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Does a CGT event in Division 104 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) happen when a payment is made to the taxpayer in respect of a share that they previously owned in a company?
Yes. CGT event C2 in section 104-25 of the ITAA 1997 happens in respect of the right of the former shareholder to receive the payment, because the right is discharged or satisfied.
The taxpayer acquired shares in a company after 19 September 1985.
The taxpayer owned the shares at the record date for a return of capital to shareholders.
The taxpayer sold those shares after the record date but before the payment date.
The taxpayer received the payment on the payment date.
The capital gains tax consequences of a payment made by a company in respect of a share are founded on the legal nature of a share as a bundle of rights; see for example, the description of the legal nature of a share by Farwell J in Borland's Trustee v. Steele Bros & Co Ltd [1901] 1 Ch 279 at 288.
As a result, to the extent that the constituent rights attaching to a share are a bundle of rights that cannot be dealt with separately, those rights are not treated as separate CGT assets to which capital gains tax consequences can apply (see Taxation Ruling TR 94/30). Accordingly, CGT event C2 will not happen in respect of the right of a continuing shareholder to receive a distribution from a company that ends because it is discharged or satisfied by payment.
However, where a former shareholder retains a right to receive a distribution after they have ceased to own a share, the right has been separated and is no longer a part of the bundle of rights that make up the share. In these circumstances, the right to payment is a separate asset to which capital gains tax consequences can apply.
When the company makes the payment to the former shareholder, CGT event C2 happens as the right is discharged or satisfied (paragraph 104-25(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997).
If the full cost base (or reduced cost base) of the share has previously been applied in working out a capital gain or loss made when a CGT event happened to that share - for example, when the former shareholder disposed of the share - then, in applying subsection 104-25(3) of the ITAA 1997 to work out the capital gain for the ending of the right, the right will have a nil cost base.
Because the right to payments from the company was inherent in the share during the time that it was owned, then for the purposes of Subdivision 109-A of the ITAA 1997 the right is considered to have been acquired at the time when the share was acquired. Consequently, if the share was originally acquired by the former shareholder at least 12 months before the payment, a capital gain from the right may qualify as a discount capital gain under subsection 115-25(1) of the ITAA 1997 (provided the other conditions in Subdivision 115-A of the ITAA 1997 are satisfied).
No other CGT event happens when the payment is made. CGT event G1 does not happen as one of the requirements for that event is that you own the share at the time when the company makes a payment to you: paragraph 104-135(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997.
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