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Did CGT event C1 under section 104-20 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) happen to a taxpayer who owned ostriches when the company holding the ostriches was deregistered?
Yes. CGT event C1 under section 104-20 of the ITAA 1997 happened to the taxpayer who owned ostriches when the company holding the ostriches was deregistered.
The taxpayer owned six ostriches and had entered into an Agistment and Breeding Services Agreement with a company.
The taxpayer paid $10,000 to the company for the management fees and agistment costs associated with the ostriches.
In the 2000-01 income year, after reviewing the information available, the taxpayer concluded that there would never be a return on the investment nor any saleable asset to dispose of. At that time, the taxpayer discontinued the payment of monies to the company.
In 2001-02 income year, the company was deregistered. All assets of the company were liquidated but no payment was paid to unsecured creditors. The taxpayer had taken no action during liquidation to recover their property or any distribution.
The taxpayer does not know what happened to the ostriches when payment of the management and agistment fees ceased.
Under section 104-20 of the ITAA 1997 CGT event C1 happens if a CGT asset you own is lost or destroyed.
A CGT asset is defined as any kind of property or a legal or equitable right that is not property (section 108-5 of the ITAA 1997).
The CGT asset in this case is the six ostriches. The taxpayer owned the ostriches but the company had possession and control of the ostriches.
The word 'lost' in subsection 104-20(1) of the ITAA 1997 is not defined and takes its ordinary meaning. Taxation Determination TD 1999/79 states that the meaning of the word 'lose' in the context of subsection 104-20(1) ('lost' being the past tense of lose) is 'to come to be without, by some chance, and not know the whereabouts of: to lose a ring'.
Paragraph 3 of TD 1999/79 says that the word 'lost' is wide enough to cover some situations where an asset is confiscated. However, other situations involving confiscation may amount to a change of ownership under CGT event A1, so that the circumstances of each case determine the relevant CGT event.
Because the company did not give back the ostriches to the taxpayer and was subsequently liquidated and deregistered, the taxpayer had no means of knowing what had happened to their property. Even if they had located the property held by the company they would have had no means of knowing which ostriches were theirs. They had no means of knowing whether the ostriches had been destroyed, or whether there had been a change of ownership of them by confiscation.
CGT event C1 therefore happened as the taxpayer had lost their ostriches when the company was deregistered.
Under subsection 104-20(2) of the ITAA 1997 the time of CGT event C1 is when you first receive compensation for the loss or if you receive no compensation when the loss is discovered. As the taxpayer did not receive any payment or compensation the time of CGT event C1 is when the loss was discovered. This was when the company was deregistered in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 because the company ceased to exist as a legal entity and therefore ceased to hold any property. On deregistration, the taxpayer no longer had any rights to recover their property.
Date of Amendment Part Comment 18 August 2017 Facts Removed irrelevant word and made minor punctuation correction. 1 October 2014 Facts Exclude immaterial facts.
Date of Amendment | Part | Comment
18 August 2017 | Facts | Removed irrelevant word and made minor punctuation correction.
1 October 2014 | Facts | Exclude immaterial facts.
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