Nexus with assessable income
94 The Commissioner submits that, even if the respondent incurred a loss, it did not fall within either limb of s 51(1) in that it was neither "incurred in gaining or producing the assessable income" nor "necessarily incurred in carrying on a business" for the purpose of gaining or producing such income. The argument is that, by the time the claimed transferable losses accrued, the nexus between the loan from Mercantile Mutual and the assessable income of Chapel Road had long disappeared. Within weeks of refinancing the loan, Chapel Road was in default and Mercantile Mutual had exercised its right under s 63, to enter into receipt of the rents and profits. More importantly, in 1991 Jones Lang Wooten had been appointed by the mortgagee to take over the management of the property. The Commissioner submits that from this time the mortgagee and not Chapel Road was running the business and generating such income as it produced and consequently the required nexus between the borrowing and the assessable income did not exist.
95 I should make clear that I accept that once it was in possession, Mercantile Mutual, and not Chapel Road, was carrying on the rental business in respect of the Bankstown property. In my view, however, Chapel Road did have assessable income in the relevant period and the losses it suffered were incurred in gaining that assessable income. In explaining these views it is necessary to consider the nature of the rights and obligations of a mortgagee in possession.
96 The fundamental character of a mortgage is that it provides security for the monies advanced by the mortgagee. It has been long accepted that whether the mortgage takes the form of ownership, possession or charge, its substance as a security provides the context in which the rights of the parties are determined; Salt v Marquess of Northampton [1892] AC 1; compare Gurfinkel v Bentley Pty Ltd (1966) 116 CLR 98. The mortgagee is entitled to the benefit of the security and, subject to the specific terms of the agreement between the parties, it is entitled to give primacy to this interest in exercising its rights under the mortgage whether in relation to possession or sale. Nevertheless the ambit of these rights is circumscribed by the fact that the mortgagee's rights are limited to the vindication of its security. Consistent with this principle it is well established that the mortgagee is not a trustee for the mortgagor; Kennedy v De Trafford [1897] AC 180, Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (Vic) v General Credits Ltd [1988] VR 571. Nevertheless, it is also well established that the mortgagee is not entitled to ignore the mortgagor's interest where protection of that interest is compatible with its right to protect or realise its security. The principle has been vindicated in a wide variety of cases including those dealing with the mortgagee's right to possession (Quennell v Maltby [1979] 1 WLR 318); the mortgagee's exercise of the power of sale (Latec Investments Ltd v Hotel Terrigal Pty Ltd (in liq) (1965) 113 CLR 265; Forsyth v Blundell (1973) 129 CLR 477); and the mortgagor's right to redeem (Salt v Marquess of Northampton, Stern v McArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489).
97 The mortgage to Mercantile Mutual was created not by way of a transfer of the mortgagor's legal title (as with a mortgage under the general law) but as a charge under s 57(1) of the Real Property Act. On default by Chapel Road, Mercantile Mutual had a right to possession in accordance with ss 60 and 63 which, relevantly, provide:
"60 The mortgagee, chargee or covenant chargee upon default in payment of the principal sum or any part thereof … may:
(a) enter into possession of the mortgaged or charged land by receiving the rents and profits therefor …
…
in the same manner in which he might have made such entry or brought such proceedings if the principal sum … were secured to him by a conveyance of the legal estate in the land so mortgaged or charged.
63(1) Whenever a mortgagee, chargee or covenant chargee gives notice of his demanding to enter into receipt of the rents and profits of the mortgaged or charged land to the tenant or occupier or other person liable to pay or account for the rents and profits thereof, all the powers and remedies of the mortgagor, charger or covenant charger in regard to receipt and recovery of, and giving discharges for, such rents and profits, shall be suspended and transferred to the said mortgagee, chargee or covenant chargee until such notice is withdrawn, or the mortgage, charge or covenant charge is satisfied, and a discharge thereof duly registered."
98 Once Mercantile Mutual gave notice pursuant to s 63(2) that it required the tenants of the Bankstown property to pay their rent to it, Chapel Road's powers as landlord to recover those rents were suspended and transferred to Mercantile Mutual. Mercantile Mutual then became entitled to enter into possession by receiving the rents and profits and, if it wished, to bring proceedings in the Supreme Court for possession in the same manner as it could have done had its mortgage been created by a conveyance of the legal estate rather than by statutory charge under s 57. It is important to note that although s 60 equates the rights of the mortgagee under the statutory charge to those of a mortgagee who has taken a conveyance of the legal estate; it does not equate the mortgagee's rights to those of an unencumbered owner of the land. This is a significant distinction when considering the rights of a mortgagor whose mortgagee has gone into possession.
99 The rights and obligations of a mortgagee who is in possession of the mortgaged land have been established over centuries and have been shaped by the recognition of the mortgagee's interest as a security. As mentioned above, the mortgagee is not a trustee for the mortgagor nor is it obliged to care for the property as an owner might; Kennedy v General Credits Ltd (1982) 2 BPR 9456. The mortgagee is not, however, entitled to disregard the mortgagor's interest entirely and will be liable "if there be gross negligence, by which the property is deteriorated"; Wragg v Denham (1836) 2 Y&C Ex 117 at 121-2; 160 ER 335 at 337.
100 The mortgagor's continuing interest in the property is also recognised in the obligation of the mortgagee to account to the mortgagor not only on the basis of actual receipts but also for that it would have received but for its "wilful default". The obligations of a mortgagee who takes possession of land from which a business is operated were considered in Rowe v Wood (1822) 2 Jac & W 553 at 554-5; 37 ER 740. Rowe v Wood was discussed by Hope JA in Kennedy at 9457-9458. It is not necessary here to consider his Honour's observations in any detail, however it is clear that his Honour accepted that the mortgagee's interest was limited to preserving or realising its security. The mortgagee was not obliged to risk its own capital in speculation that would ultimately benefit the mortgagor it was also not entitled to "enter into speculative transactions or arrangements at the expense of the mortgagor". There are, as Hope JA recognised in Kennedy, considerable difficulties in giving content to terms such as "gross negligence" and "wilful default" but that problem need not be addressed here. For present purposes, it is sufficient to note that both terms recognise the need to balance the legitimate interests of mortgagee and mortgagor.
101 In electing to go into possession and carry on the rental business through its agent, Jones Lang Wooten, Mercantile Mutual was acting primarily for its own benefit in preserving the security it had under the mortgage. While, as the primary judge observed, it would be a mischaracterisation to describe the mortgagee as carrying on Chapel Road's business by treating the business as a thing rather than a course of conduct, such a description would capture a fundamental element of what was occurring. The course of conduct involved in running the business may have been Mercantile Mutual's (through its agent) but its right to the income was limited to a right to apply the income to Chapel Road's debt. It could not be said that Chapel Road had no interest in the business or the income of the business.
102 Mercantile Mutual was obliged to account to Chapel Road for the income and would have been liable for wilful default. If the income of the business had exceeded the amount due to the mortgagee, that excess would have been the income of Chapel Road not Mercantile Mutual. The fact that the income was never sufficient to generate an excess does not, in my opinion, alter the legal rights of the parties. Although such income as was obtained was compulsorily applied to the mortgage debt, it was no less the income of Chapel Road than the wages of an employee which are subject to a garnishee order are still the wages of the employee. The construction of the property that was generating the rental income had been financed by the loan secured by the mortgage. The losses incurred by Chapel Road arose because the rental income was not sufficient to cover the interest payable on that loan. Nevertheless the losses were incurred in generating that income.
103 As Heerey and Edmonds JJ have shown there have been a number of cases where it has been held that a loss or outgoing may be deductible even if it was incurred after the taxpayer was no longer involved in the associated business and when there was no question of the taxpayer deriving any current income. In Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Brown (1999) 43 ATR 1 at 9, the Full Federal Court recognised that, in particular circumstances, the period of time between cessation of the business and the payment of outgoings might be fatal to the required nexus between the two. Referring to Fletcher v Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth of Australia (1991) 173 CLR 1 at 18 and 19, their Honours commented, however, that "it is a "commonsense" or "practical" weighing of all the factors which must provide the ultimate answer." The argument here is much stronger for the taxpayer than the situation in Brown because here the taxpayer was still obtaining income from the business even though it was no longer carrying on the business itself.
104 The decision in Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) v Riverside Road Lodge Pty Ltd (In liq) (1990) 23 FCR 305 does not detract from the authority of these decisions. In that case the nexus no longer existed because, as a result of the sale and lease-back of the property on which a motel business was conducted, interest payments on the loan to finance the construction of the motel no longer related to the (now) tenant's business of running the motel.
105 For all of these reasons I am of the opinion that the nexus between Chapel Road's losses and the gaining of income was such that the losses in respect of the interest can be said to be incurred in gaining the assessable income and therefore were allowable deductions. That being the case his Honour's conclusion that the provisions of s 80G of the 1936 Act had been met and that R&D Holdings was entitled to recoup the losses in question must be upheld. It follows that the Commissioner's notices of contention in respect of his Honour's judgment in relation to the 1998 and 1999 tax years must be dismissed.