A provision has been included in the will precedents to provide for the resignation of a trustee without being replaced, provided one remains.
Probate filing fees
The Supreme Court Probate filing fees have been updated in the retainer instructions and in the costs agreements. 1 July 2017
VIC – Land tax smart form for deceased estates
New land tax online smart form Deceased estate – Commencement or completion of administration (LTX-Trust-18).
This form replaces the paper forms LTX-Trust-13 and LTX-Trust-14, which will not be accepted beyond 30 September 2017.
VIC – Emailing in the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court (Chapter I Email Service Amendment) Rules 2017 which come into effect on 1 August 2017 requires parties in civil matters to include an email address for service in documents filed with the Court and provide that ordinary service may be effected by email to that address.
Documents are to be served either as attachments to a covering email or by including in the email an operative hyperlink to the documents being served.
Estate filing fees
The costs agreements and retainer instructions have been updated to reflect changes to the Supreme Court filing fees.
Businesses changing hands
The commentary was updated to include an expanded discussion about employment agreements and the handling of employee entitlements when a business changes hands.
Assets and liabilities list
A new ‘tear off’ assets and liabilities list has been added to the retainer instructions Wills, powers of attorney precedent. This list may assist clients when they wish to provide more detail in their planning, as well retained by the client with their personal documents.
Transport accident claims – TAC
The commentary and precedents in this publication have been updated to reflect changes to indexed amounts
Land transfer duty benefits
By Russell Cocks, Solicitor
First published in the Law Institute Journal
State Revenue Office has announced changes to the benefits available to purchasers of real estate to take effect from 1 July 2017.
Imposition of duty on transfer of land in Victoria is a significant source of revenue for the State government. It is also a significant source of angst for taxpayers and people involved in the real estate industry. Changes to the duty regime are often seen as levers for economic development and as such those changes are usually designed to achieve a politically beneficial outcome for the government.
The issue of housing affordability, particularly for first home buyers, is a hot button political issue and the duty changes are targeted at that demographic. The changes apply to contracts of sale after 1 July 2017, which may mean that the months of May and June will be ‘slow’ in this marketplace, followed by substantial uplift from July onwards.
Traditionally a first home buyer needs a minimum of the 10% deposit. Given that duty on a purchase of $500,000 is in the range of 5% the government impost is half of that hard fought for deposit. Granting an exemption or concession in relation to duty should therefore provide a substantial impetus for sales. The contrary argument is that it will simply bring more people into the market and effectively increase the price of housing by the amount of the benefit. This dispute between supply/demand will no doubt continue to occupy the attention of economists but we lawyers will move on to the practical consequences of the changes.
FIRST HOME BUYERS – both new and established homes
Full exemption for purchase price up to $600,000.
Reducing concession between $600,000 and $750,000 (no concession at $750,000).
Requirements:
- Purchaser and partner must qualify as ‘first home buyers’; and
- Purchaser must be an Australian citizen or permanent resident; and
- Purchaser must use property as Principal Place of Residence for a continuous period of 12 months commencing within 12 months of possession.
Importantly in the new home market, the ‘dutiable amount’ is calculated after taking into account deductions relating to the cost of construction post-contract.
One segment of the new home market is based on the first home buyer purchasing the land and then entering into a separate building contract for construction. In this case the dutiable value is based on the land contract and will normally come within the full exemption available up to $600,000. However another method has the first home buyer enter into a land and building contract for the total value of the land and construction. This may have a contract price above the $600,000 threshold but the exemption is available if the value of the land as at the date of the contract is below $600,000. Adopting the Fixed Percentage Method of allocating value in such cases will mean that the full exemption will be available so long as an amount equal to 55% of the contract price is below $600.000, allowing for total contract prices of well over $1m.
This takes us into the realms of:
OFF THE PLAN SALES
Substantial duty concessions have always been available in Victoria in relation to off the plan sales. The availability of this concession is to be limited after 1 July 2017 to properties to be used by the purchaser as their principal place of residence.
The concession is available where the dutiable value of the property is less than $550,000. Importantly, the calculation of dutiable value allows for deduction from the contract price of an amount that represents the value of construction to be undertaken after the date of the contract and prior to settlement. The Fixed Percentage Method of calculation of post-contract construction cost allocates cost as follows:
Single dwelling
- Construction cost 45%
- Land component 55%
Multi-lot
- Construction cost 60%
- Land component 40%
High rise
- Construction cost 75%
- Land component 25%
If a purchaser signs a contract before any construction commences the dutiable value will be below the $550,000 threshold provided that the contact price is less than:
- Single dwelling $1,000,000
- Multi lot $1,375,000
- High rise $2,200,000
and duty will be calculated at the concession rate available to purchasers who intend to occupy the property as their principal place of residence.
The concession that was previously available for investment properties and commercial developments will cease as at 30 June 2017 and the concession will only apply to owner-occupied properties.
VIC – State Revenue Office amendments
From 1 July 2017:
- exemption of transfer duty for transfers between spouses is only available for principal place of residence. Transfers following breakdown of relationship are unchanged and the exemption continues to apply to all properties.
- off-the-plan duty concession is restricted to properties acquired by owner/occupiers who are eligible for the principal place of residence or first home buyer duty concessions.
- First Home Buyers:
- Who purchase a property to the value of $600,000 will pay no duty, with concessions available for properties between $600,000 and $750,000.
- Who purchase in regional Victoria a new home to the value of $750,000 may apply for the First Home Owner Grant of $20,000. Criteria includes the property must be the applicant’s principal place of residence for a continuous period of 12 months, moving in within 12 months of completion.
- From 27 June 2017 Australian Defence Force personnel enrolled to vote in Victoria on duty or on leave are exempt from the residence requirement for the First Home Owner Grant.
Land Tax
From 1 January 2018, vacant residential properties in the inner and middle ring of Melbourne will be subject to a vacant residential land tax of 1 per cent of the property’s capital improved value. A property will be considered vacant if it is unoccupied for six months or more in a calendar year. The six months does not need to be continuous. There are exemptions for many properties including for vacant land.
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