the applicant. This was said to be a repayment, on 28 December 2007, of funds "advanced" by the applicant to Advanced Ocular Systems Ltd ("AOS") (now known as IFS). Paragraph [25] of the applicant's first affidavit states:
I refer to Transaction D1, being a deposit of $982,500 into my WBC Rocket Home Loan Account on 28 December 2007. I have identified this transaction as repayment of funds advanced to Advanced Ocular Systems Limited (AOS), in relation to the repayment of funds advanced for the purchase of the Westfield Property Project on behalf of AOS … being a Category 2 deposit. These funds were received from AOS for repayment of a loan that I had advanced to the company pending the completion of a capital raising.
46 Six documents were exhibited to the applicant's first affidavit in relation to this payment. They undoubtedly show that the applicant had a business relationship of some kind with AOS and possibly that the monies in issue came from that company, but they did not evidence a pre-existing relationship of debtor and creditor. They also did not evidence any advance from the applicant to AOS.
47 Some attempt was made to corroborate this alleged loan. An affidavit of a Mr Cuperus was read. But he had no personal knowledge of the payment made by the applicant to AOS as he only joined that company after the repayment had allegedly taken place. Accordingly, his evidence could not corroborate the alleged loan.
48 The applicant also tendered a bundle of documents, called the "Westfield Bundle of Documents", in support of the existence of this alleged loan. The applicant claimed that this loan was associated with the funding of a property investment called "Westfield". These documents might prove that there had been a Westfield project; they did not, however, prove that the deposit of $982,500 was the repayment of a loan.
49 Finally, the applicant tendered an announcement made by AOS to the Australian Stock Exchange dated 17 December 2007. The document does not refer to any loan between the applicant and AOS. Indeed, it does not refer to the applicant at all.
50 I gave the applicant's counsel leave to lead orally evidence in chief to see whether a satisfactory evidentiary basis for the alleged advance might be discovered. The applicant was asked, without objection being taken, "why it was that you needed to be repaid for this transaction." The response given in chief mostly comprised a narrative of enquiries that the applicant had made to try to determine what the deposit of $982,500 might have concerned. This included making enquiries of Mr Cuperus, and Mr Cross. Mr Cross, who had sworn two affidavits in this proceeding, gave inadmissible evidence about this alleged loan. Like Mr Cuperus, he joined AOS/IFS after the alleged repayment had been made.
51 An affidavit of Mr Iemma, an entertainer, was also relied upon. That affidavit said nothing about any alleged loan in the sum of $982,500 between the applicant and AOS. Yet, the applicant gave oral evidence in chief that he had asked Mr Iemma on the Friday evening before the commencement of the trial "why would I have got this large a payment from - out of the Westfield transaction with AOS?" Mr Iemma, and his father, had invested in the Westfield transaction. The answer given by the applicant reveals that as late as the week before the trial, he was still trying to understand this deposit. In my view, when his answers in chief are considered in totality, I find that the applicant had no real, actual memory of why he received this sum on 28 December 2007. When pressed by me as to whether he really had a personal recollection of this amount, the applicant said that he did "now". It follows, however, that he had no such personal recollection when he swore his first affidavit: cf Nicholson v Zizza [2005] FCA 257 at [8]. Moreover, having had the advantage of seeing him and having heard from him, I find that he still does not have any such personal recollection. That is why he was still asking Mr Iemma about it the week before the trial. I am fortified in that conclusion by answers given by the applicant in cross-examination in which he variously stated that he had advanced around $1.5 million and then subsequently "$1.8 million in totality". The applicant's lack of recollection is understandable. The deposit took place over 10 years ago and the applicant failed to create and then retain sufficient business records about it.
52 As already mentioned, counsel for the Commissioner made a concession in relation to the two deposits described at [29] and [31(d)]. One was a deposit of $250,000 said to have been a repayment of another loan made to AOS (IFS). The other was a deposit of $350,000, again said to have been a repayment of yet another loan to AOS. The Commissioner conceded that each of these deposits was not assessable income, but did not otherwise admit the underlying factual foundation alleged by the applicant that each was a repayment of a loan (a much smaller concession had also been made, totalling $3,111 for that 2013 year). The applicant nonetheless wanted to rely on these two deposits to support a more general finding that the other loans he had allegedly made were in fact loans, in particular in relation to the large alleged repayment of $982,500. In that respect, the applicant submitted that a pattern of evidence may render the existence of a transaction more probable. He referred to Krew v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1971) 71 ATC 4213; 2 ATR 230 ("Krew"). In that case, the taxpayer, who was in the metal and hardware business, had been issued with an asset betterment assessment. He contended that cash kept in his safe was the product of successful gambling. Walsh J found that this was so for some of the years in dispute. His Honour reached that conclusion from an examination of the bank accounts of the taxpayer and in some cases drew inferences from the size and timing of deposits and withdrawals. For example in relation to the 1951 year of income, Walsh J described a series of transfers made to a bank account and said at 4222:
It is unlikely, I think, that much of that money came from unrecorded dealings in the metal business. When the details of these deposits are considered… and when regard is had to the pattern of substantial cash withdrawals in the same year and to the oral evidence of the gambling activities of the appellant at this time, I think it is more likely than not that these deposits, or a substantial part of them, came from the proceeds of gambling, either directly or by way of the safe.
[my emphasis]
53 The applicant also relied on what Burchett J had said in Ma v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1992) 37 FCR 225 ("Ma") at 233:
Furthermore, the making of estimates upon inexact evidence, which is so much a feature of both judicial and administrative decision-making, cannot be uniquely excluded from appeals against betterment assessments. To refuse to consider the credit, not only of the applicant, but also of his independent and unchallenged witnesses, simply because the effect of the evidence was to support his accountant's generalizations about double-counting rather than to hit upon a precise figure, was to fall into an error of law.
54 In my view, given the paucity of the evidence led concerning each alleged loan, and the narrowness of the Commissioner's concession, I am not able to make inferences here of the kind made by Walsh J. That is because there is no equivalent in this case of the "great mass of evidence" described by Walsh J (at 4219) and which was apparently before his Honour in Krew. Whilst it is difficult for me to appreciate what that "great mass" included, unlike the case before me here, it would appear that the taxpayer in Krew gave positive evidence about how his gambling led to significant winnings. For example, he gave evidence about the success of his horse "Gay Venture" in 1949.
55 In contrast, here, very little evidence was led about how the applicant earned his income, and what corporate structure he had in place. I do not know how the Singapore companies traded in shares. I do not know why those entities acquired or sold any particular class of shares. I do not know whether the four companies were the only entities comprising the so-called offshore structure. In cross-examination, the applicant appeared to accept that one of the entities through which he traded in shares was called "Devonport Traders Ltd" which had an address based in the British Virgin Islands and a "please reply address" in Lichtenstein. The applicant led no evidence about this entity.
56 Nor is this a case like Ma, where there was "inexact evidence." This is a case where there is only assertion, or evidence upon which I can give no, or very little, weight.
57 Compounding the problem for the applicant is that, in cross-examination, the size of his considerable wealth was exposed, if only in part. Three loan applications to Westpac dated 8 February 2006, 24 October 2006 and 20 June 2007 respectively, and signed by the applicant on each occasion, were tendered into evidence. In cross-examination, the applicant agreed that the financial details comprised in each application were the product of statements he had made to Westpac. The first application disclosed that he and his former wife owned property assets valued at about $8,475,000, shares valued at about $24,841,100 and motorcars to the value of about $281,000. The applicant further accepted that the shares he had valued included those held by him via his Singapore companies (the value of these shares included certain shares he thought he was to receive, but which he did not). The application also contained statements made by the applicant to his bank that he earned monthly income of $32,047 and that his annual gross income was $772,000. The other two forms contained similar statements. In cross-examination, the applicant did not dispute the accuracy of these figures save for one possible mistake in the third form. The size and nature of these earnings and assets required proper explanation; no such explanation, however, was to be found in the affidavits relied upon by the applicant.
58 For these reasons I am not satisfied that the applicant has discharged his onus of proving that any of the deposits were repayments of loans he had advanced to third parties, in particular, I am not so satisfied in relation to the alleged repayment of $982,500. In reaching this conclusion, I have taken into account the fact that the Commissioner chose not to cross-examine the applicant in relation to this particular loan. But I am nonetheless not prepared, on the scant material before me, and in the absence of clear evidence concerning the sources of the applicant's wealth, to make a positive finding that the deposits constituted the repayment of loans. The foregoing illustrates the fiscal peril of carrying on a largely undocumented business.
59 In his closing written submissions, counsel for the applicant sought to resist the making of adverse findings about the applicant, because of alleged breaches of the rule in Browne v Dunn (1894) 6 R 67. That submission is, with respect, misconceived. For the most part, the Commissioner did not seek to challenge directly the evidence given by the applicant. He did not need to because it was largely deficient or because the applicant gave answers in cross-examination that were truthful. When he did need to challenge the applicant's evidence concerning, for example, the preparation of his income tax returns in 2015, counsel for the Commissioner did properly put adverse propositions to the applicant (see below).
60 I should say something about the affidavit material relied upon in an attempt to corroborate the assertions made by the applicant in his first affidavit. First, there were the two affidavits of his business associate, Mr Cross. Mr Cross deposed in his first affidavit that he and the applicant split the consultancy income derived "through" Greenday, on a 50/50 basis. That evidence, which I accept, did not address any particular amount assessed by the Commissioner to be income. The balance of the affidavit I ruled as inadmissible. It was speculation.
61 The second affidavit, which was three paragraphs long, gave highly generalised evidence about an earlier company used to supply consultancy services, called Healthtec. It also exhibited summary spreadsheets setting out the profit and losses of Greenday and Healthtec. Once again, this evidence did not address any particular amount included in the applicant's assessable income. Nor were the summary spreadsheets of any assistance. Their origin was not identified. I do not know if they were the product of audited accounts, and again they did not shed light as to how the applicant became entitled to consultancy income. Did these companies act as his agent? Did they pay the applicant dividends? One does not know.
62 Secondly, there was the affidavit of Mr Newman. He deposed that he was a co-investor in "opportunities" presented to him by the applicant. I largely ruled his evidence as inadmissible. It was again speculation.
63 Thirdly, there was the affidavit of Mr Lambrecht. He was a "business contact" of the applicant. I ruled the relevant parts of his affidavit to be inadmissible. It was yet again speculation.
64 Fourthly, was the affidavit of Mr Iemma. He was an "entertainer". I again ruled the relevant part of his affidavit as inadmissible speculation or hearsay.
65 Fifthly, there was the affidavit of Mr Fell. He was the chief operating officer of Quipoz Limited. He swore a very brief affidavit comprising of only three paragraphs in which he deposed in the most general way to an unspecified cash flow shortage that his company was experiencing "in or around 2007". He then asserted that "in or around 2007" the applicant "provided a loan to Quipoz". To the best of his recollection the loan was in the amount of "around $100,000 and was subsequently repaid by Quipoz to [the applicant] later the same year". I admitted these paragraphs into evidence. Mr Fell was then cross-examined. The following exchange then took place:
Thank you. Now, you indicate in your affidavit that this was a loan advanced to Quipoz. Do you recall the date of the loan?---No ..... on the circumstances because of a particular ..... but - as in particular occurrence, but I can't give you the exact dates, that's why there was a little bit of looseness around pinpointing the exact date. I can be pretty rough around that, but I can be certain around the circumstances.
All right. And do you recall the month in 2007? If you don't recall - - -?---All I can do is give you the background and I can answer your question, if you're wanting me to be specific, I would have to say, no, I can't recall a date.
All right. Now, I was just wanting to know if you recalled the month. That was all? If you don't - - -?---Yes, roughly, the date of the request would be sort of January, February 2007, and I would expect the debt was repaid a number of months after that, but that - like I said, the dates are not as certain to me as the circumstances around why the loan was required.
All right. So you say roughly - you're trying to recollect January or February and it was repaid, you say, some months later?---I would guess so ..... chief operating officer, there was a CEO who was also the CFO, which - who handled all the repayments. I actually made the request for the loan and ..... actually took place, and I know for a fact that it was then paid back ..... who were the accountants at the time, would have records of that.
But you weren't directly involved in that process, were you?--- ..... process of asking for the loan and - - -
No. I'm sorry, I'm speaking about the repayment of the loan?---No, the CFO would have made the loan.
66 Whilst Mr Fell thought that the loan was repaid "some months later" after January or February 2007, the deposit said to be the product of this alleged repayment in fact took place on 13 July 2007. Moreover, as the exchange set out above reveals, Mr Fell could not give specific evidence about the alleged loan. He did not handle the repayments and his recollection was "pretty rough". I am not persuaded that Mr Fell had any useful recollection of the alleged loan. He certainly was not able to corroborate that the specific deposit of $103,149.32 made on 13 July 2007 was the repayment of the suggested loan of $100,000. The terms of the alleged loan were never identified. The manner in which funds were allegedly advanced was not identified. All Mr Fell said in conclusory terms was that the applicant "provided a loan to Quipoz".
67 Sixthly, Mr Cuperus, who was the chief financial officer and company secretary of IFS between April 2008 and October 2009, as already mentioned, swore an affidavit. I rejected his evidence concerning the $982,500 deposit as he had had no personal involvement with this alleged transaction.
68 Seventhly, Mr Evans, who was a registered builder, swore two affidavits. Each concerned work undertaken in relation to a property in West Perth. This evidence appeared to relate to a claim concerning the calculation of the cost base of an asset for the purposes of Pt 3-1 of the 1997 Act. This claim was ultimately not pursued.
69 Eighthly, there were three affidavits filed by Mr Thompson. The first contained evidence corroborating the sale of the car. The second exhibited certain management accounts and a balance sheet of Greenday for some of the years in dispute. This exhibit was not referred to by the applicant in opening or in closing submissions. One paragraph addressed the preparation of the income tax returns in 2015: Mr Thompson said he did not include the consulting fees derived through Greenday in those returns because they had been received by Dominion. The third affidavit is dealt with below.
70 Compounding the problem I had with this third party evidence is that the applicant, who had read their affidavits, had spoken to some of the witnesses about some of the transactions he was endeavouring to prove. In cross-examination of the applicant, the following exchange took place:
Did you speak to Mr Lambrecht before swearing your affidavit about this 40 transaction - - -?---I - I - - - back in 2016?---I believe before I would have spoken to him to say, "Why would I have received this money from you?" and - because I know there is no way he would be sending me money for personal exertion, so I was trying to understand it with that designation. I - and I asked him if it would have been for the SBN transaction at the time, and that - as - as best as he could remember, that's why that designation was on there, but he wouldn't have been buying shares from me personally or paying me to have done some sort of job for him.
But it was after you had that conversation that you swore your affidavit in December 2016?---Possibly. I'm - I couldn't honestly tell you which came - the - the horse or the cart on the conversations with him. As we were trying to identify deposits with Mr Roos, I would have spoken to Mr Iemma, I would have spoken to [Mr Lambrecht]; I didn't speak to Ashok because once I ascertained on [Mr Lambrecht's] one the right designation, I was sure was Ashok's were, so - - -
So you spoke to Mr - well, you certainly spoke to Mr Roos before you swore your affidavit?---Yes.
And as part of that process, in addition to looking at documents, you spoke to these various people whose names you've just mentioned - - -?---Yes.
- - - to refresh your memory and to assist you in working out what these transactions were about. Is that correct?---Correct.
So you talk about Mr Lambrecht, Mr Iemma, and you say you didn't speak to Ashok?---No, I didn't.
So who else did you speak to about these transactions?---I - I remember speaking to [Mr] Evans - - -
Yes?--- - - - at the time because some of the - the funds were [Mr] Evans, and both [Mr Lambrecht] and [Mr Iemma].
71 In my view, there is a risk that because of the conversations the applicant had with Mr Lambrecht, Mr Iemma, Mr Roos and Mr Evans, the evidence those witnesses gave became infected with the applicant's objectives or hopes. That renders their evidence all the more unreliable: Day v Perisher Blue Pty Ltd (2003) 62 NSWLR 731 at [30].
72 It follows, that the witnesses called to corroborate the applicant's evidence did not progress the applicant's claim in any meaningful way.