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No.
Subsection 36A(1) does not apply if such a transfer occurs. The sole trader who owned the trading assets before the change in ownership of the assets effected by the transfer has no interest (legal, beneficial or legal and beneficial interest) in the assets after the change.
Section 36A is founded on the existence of undivided fractional interests in trading assets. A discretionary beneficiary of a discretionary trust does not have, in our view, an undivided fractional interest in the assets held by the trustee of a discretionary trust (even if, at general law, the discretionary beneficiary may have a beneficial interest in trust assets in certain circumstances: see Queensland Trustees Ltd v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Qld) (1952) 88 CLR 54). Subsection 36A(1) does not apply because the sole trader has no undivided fractional interest in the trading assets after the transfer of the assets to the trustee.
Because subsection 36A(1) does not apply, subsection 36A(2) cannot apply: see paragraph 36A(2)(a).
Section 36 applies to such a transfer if it is not made in the ordinary course of carrying on the sole trader's business.
The expression 'trading assets' is used in this Taxation Determination to mean assets of a business (being trading stock, standing or growing crops, crop stools or trees which have been planted and tended for the purpose of sale). Example Fred Jersey owns a grazing business in north west Queensland. Fred transfers his business to a private family company as corporate trustee of Fred's family discretionary trust, in which Fred is not a discretionary beneficiary. Neither subsection 36A(1) nor 36A(2) applies to the disposal of the trading stock of the business by Fred to the corporate trustee of the discretionary trust because Fred retains no interest in the trading stock after the disposal. The transfer of the trading stock is not a disposal made in the ordinary course of Fred's business and section 36 applies.
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