Are my legal expenses tax deductible?
The tax deductibility of employment-related legal expenses is a
complicated and changing area. This is especially the case in
relation to legal costs incurred in the preparation and
administration of employment contracts.
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
Whether an expense incurred by an employee is tax deductible is
generally decided by reference to section 8-1 of the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 ("ITAA").
This section provides that you can deduct from your assessable
income any "loss or outgoing" to the extent that it is
incurred in gaining or producing your assessable
income or it is necessarily incurred in carrying on a
business for the purpose of producing assessable income.
However, you cannot deduct a loss or outgoing to the extent
that:
Commissioner of Taxation's Ruling
The Commissioner of Taxation's ("the Commissioner") main ruling
in relation to employment contracts is Taxation Ruling
2000/5 ("the Ruling") which provides that the following costs
incurred by an employee are allowable deductions:
- costs of drawing up an employment agreement
with an existing employer to replace an award, or in accordance
with the existing agreement
- costs associated with the settlement of
disputes arising out of an existing employment
agreement
- costs of changing the conditions of an existing
employment agreement with the same employer (providing the
existing agreement allows for changes) including a variation,
renegotiation or upon a promotion, and
- costs of renewing or extending a fixed term employment
agreement, provided the existing agreement provides for
this renewal or extension.
In the Ruling the Commissioner highlights that where an employee
is entering into new employment a deduction
is not allowable for expenses incurred, as it
is considered to be incurred at a point "too soon" to be incurred
in the production of assessable income and further it is a "capital
expense".
Two recent cases
The Commissioner's defeat in two recent relevant court cases may
be seen to expand the circumstances in which legal costs may be
deductible where the Commissioner formerly had ruled and argued
that they were not. In light of these recent cases, the
Commissioner is reviewing a variety of previous rulings and
determinations.
Expense is incurred in gaining or producing assessable
income
Court cases have established that in order to be deductible,
there must be a sufficient connection between the expense incurred
and what is itself productive of the assessable income.
Romanin's case
In the 2008 decision in Romanin v Commissioner of
Taxation ("Romanin's Case") the Federal Court held that legal
expenses incurred in pursuing proceedings in the Industrial
Relations Commission of NSW for pay in lieu of notice were tax
deductible. Mr Romanin was found to have a contractual
entitlement to 12 months' notice (or pay in lieu) and he was
dismissed with seven days notice.
The Commissioner argued that such legal expenses were of a
capital nature because the "advantage sought" was a lump sum by way
of relief for termination of his employment.
However, McKerracher J held that even though the amount sought
was a lump sum and even though it related to an amount owing on the
termination of the contract, the legal costs incurred by Mr Romanin
in doing so were deductible and that deduction was not denied as
being capital or of a capital nature.
Romanin's Case extends the circumstances where legal costs
incurred by an employee will be deductible. Each case should
be carefully considered on its merits having regard to the decision
and the action the Commissioner takes in relation to the existing
rulings.
Day's case
The 2008 High Court decision in Commissioner of Taxation v
Shane Day ("Day's Case") held that a Commonwealth Customs
Officer who incurred legal expenses in defending
disciplinary charges under the Public Service Act 1922
("PSA") could lawfully claim the legal expenses as a tax
deduction.
The majority of the High Court held in Day's Case that the legal
costs incurred by Mr Day were deductible as they were incurred in
the course of gaining or producing his assessable income and were
not of a private or domestic nature. The Court explained that
the question to be answered is whether the occasion of the outgoing
was "found in" what was productive of actual or expected
income.
In this case, Mr Day's position as an officer subject to the PSA
obliged him to observe standards of conduct extending beyond those
in performance of the tasks associated with his office and the
charges were not "remote from his office" as might be the case in
defending a criminal charge for "private conduct".
The Court noted that incurring of expenditure by an employee to
defend a charge because it may result in dismissal may not itself
be sufficient in every case to establish the necessary connection
to the employment which is productive of the income and much will
depend upon what was entailed in the employment and the duties
which it imposes upon the employee.
The Commissioner in his Decision Impact Statement
states "where employment or service is conducted on terms that
standards of conduct be observed in a taxpayer's personal life on
pain of dismissal or reduction in salary, legal expenses incurred
in resisting civil disciplinary or legal action will be
deductible."
The implications of this case are to expand the types of
circumstances where legal costs may be deductible in cases where an
employee takes action to defend against charges that might impact
on their continued employment.
The expense must not be of capital or of a capital
nature, or of a private or domestic nature.
Section 8-1(2) ITAA provides that a loss or outgoing will not be
deductible to the extent that it is capital or of a capital nature,
or it is of a private or domestic nature.