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Consolidated Acts of Samoa 2014 |
SAMOA
VALUE ADDED GOODS AND SERVICES TAX
ACT 1993
Arrangement of Provisions
PART I
PREMILINARY
1A. Commencement
PART II
IMPOSITION OF TAX
PART III
RETURNS AND PAYMENT
OF TAX
Parts IV – VI Repealed
PART VII
TAX CREDITS, REFUNDS
AND RELIEF FROM TAX
44 - 46 Repealed
PART VIII
REGISTRATION
PART IX
SPECIAL CASES
53 – 54 Repealed
PART X
PENALTIES
58 – 61 Repealed
64 – 69 Repealed.
PART XI
GENERAL PROVISIONS
70A. Prices to be displayed
75A. Adjustments to tax payable in relation to credit and debit notes following change in rate of tax
PART XII
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
PART XIII
CONSEQUENTIAL REPEALS
VALUE ADDED GOODS
AND SERVICES TAX ACT 1993
1993 No.42
AN ACT to make provision for the imposition and collection of a value added tax on goods and services.
[Assent and commencement date: 23 December 1993]
[Commencement date for section 83: 1 January 1994]
PART I
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title – This Act may be cited as the Value Added Goods and Services Tax Act 1993.
1A. Commencement –(1) This Act and the Value Added Goods and Services Tax Amendment Act 1993 (except for section 83) comes into force on the day upon which
the Value Added Goods and Services Tax Amendment Act 1993 is assented to by the Head of State.
(2) Section 83 comes into force on 1January 1994.
2. Interpretation –(1) In this Act, other than in sections 13 and 14, unless the context otherwise requires.
“associated persons” include:
(a) any 2 companies which consist substantially of the same shareholders or are under the control of substantially the same persons;
(b) any company and any person (other than a company) where that person or the spouse or infant child of that person or any trustee for that person or for that spouse or for that infant child hold separately or any 2 or more of them hold, in the aggregate, 10% or more of the paid up capital or 10% or more in nominal value of the allotted shares of that company;
(c) any 2 persons one of whom is the spouse or infant child of the other person, or is a trustee for that spouse or that infant child;
(d) any 2 persons, one of whom is a trustee for the other;
(e) any 2 persons who are relatives;
(f) any company and any person where the person is associated with another person who is associated with the company;
(g) any 2 or more persons who are partners within the meaning of the Partnership Act 1975 or persons associated with a partnership, –
and “person associated with another person” has a corresponding meaning;
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Inland Revenue as defined in the Tax Administration Act 2012;
“company” means a body corporate, whether incorporated in Samoa or elsewhere; but does not include a public authority;
“consideration”, for the supply of goods and services to any person:
(a) includes any payment made or any act or forbearance, whether or not voluntary, in respect of, in response to, or for the inducement of, the supply of any goods and services, whether by that person or by any other person; but
(b) does not include an unconditional gift to any non-profit body;
“consideration in money” includes consideration expressed as an amount of money;
“document” includes any electronic data, computer programs, computer tapes, and computer discs;
“donated goods and services” means goods and services which are gifted to a non-profit body and are intended for use in the carrying on or carrying out of the purposes of that non-profit body;
“due date”, in relation to the payment of tax by any registered person, means the last day for payment determined in section 24(1) in respect of that registered person;
“exempt supply” means a supply that is exempt from tax pursuant to section 15;
“financial services” (see section 3(1) and (5));
“food” means food of a type suitable for human consumption;
“goods” means all kinds of personal or real property; but does not include chooses in action or money;
“hire,” in relation to goods, includes a letting on any terms, including a lease;
“hire purchase agreement”:
(a) means an agreement whereby goods are let or hired with an option to purchase; and
(b) includes an agreement for the purchase of goods by instalments (whether the agreement describes the instalments as rent or hire or otherwise); but
(c) does not include any agreement under which the property passes absolutely at the time of the agreement to the person who agrees to purchase them;
“hospital” means any hospital or institution administered by the Ministry of Health pursuant to the Ministry of Health Act 2006in which any medical, dental, pharmaceutical or nursing services is provided and includes all clinics, dispensaries, outpatient departments, services, offices and undertakings maintained in connection with or incidental to that hospital or institution;
“input tax”, in relation to a registered person, means:
(a) tax charged and paid under section 9(1) on the supply of goods and services made to that person;
(b) tax levied and paid on goods entered for home consumption under the Customs Act 2014by that person,–
being in any case goods and services acquired for the principal purpose of making taxable supplies;
“insurance” means insurance or guarantee against loss, damage, injury, or risk of any kind whatever, whether pursuant to any contract or any enactment; and includes reinsurance; and “contract of insurance” includes a policy of insurance, an insurance cover, and a renewal of a contract of insurance:
PROVIDED THAT nothing in this definition applies to any insurance specified in section 3;
International Aid” means any assistance in the form of goods or services provided to the Government of Samoa by any foreign state, organisation or person and includes any assistance for any government project, or any other project or purpose approved by the Minister;
“invoice” means a document notifying an obligation to make payment; and also includes a receipt or acknowledgement of payment;
“money” includes:
(a) bank notes and other currency, being any negotiable instruments used or circulated, or intended for use or circulation, as currency; and
(b) postal notes and money orders; and
(c) promissory notes and bills of exchange, –
whether of Samoa or any other country, but does not include a collector’s piece, investment article, or item of numismatic interest;
“National Revenue Board” means the National Revenue Board established pursuant to the Public Finance Management Act 2001;
“non-profit body” means any society, association, or organisation, whether incorporated or not:
(a) which is carried on other than for the purposes of profit or gain to any proprietor, member, or shareholder; and
(b) which is, by the terms of its memorandum, articles of association, rules, or other document constituting or governing the activities of that society, association, or organisation, prohibited from making any distribution whether by way of money, property, or otherwise howsoever, to any such proprietor, member, or shareholder;
“Office of Parliament” means the administrative and support services and staff of:
(a) the Ombudsman;
(b) the Controller and Auditor General;
“output tax”, in relation to any registered person, means the tax charged pursuant to section 9(1) in respect of the supply of goods and services made by that person;
“penal tax” means penal tax charged under section 62;
“person” includes a body corporate, a public authority, and an unincorporated body of persons;
“prescribed form” means:
(a) a form prescribed by regulations made under this Act; or
(b) if no form is prescribed by regulations,a form approved by the Commissioner or by the Comptroller of Customs as the case may be;
“produce” means produce from the activity of agriculture or aqua culture and includes any fruits, vegetables, root crops, fish or other aquatic produce;
“public authority”:
(a) means all instruments of the Government of Samoa, whether departments, corporations, agencies, or other instruments; and
(b) includes offices of Parliament; but
(c) does not include the Head of State, members of the Council of Deputies, members of the Executive Council, Cabinet Ministers, or members of Parliament;
“raw and unprocessed state” means not yet cooked, smoked or baked; not yet processed by any mechanical or chemical means, or otherwise other than through basic separation, cutting of parts, packing or freezing (not being the process of freezing through blast or snap freezing), unmanufactured; undiluted, unpounded;
“recipient”, in relation to any supply of goods and services, means the person receiving the supply;
“registered person” means a person who is registered or is liable to be registered under this Act;
“registration number”, in relation to any registered person, means the number allocated to that registered person for the purposes of this Act;
“relative” has the meaning defined in section 2 of the Income Tax Act 2012;
“resident” means resident as determined in accordance with the Income Tax Act 2012:
PROVIDED THAT, despite anything in that Act:
(a) a person is taken to be resident in Samoa to the extent that such person carries on, in Samoa, any taxable activity or any other activity, while having any fixed or permanent place in Samoa relating to that taxable activity or other activity;
(b) a person who is an unincorporated body of persons, or is otherwise a body (as defined in section 52), is taken to be resident in Samoa if that body has its centre of administrative management in Samoa;
“return” means any return required to be furnished under Part III;
“Revenue Board” means the National Revenue Board established under the National Revenue Board Act 1990, and continued by the Public Finance Management Act 2001;
“revenue from the Government”:
(a) means revenue received from the Government (not being revenue received from any other public authority) by any public authority for the supply of outputs by that public authority; but
(b) does not include—
(i) any value added goods and services tax, chargeable in accordance with the provisions of this Act, on the supply of outputs by that public authority;
(ii) any revenue collected by that public authority as agent on behalf of the Government;
“services” means anything which is not goods or money;
“supplier”, in relation to any supply of goods and services, means the person making the supply;
“supply” (see section 5);
“tax” means value added goods and services tax;
“tax fraction” means the fraction calculated in accordance with the following formula:
a
100 + a
where ais the rate of tax specified in section 9(1);
“tax invoice” means a document provided pursuant to section 25;
“tax payable”:
(a) means an amount of tax calculated in accordance with section 21; and
(b) includes—
(i) an amount referred to in section 18(2) or 27(9);
(ii) an amount of additional tax;
“taxable activity” (see section 6);
“taxable period”, in relation to a registered person, means a taxable period determined under section 16;
“taxable supply” means any supply of goods and services in Samoa which is charged with tax pursuant to section 9, including tax charged at the rate of zero percentunder section 12;
“trustee” includes:
(a) an executor and administrator; and
(b) the Public Trustee;
“unconditional gift” means a payment other than a government grant or subsidy voluntarily made to any non-profit body
for the carrying on or carrying out of the purposes of that non-profit body and in respect of which no identifiable direct valuable
benefit arises or may arise in the form of a supply of goods and services to the person making that payment, or any other person
where that person and that other person are associated persons.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, a reference to goods and services includes a reference to goods or services.
3. Meaning of term “financial services” –(1)For the purposes of this Act, “financial services” means any one or more of the following activities:
(a) the exchange of currency (whether effected by the exchange of bank notes or coin, by crediting or debiting accounts, or otherwise);
(b) the issue, payment, collection, or transfer of ownership of a cheque or letter of credit;
(c) the issue, allotment, drawing, acceptance, endorsement, or transfer of ownership of a debt security;
(d) the issue, allotment, or transfer of ownership of an equity security or a participatory security;
(e) underwriting or sub-underwriting the issue of an equity security, debt security, or participatory security;
(f) the provision of credit under a credit contract;
(g) the renewal or variation of a debt security, equity security, participatory security, or credit contract;
(h) the provision, taking, variation, or release of a guarantee, indemnity, security, or bond in respect of the performance of obligations under a cheque, credit contract, equity security, debt security, or participatory security, or in respect of the activities specified in paragraphs (b) to (g);
(i) the provision, or transfer of ownership, of a life insurance contract or the provision of re-insurance in respect of any such contract;
(j) the provision, or transfer of ownership, of an interest in a superannuation scheme, or the management of a superannuation scheme;
(k) the provision or assignment of a futures contract through a futures exchange;
(l) the payment or collection of any amount of interest, principal dividend, or other amount whatever in respect of any debt security, equity security, participatory security, credit contract, contract of life insurance, superannuation scheme, or futures contract;
(m) agreeing to do, or arranging, any of the activities specified in paragraphs (a) to (l), other than advising thereon.
(2) For the purposes of this section, “credit contract” means:
(a) a contract under which a person provides or agrees to provide money or money’s worth in consideration of a promise by another person to pay, or to procure the payment of, in the future and in respect of the provision, a sum or sums of money exceeding in aggregate the amount of the first mentioned money or money’s worth; or
(b) a contract under which a person forbears or agrees to forbear from requiring payment of money owing to him in consideration of
a promise by another person to pay, or to procure the payment of, in the future and in respect of the forbearance, a sum or sums
of money exceeding in aggregate the amount of the first mentioned money.
(3) For the purposes of this section:
“cheque” means a cheque as defined in the Bills of Exchange Act 1976;
“currency” means any banknote or other currency of any country, other than when used as a collector’s piece, investment article, item of numismatic interest, or otherwise than as a medium of exchange;
“debt security” means any interest in or right to be paid money that is, or is to be, owing by any person; but does not include a cheque;
“equity security” means any interest in or right to a share in the capital of a body corporate;
“general accounting and record package services”, in relation to financial services, includes:
(a) the provision of any financial clearing system which may form part of a settlement process; and
(b) the posting of transactions to customers’ accounts; and
(c) the maintenance of those customers’ accounts; and
(d) the provision of any ancillary services (such as network management, software support and development) supplied in relation to the services referred to in any of paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this definition, –
but does not include the services referred to in paragraphs (a) to (d) of this definition where those services are supplied by a supplier of a financial service and are reasonably incidental and necessary to the supply of that financial service by that supplier of the financial service;
“life insurance contract” means a contract lawfully entered into to the extent that it places a sum or sums at risk upon the contingency of the termination or continuance of human life, or marriage, or the birth of a child;
“participatory security”:
(a) means any interest or right to participate in any capital, assets, earnings, or other property of any person where that interest or right forms part of a contributory scheme; and
(b) includes an interest in a unit trust; but
(c) does not include an equity security, a debt security, money, or a cheque;
“superannuation scheme” means any scheme or fund which the Commissioner is satisfied would meet all the conditions required
for an employer to be allowed a deduction from the residual assessable income of that employer, under the Income Tax Act 2012, even if the employer may not otherwise be subjected to any liability under the Income Tax Act 2012 or be required to obtain a decision under that Act.
(4) Despite subsection (3), “debt security”, “equity security”, and “participatory security” do not
include any of the following:
(a) a life insurance contract or any other contract of insurance;
(b) an estate or interest in land, other than an estate or interest as mortgagee or charge-holder;
(c) an interest in a superannuation scheme.
(5) Despite anything in this section, “financial services” does not include the assignment or other transfer of any right
to receive payment in relation to any taxable supply where, as a result of any such assignment or transfer, output tax in relation
to that taxable supply would not be or become attributable to any taxable period for the purposes of section 21(6).
(6) Despite anything in this section, where any person supplies goods and services (being the supply of general accounting and record
package services) to any person who is a supplier of financial services, or to a customer of the person who is a supplier of financial
services, that supply is, for the purposes of this Act, taken not to be a supply of financial services.
4. Meaning of term “open market value”– (1) For the purposes of this section:
(a) the term “similar supply”, in relation to a supply of goods and services, means any other supply of goods and services that, in respect of the characteristics, quality, quantity, functional components, materials, and reputation of the goods and services first mentioned, is the same as, or closely or substantially resembles, that supply of goods and services;
(b) the open market value of a supply shall include any goods and services tax charged pursuant to section 9(1) on that supply.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, the open market value of any supply of goods and services at any date shall be the consideration in
money which the supply of those goods and services would generally fetch if supplied in similar circumstances at that date in Samoa,
being a supply freely offered and made between persons who are not associated persons.
(3) Where the open market value of any supply of goods and services cannot be determined under subsection (2), the open market value
shall be the consideration in money which a similar supply would generally fetch if supplied in similar circumstances at that date
in Samoa, being a supply freely offered and made between persons who are not associated persons.
(4) Where the open market value of any supply of goods and services cannot be determined pursuant to subsection (2) or subsection (3),
the open market value shall be determined in accordance with a method approved by the Commissioner which provides a sufficiently
objective approximation of the consideration in money which could be obtained for that supply of those goods and services.
(5) For the purposes of this Act, the open market value of any consideration, not being consideration in money, for a supply of goods
and services shall be ascertained in the same manner, with any necessary modifications, as the open market value of any supply of
goods and services is ascertained pursuant to the foregoing provisions of this section.
5. Meaning of term “supply” –(1)Inthis Act, “supply” means all forms of supply, including the provision of rental premises.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, where any goods acquired (whether in terms of a hire purchase agreement or otherwise) or produced by
a person (that person being referred to hereafter in this subsection as the first person) are sold, under a power exercisable by
another person (that person being referred to hereafter in this subsection as the second person), in or towards the satisfaction
of a debt owed by the first person, those goods shall be deemed to be supplied in the course or furtherance of a taxable activity
carried on by the first person (being deemed a registered person), unless:
(a) the first person has furnished to the second person statement in writing that the supply of those goods would not be a taxable supply if those goods were sold by the first person (notwithstanding that the first person may not be the owner of those goods), and stating fully the reasons why that supply would not be a taxable supply; or
(b) where the second person has been unable to obtain the written statement referred to in paragraph (a), that person may determine,
in relation to any reasonable information held, that the supply of those goods would not have been a taxable supply if those goods
had been sold by the first person (notwithstanding that the first person may not be the owner of those goods).
(3) For the purposes of this Act, if a person ceases to be a registered person, any goods and services then forming part of the assets
of a taxable activity carried on by that person shall be deemed to be supplied by that person in the course of that taxable activity
at a time immediately before that person ceases to be a registered person, unless the taxable activity is carried on by another person
who, pursuant to section 53, is deemed to be a registered person.
(4) For the purposes of this Act, a public authority is taken to supply goods and services, where:
(a) any payment is made by the Government to or on behalf of the public authority in relation to any payment for the supply of goods and services other than for goods and services which do not constitute a taxable activity in the terms ofsection 6(3)(d) or 6(3)(e);
(b) any amount is brought to account as a revenue of the Government or a public authority, from any person, including the Government,
by way of any charge, fee, impost, levy, payment or rate, imposed under any statute, regulation rule, or written authority, whether
in the case of a public authority it is retained by that public authority for its own use or transferred to the Government:
PROVIDED THAT this paragraph does not apply to:
(aa) any income tax due to the Inland Revenue Department under the tax laws ; or
(bb) any customs tariff or excise tax due to the Customs Department under the Customs Acts; or
(cc) or any stamp duty under the Stamp Duty Ordinance 1932; or
(dd) any petroleum levy under the Petroleum Act 1984; or
(ee) any foreign exchange levy under the Foreign Exchange Levy Act 1977.(Act repealed by Foreign Exchange Levy Repeal 1998, No. 13)
(5) For the purposes of this Act, where any payment in the nature of a grant or subsidy is made on behalf of the Government or by any
public authority to:
(a) any person (not being a public authority) in relation to or in respect of that person’s taxable activity; or
(b) any person for the benefit and on behalf of another in relation to or in respect of that other person’s taxable activity,
–
that payment is taken to be consideration for a supply of goods and services by the person to whom or for whose benefit the payment
is made in the course or furtherance of that person’s taxable activity.
(6)In subsection (5), “payment in the nature of a grant or subsidy”:
(a) includes—
(i) a suspensory loan or advance, when that loan or advance becomes non-repayable by reason of its conditions for non-repayment being satisfied; and
(ii) a payment in the nature of a grant or subsidy of a kind that is declared by the Head of State by Order to be a taxable grant or subsidy for the purposes of subsection (5), being a payment that, but for such declaration, would be excluded from this definition by virtue of paragraph (b)(ii) of this subsection.
(b) does not include—
(i) any payment of a benefit paid under Part XII of the National Provident Fund Act 1972; or
(ii) subject to paragraph (a)(ii), any other payment made to a person where the payment is for the personal use and benefit of the person or, as the case may be, a relative of the person; or
(iii) any payment of a kind that is declared by the Head of State by Order not to be a taxable grant or subsidy for the purposes of
subsection (5).
(7) Despite anything in this Act, for the purposes of this Act where any person bets any money on any horse race, the amount of money
so bet is taken to be for a supply of services:
(a) by the holder of a totalisatorlicence under the Betting (Totalisator Agency) Act 1990, in the case of money placed as a bet with that licence holder; or
(b) by the Totalisator Agency Board in the case of money placed as a bet with the Board at an office or agency of the Board, where that amount of money is dealt with in terms of sections 35 and 36 of the Betting (Totalisator Agency) Act 1990; or
(c) by the holder of a licence under section 16A of the Betting (Totalisator Agency) Act 1990 in the case of money placed as a bet with that licence holder.
(8)Despite anything in this Act, for the purposes of this Act,if a person pays an amount in money to participate in a game of chance,
or lottery, the amount of money so paid to participate is taken to be for a supply of services by the person, society, promoter,
or organiser who conducts the game of chance or lottery.
(9) For the purposes of subsection (8):
“game of chance” includes bingo, as that term is defined in section 2 of the Gaming Act 1978;
“lottery” includes a lottery as defined by section 2 of the Gaming Act 1978 and includes also a lottery as defined by section 2 of the National Lotteries Act 1978;
“promoter” includes the National Lotteries Board established pursuant to the National Lotteries Act 1978.
(10) The disposition of a taxable activity as a going concern is taken to be a supply of goods made in the course or furtherance of the
taxable activity.
(11) For the purposes of this Act, except for section 21(3), where a registered person receives any indemnity payment pursuant to a contract
of insurance, that payment shall, to the extent that it relates to a loss incurred in the course of making a taxable supply, be deemed
to be consideration received for a supply of services performed on the day of receipt of that indemnity payment by that registered
person in the course or furtherance of that person’s taxable activity:
PROVIDED THAT this subsection does not apply to any indemnity payment received pursuant to a contract of insurance where:
(a) the supply of that contract of insurance is not a supply charged with tax pursuant to section 9 (1); or
(b) that payment is to indemnify for any loss of earnings (being earnings within the meaning of the Accident Compensation Act 1989).
(12) For the purposes of this Act, if a supply is charged with tax in part under section 9 and in part under section 12, each such part
is taken to be a separate supply.
6. Meaning of term “taxable activity”–(1)For the purposes of this Act, “taxable activity” means:
(a) any activity which is carried on continuously or regularly by any person, whether or not for a pecuniary profit, and involves or is intended to involve, in whole or in part, the supply of goods and services to any other person for a consideration; and includes any such activity carried on in the form of a business, trade, manufacture, profession, vocation, association, or club; or
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), the activities of any public authority.
(2) Anything done in connection with the commencement or termination of a taxable activity is taken to be carried out in the course or
furtherance of that taxable activity.
(3) Despite subsections (1) and (2), for the purposes of this Act,“taxable activity”does not include, in relation to any
person:
(a) being a natural person, any activity carried on entirely as a private recreational pursuit or hobby; or
(b) not being a natural person, any activity which, if it were carried on by a natural person, would be carried on entirely as a private recreational pursuit or hobby; or
(c) any engagement, occupation, or employment under any contract of service or as a director of a company:
PROVIDED THATif a person, in carrying on any taxable activity, accepts any office, any services supplied by that person as the holder of that office is taken to be supplied in the course or furtherance of that taxable activity; or
(d)any engagement, occupation, or employment—
(i) pursuant to the Civil List Act 1964;
(ii) as a Judge, Attorney-General, Controller and Auditor General or Ombudsman;
(iii) pursuant to an appointment made by the Head of State and evidenced by a warrant or by an Order;
(iv) as a Chairperson or member of any statutory board, council, committee, or other body; or
(e) that part of an activity to the extent to which the activity involves the making of exempt supplies.
7. Administration –(1) This Act, other than sections 13 and 14, is declared to be one of the tax lawswithin the meaning of the Tax Administration Act 2012, and the First Schedule to that Act is accordingly amended by adding a reference to this Act.
(2) The provisions of the Tax Administration Act 2012 relating to the functions responsibilities and powers of the Commissioner, the Deputy Commissioner, officers, members and employees
of the Inland Revenue Department for the purpose of carrying out the administration of the tax law shall with the necessary modifications
apply to this Act.
(3) Sections 13 and 14 are for the purposes of section 3(1)(f) of the Customs Act 1977 declared to be a Customs Act.
(4) The provisions of the Customs Act 2014 relating to the functions responsibilities and powers of the Minister, the Comptroller, the Collector, officers, members and employees
of the Customs Department for the purpose of carrying out the administration of the Customs Acts apply with the necessary modifications
to sections 13 and 14.
8. Act binds Government – This Act binds the Government.
PART II
IMPOSITION OF TAX
9. Imposition of value added goods and services tax on supply –(1) Despite any other Act and, subject to this Act, a tax, to be known as value added goods and services tax, shall be charged in accordance
with the provisions of this Act at the rate of 15%on the supply (but not including an exempt supply) in Samoa of goods and services,
on or after 1 January 1994, by a registered person in the course or furtherance of a taxable activity carried on by that person,
by reference to the value of that supply.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, goods and services are taken to be supplied in Samoa if the supplier is resident in Samoa, and are
taken to be supplied outside Samoa if the supplier is not resident in Samoa:
PROVIDED THAT:
(a) goods and services are taken to be supplied in Samoa if the supplier is not resident in Samoa and either:
(i) the goods are in Samoa at the time of supply; or
(ii) the services are physically performed in Samoa by any person who is in Samoa at the time the services are performed;
(b) where goods and services that are taken to be supplied in Samoa pursuant to paragraph (a) of this proviso are supplied to a registered person for the purposes of carrying on that person’s taxable activity, those goods and services are taken to be supplied outside Samoa unless the supplier and the recipient agree that this paragraph does not apply to that supply.
10. Time of supply –(1) Subject to this Act, for the purposes of this Act a supply of goods and services are taken to take place at the earlier of the time
an invoice is issued by the supplier or the recipient or the time any payment is received by the supplier, in respect of that supply.
(2) Despite subsection (1), a supply of goods and services are taken to take place where the supplier and the recipient are associated
persons:
(a) for supply of goods which are to be removed, at the time of the removal; and
(b) for supply of goods which are not to be removed, at the time when they are made available to the recipient; and
(c) for supply of services, at the time the services are performed:
PROVIDED THAT this paragraph does not apply in any case where an invoice is issued, or any payment is made, in respect of that supply, on or before
the last day for providing the return in relation to the taxable period during which, but for this proviso, that supply would have
been made.
(3)Despite subsection (1) or (2):
(a) if goods are supplied under an agreement to hire, or where services are supplied under any agreement or enactment which provides for periodic payments, they are taken to be successively supplied for successive parts of the period of the agreement or the enactment, and each of the successive supplies is taken to take place when a payment becomes due or is received, whichever is the earlier;
(b) if and to the extent that—
(i) goods are supplied progressively or periodically pursuant to any agreement or enactment which provides for the consideration for that supply to be paid in instalments or periodically and in relation to the periodic or progressive supply of those goods; or
(ii) goods and services supplied directly in the construction, major reconstruction, manufacture, or extension of a building or an engineering work are supplied pursuant to any agreement or enactment which provides for the consideration for that supply to become due and payable in instalments or periodically in relation to the progressive nature of that construction, manufacture, or extension, –
those goods and services are taken to be successively supplied, and each such successive supply is taken to take place whenever any payment in respect of any supply becomes due, is received, or any invoice relating only to that payment is issued, whichever is the earlier;
(c) where goods and services are supplied under a hire purchase agreement, that supply is taken to take place at the time the agreement is entered into;
(d) for the purposes of this subsection, “agreement to hire” means an agreement for the bailment of goods for hire, and includes a lease of goods and a rental agreement,
but does not include—
(i) an agreement under which the property in the goods passes to the bailee or which expressly contemplates that the property in the goods will pass to the bailee; or
(ii) a hire purchase agreement.
(4) Subject to subsection (2), if:
(a) goods are supplied under an agreement, other than an agreement to hire (as defined in subsection (3)(d)); and
(b) the goods or part of them are appropriated under that agreement by the recipient in circumstances where the whole of the consideration
is not determined at the time they are appropriated, –
that supply is taken to take place when and to the extent that any payment under the agreement is due or is received or an invoice
relating to the supply is issued by the supplier or the recipient, whichever is the earlier.
(5) Despite this section, if a public authority is taken to have supplied goods and services pursuant to section 5(4), the supply is,
to the extent that the supply is brought to charge as revenue from the Government, taken to take place in the taxable period in which
the bringing to charge applies.
(6) Despite subsection (1), if the supply is taken to be made pursuant to section 5(8), the supply is takento take place on the date
on which the first drawing or determination of a result of the game of chance or lottery commences.
(7)If the supply is for a consideration in money received by the supplier by means of any machine, meter or other device operated by
a coin or token, the supply is takento take place at the time any such coin or token is taken from that machine, meter or other device
by or on behalf of the supplier.
11. Value of supply of goods and services –(1)For the purposes of this Act, the following provisions of this section apply for determining the value of any supply of goods and
services.
(2) Subject to this section, the value of a supply of goods and services shall be such amount as, with the addition of the tax charged,
is equal to the aggregate of:
(a) to the extent that the consideration for the supply is consideration in money, the amount of the money;
(b) to the extent that the consideration for the supply is not consideration in money, the open market value of that consideration.
(3) Subject to subsections (4) and (6), where:
(a) a supply is made by a person for no consideration or for a consideration in money that is less than the open market value of that supply; and
(b) the supplier and the recipient are associated persons, –
the consideration in money for the supply is taken to be the open market value of that supply.
(4) Subsection (3) does not apply to any supply made by a registered person where the recipient:
(a) acquired that supply for the principal purpose of making taxable supplies; and
(b) is entitled, under section 21(3), to make a deduction in respect of that supply.
(5)(repealed by Act 1998, No.18)
(6)If goods and services are taken to be supplied by a person under section 5(3), the consideration in money for that supply is taken
to be the lesser of:
(a) the cost of those goods and services to the supplier, including any tax charged in respect of the supply of those goods and services to that supplier;
(b) the open market value of that supply.
(7) Despite this section, if goods and services are, or are taken to be, supplied by any public authority:
(a) pursuant to section 5(4)(a), the consideration in money for any such supply shall be an amount equal to any amount from time to time paid by the Government to or on behalf of that public authority for that supply; or
(b) pursuant to section 5(4)(b), the value of any such supply shall be an amount equal to any amount that is from time to time brought
to charge as revenue from the Government in respect of the supply of outputs by that public authority.
(8)If a taxable supply is not the only matter to which a consideration relates, the taxable supply is taken to be for such part of the
consideration as is properly attributable to it.
(9)If a supply of services is taken to be made under section 5(8), the consideration in money for the supply is takento be such portion
of the amount in money a person pays to participate in a game of chance or lottery, as represents the total proceeds (after deducting
the amount of all prizes paid and payable in money) in respect of that game of chance or lottery.
12. Zero-rating–(1)If, but for this section, a supply of goods would be charged with tax under section 9, any such supply shall be charged at the rate of zero percent if:
(a) the supplier has entered the goods for export, pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, and those goods have been exported by the supplier; or
(b) the goods have been taken to be entered for export, pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, and the goods have been exported by the supplier; or
(c) the supplier has satisfied the Commissioner that the goods have been exported by the supplier to a place outside Samoa; or
(d) subject to subsection (3), the supplier will enter the goods for export, pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, in the course of, or as a condition of, making the supply and will export the goods; or
(e) subject to subsection (3), the goods will be taken to be entered for export, pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, and exported by the supplier in the course of, or as a condition of, making the supply; or
(f) subject to subsection (5), the goods are supplied by a supplier licensed, pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, as an export warehouse, and—
(i) the supplier has been licensed by the Comptroller to operate a sealed bag system; and
(ii) the goods are supplied in accordance with the sealed bag system; and
(iii) the goods are entered, or are taken to be entered, for export pursuant to the Customs Act 2014; or
(g) the goods are not situated in Samoa at the time of supply and are not to be entered into Samoa for home consumption pursuant to the Customs Act 2014; or
(h) the goods have been supplied in the course of repairing, renovating, modifying, or treating any goods to which subsection (6)(f)(ii) refers and the goods supplied—
(i) are wrought into, affixed to, attached to, or otherwise form part of those other goods; or
(ii) being consumable goods, become unusable or worthless as a direct result of being used in that repair, renovation, modification, or treatment process; or
(i) the goods have been supplied for use as stores for consumption outside Samoa on an aircraft or a ship going to a destination outside Samoa; or
(j) the supply is to a registered person of a taxable activity as a going concern or of a part of a taxable activity as a going concern where that part is capable of separate operation; or
(k) the goods are supplied for and to the Head of State; or
(l) the supplies and equipment supplied to the Gambling Control Authority established under the Casino and Gambling Control Act 2010:
PROVIDED THAT paragraphs (a), (g), (h) and (i) do not apply in respect of any supply of goods by a registered person, being goods which have been or will be re-imported to Samoa
by the supplier.
(2) For the purposes of this section:
“Comptroller” means the Comptroller of Customs as defined in section 2 of the Customs Act 2014;
“sealed bag” system means a system whereby a supplier:
(a) is licensed to operate an export warehouse; and
(b) may, with the authorisation of the Comptroller, and subject to any conditions the Comptroller may specify, supply goods in a sealed bag to individuals intending to travel overseas within 5 days of the time of supply; and
(c) in terms of the conditions specified by the Comptroller is required to provide evidence that the goods have been exported from
Samoa within 28 days of the time of supply.
(3)If subsection (1)(d) or (e) applies, and the goods are not exported by the supplier within:
(a) twenty-eight days of the time of supply; or
(b) such longer period, from the time of supply, as the Commissioner has determined pursuant to subsection (4), –
the goods shall, despite subsection (1)(d) and (e), but subject to subsection (1)(a) and (b) and to subsection (4), be charged with
tax under section 9.
(4)If subsection (1)(d) or (e) applies and the Commissioner has determined, upon application by the supplier in writing, that:
(a) circumstances beyond the control of the supplier and recipient have prevented, or will prevent, the exportation of those goods within 28 days of the time of supply; or
(b) due to the nature of the supply, it is not practicable for the supplier to export those goods, or a class of those goods, within
28 days of the time of supply, –
the Commissioner may extend the 28 day period before the supply of goods is charged with tax under section 9, as the Commissioner
sees fit.
(5)If subsection (1)(f) applies and the goods cannot be evidenced, as specified by the Comptroller in accordance with the sealed bag
system, as being exported within 28 days of the time of supply, the supply shall be charged with tax under section 9.
(6)If, but for this section, a supply of services would be charged with tax under section 9, the supply is to be charged at the rate
of zero percent where:
(a) the services (not being ancillary transport such as loading, unloading, and handling) comprise the transport of passengers or goods—
(i) from a place outside Samoa to another place outside Samoa; or
(ii) from a place in Samoa to a place outside Samoa; or
(iii) from a place outside Samoa to a place in Samoa; or
(b) the services comprise the transport of passengers from a place in Samoa to another place in Samoa where the transport is by aircraft and forms part of a carriage which originates outside Samoa;
(c) the services (including any ancillary transport activities such as loading, unloading, and handling) comprise the transport of goods from a place in Samoa to another place in Samoa to the extent that those services are supplied by the same supplier as part of the supply of services to which paragraph (a)(ii) or (a)(iii) applies; or
(d) the services comprise the insuring or the arranging of the insurance or the arranging of the transport of passengers or goods to which any provision of paragraphs (a) to (c) applies; or
(e) the services are supplied directly in connection with land, or any improvement thereto, situated outside Samoa; or
(f) the services are supplied directly in connection with—
(i) movable personal property, other than choses in action, situated outside Samoa when the services are performed; or
(ii) goods referred to in either section 48(2) or section 164 of the Customs Act 1977, even if they are in Samoa; or
(g) the services are physically performed outside Samoa; or
(h) the services are supplied for and to a person who is not resident in Samoa and who is outside Samoa at the time the services are performed, not being services which are supplied directly in connection with—
(i) land or any improvement thereto situated inside Samoa; or
(ii) moveable personal property (other than choses in action, and other than goods referred to in paragraph (f)(ii)) situated inside Samoa at the time the services are performed,–
and not being services which are the acceptance of an obligation to refrain from carrying on any taxable activity, to the extent that the conduct of that activity would have occurred within Samoa; or
(i) the services are—
(i) the filing, prosecution, granting, maintenance, transfer, assignment, licensing, or enforcement of intellectual property rights, including patents, designs, trademarks, copyrights, plant variety rights, know-how, confidential information, trade secrets, or similar rights; or
(ii) other services in respect of such rights, including services involved in the making of searches, the giving of advice, opposing the grant or seeking the revocation of such rights, or opposing steps taken to enforce such rights; or
(iii) the acceptance of an obligation to refrain from pursuing or exercising in whole or in part any such rights, –
where and to the extent that those rights are for use outside Samoa; or
(j) the services are—
(i) the filing, prosecution, granting, maintenance, transfer, assignment, licensing, or enforcement of intellectual property rights, including patents, designs, trademarks, copyrights, plant variety rights, know-how, confidential information, trade secrets, or similar rights; or
(ii) other services in respect of such rights, including services involved in the making of searches, the giving of advice, opposing the grant or seeking the revocation of such rights, or opposing steps taken to enforce such rights, –
where and to the extent that those services are supplied for and to a person who is not resident in Samoa and who is outside Samoa when the service is performed; or
(k) the services are the acceptance of an obligation to refrain from carrying on any taxable activity, where the conduct of the taxable activity would have occurred outside Samoa; or
(l) the services are supplied for and to the Head of State.
(m) the supply of educational services by primary schools, secondary schools or colleges and tertiary institutions approved by the Minister; or
(n) the supply of medical goods and services provided in hospitals;
(o) the supply of water by the Water Authority under the Samoa Water Authority Act 2003 but not including the provision of services by the Water Authority under private contract such as the drilling of bores or the installation of pipes;
(p) the supply of totalisator betting facilities on races held whether within or outside of Samoa, the carrying on of the business or occupation of bookmaking, conducting the game of lotto or any other similar services provided by the Totalisator Agency Board in accordance with the Betting (Totalisator Agency) Act 1990; or
(q) the services are the licensing of casinos and the bringing to account commission imposed by the Gambling Control Authority under the Casino and Gambling Control Act 2010.
13. Imposition of value added goods and services tax on imports –(1) Despite anything in this Act, a tax to be known as value added goods and services tax shall be levied, collected, and paid in accordance with the provisions of this section at the rate of 10%on the importation of goods into Samoa, being goods that are:
(a) entered therein, or delivered, for home consumption on or after 1 January 1994 under the Customs Act 2014; or
(b) before their entry, or delivery, for home consumption or, dealt with on or after 1 January 1994 in breach of any provision of
any of the Customs Acts, –
by reference to the value of the goods as determined under subsection (2):
PROVIDEDTHATthis subsection does not apply—
(i) if goods or services are imported under an international aid project subject to a Memorandum of Understanding, where the terms of the Memorandum of Understanding are inconsistent with this subsection; and
(ii) if the Minister makes a determination to exempt from tax, goods and services imported under any other international aid project or which are donated from overseas for the purposes of aid:
AND PROVIDED FURTHER THAT nothing in subsection (1) applies to the importation of aircraft that exceed 15,000kg in weight and with fall under code items 8802.4010
and 8802.4090 of the First Schedule of the Customs Tariff Act 1975.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the value of goods imported into Samoa shall be the sum of the following amounts (excluding any
tax charged under this Act):
(a) the amount of the value of the goods determined in accordance with the Customs and Excise Acts (whether or not duty is payable under those Acts);
(b) the amounts of duty (if any) and tax (if any) payable on those goods under the Customs and Excise Acts, but not including any tax levied or charged under this Act; and
(c) the amount paid or payable to transport the goods to Samoa and to insure the goods for such transport, if not already included
under paragraph (a).
(3) Subject to this section, tax levied under subsection (1) shall be collected and paid as if it were Customs duty levied on the importation
of goods pursuant to the Customs Act 2014, and as if all goods imported into Samoa were liable to Customs duty.
(4) The following provisions of the Customs Act 1977 apply to the collection, payment, and enforcement of value added goods and services
tax levied under subsection (1):
(a) sections 2 to 4, Part II, Part III, Part IV (except for sections 80 and 81), Part V, Part VI (only in respect to sections 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 147, 149, 153, 155, and 164), Part VIII, Part IX, Part X, Part XI, Part XII, Part XIII, Part XIV, and Part XV of the Customs Act 1977:
PROVIDED THAT section 149 of that Act applies only in respect of goods that are imported by the same person as the person who exported them from Samoa if, at the time of their export from Samoa, those goods were not—
(i) a supply of goods charged with tax at the rate of zero percent pursuant to section 12; or
(ii) a supply of goods, made before 1 January 1994, that would have been charged with tax at the rate of zero percent pursuant to section 12 of this Act if the supply of those goods had taken place on 1 January 1994; and
(b) sections 156 to 163 and section 165:
PROVIDED THAT this paragraph does not apply to any registered person in respect of goods imported for the purpose of carrying on that person’s taxable activity; and
(c) section 166 if—
(i) the specifications of the imported goods are not in accordance with the specifications of the goods ordered, or the imported goods are faulty; and
(ii) the recipient is either not a registered person, or is a registered person but does not qualify for an input tax credit in relation to the imported goods; and
(iii) the person who imported the goods exports the goods—
(A)for goods with the wrong specifications, within 2 months after their importation, or such longer period not exceeding 12 months after their importation as may be approved by the Comptroller of Customs; or
(B)forfaulty goods, within 12 months after their importation.
(5) No liability to value added goods and services tax shall arise under any provision of the Customs Act 1977 by virtue of the operation
of subsection (3) or (4) of this section.
(6)In this section:
“Customs Acts” has the same meaning as defined in section 3 of the Customs Act 2014;
“Customs and Excise Acts” means:
(a) the Customs Act 2014;
(b) the Customs Tariff Act 1975;
(c) the Excise Tax (Import Administration Act) 1984;
(d) the Excise Tax Rate 1984;
(e) any Act amending or in substitution for any of the above-mentioned enactments;
(f) all orders, regulations and rules made under any such enactment by any competent authority;
“Samoa”, “person,” and “registered person” have the same meanings as defined in section 2 of this Act;
“taxable activity” has the same meaning as defined in section 6 of this Act.
14. Imposition of value added goods and services tax on goods liable to excise duty and supplied at “in bond” prices –(1) Despite anything in this Act, a tax to be known as value added goods and services tax shall be levied, collected, and paid under
this section at the rate of 15%on any goods manufactured in Samoa of a class or kind liable to excise duty pursuant to the Excise Tax (Domestic Administration) Act 1984, that supply being charged with tax under this Act, which are supplied at a price that does not include such excise duty, by reference
to the value of the goods as determined under subsection (2).
(2) For the purposes of any tax levied under subsection (1), the value on which tax is levied is taken to be the amount of the excise
duty levied on the goods pursuant to the Excise Tax (Domestic Administration) Act 1984.
(3) Subject to this section, tax levied under subsection (1) shall be collected and paid as if it were excise duty levied on those goods
pursuant to the Excise Tax (Domestic Administration) Act 1984.
15. Exempt supplies– The following supplies of goods and services shall be exempt from tax:
(a) the supply of any financial services (together with the supply of any other goods and services, supplied by the supplier of those financial services, which are reasonably incidental and necessary to that supply of financial services), not being—
(i) a supply of financial services which, but for this subparagraph, would be charged with tax at the rate of zero percent pursuant to section 12(6); or
(ii) a supply of goods and services which (although being part of a supply of goods and services which, but for this subparagraph, would be an exempt supply under this paragraph) is not in itself, as between the supplier of that first-mentioned supply and the recipient, a supply of financial services in respect of which this paragraph applies;
(b) the supply by any non-profit body of any donated goods and services;
(c) the supply of any food or produce grown or produced in Samoa, where that food or produce is in a raw and unprocessed state and where that supply is not a zero-rated supply under section 12;
(d) the supply to passengers of transport services by buses and taxis, but excluding arrangements where buses or taxis are hired to the exclusive use of a customer or customers for a determined period of time or for an agreed journey;
(e)the supply of electricity under the Electric Power Corporation Act 1980;
(f)(Repealed by Act 1998, No.18)
(g) the charge imposed for departing from Samoa under the Civil Aviation Act 1998;
(h) the carriage of passengers by ships within Samoa;
(i) if an agreement or memorandum of understanding relating to an overseas funded aid project for the benefit of the Government or
a public authority expressly provides that goods and services used in relation to the project shall be exempt:
PROVIDED THAT no exemption shall be given in relation to goods and services supplied to or by subcontractors or other suppliers to the contractor
engaged in relation to any such project.
PART III
RETURNS AND PAYMENT OF TAX
16. Taxable periods –(1) The Taxable period of each registered person shall be determined by their placement by the Commissioner in either category (A) or category (B) as specified below:
(a)Category (A): with taxable periods of 2 months ending on the last day of January, March, May, July, September and November in any year.
(b)Category (B): with taxable periods of 2 months ending on the last day of February, April, June, August, October and December in any year.
(2) Despite subsection (1), the Commissioner may in his or her absolute discretion transfer a person registered under category (A) or
category (B) who fails to comply with any of the provisions of this Act in a special category specified as category (C). The taxable
period for any person transferred by the Commissioner to category (C) shall be determined by the Commissioner who may impose a taxable
period that is less in duration from those specified under categories (A) and (B).
(3) Despite this section, where any registered person dies, or goes into liquidation or receivership, or becomes bankrupt, the date of
that person’s death, liquidation, receivership or bankruptcy, as the case may be, is taken to be the last day of that person’s
taxable period.
17. Taxable period returns – (1)A registered person shall, on or before the 21st day of the month following the last day of every taxable period, provide
to the Commissioner a return, in the prescribed form, setting forth the amount of tax payable in respect of the taxable period by
that person under section 21, together with such other particulars as may be prescribed:
PROVIDED THAT where the Commissioner is satisfied that in order to meet the circumstances of any non-profit body or any particular case it is necessary
to vary the date on which any return shall be provided, the Commissioner may require a registered person to provide returns accordingly.
(2) A registered person who ceases to be registered shall, not later than the 21st day of the month following the month in which the
cessation of registration occurred, provide to the Commissioner a final return in the prescribed form in respect of that part of
the last taxable period during which that person was registered.
18. Special returns –(1)If goods are taken to be supplied by a person pursuant to section 5(2), the person selling the goods, whether or not that person is a registered person, shall, on or before the 21st day of the month following the month within which the sale was made:
(a) provide to the Commissioner in the prescribed form a return showing—
(i) that person’s name and address and, if registered, registration number; and
(ii) the name, address, and if registered, registration number of the person whose goods were sold; and
(iii) the date of the sale; and
(iv) the description and quantity of the goods sold; and
(v) the amount for which they were sold and the amount of tax charged on that supply; and
(vi) such other particulars as may be prescribed; and
(b) pay to the Commissioner the amount of tax charged on that supply; and
(c) provide to the person whose goods were sold, details of the information shown on the return referred to in paragraph (a) and
the person selling the goods and the person whose goods were sold shall exclude from any return, other than a return required under
this subsection, which either or both may be required to provide under this Act, the tax charged on that supply of goods.
(2) Any amount of tax charged on any supply of goods to which this section appliesis taken, for the purposes of this Act, to be tax payable
and shall be recoverable as a debt due to the Government.
19. Other returns – In addition to the returns specified in sections 17 and 18, the Commissioner may require a person, whether a registered person or not, to provide (whether on that person’s own behalf or as an agent or trustee) to the Commissioner such further or other returns in the prescribed form as and when the Commissioner requires for the purposes of this Act.
20. Accounting basis– Registered persons shall account for tax due under this Act on a payments basis, but the Commissioner may, in his or her absolute discretion, approve the use of an accruals or invoice basis by any registered person.
21. Calculation of tax payable –(1) In respect of each taxable period, aregistered person shall calculate the amount of tax payable by that registered person under this
section.
(2)Despite any other provision in this Act, no deduction of input tax shall be made in respect of a supply, unless the tax has been paid
and:
(a) a tax invoice or debit note or credit note, in relation to that supply, has been provided in accordance with sections 25 and 26 and is held by the registered person making that deduction at the time that any return in respect of that supply is provided; or
(b) a tax invoice is not required to be issued pursuant to section 25(6), or a debit note or credit note is not required to be issued
pursuant to section 26:
PROVIDED THAT where a tax invoice or debit note or credit note in relation to that supply has been provided in accordance with this Act, the Commissioner
may determine that no deduction for input tax in relation to that supply shall be made unless that tax invoice or debit note or credit
note is retained in accordance with the provisions of section 70.
(3A) Subject to this section, in calculating the amount of tax payable in respect of each taxable period there shall be deducted from
the amount of output tax of a registered person attributable to the taxable period the amount of input tax paid by that Registered
Person in that same taxably period.
(3B) Despite subsection (3A), the Commissioner may approve of a registered person deducting any amount of input tax in respect of any
taxable period from the amount of output tax attributable to that taxable period, the registered person may deduct that amount of
input tax from the amount of output tax attributable to any later taxable period to the extent that it has not previously been deducted
from the output tax of that registered person.
(4) Despite subsections (3A) and (3B), in relation to any registered person who has subsequently applied those goods and services in
any taxable activity within a period of 5 years immediately succeeding the expiry of the day on which the supply under section 5(3)
was taken to have occurred, in calculating the amount of tax payable, in respect of any taxable period in which those goods and services
are so applied, no amount of input tax in respect of those goods and services shall be deducted from the amount of output tax attributable
to that taxable period.
(5) For the purposes of subsections (3A), (3B) and (4), output tax in relation to a supply made by a registered person shall be attributable
to a taxable period:
(a) to the extent that payment has been received during the taxable period in respect of that supply, being a supply of goods and services which is taken to take place pursuant to section 10(1) or section 10(3) (a) or section 10(3)(b) or section 10(4) or section 26(2)(a) or section 26(7); or
(b) where the supply of goods and services is made or deemed to be made during that taxable period by that registered person, not
being a supply of goods and services to which paragraph (a) applies.
(6) If, in relation to any taxable period and any registered person, the total amount that may be deducted under subsections (3A) and
(3B) exceeds the aggregate amount of the output tax of that registered person attributable to that taxable period, the amount of
the excess shall, subject to this Act, be credited to that registered person by the Commissioner.
(7) If , in relation to any goods and services:
(a) the goods and services have been acquired or produced by any registered person for the principal purpose of making taxable supplies; and
(b) a deduction for input tax has been made pursuant to section 21(3) by that registered person in respect of those goods and services; and
(c) the goods and services are subsequently applied by that registered person to a purpose other than the making of taxable supplies,
any such goods and services are taken to be supplied by that registered person in the course of that person’s taxable activity
to the extent that they are so applied.
(8) Despite section 10, if the supply is taken to be made pursuant to subsection (7) the time of supply is taken to be the time that
the goods and services are first applied for a purpose other than in the course of making taxable supplies.
(9) Despite section 11, if the supply is taken to be made pursuant to subsection (7) the value of that supply is taken to be the lesser
of:
(a) the cost of those goods and services to the supplier, including any tax charged in respect of the supply of those goods and services to that supplier;
(b) the open market value of that supply.
(10) Where, no deduction has been made pursuant to subsections (3A) and (3B) in respect of or in relation to any goods and services acquired
or produced after 1 January 1994 by a registered person for a purpose other than the making of taxable supplies and any such goods
and services are subsequently applied for the purpose of making taxable supplies, the Commissioner shall, to the extent to which
those goods and services are so applied, allow that registered person to make a deduction under subsections (3A) and (3B) of an amount
equal to the tax fraction of that part of the lesser of:
(a) the cost of those goods and services, including the tax charged in respect of those goods and services;
(b) the open market value of the supply of those goods and services.
(11)Despite section 10, where a deduction is permitted pursuant to subsection (9) such deduction shall be made in the taxable period that
the goods and services are first applied for the purpose of making taxable supplies.
22. Allocation of taxable supplies following investigation by Commissioner –(1)In this section:
“discrepancy” means any understatement or overstatement of the taxable supplies made or received by a registered person calculated or otherwise ascertained in respect of any specified period;
“specified period” means any period, being a period that extends over more than a single taxable period, to which a discrepancy relates;
“tax discrepancy”, in relation to a discrepancy, means an amount equal to the tax fraction (being the tax fraction applicable
to the taxable period, or any part of a taxable period, in relation to which the discrepancy has been taken to have occurred) of
the amount of the taxable supplies made or received by a registered person that have been understated or overstated.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, in any case where, upon investigation by the Commissioner of the liability of a registered person for
tax, the Commissioner has calculated or otherwise ascertained a discrepancy in relation to any specified period then:
(a) subject to paragraphs (b) and (c), the amount of the discrepancy is taken to be taxable supplies made or received (as the case may be) by the registered person at a uniform daily rate throughout that specified period, and those taxable supplies are taken to have been so made or received by the registered person in the taxable periods, or parts thereof, included in the specified period;
(b) subject to paragraph (c), if the Commissioner is satisfied that the registered person did not carry on the taxable activity for any part of any specified period, the amount of the discrepancy is taken to be taxable supplies made or received (as the case may be) by the registered person at a uniform daily rate throughout the part of the specified period in which the taxable activity was carried on, and those taxable supplies are taken to be so made or received by the registered person in the taxable periods, or parts thereof, in which the taxable activity was carried on during the specified period;
(c) if the registered person satisfies the Commissioner that it would be appropriate for the amount of the discrepancy to be allocated
on a basis otherwise than in accordance with paragraph (a) or (b), the amount of the discrepancy shall be allocated on that basis,
and the amount so allocated is taken to be taxable supplies made or received (as the case may be) by the registered person in the
taxable periods, or parts thereof, to which the discrepancy has been so allocated.
(3) For the purposes of section 21, if a discrepancy has been taken pursuant to this section to be taxable supplies made or received
by a registered person in respect of any taxable period or any part of a taxable period, the tax discrepancy calculated in respect
of the discrepancy is taken to be output tax or, as the case may be, input tax in respect of that taxable period or part of a taxable
period.
23. Goods and services acquired before incorporation – A company, being a registered person, is, where any amount of tax has been charged or levied pursuant to section 9(1),13(1) or 14(1) in relation to the acquisition of goods and services for or on behalf of that company or in connection with the incorporation of that company, and where those goods and services were acquired prior to incorporation by a person who:
(a) became a member, officer, or employee of the company and was reimbursed by the company for the whole amount of the consideration paid for the goods and services; and
(b) acquired those goods and services for the purpose of a taxable activity to be carried on by the company and has not used those goods and services for any purpose other than such taxable activity, –
taken to be the recipient of the goods and services and to have paid any tax charged or levied pursuant to section 9(1),13(1) or 14(1)
as if the supply or the payment of the tax had been made during the taxable period in which the reimbursement referred to in paragraph
(a) is made:
PROVIDED THAT this section does not apply in relation to any goods and services where:
(c) the supply of those goods and services by that person to the company is a taxable supply; or
(d) those goods and services were so acquired more than 6 months prior to the date of incorporation of the company; or
(e) the company does not hold sufficient records to establish the particulars relating to the deduction to be made.
24. Payment of tax –(1) A registered person, for each taxable period, shall, not later than the last day allowed under this Act for providing a return for
that taxable period, pay to the Commissioner the tax payable for that period as calculated pursuant to section 21.
(2)Repealed.
(3) Subject to the Tax Administration Act 2012, the amount set forth as tax payable on any return provided by a registered person is conclusively taken to be correct for the purposes
of this Act.
(4)Repealed.
25. Tax invoices–(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a supplier, being a registered person, making a taxable supply to a recipient, being
a registered person, shall provide that recipient, within 28 days of the making of that taxable supply, with a tax invoice containing
such particulars as are specified in this section:
PROVIDED THAT:
(a) it shall not be lawful to issue more than one tax invoice for each taxable supply;
(b) if a registered person claims to have lost the original tax invoice, the supplier or the recipient, as the case may be, may provide
a copy clearly marked “copy only”.
(2)If a recipient, being a registered person, creates a document containing the particulars specified in this section and purporting
to be a tax invoice in respect of a taxable supply of goods and services made to the recipient by a supplier, being a registered
person, that document is taken to be a tax invoice provided by the supplier under subsection (1)if:
(a) the Commissioner has granted prior approval for the issue of such documents by a recipient or class or classes of recipients in relation to the taxable supplies or class or classes of taxable supplies to which the documents relate; and
(b) the supplier and the recipient agree that the supplier shall not issue a tax invoice in respect of any taxable supply to which this subsection applies; and
(c) the document is provided to the supplier and a copy is retained by the recipient; and
(d) the words “buyer created tax invoice - IRD approved” are contained in a prominent place on that document:
PROVIDED THAT where a tax invoice is issued pursuant to this subsection any tax invoice issued by the supplier in respect of that taxable supply
is taken not to be a tax invoice for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Subject to subsection (4), for the purposes of subsection (1), if goods are taken to be supplied by a person pursuant to section
5(2), the person selling those goods, whether or not that person is a registered person, in making that taxable supply to a recipient,
is taken to be the supplier of those goods.
(4)If subsection (3) applies and the person who is taken to be the supplier is not a registered person, the reference to registration
number of the supplier in subsection (5)(b) is to be read as if that reference were to the Inland Revenue Department’s identification
number of the supplier.
(5) Except as the Commissioner may otherwise allow, and subject to this section, a tax invoice shall contain the following particulars:
(a) the words “tax invoice” in a prominent place;
(b) the name and registration number of the supplier;
(c) the name and address of the recipient;
(d) the date upon which the tax invoice is issued;
(e) a description of the goods and services supplied;
(f) the quantity or volume of the goods and services supplied;
(g) either—
(i) the total amount of the tax charged, the consideration, excluding tax, and the consideration, inclusive of tax for the supply; or
(ii) where the amount of tax charged is the tax fraction of the consideration, the consideration for the supply and a statement that
it includes a charge in respect of the tax.
(6)If the Commissioner is satisfied that there are or will be sufficient records available to establish the particulars of any supply
or class of supplies, and that it would be impractical to require that a tax invoice be issued pursuant to this section, the Commissioner
may determine that, subject to any conditions that the Commissioner may consider necessary:
(a) any one or more of the particulars specified in subsection (5) shall not be contained on a tax invoice; or
(b) a tax invoice is not required to be issued.
(7) A tax invoice issued pursuant to subsection (6)(a) shall contain the words “modified tax invoice - IRD approved” in a
prominent place.
(8) Whenan approval has been granted by the Commissioner to issue tax invoices pursuant to subsection (2), that approval may be withdrawn
at any time if the Commissioner is satisfied that the conditions of that approval have not been complied with.
(9)If the Commissioner has determined that a tax invoice may be issued pursuant to subsection (6)(a), or is not required to be issued
pursuant to subsection (6)(b), that determination may be revoked if the Commissioner is satisfied that any conditions specified have
not been complied with.
(10)Nothing in this section requires the provision of a tax invoice in respect of a transaction where the price is less than $20, or such
other sum as may be later prescribed.
(11)If an amount of tax charged is required to be shown on a tax invoice and that amount consists of a number of tala and sene together
with any fraction or part of a sene, that fraction of that sene:
(a) if less than or equal to half that sene, may be disregarded for the purposes of this section; and
(b) if in excess of half of that sene, is taken for the purposes of this section to be an amount equal to one sene.
26. Credit and debit notes–(1)This section applies if, in relation to the supply of goods and services by any registered person:
(a) that supply of goods and services has been cancelled; or
(b) the nature of that supply of goods and services has been fundamentally varied or altered; or
(c) the previously agreed consideration for that supply of goods and services has been altered, whether due to the offer of a discount or otherwise; or
(d) the goods and services or part of those goods and services supplied have been returned to the supplier, and the supplier has;
(e) provided a tax invoice in relation to that supply and as a result of any one or more of the above events, the amount shown thereon as tax charged on that supply is incorrect; or
(f) provided a return in relation to the taxable period for which output tax on that supply is attributable and, as a result of any
one or more of the above events, has accounted for an incorrect amount of output tax on that supply.
(2)If a supplier has accounted for an incorrect amount of output tax as specified in subsection (1)(f), that supplier shall make an adjustment
in calculating the tax payable by that supplier in the return for the taxable period during which it has become apparent that the
output tax is incorrect, and is:
(a) the output tax properly charged in relation to that supply exceeds the output tax actually accounted for by the supplier, the amount of that excess is taken to be tax charged by that supplier in relation to a taxable supply attributable to the taxable period in which the adjustment is to be made, and not attributable to any prior taxable period;
(b) the output tax actually accounted for exceeds the tax properly charged in relation to that supply, that supplier shall make a
deduction of input tax under section 21(3) of the amount of that excess.
(3) Subject to this section, when a tax invoice has been provided as specified in subsection (1)(e), and:
(a) the amount shown as tax charged on that tax invoice exceeds the actual tax charged in respect of that supply, the supplier shall provide the recipient with a credit note, containing the following particulars—
(i) the words “credit note” in a prominent place;
(ii) the name and registration number of the registered person;
(iii) the name and address of the recipient;
(iv) the date on which the credit note was issued;
(v) either:
(A) the amount of consideration for that supply contained in the tax invoice referred to above, the correct amount of consideration for the supply, the difference between those 2 amounts, and the tax charged in respect of that supply to the extent that it relates to the amount of that difference; or
(B) if the tax charged in respect of the supply is the tax fraction of the consideration, the difference referred to above in this subparagraph and a statement that that difference includes a charge in respect of the tax;
(vi) a brief explanation of the circumstances giving rise to the issuing of the credit note;
(b) the actual tax charged in respect of that supply exceeds the tax charged shown on the tax invoice, the supplier shall provide the recipient with a debit note, containing the following particulars—
(i) the words “debit note” in a prominent place;
(ii) the name and registration number of the registered person;
(iii) the name and address of the recipient;
(iv) the date on which the debit note was issued;
(v) either:
(A) the amount of consideration for that supply contained in the tax invoice referred to above, the correct amount of consideration for the supply, the difference between those 2 amounts, and the tax charged in respect of that supply to the extent that it relates to the amount of that difference; or
(B) where the tax charged in respect of the supply is the tax fraction of the consideration, the difference referred to above in this subparagraph and a statement that that difference includes a charge in respect of the tax;
(vi) a brief explanation of the circumstances giving rise to the issuing of the debit note:
PROVIDED THAT—
(i) it shall not be lawful to issue more than one credit note or debit note for the amount of the excess;
(ii) if any registered person claims to have lost the original credit note or debit note, the supplier or recipient, as the case may be, may provide a copy clearly marked “copy only”;
(iii) a supplier shall not be required to provide a recipient with a credit note pursuant to paragraph (a) in any case where and
to the extent that the amount of the excess referred to in that paragraph arises as a result of the recipient taking up a prompt
payment discount offered by the supplier and that the terms of the prompt payment discount offer are clearly stated on the face of
the tax invoice.
(4)If a recipient, being a registered person, creates a document containing the particulars specified in this section and purporting
to be a credit note or a debit note in respect of a supply of goods and services made to the recipient by a supplier, being a registered
person, that document is taken to be a credit note or, as the case may be, a debit note provided by the supplier under subsection
(3) if:
(a) the Commissioner has granted prior approval for the issue of such documents by a recipient or class or classes of recipients in relation to the supplies or class or classes of supplies to which the documents relate; and
(b) the supplier and the recipient agree that the supplier shall not issue a credit note or, as the case may be, a debit note in respect of any supply to which this subsection applies; and
(c) a copy of any such document is provided to the supplier and another copy is retained by the recipient:
PROVIDED THAT—
(d) when a credit note is issued pursuant to this subsection, any credit note issued by the supplier in respect of that supply shall be deemed not to be a credit note for the purposes of this Act;
(e) when a debit note is issued pursuant to this subsection, any debit note issued by the supplier in respect of that supply is taken
not to be a debit note for the purposes of this Act.
(5)If the Commissioner is satisfied that there are or will be sufficient records available to establish the particulars of any supply
or class of supplies, and that it would be impractical to require that a credit note or a debit note be issued pursuant to this section,
the Commissioner may determine that, subject to any conditions that the Commissioner may consider necessary:
(a) any one or more of the particulars specified in paragraph (a) or, as the case may be, subsection (3)(b) shall not be contained in a credit note or, as the case may be, a debit note; or
(b) a credit note or, as the case may be, a debit note is not required to be issued.
(6) Despite subsection (3) if, in relation to any taxable supplies, or a class or classes of taxable supplies, made by a supplier to
a recipient, or a class or classes of recipients:
(a) the supplier has provided, in terms of section 25, one or more tax invoices to a recipient in respect of those taxable supplies; and
(b) the Commissioner is satisfied that there are or will be sufficient records available to establish the particulars of those taxable
supplies to a recipient, –
the Commissioner may determine in respect of any recipient, or class or classes of recipients, that, subject to any conditions that
the Commissioner may consider necessary, the supplier may issue one credit note or debit note to each recipient with respect to those
tax invoices.
(7) When any recipient, being a registered person, has been issued with a credit note pursuant to subsection (3)(a), or has written or
other notice or otherwise knows that any tax invoice which that registered person holds is incorrect as a result of any one or more
of the events specified in any of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (d) of subsection (1), and has made a deduction of any amount of
input tax in any taxable period in respect of that supply of goods and services to which the credit note or that notice or other
knowledge, as the case may be, relates, the amount of the excess referred to in subsection (3)(a) is taken to be tax charged in relation
to a taxable supply made by the recipient attributable to the taxable period in which the credit note was issued, or that notice
or, as the case may be, other knowledge was received, to the extent that the input tax deducted exceeds the output tax properly charged.
(8) When any recipient, being a registered person, has been issued with a debit note pursuant to subsection (3)(b), and has made a deduction
of any amount of input tax in any taxable period in respect of that supply of goods and services to which that debit note relates,
the recipient shall make a deduction of input tax pursuant to section 21(3) of the amount of the excess referred to in subsection
(3)(b) in the taxable period in which the debit note is issued, to the extent that the output tax properly charged exceeds the input
tax deducted.
(9)If any amount of tax charged is required to be shown on any credit note or debit note, and that amount consists of any number of tala
and sene together with any fraction or part of a sene, that fraction or part of that sene:
(a) if less than or equal to half of that sene, may be disregarded for the purposes of this section;
(b) if in excess of half of that sene, is taken, for the purposes of this section, to be an amount equal to one sene.
Parts IV – VI Repealed
PART VII
TAX CREDITS, REFUNDS AND RELIEF FROM TAX
42. Credit for excess tax – (1) Subject to this Part, where any registered person has paid to the Commissioner any amount in excess of the amount of tax
payable properly calculated in accordance with this Act in respect of any taxable period, the Commissioner shall credit the amount
paid in excess:
PROVIDED THAT, subject to subsection (2), no credit shall be made after the expiration of the period of 8 years immediately after the end of the
taxable period, unless written application for the credit is made by or on behalf of the registered person before the expiration
of that period.
(2)Despite section 21(6), in any case where an assessment has been made pursuant to section 27 so as to change any amount of tax payable
by any registered person or creditable by the Commissioner, and the Commissioner is satisfied that by reason of that assessment either:
(a) tax has been paid by that person in excess of the amount properly payable; or
(b) an amount has been credited to that person by the Commissioner pursuant to section 21(6) and that amount is less than the amount
properly creditable, –
the Commissioner shall, even if the time limited under subsection (1) for the making of a credit may have expired, credit, pursuant
to this section, the tax so paid in excess or, as the case may be, the amount properly creditable to the extent that such amount
exceeds the amount that has been credited:
PROVIDED THAT, in any such case, no credit shall be made after the expiration of the period of 8 years immediately after the end of the year in
which the assessment was made, unless written application for the credit is made by or on behalf of the registered person before
the expiration of that period.
43. Tax paid in excess may be set off against tax payable when assessment re-opened – If, upon the investigation by the Commissioner of the liability of a registered person for tax over a number of taxable periods:
(a) the Commissioner assesses the registered person with tax for any taxable period in respect of which no assessment has been made previously or alters an assessment for any taxable period so as to increase the amount thereof; and
(b) for any taxable period or taxable periods within that group of taxable periods tax has been paid in excess of the amount properly
payable, –
the Commissioner may, in the Commissioner’s discretion and to the extent that in the opinion of the Commissioner is equitable,
allow any amount so paid in excess to be deducted from or set off against any tax payable for any taxable period or taxable periods,
although the time limited for the making of a refund or allowing of a credit of any tax so paid in excess may have expired.
44 – 46 Repealed
PART VIII
REGISTRATION
47. Liability to register –(1) Subject to this Act, a person who, on or after 1 January 1994 carries on any taxable activity, becomes liable to be registered:
PROVIDED THAT no person is liable to be registered where at the end of any month the total value of their supplies made in Samoa for that month
and the 11 months either preceding or succeeding that month do not exceed the amount the Head of State maydeclare by Order.
(2) A person who is liable to be registered, pursuant to subsection (1), shall apply to the Commissioner in the prescribed form for registration
under this Act, within 21 days of becoming so liable, and provide the Commissioner with such further particulars as the Commissioner
may require for the purpose of registering that person.
(2A) Despitesubsections (1) and (2), a person who satisfies the Commissioner that, on or after 1 January 1994:
(a) that person is carrying on any taxable activity; or
(b) that person intends to carry on any taxable activity from a specified date;
(c) that the goods and services made or provided, or to be made or provided, shall be more than 50%zero-rated under this Act, –
may apply to the Commissioner in a form approved by him for registration under this Act, and provide the Commissioner with such further
particulars as the Commissioner may require for the purpose of registering that person.
(2AB)If any person has made application for registration under subsections (2) or (2A) and the Commissioner is satisfied that that person
should in the Commissioner’s discretion to be registered under this Act, that person shall be a registered person for the purposes
of this Act with effect from such date as the Commissioner may determine.
(3) An application for registration under this Act purporting to be made by or on behalf,is, for all purposes,taken to be made by that
person or by that person’s authority, as the case may be, unless the contrary is proved.
(4)If any person has not made application pursuant to subsection (2), and the Commissioner is satisfied that person is liable to be registered
under this Act, that person is taken to be a registered person for the purposes of this Act with effect from the date on which that
person first became liable to become registered under this Act:
PROVIDED THAT the Commissioner may, having regard to the circumstances of the case, determine that such person taken to be a registered person
shall be registered from such later date as the Commissioner considers equitable.
(5)The provisions of this Act relating to the determination of the value of any supply of goods and services apply for the purposes of
this section, with the modification, that no regard shall be had to any tax charged in respect of any such supply.
48. Cancellation of registration –(1) A registered person who ceases to carry on all taxable activities shall notify the Commissioner of that fact within 21 days of the
date of cessation and the Commissioner shall cancel the registration of any such person with effect from the last day of the taxable
period during which all such taxable activities ceased, or from such other date as may be determined by the Commissioner:
PROVIDED THAT the Commissioner shall not at any time cancel the registration of any such registered person if there are reasonable grounds for
believing that the registered person will carry on any taxable activity at any time within 12 months from that date of cessation.
(2) Any notification by a registered person pursuant to subsection (3) shall be made in writing to the Commissioner and shall state the
date upon which that person ceased to carry on all taxable activities and whether or not that person intends to carry on any taxable
activity within 12 months from that date.
(3)If the Commissioner is satisfied that a registered person is not carrying on a taxable activity the Commissioner may cancel that person’s
registration with effect from the last day of the taxable period during which the Commissioner was so satisfied, or from such other
date as may be determined by the Commissioner, and shall notify that person of the date on which the cancellation of the registration
takes effect.
(4) Any date determined by the Commissioner for the cancellation of registration under subsection (3) may be retrospective to a date
not earlier than:
(a) the last day of the taxable period during which taxable activity by the person ceased; or
(b) the date on which the person was registered under this Act, if the Commissioner is satisfied that the person did not, from that
date, carry on any taxable activity.
(5)Subject to this Act, a registered person who carries on any taxable activity shall cease to be liable to be registered where at any
time the Commissioner is satisfied that the value of that person’s taxable supplies in the period of 12 months then beginning
will be not more than the amount specified by Order declared under section 47(1).
(6)A person who, by virtue of subsection (5), ceases to be liable to be registered may request the Commissioner inwriting to cancel that
person’s registration, and if the Commissioner is at any time satisfied, as mentioned in subsection (5), the Commissioner shall
cancel that person’s registration with effect from the last day of the taxable period during which the Commissioner was so
satisfied, or from such other date as may be determined by the Commissioner, and shall notify that person of the date on which the
cancellation of the registration takes effect.
(7)Despiteany other provision of this section, where the Commissioner is satisfied as mentioned in subsection (5), he or she may cancel
the person’s registration, such cancellation to be effective from a date as determined by the Commissioner.
49. Registered person to notify change of status – Subject to this Act, a registered person shall within 21 days notify the Commissioner in writing of:
(a) any change in the name, address, constitution, or nature of the principal taxable activity or activities of that registered person;
(b) any change of address from which, or the name in which, any taxable activity is carried on by that registered person:
PROVIDED THAT this section does not apply to the notification of any changes in the ownership of any company.
50. Liabilities not affected by ceasing to be a registered person – The obligations and liabilities under this Act of any person for anything done, or omitted to be done, by that person while that person is a registered person shall not be affected by the fact that that person ceases to be a registered person, or by the fact that, being a registered person, the Commissioner cancels that person’s registration.
PART IX
SPECIAL CASES
51. Branches and divisions –(1)If a taxable activity is carried on by any registered person in branches or divisions, that registered person may apply in writing
to the Commissioner for any such branch or division to be registered as a separate registered person for the purposes of this Act.
(2) The Commissioner shall, upon application made pursuant to subsection (1), register any branch or division as a separate registered
person if each such branch or division maintains an independent system of accounting and can be separately identified by reference
to the nature of the activities carried on or the location of the branch or division, and where any such branch or division is so
separately registered, any taxable activity carried on by that branch or division is, to that extent, taken not to be carried on
by the registered person first mentioned in subsection (1).
(3) The registered person first mentioned in subsection (1) may, at any time, apply in writing to the Commissioner for any branch or
division separately registered under subsection (2) to cease to be so registered, and the Commissioner shall cancel that separate
registration with effect from the last day of the taxable period of the branch or division during which that application was made,
and any taxable activity carried on by that branch or division shall thereafter, to that extent, be deemed to be carried on by the
registered person first mentioned in subsection (1).
(4) The Commissioner shall cancel the separate registration of any branch or division on the cancellation of the registration of the
registered person first mentioned in subsection (1).
(5)If a branch or division separately registered pursuant to this section makes default in doing anything required to be done under this
Act, the liability for the doing of that thing shall revert to the registered person first mentioned in subsection (1).
(6) Despite subsections (1) to (5), for the purposes of sections 16 and 20, this section is taken not to have applied, and any placement
or direction made under sections 16 and 20 in respect of the registered person first mentioned in subsection (1) shall, for the purposes
of this Act, apply equally to each branch or division separately registered pursuant to this section.
52. Unincorporated bodies –(1)Inthis section:
“body” means an unincorporated body of persons; and includes:
(a) a partnership;
(b) a joint venture;
(c) the trustees of a trust;
“member” means a partner, a joint venturer, a trustee, or a member of a body;
“partnership” and “partner” have the same meanings as in the Partnership Act 1975.
(2)If a body that carries on any taxable activity is registered pursuant to this Act:
(a) the members of that body shall not themselves be or liable to be registered under this Act in relation to the carrying on of that taxable activity; and
(b) any supply of goods and services made in the course of carrying on that taxable activity is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to be supplied by that body, and is taken not to be made by any member of that body; and
(c) any supply of goods and services to, or acquisition of goods by, any member of that body acting in the capacity as a member of that body and in the course of carrying on that taxable activity, not being a supply to which paragraph (b) applies, is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to be supplied to or acquired by that body, and is taken not to be supplied to or acquired by that member; and
(d) that registration shall be in the name of the body, or where that body is the trustees of a trust, in the name of the trust; and
(e) subject to subsection (3), any change of members of that body shall have no effect for the purposes of this Act.
(3) Despite anything in this section, a member is liable jointly and severally with any other members for all tax payable by the body
while that member remains a member of that body, and, where that member is an individual, after that member’s death, that member’s
estate shall be severally liable in due course of administration for such tax payable as far as it remains unpaid:
PROVIDED THAT where any such body is a partnership, joint venture, or the trustees of a trust, a member shall not cease to be a member for the
purposes of this section until the date on which any change of membership of that body is notified in writing to the Commissioner.
(4) For the purposes of this Act, any notice served in accordance with this Act which is addressed to a body by the name in which it
is registered pursuant to this Act, is taken to be served on that body and on all members of that body.
(5) Subject to subsection (6), if anything is required to be done pursuant to this Act by or on behalf of any body, it shall be the joint
and several liability of all the members to do any such thing:
PROVIDED THAT any such thing done by one member is sufficient compliance with any such requirement.
(6)Despite anything in this section, but subject to subsection (3), where anything is required to be done pursuant to this Act by or
on behalf of any body, not being a partnership, joint venture, or trustees of a trust, the affairs of which are managed by its members
or a committee or committees of its members, it shall be the joint and several responsibility of:
(a) a member holding office as president, chairperson, treasurer, secretary, or any similar office; or
(b) in default of any such member, a member holding office as a member of a committee:
PROVIDED THAT if it is done by any official or committee member, referred to in paragraph (a) or (b), that shall be sufficient compliance with
any such requirement.
53 – 54 Repealed
55. Agents and auctioneers –(1) Subject to this section, for the purposes of this Act, where an agent makes a supply of goods and services for and on behalf of any
other person who is the principal of that agent, that supply is taken to be made by that principal and not by that agent:
PROVIDED THAT, where that supply is a taxable supply, that agent, being a registered person, may, despite anything in this Act, issue a tax invoice
or a credit note or a debit note in relation to that supply as if that agent had made a taxable supply, and to the extent that that
tax invoice or credit note or debit note relates to that supply, that principal shall not also issue, as the case may be, a tax invoice
or a credit note or a debit note.
(2) Subject to this section, for the purposes of this Act, where any registered person makes a taxable supply of goods and services to
an agent who is acting on behalf of another person who is the principal for the purposes of that supply, that supply is taken to
be made to that principal and not to that agent:
PROVIDED THAT that agent may nevertheless request that that agent be issued with a tax invoice and that registered person may issue a tax invoice
or a credit note or debit note as if the supply were made to that agent.
(3)If a tax invoice or a credit note or debit note in relation to a supply has been issued:
(a) by an agent pursuant to subsection (1); or
(b) to an agent pursuant to subsection (2),–
the agent shall maintain sufficient records to enable the name and address and registration number (if any) of the principal to be
ascertained.
(4)In subsection (5), “auctioneer” means a registered person carrying on a taxable activity which comprises or includes the
supply by auction of goods as an auctioneer or agent for or on behalf of another person (hereafter in this section referred to as
a principal).
(5)Despite subsections (1) to (4), where the principal and the auctioneer agree to have a supply by auction of any goods, not being a
taxable supply, treated as if that supply had been made by that auctioneer and not by that principal, that supply shall be charged
with tax as if it were made by that auctioneer in the course or furtherance of that auctioneer’s taxable activity and that
auctioneer may:
(a) recover the amount of tax charged on that supply from that principal as a debt together with the costs of recovery in any Court of competent jurisdiction; or
(b) retain or deduct the same out of any money in that auctioneer’s hands belonging or payable to that principal.
(6)Despite subsection (2), where any registered person makes a taxable supply (not being a supply that is charged with tax at the rate
of zero percent pursuant to section 12) of goods and services to an agent, being a registered person, who is acting for or on behalf
of another person who is the principal for the purposes of that supply, and:
(a) that principal is not resident in Samoa and is not a registered person; and
(b) that supply is directly in connection with either the exportation, or the arranging thereof, of goods from Samoa to any country
or place outside Samoa, or the importation, or the arranging thereof, of goods to Samoa from any country or place outside Samoa,
including, in either case, the transportation of those goods within Samoa as part of that exportation or, as the case may be, importation,
–
this Act, where that agent and that principal agree, has effect as if that supply were made to that agent and not to that principal.
PART X
PENALTIES
57. Offences –(1) A person commits an offence against this Act who:
(a) fails to apply for registration as required pursuant to section 47; or
(b) fails to notify the Commissioner of any of the matters required pursuant to section 49; or
(c) – (e) Repealed
(f) knowingly issues any tax invoices showing any amount charged as tax where—
(i) no amount of tax is charged in respect of any supply to which such tax invoice applies; or
(ii) the amount shown as being charged as tax is in excess of the amount properly so charged under this Act; or
(iii) the supply in respect of the tax charged will not take place; or
(g) knowingly represents to any person, in writing or otherwise howsoever, that any amount is charged as tax if either—
(i) no amount of tax is charged in respect of any supply to which any such representation refers; or
(ii) the amount represented as being charged as tax is not the amount properly so charged under this Act; or
(h) receives, acquires possession of, or deals with any goods, or accepts the supply of any services, where that person knows or has reason to believe that the tax on the supply of the goods or the services has been or will be evaded; or
(i) – (j)Repealed
(k) knowingly issues any tax invoice required under this Act which is in any material aspect erroneous or incomplete, or knowingly makes any statement or declaration in relation to any matter under this Act which is erroneous or incomplete in any material aspect; or
(l) knowingly contravenes section 25(1)(a) or 26(3)(c); or
(m) being a registered person, fails to provide another registered person with a tax invoice as required under this Act; or
(n) knowingly fails to make any deduction or extraction required by a notice under section 40; or
(o) fails, after making any deduction or extraction required by a notice under section 40, to pay the sum deducted or extracted to the Commissioner within the time specified in the notice; or
(p) permits the payment to or on behalf of any person, other than the Commissioner, of any amount that, under section 40(10), is taken to be held in trust for the Government.
(q) Repealed
(2) A person who commits an offence against subsection (1)(b),(1)(j) or (1)(l) or section 58 is:
(a)on the first occasion on which the person is convicted of any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine not exceeding 10 penalty units; or
(b)on the second occasion on which the person is convicted of any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine not exceeding 10 penalty units;
(c)on every occasion, other than the occasions referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b), on which the person is convicted of any such
offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine
not exceeding 30 penalty units.
(3) A person who commits an offence against subsection (1)(m) is:
(a) on the first occasion on which the person is convicted of any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine not exceeding 5 penalty units for each month of default;
(b) on the second occasion on which the person is convicted of any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine not exceeding 7 penalty units and 1 half of a penalty unit for each month of default;
(c) on every occasion, other than the occasions referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b), on which the person is convicted of any such
offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine
not exceeding 10 penalty units for each month of default.
(4) A person who commits an offence against this Act for which no other penalty is prescribed is:
(a) on the first occasion on which the person is convicted of any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences, to a fine not exceeding 50 penalty units;
(b) on every occasion, other than the occasion referred to in paragraph (a) of this subsection, on which the person is convicted of
any such offence or more than one such offence, liable, in respect of that offence or, as the case may be, each of those offences,
to a fine not exceeding 100 penalty units.
(5)Repealed
(6) A registered person who fails to comply with section 70A commits an offence and is liable upon conviction to a fine not exceeding
5 penalty units. A registered person who has been convicted under this subsection shall in a subsequent conviction be liable to
a fine not exceeding 10 penalty units.
58. Officers and employees of corporate bodies –(1)Inthis section, “officer”, in relation to a corporate body, includes:
(a) a director or secretary or other statutory officer of the corporate body; or
(b) a receiver or a manager of any property of the corporate body, or a person having powers or responsibilities, similar to those of such a receiver or manager, in relation to the corporate body; or
(c) a liquidator of the corporate body.
(2) A person commits an offence against this Act who, being an officer or an employee of a corporate body, is, by reason of that office
or, as the case may be, that employment, responsible (whether pursuant to any statute or rule of law, or any instructions of the
corporate body or for any other reason) for providing to the Commissioner any information or any statement or any return pursuant
to this Act or pursuant to any notice, order, or requirement issued, made, or notified pursuant to this Act, and who fails to provide
that information or that statement or that return, as the case may be, to the Commissioner within the time specified for providing
the information or statement.
59. Proceedings to be taken in the District Court – All proceedings for offences against this Act shall be taken by way of prosecution before a District Court Judge upon the information of the Commissioner.
60. Information may charge several offences –(1)An information may charge the defendant with any number of offences against this Act if those offences are founded on the same set
of facts, or form or are part of a series of offences of the same or similar character.
(2)Ifan information charges more than one such offence, particulars of each offence charged shall be set out separately in the information.
(3) All such charges shall be heard together, unless the Court, either before or at any time during the hearing, considers it just that
any charge should be heard separately and makes an order to that effect.
61. Information may be laid within 10 years – Despite anything in any other Act, any information in respect of any offence against this Act or against any regulations made thereunder may be laid at any time within 10 years after the end of the taxable period in which the offence was committed.
62. Penal tax in case of evasion –If:
(a) a registered person—
(i) evades; or
(ii) attempts to evade; or
(iii) does any act with intent to evade; or
(iv) makes default in the performance of any duty imposed upon that person by this Act or regulations made under this Act with intent to evade, –
the payment of any amount of tax payable (which amount is hereafter referred to as the deficient tax);
(b) a registered person—
(i) causes; or
(ii) attempts to cause; or
(iii) does any act with intent to cause; or
(iv) makes default in the performance of any duty imposed upon that person by this Act or regulations made under this Act with intent to cause, –
the credit to that person by the Commissioner of any amount (which amount is hereafter also referred to as the deficient tax), pursuant to section 21(6), in excess of the amount properly so to be credited to that person, that person shall be chargeable, by way of penalty for that offence, with additional tax (hereafter called penal tax) not exceeding an amount equal to treble the amount of the deficient tax.
63. Nature of penal tax – Subject to this Part, penal tax shall for all purposes be deemed to be tax of the same nature as the deficient tax to which it relates, and is taken to be payable in and for the same taxable period as that deficient tax.
64. Assessment of penal tax –(1) Penal tax shall be assessed by the Commissioner in the same manner, so far as may be, as the deficient tax to which it relates, but
separately therefrom.
(2) An assessment of penal tax may be amended from time to time in the same manner as any other assessment.
(3)The Commissioner may make or amend an assessment of penal tax at any time.
65. Objections to penal tax –(1) An assessment of penal tax shall be subject, in the same manner as any other assessment of tax, to objection on the ground that the
person so assessed is not chargeable with penal tax, or on the ground that the amount so assessed is excessive having regard to the
nature and degree of the offence or to the reason for the imposition of the penal tax, and despite that the amount so assessed is
not in excess of treble the amount of the deficient tax:
PROVIDED THAT, where the person so assessed is chargeable with penal tax, the amount of penal tax assessed by the Commissioner shall not be reduced
below the smaller of the following amounts:
(a) the amount of penal tax so assessed;
(b) an amount calculated, in respect of the period commencing with the last day of the taxable period for which the deficient tax
is payable and ending with the day on which the assessment of the penal tax is made by the Commissioner, at the rate of 10% a year
of the amount of the deficient tax.
(2) Subject to subsection (1), the provisions of this Act as to objections apply to an objection to an assessment of penal tax, except
that the burden of proving the offence in respect of which penal tax is chargeable lies upon the Commissioner.
66. Recovery of penal tax – An assessment of penal tax may be made and the tax so assessed shall be recoverable at any time, whether before or after the deficient tax to which it relates has been assessed or paid, or has become assessable or payable.
67. Recovery of penal tax from executors or administrators –(1) Penal tax shall be assessable against and recoverable from the executors or administrators of a deceased registered person, but,
if so assessed, the amount thereof shall be recoverable only as a debt incurred by the deceased in that person’s lifetime.
(2) No penal tax shall be recoverable from any person other than the registered person or that person’s executors or administrators.
68. Recovery of penal tax not affected by conviction of registered person – The assessment or recovery of penal tax in respect of any offence shall not be in any manner barred or affected by the fact that the registered person has been convicted under this Act of the same or any other offence, but no person who has paid the penal tax assessed against that person for any offence shall be thereafter convicted of the same offence.
69. Publication of names of tax evaders –(1) The Commissioner may publish in the Savali a list of persons who:
(a) have been convicted under section 57(1)(d); or
(b) have been convicted under section 57(1)(q) of aiding, abetting, inciting, or conspiring with any other person to commit any offence under section 57(1)(d); or
(c) have been charged with penal tax under section 62.
(2) The Commissioner may omit from any list published under this section any reference to any registered person to whom subsection (1)
applies if the Commissioner is satisfied that, before any investigation or inquiry has been commenced in respect of the offence or
evasion of which the registered person is guilty, the registered person has voluntarily disclosed to the Commissioner or to any officer
authorised by the Commissioner in that behalf complete information and full particulars as to the offence or evasion.
(3) A list published under this section may specify all or any of the following:
(a) the name, address, and principal taxable activity of the registered person;
(b) such particulars of the offence or evasion as the Commissioner thinks fit;
(c) the taxable period or taxable periods in which the offence or evasion occurred;
(d) the amount or estimated amount of the tax evaded;
(e) the amount (if any) of the penal tax imposed.
PART XI
GENERAL PROVISIONS
70. Keeping of records –(1)In this section, “records” includes books of account (whether contained in a manual, mechanical, or electronic format)
recording receipts or payments or income or expenditure, and also includes vouchers, bank statements, invoices, tax invoices, credit
notes, debit notes, receipts, and such other documents as are necessary to verify the entries in any such books of account.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the records required to be kept and retained, pursuant to subsection (3), shall contain:
(a) a record of all goods and services supplied by or to that registered person showing the goods and services, and the suppliers or their agents, in sufficient detail to enable the goods and services, the suppliers, or the agents to be readily identified by the Commissioner, and all invoices, tax invoices, credit notes, and debit notes relating thereto; and
(b) the charts and codes of account, the accounting instruction manuals, and the system and programme documentation which describes the accounting system used in each taxable period in the supply of goods and services; and
(c) any list required to be prepared in accordance with section 75(3).
(3) Subject to subsection (4), a registered person who supplies in Samoa goods and services shall keep in Samoa copies of records issued
by that registered person, and sufficient records in the English language or the Samoan language to enable ready ascertainment by
the Commissioner or any officer authorised by the Commissioner in that behalf, of that person’s liability to tax and shall
retain in Samoa all such records for a period of at least 10 years after the end of the taxable period to which they relate.
(4) This section does not require the retention of any records:
(a) for which the Commissioner has given notice in writing that retention is not required;
(b) of a company which has been wound-up and finally dissolved.
70A. Prices to be displayed –(1)The price of all goods and services to which this Act applies and supplied at the retail level in Samoa shall be displayed as inclusive
of the tax chargeable on that supply.
(2) Despite subsection (1), if any tourism publicity material is or will be utilised outside of Samoa to advertise the supply of any
goods and services by any registered person, the price of those goods and services may be displayed as exclusive of tax chargeable
on that supply:
PROVIDED THAT any publicity material that displays a tax exclusive price must clearly state that the price displayed is subject to tax.
71. Agreement to defeat the intention and application of Act to be void –(1) Despite anything in this Act, if the Commissioner is satisfied that an arrangement has been entered into between persons to defeat
the intent and application of this Act, or of any provision of this Act, the Commissioner shall treat the arrangement as void for
the purposes of this Act and shall adjust the amount of tax payable by any registered person (or refundable or to be credited to
that person by the Commissioner) who is affected by the arrangement, whether or not that registered person is a party to it, in such
manner as the Commissioner considers appropriate so as to counteract any tax advantage obtained by that registered person from or
under that arrangement.
(2) The Commissioner may, for the purposes of this section, deem:
(a) any person (not being, apart from this subsection, a registered person) who is a party to or has participated in any way in any arrangement, to be a registered person;
(b) any supply of goods and services, whether or not a taxable supply, that is affected by or is part of any arrangement, to be both made to and made by any registered person;
(c) any supply of goods and services to occur in any taxable period that, but for any arrangement affected by this section, would have been the taxable period in which the supply was made;
(d) any supply of goods and services to have been made, or consideration for such supply to be given, at open market value.
(3)If:
(a) a person (in this subsection hereafter referred to as the original person) enters into any arrangement on or after the date upon which this Act was first introduced into the Legislative Assembly whereby any taxable activity formerly carried on by the original person is carried on, in whole or in part, by any other person or other persons; and
(b) the original person and the other person or other persons are associated persons, –
for the purposes of section 47(1), the value of the supplies made in the course of carrying on all taxable activities in any period
of 12 months commencing on the first day of any month by the original person and by the other person or, as the case may be, by the
other persons shall, so far as the value relates to those supplies arising from the taxable activity formerly carried on by the original
person, each be taken to be equal to the aggregate of the value of the taxable supplies made by all of them for that period:
PROVIDED THAT the Commissioner may, having regard to the circumstances of the case and if the Commissioner thinks it equitable to do so, determine
in any particular case that this subsection shall not apply to all or any of the original person and that other person or, as the
case may be, those other persons.
(4)In this section:
“arrangement” means any contract, agreement, plan, or understanding (whether enforceable or unenforceable) including all steps and transactions by which it is carried into effect;
“tax advantage” includes:
(a) any reduction in the liability of any registered person to pay tax;
(b) any increase in the entitlement of any registered person to a refund or credit of tax;
(c) any reduction in the total consideration payable by any person in respect of any supply of goods and services.
72. Samoa currency – For the purposes of this Act, all amounts of money shall be expressed in terms of Samoa currency, and in any case where and to the extent that such amount is consideration in money for a supply, that amount shall be expressed in terms of Samoa currency as at the time of that supply.
73. Effect of imposition or alteration of tax –(1)Inthis section,“alteration in the law” means the coming into force of the provisions of this Act or any amendment to this Act by which:
(a) a supply of goods and services is charged with, or exempted from, tax; or
(b) the rate of tax in relation to a supply of goods and services is increased or reduced.
(2)If an alteration in the law is made and a supplier has, at any time entered into any agreement or contract in respect of the supply
of goods and services with a recipient, unless express provision for the exclusion of any such alteration in the law is contained
in the agreement or contract, or where the alteration in the law has been taken into account, the agreement or contract is taken
to be modified as follows:
(a) if the alteration in the law renders that supply liable to be charged with tax or increases the amount of any tax charged or chargeable in relation to that supply, the supplier may add to the agreed price in the said agreement or contract the amount of that tax or the increase of that tax; or
(b) if the alteration in the law renders that supply exempt from tax or reduces the amount of tax charged or chargeable in relation
to that supply, the supplier or the recipient may deduct from the agreed price in the said agreement or contract the amount of that
tax or the reduction of that tax:
PROVIDED THAT this subsection does not apply where that contract or agreement is entered into after the expiry of the period of 3 months that commences
with the coming into force of the alteration in the law:
PROVIDED FURTHER THAT this subsection does not apply to require a public authority to alter any amount agreed to be paid by the authority in respect of
any supply of goods and services where the consideration for that supply is in the nature of a grant or subsidy.
(3)If an alteration in the law is made, any fee, charge, or other amount, prescribed by, or determined pursuant to, any Act or by any
regulation, in respect of any supply of goods and services is, unless provision to the contrary is contained in that Act or regulation,
taken to be modified as follows:
(a) if the alteration in the law renders the fee, charge, or other amount prescribed by, or determined pursuant to, that Act or regulation liable to be charged with tax or increases the amount of tax charged or chargeable, the said fee, charge, or other amount so prescribed or determined shall be increased by that amount of tax charged or chargeable; or
(b) if the alteration in the law renders the fee, charge, or other amount prescribed, or determined pursuant to, that Act or regulation
exempt from tax or reduces the amount of tax charged or chargeable, the said fee, charge, or other amount so prescribed or determined
shall be exempted from tax or reduced by the amount of tax no longer charged or chargeable:
PROVIDED THAT where any such Act or regulation prescribes or determines either a maximum or a minimum amount in respect of any supply of goods
and services, that maximum or, as the case may be, minimum amount shall, for the purposes of any such Act or regulation, be deemed
to be increased or, as the case may be, decreased, by the amount of tax charged or, as the case may be, tax no longer charged by
virtue of this subsection:
PROVIDED FURTHER THAT this subsection does not apply to any fee, charge, or other amount prescribed or determined which is required to be paid by any public
authority to any other person by virtue of that Act or regulation.
(4)If a supply is or becomes charged with tax pursuant to this Act, the amount of any increase in consideration in respect of that supply
attributable to the tax charged on that supply shall be recoverable by the supplier from the recipient of the taxable supply.
(5)If an alteration in the law takes place so as to operate retrospectively from any date, this section shall also apply retrospectively
in the date, and any money paid by a date, and any money paid by a recipient of the taxable supply to the supplier in excess of
the amount which by virtue of the application of this section is properly payable, shall be recover-able by the recipient,
notwithstanding that the over payment may have arisen due to a mistake of law.
(6)Until 30 June 2003 and despite the provisions of the Act, the Commissioner may exercise his or her discretion to allow value added
goods and services tax imposed under section 9 to be calculated at the rate of 10% if:
(a) the change of the rate of such tax effected by the Value Added Goods and Services Tax Amendment Act 2002 entails serious hardship for a supplier concerning any agreement or contract the supplier has entered into in respect of the supply of goods and services with a recipient; and
(b) the other provisions of this section do not provide relief from such hardship for the supplier; and
(c) the amount of any taxation revenue foregone in respect of any supplier as a result of the Commissioner exercising his or her discretion under this subsection is no greater than $1000.
74. Returns to be provided in 2 parts for taxable period in which change in rate of tax occurs –(1)If there is a change in the rate of tax imposed by section 9, a registered person who does not have a taxable period beginning on the same day as the date on which the new rate comes into force shall provide to the Commissioner a return in 2 parts for the taxable period in which the new rate comes into force, comprising:
(a) a Part I return, covering the period beginning on the first day of the person’s taxable period and ending with the day immediately preceding the date on which the new rate comes into force; and
(b) a Part II return, covering the period beginning on the date on which the new rate comes into force and ending with the last day of the person’s
taxable period.
(2)Part I or II return shall be provided in a form or forms prescribed by the Commissioner, and the 2 parts are together taken to form a single
return.
(3)A person, whether registered or not, who is required to make a return pursuant to section 17(2) in respect of any period in which
a new rate of tax comes into force shall (except where the new rate comes into force on the first day of that period) provide a return
in 2 parts in accordance with this section, as if the period for which the return is required to be made were a taxable period.
75. Adjustments to tax payable following change in rate of tax –(1)The adjustment required by this section shall be calculated as follows:
(a) first determine the amount of consideration payable by the registered person on qualifying supplies made to the registered person;
(b) subtract the amount of the consideration payable to the registered person on qualifying supplies made by the registered person;
(c) multiply the resulting total by an amount equal to the old tax fraction subtracted from the new tax fraction (as respectively
calculated in accordance with section 2 immediately before and immediately after the new rate of tax comes into force).
(2)If the amount so calculated is a negative amount, that amount shall be a credit to the registered person, and:
(a) shall be set off against any amount of tax payable by the registered person in respect of any taxable period ending before the day on which the new rate of tax comes into force; and
(b) to the extent that it cannot be so set off, shall be set off against any amount of tax payable by the registered person in respect of the taxable period in which the new rate comes into force; and
(c) to the extent that it cannot be so set off, shall be carried forward to the next taxable period and set off against any amount
of tax payable by the registered person in respect of that next taxable period, and so on, –
but no such credit shall be refunded by the Commissioner.
(3) For the purposes of this section, a registered person shall, in respect of all qualifying supplies made by or to that person, prepare:
(a) a list of debtors of the registered person showing the amounts due to that person as at the commencement of the day on which the new rate of tax comes into force; and
(b) a list of creditors of the registered person showing the amounts due by that person as at the commencement of that day.
(4)For the purposes of this section, the Commissioner may issue guidelines either to apply generally or in relation to a specific registered
person, for the purpose of assisting to determine whether a supply is a “qualifying supply” and any registered person
who complies with the guide-lines issued shall not contravene this Act in that regard.
75A.Adjustments to tax payable in relation to credit and debit notes following change in rate of tax–(1)If –
(a) there is a change in the rate of tax imposed by section 9; and
(b) any registered person (being a supplier) has made an adjustment pursuant to section 75 in respect of any qualifying supply made by that person; and
(c) that registered person subsequently issues a debit note or credit note (in accordance with section 26) in respect of a qualifying
supply made for which payment has not been received as at the time of the issue of that debit note or credit note, –
that registered person shall, in the taxable period in which the debit note or credit note is issued, adjust the amount of the tax
payable under section 21 by an amount calculated in accordance with this section.
(2)If:
(a) there is a change in the rate of tax imposed by section 9; and
(b) any registered person (being a recipient) has made an adjustment pursuant to section 75 in respect of any qualifying supply received by that person; and
(c) that registered person has subsequently, in respect of any qualifying supply—
(i) been issued with a debit note or credit note; or
(ii) received written or other notice, or other-wise knows that any tax invoice held in incorrect, for which payment has not been
made as at the time of the receipt of that debit note or credit note, or other notice, or knowledge, –
that registered person shall, in the taxable period in which the debit note or credit note or other notice or knowledge was received,
adjust the amount of tax payable under section 21 by an amount calculated under this section.
(3) The adjustment required by this section shall be calculated as follows:
(a) subtract from the amount of consideration originally payable to, or, as the case may be, by that registered person the amount of consideration that is now payable to, or, as the case may be, by that registered person;
(b) multiply the resulting total by an amount equal to the old tax fraction subtracted from the new tax fraction (as respectively
calculated in accordance with section 2 immediately before and immediately after the new rate of tax comes into force).
(4) For the purposes of subsection (1), the amount of the adjustment pursuant to this section is taken to be:
(a)output tax where the amount of the adjustment is a positive amount; and
(b) input tax where the amount of the adjustment is a negative amount.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (2), the amount of the adjustment pursuant to this section is taken to be:
(a) output tax where the amount of the adjustment is a negative amount; and
(b) input tax where the amount of the adjustment is a positive amount.
76. Liability to pay past tax, etc., not affected by alteration in the law – Except as otherwise expressly provided in any enactment, the repeal or amendment of any provision of this Act shall not affect any liability or right of any person or of the Government that existed under that provision immediately before its repeal or amendment, and in particular:
(a) any liability to tax, or to any fine or penalty, of any person pursuant to the repealed or amended provision, and the right of the Government to any revenue, tax, fee, fine, or penalty pursuant to the repealed or amended provision, shall not be affected by the repeal or amendment; and
(b) all acts and proceedings for the assessment or recovery of any revenue, tax, fine, or penalty assessed or assessable or paid or payable pursuant to the repealed or amended provision, and all proceedings in respect of offences committed or alleged to be committed in respect of the repealed or amended provision, may be instituted or continued as if the provision had not been repealed or amended.
77. Disclosure of information –(1) No obligation as to secrecy or other restriction upon the disclosure of information imposed by any enactment or otherwise shall prevent any of them:
(a) the Commissioner of Inland Revenue or any officer authorised in that behalf; and
(b) the Comptroller of Customs or any officer of Customs authorised in that behalf; and
(c) the Chief Executive Officer or any officer of Treasury authorised in that behalf; and
(d) the National Revenue Board or any member or officer thereof authorised in that behalf, –
from disclosing to each other information obtained for revenue-gathering purposes and which is required to be disclosed by the persons
authorised by this subsection for the same purpose to give effect to the provisions of this Act.
(2) Information obtained pursuant to subsection (1) shall not be disclosed except:
(a) to the persons authorised under that subsection; or
(b) for the purpose of any proceedings connected with a matter in relation to which those persons so authorised perform their duties.
78. Power to extend time for doing anything under Act – (1) Where anything required by or under this Act to be done at or within a fixed time cannot be or is not so done, the Head of State
may, by Order, appoint a further or other time for doing the same, whether the time at or within which the same ought to have been
done has or has not expired.
(2) Anything done at, or, as the case may be, within the time prescribed by any such Ordershall be as valid as if it had been done
at, or, as the case may be, within the time fixed by or under this Act.
79. Regulations – The Head of State may, acting on the advice of Cabinet, make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, for all or any of the following purposes:
(a) prescribing the duties and functions of officers and other persons appointed or employed under this Act;
(b) prescribing the form of returns to be made, the particulars to be set forth therein, the persons by whom and the time when or within which such returns are to be made, and the forms of the assessments, notices, and other documents referred to in this Act or necessary in order to give effect thereto;
(c) providing, where there is no provision in this Act or no sufficient provision in respect of any matter or thing necessary to give effect to this Act, in what manner and form the deficiency shall be supplied;
(d) prescribing offences against any such regulations and prescribing fines not exceeding 5 penalty units in respect of any such offence;
(e) providing for such matters as are contemplated by or necessary for giving full effect to the provisions of this Act and for the due administration thereof.
PART XII
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
80. Registration of persons liable to be registered on 1 January 1994 –(1) Despite section 47, a person who, on or after the commencement of this Act and on or before 31 October 1993, knows, or could with
reasonable diligence have known, that that person will be liable to be registered with effect on and from 1 January 1994 pursuant
to section 47 shall, to enable the Commissioner to effect registration of any such person with effect on and from 1 January 1994,
apply in the prescribed form, before 30 November 1993, to the Commissioner to be registered, and the Commissioner shall register
that person in the manner prescribed by section 47.
(2)Any other person who is liable to be registered under this Act on or after 1 January 1994, shall apply for registration pursuant to
section 47.
(3)A person to whom subsection (1) applies who fails to comply with that subsection commits an offence and is liable to a fine not exceeding
5 penalty units, or, if that person is a company, to a fine not exceeding 20 penalty units.
81. Supplies prior to 1 January 1994 –(1)Inthis Part, “time of performance” means:
(a) for supply of goods—
(i) where the goods are to be removed, the time of the removal;
(ii) where the goods are to be removed and where the property in those goods will pass from the supplier to the recipient, the earlier of the time of the removal and the time that that property passes;
(iii) where the goods are not to be removed, the time when they are made available to the recipient;
(iv) where the goods (being sent or taken on approval, sale or return, or similar terms) are removed before it is known whether a supply will take place, the time when it becomes certain that the supply has taken place; or
(b) for supply of services, the time when the services are performed.
(2) Where any registered person supplies or agrees to supply services by virtue of or pursuant to any contract, agreement, or enactment,
(whether conditionally or unconditionally, on the happening of any event or any contingency, or otherwise), and that contract, agreement,
or enactment expressly or impliedly provides that for, or in respect of, any period or periods, that:
(a) any right is to be granted or exercisable, or any thing is to be done, or omitted to be done; or
(b) any payment is due, or may be made; or
(c) the contract or agreement is in force, or enforceable, or will have effect, –
those services is, for the purposes of subsection (1)(b), be taken to be performed by that registered person continuously and uniformly
during the whole of that period or those periods.
(3) Where any services are supplied pursuant to any contract, agreement, or enactment which provides that any right is to be granted
or exercisable by an individual for a period which will end with the termination of the life of that individual, and where that contract,
agreement, or enactment provides for a single non-refundable payment as consideration for the granting or exercising of that right,
those services is, for the purposes of subsection (1)(b), taken to have been performed at the earlier of the time that that right
is granted by the supplier or first becomes exercisable.
(4)Despite anything in this Act, for the purposes of subsection (1), goods supplied under an agreement to hire as defined in section
10(3)(d) is taken to be a supply of services.
(5) Subject to subsection (6) and despite section 10 where, and to the extent that, the time of performance of any supply of goods and
services:
(a) is before 1 January 1994, and that supply would, but for this section, be deemed by section 10 to take place on or after 1 January 1994, and the value of that supply is ascertainable, that time of performance shall, for the purposes of this Act, be the time when the supply of those goods and services is deemed to take place;
(b) is on or after 1 January 1994, and that supply would, but for this section, be deemed by section 10 or section 21 to take place before 1 January 1994—
(i) that time of performance shall, for the purposes of section 9, be the time when the supply of those goods and services is deemed to take place; and
(ii) the time when the supply of those goods and services is made shall, for the purposes of section 21, be deemed to be the 1 January
1994; and
(6) Despite subsection (5), where and to the extent that any supply of goods is the construction, major reconstruction, manufacture,
or extension of a building or a civil engineering work by the supplier, and the goods are:
(a) sold pursuant to any written contract entered into before 1 January 1994; and
(b) made available to the recipient on or after 1 January 1994, –
the value of all work and materials permanently incorporated in or affixed on the site of the building or civil engineering work pursuant to that contract shall be determined as at the close of 31 December 1993, and:
(c) to the extent that the aggregate of the consideration in money for all supplies in respect of the sale of those goods which, pursuant to section 10(1) or section 10(3)(b)(ii), took place before 1 January 1994, exceeds that value, the amount of that excess shall be deemed to be consideration in money for a taxable supply made by that supplier on 1 January 1994 and charged with tax pursuant to section 9(1);
(d) to the extent that that value exceeds the aggregate of the consideration in money for all supplies in respect of the sale of those
goods which, pursuant to section 10(1) or section 10(3)(b)(ii), took place before 1 January 1994, the consideration in money for
the first supply in respect of the sale of those goods which, pursuant to section 10(1) or section 10(3)(b)(ii), takes place on or
after 1 January 1994 shall be deemed to be reduced by the amount of that excess:
PROVIDED THAT any part of the amount of that excess remaining, in any case where that consideration is reduced to nil as a result of the application
of this paragraph, shall be carried forward and the consideration for any subsequent such supply shall be deemed to be reduced to
that extent, and so on:
PROVIDED THAT this subsection shall only apply to the extent that that value has been determined on or before 1 February 1994 in a manner acceptable
to the Commissioner by a competent independent valuer, or by any other competent valuer that the Commissioner may, in the Commissioner’s
discretion approve:
PROVIDED FURTHER THAT where any such supply is made to a registered person, exclusively for the purposes of making taxable supplies, the first proviso
to this subsection shall not apply.
82. Certain contracts entered into on or before the date upon which this Act was first introduced into the Legislative Assembly –(1)Inthis section:
“non-reviewable contract”in relation to any supply, means any written contract, or any agreement entered into pursuant to an enactment, for the supply of goods and services where:
(a) those goods and services are specifically identified in the contract or, as the case may be, agreement; and
(b) the consideration in money for that supply is specified in the contract or, as the case may be, agreement either by reference to an amount of money or by way of a formula; and
(c) the contract or, as the case may be, agreement contains no provision for, and does not otherwise contemplate, any change to that consideration arising either directly or indirectly from the imposition of the value added goods and services tax; but does not include any contract that provides for or otherwise contemplates a general review of the consideration in money for that supply;
“review” includes renegotiation, adjustment, or alteration;
“reviewable contract”, in relation to any supply, means any written contract, not being a non-reviewable contract, for
the supply of goods and services where the consideration in money for that supply is specified in the contract either by reference
to an amount of money or by way of a formula.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, where any supply is made pursuant to any non-reviewable contract entered into on or before the date
upon which this Act was first introduced into the Legislative Assembly, and that supply would, but for this section, be charged with
tax under section 9, that supply shall be charged with tax at the rate of zero percent.
(3) For the purposes of this Act, where any supply is made pursuant to any reviewable contract entered into on or before the date upon
which this Act was first introduced into the Legislative Assembly, and that supply would, but for this section, be charged with tax
under section 9, that supply shall, to the extent that such supply is made prior to the first opportunity after the date upon which
this Act was first introduced into the Legislative Assembly for the review of the consideration in money for that supply, be charged
with tax at the rate of zero percent:
PROVIDED THAT the time when that supply is made shall be determined solely by reference to the time of performance of that supply.
PART XIII
CONSEQUENTIAL REPEALS
83. Repeal of existing legislation - The following pieces of legislation are repealed:
(a) Goods and Services Tax Act 1986 No. 17;
(b) Goods and Services Amendment Act 1991 No. 9;
(c) Goods and Services Tax (Partial Remission) Act 1992/1993 No. 12;
(d) section 18(3) and 18A of the Income Tax Act 1974.
REVISION NOTES 2008– 2014
This is the official version of this Act as at 31 December 2014.
This Act has been revised by the Legislative Drafting Division from 2008 to 2014respectively under the authority of the Attorney General given under the Revision and Publication of Laws Act 2008.
The following general revisions have been made:
(a) Amendments have been made to conform to modern drafting styles and to use modern language as applied in the laws of Samoa.
(b) Insertion of the commencement date
(c) References to the male gender made gender neutral
(d) Other minor editing has been done in accordance with the lawful powers of the Attorney General, where appropriate:
(i) “Every” changed to “a/an”
(ii) Present tense drafting style:
- “shall be” changed to “is/are”
- “shall be deemed” changed to “is/are taken”
- “shall have” changed to “has”
- “hereby” and “from time to time” removed
(iii) Removal/replacement of obsolete and archaic terms with plain language
- “notwithstanding” changed to “despite” or “even if” or “although”
- “in accordance with the provisions of” changed to “under”
- “save” changed to “except”
- “furnish” changed to “provide”
- “where” changed to “if”
- “for the purposes of” changed to “in”
(iv) Numbers (and symbols – e.g. percent) in words changed to figures/symbols
(v) Removal of superfluous terms
- “the generality of”
- “of this Act/subsection”
- “the provisions of”
- “the term/expression”
- “in the case of” changed to “for”
(vi) “the foregoing provisions of this section”, “the preceding subsection” and similar wording changed to the actual section/subsections
(vii) Section 21 re-paragraphed to create subsection (3A) and (3B). Section 10(4) paragraphed. Section 13(6) renumbered.
(viii) Definitions in sections 2 and 3(3) paragraphed to separate “means”, and “includes” and “does not includes”
- consideration
- hire purchase agreement
- prescribed form
- public authority
- revenue from the Government
- tax payable
- trustee
- participatory security
(ix) revised so that references to Income Tax Act 1974 and IncomeTax Administration Act 1974 are changed to the Income Tax 2012 Act and the Tax Administration Act 2012.
(x) Short title of the Act amended to delete reference to “1992”.
(xi) Revised so that references to “Customs Act 1977” are substituted with “Customs Act 2014”.
Since the publication of the Consolidated and Revised Statutes of Samoa 2007 this Act has been amended–
By theValue Added Goods and Services Tax Amendment Act 2009 (commencing 29 October 2008)
Section 12(6)(o) - Deleted and replaced “pipes.” With “pipes; or”
Section 12(6)(p) - A new section 12(6)(p) was inserted.
By the Casino and Gambling Control Act 2010, No.10 (commencing 8March 2012)
Section 12(1) - new paragraph (l) inserted
Section 12(6) - new paragraph(q) inserted
By the Tax Administration Act 2012, No. 20 (commencing 1 January 2013)
Section 2 - amendments to certain definitions
Section 24 - amended
Parts IV, V and VI repealed
Sections 44 to 46, 53, 54, 56; repealed
Section 57 - amended
Sections 58 to 61, 64 to 69; repealed
Note that the Customs Act 1977 has been repealed by the Customs Act 2014.
ThisActis administered by
the Ministry for Revenue.
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