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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Parkwood Landfill v Commissioners of Customs & Excise [2002] EWCA Civ 1707 (28 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1707.html Cite as: [2003] 1 WLR 697, [2002] EWCA Civ 1707, [2002] STC 1536, [2003] 1 All ER 579 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
THE VICE-CHANCELLOR
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
MR JUSTICE AIKENS
____________________
PARKWOOD LANDFILL | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS & EXCISE | Respondent |
____________________
P. Havers QC and Miss P. Whipple (instructed by Solicitor for Customs & Excise) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 12th November 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aldous:
"… to ensure that landfill costs reflect environmental impact thereby encouraging business and consumers in a cost effective and non-regulatory manner, to produce less waste; to recover value from more of the waste that is produced; and to dispose of less waste in landfill sites."
"39. (1) A tax, to be known as landfill tax, shall be charged in accordance with this Part.
(2) The tax shall be under the care and management of the Commissioners of Customs and Excise.
40. - (1) Tax shall be charged on a taxable disposal.
(2) A disposal is a taxable disposal if—
(a) it is a disposal of material as waste,
(b) it is made by way of landfill,
(c) it is made at a landfill site, and
(d) it is made on or after 1st October 1996.
(3) For this purpose a disposal is made at a landfill site if the land on or under which it is made constitutes or falls within land which is a landfill site at the time of the disposal.
41. - (1) The person liable to pay tax charged on a taxable disposal is the landfill site operator.
(2) The reference here to the landfill site operator is to the person who is at the time of the disposal the operator of the landfill site which constitutes or contains the land on or under which the disposal is made.
…
61. - (1) Where –
(a) a taxable disposal is in fact made on a particular day,
(b) within the period of 14 days beginning with that day the person liable to pay tax in respect of the disposal issues a landfill invoice in respect of the disposal, and
(c) he has not notified the Commissioners in writing that he elects not to avail himself of this subsection,
for the purposes of this Part the disposal shall be treated as made at the time the invoice is issued.
(2) The reference in subsection (1) above to a landfill invoice is to a document containing such particulars as regulations may prescribe for the purposes of that subsection.
(3) The Commissioners may at the request of a person direct that subsection (1) above shall apply –
(a) in relation to disposals in respect of which he is liable to pay tax, or
(b) in relation to such of them as may be specified in the direction,
as if for the period of 14 days there were substituted such longer period as may be specified in the direction.
…
64. - (1) A disposal of material is a disposal of it as waste if the person making the disposal does so with the intention of discarding the material.
(2) The fact that the person making the disposal or any other person could benefit from or make use of the material is irrelevant.
(3) Where a person makes a disposal on behalf of another person, for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2) above the person on whose behalf the disposal is made shall be treated as making the disposal.
(4) The reference in subsection (3) above to a disposal on behalf of another person includes references to a disposal –
(a) at the request of another person;
(b) in pursuance of a contract with another person.
65. - (1) There is a disposal of material by way of landfill if –
(a) it is deposited on the surface of land or on a structure set into the surface, or
(b) it is deposited under the surface of land.
…"
"35. I turn then to the fourth issue. I agree that on a literal construction of s.65(1) there was a disposal by way of landfill. The condition is expressed in the passive. That which must be disposed of by way of landfill is not waste but material subject to a disposal as waste. It matters not by whom the disposal is made. As Moses J pointed out in Darfish the requirement of s.40(2)(b) refers to a point of time not necessarily the same as that at which the disposal as waste takes place. Likewise the disposal as waste may in accordance with the terms of the contract take place otherwise than at the landfill site. These considerations indicate that the "disposal" for the purposes of the Act is more than the legal transaction by which it is effected or property in the material passes. Provided that the material can be identified as having been subject to a disposal as waste I can see no basis on which it is possible to exclude material which was waste but has been recycled before a disposal by way of landfill.
36. There remains the underlying question what is comprehended in the word "disposal". For the reasons I have given it cannot be limited to the legal transaction by which property in the material passes. S.64(3) and (4) extend the identity of the person making the disposal beyond the ambit of principal and agent. Thus it is envisaged, as Moses J pointed out in Darfish, that there may be more than one person making the disposal. A disposal may be made in more than one place, at more than one time and by more than one legal transaction. In the absence of clarification in further legislation the proper application of s.40(2) will have to be ascertained on a case by case basis."
"21. The material in the instant case, the top soil and subsoil, was removed and transported away from Wilson Bowden's and Hallamshire's sites. Those were important processes of disposal. Even if it is accepted that the soil was deposited on behalf of Darfish, nonetheless the disposal was made on behalf of Wilson Bowden and Hallamshire, because it was they who requested the removal and transport of the soil away from their sites and those processes were made in pursuance of contracts with those companies (see section 64(4)). In those circumstances, section 64(3) requires the Tribunal to examine the intentions of Wilson Bowden and Hallamshire.
22. Since it appears that the Tribunal found that the deposit (and possibly the transport) were made on behalf of Darfish, it is argued that its intention was the only intention which the Tribunal was required to consider. I disagree. I have construed disposal as the antonym of retention. The focus of the provisions is upon the person getting rid of something, not upon the person retaining or acquiring something. DNS was not making a disposal, on my construction, on behalf of Darfish. It was assisting in the acquisition and retention of the material on behalf of Darfish. But it was making a disposal on behalf of Wilson Bowden and Hallamshire, and it is their intention which should have been determined by the Tribunal."
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
Mr Justice Aikens: