Slushies (alcoholic): a weekend activity or a manufacturing business?
I think the ATO released ATO ID 2010/130 to prove they in fact do have a sense of humour. This interpretive decision discusses if the creation of a slushie is considered to be an act of manufacturing and therefore caught in the Excise Act 1901. If you do not know what a slushie is, it is a generic term for a flavoured frozen drink often seen at convenience stores or the movies. Adult versions of the drink can include alcohol.
After a meandering thought process the interpretive decision comes to the conclusion that slushies are not 'manufactured' and therefore not caught by the Excise Act.
You can now enjoy your Slushie on the weekend without having to worry about declaring the consumption to the ATO and having to pay another tax!
I have included the ID below if you would like to read it:
ATO ID 2010/130
Issue
Is the preparation of an iced alcoholic beverage (slushie) by
mixing duty paid spirit with syrup or fruit juice in a frozen cocktail
machine behind the bar of a licensed premises considered to be
'manufacture' for the purposes of section 4 of the Excise Act 1901
(Excise Act)?
Decision
No. The preparation of a slushie by mixing duty paid spirit with
syrup or fruit juice in a frozen cocktail machine behind the bar of a
licensed premises is not considered to be 'manufacture' for the purposes
of section 4 of the Excise Act.
Facts
A frozen cocktail machine consists of between one to four bowls.
Each bowl has a capacity of between 10 to 20 litres and is capable of
containing and mixing a different flavoured alcoholic beverage.
Duty paid spirit is mixed with a sugared, flavoured,
non-alcoholic liquid (syrup) or fruit juice in the frozen cocktail
machine.
Once added to the frozen cocktail machine, the mixture is frozen
by a freezing cylinder in the machine. The frozen mixture is then
continuously scraped off the cylinder and constantly stirred by a
rotating blade in order to provide a uniform icy consistency.
The slushie is then dispensed directly from the frozen cocktail
machine into a glass or jug for retail sale and consumption at the
premises.
The slushie will generally have an alcohol content of between 5%
and 11%.
The frozen cocktail machine is located and the entire process
takes place behind the bar of a licensed hotel, club or restaurant.
Reasons for Decision
Section 25 of the Excise Act provides that only a licensed
manufacturer is to manufacture excisable goods.
Excisable goods are goods on which excise duty is imposed by
Parliament. Under section 5 of the Excise Tariff Act 1921
(Excise Tariff Act), excise duty is imposed on goods listed in the
Schedule to the Excise Tariff Act that are manufactured or produced in
Australia.
Items 2 and 3 of the Schedule to the Excise Tariff Act set out
the excise duties imposed on spirits and other excisable beverages.
Therefore, it is necessary to determine if the product is manufactured
in Australia.
Section 4 of the Excise Act defines 'manufacture' as:
Manufacture includes all processes
in the manufacture of excisable goods and, in relation to beer,
includes the provision to the public at a particular premises of
commercial facilities and equipment for use in the production of beer at
those premises.
This definition (which includes the term 'manufacture' within it) is
circular and provides little guidance. It is therefore necessary to look
outside the provisions of the Excise Act for guidance on the meaning of
the term.
The Australian Oxford Dictionary , 2nd edn, 2004, Oxford
University Press, Melbourne, defines manufacture to be:
1a the making of articles especially in a
factory etc. b a branch of an industry (woollen manufacture
). 2 esp derog . The merely mechanical production of
literature, art, etc... 1 make (articles), especially on an
industrial scale. 2 invent or fabricate (evidence, a story,
etc.) 3 esp. derog . Make or produce (literature, art,
etc.) in a mechanical way...
In addition to its ordinary meaning, the courts have extensively
examined the meaning of the term 'manufacture' in the context of
legislation other than the Excise Act, in particular sales tax
legislation. Although it is not possible, for the purposes of the Excise
Act, to directly adopt the judicial interpretation of the word
'manufacture' as it appears outside of the Excise regime, the cases
still provide a useful guideline as to possible interpretations of the
term.
In McNichol and Anor v. Pinch [1906] 2 KB 352, Darling J
stated at page 361:
... the essence of making or of manufacturing is
that what is made shall be a different thing from that out of which it
is made.
Factors that have been taken into consideration by the courts in
examining whether something is a different thing from that out of which
it is made include but are not limited to the colour, shape, composition
or any other quality, as well as differences in its utility for some
purpose: M.P. Metals Pty Ltd v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(1967-) 117 CLR 631; (1968) 14 ATD 407. Another factor that has
been considered by the courts is whether there has been an application
of skill to the component elements of a thing in order to bring a new
and saleable entity into existence: Re Searls Ltd (1932) 33 SR
(NSW) 7 at 11.
Although it is clear from the definition of 'manufacture'
contained in the Excise Act that the term is intended to be interpreted
and applied broadly, whether or not excisable goods are 'manufactured'
will often be a question of fact and degree that requires the exercise
of judgement in relation to the different processes involved in the
making of the goods.
Bearing this in mind, the courts have also provided that the
concept of manufacture should not be taken beyond its usually accepted
limit unless the legislation so requires: Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v. Nimrod Theatre Co. Pty. Ltd . (1984) 15 ATR 607; 84 ATC
4310 ( Nimrod ); Adams v. Rau (1931) 46 CLR 572 ( Adams
) and Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Rochester (1934) 50
CLR 225; (1934) 2 ATD 466.
For example, in explaining that the concept of manufacture should
not be taken beyond its usually accepted limit, the court in Nimrod
referred to Adams stating:
...In Adams v. Rau (supra), it was held that
transcripts produced by professional shorthand writers were not
manufactured goods within the meaning of the Act... It was said (at 579)
that it would be a misuse of English to describe a shorthand writer's
employment as the manufacture and production of transcripts...
In Adams the court stated the following in relation to
construing the term 'manufacture':
...The definition should receive an operation
according to the natural and ordinary meaning of its terms...
It is acknowledged that a strict interpretation of the term
'manufacture' as it is defined in the Excise Act may lead to the
conclusion that the preparation of slushies in the manner described
could be 'manufacture' for the purposes of the Excise Act.
However, in the absence of any provision in the Excise Act to the
contrary, such an interpretation would be taking the concept of
'manufacture' beyond its usually accepted limit.
It is acknowledged that there is a distinction between the mixing
of spirits behind a bar in a licensed hotel, club or restaurant upon a
customer's specific request and the preparation of slushies as
described. Slushies are produced in bulk and are available for customers
to purchase in a pre-prepared form as opposed to being prepared on an
individual drink-by-drink basis.
However, it is the Commissioner's view that this distinction is
not material for present purposes. Where a bartender mixes spirits
behind a bar upon a customer's request it is considered that the
bartender is simply using the manufactured product (duty paid spirit)
for one of the uses for which it was intended; namely, the preparation
of a mixed alcoholic beverage for retail sale and consumption at the
licensed premises. The frozen cocktail machine is simply a modern
electric appliance performing the same function as a bartender albeit in
larger quantities and with greater efficiency.
Therefore, the preparation of a slushie in the manner and
circumstances described in the facts above involves simply using duty
paid spirit for one of the uses for which it was intended and is not
considered to be 'manufacture' for the purposes of the Excise Act.