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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Commissioners of Customs & Excise v BAA Plc [2002] EWCA Civ 1814 (11 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1814.html Cite as: [2003] STC 35, [2002] EWCA Civ 1814 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
MR. JUSTICE ETHERTON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
____________________
COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTOMS & EXCISE | Appellants | |
- and - | ||
BAA plc | Respondent |
____________________
Mr. David Southern (instructed by Solicitor for BAA plc ) for the Respondents in the First Appeal
Mr. David Southern and Mr. Gerard Hillman (instructed by H H Mainprice & Co.) for the Appellants in the Second Appeal
Hearing dates : 19th and 20th November, 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor :
"...a common means by which an organisation seeks to develop its relationship with its members or customers, offer additional benefits to them and obtain a contribution to the costs of having to operate and maintain databases. A co-branded credit card is a card issued by a bank as a result of a business arrangement between a bank and an organisation which is not a bank (the "non-bank"), under which the non-bank will endorse the card and obtain applications from its members or customers for the card, which when issued bears the names of both bank and non-bank. The term "affinity card" is also used in this context, but usually with reference to cards endorsed by non-profit making organisations..." [2002] STC 327 at paragraph [7]
"1. BOS provides credit card services throughout the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands as a registered user of the VISA trade mark;
2. BAA wishes to promote a credit card co-branded with BOS' and BAA's trade marks to certain persons in association with BAA's bonus point scheme and as part of its customer loyalty strategy;
3. BOS has agreed to provide a co-branded credit card service to certain persons introduced by BAA to BOS, subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter appearing;"
(1) By clause 2: BAA shall introduce persons who require cards to BoS. BAA shall assist applicants in completing application forms, shall check all application forms submitted to BAA for errors and omissions, and shall correspond with applicants in relation to any such errors or omissions. BAA shall carry out, at its own cost and expense, screening processes to be agreed between BoS and BAA from time to time. BAA shall submit the application forms to BoS for approval. BoS shall be entitled in its absolute discretion to reject any application.
(2) By clause 3: The card issued to an applicant shall have the features and benefits specified in the First Schedule and shall bear the design detailed in the Sixth Schedule to the Agreement, or such other design as BoS or BAA may agree in writing. The agreed design in the Sixth Schedule has, among other things, the initials of BAA on the front of the card. The card issuer-card- holder relationship for each card shall be between BoS and the card holder respectively.
(3) The features and benefits set out in the First Schedule include a minimum credit limit of £750, the absence of an annual charge, specified rates of interest, administration fees for returned payments and the like and a number of optional benefits or services.
(4) By clause 3.3 variations in the rate of interest or other card features or terms and conditions may be made in its discretion by BoS but only after consulting BAA and subject to giving BAA three months prior notice. Clause 3.4 contains a similar provision relating to alterations in the additional benefits to be provided to card-holders by BAA, though the obligation to provide them is contained in clause 7.3 and any alteration is subject to the consent of BoS.
(5) By clause 4 BoS is obliged to pay BAA, in respect of each accepted application for a WorldCard, where the card has been used in accordance with its terms for at least a month, a one-off payment of an "Introduction and Processing Fee". BoS is also required to pay an on-going "Commission Fee" related to usage of the card. This consideration is expressly linked to the obligations of BAAE under clause 2.1 and is deemed to be inclusive of VAT (if applicable).
(1) BAA WorldPoints awarded to card-holders for purchases and additional airport-specific award points offers and airport shopping incentives, including a customer magazine and additional reward options.
(2) Half Price Holiday Parking on redemption of WorldPoints and alternative or different parking offers depending upon seasonal influences.
(3) Fastrack Security Access on redemption or anticipation of the grant of WorldPoints.
(4) Upgrade to First Class on Heathrow Express and Gatwick Express if a Cardholder uses his card to buy a Heathrow Express or Gatwick Express ticket.
(5) One Year No Quibble refund Guarantee in respect of all airport purchases as an extension of the standard three month airport guarantee.
"Without prejudice to other Community provisions, Member States shall exempt the following under conditions which they shall lay down for the purpose of ensuring the correct and straightforward application of the exemptions and of preventing any possible evasion, avoidance or abuse;
[(a)-(c)]
(d) the following transactions:
1 the granting and the negotiation of credit and the management of credit by the person granting it;
[2. the negotiation of or any dealings in credit guarantees...
3. transactions, including negotiation, concerning deposit and current accounts...
4. transactions, including negotiation,concerning currency...
5. transactions, including negotiation, excluding management and safekeeping, in shares...
6. management of special investment funds...]"
"(1) It is common ground: (a) that FBS entered into exempt transactions granting credit in the form of credit cards to members of CSMA; but the exemption is not limited to a supply by the person granting credit; (b) that CSMA supplied services to FBS in connection with the granting of that credit to its members and, in consideration of those services, received a commission calculated by reference to the total amount of credit granted; and (c) that there is no express reference in either the Sixth Directive or in Sch 6 to the 1983 Act to 'particular' transactions or to the 'specific' grant of credit.
(2) The critical question is whether the expressions 'negotiation of credit', and 'making of arrangements for any transaction for granting of any credit' are to be construed as implicitly restricted to activities in relation to particular transactions for the specific grant of credit. Neither the purpose nor the context of the exemption justify placing this restricted meaning on the wide general language of the directive and of the 1983 Act. Both the 'negotiation of credit' and 'the making of arrangements' for the granting of credit refer to the doing of things antecedent to, and directly leading to, the results sought to be achieved by the doing of those things. The result to be attained is of a general rather than a specific nature, namely the 'granting of any credit'. In some cases intermediaries between principals will be involved in achieving that result. In other cases they will not. It is neither expressly nor impliedly necessary that they should be involved as a condition of the application of the exemption to those who do not actually grant credit.
(3) The activities of CSMA, in respect of which FBS paid commission, can reasonably and sensibly be described as negotiation of, or making arrangements for any transaction for, the grant of credit. I am unable to detect either in the purpose of the exemptions or in the language and context in which they are expressed any distinction between (a) the negotiation, or making arrangements for particular transactions for the specific grant of any credit, and (b) these negotiations or arrangements planned and designed by joint efforts for the specific purpose of leading directly to the grant of credit by FBS to members of CSMA."
"The inclusion of negotiation among exempt operations is prompted by its very nature. When negotiation is undertaken, on one's behalf or for a third party, the substance of the exempt operation is being shaped. The scope of the activity involved in negotiation is co-extensive with that of the legal transaction to which it leads and, therefore, it has no life of its own and is treated in the same way for tax purposes (see Card Protection Plan Ltd v Customs and Excise Comrs [1999] STC 270 at 293, [1999] 2 AC 601, at 627 para 30): if the transaction is exempt, so is the negotiation. In this respect, it is immaterial whether the dealings are direct or carried out through a representative. Where a representative is used, his activity appears to be that of the principal and consequently, the negotiations which he carries out must be treated from a tax point of view as if they were those of the principal. Otherwise, the principle of fiscal neutrality would be infringed."
"the words "transactions in securities" refer to transactions liable to create, alter or extinguish parties' rights and obligations in respect of securities."
"39. It is not necessary to consider the precise meaning of the word 'negotiation', which also appears in other provisions of the Sixth Directive, in particular, Article13B(d)(1) to (4), in order to hold that, in the context of Article 13B(d)(5), it refers to the activity of an intermediary who does not occupy the position of any party to a contract relating to a financial product, and whose activity amounts to something other than the provision of contractual services typically undertaken by the parties to such contracts. Negotiation is a service rendered to, and remunerated by a contractual party as a distinct act of mediation. It may consist, amongst other things, in pointing out suitable opportunities for the conclusion of such a contract, making contact with another party or negotiating, in the name of and on behalf of a client, the detail of the payments to be made by either side. The purpose of negotiation is therefore to do all that is necessary in order for two parties to enter into a contract, without the negotiator having any interest of his own in the terms of the contract.
40. On the other hand, it is not negotiation where one of the parties entrusts to a sub-contractor some of the clerical formalities related to the contract, such as providing information to the other party and receiving and processing applications for subscription to the securities which form the subject matter of the contract. In such a case, the subcontractor occupies the same position as the party selling the financial product and is not therefore an intermediary who does not occupy the position of one of the parties to the contract, within the meaning of the provision in question."
"...The Court of Justice found against CSC, not on the basis of those narrow legal interpretations of the word "negotiation", but on the basis that CSC was doing no more than carrying out, as a subcontractor, some of the clerical formalities related to the contract to be entered into between the customer and Sun Alliance, such as providing information to the potential customer and receiving and processing applications for subscription to the security which was to form the subject matter of the contract.
43. It does not seem to me that the analysis and decision of the Court of Justice in the CSC case are inconsistent with the decision of the Court of Appeal in Customs & Excise v Civil Service Motoring Association Ltd [1998] STC 111. The CSMA case, therefore, remains binding on me as an authority as to the proper meaning of the expression "negotiation of credit" in article 13B(d)1 of the Sixth Directive. Accordingly, there is no reason, in principle, why the exemption in Article 13B(d)1 should not apply to arrangements for an affinity card scheme."
"In my judgment, the activities carried out by BAAE, pursuant to the Credit Card Agreement, satisfy the requirements for "negotiation of credit" in Article 13B(d)1. They constitute "a distinct act of mediation" within paragraph 39 of the judgment of the Court of Justice in CSC Financial Services Ltd v Customs & Excise [2002] STC 57. Without BAAE's services, the individual contracts for the issue of WorldCards to individual customers of BAAE would not take place. BAAE's activities cannot be fairly characterised as mere clerical formalities, which it effectively carries out as a subcontractor of BOS (cf. para.40 of the Court of Justice's judgment in the CSC case). BAAE does not play a purely passive role in relation to the individual contracts for the issue of a WorldCard to an applicant. Nor can its activities properly be described as merely carrying out promotional or marketing activities for BOS. In addition to the matters specifically relied upon by [counsel for BAA], I would add the role of BAAE in providing the Additional Card Benefits, and BAAE's obligation, under the Credit Card Agreement, to use reasonable endeavours to ensure that the Additional Card Benefits remain competitive with similar benefits offered to credit card holders by competitors of BAA within BAA's industry sector."
(1) The provisions of Article 13 B(d)1 are to be construed strictly. The general principle of European Community law is that turnover tax is levied on all services supplied for consideration by a taxable person. Exemptions from that general principle are to be interpreted strictly, Stichting Uitvoering Financiële Acties v Staatssecretaris van Financiën [1989] ECR 1737.
(2) The expression "negotiation" in Article 13B(d)1 has its own independent meaning in Community law, and is not to be equated merely with an English dictionary definition, Customs and Excise Commissioners v Cantor Fitzgerald International [2001] STC 1453, 1460.
(3) Article 13 of the Sixth Directive applies directly within the United Kingdom, and may be invoked by a taxpayer, irrespective of domestic United Kingdom legislation, Ursula Becker v Finanzamt Münster-Innenstadt [1982] ECR 53.
(4) BAA must show, in order to bring itself within the exemption in Article 13 B(d)1, that there is a distinct supply of services, in consideration of the payments to it by BoS under the Credit Card Agreement, the overall character of which falls within the expression "negotiation of credit" within that exemption; Sparekassernes Datacenter (SDC) v Skatteministeriet [1997] STC 932: Ivory & Sime Trustlink Ltd v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1998] STC 597; Customs and Excise Commissioners v Guy Butler (International) Ltd [1975] STC 299; Customs and Excise Commissioners v Lloyds TSB Group Ltd [1998] STC 528,535.
(5) United Kingdom domestic legislation cannot cut down the meaning of Article 13 of the Sixth Directive.
(6) The relevant provisions of the United Kingdom legislation, that is to say Group 5 of Schedule 9 to the 1994 Act, are to be interpreted, so far as possible, without unduly offending the language used in the statute, so as to be consistent with and give effect to the provisions in the Directive, Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Limited [1993]1 WLR 59.
(7) The issue of a credit card is a grant of credit.
"GROUP 5 - FINANCE
Item No
....
2. The making of any advance or the granting of any credit.
...
5. The making of arrangements for any transaction comprised in item ...2......."
"GROUP 5 - FINANCE
Item No
....
2. The making of any advance or the granting of any credit.
....
5. The provision of intermediary services in relation to any transaction comprised in item 1, 2, 3, 4 or 6 (whether or not any such transaction is finally concluded) by a person acting in an intermediary capacity.
....
Notes:
...
(2A) This Group does not include a supply of services comprising the management of credit, other than such a supply made by the person granting the credit.
(2B) For the purposes of this Group a person makes "a supply of services comprising the management of credit" if he performs any one or more of the following in relation to a credit, a credit card, a chargecard or a similar payment card, operation -
(a) credit checking;
(b) valuation;
(c) authorisation services;
(d) taking decisions relating to a grant or an application for a grant of credit;
(e) creating and maintaining records relating to a grant or an application for a grant of credit on behalf of the credit provider; and
(f) monitoring a creditor's payment record or dealing with overdue payments.
....
(5) For the purposes of item 5 "intermediary services" consist of bringing together, with a view to the provision of financial services -
(a) persons who are or may be seeking to receive financial services, and
(b) persons who provide financial services,
together with (in the case of financial services falling within item 1, 2, 3 or 4) the performance of work preparatory to the conclusion of contracts for the provision of those financial services, but do not include the supply of any market research, product design, advertising, promotional or similar services or the collection, collation and provision of information in connection with such activities.
(5A) For the purposes of item 5 a person is "acting in an intermediary capacity" wherever he is acting as an intermediary, or one of the intermediaries, between -
(a) a person who provides financial services, and
(b) a person who is or may be seeking to receive financial services,
unless the financial service in question is the grant of credit and he is also making supplies of services comprising the management of credit to the grantor, or prospective grantor, of the credit.
..."
"The services provided by BAAE, pursuant to the Credit Card Agreement, involve BAAE bringing together a person providing a financial service (the grant of credit) and persons seeking to receive that financial service within Note (5A) of Group 5, and the performance by BAAE of work preparatory to the conclusion of contracts for the grant of credit within Note (5) of Group 5. [counsel for Customs & Excise] accepted that, notwithstanding the exclusion from the statutory exemption of "the supply of any market research, product design, advertising, promotional or similar services, or the collection, collation and provision of information in connection with such activities" by virtue of Note (5) in Group 5, it is necessary to form a view as to the overall character of the supply in question. A similar approach is required with regard to the exclusion from the exemption of services comprising " the management of credit", by virtue of Notes (5A) and (2B) of Group 5. As I have said, on the facts of the present case, I find that the overall character of the services provided by BAAE, pursuant to the Credit Card Agreement, does not fall within those exclusions from the statutory exemption in Item No 5 of Group 5."
"The Institute desires to make available to members of the Institute a financial package associated with the Institute and Beneficial is willing to make so available the Product (as hereinafter defined) upon the terms and conditions contained below."
The Product is defined in clause 1 as the financial product detailed in Schedule 1 or as varied from time to time by BB after consultation with the Institute. Schedule 1 contains the details. Thus the card is to be a visa gold card "branded with the name of" IoD. The credit limit is to be £10,000 and the card is to double as cheque guarantee card up to £100. In addition the member is to be issued with a cheque book. There are details as to interest rates, standing order and direct debit facilities and times and amounts of repayment. There are a number of additional benefits such as travel accident insurance, holiday savings and a "beneficial wine service".
"65. We accept the Respondent's argument that to come within the exemption for such limited activities as those for which it now claims exemption, the Appellant would have to be in a position to negotiate the rates, or to be otherwise involved in the actual transaction binding the other party to the credit card agreement as an agent. This is not the case in the present circumstances.
66. We accept the Respondent's arguments for distinguishing the Civil Service Motoring Association case on its facts. In this matter we follow the opinion of the Advocate-General in the CSC case, cited extensively by [counsel for the Customs & Excise], and in particular his construction of article 13B(d)(5) in terms of its aims being to exempt those activities which are capable of altering a legal position by the creation, changing or extinguishment of rights and obligations, which we find is not the case here. In the present case the Appellant's activities do not affect the substance of the transaction."
a) dismiss the appeal of Customs & Excise in the BAA appeal,
b) allow the appeal of IoD in the IoD appeal, and
c) refuse to make a reference to the Court of Justice in both appeals.
Mummery LJ:
I agree
Tuckey LJ:
I also agree