Fastbet Investments Pty Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
[2019] FCA 2073
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2019-12-09
Before
Derrington J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (54 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 In separate proceedings the respective applicants, Fastbet Investments Pty Ltd (Fastbet) and Holmes Road Pty Ltd (Holmes Road), each seek relief under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) (AD(JR) Act) or s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) in respect of decisions by the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth (the Commissioner) to issue notices to them under s 255-100 of Schedule 1 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth) (the TAA). Each of those notices required the recipient company to give security to the Commissioner for the due payment of a "future tax-related liability". 2 Each applicant company is controlled by Ms Tina Bazzo, who is the sole director of each, and whose personal conduct and conduct in the control of other corporations formed the basis of the Commissioner's decision to issue the notices. Each of the originating applications relies on substantially the same grounds, being, predominantly, that the Commissioner failed to take into account certain alleged relevant considerations when exercising the discretion to issue the notices. A constitutional ground is also advanced, although the applicants acknowledge that, in respect of this issue, this Court is bound by the decision in Keris Pty Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (2017) 253 FCR 233 (Keris), where that same ground was rejected. In Fastbet's application, relief is also claimed for the return of money which has been received by the Commissioner from time to time in return for the partial release of the security granted by Fastbet. 3 At the request of the parties the matters were heard together. Whilst that may have seemed an acceptable course at the time, it has ultimately resulted in some ambiguity in the evidence. The parties focused attention on the issues surrounding the notice given to Fastbet and seemed to accept that the relevant evidence applied to the circumstances of Holmes Road. As it transpired, that assumption was possibly too readily accepted. The issue in each matter turned on the decision-making process of the Commissioner in respect of each applicant and those processes occurred on different occasions in relation to slightly different circumstances. 4 As the following reasons disclose, in each matter the applicant has failed to establish the existence of an error which has invalidated the decision of the Commissioner to issue the notice. In summary, the applications fail for the following reasons: (a) The applications were founded upon the erroneous basis that the requirement of the Commissioner to have regard to "all relevant circumstances" related to the exercise of his discretion to issue a notice under s 255-100. In fact, that obligation related to the antecedent step of the Commissioner reaching a reasonable belief that requiring security from the applicants was appropriate. (b) That error permeated each application and the submissions made in relation to them. The applicants' focus was on attempting to establish what were "relevant considerations" for the exercise of power rather than what were the factors or circumstances to which the Commissioner was to have regard in forming a reasonable belief about the appropriateness of requiring security. (c) In any event, the matters which were said by the applicants to be "relevant considerations" were not matters which, by implication from the subject-matter, scope and purpose of the Act conferring power, the Commissioner was required to take into account in the exercise of his discretion or in the formation of the required state of mind. (d) Even if the Commissioner was required to have regard to the matters identified, as a matter of fact, he largely did so when determining to issue the notices. (e) Moreover, most of the matters advanced by the applicants were not essential, significant or important to the state of mind which the Commissioner was required to form under s 255-100(1)(b), in the sense that the failure to have regard to them would not evidence a failure to perform the statutory obligation. Any identified matter to which the Commissioner did not have regard fell within this category. (f) The Commissioner is entitled to rely upon and adopt the calculations and assessments performed by his officers in the course of their employment and, for the purposes of reaching the state of mind required by s 255-100, he is not required to undertake them himself nor, to the extent to which he might be able, review them. (g) Even if it be that the Commissioner did not have regard to one of the myriad matters identified by the applicants (in paragraph 3 of the respective originating applications), the failure to do so was not "material" and the omission did not give rise to any vitiating error in the formation of the required state of mind or the subsequent exercise of discretion. Neither party addressed the question of the materiality of any failure to have regard to any of the identified circumstances.