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Tuesday 15th August 2023
Vic, NSW, ACT, QLD, Tas: 12 noon to 3.15pm
SA/NT: 11.30am to 2.55pm
WA: 10.00am to 1.15pm |
REGISTER NOW!
10 WEEKS
UNTIL THE EVENT
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Hear from the experts at this online lunchtime conference. You can watch it on your computer or on your portable electronic device from anywhere.
The conference will be based on our highly successful video webinar technology: there'll be a chairperson, presentations and you'll have an opportunity to ask questions via online chat.
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Session 1: Legal and Financial Considerations in Intergenerational Farming Business Structures
The decision to re-structure a family farming business requires a full consideration of risks and consequences of change. This session will examine the most common models for intergenerational farming businesses and particular matters that need to be taken into account, including:
- Management and ownership of assets and operations
- Financial and tax considerations
- Key deed clauses
- Flexibility and exit strategies
- Case studies on partnerships
- Financial and tax considerations
- Control now and into the future
- Asset transfer and management including tax considerations
- Adding new beneficiaries
- Dispute resolution mechanisms
- Case studies on trusts
- Share farming arrangements:
- Asset ownership and obligations
- Cost and profit arrangements
- What should be in the agreement?
- Case studies on using entities in combination
Session 2: Handing Over the Family Farm: Estate Planning for Rural Families
The last thing elderly parents want is for the next generation to be squabbling over the estate after they have gone. The likelihood of this largely depends on what consideration the parents have given to what happens to the farm after death. This session will provide a guide to anticipating estate litigation through effective estate planning for families on the land, including:
- Strategies for approaching and advising farming families on estate planning - is it ever too late?
- Consideration of contributions by, compensation for and special needs of adult children
- How to anticipate and manage competing claims and generational hopes and dreams
- Is a testamentary trust a solution or a problem?
- What to do about the estranged child?
- Pre-empting claims on the basis of promises made: Rodda v Ian Rodda Pty Ltd [2015] SASC 95
- Lessons from family provision claims and other disputes
- When is a deed of family arrangement the answer?
Session 3: Tax Tips and Traps in Rural Property Transactions
Keeping abreast of obligations concerning federal taxes on rural property transactions can be challenging. This session provides an update to practitioners on the latest changes and potential developments in this complex area, including:
- When is land eligible for the small business CGT concessions?
- Business of primary production or hobby farm (TR 97/11)?:
- The income tax implications on a land sale
- The GST implications on a land sale
- Practical strategies for minimising tax obligations on land transfers:
- How should transfers be structured?
- Comparing tax treatment of land transfers inter vivos and on death
- When will subdividing and selling of farmland be considered an enterprise for GST purposes? (San Remo Heights v FC of T [2020] AATA 4023)
- Case studies, including review of PBR 1051303645955
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Nicky Grummitt, Director, Grevillea Law, Goondiwindi, Qld (Chair)
Paul Gibney, Partner, Gibney & Gunson Lawyers, Albury, NSW
Fran Becker, Partner, Hamilton Locke, Brisbane, Qld
Russell Postle, Consultant, BDO, Brisbane, Qld
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- It was just like being at a well run conference but in many ways better.
- This option is of great assistance to country practitioners.
- The live online conference format worked well and made the speakers more engaging than a recording.
- Our team used the boardroom. We could talk and discuss the presentation without feeling we were imposing on others and you could submit a question, which we did. All from the comfort of our own office.
- The conference was well organised and the email links very useful.
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Delegates registered to attend the LIVE event will receive a CPD certificate for attendance. Lawyers can claim up to 3 CPD units/points (substantive law). Accountants can claim up to 3 CPD/training hours.
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If you register and pay by 14 July 2023 you will pay only $385 – a saving of $165 off the full price conference registration fee of $550.
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If you need assistance or have an enquiry, please do not hesitate to contact our Event Coordinator, Hayley Williams–Cameron on (03) 8601 7730 or email: hayley@tved.net.au |
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