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Home News

Current pension documents key to avoid legal risk

SMSF trustees and auditors are risking legal action by not having up-to-date pension payment documents in place for the current year, according to a leading SMSF strategist.

by Sarah Kendell
October 29, 2019
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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LightYear Group and I Love SMSF director Grant Abbott said he had seen a spike in trustees seeking to put pension payment documents in place for the coming year, as ATO compliance crackdowns drove further trustee awareness of the importance of having robust documentation in place.

“In the last week alone, there have been more than 200 pension payment documents completed on the LightYear Docs platform,” Mr Abbott said.

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“Although it is only a fraction of the entire field of account-based pensions on foot, it appears that the penny has dropped following the Commissioner of Taxation’s investment strategy blitz [and] that the smarter advisers are ensuring all compliance holes are filled with appropriate documentation.”

Mr Abbott pointed out that it was a SIS Act requirement that SMSF trustees pay pensions to their members, but that without current pension payment documents in place, there was a risk that any pension being paid to a trustee was not a legally valid one.

“The relationship between the pension recipient and the trustee is a contractual one — the pension recipient has paid monies to acquire an account-based pension from the trustee of the fund,” he said.

“If the trustee fails to deliver on that promise, then a legal action under section 54C and section 55(3) of the SIS Act 93 can be taken by the member against the trustee and potentially the auditor for any loss or damages.”

He said trustees needed to formalise documents each year that included a determination of the minimum income payment for the current financial year, confirmation from the member as to their proposed current year payment, a request as to whether any payment above the minimum was a commutation and a proposed process if the minimum payment for the year was not met.

“Without current year pension documentation, given the pension is account-based and reliant on the member notifying the trustee of their pension payment, it may be that the pension is not a pension under SIS Regulation 1.06(9),” he said.

Tags: News

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Comments 2

  1. anon says:
    6 years ago

    again more paperwork, member telling themselves as trustees they are going to take the minimum payment.

    Reply
    • Grant Abbott says:
      6 years ago

      I heard the exact same response post ATO letter on investment strategy but at the end of the day Trusteeship is different to being a member. See the $300,000 award to a member of a SMSF against the Trustee in Dunstone v Irvine VSC 488 because of poor paperwork.

      Reply

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SMSF Adviser is the authoritative source of news, opinions and market intelligence for Australia’s SMSF sector. The SMSF sector now represents more than one million members and approximately one third of Australia's superannuation savings. Over the past five years the number of SMSF members has increased by close to 30 per cent, highlighting the opportunity for engaged, informed and driven professionals to build successful SMSF advice business.

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