Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

This Act was repealed by the Revenue Laws Amendment and Repeal Act 2010 s. 29(b) (No. 17 of 2010) as at 26 Jun 2010 (see s. 2(b)).

 

 

Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

Contents

Part 1 — Preliminary

1.Short title2

2.Commencement2

3.Relationship with other Acts2

4.Meaning of terms used in this Act2

Part 2 — Liability and assessment

5.Debits tax on debits3

6.Time for payment of debits tax5

7.Liability to pay debits tax5

8.Recovery of debits tax from customer6

9.Monthly returns by financial institutions6

Part 3 — Certificated accounts

10.Application and issue of certificates8

11.Duration of certification8

12.Notification of debits that are not exempt or excluded8

13.Refund of debits tax if certificate commences retrospectively9

14.Annual statement of certificated accounts10

15.Revocation of certificates11

16.Offences relating to certificates11

Part 4 — General

17.Deemed separate debits12

18.Debits to be expressed in Australian currency12

19.Exemptions under other written laws12

20.Financial institution to keep records13

21.Regulations13

Glossary

1.Definitions14

2.Exempt debit16

3.Excluded debit17

Notes

Compilation table20

 

Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

An Act relating to the assessment and collection of tax on debits made to accounts kept with financial institutions.

Part 1 Preliminary

1.Short title

This Act may be cited as the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002.

2.Commencement

This Act comes into operation on the day on which the Taxation Administration Act 2003 comes into operation.

3.Relationship with other Acts

The Taxation Administration Act 2003 and the Debits Tax Act 2002 are to be read with this Act as if they formed a single Act.

4.Meaning of terms used in this Act

The Glossaries at the end of this Act and the Taxation Administration Act 2003 define or affect the meaning of some of the words and expressions used in this Act and also affect the operation of other provisions.

Part 2 Liability and assessment

5.Debits tax on debits

(1)Debits tax is payable on a debit made to an account kept in Western Australia.

(2)Debits tax is payable on a debit made to an account kept outside Western Australia if —

(a)the account is not the head account in a third party cheque arrangement;

(b)at the time the debit is made, the person in whose name the account is kept, or if the account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons any one of them, is a resident;

(c)the Commissioner is satisfied that the account was used in connection with the transaction that resulted in the debit for the purpose, or for purposes that included the purpose, of enabling —

(i)the person in whose name the account is kept, or if the account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons, any one of them; or

(ii)any other person,

to avoid liability for payment of debits tax that would have been imposed if the debit had been made to an account kept in Western Australia; and

(d)the person concerned is not liable, in relation to the use of the account, to pay tax of a similar kind to debits tax under the laws of the place where the account is kept.

(3)Debits tax is payable on a debit made to the head account in a third party cheque arrangement kept outside Western Australia if —

(a)at the time the debit is made —

(i)institution A is a resident; or

(ii)the customer, or if the customer’s account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons any one of them, is a resident;

(b)the Commissioner is satisfied that the head account was used in connection with the transaction that resulted in the debit for the purpose, or for purposes that included the purpose, of enabling —

(i)institution A;

(ii)the customer, or if the customer’s account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons, any one of them; or

(iii)any other person,

to avoid liability for payment of debits tax that would have been imposed if the debit had been made to an account kept in Western Australia; and

(c)the person concerned is not liable, in relation to the use of the account, to pay tax of a similar kind to debits tax under the laws of the place where the head account is kept.

(4)However, debits tax is not payable on —

(aa)a debit made on or after 1 July 2005;

(a)an exempt debit; or

(b)an excluded debit made to —

(i)a certificated account; or

(ii)an account kept outside Western Australia.

(5)In this section —

third party cheque arrangement means an arrangement under which —

(a)a person (the customer) keeps an account with a financial institution (institution A) (which account is not an account as defined in this Act because the customer cannot draw cheques on institution A);

(b)institution A keeps an account (the head account) with another financial institution (institution B); and

(c)the terms on which those accounts are kept —

(i)allow institution A to deliver to the customer incomplete cheques drawn by institution A on institution B;

(ii)allow the customer to complete and use those cheques;

(iii)require institution B to honour those cheques;

(iv)require institution A to pay to institution B the amounts necessary to enable institution B to honour the cheques; and

(v)authorise institution A to debit those amounts to the customer’s account.

[Section 5 amended by No. 66 of 2003 s. 102.]

6.Time for payment of debits tax

Debits tax is due for payment within 14 days after the end of the month in which the debit was made.

7.Liability to pay debits tax

(1)Debits tax on a debit is payable by —

(a)the financial institution; and

(b)the customer.

(2)However the financial institution is not liable to pay any debits tax on a debit made to a certificated account or to an account kept outside Western Australia.

(3)If 2 or more people are liable to pay debits tax on a debit, they are jointly and severally liable.

(4)A person who is liable to pay debits tax is also liable to pay any penalties, interest or other amount payable under a debits tax Act in connection with the debits tax.

8.Recovery of debits tax from customer

(1)If a financial institution has paid debits tax on a debit the customer is liable to pay to the financial institution an amount equal to the amount of the debits tax minus any amount —

(a)that has been refunded to the financial institution under a debits tax Act in respect of the debit; or

(b)in respect of which an amount has been paid to the financial institution under section 13.

(2)If 2 or more people are liable to pay the amount to a financial institution, they are jointly and severally liable.

(3)A financial institution may recover an amount due under subsection (1) —

(a)by debiting the amount to the account;

(b)as a debt due by the customer to the financial institution, by action in a court of competent jurisdiction;

(c)in any other manner agreed between the financial institution and the customer; or

(d)by any combination of those methods.

9.Monthly returns by financial institutions

(1)A financial institution must lodge a monthly return in relation to all debits made during the month to accounts kept with the financial institution in Western Australia on which debits tax is payable by the institution.

Penalty: $5 000.

(2)If no such debits are made during a month, the financial institution is to lodge a nil return for that month.

Penalty: $5 000.

(3)A monthly return must —

(a)be in an approved form; and

(b)be lodged with the Commissioner within 14 days after the end of the month.

(4)The Commissioner may, by notice, permit a financial institution to lodge separate monthly returns in relation to debits made to accounts kept with a particular branch or branches of the financial institution.

(5)A financial institution is not required to lodge a monthly return under subsection (1) or (2) for a month commencing on or after 1 July 2005.

[Section 9 amended by No. 66 of 2003 s. 103.]

Part 3 Certificated accounts

10.Application and issue of certificates

(1)If, on the application of a customer, the Commissioner is satisfied that all debits made, or to be made, before 1 July 2005 to an account kept in Western Australia are, or are likely to be, exempt debits or excluded debits, the Commissioner is to issue a certificate for the account.

(2)An application for a certificate is to be in an approved form.

(3)If the Commissioner does not issue a certificate, the Commissioner must notify the applicant to that effect.

[Section 10 amended by No. 66 of 2003 s. 104.]

11.Duration of certification

(1)The Commissioner must specify in the certificate the date with effect from which the certificate is to take effect (the start date).

(2)The start date —

(a)may be before the date on which the certificate is issued;

(b)cannot be more than 5 years before the date on which the application for the certificate was made; and

(c)must not be earlier than 28 June 1996 unless a certificate could have been issued for the account before that date.

(3)A certificate comes into force with effect from the start date and remains in force until midnight on the expiry date specified in the certificate (if any) or until it is revoked.

12.Notification of debits that are not exempt or excluded

(1)If a debit that is not an exempt debit or an excluded debit is made to a certificated account before 1 July 2005 the customer must notify the Commissioner within 7 days after the debit is made, unless the Commissioner was notified in accordance with subsection (2) before the debit was made.

Penalty: $20 000.

(2)If the customer for a certificated account becomes aware that a debit that is not an exempt debit or an excluded debit will be, or is likely to be, made to the account within the next 30 days and before 1 July 2005, the customer must notify the Commissioner within 7 days of becoming aware of it.

Penalty: $20 000.

(3)A notification must be made in an approved form.

(4)If an account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons it is sufficient compliance with subsection (1) or (2) if one of them notifies the Commissioner in accordance with this section.

[Section 12 amended by No. 66 of 2003 s. 105.]

13.Refund of debits tax if certificate commences retrospectively

(1)If —

(a)the start date (within the meaning of section 11) for a certificate is before the date on which the certificate was issued;

(b)debits tax has been paid on a debit made to the account on or after the start date; and

(c)debits tax would not have been payable on that debit had the certificate been issued on the start date,

then debits tax is to be taken never to have been payable on that debit and the Commissioner is to make a reassessment accordingly.

(2)An application for a reassessment may be made —

(a)if the financial institution has recovered the amount of the debits tax from the customer — by the customer; or

(b)otherwise — by the financial institution.

(3)Despite section 17 of the Taxation Administration Act 2003, the Commissioner may make a reassessment under subsection (1) of the amount of debits tax payable on any debit made to the account after the start date, irrespective of when the original assessment in relation to that debit was made.

(4)If a customer who is entitled under this section to apply for a reassessment of the amount of debits tax payable on a debit but has not done so, presents the certificate referred to in subsection (1)(a) to the financial institution —

(a)the financial institution is to pay to the customer an amount equal to the amount of the debits tax; and

(b)the financial institution may then apply for a reassessment instead of the customer.

(5)A financial institution that is entitled under subsection (4) to apply for a reassessment may, instead of applying for a reassessment, include in its monthly return lodged under section 9 for the month in which the customer presented the certificate a credit of an amount equal to the amount of debits tax.

14.Annual statement of certificated accounts

(1)A financial institution with which one or more certificated accounts are kept during a calendar year must give to the Commissioner an annual statement in relation to all certificated accounts kept with the institution during that year.

Penalty: $5 000.

(2)An annual statement must —

(a)be in an approved form; and

(b)be given to the Commissioner before 1 March in the year after the year to which the statement relates (or such later date as the Commissioner allows).

(3)A financial institution is not required to lodge an annual statement under subsection (1) for the year 2006 or any subsequent year.

[Section 14 amended by No. 66 of 2003 s. 106.]

15.Revocation of certificates

(1)The Commissioner may revoke a certificate if the Commissioner is satisfied that a debit that is not an exempt debit or an excluded debit has been, or is to be, made to the account.

(2)Subsection (1) applies whether or not the Commissioner has been notified under section 12.

(3)A revocation must be served on —

(a)the customer, or if the account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons, each of them; and

(b)the financial institution with which the account is kept.

(4)A revocation takes effect on the day, and at the time, it is served on the financial institution.

16.Offences relating to certificates

A person must not —

(a)forge a certificate;

(b)utter a certificate that the person knows is forged;

(c)alter or sign a certificate without lawful authority;

(d)knowingly represent that a document is a certificate if it is not; or

(e)knowingly represent that a certificate applies to an account other than the account for which it was issued.

Penalty: $20 000.

Part 4 General

17.Deemed separate debits

(1)A debit that would, but for this section, be a single debit made to an account in respect of 2 or more transactions is taken to be separate debits in relation to each of those transactions.

(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to a debit that is, or is in a class of debits that are, prescribed for the purposes of this section.

(3)In this section —

transaction means the payment of a cheque, or the doing of any other thing, that will result in the making of a debit to an account.

18.Debits to be expressed in Australian currency

For the purposes of this Act the amount of a debit that is made in a currency other than Australian currency, is the amount of the debit converted to Australian currency as at the time the debit was made.

19.Exemptions under other written laws

(1)A written law passed before 1 January 1991 that purports to exempt a person from liability to pay a tax which could be taken to include debits tax does not exempt that person from liability to pay debits tax.

(2)A written law passed on or after 1 January 1991 that purports to exempt a person from liability —

(a)to pay taxes under the laws of Western Australia; or

(b)to pay certain taxes under those laws that include debits tax,

other than a law that expressly exempts a person from liability to pay debits tax, does not exempt the person from liability to pay debits tax.

20.Financial institution to keep records

A financial institution must make and retain sufficient records (including any prescribed records) to enable its liability for debits tax to be assessed by the Commissioner.

21.Regulations

(1)The Governor may make regulations prescribing all matters that are required or permitted by a debits tax Act to be prescribed or are necessary or convenient to be prescribed to give effect to a debits tax Act.

(2)Regulations may create offences and provide, in respect of an offence so created, for the imposition of a fine not exceeding $5 000.

 

Glossary

[s. 4]

1.Definitions

(1)Unless the contrary intention appears —

account means an account —

(a)kept with a financial institution (including an account kept by way of withdrawable share capital in, or money deposited with, a financial institution that is not a bank); and

(b)to which payments may be debited by the institution in respect of cheques drawn on the institution by the customer;

activity in the nature of a business

(a)includes the supplying of goods or services (other than goods or services that are, or are in a class of goods or services that are, prescribed for the purposes of this paragraph) to the public for payment;

(b)does not include the carrying on of an activity that forms a minor or insignificant part of the functions of the body carrying it on; and

(c)need not be an activity carried on for profit;

banking business includes a business carried on by a financial institution in the course of which the institution keeps accounts for its customers;

certificate means a certificate issued under section 10;

certificated account means an account in respect of which a certificate is in force;

charitable organisation means —

(a)a public benevolent or religious institution;

(b)a public hospital or a hospital carried on by an association or other body of persons otherwise than for purposes of profit or gain to the individual members of that association or body;

(c)a university;

(d)a government college, a government school, or a college or school carried on by an association or other body of persons otherwise than for purposes of profit or gain to the individual members of that association or body;

(e)a trust the moneys of which may be applied only for charitable purposes;

(f)an institution established for any other charitable purpose;

(g)a society, institution or organisation established, and carried on, solely for the purpose of raising money for, or otherwise promoting the interests of an entity that is a charitable organisation under paragraphs (a) to (f);

cheque has the same meaning as it has in the Cheques Act 1986 of the Commonwealth;

clause means a clause in this Glossary;

customer means a person in whose name an account is kept;

debit means a debit to an account;

debits tax means the tax imposed by the Debits Tax Act 2002;

debits tax Act means any one or more of the following —

(a)the Debits Tax Act 2002;

(b)the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002;

(c)the Taxation Administration Act 2003;

excluded debit means a debit that is excluded under clause 3;

exempt debit means a debit that is exempt under clause 2;

financial institution means a financial institution within the meaning of the Cheques Act 1986 of the Commonwealth;

government body means —

(a)a department of the government of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory;

(b)an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory; or

(c)a local government;

incomplete, in relation to a cheque, means wanting in a material particular necessary for the cheque to be, on its face, a complete cheque;

resident means —

(a)an individual who —

(i)resides in Western Australia; or

(ii)is domiciled in Western Australia, unless the Commissioner is satisfied that the person’s permanent place of residence is outside Western Australia;

(b)a body corporate registered under the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth that —

(i)is taken to be incorporated in Western Australia; or

(ii)carries on business in Western Australia and either —

(I)has its central management and control in Western Australia; or

(II)has its voting power controlled by shareholders who are residents of Western Australia;

(c)a body corporate that is not registered under the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth that —

(i)is incorporated in Western Australia; or

(ii)carries on business in Western Australia and either —

(I)has its central management and control in Western Australia; or

(II)has its voting power controlled by shareholders who are residents of Western Australia;

(d)a partnership or other unincorporated association or body of persons, any member of which is a resident.

(2)In relation to a debit —

(a)a reference to “the account” is a reference to the account to which the debit is made;

(b)a reference to “the customer” is a reference to the customer in whose name the account is kept; and

(c)a reference to “the financial institution” is a reference to the financial institution with which the account is kept.

2.Exempt debit

(1)A debit is exempt if it is made for the purpose of —

(a)reversing a credit previously made to an account;

(b)deducting an amount under section 221YHZC(1A) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 of the Commonwealth; or

(c)recovering from the customer an amount equal to the amount of debits tax paid or payable by the financial institution.

(2)If, as a result of —

(a)the closure of a branch, or the amalgamation of branches, of a financial institution;

(b)the conversion, updating or relocating of a financial institution’s data processing systems; or

(c)the loss by the customer of an electronic banking card issued by a financial institution,

the financial institution —

(d)debits or credits an amount to an account solely for the purpose of closing that account; and

(e)credits or debits the same amount to a new account kept with the financial institution for the same customer,

then the debit referred to in paragraph (d) or (e) is exempt.

(3)A debit is exempt if it is, or is in a class of debits that are, prescribed for the purposes of this subclause.

(4)If a debit made to an account is subsequently reversed, the debit is to be taken to be, and to have always been, exempt.

3.Excluded debit

(1)A debit is excluded if the customer is —

(a)the Governor‑General or the Governor of a State;

(b)the government of a country other than Australia.

(2)A debit is excluded if —

(a)the customer is a person who would, but for section 19, be entitled to an exemption from debits tax by virtue of a written law other than a debits tax Act; and

(b)the debit is made in relation to a transaction carried out by or on behalf of the customer solely for the purpose of —

(i)in the case of an individual — his or her private or domestic affairs (which does not include the carrying on by the individual of a business in Australia); or

(ii)in the case of an organisation — engaging in its official activities.

(3)A debit is excluded if —

(a)the customer is a charitable organisation; and

(b)the debit is made in relation to a transaction carried out by or on behalf of the organisation solely in furtherance of its objects.

(4)A debit is excluded if —

(a)the customer is a government body other than a body the sole or principal function of which is to carry on an activity in the nature of a business; and

(b)the debit is made in relation to a transaction entered into by or on behalf of the government body that is not in connection with the carrying on by that body of an activity in the nature of a business.

(5)A debit is excluded if —

(a)the customer is a financial institution (other than the institution with which the account is kept);

(b)either —

(i)the business carried on by the customer in Western Australia consists wholly or principally of banking business; or

(ii)all debits made, or to be made, to the account are in connection with banking business carried on by the customer in Western Australia;

and

(c)the account is not the head account in a third party cheque arrangement (as defined in section 5).

(6)A debit is excluded if the debits tax that would be payable on the debit if it were not excluded cannot be recovered from the customer by the financial institution.

(7)A debit is excluded if it is, or is in a class of debits that are, prescribed for the purposes of this subclause.

(8)A debit is excluded if the customer is an authority of the Commonwealth, or of a State or Territory, that is, or is of a class of authorities that are, prescribed for the purposes of this subclause.

(9)If an account is kept in the name of 2 or more persons, a reference in this clause to “the customer” is a reference to all of them.

 

Notes

1This is a compilation of the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002 and includes the amendments made by the other written laws referred to in the following table 2, 3.

Compilation table

Short title

Number and Year

Assent

Commencement

Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

50 of 2002

20 Mar 2003

1 Jul 2003 (see s. 2 and Gazette 27 Jun 2003 p. 2383)

Business Tax Review (Assessment) Act (No. 2) 2003 Pt. 4

66 of 2003

5 Dec 2003

5 Dec 2003 (see s. 2(4))

This Act was repealed by the Revenue Laws Amendment and Repeal Act 2010 s. 29(b) (No. 17 of 2010) as at 26 Jun 2010 (see s. 2(b))

2Under the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes Administration) Act 1999 s. 7 this Act is to be read and construed with any modifications referred to in subsection (1) of that section and, in particular, with the modifications set out in the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes Administration) Regulations 2007. s. 1‑4 and Pt. 2 Div. 2 of those regulations read as follows:

1.Citation

These regulations are the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes Administration) Regulations 2007.

2.Commencement

These regulations come into operation on the day on which the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) (Modification of Applied Laws (WA)) Notice 2007 comes into operation.

3.When certain modifications have effect

(1)The modifications prescribed in Part 2, Part 3, Part 5, Part 6 Division 2 and Part 7 have effect on and from 1 July 2003.

(2)The modifications prescribed in Part 4 have effect on and from 9 April 2006 and prevail over the modifications in the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes Administration) Regulations 2002 Part 5 to the extent of any inconsistency.

Note:

Modifications prescribed for the purposes of section 7(2) of the Act may be expressed to take effect from a date that is earlier than the date on which the modifications are published in the Gazette, see section 7(3) of the Act.

4.Modification of State taxing laws

(1)For the purposes of section 7(2) of the Act, each State taxing law is taken to be modified to the extent necessary to give effect to subregulation (2).

(2)If —

(a)a State taxing law applies, or could apply, to any extent, to or in relation to an event, state of affairs or transaction, and the corresponding applied law also applies, or could apply, to any extent, to or in relation to the same event, state of affairs or transaction; and

(b)a person is required or permitted, or could be required or permitted, to take an action under both the State taxing law and the corresponding applied law in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction; and

(c)the person has taken the action in accordance with the corresponding applied law; and

(d)the Commissioner of State Revenue has sufficient information about the event, state of affairs or transaction to carry out his or her functions in relation to it under the State taxing law or the corresponding applied law or both, as the case requires,

then —

(e)the person is not required to take the action under the State taxing law; and

(f)the Commissioner may carry out his or her functions in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction as if the person had taken whatever action is required or permitted under the State taxing law in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction.

(3)The particular modifications set out in these regulations of certain State taxing laws have effect for the purposes of section 7(2) of the Act.

Part 2 — Debits tax

Division 2 — The Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

8.Modification of the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

This Division sets out modifications of the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002 in its application as a law of Western Australia.

9.Section 4A inserted

After section 4 the following section is inserted —

4A.Application of Act in non‑Commonwealth places

(1)In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears —

(a)a reference to this Act is to be read as a reference to this Act in its application as a law of Western Australia; and

(b)a reference to the regulations is to be read as a reference to the Debits Tax Assessment Regulations 2003 in their application as a law of Western Australia; and

(c)a reference to the Debits Tax Act 2002 is to be read as a reference to that Act in its application as a law of Western Australia; and

(d)a reference to the Taxation Administration Act 2003 is to be read as a reference to that Act in its application as a law of Western Australia.

(2)This Act is to be read with the applied Debits Tax Assessment Act as a single body of law.

”.

10.Glossary modified

The Glossary clause 1 is modified by inserting in their appropriate alphabetical positions —

applied Debits Tax Act means the Debits Tax Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Act;

applied Debits Tax Assessment Act means the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Act;

Commonwealth Act means the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) Act 1998 of the Commonwealth;

”.

”.

3Under the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) Act 1998 s. 8(2) of the Commonwealth, this Act is to be read and construed with any modifications referred to in subsection (1) of that section and, in particular, with the modifications set out in the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) (Modification of Applied Laws (WA)) Notice 2007. r. 1-5 and Pt. 2 Div. 2 of that notice read as follows:

1.Citation

This notice is the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) (Modification of Applied Laws (WA)) Notice 2007.

2.Commencement

This notice comes into operation on the day after the day on which it is registered under the Legislative Instruments Act 2003 of the Commonwealth.

3.When certain modifications have effect

(1)The modifications prescribed in Part 2, Part 3, Part 5, Part 6 Division 2 and Part 7 have effect on and from 1 July 2003.

(2)The modifications prescribed in Part 4 have effect on and from 9 April 2006 and prevail over the modifications in the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) (Modification of Applied Laws (WA)) Notice 2002 Part 5 to the extent of any inconsistency.

Note:

Modifications prescribed in a notice under section 8 of the Act may be expressed to take effect from a date that is earlier than the date on which the modifications are published in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette, see section 8(5) of the Act.

4.Definitions

In this notice —

applied WA law means the provisions of a State taxing law of Western Australia that apply or are taken to have applied in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act;

Commissioner of State Revenue means the Commissioner of State Revenue of Western Australia appointed in accordance with the Taxation Administration Act 2003 section 6 of Western Australia;

Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act means the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) Act 1998 of the Commonwealth.

5.Modification of applied WA laws

(1)For the purposes of the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act section 8, each applied WA law is taken to be modified to the extent necessary to give effect to subclause (2).

(2)If —

(a)an applied WA law applies, or could apply, to any extent, to or in relation to an event, state of affairs or transaction, and the corresponding State taxing law also applies, or could apply, to any extent, to or in relation to the same event, state of affairs or transaction; and

(b)a person is required or permitted, or could be required or permitted, to take an action under both the applied WA law and the corresponding State taxing law in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction; and

(c)the person has taken the action in accordance with the corresponding State taxing law; and

(d)the Commissioner of State Revenue has sufficient information about the event, state of affairs or transaction to carry out his or her functions in relation to it under the applied WA law or the corresponding State taxing law or both, as the case requires,

then —

(e)the person is not required to take the action under the applied WA law; and

(f)the Commissioner may carry out his or her functions in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction as if the person had taken whatever action is required or permitted under the applied WA law in relation to the event, state of affairs or transaction.

(3)The particular modifications set out in this notice of certain applied WA laws have effect for the purposes of the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act section 8.

Part 2 — Debits tax

Division 2 — The applied Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

9.Modification of the applied Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002

This Division sets out modifications of the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia.

10.Section 4A inserted

After section 4 the following section is inserted —

4A.Application of Act in Commonwealth places

(1)In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears —

(a)a reference to this Act is to be read as a reference to this Act in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act; and

(b)a reference to the regulations is to be read as a reference to the Debits Tax Assessment Regulations 2003 of Western Australia in their application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act; and

(c)a reference to the Debits Tax Act 2002 is to be read as a reference to the Debits Tax Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act; and

(d)a reference to the Taxation Administration Act 2003 is to be read as a reference to the Taxation Administration Act 2003 of Western Australia in its application as a law of the Commonwealth in or in relation to Commonwealth places in Western Australia in accordance with the Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act.

(2)This Act is to be read with the corresponding Debits Tax Assessment Act as a single body of law.

(3)In addition to being modified as prescribed by the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) (Modification of Applied Laws (WA)) Notice 2007, this Act is deemed to be further modified to any extent that is necessary or convenient —

(a)to enable this Act to operate effectively as a law of the Commonwealth; and

(b)to ensure that the combined liability of a taxpayer under this Act and the corresponding Debits Tax Assessment Act is as nearly as possible the same as the taxpayer’s liability would be under the corresponding Debits Tax Assessment Act alone if the Commonwealth places in Western Australia were not Commonwealth places.

”.

11.Glossary modified

The Glossary clause 1 is modified by inserting in their appropriate alphabetical positions —

Commonwealth Mirror Taxes Act means the Commonwealth Places (Mirror Taxes) Act 1998;

corresponding Debits Tax Act means the Debits Tax Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of Western Australia;

corresponding Debits Tax Assessment Act means the Debits Tax Assessment Act 2002 of Western Australia in its application as a law of Western Australia;

”.

”.

 

 

Defined terms

 

[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]

Defined termProvision(s)

accountGl.

activity in the nature of a businessGl.

banking businessGl.

certificateGl.

certificated accountGl.

charitable organisationGl.

chequeGl.

clauseGl.

customer5(5), Gl.

debitGl.

debits taxGl.

debits tax ActGl.

excluded debitGl.

exempt debitGl.

financial institutionGl.

government bodyGl.

head account5(5)

incompleteGl.

institution A5(5)

institution B5(5)

residentGl.

start date11(1)

third party cheque arrangement5(5)

transaction17(3)