evidence filed in the proceedings
7 It is necessary to first set out the background to the Commissioner's application. In what follows, no findings of fact are made in relation to any substantive matter: see Imobilari Pty Ltd v Opes Prime Stockbroking Ltd (2008) 252 ALR 41 at 44.
8 In support of the application for summary judgment, the Commissioner relied upon an affidavit of Maria Victoria Llorca sworn on 26 July 2013. Ms Llorca is an Officer in the Commonwealth Public Service employed in the Debt Strategic Recovery Section of the Australian Taxation Office (the ATO).
9 According to Ms Llorca, on 6 June 2012, the Commissioner issued a notice of amended assessment for the purposes of s 177 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth) (the 1936 Act) for the year ended 30 December 2009 (the Amended Assessment). A copy of the Amended Assessment was annexed to Ms Llorca's affidavit. The amount payable on the Amended Assessment was $34,702,098.55. That amount related to liability to income tax and also GIC pursuant to s 5-15 of the 1997 Act and Div 1 of Pt IIA of the TAA, which Ms Llorca deposed had been "properly calculated in accordance with the provisions of the said Acts".
10 According to Ms Llorca, as at 26 July 2013, Songa was indebted to the Commonwealth of Australia in respect of income tax liabilities and GIC in the amount of $33,552,954.55, the Amended Assessment having been served on Songa on or about 6 June 2012 in accordance with the provisions of the 1936 Act and the Income Tax Regulations 1936 (Cth).
11 Annexed to Ms Llorca's affidavit was a certificate pursuant to s 255-45 of Sch 1 to the TAA dated 26 July 2013, which stated that:
1. the notice of amended assessment for the year ended 30 December 2009 is taken to have been served on [Songa] under a taxation law; and
2. as at today's date, the amount of $33,552,954.55 is a debt due and payable by [Songa] to the Commonwealth of Australia.
12 The Amended Assessment (see [9] above) was also a notice of SIC pursuant to s 280-110 of Sch 1 to the TAA for the year ended 30 December 2009 (the SIC Notice). According to Ms Llorca, the SIC became due and payable pursuant to s 5-10 of the 1997 Act on the twenty-first day after the SIC Notice was given to Songa.
13 According to Ms Llorca, as at 26 July 2013, Songa was also indebted to the Commonwealth of Australia in respect of SIC in the amount of $4,794,780.88, the SIC Notice having been served on Songa in or about 6 June 2012 in accordance with the provisions of the TAA and the Taxation Administration Regulations 1976 (Cth). That amount included GIC pursuant to s 5-15 of the 1997 Act and Pt IIA of the TAA, which, according the Ms Llorca, had been "properly calculated in accordance with the provisions of the said Act[s]".
14 Annexed to Ms Llorca's affidavit was a certificate pursuant to s 255-45 of Sch 1 to the TAA dated 26 July 2013, which stated that:
1. the notice of shortfall interest charge for the year ended 30 June 2009 is taken to have been served on [Songa] under a taxation law;
2. as at today's date, the amount of $4,794,780.88 is a debt due and payable by [Songa] to the Commonwealth of Australia.
15 At the hearing of the application for summary judgment, the Commissioner tendered a further certificate under s 255-45 of Sch 1 of the TAA stating that:
1. the notice of amended assessment for the year ended 31 December 2009 is taken to have been served on [Songa] under a taxation law;
2. the notice of [SIC] for the year ended 31 December 2009 is taken to have been served on [Songa] under a taxation law;
3. as at today's date, the amount of $38,564,978.78 is a debt due and payable by [Songa] to the Commonwealth of Australia.
16 Having regard to the foregoing matters, the Commissioner claims to have established that Songa is indebted to the Commonwealth of Australia in the amount of $38,564,978.78 as at 15 August 2013. Accordingly, the Commissioner seeks judgment against Songa for the sum of $38,564,978.78.
17 Ms Llorca's affidavit also indicated her belief that Songa had no defence to the Commissioner's claim.
18 In submissions filed on the question of whether summary judgment should be entered, Songa referred to the affidavit of James Zdenko Fabijancic sworn on 9 August 2013. Annexed to that affidavit was a copy of the notice of objection dated 23 July 2012 and lodged by Songa against the Amended Assessment. The objection stated that the Amended Assessment and a determination under s 177F(2A)(a) of the 1936 Act were invalid, of no effect and should be cancelled, set aside or withdrawn or, if valid, stated that the Amended Assessment was excessive and should be set aside or altered by the allowance of a deduction of $101,355,415 or some lesser amount. The grounds of Songa's objection were as follows:
1. On 12 May 2009, [Songa], a resident of Singapore, entered into two bareboat charter agreements with Songa Offshore SE ("SOSE"), a resident of Cyprus, in relation to two mobile offshore drilling units;
2. On 12 May 2009, [Songa] entered into a bareboat charter agreement with Songa Offshore Drilling Limited ("SODL") for the sub-lease of the mobile offshore drilling units in Australia.
3. Pursuant to an agreement dated 11 May 2009, [Songa] also provided marketing, technical, operational and commercial management services with respect to Songa group's Asia Pacific operations.
4. In the year ended 31 December 2009:
(a) [Songa] incurred and paid to SOSE the amount of $101,355,415 pursuant to bareboat charter agreements entered into between SOSE and [Songa] (the "Lease Payments");
(b) [Songa] derived the amount of $105,069,960 pursuant to the bareboat charter agreements entered into between SODL and [Songa].
5. The Lease Payments were deductible to [Songa] under subsection 8-1(1) of the [1997 Act] on the basis that they were incurred in gaining or producing [Songa's] assessable income or were necessarily incurred in carrying on a business for the purpose of gaining or producing [Songa's] assessable income and were not excluded by the operation of subsection 8-1 (2) of that Act.
6. [Songa] was not required to withhold tax from the Lease Payments under Subdivision 12-F of Schedule 1 of the TAA because no withholding tax was payable in respect of those Lease Payments.
7. Section 26-25 of the [1997 Act] did not apply to preclude [Songa] from being able to deduct the Lease Payments because Subdivision 12-F of Schedule 1 of the TAA did not require [Songa] to withhold an amount from the Lease Payments.
8. Part IVA of the 1936 Act does not apply to enable the Commissioner to make a determination that the whole or any part of the Lease Payments were subject to withholding tax under s 128B of the [1936 Act].
9. Without limiting the foregoing:
a. a scheme for the purposes of Part IVA does not exist;
b. further and alternatively, if such a scheme does exist (which is denied) section 177CA does not apply because it is not reasonable to expect that SOSE would have, or could reasonably be expected to have been liable to pay withholding tax on the amount of the Lease Payments if the purported scheme had not been entered into or carried out. Accordingly, SOSE did not obtain a tax benefit in connection with the scheme;
c. alternatively, having regard to the matters referred to in paragraph 177D(b) of the 1936 Act, it could not be concluded that SOSE, or any of the persons who entered into or carried out any scheme, or any part of such scheme, did so for the dominant purpose of enabling SOSE to obtain a tax benefit or tax benefits in connection with the scheme or of enabling SOSE and another taxpayer or taxpayers each to obtain a tax benefit or tax benefits in connection with the scheme for the purposes of section 177D of the 1936 Act;
d. further and alternatively, the Commissioner was not entitled to determine under s 177F that SOSE is subject to withholding tax under s 128B on the whole or part of the amount of the Lease Payments;
e. further and alternatively, the Commissioner could not give effect to the Determination by issuing the Amended Assessment to [Songa] denying [Songa] a deduction for the Lease Payments.
10. No other provision of the 1936 Act or the 1997 Act applies to deny to [Songa] an allowable deduction for the whole or any part of the Lease Payments.
11. Further, and without in any way limiting the generality of the foregoing, if the Commissioner has purported to form any opinion or to be satisfied or not to be satisfied of or as to any matter or to have exercised or not to have exercised any discretion or power under the Act as the basis of, or as justifying, the assessment (which is not admitted), then such purported formation of opinion, or satisfaction, or failure to be satisfied mot the exercise of or the failure to exercise such discretion or power, was and is arbitrary, capricious, erroneous, unreasonable and void, based upon a mistaken or inadequate understanding of the relevant facts or law, or made after taking into account matters that ought not to have been taken into account or after omitting to take into account matters that ought to have been taken into account, and should now be reviewed and corrected by the Commissioner or the Administrative Appeals Tribunal or a Court, and the assessment appropriately altered or set aside.
19 Mr Fabijancic's affidavit indicated that Songa had lodged objections to the Amended Assessment and the Commissioner's decision not to remit the administrative penalty and that the Commissioner had not yet made decisions on those objections. That remains the position.