questions four, six, seven, eleven, twelve and fifteen
26 These questions can be considered together as they essentially raise the same issue. It was submitted for the applicants that the Tribunal failed to take into account as relevant considerations when speculating as to the future likely compliance of Mr Delis that the Commissioner of Taxation ("the Commissioner") "who importantly had the general administration of all Relevant Legislation" had:
(a) granted the applicants payment arrangements by way of extensions of time to pay their taxation liabilities, despite prior instances where they had not complied with the terms of other such extensions of time to pay those taxation liabilities; and
(b) due to the circumstances of Mr Delis, remitted penalties and interest imposed on the applicants for non-compliance with their taxation obligations and had not imposed administrative penalties upon Delis Enterprises when it did not lodge superannuation guarantee statements on time.
27 It was submitted that the Tribunal reached its decision that Mr Delis was not a fit and proper person to be registered as a tax agent without paying regard to, or without giving proper or sufficient regard to, the decisions of the Commissioner "concerning the full remission of penalties and interest initially imposed and (excusable) failures in regard to which the Commissioner never imposed administrative penalties ("the Commissioner's Decisions")". It was submitted that the Commissioner's Decisions "provided the Tribunal with a sound basis to properly imply that the conduct of the Applicants referable to these decisions of the Commissioner was in all the circumstances excusable, and consequently did not adversely impact upon the fitness or propriety of [Mr Delis] to be registered as a tax agent". Accordingly, so the argument went, by not so concluding the Tribunal erred in law.
28 Having regard to the nature, scope and object of the legislation, I accept that it was relevant for the Tribunal to take into account whether the applicants had complied with their taxation obligations and, in that regard, any circumstances in mitigation of their conduct. In that regard, whether the Commissioner imposed penalties for non-compliance or remitted penalties or entered into payment arrangements may be relevant considerations to take into account in determining whether an applicant for registration as a tax agent is a "fit and proper person". The Tribunal did, however, expressly take those considerations into account and attributed little or no weight to them. Amongst other reasons, the Tribunal considered that counsel for the applicants had overstated the extent of the remission of penalties and general interest charge. The Tribunal also noted the long history of non-compliance by Mr Delis, Delis Enterprises and Pinia Holdings and found that the evidence disclosed persistent failure by each of them to comply with taxation laws over a period of some 14 years and lengthy periods when no tax was paid, including between June 2008 and February 2010 when "none of the mitigating factors which Mr Delis has relied upon were present during that time". The Tribunal stated that although counsel for the applicants did not dispute that there had been instances of non-compliance with taxation laws, "that grossly understates the true position". The Tribunal also found that although the evidence disclosed that Mr Delis did make payments of arrears of tax from time to time, those payments were either of relatively small amounts or, when the threat of legal action was raised, more substantial amounts, "but always well in arrears and less than the total tax owing". The Tribunal noted at [92]-[95]:
92. … The only occasion that Delis Enterprises' account came close to being in credit was on 29 August 2012 which was immediately after the Commissioner issued a Creditor's Statutory Demand for Payment of Debt. That demand prompted two payments of $50,000 made on 9 and 22 August 2012 followed by a payment of $79,000 on 29 August 2012. Just where those monies came from was not disclosed. However, as soon as that threat had passed, the account slipped back into a substantial debit balance. Furthermore, there were no payments made between 14 November 2013 and November 2014 when the debit balance had amounted to $348,629.75.
93. The failure of the accountancy practice to make the required statutory superannuation guarantee payments to its employees is inexplicable. The balance owing to those employees steadily increased between July 2010 and December 2013 without any obvious attempt to redress that position. As I understood Mr Delis'[s] evidence, he claimed that the reasons for non-payment were that clients of the accountancy practice had not paid their accounts. As I have already explained, that cannot be correct. The Profit and Loss Statements for the 2012 and 2013 income years disclose very substantial net profits before tax. While those accounts are clearly incorrect because they do not take into account unpaid statutory liabilities, nevertheless, there was plainly sufficient cash from the conduct of the accountancy practice to make those statutory payments. Again, the explanation given by Mr Delis was unsatisfactory, and, in my opinion, misleading.
94. Although Mr Delis placed significant reliance upon his claimed ill-health between about 2008 and 2012 for failure to make payments to the tax office and to lodge returns by due date, as the Financial Statements for the accountancy practice disclose, it appears to have continued at substantial profit. Furthermore, that profit is accounted for on a cash basis, rather than an accruals basis. Put simply, that means that the practice in fact received payment from its clients to the extent stated. It was not making a loss but, rather, a substantial profit. Despite Mr Rosenbaum submitting that there was undisputed and uncontradicted evidence showing that the non-compliance with taxation laws by Mr Delis and Delis Enterprises was due to ongoing episodes of ill health, the evidence in fact shows nothing of the sort. Other than Mr Delis'[s] evidence, which necessarily is self-serving and must be given little weight, I had no objective evidence before me on the hearing of this matter which supported his ill health claims …
95. What is apparent when all of the evidence before me is examined carefully, is that the pattern of failure to lodge documents within the prescribed time and failure to pay taxes when those payments were due existed at least in 2002 and possibly even as early as 2000…
29 The Tribunal furthermore did not consider it significant that the ATO had agreed to enter into four new repayment arrangements with the ATO, stating at [78]-[79]:
78. The first thing which needs to be said about that submission is that every taxpayer is required to pay in full his, her or its taxation liability as and when it falls due. Making some payments towards those liabilities over many years in small amounts, often well in arrears of those liabilities arising, and often under the threat of legal action for recovery, is hardly something which should attract an expression of satisfaction. To the contrary, given that in this case that position appears to have been the norm for Mr Delis and Delis Enterprises since around 2000, it deserves condemnation.
79. Nevertheless, Mr Rosenbaum submitted that despite the extensive defaults in payment of tax and lodgement of returns by Mr Delis and Delis Enterprises, it is significant that the ATO has agreed to enter into the four repayment arrangements currently in place. With respect, that statement appears to be a non sequitur. Undoubtedly, the ATO's only concern is to get in tax payments which are due to it in the most cost-effective manner. Issuing court proceedings for recovery every time a taxpayer is in default would certainly not be a cost-effective way of recovering such liabilities.
Counsel for the applicants took issue with [79], submitting that [79] "clearly demonstrates that the Tribunal determined that the Commissioner merely found it to be cost-effective to enter into payment arrangements with the Applicants notwithstanding their prior non-compliance with previous payment arrangements rather than issue court proceedings". It was submitted that "the quantum of the debts of the Applicants from time to time do not support this finding". However, no attempt was made to justify that assertion and the Tribunal was not shown to be wrong.
30 The Tribunal further stated at [99]:
99. … Although I have no doubt that Mr Delis has at all times been aware of his obligations to meet his taxation liabilities and lodgment requirements, he has not complied, not for reasons of ill health or lack of funds, but rather because he has preferred to make personal use of those monies to which he was not entitled. In my opinion, the evidence plainly discloses a pattern of behaviour which is manipulative and self-serving. These are not the characteristics of an individual who is of good fame, integrity and character …
31 The Tribunal did not accept that Mr Delis's failure to comply with taxation laws was excusable, even taking into account the remissions of penalty and GIC, and payment arrangements which, for the reasons given by the Tribunal, the Tribunal considered of "doubtful relevance". Bearing in mind that the appeal pursuant to s 44 of the AAT Act does not involve a right of appeal by way of hearing de novo, error must first be shown to permit appellate intervention and no error of principle has been shown in the approach of the Tribunal. Rather than disclosing any error of principle, the submission amounted in substance to no more than an attempt to re-examine the merits with the view to obtaining a different outcome.
32 Accordingly these grounds fail.