Commissioner of Taxation v Cumins
[2008] FCA 353
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2008-03-17
Before
Gilmour J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 The applicant, the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation has petitioned for a sequestration order in respect of the estate of the respondent Mr Brian Cumins. By amended notice of motion dated 20 February 2007 the respondent seeks a stay of the petition until his application for special leave to the High Court (P2 of 2008) and two applications made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal ("AAT") have been finally determined. The application to the High Court concerns the validity of the Bankruptcy Notice which grounds the petition. The first AAT application is to reinstate a challenge to the disallowance by the applicant of objections to some but not all of the assessments issued to the respondent by the applicant. The second is an application for an extension of time for lodging an application for review of a decision. I will deal with these in more detail later.
Background 2 The respondent, Mr Cumins, invested in excess of $5 million in what he described as "Infomercial Schemes" between 1996 and 1998. An "Infomercial", according to the respondent, is an advertising film which is generally shown on television and promotes a product in an informative and objective style. 3 On 23 October 2000, the applicant issued Notices of Amended Assessments to the respondent for the years ended 30 June as follows: Year Ended Amount 1996 $ 3,344,884.24 1997 $ 2,836,956.98 1998 $12,954,263.05 TOTAL $19,136,104.27 4 Those assessments were related to tax deductions claimed by the respondent in connection with his investments in the Infomercial Schemes. Those tax deductions were disallowed by the applicant. 5 On 23 November 2000 the applicant issued further Notices of Amended Assessments to the respondent for the years ended 30 June as follows: Year Amount 1995 $ 243,360.31 1996 $ 123,141.55 1998 $2,619,580.49 TOTAL $2,986,082.35 6 In February 2001 the applicant filed a writ in the Supreme Court of Western Australia to recover from the respondent the amounts of both the October and November 2000 assessments as well as interest and other charges. 7 On 3 August 2001 the respondent commenced review proceedings in the AAT in respect of each of the applicant's decisions to disallow the respondent's objections to the assessments issued on 23 October 2000. In February 2005 the respondent withdrew the proceedings. The respondent says that he did so because he did not have the assistance of the promoters of the Infomercial Schemes including Mr Peter Leslie Ambrosy and that without his assistance it was not possible for him to present his case in the AAT. Pursuant to s 42(A)1B of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975, the affect of the withdrawal was that the AAT proceedings were considered to have been dismissed. 8 In Australian Securities & Investments Commission v Infomercial Management Group Pty Ltd [2002] VSC 262 at [58] the Supreme Court of Victoria held that certain Infomercial schemes were a fraud on the investors, if not on the Australian Taxation Office. These schemes, so claims the respondent, were the ones in which he had invested. 9 Importantly, other than in relation to a very small sum comprised in the 1998 assessment, none of the November 2000 assessments concerned the respondent's investments in the Infomercial Schemes. The assessment for 1998 for $2,619,580.49 was subject to objections by the respondent. These objections failed as did a subsequent review before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). In February 2005 an appeal to this Court from the decision of the AAT was dismissed by consent. The November 2000 assessments for 1995 and 1996 have never been the subject of an application for review or legal challenge. 10 On 15 June 2005 a summary judgment was entered in the Supreme Court proceedings against the respondent for the sum of $38,084,522.24 including interest. The respondent did not consent to the judgment but did not oppose it. The amount of the judgment attributable to the assessments made on 23 November 2000 was $4,778,969.82 including interest charges. The amount of $243,360.31 contained in the amended assessment issued on 23 November 2000 in respect of the 1995 financial year was not included in the judgment sum because it had by then been paid. However interest on this sum was claimed in the writ. 11 On 17 March 2006 the Deputy Commissioner issued a bankruptcy notice which was duly served on the respondent requiring payment, within 21 days after service, in the amount of $38,051,066.24. The amount demanded comprised the sum of the judgment less an amount of $33,456 described in the bankruptcy notice as "payments made and/or credits allowed since date of judgments or orders". 12 On 23 August 2006 the respondent filed a Notice of Appeal in the Supreme Court (CACV 107 of 2006) out of time, to set aside the summary judgment on the basis that he was defrauded by the promoters of a tax avoidance scheme. In February 2007 a single judge dismissed the respondent's application for an extension of time to appeal. In February 2007 the respondent filed an application for review by the Court of Appeal, which was ultimately dismissed. 13 The respondent also failed in proceedings in this Court by which he had sought to set aside the Bankruptcy Notice. This culminated in his appeal to the Full Court (WAD 361 of 2006) being dismissed on 24 December 2007: Cumins v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation [2007] FCAFC 207.