Primary argument
17The fulcrum of debate on the appeal concerned grounds 1, 4 and 5 of the notice of appeal, which asserted error in the characterisation of the use for which the land was put and asserted that there could only be one use for which the land was put - cattle grazing.
18This primary argument was said to involve six propositions:
(a) The enquiry required by s 10AA(2) and (3) is focussed on the actual use or uses of the land at the material date.
(b) For the purpose of the enquiry there is a material distinction between a use of the land on the one hand and a preliminary activity carried out on the land to prepare it for a contemplated or intended use in the future, on the other.
(c) The concept of a dominant use in s 10AA(3) requires comparison between uses and not a comparison between a use and a preliminary activity.
(d) The cattle operations on the land constituted a use of the land within the meaning of s 10AA but the earthworks that were being undertaken did not do so because the earthworks were only a preliminary activity, that is an activity carried out to prepare the land for a contemplated or intended use in the future for residential subdivision.
(e) There being no other use of the land at the material date to compete with the cattle operations as a use, it followed that the cattle operations were necessarily the dominant use of the land.
(f) Because that use of the land for capital operations fell within s 10AA(3)(b) then sub-s (3) was satisfied and it was necessary to proceed to sub-s (2).
19The following can be stated by way of preliminary comment upon these propositions. The first proposition can be accepted and nothing in his Honour's reasons or in the submissions of the Chief Commissioner was to a different effect. In its own terms, the second proposition might be seen to be uncontroversial. It needs to be examined in conjunction with the fourth proposition, to which I will come. Likewise, the third proposition can be seen as uncontroversial in its own terms. The fourth proposition contained within it a factual evaluation and a proposition of law. In debate it became clear that Leda contended for a distinction between activity and use that was based upon productive return. Leda contended that it was not open to the learned primary judge to conclude that the land was used for commercial land development. It was submitted that there was no open or undefined notion of use to which a factual evaluation or characterisation could be made depending upon the underlying factual circumstances. Rather, it was submitted that a use required the productive return of the land. So, it was said, here, all activity must be seen as preliminary activity until the completion of the relevant development and the commencement of its use for residential living or commercial operation. These conclusions were said to flow from the meaning of the words "used for". Thus, here, all the matters that were being undertaken on the land were mere preparatory activities and not able to be characterised as a present use of commercial land development.
20The fifth and sixth propositions were valid assuming the validity of their premises.
21The core contention in the fourth proposition was said to flow from the concept of "use" involving the notions of "putting" the land to some purpose: Commissioner of Land Tax v Christie [1973] 2 NSWLR 526 (per Bowen JA, as he then was), making the land "serve" some purpose: Council of the City of Newcastle v Royal Newcastle Hospital [1957] HCA 15; 96 CLR 493 at 508 (per Kitto J) and 515 (per Taylor J) and Minister Administering the Crown Lands Act v NSW Aboriginal Land Council [2008] HCA 48; 237 CLR 285 at 306 (per Hayne J, Heydon J, Crennan J and Kiefel J) and "devoting" the land to a particular purpose: Royal Newcastle Hospital at 515.
22Reliance was placed on the ordinary dictionary definition of use, being: "The act of putting something to work, or employing or applying a thing, for any (esp. a beneficial or productive) purpose; the fact, state, or condition of being put to work, employed or applied in this way; utilization or appropriation esp. in order to achieve an end or pursue one's purpose"; the Oxford English Dictionary (online).
23None of these elements of the meaning of use requires a conclusion that use must involve productive return to be present use. As Mason P said in NSW Aboriginal Land Council v Minister Administering the Crown Lands Act [2007] NSWCA 281; 157 LGERA 18 at 25 [32] "use" is a "protean" term and can be measured from a number of different perspectives. In the High Court in the NSW Aboriginal Land Council case it was held that use of land involves utilisation, exploitation or employment and that it requires actual physical use, not some notional or potential future or contemplated use: at 293-294 [22], 296-297 [30]-[32] (per Kirby J) and 306-307 [73] (per Hayne J, Heydon J, Crennan J and Kiefel J) and see Thomason at 293.
24I am unable to accept the bright line distinction made by Leda in its submissions. The words of the section (other than identifying particular uses in paras (a)-(f)) do not otherwise prescribe any particular use for which the land could be otherwise used. The particular uses identified in paras (a)-(f) are the uses for which the land must be dominantly used for the application of sub-s (3). As the appellant, Leda, submits, if there is another use for which the land is being put, it must be compared with the relevant use in, here, para (b). In evaluating any given circumstances there is no warrant within the words of the section or the meaning of the word "use" or the phrase "used for" to require beneficial return or any other like concept. There will be some circumstances in which activity on the land will be understood or evaluated as preliminary to the undertaking of a future use. That is not what s 10AA is directed to. There must be a present use for which the land is being used. That does not deny, however, the proper evaluation of any given circumstances. The appropriate task is the one which the primary judge undertook. Upon evaluation of all the material he asked himself what the people who owned the land were actually using it for. Or, to put the matter another way, what was the purpose of what the owner was doing on the land so that the question as to what the land was being used for could be answered? Here, looking at all the activities together with the surrounding circumstances of Leda's evident purpose in carrying out those activities, it could be concluded (and was concluded by the primary judge, rightly, in my view) that the land was being used for commercial land development. The fact that the land was, at that time, at the stage of earthworks does not deny the present use of the land for commercial land development. It does not matter, in my view, that the residential housing estates likely to be built in due course had not yet been completed, had not yet been sold and had not yet taken their place in a completed residential development.
25The primary judge's overall evaluation of the use for which Leda was putting the land, as commercial land development or residential development was, in my view, correct.
26The appellant submitted that the primary judge failed to give proper regard to the statutory purpose of s 10AA in its construction, in particular in giving content to the phrase "used for". It was submitted that an exemption that exists for the purpose of encouraging, rewarding or protecting some class of activity was to be given a liberal and not restrictive construction: Burt v Commissioner of Taxation [1912] HCA 74; 15 CLR 469 at 482; Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Murry [1998] HCA 42; 193 CLR 605 at 632; Canwan Coals Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1974] 1 NSWLR 728 at 733; Diethelm Manufacturing Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1993) 44 FCR 450 at 457; and Mayor, Councillors and Citizens of the City of Essenden v Cox [1967] VR 545 at 551.
27It was submitted that the manifest policy of s 10AA is to encourage and reward a class of activity, being primary production. It should therefore be construed by giving "reasonably wide and, indeed, liberal scope to the requirement that lands should be used for the specified purposes": Cox at 551. The primary judge was criticised for ascribing a different purpose to s 10AA at [28] of his reasons, where his Honour said:
"... the goal of the Land Tax Management Act , s 10AA(2) was to prevent land destined for other purposes to be exempt from land tax as purported farmland in the interim."
28Both parties provided the Court with extrinsic material relating to s 10AA and related provisions in the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW), in particular s 118. Much of the secondary material can be seen to be directed to the mischief or purpose of sub-s (2), rather than sub-s (3): see the Second Reading Speech to the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Bill 2005 and the definition of "farmland" in the Local Government Act 1993 (NSW), s 515 and the similarly worded earlier provision of the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW), s 118. Looking at the terms of s 10AA in its place in the Act, the provision is not to be understood as a statutory encouragement for primary production as that phrase is used in the colloquial sense. The provision concerns land used for primary production as defined. What the provision is apt to achieve and what can be taken as its purpose from its text and context in the Act is the provision of an exemption for land used for primary production to the extent and in the manner referred to in sub-ss (2) and (3). There is no requirement to approach the matter in some beneficial fashion striving to expand the reach of the exemption or to narrow the taxing operation of the section according to strict language. More particularly, there is nothing in the purpose of the legislation, drawn from its words and context or from the secondary material insofar as that addresses mischief to require used "for" to be limited to use of land which is producing beneficial or commercial return, as argued by Leda.
29The various cases to which his Honour made reference and which were referred to in argument do not advance the resolution of the appeal. None was directed to a statutory provision in the same terms as s 10AA. Each was directed to a particular form of words in which a particular use was identified and the question arose whether antecedent or collateral activity could be seen to be part of that use because of its proximity or connection or whether it was to be seen as antecedent and separate from the later particular use. A brief examination of these cases will reveal that this was their context and that they are of no particular utility in resolving this appeal.
30In Sandhurst Holdings (Australia) Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue [2009] VSCA 167; 25 VR 59; 2009 ATC 20-118 the Court of Appeal was concerned with a provision (the Land Tax Act 1958 (Vic), s 9(1)(g)) that specified the relevant use or purpose of "providing or promoting cultural or sporting or recreation or similar facilities or objectives". The question was whether the land fitted that description while a golf course and associated recreational facilities were being constructed. At [17] of the reasons, the primary judge succinctly expressed the reasoning of the Court of Appeal as follows:
"Dodds-Streeton JA, with whom the other members of the Court of Appeal agreed, said at 9,953 [77] that the exemption was confined to use for, or ancillary and incidental to, the prescribed end purposes and did not cover use for a preliminary activity such as construction or development preparatory to such use."
31In Bosa Development Corp v Coquitlam Assessor, Area No 12 (Bosa No 2) (1996) 30 BCLR (3d) 263 the relevant provision referred to land "used for residential purposes". Parcels of land were the subject of planning for residential, commercial and civil purposes; geotechnical and soil studies had been done as well as other investigative and assessment work. No development application or construction had been done. Unsurprisingly, the land was found not to fall within the statutory description.
32In Applewood Residential Development Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue [2006] VSCA 207; 64 ATR 291 the relevant provision (the Land Tax Act 1958 (Vic), s 9(1)(j)) referred (at the relevant time) to land "used and occupied as a retirement village and for no other purpose". Land had been acquired for developing a retirement village in stages. Again, unsurprisingly, the Court of Appeal found that the exemption applied only to so much of the land as was used and occupied as a retirement village and not to land on which development to that end purpose was occurring.
33Accepting that these cases were rightly decided does not advance the position of Leda once the validity of the primary judge's characterisation of Leda's use is accepted as within the boundary of the phrase "used for" in s 10AA(3).
34The acceptance of, or preference for, other cases, concerning different statutes, that concluded that land in a development phase could be regarded as a use for a specified purpose is not necessary to support the conclusion of the primary judge. In Burnaby/New Westminster Assessor, Area No 10 v Intracorp Developments Ltd (2000) BCCA 121 the question arose for the Court of Appeal of British Columbia as to when during the construction of a residential project it could be said that land was used for residential purposes. The primary judge quoted [28]-[31] of Donald JA's reasons in that case. The reasoning proceeded upon the basis that the development steps having been taken would be sufficient to amount to residential purposes if they had reached the stage where the owner was committed to that use. Similar ideas can be seen to have moved the Full Federal Court in Whitfords Beach Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1983) 14 ATR 247 at 254.
35It is unnecessary to decide whether this notion of commitment of land to a use not strictly speaking yet commenced has validity.
36In Educang Ltd v Brisbane City Council [2002] QSC 374 the relevant question was whether land was "used for" a school. White J expressed the view that there was an element of futurity in the expression "used for" (at [19]). The school was being built. Her Honour found that the construction activity was ancillary to its use for a school.
37In Meriton Apartments Pty Ltd v Parramatta City Council [2003] NSWLEC 309 Pain J was concerned with a legislative provision requiring a "use for" residential accommodation. Building had commenced for residential accommodation. Pain J held (at [22]) that the use of the land was for residential accommodation.
38It is true that the primary judge said that he preferred the approach in Meriton , Educang and New Westminster to the approach taken in Sandhurst Holdings .
39It is unnecessary to come to a view whether his Honour was correct in the expression of that view, just as it is unnecessary to analyse each of these cases in order to consider whether they were correctly decided on their relevant provisions.
40It can be accepted that for the resolution of this appeal used "for" is to be seen as a present use. Leda was using the land for two purposes: cattle grazing and commercial land development. The question was whether the former was the dominant use so as to attract or satisfy s 10AA(3).