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State Taxes, Stamp Duty, State Tax Disputes, Taxation Nicholas Clifton State Taxes, Stamp Duty, State Tax Disputes, Taxation Nicholas Clifton

New Draft Victorian Revenue Ruling imposes stamp duty on apportioned land tax and windfall gains tax

The Victorian State Revenue Office has issued a draft revenue ruling “Land transfer duty - Consideration - Assumption of tax liabilities” for comment that seeks to impose a new stamp duty on adjustments at settlement of property transfers.  This is an Australian first tax and will penalise commercial and other property transfers.

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Alphington Developments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue – payments made by vendor could not reduce purchase price for stamp duty purposes

The Victorian Supreme Court in Alphington Developments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue [2025] VSC 709 considered the dutiable value for a transfer of land under paragraph 20(1)(a) of the Duties Act 2000 (Vic) and whether payments required to be made by the vendor under a contract were able to reduce the headline purchase price for stamp duty purposes.

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Business Law, Taxation, Federal Taxes Alicia Hill Business Law, Taxation, Federal Taxes Alicia Hill

Bakers Delight Case: What Franchisors Need to Know About Workplace Liability

The Full Court of the Federal Court’s decision in Bakers Delight Holdings Ltd v Fair Work Ombudsman [2025] FCAFC 144 provides insight into the interaction between franchisor liability and ‘reverse onus’ mechanisms in the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth).

 

Specifically, the Federal Court confirmed that franchisors can be held legally responsible for workplace contraventions by franchisees, even where the case against the franchisee relies on a ‘reverse onus of proof’. Franchisors are recommended to implement proactive compliance systems across their networks to avoid liability.

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Trusts, Superannuation, Federal Taxes Philippa Briglia Trusts, Superannuation, Federal Taxes Philippa Briglia

SMSFs and bare trusts – not just for LRBAs

Many will be familiar with the use of bare trusts by SMSFs as part of a limited recourse borrowing arrangement (LRBA), but there are other ways in which an SMSF might invest via a bare trust, providing different structuring opportunities. This article considers the use of ‘non LRBA bare trusts’ by SMSFs and the superannuation law implications.

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Publications Neil Brydges Publications Neil Brydges

Are Your Trust Distributions Ticking Tax Time Bombs?

A reasonable period has elapsed since the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) issued its guidance material (Taxation Ruling TR 2022/4 and Practical Compliance Guideline PCG 2022/2) on the application of section 100A of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA 1936), dealing with reimbursement agreements. So, where are we now at with this contentious section of the ITAA 1936 and the ATO's compliance approach in practice? This paper investigates further, including:

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XLZH - discretionary trusts and pre-CGT assets - more on this to come?

The ART decision in XLZH v FCT looked at whether pre-CGT assets owned by a discretionary trust kept that status under Division 149 and to the extent to which ATO Ruling IT 2430 can be relied upon in applying Division 149.

 

#CGT, #Division 149, #discretionary trusts, #Tax, #IT 2430

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Form vs Reality: Where franchisors may be liable for franchisee conduct – lessons from ASIC v Darranda.

The recent Federal Court decision in ASIC v Darranda Pty Ltd [2024] FCA 1015 highlights that where a franchisor designs the systems, documents or marketing used by franchisees, it may be held liable for regulatory breaches in its network, even without direct dealings with consumers.

#franchising #franchisorliability #ASIC #RegulatoryCompliance

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Sladen Snippet – New Div 296 tax – what we know and what we don’t?

New Division 296 tax, as outlined in a Treasury Fact Sheet, includes two indexed thresholds ($3 million and $10 million) and taxation on realised (not unrealised) earnings from 1 July 2026. However, critical details about how realised earnings will be calculated—particularly regarding pre-1 July 2026 gains—remain unclear.

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Changing a Franchise Business Structure: Take Aways from Netdeen Pty Ltd v Lindfield Pty Ltd

The 28 August 2025 decision of the Court of Appeal of New South Wales in Netdeen Pty Ltd (t/as GJ Gardner Homes) v Lindfield NSW Pty Ltd[i] highlights several important considerations for franchisees and franchisors alike when changing a business structure.

Franchisors should have consideration to the impact that this may have on their existing contractual obligations. Franchisees need to be aware of whether their existing agreements allow for this possibility and consider this prior to entering into a franchise agreement.

The decision also highlights the importance of clear drafting in contracts, even where there has been ostensible agreement between the parties.

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Bendel Part III: summary of the parties’ submissions

The article explains the arguments contained in the parties’ submissions to the High Court in the appeal by the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) from the Full Federal Court’s (Full Court) decision in Commissioner of Taxation v Bendel [2025] FCAFC 15 (Bendel). 

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Business Law, Superannuation, Taxation Philippa Briglia Business Law, Superannuation, Taxation Philippa Briglia

Super and death case studies part 3 – tax issues where BDBN directs death benefit payment of large property in-specie

This article is the third in a three-part series setting out practical solutions to common issues in super, tax and estate planning, with a particular focus on the tax impact of payments to beneficiaries.

Part 3 of our series looks at the tax issues which should be considered when paying death benefits in specie, including capital gains tax and the super ‘death tax’.

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