Taxation Administration Act 1996 No 97



An Act to make general provision with respect to the administration and enforcement of the other taxation laws.
Part 1 Preliminary
1   Name of Act
This Act is the Taxation Administration Act 1996.
2   Commencement
This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by proclamation.
3   Definitions
(1)  In this Act—
assessment means an assessment made by the Chief Commissioner under Part 3 of the tax liability of a person under a taxation law, and includes—
(a)  a reassessment and a compromise assessment under Part 3, and
(b)  an assessment by the Supreme Court or the Civil and Administrative Tribunal on an application for a review.
authorised officer means a person who is an authorised officer under section 68.
Chief Commissioner means the Chief Commissioner referred to in section 60.
Commissioner means the Commissioner referred to in section 64.
exercise a function includes perform a duty.
function includes a power, authority or duty.
Hardship Review Board means the Hardship Review Board constituted under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018.
investigation means an investigation under Division 2 of Part 9.
premises includes land, a vehicle, a vessel and an aircraft.
recognised revenue law has the meaning given by section 80A.
record means—
(a)  a documentary record, or
(b)  a record made by an electronic, electromagnetic, photographic or optical process, or
(c)  any other kind of record.
return means a return, statement, application, report or other record that—
(a)  is required or authorised under a taxation law to be lodged by a person with the Chief Commissioner or a specified person, and
(b)  is liable to tax or records matters in respect of which there is or may be a tax liability.
review means a review by the Supreme Court, or an administrative review by the Civil and Administrative Tribunal, on an application made under Division 2 of Part 10.
tax means a tax, duty, contribution or levy under a taxation law, and includes—
(a)  interest and penalty tax under Part 5, and
(a1)  a penalty under section 106KA, and
(b)  any other amount paid or payable by a taxpayer to the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law.
tax debt—see section 44.
taxation law has the meaning given by section 4.
Note.
See also section 5 (Application of Act to State tax-equivalent regime).
tax default means a failure by a taxpayer to pay, in accordance with a taxation law, the whole or part of tax that the taxpayer is liable to pay.
tax officer means—
(a)  the Chief Commissioner, or
(b)  the Commissioner, or
(c)  an authorised officer, or
(d)  any other person engaged (whether as an officer or employee or otherwise) in the administration or enforcement of a taxation law.
taxpayer means a person who has been assessed as liable to pay an amount of tax, who has paid an amount as tax or who is liable or may be liable to pay tax.
this jurisdiction means New South Wales.
trustee includes—
(a)  a person who is a trustee under an implied or constructive trust, and
(b)  in relation to a deceased person—an executor of the will, or an administrator of the estate, of the deceased person, and
(c)  a receiver or manager of the property of a company, or a liquidator of a company for the purpose of its winding up, and
(d)  a receiver, guardian, committee or manager of the property of a person under a legal or other disability, and
(e)  a person having possession, control or management of a business or property of a person who is under a legal or other disability, and
(f)  any person acting in a fiduciary capacity.
Note.
The Interpretation Act 1987 contains definitions and other provisions that affect the interpretation and application of this Act.
(2)  Notes in the text of this Act do not form part of the Act.
s 3: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [1]–[3]; 2000 No 106, Sch 4.8 [1]; 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [1]; 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [1]; 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [1] [2]; 2017 No 32, Sch 3.3 [1]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [1]; 2024 No 90, Sch 8[1].
4   Meaning of “taxation laws”
The following are taxation laws for the purposes of this Act—
this Act
a regulation under any of those Acts.
Note.
The Fire and Emergency Services Levy Act 2017 applies parts of this Act to the levy payable under that Act if the responsibility for levy recovery is transferred to the Chief Commissioner or if the Chief Commissioner requires a waived amount of the levy to be repaid.
The Fire and Emergency Services Levy Act 2017 also applies parts of this Act to the collection instalments payable by a council under that Act as if those instalments were a tax.
In addition, some of the provisions of this Act apply to the contributions payable by councils under the following—
(a)  Part 5 of the Fire and Rescue NSW Act 1989,
(b)  Part 5 of the Rural Fires Act 1997,
(c)  Part 5A of the State Emergency Service Act 1989.
s 4: Am 1997 No 32, sec 16; 1997 No 123, Sch 2.3; 1998 No 79, Sch 2.4; 2001 No 40, sec 26; 2001 No 43, Sch 2 [1]; 2001 No 72, Sch 5 [1]; 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [2]; 2004 No 33, Sch 3.3; 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [1]; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [1]; 2009 No 5, sec 17 (1); 2015 No 68, Sch 1; 2017 No 9, Sch 4.8; 2017 No 32, Sch 3.3 [2]; 2018 No 59, Sch 5.1; 2022 No 60, Sch 5.4.
5   Application of Act to relevant tax-equivalent regime
(1)  For the purpose of the administration and enforcement of a relevant tax-equivalent regime, the provisions of section 5.3 of the Government Sector Finance Act 2018, and any other provisions of that Act or directions or regulations under that Act, insofar as they relate to the relevant tax-equivalent regime, are taken to be a taxation law.
(2)  To avoid doubt, amounts payable as tax-equivalents under a relevant tax-equivalent regime in accordance with section 5.3 of the Government Sector Finance Act 2018 are taxes for the purposes of this Act.
(3)  Part 10 (Objections and reviews) does not apply in respect of an assessment of liability under a relevant tax-equivalent regime under section 5.3 of the Government Sector Finance Act 2018.
(4)  In this section—
relevant tax-equivalent regime has the meaning as in section 5.3 of the Government Sector Finance Act 2018.
s 5: Rep 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [4]. Ins 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [2]. Subst 2018 No 70, Sch 4.102 [1].
5A   Application of Act to community development levy
(1)  For the purpose of the administration and enforcement of the scheme for the levying and payment of the community development levy under the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983, Division 4A of Part 2 of that Act and any regulations made under that Division, are taken to be a taxation law.
(2)  To avoid doubt, amounts payable for the community development levy under that Act are taxes for the purposes of this Act (other than Part 4).
s 5A: Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 2.5 [1].
5B   Application of Act to royalties
(1)  For the purpose of the administration and enforcement of legislative schemes for the payment of royalties to the Crown, the following provisions are taken to be taxation laws—
(a)  Part 14 of the Mining Act 1992,
(b)  Divisions 2 and 3 of Part 4.4 of the Offshore Minerals Act 1999,
(c)  the provisions of Division 7 of Part 4 of the Petroleum (Offshore) Act 1982 to the extent that those provisions relate to royalties under that Act,
(d)  Part 7 of the Petroleum (Onshore) Act 1991,
(e)  any other provisions of the Acts referred to in paragraphs (a)–(d), or of the regulations under those Acts, to the extent that they relate to royalties.
(2)  Royalty is taken to be a tax for the purposes of this Act.
(3)  In this section—
royalty means royalty payable under—
(a)  the Mining Act 1992, or
s 5B: Ins 2014 No 37, Sch 4.7 [1].
5C   Application of Act to passenger service levy
(1)  For the purpose of the administration and enforcement of the scheme for the levying and payment of the passenger service levy under the Point to Point Transport (Taxis and Hire Vehicles) Act 2016, Schedule 4 to that Act and any regulations made under that Schedule, are taken to be taxation laws.
(2)  To avoid doubt, amounts payable for the passenger service levy under that Act are taxes for the purposes of this Act (other than Division 2 of Part 7).
s 5C: Ins 2016 No 34, Sch 7.7.
6   Act binds the Crown
(1)  This Act binds the Crown in right of this jurisdiction and, in so far as the legislative power of the Legislature of this jurisdiction permits, the Crown in all its other capacities.
(2)  This section does not affect the liability of the Crown to tax under another taxation law.
Part 2 Purpose of Act and relationship with other taxation laws
7   Purpose of Act and relationship with other taxation laws
(1)  The purpose of this Act is to make general provision with respect to the administration and enforcement of the other taxation laws.
(2)  The other taxation laws include provisions with respect to—
(a)  the imposition of tax and its payment, and
(b)  exceptions to and exemptions from liability to the tax, and
(c)  entitlements to refunds.
(3)  This Act includes general provisions with respect to—
(a)  assessment and reassessment of tax liability, and
(b)  obtaining refunds of tax, and
(c)  imposition of interest and penalty tax, and
(d)  approval of special tax return arrangements, and
(e)  collection of tax, and
(f)  record keeping obligations of taxpayers and general offences, and
(g)  tax officers and their investigative powers and secrecy obligations, and
(h)  objections and reviews, and
(h1)  tax avoidance schemes, and
(h2)  the prohibition on the use of confidential tax information, and
(i)  miscellaneous matters such as service of documents, corporate criminal liability and evidence.
s 7: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [5]; 2022 No 16, Sch 8[1]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[1].
Part 3 Assessment of tax liability
8   General power to make assessment
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may make an assessment of the tax liability of a taxpayer.
(2)  An assessment of a tax liability may consist of a determination that there is not a particular tax liability.
(3)  For the avoidance of doubt, an assessment of tax liability is taken to have been made when the Chief Commissioner calculates the tax liability of a taxpayer based on a return under the Payroll Tax Act 2007 or any other Act prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this subsection (whether or not the Chief Commissioner issues a notice of assessment as a result of that calculation or otherwise notifies the taxpayer of the calculation).
s 8: Am 2015 No 65, Sch 4 [1].
9   Reassessment
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may make one or more reassessments of a tax liability of a taxpayer.
(2)  A reassessment of a tax liability is to be made in accordance with the legal interpretations and assessment practices generally applied by the Chief Commissioner in relation to matters of that kind at the time the tax liability arose except to the extent that any departure from those interpretations and practices is required by a change in the law (whether legislative or non-legislative) made after that time.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner cannot make a reassessment of a tax liability more than 5 years after the initial assessment of the liability, unless—
(a)  the reassessment is to adjust tax to give effect to a decision on an objection or review as to an assessment, or
(b)  at the time the initial assessment or a reassessment was made, all the facts and circumstances affecting the liability under the relevant taxation law of the person in respect of whom the assessment or reassessment was made were not fully and truly disclosed to the Chief Commissioner and, as a result, the tax liability was assessed at a lower amount, or
(c)  the reassessment is authorised to be made more than 5 years after the initial assessment by another taxation law, or
(d)  the reassessment is made as a consequence of an application by a taxpayer, being an application made within 5 years after the initial assessment of the liability, and the reassessment reduces the tax liability.
(4)  The initial assessment of a tax liability remains the initial assessment of the liability for the purposes of this Act even if it is withdrawn under section 13.
s 9: Am 1998 No 44, Sch 6 [1]; 1999 No 10, Sch 6 [1]; 2000 No 51, Sch 7 [1]; 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [6]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[2] [3].
10   Requirement for full and true disclosure of relevant facts and circumstances
(1)  A person who is liable to pay tax under a taxation law must, before or at the time an assessment of the tax liability is made, fully and truly disclose to the Chief Commissioner all the facts and circumstances affecting the tax liability under the relevant taxation law.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against subsection (1) committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
(2)  A defendant is not guilty of an offence under this section if the defendant proves that the defendant reasonably relied on some other person to ensure that the requirements of this section were satisfied.
s 10: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [1]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
11   Information on which assessment is made
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may make an assessment on the information that the Chief Commissioner has from any source at the time the assessment is made.
(2)  If the Chief Commissioner has insufficient information to make an exact assessment of a tax liability, the Chief Commissioner may make an assessment by way of estimate.
12   Compromise assessment
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may make an assessment in accordance with this section—
(a)  if it is difficult or impracticable for the Chief Commissioner to determine a person’s tax liability under a taxation law without undue delay or expense because of the complexity or uncertainty of the case or for any other reason, or
(b)  for the purpose of settling a dispute between the Chief Commissioner and a person concerning the person’s tax liability (whether or not a previous assessment has been made).
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may, with the agreement of the taxpayer, assess liability in an amount specified in, or determined in accordance with, the agreement.
(3)  Despite section 9, the Chief Commissioner cannot make a reassessment of a tax liability assessed in accordance with this section—
(a)  except with the agreement of the taxpayer, or
(b)  unless the assessment under this section was procured by fraud or there was a deliberate failure to disclose material information.
(4)    (Repealed)
(5)  This section does not limit the power of the Chief Commissioner to make an assessment by way of estimate under section 11.
s 12: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [7]; 2012 No 76, Sch 4 [1].
13   Withdrawal of assessment
The Chief Commissioner may withdraw an assessment (being an assessment for which a notice of assessment has been issued) at any time within 5 years after the date of issue of the notice, whether or not the amount of tax specified in the assessment has been paid.
14   Notice of assessment, reassessment or withdrawal of assessment
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may issue a notice of assessment (showing the amount of the assessment).
(2)  If the Chief Commissioner has not issued a notice of assessment of the tax liability of a taxpayer, the Chief Commissioner must issue the notice if a request to do so is made by the taxpayer within 5 years after the liability arose.
(3)  If the Chief Commissioner makes a reassessment, the Chief Commissioner must issue a notice of assessment (showing the amount of the reassessment).
(4)  If the Chief Commissioner withdraws an assessment, the Chief Commissioner must issue a notice of withdrawal of assessment.
(5)  The notice is to be in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner.
15   Inclusion of interest and penalty tax in notice of assessment
A notice of assessment of a taxpayer’s tax liability issued following a tax default by the taxpayer must specify any interest and penalty tax payable by the taxpayer under Part 5 or section 95 in respect of the default.
16   Validity of assessment
The validity of an assessment is not affected because a provision of a taxation law has not been complied with.
16A   Land tax assessments—special provisions
The validity of a land tax assessment for a land tax year (within the meaning of the Land Tax Management Act 1956) is not affected by an objection or appeal under the Valuation of Land Act 1916 in relation to a land tax assessment for a subsequent land tax year, even if the objection or appeal results in a change to a land valuation on which the earlier land tax assessment was partly based.
Note.
Under the Land Tax Management Act 1956 land tax assessments are based on an average value of land, being an average of the land value of the land in respect of the most recent 3 land tax years. This section prevents an objection to a land tax assessment from affecting the validity of previous land tax assessments that were based on one or 2 of the same land values.
s 16A: Ins 2006 No 87, Sch 3.2.
17   Acceptance of money or return not necessarily an assessment
The acceptance of money by the Chief Commissioner paid in connection with the lodging of a return or other document, or the acceptance of a return or other document, is not, only because of the acceptance, an assessment.
s 17: Am 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [1].
17A   Valuation of property
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, for the purpose of making an assessment of the tax liability of a taxpayer—
(a)  require the taxpayer, by written notice, to provide evidence of the value of property that the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate, or
(b)  obtain a valuation of property from a person the Chief Commissioner is satisfied is suitably qualified to provide evidence of the value of property, or
(c)  rely on a valuation of property prepared for any purpose by a person the Chief Commissioner is satisfied is suitably qualified to provide evidence of the value of property.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may recover from the taxpayer the cost of obtaining a valuation of property under subsection (1)(b) if—
(a)  the value of the property in the valuation obtained by the Chief Commissioner differs from the value of the property provided by the taxpayer by at least 10%, or
(b)  the taxpayer fails to comply with a written notice given to the taxpayer under subsection (1)(a) within 60 days after the notice is issued.
s 17A: Ins 2023 No 18, Sch 9[5].
Part 4 Refunds of tax
18   Entitlement to refund
(1)  If a taxpayer has paid a greater amount of tax in relation to a tax liability than the amount assessed for that liability, the Chief Commissioner must refund the difference to the taxpayer, subject to this Part.
(2)  For the avoidance of doubt, it is declared that an amount by which tax is overpaid is taken to be tax for the purposes of this Part.
s 18: Am 1998 No 44, Sch 6 [2].
19   Offset of refund against other liability
(1)  Instead of making a refund to a taxpayer, the Chief Commissioner may apply the amount that would otherwise be refunded to meet any of the following—
(a)  a tax debt or any other amount payable by the taxpayer under a taxation law,
(b)  a grant debt (within the meaning of the State Debt Recovery Act 2018) payable by the taxpayer, whether or not a debt recovery order has been made under that Act against the taxpayer for the debt,
(c)  a referable debt (within the meaning of the State Debt Recovery Act 2018) payable by the taxpayer, but only if a debt recovery order has been made against the taxpayer for the debt,
(d)  a fine, within the meaning of the Fines Act 1996, payable by the taxpayer.
(2)  A refund may be credited towards a taxpayer’s future liability, but only with the taxpayer’s consent.
s 19: Am 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [2]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[6].
20   Windfalls—refusal of refund
The Chief Commissioner may refuse to make a refund to a taxpayer if—
(a)  the relevant taxation law provides for the passing on of the tax to another person, and
(b)  the tax sought to be refunded has been passed on to another person, and
(c)  the Chief Commissioner is not satisfied that appropriate arrangements have been made to pass the tax sought to be refunded on to that other person.
Part 5 Interest and penalty tax
Division 1 Interest
21   Interest in respect of tax defaults
(1)  If a tax default occurs, the taxpayer is liable to pay interest on the amount of tax unpaid calculated on a daily basis from the end of the last day for payment until the day it is paid at the interest rate from time to time applying under this Division.
(2)  Interest is payable under this section in respect of a tax default that consists of a failure to pay—
(a)  penalty tax under Division 2, or
(b)  a penalty imposed under section 106KA.
(3)  Interest is not payable in respect of a failure to pay interest under this division.
s 21: Am 2024 No 90, Sch 8[2].
22   Interest rate
(1)  The interest rate is the sum of—
(a)  the market rate component, and
(b)  the premium component.
(2)  The market rate component is—
(a)  unless an order is in force under paragraph (b), the Bank Accepted Bill rate rounded to the second decimal place (rounding 0.005 upwards), or
(b)  the rate specified for the time being by order of the Minister published in the Gazette.
(3)  The premium component is 8% per annum.
(4)  In this section, the Bank Accepted Bill rate in respect of any day within a period specified in Column 1 of the Table to this subsection is the monthly average yield of 90-day Bank Accepted Bills published by the Reserve Bank for the month specified in Column 2 of that Table opposite that period.
Table
Column 1
Column 2
Period
Monthly average yield
1 January to 31 March
the preceding November
1 April to 30 June
the preceding February
1 July to 30 September
the preceding May
1 October to 31 December
the preceding August
(5)  If the monthly average yield of 90-day Bank Accepted Bills for a particular month is not published by the Reserve Bank before the beginning of the relevant period, it is taken to be the same as the last monthly average yield of 90-day Bank Accepted Bills published by the Reserve Bank before that month.
s 22: Am 1999 No 10, Sch 6 [2] [3]; 2001 No 22, Sch 4 [1] [2]; 2009 No 51, Sch 6 [1].
23   Liability to payment of small amounts of interest
There is no liability imposed by a taxation law to pay an amount of interest if the amount is less than $20.
24   Interest rate to prevail over interest otherwise payable on a judgment debt
If judgment is given by or entered in a court for an amount of unpaid tax (or an amount that includes an amount of unpaid tax), the interest rate determined in accordance with this Division continues to apply, to the exclusion of any other interest rate, until the tax is paid.
25   Remission of interest
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may remit interest.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may issue guidelines setting out how interest must be remitted under this division.
(3)  If guidelines are issued, interest must be remitted only in accordance with the guidelines.
(4)  The imposition or remission of penalty tax is not relevant to the imposition or remission of interest.
s 25: Subst 2023 No 26, Sch 5[1].
Division 2 Penalty tax
26   Penalty tax in respect of certain tax defaults
(1)  If a tax default occurs, the taxpayer is liable to pay penalty tax in addition to the amount of tax unpaid.
(2)  Penalty tax imposed under this Division is in addition to interest.
(3)  Penalty tax is not payable in respect of a tax default that consists of a failure to pay—
(a)  interest under Division 1, or
(b)  penalty tax previously imposed under this division, or
(c)  a penalty imposed under section 106KA.
s 26: Am 2024 No 90, Sch 8[3].
27   Amount of penalty tax
(1)  The amount of penalty payable for a tax default is, subject to this Division—
(a)  25% of the amount of tax unpaid, or
(b)  if the taxpayer is a significant global entity within the meaning of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 of the Commonwealth—50% of the amount of tax unpaid.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may increase the amount of penalty tax payable in respect of a tax default to 75% of the amount of tax unpaid if the Chief Commissioner is satisfied that the tax default was caused wholly or partly by the intentional disregard by the taxpayer (or a person acting on behalf of the taxpayer) of a taxation law.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may determine that no penalty tax is payable in respect of a tax default if the Chief Commissioner is satisfied that—
(a)  the taxpayer (or a person acting on behalf of the taxpayer) took reasonable care to comply with the taxation law, or
(b)  the tax default occurred solely because of circumstances beyond the taxpayer’s control (or if a person acted on behalf of the taxpayer, because of circumstances beyond either the person’s or the taxpayer’s control) but not amounting to financial incapacity.
s 27: Am 2022 No 16, Sch 8[2].
28   Reduction in penalty tax for disclosure before investigation
(1)  The amount of penalty tax determined under section 27 is to be reduced by 80% if, before the Chief Commissioner informs the taxpayer that an investigation relating to the taxpayer is to be carried out, the taxpayer discloses to the Chief Commissioner, in writing, sufficient information to enable the nature and extent of the tax default to be determined.
(2)  This section does not apply in respect of information disclosed by a taxpayer if the taxpayer is registered under a taxation law and—
(a)  the tax default involved a failure to lodge a return as required under that taxation law, or
(b)  the tax default involved a failure to pay tax by the date required under that taxation law.
s 28: Am 2009 No 51, Sch 6 [2].
29   Reduction in penalty tax for disclosure during investigation
(1)  The amount of penalty tax determined under section 27 is to be reduced by 20% if, after the Chief Commissioner informs the taxpayer that an investigation relating to the taxpayer is to be carried out and before it is completed, the taxpayer discloses to the Chief Commissioner, in writing, sufficient information to enable the nature and extent of the tax default to be determined.
(2)  This section does not apply in respect of information disclosed by a taxpayer if the taxpayer is registered under a taxation law and—
(a)  the tax default involved a failure to lodge a return as required under that taxation law, or
(b)  the tax default involved a failure to pay tax by the date required under that taxation law.
s 29: Am 2009 No 51, Sch 6 [3].
30   Increase in penalty tax for concealment
(1)  The amount of penalty tax determined under section 27 is to be increased by 20% if, after the Chief Commissioner has informed the taxpayer that an investigation is to be carried out and before the investigation is completed, the taxpayer took steps to prevent or hinder the Chief Commissioner from becoming aware of the nature and extent of the tax default in whole or part.
(2)  For the purposes of this section, a taxpayer takes steps to prevent or hinder the Chief Commissioner if the taxpayer—
(a)  deliberately damages or destroys records required to be kept under the taxation law to which the investigation relates, or
(b)  refuses or fails (without reasonable excuse) to comply with a requirement made by the Chief Commissioner under Division 2 of Part 9 for the purposes of determining the taxpayer’s tax liability, or
(c)  hinders or obstructs an authorised officer exercising functions under that Division for that purpose.
Note.
This Table contains a summary of the provisions of sections 27–30.
Penalty category
Prime rate
%
Voluntary disclosure
Concealment or hindrance in establishing underpayment
%
Before investigation
%
During investigation
%
Failure to take reasonable care but no intentional disregard of the law
25
5
20
30
Failure to take reasonable care, but no intentional disregard of the law, by significant global entity
50
10
40
60
Intentional disregard of the law
75
15
60
90
s 30: Am 2022 No 16, Sch 8[3].
31   Minimum amount of penalty tax
Penalty tax is not to be imposed if the amount of the penalty tax is less than $20.
32   Time for payment of penalty tax
Penalty tax must be paid by a taxpayer within the period specified for that purpose in a notice of assessment of the tax liability of the taxpayer, being a period of not less than 14 days.
33   Remission of penalty tax
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, in such circumstances as the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate, remit penalty tax by any amount.
(2)  The imposition or remission of interest is not relevant to the imposition or remission of penalty tax.
s 33: Am 2023 No 26, Sch 5[2].
33A   Penalty tax relief
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, in a way the Chief Commissioner thinks fit, publish guidelines on the circumstances in which, or the grounds on which, the Chief Commissioner may determine that no penalty tax is payable in relation to a tax default (penalty tax relief guidelines).
(2)  If the Chief Commissioner publishes penalty tax relief guidelines, the Chief Commissioner may determine that no penalty tax is payable in relation to a tax default after considering the guidelines.
(3)  This section does not affect section 27(3).
s 33A: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[4].
Part 6 Returns
Division 1 General
34   Form of returns
A return is to be in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner.
35   Time of lodgment
A return is taken to have been lodged by a person at the time the return is served on the Chief Commissioner.
36   Extending time or period for lodgment
The Chief Commissioner may extend the time or period for lodgment of a return by a person.
Division 2 Approval of special tax return arrangements
37   Approval of special tax return arrangements
(1)  Despite the provisions of another taxation law, the Chief Commissioner may, by written notice, give approval for a special arrangement for the lodging of returns and payment of tax under the taxation law to—
(a)  a specified taxpayer, or
(b)  a specified agent or other person on behalf of a specified taxpayer, a specified class of taxpayers or taxpayers for whom that agent or other person is authorised to act, or
(c)  any other specified person who is a party to a transaction or class of transactions in respect of which a liability for tax arises.
(2)  An approval, among other things—
(a)  may provide an exemption for the taxpayer or taxpayers from specified provisions of the taxation law to which it applies, and
(b)  may authorise the lodging of returns and payments of tax by electronic means.
(3)  An approval may be given on the initiative of the Chief Commissioner or on application.
(4)  The calculation of tax by a person other than the Chief Commissioner in accordance with a special arrangement approved under this section is not an assessment.
(5)  For the purposes of this Division, an arrangement approved under this section is a special arrangement and the person to whom the approval is given is an approval holder.
(6)  A special arrangement does not transfer a taxpayer’s tax liability from a taxpayer to an approval holder.
s 37: Am 2000 No 51, Sch 7 [2]; 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [1] [2].
38   Application for approval
(1)  An application for an approval under this Division must be made to the Chief Commissioner in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may grant or refuse an application for an approval under this Division.
39   Conditions of approval
(1)  An approval under this Division is subject to conditions specified by the Chief Commissioner in the notice of approval or by subsequent written notice.
(2)  The conditions of an approval may include—
(a)  conditions limiting the approval to tax liabilities of a specified class, and
(b)  conditions limiting the approval to transactions effected by instruments of a specified class, and
(c)  conditions requiring the lodging of returns at specified times and conditions as to the contents of the returns, and
(d)  conditions requiring payments of tax at specified times, and
(e)  conditions as to the means by which returns are to be lodged or payments of tax are to be made, and
(f)  if the approval provides an exemption from a requirement for the stamping of instruments, conditions as to the endorsement of the instruments, and
(g)  conditions requiring the keeping of specified records.
s 39: Am 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [3].
39A   Registration of approval holders
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, by written notice served on a person at the time of, or subsequent to, approving the person to pay tax or lodge returns under a special arrangement, register the person as a person who is approved to pay tax under the special arrangement.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may, by order in writing served on the person at the time of, or subsequent to, registration, direct the person to pay tax in respect of any transaction or class of transactions that is the subject of a special arrangement in accordance with the special arrangement.
(3)  Tax that is the subject of such a direction must be paid in accordance with the special arrangement.
(4)  The Chief Commissioner may revoke the registration of a person under this section if the Chief Commissioner cancels an approval under this Division.
s 39A: Ins 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [4].
40   Variation and cancellation of approvals
The Chief Commissioner may vary or cancel an approval under this Division by written notice served on the approval holder to whom the approval was given.
s 40: Am 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [5].
41   Contravention of approval
(1)  An approval holder must not fail to comply with the conditions of a special arrangement.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
(2)  A person does not commit an offence against subsection (1) for a failure to comply with the conditions of a special arrangement in relation to a particular tax liability if the provisions of the taxation law under which it is levied (disregarding the special arrangement) are complied with in relation to that tax liability.
(3)  Subsection (2) does not apply in relation to a tax liability for a transaction or class of transactions if the approval holder has been directed under section 39A to pay tax in respect of the transaction or class of transactions in accordance with the special arrangement.
Note.
An offence against subsection (1) committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 41: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [2]. Subst 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [6]. Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
42   Stamping of instruments
(1)  If—
(a)  an approval under this Division provides for an exemption from a requirement for the stamping of an instrument, and
(b)  the instrument is endorsed in accordance with the conditions of the approval,
the instrument is taken to be duly stamped but without affecting liability for the payment of tax in relation to the instrument under the relevant taxation law.
(2)  A person who endorses an instrument otherwise than under and in accordance with an approval under this Division so as to suggest or imply that the instrument is properly so endorsed and as a result is taken to be duly stamped is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against subsection (2) committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
(3)  Despite subsection (1), the endorsing of an instrument as referred to in subsection (1) (b) is not evidence of an assessment of the duty payable under the Duties Act 1997 in respect of the instrument.
s 42: Am 2000 No 51, Sch 7 [3]; 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [3].
Part 7 Collection of tax
Division 1 General
pt 7, div 1, hdg: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [2].
43   Tax payable to the Chief Commissioner
Tax that is payable is payable to the Chief Commissioner.
44   Unpaid tax is debt payable to Chief Commissioner
(1)  If the whole or part of tax payable by a taxpayer is not paid to the Chief Commissioner as required by a notice of assessment, the amount unpaid is a debt payable to the Chief Commissioner by the taxpayer.
(2)  A debt payable by a taxpayer to the Chief Commissioner under this Act is a tax debt under this Act.
s 44: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [8]. Subst 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [3].
45   Joint and several liability
(1)  If 2 or more persons are jointly and severally liable to pay an amount under a taxation law, the amount that is unpaid is a tax debt payable to the Chief Commissioner by each of them.
(2)  If under a taxation law two or more persons are jointly and severally liable to pay an amount of tax that is payable by any one of them, each person is also jointly and severally liable to pay any related charges, being—
(a)  any amount payable to the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law in relation to that amount, including any interest and penalty tax under Part 5, and
(b)  any costs and expenses incurred in relation to the recovery of that amount that the Chief Commissioner is entitled to recover from any such person.
(2A)  The Chief Commissioner may issue a notice of assessment of the liability of a person to pay any tax and related charges for which the person is jointly and severally liable with another person under a taxation law, even if a notice of assessment has already been issued to the other person.
(3)  A person who pays an amount of tax in accordance with the liability imposed by this section has such rights of contribution or indemnity from the other person or persons as are just.
s 45: Am 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [1]; 2010 No 46, Sch 11 [1] [2]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [4].
46   Collection of tax from third parties
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may require any of the following persons instead of the taxpayer to pay tax that is payable but remains unpaid—
(a)  a person by whom any money is due or accruing or may become due to the taxpayer,
(b)  a person who holds or may subsequently hold money for or on account of the taxpayer,
(c)  a person who holds or may subsequently hold money on account of some other person for payment to the taxpayer,
(d)  a person having authority from some other person to pay money to the taxpayer.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner’s requirement is to be made by notice in writing.
(3)  A copy of the notice must be served on the taxpayer.
(4)  The amount of money required to be paid to the Chief Commissioner is—
(a)  if the amount of the money so held or due or authorised to be paid does not exceed the amount payable by the taxpayer to the Chief Commissioner—all the money, or
(b)  if the amount of the money exceeds the amount so payable—sufficient money to pay the amount so payable.
(5)  The money must be paid to the Chief Commissioner on receipt of the notice, or when the money is held by the person and becomes due to the taxpayer, or after such period (if any) as may be specified by the Chief Commissioner, whichever is the later.
(6)  A person subject to a requirement of the Chief Commissioner under this section must comply with the requirement.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
(7)  A person who makes a payment in accordance with this section is taken to be acting under the authority of the taxpayer and of all other persons concerned and is indemnified by this section in respect of the payment.
(8)  If, after a person is given a notice under this section by the Chief Commissioner, the whole or a part of the amount is paid by another person, the Chief Commissioner must promptly notify the person to whom the notice is given of the payment and the notice is taken to be amended accordingly.
(9)  In this section, tax includes a judgment debt and costs in respect of such an amount.
47   Arrangements for payment of tax
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may extend the time for payment of tax by a taxpayer and may accept the payment of tax by instalments.
(2)  A decision of the Chief Commissioner under this section may be made subject to such conditions (for example, as to the payment of interest) as the Chief Commissioner may determine.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may, in such circumstances as the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate, remit the payment of interest required to be paid by a condition imposed under subsection (2) by any amount.
(4)  This section ceases to apply if a debt recovery order under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018 is made against the taxpayer in respect of the amount payable.
(5)  Subsection (4) does not limit the functions of the Chief Commissioner under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018.
s 47: Am 1999 No 10, Sch 6 [4]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [6].
Division 2 Recovery of tax from directors and former directors of corporations
pt 7, div 2: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3].
47A   Definitions
In this Division—
corporate tax liability means—
(a)  the amount of tax that a corporation has been assessed as being liable to pay, as set out in a notice of assessment issued to the corporation, and
(b)  any interest or penalty tax payable in respect of an amount referred to in paragraph (a).
special arrangement for the payment of a corporate tax liability means an arrangement for the payment of tax made by the Chief Commissioner under section 47.
s 47A: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [1] [2].
47B   Liability of directors and former directors of corporation for failure to pay corporate tax liability
(1)  If a corporation fails to pay a corporate tax liability in accordance with a notice of assessment issued by the Chief Commissioner, the Chief Commissioner may serve a compliance notice on one or more of the following persons—
(a)  a person who is a director of the corporation,
(b)  a person who was a director of the corporation at the time the corporation first became liable to pay the tax, or any part of the tax, that is included in the corporate tax liability or at any time afterwards (referred to in this Division as a former director), subject to subsection (5).
(2)  A compliance notice is a notice that advises a director or former director of a corporation that he or she will be liable to pay a corporate tax liability of the corporation if the failure to pay the corporate tax liability is not rectified before the end of a period specified in the notice (the compliance period).
(2A)  The compliance period is to be a period of not less than 21 days from the date the notice is served on the director or former director.
(3)  For the purposes of this Division, a failure to pay a corporate tax liability is rectified if before the end of the compliance period—
(a)  the corporate tax liability is paid, or
(b)  the Chief Commissioner makes a special arrangement with the corporation for the payment of the corporate tax liability, or
(c)  the Hardship Review Board waives or defers payment of some or all of the corporate tax liability, or
(d)  an administrator of the corporation is appointed under Part 5.3A of the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth, or
(e)  the corporation begins to be wound up within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth.
(4)  If the failure to pay the corporate tax liability is not rectified before the end of the compliance period, the director or former director on whom the compliance notice was served is jointly and severally liable with the corporation to pay the corporate tax liability.
(4A)  The Chief Commissioner is to issue to the director or former director a notice of assessment of the tax liability of the director or former director under this Division.
(5)  A person does not cease to be liable to pay a corporate tax liability because the person ceases to be a director of the corporation, but a former director of a corporation is not liable for any tax for which the corporation first became liable after the director ceased to be a director of the corporation.
s 47B: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [3]–[7]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [7].
47C   Failure to comply with special arrangements
If—
(a)  a failure by a corporation to pay a corporate tax liability is rectified because of a special arrangement for the payment of the corporate tax liability, or because payment of part or all of the corporate tax liability is deferred by the Board of Review, and
(b)  the corporation fails to pay the corporate tax liability in accordance with the terms of the special arrangement or deferral,
the Chief Commissioner may serve a further compliance notice on the director or former director in respect of the corporate tax liability, or so much of the corporate tax liability as remains unpaid, and this Division applies accordingly.
s 47C: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [8].
47D   Right of indemnity and contribution
If a director or former director of a corporation is liable to pay a corporate tax liability under this Division and an amount is paid by the director or former director in discharge of that liability, the director or former director is entitled—
(a)  to be indemnified for payment of that amount by the corporation, and
(b)  to recover a contribution from any other director or former director of the corporation who is liable to pay the corporate tax liability under this Division, as if the directors and former directors who are liable to pay the corporate tax liability had jointly guaranteed payment of the corporate tax liability.
s 47D: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [8].
47E   Defences
In proceedings for the recovery of a corporate tax liability from a director or former director of a corporation under this Division, it is a defence to the recovery of the corporate tax liability from the director or former director if the director or former director establishes that—
(a)  the director or former director took all reasonable steps that were possible in the circumstances to ensure that the corporation rectified the failure to pay the corporate tax liability before the end of the compliance period for the compliance notice served on the director or former director, or
(b)  the director or former director was unable, because of illness or for some other similar good reason, to take steps to ensure that the corporation rectified the failure to pay the corporate tax liability before the end of the compliance period for the compliance notice served on the director or former director.
s 47E: Ins 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [3]. Subst 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [9].
Part 8 Record keeping and general offences
48   Requirement to keep proper records
(1)  A person must keep, or cause to be kept, such records as are necessary to enable the person’s tax liability under a taxation law to be properly assessed.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
(2)  This section does not affect a provision of any other taxation law concerning the keeping of records.
Note.
A person who is required by a taxation law to keep a record may include other information in the record for the person’s own use.
s 48: Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
49   Additional records
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, by written notice given to a person who is required by a taxation law to keep a record or cause a record to be kept, require the person to keep, or cause to be kept, such additional records as are specified in the notice.
(2)  A person who fails to comply with such a notice is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against subsection (2) committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 49: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [4]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
50   Inclusion of false or misleading information
A person must not—
(a)  make a record required to be made by a taxation law that comprises or contains matter that the person knows is false or misleading in a material particular, or
(b)  include in a record required to be made or kept by a taxation law matter that the person knows is false or misleading in a material particular.
Maximum penalty—
(a)  500 penalty units for a first offence, or
(b)  1,000 penalty units for a second or subsequent offence.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 50: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [5]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[7].
51   Accessibility
A person who is required by a taxation law to keep a record must keep the record so that it is able to be readily produced to the Chief Commissioner if the Chief Commissioner requires its production.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
s 51: Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
52   Form of record—English language
A person who is required by a taxation law to keep a record must keep the record in English or in a form that can be readily converted or translated into English.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
s 52: An 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
53   Period of retention
(1)  A person who is required by a taxation law to keep a record must retain the record for not less than 5 years after—
(a)  the date it was made or obtained, or
(b)  the date of completion of the transaction or act to which it relates,
whichever is the later.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
(2)  A person may, with the written approval of the Chief Commissioner, destroy a record within the 5-year period unless another law requires the record to be retained for not less than 5 years.
s 53: Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
54   Wilfully destroying records
A person must not wilfully damage or destroy a record required to be kept by a taxation law.
Maximum penalty—500 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 54: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [6]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[8].
55   Knowingly giving false or misleading information
A person must not—
(a)  make a statement, orally or in writing, to a tax officer, or
(b)  give information, orally or in writing, to a tax officer,
knowing that it is false or misleading in a material particular.
Maximum penalty—
(a)  500 penalty units for a first offence, or
(b)  1,000 penalty units or 2 years imprisonment, or both, for a second or subsequent offence.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 55: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [7]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[9].
56   Deliberately omitting information
A person must not omit from a statement made to a tax officer any matter or thing without which the statement is, to the person’s knowledge, false or misleading in a material particular.
Maximum penalty—
(a)  500 penalty units for a first offence, or
(b)  1,000 penalty units or 2 years imprisonment, or both, for a second or subsequent offence.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 56: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [8]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[9].
57   Failure to lodge documents
A person must not fail or refuse to lodge a document, statement or return that is required to be lodged by a taxation law.
Maximum penalty—250 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 57: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [9]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
58   Falsifying or concealing identity
A taxpayer who—
(a)  falsifies or conceals the identity, or the address or location of a place of residence or business, of the taxpayer or of another person, or
(b)  does, by act or omission, anything that facilitates the falsification or concealment of the identity, or the address or location of a place of residence or business, of the taxpayer or another person,
is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—500 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 58: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [10]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[8].
58A   Tax evasion
A person must not, by a deliberate act or omission, evade or attempt to evade tax.
Maximum penalty—500 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or both.
s 58A: Ins 2023 No 18, Sch 9[11].
59   General defence under Part 8
A person is not guilty of an offence against a requirement of this Part if the person proves that—
(a)  the person took reasonable care to comply with the requirement, or
(b)  the contravention of the requirement was caused solely because of circumstances beyond the person’s control.
Part 9 Tax officers, investigation, collection of information and secrecy provisions
pt 9, hdg: Am 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [1].
Division 1 Tax officers
60   The Chief Commissioner
(1)  There is to be a Chief Commissioner of State Revenue.
(2)  The person for the time being holding office or acting as Deputy Secretary, Revenue NSW in the department in which this Act is administered, is also to hold office as Chief Commissioner.
s 60: Am 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [8]; 2024 No 90, Sch 8[4].
61   General administration of the taxation laws
The Chief Commissioner has the general administration of this Act and the other taxation laws and may do all such things as are necessary or convenient to give effect to this Act and the other taxation laws.
61A   Exceptions for general practitioners during relevant period
(1)  During the relevant period, the Chief Commissioner must not conduct an audit of—
(a)  a general practitioner’s compliance with the Payroll Tax Act 2007, or
(b)  compliance with the Payroll Tax Act 2007 by an entity with whom a general practitioner has a practice arrangement, to the extent amounts paid or payable by the entity relate to the general practitioner.
(2)  Also, if a tax default by a general practitioner occurs before or during the relevant period—
(a)  in calculating, under Part 5, the interest payable by the general practitioner, no interest is payable in relation to a day that is within the relevant period, and
(b)  the general practitioner is not liable under Part 5 to pay—
(i)  for a tax default that occurs during the relevant period—penalty tax in relation to the tax default, or
(ii)  for a tax default that occurred before the relevant period—any penalty tax in relation to the tax default that was not paid before the relevant period.
(3)  Subsection (2) does not entitle a person to a refund of interest or penalty tax paid before the relevant period.
(4)  This section applies despite section 61 or another provision of a taxation law.
(5)  In this section—
general practitioner means a medical practitioner who, under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law, holds registration as a general practitioner.
practice arrangement has the same meaning as in the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (NSW).
relevant period means the period—
(a)  starting at the beginning of 4 September 2023, and
(b)  ending at the beginning of 4 September 2024.
s 61A: Ins 2023 No 18, Sch 9[12]. Am 2024 No 38, Sch 6.
62   Legal proceedings in Chief Commissioner’s name
(1)  Legal proceedings may be taken by or against the Chief Commissioner in the name “Chief Commissioner of State Revenue”.
(2)  A person who takes legal proceedings in the name of the Chief Commissioner is taken to be authorised to take those proceedings, in the absence of evidence to the contrary.
63   Chief Commissioner may perform functions under Commonwealth Act
The Chief Commissioner may exercise the functions of a State taxation officer under Part IIIA of the Commonwealth Taxation Administration Act 1953.
64   The Commissioner
(1)  There is to be a Commissioner of State Revenue.
(2)  The person for the time being holding office or acting as Executive Director, Technical and Advisory Services, Revenue NSW in the department in which this Act is administered, is also to hold office as Commissioner.
(3)  While there is no person holding office as Chief Commissioner, the Commissioner of State Revenue has the same functions as the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law.
s 64: Am 2012 No 76, Sch 4 [2]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [9]; 2024 No 90, Sch 8[4].
65   Other staff
Such other staff as may be necessary for the administration of the taxation laws may be employed under the Government Sector Employment Act 2013.
s 65: Am 2017 No 22, Sch 4.45 [1].
66   Use of consultants and contractors
The Chief Commissioner may engage such consultants and contractors as may be necessary or convenient to exercise the Chief Commissioner’s functions.
67   Delegation by Chief Commissioner
The Chief Commissioner may delegate to any person any function of the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law or the Emergency Services Levy Insurance Monitor Act 2016, other than this power of delegation.
s 67: Am 2017 No 32, Sch 3.3 [3].
68   Authorised officers
(1)  The Chief Commissioner and the Commissioner are authorised officers for the purposes of the taxation laws.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may appoint persons to be authorised officers for the purposes of the taxation laws.
(3)  A tax officer to whom the Chief Commissioner delegates functions under Division 2 is an authorised officer for the purposes of the taxation laws.
69   Identity cards for authorised officers
An authorised officer must be issued with an identity card in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner—
(a)  containing the person’s name and a photograph of the person, and
(b)  stating that the person is an authorised officer for the purposes of the taxation laws.
70   Personal liability
A matter or thing done or omitted by the Chief Commissioner or a tax officer does not, if the matter or thing was done or omitted in good faith for the purpose of executing a taxation law, subject the Chief Commissioner or the tax officer so acting personally to any action, liability, claim or demand.
Division 2 Investigation
71   Circumstances in which investigative powers may be exercised
A function conferred under this Division may be exercised only for the purposes of a taxation law.
Note.
Section 80A provides that the powers may also be exercised for the purposes of a recognised revenue law in some circumstances.
s 71: Am 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [3].
72   Power to require information, instruments and records, and attendance
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may require a person, by written notice, to do any one or more of the following—
(a)  to provide to the Chief Commissioner (either orally or in writing) information that is described in the notice,
(b)  to attend and give evidence before the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer,
(c)  to produce to the Chief Commissioner an instrument or record in the person’s custody or control that is described in the notice.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner must, if the requirement is made of a person to determine that person’s tax liability, indicate in the notice that the requirement is made for that purpose, but the Chief Commissioner is not otherwise required to identify a person in relation to whom any information, evidence, instrument or record is required under this section.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may require information or evidence that is not given orally to be provided in the form of or verified by statutory declaration.
(4)  The Chief Commissioner may require evidence that is given orally to be given on oath or by affirmation and for that purpose the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer may administer an oath or affirmation.
(5)  A person who is required to attend and give evidence orally is to be paid expenses in accordance with the scale of allowances to witnesses in force for the time being under the rules of the District Court.
(6)  Subsection (5) does not apply to a person, or a representative of a person, whose liability under a taxation law is being investigated by the Chief Commissioner.
(7)  The Chief Commissioner may make a recording, by such means as the Chief Commissioner determines, of the evidence given orally by a person.
(8)  The person to whom the notice is given must comply with the notice within such period as is specified in the notice or such extended period as the Chief Commissioner may allow.
Maximum penalty (subsection (8)): 250 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against subsection (8) committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 72: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [11]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[4].
73   Access to public records without fee
The Chief Commissioner is entitled to inspect and take copies of any public record kept under an Act or law of this jurisdiction without payment of any fee that would be payable but for this section.
74   Use and inspection of documents and records provided to Chief Commissioner or authorised officer
(1)  This section applies to a document or record that is provided or produced to the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner or the authorised officer may take and retain possession of the document or record solely for the purpose of enabling the document or record to be inspected and for copies of, or extracts or notes from, the document or record to be made or taken by or on behalf of the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer.
(3)  However, if the record was provided or produced to the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer on the premises where it is normally kept, the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer may remove it from those premises for the purposes referred to in subsection (2) only—
(a)  with the consent of the owner or occupier of the premises, or
(b)  if it is not practicable to inspect or copy or take extracts or notes from the record on the premises.
(4)  The Chief Commissioner or authorised officer may retain possession of the document or record—
(a)  except in the case of a document impounded under section 76 (1) (d), for a reasonable period, but not exceeding 28 days without the consent of the person entitled to it, or
(b)  in the case of a document impounded under section 76 (1) (d), until the tax payable in respect of the instrument has been paid.
(5)  The Chief Commissioner or the authorised officer must permit a person who would be entitled to inspect the document or record if it were not in the possession of the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer to inspect the document or record at any reasonable time.
(6)  Nothing in this section prejudices a lien a person has on the document or record.
(7)  Nothing in this section limits or affects section 76.
75   Power of entry on premises
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may enter and remain on premises if the Chief Commissioner has reason to believe or suspect that there are records at the premises that are relevant to the administration of a taxation law.
(2)  Entry may be made at any reasonable time.
(3)  The power of an authorised officer to enter premises may not be exercised unless the authorised officer has the written delegation issued by the Chief Commissioner and produces it if requested to do so by the owner or occupier of the premises, or a person in physical occupation of the premises.
(4)  Before the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer enters premises under this Act, the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer must give the owner or occupier of the premises, or a person in physical occupation of the premises, reasonable notice of the intention to enter unless—
(a)  entry is made with the consent of the owner, occupier or person, or
(b)  the giving of notice would, in the opinion of the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer, defeat the purpose for which it is intended to enter the premises.
(5)  The powers of entry and inspection conferred by this Part are not exercisable in relation to premises or a part of premises used for residential purposes except—
(a)  with the consent of the owner or occupier of the premises or part, or a person in physical occupation of the premises or part, or
(b)  under the authority conferred by a search warrant.
76   Functions exercisable on entry
(1)  The Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer who has entered premises in accordance with this Division may—
(a)  require any person at those premises to produce any records in the custody or possession or under the control of the person (including a written record that reproduces in an understandable form information stored by computer, microfilm or other means or process), and
(b)  require any person at those premises to answer questions or otherwise furnish information, and
(c)  require the owner or occupier of the premises, or any person physically in occupation of the premises, to provide the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer with such assistance and facilities as is or are reasonably necessary to enable the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer to exercise the functions of the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer under this Part, and
(d)  impound an instrument that ought to be but is not stamped or is insufficiently stamped.
(2)  A receipt is to be issued for anything removed.
(3)  Any material seized and removed may be destroyed by the Chief Commissioner if—
(a)  the person from whom the material was obtained refuses to accept the return of the material, or
(b)  the person from whom the material was obtained cannot be located or ceases to exist.
(4)  Nothing in this section limits or affects section 74.
s 76: Am 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [4].
77   Search warrant
(1)  The Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer under this Act may apply to an authorised officer within the meaning of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 for a warrant to search any premises if the Chief Commissioner or the authorised officer under this Act has reasonable grounds to believe that any records are to be found there, being records to which the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer under this Act would have access if they were kept on premises to which the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer under this Act has access.
(2)  An authorised officer within the meaning of the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 to whom the application is made may, if satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for doing so, issue a search warrant authorising the Chief Commissioner or authorised officer under this Act to enter and search the premises.
(3)  Nothing in this section limits or restricts any power conferred on the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer under this Part.
(4)    (Repealed)
s 77: Am 2002 No 103, Sch 4.92 [1]–[3].
78   Obstructing Chief Commissioner or authorised officer
(1)  A person who—
(a)  prevents the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer from exercising a function under this Division, or
(b)  hinders or obstructs the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer in the exercise of such a function, or
(c)  without reasonable excuse, refuses or fails to comply with a requirement made or to answer a question of the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer asked in accordance with section 76,
is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
(2)  A person is not guilty of an offence under this section arising from the entry of the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer onto premises unless it is established that, at the material time, the Chief Commissioner or the authorised officer—
(a)  identified himself or herself as the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer, and
(b)  warned the person that a failure or refusal to comply with the requirement may constitute an offence.
79   Impersonating Chief Commissioner or authorised officer
A person who impersonates or falsely represents that he or she is the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
80   Defence of reasonable compliance
A person is not guilty of an offence under this Division if the court hearing the charge is satisfied—
(a)  that the defendant could not, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, have complied with the requirement to which the charge relates, or
(b)  that the defendant complied with the requirement to the extent of his or her ability to do so.
Division 2A Investigations under other laws
pt 9, div 2A: Ins 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [5].
80A   Investigations for the purposes of recognised revenue laws
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, by agreement with the corresponding Commissioner of a recognised jurisdiction—
(a)  authorise the corresponding Commissioner to exercise a function under Division 2 for the purposes of a recognised revenue law in force in that jurisdiction, or
(b)  exercise a function under Division 2 on behalf of the corresponding Commissioner for the purposes of a recognised revenue law in force in that jurisdiction.
(2)    (Repealed)
(3)  For the purposes of exercising a function under Division 2 for the purposes of a recognised revenue law—
(a)  a reference in this Part to tax is to be read as a reference to tax payable under the recognised revenue law, and
(b)  a reference in this Part to a tax liability is to be read as a reference to a tax liability under the recognised revenue law, and
(c)  a reference in this Part to a taxation law is to be read as a reference to the recognised revenue law, and
(d)  a reference in this Part to a contravention of a taxation law is to be read as a reference to a contravention of the recognised revenue law.
(4)  If the Chief Commissioner authorises a corresponding Commissioner of a recognised jurisdiction to exercise a function under Division 2—
(a)  a reference in this Part to the Chief Commissioner is to be read as a reference to the corresponding Commissioner, and
(b)  a reference in this Part to an authorised officer is to be read as a reference to a person authorised to exercise the function under a recognised revenue law in force in a recognised jurisdiction, and
(c)  a reference in this Part to an authorised officer’s identity card, in relation to a person authorised to exercise the function under a recognised revenue law in force in the recognised jurisdiction, is to be read as a reference to an identification card or certificate issued to the person under the recognised revenue law.
(5)  In this section—
corresponding Commissioner, in relation to a recognised jurisdiction in which a recognised revenue law is in force, means the person responsible for administering the recognised revenue law or a person holding a position in the administration of that law that corresponds to the position of Chief Commissioner.
recognised jurisdiction means the Commonwealth, another State or a Territory.
recognised revenue law means a law of the Commonwealth, another State or a Territory that—
(a)  corresponds to a taxation law, or
(b)  is listed in Schedule 2.
(6)  The Governor may, by proclamation published on the NSW legislation website, amend Schedule 2 by inserting, omitting or amending any matter.
s 80A: Ins 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [5]. Am 2005 No 111, Sch 7 [1] [2]; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [2] [3]; 2009 No 56, Sch 4.75.
80AA   Investigations in other jurisdictions for the purposes of taxation laws
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may—
(a)  enter into an agreement or arrangement with a corresponding Commissioner of a recognised jurisdiction to enable the exercise, by or on behalf of the Chief Commissioner, of investigative functions conferred or imposed under a recognised revenue law for the purposes of a taxation law, and
(b)  authorise any person who is authorised to exercise a function under Division 2 to exercise such investigative functions as may be conferred or imposed on the person by the recognised revenue law for the purposes of a taxation law.
(2)  In this section, corresponding Commissioner, recognised jurisdiction and recognised revenue law have the same meanings as they have in section 80A.
(3)  In this section, investigative function includes any function that corresponds to a function conferred or imposed by Division 2.
s 80AA: Ins 2005 No 111, Sch 7 [3].
80B   Arrangements for exercise of functions under non-taxation laws
(1)  Nothing in this Act, any other Act or any other law prevents the Chief Commissioner or an authorised officer—
(a)  from exercising any investigative function conferred or imposed by or under the provisions of a non-taxation law for the purposes of that law, or
(b)  from exercising any such investigative function in conjunction with a function exercised under this Part for the purposes of a taxation law.
(2)  Subsection (1) is subject to any express provision to the contrary in the non-taxation law concerned.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may enter into an arrangement with a public authority in connection with the exercise of investigative functions by the Chief Commissioner or by authorised officers under a non-taxation law, for the payment of a fee or otherwise, subject to the provisions of the non-taxation law concerned.
(4)  In this section—
investigative function means a function conferred or imposed by or under a non-taxation law in connection with any investigation or audit that may be carried out for the purposes of that law.
non-taxation law means any law of this State that is not a taxation law.
public authority means—
(a)  a Government department or administrative office, or
(b)  a statutory body representing the Crown, or
(c)  any other public or local authority (including any State owned corporation) constituted by or under an Act.
s 80B: Ins 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [5].
Division 2B Collection of information for disclosure to Commonwealth
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80C   Definitions
In this Division—
head of a Public Service agency and Public Service agency have the same meanings as in the Government Sector Employment Act 2013.
reportable information means information that is reportable by the State to the Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth under Subdivision 396-B of Division 396 of Part 5-25 of Chapter 5 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 of the Commonwealth.
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80D   Relationship with other NSW laws
(1)  Nothing in this Act or any other Act or law (including the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998) prevents the collection or disclosure of reportable information in accordance with this Division.
(2)  Nothing in this Division prevents the collection or disclosure of reportable information in accordance with any other provisions of this Act or any other Act or law (including the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998).
(3)  Information may be collected and disclosed in accordance with this Division even if—
(a)  the information is collected only for the purposes of disclosure to the Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth and not collected under or in relation to the administration of any law of the State (except for this Division), and
(b)  the information is not disclosed in connection with the administration or execution of any law of the State (except for this Division).
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80E   Collection and disclosure of reportable information
(1)  The Chief Commissioner or the head of a Public Service agency may collect reportable information.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may disclose reportable information to the Commissioner of Taxation of the Commonwealth.
(3)  The head of a Public Service agency may disclose reportable information to the Chief Commissioner.
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80F   Treasurer may direct collection and disclosure to Chief Commissioner
(1)  The Treasurer may direct the head of a Public Service agency to disclose any reportable information held by the agency to the Chief Commissioner and may also direct the head of a Public Service agency to collect reportable information for the purposes of that disclosure.
(2)  The head of the Public Service agency is to make such arrangements as are necessary for the collection, and disclosure to the Chief Commissioner, of reportable information, in accordance with the direction of the Treasurer.
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80G   How reportable information may be collected
(1)  The Chief Commissioner or the head of a Public Service agency may collect reportable information by requiring a person providing information for the purposes of a function carried out under a taxation law, or a law administered by the Minister to whom the Public Service agency is responsible, to provide the reportable information.
(2)  Without limiting subsection (1), the Chief Commissioner or the head of a Public Service agency may require reportable information to be provided in connection with the lodgment of an instrument, or the making of an application, under a taxation law or a law administered by the Minister to whom the Public Service agency is responsible.
(3)  Nothing in this section limits the circumstances in which the Chief Commissioner or the head of a Public Service agency may collect reportable information.
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
80H   Enforcement
Sections 55–59 extend to a person who is required by the Chief Commissioner or the head of a Public Service agency to provide reportable information under section 80G (1) or (2). For that purpose—
(a)  a reference in sections 55 and 56 to a tax officer includes a reference to the head of a Public Service agency or any other person engaged (whether as an employee or otherwise) in the administration or enforcement of the law concerned, and
(b)  a reference in section 57 to a document, statement or return that is required to be lodged by a taxation law includes a reference to the following—
(i)  any of the reportable information that the Chief Commissioner or head requires the person to provide,
(ii)  any document, statement or return that the Chief Commissioner or head requires to be lodged in support of that reportable information, and
(c)  a reference in section 58 to a taxpayer includes a reference to the person.
pt 9, div 2B (ss 80C–80H): Ins 2016 No 29, Sch 1 [2].
Division 3 Secrecy
81   Prohibition on certain disclosures of information by tax officers
A person who is or was a tax officer must not disclose any information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law, except as permitted by this Division.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
82   Permitted disclosures—to particular persons
A tax officer may disclose information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law—
(a)  with the consent of the person to whom the information relates or at the request of a person acting on behalf of the person to whom the information relates, or
(b)  in connection with the administration or execution of the following laws (including for the purpose of any legal proceedings arising out of any of those laws or a report of any such proceedings)—
(i)  a taxation law,
(ii)  the First Home Owner Grant and Shared Equity Act 2000 or a corresponding law of another State or a Territory,
(iv)  a recognised revenue law,
(v)  the Fines Act 1996,
(vi), (vii)    (Repealed)
(c)    (Repealed)
(d)  in accordance with a requirement imposed, or authorisation conferred, by or under an Act, or
(e)  to the Commissioner for the New South Wales Crime Commission or a person authorised by the Commissioner, or
(f)  to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, or a person authorised by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission, for the purposes of the administration or execution of the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth or Part 3 of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 of the Commonwealth (or regulations in force under that Act or Part), or
(g)  to the Australian Crime Commission, or a person authorised by that Commission, for the purposes of the administration or execution of—
(i)  the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002 of the Commonwealth, or
(ii)  a law of a State or Territory that makes provision for the operation of that Commission in that State or Territory, or
(h)  to the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, or a member of the Australian Federal Police designated by the Commissioner, for the purpose of enforcing a law of the Commonwealth that creates an offence, or
(i)  to the Official Receiver in Bankruptcy for the purposes of the administration or execution of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 of the Commonwealth, or
(j)  to the Comptroller-General of Customs for the purposes of the Customs Act 1901 of the Commonwealth, or
(j1)  to the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission or a person authorised by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commissioner, or
(k)  to any of the following persons or a person authorised by any of the following persons—
(i)  the Ombudsman,
(ii)    (Repealed)
(iii)  the Australian Statistician,
(iv)  the Auditor-General,
(v)  the Valuer-General,
(vi)  a Public Service employee acting in the execution or administration of the Regional Development Act 2004, or
(vii)  the State Insurance Regulatory Authority,
(viii)  the Legal Services Commissioner, a member of the Law Society Council, an external examiner appointed under section 155 of the Legal Profession Uniform Law (NSW) or an external investigator appointed under section 162 of that Law,
(ix)  the head of a Public Service agency within the meaning of the Government Sector Employment Act 2013 or the holder of a statutory office if the information relates to land, including its description, ownership and value,
(x)  the Hardship Review Board constituted under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018 or a member of that Board,
(xi)  the Secretary of the Department of Education,
(xia)    (Repealed)
(xii)  the Chief Executive Officer of Service NSW,
(xiii)  the Secretary of the Department of Transport, for the purposes of administration of the Parking Space Levy Act 2009,
(xiv)  the Commissioner of Police,
(xv)  the Commissioner for Vocational Training,
(xvi)  the Independent Commission Against Corruption,
(xvii)  the Commissioner of Fire and Rescue NSW,
(xviii)  the Commissioner of the NSW Rural Fire Service,
(xix)  the Commissioner of the State Emergency Service,
(xx)  the Chief Executive Officer of Investment NSW for the purposes of the administration of Jobs Plus agreements under the Payroll Tax Act 2007, section 66F,
(xxi)  Museums of History NSW,
(xxii)  State Records Authority NSW, or
(k1)  to the Secretary of the Treasury for the purposes of assisting the Treasurer in the exercise of the Treasurer’s functions under—
(i)  the Government Sector Finance Act 2018 in relation to the Budget, or
(ii)  other Acts, or
(l)  to a person prescribed by the regulations, or a person authorised by any such person.
s 82: Am 1998 No 104, Sch 8 [1]; 1999 No 10, Sch 6 [5] [6]; 2000 No 51, Sch 7 [4]; 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [2]; 2001 No 22, Sch 4 [3] [4]; 2001 No 43, Sch 2 [2]; 2001 No 96, Sch 3 [1]; 2002 No 63, Sch 6; 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [6]–[8] (am 2003 No 13, Sch 1.32); 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [4]–[6]; 2004 No 58, sec 18; 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [3]–[5]; 2006 No 51, Sch 4; 2006 No 58, Sch 3.16; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [4]–[7]; 2009 No 5, sec 17 (2); 2011 No 26, Sch 2.2 [1] [2]; 2012 No 76, Sch 4 [3]–[7]; 2014 No 33, Sch 2.44; 2014 No 73, Sch 2.2; 2015 No 7, Sch 2.42; 2015 No 14, Sch 2.2 [1] [2]; 2015 No 15, Sch 2.56; 2015 No 19, Sch 15.22; 2017 No 11, Sch 4.4; 2017 No 22, Schs 2.40 [1] [2], 4.45 [2]–[5]; 2017 No 32, Sch 3.3 [4]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [10] [11]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[10] [13]; 2024 No 90, Sch 8[5]–[7].
83   Permitted disclosures—of a general nature
The Chief Commissioner may disclose information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law unless that information will or is likely to—
(a)  directly or indirectly identify a particular taxpayer, or
(b)  disclose matters concerning the personal affairs of a particular taxpayer.
83B   Permitted disclosures—investigation and law enforcement
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may disclose information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law to an investigative or law enforcement agency to assist the agency to exercise its investigative, complaint handling or law enforcement functions.
(2)  In this section—
investigative or law enforcement agency means a government agency, or a government official, of a State, a Territory or the Commonwealth that has investigative, complaint handling or law enforcement functions.
investigative, complaint handling or law enforcement functions include functions that may result in the agency taking or instituting disciplinary, criminal or other formal action or proceedings against a person or body under investigation.
s 83B: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[5].
83C   Permitted disclosures—tax clearance checks
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may disclose information about a taxpayer, obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law, to a NSW public agency in connection with the procurement by the NSW public agency of goods or services from the taxpayer.
(2)  In particular, the Chief Commissioner may disclose the following information about a taxpayer, as current at the time of disclosure, to assist the NSW public agency in assessing whether the taxpayer is an appropriate person from whom the NSW public agency should procure goods or services—
(a)  information about a return that is required to be lodged by the taxpayer with the Chief Commissioner but has not been lodged,
(b)  information about the taxpayer’s liability to pay tax under a taxation law,
(c)  without limiting paragraph (a) or (b), information about a return, or tax liability, that is the subject of a special arrangement under section 37,
(d)  the following information for the previous 5 years—
(i)  the amount of penalty tax imposed on the taxpayer,
(ii)  the amount of tax payable by the taxpayer and written off by the Chief Commissioner.
(3)  For the purposes of this section—
(a)  information about, or in relation to, a taxpayer includes information about, or in relation to, an associated person of the taxpayer, and
(b)  a person is an associated person of a taxpayer if the person is an associated person of the taxpayer for the purposes of the Duties Act 1997.
Note—
See the Duties Act 1997, Dictionary, clause 2.
(4)  In this section—
NSW public agency means the following—
(a)  a government sector agency within the meaning of the Government Sector Employment Act 2013,
(b)  a NSW Government agency,
(c)  another public authority that is constituted by or under an Act or that exercises public functions, other than a State owned corporation,
(d)  a State owned corporation prescribed by the regulations.
s 83C: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[5].
84   Prohibition on secondary disclosures of information
(1)  A person must not disclose any information obtained from a tax officer in accordance with this Part unless the disclosure is made with the consent of the Chief Commissioner or so as to enable the person to exercise a function conferred on the person by law for the purpose of the enforcement of a law or protecting the public revenue.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
(2)  This section does not limit the operation of section 85AA.
s 84: Am 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [7]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[14].
85   Further restrictions on disclosure
(1)  A person who is or was a tax officer is not required to disclose or produce in any court any information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law except—
(a)  if it is necessary to do so for the purposes of the administration or execution of a taxation law, or
(b)  if the requirement is made for the purposes of enabling a person who is specified for the time being to be an authorised recipient to exercise a function conferred or imposed on the person by law.
(2)  In this section—
authorised recipient means a person to whom information may be disclosed under section 82.
s 85: Am 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [9] [10].
85AA   Disclosure of confidential tax information
(1)  A person must not knowingly or recklessly disclose or use confidential tax information.
Maximum penalty—
(a)  for an individual—10,090 penalty units, or
(b)  otherwise—50,450 penalty units.
(2)  Subsection (1) does not apply to the disclosure or use of confidential tax information—
(a)  by a Public Service agency, unless the Chief Commissioner has prohibited the disclosure or use, or
(b)  with the prior written consent of the Chief Commissioner, or
(c)  in accordance with a confidentiality agreement with the Chief Commissioner, or
(d)  if otherwise authorised or required by law.
(3)  A person must not knowingly conceal, or attempt to conceal, the disclosure or use of confidential information in contravention of subsection (1).
Maximum penalty—
(a)  for an individual—10,090 penalty units, or
(b)  otherwise—50,450 penalty units.
(4)  If the Chief Commissioner suspects a person has contravened subsection (1) or (3), whether or not the person has been charged with or convicted of an offence under the subsection, the Chief Commissioner may report the suspected contravention to a professional association or body the Chief Commissioner considers to be relevant to the person.
(5)  Also, if a person is convicted of an offence against subsection (1) or (3), the Chief Commissioner may publish, in the way decided by the Chief Commissioner, information about the offence that the Chief Commissioner considers appropriate.
(6)  In this section—
confidential tax information
(a)  means information that—
(i)  by its nature is confidential, or
(ii)  is designated as confidential tax information by the Chief Commissioner, or
(iii)  is specified to be confidential tax information under a confidentiality agreement with the Chief Commissioner, but
(b)  does not include—
(i)  information in the public domain, unless the information came into the public domain because of an unauthorised disclosure or use, or
(ii)  information designated by the Chief Commissioner to be information to which this section does not apply, or
(iii)  information about the taxation affairs of a particular taxpayer.
s 85AA: Ins 2023 No 18, Sch 9[15]. Am 2023 No 26, Sch 5[3].
85A   Disclosures under other laws
(1)  This Division does not prevent the disclosure of information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a non-taxation law, in the exercise of functions conferred or imposed by or under that law, even if those functions are exercised in conjunction with functions exercised under a taxation law.
Note.
Section 80B makes it clear that functions exercised by authorised officers under a taxation law may be exercised in conjunction with functions exercised by them under non-taxation laws.
(2)  However, this section does not authorise the disclosure of any such information in contravention of the non-taxation law under which the functions are exercised.
(3)  In this section—
non-taxation law means any law of this State that is not a taxation law.
s 85A: Ins 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [11].
Part 10 Objections and reviews
pt 10, hdg: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [9].
Division 1 Objections
86   Objections
(1)  A taxpayer who is dissatisfied with—
(a)  an assessment that is shown in a notice of assessment served on the taxpayer, or
(b)  any other decision (within the meaning of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997) of the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law,
may lodge a written objection with the Chief Commissioner.
(2)  However, a taxpayer may not lodge such an objection in respect of the following—
(a)  an assessment made under section 12 (Compromise assessment) with the agreement of the taxpayer,
(ab)  a decision not to make an assessment under section 12,
(b)  the determination of an objection under this Part (including such part of any reassessment that gives effect to the determination of an objection that is allowed in whole or in part),
(c)  a decision to reassess the taxpayer’s tax liability that does not have the effect of increasing that liability where the taxpayer seeks to lodge the objection more than 60 days after the date of service of the notice of the initial assessment,
(d)  a decision not to reassess the taxpayer’s tax liability where the taxpayer seeks to lodge the objection more than 60 days after the date of service of the notice of the initial assessment.
(3)  The provisions of subsection (2) (c) and (d) do not preclude the lodgment of an objection that is sought to be lodged more than 60 days after the date of service of the notice of the initial assessment if the Chief Commissioner permits its lodgment. The provisions of section 90 (2)–(5) apply to any such objection in the same way as they apply to an objection referred to in section 90 (1).
s 86: Am 1998 No 104, Sch 8 [2]; 1999 No 60, Sch 5 [1]. Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [10]. Am 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [6]; 2006 No 50, Sch 5 [1]; 2012 No 76, Sch 4 [8]; 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [3].
87   Grounds for objection
(1)  The grounds for the objection must be stated fully and in detail, and must be in writing.
(2)  The grounds for the objection, in the case of a reassessment, are limited to the extent of the reassessment.
88   Onus of proof and evidence on objection
On an objection, the objector has the onus of proving the objector’s case.
89   Time for lodging objection
(1)  An objection must be lodged with the Chief Commissioner not later than 60 days after the date of service of the notice of the assessment or the date on which the decision referred to in section 86 (1) (b) is served on the taxpayer, except as provided by section 90.
(2)  An objection is taken to have been lodged with the Chief Commissioner when it is served on the Chief Commissioner.
90   Objections lodged out of time
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may permit a person to lodge an objection after the 60-day period referred to in section 89, but no later than 5 years after—
(a)  the date of service of the notice of the initial assessment, or
(b)  the date on which the decision referred to in section 86(1)(b) is served on the taxpayer.
(2)  The person seeking to so lodge the objection must state fully and in detail, and in writing, the circumstances concerning and the reasons for the failure to lodge the objection within the 60-day period.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may grant permission unconditionally or subject to conditions or may refuse permission.
(4)  The Chief Commissioner must give notice to the person of the Chief Commissioner’s decision and include in the notice the reasons for refusing to grant permission or for imposing conditions of the permission.
(5)  The notice is to be in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner.
s 90: Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[16].
91   Determination of objection
(1)  The Chief Commissioner must consider an objection and either allow the objection in whole or in part or disallow the objection.
Note.
The Chief Commissioner should endeavour to determine the objection within 90 days after it is received. Failure to make a determination within the 90-day period is a ground for review under Division 2.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may determine an objection that is the subject of an application for review under Division 2 at any time before the hearing of the application for review commences.
(3)  If the Chief Commissioner delegates the functions conferred by this section, the delegate who considers the objection must be a different person from, and not subordinate to, the person who made the assessment or decision against which the objection is lodged.
s 91: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [11] [12].
92   Suspension of determination
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may suspend the determination of an objection for any period during which the objector, or another person having information relevant to the objection, fails to provide information relevant to the objection that the Chief Commissioner has requested under a taxation law.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner must give the objector written notice of a suspension under subsection (1).
(3)  The Chief Commissioner, at the request of the objector, may suspend the determination of an objection pending the outcome of legal proceedings relating to a tax liability of the same kind as the tax liability the subject of the objection.
93   Notice of determination
(1)  The Chief Commissioner must give notice to the objector of the determination of the objection.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner must, in the notice, give the reasons for disallowing an objection or for allowing an objection in part only.
(2A)  The reasons for a determination of an objection in respect of an assessment or other decision that the Civil and Administrative Tribunal has jurisdiction under Division 2 to review must set out the matters referred to in section 49 (3) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 in respect of the determination.
(2B)  The notice must also inform the objector of the objector’s right to make an application for review under Division 2 in the case of a determination to disallow the objection or to allow the objection in part only.
(3)  The notice is to be in a form approved by the Chief Commissioner.
s 93: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [13]; 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [4] [5].
94   Recovery of tax pending objection
The fact that an objection is pending does not in the meantime affect the assessment or decision to which the objection relates and tax may be recovered as if no objection were pending.
s 94: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [14].
95   Payment of interest following unsuccessful objection
Division 1 of Part 5 applies to an amount of tax required to be paid following the determination of an objection.
Division 2 Reviews
pt 10, div 2: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15].
96   Review by Civil and Administrative Tribunal
(1)  A taxpayer may apply to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal for an administrative review under the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 of a decision of the Chief Commissioner that has been the subject of an objection under Division 1 if—
(a)  the taxpayer is dissatisfied with the Chief Commissioner’s determination of the taxpayer’s objection, or
(b)  90 days (not including any period of suspension under section 92) have passed since the taxpayer’s objection was served on the Chief Commissioner and the Chief Commissioner has not determined the objection.
(2)  However, a taxpayer cannot apply to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal under this section for an administrative review in respect of a decision of a kind prescribed by the regulations as an exempt decision for the purposes of this section.
(3)  A taxpayer who has applied to the Supreme Court under section 97 for a review of a decision cannot apply to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal under this section in respect of the same decision. However, the taxpayer may do so if the earlier application is withdrawn with the approval of the Supreme Court for the purpose of enabling the Civil and Administrative Tribunal to deal with the matter.
(4)  The following provisions of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 do not apply to an application made under this section (or any assessment or other decision to which it relates)—
(a)  Part 2 of Chapter 3,
(b)  section 55 (3)–(6).
(5)  For the purposes of section 58 (1) (a) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997
(a)  the obligation of the Chief Commissioner under that paragraph to lodge a statement of reasons with the Tribunal in respect of an application is limited to providing the Tribunal with a statement of reasons only in respect of the matters arising from the grounds specified in the application, and
(b)  if one of the grounds specified in the application relates to a matter raised in an objection determined by the Chief Commissioner—the Chief Commissioner may rely on reasons previously given to the taxpayer by the Chief Commissioner under section 93 for the determination of the objection in explanation of that part of the assessment or decision to which the objection related.
Note.
Section 58 of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 requires an administrator whose decision is the subject of an application for an administrative review to the Tribunal to lodge with the Tribunal certain relevant documents relating to the decision, including statements of reasons.
(6)  The Minister is not to recommend the making of a regulation containing provisions for the purposes of subsection (2) unless the Minister certifies that the Minister administering the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013 has agreed to the provisions.
s 96: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15]. Am 2000 No 106, Sch 4.8 [2]; 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [8]; 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [7]. Subst 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [6].
97   Review by Supreme Court
(1)  A taxpayer may apply to the Supreme Court for a review of a decision of the Chief Commissioner that has been the subject of an objection under Division 1 if—
(a)  the taxpayer is dissatisfied with the Chief Commissioner’s determination of the taxpayer’s objection, or
(b)  90 days (not including any period of suspension under section 92) have passed since the taxpayer’s objection was served on the Chief Commissioner and the Chief Commissioner has not determined the objection.
(2)  A taxpayer who has applied to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal under section 96 for an administrative review in respect of a decision cannot apply to the Supreme Court under this section in respect of the same decision. However, the taxpayer may do so if the earlier application is withdrawn with the approval of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal for the purposes of enabling the Supreme Court to deal with the matter.
(3)    (Repealed)
(4)  A review by the Supreme Court is taken to be an appeal for the purposes of the Supreme Court Act 1970 and the regulations and rules made under that Act, except as otherwise provided by that Act or those regulations or rules.
s 97: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15]. Am 2001 No 22, Sch 4 [5]; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [8]; 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [7].
98   (Repealed)
s 98: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15]. Rep 2000 No 106, Sch 4.8 [3].
99   Time for making application for review
(1)  An application for review following a determination by the Chief Commissioner of an objection must be made not later than 60 days after the date of issue of the notice of the Chief Commissioner’s determination of the objection. The court or tribunal to which the application is to be made may allow a person to apply for a review after that 60-day period.
(2)  An application for review following a failure of the Chief Commissioner to determine an objection within the relevant 90-day period may be made at any time after the end of that period.
s 99: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15].
100   Provisions relating to applications for review
(1)  An application for review following a failure of the Chief Commissioner to determine an objection cannot be made unless the applicant has given written notice of the proposed application to the Chief Commissioner not less than 14 days before it is made.
(2)  The applicant’s and respondent’s cases on an application for review are not limited to the grounds of the objection.
(3)  The applicant has the onus of proving the applicant’s case in an application for review.
(4)  If the applicant or respondent appeals against a decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal in an application for review to an Appeal Panel of the Tribunal, the applicant in the application for review continues to bear the onus of proving the applicant’s case in the appeal if the Appeal Panel grants leave for the appeal to extend to a review of the merits of the decision.
s 100: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15]. Am 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [8].
101   Powers of court or tribunal on review
(1)  The court or tribunal dealing with the application for review may do any one or more of the following—
(a)  confirm or revoke the assessment or other decision to which the application relates,
(b)  make an assessment or other decision in place of the assessment or other decision to which the application relates,
(c)  make an order for payment to the Chief Commissioner of any amount of tax that is assessed as being payable but has not been paid,
(d)  remit the matter to the Chief Commissioner for determination in accordance with its finding or decision,
(e)  make any further order as to costs or otherwise as it thinks fit.
(2)  Nothing in this section limits the application of the following provisions in respect of an application for review before the Civil and Administrative Tribunal—
(a)  Division 3 of Part 3 of Chapter 3 of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997,
(b)  section 60 (Costs) of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013.
s 101: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15]. Am 2013 No 95, Sch 2.142 [9].
102   Giving effect to decision on review
(1)  Within 60 days after the decision on the review becomes final, the Chief Commissioner must take any action that is necessary to give effect to that decision. That action may include amending any relevant assessment.
(2)  If no appeal against the decision on the review is made within 30 days after the day on which the decision is made, the decision on the review is taken, for the purposes of this section, to have become final at the end of the 30-day period.
s 102: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15].
103   Recovery of tax pending review
(1)  The fact that an application for a review is pending does not in the meantime affect the assessment or other decision to which the application for review relates and tax may be recovered as if no review were pending.
(2)  Nothing in this section affects any power of a court or tribunal to which an application for review under this Part is made (or can be made) to grant a stay under any other law of any such assessment or decision.
s 103: Subst 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15].
103A   Review or appeal by other courts or tribunals
(1)  No court or tribunal (or other body or person) has jurisdiction or power to consider any question concerning an assessment or other decision of the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law (including the determination of an objection under Division 1) except as provided by this Part.
(2)  Subsection (1) does not apply to a decision of the Chief Commissioner under Part 4, 7, 8, 9 or 11 (not being an assessment).
Note.
This subsection preserves the inherent jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to entertain an application for judicial review of any such decision of the Chief Commissioner.
s 103A: Ins 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [15].
Division 3 Refund of amounts and payment of interest following successful objection or review
pt 10, div 3, hdg: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [16].
104   Refund of amount
If a taxpayer’s objection is allowed in whole or in part or a taxpayer’s application for review is successful, the Chief Commissioner must, subject to section 19, refund any amount paid in excess of a requirement for payment under the relevant taxation law.
s 104: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [17]; 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [9].
105   Payment of interest
(1)  In addition to an amount refunded under this Division, the Chief Commissioner is required, subject to section 19, to pay interest on the amount calculated on a daily basis from the date of its payment by the taxpayer until the date of the refund at the market rate component under section 22.
(2)  The requirement under this section to pay interest on an amount refunded to the taxpayer extends, subject to section 19, to an amount of land tax or payroll tax paid by and refunded to any other member of a group to which the taxpayer belongs if—
(a)  (as a consequence of the objection of the taxpayer being allowed in whole or in part or the review being successful) the Chief Commissioner makes a reassessment of the amount of land tax or payroll tax the other member of the group is liable to pay, and
(b)  the reassessment shows that the other member of the group is entitled to the refund.
(3)  In this section—
group has the same meaning as in—
(a)  section 29 (7) of the Land Tax Management Act 1956, in the case of land tax, or
(b)  the Payroll Tax Act 2007, in the case of payroll tax.
land tax has the same meaning as in the Land Tax Management Act 1956.
payroll tax has the same meaning as in the Payroll Tax Act 2007.
s 105: Am 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [10]; 2016 No 14, Sch 5 [1].
105A   Objections to land valuations
If an objection to a valuation made under the Valuation of Land Act 1916 is allowed by the Valuer-General under that Act (in whole or in part), and the valuation was used as the basis of an assessment of the tax liability of a taxpayer, sections 104 and 105 apply in relation to the objection in the same way as they apply to an objection under that Act.
s 105A: Ins 2006 No 50, Sch 5 [2].
Division 4 Chief Commissioner may state case
106   Chief Commissioner may state case
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, if the Chief Commissioner thinks fit, state a case on any question of law concerning the assessment or refund of tax and forward the case to the Supreme Court for its opinion.
(2)  The Supreme Court is to give its opinion on any case forwarded to it and cause the Chief Commissioner to be notified of that opinion.
Division 5 Hardship Review Board
pt 10, div 5: Ins 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [3].
106A   Functions of Hardship Review Board
(1)  The Hardship Review Board may exercise its functions under this Division in relation to a tax only on the application of the taxpayer.
(2)  Division 3 of Part 7 of the State Debt Recovery Act 2018 applies to reviews under this Act in the same way as it applies to hardship reviews under that Act.
(3)  The Hardship Review Board may exercise its functions under this Act in conjunction with any functions that the Board may exercise under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018 or the Fines Act 1996.
s 106A: Ins 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [3]. Subst 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [12].
106B   Waiver of tax
(1)  The Hardship Review Board may, if authorised by a taxation law to do so, waive the payment of tax, either wholly or in part, if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the person liable to pay it is in such circumstances that the exaction of the full amount of tax would result in serious hardship for the person or the person’s dependants, or
(b)  the person liable to pay it has died and that person’s dependants are in such circumstances that the exaction of the full amount of tax would result in serious hardship for them.
(2)  The Chief Commissioner may exercise the functions of the Hardship Review Board under this section if the amount of the unpaid tax is less than $2,000 in any particular case for any financial year.
(3)  In this section, tax includes—
(a)  any amount payable to the Chief Commissioner under a taxation law in relation to tax, including any interest and penalty tax under Part 5, and
(b)  any costs and expenses incurred in relation to the recovery of the tax or any other amount that the Chief Commissioner is entitled to recover from any such person.
(4)  This section applies only to tax payable by a natural person.
s 106B: Ins 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [13].
106C   Deferral and writing off of tax
(1)  The Hardship Review Board may direct the Chief Commissioner—
(a)  to extend the time for payment of tax under section 47, or
(b)  to write off tax under section 110.
(2)  The Hardship Review Board may exercise its functions under this section only in respect of tax payable by a natural person.
(3)  The Hardship Review Board cannot exercise its functions under this section if the Chief Commissioner has made a debt recovery order in respect of the tax under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018.
(4)  This section does not limit the functions of the Hardship Review Board under that Act.
s 106C: Ins 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [3]. Am 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [14].
106CA   Actions to be taken by Chief Commissioner
(1)  The Chief Commissioner is to make such refund of tax already paid as is necessary to give effect to a decision of the Hardship Review Board under this Division.
(2)  If the Chief Commissioner has made a debt recovery order in respect of the tax amount under the State Debt Recovery Act 2018, the Chief Commissioner must revoke the debt recovery order to the extent necessary to give effect to a decision of the Hardship Review Board, or of the Chief Commissioner exercising the functions of the Hardship Review Board, to waive the payment of tax.
s 106CA: Ins 2001 No 96, Sch 3 [2]. Am 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [15].
106D   (Repealed)
s 106D: Ins 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [3]. Rep 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [16].
Part 10A Tax avoidance schemes
pt 10A: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
Division 1 Preliminary
pt 10A, div 1: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 1[6].
106E   Object of Part
The object of this Part is to deter schemes to avoid tax liability.
s 106E: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Am 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [8]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106F   What is a tax avoidance scheme?
(1)  For the purposes of this Part, a tax avoidance scheme is a scheme that a person, whether alone or with others, enters into, makes or carries out for the sole or dominant purpose of enabling a tax liability to be avoided.
(2)  It does not matter if the scheme is entered into, made or carried out wholly or partly outside New South Wales.
(3)  In determining the sole or dominant purpose for which a scheme is entered into, made or carried out, any purpose related to avoiding a liability for foreign tax must be disregarded.
(3A)  For Division 3, a scheme that results in, or may reasonably result in, the constitution of a group under the Payroll Tax Act 2007, section 74A is taken to be a tax avoidance scheme.
Note—
Under the Payroll Tax Act 2007, section 74(4), the Chief Commissioner may determine that an entity and a former entity that are influenced by a third party do not constitute a group if the Chief Commissioner is satisfied the influence of the third party on the entity and a former entity is not, or was not, intended to avoid tax.
(4)  In this section—
foreign tax means a duty, tax or other impost imposed under a law of another State, a Territory, the Commonwealth or a jurisdiction outside Australia.
s 106F: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6]. Am 2023 No 18, Sch 9[17].
106G   Matters relevant to whether scheme is tax avoidance scheme
The following matters must be taken into account in determining whether a scheme is a tax avoidance scheme—
(a)  the way in which the scheme was entered into, made or carried out,
(b)  the form and substance of the scheme, including—
(i)  the legal rights and obligations involved in the scheme, and
(ii)  the economic and commercial substance of the scheme,
(c)  when the scheme was entered into or made and the length of the period during which the scheme was carried out,
(d)  the purpose of a taxation law, or of a provision of a taxation law, whether or not the purpose is expressly stated,
(e)  the effect that a taxation law would have in relation to the scheme apart from this Part,
(f)  any change in a person’s financial position, or other circumstances, that has resulted, will result, or may reasonably be expected to result, from the scheme,
(g)  the nature of any connection, whether of a business, family or other nature, between the person whose tax liability is avoided as a result of the scheme and another person whose financial position or other circumstances have changed, will change, or may reasonably be expected to change, as a result of the scheme,
(h)  the circumstances surrounding the scheme.
s 106G: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106H   Meaning of “scheme”
(1)  In this Part, a scheme means—
(a)  a trust, contract, agreement, arrangement, understanding, promise or undertaking, including all steps and transactions by which it is carried into effect—
(i)  whether entered into or made orally or in writing, and
(ii)  whether express or implied, and
(iii)  whether or not it is, or is intended to be, enforceable by legal proceedings, or
(b)  a scheme, plan or proposal, whether implemented or not, or
(c)  an action, a course of action or a course of conduct.
(2)  A scheme may be a unilateral scheme.
(3)  This Part applies in relation to a part of a scheme in the same way as it applies to a scheme and a reference in this Part to a scheme includes a reference to a part of a scheme.
s 106H: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106I   Meaning of “avoid”
In this Part—
(a)  a reference to avoiding tax, or payment of tax, includes a reference to postponing payment of tax, and
(b)  a reference to avoiding tax liability includes a reference to reducing or postponing tax liability.
s 106I: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Am 2005 No 111, Sch 7 [4]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
s 106IA: Ins 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [9]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2].
Division 2 Payment of avoided tax
pt 10A, div 2: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106J   Payment of tax avoided as a result of tax avoidance scheme
(1)  A person is liable to pay the amount of tax avoided by the person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme.
(2)  For the purposes of this Part, the amount of tax avoided by a person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme is the amount of tax that, if the tax avoidance scheme had not been entered into, made or carried out—
(a)  would have been payable by the person, or
(b)  it is reasonable to expect would have been payable by the person, assuming that a reasonable alternative to entering into or making the scheme had been adopted, being an alternative that would have achieved the same economic or commercial result as the scheme, other than the result of avoiding tax.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner may make an assessment, or reassessment, of tax liability on the basis of the person’s liability under this Part to pay an amount of tax avoided by the person.
s 106J: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106K   When does a liability to pay avoided tax arise?
(1)  A liability to pay an amount of tax avoided by a person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme is taken to arise on the date the amount of tax avoided would have been payable if the tax avoidance scheme had not been entered into or made.
(2)  Accordingly, a tax default is taken to have occurred on the date the amount of tax avoided would have been payable if the tax avoidance scheme had not been entered into or made.
Note—
This means that interest and penalty tax may be charged in addition to the amount of tax avoided.
(3)  This section applies only if the Chief Commissioner issues a notice of assessment, or reassessment, of tax liability on the basis that a scheme is a tax avoidance scheme.
s 106K: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106KA   Additional penalties for tax avoidance schemes
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may impose a penalty on a taxpayer if the Chief Commissioner—
(a)  issues a notice of assessment, or reassessment, of tax liability to the taxpayer, and
(b)  issues the notice on the basis that a scheme is a tax avoidance scheme.
(2)  The penalty—
(a)  may be imposed by written notice to the taxpayer, and
(b)  must not be more than the amount of tax avoided by the taxpayer.
(3)  In deciding whether to impose a penalty and the amount of the penalty, the Chief Commissioner must consider the following—
(a)  the amount of tax avoided,
(b)  the length of the period during which the person was involved in the tax avoidance scheme,
(c)  the deterrent effect the penalty may have,
(d)  another matter the Chief Commissioner considers relevant.
(4)  The liability to pay the penalty is in addition to the following—
(a)  a liability under this division to pay the amount of tax avoided,
(b)  a liability under Part 5 to pay interest in relation to the amount of tax avoided,
(c)  a liability under Part 5 to pay penalty tax in relation to the amount of tax avoided.
s 106KA: Ins 2024 No 90, Sch 8[8].
106L   Reasons for decision to be given
A notice of assessment, or reassessment, of tax liability that is issued by the Chief Commissioner on the basis that a scheme is a tax avoidance scheme must be accompanied by a statement of the Chief Commissioner’s reasons for making the assessment or reassessment.
s 106L: Ins 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2007 No 21, Sch 4.3 [2]. Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106M   Innocent participants
(1)  A person is liable under this Part to pay an amount of tax avoided by the person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme whether or not the person entered into, made or carried out the tax avoidance scheme.
(2)  However, a person is not liable to pay an amount of tax avoided by the person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme if the Chief Commissioner is satisfied that the person did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to have known, that the scheme was a tax avoidance scheme.
s 106M: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
Division 3 Promotion of tax avoidance schemes
pt 10A, div 3: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106N   Promotion of tax avoidance schemes prohibited
(1)  A person must not engage in conduct that results in a person being a promoter of a tax avoidance scheme.
(2)  A person is a promoter of a tax avoidance scheme if the person markets the scheme or otherwise encourages the growth of the scheme or interest in it.
(3)  However, a person is not a promoter of a tax avoidance scheme merely because the person—
(a)  provides advice about the scheme, or
(b)  distributes information or material about the scheme prepared by another person.
s 106N: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106O   Civil penalty for promotion of tax avoidance scheme
(1)  The Supreme Court may, on application by the Chief Commissioner, make an order requiring a person who contravenes section 106N to pay the State a civil penalty not exceeding—
(a)  10,090 penalty units for an individual, or
(b)  50,450 penalty units for a corporation.
(2)  In deciding what penalty is appropriate for a contravention of section 106N by a person (referred to in subsection (4) as a promoter), the Supreme Court may have regard to all matters it considers relevant, including the following—
(a)  the amount of the consideration received or receivable, directly or indirectly, by the person or associated persons, or both, in relation to the scheme,
(b)  the deterrent effect the penalty may have,
(c)  the amount of loss or damage incurred by a person who enters into, makes or carries out the tax avoidance scheme,
(d)  the nature and extent of the contravention,
(e)  the circumstances in which the contravention took place, including the deliberateness of the person’s conduct and whether there was an honest and reasonable mistake of law,
(f)  the period over which the conduct extended,
(g)  whether the person took steps to avoid the contravention,
(h)  whether the person has previously been found by the Court to have engaged in the same or similar conduct,
(i)  the degree of the person’s cooperation with the Chief Commissioner.
(3)  The debt arising from an order to pay a civil penalty is taken to be a judgment debt.
(4)  For the purposes of this section, a person is an associated person of a promoter of a tax avoidance scheme if the person is an associated person of the promoter for the purposes of the Duties Act 1997.
Note—
See the Duties Act 1997, Dictionary, clause 2.
s 106O: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106P   When civil penalty not available
(1)  The Supreme Court must not order a person (the relevant person) to pay a civil penalty if the person satisfies the Court—
(a)  that the conduct in relation to which the proceedings were instituted was due to a reasonable mistake of fact, or
(b)  that—
(i)  the conduct in relation to which the proceedings were instituted was due to the act or default of another person, to an accident or to some other cause beyond the relevant person’s control, and
(ii)  the relevant person took reasonable precautions and exercised due diligence to avoid the conduct.
(2)  The other person referred to in paragraph (1)(b) does not include someone who was an employee or agent of the relevant person when the alleged conduct occurred.
(3)  The Chief Commissioner must not make an application under section 106O for conduct referred to in section 106N in relation to a person’s involvement in a tax avoidance scheme if—
(a)  the scheme is based on treating a taxation law as applying in a particular way, and
(b)  that way agrees with—
(i)  advice given to the person or the person’s agent by or on behalf of the Chief Commissioner, or
(ii)  a statement in a publication approved in writing by the Chief Commissioner.
(4)  The Chief Commissioner must not make an application under section 106O in relation to a person’s involvement in a tax avoidance scheme more than 6 years after the person last engaged in conduct that resulted in the person or another person being a promoter of the scheme.
s 106P: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106Q   Injunctions
The Supreme Court may, on application by the Chief Commissioner in relation to a person who has engaged, is engaging or is proposing to engage in conduct referred to in section 106N, grant an injunction—
(a)  restraining the person from engaging in the conduct, and
(b)  if, in the Court’s opinion, it is desirable to do so—requiring the person to do something.
s 106Q: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
106R   Voluntary undertakings
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may accept a written undertaking given by a person for the purposes of this section in connection with furthering the object of this Part.
(2)  The person may withdraw or vary the undertaking at any time, but only with the consent of the Chief Commissioner.
(3)  If the Chief Commissioner considers that the person who gave the undertaking has breached any of its terms, the Chief Commissioner may apply to the Supreme Court for an order under subsection (4).
(4)  If the Court is satisfied that the person has breached a term of the undertaking, the Court may make one or both of the following orders—
(a)  an order directing the person to comply with the term of the undertaking,
(b)  another order that the Court considers appropriate.
(5)  The Chief Commissioner may publish a written undertaking given by a person for the purposes of this section in a way the Chief Commissioner thinks fit.
s 106R: Ins 2022 No 16, Sch 8[6].
Part 11 Miscellaneous provisions
107   Means and time of payment
(1)  Tax must be paid to the Chief Commissioner using a method approved by the Chief Commissioner.
(1A), (1B)    (Repealed)
(2)  An approval of the Chief Commissioner may be—
(a)  general or limited to particular taxes, persons or payments, and
(b)  unconditional or subject to conditions.
(3)  If the Chief Commissioner approves payment by a personal cheque—
(a)  payment will be taken to be effected when the cheque is received by the Chief Commissioner provided that payment occurs when the Chief Commissioner first presents the cheque to the bank for payment, or
(b)  in any other case, payment will be taken to be effected when payment occurs under the cheque following presentation by the Chief Commissioner (however, the Chief Commissioner is under no obligation to present a cheque for payment more than once).
(4)  An approval of a means of payment (other than by personal cheque) may include a stipulation as to when payment by that means will be taken to be effected and any such stipulation will have effect according to its terms.
(5)  The Chief Commissioner may vary or cancel an approval under this section.
s 107: Am 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [7]; 2023 No 18, Sch 9[18].
108   Adjustments for fraction of a dollar
(1)  If a single amount of tax payable by a taxpayer is not a multiple of a dollar, the Chief Commissioner may decrease the amount but not lower than the nearest dollar.
(2)  If the Chief Commissioner aggregates two or more amounts of tax that are payable by a taxpayer and the aggregated amount is not a multiple of a dollar, the Chief Commissioner may decrease the aggregated amount but not lower than the nearest dollar.
109   Valuation of foreign currency
(1)  If an amount involved in the calculation of tax is not in Australian currency, the amount is to be converted to Australian currency—
(a)  at the rate of exchange last reported by the Reserve Bank before the liability to pay the tax arose, or
(b)  at a rate of exchange determined by the Chief Commissioner.
(2)  This section is subject to a provision of another taxation law governing the calculation of tax where an amount involved in the calculation is not in Australian currency.
s 109: Am 2024 No 90, Sch 8[9].
110   Writing off of tax
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may write off the whole or any part of any unpaid tax if satisfied that action, or further action, to recover the tax is impracticable or unwarranted.
(2)  The writing off of tax does not affect the liability of the taxpayer to pay the tax or the power of the Chief Commissioner to recover it.
(3)  This section has effect despite the provisions of the Government Sector Finance Act 2018 or another taxation law.
s 110: Am 2018 No 70, Sch 4.102 [2].
111   Appropriation of Consolidated Fund
If the Chief Commissioner is authorised or required to pay an amount under this Act or any taxation law, the amount is to be paid from the Consolidated Fund which is appropriated by this section to the necessary extent.
s 111: Am 2014 No 37, Sch 4.7 [2].
111A   Refusal by Chief Commissioner to exercise functions
The Chief Commissioner may refuse to exercise any function under a taxation law concerning an instrument, transaction or return (including the stamping or marking of an instrument) if any information, evidence, instrument or record concerning the instrument, transaction or return is not provided to the Chief Commissioner in accordance with a requirement of a taxation law.
s 111A: Ins 1998 No 44, Sch 6 [3].
112   Public officer of corporation
(1)  The Chief Commissioner may, by written notice served on a corporation, require the corporation to appoint, within a period specified in the notice, a natural person whose principal place of residence is in this jurisdiction as a public officer of the corporation for the purposes of the taxation laws, and to keep the office of public officer constantly filled by such a person.
(2)  An appointment of a public officer is not duly made until written notice of the appointment, specifying the name and residential address of the officer, has been lodged with the Chief Commissioner.
(3)  If—
(a)  the Chief Commissioner has required a corporation to appoint a public officer, and
(b)  the corporation does not make such an appointment as required or does not keep the office of public officer constantly filled as required,
the Chief Commissioner may appoint a person as the public officer of the corporation by written notice served on the person and the corporation.
(4)  Service of a document on the public officer of the corporation is sufficient service on the corporation for the purposes of a taxation law, and, if at any time the corporation does not have a public officer as required under this section, then service on a person acting or appearing to act in the business of the corporation is sufficient.
(5)  The public officer is answerable for the discharge of all obligations imposed on the corporation under a taxation law, and, in case of default, is liable to the same penalties.
(6)  Everything that the public officer is required to do and does in his or her representative capacity is taken to have been done by the corporation, but the absence or non-appointment of a public officer does not excuse the corporation from the necessity of complying, or from a penalty for failure to comply, with a provision of a taxation law and the corporation is liable to comply with the taxation laws as if there were no requirement to appoint a public officer.
(7)  A document served on or requirement made of the public officer is taken to have been served on or made of the corporation.
(8)  Any civil or criminal proceedings brought under a taxation law against the public officer are taken to have been brought against the corporation, and the corporation is liable jointly with the public officer for any penalty imposed on the public officer, or for compliance with any order made against the public officer.
113   Notice of liquidator’s appointment
A liquidator appointed to wind up a company must notify the Chief Commissioner of the appointment within 14 days after the date of the appointment.
Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.
Note.
An offence against this section committed by a corporation is an executive liability offence attracting executive liability for a director or other person involved in the management of the corporation—see section 121.
s 113: Am 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [12].
113A   Use of certain information—notice of sale or transfer of land
The Chief Commissioner is entitled to receive, and to use in relation to the administration of a taxation law, information contained in a notice lodged with the Registrar-General as referred to in section 604 (4) of the Local Government Act 1993.
s 113A: Ins 1999 No 10, Sch 6 [7].
114   Service of documents on Chief Commissioner
A document authorised or required to be served on, given to or lodged with the Chief Commissioner for the purposes of a taxation law may be served, given or lodged—
(a)  by delivering it at an office of the Chief Commissioner, or
(b)  by post addressed to the Chief Commissioner at an office of the Chief Commissioner, or
(c)  by delivering the document, addressed to the Chief Commissioner, to the facilities of a document exchange specified by the Chief Commissioner for the service of documents of that kind, or
(d)  by leaving it with a person who has authority to accept documents on the Chief Commissioner’s behalf, or
(e)  by email to an email address specified by the Chief Commissioner for the service of documents of that kind, or
(f)  by any other method authorised by the regulations for the service of documents of that kind.
s 114: Am 2017 No 25, Sch 1.37 [1].
115   Day of service of document or payment of money
If a document is served on the Chief Commissioner or a payment of money is tendered to the Chief Commissioner at a time on a day that is after the ordinary hours of business when the offices of the Chief Commissioner are open to the public on that day, the document or money is taken to have been served on or tendered to the Chief Commissioner on the following business day.
116   Service of documents by Chief Commissioner
(1)  A document authorised or required to be served on a person by the Chief Commissioner for the purposes of a taxation law may be served on the person—
(a)  personally, or
(b)  by leaving it at the last address of the person known to the Chief Commissioner (including, in the case of a corporation, the registered address or a business address of the corporation), or
(c)  by post addressed to the person at the last address of the person known to the Chief Commissioner (including, in the case of a corporation, the registered address or a business address of the corporation), or
(d)  by delivering the document, addressed to the person, to the facilities of a document exchange specified by the person for the service of documents of that kind, or
(d1)  in an approved electronic manner, or
(d2)  by any other method authorised by the regulations for the service of documents of that kind, or
(e)  by any means provided for the service of the document by another Act or law.
(2)  If a person (the agent) has actual or apparent authority to accept service of a document on behalf of another, the Chief Commissioner may, for the purposes of a taxation law, serve the document on the agent as if the agent were that other person.
(3)  Service of a document on a member of a partnership, or on a member of the committee of management of an unincorporated association or other body of persons, is taken, for the purposes of a taxation law, to constitute service of the document on each member of the partnership, or on each member of the association or other body of persons.
(4)  For the purposes of this section, an approved electronic manner of serving a document on a person means—
(a)  sending the document to a telephone number or email address provided by the person for the purposes of the service of the document, or
(b)  providing the person access to the document via an online notification system if the person consents to the use of the system, or
(c)  another electronic manner prescribed by the regulations.
(5)  A person may, orally or in writing, provide an email address or telephone number, or consent to the use of an online notification system, for the purpose of being served—
(a)  a particular document, or
(b)  a particular kind of document, or
(c)  documents for a particular period, or
(d)  all documents.
(6)  This section does not authorise a document to be served on a person orally.
(7)  In this section—
online notification system means an online system approved by the Chief Commissioner for the purpose of enabling a person to securely access a document by means of a website, mobile telephone or mobile device or by other electronic means.
serve includes give or send.
s 116: Am 2017 No 25, Sch 1.37 [2]; 2022 No 16, Sch 8[7]–[9].
117   Judicial notice of Chief Commissioner’s name and signature
Judicial notice is to be taken of—
(a)  the name of a person who holds or has held the office of Chief Commissioner, and
(b)  the signature of a person who holds or has held the office of Chief Commissioner.
118   Presumption of regularity as to issue of documents
A document or a copy of a document bearing the written, printed or stamped signature or name of the Chief Commissioner or a person described in the document as a delegate of the Chief Commissioner is, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, taken to have been lawfully issued by the Chief Commissioner.
118A   Actions for recovery of tax
In any action for the recovery of any tax payable under this Act, a defendant cannot plead, and the court cannot take judicial notice of, any law relating to gaming which, but for this section, might be pleaded or noted judicially in answer to or avoidance of the claim in the action.
s 118A: Ins 2001 No 43, Sch 2 [3].
119   Evidence of assessment
Production of a notice of assessment, or of a document signed by the Chief Commissioner purporting to be a copy of a notice of assessment, is—
(a)  conclusive evidence of the due making of the assessment, and
(b)  conclusive evidence that the amount and all particulars of the assessment are correct, except in objection or review proceedings when it is prima facie evidence only.
s 119: Am 2000 No 72, Sch 2 [18].
120   Certificate evidence
A certificate signed by the Chief Commissioner that states any of the following matters is admissible in proceedings under a taxation law and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is proof of the matters stated in the certificate—
(a)  the person named in the certificate is liable to pay tax,
(b)  an assessment of tax has been made in relation to circumstances specified in the certificate,
(c)  notice of an assessment was issued to a person named in the certificate, or the person’s agent, on the day specified in the certificate,
(d)  the amount of tax, a penalty or interest specified in the certificate is payable by a person named in the certificate or has been paid in whole or in part by or on behalf of a person so named,
(e)  a document specified in the certificate was posted to, delivered to, or served personally on, a person named in the certificate on a day specified in the certificate,
(f)  a person named in the certificate is, or is not, registered or licensed as required by the relevant taxation law,
(g)  a return or statement required by a taxation law has been, or has not been, lodged by or on behalf of a person named in the certificate on or as at a day specified in the certificate,
(h)  a person named in the certificate is, or was, an authorised officer on the date specified in the certificate.
121   Liability of directors etc for offences by corporation—offences attracting executive liability
(1)  For the purposes of this section, an executive liability offence is an offence against any of the following provisions of the taxation laws that is committed by a corporation—
(a)  section 10 (1),
(b)  section 41 (1),
(c)  section 42 (2),
(d)  section 49 (2),
(e)  section 50,
(f)  section 54,
(g)  section 55,
(h)  section 56,
(i)  section 57,
(j)  section 58,
(k)  section 72 (8),
(l)  section 113,
(m)  section 25 (6) of the Duties Act 1997,
(n)  section 218C (1) of the Duties Act 1997,
(o)  section 248 of the Duties Act 1997,
(p)  section 251 (1) of the Duties Act 1997,
(q)  section 262 of the Duties Act 1997,
(r)  section 270 (4) of the Duties Act 1997,
(s)  section 286 (1) of the Duties Act 1997,
(t)  section 296 (1) of the Duties Act 1997,
(u)  section 301 (1) of the Duties Act 1997,
(v)  section 11 of the Health Insurance Levies Act 1982,
(w)  clause 18 (8) of Schedule 2 to the Payroll Tax Act 2007.
(2)  A person commits an offence against this section if—
(a)  a corporation commits an executive liability offence, and
(b)  the person is—
(i)  a director of the corporation, or
(ii)  an individual who is involved in the management of the corporation and who is in a position to influence the conduct of the corporation in relation to the commission of the executive liability offence, and
(c)  the person—
(i)  knows or ought reasonably to know that the executive liability offence (or an offence of the same type) would be or is being committed, and
(ii)  fails to take all reasonable steps to prevent or stop the commission of that offence.
Maximum penalty—The maximum penalty for the executive liability offence if committed by an individual.
(3)  The prosecution bears the legal burden of proving the elements of the offence against this section.
(4)  The offence against this section can only be prosecuted by a person who can bring a prosecution for the executive liability offence.
(5)  This section does not affect the liability of the corporation for the executive liability offence, and applies whether or not the corporation is prosecuted for, or convicted of, the executive liability offence.
(6)  This section does not affect the application of any other law relating to the criminal liability of any persons (whether or not directors or other managers of the corporation) who are accessories to the commission of the executive liability offence or are otherwise concerned in, or party to, the commission of the executive liability offence.
(7)  In this section—
director has the same meaning it has in the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth.
reasonable steps, in relation to the commission of an executive liability offence, includes, but is not limited to, such action (if any) of the following kinds as is reasonable in all the circumstances—
(a)  action towards—
(i)  assessing the corporation’s compliance with the provision creating the executive liability offence, and
(ii)  ensuring that the corporation arranged regular professional assessments of its compliance with the provision,
(b)  action towards ensuring that the corporation’s employees, agents and contractors are provided with information, training, instruction and supervision appropriate to them to enable them to comply with the provision creating the executive liability offence so far as the provision is relevant to them,
(c)  action towards ensuring that—
(i)  the plant, equipment and other resources, and
(ii)  the structures, work systems and other processes,
relevant to compliance with the provision creating the executive liability offence are appropriate in all the circumstances,
(d)  action towards creating and maintaining a corporate culture that does not direct, encourage, tolerate or lead to non-compliance with the provision creating the executive liability offence.
s 121: Subst 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [13]. Am 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [8].
121A   Liability of directors etc for offences by corporation—accessory to the commission of the offences
(1)  For the purposes of this section, a corporate offence is an offence against a taxation law or the regulations that is capable of being committed by a corporation, whether or not it is an executive liability offence referred to in section 121.
(2)  A person commits an offence against this section if—
(a)  a corporation commits a corporate offence, and
(b)  the person is—
(i)  a director of the corporation, or
(ii)  an individual who is involved in the management of the corporation and who is in a position to influence the conduct of the corporation in relation to the commission of the corporate offence, and
(c)  the person—
(i)  aids, abets, counsels or procures the commission of the corporate offence, or
(ii)  induces, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the commission of the corporate offence, or
(iii)  conspires with others to effect the commission of the corporate offence, or
(iv)  is in any other way, whether by act or omission, knowingly concerned in, or party to, the commission of the corporate offence.
Maximum penalty—The maximum penalty for the corporate offence if committed by an individual.
(3)  The prosecution bears the legal burden of proving the elements of the offence against this section.
(4)  The offence against this section can only be prosecuted by a person who can bring a prosecution for the corporate offence.
(5)  This section does not affect the liability of the corporation for the corporate offence, and applies whether or not the corporation is prosecuted for, or convicted of, the corporate offence.
(6)  This section does not affect the application of any other law relating to the criminal liability of any persons (whether or not directors or other managers of the corporation) who are concerned in, or party to, the commission of the corporate offence.
s 121A: Ins 2012 No 97, Sch 1.40 [13].
122   Penalties for corporations
The maximum penalty that a court may impose for an offence against a taxation law that is committed by a corporation is 5 times the maximum penalty that the court could, but for this section, impose as a penalty for the offence.
123   Tax liability unaffected by payment of penalty
The payment by a person of a penalty imposed by a court does not relieve the person from the payment of any other amount the person is liable to pay under a taxation law.
124   Continuing offences
(1)  A person may be convicted of a second or subsequent offence for a failure to do an act (where the failure constitutes an offence) if the failure continues beyond the period or date in respect of which the person is convicted for the failure.
(2)  The maximum penalty for the offence is the same whether it is a second or subsequent offence.
125   Proceedings for offences
(1)  Proceedings for an offence against a taxation law may be dealt with before the Local Court or before the Supreme Court in its summary jurisdiction.
(2)  Proceedings for an offence against a taxation law may be commenced at any time within 3 years after the date on which it is alleged the offence was committed.
(3)  If proceedings for an offence against a taxation law are taken before the Local Court, the maximum monetary penalty that the Court may impose is, despite any provision of a taxation law to the contrary, 100 penalty units or the maximum monetary penalty provided by the taxation law for the offence, whichever amount is the smaller.
(4)  If proceedings for an offence against a taxation law are taken before the Supreme Court, the Court may impose a penalty not exceeding the maximum penalty provided by the taxation law for the offence.
s 125: Am 1999 No 85, Sch 2.68; 2007 No 94, Schs 2, 4; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [9].
126   Regulations
(1)  The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to be prescribed or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.
(2)  A regulation may create an offence punishable by a penalty not exceeding 20 penalty units.
127   Savings, transitional and other provisions
Schedule 1 has effect.
(1)  The Minister must review the amendments made to this Act by the State Revenue and Fines Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous) Act 2022 to determine—
(a)  whether the policy objectives of the amendments remain valid, and
(b)  whether the terms of the amendments remain appropriate for securing the policy objectives.
(2)  The review must be undertaken as soon as possible after the period of 2 years from the date of assent to the State Revenue and Fines Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous) Act 2022.
(3)  The Minister must table a report on the outcome of the review in each House of Parliament within 12 months after the end of the period of 2 years.
s 128: Subst 2022 No 16, Sch 8[10].
Schedule 1 Savings, transitional and other provisions
(Section 127)
Part 1 Preliminary
1   Regulations
(1)  The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts—
this Act
State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment (No 2) Act 2001 (to the extent that it amends this Act)
State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2003 (to the extent that it amends this Act)
any Act that amends this Act
(2)  Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later day.
(3)  To the extent to which any such provision takes effect from a date that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the provision does not operate so as—
(a)  to affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the State or an authority of the State), the rights of that person existing before the date of its publication, or
(b)  to impose liabilities on any person (other than the State or an authority of the State), in respect of anything done or omitted to be done before the date of its publication.
2   Application of s 30 of Interpretation Act 1987
Except to the extent otherwise provided by this Schedule, nothing in this Schedule affects the application of section 30 of the Interpretation Act 1987.
Part 2 Provisions arising from enactment of this Act
3   Existing assessments
An assessment made under a taxation law before the commencement of Part 3 is taken to have been made under that Part, except as provided by clause 16 (2).
4   Assessments of existing liabilities
The power to make an assessment under Part 3 extends to a tax liability existing before the commencement of that Part.
5   Inclusion of interest and penalties in notices of assessment
Despite section 15, a notice of assessment in respect of a tax liability existing before the commencement of Part 3 must specify any interest accrued or fine, penalty or penalty tax payable in relation to the liability calculated in accordance with clauses 8 and 9.
6   Refunds of tax paid before commencement of Part 4
Part 4 extends to tax paid before the commencement of that Part.
7   Existing refund applications
Part 4 extends to an application for a refund of tax that was made to the Chief Commissioner before the commencement of that Part and that has not been determined by the Chief Commissioner on that commencement.
8   Interest in respect of existing tax defaults
(1)  If a tax default occurred before the commencement of Division 1 of Part 5, interest accrues in relation to that default on and from that commencement in accordance with that Division, subject to this clause.
(2)  The taxpayer concerned may elect that interest accrue under the law that applied to the tax default immediately before the commencement of Division 1 of Part 5.
(3)  An election is made by written notice served on the Chief Commissioner.
(4)  If the taxpayer makes an election under this clause, the relevant taxation law as in force immediately before the commencement of Division 1 of Part 5 continues to apply to the accrual of interest in relation to the tax default as if this Act and the Taxation Administration (Consequential Amendments) Act 1996 had not been enacted.
9   Penalty tax
(1)  Division 2 of Part 5 does not apply to a tax default that occurred before the commencement of that Division.
(2)  The relevant taxation law as in force immediately before the commencement of Division 2 of Part 5 continues to apply to the liability for, and calculation of, any fine or penalty payable in relation to a tax default that occurred before that commencement as if this Act and the Taxation Administration (Consequential Amendments) Act 1996 had not been enacted.
10   Form of returns
Section 34 extends to an approval that has been given under a relevant taxation law before the commencement of that section and that is in force on that commencement.
11   Approval of special tax return arrangements
Division 2 of Part 6 extends to an approval that has been given under a relevant taxation law before the commencement of that Division and that is in force on that commencement.
12   Unpaid tax
Part 7 extends to tax that is payable but remains unpaid immediately before the commencement of that Part.
13   Records
Sections 51, 52, 53 and 54 extend to records required to be kept, before the commencement of those sections, under a taxation law.
14   References to tax officers
On and from the commencement of Division 1 of Part 9, a reference (however expressed) in any other Act (whether assented to before, on or after that commencement), in any instrument made under an Act or in any other instrument of any kind—
(a)  to the Chief Commissioner of Stamp Duties, the Deputy Chief Commissioner of Stamp Duties, the Chief Commissioner of Health Insurance Levies, the Deputy Chief Commissioner of Health Insurance Levies, the Chief Commissioner of Land Tax, the Deputy Chief Commissioner of Land Tax, the Chief Commissioner of Pay-roll Tax or the Deputy Chief Commissioner of Pay-roll Tax—is to be read as a reference to the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue, or
(b)  to the Commissioner of Stamp Duties, the Commissioner of Health Insurance Levies, the Commissioner of Land Tax, an Assistant Commissioner of Land Tax or the Commissioner of Pay-roll Tax—is to be read as a reference to the Commissioner of State Revenue.
15   Secrecy
Division 3 of Part 9 extends to information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law before the commencement of that Division.
16   Objection and appeals
(1)  Part 10 applies only to a notice of assessment, or a notice of decision or determination of the Chief Commissioner, served after the commencement of that Part.
(2)  The provisions of the relevant taxation law as in force immediately before the commencement of Part 10 continue to apply to a notice of assessment, or a notice of decision or determination of a tax officer, served before the commencement of that Part as if this Act and the Taxation Administration (Consequential Amendments) Act 1996 had not been enacted.
(3)  Sections 104 and 105 apply to an objection that is allowed, or an appeal that is upheld, after the commencement of those sections, despite the other provisions of this clause.
17   Writing off of tax
Section 110 extends to tax that was unpaid before the commencement of that section.
18   Public officer of corporation
The appointment of a public officer under section 41 of the Pay-roll Tax Act 1971, being an appointment that is in force immediately before the repeal of that section, is taken to be an appointment under section 112.
Part 3 Provisions relating to Stamp Duties Act 1920 arising from enactment of Duties Act 1997
19   Existing assessments under Stamp Duties Act 1920
An assessment made under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998 is taken to have been made under Part 3, except as provided by clause 28.
20   Assessments of existing liabilities under Stamp Duties Act 1920
The power to make an assessment under Part 3 extends to a tax liability existing under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998.
21   Refunds of tax paid under Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998
Part 4 extends to tax paid under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998.
22   Existing refund applications under the Stamp Duties Act 1920
Part 4 extends to an application for a refund of tax that was made under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 to the Chief Commissioner before 1 July 1998 and that had not been determined by the Chief Commissioner as at that date.
23   Form of returns
Section 34 extends to an approval that was given under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998 and that is in force immediately before that date.
24   Approval of special tax return arrangements
Division 2 of Part 6 extends to an approval that was given under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998 and that is in force immediately before that date.
25   Duty unpaid under the Stamp Duties Act 1920
Part 7 extends to tax that is payable under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 but remains unpaid immediately before 1 July 1998.
26   Records
Sections 51, 52, 53 and 54 extend to records required to be kept under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 immediately before 1 July 1998.
27   Secrecy
Division 3 of Part 9 extends to information obtained under or in relation to the administration of the Stamp Duties Act 1920 before 1 July 1998.
28   Objections and appeals
(1)  Part 10, in its application to the Stamp Duties Act 1920, applies only to a notice of assessment, or a notice of decision or determination of the Chief Commissioner, served on or after 1 July 1998.
(2)  The Stamp Duties Act 1920, as in force immediately before 1 July 1998, continues to apply to a notice of assessment, or a notice of decision or determination of a tax officer, served before 1 July 1998 as if the Duties Act 1997 had not been enacted.
(3)  Sections 104 and 105 apply to an objection that is allowed, or an appeal that is upheld, on or after 1 July 1998, despite the other provisions of this clause.
29   Writing off of tax
Section 110 extends to tax under the Stamp Duties Act 1920 that was unpaid before 1 July 1998.
Part 4 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 1999
30   Objections
Section 86 (1B), as inserted by the State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 1999, is taken to extend to any refusal by the Chief Commissioner to refund tax paid by a taxpayer that was made by the Chief Commissioner before the commencement of that subsection.
Part 5 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2001
31   Application of interest rate changes
(1)  The amendments made to section 22 by Schedule 4 [1] and [2] to the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2001 do not apply to the calculation of interest in respect of any day occurring before 1 July 2001.
(2)  Anything done or omitted to be done under this Act is validated to the extent that it would have been valid under this Act if this clause had been in force at the time that it was done or omitted.
Part 6 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2003
32   Permitted disclosures—to particular persons
Section 82, as amended by the State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2003, extends to information disclosed on or after 1 July 2003.
33   Secondary disclosures of information
Section 84, as amended by the State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2003, extends to information obtained before the commencement of the amendment.
Part 7 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2008
34   Application of amendments
(1)  The amendments made to section 82 by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2008 extend to the disclosure, on or after the commencement of the amendments, of information obtained under or in relation to the administration of a taxation law before the commencement of those amendments.
(2)  The amendment made to section 125 by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2008 does not apply in respect of an offence alleged to have been committed before the commencement of that amendment (and section 125, as in force immediately before that amendment, continues to apply in respect of such an offence).
35   Repeal of Debits Tax Act 1990
The repeal of the Debits Tax Act 1990 does not affect any liability for tax under that Act that arose before that repeal, and that Act, and this Act, as in force immediately before the repeal of the Debits Tax Act 1990, continues to apply in respect of any such liability.
36   Repeal of Stamp Duties Act 1920
This Act, as in force immediately before the repeal of the Stamp Duties Act 1920, continues to apply in respect of any liability for tax under the Stamp Duties Act 1920.
Part 8 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2010
37   Repeal of petroleum subsidies legislation
(1)  Section 21 and Part 5A of the Petroleum Products Subsidy Act 1997, as in force immediately before their repeal by the amending Act, continue to apply in relation to any amount paid under that Act, or any other thing done or purported to have been done, before that repeal.
Note.
The above provisions enable investigations to be undertaken in connection with compliance with the Petroleum Products Subsidy Act 1997 and amounts wrongly paid to be recovered.
(2)  Clause 9 (3) of the Petroleum Products Subsidy Regulation 2004, as in force immediately before its repeal by the amending Act, continues to apply in relation to records for a financial year that started before 1 July 2009.
Note.
Clause 9 (3) of the Petroleum Products Subsidy Regulation 2004 requires records kept under the Regulation to be kept for 5 years after the financial year to which they relate.
(3)  This clause does not limit section 30 of the Interpretation Act 1987.
(4)  In this clause—
Part 9 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2012
38   Compromise assessment
The amendment made to section 12 by the State Revenue Legislation Further Amendment Act 2012 extends, and is taken to have always extended, to disputes arising, or a tax liability arising, before the commencement of that amendment.
Part 10 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2014
39   Director’s liabilities
Division 2 of Part 7, as in force immediately before the commencement of the amendments made by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2014, continues to apply to a compliance notice issued before that commencement.
40   Application of Act to royalties
Section 5B, as inserted by the State Revenue and Other Legislation Amendment (Budget Measures) Act 2014, applies in respect of royalty payable for a period that commences on or after the commencement of that section.
41   Registration of approval holder
Section 39A, as inserted by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment (Electronic Transactions) Act 2014, extends to a special arrangement approved by the Chief Commissioner, or a person approved to pay tax under a special arrangement, before the commencement of section 39A.
Part 13 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2015
42   Reassessment
Section 8 (3) of this Act, as inserted by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2015, extends to any calculation of tax liability made by the Chief Commissioner at any time before the commencement of that provision but does not extend to any matter the subject of a decision in Freelance Global Ltd v Chief Commissioner of State Revenue[2014] NSWSC 127.
Part 14 Provisions arising from enactment of State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2016
43   Requirement to pay interest on refund to member of group
Section 105 (2) and (3), as inserted by the State Revenue Legislation Amendment Act 2016, extend to an amount of land tax or payroll tax paid by a taxpayer before the commencement of those provisions (but do not apply in relation to a reassessment that is made before the commencement of those provisions of the amount of land tax or payroll tax the taxpayer is liable to pay).
Part 15 Provisions arising from enactment of State Debt Recovery Act 2018
44   Application to existing tax debts
(1)  An amendment made to this Act by the State Debt Recovery Act 2018 extends to a tax amount that became payable before the commencement of the amendment.
(2)  Accordingly, a notice of assessment may be served on a person, in relation to the tax amount, in accordance with section 46 (as substituted by that Act) and that notice constitutes a debt notice for the purposes of the State Debt Recovery Act 2018.
(3)  This clause is subject to the other provisions of this Part.
45   Continuation of Hardship Review Board’s functions
The functions of the Hardship Review Board in relation to any matter that was being dealt with by the Hardship Review Board as constituted under section 106A, before the substitution of that section by the State Debt Recovery Act 2018, may continue to be exercised by the Hardship Review Board as constituted under that section.
46   Substitution of section 46
(1)  Section 46, as in force immediately before its substitution by the State Debt Recovery Act 2018, continues to apply in relation to any requirement made by the Chief Commissioner that was made under that section, by notice in writing served on a taxpayer, before the substitution of that section by that Act.
(2)  This clause does not prevent the Chief Commissioner exercising the Chief Commissioner’s functions under section 46, as substituted by the State Debt Recovery Act 2018, in respect of the unpaid tax amount.
47   Part 10A—tax avoidance schemes
(1)  Part 10A, as inserted by the State Revenue and Fines Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous) Act 2022, applies to a scheme that is—
(a)  entered into or made on or after the commencement of the Part, or
(b)  carried out on or after the commencement of the Part, regardless of when it was first entered into or made.
(2)  However, Part 10A does not apply to tax avoided by a person as a result of a tax avoidance scheme if, apart from the scheme, the tax liability would have arisen before the commencement of the Part.
(3)  A provision of Part 10A that corresponds, or substantially corresponds, to a provision of the duty avoidance provisions extends to a scheme to which the duty avoidance provisions applied immediately before their repeal.
(4)  In this clause—
duty avoidance provisions means the Duties Act 1997, Chapter 11A.
scheme includes part of a scheme.
tax does not include duty under the Duties Act 1997.
tax liability does not include liability for duty under the Duties Act 1997.
sch 1: Am 1998 No 44, Sch 6 [4] [5]; 1999 No 60, Sch 5 [2] [3]; 2000 No 51, Sch 7 [5]; 2000 No 105, Sch 6 [4]; 2001 No 22, Sch 4 [6]; 2001 No 43, Sch 2 [4]; 2001 No 72, Sch 5 [2]; 2001 No 96, Sch 3 [3]; 2002 No 108, Sch 7 [12] [13]; 2002 No 121, Sch 2 [2]; 2003 No 80, Sch 6 [11] [12]; 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [10]; 2005 No 111, Sch 7 [5]; 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [10] [11]; 2009 No 58, Sch 2.5 [2]; 2010 No 46, Sch 11 [3] [4]; 2012 No 76, Sch 4 [9] [10]; 2014 No 19, Sch 3 [10]; 2014 No 37, Sch 4.7 [3]; 2014 No 67, Sch 2 [9]; 2015 No 65, Sch 4 [2]; 2016 No 14, Sch 5 [2]; 2018 No 11, Sch 3.14 [17]; 2022 No 16, Sch 8[11].
Schedule 2 Recognised revenue laws
(Section 80A)
Australian Capital Territory
Rates Act 2004
Utilities Act 2000
Utilities (Network Facilities Tax) Act 2006
South Australia
Petroleum Products Regulation Act 1995
Victoria
Business Franchise (Petroleum Products) Act 1979
sch 2: Ins 2005 No 51, Sch 7 [11]. Subst 2008 No 67, Sch 6 [12]. Am 2018 No 68, Sch 1.21.