The case of the Superannuation Complaints Tribunal in D19-20\023 provides a useful explanation of the wider position at law in relation to step children, including from a superannuation perspective.
In summary the decision confirms:
- There is some support for the position for general law purposes, and in particular family provision (or testator family maintenance applications) that someone does not cease to be a ‘step-child’ of a person when their natural parent pre-deceases the person, if the marital relationship between their natural parent and the person was in place at the date of the natural parent’s death (see Scott-Mackenzie v Bail [2017] VSCA 108).
- That is, the relationship of step-parent and step-child is one of affinity and does not cease merely because of the death of the natural parent. In other words 'once a step-child of the deceased, always a step-child of the deceased (providing the relationship of the deceased with the natural parent was not earlier dissolved otherwise than by death)'.
- In contrast, there are also cases that conclude the relationship of ‘step-child’ ceases automatically on the death of the natural parent (see Re Burt (1988) 1 Qd R 23, Re Moreton (1996) 2 Qd R 174, Basterfield v Gay (1994) 3 Tas R 293 and Connors v Tasmanian Trustee Limited (1996) 6 Tas R 267).
- For superannuation purposes, historically the Tax Office is on record as holding that a child only remains a stepchild while the relevant parents are a couple, for example see ATO ID 2011/77 where it was decided that a person ceases to be a 'stepchild' for the purposes of being a 'dependant' of the member under regulation 6.22 of the superannuation regulations, when the legal marriage of their natural parent to the member ends.
- There is however support for the broader concept of ‘step-child’ - that is a relationship of affinity between the step-parent and step-child that can continue beyond the death of the natural parent.
- In the factual matrix here, the Tribunal was satisfied that the step-daughter and the deceased member continued to have a sufficiently close relationship after the earlier death of the spouse of the member (who was the natural parent of the step-daughter).
- As a result the natural daughter of the spouse of the member remained the step-child of the deceased member and in turn fell within the definition of ‘child’ at the date of the deceased member’s death. Therefore she was a ‘dependant’ for the purposes of both the trust deed of the fund and the superannuation legislation.
** For the trainspotters, the title of today's post is riffed from the Happy Mondays song ‘Step On’.
View here: