Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Thorogood [1927] HCA 36;
[1927] HCA 36
At a glance
Source factsCourt
High Court of Australia
Decision date
1927-09-16
Before
Starke JJ
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (17 paragraphs)
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Thorogood [1927] HCA 36; (1927) 40 CLR 454 (16 September 1927)
The Federal Commissioner of Taxation Appellant; and Thorogood Respondent.
This appeal arises under sec. 51 (6) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1922-1925, and raises a question of law. The taxpayer carries on the business of buying land, dividing it into allotments, on each of which he builds, and then selling the allotment. The sale is on the terms of a deposit, the balance payable at dates exceeding the year of sale. The method is sometimes by contract only, the taxpayer retaining the title until payment; and sometimes by his mortgaging the land to cover part of the purchase-money and then transferring the land to his purchaser, who takes title subject to the first mortgage and gives a second mortgage for the balance with interest. The facts are only necessary to be stated so far as they raise the question of law. To what I have said I need only add that on inspection of the taxpayer's books of account the Commissioner (or the officer representing him) found, as he claims, that the taxpayer had treated the transactions of the year as completely ascertaining the profit on the year's transactions, notwithstanding considerable portions of the actual payments by the purchasers were not due till afterwards. The Commissioner (or his officer), on the authority, as he supposed, of [] and [], assessed the taxpayer on the basis appearing by his books of account, and, on objection made, disallowed it. The taxpayer appealed to the Board of Review. On that appeal two opposing views were presented: - For the taxpayer it was contended that, whatever the method of accountancy or other collateral circumstances, a taxpayer can always require the Commissioner to assess according to the actual receipts of the year. For the Commissioner it was urged that the authorities referred to laid down, as a rule of law, that if a taxpayer in his books represents the transactions for the year as resulting in a stated profit, the taxpayer is bound by that, unless the Commissioner sees sufficient reason to induce him to relax the situation and permit inquiry into the actual results. The Board was invited to lay down a principle. By a majority the Board declined to do so, and did not accept the extreme view of either side. It was by the majority of the Board dealt with on business lines; the deposit, the first-mortgage money actually received by the taxpayer, and substantially secured to him, being treated as virtually received as purchase-money, while, except so much of the second-mortgage money as he also actually received, the second-mortgage money was excluded from the assessment for the year. The profits were apportioned accordingly. The taxpayer does not appeal: he rests content with the Board's decision. The Commissioner appeals, and again urges the principle of law contended for by him, to which reference has been made.