Issue
Where mutuality applies to the head entity of a consolidated group, are insurance premiums received by an insurance company which is a member of that group, but not itself a mutual entity, mutual receipts?
Decision
No. The insurance premiums are not mutual receipts.
Facts
Head Co is the head company of a consolidated group of which Insurance Ltd is a member.
Head Co is an unlisted public company which is limited by guarantee. It does not have shareholders and its members are a particular industry group. Head Co claims it is an entity to which the principle of mutuality has applied.
Insurance Ltd is a licensed insurer incorporated overseas but has its central management and control in Australia and is a general insurance company for the purposes of Division 321 of Schedule 2J of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936). It is a company limited by shares 100% owned by Head Co. Insurance Ltd sells professional indemnity insurance to both members and non-members of Head Co. The approximate proportion of policyholders that are members and non-members is 75% to 25%.
Reasons for Decision
One of the primary indicia of mutual receipts is whether they are included in the common fund of the entity and subject to the reasonable relationship principle.
Insurance Ltd's premiums were received under insurance contracts. As this is a commercial arrangement the receipt of the premiums is not attributable to the membership interests in a common fund, the premiums are not mutual receipts.
The decision of the High Court of Australia in Sydney Water Board Employees' Credit Union Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1973) 129 CLR 446; 73 ATC 4129; (1973) 4 ATR 157 (the Sydney Water Board Case ) provides the authority for this conclusion.
In this case the taxpayer contended that the mutuality principle applied where interest paid to it by members on moneys borrowed from the taxpayer, was not assessable income in its hands. The company's rules indicated that any surplus resulting from the taxpayer's operations or any rebate of interest paid during a financial year shall only be made to members who had obtained loans from the company.
Having regard to the relationship which existed between taxpayer and its borrowing members and the nature of the transactions, it was apparent that the mutuality principle had no application. The taxpayer lent money to members under individual contracts of loan by which the borrowers were bound to pay the stipulated interest to taxpayer for its benefit. The taxpayer borrowed money from its members under individual contracts of loan by which it was bound to pay interest to them.
The Sydney Water Board Case provides support for the view that where there is insufficient identity between contributors and participators in a distribution of surplus, the mutuality principle will not apply. Also, the distribution of surplus in this case resulted from the taxpayer's use of its general funds and did not constitute payment from a common fund.
Although Head Co is a mutual entity the insurance business of Insurance Ltd is not part of Head Co members' common fund. The surplus of funds from Insurance Ltd arises from the contractual relationship between Insurance Ltd and its policy holders rather than the reasonable relationship between Head Co and its members.
From 1 July 2010, the Tax Laws Amendment (Transfer of Provisions) Act 2010 repealed Schedule 2J of the ITAA 1936 and rewrote those provisions into Division 321 of the ITAA 1997. The wording and format was altered to adhere to the drafting approach taken in the ITAA 1997, but as outlined in Chapter 6 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Tax Laws Amendment (Transfer of Provisions) Bill 2010, there has been no change in meaning of the rewritten provisions.
Therefore, from 1 July 2010, all references to Schedule 2J of the ITAA 1936 should be read as referring to Division 321 of the ITAA 1997.